Bash output redirection

There are 3 built-in file descriptors: stdin, stdout and stderr (std=standard).

Basic

    0/1/2 references stdin/stdout/stderr
    >/2> redirects stdout/stderr, where > is taken as 1>
    &1/&2 references stdout/stderr
    &> redirects everything
    > creates or overwrites a file
    >> creates or appends to a file
    < reads from a file, where < is taken as 0<

Note: You should be pretty sure of what a command is doing if you are going to wipe it's output.

Redirecting Examples

    stdout to file: ls -l > ls-l.txt
    stderr to file: grep da * 2> grep-errors.txt
    one to another: grep da * 1>&2
    everything: do_stuff &> /dev/null
    combined: command < input-file > output-file, reads from input-file and writes stdout to output-file
  • 0 Пользователи нашли это полезным
Помог ли вам данный ответ?

Связанные статьи

How To Set Up A Cron Job via CPanel

This tutorial is going to show you how to setup a cron job in cPanel the easy way. You can set a...

How do I configure a cron job ?

Cron jobs are commands used to schedule tasks that must run periodically, for instance: from...

GeoIP

How to get mod_geoip to work on cPanel (Country and City)   mod_geoip allows you to look...

Mod PageSpeed

You can install Mod PageSpeed by using following stepswget...

Using Index Manager

This tutorial will teach about using the Index Manager. The Index Manager allows you to customize...