On Wed, 2010-08-18 at 10:14 -0400, Jianghai Zhu wrote:
I realize that after a phenix run, especially autobuild and autosol, there are a lot of temporary files. Is there a way to clean up the disk? Even the .geo file can be removed after some time, because it is huge and can be easily regenerated.
It may be a good idea to change your defaults so that all the files you'll only use once in a lifetime will not be generated. Prevention, prevention, prevention :) Something like this rm */*.geo will get rid of the .geo files for a particular project. Careful with rm and * combination - it always helps to run the same command with ls instead of rm just to see what files will actually get deleted (or use rm -i which will ask for confirmation for every file). If all your projects are in the same master folder, something like rm */*/*.geo issued there will clean up everything - you get the idea. But don't blame me if you accidentally wipe all your data. rm is not for the weak, the files are practically gone forever. On Linux (Ubuntu at least) you can move set of files to trash can using "trash" instead of rm if you put this alias into your .bashrc alias trash='mv -t ~/.local/share/Trash/files --backup=t' There is also trash-cli command line interface - rather handy for the paranoid types like myself. All the wildcard flexibility plus recovery option. In the future I should stick to the question which was actually asked :) Ed. -- "I'd jump in myself, if I weren't so good at whistling." Julian, King of Lemurs