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I have a variable $data and variable $file in a bash script:

data=$(echo "$(printf '%s\n' "${array[@]/%/$'\n\n'}")")
file=$(<scriptfile_results)

Those variables will contain text. How to compare those two? One option is to use diff(1) utility like this:

diff -u <(echo "$data") <(echo "$file")

Is this an correct and elegant way to compare content of two variables? In addition how is the <( ) technique called? As I understand, for each <( ) a temporary file(named pipe) is created..

5 Answers 5

122

Yes, diff <(echo "$foo") <(echo "$bar") is fine.

By searching the bash manpage for the characters <(, you can find that this is called “process substitution.”

You don't need to worry about the efficiency of creating a temporary file, because the temporary file is really just a pipe, not a file on disk. Try this:

$ echo <(echo foo)
/dev/fd/63

This shows that the temporary file is really just the pipe “file descriptor 63.” Although it appears on the virtual /dev filesystem, the disk is never touched.

The actual efficiency issue that you might need to worry about here is the ‘process’ part of “process substitution.” Bash forks another process to perform the echo foo. On some platforms, like Cygwin, this can be very slow if performed frequently. However, on most modern platforms, forking is pretty fast. I just tried doing 1000 process substitutions at once by running the script:

echo <(echo foo) <(echo foo) ... 997 repetitions ... <(echo foo)

It took 0.225s on my older Mac laptop, and 2.3 seconds in a Ubuntu virtual machine running on the same laptop. Dividing by the 1000 invocations, this shows that process substitutions takes less than 3 milliseconds—something totally dwarfed by the runtime of diff, and probably not anything you need to worry about!

6
  • 1
    thank you for explaining this! On my Xeon [email protected] 'time for i in {0..1000}; do echo <(echo foo); done' took 0.264s.
    – Martin
    Nov 21, 2012 at 23:41
  • 3
    Note that even echo foo > foo; cat foo; rm foo is also unlikely to ever touch the disk. If the tempfile is removed before the vfs is flushed to the physical partition, nothing ever goes to the platter. Nov 6, 2014 at 13:47
  • Your echos need -e on the first line. Thanks for the answer!! May 26, 2018 at 0:42
  • @thebunnyrules I don’t think -e would be helpful here, as it would make the literal strings foo\tbar and foo bar compare equal even though they’re different strings of different lengths. Did you have some an example in mind?
    – andrewdotn
    May 26, 2018 at 15:25
  • @andrewdotn, I was under the mistaken impression that it's needed to expand newlines in variable but I played around with echo yesterday and it's not. It's only needed for expanding user added newlines and tabs such as \n or \t but not the newline that a variable would inherit from being defined via var=$(some operation). If I could withdraw the edit I would but once it's submitted it's out of my control. Feel free to reject it. May 28, 2018 at 0:13
7
test "$data" = "$file" && echo the variables are the same

If you wish to be verbose, you can also do:

if test "$data" = "$file"; then
  : variables are the same
else
  : variables are different
fi
2
  • 1
    is there a way to actually use diff on 2 variables instead of 2 files without writing them to temp files? I've actually wondered about that before. (so you can actually see what's different between them) Nov 18, 2012 at 3:35
  • @sampson-chen as far I know, there isn't. However, it would be great if some experienced bash programmer confirms this.
    – Martin
    Nov 21, 2012 at 23:37
6

This works best for me:

var1="cat dog mule pig"
var2="cat dog ant"

diff <( echo "$var1" ) <( echo "$var2" )

First I set var1 and var2. Then I diff with <( ) elements to say that the input is a variable.

3
~ cat test.sh   

#!/usr/bin/env bash

array1=(cat dog mule pig)
array2=(cat dog ant)

diff -ia --suppress-common-lines <( printf "%s\n" "${array1[@]}" ) <( printf "%s\n" "${array2[@]}" )
1
  • you can operate with result, create variable and so on. my version prints out a difference, for example. just try it. will not harm.
    – deadElk
    Oct 13, 2014 at 12:55
3

Using comm:

comm -23 <(echo $variableA | tr ' ' '\n' | sort) <(echo $variableB | tr ' ' '\n' | sort)

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