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Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Read variables and their values from file Post 302383280 by bhushana on Tuesday 29th of December 2009 05:43:12 AM
Old 12-29-2009
Hi,

Basically, I have values in a file as expected_output. These values are the sizes of the diff sections of the elf file.

And if the application is build with a particular option then i expect there should not be any changes to the sizes of some sections.

so i want to compare the expected output values with one i get after rebuilding the application.

I have got the solution:
But I wonder if there is any option which compares two hex values ( as readelf produces hex numbers but with no 0x prefix).
I have used "let "sec_size_hex=0x$sec_size" before doing the comparison.
 

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RCSDIFF(1)						      General Commands Manual							RCSDIFF(1)

NAME
rcsdiff - compare RCS revisions SYNOPSIS
rcsdiff [ -ksubst ] [ -q ] [ -rrev1 [ -rrev2 ] ] [ -T ] [ -V[n] ] [ -xsuffixes ] [ -zzone ] [ diff options ] file ... DESCRIPTION
rcsdiff runs diff(1) to compare two revisions of each RCS file given. Pathnames matching an RCS suffix denote RCS files; all others denote working files. Names are paired as explained in ci(1). The option -q suppresses diagnostic output. Zero, one, or two revisions may be specified with -r. The option -ksubst affects keyword sub- stitution when extracting revisions, as described in co(1); for example, -kk -r1.1 -r1.2 ignores differences in keyword values when compar- ing revisions 1.1 and 1.2. To avoid excess output from locker name substitution, -kkvl is assumed if (1) at most one revision option is given, (2) no -k option is given, (3) -kkv is the default keyword substitution, and (4) the working file's mode would be produced by co -l. See co(1) for details about -T, -V, -x and -z. Otherwise, all options of diff(1) that apply to regular files are accepted, with the same meaning as for diff. If both rev1 and rev2 are omitted, rcsdiff compares the latest revision on the default branch (by default the trunk) with the contents of the corresponding working file. This is useful for determining what you changed since the last checkin. If rev1 is given, but rev2 is omitted, rcsdiff compares revision rev1 of the RCS file with the contents of the corresponding working file. If both rev1 and rev2 are given, rcsdiff compares revisions rev1 and rev2 of the RCS file. Both rev1 and rev2 may be given numerically or symbolically. EXAMPLE
The command rcsdiff f.c compares the latest revision on the default branch of the RCS file to the contents of the working file f.c. ENVIRONMENT
RCSINIT options prepended to the argument list, separated by spaces. See ci(1) for details. DIAGNOSTICS
Exit status is 0 for no differences during any comparison, 1 for some differences, 2 for trouble. IDENTIFICATION
Author: Walter F. Tichy. Manual Page Revision: 1.1.1.1; Release Date: 2002/04/30. Copyright (C) 1982, 1988, 1989 Walter F. Tichy. Copyright (C) 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993 Paul Eggert. SEE ALSO
ci(1), co(1), diff(1), ident(1), rcs(1), rcsintro(1), rcsmerge(1), rlog(1) Walter F. Tichy, RCS--A System for Version Control, Software--Practice & Experience 15, 7 (July 1985), 637-654. GNU
2002/04/30 RCSDIFF(1)
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