mlocate binary package in Ubuntu Xenial arm64
mlocate is a new implementation of locate, a tool to find files
anywhere in the filesystem based on their name, using a fixed pattern
or a regular expression. Unlike other tools like find(1), locate uses
a previously created database to perform the search, allowing queries
to execute much faster. This database is updated periodically from
cron.
.
Several implementations of locate exist: the original implementation
from GNU's findutils, slocate, and mlocate. The advantages of mlocate
are:
.
* it indexes all the filesystem, but results of a search will only
include files that the user running locate has access to. It does
this by updating the database as root, but making it unreadable for
normal users, who can only access it via the locate binary. slocate
does this as well, but not the original locate.
.
* instead of re-reading all the contents of all directories each time
the database is updated, mlocate keeps timestamp information in its
database and can know if the contents of a directory changed without
reading them again. This makes updates much faster and less demanding
on the hard drive. This feature is only found in mlocate.
.
Installing mlocate will change the /usr/bin/locate binary to point to
mlocate via the alternatives mechanism. After installation, you may
wish to run /etc/cron.
otherwise mlocate won't work until that script is run from cron itself
(since mlocate does not use the same database file as standard locate).
Also, you may wish to remove the "locate" package in order not to have
two different database files updated regularly on your system.
Publishing history
Date | Status | Target | Component | Section | Priority | Phased updates | Version | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2015-10-22 15:20:22 UTC | Published | Ubuntu Xenial arm64 | release | main | utils | Standard | 0.26-1ubuntu2 | ||
|