Hi everyone!
New user here. Shoot this one down if it's been hashed before:
I just did an archive, merging data from a few sources totaling about 10TB of data. About 6 million files across 700k folders. This is all production based stuff, so it's mostly media: sound bites, images and movies, and a LOT of 3d data (3d binary data files, .OBJs, LIDAR scans and similar). It's basically an archive of a production facility, and the client wants to use it as a sort of library that they can search through. Media is a 10 TB WD external HDD with what appears to be USB 3.
The data has not been written in any coherent way that I can make sense of- just big stacks of folders. But it does look like the time and date stamps are good on the files (folders are all marked with the same date). I am hoping to find an indexing solution that will work across multiple OSs. In order of importance: Windows 10+, Linux, MacOS. Again, these are all "art production" files, so they may be in the hands of a producer (Windows), 3d workstation (linux), or 2d/post which is often MacOS[/latest Mac]. If Everything is as good as it says in is, and as good as it reads, then we may just attach the external HDD with said Everything Index on a windoze machine and force people to use that to retrieve data.
Also note, I am not an IT guy, I'm an artist that got tasked with this. Looks like "Everything" will create a fast index for Windows. Is there an app or client to read that Index via linux, et al? Perhaps I should use a different software to manage this disk-drive? How fast will this be for such a big data set?
Thanks for your consideration!
V
External drive indexing question
Re: External drive indexing question
"Everything" is currently Windows only.
You might find file lists useful?
They are essentially a CSV file with the filename, size and date modified. You should be able to view these on any OS.
What format is the external HDD drive using?
-If it is NTFS, Everything should be able to build an index in a few seconds. Non-NTFS volumes may take a few minutes to index with Everything.
To add your removable NTFS volumes to your Everything index:
You might find file lists useful?
They are essentially a CSV file with the filename, size and date modified. You should be able to view these on any OS.
What format is the external HDD drive using?
-If it is NTFS, Everything should be able to build an index in a few seconds. Non-NTFS volumes may take a few minutes to index with Everything.
To add your removable NTFS volumes to your Everything index:
- In Everything, from the Tools menu, click Options.
- Click the NTFS tab.
- Select your removable NTFS volume.
- Check Include in database.
- Click OK.
- In Everything, from the Tools menu, click Options.
- Click the Folders tab.
- Click Add....
- Select your non-NTFS volume and click OK.
- Click OK.