ccdiff - Man Page

Colored Character diff

Synopsis

 ccdiff [options] file1|- file2|-
 ccdiff [options] dir1    dir2

 ccdiff --help
 ccdiff --man
 ccdiff --info

Description

Show the diff between two files on a character by character base. In contrast to the standard diff tools, this tool uses the diff algorithm horizontally for each line in the vertical diff, highlighting the changes. This is very handy in hard to spot changes like O to 0, I to l or 1 and whitespace.

If there are two argument, and both are a folder/directory, a recursive diff is executed. This is not available whan used as a (sub)class.

Options

Command line options

--help -?

Show a summary of the available command-line options and exit.

--version -V

Show the version and exit.

--man

Show this manual using pod2man and nroff.

--info

Show this manual using pod2text.

--utf-8 -U

All I/O (streams to compare and standard out) are in UTF-8.

--diff-class=C --dc=C

Select the class used to execute the diff. By default ccdiff will select the first available out of Algorithm::Diff::XS or Algorithm::Diff.

Sometime the XS version fails on encoding and the pure-perl version will work just fine. You can force ccdiff to use either

Select the pure-perl version with any of PP, AD, Algorthm::Diff, Algorithm-Diff, or Algorithm::Diff::PP (case insensitive)

 --dc=pp
 --dc=algorithm-diff
 --diff-class=Algorithm::Diff::PP

Select the XS version with any of XS, ADX, Algorthm::Diff::XS, or Algorithm-Diff-XS (case insensitive)

 --dc=xs
 --dc=algorithm-diff-xs
 --diff-class=Algorithm::Diff::XS
--unified[=3] -u [3]

Generate a unified diff. The number of context lines is optional. When omitted it defaults to 3. Currently there is no provision of dealing with overlapping diff chunks. If the common part between two diff chunks is shorter than twice the number of context lines, some lines may show twice.

The default is to use traditional diff:

 5,5c5,5
 < Sat Dec 18 07:00:33 1993,I.O.D.U.,,756194433,1442539
 ---
 > Sat Dec 18 07:08:33 1998,I.O.D.U.,,756194433,1442539

a unified diff (-u1) would be

 5,5c5,5
  Tue Sep  6 05:43:59 2005,B.O.Q.S.,,1125978239,1943341
 -Sat Dec 18 07:00:33 1993,I.O.D.U.,,756194433,1442539
 +Sat Dec 18 07:08:33 1998,I.O.D.U.,,756194433,1442539
  Mon Feb 23 10:37:02 2004,R.X.K.S.,van,1077529022,1654127
--verbose[=1] -v[1]

Show an additional line for each old or new section in a change chunk (not for added or deleted lines) that shows the hexadecimal value of each character. If --utf-8 is in effect, it will show the Unicode character name(s).

This is a debugging option, so invisible characters can still be "seen".

--verbose accepts an optional verbosity-level. On level 2 and up, all horizontal changes get left-and-right markers inserted to enable seeing the location of the ZERO WIDTH or invisible characters. With level 3 and up and Unicode enabled, the changed characters will also show the codepoint in hex.

An example of this:

With -Uu0v0:

 1,1c1,1
 - A  BCDE Fg
 + A BcdEFg

With -Uu0v1:

 1,1c1,1
 - A  BCDE Fg
 - -- verbose : SPACE, LATIN CAPITAL LETTER C, LATIN CAPITAL LETTER D, SPACE
 + A BcdEFg
 + -- verbose : LATIN SMALL LETTER C, LATIN SMALL LETTER D, ZERO WIDTH SPACE

With -Uu0v2:

 1,1c1,1
 - A ↱ ↰B↱CD↰E↱ ↰Fg
 - -- verbose : SPACE, LATIN CAPITAL LETTER C, LATIN CAPITAL LETTER D, SPACE
 + A B↱cd↰E↱↰Fg
 + -- verbose : LATIN SMALL LETTER C, LATIN SMALL LETTER D, ZERO WIDTH SPACE

With -Uu0v3:

 1,1c1,1
 - A ↱ ↰B↱CD↰E↱ ↰Fg
 - -- verbose : SPACE (U+000020), LATIN CAPITAL LETTER C (U+000043), LATIN CAPITAL LETTER D (U+000044), SPACE (U+000020)
 + A B↱cd↰E↱↰Fg
 + -- verbose : LATIN SMALL LETTER C (U+000063), LATIN SMALL LETTER D (U+000064), ZERO WIDTH SPACE (U+00200B)

With -Uu0v2 --ascii:

 1,1c1,1
 - A > <B>CD<E> <Fg
 - -- verbose : SPACE, LATIN CAPITAL LETTER C, LATIN CAPITAL LETTER D, SPACE
 + A B>cd<E><Fg
 + -- verbose : LATIN SMALL LETTER C, LATIN SMALL LETTER D, ZERO WIDTH SPACE

the word "verbose" and the character markers will be displayed using the verbose color. The characters used for the markers can be defined in your configuration file as chr_cml (the character used as marker on the left) and chr_cmr (the character used as marker on the right).

--markers -m

Use markers under each changed character in change-chunks.

--markers is especially useful if the terminal does not support colors, or if you want to copy/paste the output to (ASCII) mail. See also --ascii. The markers will have the same color as added or deleted text.

This will look like (with unified diff):

 5,5c5,5
 -Sat Dec 18 07:08:33 1998,I.O.D.U.,,756194433,1442539
 -               ▼       ▼
 +Sat Dec 18 07:00:33 1993,I.O.D.U.,,756194433,1442539
 +               ▲       ▲

The characters used for the markers can be defined in your configuration file as chr_old (the character used as marker under removed characters) and chr_new (the character used as marker under added characters).

If --ellipsis is also in effect and either the chr_eli is longer than one character or --verbose level is over 2, this option is automatically disabled.

--ascii -a

Use (colored) ASCII indicators instead of Unicode. The default indicators are Unicode characters that stand out better. The markers will have the same color as added or deleted text.

For the vertical markers (-m) that would look like:

 5,5c5,5
 -Sat Dec 18 07:08:33 1998,I.O.D.U.,,756194433,1442539
 -               ^       ^
 +Sat Dec 18 07:00:33 1993,I.O.D.U.,,756194433,1442539
 +               ^       ^

For the positional indicators, I did consider using U+034e (COMBINING UPWARDS ARROW BELOW), but as most terminals are probably unable to show it due to line height changes, I did not pursue the idea.

--pink -p

Change the default red for deleted text to the color closest to pink that is supported by Term::ANSIColor: magenta.

--reverse -r

Reverse/invert the foreground and background for the colored indicators.

If the foreground color has bold, it will be stripped from the new background color.

--swap -s

Swap the colors for new and old.

--list-colors

List available colors and exit.

--no-colors

Disable all colors. Useful for redirecting the diff output to a file that is to be included in documentation.

This is the default if the environment variable $NO_COLOR has a true value or if the environment variable $CLICOLOR is set to a false value.  If set, $CLICOLOR_FORCE will overrule the default of $NO_COLOR.

--old=color

Define the foreground color for deleted text.

--new=color

Define the foreground color for added text.

--bg=color

Define the background color for changed text.

--index --idx -I

Prefix position indicators with an index.

 [001] 5,5c5,5
 -Sat Dec 18 07:08:33 1998,I.O.D.U.,,756194433,1442539
 +Sat Dec 18 07:00:33 1993,I.O.D.U.,,756194433,1442539

If a positive number is passed (--index=4 or -I 4), display just the chunk with that index, using the verbose color:

This is useful in combination with --verbose.

--threshold=2 -t 2

Defines the number of lines a change block may differ before the fall-back of horizontal diff to vertical diff.

If a chunk describes a change, and the number of lines in the original block has fewer or more lines than the new block and that difference exceeds this threshold, ccdiff will fall-back to vertical diff.

--heuristics=n -h n

Defines the percentage of character-changes a change block may differ before the fall-back of horizontal diff to vertical diff.

This percentage is calculated as (characters removed + characters added) / (2 * characters unchanged)).

--ellipsis=n -e n

Defines the number of characters to keep on each side of a horizontal-equal segment. The default is 0, meaning do not compress.

If set to a positive number, and the length of a segment of equal characters inside a horizontal diff is longer than twice this value, the middle part is replaced with ┈ U02508 \N{BOX DRAWINGS LIGHT QUADRUPLE DASH HORIZONTAL} (instead of … U02026, as HORIZONTAL ELLIPSIS does not stand out enough).

With -u0me3 that would be like

 5,5c5,5
 -Sat┈07:08:33┈ 1998,I.┈539
 -        ▼        ▼
 +Sat┈07:00:33┈ 1993,I.┈539
 +        ▲        ▲

With -u0e3 -v2 like

 5,5c5,5
 -Sat↤9↦07:0↱0↰:33 199↱3↰,I.↤23↦539
 - -- verbose : DIGIT ZERO, DIGIT THREE
 +Sat↤9↦07:0↱8↰:33 199↱8↰,I.↤23↦539
 + -- verbose : DIGIT EIGHT, DIGIT EIGHT

The text used for the replaced text can be defined in your configuration file as chr_eli and/or chr_eli_v.

--ignore-case -i

Ignore case on comparison.

--ignore-all-space -w

Ignore all white-space changes. This will set all options -b, -Z, -E, and -B.

--ignore-trailing-space -Z

Ignore changes in trailing white-space (tabs and spaces).

--ignore-ws|ignore-space-change -b

Ignore changes in horizontal white-space (tabs and spaces). This does not include white-space changes that split non-white-space or remove white-space between two non-white-space elements.

--ignore-tab-expansion -E

NYI

--ignore-blank-lines -B

Just Partly Implemented (WIP)

Configuration files

In order to be able to overrule the defaults set in ccdiff, one can set options specific for this login. The following option files are looked for in this order:

 - $HOME/ccdiff.rc
 - $HOME/.ccdiffrc
 - $HOME/.config/ccdiff

and evaluated in that order. Any options specified in a file later in that chain will overwrite previously set options.

Option files are only read and evaluated if they are not empty and not writable by others than the owner.

The syntax of the file is one option per line, where leading and trailing white-space is ignored. If that line then starts with one of the options listed below, followed by optional white-space followed by either an = or a :, followed by optional white-space and the values, the value is assigned to the option. The values no and false (case insensitive) are aliases for 0. The values yes and true are aliases to -1 (-1 being a true value).

Between parens is the corresponding command-line option.

unified (-u)

If you prefer unified-diff over old-style diff by default, set this to the desired number of context lines:

 unified : 3

The default is undefined

markers (-m)
 markers : false

Defines if markers should be used under changed characters. The default is to use colors only. The -m command line option will toggle the option when set from a configuration file.

ascii (-a)
 ascii   : false

Defines to use ASCII markers instead of Unicode markers. The default is to use Unicode markers.

reverse (-r)
 reverse : false

Defines if changes are displayed as foreground-color over background-color or background-color over foreground-color. The default is false, so it will color the changes with the appropriate color (new or old) over the default background color.

swap (-s)
 swap    : false

Swap the colors for new and old.

new (--new)
 new     : green

Defines the color to be used for added text. The default is green.

The color none is also accepted and disables this color.

Any color accepted by Term::ANSIColor is allowed. Any other color will result in a warning. This option can include bold either as prefix or as suffix.

This option may also be specified as

 new-color
 new_color
 new-colour
 new_colour
old (--old)
 old     : red

Defines the color to be used for deleted text. The default is red.

The color none is also accepted and disables this color.

Any color accepted by Term::ANSIColor is allowed. Any other color will result in a warning. This option can include bold either as prefix or as suffix.

This option may also be specified as

 old-color
 old_color
 old-colour
 old_colour
bg (--bg)
 bg      : white

Defines the color to be used as background for changed text. The default is white.

The color none is also accepted and disables this color.

Any color accepted by Term::ANSIColor is allowed. Any other color will result in a warning. The bold attribute is not allowed.

This option may also be specified as

 bg-color
 bg_color
 bg-colour
 bg_colour
 background
 background-color
 background_color
 background-colour
 background_colour
header (-H --header --HC=color --header-color=color)
 header  : 1
 header  : blue_on_white

Defines if a header is displayed above the diff (default is 1), supported colors are allowed.

If the value is a valid supported color, it will show the header in that color scheme.  To disable the header set it to 0 in the RC file or use --no-header as a command line argument.

verbose
 verbose : cyan

Defines the color to be used as color for the verbose tag. The default is cyan. This color will only be used under --verbose.

The color none is also accepted and disables this color.

Any color accepted by Term::ANSIColor is allowed. Any other color will result in a warning.

This option may also be specified as

 verbose-color
 verbose_color
 verbose-colour
 verbose_colour
utf8 (-U)
 utf8    : yes

Defines whether all I/O is to be interpreted as UTF-8. The default is no.

This option may also be specified as

 unicode
 utf
 utf-8
index (-I)
 index   : no

Defines if the position indication for a change chunk is prefixed with an index number. The default is no. The index is 1-based.

Without this option, the position indication would be like

 5,5c5,5
 19,19d18
 42a42,42

with this option, it would be

 [001] 5,5c5,5
 [002] 19,19d18
 [005] 42a42,42

When this option contains a positive integer, ccdiff will only show the diff chunk with that index.

emacs
 emacs   : no

If this option is yes/true, calling ccdiff with just one single argument, and that argument being an existing file, the arguments will act as

 $ ccdiff file~ file

if file~ exists.

threshold (-t)
 threshold : 2

Defines the number of lines a change block may differ before the fall-back of horizontal diff to vertical diff.

heuristics (-h)
 heuristics : 40

Defines the percentage of character-changes a change block may differ before the fall-back of horizontal diff to vertical diff. The default is undefined, meaning no fallback based on heuristics.

ellipsis (-e)
 ellipsis : 0

Defines the number of characters to keep on each side of a horizontal-equal segment. The default is 0, meaning to not compress. See also chr_eli.

chr_old
 chr_old : U+25BC

Defines the character used to indicate the position of removed text on the line below the text when option -m is in effect.

chr_new
 chr_new : U+25B2

Defines the character used to indicate the position of added text on the line below the text when option -m is in effect.

chr_cml
 chr_cml : U+21B1

Defines the character used to indicate the starting position of changed text in a line when verbose level is 3 and up.

chr_cmr
 chr_cmr : U+21B0

Defines the character used to indicate the ending position of changed text in a line when verbose level is 3 and up.

chr_eli
 chr_eli : U+21B0

Defines the character used to indicate omitted text in large unchanged text when --ellipsis/-e is in effect.

This character is not equally well visible on all terminals or in all fonts, so you might want to change it to something that stands out better in your environment. Possible suggestions:

 … U+2026 HORIZONTAL ELLIPSIS
 ‴ U+2034 TRIPLE PRIME
 ‷ U+2037 REVERSED TRIPLE PRIME
 ↔ U+2194 LEFT RIGHT ARROW
 ↭ U+21ad LEFT RIGHT WAVE ARROW
 ↮ U+21ae LEFT RIGHT ARROW WITH STROKE
 ↹ U+21b9 LEFTWARDS ARROW TO BAR OVER RIGHTWARDS ARROW TO BAR
 ⇄ U+21c4 RIGHTWARDS ARROW OVER LEFTWARDS ARROW
 ⇆ U+21c6 LEFTWARDS ARROW OVER RIGHTWARDS ARROW
 ⇎ U+21ce LEFT RIGHT DOUBLE ARROW WITH STROKE
 ⇔ U+21d4 LEFT RIGHT DOUBLE ARROW
 ⇹ U+21f9 LEFT RIGHT ARROW WITH VERTICAL STROKE
 ⇼ U+21fc LEFT RIGHT ARROW WITH DOUBLE VERTICAL STROKE
 ⇿ U+21ff LEFT RIGHT OPEN-HEADED ARROW
 ≋ U+224b TRIPLE TILDE
 ┄ U+2504 BOX DRAWINGS LIGHT TRIPLE DASH HORIZONTAL
 ┅ U+2505 BOX DRAWINGS HEAVY TRIPLE DASH HORIZONTAL
 ┈ U+2508 BOX DRAWINGS LIGHT QUADRUPLE DASH HORIZONTAL
 ┉ U+2509 BOX DRAWINGS HEAVY QUADRUPLE DASH HORIZONTAL
 ⧻ U+29fb TRIPLE PLUS
 ⬌ U+2b0c LEFT RIGHT BLACK ARROW
chr_eli_v
 chr_eli_v : U+21A4U+21A6

When using --ellipsis with --verbose level 2 or up, the single character indicator will be replaced with this character. If it is 2 characters wide, the length of the compressed part is put between the characters.

A suggested alternative might be U+21E4U+21E5

Git integration

You can use ccdiff to show diffs in git. It may work like this:

 $ git config --global diff.tool ccdiff
 $ git config --global difftool.prompt false
 $ git config --global difftool.ccdiff.cmd 'ccdiff --utf-8 -u -r $LOCAL $REMOTE'
 $ git difftool SHA~..SHA
 $ wget https://github.com/Tux/App-ccdiff/raw/master/Files/git-ccdiff \
    -O ~/bin/git-ccdiff
 $ perl -pi -e 's{/pro/bin/perl}{/usr/bin/env perl}' ~/bin/git-ccdiff
 $ chmod 755 ~/bin/git-ccdiff
 $ git ccdiff SHA

Of course you can use curl instead of wget and you can choose your own (fixed) path to perl instead of using /usr/bin/env.

From then on you can do

 $ git ccdiff
 $ git ccdiff 5c5a39f2

Caveats

Due to the implementation, where both sides of the comparison are completely kept in memory, this tool might not be able to deal with (very) large datasets.

Speed

There are situations where Algorithm::Diff takes considerably more time compared to e.g. GNU diff. Installing Algorithm::Diff::XS will make ccdiff a lot faster. ccdiff will choose Algorithm::Diff::XS if available.

See Also

Algorithm::Diff::XS, Algorithm::Diff, Text::Diff

Author

H.Merijn Brand

Info

2024-07-18 perl v5.40.0 User Contributed Perl Documentation