# [Day 7](https://adventofcode.com/2022/day/7) :gift::gift::gift::gift::gift::gift::gift: Today's language: **Bash** + **awk** The way the challenge is laid out is absolutely ridiculus; both tasks could be done in one-liners on a Linux machine in any POSIX shell, IF the user wasn't as stupid... That's why I wrote a bash script that actually creates the whole filesystem from the input-file. It does so (by default) in `/tmp`. The sizes for the files are only allocated so that `du` shows the filesize, no write operations are taking place. The problem is, that (even empty) directories have a size, which also increases with every file and subdirectory in it. That's why I needed to calculate the sizes of the directories *without* the actual file sizes and subtract that from the output of `du`. This new output can then be piped into an `awk` one-liner. In reality, this problem wouldn't exist since you would want the total size of a directory anyway. If the size of the directories themselves would not matter, the commands would be: ```shell # Task 1 du -b / | awk 'BEGIN{sum=0} {if ($1 <= 100000) {sum+=($1)}} END{print "Total size of all dirs<100000: "sum-0}' # Task 2: min_size = (Update size) - (file system size) - (used size) du -b / | awk 'BEGIN{file=""; size=99999999} {if ($1 >= min_size && $1 < size) {size=$1; file=$2}} END{print "You should delete "file" size("size")"}' ``` ```shell ./day7.sh output.txt ```