All of the below is copied directly from @TomOnTime's serverfault answer here:
Show lines that only exist in file a: (i.e. what was deleted from a)
comm -23 a b
Show lines that only exist in file b: (i.e. what was added to b)
comm -13 a b
Show lines that only exist in one file or the other: (but not both)
comm -3 a b | sed 's/^//'
(Warning: If file a
has lines that start with TAB, it (the first TAB) will be removed from the output.)
NOTE: Both files need to be sorted for "comm" to work properly. If they aren't already sorted, you should sort them:
sort <a >a.sorted
sort <b >b.sorted
comm -12 a.sorted b.sorted
If the files are extremely long, this may be quite a burden as it requires an extra copy and therefore twice as much disk space.
Edit: note that the command can be written more concisely using process substitution (thanks to @phk for the comment):
comm -12 <(sort < a) <(sort < b)
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