capacity of keyring
Sascha Kiefer
sk at intertivity.com
Fri Feb 4 12:36:40 CET 2005
Yes. It's pretty worse.
gpg: Total number processed: 569
gpg: w/o user IDs: 3
gpg: imported: 434 (RSA: 36)
gpg: unchanged: 132
the program is still running:
Name Pid Pri Thd Hnd Priv CPU Time Elapsed Time
gpg 3836 8 1 24 230048 0:14:35.265 0:15:55.496
Hmm, thats pretty bad and i have to overthink my ideas!
Holger Sesterhenn schrieb:
> Hi,
>
>> Do you know how many keys can you put into a keystore and
>> still be fast?
>> What happens when I put 10.000 keys in there? What about 100.000 keys?
>
>
> I have done some tests with dumps from a HKP keyserver (> 20MB of
> data, 25000 keys, SuSE Linux 9.x and own Linux distribution).
> GnuPG 1.2.3 crashed during import after about 2500 keys. GnuPG 1.3.9X
> and 1.4.0 did the job but terribly slow.
>
> It took more than 6 hours to '--import' on a P-IV/2,4 MHz (512 MB RAM,
> 40 GB ATA) and was only a bit faster on a dual P-IV/3 Mhz (2 GB RAM,
> SCSI with 64 MB Cache controller).
>
> It's because GnuPG has to scan the whole keyring again and again if
> you append keys to it. It's an exponential behaviour.
>
> GnuPG is still a client software not designed to handle such an amount
> of keys.
>
> But as Werner mentioned, this may change in future releases ;-).
More information about the Gnupg-users
mailing list