I am attaching two files namely file1 and file2.I have removed /proc and /opt file system in file2 . Now when I use below command it is giving me two more file system along with /proc and /opt .
awk ' NR==FNR { a[$0]; next } !($0 in a)' file2.txt file1.txt
hi gurus,
I am having a file containing a list of tables.i want to find the count of records inside thes tables.
for this i have to connect into database and i have to put the count for all the tables inside another file i used the following loop once all the tablenames are inside the file.
... (1 Reply)
Hi All,
I am new to UNIX and shell scripts and also new to this forum.
I need a script to find all the files in a directory that contain any of the strings present in another file.
Please provide me the script or if you could provide pointers to any link in this forum it would be helpful.... (4 Replies)
Hi All,
i have a file that is tab delimited. i need help to find the rows which are having same price based on the site code but some times, there are difference so i need to find only the records which are different in all site code.
Dept Sec Barcode 10001 10002 10003 10004... (1 Reply)
Hi,
Could anyone help me to solve this problem?
I have two files "f1" and "f2" having 2 fields in each, a) file size and b) file name. The data are almost same in both the files except for few and new additional lines. Now, I have to find out and print the output as, the difference in the... (3 Replies)
Im pretty new to shell scripting, but i have got the jist of it over the past 10 weeks or so i have been using it. I just have one thing im stuck on thats bugging the hell out of me. Here it goes...
I need a script that -
You enter a filename and then a string which reports whether that string... (2 Replies)
Hi,
file1.txt
AAA
BBB
CCC
DDD
file2.txt
abc|AAA|AAAabcbcs|fnwufnq
bca|nwruqf|AAA|fwfwwefwef
fmimwe|BBB|fnqwufw|wufbqw
wcdbi|CCC|wefnwin|wfwwf
DDD|wabvfav|wqef|fwbwqfwfe
i need the count of rows of file1.txt present in the file2.txt
required output:
AAA 2 (10 Replies)
Hi,
I am trying to find out whether there are any Unix utilities that compares folders, files and contents within the file and provides a comprehensive report. The comparison can be against base version of a folder and file with content. Can you please let me know of such a utility?
Thanks,... (6 Replies)
The contents of my service file srvtemplate-data-i4-s1.conf is
Description=test service for users
After=network.target local-fs.target
Type=forking
RemainAfterExit=no
PIDFile=/data/i4/srvt.pid
LimitCORE=infinity
EnvironmentFile=%I
.
.
.
WantedBy=multi-user.target (0 Replies)
RMGDIFF(1x)RMGDIFF(1x)NAME
rmgdiff - use almost any graphical file difference browser to recursively view the differences between two directories.
SYNOPSIS
rmgdiff [-b] [-d] [-g gui] [-n] dir1 dir2
DESCRIPTION
rmgdiff is an awk script that works in conjunction with almost any graphical file difference browser. It is known to work with mgdiff,
tkdiff, and xdiff.
Unless I am mistaken, most of the GUI difference viewers (except for emacs) do not have built-in support for recursing down two directo-
ries, but diff does. Based on diff's output, rmgdiff decides when to invoke the graphical difference viewer.
In addition, rmgdiff also collates diff's output. As soon as a new difference is encountered in a text file, rmgdiff will print to stan-
dard output the name of the file that both directories have in common. It will then start the GUI and block until the user exits. As more
text files with differences are found, the GUI will be started up again.
In the interim, rmgdiff will keep track of differences in binary (non-text) files. It organizes the binary files as executables, shared
libraries, static libraries, object files, and other. Only after all the text files have been displayed will rmgdiff report the binary
differences.
It also keeps track of files and directories that diff reports as being only in one directory or another. rmgdiff organizes these entries
by directory. Thus, files in one directory will be reported in one block, and files that are in the other directory will be reported in a
different block.
In addition to printing the name of the files that are different, rmgdiff defaults to printing the relevant portion of the output from the
file command. This has the unfortunate side-effect of slowing things down; however, I find this information to be invaluable. If you're
just looking for a fast way to collate diff's output, try piping it into sort instead.
COMMAND LINE OPTIONS -b Sets the basic reporting mode. In basic mode, rmgdiff reports only file names. It does not report the file types involved.
-c By default, files relating to CVS are ignored by rmgdiff. If you want to include CVS files, use this option.
-d Sets rmgdiff to print way too much debugging information.
-g gui Tells rmgdiff which gui you would like to use for viewing differences. By default, mgdiff is used. You can also set $RMGDIFF_GUI
in your environment, but it can be overridden with this option.
-n rmgdiff will not invoke the gui. This is useful, if you only want to view the collated output.
AUTHOR
Paul Serice (paul@serice.net)
RMGDIFF(1x)