dwww Home | Manual pages | Find package

LOCATEDB(5)                   File Formats Manual                  LOCATEDB(5)

NAME
       locatedb - front-compressed file name database

DESCRIPTION
       This  manual  page  documents the format of file name databases for the
       GNU version of locate.  The file name databases contain lists of  files
       that  were  in  particular directory trees when the databases were last
       updated.

       There can be multiple databases.  Users can select which databases  lo-
       cate searches using an environment variable or command line option; see
       locate(1).   The  system  administrator can choose the file name of the
       default database, the frequency with which the databases  are  updated,
       and  the  directories  for  which they contain entries.  Normally, file
       name databases are updated by running  the  updatedb  program  periodi-
       cally, typically nightly; see updatedb(1).

GNU LOCATE02 database format
       This  is the default format of databases produced by updatedb.  The up-
       datedb program runs frcode to compress the list  of  file  names  using
       front-compression,  which reduces the database size by a factor of 4 to
       5.  Front-compression (also known as  incremental  encoding)  works  as
       follows.

       The  database entries are a sorted list (case-insensitively, for users'
       convenience).  Since the list is sorted, each entry is likely to  share
       a prefix (initial string) with the previous entry.  Each database entry
       begins  with an signed offset-differential count byte, which is the ad-
       ditional number of characters of prefix of the preceding entry  to  use
       beyond the number that the preceding entry is using of its predecessor.
       (The counts can be negative.)  Following the count is a null-terminated
       ASCII remainder — the part of the name that follows the shared prefix.

       If  the  offset-differential  count  is  larger than can be stored in a
       signed byte (±127), the byte has the value 0x80 (binary  10000000)  and
       the  actual  count  follows  in a 2-byte word, with the high byte first
       (network byte order).  This count can also be negative  (the  sign  bit
       being in the first of the two bytes).

       Every  database begins with a dummy entry for a file called `LOCATE02',
       which locate checks for to ensure that the database file has  the  cor-
       rect format; it ignores the entry in doing the search.

       Databases  cannot  be  concatenated together, even if the first (dummy)
       entry is trimmed from all but the first database.  This is because  the
       offset-differential  count in the first entry of the second and follow-
       ing databases will be wrong.

       In the future, the data within the locate database may not be sorted in
       any particular order.  To obtain sorted results, pipe the output of lo-
       cate through sort -f.

slocate database format
       The slocate program uses a database format similar to,  but  not  quite
       the  same as, GNU locate.  The first byte of the database specifies its
       security level.  If the security level is 0, slocate will  read,  match
       and  print  filenames  on  the basis of the information in the database
       only.  However, if the security level byte is 1, slocate omits  entries
       from  its  output  if  the invoking user is unable to access them.  The
       second byte of the database is zero.  The second byte  is  followed  by
       the  first database entry.  The first entry in the database is not pre-
       ceded by any differential count or dummy entry.  Instead the  differen-
       tial count for the first item is assumed to be zero.

       Starting with the second entry (if any) in the database, data is inter-
       preted as for the GNU LOCATE02 format.

Old Locate Database format
       There is also an old database format, used by Unix locate and find pro-
       grams  and  earlier  releases  of the GNU ones.  updatedb runs programs
       called bigram and code to produce old-format databases.  The old format
       differs from the above description in the following ways.   Instead  of
       each  entry  starting with an offset-differential count byte and ending
       with a null, byte values from 0 through 28 indicate offset-differential
       counts from -14 through 14.  The byte value indicating that a long off-
       set-differential count follows is 0x1e (30), not 0x80.  The long counts
       are stored in host byte order, which is not  necessarily  network  byte
       order, and host integer word size, which is usually 4 bytes.  They also
       represent a count 14 less than their value.  The database lines have no
       termination  byte; the start of the next line is indicated by its first
       byte having a value ≤ 30.

       In addition, instead of starting with a dummy entry, the  old  database
       format  starts with a 256 byte table containing the 128 most common bi-
       grams in the file list.  A bigram is a pair of adjacent  bytes.   Bytes
       in  the  database that have the high bit set are indexes (with the high
       bit cleared) into the bigram table.  The bigram and offset-differential
       count coding makes these databases 20–25% smaller than the new  format,
       but makes them not 8-bit clean.  Any byte in a file name that is in the
       ranges  used  for  the  special  codes is replaced in the database by a
       question mark, which not coincidentally is the shell wildcard to  match
       a single character.

EXAMPLE
       Input to frcode:
       /usr/src
       /usr/src/cmd/aardvark.c
       /usr/src/cmd/armadillo.c
       /usr/tmp/zoo

       Length of the longest prefix of the preceding entry to share:
       0 /usr/src
       8 /cmd/aardvark.c
       14 rmadillo.c
       5 tmp/zoo

       Output  from  frcode, with trailing nulls changed to newlines and count
       bytes made printable:
       0 LOCATE02
       0 /usr/src
       8 /cmd/aardvark.c
       6 rmadillo.c
       -9 tmp/zoo

       (6 = 14 - 8, and -9 = 5 - 14)

REPORTING BUGS
       GNU   findutils   online   help:   <https://www.gnu.org/software/findu-
       tils/#get-help>
       Report any translation bugs to <https://translationproject.org/team/>

       Report any other issue via the form at the GNU Savannah bug tracker:
              <https://savannah.gnu.org/bugs/?group=findutils>
       General  topics  about  the  GNU findutils package are discussed at the
       bug-findutils mailing list:
              <https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/bug-findutils>

COPYRIGHT
       Copyright © 1994-2022 Free Software Foundation, Inc.   License  GPLv3+:
       GNU GPL version 3 or later <https://gnu.org/licenses/gpl.html>.
       This  is  free  software:  you  are free to change and redistribute it.
       There is NO WARRANTY, to the extent permitted by law.

SEE ALSO
       find(1), locate(1), xargs(1), locatedb(5)

       Full documentation <https://www.gnu.org/software/findutils/locatedb>
       or available locally via: info locatedb

                                                                   LOCATEDB(5)

Generated by dwww version 1.16 on Tue Dec 16 06:35:49 CET 2025.