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Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Increase the performance of find command. Post 303041945 by drl on Saturday 7th of December 2019 02:09:29 PM
Old 12-07-2019
Hi.
Quote:
Originally Posted by jim mcnamara
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.
Indeed. The first question one needs to answer is Does it have to be faster? Otherwise you are spending time that probably could be better spent elsewhere.

That being said, I have been [trying to] learn rustc, and have compiled a few codes that are very fast. One is fd. You can see benchmarks comparing it to standard find at GitHub - sharkdp/fd: A simple, fast and user-friendly alternative to 'find'

Depending on choices fd is faster by a factor of 5 up to 9, or even faster if one ignores hidden directories.

However, it would require you to either download a compiled code, or download the Rust system and compile fd yourself. I don't see a version for AIX, so this is academic.

I suppose if enough folks asked for Rust to be ported to platforms like Solaris, AIX, etc., it might happen. It might be worth a try if one really, really wanted that extra bit of speed.

I'll take the speed if it's easy to do and I really need it, but otherwise I have other stuff to do.

Best wishes ... cheers, drl
This User Gave Thanks to drl For This Post:
 

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sum(1)							      General Commands Manual							    sum(1)

NAME
sum - print checksum and block or byte count of file(s) SYNOPSIS
[file ...] Remarks is obsolescent and should not be used in new applications that are intended to be portable between systems. Use instead (see cksum(1)). DESCRIPTION
calculates and prints to standard output a checksum for each named file, and also prints the size of the file in 512 byte blocks, rounded up. The default algorithm is a 16-bit sum of the bytes in which overflow is ignored. Alternate algorithms can be selected with the and options. Standard input is used if no file names are given. is typically used to verify data integrity when copying files between systems. Options recognizes the following options: Use an alternate algorithm in which the 16-bit sum is right rotated with each byte in computing the checksum. Use the 32-bit cyclical redundancy check (CRC) algorithm used by RETURN VALUE
returns the following values upon completion: All files were processed successfully. One or more files could not be read or some other error occurred. If an inaccessible file is encountered, continues processing any remaining files, but the final exit status is affected. DIAGNOSTICS
Read error conditions are indistinguishable from end of file on most devices; check the block or byte count. WARNINGS
This command is likely to be withdrawn from X/Open standards. Applications using this command might not be portable to other vendors' platforms. The usage of cksum(1) is recommended. SEE ALSO
cksum(1), wc(1). STANDARDS CONFORMANCE
sum(1)
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