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However, since Linux is a flexible system, these default settings don't necessarily have to be applied. The standard output, for example, on a heavily monitored server in a large environment may be a printer.


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5.1.2. The redirection operators


5.1.2.1. Output redirection with > and |


Sometimes you will want to put output of a command in a file, or you may want to issue another command on the output of one command. This is known as redirecting output. Redirection is done using either the ">" (greater-than symbol), or using the "|" (pipe) operator which sends the standard output of one command to another command as standard input.


As we saw before, the cat command concatenates files and puts them all together to the standard output. By redirecting this output to a file, this file name will be created - or overwritten if it already exists, so take care.


nancy:~> cat test1

some words


nancy:~> cat test2

some other words


nancy:~> cat test1 test2 > test3


nancy:~> cat test3

some words

nancy:~> cat test1

some words


nancy:~> cat test2

some other words


nancy:~> cat test1 test2 > test3


nancy:~> cat test3

some words


some other words


imageDon't overwrite!

Be careful not to overwrite existing (important) files when redirecting output. Many shells, including Bash, have a built-in feature to protect you from that risk: noclobber. See the Info pages for more information. In Bash, you would want to add the set -o noclobber command to your .bashrc configuration file in order to prevent accidental overwriting of files.

Redirecting "nothing" to an existing file is equal to emptying the file:


nancy:~> ls -l list

-rw-rw-r-- 1 nancy


nancy


117 Apr 2 18:09 list

nancy:~> > list

nancy:~> ls -l list

-rw-rw-r-- 1 nancy


nancy


0 Apr 4 12:01 list

This process is called truncating.


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The same redirection to an nonexistent file will create a new empty file with the given name:


nancy:~> ls -l newlist

ls: newlist: No such file or directory


nancy:~> > newlist

nancy:~> ls -l newlist

ls: newlist: No such file or directory


nancy:~> > newlist


nancy:~> ls -l newlist

-rw-rw-r-- 1 nancy nancy

0 Apr 4 12:05 newlist

nancy:~> ls -l newlist

-rw-rw-r-- 1 nancy nancy

Chapter 7 gives some more examples on the use of this sort of redirection. Some examples using piping of commands:

To find a word within some text, display all lines matching "pattern1", and exclude lines also matching "pattern2" from being displayed:


grep pattern1 file | grep -v pattern2


To display output of a directory listing one page at a time:


ls -la | less


To find a file in a directory:


ls -l | grep part_of_file_name


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5.1.2.2. Input redirection


In another case, you may want a file to be the input for a command that normally wouldn't accept a file as an option. This redirecting of input is done using the "<" (less-than symbol) operator.


Below is an example of sending a file to somebody, using input redirection.


andy:~> mail [email protected] < to_do


If the user mike exists on the system, you don't need to type the full address. If you want to reach somebody on the Internet, enter the fully qualified address as an argument to mail.


This reads a bit more difficult than the beginner's cat file | mail someone, but it is of course a much more elegant way of using the available tools.


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5.1.2.3. Combining redirections


The following example combines input and output redirection. The file text.txt is first checked for spelling mistakes, and the output is redirected to an error log file:


spell < text.txt > error.log


The following command lists all commands that you can issue to examine another file when using less:


mike:~> less --help | grep -i examine

:e [file] Examine a new file.

:n * Examine the (N-th) next file from the command line.

:p * Examine the (N-th) previous file from the command line.

:x * Examine the first (or N-th) file from the command line.

mike:~> less --help | grep -i examine

:e [file] Examine a new file.

:n * Examine the (N-th) next file from the command line.

:p * Examine the (N-th) previous file from the command line.

:x * Examine the first (or N-th) file from the command line.

The -i option is used for case-insensitive searches - remember that UNIX systems are very case-sensitive. If you want to save output of this command for future reference, redirect the output to a file:

mike:~> less --help | grep -i examine > examine-files-in-less


mike:~> cat examine-files-in-less

:e [file] Examine a new file.

:n * Examine the (N-th) next file from the command line.

:p * Examine the (N-th) previous file from the command line.

:x * Examine the first (or N-th) file from the command line.

mike:~> less --help | grep -i examine > examine-files-in-less


mike:~> cat examine-files-in-less

:e [file] Examine a new file.

:n * Examine the (N-th) next file from the command line.

:p * Examine the (N-th) previous file from the command line.

:x * Examine the first (or N-th) file from the command line.

Output of one command can be piped into another command virtually as many times as you want, just as long as these commands would normally read input from standard input and write output to the standard output.

Sometimes they don't, but then there may be special options that instruct these commands to behave according to the standard definitions; so read the documentation (man and Info pages) of the commands you use if you should encounter errors.


Again, make sure you don't use names of existing files that you still need. Redirecting output to existing files will replace the content of those files.


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5.1.2.4. The >> operator


Instead of overwriting file data, you can also append text to an existing file using two subsequent greater-than signs:


Example:


mike:~> cat wishlist

more money less work


mike:~> date >> wishlist

mike:~> cat wishlist

more money less work


mike:~> date >> wishlist


mike:~> cat wishlist

more money less work

Thu Feb 28 20:23:07 CET 2002

mike:~> cat wishlist

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