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Special Forums Hardware Filesystems, Disks and Memory Compressed Filesystem for Linux Post 302820847 by Corona688 on Thursday 13th of June 2013 02:14:10 PM
Old 06-13-2013
ext3/4 have hashes for big enough directories I believe. Lots of these features can be found in different things, but seldom all together.
 

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Leak(3) 						User Contributed Perl Documentation						   Leak(3)

NAME
Devel::Leak - Utility for looking for perl objects that are not reclaimed. SYNOPSIS
use Devel::Leak; ... setup code my $count = Devel::Leak::NoteSV($handle); ... code that may leak Devel::Leak::CheckSV($handle); DESCRIPTION
Devel::Leak has two functions "NoteSV" and "CheckSV". "NoteSV" walks the perl internal table of allocated SVs (scalar values) - (which actually contains arrays and hashes too), and records their addresses in a table. It returns a count of these "things", and stores a pointer to the table (which is obtained from the heap using malloc()) in its argument. "CheckSV" is passed argument which holds a pointer to a table created by "NoteSV". It re-walks the perl-internals and calls sv_dump() for any "things" which did not exist when "NoteSV" was called. It returns a count of the number of "things" now allocated. CAVEATS
Note that you need a perl built with -DDEBUGGING for sv_dump() to print anything, but counts are valid in any perl. If new "things" have been created, "CheckSV" may (also) report additional "things" which are allocated by the sv_dump() code. HISTORY
This little utility module was part of Tk until the variable renaming in perl5.005 made it clear that Tk had no business knowing this much about the perl internals. AUTHOR
Nick Ing-Simmons <nick@ni-s.u-net.com> perl v5.16.3 2004-03-18 Leak(3)
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