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Re: Cygwin Performance and stat()


On 6/1/2010 5:42 PM, Christopher Wingert wrote:
I think there are a lot of use cases where the extra information (ACL
information *I assume* is the majority of the problem) is unnecessary.
For most of the applications filename, size, and the three dates are all
that is necessary.  So cygwin stat is overkill.  So if I can tell the
emulation layer (via an environment flag) or the actually utility
(bash/ls/make/find/du) via a command line switch, I think I can save a lot
of time waiting.

Just to highlight how bad this problem is.  I have a network drive with
681 sub directories and approximately 90k files.  A time comparison for
getting directory information as follows:

*DOS "dir /s" takes 17 seconds.
*Cygwin "ls -lR" takes 5950 seconds (that's almost two hours).
*msls -lR takes 55 seconds.
*myls (see code below) takes 7 seconds.

Each test was done twice and after a reboot to make sure there was no
caching involved.

To be clear, Cygwin ls is 850X slower.

Thanks for this information and perhaps I'm wrong but I don't believe anyone in this thread thought that you were lying when you noted issues with the performance of stat(). ;-) But providing a variant of stat() along the lines of what you propose above is not practical for all the reasons already stated. I believe we would all like stat() to be quicker but we need something that solves the root of the problem and not partial, hidden solutions that are problematic to use.

--
Larry Hall                              http://www.rfk.com
RFK Partners, Inc.                      (508) 893-9779 - RFK Office
216 Dalton Rd.                          (508) 893-9889 - FAX
Holliston, MA 01746

_____________________________________________________________________

A: Yes.
Q: Are you sure?
A: Because it reverses the logical flow of conversation.
Q: Why is top posting annoying in email?

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