06-03-2013
10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hello,
I want to compare two files. All records in file 2 that are not in file 1 should be output to file 3.
For example:
file 1
123
1234
123456
file 2
123
2345
23456
file 3 should have
2345
23456
I have looked at diff, bdiff, cmp, comm, diff3 without any luck! (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: blt123
2 Replies
2. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi,
I have two similar directory structures. One is the latest dev environment and the other is a previous version of the same dev environment.
I need to do a diff on the .cpp .c .java and .h files.
Hence I need a list of all the files of the above pattern so that I can diff then... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: vino
3 Replies
3. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi,
svn diff does not work very well with 2 local folders, so I am trying to do this diff using diff locally.
since there's a bunch of meta files in an svn directory, I want to do a diff that excludes everything EXCEPT *.java files. there seems to be only an --exclude option, so I'm not sure... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: ackbarr
3 Replies
4. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi,
I have written a small shellscript
Imagine dbalt.txt already existed...
"
....
touch report.txt
lynx -dump "http://site.com/index.htm" > site1.txt
lynx -dump "http://site.com/index2.htm" > site2.txt
grep -E 'Nummer: |EUR' site1.txt > preis1.txt
grep -E 'Nummer: |EUR' site2.txt >... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Blackbox
2 Replies
5. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi Everyone,
1.txt
00:01:01 asdf
00:33:33 1234
00:33:33 0987
00:33:33 12
00:33:33 444
2.txt
vvvv|ee
444|dd33|ee
dddd|ee
12|ee
3ciur|fdd
the output should be: (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: jimmy_y
6 Replies
6. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi
I want to compare 2 files. The files have the same amount of rows and columns. So each line must be compare against the other and if one differs from the other, the result of both must be stored in a seperate file.
I am doing this in awk.
Here is my file1:
Blocks... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: ladyAnne
2 Replies
7. Shell Programming and Scripting
Moderator, please, delete this topic (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: optik77
1 Replies
8. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi,
I am new to shell scripting.
please help me to find out the solution.
I need a script where we need to read the text file(consists of all file names) and get the file names one by one
and append the date suffix for each file name as 'yyyymmdd' .
Then search each file if exists... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Lucky123
1 Replies
9. Shell Programming and Scripting
Guys i have 3 files,
but i want to compare and diff only the 2nd column
path=`/home/whois/doms`
for i in `cat domain.tx`
do
whois $i| sed -n '/Registry Registrant ID:/,/Registrant Email:/p' > $path/$i.registrant
whois $i| sed -n '/Registry Admin ID:/,/Admin Email:/p' > $path/$i.admin... (10 Replies)
Discussion started by: kenshinhimura
10 Replies
10. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi Gurus,
I have requirement to compare current result with previous reuslt.
The sample case is below.
1 job1 1
1 job2 2
1 job3 3
2 job_a1 1
2 job_a2 2
2 job_a3 3
3 job_b1 1
3 job_b2 2
for above sample file, GID is group ID, for input line, the job run... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: ken6503
1 Replies
bdiff(1) General Commands Manual bdiff(1)
NAME
bdiff - Finds differences in large files
SYNOPSIS
bdiff file1 file2 [number] [-s]
bdiff - file2 [number] [-s]
bdiff file1 - [number] [-s]
The bdiff command compares file1 and file2 and writes information about their differing lines to standard output. If either filename is -
(dash), bdiff reads standard input.
OPTIONS
Suppresses error messages. (May either precede or follow the number argument if it is specified.)
DESCRIPTION
The bdiff command uses diff to find lines that must be changed in two files to make them identical (see the diff command). Its primary
purpose is to permit processing of files that are too large for diff.
The bdiff command ignores lines common to the beginning of both files, splits the remainders into sections of number lines, and runs diff
on the sections. The output is then processed to make it look as if diff had processed the files whole.
If you do not specify number, a system default is used. In some cases, the number you specify or the default number may be too large for
diff. If bdiff fails, specify a smaller value for number and try again.
Note that because of file segmenting, bdiff does not necessarily find the smallest possible set of file differences. In general, although
the output is similar, using bdiff is not the equivalent of using diff.
NOTES
The diff command is executed by a child process, generated by forking, and communicates with bdiff through pipes.
It should not normally be necessary to use this command, since diff can handle most large files.
EXIT STATUS
No differences. Differences found. An error occurred.
SEE ALSO
Commands: diff(1), diff3(1)
bdiff(1)