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Special Forums Hardware Filesystems, Disks and Memory Directory is Same but Checksum is different Post 302105031 by Perderabo on Tuesday 30th of January 2007 09:54:59 AM
Old 01-30-2007
I don't know what running "sum on software" means. I don't know what item is being compared to what other item. Are there even two items involved? Are you running sum on an item and later running sum again on the same item?

Because you are running sum on an empty directory, it is clear that you are actually using the directory as input. (As opposed to running sum on the contents of the directory.)

You say "Then our software is deleted, and reinstalled.". You do this because you're not happy with the sum on an empty directory?

A directory entry is a name and an inode number. A directory has many of these. A directory entry is deleted by clobbered the beginning of the name. Directories grow but do not shrink. Two empty directories may be of different sizes. And they may have differents shards of deleted entries laying around. Now put two identical entries in each directory. You may overlay the only differing shard. Or you may still have seemingly identical directories with differing sums.

Because of the tree structure of a file system, there is no legal way to create two identical directories although it can be done through trickery. So I still have no clue as to what you are doing. Smilie
 

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sum(n)									sum								    sum(n)

NAME
sum - calculate a sum(1) compatible checksum SYNOPSIS
package require Tcl 8.2 package require sum ?1.0? ::crc::sum ?-format format? message ::crc::sum ?-format format? -filename file DESCRIPTION
This package provides a Tcl-only implementation of the sum(1) command which calculates a 16 bit checksum value from the input data. The BSD sum algorithm is used by default but the SysV algorithm is also available. COMMANDS
::crc::sum ?-format format? message ::crc::sum ?-format format? -filename file The command takes string data or a file name and returns a checksum value calculated using the sum(1) algorithm. The result is for- matted using the format(n) specifier provided or as an unsigned integer (%u) by default. OPTIONS
-filename name Return a checksum for the file contents instead of for parameter data. -format string Return the checksum using an alternative format template. EXAMPLES
% crc::sum "Hello, World!" 37287 % crc::sum -format 0x%X "Hello, World!" 0x91A7 % crc::sum -file sum.tcl 13392 SEE ALSO
sum(1), cksum(n), crc32(n) AUTHORS
Pat Thoyts KEYWORDS
sum, cksum, checksum, crc, crc32, cyclic redundancy check, data integrity, security crc 1.0 sum(n)
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