1

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...

9
  • 1
    Is this a linux emulator running under windows? If so, windows is probably modifying the contents of Documents in some manner so as to cause md5sum to return a different checksum. Oct 28, 2014 at 7:33
  • Please use the fullcode markup and not the ` Oct 28, 2014 at 8:04
  • 1
    Maybe 7z includes a time stamp (creation time stamp?) in the archive. Compare them with cmp -l 1.7z 2.7z and see how many bytes are different.
    – glglgl
    Oct 28, 2014 at 9:12
  • @KarolyHorvath I meant code sample. I speak wrong english when I run with low levels of caffeine Oct 28, 2014 at 9:15
  • 2
    Can you provide a source file and the two (different) 7z archives that get created for it? Oct 28, 2014 at 9:17

2 Answers 2

1

The reliable way to check if two different losslessly compressed files have identical contents is to expand their contents and compare those (e.g. using md5sum). Comparing the compressed files is going to end badly sooner or later, regardless of which compression scheme you use.

2
  • I agree, but with 7z I'm compressing entire folders and it doesn't sound handy to compare their files in entire tree structure. Maybe I could do that somehow, recursively, but how no I idea how to, yet. Can I use some other equivalent for getting same result? Can I create tar archives without compression and compare md5sum of them with the md5sum of old backup tars, would that work? Does tar always create a file with same md5sum (suppose I'm archiving same content and don't use the "z" switch)?
    – arcull
    Oct 28, 2014 at 21:10
  • @arcull: tar is worth trying, sure. It's a lot less likely to change over time, and a quick test on my system shows that tarring the same directory twice gives the same md5sum on both tar output files. Give it a try. :) Oct 29, 2014 at 2:22
0

I've partially solved this. It looks like it matters if you specify full path to the folder you are compressing or not. The resulting file is not the same. .This affects both 7z and tar.I mean like this: value1=$(tar -c /tmp/at-spi2/|md5sum|cut -d ' ' -f 1) value2=$(tar -c at-spi2/|md5sum|cut -d ' ' -f 1)

So obviously I'm doing this wrong. Is there a switch for 7z and tar which would remove absolute path?

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.