1This is diffutils.info, produced by makeinfo version 6.5 from
2diffutils.texi.
3
4This manual is for GNU Diffutils (version 3.7, 7 January 2018), and
5documents the GNU 'diff', 'diff3', 'sdiff', and 'cmp' commands for
6showing the differences between files and the GNU 'patch' command for
7using their output to update files.
8
9   Copyright (C) 1992-1994, 1998, 2001-2002, 2004, 2006, 2009-2018 Free
10Software Foundation, Inc.
11
12     Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this
13     document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License,
14     Version 1.3 or any later version published by the Free Software
15     Foundation; with no Invariant Sections, no Front-Cover Texts, and
16     no Back-Cover Texts.  A copy of the license is included in the
17     section entitled "GNU Free Documentation License."
18INFO-DIR-SECTION Individual utilities
19START-INFO-DIR-ENTRY
20* cmp: (diffutils)Invoking cmp.                 Compare 2 files byte by byte.
21* diff: (diffutils)Invoking diff.               Compare 2 files line by line.
22* diff3: (diffutils)Invoking diff3.             Compare 3 files line by line.
23* patch: (diffutils)Invoking patch.             Apply a patch to a file.
24* sdiff: (diffutils)Invoking sdiff.             Merge 2 files side-by-side.
25END-INFO-DIR-ENTRY
26
27INFO-DIR-SECTION Text creation and manipulation
28START-INFO-DIR-ENTRY
29* Diffutils: (diffutils).       Comparing and merging files.
30END-INFO-DIR-ENTRY
31
32
33File: diffutils.info,  Node: Top,  Next: Overview,  Up: (dir)
34
35Comparing and Merging Files
36***************************
37
38This manual is for GNU Diffutils (version 3.7, 7 January 2018), and
39documents the GNU 'diff', 'diff3', 'sdiff', and 'cmp' commands for
40showing the differences between files and the GNU 'patch' command for
41using their output to update files.
42
43   Copyright (C) 1992-1994, 1998, 2001-2002, 2004, 2006, 2009-2018 Free
44Software Foundation, Inc.
45
46     Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this
47     document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License,
48     Version 1.3 or any later version published by the Free Software
49     Foundation; with no Invariant Sections, no Front-Cover Texts, and
50     no Back-Cover Texts.  A copy of the license is included in the
51     section entitled "GNU Free Documentation License."
52
53* Menu:
54
55* Overview::              Preliminary information.
56* Comparison::            What file comparison means.
57
58* Output Formats::        Formats for two-way difference reports.
59* Incomplete Lines::      Lines that lack trailing newlines.
60* Comparing Directories:: Comparing files and directories.
61* Adjusting Output::      Making 'diff' output prettier.
62* diff Performance::      Making 'diff' smarter or faster.
63
64* Comparing Three Files:: Formats for three-way difference reports.
65* diff3 Merging::         Merging from a common ancestor.
66
67* Interactive Merging::   Interactive merging with 'sdiff'.
68
69* Merging with patch::    Using 'patch' to change old files into new ones.
70* Making Patches::        Tips for making and using patch distributions.
71
72* Invoking cmp::          Compare two files byte by byte.
73* Invoking diff::         Compare two files line by line.
74* Invoking diff3::        Compare three files line by line.
75* Invoking patch::        Apply a diff file to an original.
76* Invoking sdiff::        Side-by-side merge of file differences.
77
78* Standards conformance:: Conformance to the POSIX standard.
79* Projects::              If you've found a bug or other shortcoming.
80
81* Copying This Manual::   How to make copies of this manual.
82* Translations::          Available translations of this manual.
83* Index::                 Index.
84
85
86File: diffutils.info,  Node: Overview,  Next: Comparison,  Prev: Top,  Up: Top
87
88Overview
89********
90
91Computer users often find occasion to ask how two files differ.  Perhaps
92one file is a newer version of the other file.  Or maybe the two files
93started out as identical copies but were changed by different people.
94
95   You can use the 'diff' command to show differences between two files,
96or each corresponding file in two directories.  'diff' outputs
97differences between files line by line in any of several formats,
98selectable by command line options.  This set of differences is often
99called a "diff" or "patch".  For files that are identical, 'diff'
100normally produces no output; for binary (non-text) files, 'diff'
101normally reports only that they are different.
102
103   You can use the 'cmp' command to show the byte and line numbers where
104two files differ.  'cmp' can also show all the bytes that differ between
105the two files, side by side.  A way to compare two files character by
106character is the Emacs command 'M-x compare-windows'.  *Note Other
107Window: (emacs)Other Window, for more information on that command.
108
109   You can use the 'diff3' command to show differences among three
110files.  When two people have made independent changes to a common
111original, 'diff3' can report the differences between the original and
112the two changed versions, and can produce a merged file that contains
113both persons' changes together with warnings about conflicts.
114
115   You can use the 'sdiff' command to merge two files interactively.
116
117   You can use the set of differences produced by 'diff' to distribute
118updates to text files (such as program source code) to other people.
119This method is especially useful when the differences are small compared
120to the complete files.  Given 'diff' output, you can use the 'patch'
121program to update, or "patch", a copy of the file.  If you think of
122'diff' as subtracting one file from another to produce their difference,
123you can think of 'patch' as adding the difference to one file to
124reproduce the other.
125
126   This manual first concentrates on making diffs, and later shows how
127to use diffs to update files.
128
129   GNU 'diff' was written by Paul Eggert, Mike Haertel, David Hayes,
130Richard Stallman, and Len Tower.  Wayne Davison designed and implemented
131the unified output format.  The basic algorithm is described by Eugene
132W. Myers in "An O(ND) Difference Algorithm and its Variations",
133'Algorithmica' Vol. 1, 1986, pp. 251-266,
134<http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/BF01840446>; and in "A File Comparison
135Program", Webb Miller and Eugene W. Myers, 'Software--Practice and
136Experience' Vol. 15, 1985, pp. 1025-1040,
137<http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/spe.4380151102>.  The algorithm was
138independently discovered as described by Esko Ukkonen in "Algorithms for
139Approximate String Matching", 'Information and Control' Vol. 64, 1985,
140pp. 100-118, <http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S0019-9958(85)80046-2>.  Unless
141the '--minimal' option is used, 'diff' uses a heuristic by Paul Eggert
142that limits the cost to O(N^1.5 log N) at the price of producing
143suboptimal output for large inputs with many differences.  Related
144algorithms are surveyed by Alfred V. Aho in section 6.3 of "Algorithms
145for Finding Patterns in Strings", 'Handbook of Theoretical Computer
146Science' (Jan Van Leeuwen, ed.), Vol. A, 'Algorithms and Complexity',
147Elsevier/MIT Press, 1990, pp. 255-300.
148
149   GNU 'diff3' was written by Randy Smith.  GNU 'sdiff' was written by
150Thomas Lord.  GNU 'cmp' was written by Torbjo"rn Granlund and David
151MacKenzie.
152
153   GNU 'patch' was written mainly by Larry Wall and Paul Eggert; several
154GNU enhancements were contributed by Wayne Davison and David MacKenzie.
155Parts of this manual are adapted from a manual page written by Larry
156Wall, with his permission.
157
158
159File: diffutils.info,  Node: Comparison,  Next: Output Formats,  Prev: Overview,  Up: Top
160
1611 What Comparison Means
162***********************
163
164There are several ways to think about the differences between two files.
165One way to think of the differences is as a series of lines that were
166deleted from, inserted in, or changed in one file to produce the other
167file.  'diff' compares two files line by line, finds groups of lines
168that differ, and reports each group of differing lines.  It can report
169the differing lines in several formats, which have different purposes.
170
171   GNU 'diff' can show whether files are different without detailing the
172differences.  It also provides ways to suppress certain kinds of
173differences that are not important to you.  Most commonly, such
174differences are changes in the amount of white space between words or
175lines.  'diff' also provides ways to suppress differences in alphabetic
176case or in lines that match a regular expression that you provide.
177These options can accumulate; for example, you can ignore changes in
178both white space and alphabetic case.
179
180   Another way to think of the differences between two files is as a
181sequence of pairs of bytes that can be either identical or different.
182'cmp' reports the differences between two files byte by byte, instead of
183line by line.  As a result, it is often more useful than 'diff' for
184comparing binary files.  For text files, 'cmp' is useful mainly when you
185want to know only whether two files are identical, or whether one file
186is a prefix of the other.
187
188   To illustrate the effect that considering changes byte by byte can
189have compared with considering them line by line, think of what happens
190if a single newline character is added to the beginning of a file.  If
191that file is then compared with an otherwise identical file that lacks
192the newline at the beginning, 'diff' will report that a blank line has
193been added to the file, while 'cmp' will report that almost every byte
194of the two files differs.
195
196   'diff3' normally compares three input files line by line, finds
197groups of lines that differ, and reports each group of differing lines.
198Its output is designed to make it easy to inspect two different sets of
199changes to the same file.
200
201   These commands compare input files without necessarily reading them.
202For example, if 'diff' is asked simply to report whether two files
203differ, and it discovers that the files have different sizes, it need
204not read them to do its job.
205
206* Menu:
207
208* Hunks::             Groups of differing lines.
209* White Space::       Suppressing differences in white space.
210* Blank Lines::       Suppressing differences whose lines are all blank.
211* Specified Lines::   Suppressing differences whose lines all match a pattern.
212* Case Folding::      Suppressing differences in alphabetic case.
213* Brief::             Summarizing which files are different.
214* Binary::            Comparing binary files or forcing text comparisons.
215
216
217File: diffutils.info,  Node: Hunks,  Next: White Space,  Up: Comparison
218
2191.1 Hunks
220=========
221
222When comparing two files, 'diff' finds sequences of lines common to both
223files, interspersed with groups of differing lines called "hunks".
224Comparing two identical files yields one sequence of common lines and no
225hunks, because no lines differ.  Comparing two entirely different files
226yields no common lines and one large hunk that contains all lines of
227both files.  In general, there are many ways to match up lines between
228two given files.  'diff' tries to minimize the total hunk size by
229finding large sequences of common lines interspersed with small hunks of
230differing lines.
231
232   For example, suppose the file 'F' contains the three lines 'a', 'b',
233'c', and the file 'G' contains the same three lines in reverse order
234'c', 'b', 'a'.  If 'diff' finds the line 'c' as common, then the command
235'diff F G' produces this output:
236
237     1,2d0
238     < a
239     < b
240     3a2,3
241     > b
242     > a
243
244But if 'diff' notices the common line 'b' instead, it produces this
245output:
246
247     1c1
248     < a
249     ---
250     > c
251     3c3
252     < c
253     ---
254     > a
255
256It is also possible to find 'a' as the common line.  'diff' does not
257always find an optimal matching between the files; it takes shortcuts to
258run faster.  But its output is usually close to the shortest possible.
259You can adjust this tradeoff with the '--minimal' ('-d') option (*note
260diff Performance::).
261
262
263File: diffutils.info,  Node: White Space,  Next: Blank Lines,  Prev: Hunks,  Up: Comparison
264
2651.2 Suppressing Differences in Blank and Tab Spacing
266====================================================
267
268The '--ignore-tab-expansion' ('-E') option ignores the distinction
269between tabs and spaces on input.  A tab is considered to be equivalent
270to the number of spaces to the next tab stop (*note Tabs::).
271
272   The '--ignore-trailing-space' ('-Z') option ignores white space at
273line end.
274
275   The '--ignore-space-change' ('-b') option is stronger than '-E' and
276'-Z' combined.  It ignores white space at line end, and considers all
277other sequences of one or more white space characters within a line to
278be equivalent.  With this option, 'diff' considers the following two
279lines to be equivalent, where '$' denotes the line end:
280
281     Here lyeth  muche rychnesse  in lytell space.   -- John Heywood$
282     Here lyeth muche rychnesse in lytell space. -- John Heywood   $
283
284   The '--ignore-all-space' ('-w') option is stronger still.  It ignores
285differences even if one line has white space where the other line has
286none.  "White space" characters include tab, vertical tab, form feed,
287carriage return, and space; some locales may define additional
288characters to be white space.  With this option, 'diff' considers the
289following two lines to be equivalent, where '$' denotes the line end and
290'^M' denotes a carriage return:
291
292     Here lyeth  muche  rychnesse in lytell space.--  John Heywood$
293       He relyeth much erychnes  seinly tells pace.  --John Heywood   ^M$
294
295   For many other programs newline is also a white space character, but
296'diff' is a line-oriented program and a newline character always ends a
297line.  Hence the '-w' or '--ignore-all-space' option does not ignore
298newline-related changes; it ignores only other white space changes.
299
300
301File: diffutils.info,  Node: Blank Lines,  Next: Specified Lines,  Prev: White Space,  Up: Comparison
302
3031.3 Suppressing Differences Whose Lines Are All Blank
304=====================================================
305
306The '--ignore-blank-lines' ('-B') option ignores changes that consist
307entirely of blank lines.  With this option, for example, a file
308containing
309     1.  A point is that which has no part.
310
311     2.  A line is breadthless length.
312     -- Euclid, The Elements, I
313is considered identical to a file containing
314     1.  A point is that which has no part.
315     2.  A line is breadthless length.
316
317
318     -- Euclid, The Elements, I
319
320   Normally this option affects only lines that are completely empty,
321but if you also specify an option that ignores trailing spaces, lines
322are also affected if they look empty but contain white space.  In other
323words, '-B' is equivalent to '-I '^$'' by default, but it is equivalent
324to '-I '^[[:space:]]*$'' if '-b', '-w' or '-Z' is also specified.
325
326
327File: diffutils.info,  Node: Specified Lines,  Next: Case Folding,  Prev: Blank Lines,  Up: Comparison
328
3291.4 Suppressing Differences Whose Lines All Match a Regular Expression
330======================================================================
331
332To ignore insertions and deletions of lines that match a 'grep'-style
333regular expression, use the '--ignore-matching-lines=REGEXP' ('-I
334REGEXP') option.  You should escape regular expressions that contain
335shell metacharacters to prevent the shell from expanding them.  For
336example, 'diff -I '^[[:digit:]]'' ignores all changes to lines beginning
337with a digit.
338
339   However, '-I' only ignores the insertion or deletion of lines that
340contain the regular expression if every changed line in the hunk--every
341insertion and every deletion--matches the regular expression.  In other
342words, for each nonignorable change, 'diff' prints the complete set of
343changes in its vicinity, including the ignorable ones.
344
345   You can specify more than one regular expression for lines to ignore
346by using more than one '-I' option.  'diff' tries to match each line
347against each regular expression.
348
349
350File: diffutils.info,  Node: Case Folding,  Next: Brief,  Prev: Specified Lines,  Up: Comparison
351
3521.5 Suppressing Case Differences
353================================
354
355GNU 'diff' can treat lower case letters as equivalent to their upper
356case counterparts, so that, for example, it considers 'Funky Stuff',
357'funky STUFF', and 'fUNKy stuFf' to all be the same.  To request this,
358use the '-i' or '--ignore-case' option.
359
360
361File: diffutils.info,  Node: Brief,  Next: Binary,  Prev: Case Folding,  Up: Comparison
362
3631.6 Summarizing Which Files Differ
364==================================
365
366When you only want to find out whether files are different, and you
367don't care what the differences are, you can use the summary output
368format.  In this format, instead of showing the differences between the
369files, 'diff' simply reports whether files differ.  The '--brief' ('-q')
370option selects this output format.
371
372   This format is especially useful when comparing the contents of two
373directories.  It is also much faster than doing the normal line by line
374comparisons, because 'diff' can stop analyzing the files as soon as it
375knows that there are any differences.
376
377   You can also get a brief indication of whether two files differ by
378using 'cmp'.  For files that are identical, 'cmp' produces no output.
379When the files differ, by default, 'cmp' outputs the byte and line
380number where the first difference occurs, or reports that one file is a
381prefix of the other.  You can use the '-s', '--quiet', or '--silent'
382option to suppress that information, so that 'cmp' produces no output
383and reports whether the files differ using only its exit status (*note
384Invoking cmp::).
385
386   Unlike 'diff', 'cmp' cannot compare directories; it can only compare
387two files.
388
389
390File: diffutils.info,  Node: Binary,  Prev: Brief,  Up: Comparison
391
3921.7 Binary Files and Forcing Text Comparisons
393=============================================
394
395If 'diff' thinks that either of the two files it is comparing is binary
396(a non-text file), it normally treats that pair of files much as if the
397summary output format had been selected (*note Brief::), and reports
398only that the binary files are different.  This is because line by line
399comparisons are usually not meaningful for binary files.  This does not
400count as trouble, even though the resulting output does not capture all
401the differences.
402
403   'diff' determines whether a file is text or binary by checking the
404first few bytes in the file; the exact number of bytes is system
405dependent, but it is typically several thousand.  If every byte in that
406part of the file is non-null, 'diff' considers the file to be text;
407otherwise it considers the file to be binary.
408
409   Sometimes you might want to force 'diff' to consider files to be
410text.  For example, you might be comparing text files that contain null
411characters; 'diff' would erroneously decide that those are non-text
412files.  Or you might be comparing documents that are in a format used by
413a word processing system that uses null characters to indicate special
414formatting.  You can force 'diff' to consider all files to be text
415files, and compare them line by line, by using the '--text' ('-a')
416option.  If the files you compare using this option do not in fact
417contain text, they will probably contain few newline characters, and the
418'diff' output will consist of hunks showing differences between long
419lines of whatever characters the files contain.
420
421   You can also force 'diff' to report only whether files differ (but
422not how).  Use the '--brief' ('-q') option for this.
423
424   In operating systems that distinguish between text and binary files,
425'diff' normally reads and writes all data as text.  Use the '--binary'
426option to force 'diff' to read and write binary data instead.  This
427option has no effect on a POSIX-compliant system like GNU or traditional
428Unix.  However, many personal computer operating systems represent the
429end of a line with a carriage return followed by a newline.  On such
430systems, 'diff' normally ignores these carriage returns on input and
431generates them at the end of each output line, but with the '--binary'
432option 'diff' treats each carriage return as just another input
433character, and does not generate a carriage return at the end of each
434output line.  This can be useful when dealing with non-text files that
435are meant to be interchanged with POSIX-compliant systems.
436
437   The '--strip-trailing-cr' causes 'diff' to treat input lines that end
438in carriage return followed by newline as if they end in plain newline.
439This can be useful when comparing text that is imperfectly imported from
440many personal computer operating systems.  This option affects how lines
441are read, which in turn affects how they are compared and output.
442
443   If you want to compare two files byte by byte, you can use the 'cmp'
444program with the '--verbose' ('-l') option to show the values of each
445differing byte in the two files.  With GNU 'cmp', you can also use the
446'-b' or '--print-bytes' option to show the ASCII representation of those
447bytes.  *Note Invoking cmp::, for more information.
448
449   If 'diff3' thinks that any of the files it is comparing is binary (a
450non-text file), it normally reports an error, because such comparisons
451are usually not useful.  'diff3' uses the same test as 'diff' to decide
452whether a file is binary.  As with 'diff', if the input files contain a
453few non-text bytes but otherwise are like text files, you can force
454'diff3' to consider all files to be text files and compare them line by
455line by using the '-a' or '--text' option.
456
457
458File: diffutils.info,  Node: Output Formats,  Next: Incomplete Lines,  Prev: Comparison,  Up: Top
459
4602 'diff' Output Formats
461***********************
462
463'diff' has several mutually exclusive options for output format.  The
464following sections describe each format, illustrating how 'diff' reports
465the differences between two sample input files.
466
467* Menu:
468
469* Sample diff Input:: Sample 'diff' input files for examples.
470* Context::           Showing differences with the surrounding text.
471* Side by Side::      Showing differences in two columns.
472* Normal::            Showing differences without surrounding text.
473* Scripts::           Generating scripts for other programs.
474* If-then-else::      Merging files with if-then-else.
475
476
477File: diffutils.info,  Node: Sample diff Input,  Next: Context,  Up: Output Formats
478
4792.1 Two Sample Input Files
480==========================
481
482Here are two sample files that we will use in numerous examples to
483illustrate the output of 'diff' and how various options can change it.
484
485   This is the file 'lao':
486
487     The Way that can be told of is not the eternal Way;
488     The name that can be named is not the eternal name.
489     The Nameless is the origin of Heaven and Earth;
490     The Named is the mother of all things.
491     Therefore let there always be non-being,
492       so we may see their subtlety,
493     And let there always be being,
494       so we may see their outcome.
495     The two are the same,
496     But after they are produced,
497       they have different names.
498
499   This is the file 'tzu':
500
501     The Nameless is the origin of Heaven and Earth;
502     The named is the mother of all things.
503
504     Therefore let there always be non-being,
505       so we may see their subtlety,
506     And let there always be being,
507       so we may see their outcome.
508     The two are the same,
509     But after they are produced,
510       they have different names.
511     They both may be called deep and profound.
512     Deeper and more profound,
513     The door of all subtleties!
514
515   In this example, the first hunk contains just the first two lines of
516'lao', the second hunk contains the fourth line of 'lao' opposing the
517second and third lines of 'tzu', and the last hunk contains just the
518last three lines of 'tzu'.
519
520
521File: diffutils.info,  Node: Context,  Next: Side by Side,  Prev: Sample diff Input,  Up: Output Formats
522
5232.2 Showing Differences in Their Context
524========================================
525
526Usually, when you are looking at the differences between files, you will
527also want to see the parts of the files near the lines that differ, to
528help you understand exactly what has changed.  These nearby parts of the
529files are called the "context".
530
531   GNU 'diff' provides two output formats that show context around the
532differing lines: "context format" and "unified format".  It can
533optionally show in which function or section of the file the differing
534lines are found.
535
536   If you are distributing new versions of files to other people in the
537form of 'diff' output, you should use one of the output formats that
538show context so that they can apply the diffs even if they have made
539small changes of their own to the files.  'patch' can apply the diffs in
540this case by searching in the files for the lines of context around the
541differing lines; if those lines are actually a few lines away from where
542the diff says they are, 'patch' can adjust the line numbers accordingly
543and still apply the diff correctly.  *Note Imperfect::, for more
544information on using 'patch' to apply imperfect diffs.
545
546* Menu:
547
548* Context Format::  An output format that shows surrounding lines.
549* Unified Format::  A more compact output format that shows context.
550* Sections::        Showing which sections of the files differences are in.
551* Alternate Names:: Showing alternate file names in context headers.
552
553
554File: diffutils.info,  Node: Context Format,  Next: Unified Format,  Up: Context
555
5562.2.1 Context Format
557--------------------
558
559The context output format shows several lines of context around the
560lines that differ.  It is the standard format for distributing updates
561to source code.
562
563   To select this output format, use the '--context[=LINES]' ('-C
564LINES') or '-c' option.  The argument LINES that some of these options
565take is the number of lines of context to show.  If you do not specify
566LINES, it defaults to three.  For proper operation, 'patch' typically
567needs at least two lines of context.
568
569* Menu:
570
571* Example Context::  Sample output in context format.
572* Less Context::     Another sample with less context.
573* Detailed Context:: A detailed description of the context output format.
574
575
576File: diffutils.info,  Node: Example Context,  Next: Less Context,  Up: Context Format
577
5782.2.1.1 An Example of Context Format
579....................................
580
581Here is the output of 'diff -c lao tzu' (*note Sample diff Input::, for
582the complete contents of the two files).  Notice that up to three lines
583that are not different are shown around each line that is different;
584they are the context lines.  Also notice that the first two hunks have
585run together, because their contents overlap.
586
587     *** lao	2002-02-21 23:30:39.942229878 -0800
588     --- tzu	2002-02-21 23:30:50.442260588 -0800
589     ***************
590     *** 1,7 ****
591     - The Way that can be told of is not the eternal Way;
592     - The name that can be named is not the eternal name.
593       The Nameless is the origin of Heaven and Earth;
594     ! The Named is the mother of all things.
595       Therefore let there always be non-being,
596         so we may see their subtlety,
597       And let there always be being,
598     --- 1,6 ----
599       The Nameless is the origin of Heaven and Earth;
600     ! The named is the mother of all things.
601     !
602       Therefore let there always be non-being,
603         so we may see their subtlety,
604       And let there always be being,
605     ***************
606     *** 9,11 ****
607     --- 8,13 ----
608       The two are the same,
609       But after they are produced,
610         they have different names.
611     + They both may be called deep and profound.
612     + Deeper and more profound,
613     + The door of all subtleties!
614
615
616File: diffutils.info,  Node: Less Context,  Next: Detailed Context,  Prev: Example Context,  Up: Context Format
617
6182.2.1.2 An Example of Context Format with Less Context
619......................................................
620
621Here is the output of 'diff -C 1 lao tzu' (*note Sample diff Input::,
622for the complete contents of the two files).  Notice that at most one
623context line is reported here.
624
625     *** lao	2002-02-21 23:30:39.942229878 -0800
626     --- tzu	2002-02-21 23:30:50.442260588 -0800
627     ***************
628     *** 1,5 ****
629     - The Way that can be told of is not the eternal Way;
630     - The name that can be named is not the eternal name.
631       The Nameless is the origin of Heaven and Earth;
632     ! The Named is the mother of all things.
633       Therefore let there always be non-being,
634     --- 1,4 ----
635       The Nameless is the origin of Heaven and Earth;
636     ! The named is the mother of all things.
637     !
638       Therefore let there always be non-being,
639     ***************
640     *** 11 ****
641     --- 10,13 ----
642         they have different names.
643     + They both may be called deep and profound.
644     + Deeper and more profound,
645     + The door of all subtleties!
646
647
648File: diffutils.info,  Node: Detailed Context,  Prev: Less Context,  Up: Context Format
649
6502.2.1.3 Detailed Description of Context Format
651..............................................
652
653The context output format starts with a two-line header, which looks
654like this:
655
656     *** FROM-FILE FROM-FILE-MODIFICATION-TIME
657     --- TO-FILE TO-FILE-MODIFICATION TIME
658
659The timestamp normally looks like '2002-02-21 23:30:39.942229878 -0800'
660to indicate the date, time with fractional seconds, and time zone in
661Internet RFC 2822 format (ftp://ftp.isi.edu/in-notes/rfc2822.txt).  (The
662fractional seconds are omitted on hosts that do not support fractional
663timestamps.)  However, a traditional timestamp like 'Thu Feb 21 23:30:39
6642002' is used if the 'LC_TIME' locale category is either 'C' or 'POSIX'.
665
666   You can change the header's content with the '--label=LABEL' option;
667see *note Alternate Names::.
668
669   Next come one or more hunks of differences; each hunk shows one area
670where the files differ.  Context format hunks look like this:
671
672     ***************
673     *** FROM-FILE-LINE-NUMBERS ****
674       FROM-FILE-LINE
675       FROM-FILE-LINE...
676     --- TO-FILE-LINE-NUMBERS ----
677       TO-FILE-LINE
678       TO-FILE-LINE...
679
680   If a hunk contains two or more lines, its line numbers look like
681'START,END'.  Otherwise only its end line number appears.  An empty hunk
682is considered to end at the line that precedes the hunk.
683
684   The lines of context around the lines that differ start with two
685space characters.  The lines that differ between the two files start
686with one of the following indicator characters, followed by a space
687character:
688
689'!'
690     A line that is part of a group of one or more lines that changed
691     between the two files.  There is a corresponding group of lines
692     marked with '!' in the part of this hunk for the other file.
693
694'+'
695     An "inserted" line in the second file that corresponds to nothing
696     in the first file.
697
698'-'
699     A "deleted" line in the first file that corresponds to nothing in
700     the second file.
701
702   If all of the changes in a hunk are insertions, the lines of
703FROM-FILE are omitted.  If all of the changes are deletions, the lines
704of TO-FILE are omitted.
705
706
707File: diffutils.info,  Node: Unified Format,  Next: Sections,  Prev: Context Format,  Up: Context
708
7092.2.2 Unified Format
710--------------------
711
712The unified output format is a variation on the context format that is
713more compact because it omits redundant context lines.  To select this
714output format, use the '--unified[=LINES]' ('-U LINES'), or '-u' option.
715The argument LINES is the number of lines of context to show.  When it
716is not given, it defaults to three.
717
718   At present, only GNU 'diff' can produce this format and only GNU
719'patch' can automatically apply diffs in this format.  For proper
720operation, 'patch' typically needs at least three lines of context.
721
722* Menu:
723
724* Example Unified::  Sample output in unified format.
725* Detailed Unified:: A detailed description of unified format.
726
727
728File: diffutils.info,  Node: Example Unified,  Next: Detailed Unified,  Up: Unified Format
729
7302.2.2.1 An Example of Unified Format
731....................................
732
733Here is the output of the command 'diff -u lao tzu' (*note Sample diff
734Input::, for the complete contents of the two files):
735
736     --- lao	2002-02-21 23:30:39.942229878 -0800
737     +++ tzu	2002-02-21 23:30:50.442260588 -0800
738     @@ -1,7 +1,6 @@
739     -The Way that can be told of is not the eternal Way;
740     -The name that can be named is not the eternal name.
741      The Nameless is the origin of Heaven and Earth;
742     -The Named is the mother of all things.
743     +The named is the mother of all things.
744     +
745      Therefore let there always be non-being,
746        so we may see their subtlety,
747      And let there always be being,
748     @@ -9,3 +8,6 @@
749      The two are the same,
750      But after they are produced,
751        they have different names.
752     +They both may be called deep and profound.
753     +Deeper and more profound,
754     +The door of all subtleties!
755
756
757File: diffutils.info,  Node: Detailed Unified,  Prev: Example Unified,  Up: Unified Format
758
7592.2.2.2 Detailed Description of Unified Format
760..............................................
761
762The unified output format starts with a two-line header, which looks
763like this:
764
765     --- FROM-FILE FROM-FILE-MODIFICATION-TIME
766     +++ TO-FILE TO-FILE-MODIFICATION-TIME
767
768The timestamp looks like '2002-02-21 23:30:39.942229878 -0800' to
769indicate the date, time with fractional seconds, and time zone.  The
770fractional seconds are omitted on hosts that do not support fractional
771timestamps.
772
773   You can change the header's content with the '--label=LABEL' option.
774*Note Alternate Names::.
775
776   Next come one or more hunks of differences; each hunk shows one area
777where the files differ.  Unified format hunks look like this:
778
779     @@ FROM-FILE-LINE-NUMBERS TO-FILE-LINE-NUMBERS @@
780      LINE-FROM-EITHER-FILE
781      LINE-FROM-EITHER-FILE...
782
783   If a hunk contains just one line, only its start line number appears.
784Otherwise its line numbers look like 'START,COUNT'.  An empty hunk is
785considered to start at the line that follows the hunk.
786
787   If a hunk and its context contain two or more lines, its line numbers
788look like 'START,COUNT'.  Otherwise only its end line number appears.
789An empty hunk is considered to end at the line that precedes the hunk.
790
791   The lines common to both files begin with a space character.  The
792lines that actually differ between the two files have one of the
793following indicator characters in the left print column:
794
795'+'
796     A line was added here to the first file.
797
798'-'
799     A line was removed here from the first file.
800
801
802File: diffutils.info,  Node: Sections,  Next: Alternate Names,  Prev: Unified Format,  Up: Context
803
8042.2.3 Showing Which Sections Differences Are in
805-----------------------------------------------
806
807Sometimes you might want to know which part of the files each change
808falls in.  If the files are source code, this could mean which function
809was changed.  If the files are documents, it could mean which chapter or
810appendix was changed.  GNU 'diff' can show this by displaying the
811nearest section heading line that precedes the differing lines.  Which
812lines are "section headings" is determined by a regular expression.
813
814* Menu:
815
816* Specified Headings::  Showing headings that match regular expressions.
817* C Function Headings:: Showing headings of C functions.
818
819
820File: diffutils.info,  Node: Specified Headings,  Next: C Function Headings,  Up: Sections
821
8222.2.3.1 Showing Lines That Match Regular Expressions
823....................................................
824
825To show in which sections differences occur for files that are not
826source code for C or similar languages, use the
827'--show-function-line=REGEXP' ('-F REGEXP') option.  'diff' considers
828lines that match the 'grep'-style regular expression REGEXP to be the
829beginning of a section of the file.  Here are suggested regular
830expressions for some common languages:
831
832'^[[:alpha:]$_]'
833     C, C++, Prolog
834'^('
835     Lisp
836'^@node'
837     Texinfo
838
839   This option does not automatically select an output format; in order
840to use it, you must select the context format (*note Context Format::)
841or unified format (*note Unified Format::).  In other output formats it
842has no effect.
843
844   The '--show-function-line' ('-F') option finds the nearest unchanged
845line that precedes each hunk of differences and matches the given
846regular expression.  Then it adds that line to the end of the line of
847asterisks in the context format, or to the '@@' line in unified format.
848If no matching line exists, this option leaves the output for that hunk
849unchanged.  If that line is more than 40 characters long, it outputs
850only the first 40 characters.  You can specify more than one regular
851expression for such lines; 'diff' tries to match each line against each
852regular expression, starting with the last one given.  This means that
853you can use '-p' and '-F' together, if you wish.
854
855
856File: diffutils.info,  Node: C Function Headings,  Prev: Specified Headings,  Up: Sections
857
8582.2.3.2 Showing C Function Headings
859...................................
860
861To show in which functions differences occur for C and similar
862languages, you can use the '--show-c-function' ('-p') option.  This
863option automatically defaults to the context output format (*note
864Context Format::), with the default number of lines of context.  You can
865override that number with '-C LINES' elsewhere in the command line.  You
866can override both the format and the number with '-U LINES' elsewhere in
867the command line.
868
869   The '--show-c-function' ('-p') option is equivalent to '-F
870'^[[:alpha:]$_]'' if the unified format is specified, otherwise '-c -F
871'^[[:alpha:]$_]'' (*note Specified Headings::).  GNU 'diff' provides
872this option for the sake of convenience.
873
874
875File: diffutils.info,  Node: Alternate Names,  Prev: Sections,  Up: Context
876
8772.2.4 Showing Alternate File Names
878----------------------------------
879
880If you are comparing two files that have meaningless or uninformative
881names, you might want 'diff' to show alternate names in the header of
882the context and unified output formats.  To do this, use the
883'--label=LABEL' option.  The first time you give this option, its
884argument replaces the name and date of the first file in the header; the
885second time, its argument replaces the name and date of the second file.
886If you give this option more than twice, 'diff' reports an error.  The
887'--label' option does not affect the file names in the 'pr' header when
888the '-l' or '--paginate' option is used (*note Pagination::).
889
890   Here are the first two lines of the output from 'diff -C 2
891--label=original --label=modified lao tzu':
892
893     *** original
894     --- modified
895
896
897File: diffutils.info,  Node: Side by Side,  Next: Normal,  Prev: Context,  Up: Output Formats
898
8992.3 Showing Differences Side by Side
900====================================
901
902'diff' can produce a side by side difference listing of two files.  The
903files are listed in two columns with a gutter between them.  The gutter
904contains one of the following markers:
905
906white space
907     The corresponding lines are in common.  That is, either the lines
908     are identical, or the difference is ignored because of one of the
909     '--ignore' options (*note White Space::).
910
911'|'
912     The corresponding lines differ, and they are either both complete
913     or both incomplete.
914
915'<'
916     The files differ and only the first file contains the line.
917
918'>'
919     The files differ and only the second file contains the line.
920
921'('
922     Only the first file contains the line, but the difference is
923     ignored.
924
925')'
926     Only the second file contains the line, but the difference is
927     ignored.
928
929'\'
930     The corresponding lines differ, and only the first line is
931     incomplete.
932
933'/'
934     The corresponding lines differ, and only the second line is
935     incomplete.
936
937   Normally, an output line is incomplete if and only if the lines that
938it contains are incomplete.  *Note Incomplete Lines::.  However, when an
939output line represents two differing lines, one might be incomplete
940while the other is not.  In this case, the output line is complete, but
941its the gutter is marked '\' if the first line is incomplete, '/' if the
942second line is.
943
944   Side by side format is sometimes easiest to read, but it has
945limitations.  It generates much wider output than usual, and truncates
946lines that are too long to fit.  Also, it relies on lining up output
947more heavily than usual, so its output looks particularly bad if you use
948varying width fonts, nonstandard tab stops, or nonprinting characters.
949
950   You can use the 'sdiff' command to interactively merge side by side
951differences.  *Note Interactive Merging::, for more information on
952merging files.
953
954* Menu:
955
956* Side by Side Format::  Controlling side by side output format.
957* Example Side by Side:: Sample side by side output.
958
959
960File: diffutils.info,  Node: Side by Side Format,  Next: Example Side by Side,  Up: Side by Side
961
9622.3.1 Controlling Side by Side Format
963-------------------------------------
964
965The '--side-by-side' ('-y') option selects side by side format.  Because
966side by side output lines contain two input lines, the output is wider
967than usual: normally 130 print columns, which can fit onto a traditional
968printer line.  You can set the width of the output with the
969'--width=COLUMNS' ('-W COLUMNS') option.  The output is split into two
970halves of equal width, separated by a small gutter to mark differences;
971the right half is aligned to a tab stop so that tabs line up.  Input
972lines that are too long to fit in half of an output line are truncated
973for output.
974
975   The '--left-column' option prints only the left column of two common
976lines.  The '--suppress-common-lines' option suppresses common lines
977entirely.
978
979
980File: diffutils.info,  Node: Example Side by Side,  Prev: Side by Side Format,  Up: Side by Side
981
9822.3.2 An Example of Side by Side Format
983---------------------------------------
984
985Here is the output of the command 'diff -y -W 72 lao tzu' (*note Sample
986diff Input::, for the complete contents of the two files).
987
988     The Way that can be told of is n   <
989     The name that can be named is no   <
990     The Nameless is the origin of He        The Nameless is the origin of He
991     The Named is the mother of all t   |    The named is the mother of all t
992                                        >
993     Therefore let there always be no        Therefore let there always be no
994       so we may see their subtlety,           so we may see their subtlety,
995     And let there always be being,          And let there always be being,
996       so we may see their outcome.            so we may see their outcome.
997     The two are the same,                   The two are the same,
998     But after they are produced,            But after they are produced,
999       they have different names.              they have different names.
1000                                        >    They both may be called deep and
1001                                        >    Deeper and more profound,
1002                                        >    The door of all subtleties!
1003
1004
1005File: diffutils.info,  Node: Normal,  Next: Scripts,  Prev: Side by Side,  Up: Output Formats
1006
10072.4 Showing Differences Without Context
1008=======================================
1009
1010The "normal" 'diff' output format shows each hunk of differences without
1011any surrounding context.  Sometimes such output is the clearest way to
1012see how lines have changed, without the clutter of nearby unchanged
1013lines (although you can get similar results with the context or unified
1014formats by using 0 lines of context).  However, this format is no longer
1015widely used for sending out patches; for that purpose, the context
1016format (*note Context Format::) and the unified format (*note Unified
1017Format::) are superior.  Normal format is the default for compatibility
1018with older versions of 'diff' and the POSIX standard.  Use the
1019'--normal' option to select this output format explicitly.
1020
1021* Menu:
1022
1023* Example Normal::  Sample output in the normal format.
1024* Detailed Normal:: A detailed description of normal output format.
1025
1026
1027File: diffutils.info,  Node: Example Normal,  Next: Detailed Normal,  Up: Normal
1028
10292.4.1 An Example of Normal Format
1030---------------------------------
1031
1032Here is the output of the command 'diff lao tzu' (*note Sample diff
1033Input::, for the complete contents of the two files).  Notice that it
1034shows only the lines that are different between the two files.
1035
1036     1,2d0
1037     < The Way that can be told of is not the eternal Way;
1038     < The name that can be named is not the eternal name.
1039     4c2,3
1040     < The Named is the mother of all things.
1041     ---
1042     > The named is the mother of all things.
1043     >
1044     11a11,13
1045     > They both may be called deep and profound.
1046     > Deeper and more profound,
1047     > The door of all subtleties!
1048
1049
1050File: diffutils.info,  Node: Detailed Normal,  Prev: Example Normal,  Up: Normal
1051
10522.4.2 Detailed Description of Normal Format
1053-------------------------------------------
1054
1055The normal output format consists of one or more hunks of differences;
1056each hunk shows one area where the files differ.  Normal format hunks
1057look like this:
1058
1059     CHANGE-COMMAND
1060     < FROM-FILE-LINE
1061     < FROM-FILE-LINE...
1062     ---
1063     > TO-FILE-LINE
1064     > TO-FILE-LINE...
1065
1066   There are three types of change commands.  Each consists of a line
1067number or comma-separated range of lines in the first file, a single
1068character indicating the kind of change to make, and a line number or
1069comma-separated range of lines in the second file.  All line numbers are
1070the original line numbers in each file.  The types of change commands
1071are:
1072
1073'LaR'
1074     Add the lines in range R of the second file after line L of the
1075     first file.  For example, '8a12,15' means append lines 12-15 of
1076     file 2 after line 8 of file 1; or, if changing file 2 into file 1,
1077     delete lines 12-15 of file 2.
1078
1079'FcT'
1080     Replace the lines in range F of the first file with lines in range
1081     T of the second file.  This is like a combined add and delete, but
1082     more compact.  For example, '5,7c8,10' means change lines 5-7 of
1083     file 1 to read as lines 8-10 of file 2; or, if changing file 2 into
1084     file 1, change lines 8-10 of file 2 to read as lines 5-7 of file 1.
1085
1086'RdL'
1087     Delete the lines in range R from the first file; line L is where
1088     they would have appeared in the second file had they not been
1089     deleted.  For example, '5,7d3' means delete lines 5-7 of file 1;
1090     or, if changing file 2 into file 1, append lines 5-7 of file 1
1091     after line 3 of file 2.
1092
1093
1094File: diffutils.info,  Node: Scripts,  Next: If-then-else,  Prev: Normal,  Up: Output Formats
1095
10962.5 Making Edit Scripts
1097=======================
1098
1099Several output modes produce command scripts for editing FROM-FILE to
1100produce TO-FILE.
1101
1102* Menu:
1103
1104* ed Scripts:: Using 'diff' to produce commands for 'ed'.
1105* Forward ed:: Making forward 'ed' scripts.
1106* RCS::        A special 'diff' output format used by RCS.
1107
1108
1109File: diffutils.info,  Node: ed Scripts,  Next: Forward ed,  Up: Scripts
1110
11112.5.1 'ed' Scripts
1112------------------
1113
1114'diff' can produce commands that direct the 'ed' text editor to change
1115the first file into the second file.  Long ago, this was the only output
1116mode that was suitable for editing one file into another automatically;
1117today, with 'patch', it is almost obsolete.  Use the '--ed' ('-e')
1118option to select this output format.
1119
1120   Like the normal format (*note Normal::), this output format does not
1121show any context; unlike the normal format, it does not include the
1122information necessary to apply the diff in reverse (to produce the first
1123file if all you have is the second file and the diff).
1124
1125   If the file 'd' contains the output of 'diff -e old new', then the
1126command '(cat d && echo w) | ed - old' edits 'old' to make it a copy of
1127'new'.  More generally, if 'd1', 'd2', ..., 'dN' contain the outputs of
1128'diff -e old new1', 'diff -e new1 new2', ..., 'diff -e newN-1 newN',
1129respectively, then the command '(cat d1 d2 ... dN && echo w) | ed - old'
1130edits 'old' to make it a copy of 'newN'.
1131
1132* Menu:
1133
1134* Example ed::  A sample 'ed' script.
1135* Detailed ed:: A detailed description of 'ed' format.
1136
1137
1138File: diffutils.info,  Node: Example ed,  Next: Detailed ed,  Up: ed Scripts
1139
11402.5.1.1 Example 'ed' Script
1141...........................
1142
1143Here is the output of 'diff -e lao tzu' (*note Sample diff Input::, for
1144the complete contents of the two files):
1145
1146     11a
1147     They both may be called deep and profound.
1148     Deeper and more profound,
1149     The door of all subtleties!
1150     .
1151     4c
1152     The named is the mother of all things.
1153
1154     .
1155     1,2d
1156
1157
1158File: diffutils.info,  Node: Detailed ed,  Prev: Example ed,  Up: ed Scripts
1159
11602.5.1.2 Detailed Description of 'ed' Format
1161...........................................
1162
1163The 'ed' output format consists of one or more hunks of differences.
1164The changes closest to the ends of the files come first so that commands
1165that change the number of lines do not affect how 'ed' interprets line
1166numbers in succeeding commands.  'ed' format hunks look like this:
1167
1168     CHANGE-COMMAND
1169     TO-FILE-LINE
1170     TO-FILE-LINE...
1171     .
1172
1173   Because 'ed' uses a single period on a line to indicate the end of
1174input, GNU 'diff' protects lines of changes that contain a single period
1175on a line by writing two periods instead, then writing a subsequent 'ed'
1176command to change the two periods into one.  The 'ed' format cannot
1177represent an incomplete line, so if the second file ends in a changed
1178incomplete line, 'diff' reports an error and then pretends that a
1179newline was appended.
1180
1181   There are three types of change commands.  Each consists of a line
1182number or comma-separated range of lines in the first file and a single
1183character indicating the kind of change to make.  All line numbers are
1184the original line numbers in the file.  The types of change commands
1185are:
1186
1187'La'
1188     Add text from the second file after line L in the first file.  For
1189     example, '8a' means to add the following lines after line 8 of file
1190     1.
1191
1192'Rc'
1193     Replace the lines in range R in the first file with the following
1194     lines.  Like a combined add and delete, but more compact.  For
1195     example, '5,7c' means change lines 5-7 of file 1 to read as the
1196     text file 2.
1197
1198'Rd'
1199     Delete the lines in range R from the first file.  For example,
1200     '5,7d' means delete lines 5-7 of file 1.
1201
1202
1203File: diffutils.info,  Node: Forward ed,  Next: RCS,  Prev: ed Scripts,  Up: Scripts
1204
12052.5.2 Forward 'ed' Scripts
1206--------------------------
1207
1208'diff' can produce output that is like an 'ed' script, but with hunks in
1209forward (front to back) order.  The format of the commands is also
1210changed slightly: command characters precede the lines they modify,
1211spaces separate line numbers in ranges, and no attempt is made to
1212disambiguate hunk lines consisting of a single period.  Like 'ed'
1213format, forward 'ed' format cannot represent incomplete lines.
1214
1215   Forward 'ed' format is not very useful, because neither 'ed' nor
1216'patch' can apply diffs in this format.  It exists mainly for
1217compatibility with older versions of 'diff'.  Use the '-f' or
1218'--forward-ed' option to select it.
1219
1220
1221File: diffutils.info,  Node: RCS,  Prev: Forward ed,  Up: Scripts
1222
12232.5.3 RCS Scripts
1224-----------------
1225
1226The RCS output format is designed specifically for use by the Revision
1227Control System, which is a set of free programs used for organizing
1228different versions and systems of files.  Use the '--rcs' ('-n') option
1229to select this output format.  It is like the forward 'ed' format (*note
1230Forward ed::), but it can represent arbitrary changes to the contents of
1231a file because it avoids the forward 'ed' format's problems with lines
1232consisting of a single period and with incomplete lines.  Instead of
1233ending text sections with a line consisting of a single period, each
1234command specifies the number of lines it affects; a combination of the
1235'a' and 'd' commands are used instead of 'c'.  Also, if the second file
1236ends in a changed incomplete line, then the output also ends in an
1237incomplete line.
1238
1239   Here is the output of 'diff -n lao tzu' (*note Sample diff Input::,
1240for the complete contents of the two files):
1241
1242     d1 2
1243     d4 1
1244     a4 2
1245     The named is the mother of all things.
1246
1247     a11 3
1248     They both may be called deep and profound.
1249     Deeper and more profound,
1250     The door of all subtleties!
1251
1252
1253File: diffutils.info,  Node: If-then-else,  Prev: Scripts,  Up: Output Formats
1254
12552.6 Merging Files with If-then-else
1256===================================
1257
1258You can use 'diff' to merge two files of C source code.  The output of
1259'diff' in this format contains all the lines of both files.  Lines
1260common to both files are output just once; the differing parts are
1261separated by the C preprocessor directives '#ifdef NAME' or '#ifndef
1262NAME', '#else', and '#endif'.  When compiling the output, you select
1263which version to use by either defining or leaving undefined the macro
1264NAME.
1265
1266   To merge two files, use 'diff' with the '-D NAME' or '--ifdef=NAME'
1267option.  The argument NAME is the C preprocessor identifier to use in
1268the '#ifdef' and '#ifndef' directives.
1269
1270   For example, if you change an instance of 'wait (&s)' to 'waitpid
1271(-1, &s, 0)' and then merge the old and new files with the
1272'--ifdef=HAVE_WAITPID' option, then the affected part of your code might
1273look like this:
1274
1275         do {
1276     #ifndef HAVE_WAITPID
1277             if ((w = wait (&s)) < 0  &&  errno != EINTR)
1278     #else /* HAVE_WAITPID */
1279             if ((w = waitpid (-1, &s, 0)) < 0  &&  errno != EINTR)
1280     #endif /* HAVE_WAITPID */
1281                 return w;
1282         } while (w != child);
1283
1284   You can specify formats for languages other than C by using line
1285group formats and line formats, as described in the next sections.
1286
1287* Menu:
1288
1289* Line Group Formats::    Formats for general if-then-else line groups.
1290* Line Formats::          Formats for each line in a line group.
1291* Example If-then-else::  Sample if-then-else format output.
1292* Detailed If-then-else:: A detailed description of if-then-else format.
1293
1294
1295File: diffutils.info,  Node: Line Group Formats,  Next: Line Formats,  Up: If-then-else
1296
12972.6.1 Line Group Formats
1298------------------------
1299
1300Line group formats let you specify formats suitable for many
1301applications that allow if-then-else input, including programming
1302languages and text formatting languages.  A line group format specifies
1303the output format for a contiguous group of similar lines.
1304
1305   For example, the following command compares the TeX files 'old' and
1306'new', and outputs a merged file in which old regions are surrounded by
1307'\begin{em}'-'\end{em}' lines, and new regions are surrounded by
1308'\begin{bf}'-'\end{bf}' lines.
1309
1310     diff \
1311        --old-group-format='\begin{em}
1312     %<\end{em}
1313     ' \
1314        --new-group-format='\begin{bf}
1315     %>\end{bf}
1316     ' \
1317        old new
1318
1319   The following command is equivalent to the above example, but it is a
1320little more verbose, because it spells out the default line group
1321formats.
1322
1323     diff \
1324        --old-group-format='\begin{em}
1325     %<\end{em}
1326     ' \
1327        --new-group-format='\begin{bf}
1328     %>\end{bf}
1329     ' \
1330        --unchanged-group-format='%=' \
1331        --changed-group-format='\begin{em}
1332     %<\end{em}
1333     \begin{bf}
1334     %>\end{bf}
1335     ' \
1336        old new
1337
1338   Here is a more advanced example, which outputs a diff listing with
1339headers containing line numbers in a "plain English" style.
1340
1341     diff \
1342        --unchanged-group-format='' \
1343        --old-group-format='-------- %dn line%(n=1?:s) deleted at %df:
1344     %<' \
1345        --new-group-format='-------- %dN line%(N=1?:s) added after %de:
1346     %>' \
1347        --changed-group-format='-------- %dn line%(n=1?:s) changed at %df:
1348     %<-------- to:
1349     %>' \
1350        old new
1351
1352   To specify a line group format, use 'diff' with one of the options
1353listed below.  You can specify up to four line group formats, one for
1354each kind of line group.  You should quote FORMAT, because it typically
1355contains shell metacharacters.
1356
1357'--old-group-format=FORMAT'
1358     These line groups are hunks containing only lines from the first
1359     file.  The default old group format is the same as the changed
1360     group format if it is specified; otherwise it is a format that
1361     outputs the line group as-is.
1362
1363'--new-group-format=FORMAT'
1364     These line groups are hunks containing only lines from the second
1365     file.  The default new group format is same as the changed group
1366     format if it is specified; otherwise it is a format that outputs
1367     the line group as-is.
1368
1369'--changed-group-format=FORMAT'
1370     These line groups are hunks containing lines from both files.  The
1371     default changed group format is the concatenation of the old and
1372     new group formats.
1373
1374'--unchanged-group-format=FORMAT'
1375     These line groups contain lines common to both files.  The default
1376     unchanged group format is a format that outputs the line group
1377     as-is.
1378
1379   In a line group format, ordinary characters represent themselves;
1380conversion specifications start with '%' and have one of the following
1381forms.
1382
1383'%<'
1384     stands for the lines from the first file, including the trailing
1385     newline.  Each line is formatted according to the old line format
1386     (*note Line Formats::).
1387
1388'%>'
1389     stands for the lines from the second file, including the trailing
1390     newline.  Each line is formatted according to the new line format.
1391
1392'%='
1393     stands for the lines common to both files, including the trailing
1394     newline.  Each line is formatted according to the unchanged line
1395     format.
1396
1397'%%'
1398     stands for '%'.
1399
1400'%c'C''
1401     where C is a single character, stands for C.  C may not be a
1402     backslash or an apostrophe.  For example, '%c':'' stands for a
1403     colon, even inside the then-part of an if-then-else format, which a
1404     colon would normally terminate.
1405
1406'%c'\O''
1407     where O is a string of 1, 2, or 3 octal digits, stands for the
1408     character with octal code O.  For example, '%c'\0'' stands for a
1409     null character.
1410
1411'FN'
1412     where F is a 'printf' conversion specification and N is one of the
1413     following letters, stands for N's value formatted with F.
1414
1415     'e'
1416          The line number of the line just before the group in the old
1417          file.
1418
1419     'f'
1420          The line number of the first line in the group in the old
1421          file; equals E + 1.
1422
1423     'l'
1424          The line number of the last line in the group in the old file.
1425
1426     'm'
1427          The line number of the line just after the group in the old
1428          file; equals L + 1.
1429
1430     'n'
1431          The number of lines in the group in the old file; equals L - F
1432          + 1.
1433
1434     'E, F, L, M, N'
1435          Likewise, for lines in the new file.
1436
1437     The 'printf' conversion specification can be '%d', '%o', '%x', or
1438     '%X', specifying decimal, octal, lower case hexadecimal, or upper
1439     case hexadecimal output respectively.  After the '%' the following
1440     options can appear in sequence: a series of zero or more flags; an
1441     integer specifying the minimum field width; and a period followed
1442     by an optional integer specifying the minimum number of digits.
1443     The flags are '-' for left-justification, ''' for separating the
1444     digit into groups as specified by the 'LC_NUMERIC' locale category,
1445     and '0' for padding with zeros instead of spaces.  For example,
1446     '%5dN' prints the number of new lines in the group in a field of
1447     width 5 characters, using the 'printf' format '"%5d"'.
1448
1449'(A=B?T:E)'
1450     If A equals B then T else E.  A and B are each either a decimal
1451     constant or a single letter interpreted as above.  This format spec
1452     is equivalent to T if A's value equals B's; otherwise it is
1453     equivalent to E.
1454
1455     For example, '%(N=0?no:%dN) line%(N=1?:s)' is equivalent to 'no
1456     lines' if N (the number of lines in the group in the new file) is
1457     0, to '1 line' if N is 1, and to '%dN lines' otherwise.
1458
1459
1460File: diffutils.info,  Node: Line Formats,  Next: Example If-then-else,  Prev: Line Group Formats,  Up: If-then-else
1461
14622.6.2 Line Formats
1463------------------
1464
1465Line formats control how each line taken from an input file is output as
1466part of a line group in if-then-else format.
1467
1468   For example, the following command outputs text with a one-character
1469change indicator to the left of the text.  The first character of output
1470is '-' for deleted lines, '|' for added lines, and a space for unchanged
1471lines.  The formats contain newline characters where newlines are
1472desired on output.
1473
1474     diff \
1475        --old-line-format='-%l
1476     ' \
1477        --new-line-format='|%l
1478     ' \
1479        --unchanged-line-format=' %l
1480     ' \
1481        old new
1482
1483   To specify a line format, use one of the following options.  You
1484should quote FORMAT, since it often contains shell metacharacters.
1485
1486'--old-line-format=FORMAT'
1487     formats lines just from the first file.
1488
1489'--new-line-format=FORMAT'
1490     formats lines just from the second file.
1491
1492'--unchanged-line-format=FORMAT'
1493     formats lines common to both files.
1494
1495'--line-format=FORMAT'
1496     formats all lines; in effect, it sets all three above options
1497     simultaneously.
1498
1499   In a line format, ordinary characters represent themselves;
1500conversion specifications start with '%' and have one of the following
1501forms.
1502
1503'%l'
1504     stands for the contents of the line, not counting its trailing
1505     newline (if any).  This format ignores whether the line is
1506     incomplete; *Note Incomplete Lines::.
1507
1508'%L'
1509     stands for the contents of the line, including its trailing newline
1510     (if any).  If a line is incomplete, this format preserves its
1511     incompleteness.
1512
1513'%%'
1514     stands for '%'.
1515
1516'%c'C''
1517     where C is a single character, stands for C.  C may not be a
1518     backslash or an apostrophe.  For example, '%c':'' stands for a
1519     colon.
1520
1521'%c'\O''
1522     where O is a string of 1, 2, or 3 octal digits, stands for the
1523     character with octal code O.  For example, '%c'\0'' stands for a
1524     null character.
1525
1526'Fn'
1527     where F is a 'printf' conversion specification, stands for the line
1528     number formatted with F.  For example, '%.5dn' prints the line
1529     number using the 'printf' format '"%.5d"'.  *Note Line Group
1530     Formats::, for more about printf conversion specifications.
1531
1532   The default line format is '%l' followed by a newline character.
1533
1534   If the input contains tab characters and it is important that they
1535line up on output, you should ensure that '%l' or '%L' in a line format
1536is just after a tab stop (e.g. by preceding '%l' or '%L' with a tab
1537character), or you should use the '-t' or '--expand-tabs' option.
1538
1539   Taken together, the line and line group formats let you specify many
1540different formats.  For example, the following command uses a format
1541similar to normal 'diff' format.  You can tailor this command to get
1542fine control over 'diff' output.
1543
1544     diff \
1545        --old-line-format='< %l
1546     ' \
1547        --new-line-format='> %l
1548     ' \
1549        --old-group-format='%df%(f=l?:,%dl)d%dE
1550     %<' \
1551        --new-group-format='%dea%dF%(F=L?:,%dL)
1552     %>' \
1553        --changed-group-format='%df%(f=l?:,%dl)c%dF%(F=L?:,%dL)
1554     %<---
1555     %>' \
1556        --unchanged-group-format='' \
1557        old new
1558
1559
1560File: diffutils.info,  Node: Example If-then-else,  Next: Detailed If-then-else,  Prev: Line Formats,  Up: If-then-else
1561
15622.6.3 An Example of If-then-else Format
1563---------------------------------------
1564
1565Here is the output of 'diff -DTWO lao tzu' (*note Sample diff Input::,
1566for the complete contents of the two files):
1567
1568     #ifndef TWO
1569     The Way that can be told of is not the eternal Way;
1570     The name that can be named is not the eternal name.
1571     #endif /* ! TWO */
1572     The Nameless is the origin of Heaven and Earth;
1573     #ifndef TWO
1574     The Named is the mother of all things.
1575     #else /* TWO */
1576     The named is the mother of all things.
1577
1578     #endif /* TWO */
1579     Therefore let there always be non-being,
1580       so we may see their subtlety,
1581     And let there always be being,
1582       so we may see their outcome.
1583     The two are the same,
1584     But after they are produced,
1585       they have different names.
1586     #ifdef TWO
1587     They both may be called deep and profound.
1588     Deeper and more profound,
1589     The door of all subtleties!
1590     #endif /* TWO */
1591
1592
1593File: diffutils.info,  Node: Detailed If-then-else,  Prev: Example If-then-else,  Up: If-then-else
1594
15952.6.4 Detailed Description of If-then-else Format
1596-------------------------------------------------
1597
1598For lines common to both files, 'diff' uses the unchanged line group
1599format.  For each hunk of differences in the merged output format, if
1600the hunk contains only lines from the first file, 'diff' uses the old
1601line group format; if the hunk contains only lines from the second file,
1602'diff' uses the new group format; otherwise, 'diff' uses the changed
1603group format.
1604
1605   The old, new, and unchanged line formats specify the output format of
1606lines from the first file, lines from the second file, and lines common
1607to both files, respectively.
1608
1609   The option '--ifdef=NAME' is equivalent to the following sequence of
1610options using shell syntax:
1611
1612     --old-group-format='#ifndef NAME
1613     %<#endif /* ! NAME */
1614     ' \
1615     --new-group-format='#ifdef NAME
1616     %>#endif /* NAME */
1617     ' \
1618     --unchanged-group-format='%=' \
1619     --changed-group-format='#ifndef NAME
1620     %<#else /* NAME */
1621     %>#endif /* NAME */
1622     '
1623
1624   You should carefully check the 'diff' output for proper nesting.  For
1625example, when using the '-D NAME' or '--ifdef=NAME' option, you should
1626check that if the differing lines contain any of the C preprocessor
1627directives '#ifdef', '#ifndef', '#else', '#elif', or '#endif', they are
1628nested properly and match.  If they don't, you must make corrections
1629manually.  It is a good idea to carefully check the resulting code
1630anyway to make sure that it really does what you want it to; depending
1631on how the input files were produced, the output might contain duplicate
1632or otherwise incorrect code.
1633
1634   The 'patch' '-D NAME' option behaves like the 'diff' '-D NAME'
1635option, except it operates on a file and a diff to produce a merged
1636file.  *Note patch Options::.
1637
1638
1639File: diffutils.info,  Node: Incomplete Lines,  Next: Comparing Directories,  Prev: Output Formats,  Up: Top
1640
16413 Incomplete Lines
1642******************
1643
1644When an input file ends in a non-newline character, its last line is
1645called an "incomplete line" because its last character is not a newline.
1646All other lines are called "full lines" and end in a newline character.
1647Incomplete lines do not match full lines unless differences in white
1648space are ignored (*note White Space::).
1649
1650   An incomplete line is normally distinguished on output from a full
1651line by a following line that starts with '\'.  However, the RCS format
1652(*note RCS::) outputs the incomplete line as-is, without any trailing
1653newline or following line.  The side by side format normally represents
1654incomplete lines as-is, but in some cases uses a '\' or '/' gutter
1655marker.  *Note Side by Side::.  The if-then-else line format preserves a
1656line's incompleteness with '%L', and discards the newline with '%l'.
1657*Note Line Formats::.  Finally, with the 'ed' and forward 'ed' output
1658formats (*note Output Formats::) 'diff' cannot represent an incomplete
1659line, so it pretends there was a newline and reports an error.
1660
1661   For example, suppose 'F' and 'G' are one-byte files that contain just
1662'f' and 'g', respectively.  Then 'diff F G' outputs
1663
1664     1c1
1665     < f
1666     \ No newline at end of file
1667     ---
1668     > g
1669     \ No newline at end of file
1670
1671(The exact message may differ in non-English locales.)  'diff -n F G'
1672outputs the following without a trailing newline:
1673
1674     d1 1
1675     a1 1
1676     g
1677
1678'diff -e F G' reports two errors and outputs the following:
1679
1680     1c
1681     g
1682     .
1683
1684
1685File: diffutils.info,  Node: Comparing Directories,  Next: Adjusting Output,  Prev: Incomplete Lines,  Up: Top
1686
16874 Comparing Directories
1688***********************
1689
1690You can use 'diff' to compare some or all of the files in two directory
1691trees.  When both file name arguments to 'diff' are directories, it
1692compares each file that is contained in both directories, examining file
1693names in alphabetical order as specified by the 'LC_COLLATE' locale
1694category.  Normally 'diff' is silent about pairs of files that contain
1695no differences, but if you use the '--report-identical-files' ('-s')
1696option, it reports pairs of identical files.  Normally 'diff' reports
1697subdirectories common to both directories without comparing
1698subdirectories' files, but if you use the '-r' or '--recursive' option,
1699it compares every corresponding pair of files in the directory trees, as
1700many levels deep as they go.
1701
1702   If only one file exists, 'diff' normally does not show its contents;
1703it merely reports that one file exists but the other does not.  You can
1704make 'diff' act as though the missing file is empty, so that it outputs
1705the entire contents of the file that actually exists.  (It is output as
1706either an insertion or a deletion, depending on whether the missing file
1707is in the first or the second position.)  To do this, use the
1708'--new-file' ('-N') option.  This option affects command-line arguments
1709as well as files found via directory traversal; for example, 'diff -N a
1710b' treats 'a' as empty if 'a' does not exist but 'b' does, and similarly
1711'diff -N - b' treats standard input as empty if it is closed but 'b'
1712exists.
1713
1714   If the older directory contains large files that are not in the newer
1715directory, you can make the patch smaller by using the
1716'--unidirectional-new-file' option instead of '-N'.  This option is like
1717'-N' except that it inserts the contents only of files that appear in
1718the second directory but not the first (that is, files that were added).
1719At the top of the patch, write instructions for the user applying the
1720patch to remove the files that were deleted before applying the patch.
1721*Note Making Patches::, for more discussion of making patches for
1722distribution.
1723
1724   To ignore some files while comparing directories, use the
1725'--exclude=PATTERN' ('-x PATTERN') option.  This option ignores any
1726files or subdirectories whose base names match the shell pattern
1727PATTERN.  Unlike in the shell, a period at the start of the base of a
1728file name matches a wildcard at the start of a pattern.  You should
1729enclose PATTERN in quotes so that the shell does not expand it.  For
1730example, the option '-x '*.[ao]'' ignores any file whose name ends with
1731'.a' or '.o'.
1732
1733   This option accumulates if you specify it more than once.  For
1734example, using the options '-x 'RCS' -x '*,v'' ignores any file or
1735subdirectory whose base name is 'RCS' or ends with ',v'.
1736
1737   If you need to give this option many times, you can instead put the
1738patterns in a file, one pattern per line, and use the
1739'--exclude-from=FILE' ('-X FILE') option.  Trailing white space and
1740empty lines are ignored in the pattern file.
1741
1742   If you have been comparing two directories and stopped partway
1743through, later you might want to continue where you left off.  You can
1744do this by using the '--starting-file=FILE' ('-S FILE') option.  This
1745compares only the file FILE and all alphabetically later files in the
1746topmost directory level.
1747
1748   If two directories differ only in that file names are lower case in
1749one directory and upper case in the upper, 'diff' normally reports many
1750differences because it compares file names in a case sensitive way.
1751With the '--ignore-file-name-case' option, 'diff' ignores case
1752differences in file names, so that for example the contents of the file
1753'Tao' in one directory are compared to the contents of the file 'TAO' in
1754the other.  The '--no-ignore-file-name-case' option cancels the effect
1755of the '--ignore-file-name-case' option, reverting to the default
1756behavior.
1757
1758   If an '--exclude=PATTERN' ('-x PATTERN') option, or an
1759'--exclude-from=FILE' ('-X FILE') option, is specified while the
1760'--ignore-file-name-case' option is in effect, case is ignored when
1761excluding file names matching the specified patterns.
1762
1763   To tell 'diff' not to follow a symbolic link, use the
1764'--no-dereference' option.
1765
1766
1767File: diffutils.info,  Node: Adjusting Output,  Next: diff Performance,  Prev: Comparing Directories,  Up: Top
1768
17695 Making 'diff' Output Prettier
1770*******************************
1771
1772'diff' provides several ways to adjust the appearance of its output.
1773These adjustments can be applied to any output format.
1774
1775* Menu:
1776
1777* Tabs::            Preserving the alignment of tab stops.
1778* Trailing Blanks:: Suppressing blanks before empty output lines.
1779* Pagination::      Page numbering and time-stamping 'diff' output.
1780
1781
1782File: diffutils.info,  Node: Tabs,  Next: Trailing Blanks,  Up: Adjusting Output
1783
17845.1 Preserving Tab Stop Alignment
1785=================================
1786
1787The lines of text in some of the 'diff' output formats are preceded by
1788one or two characters that indicate whether the text is inserted,
1789deleted, or changed.  The addition of those characters can cause tabs to
1790move to the next tab stop, throwing off the alignment of columns in the
1791line.  GNU 'diff' provides two ways to make tab-aligned columns line up
1792correctly.
1793
1794   The first way is to have 'diff' convert all tabs into the correct
1795number of spaces before outputting them; select this method with the
1796'--expand-tabs' ('-t') option.  To use this form of output with 'patch',
1797you must give 'patch' the '-l' or '--ignore-white-space' option (*note
1798Changed White Space::, for more information).  'diff' normally assumes
1799that tab stops are set every 8 print columns, but this can be altered by
1800the '--tabsize=COLUMNS' option.
1801
1802   The other method for making tabs line up correctly is to add a tab
1803character instead of a space after the indicator character at the
1804beginning of the line.  This ensures that all following tab characters
1805are in the same position relative to tab stops that they were in the
1806original files, so that the output is aligned correctly.  Its
1807disadvantage is that it can make long lines too long to fit on one line
1808of the screen or the paper.  It also does not work with the unified
1809output format, which does not have a space character after the change
1810type indicator character.  Select this method with the '-T' or
1811'--initial-tab' option.
1812
1813
1814File: diffutils.info,  Node: Trailing Blanks,  Next: Pagination,  Prev: Tabs,  Up: Adjusting Output
1815
18165.2 Omitting trailing blanks
1817============================
1818
1819When outputting lines in normal or context format, or outputting an
1820unchanged line in unified format, 'diff' normally outputs a blank just
1821before each line.  If the line is empty, the output of 'diff' therefore
1822contains trailing blanks even though the input does not contain them.
1823For example, when outputting an unchanged empty line in context format,
1824'diff' normally outputs a line with two leading spaces.
1825
1826   Some text editors and email agents routinely delete trailing blanks,
1827so it can be a problem to deal with diff output files that contain them.
1828You can avoid this problem with the '--suppress-blank-empty' option.  It
1829causes 'diff' to omit trailing blanks at the end of output lines in
1830normal, context, and unified format, unless the trailing blanks were
1831already present in the input.  This changes the output format slightly,
1832so that output lines are guaranteed to never end in a blank unless an
1833input line ends in a blank.  This format is less likely to be munged by
1834text editors or by transmission via email.  It is accepted by GNU
1835'patch' as well.
1836
1837
1838File: diffutils.info,  Node: Pagination,  Prev: Trailing Blanks,  Up: Adjusting Output
1839
18405.3 Paginating 'diff' Output
1841============================
1842
1843It can be convenient to have long output page-numbered and time-stamped.
1844The '--paginate' ('-l') option does this by sending the 'diff' output
1845through the 'pr' program.  Here is what the page header might look like
1846for 'diff -lc lao tzu':
1847
1848     2002-02-22 14:20                 diff -lc lao tzu                 Page 1
1849
1850
1851File: diffutils.info,  Node: diff Performance,  Next: Comparing Three Files,  Prev: Adjusting Output,  Up: Top
1852
18536 'diff' Performance Tradeoffs
1854******************************
1855
1856GNU 'diff' runs quite efficiently; however, in some circumstances you
1857can cause it to run faster or produce a more compact set of changes.
1858
1859   One way to improve 'diff' performance is to use hard or symbolic
1860links to files instead of copies.  This improves performance because
1861'diff' normally does not need to read two hard or symbolic links to the
1862same file, since their contents must be identical.  For example, suppose
1863you copy a large directory hierarchy, make a few changes to the copy,
1864and then often use 'diff -r' to compare the original to the copy.  If
1865the original files are read-only, you can greatly improve performance by
1866creating the copy using hard or symbolic links (e.g., with GNU 'cp -lR'
1867or 'cp -sR').  Before editing a file in the copy for the first time, you
1868should break the link and replace it with a regular copy.
1869
1870   You can also affect the performance of GNU 'diff' by giving it
1871options that change the way it compares files.  Performance has more
1872than one dimension.  These options improve one aspect of performance at
1873the cost of another, or they improve performance in some cases while
1874hurting it in others.
1875
1876   The way that GNU 'diff' determines which lines have changed always
1877comes up with a near-minimal set of differences.  Usually it is good
1878enough for practical purposes.  If the 'diff' output is large, you might
1879want 'diff' to use a modified algorithm that sometimes produces a
1880smaller set of differences.  The '--minimal' ('-d') option does this;
1881however, it can also cause 'diff' to run more slowly than usual, so it
1882is not the default behavior.
1883
1884   When the files you are comparing are large and have small groups of
1885changes scattered throughout them, you can use the '--speed-large-files'
1886option to make a different modification to the algorithm that 'diff'
1887uses.  If the input files have a constant small density of changes, this
1888option speeds up the comparisons without changing the output.  If not,
1889'diff' might produce a larger set of differences; however, the output
1890will still be correct.
1891
1892   Normally 'diff' discards the prefix and suffix that is common to both
1893files before it attempts to find a minimal set of differences.  This
1894makes 'diff' run faster, but occasionally it may produce non-minimal
1895output.  The '--horizon-lines=LINES' option prevents 'diff' from
1896discarding the last LINES lines of the prefix and the first LINES lines
1897of the suffix.  This gives 'diff' further opportunities to find a
1898minimal output.
1899
1900   Suppose a run of changed lines includes a sequence of lines at one
1901end and there is an identical sequence of lines just outside the other
1902end.  The 'diff' command is free to choose which identical sequence is
1903included in the hunk.  In this case, 'diff' normally shifts the hunk's
1904boundaries when this merges adjacent hunks, or shifts a hunk's lines
1905towards the end of the file.  Merging hunks can make the output look
1906nicer in some cases.
1907
1908
1909File: diffutils.info,  Node: Comparing Three Files,  Next: diff3 Merging,  Prev: diff Performance,  Up: Top
1910
19117 Comparing Three Files
1912***********************
1913
1914Use the program 'diff3' to compare three files and show any differences
1915among them.  ('diff3' can also merge files; see *note diff3 Merging::).
1916
1917   The "normal" 'diff3' output format shows each hunk of differences
1918without surrounding context.  Hunks are labeled depending on whether
1919they are two-way or three-way, and lines are annotated by their location
1920in the input files.
1921
1922   *Note Invoking diff3::, for more information on how to run 'diff3'.
1923
1924* Menu:
1925
1926* Sample diff3 Input::    Sample 'diff3' input for examples.
1927* Example diff3 Normal::  Sample output in the normal format.
1928* Detailed diff3 Normal:: A detailed description of normal output format.
1929* diff3 Hunks::           The format of normal output format.
1930
1931
1932File: diffutils.info,  Node: Sample diff3 Input,  Next: Example diff3 Normal,  Up: Comparing Three Files
1933
19347.1 A Third Sample Input File
1935=============================
1936
1937Here is a third sample file that will be used in examples to illustrate
1938the output of 'diff3' and how various options can change it.  The first
1939two files are the same that we used for 'diff' (*note Sample diff
1940Input::).  This is the third sample file, called 'tao':
1941
1942     The Way that can be told of is not the eternal Way;
1943     The name that can be named is not the eternal name.
1944     The Nameless is the origin of Heaven and Earth;
1945     The named is the mother of all things.
1946
1947     Therefore let there always be non-being,
1948       so we may see their subtlety,
1949     And let there always be being,
1950       so we may see their result.
1951     The two are the same,
1952     But after they are produced,
1953       they have different names.
1954
1955       -- The Way of Lao-Tzu, tr. Wing-tsit Chan
1956
1957
1958File: diffutils.info,  Node: Example diff3 Normal,  Next: Detailed diff3 Normal,  Prev: Sample diff3 Input,  Up: Comparing Three Files
1959
19607.2 An Example of 'diff3' Normal Format
1961=======================================
1962
1963Here is the output of the command 'diff3 lao tzu tao' (*note Sample
1964diff3 Input::, for the complete contents of the files).  Notice that it
1965shows only the lines that are different among the three files.
1966
1967     ====2
1968     1:1,2c
1969     3:1,2c
1970       The Way that can be told of is not the eternal Way;
1971       The name that can be named is not the eternal name.
1972     2:0a
1973     ====1
1974     1:4c
1975       The Named is the mother of all things.
1976     2:2,3c
1977     3:4,5c
1978       The named is the mother of all things.
1979
1980     ====3
1981     1:8c
1982     2:7c
1983         so we may see their outcome.
1984     3:9c
1985         so we may see their result.
1986     ====
1987     1:11a
1988     2:11,13c
1989       They both may be called deep and profound.
1990       Deeper and more profound,
1991       The door of all subtleties!
1992     3:13,14c
1993
1994         -- The Way of Lao-Tzu, tr. Wing-tsit Chan
1995
1996
1997File: diffutils.info,  Node: Detailed diff3 Normal,  Next: diff3 Hunks,  Prev: Example diff3 Normal,  Up: Comparing Three Files
1998
19997.3 Detailed Description of 'diff3' Normal Format
2000=================================================
2001
2002Each hunk begins with a line marked '===='.  Three-way hunks have plain
2003'====' lines, and two-way hunks have '1', '2', or '3' appended to
2004specify which of the three input files differ in that hunk.  The hunks
2005contain copies of two or three sets of input lines each preceded by one
2006or two commands identifying where the lines came from.
2007
2008   Normally, two spaces precede each copy of an input line to
2009distinguish it from the commands.  But with the '--initial-tab' ('-T')
2010option, 'diff3' uses a tab instead of two spaces; this lines up tabs
2011correctly.  *Note Tabs::, for more information.
2012
2013   Commands take the following forms:
2014
2015'FILE:La'
2016     This hunk appears after line L of file FILE, and contains no lines
2017     in that file.  To edit this file to yield the other files, one must
2018     append hunk lines taken from the other files.  For example, '1:11a'
2019     means that the hunk follows line 11 in the first file and contains
2020     no lines from that file.
2021
2022'FILE:Rc'
2023     This hunk contains the lines in the range R of file FILE.  The
2024     range R is a comma-separated pair of line numbers, or just one
2025     number if there is only one line.  To edit this file to yield the
2026     other files, one must change the specified lines to be the lines
2027     taken from the other files.  For example, '2:11,13c' means that the
2028     hunk contains lines 11 through 13 from the second file.
2029
2030   If the last line in a set of input lines is incomplete (*note
2031Incomplete Lines::), it is distinguished on output from a full line by a
2032following line that starts with '\'.
2033
2034
2035File: diffutils.info,  Node: diff3 Hunks,  Prev: Detailed diff3 Normal,  Up: Comparing Three Files
2036
20377.4 'diff3' Hunks
2038=================
2039
2040Groups of lines that differ in two or three of the input files are
2041called "diff3 hunks", by analogy with 'diff' hunks (*note Hunks::).  If
2042all three input files differ in a 'diff3' hunk, the hunk is called a
2043"three-way hunk"; if just two input files differ, it is a "two-way
2044hunk".
2045
2046   As with 'diff', several solutions are possible.  When comparing the
2047files 'A', 'B', and 'C', 'diff3' normally finds 'diff3' hunks by merging
2048the two-way hunks output by the two commands 'diff A B' and 'diff A C'.
2049This does not necessarily minimize the size of the output, but
2050exceptions should be rare.
2051
2052   For example, suppose 'F' contains the three lines 'a', 'b', 'f', 'G'
2053contains the lines 'g', 'b', 'g', and 'H' contains the lines 'a', 'b',
2054'h'.  'diff3 F G H' might output the following:
2055
2056     ====2
2057     1:1c
2058     3:1c
2059       a
2060     2:1c
2061       g
2062     ====
2063     1:3c
2064       f
2065     2:3c
2066       g
2067     3:3c
2068       h
2069
2070because it found a two-way hunk containing 'a' in the first and third
2071files and 'g' in the second file, then the single line 'b' common to all
2072three files, then a three-way hunk containing the last line of each
2073file.
2074
2075
2076File: diffutils.info,  Node: diff3 Merging,  Next: Interactive Merging,  Prev: Comparing Three Files,  Up: Top
2077
20788 Merging From a Common Ancestor
2079********************************
2080
2081When two people have made changes to copies of the same file, 'diff3'
2082can produce a merged output that contains both sets of changes together
2083with warnings about conflicts.
2084
2085   One might imagine programs with names like 'diff4' and 'diff5' to
2086compare more than three files simultaneously, but in practice the need
2087rarely arises.  You can use 'diff3' to merge three or more sets of
2088changes to a file by merging two change sets at a time.
2089
2090   'diff3' can incorporate changes from two modified versions into a
2091common preceding version.  This lets you merge the sets of changes
2092represented by the two newer files.  Specify the common ancestor version
2093as the second argument and the two newer versions as the first and third
2094arguments, like this:
2095
2096     diff3 MINE OLDER YOURS
2097
2098You can remember the order of the arguments by noting that they are in
2099alphabetical order.
2100
2101   You can think of this as subtracting OLDER from YOURS and adding the
2102result to MINE, or as merging into MINE the changes that would turn
2103OLDER into YOURS.  This merging is well-defined as long as MINE and
2104OLDER match in the neighborhood of each such change.  This fails to be
2105true when all three input files differ or when only OLDER differs; we
2106call this a "conflict".  When all three input files differ, we call the
2107conflict an "overlap".
2108
2109   'diff3' gives you several ways to handle overlaps and conflicts.  You
2110can omit overlaps or conflicts, or select only overlaps, or mark
2111conflicts with special '<<<<<<<' and '>>>>>>>' lines.
2112
2113   'diff3' can output the merge results as an 'ed' script that that can
2114be applied to the first file to yield the merged output.  However, it is
2115usually better to have 'diff3' generate the merged output directly; this
2116bypasses some problems with 'ed'.
2117
2118* Menu:
2119
2120* Which Changes::            Selecting changes to incorporate.
2121* Marking Conflicts::        Marking conflicts.
2122* Bypassing ed::             Generating merged output directly.
2123* Merging Incomplete Lines:: How 'diff3' merges incomplete lines.
2124* Saving the Changed File::  Emulating System V behavior.
2125
2126
2127File: diffutils.info,  Node: Which Changes,  Next: Marking Conflicts,  Up: diff3 Merging
2128
21298.1 Selecting Which Changes to Incorporate
2130==========================================
2131
2132You can select all unmerged changes from OLDER to YOURS for merging into
2133MINE with the '--ed' ('-e') option.  You can select only the
2134nonoverlapping unmerged changes with '--easy-only' ('-3'), and you can
2135select only the overlapping changes with '--overlap-only' ('-x').
2136
2137   The '-e', '-3' and '-x' options select only "unmerged changes", i.e.
2138changes where MINE and YOURS differ; they ignore changes from OLDER to
2139YOURS where MINE and YOURS are identical, because they assume that such
2140changes have already been merged.  If this assumption is not a safe one,
2141you can use the '--show-all' ('-A') option (*note Marking Conflicts::).
2142
2143   Here is the output of the command 'diff3' with each of these three
2144options (*note Sample diff3 Input::, for the complete contents of the
2145files).  Notice that '-e' outputs the union of the disjoint sets of
2146changes output by '-3' and '-x'.
2147
2148   Output of 'diff3 -e lao tzu tao':
2149     11a
2150
2151       -- The Way of Lao-Tzu, tr. Wing-tsit Chan
2152     .
2153     8c
2154       so we may see their result.
2155     .
2156
2157   Output of 'diff3 -3 lao tzu tao':
2158     8c
2159       so we may see their result.
2160     .
2161
2162   Output of 'diff3 -x lao tzu tao':
2163     11a
2164
2165       -- The Way of Lao-Tzu, tr. Wing-tsit Chan
2166     .
2167
2168
2169File: diffutils.info,  Node: Marking Conflicts,  Next: Bypassing ed,  Prev: Which Changes,  Up: diff3 Merging
2170
21718.2 Marking Conflicts
2172=====================
2173
2174'diff3' can mark conflicts in the merged output by bracketing them with
2175special marker lines.  A conflict that comes from two files A and B is
2176marked as follows:
2177
2178     <<<<<<< A
2179     lines from A
2180     =======
2181     lines from B
2182     >>>>>>> B
2183
2184   A conflict that comes from three files A, B and C is marked as
2185follows:
2186
2187     <<<<<<< A
2188     lines from A
2189     ||||||| B
2190     lines from B
2191     =======
2192     lines from C
2193     >>>>>>> C
2194
2195   The '--show-all' ('-A') option acts like the '-e' option, except that
2196it brackets conflicts, and it outputs all changes from OLDER to YOURS,
2197not just the unmerged changes.  Thus, given the sample input files
2198(*note Sample diff3 Input::), 'diff3 -A lao tzu tao' puts brackets
2199around the conflict where only 'tzu' differs:
2200
2201     <<<<<<< tzu
2202     =======
2203     The Way that can be told of is not the eternal Way;
2204     The name that can be named is not the eternal name.
2205     >>>>>>> tao
2206
2207   And it outputs the three-way conflict as follows:
2208
2209     <<<<<<< lao
2210     ||||||| tzu
2211     They both may be called deep and profound.
2212     Deeper and more profound,
2213     The door of all subtleties!
2214     =======
2215
2216       -- The Way of Lao-Tzu, tr. Wing-tsit Chan
2217     >>>>>>> tao
2218
2219   The '--show-overlap' ('-E') option outputs less information than the
2220'--show-all' ('-A') option, because it outputs only unmerged changes,
2221and it never outputs the contents of the second file.  Thus the '-E'
2222option acts like the '-e' option, except that it brackets the first and
2223third files from three-way overlapping changes.  Similarly, '-X' acts
2224like '-x', except it brackets all its (necessarily overlapping) changes.
2225For example, for the three-way overlapping change above, the '-E' and
2226'-X' options output the following:
2227
2228     <<<<<<< lao
2229     =======
2230
2231       -- The Way of Lao-Tzu, tr. Wing-tsit Chan
2232     >>>>>>> tao
2233
2234   If you are comparing files that have meaningless or uninformative
2235names, you can use the '--label=LABEL' option to show alternate names in
2236the '<<<<<<<', '|||||||' and '>>>>>>>' brackets.  This option can be
2237given up to three times, once for each input file.  Thus 'diff3 -A
2238--label X --label Y --label Z A B C' acts like 'diff3 -A A B C', except
2239that the output looks like it came from files named 'X', 'Y' and 'Z'
2240rather than from files named 'A', 'B' and 'C'.
2241
2242
2243File: diffutils.info,  Node: Bypassing ed,  Next: Merging Incomplete Lines,  Prev: Marking Conflicts,  Up: diff3 Merging
2244
22458.3 Generating the Merged Output Directly
2246=========================================
2247
2248With the '--merge' ('-m') option, 'diff3' outputs the merged file
2249directly.  This is more efficient than using 'ed' to generate it, and
2250works even with non-text files that 'ed' would reject.  If you specify
2251'-m' without an 'ed' script option, '-A' is assumed.
2252
2253   For example, the command 'diff3 -m lao tzu tao' (*note Sample diff3
2254Input:: for a copy of the input files) would output the following:
2255
2256     <<<<<<< tzu
2257     =======
2258     The Way that can be told of is not the eternal Way;
2259     The name that can be named is not the eternal name.
2260     >>>>>>> tao
2261     The Nameless is the origin of Heaven and Earth;
2262     The Named is the mother of all things.
2263     Therefore let there always be non-being,
2264       so we may see their subtlety,
2265     And let there always be being,
2266       so we may see their result.
2267     The two are the same,
2268     But after they are produced,
2269       they have different names.
2270     <<<<<<< lao
2271     ||||||| tzu
2272     They both may be called deep and profound.
2273     Deeper and more profound,
2274     The door of all subtleties!
2275     =======
2276
2277       -- The Way of Lao-Tzu, tr. Wing-tsit Chan
2278     >>>>>>> tao
2279
2280
2281File: diffutils.info,  Node: Merging Incomplete Lines,  Next: Saving the Changed File,  Prev: Bypassing ed,  Up: diff3 Merging
2282
22838.4 How 'diff3' Merges Incomplete Lines
2284=======================================
2285
2286With '-m', incomplete lines (*note Incomplete Lines::) are simply copied
2287to the output as they are found; if the merged output ends in an
2288conflict and one of the input files ends in an incomplete line,
2289succeeding '|||||||', '=======' or '>>>>>>>' brackets appear somewhere
2290other than the start of a line because they are appended to the
2291incomplete line.
2292
2293   Without '-m', if an 'ed' script option is specified and an incomplete
2294line is found, 'diff3' generates a warning and acts as if a newline had
2295been present.
2296
2297
2298File: diffutils.info,  Node: Saving the Changed File,  Prev: Merging Incomplete Lines,  Up: diff3 Merging
2299
23008.5 Saving the Changed File
2301===========================
2302
2303Traditional Unix 'diff3' generates an 'ed' script without the trailing
2304'w' and 'q' commands that save the changes.  System V 'diff3' generates
2305these extra commands.  GNU 'diff3' normally behaves like traditional
2306Unix 'diff3', but with the '-i' option it behaves like System V 'diff3'
2307and appends the 'w' and 'q' commands.
2308
2309   The '-i' option requires one of the 'ed' script options '-AeExX3',
2310and is incompatible with the merged output option '-m'.
2311
2312
2313File: diffutils.info,  Node: Interactive Merging,  Next: Merging with patch,  Prev: diff3 Merging,  Up: Top
2314
23159 Interactive Merging with 'sdiff'
2316**********************************
2317
2318With 'sdiff', you can merge two files interactively based on a
2319side-by-side '-y' format comparison (*note Side by Side::).  Use
2320'--output=FILE' ('-o FILE') to specify where to put the merged text.
2321*Note Invoking sdiff::, for more details on the options to 'sdiff'.
2322
2323   Another way to merge files interactively is to use the Emacs Lisp
2324package 'emerge'.  *Note Emerge: (emacs)Emerge, for more information.
2325
2326* Menu:
2327
2328* sdiff Option Summary:: Summary of 'sdiff' options.
2329* Merge Commands::       Merging two files interactively.
2330
2331
2332File: diffutils.info,  Node: sdiff Option Summary,  Next: Merge Commands,  Up: Interactive Merging
2333
23349.1 Specifying 'diff' Options to 'sdiff'
2335========================================
2336
2337The following 'sdiff' options have the same meaning as for 'diff'.
2338*Note diff Options::, for the use of these options.
2339
2340     -a -b -d -i -t -v
2341     -B -E -I REGEXP -Z
2342
2343     --expand-tabs
2344     --ignore-blank-lines  --ignore-case
2345     --ignore-matching-lines=REGEXP  --ignore-space-change
2346     --ignore-tab-expansion  --ignore-trailing-space
2347     --left-column  --minimal  --speed-large-files
2348     --strip-trailing-cr  --suppress-common-lines
2349     --tabsize=COLUMNS  --text  --version  --width=COLUMNS
2350
2351   For historical reasons, 'sdiff' has alternate names for some options.
2352The '-l' option is equivalent to the '--left-column' option, and
2353similarly '-s' is equivalent to '--suppress-common-lines'.  The meaning
2354of the 'sdiff' '-w' and '-W' options is interchanged from that of
2355'diff': with 'sdiff', '-w COLUMNS' is equivalent to '--width=COLUMNS',
2356and '-W' is equivalent to '--ignore-all-space'.  'sdiff' without the
2357'-o' option is equivalent to 'diff' with the '--side-by-side' ('-y')
2358option (*note Side by Side::).
2359
2360
2361File: diffutils.info,  Node: Merge Commands,  Prev: sdiff Option Summary,  Up: Interactive Merging
2362
23639.2 Merge Commands
2364==================
2365
2366Groups of common lines, with a blank gutter, are copied from the first
2367file to the output.  After each group of differing lines, 'sdiff'
2368prompts with '%' and pauses, waiting for one of the following commands.
2369Follow each command with <RET>.
2370
2371'e'
2372     Discard both versions.  Invoke a text editor on an empty temporary
2373     file, then copy the resulting file to the output.
2374
2375'eb'
2376     Concatenate the two versions, edit the result in a temporary file,
2377     then copy the edited result to the output.
2378
2379'ed'
2380     Like 'eb', except precede each version with a header that shows
2381     what file and lines the version came from.
2382
2383'el'
2384'e1'
2385     Edit a copy of the left version, then copy the result to the
2386     output.
2387
2388'er'
2389'e2'
2390     Edit a copy of the right version, then copy the result to the
2391     output.
2392
2393'l'
2394'1'
2395     Copy the left version to the output.
2396
2397'q'
2398     Quit.
2399
2400'r'
2401'2'
2402     Copy the right version to the output.
2403
2404's'
2405     Silently copy common lines.
2406
2407'v'
2408     Verbosely copy common lines.  This is the default.
2409
2410   The text editor invoked is specified by the 'EDITOR' environment
2411variable if it is set.  The default is system-dependent.
2412
2413
2414File: diffutils.info,  Node: Merging with patch,  Next: Making Patches,  Prev: Interactive Merging,  Up: Top
2415
241610 Merging with 'patch'
2417***********************
2418
2419'patch' takes comparison output produced by 'diff' and applies the
2420differences to a copy of the original file, producing a patched version.
2421With 'patch', you can distribute just the changes to a set of files
2422instead of distributing the entire file set; your correspondents can
2423apply 'patch' to update their copy of the files with your changes.
2424'patch' automatically determines the diff format, skips any leading or
2425trailing headers, and uses the headers to determine which file to patch.
2426This lets your correspondents feed a mail message containing a
2427difference listing directly to 'patch'.
2428
2429   'patch' detects and warns about common problems like forward patches.
2430It saves any patches that it could not apply.  It can also maintain a
2431'patchlevel.h' file to ensure that your correspondents apply diffs in
2432the proper order.
2433
2434   'patch' accepts a series of diffs in its standard input, usually
2435separated by headers that specify which file to patch.  It applies
2436'diff' hunks (*note Hunks::) one by one.  If a hunk does not exactly
2437match the original file, 'patch' uses heuristics to try to patch the
2438file as well as it can.  If no approximate match can be found, 'patch'
2439rejects the hunk and skips to the next hunk.  'patch' normally replaces
2440each file F with its new version, putting reject hunks (if any) into
2441'F.rej'.
2442
2443   *Note Invoking patch::, for detailed information on the options to
2444'patch'.
2445
2446* Menu:
2447
2448* patch Input::            Selecting the type of 'patch' input.
2449* Revision Control::       Getting files from RCS, SCCS, etc.
2450* Imperfect::              Dealing with imperfect patches.
2451* Creating and Removing::  Creating and removing files with a patch.
2452* Patching Timestamps::   Updating timestamps on patched files.
2453* Multiple Patches::       Handling multiple patches in a file.
2454* patch Directories::      Changing directory and stripping directories.
2455* Backups::                Whether backup files are made.
2456* Backup Names::           Backup file names.
2457* Reject Names::           Reject file names.
2458* patch Messages::         Messages and questions 'patch' can produce.
2459* patch and POSIX::        Conformance to the POSIX standard.
2460* patch and Tradition::    GNU versus traditional 'patch'.
2461
2462
2463File: diffutils.info,  Node: patch Input,  Next: Revision Control,  Up: Merging with patch
2464
246510.1 Selecting the 'patch' Input Format
2466=======================================
2467
2468'patch' normally determines which 'diff' format the patch file uses by
2469examining its contents.  For patch files that contain particularly
2470confusing leading text, you might need to use one of the following
2471options to force 'patch' to interpret the patch file as a certain format
2472of diff.  The output formats listed here are the only ones that 'patch'
2473can understand.
2474
2475'-c'
2476'--context'
2477     context diff.
2478
2479'-e'
2480'--ed'
2481     'ed' script.
2482
2483'-n'
2484'--normal'
2485     normal diff.
2486
2487'-u'
2488'--unified'
2489     unified diff.
2490
2491
2492File: diffutils.info,  Node: Revision Control,  Next: Imperfect,  Prev: patch Input,  Up: Merging with patch
2493
249410.2 Revision Control
2495=====================
2496
2497If a nonexistent input file is under a revision control system supported
2498by 'patch', 'patch' normally asks the user whether to get (or check out)
2499the file from the revision control system.  Patch currently supports
2500RCS, ClearCase and SCCS. Under RCS and SCCS, 'patch' also asks when the
2501input file is read-only and matches the default version in the revision
2502control system.
2503
2504   The '--get=NUM' ('-g NUM') option affects access to files under
2505supported revision control systems.  If NUM is positive, 'patch' gets
2506the file without asking the user; if zero, 'patch' neither asks the user
2507nor gets the file; and if negative, 'patch' asks the user before getting
2508the file.  The default value of NUM is given by the value of the
2509'PATCH_GET' environment variable if it is set; if not, the default value
2510is zero if 'patch' is conforming to POSIX, negative otherwise.  *Note
2511patch and POSIX::.
2512
2513   The choice of revision control system is unaffected by the
2514'VERSION_CONTROL' environment variable (*note Backup Names::).
2515
2516
2517File: diffutils.info,  Node: Imperfect,  Next: Creating and Removing,  Prev: Revision Control,  Up: Merging with patch
2518
251910.3 Applying Imperfect Patches
2520===============================
2521
2522'patch' tries to skip any leading text in the patch file, apply the
2523diff, and then skip any trailing text.  Thus you can feed a mail message
2524directly to 'patch', and it should work.  If the entire diff is indented
2525by a constant amount of white space, 'patch' automatically ignores the
2526indentation.  If a context diff contains trailing carriage return on
2527each line, 'patch' automatically ignores the carriage return.  If a
2528context diff has been encapsulated by prepending '- ' to lines beginning
2529with '-' as per Internet RFC 934
2530(ftp://ftp.isi.edu/in-notes/rfc934.txt), 'patch' automatically
2531unencapsulates the input.
2532
2533   However, certain other types of imperfect input require user
2534intervention or testing.
2535
2536* Menu:
2537
2538* Changed White Space:: When tabs and spaces don't match exactly.
2539* Reversed Patches::    Applying reversed patches correctly.
2540* Inexact::             Helping 'patch' find close matches.
2541* Dry Runs::            Predicting what 'patch' will do.
2542
2543
2544File: diffutils.info,  Node: Changed White Space,  Next: Reversed Patches,  Up: Imperfect
2545
254610.3.1 Applying Patches with Changed White Space
2547------------------------------------------------
2548
2549Sometimes mailers, editors, or other programs change spaces into tabs,
2550or vice versa.  If this happens to a patch file or an input file, the
2551files might look the same, but 'patch' will not be able to match them
2552properly.  If this problem occurs, use the '-l' or
2553'--ignore-white-space' option, which makes 'patch' compare blank
2554characters (i.e. spaces and tabs) loosely so that any nonempty sequence
2555of blanks in the patch file matches any nonempty sequence of blanks in
2556the input files.  Non-blank characters must still match exactly.  Each
2557line of the context must still match a line in the input file.
2558
2559
2560File: diffutils.info,  Node: Reversed Patches,  Next: Inexact,  Prev: Changed White Space,  Up: Imperfect
2561
256210.3.2 Applying Reversed Patches
2563--------------------------------
2564
2565Sometimes people run 'diff' with the new file first instead of second.
2566This creates a diff that is "reversed".  To apply such patches, give
2567'patch' the '--reverse' ('-R') option.  'patch' then attempts to swap
2568each hunk around before applying it.  Rejects come out in the swapped
2569format.
2570
2571   Often 'patch' can guess that the patch is reversed.  If the first
2572hunk of a patch fails, 'patch' reverses the hunk to see if it can apply
2573it that way.  If it can, 'patch' asks you if you want to have the '-R'
2574option set; if it can't, 'patch' continues to apply the patch normally.
2575This method cannot detect a reversed patch if it is a normal diff and
2576the first command is an append (which should have been a delete) since
2577appends always succeed, because a null context matches anywhere.  But
2578most patches add or change lines rather than delete them, so most
2579reversed normal diffs begin with a delete, which fails, and 'patch'
2580notices.
2581
2582   If you apply a patch that you have already applied, 'patch' thinks it
2583is a reversed patch and offers to un-apply the patch.  This could be
2584construed as a feature.  If you did this inadvertently and you don't
2585want to un-apply the patch, just answer 'n' to this offer and to the
2586subsequent "apply anyway" question--or type 'C-c' to kill the 'patch'
2587process.
2588
2589
2590File: diffutils.info,  Node: Inexact,  Next: Dry Runs,  Prev: Reversed Patches,  Up: Imperfect
2591
259210.3.3 Helping 'patch' Find Inexact Matches
2593-------------------------------------------
2594
2595For context diffs, and to a lesser extent normal diffs, 'patch' can
2596detect when the line numbers mentioned in the patch are incorrect, and
2597it attempts to find the correct place to apply each hunk of the patch.
2598As a first guess, it takes the line number mentioned in the hunk, plus
2599or minus any offset used in applying the previous hunk.  If that is not
2600the correct place, 'patch' scans both forward and backward for a set of
2601lines matching the context given in the hunk.
2602
2603   First 'patch' looks for a place where all lines of the context match.
2604If it cannot find such a place, and it is reading a context or unified
2605diff, and the maximum fuzz factor is set to 1 or more, then 'patch'
2606makes another scan, ignoring the first and last line of context.  If
2607that fails, and the maximum fuzz factor is set to 2 or more, it makes
2608another scan, ignoring the first two and last two lines of context are
2609ignored.  It continues similarly if the maximum fuzz factor is larger.
2610
2611   The '--fuzz=LINES' ('-F LINES') option sets the maximum fuzz factor
2612to LINES.  This option only applies to context and unified diffs; it
2613ignores up to LINES lines while looking for the place to install a hunk.
2614Note that a larger fuzz factor increases the odds of making a faulty
2615patch.  The default fuzz factor is 2; there is no point to setting it to
2616more than the number of lines of context in the diff, ordinarily 3.
2617
2618   If 'patch' cannot find a place to install a hunk of the patch, it
2619writes the hunk out to a reject file (*note Reject Names::, for
2620information on how reject files are named).  It writes out rejected
2621hunks in context format no matter what form the input patch is in.  If
2622the input is a normal or 'ed' diff, many of the contexts are simply
2623null.  The line numbers on the hunks in the reject file may be different
2624from those in the patch file: they show the approximate location where
2625'patch' thinks the failed hunks belong in the new file rather than in
2626the old one.
2627
2628   If the '--verbose' option is given, then as it completes each hunk
2629'patch' tells you whether the hunk succeeded or failed, and if it
2630failed, on which line (in the new file) 'patch' thinks the hunk should
2631go.  If this is different from the line number specified in the diff, it
2632tells you the offset.  A single large offset _may_ indicate that 'patch'
2633installed a hunk in the wrong place.  'patch' also tells you if it used
2634a fuzz factor to make the match, in which case you should also be
2635slightly suspicious.
2636
2637   'patch' cannot tell if the line numbers are off in an 'ed' script,
2638and can only detect wrong line numbers in a normal diff when it finds a
2639change or delete command.  It may have the same problem with a context
2640diff using a fuzz factor equal to or greater than the number of lines of
2641context shown in the diff (typically 3).  In these cases, you should
2642probably look at a context diff between your original and patched input
2643files to see if the changes make sense.  Compiling without errors is a
2644pretty good indication that the patch worked, but not a guarantee.
2645
2646   A patch against an empty file applies to a nonexistent file, and vice
2647versa.  *Note Creating and Removing::.
2648
2649   'patch' usually produces the correct results, even when it must make
2650many guesses.  However, the results are guaranteed only when the patch
2651is applied to an exact copy of the file that the patch was generated
2652from.
2653
2654
2655File: diffutils.info,  Node: Dry Runs,  Prev: Inexact,  Up: Imperfect
2656
265710.3.4 Predicting what 'patch' will do
2658--------------------------------------
2659
2660It may not be obvious in advance what 'patch' will do with a complicated
2661or poorly formatted patch.  If you are concerned that the input might
2662cause 'patch' to modify the wrong files, you can use the '--dry-run'
2663option, which causes 'patch' to print the results of applying patches
2664without actually changing any files.  You can then inspect the
2665diagnostics generated by the dry run to see whether 'patch' will modify
2666the files that you expect.  If the patch does not do what you want, you
2667can modify the patch (or the other options to 'patch') and try another
2668dry run.  Once you are satisfied with the proposed patch you can apply
2669it by invoking 'patch' as before, but this time without the '--dry-run'
2670option.
2671
2672
2673File: diffutils.info,  Node: Creating and Removing,  Next: Patching Timestamps,  Prev: Imperfect,  Up: Merging with patch
2674
267510.4 Creating and Removing Files
2676================================
2677
2678Sometimes when comparing two directories, a file may exist in one
2679directory but not the other.  If you give 'diff' the '--new-file' ('-N')
2680option, or if you supply an old or new file that is named '/dev/null' or
2681is empty and is dated the Epoch (1970-01-01 00:00:00 UTC), 'diff'
2682outputs a patch that adds or deletes the contents of this file.  When
2683given such a patch, 'patch' normally creates a new file or removes the
2684old file.  However, when conforming to POSIX (*note patch and POSIX::),
2685'patch' does not remove the old file, but leaves it empty.  The
2686'--remove-empty-files' ('-E') option causes 'patch' to remove output
2687files that are empty after applying a patch, even if the patch does not
2688appear to be one that removed the file.
2689
2690   If the patch appears to create a file that already exists, 'patch'
2691asks for confirmation before applying the patch.
2692
2693
2694File: diffutils.info,  Node: Patching Timestamps,  Next: Multiple Patches,  Prev: Creating and Removing,  Up: Merging with patch
2695
269610.5 Updating Timestamps on Patched Files
2697=========================================
2698
2699When 'patch' updates a file, it normally sets the file's last-modified
2700timestamp to the current time of day.  If you are using 'patch' to track
2701a software distribution, this can cause 'make' to incorrectly conclude
2702that a patched file is out of date.  For example, if 'syntax.c' depends
2703on 'syntax.y', and 'patch' updates 'syntax.c' and then 'syntax.y', then
2704'syntax.c' will normally appear to be out of date with respect to
2705'syntax.y' even though its contents are actually up to date.
2706
2707   The '--set-utc' ('-Z') option causes 'patch' to set a patched file's
2708modification and access times to the timestamps given in context diff
2709headers.  If the context diff headers do not specify a time zone, they
2710are assumed to use Coordinated Universal Time (UTC, often known as GMT).
2711
2712   The '--set-time' ('-T') option acts like '-Z' or '--set-utc', except
2713that it assumes that the context diff headers' timestamps use local time
2714instead of UTC. This option is not recommended, because patches using
2715local time cannot easily be used by people in other time zones, and
2716because local timestamps are ambiguous when local clocks move backwards
2717during daylight-saving time adjustments.  If the context diff headers
2718specify a time zone, this option is equivalent to '--set-utc' ('-Z').
2719
2720   'patch' normally refrains from setting a file's timestamps if the
2721file's original last-modified timestamp does not match the time given in
2722the diff header, of if the file's contents do not exactly match the
2723patch.  However, if the '--force' ('-f') option is given, the file's
2724timestamps are set regardless.
2725
2726   Due to the limitations of the current 'diff' format, 'patch' cannot
2727update the times of files whose contents have not changed.  Also, if you
2728set file timestamps to values other than the current time of day, you
2729should also remove (e.g., with 'make clean') all files that depend on
2730the patched files, so that later invocations of 'make' do not get
2731confused by the patched files' times.
2732
2733
2734File: diffutils.info,  Node: Multiple Patches,  Next: patch Directories,  Prev: Patching Timestamps,  Up: Merging with patch
2735
273610.6 Multiple Patches in a File
2737===============================
2738
2739If the patch file contains more than one patch, and if you do not
2740specify an input file on the command line, 'patch' tries to apply each
2741patch as if they came from separate patch files.  This means that it
2742determines the name of the file to patch for each patch, and that it
2743examines the leading text before each patch for file names and
2744prerequisite revision level (*note Making Patches::, for more on that
2745topic).
2746
2747   'patch' uses the following rules to intuit a file name from the
2748leading text before a patch.  First, 'patch' takes an ordered list of
2749candidate file names as follows:
2750
2751   * If the header is that of a context diff, 'patch' takes the old and
2752     new file names in the header.  A name is ignored if it does not
2753     have enough slashes to satisfy the '-pNUM' or '--strip=NUM' option.
2754     The name '/dev/null' is also ignored.
2755
2756   * If there is an 'Index:' line in the leading garbage and if either
2757     the old and new names are both absent or if 'patch' is conforming
2758     to POSIX, 'patch' takes the name in the 'Index:' line.
2759
2760   * For the purpose of the following rules, the candidate file names
2761     are considered to be in the order (old, new, index), regardless of
2762     the order that they appear in the header.
2763
2764Then 'patch' selects a file name from the candidate list as follows:
2765
2766   * If some of the named files exist, 'patch' selects the first name if
2767     conforming to POSIX, and the best name otherwise.
2768
2769   * If 'patch' is not ignoring RCS, ClearCase, and SCCS (*note Revision
2770     Control::), and no named files exist but an RCS, ClearCase, or SCCS
2771     master is found, 'patch' selects the first named file with an RCS,
2772     ClearCase, or SCCS master.
2773
2774   * If no named files exist, no RCS, ClearCase, or SCCS master was
2775     found, some names are given, 'patch' is not conforming to POSIX,
2776     and the patch appears to create a file, 'patch' selects the best
2777     name requiring the creation of the fewest directories.
2778
2779   * If no file name results from the above heuristics, you are asked
2780     for the name of the file to patch, and 'patch' selects that name.
2781
2782   To determine the "best" of a nonempty list of file names, 'patch'
2783first takes all the names with the fewest path name components; of
2784those, it then takes all the names with the shortest basename; of those,
2785it then takes all the shortest names; finally, it takes the first
2786remaining name.
2787
2788   *Note patch and POSIX::, to see whether 'patch' is conforming to
2789POSIX.
2790
2791
2792File: diffutils.info,  Node: patch Directories,  Next: Backups,  Prev: Multiple Patches,  Up: Merging with patch
2793
279410.7 Applying Patches in Other Directories
2795==========================================
2796
2797The '--directory=DIRECTORY' ('-d DIRECTORY') option to 'patch' makes
2798directory DIRECTORY the current directory for interpreting both file
2799names in the patch file, and file names given as arguments to other
2800options (such as '-B' and '-o').  For example, while in a mail reading
2801program, you can patch a file in the '/usr/src/emacs' directory directly
2802from a message containing the patch like this:
2803
2804     | patch -d /usr/src/emacs
2805
2806   Sometimes the file names given in a patch contain leading
2807directories, but you keep your files in a directory different from the
2808one given in the patch.  In those cases, you can use the
2809'--strip=NUMBER' ('-pNUMBER') option to set the file name strip count to
2810NUMBER.  The strip count tells 'patch' how many slashes, along with the
2811directory names between them, to strip from the front of file names.  A
2812sequence of one or more adjacent slashes is counted as a single slash.
2813By default, 'patch' strips off all leading directories, leaving just the
2814base file names.
2815
2816   For example, suppose the file name in the patch file is
2817'/gnu/src/emacs/etc/NEWS'.  Using '-p0' gives the entire file name
2818unmodified, '-p1' gives 'gnu/src/emacs/etc/NEWS' (no leading slash),
2819'-p4' gives 'etc/NEWS', and not specifying '-p' at all gives 'NEWS'.
2820
2821   'patch' looks for each file (after any slashes have been stripped) in
2822the current directory, or if you used the '-d DIRECTORY' option, in that
2823directory.
2824
2825
2826File: diffutils.info,  Node: Backups,  Next: Backup Names,  Prev: patch Directories,  Up: Merging with patch
2827
282810.8 Backup Files
2829=================
2830
2831Normally, 'patch' creates a backup file if the patch does not exactly
2832match the original input file, because in that case the original data
2833might not be recovered if you undo the patch with 'patch -R' (*note
2834Reversed Patches::).  However, when conforming to POSIX, 'patch' does
2835not create backup files by default.  *Note patch and POSIX::.
2836
2837   The '--backup' ('-b') option causes 'patch' to make a backup file
2838regardless of whether the patch matches the original input.  The
2839'--backup-if-mismatch' option causes 'patch' to create backup files for
2840mismatches files; this is the default when not conforming to POSIX. The
2841'--no-backup-if-mismatch' option causes 'patch' to not create backup
2842files, even for mismatched patches; this is the default when conforming
2843to POSIX.
2844
2845   When backing up a file that does not exist, an empty, unreadable
2846backup file is created as a placeholder to represent the nonexistent
2847file.
2848
2849
2850File: diffutils.info,  Node: Backup Names,  Next: Reject Names,  Prev: Backups,  Up: Merging with patch
2851
285210.9 Backup File Names
2853======================
2854
2855Normally, 'patch' renames an original input file into a backup file by
2856appending to its name the extension '.orig', or '~' if using '.orig'
2857would make the backup file name too long.(1)  The '-z BACKUP-SUFFIX' or
2858'--suffix=BACKUP-SUFFIX' option causes 'patch' to use BACKUP-SUFFIX as
2859the backup extension instead.
2860
2861   Alternately, you can specify the extension for backup files with the
2862'SIMPLE_BACKUP_SUFFIX' environment variable, which the options override.
2863
2864   'patch' can also create numbered backup files the way GNU Emacs does.
2865With this method, instead of having a single backup of each file,
2866'patch' makes a new backup file name each time it patches a file.  For
2867example, the backups of a file named 'sink' would be called,
2868successively, 'sink.~1~', 'sink.~2~', 'sink.~3~', etc.
2869
2870   The '-V BACKUP-STYLE' or '--version-control=BACKUP-STYLE' option
2871takes as an argument a method for creating backup file names.  You can
2872alternately control the type of backups that 'patch' makes with the
2873'PATCH_VERSION_CONTROL' environment variable, which the '-V' option
2874overrides.  If 'PATCH_VERSION_CONTROL' is not set, the 'VERSION_CONTROL'
2875environment variable is used instead.  Please note that these options
2876and variables control backup file names; they do not affect the choice
2877of revision control system (*note Revision Control::).
2878
2879   The values of these environment variables and the argument to the
2880'-V' option are like the GNU Emacs 'version-control' variable (*note
2881(emacs)Backup Names::, for more information on backup versions in
2882Emacs).  They also recognize synonyms that are more descriptive.  The
2883valid values are listed below; unique abbreviations are acceptable.
2884
2885't'
2886'numbered'
2887     Always make numbered backups.
2888
2889'nil'
2890'existing'
2891     Make numbered backups of files that already have them, simple
2892     backups of the others.  This is the default.
2893
2894'never'
2895'simple'
2896     Always make simple backups.
2897
2898   You can also tell 'patch' to prepend a prefix, such as a directory
2899name, to produce backup file names.  The '--prefix=PREFIX' ('-B PREFIX')
2900option makes backup files by prepending PREFIX to them.  The
2901'--basename-prefix=PREFIX' ('-Y PREFIX') prepends PREFIX to the last
2902file name component of backup file names instead; for example, '-Y ~'
2903causes the backup name for 'dir/file.c' to be 'dir/~file.c'.  If you use
2904either of these prefix options, the suffix-based options are ignored.
2905
2906   If you specify the output file with the '-o' option, that file is the
2907one that is backed up, not the input file.
2908
2909   Options that affect the names of backup files do not affect whether
2910backups are made.  For example, if you specify the
2911'--no-backup-if-mismatch' option, none of the options described in this
2912section have any affect, because no backups are made.
2913
2914   ---------- Footnotes ----------
2915
2916   (1) A coding error in GNU 'patch' version 2.5.4 causes it to always
2917use '~', but this should be fixed in the next release.
2918
2919
2920File: diffutils.info,  Node: Reject Names,  Next: patch Messages,  Prev: Backup Names,  Up: Merging with patch
2921
292210.10 Reject File Names
2923=======================
2924
2925The names for reject files (files containing patches that 'patch' could
2926not find a place to apply) are normally the name of the output file with
2927'.rej' appended (or '#' if using '.rej' would make the backup file name
2928too long).
2929
2930   Alternatively, you can tell 'patch' to place all of the rejected
2931patches in a single file.  The '-r REJECT-FILE' or
2932'--reject-file=REJECT-FILE' option uses REJECT-FILE as the reject file
2933name.
2934
2935
2936File: diffutils.info,  Node: patch Messages,  Next: patch and POSIX,  Prev: Reject Names,  Up: Merging with patch
2937
293810.11 Messages and Questions from 'patch'
2939=========================================
2940
2941'patch' can produce a variety of messages, especially if it has trouble
2942decoding its input.  In a few situations where it's not sure how to
2943proceed, 'patch' normally prompts you for more information from the
2944keyboard.  There are options to produce more or fewer messages, to have
2945it not ask for keyboard input, and to affect the way that file names are
2946quoted in messages.
2947
2948* Menu:
2949
2950* More or Fewer Messages::    Controlling the verbosity of 'patch'.
2951* patch and Keyboard Input::  Inhibiting keyboard input.
2952* patch Quoting Style::       Quoting file names in diagnostics.
2953
2954   'patch' exits with status 0 if all hunks are applied successfully, 1
2955if some hunks cannot be applied, and 2 if there is more serious trouble.
2956When applying a set of patches in a loop, you should check the exit
2957status, so you don't apply a later patch to a partially patched file.
2958
2959
2960File: diffutils.info,  Node: More or Fewer Messages,  Next: patch and Keyboard Input,  Up: patch Messages
2961
296210.11.1 Controlling the Verbosity of 'patch'
2963--------------------------------------------
2964
2965You can cause 'patch' to produce more messages by using the '--verbose'
2966option.  For example, when you give this option, the message 'Hmm...'
2967indicates that 'patch' is reading text in the patch file, attempting to
2968determine whether there is a patch in that text, and if so, what kind of
2969patch it is.
2970
2971   You can inhibit all terminal output from 'patch', unless an error
2972occurs, by using the '-s', '--quiet', or '--silent' option.
2973
2974
2975File: diffutils.info,  Node: patch and Keyboard Input,  Next: patch Quoting Style,  Prev: More or Fewer Messages,  Up: patch Messages
2976
297710.11.2 Inhibiting Keyboard Input
2978---------------------------------
2979
2980There are two ways you can prevent 'patch' from asking you any
2981questions.  The '--force' ('-f') option assumes that you know what you
2982are doing.  It causes 'patch' to do the following:
2983
2984   * Skip patches that do not contain file names in their headers.
2985
2986   * Patch files even though they have the wrong version for the
2987     'Prereq:' line in the patch;
2988
2989   * Assume that patches are not reversed even if they look like they
2990     are.
2991
2992The '--batch' ('-t') option is similar to '-f', in that it suppresses
2993questions, but it makes somewhat different assumptions:
2994
2995   * Skip patches that do not contain file names in their headers (the
2996     same as '-f').
2997
2998   * Skip patches for which the file has the wrong version for the
2999     'Prereq:' line in the patch;
3000
3001   * Assume that patches are reversed if they look like they are.
3002
3003
3004File: diffutils.info,  Node: patch Quoting Style,  Prev: patch and Keyboard Input,  Up: patch Messages
3005
300610.11.3 'patch' Quoting Style
3007-----------------------------
3008
3009When 'patch' outputs a file name in a diagnostic message, it can format
3010the name in any of several ways.  This can be useful to output file
3011names unambiguously, even if they contain punctuation or special
3012characters like newlines.  The '--quoting-style=WORD' option controls
3013how names are output.  The WORD should be one of the following:
3014
3015'literal'
3016     Output names as-is.
3017'shell'
3018     Quote names for the shell if they contain shell metacharacters or
3019     would cause ambiguous output.
3020'shell-always'
3021     Quote names for the shell, even if they would normally not require
3022     quoting.
3023'c'
3024     Quote names as for a C language string.
3025'escape'
3026     Quote as with 'c' except omit the surrounding double-quote
3027     characters.
3028
3029   You can specify the default value of the '--quoting-style' option
3030with the environment variable 'QUOTING_STYLE'.  If that environment
3031variable is not set, the default value is 'shell', but this default may
3032change in a future version of 'patch'.
3033
3034
3035File: diffutils.info,  Node: patch and POSIX,  Next: patch and Tradition,  Prev: patch Messages,  Up: Merging with patch
3036
303710.12 'patch' and the POSIX Standard
3038====================================
3039
3040If you specify the '--posix' option, or set the 'POSIXLY_CORRECT'
3041environment variable, 'patch' conforms more strictly to the POSIX
3042standard, as follows:
3043
3044   * Take the first existing file from the list (old, new, index) when
3045     intuiting file names from diff headers.  *Note Multiple Patches::.
3046
3047   * Do not remove files that are removed by a diff.  *Note Creating and
3048     Removing::.
3049
3050   * Do not ask whether to get files from RCS, ClearCase, or SCCS. *Note
3051     Revision Control::.
3052
3053   * Require that all options precede the files in the command line.
3054
3055   * Do not backup files, even when there is a mismatch.  *Note
3056     Backups::.
3057
3058
3059File: diffutils.info,  Node: patch and Tradition,  Prev: patch and POSIX,  Up: Merging with patch
3060
306110.13 GNU 'patch' and Traditional 'patch'
3062=========================================
3063
3064The current version of GNU 'patch' normally follows the POSIX standard.
3065*Note patch and POSIX::, for the few exceptions to this general rule.
3066
3067   Unfortunately, POSIX redefined the behavior of 'patch' in several
3068important ways.  You should be aware of the following differences if you
3069must interoperate with traditional 'patch', or with GNU 'patch' version
30702.1 and earlier.
3071
3072   * In traditional 'patch', the '-p' option's operand was optional, and
3073     a bare '-p' was equivalent to '-p0'.  The '-p' option now requires
3074     an operand, and '-p 0' is now equivalent to '-p0'.  For maximum
3075     compatibility, use options like '-p0' and '-p1'.
3076
3077     Also, traditional 'patch' simply counted slashes when stripping
3078     path prefixes; 'patch' now counts pathname components.  That is, a
3079     sequence of one or more adjacent slashes now counts as a single
3080     slash.  For maximum portability, avoid sending patches containing
3081     '//' in file names.
3082
3083   * In traditional 'patch', backups were enabled by default.  This
3084     behavior is now enabled with the '--backup' ('-b') option.
3085
3086     Conversely, in POSIX 'patch', backups are never made, even when
3087     there is a mismatch.  In GNU 'patch', this behavior is enabled with
3088     the '--no-backup-if-mismatch' option, or by conforming to POSIX.
3089
3090     The '-b SUFFIX' option of traditional 'patch' is equivalent to the
3091     '-b -z SUFFIX' options of GNU 'patch'.
3092
3093   * Traditional 'patch' used a complicated (and incompletely
3094     documented) method to intuit the name of the file to be patched
3095     from the patch header.  This method did not conform to POSIX, and
3096     had a few gotchas.  Now 'patch' uses a different, equally
3097     complicated (but better documented) method that is optionally
3098     POSIX-conforming; we hope it has fewer gotchas.  The two methods
3099     are compatible if the file names in the context diff header and the
3100     'Index:' line are all identical after prefix-stripping.  Your patch
3101     is normally compatible if each header's file names all contain the
3102     same number of slashes.
3103
3104   * When traditional 'patch' asked the user a question, it sent the
3105     question to standard error and looked for an answer from the first
3106     file in the following list that was a terminal: standard error,
3107     standard output, '/dev/tty', and standard input.  Now 'patch' sends
3108     questions to standard output and gets answers from '/dev/tty'.
3109     Defaults for some answers have been changed so that 'patch' never
3110     goes into an infinite loop when using default answers.
3111
3112   * Traditional 'patch' exited with a status value that counted the
3113     number of bad hunks, or with status 1 if there was real trouble.
3114     Now 'patch' exits with status 1 if some hunks failed, or with 2 if
3115     there was real trouble.
3116
3117   * Limit yourself to the following options when sending instructions
3118     meant to be executed by anyone running GNU 'patch', traditional
3119     'patch', or a 'patch' that conforms to POSIX. Spaces are
3120     significant in the following list, and operands are required.
3121
3122          -c
3123          -d DIR
3124          -D DEFINE
3125          -e
3126          -l
3127          -n
3128          -N
3129          -o OUTFILE
3130          -pNUM
3131          -R
3132          -r REJECTFILE
3133
3134
3135File: diffutils.info,  Node: Making Patches,  Next: Invoking cmp,  Prev: Merging with patch,  Up: Top
3136
313711 Tips for Making and Using Patches
3138************************************
3139
3140Use some common sense when making and using patches.  For example, when
3141sending bug fixes to a program's maintainer, send several small patches,
3142one per independent subject, instead of one large, harder-to-digest
3143patch that covers all the subjects.
3144
3145   Here are some other things you should keep in mind if you are going
3146to distribute patches for updating a software package.
3147
3148* Menu:
3149
3150* Tips for Patch Producers::    Advice for making patches.
3151* Tips for Patch Consumers::    Advice for using patches.
3152* Avoiding Common Mistakes::    Avoiding common mistakes when using 'patch'.
3153* Generating Smaller Patches::  How to generate smaller patches.
3154
3155
3156File: diffutils.info,  Node: Tips for Patch Producers,  Next: Tips for Patch Consumers,  Up: Making Patches
3157
315811.1 Tips for Patch Producers
3159=============================
3160
3161To create a patch that changes an older version of a package into a
3162newer version, first make a copy of the older and newer versions in
3163adjacent subdirectories.  It is common to do that by unpacking 'tar'
3164archives of the two versions.
3165
3166   To generate the patch, use the command 'diff -Naur OLD NEW' where OLD
3167and NEW identify the old and new directories.  The names OLD and NEW
3168should not contain any slashes.  The '-N' option lets the patch create
3169and remove files; '-a' lets the patch update non-text files; '-u'
3170generates useful timestamps and enough context; and '-r' lets the patch
3171update subdirectories.  Here is an example command, using Bourne shell
3172syntax:
3173
3174     diff -Naur gcc-3.0.3 gcc-3.0.4
3175
3176   Tell your recipients how to apply the patches.  This should include
3177which working directory to use, and which 'patch' options to use; the
3178option '-p1' is recommended.  Test your procedure by pretending to be a
3179recipient and applying your patches to a copy of the original files.
3180
3181   *Note Avoiding Common Mistakes::, for how to avoid common mistakes
3182when generating a patch.
3183
3184
3185File: diffutils.info,  Node: Tips for Patch Consumers,  Next: Avoiding Common Mistakes,  Prev: Tips for Patch Producers,  Up: Making Patches
3186
318711.2 Tips for Patch Consumers
3188=============================
3189
3190A patch producer should tell recipients how to apply the patches, so the
3191first rule of thumb for a patch consumer is to follow the instructions
3192supplied with the patch.
3193
3194   GNU 'diff' can analyze files with arbitrarily long lines and files
3195that end in incomplete lines.  However, older versions of 'patch' cannot
3196patch such files.  If you are having trouble applying such patches, try
3197upgrading to a recent version of GNU 'patch'.
3198
3199
3200File: diffutils.info,  Node: Avoiding Common Mistakes,  Next: Generating Smaller Patches,  Prev: Tips for Patch Consumers,  Up: Making Patches
3201
320211.3 Avoiding Common Mistakes
3203=============================
3204
3205When producing a patch for multiple files, apply 'diff' to directories
3206whose names do not have slashes.  This reduces confusion when the patch
3207consumer specifies the '-pNUMBER' option, since this option can have
3208surprising results when the old and new file names have different
3209numbers of slashes.  For example, do not send a patch with a header that
3210looks like this:
3211
3212     diff -Naur v2.0.29/prog/README prog/README
3213     --- v2.0.29/prog/README	2002-03-10 23:30:39.942229878 -0800
3214     +++ prog/README	2002-03-17 20:49:32.442260588 -0800
3215
3216because the two file names have different numbers of slashes, and
3217different versions of 'patch' interpret the file names differently.  To
3218avoid confusion, send output that looks like this instead:
3219
3220     diff -Naur v2.0.29/prog/README v2.0.30/prog/README
3221     --- v2.0.29/prog/README	2002-03-10 23:30:39.942229878 -0800
3222     +++ v2.0.30/prog/README	2002-03-17 20:49:32.442260588 -0800
3223
3224   Make sure you have specified the file names correctly, either in a
3225context diff header or with an 'Index:' line.  Take care to not send out
3226reversed patches, since these make people wonder whether they have
3227already applied the patch.
3228
3229   Avoid sending patches that compare backup file names like
3230'README.orig' or 'README~', since this might confuse 'patch' into
3231patching a backup file instead of the real file.  Instead, send patches
3232that compare the same base file names in different directories, e.g.
3233'old/README' and 'new/README'.
3234
3235   To save people from partially applying a patch before other patches
3236that should have gone before it, you can make the first patch in the
3237patch file update a file with a name like 'patchlevel.h' or 'version.c',
3238which contains a patch level or version number.  If the input file
3239contains the wrong version number, 'patch' will complain immediately.
3240
3241   An even clearer way to prevent this problem is to put a 'Prereq:'
3242line before the patch.  If the leading text in the patch file contains a
3243line that starts with 'Prereq:', 'patch' takes the next word from that
3244line (normally a version number) and checks whether the next input file
3245contains that word, preceded and followed by either white space or a
3246newline.  If not, 'patch' prompts you for confirmation before
3247proceeding.  This makes it difficult to accidentally apply patches in
3248the wrong order.
3249
3250
3251File: diffutils.info,  Node: Generating Smaller Patches,  Prev: Avoiding Common Mistakes,  Up: Making Patches
3252
325311.4 Generating Smaller Patches
3254===============================
3255
3256The simplest way to generate a patch is to use 'diff -Naur' (*note Tips
3257for Patch Producers::), but you might be able to reduce the size of the
3258patch by renaming or removing some files before making the patch.  If
3259the older version of the package contains any files that the newer
3260version does not, or if any files have been renamed between the two
3261versions, make a list of 'rm' and 'mv' commands for the user to execute
3262in the old version directory before applying the patch.  Then run those
3263commands yourself in the scratch directory.
3264
3265   If there are any files that you don't need to include in the patch
3266because they can easily be rebuilt from other files (for example, 'TAGS'
3267and output from 'yacc' and 'makeinfo'), exclude them from the patch by
3268giving 'diff' the '-x PATTERN' option (*note Comparing Directories::).
3269If you want your patch to modify a derived file because your recipients
3270lack tools to build it, make sure that the patch for the derived file
3271follows any patches for files that it depends on, so that the
3272recipients' timestamps will not confuse 'make'.
3273
3274   Now you can create the patch using 'diff -Naur'.  Make sure to
3275specify the scratch directory first and the newer directory second.
3276
3277   Add to the top of the patch a note telling the user any 'rm' and 'mv'
3278commands to run before applying the patch.  Then you can remove the
3279scratch directory.
3280
3281   You can also shrink the patch size by using fewer lines of context,
3282but bear in mind that 'patch' typically needs at least two lines for
3283proper operation when patches do not exactly match the input files.
3284
3285
3286File: diffutils.info,  Node: Invoking cmp,  Next: Invoking diff,  Prev: Making Patches,  Up: Top
3287
328812 Invoking 'cmp'
3289*****************
3290
3291The 'cmp' command compares two files, and if they differ, tells the
3292first byte and line number where they differ or reports that one file is
3293a prefix of the other.  Bytes and lines are numbered starting with 1.
3294The arguments of 'cmp' are as follows:
3295
3296     cmp OPTIONS... FROM-FILE [TO-FILE [FROM-SKIP [TO-SKIP]]]
3297
3298   The file name '-' is always the standard input.  'cmp' also uses the
3299standard input if one file name is omitted.  The FROM-SKIP and TO-SKIP
3300operands specify how many bytes to ignore at the start of each file;
3301they are equivalent to the '--ignore-initial=FROM-SKIP:TO-SKIP' option.
3302
3303   By default, 'cmp' outputs nothing if the two files have the same
3304contents.  If the two files have bytes that differ, 'cmp' reports the
3305location of the first difference to standard output:
3306
3307     FROM-FILE TO-FILE differ: char BYTE-NUMBER, line LINE-NUMBER
3308
3309If one file is a prefix of the other, 'cmp' reports the shorter file's
3310name to standard error, followed by a blank and extra information about
3311the shorter file:
3312
3313     cmp: EOF on SHORTER-FILE EXTRA-INFO
3314
3315   The message formats can differ outside the POSIX locale.  POSIX
3316allows but does not require the EOF diagnostic's file name to be
3317followed by a blank and additional information.
3318
3319   An exit status of 0 means no differences were found, 1 means some
3320differences were found, and 2 means trouble.
3321
3322* Menu:
3323
3324* cmp Options:: Summary of options to 'cmp'.
3325
3326
3327File: diffutils.info,  Node: cmp Options,  Up: Invoking cmp
3328
332912.1 Options to 'cmp'
3330=====================
3331
3332Below is a summary of all of the options that GNU 'cmp' accepts.  Most
3333options have two equivalent names, one of which is a single letter
3334preceded by '-', and the other of which is a long name preceded by '--'.
3335Multiple single letter options (unless they take an argument) can be
3336combined into a single command line word: '-bl' is equivalent to '-b
3337-l'.
3338
3339'-b'
3340'--print-bytes'
3341     Print the differing bytes.  Display control bytes as a '^' followed
3342     by a letter of the alphabet and precede bytes that have the high
3343     bit set with 'M-' (which stands for "meta").
3344
3345'--help'
3346     Output a summary of usage and then exit.
3347
3348'-i SKIP'
3349'--ignore-initial=SKIP'
3350     Ignore any differences in the first SKIP bytes of the input files.
3351     Treat files with fewer than SKIP bytes as if they are empty.  If
3352     SKIP is of the form 'FROM-SKIP:TO-SKIP', skip the first FROM-SKIP
3353     bytes of the first input file and the first TO-SKIP bytes of the
3354     second.
3355
3356'-l'
3357'--verbose'
3358     Output the (decimal) byte numbers and (octal) values of all
3359     differing bytes, instead of the default standard output.  Each
3360     output line contains a differing byte's number relative to the
3361     start of the input, followed by the differing byte values.  Byte
3362     numbers start at 1.  Also, output the EOF message if one file is
3363     shorter than the other.
3364
3365'-n COUNT'
3366'--bytes=COUNT'
3367     Compare at most COUNT input bytes.
3368
3369'-s'
3370'--quiet'
3371'--silent'
3372     Do not print anything; only return an exit status indicating
3373     whether the files differ.
3374
3375'-v'
3376'--version'
3377     Output version information and then exit.
3378
3379   In the above table, operands that are byte counts are normally
3380decimal, but may be preceded by '0' for octal and '0x' for hexadecimal.
3381
3382   A byte count can be followed by a suffix to specify a multiple of
3383that count; in this case an omitted integer is understood to be 1.  A
3384bare size letter, or one followed by 'iB', specifies a multiple using
3385powers of 1024.  A size letter followed by 'B' specifies powers of 1000
3386instead.  For example, '-n 4M' and '-n 4MiB' are equivalent to '-n
33874194304', whereas '-n 4MB' is equivalent to '-n 4000000'.  This notation
3388is upward compatible with the SI prefixes
3389(http://www.bipm.fr/enus/3_SI/si-prefixes.html) for decimal multiples
3390and with the IEC 60027-2 prefixes for binary multiples
3391(http://physics.nist.gov/cuu/Units/binary.html).
3392
3393   The following suffixes are defined.  Large sizes like '1Y' may be
3394rejected by your computer due to limitations of its arithmetic.
3395
3396'kB'
3397     kilobyte: 10^3 = 1000.
3398'k'
3399'K'
3400'KiB'
3401     kibibyte: 2^10 = 1024.  'K' is special: the SI prefix is 'k' and
3402     the IEC 60027-2 prefix is 'Ki', but tradition and POSIX use 'k' to
3403     mean 'KiB'.
3404'MB'
3405     megabyte: 10^6 = 1,000,000.
3406'M'
3407'MiB'
3408     mebibyte: 2^20 = 1,048,576.
3409'GB'
3410     gigabyte: 10^9 = 1,000,000,000.
3411'G'
3412'GiB'
3413     gibibyte: 2^30 = 1,073,741,824.
3414'TB'
3415     terabyte: 10^12 = 1,000,000,000,000.
3416'T'
3417'TiB'
3418     tebibyte: 2^40 = 1,099,511,627,776.
3419'PB'
3420     petabyte: 10^15 = 1,000,000,000,000,000.
3421'P'
3422'PiB'
3423     pebibyte: 2^50 = 1,125,899,906,842,624.
3424'EB'
3425     exabyte: 10^18 = 1,000,000,000,000,000,000.
3426'E'
3427'EiB'
3428     exbibyte: 2^60 = 1,152,921,504,606,846,976.
3429'ZB'
3430     zettabyte: 10^21 = 1,000,000,000,000,000,000,000
3431'Z'
3432'ZiB'
3433     2^70 = 1,180,591,620,717,411,303,424.  ('Zi' is a GNU extension to
3434     IEC 60027-2.)
3435'YB'
3436     yottabyte: 10^24 = 1,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000.
3437'Y'
3438'YiB'
3439     2^80 = 1,208,925,819,614,629,174,706,176.  ('Yi' is a GNU extension
3440     to IEC 60027-2.)
3441
3442
3443File: diffutils.info,  Node: Invoking diff,  Next: Invoking diff3,  Prev: Invoking cmp,  Up: Top
3444
344513 Invoking 'diff'
3446******************
3447
3448The format for running the 'diff' command is:
3449
3450     diff OPTIONS... FILES...
3451
3452   In the simplest case, two file names FROM-FILE and TO-FILE are given,
3453and 'diff' compares the contents of FROM-FILE and TO-FILE.  A file name
3454of '-' stands for the standard input.
3455
3456   If one file is a directory and the other is not, 'diff' compares the
3457file in the directory whose name is that of the non-directory.  The
3458non-directory file must not be '-'.
3459
3460   If two file names are given and both are directories, 'diff' compares
3461corresponding files in both directories, in alphabetical order; this
3462comparison is not recursive unless the '--recursive' ('-r') option is
3463given.  'diff' never compares the actual contents of a directory as if
3464it were a file.  The file that is fully specified may not be standard
3465input, because standard input is nameless and the notion of "file with
3466the same name" does not apply.
3467
3468   If the '--from-file=FILE' option is given, the number of file names
3469is arbitrary, and FILE is compared to each named file.  Similarly, if
3470the '--to-file=FILE' option is given, each named file is compared to
3471FILE.
3472
3473   'diff' options begin with '-', so normally file names may not begin
3474with '-'.  However, '--' as an argument by itself treats the remaining
3475arguments as file names even if they begin with '-'.
3476
3477   An exit status of 0 means no differences were found, 1 means some
3478differences were found, and 2 means trouble.
3479
3480* Menu:
3481
3482* diff Options:: Summary of options to 'diff'.
3483
3484
3485File: diffutils.info,  Node: diff Options,  Up: Invoking diff
3486
348713.1 Options to 'diff'
3488======================
3489
3490Below is a summary of all of the options that GNU 'diff' accepts.  Most
3491options have two equivalent names, one of which is a single letter
3492preceded by '-', and the other of which is a long name preceded by '--'.
3493Multiple single letter options (unless they take an argument) can be
3494combined into a single command line word: '-ac' is equivalent to '-a
3495-c'.  Long named options can be abbreviated to any unique prefix of
3496their name.  Brackets ([ and ]) indicate that an option takes an
3497optional argument.
3498
3499'-a'
3500'--text'
3501     Treat all files as text and compare them line-by-line, even if they
3502     do not seem to be text.  *Note Binary::.
3503
3504'-b'
3505'--ignore-space-change'
3506     Ignore changes in amount of white space.  *Note White Space::.
3507
3508'-B'
3509'--ignore-blank-lines'
3510     Ignore changes that just insert or delete blank lines.  *Note Blank
3511     Lines::.
3512
3513'--binary'
3514     Read and write data in binary mode.  *Note Binary::.
3515
3516'-c'
3517     Use the context output format, showing three lines of context.
3518     *Note Context Format::.
3519
3520'--color [=WHEN]'
3521     Specify whether to use color for distinguishing different contexts,
3522     like header, added or removed lines.  WHEN may be omitted, or one
3523     of:
3524        * none Do not use color at all.  This is the default when no
3525          -color option is specified.
3526        * auto Use color only if standard output is a terminal.
3527        * always Always use color.
3528     Specifying '--color' and no WHEN is equivalent to '--color=auto'.
3529
3530'-C LINES'
3531'--context[=LINES]'
3532     Use the context output format, showing LINES (an integer) lines of
3533     context, or three if LINES is not given.  *Note Context Format::.
3534     For proper operation, 'patch' typically needs at least two lines of
3535     context.
3536
3537     For compatibility 'diff' also supports an obsolete option syntax
3538     '-LINES' that has effect when combined with '-c', '-p', or '-u'.
3539     New scripts should use '-U LINES' ('-C LINES') instead.
3540
3541'--changed-group-format=FORMAT'
3542     Use FORMAT to output a line group containing differing lines from
3543     both files in if-then-else format.  *Note Line Group Formats::.
3544
3545'-d'
3546'--minimal'
3547     Change the algorithm perhaps find a smaller set of changes.  This
3548     makes 'diff' slower (sometimes much slower).  *Note diff
3549     Performance::.
3550
3551'-D NAME'
3552'--ifdef=NAME'
3553     Make merged '#ifdef' format output, conditional on the preprocessor
3554     macro NAME.  *Note If-then-else::.
3555
3556'-e'
3557'--ed'
3558     Make output that is a valid 'ed' script.  *Note ed Scripts::.
3559
3560'-E'
3561'--ignore-tab-expansion'
3562     Ignore changes due to tab expansion.  *Note White Space::.
3563
3564'-f'
3565'--forward-ed'
3566     Make output that looks vaguely like an 'ed' script but has changes
3567     in the order they appear in the file.  *Note Forward ed::.
3568
3569'-F REGEXP'
3570'--show-function-line=REGEXP'
3571     In context and unified format, for each hunk of differences, show
3572     some of the last preceding line that matches REGEXP.  *Note
3573     Specified Headings::.
3574
3575'--from-file=FILE'
3576     Compare FILE to each operand; FILE may be a directory.
3577
3578'--help'
3579     Output a summary of usage and then exit.
3580
3581'--horizon-lines=LINES'
3582     Do not discard the last LINES lines of the common prefix and the
3583     first LINES lines of the common suffix.  *Note diff Performance::.
3584
3585'-i'
3586'--ignore-case'
3587     Ignore changes in case; consider upper- and lower-case letters
3588     equivalent.  *Note Case Folding::.
3589
3590'-I REGEXP'
3591'--ignore-matching-lines=REGEXP'
3592     Ignore changes that just insert or delete lines that match REGEXP.
3593     *Note Specified Lines::.
3594
3595'--ignore-file-name-case'
3596     Ignore case when comparing file names.  For example, recursive
3597     comparison of 'd' to 'e' might compare the contents of 'd/Init' and
3598     'e/inIt'.  At the top level, 'diff d inIt' might compare the
3599     contents of 'd/Init' and 'inIt'.  *Note Comparing Directories::.
3600
3601'-l'
3602'--paginate'
3603     Pass the output through 'pr' to paginate it.  *Note Pagination::.
3604
3605'-L LABEL'
3606'--label=LABEL'
3607     Use LABEL instead of the file name in the context format (*note
3608     Context Format::) and unified format (*note Unified Format::)
3609     headers.  *Note RCS::.
3610
3611'--left-column'
3612     Print only the left column of two common lines in side by side
3613     format.  *Note Side by Side Format::.
3614
3615'--line-format=FORMAT'
3616     Use FORMAT to output all input lines in if-then-else format.  *Note
3617     Line Formats::.
3618
3619'-n'
3620'--rcs'
3621     Output RCS-format diffs; like '-f' except that each command
3622     specifies the number of lines affected.  *Note RCS::.
3623
3624'-N'
3625'--new-file'
3626     If one file is missing, treat it as present but empty.  *Note
3627     Comparing Directories::.
3628
3629'--new-group-format=FORMAT'
3630     Use FORMAT to output a group of lines taken from just the second
3631     file in if-then-else format.  *Note Line Group Formats::.
3632
3633'--new-line-format=FORMAT'
3634     Use FORMAT to output a line taken from just the second file in
3635     if-then-else format.  *Note Line Formats::.
3636
3637'--no-dereference'
3638     Act on symbolic links themselves instead of what they point to.
3639     Two symbolic links are deemed equal only when each points to
3640     precisely the same name.
3641
3642'--old-group-format=FORMAT'
3643     Use FORMAT to output a group of lines taken from just the first
3644     file in if-then-else format.  *Note Line Group Formats::.
3645
3646'--old-line-format=FORMAT'
3647     Use FORMAT to output a line taken from just the first file in
3648     if-then-else format.  *Note Line Formats::.
3649
3650'-p'
3651'--show-c-function'
3652     Show which C function each change is in.  *Note C Function
3653     Headings::.
3654
3655'--palette=PALETTE'
3656     Specify what color palette to use when colored output is enabled.
3657     It defaults to 'rs=0:hd=1:ad=32:de=31:ln=36' for red deleted lines,
3658     green added lines, cyan line numbers, bold header.
3659
3660     Supported capabilities are as follows.
3661
3662     'ad=32'
3663
3664          SGR substring for added lines.  The default is green
3665          foreground.
3666
3667     'de=31'
3668
3669          SGR substring for deleted lines.  The default is red
3670          foreground.
3671
3672     'hd=1'
3673
3674          SGR substring for chunk header.  The default is bold
3675          foreground.
3676
3677     'ln=36'
3678
3679          SGR substring for line numbers.  The default is cyan
3680          foreground.
3681
3682'-q'
3683'--brief'
3684     Report only whether the files differ, not the details of the
3685     differences.  *Note Brief::.
3686
3687'-r'
3688'--recursive'
3689     When comparing directories, recursively compare any subdirectories
3690     found.  *Note Comparing Directories::.
3691
3692'-s'
3693'--report-identical-files'
3694     Report when two files are the same.  *Note Comparing Directories::.
3695
3696'-S FILE'
3697'--starting-file=FILE'
3698     When comparing directories, start with the file FILE.  This is used
3699     for resuming an aborted comparison.  *Note Comparing Directories::.
3700
3701'--speed-large-files'
3702     Use heuristics to speed handling of large files that have numerous
3703     scattered small changes.  *Note diff Performance::.
3704
3705'--strip-trailing-cr'
3706     Strip any trailing carriage return at the end of an input line.
3707     *Note Binary::.
3708
3709'--suppress-common-lines'
3710     Do not print common lines in side by side format.  *Note Side by
3711     Side Format::.
3712
3713'-t'
3714'--expand-tabs'
3715     Expand tabs to spaces in the output, to preserve the alignment of
3716     tabs in the input files.  *Note Tabs::.
3717
3718'-T'
3719'--initial-tab'
3720     Output a tab rather than a space before the text of a line in
3721     normal or context format.  This causes the alignment of tabs in the
3722     line to look normal.  *Note Tabs::.
3723
3724'--tabsize=COLUMNS'
3725     Assume that tab stops are set every COLUMNS (default 8) print
3726     columns.  *Note Tabs::.
3727
3728'--suppress-blank-empty'
3729     Suppress any blanks before newlines when printing the
3730     representation of an empty line, when outputting normal, context,
3731     or unified format.  *Note Trailing Blanks::.
3732
3733'--to-file=FILE'
3734     Compare each operand to FILE; FILE may be a directory.
3735
3736'-u'
3737     Use the unified output format, showing three lines of context.
3738     *Note Unified Format::.
3739
3740'--unchanged-group-format=FORMAT'
3741     Use FORMAT to output a group of common lines taken from both files
3742     in if-then-else format.  *Note Line Group Formats::.
3743
3744'--unchanged-line-format=FORMAT'
3745     Use FORMAT to output a line common to both files in if-then-else
3746     format.  *Note Line Formats::.
3747
3748'--unidirectional-new-file'
3749     If a first file is missing, treat it as present but empty.  *Note
3750     Comparing Directories::.
3751
3752'-U LINES'
3753'--unified[=LINES]'
3754     Use the unified output format, showing LINES (an integer) lines of
3755     context, or three if LINES is not given.  *Note Unified Format::.
3756     For proper operation, 'patch' typically needs at least two lines of
3757     context.
3758
3759     On older systems, 'diff' supports an obsolete option '-LINES' that
3760     has effect when combined with '-u'.  POSIX 1003.1-2001 (*note
3761     Standards conformance::) does not allow this; use '-U LINES'
3762     instead.
3763
3764'-v'
3765'--version'
3766     Output version information and then exit.
3767
3768'-w'
3769'--ignore-all-space'
3770     Ignore white space when comparing lines.  *Note White Space::.
3771
3772'-W COLUMNS'
3773'--width=COLUMNS'
3774     Output at most COLUMNS (default 130) print columns per line in side
3775     by side format.  *Note Side by Side Format::.
3776
3777'-x PATTERN'
3778'--exclude=PATTERN'
3779     When comparing directories, ignore files and subdirectories whose
3780     basenames match PATTERN.  *Note Comparing Directories::.
3781
3782'-X FILE'
3783'--exclude-from=FILE'
3784     When comparing directories, ignore files and subdirectories whose
3785     basenames match any pattern contained in FILE.  *Note Comparing
3786     Directories::.
3787
3788'-y'
3789'--side-by-side'
3790     Use the side by side output format.  *Note Side by Side Format::.
3791
3792'-Z'
3793'--ignore-trailing-space'
3794     Ignore white space at line end.  *Note White Space::.
3795
3796
3797File: diffutils.info,  Node: Invoking diff3,  Next: Invoking patch,  Prev: Invoking diff,  Up: Top
3798
379914 Invoking 'diff3'
3800*******************
3801
3802The 'diff3' command compares three files and outputs descriptions of
3803their differences.  Its arguments are as follows:
3804
3805     diff3 OPTIONS... MINE OLDER YOURS
3806
3807   The files to compare are MINE, OLDER, and YOURS.  At most one of
3808these three file names may be '-', which tells 'diff3' to read the
3809standard input for that file.
3810
3811   An exit status of 0 means 'diff3' was successful, 1 means some
3812conflicts were found, and 2 means trouble.
3813
3814* Menu:
3815
3816* diff3 Options:: Summary of options to 'diff3'.
3817
3818
3819File: diffutils.info,  Node: diff3 Options,  Up: Invoking diff3
3820
382114.1 Options to 'diff3'
3822=======================
3823
3824Below is a summary of all of the options that GNU 'diff3' accepts.
3825Multiple single letter options (unless they take an argument) can be
3826combined into a single command line argument.
3827
3828'-a'
3829'--text'
3830     Treat all files as text and compare them line-by-line, even if they
3831     do not appear to be text.  *Note Binary::.
3832
3833'-A'
3834'--show-all'
3835     Incorporate all unmerged changes from OLDER to YOURS into MINE,
3836     surrounding conflicts with bracket lines.  *Note Marking
3837     Conflicts::.
3838
3839'--diff-program=PROGRAM'
3840     Use the compatible comparison program PROGRAM to compare files
3841     instead of 'diff'.
3842
3843'-e'
3844'--ed'
3845     Generate an 'ed' script that incorporates all the changes from
3846     OLDER to YOURS into MINE.  *Note Which Changes::.
3847
3848'-E'
3849'--show-overlap'
3850     Like '-e', except bracket lines from overlapping changes' first and
3851     third files.  *Note Marking Conflicts::.  With '-E', an overlapping
3852     change looks like this:
3853
3854          <<<<<<< MINE
3855          lines from MINE
3856          =======
3857          lines from YOURS
3858          >>>>>>> YOURS
3859
3860'--help'
3861     Output a summary of usage and then exit.
3862
3863'-i'
3864     Generate 'w' and 'q' commands at the end of the 'ed' script for
3865     System V compatibility.  This option must be combined with one of
3866     the '-AeExX3' options, and may not be combined with '-m'.  *Note
3867     Saving the Changed File::.
3868
3869'--label=LABEL'
3870     Use the label LABEL for the brackets output by the '-A', '-E' and
3871     '-X' options.  This option may be given up to three times, one for
3872     each input file.  The default labels are the names of the input
3873     files.  Thus 'diff3 --label X --label Y --label Z -m A B C' acts
3874     like 'diff3 -m A B C', except that the output looks like it came
3875     from files named 'X', 'Y' and 'Z' rather than from files named 'A',
3876     'B' and 'C'.  *Note Marking Conflicts::.
3877
3878'-m'
3879'--merge'
3880     Apply the edit script to the first file and send the result to
3881     standard output.  Unlike piping the output from 'diff3' to 'ed',
3882     this works even for binary files and incomplete lines.  '-A' is
3883     assumed if no edit script option is specified.  *Note Bypassing
3884     ed::.
3885
3886'--strip-trailing-cr'
3887     Strip any trailing carriage return at the end of an input line.
3888     *Note Binary::.
3889
3890'-T'
3891'--initial-tab'
3892     Output a tab rather than two spaces before the text of a line in
3893     normal format.  This causes the alignment of tabs in the line to
3894     look normal.  *Note Tabs::.
3895
3896'-v'
3897'--version'
3898     Output version information and then exit.
3899
3900'-x'
3901'--overlap-only'
3902     Like '-e', except output only the overlapping changes.  *Note Which
3903     Changes::.
3904
3905'-X'
3906     Like '-E', except output only the overlapping changes.  In other
3907     words, like '-x', except bracket changes as in '-E'.  *Note Marking
3908     Conflicts::.
3909
3910'-3'
3911'--easy-only'
3912     Like '-e', except output only the nonoverlapping changes.  *Note
3913     Which Changes::.
3914
3915
3916File: diffutils.info,  Node: Invoking patch,  Next: Invoking sdiff,  Prev: Invoking diff3,  Up: Top
3917
391815 Invoking 'patch'
3919*******************
3920
3921Normally 'patch' is invoked like this:
3922
3923     patch <PATCHFILE
3924
3925   The full format for invoking 'patch' is:
3926
3927     patch OPTIONS... [ORIGFILE [PATCHFILE]]
3928
3929   You can also specify where to read the patch from with the '-i
3930PATCHFILE' or '--input=PATCHFILE' option.  If you do not specify
3931PATCHFILE, or if PATCHFILE is '-', 'patch' reads the patch (that is, the
3932'diff' output) from the standard input.
3933
3934   If you do not specify an input file on the command line, 'patch'
3935tries to intuit from the "leading text" (any text in the patch that
3936comes before the 'diff' output) which file to edit.  *Note Multiple
3937Patches::.
3938
3939   By default, 'patch' replaces the original input file with the patched
3940version, possibly after renaming the original file into a backup file
3941(*note Backup Names::, for a description of how 'patch' names backup
3942files).  You can also specify where to put the output with the '-o FILE'
3943or '--output=FILE' option; however, do not use this option if FILE is
3944one of the input files.
3945
3946* Menu:
3947
3948* patch Options::     Summary table of options to 'patch'.
3949
3950
3951File: diffutils.info,  Node: patch Options,  Up: Invoking patch
3952
395315.1 Options to 'patch'
3954=======================
3955
3956Here is a summary of all of the options that GNU 'patch' accepts.  *Note
3957patch and Tradition::, for which of these options are safe to use in
3958older versions of 'patch'.
3959
3960   Multiple single-letter options that do not take an argument can be
3961combined into a single command line argument with only one dash.
3962
3963'-b'
3964'--backup'
3965     Back up the original contents of each file, even if backups would
3966     normally not be made.  *Note Backups::.
3967
3968'-B PREFIX'
3969'--prefix=PREFIX'
3970     Prepend PREFIX to backup file names.  *Note Backup Names::.
3971
3972'--backup-if-mismatch'
3973     Back up the original contents of each file if the patch does not
3974     exactly match the file.  This is the default behavior when not
3975     conforming to POSIX. *Note Backups::.
3976
3977'--binary'
3978     Read and write all files in binary mode, except for standard output
3979     and '/dev/tty'.  This option has no effect on POSIX-conforming
3980     systems like GNU/Linux.  On systems where this option makes a
3981     difference, the patch should be generated by 'diff -a --binary'.
3982     *Note Binary::.
3983
3984'-c'
3985'--context'
3986     Interpret the patch file as a context diff.  *Note patch Input::.
3987
3988'-d DIRECTORY'
3989'--directory=DIRECTORY'
3990     Make directory DIRECTORY the current directory for interpreting
3991     both file names in the patch file, and file names given as
3992     arguments to other options.  *Note patch Directories::.
3993
3994'-D NAME'
3995'--ifdef=NAME'
3996     Make merged if-then-else output using NAME.  *Note If-then-else::.
3997
3998'--dry-run'
3999     Print the results of applying the patches without actually changing
4000     any files.  *Note Dry Runs::.
4001
4002'-e'
4003'--ed'
4004     Interpret the patch file as an 'ed' script.  *Note patch Input::.
4005
4006'-E'
4007'--remove-empty-files'
4008     Remove output files that are empty after the patches have been
4009     applied.  *Note Creating and Removing::.
4010
4011'-f'
4012'--force'
4013     Assume that the user knows exactly what he or she is doing, and do
4014     not ask any questions.  *Note patch Messages::.
4015
4016'-F LINES'
4017'--fuzz=LINES'
4018     Set the maximum fuzz factor to LINES.  *Note Inexact::.
4019
4020'-g NUM'
4021'--get=NUM'
4022     If NUM is positive, get input files from a revision control system
4023     as necessary; if zero, do not get the files; if negative, ask the
4024     user whether to get the files.  *Note Revision Control::.
4025
4026'--help'
4027     Output a summary of usage and then exit.
4028
4029'-i PATCHFILE'
4030'--input=PATCHFILE'
4031     Read the patch from PATCHFILE rather than from standard input.
4032     *Note patch Options::.
4033
4034'-l'
4035'--ignore-white-space'
4036     Let any sequence of blanks (spaces or tabs) in the patch file match
4037     any sequence of blanks in the input file.  *Note Changed White
4038     Space::.
4039
4040'-n'
4041'--normal'
4042     Interpret the patch file as a normal diff.  *Note patch Input::.
4043
4044'-N'
4045'--forward'
4046     Ignore patches that 'patch' thinks are reversed or already applied.
4047     See also '-R'.  *Note Reversed Patches::.
4048
4049'--no-backup-if-mismatch'
4050     Do not back up the original contents of files.  This is the default
4051     behavior when conforming to POSIX. *Note Backups::.
4052
4053'-o FILE'
4054'--output=FILE'
4055     Use FILE as the output file name.  *Note patch Options::.
4056
4057'-pNUMBER'
4058'--strip=NUMBER'
4059     Set the file name strip count to NUMBER.  *Note patch
4060     Directories::.
4061
4062'--posix'
4063     Conform to POSIX, as if the 'POSIXLY_CORRECT' environment variable
4064     had been set.  *Note patch and POSIX::.
4065
4066'--quoting-style=WORD'
4067     Use style WORD to quote names in diagnostics, as if the
4068     'QUOTING_STYLE' environment variable had been set to WORD.  *Note
4069     patch Quoting Style::.
4070
4071'-r REJECT-FILE'
4072'--reject-file=REJECT-FILE'
4073     Use REJECT-FILE as the reject file name.  *Note Reject Names::.
4074
4075'-R'
4076'--reverse'
4077     Assume that this patch was created with the old and new files
4078     swapped.  *Note Reversed Patches::.
4079
4080'-s'
4081'--quiet'
4082'--silent'
4083     Work silently unless an error occurs.  *Note patch Messages::.
4084
4085'-t'
4086'--batch'
4087     Do not ask any questions.  *Note patch Messages::.
4088
4089'-T'
4090'--set-time'
4091     Set the modification and access times of patched files from
4092     timestamps given in context diff headers, assuming that the context
4093     diff headers use local time.  *Note Patching Timestamps::.
4094
4095'-u'
4096'--unified'
4097     Interpret the patch file as a unified diff.  *Note patch Input::.
4098
4099'-v'
4100'--version'
4101     Output version information and then exit.
4102
4103'-V BACKUP-STYLE'
4104'--version=control=BACKUP-STYLE'
4105     Select the naming convention for backup file names.  *Note Backup
4106     Names::.
4107
4108'--verbose'
4109     Print more diagnostics than usual.  *Note patch Messages::.
4110
4111'-x NUMBER'
4112'--debug=NUMBER'
4113     Set internal debugging flags.  Of interest only to 'patch'
4114     patchers.
4115
4116'-Y PREFIX'
4117'--basename-prefix=PREFIX'
4118     Prepend PREFIX to base names of backup files.  *Note Backup
4119     Names::.
4120
4121'-z SUFFIX'
4122'--suffix=SUFFIX'
4123     Use SUFFIX as the backup extension instead of '.orig' or '~'.
4124     *Note Backup Names::.
4125
4126'-Z'
4127'--set-utc'
4128     Set the modification and access times of patched files from
4129     timestamps given in context diff headers, assuming that the context
4130     diff headers use UTC. *Note Patching Timestamps::.
4131
4132
4133File: diffutils.info,  Node: Invoking sdiff,  Next: Standards conformance,  Prev: Invoking patch,  Up: Top
4134
413516 Invoking 'sdiff'
4136*******************
4137
4138The 'sdiff' command merges two files and interactively outputs the
4139results.  Its arguments are as follows:
4140
4141     sdiff -o OUTFILE OPTIONS... FROM-FILE TO-FILE
4142
4143   This merges FROM-FILE with TO-FILE, with output to OUTFILE.  If
4144FROM-FILE is a directory and TO-FILE is not, 'sdiff' compares the file
4145in FROM-FILE whose file name is that of TO-FILE, and vice versa.
4146FROM-FILE and TO-FILE may not both be directories.
4147
4148   'sdiff' options begin with '-', so normally FROM-FILE and TO-FILE may
4149not begin with '-'.  However, '--' as an argument by itself treats the
4150remaining arguments as file names even if they begin with '-'.  You may
4151not use '-' as an input file.
4152
4153   'sdiff' without '--output' ('-o') produces a side-by-side difference.
4154This usage is obsolete; use the '--side-by-side' ('-y') option of 'diff'
4155instead.
4156
4157   An exit status of 0 means no differences were found, 1 means some
4158differences were found, and 2 means trouble.
4159
4160* Menu:
4161
4162* sdiff Options:: Summary of options to 'diff'.
4163
4164
4165File: diffutils.info,  Node: sdiff Options,  Up: Invoking sdiff
4166
416716.1 Options to 'sdiff'
4168=======================
4169
4170Below is a summary of all of the options that GNU 'sdiff' accepts.  Each
4171option has two equivalent names, one of which is a single letter
4172preceded by '-', and the other of which is a long name preceded by '--'.
4173Multiple single letter options (unless they take an argument) can be
4174combined into a single command line argument.  Long named options can be
4175abbreviated to any unique prefix of their name.
4176
4177'-a'
4178'--text'
4179     Treat all files as text and compare them line-by-line, even if they
4180     do not appear to be text.  *Note Binary::.
4181
4182'-b'
4183'--ignore-space-change'
4184     Ignore changes in amount of white space.  *Note White Space::.
4185
4186'-B'
4187'--ignore-blank-lines'
4188     Ignore changes that just insert or delete blank lines.  *Note Blank
4189     Lines::.
4190
4191'-d'
4192'--minimal'
4193     Change the algorithm to perhaps find a smaller set of changes.
4194     This makes 'sdiff' slower (sometimes much slower).  *Note diff
4195     Performance::.
4196
4197'--diff-program=PROGRAM'
4198     Use the compatible comparison program PROGRAM to compare files
4199     instead of 'diff'.
4200
4201'-E'
4202'--ignore-tab-expansion'
4203     Ignore changes due to tab expansion.  *Note White Space::.
4204
4205'--help'
4206     Output a summary of usage and then exit.
4207
4208'-i'
4209'--ignore-case'
4210     Ignore changes in case; consider upper- and lower-case to be the
4211     same.  *Note Case Folding::.
4212
4213'-I REGEXP'
4214'--ignore-matching-lines=REGEXP'
4215     Ignore changes that just insert or delete lines that match REGEXP.
4216     *Note Specified Lines::.
4217
4218'-l'
4219'--left-column'
4220     Print only the left column of two common lines.  *Note Side by Side
4221     Format::.
4222
4223'-o FILE'
4224'--output=FILE'
4225     Put merged output into FILE.  This option is required for merging.
4226
4227'-s'
4228'--suppress-common-lines'
4229     Do not print common lines.  *Note Side by Side Format::.
4230
4231'--speed-large-files'
4232     Use heuristics to speed handling of large files that have numerous
4233     scattered small changes.  *Note diff Performance::.
4234
4235'--strip-trailing-cr'
4236     Strip any trailing carriage return at the end of an input line.
4237     *Note Binary::.
4238
4239'-t'
4240'--expand-tabs'
4241     Expand tabs to spaces in the output, to preserve the alignment of
4242     tabs in the input files.  *Note Tabs::.
4243
4244'--tabsize=COLUMNS'
4245     Assume that tab stops are set every COLUMNS (default 8) print
4246     columns.  *Note Tabs::.
4247
4248'-v'
4249'--version'
4250     Output version information and then exit.
4251
4252'-w COLUMNS'
4253'--width=COLUMNS'
4254     Output at most COLUMNS (default 130) print columns per line.  *Note
4255     Side by Side Format::.  Note that for historical reasons, this
4256     option is '-W' in 'diff', '-w' in 'sdiff'.
4257
4258'-W'
4259'--ignore-all-space'
4260     Ignore white space when comparing lines.  *Note White Space::.
4261     Note that for historical reasons, this option is '-w' in 'diff',
4262     '-W' in 'sdiff'.
4263
4264'-Z'
4265'--ignore-trailing-space'
4266     Ignore white space at line end.  *Note White Space::.
4267
4268
4269File: diffutils.info,  Node: Standards conformance,  Next: Projects,  Prev: Invoking sdiff,  Up: Top
4270
427117 Standards conformance
4272************************
4273
4274In a few cases, the GNU utilities' default behavior is incompatible with
4275the POSIX standard.  To suppress these incompatibilities, define the
4276'POSIXLY_CORRECT' environment variable.  Unless you are checking for
4277POSIX conformance, you probably do not need to define 'POSIXLY_CORRECT'.
4278
4279   Normally options and operands can appear in any order, and programs
4280act as if all the options appear before any operands.  For example,
4281'diff lao tzu -C 2' acts like 'diff -C 2 lao tzu', since '2' is an
4282option-argument of '-C'.  However, if the 'POSIXLY_CORRECT' environment
4283variable is set, options must appear before operands, unless otherwise
4284specified for a particular command.
4285
4286   Newer versions of POSIX are occasionally incompatible with older
4287versions.  For example, older versions of POSIX allowed the command
4288'diff -c -10' to have the same meaning as 'diff -C 10', but POSIX
42891003.1-2001 'diff' no longer allows digit-string options like '-10'.
4290
4291   The GNU utilities normally conform to the version of POSIX that is
4292standard for your system.  To cause them to conform to a different
4293version of POSIX, define the '_POSIX2_VERSION' environment variable to a
4294value of the form YYYYMM specifying the year and month the standard was
4295adopted.  Two values are currently supported for '_POSIX2_VERSION':
4296'199209' stands for POSIX 1003.2-1992, and '200112' stands for POSIX
42971003.1-2001.  For example, if you are running older software that
4298assumes an older version of POSIX and uses 'diff -c -10', you can work
4299around the compatibility problems by setting '_POSIX2_VERSION=199209' in
4300your environment.
4301
4302
4303File: diffutils.info,  Node: Projects,  Next: Copying This Manual,  Prev: Standards conformance,  Up: Top
4304
430518 Future Projects
4306******************
4307
4308Here are some ideas for improving GNU 'diff' and 'patch'.  The GNU
4309project has identified some improvements as potential programming
4310projects for volunteers.  You can also help by reporting any bugs that
4311you find.
4312
4313   If you are a programmer and would like to contribute something to the
4314GNU project, please consider volunteering for one of these projects.  If
4315you are seriously contemplating work, please write to <gvc@gnu.org> to
4316coordinate with other volunteers.
4317
4318* Menu:
4319
4320* Shortcomings:: Suggested projects for improvements.
4321* Bugs::         Reporting bugs.
4322
4323
4324File: diffutils.info,  Node: Shortcomings,  Next: Bugs,  Up: Projects
4325
432618.1 Suggested Projects for Improving GNU 'diff' and 'patch'
4327============================================================
4328
4329One should be able to use GNU 'diff' to generate a patch from any pair
4330of directory trees, and given the patch and a copy of one such tree, use
4331'patch' to generate a faithful copy of the other.  Unfortunately, some
4332changes to directory trees cannot be expressed using current patch
4333formats; also, 'patch' does not handle some of the existing formats.
4334These shortcomings motivate the following suggested projects.
4335
4336* Menu:
4337
4338* Internationalization:: Handling multibyte and varying-width characters.
4339* Changing Structure::   Handling changes to the directory structure.
4340* Special Files::        Handling symbolic links, device special files, etc.
4341* Unusual File Names::   Handling file names that contain unusual characters.
4342* Timestamp Order::     Outputting diffs in timestamp order.
4343* Ignoring Changes::     Ignoring certain changes while showing others.
4344* Speedups::             Improving performance.
4345
4346
4347File: diffutils.info,  Node: Internationalization,  Next: Changing Structure,  Up: Shortcomings
4348
434918.1.1 Handling Multibyte and Varying-Width Characters
4350------------------------------------------------------
4351
4352'diff', 'diff3' and 'sdiff' treat each line of input as a string of
4353unibyte characters.  This can mishandle multibyte characters in some
4354cases.  For example, when asked to ignore spaces, 'diff' does not
4355properly ignore a multibyte space character.
4356
4357   Also, 'diff' currently assumes that each byte is one column wide, and
4358this assumption is incorrect in some locales, e.g., locales that use
4359UTF-8 encoding.  This causes problems with the '-y' or '--side-by-side'
4360option of 'diff'.
4361
4362   These problems need to be fixed without unduly affecting the
4363performance of the utilities in unibyte environments.
4364
4365   The IBM GNU/Linux Technology Center Internationalization Team has
4366proposed patches to support internationalized 'diff'
4367(http://oss.software.ibm.com/developer/opensource/linux/patches/i18n/diffutils-2.7.2-i18n-0.1.patch.gz).
4368Unfortunately, these patches are incomplete and are to an older version
4369of 'diff', so more work needs to be done in this area.
4370
4371
4372File: diffutils.info,  Node: Changing Structure,  Next: Special Files,  Prev: Internationalization,  Up: Shortcomings
4373
437418.1.2 Handling Changes to the Directory Structure
4375--------------------------------------------------
4376
4377'diff' and 'patch' do not handle some changes to directory structure.
4378For example, suppose one directory tree contains a directory named 'D'
4379with some subsidiary files, and another contains a file with the same
4380name 'D'.  'diff -r' does not output enough information for 'patch' to
4381transform the directory subtree into the file.
4382
4383   There should be a way to specify that a file has been removed without
4384having to include its entire contents in the patch file.  There should
4385also be a way to tell 'patch' that a file was renamed, even if there is
4386no way for 'diff' to generate such information.  There should be a way
4387to tell 'patch' that a file's timestamp has changed, even if its
4388contents have not changed.
4389
4390   These problems can be fixed by extending the 'diff' output format to
4391represent changes in directory structure, and extending 'patch' to
4392understand these extensions.
4393
4394
4395File: diffutils.info,  Node: Special Files,  Next: Unusual File Names,  Prev: Changing Structure,  Up: Shortcomings
4396
439718.1.3 Files that are Neither Directories Nor Regular Files
4398-----------------------------------------------------------
4399
4400Some files are neither directories nor regular files: they are unusual
4401files like symbolic links, device special files, named pipes, and
4402sockets.  Currently, 'diff' treats symbolic links as if they were the
4403pointed-to files, except that a recursive 'diff' reports an error if it
4404detects infinite loops of symbolic links (e.g., symbolic links to '..').
4405'diff' treats other special files like regular files if they are
4406specified at the top level, but simply reports their presence when
4407comparing directories.  This means that 'patch' cannot represent changes
4408to such files.  For example, if you change which file a symbolic link
4409points to, 'diff' outputs the difference between the two files, instead
4410of the change to the symbolic link.
4411
4412   'diff' should optionally report changes to special files specially,
4413and 'patch' should be extended to understand these extensions.
4414
4415
4416File: diffutils.info,  Node: Unusual File Names,  Next: Timestamp Order,  Prev: Special Files,  Up: Shortcomings
4417
441818.1.4 File Names that Contain Unusual Characters
4419-------------------------------------------------
4420
4421When a file name contains an unusual character like a newline or white
4422space, 'diff -r' generates a patch that 'patch' cannot parse.  The
4423problem is with format of 'diff' output, not just with 'patch', because
4424with odd enough file names one can cause 'diff' to generate a patch that
4425is syntactically correct but patches the wrong files.  The format of
4426'diff' output should be extended to handle all possible file names.
4427
4428
4429File: diffutils.info,  Node: Timestamp Order,  Next: Ignoring Changes,  Prev: Unusual File Names,  Up: Shortcomings
4430
443118.1.5 Outputting Diffs in Timestamp Order
4432------------------------------------------
4433
4434Applying 'patch' to a multiple-file diff can result in files whose
4435timestamps are out of order.  GNU 'patch' has options to restore the
4436timestamps of the updated files (*note Patching Timestamps::), but
4437sometimes it is useful to generate a patch that works even if the
4438recipient does not have GNU patch, or does not use these options.  One
4439way to do this would be to implement a 'diff' option to output diffs in
4440timestamp order.
4441
4442
4443File: diffutils.info,  Node: Ignoring Changes,  Next: Speedups,  Prev: Timestamp Order,  Up: Shortcomings
4444
444518.1.6 Ignoring Certain Changes
4446-------------------------------
4447
4448It would be nice to have a feature for specifying two strings, one in
4449FROM-FILE and one in TO-FILE, which should be considered to match.
4450Thus, if the two strings are 'foo' and 'bar', then if two lines differ
4451only in that 'foo' in file 1 corresponds to 'bar' in file 2, the lines
4452are treated as identical.
4453
4454   It is not clear how general this feature can or should be, or what
4455syntax should be used for it.
4456
4457   A partial substitute is to filter one or both files before comparing,
4458e.g.:
4459
4460     sed 's/foo/bar/g' file1 | diff - file2
4461
4462   However, this outputs the filtered text, not the original.
4463
4464
4465File: diffutils.info,  Node: Speedups,  Prev: Ignoring Changes,  Up: Shortcomings
4466
446718.1.7 Improving Performance
4468----------------------------
4469
4470When comparing two large directory structures, one of which was
4471originally copied from the other with timestamps preserved (e.g., with
4472'cp -pR'), it would greatly improve performance if an option told 'diff'
4473to assume that two files with the same size and timestamps have the same
4474content.  *Note diff Performance::.
4475
4476
4477File: diffutils.info,  Node: Bugs,  Prev: Shortcomings,  Up: Projects
4478
447918.2 Reporting Bugs
4480===================
4481
4482If you think you have found a bug in GNU 'cmp', 'diff', 'diff3', or
4483'sdiff', please report it by electronic mail to the GNU utilities bug
4484report mailing list (http://mail.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/bug-diffutils)
4485<bug-diffutils@gnu.org>.  Please send bug reports for GNU 'patch' to
4486<bug-patch@gnu.org>.  Send as precise a description of the problem as
4487you can, including the output of the '--version' option and sample input
4488files that produce the bug, if applicable.  If you have a nontrivial fix
4489for the bug, please send it as well.  If you have a patch, please send
4490it too.  It may simplify the maintainer's job if the patch is relative
4491to a recent test release, which you can find in the directory
4492<ftp://alpha.gnu.org/gnu/diffutils/>.
4493
4494
4495File: diffutils.info,  Node: Copying This Manual,  Next: Translations,  Prev: Projects,  Up: Top
4496
4497Appendix A Copying This Manual
4498******************************
4499
4500                     Version 1.3, 3 November 2008
4501
4502     Copyright (C) 2000, 2001, 2002, 2007, 2008 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
4503     <https://fsf.org/>
4504
4505     Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies
4506     of this license document, but changing it is not allowed.
4507
4508  0. PREAMBLE
4509
4510     The purpose of this License is to make a manual, textbook, or other
4511     functional and useful document "free" in the sense of freedom: to
4512     assure everyone the effective freedom to copy and redistribute it,
4513     with or without modifying it, either commercially or
4514     noncommercially.  Secondarily, this License preserves for the
4515     author and publisher a way to get credit for their work, while not
4516     being considered responsible for modifications made by others.
4517
4518     This License is a kind of "copyleft", which means that derivative
4519     works of the document must themselves be free in the same sense.
4520     It complements the GNU General Public License, which is a copyleft
4521     license designed for free software.
4522
4523     We have designed this License in order to use it for manuals for
4524     free software, because free software needs free documentation: a
4525     free program should come with manuals providing the same freedoms
4526     that the software does.  But this License is not limited to
4527     software manuals; it can be used for any textual work, regardless
4528     of subject matter or whether it is published as a printed book.  We
4529     recommend this License principally for works whose purpose is
4530     instruction or reference.
4531
4532  1. APPLICABILITY AND DEFINITIONS
4533
4534     This License applies to any manual or other work, in any medium,
4535     that contains a notice placed by the copyright holder saying it can
4536     be distributed under the terms of this License.  Such a notice
4537     grants a world-wide, royalty-free license, unlimited in duration,
4538     to use that work under the conditions stated herein.  The
4539     "Document", below, refers to any such manual or work.  Any member
4540     of the public is a licensee, and is addressed as "you".  You accept
4541     the license if you copy, modify or distribute the work in a way
4542     requiring permission under copyright law.
4543
4544     A "Modified Version" of the Document means any work containing the
4545     Document or a portion of it, either copied verbatim, or with
4546     modifications and/or translated into another language.
4547
4548     A "Secondary Section" is a named appendix or a front-matter section
4549     of the Document that deals exclusively with the relationship of the
4550     publishers or authors of the Document to the Document's overall
4551     subject (or to related matters) and contains nothing that could
4552     fall directly within that overall subject.  (Thus, if the Document
4553     is in part a textbook of mathematics, a Secondary Section may not
4554     explain any mathematics.)  The relationship could be a matter of
4555     historical connection with the subject or with related matters, or
4556     of legal, commercial, philosophical, ethical or political position
4557     regarding them.
4558
4559     The "Invariant Sections" are certain Secondary Sections whose
4560     titles are designated, as being those of Invariant Sections, in the
4561     notice that says that the Document is released under this License.
4562     If a section does not fit the above definition of Secondary then it
4563     is not allowed to be designated as Invariant.  The Document may
4564     contain zero Invariant Sections.  If the Document does not identify
4565     any Invariant Sections then there are none.
4566
4567     The "Cover Texts" are certain short passages of text that are
4568     listed, as Front-Cover Texts or Back-Cover Texts, in the notice
4569     that says that the Document is released under this License.  A
4570     Front-Cover Text may be at most 5 words, and a Back-Cover Text may
4571     be at most 25 words.
4572
4573     A "Transparent" copy of the Document means a machine-readable copy,
4574     represented in a format whose specification is available to the
4575     general public, that is suitable for revising the document
4576     straightforwardly with generic text editors or (for images composed
4577     of pixels) generic paint programs or (for drawings) some widely
4578     available drawing editor, and that is suitable for input to text
4579     formatters or for automatic translation to a variety of formats
4580     suitable for input to text formatters.  A copy made in an otherwise
4581     Transparent file format whose markup, or absence of markup, has
4582     been arranged to thwart or discourage subsequent modification by
4583     readers is not Transparent.  An image format is not Transparent if
4584     used for any substantial amount of text.  A copy that is not
4585     "Transparent" is called "Opaque".
4586
4587     Examples of suitable formats for Transparent copies include plain
4588     ASCII without markup, Texinfo input format, LaTeX input format,
4589     SGML or XML using a publicly available DTD, and standard-conforming
4590     simple HTML, PostScript or PDF designed for human modification.
4591     Examples of transparent image formats include PNG, XCF and JPG.
4592     Opaque formats include proprietary formats that can be read and
4593     edited only by proprietary word processors, SGML or XML for which
4594     the DTD and/or processing tools are not generally available, and
4595     the machine-generated HTML, PostScript or PDF produced by some word
4596     processors for output purposes only.
4597
4598     The "Title Page" means, for a printed book, the title page itself,
4599     plus such following pages as are needed to hold, legibly, the
4600     material this License requires to appear in the title page.  For
4601     works in formats which do not have any title page as such, "Title
4602     Page" means the text near the most prominent appearance of the
4603     work's title, preceding the beginning of the body of the text.
4604
4605     The "publisher" means any person or entity that distributes copies
4606     of the Document to the public.
4607
4608     A section "Entitled XYZ" means a named subunit of the Document
4609     whose title either is precisely XYZ or contains XYZ in parentheses
4610     following text that translates XYZ in another language.  (Here XYZ
4611     stands for a specific section name mentioned below, such as
4612     "Acknowledgements", "Dedications", "Endorsements", or "History".)
4613     To "Preserve the Title" of such a section when you modify the
4614     Document means that it remains a section "Entitled XYZ" according
4615     to this definition.
4616
4617     The Document may include Warranty Disclaimers next to the notice
4618     which states that this License applies to the Document.  These
4619     Warranty Disclaimers are considered to be included by reference in
4620     this License, but only as regards disclaiming warranties: any other
4621     implication that these Warranty Disclaimers may have is void and
4622     has no effect on the meaning of this License.
4623
4624  2. VERBATIM COPYING
4625
4626     You may copy and distribute the Document in any medium, either
4627     commercially or noncommercially, provided that this License, the
4628     copyright notices, and the license notice saying this License
4629     applies to the Document are reproduced in all copies, and that you
4630     add no other conditions whatsoever to those of this License.  You
4631     may not use technical measures to obstruct or control the reading
4632     or further copying of the copies you make or distribute.  However,
4633     you may accept compensation in exchange for copies.  If you
4634     distribute a large enough number of copies you must also follow the
4635     conditions in section 3.
4636
4637     You may also lend copies, under the same conditions stated above,
4638     and you may publicly display copies.
4639
4640  3. COPYING IN QUANTITY
4641
4642     If you publish printed copies (or copies in media that commonly
4643     have printed covers) of the Document, numbering more than 100, and
4644     the Document's license notice requires Cover Texts, you must
4645     enclose the copies in covers that carry, clearly and legibly, all
4646     these Cover Texts: Front-Cover Texts on the front cover, and
4647     Back-Cover Texts on the back cover.  Both covers must also clearly
4648     and legibly identify you as the publisher of these copies.  The
4649     front cover must present the full title with all words of the title
4650     equally prominent and visible.  You may add other material on the
4651     covers in addition.  Copying with changes limited to the covers, as
4652     long as they preserve the title of the Document and satisfy these
4653     conditions, can be treated as verbatim copying in other respects.
4654
4655     If the required texts for either cover are too voluminous to fit
4656     legibly, you should put the first ones listed (as many as fit
4657     reasonably) on the actual cover, and continue the rest onto
4658     adjacent pages.
4659
4660     If you publish or distribute Opaque copies of the Document
4661     numbering more than 100, you must either include a machine-readable
4662     Transparent copy along with each Opaque copy, or state in or with
4663     each Opaque copy a computer-network location from which the general
4664     network-using public has access to download using public-standard
4665     network protocols a complete Transparent copy of the Document, free
4666     of added material.  If you use the latter option, you must take
4667     reasonably prudent steps, when you begin distribution of Opaque
4668     copies in quantity, to ensure that this Transparent copy will
4669     remain thus accessible at the stated location until at least one
4670     year after the last time you distribute an Opaque copy (directly or
4671     through your agents or retailers) of that edition to the public.
4672
4673     It is requested, but not required, that you contact the authors of
4674     the Document well before redistributing any large number of copies,
4675     to give them a chance to provide you with an updated version of the
4676     Document.
4677
4678  4. MODIFICATIONS
4679
4680     You may copy and distribute a Modified Version of the Document
4681     under the conditions of sections 2 and 3 above, provided that you
4682     release the Modified Version under precisely this License, with the
4683     Modified Version filling the role of the Document, thus licensing
4684     distribution and modification of the Modified Version to whoever
4685     possesses a copy of it.  In addition, you must do these things in
4686     the Modified Version:
4687
4688       A. Use in the Title Page (and on the covers, if any) a title
4689          distinct from that of the Document, and from those of previous
4690          versions (which should, if there were any, be listed in the
4691          History section of the Document).  You may use the same title
4692          as a previous version if the original publisher of that
4693          version gives permission.
4694
4695       B. List on the Title Page, as authors, one or more persons or
4696          entities responsible for authorship of the modifications in
4697          the Modified Version, together with at least five of the
4698          principal authors of the Document (all of its principal
4699          authors, if it has fewer than five), unless they release you
4700          from this requirement.
4701
4702       C. State on the Title page the name of the publisher of the
4703          Modified Version, as the publisher.
4704
4705       D. Preserve all the copyright notices of the Document.
4706
4707       E. Add an appropriate copyright notice for your modifications
4708          adjacent to the other copyright notices.
4709
4710       F. Include, immediately after the copyright notices, a license
4711          notice giving the public permission to use the Modified
4712          Version under the terms of this License, in the form shown in
4713          the Addendum below.
4714
4715       G. Preserve in that license notice the full lists of Invariant
4716          Sections and required Cover Texts given in the Document's
4717          license notice.
4718
4719       H. Include an unaltered copy of this License.
4720
4721       I. Preserve the section Entitled "History", Preserve its Title,
4722          and add to it an item stating at least the title, year, new
4723          authors, and publisher of the Modified Version as given on the
4724          Title Page.  If there is no section Entitled "History" in the
4725          Document, create one stating the title, year, authors, and
4726          publisher of the Document as given on its Title Page, then add
4727          an item describing the Modified Version as stated in the
4728          previous sentence.
4729
4730       J. Preserve the network location, if any, given in the Document
4731          for public access to a Transparent copy of the Document, and
4732          likewise the network locations given in the Document for
4733          previous versions it was based on.  These may be placed in the
4734          "History" section.  You may omit a network location for a work
4735          that was published at least four years before the Document
4736          itself, or if the original publisher of the version it refers
4737          to gives permission.
4738
4739       K. For any section Entitled "Acknowledgements" or "Dedications",
4740          Preserve the Title of the section, and preserve in the section
4741          all the substance and tone of each of the contributor
4742          acknowledgements and/or dedications given therein.
4743
4744       L. Preserve all the Invariant Sections of the Document, unaltered
4745          in their text and in their titles.  Section numbers or the
4746          equivalent are not considered part of the section titles.
4747
4748       M. Delete any section Entitled "Endorsements".  Such a section
4749          may not be included in the Modified Version.
4750
4751       N. Do not retitle any existing section to be Entitled
4752          "Endorsements" or to conflict in title with any Invariant
4753          Section.
4754
4755       O. Preserve any Warranty Disclaimers.
4756
4757     If the Modified Version includes new front-matter sections or
4758     appendices that qualify as Secondary Sections and contain no
4759     material copied from the Document, you may at your option designate
4760     some or all of these sections as invariant.  To do this, add their
4761     titles to the list of Invariant Sections in the Modified Version's
4762     license notice.  These titles must be distinct from any other
4763     section titles.
4764
4765     You may add a section Entitled "Endorsements", provided it contains
4766     nothing but endorsements of your Modified Version by various
4767     parties--for example, statements of peer review or that the text
4768     has been approved by an organization as the authoritative
4769     definition of a standard.
4770
4771     You may add a passage of up to five words as a Front-Cover Text,
4772     and a passage of up to 25 words as a Back-Cover Text, to the end of
4773     the list of Cover Texts in the Modified Version.  Only one passage
4774     of Front-Cover Text and one of Back-Cover Text may be added by (or
4775     through arrangements made by) any one entity.  If the Document
4776     already includes a cover text for the same cover, previously added
4777     by you or by arrangement made by the same entity you are acting on
4778     behalf of, you may not add another; but you may replace the old
4779     one, on explicit permission from the previous publisher that added
4780     the old one.
4781
4782     The author(s) and publisher(s) of the Document do not by this
4783     License give permission to use their names for publicity for or to
4784     assert or imply endorsement of any Modified Version.
4785
4786  5. COMBINING DOCUMENTS
4787
4788     You may combine the Document with other documents released under
4789     this License, under the terms defined in section 4 above for
4790     modified versions, provided that you include in the combination all
4791     of the Invariant Sections of all of the original documents,
4792     unmodified, and list them all as Invariant Sections of your
4793     combined work in its license notice, and that you preserve all
4794     their Warranty Disclaimers.
4795
4796     The combined work need only contain one copy of this License, and
4797     multiple identical Invariant Sections may be replaced with a single
4798     copy.  If there are multiple Invariant Sections with the same name
4799     but different contents, make the title of each such section unique
4800     by adding at the end of it, in parentheses, the name of the
4801     original author or publisher of that section if known, or else a
4802     unique number.  Make the same adjustment to the section titles in
4803     the list of Invariant Sections in the license notice of the
4804     combined work.
4805
4806     In the combination, you must combine any sections Entitled
4807     "History" in the various original documents, forming one section
4808     Entitled "History"; likewise combine any sections Entitled
4809     "Acknowledgements", and any sections Entitled "Dedications".  You
4810     must delete all sections Entitled "Endorsements."
4811
4812  6. COLLECTIONS OF DOCUMENTS
4813
4814     You may make a collection consisting of the Document and other
4815     documents released under this License, and replace the individual
4816     copies of this License in the various documents with a single copy
4817     that is included in the collection, provided that you follow the
4818     rules of this License for verbatim copying of each of the documents
4819     in all other respects.
4820
4821     You may extract a single document from such a collection, and
4822     distribute it individually under this License, provided you insert
4823     a copy of this License into the extracted document, and follow this
4824     License in all other respects regarding verbatim copying of that
4825     document.
4826
4827  7. AGGREGATION WITH INDEPENDENT WORKS
4828
4829     A compilation of the Document or its derivatives with other
4830     separate and independent documents or works, in or on a volume of a
4831     storage or distribution medium, is called an "aggregate" if the
4832     copyright resulting from the compilation is not used to limit the
4833     legal rights of the compilation's users beyond what the individual
4834     works permit.  When the Document is included in an aggregate, this
4835     License does not apply to the other works in the aggregate which
4836     are not themselves derivative works of the Document.
4837
4838     If the Cover Text requirement of section 3 is applicable to these
4839     copies of the Document, then if the Document is less than one half
4840     of the entire aggregate, the Document's Cover Texts may be placed
4841     on covers that bracket the Document within the aggregate, or the
4842     electronic equivalent of covers if the Document is in electronic
4843     form.  Otherwise they must appear on printed covers that bracket
4844     the whole aggregate.
4845
4846  8. TRANSLATION
4847
4848     Translation is considered a kind of modification, so you may
4849     distribute translations of the Document under the terms of section
4850     4.  Replacing Invariant Sections with translations requires special
4851     permission from their copyright holders, but you may include
4852     translations of some or all Invariant Sections in addition to the
4853     original versions of these Invariant Sections.  You may include a
4854     translation of this License, and all the license notices in the
4855     Document, and any Warranty Disclaimers, provided that you also
4856     include the original English version of this License and the
4857     original versions of those notices and disclaimers.  In case of a
4858     disagreement between the translation and the original version of
4859     this License or a notice or disclaimer, the original version will
4860     prevail.
4861
4862     If a section in the Document is Entitled "Acknowledgements",
4863     "Dedications", or "History", the requirement (section 4) to
4864     Preserve its Title (section 1) will typically require changing the
4865     actual title.
4866
4867  9. TERMINATION
4868
4869     You may not copy, modify, sublicense, or distribute the Document
4870     except as expressly provided under this License.  Any attempt
4871     otherwise to copy, modify, sublicense, or distribute it is void,
4872     and will automatically terminate your rights under this License.
4873
4874     However, if you cease all violation of this License, then your
4875     license from a particular copyright holder is reinstated (a)
4876     provisionally, unless and until the copyright holder explicitly and
4877     finally terminates your license, and (b) permanently, if the
4878     copyright holder fails to notify you of the violation by some
4879     reasonable means prior to 60 days after the cessation.
4880
4881     Moreover, your license from a particular copyright holder is
4882     reinstated permanently if the copyright holder notifies you of the
4883     violation by some reasonable means, this is the first time you have
4884     received notice of violation of this License (for any work) from
4885     that copyright holder, and you cure the violation prior to 30 days
4886     after your receipt of the notice.
4887
4888     Termination of your rights under this section does not terminate
4889     the licenses of parties who have received copies or rights from you
4890     under this License.  If your rights have been terminated and not
4891     permanently reinstated, receipt of a copy of some or all of the
4892     same material does not give you any rights to use it.
4893
4894  10. FUTURE REVISIONS OF THIS LICENSE
4895
4896     The Free Software Foundation may publish new, revised versions of
4897     the GNU Free Documentation License from time to time.  Such new
4898     versions will be similar in spirit to the present version, but may
4899     differ in detail to address new problems or concerns.  See
4900     <https://www.gnu.org/copyleft/>.
4901
4902     Each version of the License is given a distinguishing version
4903     number.  If the Document specifies that a particular numbered
4904     version of this License "or any later version" applies to it, you
4905     have the option of following the terms and conditions either of
4906     that specified version or of any later version that has been
4907     published (not as a draft) by the Free Software Foundation.  If the
4908     Document does not specify a version number of this License, you may
4909     choose any version ever published (not as a draft) by the Free
4910     Software Foundation.  If the Document specifies that a proxy can
4911     decide which future versions of this License can be used, that
4912     proxy's public statement of acceptance of a version permanently
4913     authorizes you to choose that version for the Document.
4914
4915  11. RELICENSING
4916
4917     "Massive Multiauthor Collaboration Site" (or "MMC Site") means any
4918     World Wide Web server that publishes copyrightable works and also
4919     provides prominent facilities for anybody to edit those works.  A
4920     public wiki that anybody can edit is an example of such a server.
4921     A "Massive Multiauthor Collaboration" (or "MMC") contained in the
4922     site means any set of copyrightable works thus published on the MMC
4923     site.
4924
4925     "CC-BY-SA" means the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0
4926     license published by Creative Commons Corporation, a not-for-profit
4927     corporation with a principal place of business in San Francisco,
4928     California, as well as future copyleft versions of that license
4929     published by that same organization.
4930
4931     "Incorporate" means to publish or republish a Document, in whole or
4932     in part, as part of another Document.
4933
4934     An MMC is "eligible for relicensing" if it is licensed under this
4935     License, and if all works that were first published under this
4936     License somewhere other than this MMC, and subsequently
4937     incorporated in whole or in part into the MMC, (1) had no cover
4938     texts or invariant sections, and (2) were thus incorporated prior
4939     to November 1, 2008.
4940
4941     The operator of an MMC Site may republish an MMC contained in the
4942     site under CC-BY-SA on the same site at any time before August 1,
4943     2009, provided the MMC is eligible for relicensing.
4944
4945ADDENDUM: How to use this License for your documents
4946====================================================
4947
4948To use this License in a document you have written, include a copy of
4949the License in the document and put the following copyright and license
4950notices just after the title page:
4951
4952       Copyright (C)  YEAR  YOUR NAME.
4953       Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document
4954       under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.3
4955       or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation;
4956       with no Invariant Sections, no Front-Cover Texts, and no Back-Cover
4957       Texts.  A copy of the license is included in the section entitled ``GNU
4958       Free Documentation License''.
4959
4960   If you have Invariant Sections, Front-Cover Texts and Back-Cover
4961Texts, replace the "with...Texts." line with this:
4962
4963         with the Invariant Sections being LIST THEIR TITLES, with
4964         the Front-Cover Texts being LIST, and with the Back-Cover Texts
4965         being LIST.
4966
4967   If you have Invariant Sections without Cover Texts, or some other
4968combination of the three, merge those two alternatives to suit the
4969situation.
4970
4971   If your document contains nontrivial examples of program code, we
4972recommend releasing these examples in parallel under your choice of free
4973software license, such as the GNU General Public License, to permit
4974their use in free software.
4975
4976
4977File: diffutils.info,  Node: Translations,  Next: Index,  Prev: Copying This Manual,  Up: Top
4978
4979Appendix B Translations of This Manual
4980**************************************
4981
4982Nishio Futoshi of the GNUjdoc project has prepared a Japanese
4983translation of this manual.  Its most recent version can be found at
4984<http://openlab.ring.gr.jp/gnujdoc/cvsweb/cvsweb.cgi/gnujdoc/>.
4985
4986
4987File: diffutils.info,  Node: Index,  Prev: Translations,  Up: Top
4988
4989Appendix C Index
4990****************
4991
4992�[index�]
4993* Menu:
4994
4995* ! output format:                       Context.             (line   6)
4996* +- output format:                      Unified Format.      (line   6)
4997* < output format:                       Normal.              (line   6)
4998* <<<<<<< for marking conflicts:         Marking Conflicts.   (line   6)
4999* _POSIX2_VERSION:                       Standards conformance.
5000                                                              (line  23)
5001* ad capability:                         diff Options.        (line 179)
5002* aligning tab stops:                    Tabs.                (line   6)
5003* alternate file names:                  Alternate Names.     (line   6)
5004* always color option:                   diff Options.        (line  43)
5005* auto color option:                     diff Options.        (line  42)
5006* backup file names:                     Backup Names.        (line   6)
5007* backup file strategy:                  Backups.             (line   6)
5008* binary file diff:                      Binary.              (line   6)
5009* blank and tab difference suppression:  White Space.         (line   6)
5010* blank line difference suppression:     Blank Lines.         (line   6)
5011* brief difference reports:              Brief.               (line   6)
5012* bug reports:                           Bugs.                (line   6)
5013* C function headings:                   C Function Headings. (line   6)
5014* C if-then-else output format:          If-then-else.        (line   6)
5015* case difference suppression:           Case Folding.        (line   6)
5016* ClearCase:                             Revision Control.    (line   6)
5017* cmp invocation:                        Invoking cmp.        (line   6)
5018* cmp options:                           cmp Options.         (line   6)
5019* color, distinguishing different context: diff Options.      (line  37)
5020* columnar output:                       Side by Side.        (line   6)
5021* common mistakes with patches:          Avoiding Common Mistakes.
5022                                                              (line   6)
5023* comparing three files:                 Comparing Three Files.
5024                                                              (line   6)
5025* conflict:                              diff3 Merging.       (line  26)
5026* conflict marking:                      Marking Conflicts.   (line   6)
5027* context output format:                 Context.             (line   6)
5028* creating files:                        Creating and Removing.
5029                                                              (line   6)
5030* de capability:                         diff Options.        (line 184)
5031* diagnostics from patch:                patch Messages.      (line   6)
5032* diff invocation:                       Invoking diff.       (line   6)
5033* diff merging:                          Interactive Merging. (line   6)
5034* diff options:                          diff Options.        (line   6)
5035* diff sample input:                     Sample diff Input.   (line   6)
5036* diff3 hunks:                           diff3 Hunks.         (line   6)
5037* diff3 invocation:                      Invoking diff3.      (line   6)
5038* diff3 options:                         diff3 Options.       (line   6)
5039* diff3 sample input:                    Sample diff3 Input.  (line   6)
5040* directories and patch:                 patch Directories.   (line   6)
5041* directory structure changes:           Changing Structure.  (line   6)
5042* dry runs for patch:                    Dry Runs.            (line   6)
5043* ed script output format:               ed Scripts.          (line   6)
5044* EDITOR:                                Merge Commands.      (line  50)
5045* empty files, removing:                 Creating and Removing.
5046                                                              (line   6)
5047* exabyte, definition of:                cmp Options.         (line  99)
5048* exbibyte, definition of:               cmp Options.         (line 102)
5049* file name alternates:                  Alternate Names.     (line   6)
5050* file names with unusual characters:    Unusual File Names.  (line   6)
5051* format of diff output:                 Output Formats.      (line   6)
5052* format of diff3 output:                Comparing Three Files.
5053                                                              (line   6)
5054* formats for if-then-else line groups:  Line Group Formats.  (line   6)
5055* forward ed script output format:       Forward ed.          (line   6)
5056* full lines:                            Incomplete Lines.    (line   6)
5057* function headings, C:                  C Function Headings. (line   6)
5058* fuzz factor when patching:             Inexact.             (line   6)
5059* gibibyte, definition of:               cmp Options.         (line  87)
5060* gigabyte, definition of:               cmp Options.         (line  84)
5061* hd capability:                         diff Options.        (line 189)
5062* headings:                              Sections.            (line   6)
5063* hunks:                                 Hunks.               (line   6)
5064* hunks for diff3:                       diff3 Hunks.         (line   6)
5065* if-then-else output format:            If-then-else.        (line   6)
5066* ifdef output format:                   If-then-else.        (line   6)
5067* imperfect patch application:           Imperfect.           (line   6)
5068* incomplete line merging:               Merging Incomplete Lines.
5069                                                              (line   6)
5070* incomplete lines:                      Incomplete Lines.    (line   6)
5071* inexact patches:                       Inexact.             (line   6)
5072* inhibit messages from patch:           More or Fewer Messages.
5073                                                              (line   6)
5074* interactive merging:                   Interactive Merging. (line   6)
5075* introduction:                          Comparison.          (line   6)
5076* intuiting file names from patches:     Multiple Patches.    (line   6)
5077* invoking cmp:                          Invoking cmp.        (line   6)
5078* invoking diff:                         Invoking diff.       (line   6)
5079* invoking diff3:                        Invoking diff3.      (line   6)
5080* invoking patch:                        Invoking patch.      (line   6)
5081* invoking sdiff:                        Invoking sdiff.      (line   6)
5082* keyboard input to patch:               patch and Keyboard Input.
5083                                                              (line   6)
5084* kibibyte, definition of:               cmp Options.         (line  75)
5085* kilobyte, definition of:               cmp Options.         (line  71)
5086* LC_COLLATE:                            Comparing Directories.
5087                                                              (line   6)
5088* LC_NUMERIC:                            Line Group Formats.  (line 143)
5089* LC_TIME:                               Detailed Context.    (line  12)
5090* line formats:                          Line Formats.        (line   6)
5091* line group formats:                    Line Group Formats.  (line   6)
5092* ln capability:                         diff Options.        (line 194)
5093* mebibyte, definition of:               cmp Options.         (line  82)
5094* megabyte, definition of:               cmp Options.         (line  79)
5095* merge commands:                        Merge Commands.      (line   6)
5096* merged diff3 format:                   Bypassing ed.        (line   6)
5097* merged output format:                  If-then-else.        (line   6)
5098* merging from a common ancestor:        diff3 Merging.       (line   6)
5099* merging interactively:                 Merge Commands.      (line   6)
5100* messages from patch:                   patch Messages.      (line   6)
5101* multibyte characters:                  Internationalization.
5102                                                              (line   6)
5103* multiple patches:                      Multiple Patches.    (line   6)
5104* newline treatment by diff:             Incomplete Lines.    (line   6)
5105* none color option:                     diff Options.        (line  40)
5106* normal output format:                  Normal.              (line   6)
5107* options for cmp:                       cmp Options.         (line   6)
5108* options for diff:                      diff Options.        (line   6)
5109* options for diff3:                     diff3 Options.       (line   6)
5110* options for patch:                     patch Options.       (line   6)
5111* options for sdiff:                     sdiff Options.       (line   6)
5112* output formats:                        Output Formats.      (line   6)
5113* overlap:                               diff3 Merging.       (line  26)
5114* overlapping change, selection of:      Which Changes.       (line   6)
5115* overview of diff and patch:            Overview.            (line   6)
5116* paginating diff output:                Pagination.          (line   6)
5117* patch consumer tips:                   Tips for Patch Consumers.
5118                                                              (line   6)
5119* patch input format:                    patch Input.         (line   6)
5120* patch invocation:                      Invoking patch.      (line   6)
5121* patch messages and questions:          patch Messages.      (line   6)
5122* patch options:                         patch Options.       (line   6)
5123* patch producer tips:                   Tips for Patch Producers.
5124                                                              (line   6)
5125* patch, common mistakes:                Avoiding Common Mistakes.
5126                                                              (line   6)
5127* patches, shrinking:                    Generating Smaller Patches.
5128                                                              (line   6)
5129* patching directories:                  patch Directories.   (line   6)
5130* PATCH_GET:                             Revision Control.    (line  13)
5131* PATCH_VERSION_CONTROL:                 Backup Names.        (line  21)
5132* pebibyte, definition of:               cmp Options.         (line  97)
5133* performance of diff:                   diff Performance.    (line   6)
5134* petabyte, definition of:               cmp Options.         (line  94)
5135* POSIX:                                 patch and POSIX.     (line   6)
5136* POSIX <1>:                             Standards conformance.
5137                                                              (line   6)
5138* POSIXLY_CORRECT:                       patch and POSIX.     (line   6)
5139* POSIXLY_CORRECT <1>:                   Standards conformance.
5140                                                              (line   6)
5141* projects for directories:              Shortcomings.        (line   6)
5142* quoting style:                         patch Quoting Style. (line   6)
5143* QUOTING_STYLE:                         patch Quoting Style. (line  26)
5144* RCS:                                   Revision Control.    (line   6)
5145* RCS script output format:              RCS.                 (line   6)
5146* regular expression matching headings:  Specified Headings.  (line   6)
5147* regular expression suppression:        Specified Lines.     (line   6)
5148* reject file names:                     Reject Names.        (line   6)
5149* removing empty files:                  Creating and Removing.
5150                                                              (line   6)
5151* reporting bugs:                        Bugs.                (line   6)
5152* reversed patches:                      Reversed Patches.    (line   6)
5153* revision control:                      Revision Control.    (line   6)
5154* sample input for diff:                 Sample diff Input.   (line   6)
5155* sample input for diff3:                Sample diff3 Input.  (line   6)
5156* SCCS:                                  Revision Control.    (line   6)
5157* script output formats:                 Scripts.             (line   6)
5158* sdiff invocation:                      Invoking sdiff.      (line   6)
5159* sdiff options:                         sdiff Options.       (line   6)
5160* sdiff output format:                   sdiff Option Summary.
5161                                                              (line   6)
5162* section headings:                      Sections.            (line   6)
5163* side by side:                          Side by Side.        (line   6)
5164* side by side format:                   Side by Side Format. (line   6)
5165* SIMPLE_BACKUP_SUFFIX:                  Backup Names.        (line  12)
5166* special files:                         Special Files.       (line   6)
5167* specified headings:                    Specified Headings.  (line   6)
5168* summarizing which files differ:        Brief.               (line   6)
5169* System V diff3 compatibility:          Saving the Changed File.
5170                                                              (line   6)
5171* tab and blank difference suppression:  White Space.         (line   6)
5172* tab stop alignment:                    Tabs.                (line   6)
5173* tebibyte, definition of:               cmp Options.         (line  92)
5174* terabyte, definition of:               cmp Options.         (line  89)
5175* terminal, using color iff:             diff Options.        (line  42)
5176* testing patch:                         Dry Runs.            (line   6)
5177* text versus binary diff:               Binary.              (line   6)
5178* timestamp format, context diffs:       Detailed Context.    (line  12)
5179* timestamp format, unified diffs:       Detailed Unified.    (line  12)
5180* timestamps on patched files:           Patching Timestamps. (line   6)
5181* traditional patch:                     patch and Tradition. (line   6)
5182* trailing blanks:                       Trailing Blanks.     (line   6)
5183* two-column output:                     Side by Side.        (line   6)
5184* unified output format:                 Unified Format.      (line   6)
5185* unmerged change:                       Which Changes.       (line   6)
5186* varying-width characters:              Internationalization.
5187                                                              (line   6)
5188* verbose messages from patch:           More or Fewer Messages.
5189                                                              (line   6)
5190* version control:                       Revision Control.    (line   6)
5191* VERSION_CONTROL:                       Revision Control.    (line  22)
5192* VERSION_CONTROL <1>:                   Backup Names.        (line  21)
5193* white space in patches:                Changed White Space. (line   6)
5194* yottabyte, definition of:              cmp Options.         (line 110)
5195* zettabyte, definition of:              cmp Options.         (line 104)
5196
5197
5198
5199Tag Table:
5200Node: Top1431
5201Node: Overview3644
5202Node: Comparison7398
5203Node: Hunks10340
5204Node: White Space11781
5205Node: Blank Lines13620
5206Node: Specified Lines14609
5207Node: Case Folding15735
5208Node: Brief16152
5209Node: Binary17475
5210Node: Output Formats21272
5211Node: Sample diff Input21997
5212Node: Context23496
5213Node: Context Format25073
5214Node: Example Context25865
5215Node: Less Context27372
5216Node: Detailed Context28561
5217Node: Unified Format30756
5218Node: Example Unified31553
5219Node: Detailed Unified32591
5220Node: Sections34231
5221Node: Specified Headings34990
5222Node: C Function Headings36539
5223Node: Alternate Names37385
5224Node: Side by Side38298
5225Node: Side by Side Format40448
5226Node: Example Side by Side41350
5227Node: Normal42690
5228Node: Example Normal43691
5229Node: Detailed Normal44427
5230Node: Scripts46166
5231Node: ed Scripts46571
5232Node: Example ed47777
5233Node: Detailed ed48227
5234Node: Forward ed49986
5235Node: RCS50762
5236Node: If-then-else51978
5237Node: Line Group Formats53656
5238Node: Line Formats59537
5239Node: Example If-then-else62806
5240Node: Detailed If-then-else63885
5241Node: Incomplete Lines65770
5242Node: Comparing Directories67406
5243Node: Adjusting Output71698
5244Node: Tabs72205
5245Node: Trailing Blanks73819
5246Node: Pagination75044
5247Node: diff Performance75512
5248Node: Comparing Three Files78601
5249Node: Sample diff3 Input79479
5250Node: Example diff3 Normal80427
5251Node: Detailed diff3 Normal81487
5252Node: diff3 Hunks83275
5253Node: diff3 Merging84541
5254Node: Which Changes86786
5255Node: Marking Conflicts88186
5256Node: Bypassing ed90641
5257Node: Merging Incomplete Lines91984
5258Node: Saving the Changed File92710
5259Node: Interactive Merging93326
5260Node: sdiff Option Summary94035
5261Node: Merge Commands95238
5262Node: Merging with patch96527
5263Node: patch Input98894
5264Node: Revision Control99576
5265Node: Imperfect100746
5266Node: Changed White Space101895
5267Node: Reversed Patches102692
5268Node: Inexact104156
5269Node: Dry Runs107712
5270Node: Creating and Removing108576
5271Node: Patching Timestamps109625
5272Node: Multiple Patches111812
5273Node: patch Directories114473
5274Node: Backups116097
5275Node: Backup Names117161
5276Ref: Backup Names-Footnote-1120116
5277Node: Reject Names120243
5278Node: patch Messages120832
5279Node: More or Fewer Messages121892
5280Node: patch and Keyboard Input122523
5281Node: patch Quoting Style123552
5282Node: patch and POSIX124698
5283Node: patch and Tradition125537
5284Node: Making Patches128958
5285Node: Tips for Patch Producers129784
5286Node: Tips for Patch Consumers131039
5287Node: Avoiding Common Mistakes131676
5288Node: Generating Smaller Patches134201
5289Node: Invoking cmp135960
5290Node: cmp Options137510
5291Node: Invoking diff141154
5292Node: diff Options142773
5293Node: Invoking diff3152622
5294Node: diff3 Options153260
5295Node: Invoking patch156293
5296Node: patch Options157501
5297Node: Invoking sdiff162721
5298Node: sdiff Options163863
5299Node: Standards conformance166835
5300Node: Projects168581
5301Node: Shortcomings169293
5302Node: Internationalization170393
5303Node: Changing Structure171559
5304Node: Special Files172662
5305Node: Unusual File Names173773
5306Node: Timestamp Order174411
5307Node: Ignoring Changes175047
5308Node: Speedups175816
5309Node: Bugs176278
5310Node: Copying This Manual177131
5311Node: Translations202252
5312Node: Index202624
5313
5314End Tag Table
5315