Here's a quick little command that will compress (24.7) files in the current directory and below. It uses find (17.2) to find the files, recursively, and pick the files it should compress:
-size xargs |
% |
|---|
This command finds all files that:
Are not executable (! -perm -0100), so we don't compress shell
scripts and other program files.
Are bigger than one block, since it won't save any disk space to compress
a file that takes one disk block or less.
But, depending on your filesystem, the -size +1 may not really match
files that are one block long.
You may need to use -size +2, -size +1024c, or
something else.
Are regular files (-type f) and not directories, named
pipes, etc.
The -v switch to gzip tells you the names of the files and how much they're being compressed. If your system doesn't have xargs, use:
%find . ! -perm -0100 -size +1 -type f -exec gzip -v {} \;
Tune the find expressions to do what you want. Here are some ideas - for more, read your system's find manual page:
! -name \*.gzSkip any file that's already gzipped (filename ends with .gz ).
-links 1Only compress files that have no other (hard) links.
-user yournameOnly compress files that belong to you.
-atime +60Only compress files that haven't been accessed (read, edited, etc.) for more than 60 days.
You might want to put this in a job that's run every month or so by at (40.3) or cron (40.12).
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