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diff file1 file2 >/dev/null 2>&1

I know what this does. It's running the command diff, and it checks its exit status, ignoring the output of diff.

I just don't know what this part means:

>/dev/null 2>&1

what's > and &

(Not sure what these are called, so I can't look this up) (This is in Bourne Shell)

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2 Answers 2

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>/dev/null redirects standard out to /dev/null, i.e. throw the output away. 2>&1 redirects standard error to standard out; in this case, it means to throw all the error output away as well. You can google for shell output redirection for more information.

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In addition, as only the exit status is wanted, this command can be simplified to that one, which doesn't need to redirect its output to the bit bucket:

cmp -s file1 file2 

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