Some tricks about redirection
Some syntax particularity about this may have important behaviours. There is some little samples about redirections, STDERR, STDOUT and arguments ordering.
1 - Overwritting or appending?
Symbole > mean redirection.
> mean send to as a whole completed file, overwriting target if exist (see noclobber bash feature at #3 later).
>> mean send in addition to would append to target if exist.
Any case, the file would be created if they not exist.
2 - The shell command line is order dependant!!
For testing this, we need a simple command which will send something on both outputs:
$ ls -ld /tmp /tnt
ls: cannot access /tnt: No such file or directory
drwxrwxrwt 118 root root 196608 Jan 7 11:49 /tmp
$ ls -ld /tmp /tnt >/dev/null
ls: cannot access /tnt: No such file or directory
$ ls -ld /tmp /tnt 2>/dev/null
drwxrwxrwt 118 root root 196608 Jan 7 11:49 /tmp
(Expecting you don't have a directory named /tnt, of course ;). Well, we have it!!
So lets see:
$ ls -ld /tmp /tnt >/dev/null
ls: cannot access /tnt: No such file or directory
$ ls -ld /tmp /tnt >/dev/null 2>&1
$ ls -ld /tmp /tnt 2>&1 >/dev/null
ls: cannot access /tnt: No such file or directory
The last command line dump STDERR to the console, it seem not to be the expected behaviour... But...
If you want to make some post filtering about one ouput, the other or both:
$ ls -ld /tmp /tnt | sed 's/^.*$/<-- & --->/'
ls: cannot access /tnt: No such file or directory
<-- drwxrwxrwt 118 root root 196608 Jan 7 12:02 /tmp --->
$ ls -ld /tmp /tnt 2>&1 | sed 's/^.*$/<-- & --->/'
<-- ls: cannot access /tnt: No such file or directory --->
<-- drwxrwxrwt 118 root root 196608 Jan 7 12:02 /tmp --->
$ ls -ld /tmp /tnt >/dev/null | sed 's/^.*$/<-- & --->/'
ls: cannot access /tnt: No such file or directory
$ ls -ld /tmp /tnt >/dev/null 2>&1 | sed 's/^.*$/<-- & --->/'
$ ls -ld /tmp /tnt 2>&1 >/dev/null | sed 's/^.*$/<-- & --->/'
<-- ls: cannot access /tnt: No such file or directory --->
Notice that the last command line in this paragraph is exactly same as in previous paraghaph, where I wrote seem not to be the expected behaviour (so, this could even be an expected behaviour).
Well there is a little tricks about redirections, for
doing different operation on both ouputs:
$ ( ls -ld /tmp /tnt | sed 's/^/O: /' >&9 ) 9>&2 2>&1 | sed 's/^/E: /'
O: drwxrwxrwt 118 root root 196608 Jan 7 12:13 /tmp
E: ls: cannot access /tnt: No such file or directory
Nota: &9 descriptor would occur spontaneously because of ) 9>&2.
And finaly for such a cascading output formatting:
$ ((ls -ld /tmp /tnt |sed 's/^/O: /' >&9)9>&2 2>&1 |sed 's/^/E: /')2>&1| cat -n
1 O: drwxrwxrwt 118 root root 196608 Jan 7 12:29 /tmp
2 E: ls: cannot access /tnt: No such file or directory
Where STDOUT go through a specific filter, STDERR to another and finally both outputs merged go through a third command filter.
3 - A word about noclobber option and >| syntax
That's about overwritting:
While set -o noclobber instruct bash to not overwrite any existing file, the >| syntax let you pass through this limitation:
$ testfile=$(mktemp /tmp/testNoClobberDate-XXXXXX)
$ date > $testfile ; cat $testfile
Mon Jan 7 13:18:15 CET 2013
$ date > $testfile ; cat $testfile
Mon Jan 7 13:18:19 CET 2013
$ date > $testfile ; cat $testfile
Mon Jan 7 13:18:21 CET 2013
File is overwritted each time, well now:
$ set -o noclobber
$ date > $testfile ; cat $testfile
bash: /tmp/testNoClobberDate-WW1xi9: cannot overwrite existing file
Mon Jan 7 13:18:21 CET 2013
$ date > $testfile ; cat $testfile
bash: /tmp/testNoClobberDate-WW1xi9: cannot overwrite existing file
Mon Jan 7 13:18:21 CET 2013
Pass through with >|:
$ date >| $testfile ; cat $testfile
Mon Jan 7 13:18:58 CET 2013
$ date >| $testfile ; cat $testfile
Mon Jan 7 13:19:01 CET 2013
Unsetting this option and/or inquiring if already set.
$ set -o | grep noclobber
noclobber on
$ set +o noclobber
$ set -o | grep noclobber
noclobber off
$ date > $testfile ; cat $testfile
Mon Jan 7 13:24:27 CET 2013
$ rm $testfile
4 - Last trick and more...
For redirecting both output from a given command, we see that a right syntax could be:
$ ls -ld /tmp /tnt >/dev/null 2>&1
for this special case, there is a shortcut syntax: &>
$ ls -ld /tmp /tnt &>/dev/null
Nota: if 2>&1 exist, 1>&2 is a correct syntaxe too:
$ ls -ld /tmp /tnt 2>/dev/null 1>&2
4b- Now, I will let you think about:
$ ls -ld /tmp /tnt 2>&1 1>&2 | sed -e s/^/++/
++/bin/ls: cannot access /tnt: No such file or directory
++drwxrwxrwt 193 root root 196608 Feb 9 11:08 /tmp/
$ ls -ld /tmp /tnt 1>&2 2>&1 | sed -e s/^/++/
/bin/ls: cannot access /tnt: No such file or directory
drwxrwxrwt 193 root root 196608 Feb 9 11:08 /tmp/
4c- If you're interested in more informations
you could Read The Fine Manual by hitting:
man -Len -Pless\ +/^REDIRECTION bash
in a bash console ;-)