Hello,
I am looking for a script, or pointer to an approach to creating a script, that will compare two versions of a codebase and output a third directory structure containing only the files that differ between the two. I use diff quite often, but it will only create patch files (AFAIK). Does... (3 Replies)
Hi guys,
I have the following, and would like to enhance it be be able to run it in the hard coded directory and compare each file in the directory with the expectedSizeHow would I go about doing this?
Thanks,
Bloke
#!/bin/sh
] || { echo "Usage: watchSizes 400"; exit 0 ; }
#Hammer: How... (1 Reply)
I have searched about 30 threads, a load of Google pages and cannot find what I am looking for. I have some of the parts but not the whole. I cannot seem to get the puzzle fit together.
I have three folders, two of which contain different versions of multiple files, dist/file1.php dist/file2.php... (4 Replies)
I have four files, I need to compare these files together.
As such i know "sdiff and comm" commands but these commands compare 2 files together. If I use sdiff command then i have to compare each file with other which will increase the codes.
Please suggest if you know some commands whcih can... (6 Replies)
Hi,
I have a situation to compare one file, say file1.txt with a set of files in directory.The directory contains more than 100 files.
To be more precise, the requirement is to compare the first field of file1.txt with the first field in all the files in the directory.The files in the... (10 Replies)
I have two files
File 1 in reading directory is of following format
Read 1 A T
Read 3 T C
Read 5 G T
Read 7 A G
Read 10 A G
Read 12 C G
File 2 in directory contains
Read 5 A G
Read 6 T C
Read 7 G A
Read 8 G A
Read 20 A T
File2 contains (1 Reply)
I would really appreciate any assistance that I can get here.
I am fairly new to perl. I am trying to rewrite my shell scripts to perl.
Currently I have a shell script (using sed, awk, grep, etc) that gets a list of all of the zone files in a directory and then looks in named.conf for what... (0 Replies)
I have a tar arcive
arch_all.tar.gz
and 4 batched tar archive . These batches are supposed to have all the files form arch1.all.tar.gz
arch1_batch1.tar.gz
arch1_batch2.tar.gz
arch1_batch3.tar.gz
arch1_batch4.tar.gz
my issue is that the directory structure in "arch_all.tar.gz" is... (6 Replies)
Given a directory containing say a few thousand files,
please output a list of all the names of the files in the directory that are exactly the same, i.e. have the same contents.
func(a_directory_name) output -> {“matches”: , ... ]}
e.g. func(“/home/my/files”) where the directory... (7 Replies)
Hey
im working on script that can compare 2 directory and check difference, then copy difference files in third diretory.
here is the story:
in folder one we have 12 subfolder and in each of them near 500 images hosted.
01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12
in folder 2 we have same subfolder... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: nimafire
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT NETBSD
gendiff
GENDIFF(1) General Commands Manual GENDIFF(1)NAME
gendiff - utility to aid in error-free diff file generation
SYNOPSIS
gendiff <directory> <diff-extension>
DESCRIPTION
gendiff is a rather simple script which aids in generating a diff file from a single directory. It takes a directory name and a "diff-
extension" as its only arguments. The diff extension should be a unique sequence of characters added to the end of all original, unmodi-
fied files. The output of the program is a diff file which may be applied with the patch program to recreate the changes.
The usual sequence of events for creating a diff is to create two identical directories, make changes in one directory, and then use the
diff utility to create a list of differences between the two. Using gendiff eliminates the need for the extra, original and unmodified
directory copy. Instead, only the individual files that are modified need to be saved.
Before editing a file, copy the file, appending the extension you have chosen to the filename. I.e. if you were going to edit somefile.cpp
and have chosen the extension "fix", copy it to somefile.cpp.fix before editing it. Then edit the first copy (somefile.cpp).
After editing all the files you need to edit in this fashion, enter the directory one level above where your source code resides, and then
type
$ gendiff somedirectory .fix > mydiff-fix.patch
You should redirect the output to a file (as illustrated) unless you want to see the results on stdout.
SEE ALSO diff(1), patch(1)AUTHOR
Marc Ewing <marc@redhat.com>
4th Berkeley Distribution Mon Jan 10 2000 GENDIFF(1)