NAME byteback-prune - Prune old byteback backup directories to ensure there's enough space OPTIONS --minpercent, -m Start prune when disk has less than this %age free (default: 5) --maxpercent, -a Stop prune when disk has more than this %age free (default: 10) --list, -l List backups in pruning order, no other action --prune, -p Prune the next backup if necessary --prune-force, -r Prune the next backup regardless --order, -o Order backups by 'age' or 'importance' (default: importance) --verbose, -v Show debugging messages --help, -h Show this message DESCRIPTION Unless you are backing up a very small amount of data, backups will always need pruning, i.e. old backups must be deleted to make way for newer ones. This program deals with this operation by deleting old backups until a certain amount of free space is achieved, which is currently fixed at 10% free. This can be changed by setting the --maxpercent option. * midday today; * midday on the previous 6 days; * midday on the previous 4 Sundays; * midday on every fourth Sunday before that, where the "fourth Sunday" is calculated as every fourth Sunday in the Unix epoch, i.e. every fourth Sunday since Sunday 4th Jan 1970. So when you ask the pruner to run, the backup closest to the present time will be the last one to be deleted. The backup closes to "1 day ago" will be the second-last, and so on. We score every backup in this way until we end up with a "least important" snapshot to delete. The pruner will not delete backups younger than 7 days. SEE ALSO byteback-backup(1), byteback-restore(1), byteback-receive(1) AUTHOR Patrick J Cherry