This is the command stag-diffp that can be run in the OnWorks free hosting provider using one of our multiple free online workstations such as Ubuntu Online, Fedora Online, Windows online emulator or MAC OS online emulator
PROGRAM:
NAME
stag-diff - finds the difference between two stag files
SYNOPSIS
stag-diff -ignore foo-id -ignore bar-id file1.xml file2.xml
DESCRIPTION
Compares two data trees and reports whether they match. If they do not match, the mismatch
is reported.
ARGUMENTS
-help|h
shows this document
-ignore|i ELEMENT
these nodes are ignored for the purposes of comparison. Note that attributes are
treated as elements, prefixed by the containing element id. For example, if you have
<foo ID="wibble">
And you wish to ignore the ID attribute, then you would use the switch
-ignore foo-ID
You can specify multiple elements to ignore like this
-i foo -i bar -i baz
You can also specify paths
-i foo/bar/bar-id
-parser|p FORMAT
which parser to use. The default is XML. This can also be autodetected by the file
suffix. Other alternatives are sxpr and itext. See Data::Stag for details.
-report|r ELEMENT
report mismatches as they occur on each element of type ELEMENT
multiple elements can be specified
-verbose|v
used in conjunction with the -report switch
shows the tree of the mismatching element
OUTPUT
If a mismatch is reported, a report is generated displaying the subpart of the tree that
could not be matched. This will look like this:
REASON: no_matching_node: annotation
no_matching_node: feature_set
no_matching_node: feature_span
no_matching_node: evidence
no_matching_node: evidence-id
data_mismatch(:15077290 ne :15077291): evidence-id AND evidence-id
Due to the nature of tree matching, it can be difficult to specify exactly how trees do
not match. To investigate this, you may need to use the -r and -v options. For the above
output, I would recommend using
stag-diff -r feature_span -v
ALGORITHM
Both trees are recursively traversed... see the actual code for how this works
The order of elements is not important; eg
<foo>
<bar>
<baz>1</baz>
</bar>
<bar>
<baz>2</baz>
</bar>
</foo>
matches
<foo>
<bar>
<baz>2</baz>
</bar>
<bar>
<baz>1</baz>
</bar>
</foo>
The recursive nature of this algorithm means that certain tree comparisons will explode
wrt time and memory. I think this will only happen with very deep trees where nodes high
up in the tree can only be differentiated by nodes low down in the tree.
Both trees are loaded into memory to begin with, so it may thrash with very large
documents
AUTHOR
Chris Mungall cjm at fruitfly dot org
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