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UPDATEDB(1L)							  UPDATEDB(1L)

NAME
       updatedb - update a file name database

SYNOPSIS
       updatedb [options]

DESCRIPTION
       This  manual  page documents the GNU version of updatedb, which updates
       file name databases used by GNU locate.	The file name  databases  con‐
       tain  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 filesys‐
       tem.  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(1L).  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 diffent 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.

OPTIONS
       --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	 data‐
	      base.   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.   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/lib/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 instead of the new one.

       --version
	      Print the version number of updatedb and exit.

       --help Print a summary of the options to updatedb and exit.

SEE ALSO
       find(1L), locate(1L), locatedb(5L), xargs(1L) Finding Files (on-line in
       Info, or printed)

								  UPDATEDB(1L)
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