I have a program that writes information to stdout and stderr, and I need to process the stderr with grep, leaving stdout aside.
Using a temporary file, one could do it in two steps:
command > /dev/null 2> temp.file
grep 'something' temp.file
But how can this be achieved without temp files, using one command and pipes?
First redirect stderr to stdout — the pipe; then redirect stdout to
/dev/null(without changing where stderr is going):For the details of I/O redirection in all its variety, see the chapter on Redirections in the Bash reference manual.
Note that the sequence of I/O redirections is interpreted left-to-right, but pipes are set up before the I/O redirections are interpreted. File descriptors such as 1 and 2 are references to open file descriptions. The operation
2>&1makes file descriptor 2 aka stderr refer to the same open file description as file descriptor 1 aka stdout is currently referring to (seedup2()andopen()). The operation>/dev/nullthen changes file descriptor 1 so that it refers to an open file description for/dev/null, but that doesn’t change the fact that file descriptor 2 refers to the open file description which file descriptor 1 was originally pointing to — namely, the pipe.