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I need my test.py to display the following in LINUX shell - list all files in directory - descending order of file size in bytes (must display bytes) - show total files and total size at end (X files X total size) - does not include sub directories or files in other subdirectories

here is my python executable

    #!/usr/bin/env python
    import subprocess
    subprocess.call(["ls", "-l", "-S", "-s"])

this shows me the files and their size in descending order but it includes folders/subdirectories which I do not want

additionally replacing the subprocess.call with subprocess.call(["find", "-type","f"]) shows me only the files without the unneeded dates and times but I don't know how to get the info I want.

My python code:

#!/usr/bin/env python 
import subprocess, os, operator 
directory='e:\\Programs/Cyg/home/Dylan/test'       
list=os.listdir(directory) 
pairs=[] 
for file in list:
    if os.path.isfile: 
        location=os.path.join(directory, file)   
        size=os.path.getsize(location) pairs.append((file,size))  
pairs.sort(key=operator.itemgetter(0)) 
for pair in pairs:
   print (pair)
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  • 1
    Why don't you use python's own capabilities: os.walk, os.stat, os.listdir?
    – myaut
    Apr 12, 2015 at 9:43
  • I tried this code but I end up with repeated file listings and its not in order, this is the closets i've got I can't for the life of me figure out how to do this. #!/usr/bin/env python import subprocess, os, operator directory='e:\\Programs/Cyg/home/Dylan/test' list=os.listdir(directory) pairs=[] for file in list: if os.path.isfile: location=os.path.join(directory, file) size=os.path.getsize(location) pairs.append((file,size)) pairs.sort(key=operator.itemgetter(0)) for pair in pairs: print (pair)
    – dln sn1p3s
    Apr 12, 2015 at 9:53
  • 'e:\\Programs' on linux? I doubt that. Anyway it's never a good idea to mix slashes and backslashes in the path. Try to stick to the systems native. os.path can help you there
    – kratenko
    Apr 12, 2015 at 11:14

2 Answers 2

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Current directory

from os import listdir
from os.path import isfile, getsize
from operator import itemgetter

files = [(f, getsize(f)) for f in listdir('.') if isfile(f)]
files.sort(key=itemgetter(1), reverse=True)

for f, size in files:
    print '%d %s' % (size, f)
print '(%d files %d total size)' % (len(files), sum(f[1] for f in files))

Other directories

from os import listdir
from operator import itemgetter
from os.path import isfile, getsize, join, basename

def listfiles(dir):
    paths = (join(dir, f) for f in listdir(dir))
    files = [(basename(p), getsize(p)) for p in paths if isfile(p)] 
    files.sort(key=itemgetter(1), reverse=True)

    for f, size in files:
        print '%d %s' % (size, f)
    print '(%d files %d total size)' % (len(files), sum(f[1] for f in files))
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  • @PadraicCunningham: Yes true, I forgot to reverse it. The OP asked for the cwd, using os.path.join it's easy to use adapt it to any other directory. Apr 12, 2015 at 10:39
  • 1
    @PadraicCunningham: I also wrote the generic one. Apr 12, 2015 at 19:46
  • You could make paths a generator expression as you only need to iterate over it once. Apr 12, 2015 at 23:27
1

You can pipe the output to grep to ignore directories.

from subprocess import Popen,PIPE

directory = 'path' 

p1 = Popen(["ls",directory, "-Ssp"], stdout=PIPE)

p2 = Popen(["grep", "-v", '/$'], stdin=p1.stdout, stdout=PIPE)  

p1.stdout.close()
out, _err = p2.communicate()

files = out.splitlines()
total = files.pop(0)
print(total)
print(len(files))

In your own code you were sorting by the wrong key, you need to put the file size first in the tuple making sure to actually call isfile.

import  operator
from os import path, listdir

 directory = 'path' 

lst = listdir(directory)
pairs = []
for f in lst:
    if os.path.isfile(path.join(directory, f)):
        location = path.join(directory, f)
        size = os.path.getsize(location)
        pairs.append((size, f))

pairs.sort(key=operator.itemgetter(0),reverse=True)

print(len(pairs))
print(sum(s for s,_ in pairs))

for size, f in pairs:
    print(size, f)

Also to sort from highest to lowest you need to use reverse=True. If you want to ignore copies you can use if not f.endswith("~") or use the -B flag with ls to ignore backups. To change the output size for files using ls you would need to use something like --block-size 1.

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