I am trying to compare two lists that are held in two variables so I believe I need to access the array elements to compare these. I am using ksh 88 and the code I have tried is below:
Unfortunately all are being flagged up as 'not found' when I know there are some of the same filenames in both variables.
I want a soultion to compare two arrays in sh with an easy way.I want a solution to synchrose users between different AIX servers where no NIS is available. All users are meant to be same on all 10 servers. So the approach is to consider first server as master user repository and whatever the users... (0 Replies)
Hi all,
I have the following script where the contents of file1 and file2 would be something like this:
file1:
56790,0,0,100998765
89756,0,0,100567876
867645,1,3,678777654
file2:
56790,0,0,100998765
65776,0,0,4766457890
+5896,0,0,675489876
What I then want to do is check if... (4 Replies)
Hi there all,
I am having a question.
Is it posible to compare elements of 2 different arrays?
For example I got
Array 1 | Array 2
123_abc | 123_bcd
123_bcd | 234_bcd
234_abc | 567_abc
234_bcd | 123_abc
than the match is
123_abc & 234_bcd and non of the others.
So... (3 Replies)
Hello,
Let's say that we have the two following arrays
@array1=
@array2=
Is there any easy way to compare these two arrays and print the values that exist in array1 and not in array2 and the values that exist in array2 and not in array1?
Regards,
Chriss_58 (3 Replies)
Hi Im supposed to compare lines in a file :
KB0005 1019 T IFVATVPVI 0.691 PKC YES
KB0005 1036 T YFLQTSQQL 0.785 PKC YES
KB0005 1037 S FLQTSQQLK 0.585 DNAPK YES
KB0005 1045 S KQLESEGRS 0.669 PKC YES
KB0005 1045 S KQLESEGRS 0.880 unsp YES
KB204320 1019 T IFVATVPVI 0.699 PKC YES
... (7 Replies)
Hi,
my first post here!
Description of my problem:
I have one txt-file with six rows and each row contains seven numbers seperated with whitespaces.
I want to:
Compare one array with seven numbers with each row of numbers in the txt-file.
I have managed to compare one array with... (6 Replies)
Hello,
Consider the following 2 arrays:
Array1 = qw(Fa0/0 Fa0/1 Fa0/2 Fa0/3);
Array1 = qw(Fa0/1 Fa0/2 Fa0/3 Fa0/4);
I want to compare the following 2 arrays as follows:
Take specific action when elements of Array1 that doesn't exist in Array2 (in my example: Fa0/0).
Take another... (4 Replies)
I've been trying to have an array of ip addresses go through a loop one at a time. Then compare if the current element is in another array of ip addresses. I've traced my error with /bin/bash -x
+ for c in '"${ip}"'
./netk5: line 65: 50.17.231.23 23.64.146.110 23.64.159.139 107.14.36.129... (17 Replies)
I have two arrays and they look like this:
array=(`cat /local/mnt/*sys/*includes|grep -v NEW`)
array2=(`cat /tmp/*sys.z |grep -v NEW`)
I am trying to compare them but I need to use the diff -u command. I am not sure how to do this. I cannot just do diff -u ${array} ${array2}
I cannot... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: newbie2010
4 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
file::dircompare
DirCompare(3pm) User Contributed Perl Documentation DirCompare(3pm)NAME
File::DirCompare - Perl module to compare two directories using callbacks.
SYNOPSIS
use File::DirCompare;
# Simple diff -r --brief replacement
use File::Basename;
File::DirCompare->compare($dir1, $dir2, sub {
my ($a, $b) = @_;
if (! $b) {
printf "Only in %s: %s
", dirname($a), basename($a);
} elsif (! $a) {
printf "Only in %s: %s
", dirname($b), basename($b);
} else {
print "Files $a and $b differ
";
}
});
# Version-control like Deleted/Added/Modified listing
my (@listing, @modified); # use closure to collect results
File::DirCompare->compare('old_tree', 'new_tree', sub {
my ($a, $b) = @_;
if (! $b) {
push @listing, "D $a";
} elsif (! $a) {
push @listing, "A $b";
} else {
if (-f $a && -f $b) {
push @listing, "M $b";
push @modified, $b;
} else {
# One file, one directory - treat as delete + add
push @listing, "D $a";
push @listing, "A $b";
}
}
});
DESCRIPTION
File::DirCompare is a perl module to compare two directories using a callback, invoked for all files that are 'different' between the two
directories, and for any files that exist only in one or other directory ('unique' files).
File::DirCompare has a single public compare() method, with the following signature:
File::DirCompare->compare($dir1, $dir2, $sub, $opts);
The first three arguments are required - $dir1 and $dir2 are paths to the two directories to be compared, and $sub is the subroutine
reference called for all unique or different files. $opts is an optional hashref of options - see OPTIONS below.
The provided subroutine is called for all unique files, and for every pair of 'different' files encountered, with the following signature:
$sub->($file1, $file2)
where $file1 and $file2 are the paths to the two files. For 'unique' files i.e. where a file exists in only one directory, the subroutine
is called with the other argument 'undef' i.e. for:
$sub->($file1, undef)
$sub->(undef, $file2)
the first indicates $file1 exists only in the first directory given ($dir1), and the second indicates $file2 exists only in the second
directory given ($dir2).
OPTIONS
The following optional arguments are supported, passed in using a hash reference after the three required arguments to compare() e.g.
File::DirCompare->compare($dir1, $dir2, $sub, {
cmp => $cmp_sub,
ignore_unique => 1,
});
cmp By default, two files are regarded as different if their contents do not match (tested with File::Compare::compare). That default
behaviour can be overridden by providing a 'cmp' subroutine to do the file comparison, returning zero if the two files are equal, and
non-zero if not.
E.g. to compare using modification times instead of file contents:
File::DirCompare->compare($dir1, $dir2, $sub, {
cmp => sub { -M $_[0] <=> -M $_[1] },
});
ignore_cmp
If you want to see all corresponding files, not just 'different' ones, set the 'ignore_cmp' flag to tell File::DirCompare to skip its
file comparison checks i.e.
File::DirCompare->compare($dir1, $dir2, $sub,
{ ignore_cmp => 1 });
ignore_unique
If you want to ignore files that only exist in one of the two directories, set the 'ignore_unique' flag i.e.
File::DirCompare->compare($dir1, $dir2, $sub,
{ ignore_unique => 1 });
SEE ALSO
File::Dircmp, which provides similar functionality (and whose directory walking code I've adapted for this module), but a simpler
reporting-only interface, something like the first example in the SYNOPSIS above.
AUTHOR AND CREDITS
Gavin Carr <gavin@openfusion.com.au>
Thanks to Robin Barker for a bug report and fix for glob problems with whitespace.
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
Copyright 2006-2007 by Gavin Carr.
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
perl v5.10.1 2010-03-02 DirCompare(3pm)