just to get you started, here's one way.
Then you can just pipe this output to B.
I just had a play with this on Solaris, it looks like comm works a little differently.
On your system, with the above example, does comm -3 file1 file2 produce the string 'ratxxxx' even if file1 has a lot of lines at the start (ie before 'hatxxxx')?
HP-UX 11
I currently have a script that is running useradd and passwd commands to automate setting up new users. It was originally designed so that passwd was run with -d -f to delete a passwd and force user to set passwd at next login. Now mgmt wants instead to set a first-time passwd and have... (2 Replies)
hi, am new to AIX.
i have an issue. iam asked to change the umask setting on a logon script on a server to prevent writable files. i logged in as the root user and typed in umask and it displays 022, which i believe is 755 for direc and 644 for files.
1) how to I identify where the logon script... (2 Replies)
Hi All,
I know to set global variable i can use export .. But take the situation like below ..
I want to set a variable in one script and access that in second script
i have done like this .. It is not working
one.sh
#!/usr/bin/ksh
echo $RISSHI
export RISSHI=1
two.sh... (3 Replies)
Hi,
I wrote two small scripts to set env variables in a shell.
java_env.csh
#!/bin/csh -fn
setenv JAVA_HOME '/scratch/software/jdk1.5.0_11'
setenv PATH $PATH':'$JAVA_HOME'/bin'
and run it using csh ./java_env.csh
But the env variables are not set. I tried running each line on the... (5 Replies)
Hello all, I am trying to setup a script that will copy any files older than 30 days in four directories to my windows box, then delete any files older than 30days in the four directories, verify that they are deleted, then send me a confirmation email.
I would like to set this up as a cron job... (10 Replies)
Hello all,
I know this must be simple .... but i can't grasp what could be the issue.
I'm trying to setup the timezone variable (to the unix command date) according to what i find in a value that i got from parsing the config file.
The end result would be setting the log file with this new... (4 Replies)
I have a script and I want the verbosity option to work in the following way:
User can either set quiet (no verbosity), use default verbosity level (when doing -v), or set a level value (when doing -v=2 or --vrbLevel=2).
I am making some more progress on this and am thinking of this idea.
... (4 Replies)
Dear all,
I wonder if it is possible that we can run the script
from time to time..I meant, it should repeat the
sourcing of the script by itself? In my case, I need
to source this script manually from time to time,
like once in every 10 minutes.
emily, (2 Replies)
Trying to figure out the best method of security for oracle user accounts. In Solaris 10 they are set as regular users but have nologin set forcing the dev's to login as themselves and then su to the oracle users.
In Solaris11 we have the option of making it a role because RBAC is enabled but... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: os2mac
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT MINIX
diff
DIFF(1) General Commands Manual DIFF(1)NAME
diff - print differences between two files
SYNOPSIS
diff [-c | -e | -C n] [-br]file1 file2
OPTIONS -C n Produce output that contains n lines of context
-b Ignore white space when comparing
-c Produce output that contains three lines of context
-e Produce an ed-script to convert file1 into file2
-r Apply diff recursively to files and directories of
EXAMPLES
diff file1 file2 # Print differences between 2 files
diff -C 0 file1 file2
# Same as above
diff -C 3 file1 file2
# Output three lines of context with every
diff -c file1 file2 # Same
diff /etc /dev # Compares recursively the directories /etc and /dev
diff passwd /etc # Compares ./passwd to /etc/passwd
DESCRIPTION
the same name, when file1 and file2 are both directories" difference encountered"
Diff compares two files and generates a list of lines telling how the two files differ. Lines may not be longer than 128 characters. If
the two arguments on the command line are both directories, diff recursively steps through all subdirectories comparing files of the same
name. If a file name is found only in one directory, a diagnostic message is written to stdout. A file that is of either block special,
character special or FIFO special type, cannot be compared to any other file. On the other hand, if there is one directory and one file
given on the command line, diff tries to compare the file with the same name as file in the directory directory.
SEE ALSO cdiff(1), cmp(1), comm(1), patch(1).
DIFF(1)