12-09-2016
Will you please advise how to do so ?
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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
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madvise(2) System Calls Manual madvise(2)
NAME
madvise() - advise the system of a process's expected paging behavior
SYNOPSIS
DESCRIPTION
The system call permits a process to advise the system about its expected future behavior in referencing a mapped file, an anonymous memory
region, or a shared memory region. Certain implementations can use this information to optimize the use of resources.
addr and len specify the address and length in bytes of the region to which the advice refers. For the address and length must be con-
tained within a successful call to (see mmap(2)) or a successful call to (see shmat(2)); otherwise, fails with an [EINVAL] error.
The behav argument is one the following flags defined in the header
Removes any previous advice and sets the default behavior. By default, the kernel tracks access patterns on data objects and per-
forms I/Os based on process trends (that is, sequential versus random). Sequential trends cause larger "read-ahead" I/Os, while
random accesses reduce the amount of I/O to avoid unnecessary I/O.
Informs the kernel that any objects mapped in this range
will be accessed in a random matter. The kernel will read only the minimal amount of data to satisfy the user fault.
Informs the kernel that any objects mapped in this range
will be accessed in a sequential matter. The kernel will perform the maximum read-ahead for every fault. The kernel does
not pay attention to access patterns and trends, but instead assumes sequentiality for every access on the object.
Informs the kernel that the specified range
is no longer needed by the process. This allows the kernel to release the physical pages associated with an address range
back to the system for use by other processes.
is restricted to object ranges created with calls to and Attempting to use on an object that was not created using a call to
or will result in [EINVAL] being returned to the caller.
Will need these pages.
Ensure that resources are reserved.
WARNINGS
The current implementation of defines and as null operations.
RETURN VALUE
returns the following values:
Successful completion.
Failure.
is set to indicate the error.
ERRORS
If fails, is set to one of the following values.
[EFAULT] The range specified by (addr, addr+len) is invalid for a process's address space, or permission was incorrect on the
object for the behav specified.
[EINVAL] behav contains an invalid value, or addr is not a multiple of the page size as returned by the system call
[EINVAL] The address range specified by addr and len was not created by a successful call to or
AUTHOR
was developed by HP and OSF.
SEE ALSO
mmap(2), sysconf(2).
STANDARDS CONFORMANCE
madvise(2)