NAME¶
Text::Diff - Perform diffs on files and record sets
SYNOPSIS¶
use Text::Diff;
## Mix and match filenames, strings, file handles, producer subs,
## or arrays of records; returns diff in a string.
## WARNING: can return B<large> diffs for large files.
my $diff = diff "file1.txt", "file2.txt", { STYLE => "Context" };
my $diff = diff \$string1, \$string2, \%options;
my $diff = diff \*FH1, \*FH2;
my $diff = diff \&reader1, \&reader2;
my $diff = diff \@records1, \@records2;
## May also mix input types:
my $diff = diff \@records1, "file_B.txt";
DESCRIPTION¶
"diff()" provides a basic set of services akin to the GNU
"diff" utility. It is not anywhere near as feature complete as GNU
"diff", but it is better integrated with Perl and available on all
platforms. It is often faster than shelling out to a system's "diff"
executable for small files, and generally slower on larger files.
Relies on Algorithm::Diff for, well, the algorithm. This may not produce the
same exact diff as a system's local "diff" executable, but it will
be a valid diff and comprehensible by "patch". We haven't seen any
differences between Algorithm::Diff's logic and GNU diff's, but we have not
examined them to make sure they are indeed identical.
Note: If you don't want to import the "diff" function, do one
of the following:
use Text::Diff ();
require Text::Diff;
That's a pretty rare occurence, so "diff()" is exported by default.
=head1 OPTIONS
diff() takes two parameters from which to draw input and a set of options
to control it's output. The options are:
- FILENAME_A, MTIME_A, FILENAME_B, MTIME_B
- The name of the file and the modification time
"files"
These are filled in automatically for each file when diff() is passed
a filename, unless a defined value is passed in.
If a filename is not passed in and FILENAME_A and FILENAME_B are not
provided or "undef", the header will not be printed.
Unused on "OldStyle" diffs.
- OFFSET_A, OFFSET_B
- The index of the first line / element. These default to 1
for all parameter types except ARRAY references, for which the default is
0. This is because ARRAY references are presumed to be data structures,
while the others are line oriented text.
- STYLE
- "Unified", "Context",
"OldStyle", or an object or class reference for a class
providing "file_header()", "hunk_header()",
"hunk()", "hunk_footer()" and
"file_footer()" methods. The two footer() methods are
provided for overloading only; none of the formats provide them.
Defaults to "Unified" (unlike standard "diff", but
Unified is what's most often used in submitting patches and is the most
human readable of the three.
If the package indicated by the STYLE has no hunk() method,
c<diff()> will load it automatically (lazy loading). Since
all such packages should inherit from Text::Diff::Base, this should be
marvy.
Styles may be specified as class names ("STYLE ="
"Foo"), in which case they will be "new()"ed with no
parameters, or as objects ("STYLE =" Foo->new>).
- CONTEXT
- How many lines before and after each diff to display.
Ignored on old-style diffs. Defaults to 3.
- OUTPUT
- Examples and their equivalent subroutines:
OUTPUT => \*FOOHANDLE, # like: sub { print FOOHANDLE shift() }
OUTPUT => \$output, # like: sub { $output .= shift }
OUTPUT => \@output, # like: sub { push @output, shift }
OUTPUT => sub { $output .= shift },
If no "OUTPUT" is supplied, returns the diffs in a string. If
"OUTPUT" is a "CODE" ref, it will be called once with
the (optional) file header, and once for each hunk body with the text to
emit. If "OUTPUT" is an IO::Handle, output will be emitted to
that handle.
- FILENAME_PREFIX_A, FILENAME_PREFIX_B
- The string to print before the filename in the header.
Unused on "OldStyle" diffs. Defaults are "---",
"+++" for Unified and "***", "+++" for
Context.
- KEYGEN, KEYGEN_ARGS
- These are passed to "traverse_sequences" in
Algorithm::Diff.
Note: if neither "FILENAME_" option is defined, the header will
not be printed. If at one is present, the other and both MTIME_ options must
be present or "Use of undefined variable" warnings will be generated
(except on "OldStyle" diffs, which ignores these options).
These functions implement the output formats. They are grouped in to classes so
diff() can use class names to call the correct set of output routines
and so that you may inherit from them easily. There are no constructors or
instance methods for these classes, though subclasses may provide them if need
be.
Each class has
file_header(),
hunk_header(),
hunk(), and
footer() methods identical to those documented in the
Text::Diff::Unified section.
header() is called before the
hunk() is first called,
footer() afterwards. The default footer
function is an empty method provided for overloading:
sub footer { return "End of patch\n" }
Some output formats are provided by external modules (which are loaded
automatically), such as Text::Diff::Table. These are are documented here to
keep the documentation simple.
Text::Diff::Base¶
Returns "" for all methods (other than "new()").
Text::Diff::Unified¶
--- A Mon Nov 12 23:49:30 2001
+++ B Mon Nov 12 23:49:30 2001
@@ -2,13 +2,13 @@
2
3
4
-5d
+5a
6
7
8
9
+9a
10
11
-11d
12
13
- file_header
-
$s = Text::Diff::Unified->file_header( $options );
Returns a string containing a unified header. The sole parameter is the
options hash passed in to diff(), containing at least:
FILENAME_A => $fn1,
MTIME_A => $mtime1,
FILENAME_B => $fn2,
MTIME_B => $mtime2
May also contain
FILENAME_PREFIX_A => "---",
FILENAME_PREFIX_B => "+++",
to override the default prefixes (default values shown).
- hunk_header
-
Text::Diff::Unified->hunk_header( \@ops, $options );
Returns a string containing the output of one hunk of unified diff.
- Text::Diff::Unified::hunk
-
Text::Diff::Unified->hunk( \@seq_a, \@seq_b, \@ops, $options );
Returns a string containing the output of one hunk of unified diff.
Text::Diff::Table¶
+--+----------------------------------+--+------------------------------+
| |../Test-Differences-0.2/MANIFEST | |../Test-Differences/MANIFEST |
| |Thu Dec 13 15:38:49 2001 | |Sat Dec 15 02:09:44 2001 |
+--+----------------------------------+--+------------------------------+
| | * 1|Changes *
| 1|Differences.pm | 2|Differences.pm |
| 2|MANIFEST | 3|MANIFEST |
| | * 4|MANIFEST.SKIP *
| 3|Makefile.PL | 5|Makefile.PL |
| | * 6|t/00escape.t *
| 4|t/00flatten.t | 7|t/00flatten.t |
| 5|t/01text_vs_data.t | 8|t/01text_vs_data.t |
| 6|t/10test.t | 9|t/10test.t |
+--+----------------------------------+--+------------------------------+
This format also goes to some pains to highlight "invisible"
characters on differing elements by selectively escaping whitespace:
+--+--------------------------+--------------------------+
| |demo_ws_A.txt |demo_ws_B.txt |
| |Fri Dec 21 08:36:32 2001 |Fri Dec 21 08:36:50 2001 |
+--+--------------------------+--------------------------+
| 1|identical |identical |
* 2| spaced in | also spaced in *
* 3|embedded space |embedded tab *
| 4|identical |identical |
* 5| spaced in |\ttabbed in *
* 6|trailing spaces\s\s\n |trailing tabs\t\t\n *
| 7|identical |identical |
* 8|lf line\n |crlf line\r\n *
* 9|embedded ws |embedded\tws *
+--+--------------------------+--------------------------+
See "Text::Diff::Table" for more details, including how the whitespace
escaping works.
Text::Diff::Context¶
*** A Mon Nov 12 23:49:30 2001
--- B Mon Nov 12 23:49:30 2001
***************
*** 2,14 ****
2
3
4
! 5d
6
7
8
9
10
11
- 11d
12
13
--- 2,14 ----
2
3
4
! 5a
6
7
8
9
+ 9a
10
11
12
13
Note:
hunk_header() returns only "***************\n".
Text::Diff::OldStyle¶
5c5
< 5d
---
> 5a
9a10
> 9a
12d12
< 11d
Note: no
file_header().
LIMITATIONS¶
Must suck both input files entirely in to memory and store them with a normal
amount of Perlish overhead (one array location) per record. This is implied by
the implementation of Algorithm::Diff, which takes two arrays. If
Algorithm::Diff ever offers an incremental mode, this can be changed (contact
the maintainers of Algorithm::Diff and Text::Diff if you need this; it
shouldn't be too terribly hard to tie arrays in this fashion).
Does not provide most of the more refined GNU diff options: recursive directory
tree scanning, ignoring blank lines / whitespace, etc., etc. These can all be
added as time permits and need arises, many are rather easy; patches quite
welcome.
Uses closures internally, this may lead to leaks on "perl" versions
5.6.1 and prior if used many times over a process' life time.
AUTHOR¶
Adam Kennedy <adamk@cpan.org>
Barrie Slaymaker <barries@slaysys.com>
COPYRIGHT¶
Some parts copyright 2009 Adam Kennedy.
Copyright 2001 Barrie Slaymaker. All Rights Reserved.
You may use this under the terms of either the Artistic License or GNU Public
License v 2.0 or greater.