Use the comm(1)
command to compare the two files. They both need to be sorted, which you can do beforehand if they are large, or you can do it inline with bash process substitution.
comm
can take a combination of the flags -1
, -2
and -3
indicating which file to suppress lines from (unique to file 1, unique to file 2 or common to both).
To get the lines only in the old file:
comm -23 <(sort /tmp/oldList) <(sort /tmp/newList)
To get the lines only in the new file:
comm -13 <(sort /tmp/oldList) <(sort /tmp/newList)
You can feed that into a while read
loop to process each line:
while read old ; do
...do stuff with $old
done < <(comm -23 <(sort /tmp/oldList) <(sort /tmp/newList))
and similarly for the new lines.
与恶龙缠斗过久,自身亦成为恶龙;凝视深渊过久,深渊将回以凝视…