cmpcompare two files |
Command |
cmp
[-blsx
]
file1 file2
[seek1[seek2]]
cmp
compares two files. If either file name is
-
, cmp
reads the standard input for that file.
By default, cmp
begins the comparison with the first byte of
each file. If you specify seek1 and/or seek2,
cmp
uses it as a byte offset into file1 or
file2 (respectively), and comparison begins at that offset instead of at
the beginning of the files. The comparison continues (one byte at a time) until
a difference is found, at which point the comparison ends and
cmp
displays the byte and line number where the difference
occurred. cmp
numbers bytes and lines beginning with 1.
-b
compares single blocks at a time. Normally, cmp
reads large buffers of data into memory for comparison.
-l
causes the comparison and display to continue to the end.
cmp
displays the byte number (in decimal) and the
differing bytes (in octal) for each difference found.
cmp
attempts no resynchronization.
-s
suppresses output and returns a non-zero status if the files differ.
-x
displays the differing bytes shown by the -l
option
in hex.
prog.exe
and prog.com
are instances
of the same program (generated, for example, by exe2bin
)
cmp prog.exe prog.com 512
0
The files were identical.
1
The files were not identical.
2
Failure due to invalid command line argument or option.
3
Failure because of an error opening or reading an input file.
cmp
reached end-of-file on the specified file
before reaching end-of-file on the other file.
-b
and -x
options and the seek
pointers are extensions to the POSIX standard.