![]() ![]() If you must get rid of the cache files, let the browsers handle it themselves. Unless you are hard pressed with disk space, I’d say let the caches do what they are designed to do: speed up your browsing resulting in better user experience. In Linux, the majority of the disk space freed by BleachPit comes from browser cache files. This is due to the way Windows internals work, monolithic registry being the major culprit and already discussed in this thread. The main selling point of BleachPit for Windows is that it speeds up the computer. ![]() I must somewhat agree with your friend, IMHO BleachPit for Linux is a solution to a problem *nix systems generally don’t have. Overwrite data in SQLite3 before deleting it to prevent recovery (optional) ini and JSON configuration files and SQLite3 databases without deleting the whole file Surgically remove private information from. Vacuum Firefox, Google Chrome, Liferea, Thunderbird, and Yum databases: shrink files without removing data to save space and improve speed ![]() Overwrite free disk space to hide previously files DS_Store files.Įxecute yum clean for CentOS, Fedora, and Red Hat to remove cached package dataĭelete Windows registry keys-often where MRU (most recently used) lists are storedĭelete the recent documents list without deleting the whole Common.xcu file More powerful than localepurge and available on more Linux distributions.Ĭlean APT for Debian, Ubuntu, Kubuntu, Xubuntu, and Linux Mintįind widely-scattered junk such as Thumbs.db and. Going beyond standard deletion of files, BleachBit has several advanced cleaners: Clear the memory and swap on Linuxĭelete the Firefox URL history without deleting the whole file-with optional shreddingĭelete Linux localizations: delete languages you don't use. AdanaxisĪdd 2500+ cleaners by using winapp2.ini (Windows only). The following is a list of cleaners available in BleachBit 0.9.2. I had no intention of stating all the facts Just starting the thread out.but. ![]()
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