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Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Check for difference in output of 2 commands? Post 302489824 by methyl on Friday 21st of January 2011 06:30:52 PM
Old 01-21-2011
What Operating System are you running?
What Shell are you using?

Scrutinizer has quite correctly posted code using the unix "diff" program which is common to all unix versions.
The "diff" program is a buffered context compare program and shows the context of the difference and the address within each file of the difference. It is a very useful tool for comparing files which are similar and where the data is in no particular order. The "<" ">" signs tell you which file the difference came from.
It is very useful for comparing program code. For larger files there are usually special versions of diff supplied like "bdiff".


Let's say we just want to know the differences regardless of which file they came from and with no context and in no order relative to either file. I use this technique a lot for comparing code, but it works equally well for "ls".
Code:
ls -l > /tmp/my_temp_file
ls -le >> /tmp/my_temp_file
cat my_temp_file | sort | uniq -u

(Yes I know I have used "cat". I like left-to-right flow).

If you really need a one-line solution just replace each newline with a semi-colon.
This User Gave Thanks to methyl For This Post:
 

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GIT-SHELL(1)							    Git Manual							      GIT-SHELL(1)

NAME
git-shell - Restricted login shell for Git-only SSH access SYNOPSIS
chsh -s $(command -v git-shell) <user> git clone <user>@localhost:/path/to/repo.git ssh <user>@localhost DESCRIPTION
This is a login shell for SSH accounts to provide restricted Git access. It permits execution only of server-side Git commands implementing the pull/push functionality, plus custom commands present in a subdirectory named git-shell-commands in the user's home directory. COMMANDS
git shell accepts the following commands after the -c option: git receive-pack <argument>, git upload-pack <argument>, git upload-archive <argument> Call the corresponding server-side command to support the client's git push, git fetch, or git archive --remote request. cvs server Imitate a CVS server. See git-cvsserver(1). If a ~/git-shell-commands directory is present, git shell will also handle other, custom commands by running "git-shell-commands/<command> <arguments>" from the user's home directory. INTERACTIVE USE
By default, the commands above can be executed only with the -c option; the shell is not interactive. If a ~/git-shell-commands directory is present, git shell can also be run interactively (with no arguments). If a help command is present in the git-shell-commands directory, it is run to provide the user with an overview of allowed actions. Then a "git> " prompt is presented at which one can enter any of the commands from the git-shell-commands directory, or exit to close the connection. Generally this mode is used as an administrative interface to allow users to list repositories they have access to, create, delete, or rename repositories, or change repository descriptions and permissions. If a no-interactive-login command exists, then it is run and the interactive shell is aborted. EXAMPLE
To disable interactive logins, displaying a greeting instead: + $ chsh -s /usr/bin/git-shell $ mkdir $HOME/git-shell-commands $ cat >$HOME/git-shell-commands/no-interactive-login <<EOF #!/bin/sh printf '%s ' "Hi $USER! You've successfully authenticated, but I do not" printf '%s ' "provide interactive shell access." exit 128 EOF $ chmod +x $HOME/git-shell-commands/no-interactive-login SEE ALSO
ssh(1), git-daemon(1), contrib/git-shell-commands/README GIT
Part of the git(1) suite Git 1.8.5.3 01/14/2014 GIT-SHELL(1)
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