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I would like to use diff to compare two directories for differing files, using the -q option for brief output. However, the output is cluttered with a lot of files that only exist in one directory, but not the other. Can I force diff (or use another tool) to only show files that differ AND exist in both directories?

The current command I use is

diff -q <dir1> <dir2>

Any ideas are appreciated.

1 Answer 1

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It prints a bunch of lines like

Only in dir1/blah: blah

right? So just throw them away with grep.

LC_ALL=C diff ... | grep -v '^Only in'

The LC_ALL=C is to make sure that the standard "Only in" message will be printed, not any translation.

3
  • No option to do this without grep?
    – zdm
    Jun 5, 2022 at 5:25
  • This also filters valid differences starting with "Only in". Dec 7, 2022 at 16:46
  • If you have a directory with many terabytes then his is not an option because under the hood it will diff everything.
    – zomega
    Nov 23, 2023 at 10:18

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