To add to Ron's post, Plan 9's cpu exports the origination's namespace to the destination; by convention it is mounted on /mnt/term at destination. host1% cpu -h host2 host2% diff file2 /mnt/term/usr/me/file1 On Thu, May 16, 2024 at 10:09 AM ron minnich wrote: > " The 9import tool allows an arbitrary file on a remote system, with the > capability of running the Plan 9 exportfs(4) service, to be imported into > the local name space. Usually file is a directory, so the complete file > tree under the directory is made available." > https://9fans.github.io/plan9port/man/man4/9import.html > > 9import host1 / /tmp/host1 > 9import host2 /tmp/host2 > diff /tmp/host1/a/b/c /tmp/host2/a/b/c > (or whatever command you want that works with files. No need for stuff > like 'rdiff' etc.) > > stuff you take for granted on some systems ... > > I have the plan 9 cpu command working (written in Go) and I think it's > time I get import working more widely, it's just too useful. > > On Thu, May 16, 2024 at 2:01 AM wrote: > >> Ralph Corderoy wrote: >> >> > > Maybe >> > > >> > > diff -u <(ssh host1 cat file1) <(ssh host2 cat file2) >> > >> > This is annoyingly noisy if the remote SSH server has sshd_config(5)'s >> > ‘Banner’ set which spews the contents of a file before authentication, >> > e.g. the pointless >> > >> > [....] >> > >> > It appears on stderr so doesn't upset the diff but does clutter. >> >> All true, I didn't think about that. >> >> > And discarding stderr is too sloppy. >> >> But the author of a personal script knows his/her remote machines >> and can decide if >> >> diff -u <(ssh host1 cat file1 2>/dev/null) <(ssh host2 cat file2 >> 2>/dev/null) >> >> is appropriate or not. >> >> My main point was that the problem is easily solved with a >> few lines of shell, so no need for a utility, especially one >> written in C or some other compiled language. >> >> Thanks, >> >> Arnold >> >