2

I'm trying to compare the content of two files and tell if the content of one is totally included in another (meaning if one file has three lines, A, B and C, can I find those three lines, in that order, in the second file). I've looked at diff and grep but wasn't able to find the relevant option (if any).

Examples:

file1.txt   file2.txt  <= should return true (file2 is included in file1)
---------   ---------
abc         def
def         ghi
ghi
jkl    

file1.txt   file2.txt  <= should return false (file2 is not included in file1)
---------   ---------
abc         abc
def         ghi
ghi
jkl    

Any idea?

3
  • join(1) might be useful. linux.die.net/man/1/join
    – NPE
    Apr 3, 2013 at 10:39
  • could f1 and f2 have empty lines?
    – Kent
    Apr 3, 2013 at 10:44
  • 2
    I thought for a moment about comm but it would not reject your second example. My gut feel is you won't find a tool to do the job, but will have to create one from an appropriate (scripting?) language. I'd use Perl, but Python or Ruby should be fine too. Apr 3, 2013 at 11:50

4 Answers 4

1

Using the answer from here

Use the following python function:

def sublistExists(list1, list2):
    return ''.join(map(str, list2)) in ''.join(map(str, list1))

In action:

In [35]: a=[i.strip() for i in open("f1")]
In [36]: b=[i.strip() for i in open("f2")]
In [37]: c=[i.strip() for i in open("f3")]

In [38]: a
Out[38]: ['abc', 'def', 'ghi', 'jkl']

In [39]: b
Out[39]: ['def', 'ghi']

In [40]: c
Out[40]: ['abc', 'ghi']

In [41]: sublistExists(a, b)
Out[41]: True

In [42]: sublistExists(a, c)
Out[42]: False
1

Assuming your file2.txt does not contain characters with special meaning for regular expressions, you can use:

grep "$(<file2.txt)" file1.txt
1
  • 1
    It doesn't work (even with grep -F) if there's a partial match as in my second example
    – gregseth
    Apr 3, 2013 at 10:50
1

This should work even if your file2.txt contains special characters:

cp file1.txt file_read.txt

while read -r a_line ; do
   first_line_found=$( fgrep -nx "${a_line}" file_read.txt 2>/dev/null | head -1 )
   if [ -z "$first_line_found" ]; 
   then 
        exit 1 # we couldn't find a_line in the file_read.txt
   else
        { echo "1,${first_line_found}d" ; echo "w" ; } | ed file_read.txt  #we delete up to line_found
   fi   
done < file2.txt
exit 0

(the "exit 0" is there for "readability" so one can see easily that it exits with 1 only if fgrep can't find a line in file1.txt. It's not needed)

(fgrep is a literral grep, searching for a string (not a regexp))

(I haven't tested the above, it's a general idea. I hope it does work though ^^)

the "-x" force it to match lines exactly, ie, no additionnal characters (ie : "to" can no longer match "toto". Only "toto" will match "toto" when adding -x)

5
  • grep -Fx solves the problem of regexes and partial line matching. The rest is working.
    – gregseth
    Apr 3, 2013 at 11:00
  • I know I looked the man page for fgrep (=grep -F) and edited it before your comment ^^ But thanks! Apr 3, 2013 at 11:03
  • 1
    I'm not sure how it works though... the grep part check if the line matches, the loop part does it for each line, but how come the order is preserved?
    – gregseth
    Apr 3, 2013 at 11:39
  • apologies: I don't check for the order at all :( I'll try to edit it up. Apr 3, 2013 at 11:42
  • try the new one please (I can't check here, no access to a shell for the moment : I type from my head :/ ) Apr 3, 2013 at 11:48
0

please try if this awk "one-liner" ^_^ works for your real file. for the example files in your question, it worked:

awk 'FNR==NR{a=a $0;next}{b=b $0}
END{while(match(b,a,m)){
    if(m[0]==a) {print "included";exit}
    b=substr(b,RSTART+RLENGTH)
   }
    print "not included"
}' file2 file1

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