Provided by: codesearch_0.0~hg20120502-2_amd64 bug

NAME

       cindex - prepares the trigram index for csearch(1)

SYNOPSIS

       cindex [-list] [-reset] [ path...  ]

DESCRIPTION

       Cindex  prepares  the  trigram  index  for  use by csearch. The index is the file named by
       $CSEARCHINDEX, or else $HOME/.csearchindex.

       The simplest invocation is

           cindex path...

       which adds the file or directory tree named by each path to the index.  For example:

           cindex $HOME/src /usr/include

       or, equivalently:

           cindex $HOME/src
           cindex /usr/include

       If cindex is invoked with no paths, it reindexes the paths that have already  been  added,
       in  case the files have changed.  Thus, 'cindex' by itself is a useful command to run in a
       nightly cron job.

       The -list flag causes cindex to list the paths it has indexed and exit.

       By default cindex adds the named paths to the index but preserves information about  other
       paths  that  might  already be indexed (the ones printed by cindex -list). The -reset flag
       causes cindex to delete the existing index before indexing the new  paths.  With  no  path
       arguments, cindex -reset removes the index.

OPTIONS

       -list  List the indexed paths and exit.

       -reset Delete  the  existing  index before indexing the new paths. With no path arguments,
              -reset removes the index.

ENVIRONMENT

       Cindex uses the index stored in $CSEARCHINDEX or, if that  variable  is  unset  or  empty,
       $HOME/.csearchindex.

       Furthermore,  cindex  honors  the  standard  TMPDIR environment variable when creating its
       temporary files. In case the temporary files exceed the space you have in  /tmp,  possibly
       because  /tmp  is  a tmpfs and thus using your RAM, feel free to set TMPDIR to a different
       path than /tmp.

SEE ALSO

       csearch(1), cgrep(1).

AUTHOR

       This manual page was written by Michael Stapelberg <stapelberg@debian.org>, for the Debian
       project (and may be used by others).

                                            2013-06-23                                  CINDEX(1)