Am 01. Feb, 2017 schwätzte Nathan so: moin moin, > You mentioned grep, but did you try 'strings' ? > Does that even exist any more? Yeah, strings is useful, but in this case I specifically need to check the binary content, so strings pulling the text out for me doesn't solve the primary issue. strings was useful for testing. As cat -v and grep --text. Perhaps I should just throw the image through aalib :). ciao, der.hans > On 2017-02-01 01:29, der.hans wrote: >> moin moin, >> >> I have some dynamically generated PDFs coming from a pool of web servers. >> >> Each server should be generating a PDF that looks exactly the same as from >> all the other servers. >> >> The PDF generation includes sticking in a few timestamps and possibly some >> hostnames or other dynamic content. The dynamic content eliminates the >> option of just using checksums to verify the output file is the same from >> all of the web servers. >> >> Any suggestions on how I can write a command line check. Needing to >> install a script would be far less than ideal in this situation. Funnily >> enough, needing to install a package would be less of an issue in this >> particular case, especially something in CentOS 6. >> >> Me being me, I did try to just grep out the lines with timestamps :). That >> didn't quite work :(. That probably indicates the files aren't as exactly >> the same as I hope. >> >> I didn't see a pdf2sanity tool. pdf2text won't really work as I need to >> verify the graphic content and hopefully the PDF wrapper. >> >> ciao, >> >> der.hans > > -- # http://www.LuftHans.com/ http://www.PhxLinux.org/ # When in doubt, choose the interesting. -- der.hans