This file is indexed.

/etc/pydfrc is in pydf 10.

This file is owned by root:root, with mode 0o644.

The actual contents of the file can be viewed below.

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# Configuration file for pydf
#
#
# colours can be: 
#  'none'    - no change from previous colour
#  'default' - default system colour
#
# special attributes:
#  'bold'
#  'underline'
#  'blink'
#  'reverse'
#  'concealed'
#
# foreground:
#  'black'
#  'red'
#  'green'
#  'yellow'
#  'blue'
#  'magenta'
#  'cyan'
#  'white'
#
# background:
#  'on_black'
#  'on_red'
#  'on_green'
#  'on_yellow'
#  'on_blue'
#  'on_magenta'
#  'on_cyan'
#  'on_white'
#
# beep:
#  'beep'
#
#
# or any combination of these, separated with commas


# normal text colour - used to switch to after one row is displayed
normal_colour = 'default'

# colour of the header
header_colour = 'yellow'

# colour for local filesystems
local_fs_colour = 'default'

# colour for remote filesystems (such as nfs, samba, afs....)
remote_fs_colour = 'green'

# colour for special filesystems (such as proc, pty)
special_fs_colour = 'blue'

# colour for readonly mounted filesystems
readonly_fs_colour = 'cyan'

# colour for filesystems with usage > FILL_THRESH
filled_fs_colour = 'red'

# colour for filesystems with usage > FULL_THRESH
full_fs_colour = 'on_red', 'green', 'blink'

# default format for displaying sizes "-h" or "-H" or "-m" or "-k" or "--blocks"
sizeformat = "-h"

# string used to separace columns in the table
column_separator = ' '

# colour of the string
column_separator_colour = 'none'

# if the screen is wider than necessary, stretch the bar:
# 0 - do not stretch
# 1 - stretch to fill the whole screen
# real number in between - stretch by this ratio of free space
stretch_screen = 0.3

# filesystem filled up over this limit (in percents) is displayed
# with filled_fs_colour (to show it is dangerously filled up)
FILL_THRESH = 95.0

# filesystem filled up over this limit is displayed with 
# full_fs_colour (to show it is FULL)
FULL_THRESH = 99.0

# Format used to display information: (keyword, size, justify).
# keyword - one of 'fs' 'fstype' 'size' 'used' 'avail' 'perc' 'bar' 'on'.
# size - if 'size' is integer, it is a minimal possible column width of the entry
#        if 'size' is float, it is a minimal column width in percent of screen width
# 
# justify is either "l" for left justify, "r" for right justify or "c" for 
# center.
# You can use any order and any combination of keywords, but
# be careful not to exceed the size of your screen


#format = [    
#            ('fs', 15, "l"), ('size', 9, "r"), 
#            ('used', 9, "r"), ('avail', 9, "r"), ('perc', 5, "r"),
#            ('bar', 8, "l"), ('on', 16, "l")
#         ]

# this is somewhat conservative
# use fixed width for everything, since you want it readable
# only the bar is specified by percentage, because you want it dynamic
format = [    
            ('fs', 10, "l"), ('size', 5, "r"), 
            ('used', 5, "r"), ('avail', 5, "r"), ('perc', 5, "r"),
            ('bar', 0.1, "l"), ('on', 11, "l")
         ]


# character to display filesystem size bar
barchar = '#'

# fill the empty space of the size bar with this character
bar_fillchar = '.'

# hide 'mount --bind' binds?
hidebinds = True

# list of files to try to get mount information from
# on normal linux systems only /etc/mtab or /proc/mounts make sense
mountfile = ['/etc/mtab', '/etc/mnttab', '/proc/mounts']