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Operating Systems Linux Fedora Desktop search and web history Post 302333189 by TonyFullerMalv on Saturday 11th of July 2009 01:32:41 PM
Old 07-11-2009
Is it that your cache still contains cached web pages even though the history has been purged?
The cache is limited to a certain size so one would expect the old pages to be removed eventually within a couples of weeks not years!?
What is the directory where Desktop Search is finding web pages?
 

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DWWW-CACHE(8)							      Debian							     DWWW-CACHE(8)

NAME
dwww-cache - manage the dwww cache of converted documents SYNOPSIS
dwww-cache --lookup type location dwww-cache --store type location dwww-cache --list type location dwww-cache --list-all dwww-cache --clean DESCRIPTION
dwww-cache manages the cache of converted documents; it is part of dwww(7). An option (the first argument) specifies the operation. Some operations operate on the whole cache, and need no other arguments. Others need the second and third argument to specify the type and pathname of the original document. (See dwww-convert(8) for more information about the arguments.) The operations are: --lookup If the document is in the cache, output it to the standard output. Otherwise, output nothing and return a non-zero status. --store Read the document from the standard input, output it to the standard output and store it into the cache. If there was an older ver- sion already in the cache, remove it. --list Output information about one document in the cache to the standard output. The information is one line, with four space delimited fields: type, pathname of original, pathname of cached, and permanent flag (y or n). --list-all Like --list, but for all documents. --clean Forget all cached documents that have been deleted. dwww-cache maintains a database with information of the cached documents. The documents themselves are stored in separate files in the cache directory. When old documents are removed from the cache by a suitable crontab entry, they will still exist in the database. This operation removes all entries from the database where either the original or the converted file is now missing. To stop the cache from growing too large, an entry in root's crontab should remove cached files that have not been accessed for a while. For example, the following commands remove all documents that have not been accessed for ten days: find /var/cache/dwww -atime +10 | xargs rm -f dwww-cache --clean The idea is to first delete the old cached files and then clean up the database. The policy of cleaning the cache has been kept outside of dwww-cache to keep the program simple, and to allow maximum flexibility. The default dwww installation creates a /etc/cron.daily/dwww, which automatically cleans the cache each day. FILES
/var/cache/dwww/db The cache directory. /var/cache/dwww/db/.cache_db The database with information about all cached documents. This is a binary file, specially encoded for small size and high speed, and should not be touched by anyone but dwww-cache. SEE ALSO
dwww(7), dwww-convert(8). AUTHOR
Lars Wirzenius <liw@iki.fi>. Modified by Robert Luberda <robert@debian.org>. See dwww(7) for copyrights and stuff. dwww 1.11.1 February 15th, 2009 DWWW-CACHE(8)
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