Manual page for diff(1)
diff - display line-by-line differences between pairs of text files
SYNOPSIS
diff
[
-bitw
] [
-c | -e | -f |
-h | -n
]
file1 file2
diff
[
-bitw
] [
-C number
]
file1 file2
diff
[
-bitw
] [
-D string
]
file1 file2
diff
[
-bitw
] [
-c | -e | -f |
-h | -n
] [
-l
] [
-r
]
[
-s
] [
-S name
]
directory1
directory2
AVAILABILITY
SUNWesu
DESCRIPTION
The
diff
utility will compare the contents of
file1
and
file2
and write to standard output
a list of changes necessary to convert
file1
into
file2 .
This list should be minimal.
No output will be produced if the files are identical.
The normal output contains lines of these forms:
-
n1
a
n3,n4
n1,n2
d
n3
n1,n2
c
n3,n4
where
n1
and
n2
represent lines
file1
and
n3
and
n4
represent lines in
file2
These lines resemble
ed.1
commands to convert
file1
to
file2.
By exchanging
a
for
d
and reading backward,
file2
can be converted to
file1.
As in
ed,
identical pairs, where
n1=n2
or
n3=n4,
are abbreviated as a single number.
Following each of these lines come all the lines that are
affected in the first file flagged by `<',
then all the lines that are affected in the second file
flagged by `>'.
OPTIONS
- -b
-
Ignores trailing blanks (spaces and tabs) and treats
other strings of blanks as equivalent.
- -i
-
Ignores the case of letters; for example,
`A'
will compare equal to
`a'.
- -t
-
Expands
TAB
characters in output lines.
Normal or
-c
output adds character(s) to the
front of each line that may adversely affect the indentation
of the original source lines and make the output lines difficult
to interpret.
This option will preserve the original source's indentation.
- -w
-
Ignores all blanks (SPACE
and
TAB
characters)
and treats all other strings of blanks as
equivalent;
for example,
`if ( a == b )'
will compare equal to
`if(a==b)'.
The following options are mutually exclusive:
- -c
-
Produces a listing of differences
with three lines of context.
With this option output format is modified slightly:
output begins with identification of the files
involved and their creation dates, then each
change is separated by a line with a dozen
*'s.
The lines removed from
file1
are marked with '--'; those added to
file2
are marked '+'.
Lines that are changed from one file to the
other are marked in both files with '!'.
- -C number
-
Produces a listing of differences identical
to that produced by
-c
with
number
lines of context.
- -e
-
Produces a script of only
a,
c,
and
d
commands for the editor
ed,
which will recreate
file2
from
file1.
In connection with
-e ,
the following shell program may help maintain
multiple versions of a file.
Only an ancestral file ($1) and a chain of
version-to-version
ed
scripts ($2,$3,...) made by
diff
need be on hand.
A ``latest version'' appears on
the standard output.
-
(shift; cat $*; echo '1,$p') | ed - $1
Except in rare circumstances,
diff
finds a smallest sufficient set of file
differences.
- -f
-
Produces a similar script,
not useful with
ed,
in the opposite order.
- -h
-
Does a fast, half-hearted job.
It works only when changed stretches are short
and well separated,
but does work on files of unlimited length.
Options
-e
and
-f
are unavailable with
-h.
- -n
-
Produces a script similar to
-e ,
but in the opposite order and with a count
of changed lines on each insert or delete
command.
- -D string
-
Creates a merged version of
file1
and
file2
with C preprocessor controls
included so that a compilation of the result without
defining
string
is equivalent to compiling
file1,
while defining
string
will yield
file2.
The following options are used for
comparing directories:
- -l
-
Produce output in long format.
Before the diff, each text file
is piped through
pr.1
to paginate it.
Other differences
are remembered and summarized after all text file
differences are reported.
- -r
-
Applies
diff
recursively to common subdirectories
encountered.
- -s
-
Reports files that are the
identical; these would not otherwise
be mentioned.
- -S name
-
Starts a directory
diff
in the middle, beginning with the
file
name.
OPERANDS
The following operands are supported:
file1
- file2
-
A path name of a file or directory to be compared.
If either
file1
or
file2
is
-,
the standard input will be used in its place.
directory1
- directory2
-
A path name of a directory to be compared.
If only one of
file1
and
file2
is a directory,
diff
will be applied to the non-directory file and the file contained
in the directory file with a filename that is the same as the last
component of the non-directory file.
EXAMPLES
If
dir1
is a directory containing a directory named
x,
dir2
is a directory containing a directory named
x,
dir1/x
and
dir2/x
both contain files named
date.out,
and
dir2/x
contains a file named
y,
the command:
-
example% diff -r dir1 dir2
could produce output similar to:
-
Common subdirectories: dir1/x and dir2/x
Only in dir2/x: y
diff -r dir1/x/date.out dir2/x/date.out
1c1
< Mon Jul 2 13:12:16 PDT 1990
---
> Tue Jun 19 21:41:39 PDT 1990
ENVIRONMENT
See
environ.5
for descriptions of the following environment variables that affect
the execution of
diff:
LC_CTYPE,
LC_MESSAGES,
and
NLSPATH.
- LC_TIME
-
Determine the locale for affecting
the format of file timestamps written with the
-C
and
-c
options.
- TZ
-
Determine the locale for affecting
the timezone used for calculating file timestamps written with the
-C
and
-c
options.
EXIT STATUS
The following exit values are returned:
- 0
-
No differences were found.
- 1
-
Differences were found.
- >1
-
An error occurred.
FILES
- /tmp/d?????
-
temporary file used for comparison
- /usr/lib/diffh
-
executable file for
-h
option
SEE ALSO
bdiff.1
cmp.1
comm.1
dircmp.1
ed.1
pr.1
sdiff.1
environ.5
NOTES
Editing scripts produced under the
-e
or
-f
options are naive about
creating lines consisting of a single period (.).
Missing
NEWLINE
at end of file
indicates that the last line of the file in question did not have a
NEWLINE.
If the lines are different, they will be flagged and output;
although the output will seem to indicate they are the same.
Created by unroff & hp-tools.
© by Hans-Peter Bischof. All Rights Reserved (1997).
Last modified 21/April/97