Locate: Difference between revisions
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Latest revision as of 12:59, 18 March 2025
Locate is a command used in Unix and Unix-like operating systems to find files on a system. It is part of the mlocate package, which is a merge of the 'slocate' and 'locate' commands. The 'locate' command is faster than the 'find' command because it uses a previously built database, whereas 'find' searches in the real system, through all the actual directories and files.
Usage[edit]
The basic syntax of the 'locate' command is:
locate [option] pattern
Where 'option' can be any one of the options that the 'locate' command accepts, and 'pattern' is the name of the file or directory that you're looking for.
Options[edit]
Some of the most commonly used options in the 'locate' command are:
- -i: This option tells 'locate' to ignore case distinctions in both the pattern and the file names.
- -l, --limit, -n: This option limits the number of matches that 'locate' will return.
- -S: This option tells 'locate' to print statistics about each read database.
Examples[edit]
Here are some examples of how to use the 'locate' command:
- To find a file named 'example.txt', you would use:
locate example.txt - To find all files that include 'example' in their name, you would use:
locate example - To find all files that include 'example' in their name, ignoring case, you would use:
locate -i example
See Also[edit]
| Unix commands | ||||||||||
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