1 .TH "FINDDUP" 1 "Mar 2010" "Francois Fleuret" "User Commands"
3 \" This man page was written by Francois Fleuret <francois@fleuret.org>
4 \" and is distributed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike
9 finddup \- Find files common to two directories (or not)
13 \fBfinddup\fP [OPTION]... DIR1 [[not:]DIR2]
17 With a single directory argument, \fBfinddup\fP prints the duplicated
18 files found in it. With two directories, it prints either the files
19 common to both DIR1 and DIR2, or with the `not:' prefix, the ones
20 present in DIR1 and not in DIR2.
28 ignore files and directories starting with a dot
31 do not show which files from DIR2 corresponds to files from DIR1
34 do not show the file group IDs (one group for each content)
37 shows the real path of the files
41 The display is not sorted by groups.
45 .B finddup -c blah something
50 which have a matching file with exact same content in
54 .B finddup ./sources not:./backup
57 List all files found in
59 which do not have content-matching equivalent in
63 .B finddup -g ./tralala ./cuicui | sort -n
66 List groups of files with same content which exist both in
73 Written by Francois Fleuret <francois@fleuret.org> and distributed
74 under the terms of the GNU General Public License version 3 as
75 published by the Free Software Foundation. This is free software: you
76 are free to change and redistribute it. There is NO WARRANTY, to the
77 extent permitted by law.