Does anyone know of any decent online tutorials with regard to Solaris and/or Oracle, currently I'm just hamming my way through but would like to get some more in depth knowledge of the subjects.
And as I'm sat at work all day with nothing to do, I thought I'd give the old brain a workout before... (1 Reply)
i just got used to some basic unix commands etc
i wanted to learn shell programming
i bought the book but it looks like full of command reference and doesn't teach how to do shell scripting
any good ones in this site or over the web .
thank you
siva (1 Reply)
Can anyone give me the link to a website having gdb tutorials
(for advanaced debugging & shortcuts)
http://www.burneddowndays.com/talk/YaBBImages/rolleyes.gif (1 Reply)
Hi..
I required Cygwin User Guide and Reference Materials.If anybody knows the related URL Kindly help me.
Thanks & Regards :)
Sanjay.Karthik (1 Reply)
Hi ,
I would like to know how to write encrytion functions in c++ in linux environment.so would like u get some tutorials on the topic.
Can anyone help (1 Reply)
My project uses Autosys.
I am new to this product and I don't know where to start from.
Q1. Please provide me the link where I can get Autosys documentation
Q2. Please refer a good book on Autosys. (Beginner/Intermediate Level) (0 Replies)
All the autosys jobs are on server-1 and server-1 has been crashed due to some reason, Now I have to run 5 autosys jobs on server-2 (failover server) which are on server 1.
How to do with Autosys command (which command needs to fired on JIL) (0 Replies)
Does anyone have any good .NET Tutorials? What are some good websites for .NET Tutorials? (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: cokedude
0 Replies
LEARN ABOUT ULTRIX
diff3
diff3(1) General Commands Manual diff3(1)Name
diff3 - 3-way differential file comparison
Syntax
diff3 [-ex3] file1 file2 file3
Description
The command compares three versions of a file, and publishes the ranges of text that disagree, flagged with the following codes:
==== all three files differ
====1 file1 is different
====2 file2 is different
====3 file3 is different
The type of change needed to convert a given range of a given file to some other is indicated in one of these ways:
f : n1 a Text is to be appended after line number n1 in file f, where f = 1, 2, or 3.
f : n1 , n2 c
Text is to be changed in the range line n1 to line n2. If n1 = n2, the range may be abbreviated to n1.
The original contents of the range follows immediately after a c indication. When the contents of two files are identical, the contents of
the lower-numbered file is suppressed.
Options-3 Produces an editor script containing the changes between file1 and file2 that are to be incorporated into file3.
-e Produces an editor script containing the changes between file2 and file3 that are to be incorporated into file1.
-x Produces an editor script containing the changes among all three files.
Examples
Under the -e option, publishes a script for the editor that incorporates into file1 all changes between file2 and file3 - that is, the
changes that would normally be flagged ==== and ====3. Option -x (-3) produces a script to incorporate only changes flagged ==== (====3).
The following command applies the resulting script to `file1':
(cat script; echo '1,$p') | ed - file1
Restrictions
Text lines that consist of a single `.' defeat -e.
Files
/tmp/d3?????
/usr/lib/diff3
See Alsocmp(1), comm(1), diff(1), dffmk(1), join(1), sccsdiff(1), uniq(1)diff3(1)