bash:output:understand_the_difference_between_standard_output_and_standard_error
BASH - Output - Understand the difference between standard output and standard error
A sane command writes the output that you request to standard output (stdout) and only writes errors to standard error (stderr).
For example:
dig +short A wiki.sharewiz.net 5.42.134.35 ip=$(dig +short A wiki.sharewiz.net) echo "{$ip}" {5.42.134.35} ls no-such-file ls: cannot access 'no-such-file': No such file or directory output=$(ls no-such-file) ls: cannot access 'no-such-file': No such file or directory echo "{$output}" {}
NOTE: In this example:
- dig wrote output to stdout, which was also captured in the ip variable.
- This was all successful.
- ls encountered an error, so it did not write anything to stdout.
- It wrote to stderr, which was not captured (because we 2>&1 was not used).
- The error message appeared directly on the terminal instead.
bash/output/understand_the_difference_between_standard_output_and_standard_error.txt · Last modified: 2021/01/26 15:15 by peter