| SDIFF(1) | General Commands Manual | SDIFF(1) |
sdiff —
side-by-side diff
sdiff |
[-abdilstW] [-I
regexp] [-o
outfile] [-w
width] file1
file2 |
sdiff displays two files side by side,
with any differences between the two highlighted as follows: new lines are
marked with ‘>’; deleted lines are marked with
‘<’; and changed lines are marked with
‘|’.
sdiff can also be used to interactively
merge two files, prompting at each set of differences. See the
-o option for an explanation.
The options are:
-l-o
outfileEDITOR and VISUAL, below,
for details of which editor, if any, is invoked.
The commands are as follows:
l
|
1r |
2b l
| b
1b
r |
b
2svee
le
re
bqsdiff.-s-w
widthOptions passed to diff(1) are:
-a-b-d-I
regexp-i-t-W-w flag is passed to
diff(1)).The sdiff utility exits with one of the
following values:
The sdiff command first appeared in
AT&T System III UNIX and was
reimplemented for OpenBSD 3.9.
sdiff was written from scratch for the
public domain by Ray Lai
<ray@cyth.net>.
Although undocumented, sdiff supports most
long options supported by GNU sdiff, though some require GNU diff.
Tabs are treated as anywhere from one to eight characters wide, depending on the current column. Terminals that treat tabs as eight characters wide will look best.
sdiff may not work with binary data.
| February 26, 2025 | openbsd |