* mu-index.1: updated manpage with some recent performance numbers
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@ -20,7 +20,7 @@ then be searched using
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understands Maildirs as defined by Daniel Bernstein for qmail(7). In addition,
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it understands recursive Maildirs (Maildirs within Maildirs), Maildir++. It
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can also deal with VFAT-based Maildirs which use '!' as the seperators instead
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of ':' as used by Tinymail/Modest and some other e-mail programs.
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of ':' as used by \fITinymail\fR/\fIModest\fR and some other e-mail programs.
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E-mail messages which are not stored in something resembling a maildir leaf
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directory (\fIcur\fR and \fInew\fR) are ignored.
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@ -86,12 +86,12 @@ format. \fBmu index\fR will issue a warning about this.
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\fB\-\-autoupgrade\fR automatically use \fB\-y\fR, \fB\-\-empty\fR
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when \fBmu\fR notices that the database version is not up-to-date. This option
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is for use in cron scripts and the like, so they won't require any user
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interaction, even when mu introduces a new database vesion.
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interaction, even when mu introduces a new database version.
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.TP
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.B NOTE:
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It is probably not a good idea to run multiple instances of
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It is not a good idea to run multiple instances of
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.B mu index
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concurrently. No data loss should occur, but one or more of the instances may
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experience errors due to database locks.
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@ -108,15 +108,15 @@ search parameter (see below).
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.SS A note on performance
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As a non-scientific benchmark, a simple test on the authors machine (a
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Thinkpad X61s laptop using Linux 2.6.31 and an ext3 file system) with no
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existing database, and a maildir with 14,200 messages:
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Thinkpad X61s laptop using Linux 2.6.35 and an ext3 file system) with no
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existing database, and a maildir with 27273 messages:
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.nf
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$ sudo sh -c 'sync && echo 3 > /proc/sys/vm/drop_caches'
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$ time mu index --quiet
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83.36s user 6.49s system 43% cpu 3:26.21 total
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66,65s user 6,05s system 27% cpu 4:24,20 total
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.si
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(about 69 messages per second)
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(about 103 messages per second)
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A second run, which is the more typical use case when there is a database
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already, goes much faster:
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@ -124,9 +124,9 @@ already, goes much faster:
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.nf
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$ sudo sh -c 'sync && echo 3 > /proc/sys/vm/drop_caches'
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$ time mu index --quiet
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0.29s user 0.62s system 14% cpu 6.409 total
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0,48s user 0,76s system 10% cpu 11,796 total
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.si
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(about 2219 message per second)
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(more than 2300 messages per second)
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Note that each of test flushes the caches first; a more common use case might
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be to run \fBmu index\fR when new mail has arrived; the cache may stay
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@ -134,10 +134,14 @@ quite 'warm' in that case:
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.nf
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$ time mu index --quiet
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0.19s user 0.21s system 98% cpu 0.402 total
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0,33s user 0,40s system 80% cpu 0,905 total
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.si
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which is more than 35,0000 messages per second (there is some variance here,
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but the author has not seen it getting under 30,0000 messages per second).
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which is more than 30000 messages per second.
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In general, \fBmu\fR has been getting faster with each release, even with
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relatively expensive new features such as text-normalization (for
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case-insensitve/accent-insensitive matching). The profiles are dominated by
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operations in the Xapian database now.
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.SH FILES
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By default, \fBmu index\fR stores its message database in \fI~/.mu/xapian\fR;
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