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Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Script to compare 2 files and prints difference as output sidebyside Post 302755335 by RudiC on Saturday 12th of January 2013 03:24:52 PM
Old 01-12-2013
Well, that's a matter of opinion. Result of your code working on requestor's files:
Code:
Line 1 is different:
OLD_FILE: netip :01.99.22.10 NEW_FILE: netip:11.88.23.11
Line 2 is different:
OLD_FILE: username :herty NEW_FILE: username : mmerty
Line 3 is different:
OLD_FILE: component : sds mgm tth NEW_FILE:  
Line 4 is different:
OLD_FILE:   NEW_FILE: link file : gge
Line 5 is different:
OLD_FILE: link file :  NEW_FILE: symbol : £$ %$
Line 6 is different:
OLD_FILE: symbol : £$ %$ NEW_FILE:

You are right when you say line 5 etc. is different, but old line 6 equals new line 5, so a resync should take place (as does diff). Else long files will be entirely different should line 1 be lost... The requestor's sample output vaguely alludes he/she wants resync.

Anyhow, I regretfully apologize for the harsh wording.

Last edited by RudiC; 01-12-2013 at 04:32 PM..
 

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stio(3) 						     Library Functions Manual							   stio(3)

NAME
stio - Routines that provide a binary read/write interface to the symbol table SYNOPSIS
#include <syms.h> long st_readbinary (filename, how) char *filename; char how; long st_readst (fn, how, filebase, pchdr, flags) long fn; char how; long filebase; pCHDRR pchdr; long flags; void st_writebinary (filename, flags) char *filename; long flags; void st_writest (fn, flags) long fn; long flags; DESCRIPTION
The CHDRR structure (see stcu(3)) represents a symbol table in memory. A new CHDRR can be created by reading a symbol table in from disk. The St_readbinary and st_readst routines read a symbol table in from disk. The St_readbinary routine takes the file name of the symbol table and assumes the symbol table header HDRR occurs at the beginning of the file. The St_readst routine assumes that its file number references a file positioned at the beginning of the symbol table header and that the filebase parameter specifies where the object or symbol table file is based (for example, non-zero for archives). The second parameter to the read routines can be `r' for read only or `a' for appending to the symbol table. Existing local symbol, line, procedure, auxiliary, optimization, and local string tables can not be appended. If they did not exist on disk, they can be created. This restriction stems from the allocation algorithm for those symbol table sections when read in from disk and follows the standard pattern for building the symbol table. The symbol table can be read incrementally. If pchdr is zero, st_readst assumes that no symbol table has been read yet; therefore, it reads in the symbol table header and file descriptors. The flags argument is a bit mask that defines what other tables should be read. St_p* constants for each table can be ORed. If flags equals `-1', all tables are read. If pchdr is set, the tables specified by flags are added to the tables that have already been read. The value of pchdr can be gotten from st_current_pchdr (see stcu(3)). Line number entries are encoded on disk, and the read routines expand them to longs. If the version stamp is out of date, a warning message is issued to stderr. If the magic number in the HDRR is incorrect, st_error is called. All other errors cause the read routines to read non-zero; otherwise, a zero is returned. The St_writebinary and st_writest routines are symmetric to the read routines, excluding the how and pchdr parameters. The flags parameter is a bit mask that defines what table should be written. St_p* constants for each table can be ORed. If flags equals `-1', all tables are written. The write routines write sections of the table in the approved order, as specified in the link editor (ld) specification. Line numbers are compressed on disk. The write routines start all sections of the symbol table on four-byte boundaries. If the write routines encounter an error, st_error is called. After writing the symbol table, further access to the table by other routines is undefined. RELATED INFORMATION
stcu(3), stfe(3), stfd(3) delim off stio(3)
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