I'm using 7z command in bash script to create a 7z archive for backup purposes. My script does also check if this newly created 7z archive exists in my backup folder and if it does, I go and run md5sum to see if content differs. So if the archive file doesn't exits yet or the md5sum differs from the previous I copy it to my backup folder. So I tried a simple example to test the script, but the problem is that I sometimes get different md5sum for the same folder I am compressing. Why is that so? Is there any other reliable way of checking if file content differs? The commands are simple:
SourceFolder="/home/user/Documents/"
for file in $SourceFolder*
do
localfile=${file##*/}
7z a -t7z "$SourceFolder${localfile}.7z" "$file"
md5value=`md5sum "$SourceFolder${localfile}.7z"|cut -d ' ' -f 1`
...copyinf files goes from here on...
Documents
in some manner so as to cause md5sum to return a different checksum.fullcode
markup and not the`
cmp -l 1.7z 2.7z
and see how many bytes are different.code sample
. I speak wrong english when I run with low levels of caffeine