UPDATEDB(1) manual page
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updatedb - update a file name database
updatedb [options]
This
manual page documents the GNU version of updatedb, which updates file name
databases used by GNU locate. The file name databases contain lists of files
that were in particular directory trees when the databases were last updated.
The file name of the default database is determined when locate and updatedb
are configured and installed. The frequency with which the databases are
updated and the directories for which they contain entries depend on how
often updatedb is run, and with which arguments.
In networked environments,
it often makes sense to build a database at the root of each filesystem,
containing the entries for that filesystem. updatedb is then run for each
filesystem on the fileserver where that filesystem is on a local disk,
to prevent thrashing the network. Users can select which databases locate
searches using an environment variable or command line option; see locate(1)
.
Databases can not be concatenated together.
The file name database format
changed starting with GNU find and locate version 4.0 to allow machines
with different byte orderings to share the databases. The new GNU locate
can read both the old and new database formats. However, old versions of
locate and find produce incorrect results if given a new-format database.
- --findoptions=’-option1 -option2...’
- Global options to pass on to find. The
environment variable FINDOPTIONS also sets this value. Default is none.
- --localpaths=’path1
path2...’
- Non-network directories to put in the database. Default is /.
- --netpaths=’path1
path2...’
- Network (NFS, AFS, RFS, etc.) directories to put in the database. The
environment variable NETPATHS also sets this value. Default is none.
- --prunepaths=’path1
path2...’
- Directories to not put in the database, which would otherwise be.
Remove any trailing slashes from the path names, otherwise updatedb won’t
recognise the paths you want to omit (because it uses them as regular expression
patterns). The environment variable PRUNEPATHS also sets this value. Default
is /tmp /usr/tmp /var/tmp /afs.
- --prunefs=’path...’
- File systems to not put in
the database, which would otherwise be. Note that files are pruned when
a file system is reached; any file system mounted under an undesired file
system will be ignored. The environment variable PRUNEFS also sets this
value. Default is nfs NFS proc.
- --output=dbfile
- The database file to build.
Default is system-dependent. In Debian GNU/Linux, the default is /var/cache/locate/locatedb.
- --localuser=user
- The user to search non-network directories as, using su(1)
.
Default is to search the non-network directories as the current user. You
can also use the environment variable LOCALUSER to set this user.
- --netuser=user
- The user to search network directories as, using su(1)
. Default is daemon.
You can also use the environment variable NETUSER to set this user.
- --old-format
- Create the database in the old format. This is a synonym for --dbformat=old.
- --dbformat=F
- Create the database in format F. The default format is called
LOCATE02. F can be old to select the old database format (this is the same
as specifying --old-format). Alternatively the slocate format is also supported.
When the slocate format is in use, the database produced is marked as
having security level 1. If you want to build a system-wide slocate database,
you may want to run updatedb as root.
- --version
- Print the version number
of updatedb and exit.
- --help
- Print a summary of the options to updatedb and
exit.
find(1)
, locate(1)
, locatedb(5)
, xargs(1)
Finding Files (on-line
in Info, or printed)
The updatedb program correctly handles filenames
containing newlines, but only if the system’s sort command has a working
-z option. If you suspect that locate may need to return filenames containing
newlines, consider using its --null option.
The best way to report a bug
is to use the form at http://savannah.gnu.org/bugs/?group=findutils.
The
reason for this is that you will then be able to track progress in fixing
the problem. Other comments about updatedb(1)
and about the findutils
package in general can be sent to the bug-findutils mailing list. To join
the list, send email to bug-findutils-request@gnu.org.
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