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Full Discussion: sort takes a long time
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting sort takes a long time Post 302494729 by methyl on Tuesday 8th of February 2011 07:54:12 AM
Old 02-08-2011
"Linux" is a bit vague.

Here are my timings for sorting a 600 Mb file after giving "sort" one Gigabyte of memory and a very large workspace. It used about 800 Mb of disc workspace and didn't make a dent in the memory. The unsorted file is random order but I also reverse sorted it to be sure that the test is representative.
This test server is nothing special - a 10 year old HP 9000 with HP-UX 11i and slowish 36Gb 10k rpm discs.

Code:
Ordinary sort:
date;sort -o bigfile.sor -T /workspace -y 1048576 bigfile;date
Tue Feb  8 12:25:47 GMT 2011
Tue Feb  8 12:28:10 GMT 2011

Dictionary sort:
date;sort -fd -o bigfile.sor -T /workspace -y 1048576 bigfile;date
Tue Feb  8 12:31:17 GMT 2011
Tue Feb  8 12:36:19 GMT 2011

Reverse sorting the output from the previous sort:
date;sort -r -fd -o bigfile.rev -T /workspace -y 1048576 bigfile.sor;date
Tue Feb  8 12:44:26 GMT 2011
Tue Feb  8 12:49:07 GMT 2011


Are you sure that you file is only 200 Mb ?

Last edited by methyl; 02-08-2011 at 08:56 AM.. Reason: paste errors
 

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HTTP::Date(3)						User Contributed Perl Documentation					     HTTP::Date(3)

NAME
HTTP::Date - date conversion routines SYNOPSIS
use HTTP::Date; $string = time2str($time); # Format as GMT ASCII time $time = str2time($string); # convert ASCII date to machine time DESCRIPTION
This module provides functions that deal the date formats used by the HTTP protocol (and then some more). Only the first two functions, time2str() and str2time(), are exported by default. time2str( [$time] ) The time2str() function converts a machine time (seconds since epoch) to a string. If the function is called without an argument, it will use the current time. The string returned is in the format preferred for the HTTP protocol. This is a fixed length subset of the format defined by RFC 1123, represented in Universal Time (GMT). An example of a time stamp in this format is: Sun, 06 Nov 1994 08:49:37 GMT str2time( $str [, $zone] ) The str2time() function converts a string to machine time. It returns "undef" if the format of $str is unrecognized, or the time is outside the representable range. The time formats recognized are the same as for parse_date(). The function also takes an optional second argument that specifies the default time zone to use when converting the date. This parame- ter is ignored if the zone is found in the date string itself. If this parameter is missing, and the date string format does not con- tain any zone specification, then the local time zone is assumed. If the zone is not ""GMT"" or numerical (like ""-0800"" or "+0100"), then the "Time::Zone" module must be installed in order to get the date recognized. parse_date( $str ) This function will try to parse a date string, and then return it as a list of numerical values followed by a (possible undefined) time zone specifier; ($year, $month, $day, $hour, $min, $sec, $tz). The $year returned will not have the number 1900 subtracted from it and the $month numbers start with 1. In scalar context the numbers are interpolated in a string of the "YYYY-MM-DD hh:mm:ss TZ"-format and returned. If the date is unrecognized, then the empty list is returned. The function is able to parse the following formats: "Wed, 09 Feb 1994 22:23:32 GMT" -- HTTP format "Thu Feb 3 17:03:55 GMT 1994" -- ctime(3) format "Thu Feb 3 00:00:00 1994", -- ANSI C asctime() format "Tuesday, 08-Feb-94 14:15:29 GMT" -- old rfc850 HTTP format "Tuesday, 08-Feb-1994 14:15:29 GMT" -- broken rfc850 HTTP format "03/Feb/1994:17:03:55 -0700" -- common logfile format "09 Feb 1994 22:23:32 GMT" -- HTTP format (no weekday) "08-Feb-94 14:15:29 GMT" -- rfc850 format (no weekday) "08-Feb-1994 14:15:29 GMT" -- broken rfc850 format (no weekday) "1994-02-03 14:15:29 -0100" -- ISO 8601 format "1994-02-03 14:15:29" -- zone is optional "1994-02-03" -- only date "1994-02-03T14:15:29" -- Use T as separator "19940203T141529Z" -- ISO 8601 compact format "19940203" -- only date "08-Feb-94" -- old rfc850 HTTP format (no weekday, no time) "08-Feb-1994" -- broken rfc850 HTTP format (no weekday, no time) "09 Feb 1994" -- proposed new HTTP format (no weekday, no time) "03/Feb/1994" -- common logfile format (no time, no offset) "Feb 3 1994" -- Unix 'ls -l' format "Feb 3 17:03" -- Unix 'ls -l' format "11-15-96 03:52PM" -- Windows 'dir' format The parser ignores leading and trailing whitespace. It also allow the seconds to be missing and the month to be numerical in most for- mats. If the year is missing, then we assume that the date is the first matching date before current month. If the year is given with only 2 digits, then parse_date() will select the century that makes the year closest to the current date. time2iso( [$time] ) Same as time2str(), but returns a "YYYY-MM-DD hh:mm:ss"-formatted string representing time in the local time zone. time2isoz( [$time] ) Same as time2str(), but returns a "YYYY-MM-DD hh:mm:ssZ"-formatted string representing Universal Time. SEE ALSO
"time" in perlfunc, Time::Zone COPYRIGHT
Copyright 1995-1999, Gisle Aas This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. libwww-perl-5.65 2002-03-07 HTTP::Date(3)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 08:06 AM.
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