Provided by: plocate_1.1.19-2ubuntu2_amd64 

NAME
plocate-build - generate index for plocate
SYNOPSIS
plocate-build [OPTION]... MLOCATE_DB PLOCATE_DB
DESCRIPTION
plocate-build creates an index from plocate(1) from an index earlier generated by updatedb(8) from the
mlocate(1) package. Most users would rather want to use plocate's own updatedb(8), which is more direct.
If PLOCATE_DB already exists, it will be overwritten (non-atomically). The file is created such that it
is not world-readable, as the final access check is done by plocate(1) during the search.
OPTIONS
-b, --block-size SIZE
Create blocks containing SIZE filenames each, compress them together, and treat them as the same
element in the posting lists. This makes the index smaller (because the compression algorithm gets
more context to work with, and because there are fewer elements in each posting list), but also
makes posting lists less precise, moving more work to weeding out false positives after posting
list intersection.
Making this number larger will make linear search (for --regex, or very short patterns) faster,
with diminishing returns around 256 filenames per block. However, making it too large will cause
more false positives, reducing overall performance for typical queries. The default value is 32.
Setting it to 1 makes one (compressed) block per filename.
-p, --plaintext
Treat the input as plain text, with entries delimited by newlines, instead of an mlocate database.
-l, --require-visibility FLAG
Set the “require file visibility before reporting it” flag in the generated database to FLAG. The
default is yes, even for an mlocate database with the flag originally set to no (although the
latter may change in the future).
--help Print out usage information, then exit successfully.
--version
Print out version information, then exit successfully.
AUTHOR
Steinar H. Gunderson <steinar+plocate@gunderson.no>
SEE ALSO
plocate(1), /etc/cron.daily/plocate (which is called update-plocate.sh in the source distribution)
plocate-build Oct 2020 plocate-build(8)