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Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Compare two variables and print the difference Post 303037561 by Chubler_XL on Tuesday 6th of August 2019 06:14:31 AM
Old 08-06-2019
Quote:
Originally Posted by amar1208
output i am getting as 200, instead of 170 see below

PRIM_SEQ=200
STDBY_SEQ=30
echo "====================================="
echo "PRIMARY_SEQUENCE of"
echo "====================================="
echo $PRIM_SEQ
echo "====================================="
echo "STANDBY_SEQUENCE"
echo "====================================="
echo $STDBY_SEQ
echo ""
c=0
for i in ${PRIM_SEQ[*]}
do
(( x = PRIM_SEQ[c] - STB_SEQ[c] ))
echo $x
(( c = c + 1 ))
done

output i am getting is

=====================================
PRIMARY_SEQUENCE of
=====================================
200


=====================================
STANDBY_SEQUENCE of
=====================================
30

200

--- Post updated at 10:36 AM ---

sorry
PRIM_SEQ
200
100

STDBY_SEQ
50
20

SO OUTPUT I NEEDED IS
150
80
Simple typo in variable name in your expression, try:

Code:
PRIM_SEQ=(200 100)
STDBY_SEQ=(50 20)
echo "====================================="
echo "PRIMARY_SEQUENCE of"
echo "====================================="
echo $PRIM_SEQ
echo "====================================="
echo "STANDBY_SEQUENCE"
echo "====================================="
echo $STDBY_SEQ
echo ""
c=0
for i in ${PRIM_SEQ[*]}
do
(( x = PRIM_SEQ[c] - STDBY_SEQ[c] ))
echo $x
(( c = c + 1 ))
done

This User Gave Thanks to Chubler_XL For This Post:
 

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MYSQLDIFF(1)							  MySQL Utilities						      MYSQLDIFF(1)

NAME
mysqldiff - Identify differences among database objects SYNOPSIS
mysqldiff [options] {db1[:db1] | db1.obj1[:db2.obj2]} ... DESCRIPTION
This utility reads the definitions of objects and compares them using a diff-like method to determine whether they are the same. The util- ity displays the differences for objects that are not the same. Use the notation db1:db2 to name two databases to compare, or, alternatively just db1 to compare two databases with the same name. The latter case is a convenience notation for comparing same-named databases on different servers. The comparison may be run against two databases of different names on a single server by specifying only the --server1 option. The user can also connect to another server by specifying the --server2 option. In this case, db1 is taken from server1 and db2 from server2. When a database pair is specified, all objects in one database are compared to the corresponding objects in the other. Any objects not appearing in either database produce an error. To compare a specific pair of objects, add an object name to each database name in db.obj format. For example, use db1.obj1:db2.obj2 to compare two named objects, or db1.obj1 to compare an object with the same name in databases with the same name. It is not legal to mix a database name with an object name. For example, db1.obj1:db2 and db1:db2.obj2 are illegal. The comparison may be run against a single server for comparing two databases of different names on the same server by specifying only the --server1 option. Alternatively, you can also connect to another server by specifying the --server2 option. In this case, the first object to compare is taken from server1 and the second from server2. By default, the utilty generates object differences as a difference report. However, you can generate a transformation report containing SQL statements for transforming the objects for conformity instead. Use the 'sql' value for the --difftype option to produce a listing that contains the appropriate ALTER commands to conform the object definitions for the object pairs specified. If a transformation cannot be formed, the utility reports the diff of the object along with a warning statement. See important limitations in the NOTES section. To specify how to display diff-style output, use one of the following values with the --difftype option: unified (default) Display unified format output. context Display context format output. differ Display differ-style format output. sql Display SQL transformation statement output. The --changes-for option controls the direction of the difference (by specifying the object to be transformed) in either the difference report (default) or the transformation report (designated with the --difftype=sql option). Consider the following command: mysqldiff --server1=root@host1 --server2=root@host2 --difftype=sql db1.table1:dbx.table3 The leftmost database (db1) exists on the server designated by the --server1 option (host1). The rightmost database (dbx) exists on the server designated by the --server2 option (host2). o --changes-for=server1: Produce output that shows how to make the definitions of objects on server1 like the definitions of the corre- sponding objects on server2. o --changes-for=server2: Produce output that shows how to make the definitions of objects on server2 like the definitions of the corre- sponding objects on server1. The default direction is server1. For sql difference format, you can also see the reverse transformation by specifying the --show-reverse option. The utility stops on the first occurrence of missing objects or when an object does not match. To override this behavior, specify the --force option to cause the utility to attempt to compare all objects listed as arguments. OPTIONS
mysqldiff accepts the following command-line options: --help Display a help message and exit. --changes-for=<direction> Specify the server to show transformations to match the other server. For example, to see the transformation for transforming object definitions on server1 to match the corresponding definitions on server2, use --changes-for=server1. Permitted values are server1 and server2. The default is server1. --difftype=<difftype>, -d<difftype> Specify the difference display format. Permitted format values are unified, context, differ, and sql. The default is unified. --force Do not halt at the first difference found. Process all objects to find all differences. --quiet, -q Do not print anything. Return only an exit code of success or failure. --server1=<source> Connection information for the first server in <user>[:<passwd>]@<host>[:<port>][:<socket>] format. --server2=<source> Connection information for the second server in <user>[:<passwd>]@<host>[:<port>][:<socket>] format. --show-reverse Produce a transformation report containing the SQL statements to conform the object definitions specified in reverse. For example, if --changes-for is set to server1, also generate the transformation for server2. Note: The reverse changes are annotated and marked as comments. --verbose, -v Specify how much information to display. Use this option multiple times to increase the amount of information. For example, -v = verbose, -vv = more verbose, -vvv = debug. --version Display version information and exit. --width=<number> Change the display width of the test report. The default is 75 characters. NOTES
You must provide connection parameters (user, host, password, and so forth) for an account that has the appropriate privileges to access all objects to be compared. The SQL transformation feature has these known limitations: o When tables with partition differences are encountered, the utility generates the ALTER TABLE statement for all other changes but prints a warning and omits the partition differences. o If the transformation detects table options in the source table (specified with the --changes-for option) that are not changed or do not exist in the target table, the utility generates the ALTER TABLE statement for all other changes but prints a warning and omits the table option differences. o Rename for events is not supported. This is because mysqldiff compares objects by name. In this case, depending on the direction of the diff, the event is identified as needing to be added or a DROP EVENT statement is generated. o Changes in the definer clause for events are not supported. o SQL extensions specific to MySQL Cluster are not supported. For the --difftype option, the permitted values are not case sensitive. In addition, values may be specified as any unambiguous prefix of a valid value. For example, --difftype=d specifies the differ type. An error occurs if a prefix matches more than one valid value. EXAMPLES
To compare the employees and emp databases on the local server, use this command: $ mysqldiff --server1=root@localhost employees:emp1 # server1 on localhost: ... connected. WARNING: Objects in server1:employees but not in server2:emp1: EVENT: e1 Compare failed. One or more differences found. $ mysqldiff --server1=root@localhost employees.t1:emp1.t1 employees.t3:emp1.t3 # server1 on localhost: ... connected. # Comparing employees.t1 to emp1.t1 [PASS] # server1 on localhost: ... connected. # Comparing employees.t3 to emp1.t3 [PASS] Success. All objects are the same. $ mysqldiff --server1=root@localhost employees.salaries:emp1.salaries --differ # server1 on localhost: ... connected. # Comparing employees.salaries to emp1.salaries [FAIL] # Object definitions are not the same: CREATE TABLE `salaries` ( `emp_no` int(11) NOT NULL, `salary` int(11) NOT NULL, `from_date` date NOT NULL, `to_date` date NOT NULL, PRIMARY KEY (`emp_no`,`from_date`), KEY `emp_no` (`emp_no`) - ) ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=latin1 ? ^^^^^ + ) ENGINE=MyISAM DEFAULT CHARSET=latin1 ? ++ ^^^ Compare failed. One or more differences found. The following examples show how to generate a transformation report. Assume the following object definitions: Host1: CREATE TABLE db1.table1 (num int, misc char(30)); Host2: CREATE TABLE dbx.table3 (num int, notes char(30), misc char(55)); To generate a set of SQL statements that transform the definition of db1.table1 to dbx.table3, use this command: $ mysqldiff --server1=root@host1 --server2=root@host2 --changes-for=server1 --difftype=sql db1.table1:dbx.table3 # server1 on host1: ... connected. # server2 on host2: ... connected. # Comparing db1.table1 to dbx.table3 [FAIL] # Transformation statments: ALTER TABLE db1.table1 ADD COLUMN notes char(30) AFTER a, CHANGE COLUMN misc misc char(55); Compare failed. One or more differences found. To generate a set of SQL statements that transform the definition of dbx.table3 to db1.table1, use this command: $ mysqldiff --server1=root@host1 --server2=root@host2 --changes-for=server2 --difftype=sql db1.table1:dbx.table3 # server1 on host1: ... connected. # server2 on host2: ... connected. # Comparing db1.table1 to dbx.table3 [FAIL] # Transformation statments: ALTER TABLE dbx.table3 DROP COLUMN notes, CHANGE COLUMN misc misc char(30); Compare failed. One or more differences found. To generate a set of SQL statements that transform the definitions of dbx.table3 and db1.table1 in both directions, use this command: $ mysqldiff --server1=root@host1 --server2=root@host2 --show-reverse --difftype=sql db1.table1:dbx.table3 # server1 on host1: ... connected. # server2 on host2: ... connected. # Comparing db1.table1 to dbx.table3 [FAIL] # Transformation statments: # --destination=server1: ALTER TABLE db1.table1 ADD COLUMN notes char(30) AFTER a, CHANGE COLUMN misc misc char(55); # --destination=server2: # ALTER TABLE dbx.table3 # DROP COLUMN notes, # CHANGE COLUMN misc misc char(30); Compare failed. One or more differences found. COPYRIGHT
Copyright (c) 2011, 2012, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; version 2 of the License. This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MER- CHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin St, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA AUTHOR
MySQL Utilities Team COPYRIGHT
2010, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. 1.0.3 May 09, 2012 MYSQLDIFF(1)
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