Linda Walsh sent the following at Saturday, February 13, 2016 7:15 AM >Marco Atzeri wrote: --- >> On 11/02/2016 19:33, Byron Boulton wrote: >>> On 2/11/2016 1:18 PM, cyg Simple wrote: >>>> On 2/11/2016 9:00 AM, Byron Boulton wrote: >>>>> Does anyone here have success using `updatedb` and `locate` in >>>>> cygwin? I use `locate` heavily on my Linux machines, but everytime >>>>> I've tried to run `updatedb` on cygwin I've given up and killed the >>>>> process because it is taking too long. > There's a reason why on linux it is usually set to run when you are asleep. ;-) > >>>>> Is there something wrong with cygwin's implementation of >>>>> `updatedb` making it not work at all or making it slower that on my >>>>> Linux machines? Or are there others who have success using it on >>>>> cygwin? > >But it might have to do with disk speed and memory. Laptop drives are >usually among the slowest. > >I ran it just now (this is with MS's Home Essentials real-time >protection turned on). >> locate / >/tmp/all >> wc /tmp/all > 1479146 4014375 133322318 /tmp/all >> df . > >law.Bliss/bin> time index_files.sh 670592 (process ID) old priority 0, >new priority 19 44.21sec 15.06usr 28.30sys (98.09% cpu) Filesystem Size >Used Avail Use% Mounted on C: 949G 585G 365G 62% / ---- > >So ~1.4 million files... Using the following exclusions: > Local+=" /windows/sysnative/." > >---(index_files.sh)---- renice +19 $$ Local="/" if [[ -d >/windows/sysnative/. ]]; then fi Prunepaths='/.usr /proc /C /B /H /I >/M /D /P /System[[:space:]]Volume[[:space:]]Information /Windows/CSC >/pagefile.sys /Music /Pictures /Share /Media /home /Doc /$RECYCLE.BIN >/cygdrive' > >/bin/updatedb --findoptions=-noleaf --localpaths="$Local" >--prunepaths="$Prunepaths" --netpaths="$Net" ---- Most of those pruned >files are pruned either due to redundancy or being on a local network >server... > >That's fairly fast vs. the MS-Home Essentials, full malware scan I >run once a week that takes ~ 8-16 hours (It scans a few of my network >directories,as well). > >>>> Processing every file on the drive will be slow just because it's >>>> Windows. Initializing the database with updatedb will require a large >>>> amount of time. There are processes such as AntiVirus intrusion >>>> protection that might make it even slower. >>>> >>> Hmmm, the reason the slowness is particuarly strange to me is that in >>> place of using `locate` from my cygwin terminal, I have to use a program >>> called "Everything Search Engine" available at www.voidtools.com. The >>> first time I install it, it takes maybe a few minutes to index the hard >>> drive, then every once in a while when I open the program it takes a few >>> seconds to update the index, but in general the performance for indexing >>> and searching the index if comparable to `updatedb` and `locate` on a >>> Linux machine, so it's possible to do on Windows. >>> >>> Byron >>> >> >> the time taken from updatedb is mainly due to >> the execution time of "find" on the disks. >> >> It takes ~ 70 minutes for my 500 GB of data, >> and likely the AV is impacting the execution. >> >> I suspect voidtools is using MS disk indexing >> to speed up the things for it. This is technically OT since this involved a non-cygwin tool. find is slow compared with a non-Cygwin tool, specifically dir (cmd.exe). Compare find with cmd.exe's dir. Note that even with the benefit of caching (compare the 1st and 3rd times), find takes twice as long as dir. Comparing cached times (2nd vs 3rd), dir is 3X faster. $ time cmd /c dir /s /b 'C:\usr' > /dev/null ; \ time find /c/usr > /dev/null ; \ time cmd /c dir /s /b 'C:\usr' > /dev/null real 0m1.326s user 0m0.000s sys 0m0.047s real 0m2.465s user 0m0.280s sys 0m2.184s real 0m0.874s user 0m0.000s sys 0m0.031s (Note: c:\usr has nothing to do with /usr.) Here's how I use dir *in the abstract* for drives C: and D:. (Note: the /a: option of dir lists all files, including hidden ones; /o:n sorts by name.) for D in /c /d do "$(cygpath "${COMSPEC}")" /c dir /s /b /a: /o:n "$(cygpath -w "$D")" done | \ tr -s '\r\n' '\n' | \ cygpath -u -f - | \ sed -e '/^$/d' -e 's,/\+,/,g' \ sort -u \ /usr/libexec/frcode > /tmp/updatedb.tmp chmod --reference /var/locatedb /tmp/updatedb.tmp mv /tmp/updatedb.tmp /var/locatedb What I actually do (attached) is more complicated. My script chooses which directories are scanned, does them in parallel, and prints pretty messages. I get error message for very long paths (> ~250 bytes). It works well enough for me; YMMV. - Barry Disclaimer: Statements made herein are not made on behalf of NIAID.