-.TH "FINDDUP" "1.1" "Mar 2010" "Francois Fleuret" "User Commands"
+.TH "FINDDUP" "1.1" "Apr 2010" "Francois Fleuret" "User Commands"
\" This man page was written by Francois Fleuret <francois@fleuret.org>
\" and is distributed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike
With two directories, it prints either the files common to both DIR1
and DIR2 or, with the `not:' prefix, the ones present in DIR1 and not
-in DIR2. The and: prefix is assumed by default and necessary only if
+in DIR2. The `and:' prefix is assumed by default and necessary only if
you have a directory name starting with `not:'.
This command compares files by first comparing their sizes, hence goes
.SH "OPTIONS"
.TP
+\fB-v\fR, \fB--version\fR
+print the version number and exit
+.TP
\fB-h\fR, \fB--help\fR
-display help and exit
+print the help and exit
.TP
\fB-d\fR, \fB--ignore-dots\fR
ignore files and directories starting with a dot
.TP
\fB-i\fR, \fB--same-inodes-are-different\fR
files with same inode are considered as different
+.TP
+\fB-e \fI<command>\fR, \fB--exec \fI<command>\fR
+execute the provided command for each group of identical files, with
+their names as arguments
.SH "BUGS"
None known, probably many. Valgrind does not complain though.
+Since files with same inodes are considered as different when looking
+for duplicates in a single directory, there are weird behaviors -- not
+bugs -- with hard links.
+
The current algorithm is dumb, as it does not use any hashing of the
file content.
.fi
List groups of files with same content which exist both in
\fB./tralala/\fR and \fB./cuicui/\fR. Do not show group IDs, instead
-write an empty lines between groups of files of same content.
+write empty lines between groups of files of same content.
.SH "AUTHOR"