trashy is a simple, fast, and featureful alternative to rm and trash-cli written in rust.
Quick links:
- easy to use, just run
trashy put PATH
- recursive by default, without having the issues
- beautiful output
- colorized paths (similar to fd)
- cool tables
- very fast, and faster than trash-cli (see benchmarks)
- much safer than
rm -rf
- intuitive syntax and fine grained control
- uses the system trash on both linux and windows
$ trashy first second third
This is just sugar for
$ trashy put first second third
$ trashy list
$ trashy restore first second
$ trashy empty first second third
The restore
and empty
subcommands both take very similar arguments and flags.
By default the arguments for restore
and empty
are interpreted as regular expressions.
Use the -m
option to interpret them differently.
$ trashy restore --all
$ trashy empty --all
Restore with fzf
trashy list | fzf --multi | awk '{$1=$1;print}' | rev | cut -d ' ' -f1 | rev | xargs trashy restore --match=exact --force
Empty with fzf
trashy list | fzf --multi | awk '{$1=$1;print}' | rev | cut -d ' ' -f1 | rev | xargs trashy empty --match=exact --force
cargo install trashy
Download the binary from Github Releases and put it in your $PATH
.
Use your favorite AUR helper.
paru -S trashy
nix-env -i trashy
Or if you have flakes enabled:
nix profile install nixpkgs#trashy
These benchmarks are run on the rust compiler source in the compiler/
directory.
The directory has about 2000 files. The benchmarks are run using hyperfine.
Running put
on each file in the compiler/
directory recursively.
hyperfine -M 1 'fd -t f --threads 1 -x trash-put'
Time (abs ≡): 65.849 s [User: 54.383 s, System: 11.370 s]
Now with trashy
hyperfine -M 1 'fd -t f --threads 1 -x trashy put'
Time (abs ≡): 4.822 s [User: 2.014 s, System: 2.918 s]
trashy
has practically zero startup time, while trash-cli
has a large startup time because it is written in python. This difference in startup time causes massive speed differences when used in scripts. The benchmark shows that trashy
is about 13 times faster!
Listing the previously trashed items
hyperfine 'trash-list'
Time (mean ± σ): 383.7 ms ± 10.5 ms [User: 321.8 ms, System: 59.4 ms]
Range (min … max): 375.9 ms … 412.0 ms 10 runs
hyperfine 'trashy list'
Time (mean ± σ): 178.3 ms ± 1.9 ms [User: 135.7 ms, System: 40.4 ms]
Range (min … max): 175.6 ms … 181.0 ms 16 runs
trashy
is faster by more than 2 times.
No, see this issue
You should not. The alias will not be present on other systems and habits are really hard to break. An alternative is to alias trashy put
to rt
or tp
.
Copyright (c) 2020 Brian Shu
trashy is distributed under the terms of both the MIT license and the Apache License 2.0.
See the LICENSE-APACHE and LICENSE-MIT