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this post was submitted on 07 Sep 2025
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Linux is a family of open source Unix-like operating systems based on the Linux kernel, an operating system kernel first released on September 17, 1991 by Linus Torvalds. Linux is typically packaged in a Linux distribution (or distro for short).
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Hey Dessalines
I never got on with rmlint. It never felt safe to me.
I found fclones to be much better and safer.
Plus there is a GUI version for those not using the terminal
Gui Version https://github.com/pkolaczk/fclones-gui
CLI version https://github.com/pkolaczk/fclones
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Usage
fclones offers separate commands for finding and removing files. This way, you can inspect the list of found files before applying any modifications to the file system.
group – identifies groups of identical files and prints them to the standard output
remove – removes redundant files earlier identified by group
link – replaces redundant files with links (default: hard links)
dedupe – does not remove any files, but deduplicates file data by using native copy-on-write capabilities of the file system (reflink)
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I did actually test this by creating a directory with duplicates.
test_dupes 186 files
scanned directory for duplicates and created dupes.txt
fclones group . >>dupes.txt
dupes.txt
remove duplicates to another directory
/home/user/Desktop/dupes
fclones move target_dir <dupes.txt
fclones move /home/user/Desktop/dupes <dupes.txt
test_dupes now has 173 files
I haven't tried fclones, but rmlint is extremely safe. It only creates a json file and a remove script file, that you can review and edit before running.
Thank you
I will check it out again if and when I need to do a clean out.
I do create a lot of duplicates as I move and transfer files between 3 laptops.
Consider using syncthing