Virtual Method
GioFilemeasure_disk_usage
since: 2.38
Declaration [src]
gboolean
measure_disk_usage (
GFile* file,
GFileMeasureFlags flags,
GCancellable* cancellable,
GFileMeasureProgressCallback progress_callback,
gpointer progress_data,
guint64* disk_usage,
guint64* num_dirs,
guint64* num_files,
GError** error
)
Description [src]
Recursively measures the disk usage of file
.
This is essentially an analog of the ‘du’ command, but it also reports the number of directories and non-directory files encountered (including things like symbolic links).
By default, errors are only reported against the toplevel file
itself. Errors found while recursing are silently ignored, unless
G_FILE_MEASURE_REPORT_ANY_ERROR
is given in flags
.
The returned size, disk_usage
, is in bytes and should be formatted
with g_format_size()
in order to get something reasonable for showing
in a user interface.
progress_callback
and progress_data
can be given to request
periodic progress updates while scanning. See the documentation for
GFileMeasureProgressCallback
for information about when and how the
callback will be invoked.
Available since: 2.38
Parameters
flags
-
Type:
GFileMeasureFlags
GFileMeasureFlags
. cancellable
-
Type:
GCancellable
Optional
GCancellable
.The argument can be NULL
.The data is owned by the caller of the method. progress_callback
-
Type:
GFileMeasureProgressCallback
A
GFileMeasureProgressCallback
. progress_data
-
Type:
gpointer
User_data for
progress_callback
.The argument can be NULL
.The data is owned by the caller of the method. disk_usage
-
Type:
guint64*
The number of bytes of disk space used.
The argument will be set by the function. The argument can be NULL
. num_dirs
-
Type:
guint64*
The number of directories encountered.
The argument will be set by the function. The argument can be NULL
. num_files
-
Type:
guint64*
The number of non-directories encountered.
The argument will be set by the function. The argument can be NULL
. error
-
Type:
GError **
The return location for a recoverable error.
The argument can be NULL
.If the return location is not NULL
, then you must initialize it to aNULL
GError*
.The argument will be left initialized to NULL
by the virtual function if there are no errors.In case of error, the argument will be set to a newly allocated GError
; the caller will take ownership of the data, and be responsible for freeing it.