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Full Discussion: Help with find command
Top Forums UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users Help with find command Post 302546495 by alister on Thursday 11th of August 2011 10:29:56 AM
Old 08-11-2011
In short, it tells find that instead of exec'ing once per matching pathname, it should collect as many matching pathnames as possible before each exec; in lieu of invoking a program with just a single pathname argument, it's invoked with many.

In your case the issue was semantics not performance, but when dealing with a large number of pathnames, exec-+ will yield a substantial performance gain over exec-; (a lot less fork/exec work to do).

For the detailed explanation, see the find(1) man page under the -exec section: Man Page for find (POSIX Section 1) - The UNIX and Linux Forums

Regards,
Alister
 

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getexecname(3C) 					   Standard C Library Functions 					   getexecname(3C)

NAME
getexecname - return pathname of executable SYNOPSIS
#include <stdlib.h> const char *getexecname(void); DESCRIPTION
The getexecname() function returns the pathname (the first argument of one of the exec family of functions; see exec(2)) of the executable that started the process. Normally this is an absolute pathname, as the majority of commands are executed by the shells that append the command name to the user's PATH components. If this is not an absolute path, the output of getcwd(3C) can be prepended to it to create an absolute path, unless the process or one of its ancestors has changed its root directory or current working directory since the last successful call to one of the exec family of functions. RETURN VALUES
If successful, getexecname() returns a pointer to the executables pathname; otherwise, it returns 0. USAGE
The getexecname() function obtains the executable pathname from the AT_SUN_EXECNAME aux vector. These vectors are made available to dynam- ically linked processes only. A successful call to one of the exec family of functions will always have AT_SUN_EXECNAME in the aux vector. The associated pathname is guaranteed to be less than or equal to PATH_MAX, not counting the trailing null byte that is always present. ATTRIBUTES
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes: +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ | ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ |MT-Level |Safe | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ SEE ALSO
exec(2), getcwd(3C), attributes(5) SunOS 5.10 17 Dec 1997 getexecname(3C)
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