You do not need to write a plugin. You can write a job that utilizes Groovy plugin to write a Groovy system script. The job would run, say, nightly. It would identify disabled projects and erase their workspaces. Here is a link to Hudson Model API that your script will tap into. There is a Groovy script console at http://<hudson-server>/script that is very useful for debugging.
Here is a code snippet that should be of direct benefit to you. Run it in the script console and examine the output:
def hi = hudson.model.Hudson.instance
hi.getItems(hudson.model.Job).each {
job ->
println(job.displayName)
println(job.isDisabled())
println(job.workspace)
}
You may also find code snippets in this answer useful. They refer to Jenkins API, but on this level I do not think there is a difference between Jenkins and Hudson.
Update:
Here's how you can do it on multiple slaves: create a multi-configuration job (also called "matrix job") that runs on all the slaves. On each slave the following system Groovy script will give you for every job its workspace on that slave (as well as enabled/disabled flag):
def hi = hudson.model.Hudson.instance
def thr = Thread.currentThread()
def build = thr?.executable
def node = build.executor.owner.node
hi.getItems(hudson.model.Job).each {
job ->
println("---------")
println(job.displayName)
println(job.isDisabled())
println(node.getWorkspaceFor(job))
}
As the script runs on the slave itself you can wipe out the workspace directly from it. Of course, the worskspace may not exist, but it's not a problem. Note that you write the script only once - Jenkins will run it on all the slaves you specify in the matrix job automatically.