I have two folders with sub folders. One folder is the base folder, and the other one is the local folder. In these folders and subfolders consist identical as well as non identical files.
I want compare these folders and report the result in some other file. This report must consist of:
List of all identical files
List of all modified files
List of any missing file or folder
List of all non identical file
Is there a tool, batch script or utility for this?
I have tried WinMerge, but it's not the solution.
BeyondCompare is what you're looking for. It will give you all those reports in a matter of clicks.
UPDATE
As a follow up to your comment, you can also use this approach, which is as free as in beer, and does everything via command line.
Install a tool called diff tools, and you'll be able to do something like:
diff.exe
On the command line.
Araxis Merge is very good for this. I comes in a 64 bit version as well.
I have to recommend Beyond Compare for this, it's an excellent folder and file comparison tool. You can integrate it into Visual Studio as well for the file comaprison for a much better merging experience as well.
You can use WinDiff, a graphical file-comparison program.
Related
Good Morning,
I am working on legacy code. This legacy code consists of multiple projects (language C with NI LabWindows CVI) and was never manged in a source control System but only in on folders. Over time it got a little messy and copies of this folder were created and changes were made to all folders depending the project that was built.
The result is, that there are 5 folders each containing different codes bases for what once was the same code. Also many files were modified in all folders because they are used in several projects. Each project was only build from 1 of the 5 folder (so project A was only build in folder 1, project b in Folder 4 etc.). It is not only raw code, but also user interface files.
I hope that was clear so far.
My task is to merge all the code into one one codes base (as it started of originally). And I would like to get some suggestions.
Here is the plan:
1. create baseline version of one folder that is supposedly that one with the most changes.
2. create GIT repository to store the code and all changes
3. go through all folders and merge files into baseline version using file diff software. (Folder 1 is baseline, merge folder 2 to baseline, merge folder 3 to baseline etc.)
Do you have any comments on this plan? What is good? Bad? Are there tools I can use?
This seems like as good of a plan as any. You have a mess on your hands either way.
If there are many changes to the user interface panels, that could be a headache. The UIR files are binaries, which will make git merges and diffs useless.
Go into each project and under Options->Preferences select the box to save .UIR files as .TUI files and save the project. This will give you a text file output describing the user interface and allow you to use diff tools properly.
EDIT
When the User Interface is active, you can directly select Options->Save in Text Format to do this as a one-off.
Good Luck!
It might also be worthwhile to use the UI to Code converter under CVI's Tools menu to convert all your UIRs to code. This should make them more compatible with text-based source control (like the save in text format approach), but may also ease the process of merging UIs.
I am facing a strange problem. My application has 2 folders. They act as 2 features (They are independent modules). Both folders have a file log4j.xml with different configurations.
To create a installer I run heat and candle on both folders and then light them to create an MSI. After installation I see that log4j.xml is same in both the folders. The log4j.xml of the 1st folder is copied to both folders.
Is this an issue or am I doing something wrong ?
I have used three approaches to address this issue in the past:
My Preference:
Restructure the input area (if necessary using MSBuild Copy task or scripts) so that there is a single folder tree (which may reflect how you plan to have the files on the target system). The point of this is to call heat once on a folder tree which has the two sub folders. When there are files of the same name in different subfolders, heat automatically adjusts the related file/component ids.
Alternative:
It sounds like you are using -suid. Not using it will create unique ids.
Alternative #2:
Create a transform to rename the Ids related to one of the similar files.
Before I begin, I would like to express my appreciation for all of the insight I've gained on stackoverflow and everyone who contributes. I have a general question about managing large numbers of files. I'm trying to determine my options, if any. Here it goes.
Currently, I have a large number of files and I'm on Windows 7. What I've been doing is categorizing the files by copying them into folders based on what needs to be processed together. So, I have one set that contains the files by date (for long term storage) and another that contains the copies by category (for processing and calculations). Of course this doubles my data each time. Now I'm having to create more than one set of categories; 3 copies to be exact. This is quadrupling my data.
For the processing side of things, the data ends up in excel. Originally, all the data was brough into excel. Then all organization and filtering was performed in excel. This was time consuming and not easily maintainable over the long term. Later the work load was shifted to the file system itself, which lightened the work in excel.
The long and short of it is that this is an extremely inefficient use of disk space. What would be a better way of handling this?
Things that have come to mind:
Overlapping Folders
Is there a way to create a folder that only holds the addresses of a file, rather than copying the file. This way I could have two folders reference the same file.
To my understanding, a folder is a file listing the memory addresses of the files inside of it, but on Windows a file can only be contained in one folder.
Microsoft SQL Server
Not sure what could be done here.
Symbolic Links
I'm not an administrator, so I cannot execute the mklink command.
Also, I'm uncertain about any performance issues with this.
A Junction
Apparently not allowed for individual files, only folders in windows.
Search folders (*.search-ms)
Maybe I'm missing something, but to my knowledge there is no way to specify individual files to be listed.
Hashing the files
Creating hash tags for all the files, would allow for the files to be stored once. But then I have no idea how I would handle the hash tags.
XML
Maybe I could use xml files to attach meta data to the files and somehow search using them.
Database File System
I recently came across this concept in my search. Not sure how it would apply Windows.
I have found a partial solution. First, I discovered that the laptop I'm using is actually logged in as Administrator. As an alternative to options 3 and 4, I have decided to use hard-links, which are part of the NTFS file system. However, due to the large number of files, this is unmanageable using the following command from an elevated command prompt:
mklink /h <source\file> <target\file>
Luckily, Hermann Schinagl has created the Link Shell Extension application for Windows Explorer and a very insightful reading of how Junctions, Symbolic Links, and Hard Links work. The only reason that this is currently a partial solution, is due to a separate problem with Windows Explorer, which I intend to post as a separate question. Thank you Hermann.
I have 2 source folders in my project:
src/main/resources/sql/oracle
src/main/resources/sql/sqlserver
They both have a file called mh1.sql.
The project I'm working on used to support only oracle database, so it just use ClassPathResource("mh1.sql") to load the sql file directly, now I need to support different kinds of database, and switch to the correct sql file according to the database type we're using. So, is there any good way to go? without any big impact on the old project. any rough ideas?
BTW, I find that after compilation, I can only find one mh1.sql under bin folder, I'm a new guy in using Eclipse, and I'm curious to know if it's possible to output these 2 folder oracle and sqlserver to the bin folder and each contains its own mh1.sql file?
As for your second question without knowing your exact Eclipse project settings it's of course close to impossible to tell why you're not seeing the oracle and sqlserver subfolders in your bin folder. However, it should be obvious that this being fixed is a prerequisite for your first problem.
Have a look at the ClassPathResource docs, they tell you that you can/should provide a path to your resource rather than just the name. Hence, you can use ClassPathResource("sql/oracle/mh1.sql").
Having said all that you might also just dump the two files in src/main/resources/sql/ (omitting the subfolders) and give them unique names: ora-mh1.sql and mssql-mh1.sql.
I was wondering if there was a way to get the author and title properties of word, power point and excel documents.
I want to run this on various computers so i don't really want to have to install libs on each one (so i thought running a batch file would be best.
Thanks
See this previous question: Getting file properties using a batch file