Updated 2011-07-30 22:04:10 by RLE

Arjen Markus (1 april 2003) I often need to compare two directories with files that are very likely to be the same, but they may contain small changes, as I keep directories with source code for all of the platforms we build our programs for. This used to be somewhat cumbersome - the output from diff is not always that nice and manually comparing files takes a lot of patience. So I sat down and wrote this small script.
 #!/bin/sh 
 #\
 exec tclsh "$0" ${1+"$@"}
 #
 # compdir --
 #    Simply script to compare two directories with files that are 
 #    probably almost identical
 #
 # Usage:
 #    compdir other_directory
 #
 # Note:
 #    This script works as follows:
 #    - For each file (satisfying the mask) in the given two directories 
 #      - report at most 10 different lines
 #      - report their sizes and dates if they differ
 #

 # checkFiles --
 #    Scan the (text) files and compare them line by line
 #
 # Arguments:
 #    file1       File in the current directory
 #    file2       File in the other directory
 # Result:
 #    {} if no differences, otherwise a report of up to 10 different lines
 #    (lines are chopped off at 35 characters and concatenated)
 #
 proc checkFiles { file1 file2 } {
 
    set infile1 [open $file1 "r"] 
    set infile2 [open $file2 "r"] 

    set count   0
    set result  {}

    while { [gets $infile1 line1] >= 0 } {
       set rc2 [gets $infile2 line2] 

       # Second file is shorter? Report this
       if { $rc2 < 0 } { 
          set line2 "=== end-of-file ==="
       }

       if { $line1 != $line2 } {
          incr count 
          append result [format %-35s [string range $line1 0 34]] " | " \
                        [format %-35s [string range $line2 0 34]] "\n"

          if { $count > 10 } {
             break
          }
       }

       if { $rc2 < 0 } { 
          break 
       }
    }

    if { $count < 10 } { 
       # Check that the second file is also at the end
       set rc2 [gets $infile2 line2] 
       if { $rc2 > 0 } { 
          set line1 "=== end-of-file ==="
          append result [format %-35s [string range $line1 0 34]] " | " \
                        [format %-35s [string range $line2 0 34]] "\n"
   
       }
    }

    close $infile1
    close $infile2

    return $result
 }

 # reportDifferences --
 #    Scan the directory and report possible differences  
 #
 # Arguments:
 #    report      Report file 
 #    mask        Mask for the files to be scanned 
 #    dir         Name of the directory to scan against
 # Result:
 #    None, the report file is used instead
 #
 proc reportDifferences { report mask dir } { 

    set files1 [glob -nocomplain $mask]
 
    set orgdir [pwd]
    cd  $dir 
    set files2 [glob -nocomplain $mask]
    cd  $orgdir 

    set common {}
    set unique {}

    foreach f1 $files1 {
       set idx [lsearch $files2 $f1]
       if { $idx > -1 } {
          lappend common $f1
          set files2 [lreplace $files2 $idx $idx]
       } else {
          lappend unique $f1
       }
    }   

    if { $unique != {} } {
       puts $report "Files unique to [pwd]: $unique"
    }
    if { $files2 != {} } {
       puts $report "Files unique to $dir: $files2"
    }
   
    if { $files1 != {} } { 
       puts $report " "
    }

    foreach f $common {
       puts "File: $f"
       puts $report "File: $f"
       puts $report [checkFiles $f [file join $dir $f]]
    }
 }

 # main --
 #   Get the thing going
 #

 set dir [lindex $argv 0]
 if { $dir == "" } {
    puts "Usage: [file root $argv0] second-directory"
    exit 1
 }

 set report [open "compdir.rep" "w"]

 reportDifferences $report "*.c" $dir
 reportDifferences $report "*.h" $dir
 reportDifferences $report "*.f" $dir
 reportDifferences $report "*.f90" $dir
 reportDifferences $report "*.inc" $dir
 reportDifferences $report "*.y" $dir
 reportDifferences $report "*.l" $dir
 reportDifferences $report "*.tcl" $dir

 close $report

AK I use a combination of shell script and tkdiff for the same thing.
 #!/bin/sh
 diff -ru $1 $2 | grep 'Only in'                                  > $3.only
 diff -ru $1 $2 | grep 'diff -ru' | sed -e 's|diff -ru|tkdiff|' > $3.files
 wc -l $3.*

Call as
 diffdir dir1 dir2 xx

Afterward we have "xx.only" and "xx.files" in the current directory. "xx.only" lists all the files which are only in one of the directories. "xx.files" lists all the files which are different, and is also a script I can run to see all the changes, displayed via tkdiff.

AM One reason for doing it in Tcl is that on a typical Windows platform I do not have a command-line tool to do it. (And it was a nice exercise :))

AK: True. It becomes even better in the future with the recent addition of KBK's implementation of the algorithm for longest common subsequence added to tcllib (See diff in Tcl).