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Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting formatting output in human readable numbers Post 60071 by ghazi on Saturday 8th of January 2005 03:32:19 PM
Old 01-08-2005
formatting output in human readable numbers

Hi,

The following command provides the usage in 1024-byte blocks

du -ks * | sort -n | echo "$1"
...
1588820 user10
2463140 user11
2464096 user12
5808484 user13
6387400 user14
.....

I am trying to produce an output of first coulmn by multiplying by 1024 so that the output should display in bytes instead of 1024 kb blocks.



du -ks * | sort -n | awk '{print ($1 * 10242, $2)}'

getting the following output

1.62727e+10 user10
2.52275e+10 user11
2.52373e+10 user12
5.94905e+10 user13
6.54198e+10 user14


I even tried the printf as under:

du -ks * | sort -n | awk '{printf("%-20s%-10s\n", $1 * 1024, $2)}'

3.17764e+06 user10
4.92628e+06 user12
4.92819e+06 user13
1.1617e+07 user14
1.27748e+07 user15

Can some help to fix this output.

Thanks,
Ghazi
 

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DU(1)							    BSD General Commands Manual 						     DU(1)

NAME
du -- display disk usage statistics SYNOPSIS
du [-H | -L | -P] [-a | -d depth | -s] [-cghkmnrx] [file ...] DESCRIPTION
The du utility displays the file system block usage for each file argument and for each directory in the file hierarchy rooted in each direc- tory argument. If no file is specified, the block usage of the hierarchy rooted in the current directory is displayed. The options are as follows: -H Symbolic links on the command line are followed. (Symbolic links encountered in the tree traversal are not followed.) -L All symbolic links are followed. -P No symbolic links are followed. -a Display an entry for each file in the file hierarchy. -c Display the grand total after all the arguments have been processed. -d Display an entry files and directories depth directories deep. -g If the -g flag is specified, the number displayed is the number of gigabyte (1024*1024*1024 bytes) blocks. -h If the -h flag is specified, the numbers will be displayed in "human-readable" format. Use unit suffixes: B (Byte), K (Kilobyte), M (Megabyte), G (Gigabyte), T (Terabyte) and P (Petabyte). -k By default, du displays the number of blocks as returned by the stat(2) system call, i.e. 512-byte blocks. If the -k flag is speci- fied, the number displayed is the number of kilobyte (1024 bytes) blocks. Partial numbers of blocks are rounded up. -m If the -m flag is specified, the number displayed is the number of megabyte (1024*1024 bytes) blocks. -n Ignore files and directories with user "nodump" flag (UF_NODUMP) set. -r Generate warning messages about directories that cannot be read. This is the default behaviour. -s Display only the grand total for the specified files. -x Filesystem mount points are not traversed. du counts the storage used by symbolic links and not the files they reference unless the -H or -L option is specified. If either the -H or -L options are specified, storage used by any symbolic links which are followed is not counted or displayed. The -H, -L and -P options over- ride each other and the command's actions are determined by the last one specified. Files having multiple hard links are counted (and displayed) a single time per du execution. ENVIRONMENT
BLOCKSIZE If the environment variable BLOCKSIZE is set, and the -g, -h, -k, and -m options are not specified, the block counts will be dis- played in units of that size block. SEE ALSO
df(1), chflags(2), fts(3), getbsize(3), symlink(7), quot(8) HISTORY
A du command appeared in Version 6 AT&T UNIX. BSD
September 24, 2006 BSD
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