Sponsored Content
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Increase the performance of find command. Post 303041939 by jim mcnamara on Saturday 7th of December 2019 09:28:02 AM
Old 12-07-2019
This standard library call: nftw (or ftw)
IBM Knowledge Center

supports the find command traversing directory file trees - i.e., searching and locating files.

Assuming you want to keep the command you already have (and I am not sue that Rudi's suggested test is valid because of file and directory caching ):

A limiting factor is known to be the number of sub-directories in the file tree, and possibly the number of available open file descriptors - a per process limit.
If you can parallelize your code using several processes it may improve performance. I'm not sure this will help much because it depends on the number of sub-directories being large to gain any benefit. The developers who write system code try to maximize throughput.

What I'm saying is: performance enhancement work is subjective and often a misplaced resource and a waste of programmer time.
Suppose your command runs in one minute in production. Then you work hard and get it down to 35 seconds. The user perception of "slow" will still be there, so you have to get it down to maybe 6 seconds to make users happy and see it as "faster". In this case getting an order of magnitude improvement may not be possible.

And in this case you would have to do something about directory caching messing up testing because (you check this yourself) once you open a directory the system caches it for speedier access. Use the time command and rerun the command to see what I mean:
Code:
time [my long command goes here]
#write down the result
time [my long command goes here]
# write down the result and compare the two resulting times

This User Gave Thanks to jim mcnamara For This Post:
 

9 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

improve performance by using ls better than find

Hi , i'm searching for files over many Aix servers with rsh command using this request : find /dir1 -name '*.' -exec ls {} \; and then count them with "wc" but i would improve this search because it's too long and replace directly find with ls command but "ls *. " doesn't work. and... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Nicol
3 Replies

2. Solaris

What is the command to increase filesystem on solaris

I wanted to know what is the process or command to increase a filesystem on solaris. For example the /tmp directory. (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: strikelit
3 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

Increase Performance

I have written a code using AWK & sed to compare two files. The structure of the files is like this" Format is this: <bit code> <file code> <string> Follwoed by any numbers of properties lines whic start with a "space" 10101010101111101 XX abcd a AS sasa BS kkk 1110000101010110 XX... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: sandeep_hi
1 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

Increase sed performance

I'm using sed to do find and replace. But since the file is huge and i have more than 1000 files to be searched, the script is taking a lot of time. Can somebody help me with a better sed command. Below is the details. Input: 1 1 2 3 3 4 5 5 Here I know the file is sorted. ... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: gpaulose
4 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

SLEEP command performance

Hi, I wanted to run a particlar script for every 20 minutes. I dont have crontab in my server. Hence i ran this script in a loop by providing the command sleep 1200 Now i wanted to know is there any performance issue if this job keeps on execute in the server. Thanks, Puni (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: puni
1 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

Awk : find progressive increase in numbers

NR_037575 -0.155613339079513 -0.952655362767482 -1.42096466949375 -0.797042023687969 -1.26535133041424 -0.468309306726272 NR_037576 0.59124585320226 0.408702582537126 0.888885242203586 -0.182543270665134 0.297639389001326 0.480182659666459... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: quincyjones
4 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

Performance issue while using find command

Hi, I have created a shell script for Server Log Automation Process. I have used find xargs grep command to search the string. for Example, find -name | xargs grep "816995225" > test.txt . Here my problem is, We have lot of records and we want to grep the string... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: nanthagopal
4 Replies

8. Solaris

8 character limit for ipcs command , any way to increase # of chars ?

Hello All, We have a working script which identifies and kills ipcs resources which havent been correctly killed during normal shutdowns. It is working fine and dandy however there are some issues now. Environment: SunOS 5.10 Generic_148888-03 sun4u sparc SUNW,SPARC-Enterprise ... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: icalderus
4 Replies

9. Shell Programming and Scripting

Increase command length for ksh shell on Redhat Linux

I have a ksh shell script and i need to pass arguments which are generated by data pulled from a database. When the argument to the shell script is too long (about 4000 charecters) the below is the issue observed. I copy the command which is 4000 charecters long from the logs and paste it... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: mohtashims
7 Replies
cksum(n)						     Cyclic Redundancy Checks							  cksum(n)

__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

NAME
cksum - Calculate a cksum(1) compatible checksum SYNOPSIS
package require Tcl 8.2 package require cksum ?1.1.2? ::crc::cksum ?-format format? ?-chunksize size? [ -channel chan | -filename file | string ] ::crc::CksumInit ::crc::CksumUpdate token data ::crc::CksumFinal token _________________________________________________________________ DESCRIPTION
This package provides a Tcl implementation of the cksum(1) algorithm based upon information provided at in the GNU implementation of this program as part of the GNU Textutils 2.0 package. COMMANDS
::crc::cksum ?-format format? ?-chunksize size? [ -channel chan | -filename file | string ] The command takes string data or a channel or file name and returns a checksum value calculated using the cksum(1) algorithm. The result is formatted using the format(n) specifier provided or as an unsigned integer (%u) by default. OPTIONS
-channel name Return a checksum for the data read from a channel. The command will read data from the channel until the eof is true. If you need to be able to process events during this calculation see the PROGRAMMING INTERFACE section -filename name This is a convenience option that opens the specified file, sets the encoding to binary and then acts as if the -channel option had been used. The file is closed on completion. -format string Return the checksum using an alternative format template. PROGRAMMING INTERFACE
The cksum package implements the checksum using a context variable to which additional data can be added at any time. This is expecially useful in an event based environment such as a Tk application or a web server package. Data to be checksummed may be handled incrementally during a fileevent handler in discrete chunks. This can improve the interactive nature of a GUI application and can help to avoid excessive memory consumption. ::crc::CksumInit Begins a new cksum context. Returns a token ID that must be used for the remaining functions. An optional seed may be specified if required. ::crc::CksumUpdate token data Add data to the checksum identified by token. Calling CksumUpdate $token "abcd" is equivalent to calling CksumUpdate $token "ab" followed by CksumUpdate $token "cb". See EXAMPLES. ::crc::CksumFinal token Returns the checksum value and releases any resources held by this token. Once this command completes the token will be invalid. The result is a 32 bit integer value. EXAMPLES
% crc::cksum "Hello, World!" 2609532967 % crc::cksum -format 0x%X "Hello, World!" 0x9B8A5027 % crc::cksum -file cksum.tcl 1828321145 % set tok [crc::CksumInit] % crc::CksumUpdate $tok "Hello, " % crc::CksumUpdate $tok "World!" % crc::CksumFinal $tok 2609532967 AUTHORS
Pat Thoyts BUGS, IDEAS, FEEDBACK This document, and the package it describes, will undoubtedly contain bugs and other problems. Please report such in the category crc of the Tcllib SF Trackers [http://sourceforge.net/tracker/?group_id=12883]. Please also report any ideas for enhancements you may have for either package and/or documentation. SEE ALSO
crc32(n), sum(n) KEYWORDS
checksum, cksum, crc, crc32, cyclic redundancy check, data integrity, security COPYRIGHT
Copyright (c) 2002, Pat Thoyts crc 1.1.2 cksum(n)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 11:11 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy