Reputation: 90988
I'm sure I once found a shell command which could print the common lines from two or more files. What is its name?
It was much simpler than diff
.
Upvotes: 249
Views: 217495
Reputation: 7716
While
fgrep -v -f 1.txt 2.txt > 3.txt
gives you the differences of two files (what is in 2.txt and not in 1.txt), you could easily do a
fgrep -f 1.txt 2.txt > 3.txt
to collect all common lines, which should provide an easy solution to your problem. If you have sorted files, you should take comm
nonetheless. Regards!
Note: You can use grep -F
instead of fgrep
.
Upvotes: 22
Reputation: 99
Not exactly what you were asking, but something I think still may be useful to cover a slightly different scenario
If you just want to quickly have certainty of whether there is any repeated line between a bunch of files, you can use this quick solution:
cat a_bunch_of_files* | sort | uniq | wc
If the number of lines you get is less than the one you get from
cat a_bunch_of_files* | wc
then there is some repeated line.
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 1965
On limited version of Linux (like a QNAP (NAS) I was working on):
grep -f file1 file2
can cause some problems as said by @ChristopherSchultz and using grep -F -f file1 file2
was really slow (more than 5 minutes - not finished it - over 2-3 seconds with the method below on files over 20 MB)So here is what I did:
sort file1 > file1.sorted
sort file2 > file2.sorted
diff file1.sorted file2.sorted | grep "<" | sed 's/^< *//' > files.diff
diff file1.sorted files.diff | grep "<" | sed 's/^< *//' > files.same.sorted
If files.same.sorted
shall be in the same order as the original ones, then add this line for same order than file1:
awk 'FNR==NR {a[$0]=$0; next}; $0 in a {print a[$0]}' files.same.sorted file1 > files.same
Or, for the same order than file2:
awk 'FNR==NR {a[$0]=$0; next}; $0 in a {print a[$0]}' files.same.sorted file2 > files.same
Upvotes: 3
Reputation: 316
For how to do this for multiple files, see the linked answer to Finding matching lines across many files.
Combining these two answers (answer 1 and answer 2), I think you can get the result you are needing without sorting the files:
#!/bin/bash
ans="matching_lines"
for file1 in *
do
for file2 in *
do
if [ "$file1" != "$ans" ] && [ "$file2" != "$ans" ] && [ "$file1" != "$file2" ] ; then
echo "Comparing: $file1 $file2 ..." >> $ans
perl -ne 'print if ($seen{$_} .= @ARGV) =~ /10$/' $file1 $file2 >> $ans
fi
done
done
Simply save it, give it execution rights (chmod +x compareFiles.sh
) and run it. It will take all the files present in the current working directory and will make an all-vs-all comparison leaving in the "matching_lines" file the result.
Things to be improved:
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 46423
If the two files are not sorted yet, you can use:
comm -12 <(sort a.txt) <(sort b.txt)
and it will work, avoiding the error message comm: file 2 is not in sorted order
when doing comm -12 a.txt b.txt
.
Upvotes: 15
Reputation: 753615
The command you are seeking is comm
. eg:-
comm -12 1.sorted.txt 2.sorted.txt
Here:
-1 : suppress column 1 (lines unique to 1.sorted.txt)
-2 : suppress column 2 (lines unique to 2.sorted.txt)
Upvotes: 308
Reputation: 15
rm file3.txt
cat file1.out | while read line1
do
cat file2.out | while read line2
do
if [[ $line1 == $line2 ]]; then
echo $line1 >>file3.out
fi
done
done
This should do it.
Upvotes: -2
Reputation: 1009
To complement the Perl one-liner, here's its awk
equivalent:
awk 'NR==FNR{arr[$0];next} $0 in arr' file1 file2
This will read all lines from file1
into the array arr[]
, and then check for each line in file2
if it already exists within the array (i.e. file1
). The lines that are found will be printed in the order in which they appear in file2
.
Note that the comparison in arr
uses the entire line from file2
as index to the array, so it will only report exact matches on entire lines.
Upvotes: 43
Reputation: 1139
To easily apply the comm command to unsorted files, use Bash's process substitution:
$ bash --version
GNU bash, version 3.2.51(1)-release
Copyright (C) 2007 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
$ cat > abc
123
567
132
$ cat > def
132
777
321
So the files abc and def have one line in common, the one with "132". Using comm on unsorted files:
$ comm abc def
123
132
567
132
777
321
$ comm -12 abc def # No output! The common line is not found
$
The last line produced no output, the common line was not discovered.
Now use comm on sorted files, sorting the files with process substitution:
$ comm <( sort abc ) <( sort def )
123
132
321
567
777
$ comm -12 <( sort abc ) <( sort def )
132
Now we got the 132 line!
Upvotes: 76
Reputation: 506905
Maybe you mean comm
?
Compare sorted files FILE1 and FILE2 line by line.
With no options, produce three-column output. Column one contains lines unique to FILE1, column two contains lines unique to FILE2, and column three contains lines common to both files.
The secret in finding these information are the info pages. For GNU programs, they are much more detailed than their man-pages. Try info coreutils
and it will list you all the small useful utils.
Upvotes: 25