Sponsored Content
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Md5sum is running very slowly Post 302886123 by Chubler_XL on Wednesday 29th of January 2014 06:29:08 PM
Old 01-29-2014
How about using perl

Code:
#!/usr/bin/perl -w
use Digest::MD5 qw(md5 md5_hex md5_base64);

open my $DAT, $ARGV[0] or die "Could not open $ARGV[0]: $!";

while (my $line = <$DAT>) {
  chomp $line;
  my @fld = split /¬/, $line;
  print $line . "¬" . md5_hex($fld[24]." ".$fld[25]." ".$fld[26] . "\n") . "\n";
}

close $DAT;

Save as addms5sum.pl and call it like this:

Code:
$ ./addmd5sum.pl /var/IBM/CMA/LandingArea/Analysis/Add.txt > /var/IBM/CMA/LandingArea/Analysis/Add_fixed.txt


Edit: I've included the new line in the md5sum value, remove . "\n" from the md5_hex() call above if you don't need it.
 

6 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

What is md5sum???

Hi all, I am kinda puzzled. When and Why do we use md5sum? I've read man pages for mp5sum, but didn't get anything out of it. Please, can someone explain this to me in couple of words. Thank you all. (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: solvman
1 Replies

2. Solaris

Delete and copy file(s) slowly(!?)

Hi all! I have to monitor space in V890 machine, Solaris 10 weekly, because there is Oracle DB on it with many datafiles which have been taken offline to make enough size. Sometime, one or more datafiles are big, they are 20GB, 40GB etc.. The problem I have encountered is the processing of... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: trantuananh24hg
5 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

Running md5sum on a list of files

Hello, I would like to run md5sum on a list of files saved in a text file, and save the result in another file. (ie. md5sum `cat list.txt` > md5list.txt) I have tried several things, but I am always confronted to the same problem: some of the filenames have spaces. I have run sed on the... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: SDelroen
5 Replies

4. Solaris

Sun StorageTek Common Array Manager 6.0 works very slowly

Hi! I have Sun StorageTek 2540 FC array and CAM works very slowly - I can wait for software response even more than 2 minutes... I run this software on Windows machine with Firefox Web Browser but speed is terrible... How can I make it works at least a little bit faster?.. (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Sapfeer
2 Replies

5. SuSE

SLES 10 SP2 possible kernel problem, / slowly filling up

Hello Guys I first though about posting this to emergency but cause I fixed my issue with an reboot its not as important, more is important to me what caused this situation Some facts: OS: SLES 10 x64 SP2 (Virtualized Vmware ESX 3.5) / vmware tools status OK Soft: Oracle10g LVM... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: kl1ngac1k
1 Replies

6. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Checking Unix Performance - Why is a process running slowly?

Hi Please can someone explain to me how they would go about monitoring the performance of a process in Unix. Lets say that a user is running a process in Unix but it seems to be taking a long time, whereas it completed a lot quicker yesterday. How would you go about investigating what is causing... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Sunny Sid
1 Replies
HFIND(1)						      General Commands Manual							  HFIND(1)

NAME
hfind - Lookup a hash value in a hash database SYNOPSIS
hfind [-i db_type ] [-f lookup_file ] [-eq] db_file [hashes] DESCRIPTION
hfind looks up hash values in a database using a binary search algorithm. This allows one to easily create a hash database and identify if a file is known or not. It works with the NIST National Software Reference Library (NSRL) and the output of 'md5sum'. Before the database can be used by 'hfind', an index file must be created with the '-i' option. This tool is needed for efficiency. Most text-based databases do not have fixed length entries and are sometimes not sorted. The hfind tool will create an index file that is sorted and has fixed-length entries. This allows for fast lookups using a binary search algorithm instead of a linear search such as 'grep'. ARGUMENTS
-i db_type Create an index file for the database. This step must be done before a lookup can be performed. The 'db_type' argument specifies the database type (i.e. nsrl-md5 or md5sum). See section below. -f lookup_file Specify the location of a file that contains one hash value per line. These hashes will be looked up in the database. -e Extended mode. Additional information besides just the name is printed. (Does not apply for all hash database types). -q Quick mode. Instead of displaying the corresponding information with the hash, just display 0 if the hash was not found and 1 if it was. If this flag is used, then only one hash can be given at a time. -V Display version db_file The location of the hash database file. [hashes] The hashes to lookup. If they are not supplied on the command line, STDIN is used. If index files exist for both SHA-1 and MD5 hashes, then both types of hashes can be given at runtime. INDEX FILE
hfind uses an index file to perform a binary search for a hash value. This is much faster than using 'grep', which will do a linear search. Before a hash database is used, a corresponding index file must be created. This is done with the '-i' option to hfind. The resulting index file will be named based on the database file name. The name will have the original name following by the hash type (sha1 or md5) followed by '.idx'. For example, creating an MD5 hash index of the NIST NSRL results in 'NSRLFile.txt-md5.idx' and the SHA-1 index results in 'NSRLFile.txt-sha1.idx'. The file has two columns. Each entry is sorted by the first column, which is the hash value. The second column has the byte offset of the corresponding entry in the original file. So, when a hash is found in the index, the offset is recorded and then 'hfind' seeks to the entry in the original database. The following input types are valid. For NSRL, 'nsrl-md5' and 'nsrl-sha1' can be used. The difference is which hash value the index is sorted by. The 'md5sum' value can also be used to sort and index "home made" databases. 'hfind' can take data in both common formats: MD5 (test.txt) = 76b1f4de1522c20b67acc132937cf82e and 76b1f4de1522c20b67acc132937cf82e test.txt EXAMPLES
To create an MD5 index file for NIST NSRL: # hfind -i nsrl-md5 /usr/local/hash/nsrl/NSRLFile.txt To lookup a value in the NSRL: # hfind /usr/local/hash/nsrl/NSRLFile.txt 76b1f4de1522c20b67acc132937cf82e 76b1f4de1522c20b67acc132937cf82e Hash Not Found You can even do both SHA-1 and MD5 if you want: # hfind -i nsrl-sha1 /usr/local/hash/nsrl/NSRLFile.txt # hfind /usr/local/hash/nsrl/NSRLFile.txt 76b1f4de1522c20b67acc132937cf82e 80001A80B3F1B80076B297CEE8805AAA04E1B5BA 76b1f4de1522c20b67acc132937cf82e Hash Not Found 80001A80B3F1B80076B297CEE8805AAA04E1B5BA thrdcore.cpp To make a database of critical binaries of a trusted system, use 'md5sum': # md5sum /bin/* /sbin/* /usr/bin/* /usr/bin/* /usr/local/bin/* /usr/local/sbin/* > system.md5 # hfind -i md5sum system.md5 To look entries up, the following will work: # hfind system.md5 76b1f4de1522c20b67acc132937cf82e 76b1f4de1522c20b67acc132937cf82e Hash Not Found or # md5sum -q /bin/* | hfind system.md5 928682269cd3edb1acdf9a7f7e606ff2 /bin/bash <...> or # md5sum -q /bin/* > bin.md5 # hfind -f bin.md5 system.md5 928682269cd3edb1acdf9a7f7e606ff2 /bin/bash <...> SEE ALSO
sorter(1) The NIST National Software Reference Library (NSRL) can be found at www.nsrl.nist.gov. LICENSE
Distributed under the Common Public License, found in the cpl1.0.txt file in the The Sleuth Kit licenses directory. AUTHOR
Brian Carrier <carrier at sleuthkit dot org> Send documentation updates to <doc-updates at sleuthkit dot org> HFIND(1)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 08:33 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy