/usr/lib/rmgdiff/rmgdiff.awk is in mgdiff 1.0-30.
This file is owned by root:root, with mode 0o644.
The actual contents of the file can be viewed below.
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# rmgdiff.awk
# -- awk script to that reads standard input for the output
# of "diff -rq <dir1> <dir2>". It then takes diff's
# output and calls mgdiff once for each pair of text
# files that differ. It prints out a message to this
# effect. It then prints out a list of binary files
# that have differences followed by a list of files
# that appear only in the first directory followed by a
# list of files that appear only in the second
# directory.
#
# It expects you to pass in <dir1> and <dir2> on the
# command line using awk's "-v" option. You should
# find the shell script I use to call this file near
# where you found this file.
#
# -- Paul Serice
#
#
# Changes:
#
# v1.8.1 Minor clean up.
#
# v1.8.0 Testing revealed problems handling white space.
#
# v1.7 Fixed a problem with the regular expression that
# escapes meta-characters in the escape_dir() function.
# Now, both gawk and mawk should be able to interpret this
# script.
#
# v1.6 Changed the "rmgdiff" shell script wrapper so that this
# awk script does not have to be in the same directory.
# You can now place both "rmgdiff" and "rmgdiff.awk" in
# any directory and place a symbolic link in a "bin"
# directory that points to the "rmgdiff" shell script.
# The shell script will then follow the symbolic links
# in order to find the "rmgdiff.awk" script. One way to
# set this up is as follows:
#
# /usr/local/lib/rmgdiff/rmgdiff
# /usr/local/lib/rmgdiff/rmgdiff.awk
# /usr/local/bin/rmgdiff -> ../lib/rmgdiff/rmgdiff
#
# v1.5 I've said it before, and here I go again. This time
# it's fixed. v1.4 introduced a new bug related to the same
# section of code that v1.3 and v1.4 was trying to fix.
# This new bug manifested itself when a subdirectory was
# only in one directory and had a minimum depth of at least
# 2. Everything that was originally a bug and everything I
# subsequently broke now appears to work.
# v1.4 Was finally able to reproduce the bug that was causing
# reported directories to appear to have been split
# incorrectly. Problem solved.
# v1.3 Forgot to escape the accidental meta-characters in the
# directory names. Also, I am explicitly putting both the
# "rmgdiff" shell script and this "rmgdiff.awk" awk script
# in the public domain. (It has always been in the public
# domain. This just makes it official. Use at your own
# risk.)
# v1.2 Changed the way the "rmgdiff" shell script initialized the
# RMGDIFF_GUI variable.
# v1.1 Fixed bug in "/^Binary file /" rule that used "$4" and "$6"
# instead of "$3" and "$5".
# v1.0 Initial release
#
#
# trim_dir(dir) -- A user can enter a directory such as "dir", "dir/",
# "dir//", etc. trim_dirr() will reduce all of these
# to "dir" by removing all trailing slashes.
#
function trim_dir( dir , pos ) {
if( !dir )
return "";
pos = length(dir);
while( pos > 0 )
{
if( substr(dir, pos, 1) != "/" )
break;
pos--;
}
# If you made it back to the beginning, then "dir" was all slashes
# which is a synonym for the root dir.
if( pos <= 0 )
return "/";
else
return substr(dir, 1, pos);
}
#
# escape_dir(dir) -- Escape the characters in the directory name that
# are coincidentally meta characters.
#
function escape_dir(dir) {
gsub(/[[\]{}()^$. +|*?]/, "\\\\&", dir);
return dir;
}
#
# relative_path(full_path, upper_dir)
#
# This function strips off the upper most directory. This
# lets you report a difference just by reporting the relative
# path. Thus, "dir1/abcd/efgh" and "dir2/abcd/efgh" can be
# reported as being different by referring to "a difference in
# the abcd/efgh files that reside in both directories."
#
function relative_path( full_path, upper_dir , pos ) {
if( index(full_path, upper_dir) != 1 )
{
print("***");
print("*** rmgdiff.awk: Internal error. ");
print("*** " upper_dir );
print("*** can't possibly be the base directory of ");
print("*** " full_path ".");
print("***");
exit_flag = 1;
exit(1);
}
pos = length(upper_dir) + 1;
full_path_len = length(full_path);
while( pos <= full_path_len )
{
if( substr(full_path, pos, 1) != "/")
break;
pos++;
}
# If "pos" makes it all the way to the end of "full_path", then the
# user passed in the name of a single directory instead of a path.
if( pos == length )
return "";
else
return substr(full_path, pos);
}
#
# get_file_type() -- Returns the relevant part of the description returned
# by "file". Unlike for Linux, the "file" command for
# SGI will have in indeterminate number of spaces before
# the relevant partion. Hence the iterative solution.
# Perhaps it would be better to use 'FS= ' (?).
#
function get_file_type( file_name, \
cmd, pos, file_type, file_type_len, next_ch) {
cmd = file_cmd " \"" file_name "\"";
if( (cmd | getline file_type) == -1)
{
print("");
print("rmgdiff.awk: Unable to determine file type of " $2 ".");
print(" This usually occurs because you don't have any " \
"available");
print(" file descriptors or \"file\" is not in your path.");
print("");
exit_flag = 1;
exit(1);
}
close(cmd);
# Start right after the colon that always follows the file name.
pos = length(file_name) + 2;
file_type_len = length(file_type);
# Iterate until you find the first non-space and non-tab. I did it
# like this because different versions of Unix have different spacing.
while( pos <= file_type_len )
{
next_ch = substr(file_type, pos, 1);
if( (next_ch != " ") && (next_ch != "\t") )
break;
pos++;
}
if( pos > file_type_len )
{
print("***");
print("*** rmgdiff.awk: Internal error. Missed a file type for");
print("*** " file_name);
print("***");
exit_flag = 1;
exit(1);
}
return substr(file_type, pos);
}
#
# add_only_in(dir, str3, str4) -- routine to convert $3 and $4 of the
# output of diff when the file is only
# in one directory into something we can
# later print.
#
function add_only_in(dir, str3, str4 , middle, fullpath, file_type) {
middle = relative_path(str3, dir);
if( middle == "" )
fullpath = dir "/" str4;
else
fullpath = dir "/" middle "/" str4;
file_type = get_file_type(fullpath);
if( debug )
print("file_type = " file_type);
if( dir == dir1 )
{
if( debug )
print("Adding " fullpath " to only_in_dir1[" only_in_dir1_cnt "].");
if( show_file_types )
only_in_dir1[only_in_dir1_cnt++] = fullpath " (" file_type ")";
else
only_in_dir1[only_in_dir1_cnt++] = fullpath;
}
else if( dir == dir2 )
{
if( debug )
print("Adding " fullpath " to only_in_dir2[" only_in_dir2_cnt "].");
if( show_file_types )
only_in_dir2[only_in_dir2_cnt++] = fullpath " (" file_type ")";
else
only_in_dir2[only_in_dir2_cnt++] = fullpath;
}
else
{
print("***");
print("*** rmgdiff.awk: Internal error. Can't figure out " \
"\"only in\" directory.");
print("***");
exit_flag = 1;
exit(1);
}
}
#
# add_binary(full_name_1, full_name_2)
# -- Determines what type of binary a file is and adds it
# to the appropriate list for reporting later. Make
# sure "full_name_1" is the full_name associated with
# "dir1" (which is a global variable).
#
function add_binary(full_name_1, full_name_2 , file_type_1, file_type_2) {
file_type_1 = get_file_type(full_name_1);
file_type_2 = get_file_type(full_name_2);
if( debug )
{
print("full_name_1 = " full_name_1);
print("full_name_2 = " full_name_2);
print("file_type_1 = " file_type_1);
print("file_type_2 = " file_type_2);
}
if( file_type_1 ~ /executable/ && file_type_2 ~ /executable/ )
{
if( debug )
print("Adding " relative_path(full_name_1, dir1) \
" to executable_files[" executable_files_cnt "].");
if( show_file_types )
executable_files[executable_files_cnt++] \
= relative_path(full_name_1, dir1) " (" file_type_1 ")";
else
executable_files[executable_files_cnt++] \
= relative_path(full_name_1, dir1);
}
else if( file_type_1 ~ /shared object/ && file_type_2 ~ /shared object/ )
{
if( debug )
print("Adding " relative_path(full_name_1, dir1) " to shared_libs[" \
shared_libs_cnt "].");
if( show_file_types )
shared_libs[shared_libs_cnt++] \
= relative_path(full_name_1, dir1) " (" file_type_1 ")";
else
shared_libs[shared_libs_cnt++] \
= relative_path(full_name_1, dir1);
}
else if( file_type_1 ~ /ar archive/ && file_type_2 ~ /ar archive/ )
{
if( debug )
print("Adding " relative_path(full_name_1, dir1) " to static_libs[" \
static_libs_cnt "].");
if( show_file_types )
static_libs[static_libs_cnt++] \
= relative_path(full_name_1, dir1) " (" file_type_1 ")";
else
static_libs[static_libs_cnt++] \
= relative_path(full_name_1, dir1);
}
else if( file_type_1 ~ /relocatable/ && file_type_2 ~ /relocatable/ )
{
if( debug )
print("Adding " relative_path(full_name_1, dir1) " to object_files[" \
object_files_cnt "].");
if( show_file_types )
object_files[object_files_cnt++] \
= relative_path(full_name_1, dir1) " (" file_type_1 ")";
else
object_files[object_files_cnt++] \
= relative_path(full_name_1, dir1);
}
# gzip files report a date which is causing them to appear
# to be mismatched. Avoid a mismatch with this rule.
else if ( file_type_1 ~ /gzip compressed data/ &&
file_type_2 ~ /gzip compressed data/ )
{
if( debug )
{
print("Matched a gzipped file. I'll be making up a type!!!");
print("Adding " relative_path(full_name_1, dir1) \
" to other_bin_files[" other_bin_files_cnt "].");
}
if( show_file_types )
other_bin_files[other_bin_files_cnt++] \
= relative_path(full_name_1, dir1) " (gzip compressed data)";
else
other_bin_files[other_bin_files_cnt++] \
= relative_path(full_name_1, dir1);
}
# Mismatched types.
else if ( file_type_1 !~ file_type_2 )
{
if( debug )
{
print("Adding " relative_path(full_name_1, dir1) \
" to mismatched_files[" mismatched_files_cnt "].");
print("File types differ!");
}
mismatched_files[mismatched_files_cnt++] \
= relative_path(full_name_1, dir1) \
" (Types differ. See next two lines.)\n" \
" " dir1 ": (" file_type_1 ")\n" \
" " dir2 ": (" file_type_2 ")";
}
else
{
if( debug )
print("Adding " relative_path(full_name_1, dir1) \
" to other_bin_files[" other_bin_files_cnt "].");
if( show_file_types )
other_bin_files[other_bin_files_cnt++] \
= relative_path(full_name_1, dir1) " (" file_type_1 ")";
else
other_bin_files[other_bin_files_cnt++] \
= relative_path(full_name_1, dir1);
}
}
#
# add_text(full_name_1, full_name_2, file_type_1, file_type2)
# -- We don't really need to "add" an entry to note that
# we have found a text file. Instead, we go ahead and
# print out the file's name and start up the GUI.
#
function add_text(full_name_1, full_name_2, file_type_1, file_type_2) {
if( debug )
{
print("full_name_1 = " full_name_1);
print("full_name_2 = " full_name_2);
print("file_type_1 = " file_type_1);
print("file_type_2 = " file_type_2);
}
if( first_diff )
{
printf("\n*** DIFFERENT TEXT FILES ***\n\n");
first_diff = 0;
}
if( file_type_1 == file_type_2 )
if( show_file_types )
print(relative_path(full_name_1, dir1) " (" file_type_1 ")");
else
print(relative_path(full_name_1, dir1));
else
{
print("=====");
print(relative_path(full_name_1, dir1) " (Types differ. " \
"See next two lines)");
print(" " dir1 ": (" file_type_1 ")");
print(" " dir2 ": (" file_type_2 ")");
print("=====");
}
if(use_gui)
system(rmgdiff_gui " \"" full_name_1 "\" \"" full_name_2 "\"");
}
#
# add_text_or_binary(full_name_1, full_name_2)
# -- Used to detect whether we have text files that differ
# or something else. It sure would be nice if we could
# pass these strings by reference.
#
function add_text_or_binary(full_name_1, full_name_2 , file_type_1, file_type_2)
{
file_type_1 = get_file_type(full_name_1);
file_type_2 = get_file_type(full_name_2);
if( (file_type_1 ~ /text/ || file_type_1 ~ /^empty$/) &&
(file_type_2 ~ /text/ || file_type_2 ~ /^empty$/) )
{
add_text(full_name_1, full_name_2, file_type_1, file_type_2);
}
else
{
add_binary(full_name_1, full_name_2);
}
}
function check_exec(exec , cmd) {
cmd="type \"" exec "\" 1>/dev/null 2>&1";
if( system(cmd) != 0 )
{
printf("\nrmgdiff.awk: " exec " isn't executable.\n\n");
exit_flag = 1;
exit(1);
}
}
function check_dir(dir , cmd) {
cmd = "[ -d \"" dir "\" ]";
if( system(cmd) != 0 )
{
printf("\nrmgdiff.awk: \"" dir "\" isn't a directory.\n\n");
exit_flag = 1;
exit(1);
}
}
function check_external_executables() {
# You only need a gui if debug is off. Default to "mgdiff" if
# the user does not pass in a value.
if(use_gui && !rmgdiff_gui)
{
rmgdiff_gui = "mgdiff";
}
check_exec(rmgdiff_gui);
if(!file_cmd)
{
file_cmd = "file";
}
check_exec(file_cmd);
check_dir(dir1);
check_dir(dir2);
}
#
# get_full_names(raw_diff_line, dir1, dir2, full_names)
# -- This function takes the raw output of "diff -rq" for lines of
# the form "... <file1> and <file2> differ" and returns <file1>
# and <file2> in "full_names[1]" and "full_names[2]" respectively.
# A special function is needed in order to account for those
# cases where the file names have embedded spaces.
#
function get_full_names(raw_diff_line, dir1, dir2, full_names , regex) {
#
# full_names[2] -- The first call to gsub() strips off the trailing
# "differ". The second call to gsub() strips from the beginning of
# the string to the "and" that precedes <file2>. In case you missed
# it, we are calculating full_names[2] [sic] first.
#
full_names[2] = raw_diff_line;
gsub(/ differ$/, "", full_names[2]);
gsub("^.* and (" dir2 ")", dir2, full_names[2]);
#
# full_names[1] -- The first call to gsub() strips off the trailing
# "and <file2> differ". The second call to gsub() strips from the
# beginning of the string up to <file1>.
#
full_names[1] = raw_diff_line;
sub(" and " full_names[2] " differ$", "", full_names[1]);
sub("^.* " dir1, dir1, full_names[1]);
if( debug ) {
print("full_names[1] = " full_names[1]);
print("full_names[2] = " full_names[2]);
}
}
BEGIN {
if( debug )
print("Start BEGIN");
if( version )
{
printf("\nrmgdiff.awk: v1.8.1\n\n");
exit_flag = 1;
exit 1;
}
first_diff = 1; # Flag.
check_external_executables();
if( debug )
{
print("dir1 = " dir1);
print("dir2 = " dir2);
}
dir1 = trim_dir(dir1);
dir2 = trim_dir(dir2);
if( debug )
{
print("Trimmed dir1 to " dir1);
print("Trimmed dir2 to " dir2);
print("");
}
# When you want to match regular expressions, you need to escape any
# meta characters. For example, if your directory where "c++_src",
# and you try to do the match in the /^Only in/ that checks the
# following:
#
# if( "c++_src" ~ "^" "c++_src" )
#
# it will fail because the "++" in the last term are meta characters
# that aren't matched.
dir1_escaped = escape_dir(dir1);
dir2_escaped = escape_dir(dir2);
if( debug )
{
print("dir1 escaped to " dir1_escaped);
print("dir2 escaped to " dir2_escaped);
}
if( length(dir1_escaped) >= length(dir2_escaped) ) {
longer_dir = dir1;
longer_dir_escaped = dir1_escaped;
shorter_dir = dir2;
shorter_dir_escaped = dir2_escaped;
} else {
longer_dir = dir2;
longer_dir_escaped = dir2_escaped;
shorter_dir = dir1;
shorter_dir_escaped = dir1_escaped;
}
if( debug )
{
print("longer_dir = " longer_dir);
print("longer_dir_escaped = " longer_dir_escaped);
print("shorter_dir = " shorter_dir);
print("shorter_dir_escaped = " shorter_dir_escaped);
}
}
{
# Show the current line.
if( debug )
print("Current line: " $0);
}
# Find the files that differ. Filter out the VCS entries. Call mgdiff
# if the file is a text file. If the file is a binary, save it for later.
/^Files / {
if( debug )
print("Start Text and Binary files");
if( !use_cvs && $0 ~ /[ \/](CVS|.bzr|.git|.svn)([ \/:]|$)/ )
{
if( debug )
print("Skipping VCS file.\n");
next;
}
full_names[1] = "";
full_names[2] = "";
get_full_names($0, dir1, dir2, full_names);
add_text_or_binary(full_names[1], full_names[2]);
}
# This is here for compatibility with the older version of GNU diff
# that reported binary and text file differences separately.
/^Binary files / {
if( debug )
print("Start Binary files only");
if( !use_cvs && $0 ~ /[ \/](CVS|.bzr|.git|.svn)([ \/:]|$)/ )
{
if( debug )
print("Skipping VCS file.\n");
next;
}
full_names[1] = "";
full_names[2] = "";
get_full_names($0, dir1, dir2, full_names);
add_binary(full_names[1], full_names[2]);
}
# Find the files that are only in one of the directories. Filter out
# the VCS entries. Sort into two arrays for later printing.
/^Only in / {
if( debug )
print("Start Only in");
if( !use_cvs && $0 ~ /[ \/](CVS|.bzr|.git|.svn)([ \/:]|$)/ )
{
if( debug )
print("Skipping VCS file.\n");
next;
}
# Find the directory.
only_in_dir = substr($0, length("Only in ") + 1);
gsub(/: .*$/, "", only_in_dir);
# Find the file that is only in "only_in_dir".
only_file = $0;
gsub(/^.*: /, "", only_file);
if( debug )
{
print("only_in_dir = " only_in_dir);
print("only_file = " only_file);
}
#
# A space means to concatenate the strings. So,
#
# only_in_dir ~ "^" longer_dir_escaped
#
#
# means you have a match if only_in_dir begins with longer_dir_escaped.
#
# You have to NOT anchor the end of the string to match. The reason
# is that you could easily get the situation where a file or
# directory is only in one of the directories you are recursively
# diffing, and it has a depth of 2 or more. (Note, "depth" here is
# the same concept as the "find" command's "-maxdepth" parameter.)
# This means you don't know what is going to be at the end of only_in_dir.
#
# You have to test the longer directory first because you might be
# diffing two directories named something like "my_dir" and
# "my_dir-v1.0". If you tested the shorter directory first, you
# would always get a match because when only_in_dir is the longer directory,
# it too matches the shorter directory.
#
if( only_in_dir ~ "^" longer_dir_escaped ) {
add_only_in(longer_dir, only_in_dir, only_file);
}
else if( only_in_dir ~ "^" shorter_dir_escaped ) {
add_only_in(shorter_dir, only_in_dir, only_file);
} else {
print("***");
print("*** rmgdiff.awk: Internal error. Missed an \"only in\".");
print("*** only_in_dir = " only_in_dir);
print("***");
exit_flag = 1;
exit(1);
}
}
# Just print a line to separate output for each pass.
{
if( debug )
print("");
}
# Print out the entries you earlier saved to an array.
END {
if( !exit_flag )
{
# I decided to not create a separate function for printing
# reports because you can't pass these potentially large
# arrays by reference.
if( executable_files_cnt )
{
printf("\n*** DIFFERENT EXECUTABLES ***\n\n");
for( i = 0 ; i < executable_files_cnt ; i++ )
print(executable_files[i]);
}
if( shared_libs_cnt )
{
printf("\n*** DIFFERENT SHARED LIBRARIES ***\n\n");
for( i = 0 ; i < shared_libs_cnt ; i++ )
print(shared_libs[i]);
}
if( static_libs_cnt )
{
printf("\n*** DIFFERENT STATIC LIBRARIES ***\n\n");
for( i = 0 ; i < static_libs_cnt ; i++ )
print(static_libs[i]);
}
if( object_files_cnt )
{
printf("\n*** DIFFERENT OBJECT FILES ***\n\n");
for( i = 0 ; i < object_files_cnt ; i++ )
print(object_files[i]);
}
if( other_bin_files_cnt )
{
printf("\n*** OTHER DIFFERENT BINARY FILES ***\n\n");
for( i = 0 ; i < other_bin_files_cnt ; i++ )
print(other_bin_files[i]);
}
if( only_in_dir1_cnt )
{
printf("\n*** FILES ONLY IN %s ***\n\n", dir1);
for( i = 0 ; i < only_in_dir1_cnt ; i++ )
print(only_in_dir1[i]);
}
if( only_in_dir2_cnt )
{
printf("\n*** FILES ONLY IN %s ***\n\n", dir2);
for( i = 0 ; i < only_in_dir2_cnt ; i++ )
print(only_in_dir2[i]);
}
if( mismatched_files_cnt )
{
printf("\n*** WARNING: MISMATCHED FILES ***\n\n");
for( i = 0 ; i < mismatched_files_cnt ; i++ )
print(mismatched_files[i]);
}
print("");
}
}
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