Certainly the tests I am having are showing some really good speed advantages in Linux anyways.
Speed advantages compared to what? While implementing these commands in Perl can be a good exercise, I would be very surprised if a Perl program is faster than the system rm, mv, and cp commands, all of which are implemented in C on GNU systems — and most distributions of Linux use the GNU coreutils package. All of those commands accept the -v option to list the files on which they act and that can be easily translated to "running dots" with Awk: (untested)
cp -v $FROM $TO | awk '{print "."}'I am not entirely convinced that Perl is the right tool for this job, unless, again, you are doing this as a programming exercise.
In reply to Re^3: File::Copy::Recursive - current file/directory being processed
by jcb
in thread File::Copy::Recursive - current file/directory being processed
by bigal_george
| For: | Use: | ||
| & | & | ||
| < | < | ||
| > | > | ||
| [ | [ | ||
| ] | ] |