VMS Help CMS, DIFFERENCES *Conan The Librarian (sorry for the slow response - running on an old VAX) |
The DIFFERENCES command performs the following functions: o Compares two files, two generations of elements, or a file and a generation of an element (see File). o Compares the contents of two classes (see /CLASS).
1 - file |
Compares two files, two generations of elements, or a file and a generation of an element. If the entities are different, CMS creates a file that contains the lines that differ between them. If they are the same, CMS issues a message to that effect and does not create a differences file (unless the /FULL qualifier is in effect). Format: DIFFERENCES file1 [file2]
1.1 - Command Parameters
file1 Specifies the first file that is to be compared. If you specify /GENERATION for this parameter, file1 must be an element name; otherwise, a VMS file specification is assumed. file2 Specifies the second file that is to be compared. If you specify /GENERATION for this parameter, file2 must be an element name; otherwise, a VMS file specification is assumed. CMS follows these rules when you do not provide a second file specification: o If you direct CMS to take file1 from a location that is not a CMS library, CMS uses the next lower file version in the same directory as file1. o If you direct CMS to take file1 from a CMS library (by specifying /GENERATION), CMS uses the latest default directory version of file1 as the second input file.
1.2 - Description
The DIFFERENCES command compares the contents of two files. If CMS finds differences, it creates a file named first-file-name.DIF in your current default directory (unless /OUTPUT is in effect.) If the files are the same, it issues a message to that effect and does not create a differences file. By default, CMS compares two files that are not located in a CMS library. However, you can direct CMS to use element generations from the current library by specifying the /GENERATION qualifier on one or both of the file name parameters. Note: If both file1 and file2 are element generations, both generations must reside in the same library of the search list or an error will occur. A difference is defined as one of the following: o A line or lines that are in one file and not in the other. o A replacement of n lines by m lines (n may or may not be equal to m). Only the lines that differ are displayed in the differences file (unless you specify /FULL). A heading at the beginning of the differences file includes the name of the user that issued the command, the date and time the command was issued, and the file specifications of the two files being compared. If you direct CMS to use element generations and you have specified the /FORMAT option generation-differences, the differences listing contains a section labeled "Generation Differences" that contains the replacement history for the element. Each generation used in the comparison is identified by an asterisk (*) in the first column of the transaction record. The differences between the files are contained in a section labeled "Text Differences." By default, each difference is formatted with the line or lines from the first file followed by the differing line or lines from the second file. If a difference consists of a line or lines in one file but not the other, only the lines from the file containing the additional text are displayed. If you specify the /SKIP, /SENTINEL, and /IGNORE qualifiers on the same command line, they are processed in the following order: (1) /IGNORE=HISTORY (2) /IGNORE=NOTES (3) /SKIP (4) /SENTINEL (5) /IGNORE options other than HISTORY or NOTES For example, if you specify /SKIP=5 and /SENTINEL=("sushi","bar"), DIFFERENCES disregards the first 5 lines in each of the compared files, and then searches the remainder of each file for the sentinel character strings "sushi" and "bar".
1.3 - Qualifiers
1. 3.1 - /APPEND
Controls whether CMS appends the command output to an existing file, or creates a new file. If you specify /APPEND and the output file does not exist, CMS creates a new file. If you do not provide an output file specification (see the description for /OUTPUT), CMS searches your current default directory for a file with the file name specified in the file1 parameter and the file type .DIF.
1. 3.2 - /FORMAT=(data-format, data-partition, [no]generation-differences)
Controls whether the output file is formatted, specifies the type of formatting, and controls whether a list of generation differences is included in the DIFFERENCES output. You can specify the parameters in any order. data-format Specifies the type of format. Possible values for data formats include: ASCII (Default), DECIMAL, HEXADECIMAL, and OCTAL. data-partition Specifies the type of data partition. Possible values for data partitions include: BYTE, LONGWORD, RECORDS (Default), and WORD. generation-differences Specifies whether or not a list of generation differences is to be included in the DIFFERENCES output. This option is applicable only if two element generations are compared by the DIFFERENCES command. In any other case, this option is ignored. Possible values for generation-differences include: GENERATION_DIFFERENCES and NOGENERATION_DIFFERENCES (Default).
1. 3.3 - /FULL
Directs CMS to include a complete listing in the output file, including identical text and differences between file1 and file2.
1. 3.4 - /GENERATION[=generation-expression]
Directs CMS to search for an element generation in the current CMS library. The /GENERATION qualifier must immediately follow the element name to which it applies. If you specify /GENERATION but do not provide a generation expression, CMS uses the latest generation on the main line of descent.
1. 3.5 - /IGNORE=(keyword[,...])
Specifies one or more of the following keywords. Each keyword indicates a type of special character to be ignored during the comparison. Keyword Ignored Characters CASE Directs CMS to ignore any differences between the case of alphabetic characters (A-Z, a-z). FORM_FEEDS Directs CMS to remove formfeed characters as it compares records from the two files. HISTORY Directs CMS to ignore element generation history as it compares a file with a generation. At least one of the files must be an element generation with the history attribute enabled. LEADING_BLANKS Directs CMS to remove leading blanks and tabs as it compares records from the two files. NOTES Directs CMS to ignore notes as it compares a file with a generation. At least one of the files must be an element generation with the notes attribute enabled. SPACING Directs CMS to compress multiple blanks and tabs into a single space as it compares records from the two files. TRAILING_BLANKS Directs CMS to remove trailing blanks and tabs as it compares records from the two files. If the HISTORY or NOTES keyword is specified, the history or notes text is not used for the comparison, and is also removed from the output generated by DIFFERENCES. For all other options, the output generated by DIFFERENCES contains the original records used for the comparison, instead of the modified form of the records designated by the /IGNORE qualifier.
1. 3.6 - /LOG (D)
Controls whether CMS displays success and informational messages on the default output device. By default, if the command executes successfully, CMS displays a success message. If you specify /NOLOG, success and informational messages are suppressed. Any warning, error, or fatal error messages are displayed regardless of whether /LOG or /NOLOG is specified.
1. 3.7 - /OCCLUDE[=option,...]
Controls whether CMS selects the first instance of the specified object, or all instances of the specified object in the library search list. The options field contains one or more keywords associated with the name of the object. The options field can contain the following keywords: ALL--equivalent to (ELEMENT, CLASS) ELEMENT (D) NOELEMENT CLASS (D) NOCLASS NONE--equivalent to (NOELEMENT, NOCLASS) You can specify either ALL or NONE, or any combination of the [NO]ELEMENT and [NO]CLASS keywords. By default, CMS performs occlusion for all objects; that is, CMS selects only the first occurrence of a specified object.
1. 3.8 - /OUTPUT[=file-specification]
Directs CMS to write output to the specified file. CMS creates a new file if you do not specify /APPEND. If you omit the /OUTPUT qualifier (or if you specify /OUTPUT but do not provide a file specification), CMS creates a file with the file name specified in the file1 parameter and the file type .DIF. If you specify a file name but omit the file type component, CMS writes the output to a file with the specified file name and a file type of .DIF.
1. 3.9 - /NOOUTPUT
Directs CMS to execute a comparison without creating an output file. This form of the comparison may be significantly faster because CMS stops the transaction when it encounters the first difference.
1. 3.10 - /PAGE_BREAK
Controls whether CMS allows page breaks in the output file. By default, page breaks are converted to the string "<PAGE>" in the output file. Use /PAGE_BREAK to request the inclusion of page breaks in the output file.
1. 3.11 - /PARALLEL
Controls whether the differing lines from the two files are formatted side by side. If you specify /PARALLEL, the differences from the first file are displayed on the left and the differences from the second file are displayed on the right. The heading of the differences report displays the file specification of the first file on the left and the file specification of the second file on the right. By default, the width of the listing is 132. Use the /WIDTH qualifier to control the width. Vertical lines separate the text on the left side of the report from the text on the right side. The text from each of the files is allotted equal space (half the width of the full report). If a line from one of the files being compared is longer than half the width of the full report, the line is truncated on the right. A plus sign (+) is printed at the end of the line to indicate that the line has been truncated.
1. 3.12 - /SENTINEL=("begin-delimiter", "end-delimiter")
Specifies a pair of strings used to delimit a section of text to be ignored during the comparison of both files. The delimiters can be up to 256 characters per line, and must be unique. Any text between and including the delimiters is treated as if it did not exist. If you do not enclose the sentinel strings in quotation marks, they are converted to uppercase before the comparison of the files. Sentinel strings may contain any characters, but if you include spaces or tabs, they must be enclosed in quotation marks. Sentinel strings can appear anywhere in a file. If text delimited by a sentinel pair crosses record boundaries, the text after the delimited region appears in its own record in the output file; it is not appended to the contents of the record in which the begin delimiter was found.
1. 3.13 - /SKIP=number-of-lines
Indicates the number of lines at the beginning of each file (or generation) that are to be ignored during the comparison of both files. You must specify a nonnegative integer value indicating the number of lines to be ignored.
1. 3.14 - /WIDTH=n
Specifies the limit for the width of the differences report. The value n is required and must be an integer in the range 48 to 511. If n is less than 48, 48 is used. If n is more than 511, 511 is used. The default width is the same as the width of the output device. The width of the report is rounded down to the nearest multiple of 8 minus 1. CMS rounds down so that if you have specified the /PARALLEL qualifier, CMS correctly interprets the horizontal tabs in the file on the right. Thus, for example, if you specify a value of 100 on the /WIDTH qualifier, the actual width is 95.
2 - /CLASS
Compares the contents of two classes. If the particular generation of any element, that is a member of the class, differs between the classes, CMS creates a file that contains a listing of the class members that differ between them. If the contents of the classes are the same, CMS issues a message to that effect and does not create a differences file (unless the /FULL qualifier is in effect). The /CLASS qualifier must be specified prior to any other qualifiers. Format: DIFFERENCES/CLASS class1 class2
2.1 - Command Parameters
class1 Specifies the first class that is to be compared. class2 Specifies the second class that is to be compared.
2.2 - Description
The DIFFERENCES/CLASS command compares the contents of two classes. If CMS finds differences, it creates a file named first-class-name.DIF in your current default directory (unless /OUTPUT is in effect.) If the contents of the classes are the same, it issues a message to that effect and does not create a differences file. Note: Both classes must reside in the same library of the search list or an error will occur. A difference is defined as one of the following: o A particular generation of an element is a member of one class but no generation of the element is a member of the other class. o One particular generation of an element is a member of one class and a different generation of the same element is a member of the other class. Only the generations that differ are displayed in the differences file (unless you specify /FULL). A heading at the beginning of the differences file includes the name of the user that issued the command, the date and time the command was issued, and the class names of the two classes being compared.
2.3 - Qualifiers
2. 3.1 - /APPEND
Controls whether CMS appends the command output to an existing file, or creates a new file. If you specify /APPEND and the output file does not exist, CMS creates a new file. If you do not provide an output file specification (see the description for /OUTPUT), CMS searches your current default directory for a file with the file name specified in the file1 parameter and the file type .DIF.
2. 3.2 - /FULL
Directs CMS to include a complete listing in the output file, including both identical and different generations between class1 and class2.
2. 3.3 - /IGNORE=(keyword[,...])
Specifies one or more of the following keywords. Each keyword indicates a type of difference to be ignored during the comparison. Keyword Ignored Difference FIRST_VARIANT Directs CMS to ignore any differences where the generation in one class is the first variant of the generation in the other class. For example generation 2C1 is a first variant of generation 2 and generation 4B6D1 is a first variant of generation 4B6.
2. 3.4 - /LOG (D)
Controls whether CMS displays success and informational messages on the default output device. By default, if the command executes successfully, CMS displays a success message. If you specify /NOLOG, success and informational messages are suppressed. Any warning, error, or fatal error messages are displayed regardless of whether /LOG or /NOLOG is specified.
2. 3.5 - /OCCLUDE[=option,...]
Controls whether CMS selects the first instance of the specified object, or all instances of the specified object in the library search list. The options field contains one or more keywords associated with the name of the object. The options field can contain the following keywords: ALL--equivalent to (ELEMENT, CLASS) ELEMENT (D) NOELEMENT CLASS (D) NOCLASS NONE--equivalent to (NOELEMENT, NOCLASS) You can specify either ALL or NONE, or any combination of the [NO]ELEMENT and [NO]CLASS keywords. By default, CMS performs occlusion for all objects; that is, CMS selects only the first occurrence of a specified object.
2. 3.6 - /OUTPUT[=file-specification]
Directs CMS to write output to the specified file. CMS creates a new file if you do not specify /APPEND. If you omit the /OUTPUT qualifier (or if you specify /OUTPUT but do not provide a file specification), CMS creates a file with the file name specified in the class1 parameter and the file type .DIF. If you specify a file name but omit the file type component, CMS writes the output to a file with the specified file name and a file type of .DIF.
2. 3.7 - /NOOUTPUT
Directs CMS to execute a comparison without creating an output file. This form of the comparison may be significantly faster because CMS stops the transaction when it encounters the first difference.
2. 3.8 - /PARALLEL
Controls whether the differing member generations from the two classes are formatted side by side. If you specify /PARALLEL, the differences from the first class are displayed on the left and the differences from the second class are displayed on the right. The heading of the differences report displays the class name of the first class on the left and the class name of the second class on the right. By default, the width of the listing is 132. Use the /WIDTH qualifier to control the width. Vertical lines separate the text on the left side of the report from the text on the right side. The text from each of the classes is allotted equal space (half the width of the full report). If a line from one of the classes being compared is longer than half the width of the full report, the line is truncated on the right. A plus sign (+) is printed at the end of the line to indicate that the line has been truncated.
2. 3.9 - /SHOW=(keyword[,...])
Specifies one or more of the following keywords. Each keyword indicates a type of class difference to show. Keyword Difference Type GENERATION_DIFFERENCES Directs CMS to show the difference if the generation in one class differs from the generation in the other class but one generation isn't a variant of the other generation. VARIANT_DIFFERENCES Directs CMS to show the difference if the generation in one class differs from the generation in the other class and one generation is a variant of the other. One generation will be a variant of the other if at some point in the path between one generation and the other a generation is reserved and replaced /VARIANT. If the /SHOW qualifier is not specified, both generation differences and variant differences are shown. If a generation of an element is in one class but no generation of the element is in the other class then the difference is always shown regardless of whether the /SHOW qualifier is specified or not.
2. 3.10 - /WIDTH=n
Specifies the limit for the width of the differences report. The value n is required and must be an integer in the range 48 to 511. If n is less than 48, 48 is used. If n is more than 511, 511 is used. The default width is the same as the width of the output device. The width of the report is rounded down to the nearest multiple of 8 minus 1. CMS rounds down so that if you have specified the /PARALLEL qualifier, CMS correctly interprets the horizontal tabs in the generation comment on the right. Thus, for example, if you specify a value of 100 on the /WIDTH qualifier, the actual width is 95.
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