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  2. Disk Usage Analyzer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Disk_Usage_Analyzer

    Disk Usage Analyzer is a graphical disk usage analyzer for GNOME. It was part of GNOME Core Applications, [2] but was split off for GNOME 3.4. It was originally named Baobab after the Adansonia tree. The software gives the user a menu-driven, graphical representation of what is on a disk drive. [3]

  3. GNOME Disks - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GNOME_Disks

    GNOME Disks is a graphical front-end for udisks. [3] It can be used for partition management, S.M.A.R.T. monitoring, benchmarking, and software RAID (until v. 3.12). [4] An introduction is included in the GNOME Documentation Project.

  4. KDE Partition Manager - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/KDE_Partition_Manager

    KDE Partition Manager is a disk partitioning application originally written by Volker Lanz for the KDE Platform. It was first released for KDE SC 4.1 and is released independently of the central KDE release cycle. After the death of Volker Lanz in April 2014, [3] Andrius Štikonas continued the development and took over as the maintainer.

  5. GParted - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gparted

    GParted is used for creating, deleting, [3] resizing, [4] moving, checking, and copying disk partitions and their file systems. This is useful for creating space for new operating systems, reorganizing disk usage, copying data residing on hard disks, and mirroring one partition with another (disk imaging). It can also be used to format a USB drive.

  6. du (Unix) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Du_(Unix)

    -c, display a grand total of the disk usage found by the other arguments-d #, the depth at which summing should occur. -d 0 sums at the current level, -d 1 sums at the subdirectory, -d 2 at sub-subdirectories, etc.-H, calculate disk usage for link references specified on the command line-k, show sizes as multiples of 1024 bytes, not 512-byte

  7. Conky (software) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conky_(software)

    Conky is a free software desktop system monitor for the X Window System.It is available for Linux, FreeBSD, and OpenBSD. [3] Conky is highly configurable [4] [5] [6] and is able to monitor many system variables including the status of the CPU, memory, swap space, disk storage, temperatures, processes, network interfaces, battery power, system messages, e-mail inboxes, Arch Linux updates, many ...

  8. Category:Disk usage analysis software - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Disk_usage...

    Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us; Help; Learn to edit; Community portal; Recent changes; Upload file

  9. top (software) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Top_(software)

    The program produces an ordered list of running processes selected by user-specified criteria, and updates it periodically. Default ordering is by CPU usage, and only the top CPU consumers are shown. top shows how much processing power and memory are being used, as well as other information about the running processes.