Open the file for writing. In the shell, this is done with an output redirection. You can redirect the shell's standard output by putting the redirection on the exec
built-in with no argument.
set -e
exec >shell.out # exit if shell.out can't be opened
echo "This will appear in shell.out"
Make sure you haven't set the noclobber
option (which is useful interactively but often unusable in scripts). Use >
if you want to truncate the file if it exists, and >>
if you want to append instead.
If you only want to test permissions, you can run : >foo.out
to create the file (or truncate it if it exists).
If you only want some commands to write to the file, open it on some other descriptor, then redirect as needed.
set -e
exec 3>foo.out
echo "This will appear on the standard output"
echo >&3 "This will appear in foo.out"
echo "This will appear both on standard output and in foo.out" | tee /dev/fd/3
(/dev/fd
is not supported everywhere; it's available at least on Linux, *BSD, Solaris and Cygwin.)