Say I have too programs a
and b
that I can run with ./a
and ./b
.
Is it possible to diff their outputs without first writing to temporary files?
Use <(command)
to pass one command's output to another program as if it were a file name. Bash pipes the program's output to a pipe and passes a file name like /dev/fd/63
to the outer command.
diff <(./a) <(./b)
Similarly you can use >(command)
if you want to pipe something into a command.
This is called "Process Substitution" in Bash's man page.
While process substitution is not POSIX, it is supported by bash, ksh, and zsh. (ref: SE's network answer by John1024 or comment by Gilles 'SO- stop being evil')