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Yorhel 85e12beb1c Improve performance of bin format import by 30%
By calling die() instead of propagating error unions. Not surprising
that error propagation has a performance impact, but I was hoping it
wasn't this bad.

Import performance was already quite good, but now it's even better!
With the one test case I have it's faster than JSON import, but I expect
that some dir structures will be much slower.
2024-08-02 14:09:46 +02:00
LICENSES Add REUSE-compliant copyright headers 2021-07-18 11:50:50 +02:00
src Improve performance of bin format import by 30% 2024-08-02 14:09:46 +02:00
.gitignore gitignore: Also ignore the newer .zig-cache/ 2024-07-12 09:26:37 +02:00
build.zig Add (temporary) compression support for the new export format 2024-07-31 12:55:43 +02:00
ChangeLog Version 2.5 2024-07-24 14:07:17 +02:00
Makefile Build: remove preferred_optimize_mode 2024-04-25 14:15:46 +02:00
ncdu.1 Rename threading flag to -t,--threads + update man page 2024-07-18 07:49:41 +02:00
ncdubinexp.pl Add hardlink counting support for the new export format 2024-08-01 07:32:38 +02:00
README.md README: Mention zig 0.13 as well 2024-07-18 10:53:55 +02:00

ncdu-zig

Description

Ncdu is a disk usage analyzer with an ncurses interface. It is designed to find space hogs on a remote server where you don't have an entire graphical setup available, but it is a useful tool even on regular desktop systems. Ncdu aims to be fast, simple and easy to use, and should be able to run in any minimal POSIX-like environment with ncurses installed.

See the ncdu 2 release announcement for information about the differences between this Zig implementation (2.x) and the C version (1.x).

Requirements

  • Zig 0.12 or 0.13.
  • Some sort of POSIX-like OS
  • ncurses libraries and header files

Install

You can use the Zig build system if you're familiar with that.

There's also a handy Makefile that supports the typical targets, e.g.:

make
sudo make install PREFIX=/usr