What is the equivalent of /dev/null
on Windows?
9 Answers
I think you want NUL
, at least within a command prompt or batch files.
For example:
type c:\autoexec.bat > NUL
doesn't create a file.
(I believe the same is true if you try to create a file programmatically, but I haven't tried it.)
In PowerShell, you want $null
:
echo 1 > $null
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21@capthive: There's a difference between /dev/null.txt and /dev/null/foo.txt. Apr 27, 2010 at 5:26
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2I just looked at this again, and I retract my original statement. I was doing the write in code, and the error was getting swallowed. I'm deleting it so no one accidentally takes it as the truth. Jul 22, 2010 at 19:30
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4
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11@CoDEmanX: That's not my experience. Writing to the console - or even a file - can take a significant chunk of time. I've just tested it with a program writing "Hello there" to stdout 10000000 times. Redirecting to a file (on an SSD) took 18 seconds. Redirecting to NUL took 4 seconds. Not redirecting at all made me give up through a lack of patience after a while... Aug 24, 2015 at 5:49
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5I've learned back in Win95 times that you should write a colon after special device names, so
NUL:
(andCON:
,PRN:
, ...), It is mostly a matter of style and shows clearly thatNUL:
is a special object and not a file calledNUL
. Also,it is possible with a special API to make a file calledNUL
(see one of the answers). I dream that maybe one day, if everybody uses the colon by convention, we will be able to deprecate the dreaded special device names :-)– jdmDec 6, 2016 at 13:47
According to this message on the GCC mailing list, you can use the file "nul" instead of /dev/null:
#include <stdio.h>
int main ()
{
FILE* outfile = fopen ("/dev/null", "w");
if (outfile == NULL)
{
fputs ("could not open '/dev/null'", stderr);
}
outfile = fopen ("nul", "w");
if (outfile == NULL)
{
fputs ("could not open 'nul'", stderr);
}
return 0;
}
(Credits to Danny for this code; copy-pasted from his message.)
You can also use this special "nul" file through redirection.
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9Ah, so this explains why, if you create a
C:\dev
directory in Windows, and you use a lot of GNU utilities, you'll eventually acquire a mysterious file called null in that directory. Dec 29, 2018 at 9:39
NUL
in Windows seems to be actually a virtual path in any folder. Just like ..
, .
in any filesystem.
Use any folder followed with NUL will work.
Example,
echo 1 > nul
echo 1 > c:\nul
echo 1 > c:\users\nul
echo 1 > c:\windows\nul
have the same effect as /dev/null
on Linux.
This was tested on Windows 7, 64 bit.
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7Nice, it's not possible to create a file named "nul" on Windows 7 64bit :) Sep 1, 2015 at 14:22
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9@DawidFerenczy it's possible, although not in the classic way. E.g.
md \\.\c:\nul
quora.com/…, gohacking.com/how-to-create-con-folder-in-windows, superuser.com/questions/86999/…– phuclvFeb 10, 2016 at 9:42 -
3
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throws IOException using java in win10. Just need to wrap it on try catch. Was hoping to be no exception/errors just like /dev/null– MDuhMar 17, 2020 at 20:12
Jon Skeet is correct. Here is the Nul Device Driver page in the Windows Embedded documentation (I have no idea why it's not somewhere else...).
Here is another:
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76Of course Jon Skeet is correct. Thank you for stating an obvious and universal truth :) Feb 21, 2009 at 3:41
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2
NUL
works programmatically as well. E.g. the following:
freopen("NUL", "w", stderr);
works as expected without creating a file. (MSVC++ 12.0)
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2There are only so many times the question needs to be answered with
NUL
, and it was past that point 5 years ago.– miken32Jul 7, 2017 at 23:55 -
13
If you need to perform in Microsoft Windows the equivalent of a symlink to /dev/null
in Linux you would open and administrator's cmd
and type:
For files:
mklink c:\path\to\file.ext NUL:
Or, for directories:
mklink /D c:\path\to\dir NUL:
This will keep the file/direcotry always at 0 byte, and still return success to every write attempt.
In Windows10, if you want to use NUL like a file e.g.
robocopy .\test NUL /move /minage:30
# delete all files older than 30 days using robocopy
These answers all don't work.
You get the error:
ERROR 123 (0x0000007B) Accessing Destination Directory \\.\NUL\
The filename, directory name, or volume label syntax is incorrect.
However, it works if you do in cmd.exe
:
echo 1 > NUL
So NUL
doesn't behave exactly like a /dev/null
file.
However, for the robocopy
command, you can do something like:
robocopy .\test NUL\null /move /minage:30
Then it works!
In Powershell, the $null
works only as stdout redirection
echo 1 > $null
But you can't use $null
in a command like for robocopy instead of a file.
Neither does $null\null
work.
So all I could find to have the same effect like cmd.exe in PowerShell, is to call cmd.exe
from within PowerShell like this:
mkdir test1
cd test1
echo "" > test1.txt
echo "" > test2.txt
echo "" > test3.txt
$path = '.\test1'
cmd.exe /c "robocopy $path NUL\null /move"
# also this works:
cmd.exe /c "robocopy $path .\NUL\null /move"
So NUL
doesn't behave exactly like /dev/null
folder but like a folder which can have phantom files inside it when used as a target file except you use it with >
redirection, then it behaves as it is like a null device/file.
In addition it is to be mentioned that cmd.exe
creates a NUL
when first used. But one cannot look into it.
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2Doing the above with
robocopy
will actually create a folder calledNUL
, which isn't really what is desired here, especially since the folder then can't be deleted using normal means (e.g. Windows Explorer).– tomasz86Sep 5, 2022 at 10:59 -
@tomasz86 Thank you for the remark! Perhaps there is no real equivalent to Linux's /dev/null, unfortunately. Sep 5, 2022 at 12:36
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If only I read the comments before trying the Robocopy part of this answer... now to figure out how to delete this folder and its contents! Nov 27, 2022 at 22:27
You have to use start and $NUL for this in Windows PowerShell:
Type in this command assuming mySum
is the name of your application and 5
10
are command line arguments you are sending.
start .\mySum 5 10 > $NUL 2>&1
The start
command will start a detached process, a similar effect to &
. The /B
option prevents start from opening a new terminal window if the program you are running is a console application. and NUL
is Windows' equivalent of /dev/null
. The 2>&1
at the end will redirect stderr to stdout, which will all go to NUL
.
The only built-in tool, which can deal with NUL
is the good old copy
.
But make sure, you use the switch /b
(binary), otherwise the content won't be cached by OS (that was my goal).
Put a directory (recursive) to OS cache:
for /f "delims=" %f in ('dir /s /b /a-d D:\Solr\data') do @copy /b "%f" nul > nul
Use the RamMap (from Sysinternals) to verify.