75

I saw this interesting question at a comment on cyberciti.biz.

That I found I even can't find a flexible way to do this in one-line command with sh.

As far my thought for the solution is:

tmp_file=`mktemp`
(./script 2>$tmp_file >/dev/null; cat $tmp_file) | ./other-script
rm tmp_file

But you see, this is not synchronous, and fatally, it's so ugly.

Welcome to share you mind about this. :)

3
  • 4
    Did you try ./script.sh 2>&1 > /dev/null ?
    – cnicutar
    Commented Aug 19, 2012 at 14:21
  • @cnicutar It seemed I have a wrong understanding in the start. I supposed 2>&1 will redirect stderr to stdout and the 1>/dev/null will then redirect both them into /dev/null. Well I need to relearn some shell.
    – shouya
    Commented Aug 19, 2012 at 14:26
  • 1
    In my case, the 2>&1 needed to go at the end, eg: if ping -c 1 fake.x > /dev/null 2>&1;then echo true;else echo false;fi Commented Nov 20, 2015 at 22:31

3 Answers 3

143

You want

./script 2>&1 1>/dev/null | ./other-script

The order here is important. Let's assume stdin (fd 0), stdout (fd 1) and stderr (fd 2) are all connected to a tty initially, so

0: /dev/tty, 1: /dev/tty, 2: /dev/tty

The first thing that gets set up is the pipe. other-script's stdin gets connected to the pipe, and script's stdout gets connected to the pipe, so script's file descriptors so far look like:

0: /dev/tty, 1: pipe, 2: /dev/tty

Next, the redirections occur, from left to right. 2>&1 makes fd 2 go wherever fd 1 is currently going, which is the pipe.

0: /dev/tty, 1: pipe, 2: pipe

Lastly, 1>/dev/null redirects fd1 to /dev/null

0: /dev/tty, 1: /dev/null, 2: pipe

End result, script's stdout is silenced, and its stderr is sent through the pipe, which ends up in other-script's stdin.

Also see http://bash-hackers.org/wiki/doku.php/howto/redirection_tutorial

Also note that 1>/dev/null is synonymous to, but more explicit than >/dev/null

5
  • In my edit comment I incorrectly referenced stdin instead of stdout though the edit itself is still correct. I could not see how to fix edit comment or comment on edit review so mentioning here.
    – DVS
    Commented Jan 30, 2019 at 16:43
  • @geirha Excellent. What if we have to output to >/dev/null, and stderr both to a file and screen? Thanks Commented Mar 22, 2020 at 12:45
  • 1
    @ManoharReddyPoreddy To output both to terminal and a file, use the tee command. ./script 2>&1 >/dev/null | tee file
    – geirha
    Commented Mar 23, 2020 at 19:55
  • Apparently this doesn't work in zsh. It ends up redirecting script's stdout and stderr to the pipe. Is this a bug or a feature, I'm wondering. Commented Mar 2, 2022 at 14:52
  • I want to log the timestamp only when my internet connection is interrupted. The below command is working as expected. ping www.google.com 2>&1 1>/dev/null | perl -nle 'print scalar(localtime), " ", $_' Commented Mar 19, 2022 at 11:39
7

How about this:

./script 3>&1 1>/dev/null 2>&3 | ./other-script

The idea is to "backup" stdout descriptor, close the original stdout and then redirect strerr to saved stdout.

Its much similar to the solution provided by geirha, but its more explicit (bash coding can easily become very obscured).

-6

Well, that's because you can't. STDOUT and STDERR are just two files, represented by file descriptors, which are just integers, specifically 1 and 2.

What you're asking is to set descriptor 2 to /dev/null, then set descriptor 3 to the same file descriptor 2 and have that output go somewhere else.

0

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