no, but you could just combine the files yourself externally (even automatically with a script or however you want).
just combine the files with cat/type and then unique the lines
or (keep the same order):
The problem here is that just because a rule line is unique, doesn't mean that 2 "different" rules can't do exactly the same thing (there are some github projects that try to detect that, but it's often not a huge/real problem, it just removes a very small amount of lines usually)
just combine the files with cat/type and then unique the lines
Code:
cat *.rule | sort -u > all_rules.rule
or (keep the same order):
Code:
cat *.rule | ./duplicut -o all_rules.rule
The problem here is that just because a rule line is unique, doesn't mean that 2 "different" rules can't do exactly the same thing (there are some github projects that try to detect that, but it's often not a huge/real problem, it just removes a very small amount of lines usually)