home/slinx/.frostwire4.18/xml/data/audio.sxml2 home/slinx/.frostwire4.18/themes/GTK_theme/version.txt home/slinx/.frostwire4.18/themes/GTK_theme/theme.txt home/slinx/.frostwire4.18/themes/GTK_theme.fwtp home/slinx/.frostwire4.18/overlays/espsix_older_is_better.jpg home/slinx/.frostwire4.18/overlays/default.png home/slinx/.frostwire4.18/.NetworkShare/Incomplete home/slinx/.frostwire4.18/seenMessages.dat home/slinx/.frostwire4.18/responses.cache home/slinx/.frostwire4.18/questions.props home/slinx/.frostwire4.18/installation.props home/slinx/.frostwire4.18/frostwire.props home/slinx/.frostwire4.18/fileurns.cache home/slinx/.frostwire4.18/createtimes.cache home/slinx/.frostwire4.18/.AppSpecialShare its after I removed it via rpm -e ~]$ locate frostwire I uninstalled because im not sure if it caused it but I was using tcptrack and noticed that I was receiving a lot of syn_sent from an ip like every day even when I have nothing running that should be tracking back to a chinese ip address. In that case, you could remove them (through yum) as well. Sometimes it's obvious, especially if it's the only thing you installed through yum on a particular day. However, you could also look through /var/yum/log and see what packages were installed when you installed frostwire. I think there are various yum commands to locate files like that-that is, packages that were installed as dependencies of another package, but it's after midnight here, and the command escapes me. Not knowing how you installed frostwire, I'll assume you did it through yum. (If I'm telling you things you know, please forgive me, but sometimes folks don't know.) If you once again run updatedb and then try locate myfile, you'll see it's gone. You'll see that locate still finds myfile The thing is though, if you did for example Unlike find (which takes much longer) locate works from a database, which is why it's so quick. Also, did you rerun updatedb before doing locate frostwire.
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