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To redirect standard output to a truncated file in Bash, I know to use:

cmd > file.txt

To redirect standard output in Bash, appending to a file, I know to use:

cmd >> file.txt

To redirect both standard output and standard error to a truncated file, I know to use:

cmd &> file.txt

How do I redirect both standard output and standard error appending to a file? cmd &>> file.txt did not work for me.

3
  • 64
    I would like to note that &>outfile is a Bash (and others) specific code and not portable. The way to go portable (similar to the appending answers) always was and still is >outfile 2>&1
    – TheBonsai
    May 18, 2009 at 4:48
  • 11
    … and ordering of that is important. Jun 19, 2020 at 12:08
  • 2
    If you care about the ordering of the content of the two streams, see @ed-morton 's answer to a similar question, here.
    – Ana Nimbus
    Mar 23, 2022 at 13:16

9 Answers 9

2548
cmd >>file.txt 2>&1

Bash executes the redirects from left to right as follows:

  1. >>file.txt: Open file.txt in append mode and redirect stdout there.
  2. 2>&1: Redirect stderr to "where stdout is currently going". In this case, that is a file opened in append mode. In other words, the &1 reuses the file descriptor which stdout currently uses.
9
  • 40
    works great! but is there a way to make sense of this or should I treat this like an atomic bash construct?
    – flybywire
    May 18, 2009 at 8:15
  • 199
    It's simple redirection, redirection statements are evaluated, as always, from left to right. >>file : Red. STDOUT to file (append mode) (short for 1>>file) 2>&1 : Red. STDERR to "where stdout goes" Note that the interpretion "redirect STDERR to STDOUT" is wrong.
    – TheBonsai
    May 18, 2009 at 8:55
  • 34
    It says "append output (stdout, file descriptor 1) onto file.txt and send stderr (file descriptor 2) to the same place as fd1". May 18, 2009 at 9:07
  • 5
    @TheBonsai however what if I need to redirect STDERR to another file but appending? is this possible?
    – arod
    Jun 2, 2013 at 22:26
  • 49
    if you do cmd >>file1 2>>file2 it should achieve what you want. Sep 6, 2013 at 21:24
490

There are two ways to do this, depending on your Bash version.

The classic and portable (Bash pre-4) way is:

cmd >> outfile 2>&1

A nonportable way, starting with Bash 4 is

cmd &>> outfile

(analog to &> outfile)

For good coding style, you should

  • decide if portability is a concern (then use the classic way)
  • decide if portability even to Bash pre-4 is a concern (then use the classic way)
  • no matter which syntax you use, don't change it within the same script (confusion!)

If your script already starts with #!/bin/sh (no matter if intended or not), then the Bash 4 solution, and in general any Bash-specific code, is not the way to go.

Also remember that Bash 4 &>> is just shorter syntax — it does not introduce any new functionality or anything like that.

The syntax is (beside other redirection syntax) described in the Bash hackers wiki.

5
  • 12
    I prefer &>> as it's consistent with &> and >>. It's also easier to read 'append output and errors to this file' than 'send errors to output, append output to this file'. Note while Linux generally has a current version of bash, OS X, at the time of writing, still requires bash 4 to manually installed via homebrew etc. May 20, 2013 at 9:30
  • 1
    I like it more because it is shorter and only tweoi places per line, so what would for example zsh make out of "&>>"?
    – Phillipp
    Feb 17, 2016 at 14:20
  • 2
    Also important to note, that in a cron job, you have to use the pre-4 syntax, even if your system has Bash 4.
    – hyperknot
    May 18, 2017 at 10:03
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    @zsero cron doesn't use bash at all... it uses sh. You can change the default shell by prepending SHELL=/bin/bash to the crontab -e file.
    – Ray Foss
    Jun 5, 2018 at 20:45
  • &>> and &> are both Bash extensions and so less portable; the "consistent" approach would be to avoid both. Mar 6 at 2:44
120

In Bash you can also explicitly specify your redirects to different files:

cmd >log.out 2>log_error.out

Appending would be:

cmd >>log.out 2>>log_error.out
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  • 13
    Redirecting two streams to the same file using your first option will cause the first one to write "on top" of the second, overwriting some or all of the contents. Use cmd >> log.out 2> log.out instead.
    – Orestis P.
    Dec 11, 2015 at 14:33
  • 7
    Thanks for catching that; you're right, one will clobber the other. However, your command doesn't work either. I think the only way to write to the same file is as has been given before cmd >log.out 2>&1. I'm editing my answer to remove the first example.
    – Aaron R.
    Dec 11, 2015 at 15:36
  • 4
    The reason cmd > my.log 2> my.log doesn't work is that the redirects are evaluated from left to right and > my.log says "create new file my.log replacing existing files and redirect stdout to that file" and after that has been already done, the 2> my.log is evaluated and it says "create new file my.log replacing existing files and redirect stderr to that file". As UNIX allows deleting open files, the stdout is now logged to file that used to be called my.log but has since been deleted. Once the last filehandle to that file is closed, the file contents will be also deleted. Jul 8, 2021 at 7:32
  • 2
    On the other hand, cmd > my.log 2>&1 works because > my.log says "create new file my.log replacing existing files and redirect stdout to that file" and after that has been already done, the 2>&1 says "point file handle 2 to file handle 1". And according to POSIX rules, file handle 1 is always stdout and 2 is always stderr so stderr then points to already opened file my.log from first redirect. Notice that syntax >& doesn't create or modify actual files so there's no need for >>&. (If first redirect had been >> my.log then file had been simply opened in append mode.) Jul 8, 2021 at 7:40
  • @MikkoRantalainen > creates a new file if it doesn't already exist; otherwise it truncates an existing file. The reason that cmd > my.log 2> my.log does not work as expected has almost nothing to do with the fact that the file is truncated twice (because both of those occur before cmd starts), and everything to do with the two streams having independent output cursors, so that whichever writes a given byte last wins for that byte. On the other hand, using >> means that every write goes to the current end of file. Mar 6 at 2:49
105

This should work fine:

your_command 2>&1 | tee -a file.txt

It will store all logs in file.txt as well as dump them in the terminal.

2
  • 11
    This is the correct answer if you want to see the output in the terminal, too. However, this was not the question originally asked. Apr 15, 2020 at 8:04
  • tee with pipe take lot more time than direct redirection. It works but slowly, with more memory used and extrat thread Jun 20, 2023 at 11:21
76

In Bash 4 (as well as Z shell (zsh) 4.3.11):

cmd &>> outfile

just out of box.

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  • 13
    @mikemaccana: TheBonsai's answer shows bash 4 solution since 2009
    – jfs
    Mar 27, 2014 at 17:56
  • 3
    Why does this answer even exist when it's included in TheBonsai's answer? Please consider deleting it. You'll get a disciplined badge. Jun 14, 2021 at 6:23
35

Try this:

You_command 1> output.log  2>&1

Your usage of &> x.file does work in Bash 4. Sorry for that: (

Here comes some additional tips.

0, 1, 2, ..., 9 are file descriptors in bash.

0 stands for standard input, 1 stands for standard output, 2 stands for standard error. 3~9 is spare for any other temporary usage.

Any file descriptor can be redirected to other file descriptor or file by using operator > or >>(append).

Usage: <file_descriptor> > <filename | &file_descriptor>

Please see the reference in Chapter 20. I/O Redirection.

6
  • 3
    Your example will do something different than the OP asked for: It will redirect the stderr of You_command to stdout and the stdout of You_command to the file output.log. Additionally it will not append to the file but it will overwrite it. May 31, 2014 at 12:38
  • 3
    Correct: File descriptor could be any values which is more than 3 for all other files.
    – Itachi
    Dec 25, 2014 at 6:46
  • 8
    Your answer shows the most common output redirection error: redirecting STDERR to where STDOUT is currently pointing and only after that redirecting STDOUT to file. This will not cause STDERR to be redirected to the same file. Order of the redirections matters. Jan 4, 2015 at 12:51
  • 3
    does it mean, i should firstly redirect STDERROR to STDOUT, then redirect STDOUT to a file. 1 > output.log 2>&1 Mar 4, 2015 at 6:10
  • 3
    @Quintus.Zhou Yup. Your version redirects err to out, and at the same time out to file. Mar 8, 2015 at 23:22
20

Some remarks and useful tricks

Introduction

From What does " 2>&1 " mean?, I will use in this answer the command:

ls -ld /tmp /tnt

for populating simultaneously both STDIN and STDERR. (In the hope you don't have any entry in your root, called tnt.)

Redirections from script himself

You could plan redirections from the script itself:

#!/bin/bash

exec 1>>logfile.txt
exec 2>&1

/bin/ls -ld /tmp /tnt

Running this will create/append logfile.txt, containing:

/bin/ls: cannot access '/tnt': No such file or directory
drwxrwxrwt 2 root root 4096 Apr  5 11:20 /tmp

Or

#!/bin/bash

exec 1>>logfile.txt
exec 2>>errfile.txt

/bin/ls -ld /tmp /tnt

While create or append standard output to logfile.txt and create or append errors output to errfile.txt.

Log to many different files

You could create two different logfiles, appending to one overall log and recreating another last log:

#!/bin/bash

if [ -e lastlog.txt ] ;then
    mv -f lastlog.txt lastlog.old
fi
exec 1> >(tee -a overall.log /dev/tty >lastlog.txt)
exec 2>&1

ls -ld /tnt /tmp

Running this script will

  • if lastlog.txt already exist, rename them to lastlog.old (overwriting lastlog.old if they exist).
  • create a new lastlog.txt.
  • append everything to overall.log
  • output everything to the terminal.

Simple and combined logs

#!/bin/bash

[ -e lastlog.txt ] && mv -f lastlog.txt lastlog.old
[ -e lasterr.txt ] && mv -f lasterr.txt lasterr.old

exec 1> >(tee -a overall.log combined.log /dev/tty >lastlog.txt)
exec 2> >(tee -a overall.err combined.log /dev/tty >lasterr.txt)

ls -ld /tnt /tmp

So you have

  • lastlog.txt last run log file
  • lasterr.txt last run error file
  • lastlog.old previous run log file
  • lasterr.old previous run error file
  • overall.log appended overall log file
  • overall.err appended overall error file
  • combined.log appended overall error and log combined file.
  • still output to the terminal

Same, using timestamped log filenames:

#!/bin/bash

sTime=${EPOCHSECONDS}
for pre in log err; do
   printf -v ${pre}file '%s-%(%Y%m%d%H%M%S)T-%08x.txt' "$pre" "$sTime" $$
done

exec 1> >(tee -a overall.log combined.log /dev/tty >"$logfile")
exec 2> >(tee -a overall.err combined.log /dev/tty >"$errfile")

ls -ld /t{nt,mp}
  • I use $sTime in order to ensure both file will present exactly same timestamp. (If $EPOCHSECONDS is invoked two times, they could differ between each expansion!)
  • I add formed 8 characters hexadecimal representation of currend pid: $$ in order to ensure unicity.

after 3rd run, you must found 9 files:

ls -ltr
-rw-r--r--  1 user user   49 19 nov 10:36 log-20231119103611-00120649.txt
-rw-r--r--  1 user user   73 19 nov 10:36 err-20231119103611-00120649.txt
-rw-r--r--  1 user user   73 19 nov 10:36 err-20231119103634-001207b8.txt
-rw-r--r--  1 user user   49 19 nov 10:36 log-20231119103634-001207b8.txt
-rw-r--r--  1 user user  147 19 nov 10:40 overall.log
-rw-r--r--  1 user user  219 19 nov 10:40 overall.err
-rw-r--r--  1 user user   49 19 nov 10:40 log-20231119104000-001216f0.txt
-rw-r--r--  1 user user   73 19 nov 10:40 err-20231119104000-001216f0.txt
-rw-r--r--  1 user user  366 19 nov 10:40 combined.log

And for interactive session, use stdbuf:

Regarding Fonic' comment and after some test, I have to agree: with tee, stdbuf is useless. But ...

If you plan to use this in *interactive* shell, you must tell `tee` to not buffering his input/output:
# Source this to multi-log your session
[ -e lasterr.txt ] && mv -f lasterr.txt lasterr.old
[ -e lastlog.txt ] && mv -f lastlog.txt lastlog.old
exec 2> >(exec stdbuf -i0 -o0 tee -a overall.err combined.log /dev/tty >lasterr.txt)
exec 1> >(exec stdbuf -i0 -o0 tee -a overall.log combined.log /dev/tty >lastlog.txt)

Once sourced this, you could try:

ls -ld /tnt /tmp

More complex sample

From my 3 remarks about how to Convert Unix timestamp to a date string

I've used more complex command to parse and reassemble squid's log in real time: As each line begin by an UNIX EPOCH with milliseconds, I split the line on 1st dot, add @ symbol before EPOCH SECONDS to pass them to date -f - +%F\ %T then reassemble date's output and the rest of line with a dot by using paste -d ..

exec {datesfd}<> <(:)
tail -f /var/log/squid/access.log |
    tee >(
        exec sed -u 's/^\([0-9]\+\)\..*/@\1/'|
            stdbuf -o0 date -f - +%F\ %T >&$datesfd
    ) |
        sed -u 's/^[0-9]\+\.//' |
        paste -d . /dev/fd/$datesfd -

With date, stdbuf was required...

Some explanations about exec and stdbuf commands:

  • Running forks by using $(...) or <(...) is done by running subshell wich will execute binaries in another subshell (subsubshell). The exec command tell shell that there are not further command in script to be run, so binary (stdbuf ... tee) will be executed as replacement process, at same level (no need to reserve more memory for running another sub-process).

    From bash's man page (man -P'less +/^\ *exec\ ' bash):

        exec [-cl] [-a name] [command [arguments]]
               If  command  is  specified,  it  replaces the
               shell.  No new process is created....
    

    This is not really needed, but reduce system footprint.

  • From stdbuf's man page:

    NAME
           stdbuf  -  Run COMMAND, with modified buffering
           operations for its standard streams.
    

    This will tell system to use unbuffered I/O for tee command. So all outputs will be updated immediately, when some input are coming.

5
  • 1
    See further: Pipe output to two different commands, then follow link to more detailled answer on this duplicate in comment. Nov 11, 2021 at 18:14
  • 4
    Could you explain how exec stdbuf helps in this context? The man page of stdbuf states that if does not have any effect on tee?
    – Fonic
    Sep 5, 2022 at 8:25
  • 3
    @Fonic Some explanations about exec and stdbuf commands, published! Sep 5, 2022 at 8:51
  • 1
    Thanks, but still: the man page of stdbuf states that tee won't be affected by it, so what's the point? Quote: NOTE: If COMMAND adjusts the buffering of its standard streams ('tee' does for example) then that will override corresponding changes by 'stdbuf'
    – Fonic
    Sep 5, 2022 at 20:12
  • 1
    @Fonic Sorry for delay... I haved some tests to do... Answer edited! (Your comment is mentioned) Jan 21, 2023 at 16:01
19

Another approach:

If using older versions of Bash where &>> isn't available, you also can do:

(cmd 2>&1) >> file.txt

This spawns a subshell, so it's less efficient than the traditional approach of cmd >> file.txt 2>&1, and it consequently won't work for commands that need to modify the current shell (e.g. cd, pushd), but this approach feels more natural and understandable to me:

  1. Redirect standard error to standard output.
  2. Redirect the new standard output by appending to a file.

Also, the parentheses remove any ambiguity of order, especially if you want to pipe standard output and standard error to another command instead.

To avoid starting a subshell, you instead could use curly braces instead of parentheses to create a group command:

{ cmd 2>&1; } >> file.txt

(Note that a semicolon (or newline) is required to terminate the group command.)

4
  • 2
    This implementation causes one extra process for system to run. Using syntax cmd >> file 2>&1 works in all shells and does not need an extra process to run. Apr 15, 2020 at 8:06
  • 2
    @MikkoRantalainen I already explained that it spawns a subshell and is less efficient. The point of this approach is that if efficiency isn't a big deal (and it rarely is), this way is easier to remember and harder to get wrong.
    – jamesdlin
    Apr 15, 2020 at 9:21
  • 3
    @MikkoRantalainen I've updated my answer with a variant that avoids spawning a subshell.
    – jamesdlin
    Jun 28, 2020 at 4:13
  • If you truly cannot remember if the syntax is cmd >> file 2>&1 or cmd 2>&1 >> file I think it would be easier to do cmd 2>&1 | cat >> file instead of using braces or parenthesis. For me, once you understand that the implementation of cmd >> file 2>&1 is literally "redirect STDOUT to file" followed by "redirect STDERR to whatever file STDOUT is currently pointing to" (which is obviously file after the first redirect), it's immediately obvious which order you put the redirects. UNIX does not support redirecting to a stream, only to file descriptor pointed by a stream. Jun 29, 2020 at 6:58
-1

This is terribly good!

Redirect the output to log file and stdout within the current script.

Refer to https://stackoverflow.com/a/314678/5449346, very simple and clean, it redirects all the script's output to the log file and stdout, including the scripts called in the script:

exec > >(tee -a "logs/logdata.log") 2>&1 prints the logs on the screen as well as writes them into a file – shriyog Feb 2, 2017 at 9:20

Typically we would place one of these at or near the top of the script. Scripts that parse their command lines would do the redirection after parsing.

Send stdout to a file

exec > file with stderr

exec > file
exec 2>&1 append both stdout and stderr to file

exec >> file exec 2>&1 As Jonathan Leffler mentioned in his comment:

exec has two separate jobs. The first one is to replace the currently executing shell (script) with a new program. The other is changing the I/O redirections in the current shell. This is distinguished by having no argument to exec.

1
  • This should probably be a comment rather than an answer.
    – tripleee
    Jan 15 at 7:35

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