SYNOPSIS
smidiff [ -Vhsm ] [ -c file ] [ -l level ] [ -i error-pattern ] [ -p module ] oldmodule newmoduleDESCRIPTION
The smidiff program is used to check differences between a pair of SMI MIB modules or SPPI PIB modules. E.g., it can be used to detect changes in updated MIB modules that can cause interoperability problems with existing implementations. SMIv1/v2 and SPPI style MIB/PIB modules are supported.Note that conformance statements are currently not checked.
Messages describing the differences are written to the standard output channel while error and warning messages generated by the parser are written to the standard error channel.
OPTIONS
- -V, --version
- Show the smidump version and exit.
- -h, --help
- Show a help text and exit.
- -s, --severity
- Show the error severity in brackets before error messages.
- -m, --error-names
- Show the error names in braces before error messages.
- -c file, --config=file
- Read file instead of any other (global and user) configuration file.
- -p module, --preload=module
- Preload the module module before reading the main module(s). This may be helpful if an incomplete main module misses to import some definitions.
- -l level, --level=level
- Report errors and warnings up to the given severity level. See the smilint(1) manual page for a description of the error levels. The default error level is 3.
- -i prefix, --ignore=prefix
- Ignore all errors that have a tag which matches prefix.
- oldmodule
- The original module.
- newmodule
- The updated module.
If a module argument represents a path name (identified by containing at least one dot or slash character), this is assumed to be the exact file to read. Otherwise, if a module is identified by its plain module name, it is searched according to libsmi internal rules. See smi_config(3) for more details.
AUTHOR
(C) 2001 T. Klie, TU Braunschweig, Germany <[email protected]>(C) 2001 J. Schoenwaelder, TU Braunschweig, Germany <[email protected]>
and contributions by many other people.