Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: Caching find command
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Caching find command Post 302621867 by methyl on Wednesday 11th of April 2012 08:06:06 AM
Old 04-11-2012
Not as such. Disc buffering can make a second identical search quicker. Attention to kernel tuning for directory buffers can improve search times.

Some O/S have the locate command which is generally faster than find .
 

7 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Filesystems, Disks and Memory

Hard Disk parameters (caching/dma)

Linux uses hdparm to set these parameters, my question is: what tool uses BSD systems (FreeBSD/OpenBSD/NetBSD)? There is another thing which FreeBSD implements on their filesystems: softupdates. If I forgot to enable this option when I partitioned the disk, how could I enable it at a later time? (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: eNTer
1 Replies

2. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Squid not caching properly

Hi guys, Not sure if this post is in the right thread, if not please let me know and I'll ask for it to be moved ) : I've set up the Squid proxy on my linux box (SuSE 10.1). About 4 people connect to the Internet via the proxy at the moment, and it's working fine. However - in the... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: Aeros
0 Replies

3. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Caching while spliting a large file

Hi The scenario is like this. I need to split 5 files having size 3GB, 2GB, 4GB, 30GB and 20 GB respectively. The machine has 15GB heap space. Before starting split proces it was showing 15gb free space. Once the split process completed it showed 100 mb free and around 12GB cached. My... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: siba.s.nayak
3 Replies

4. Linux

caching in squid

hi, i installed fedora core 12, and i installed squid v 3, i need to know how can i cache everything. anyone can help me please (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: zazoo
1 Replies

5. Red Hat

Squid Caching Issue

Hi frnds I recently configured Squid 2.5 stable version on my redhat machine.Caches are storing in my disk (/var/spool/squid) but my access.log file always shows tcp_miss for every site i access as well as store.log file shows release on every action. some of the records of my... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: Vaibhav.T
6 Replies

6. Filesystems, Disks and Memory

SSD Caching, how its done, right choice?

Hello, someone needed VPS with SSD caching, he want to use server for websites hosting. What does that mean, this SSD caching and is it optimal solution for this? Also i listen some SSD dont like too much of writting so how one can recognise certain SSD is made the way that its not destroyed... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: postcd
1 Replies

7. Solaris

Is there disk-level caching in Solaris 11?

I have an iSCSI disk at /dev/rdsk/c5t6d0 I have made a partition (slice with UEFI label) at: /dev/rdsk/c5t6d0s0 Now I write some data to the slice: echo "xyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxy" >/text dd if=/text of=/dev/dsk/c5t6d0s0 If I dump the disk contents I... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: dorbaruch
2 Replies
Pod::Abstract::Filter::find(3pm)			User Contributed Perl Documentation			  Pod::Abstract::Filter::find(3pm)

NAME
Pod::Abstract::Filter::find - paf command to find specific nodes that contain a string. DESCRIPTION
The intention of this filter is to allow a reduction of large Pod documents to find a specific function or method. You call "paf find -f=function YourModule", and you get a small subset of nodes matching "function". For this to work, there has to be some assumptions about Pod structure. I am presuming that find is not useful if it returns anything higher than a head2, so as long as your module wraps function doco in a head2, head3, head4 or list item, we're fine. If you use head1 then it won't be useful. In order to be useful as an end user tool, head1 nodes (...) are added between the found nodes. This stops perldoc from dying with no documentation. These can be easily stripped using: "$pa->select('/head1')", then hoist and detach, or reparent to other Node types. A good example of this working as intended is: paf find select Pod::Abstract::Node AUTHOR
Ben Lilburne <bnej@mac.com> COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
Copyright (C) 2009 Ben Lilburne This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. perl v5.10.1 2010-01-03 Pod::Abstract::Filter::find(3pm)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 09:20 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy