9

I have two shell scripts, one that serves as the main "program" and another that serves as a "library."

In several places in the "program," I'll do something like: log "$thing" >> "$logfile", where log is a function defined in the "library."

# program.sh

logfile="log.txt"
stuff="hahah heheh hoho"

. library.sh 

for thing in $stuff; do
  log "$thing" >> "$logfile"
done

My question: Is there a way to redirect some of the output from the function back to the terminal without using stderr?

# library.sh

log () {

  # This gets written to the log
  echo "`date --rfc-3339=seconds`: $1"

  # How to write this to the terminal *without* using stderr?
  echo "Info: Message written to log." >&2

}

I want to avoid the use of stderr because in my actual program, there's an option to redirect errors to a file, but the messages I want to send to the terminal are informational, not errors, and should always show up on the terminal.

2 Answers 2

14

Open /dev/tty on another FD.

exec 0< /dev/null
exec 1> /dev/null
exec 2> /dev/null
exec 3> /dev/tty
echo 'Hello, World!' >&3 
10
  • interesting... can you explain what's happening? Also what's the point of the first three lines? It seems to work okay with just the last two. And, I suppose I should put the fourth line in program.sh rather than executing it each time log is called? Feb 23, 2012 at 0:16
  • 1
    The first three lines just demonstrate that the original descriptors are now useless. It's an easy stand-in for a more complicated program.
    – sarnold
    Feb 23, 2012 at 0:17
  • The first three are to show that the script does not have any other way of talking to the outside (e.g. are busy doing other things). I'd put the exec line in library.sh, but give it a higher number (say, 8 or so) just in case. Feb 23, 2012 at 0:18
  • 5
    If you just run man exec, you'll get the wrong page. man bash, and then search for the phrase it replaces the shell. (Searching for exec in the bash(1) manpage is a quick way to go nuts.)
    – sarnold
    Feb 23, 2012 at 0:27
  • 1
    @GGG: correct; any POSIX-compliant shell will provide an exec shell built-in. (Well, it doesn't have to be built-in, but providing it as an external program would be immensely difficult. The only reasonable implementation I can imagine is shell-builtin.) I just now remembered that newer bash also provides a help shell-builtin that you might like: help exec. It isn't as detailed as the manpage, but might be exactly what you need some day. :)
    – sarnold
    Feb 23, 2012 at 0:50
8

You can write directly to /dev/tty each time you want to write to the terminal:

echo "hello world" > /dev/tty

For a small example:

$ cat writer.sh 
#!/bin/sh

echo "standard output"
echo "standard error" >&2

echo "direct to terminal" > /dev/tty
$ ./writer.sh > /tmp/out 2> /tmp/err
direct to terminal
$ cat /tmp/out
standard output
$ cat /tmp/err
standard error
$ 
2
  • Thanks for this. I want to mark both of these correct, but I've got to give this one to Ignacio for the exec special sauce :) Feb 23, 2012 at 0:24
  • The exec special sauce is neat. :)
    – sarnold
    Feb 23, 2012 at 0:28

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