Redirect stdout to file and tee stderr to the same file - bash

I am running a command which will (very likely) output text to both stderr and stdout. I want to save both stderr and stdout to the same file, but I only want stderr printing to the terminal.
How can I get this to work? I've tried mycommand 1>&2 | tee file.txt >/dev/null but that doesn't print anything to the terminal.

If You Don't Need Perfect Ordering
Using two separate copies of tee, both writing to the same file in append mode but only one of them subsequently forwarding content to /dev/null, will get you where you need to be:
mycommand \
2> >(tee -a file.txt >&2) \
> >(tee -a file.txt >/dev/null)
If You Do Need Perfect Ordering
See Separately redirecting and recombining stderr/stdout without losing ordering

Related

Save StdOut and StdErr to two different files and append them in third one

I would like to save result of my script run with sh.exe on windows into three different files:
stdout to stdout.txt; stderr to stderr.txt and append stdout and stderr to all.txt. I tried to use
foo.sh &> all.txt 2> stderr.txt
or
foo.sh 2>&1 1>logfile | tee -a logfile
but it doen't even append stderr and stdout.
How can I do it?

How do I copy stderr without stopping it writing to the terminal?

I want to write a shell script that runs a command, writing its stderr to my terminal as it arrives. However, I also want to save stderr to a variable, so I can inspect it later.
How can I achieve this? Should I use tee, or a subshell, or something else?
I've tried this:
# Create FD 3 that can be used so stdout still comes through
exec 3>&1
# Run the command, piping stdout to normal stdout, but saving stderr.
{ ERROR=$( $# 2>&1 1>&3) ; }
echo "copy of stderr: $ERROR"
However, this doesn't write stderr to the console, it only saves it.
I've also tried:
{ $#; } 2> >(tee stderr.txt >&2 )
echo "stderr was:"
cat stderr.txt
However, I don't want the temporary file.
I often want to do this, and find myself reaching for /dev/stderr, but there can be problems with this approach; for example, Nix build scripts give "permission denied" errors if they try to write to /dev/stdout or /dev/stderr.
After reinventing this wheel a few times, my current approach is to use process substitution as follows:
myCmd 2> >(tee >(cat 1>&2))
Reading this from the outside in:
This will run myCmd, leaving its stdout as-is. The 2> will redirect the stderr of myCmd to a different destination; the destination here is >(tee >(cat 1>&2)) which will cause it to be piped into the command tee >(cat 1>&2).
The tee command duplicates its input (in this case, the stderr of myCmd) to its stdout and to the given destination. The destination here is >(cat 1>&2), which will cause the data to be piped into the command cat 1>&2.
The cat command just passes its input straight to stdout. The 1>&2 redirects stdout to go to stderr.
Reading from the inside out:
The cat 1>&2 command redirects its stdin to stderr, so >(cat 1>&2) acts like /dev/stderr.
Hence tee >(cat 1>&2) duplicates its stdin to both stdout and stderr, acting like tee /dev/stderr.
We use 2> >(tee >(cat 1>&2)) to get 2 copies of stderr: one on stdout and one on stderr.
We can use the copy on stdout as normal, for example storing it in a variable. We can leave the copy on stderr to get printed to the terminal.
We can combine this with other redirections if we like, e.g.
# Create FD 3 that can be used so stdout still comes through
exec 3>&1
# Run the command, redirecting its stdout to the shell's stdout,
# duplicating its stderr and sending one copy to the shell's stderr
# and using the other to replace the command's stdout, which we then
# capture
{ ERROR=$( $# 2> >(tee >(cat 1>&2)) 1>&3) ; }
echo "copy of stderr: $ERROR"
Credit goes to #Etan Reisner for the fundamentals of the approach; however, it's better to use tee with /dev/stderr rather than /dev/tty in order to preserve normal behavior (if you send to /dev/tty, the outside world doesn't see it as stderr output, and can neither capture nor suppress it):
Here's the full idiom:
exec 3>&1 # Save original stdout in temp. fd #3.
# Redirect stderr to *captured* stdout, send stdout to *saved* stdout, also send
# captured stdout (and thus stderr) to original stderr.
errOutput=$("$#" 2>&1 1>&3 | tee /dev/stderr)
exec 3>&- # Close temp. fd.
echo "copy of stderr: $errOutput"

How to redirect stdout+stderr to one file while keeping streams separate?

Redirecting stdout+stderr such that both get written to a file while still outputting to stdout is simple enough:
cmd 2>&1 | tee output_file
But then now both stdout/stderr from cmd are coming on stdout. I'd like to write stdout+stderr to the same file (so ordering is preserved assuming cmd is single threaded) but then still be able to also separately redirect them, something like this:
some_magic_tee_variant combined_output cmd > >(command-expecting-stdout) 2> >(command-expecting-stderr)
So combined_output contains the both with order preserved, but the command-expecting-stdout only gets stdout and command-expecting-stderr only gets stderr. Basically, I want to log stdout+stderr while still allowing stdout and stderr to be separately redirected and piped. The problem with the tee approach is it globs them together. Is there a way to do this in bash/zsh?
From what I unterstand this is what you are looking for. First I made a litte script to write on stdout and stderr. It looks like this:
$ cat foo.sh
#!/bin/bash
echo foo 1>&2
echo bar
Then I ran it like this:
$ ./foo.sh 2> >(tee stderr | tee -a combined) 1> >(tee stdout | tee -a combined)
foo
bar
The results in my bash look like this:
$ cat stderr
foo
$ cat stdout
bar
$ cat combined
foo
bar
Note that the -a flag is required so the tees don't overwrite the other tee's content.
{ { cmd | tee out >&3; } 2>&1 | tee err >&2; } 3>&1
Or, to be pedantic:
{ { cmd 3>&- | tee out >&3 2> /dev/null; } 2>&1 | tee err >&2 3>&- 2> /dev/null; } 3>&1
Note that it's futile to try and preserve order. It is basically impossible. The only solution would be to modify "cmd" or use some LD_PRELOAD or gdb hack,
Order can indeed be preserved. Here's an example which captures the standard output and error, in the order in which they are generated, to a logfile, while displaying only the standard error on any terminal screen you like. Tweak to suit your needs.
1.Open two windows (shells)
2.Create some test files
touch /tmp/foo /tmp/foo1 /tmp/foo2
3.In window1:
mkfifo /tmp/fifo
</tmp/fifo cat - >/tmp/logfile
4.Then, in window2:
(ls -l /tmp/foo /tmp/nofile /tmp/foo1 /tmp/nofile /tmp/nofile; echo successful test; ls /tmp/nofile1111) 2>&1 1>/tmp/fifo | tee /tmp/fifo 1>/dev/pts/1
Where /dev/pts/1 can be whatever terminal display you want. The subshell runs some "ls" and "echo" commands in sequence, some succeed (providing stdout) and some fail (providing stderr) in order to generate a mingled stream of output and error messages, so that you can verify the correct ordering in the log file.
Here's how I do it:
exec 3>log ; example_command 2>&1 1>&3 | tee -a log ; exec 3>&-
Worked Example
bash$ exec 3>log ; { echo stdout ; echo stderr >&2 ; } 2>&1 1>&3 | \
tee -a log ; exec 3>&-
stderr
bash$ cat log
stdout
stderr
Here's how that works:
exec 3>log sets up file descriptor 3 to redirect into the file called log, until further notice.
example_command to make this a working example, I used { echo stdout ; echo stderr >&2 ; }. Or you could use ls /tmp doesnotexist to provide output instead.
Need to jump ahead to the pipe | at this point because bash does it first. The pipe sets up a pipe and redirects the file descriptor 1 into this pipe. So now, STDOUT is going into the pipe.
Now we can go back to where we were next in our left-to-right interpretation: 2>&1 this says errors from the program are to go to where STDOUT currently points, i.e. into the pipe we just set up.
1>&3 means STDOUT is redirected into file descriptor 3, which we earlier set up to output to the log file. So STDOUT from the command just goes into the log file, not to the terminal's STDOUT.
tee -a log takes it's input from the pipe (which you'll remember is now the errors from the command), and outputs it to STDOUT and also appends it to the log file.
exec 3>&- closes the file descriptor 3.
Victor Sergienko's comment is what worked for me, adding exec to the front of it makes this work for the entire script (instead of having to put it after individual commands)
exec 2> >(tee -a output_file >&2) 1> >(tee -a output_file)

How do I log stderr and stdout synchronously, but print stderr to screen only?

This is a task that I try to do pretty often.
I want to log both stderr and stdout to a log file. But I only want to print to console stderr.
I've tried with tee, but once I've merge stderr and stdout using "2>&1". I can not print stdout to the screen anymore since both my pipes are merged.
Here is a simple example of what I tried
./dosomething.sh | tee -a log 2>&1.
Now I have both stderr and stdout to the log and the screen.
Any Ideas?
Based on some reading on this web site, this question has been asked.
Write STDOUT & STDERR to a logfile, also write STDERR to screen
And also a question very similar here:
Save stdout, stderr and stdout+stderr synchronously
But neither of them are able to redirect both stdout+stderr to a log and stderr to the screen while stdoud and stderr are synchronously written to the log file.
I was able to get this working in bash:
(./tmp.sh 2> >(tee >(cat >&2) >&1)) > tmp.log
This does not work correctly in zsh (the prompt does not wait for the process to exit), and does not work at all in dash. A more portable solution may be to write a simple C program to do it.
I managed to get this working with this script in bash.
mkfifo stdout
mkfifo stderr
rm -f out
cat stderr | tee -a out &
cat stdout >> out &
(echo "stdout";
grep;
echo "an other stdout";
echo "again stdout";
stat) 2> stderr > stdout
rm -f stdout
rm -f stderr
The order of the output is preserved. With this script the process ends correctly.
Note: I used grep and stat without parameter to generate stdout.

Write STDOUT & STDERR to a logfile, also write STDERR to screen

I would like to run several commands, and capture all output to a logfile. I also want to print any errors to the screen (or optionally mail the output to someone).
Here's an example. The following command will run three commands, and will write all output (STDOUT and STDERR) into a single logfile.
{ command1 && command2 && command3 ; } > logfile.log 2>&1
Here is what I want to do with the output of these commands:
STDERR and STDOUT for all commands goes to a logfile, in case I need it later--- I usually won't look in here unless there are problems.
Print STDERR to the screen (or optionally, pipe to /bin/mail), so that any error stands out and doesn't get ignored.
It would be nice if the return codes were still usable, so that I could do some error handling. Maybe I want to send email if there was an error, like this:
{ command1 && command2 && command3 ; } > logfile.log 2>&1 || mailx -s "There was an error" stefanl#example.org
The problem I run into is that STDERR loses context during I/O redirection. A '2>&1' will convert STDERR into STDOUT, and therefore I cannot view errors if I do 2> error.log
Here are a couple juicier examples. Let's pretend that I am running some familiar build commands, but I don't want the entire build to stop just because of one error so I use the '--keep-going' flag.
{ ./configure && make --keep-going && make install ; } > build.log 2>&1
Or, here's a simple (And perhaps sloppy) build and deploy script, which will keep going in the event of an error.
{ ./configure && make --keep-going && make install && rsync -av --keep-going /foo devhost:/foo} > build-and-deploy.log 2>&1
I think what I want involves some sort of Bash I/O Redirection, but I can't figure this out.
(./doit >> log) 2>&1 | tee -a log
This will take stdout and append it to log file.
The stderr will then get converted to stdout which is piped to tee which appends it to the log (if you are have Bash 4, you can replace 2>&1 | with |&) and sends it to stdout which will either appear on the tty or can be piped to another command.
I used append mode for both so that regardless of which order the shell redirection and tee open the file, you won't blow away the original. That said, it may be possible that stderr/stdout is interleaved in an unexpected way.
If your system has /dev/fd/* nodes you can do it as:
( exec 5>logfile.txt ; { command1 && command2 && command3 ;} 2>&1 >&5 | tee /dev/fd/5 )
This opens file descriptor 5 to your logfile. Executes the commands with standard error directed to standard out, standard out directed to fd 5 and pipes stdout (which now contains only stderr) to tee which duplicates the output to fd 5 which is the log file.
Here is how to run one or more commands, capturing the standard output and error, in the order in which they are generated, to a logfile, and displaying only the standard error on any terminal screen you like. Works in bash on linux. Probably works in most other environments. I will use an example to show how it's done.
Preliminaries:
Open two windows (shells, tmux sessions, whatever)
I will demonstrate with some test files, so create the test files:
touch /tmp/foo /tmp/foo1 /tmp/foo2
in window1:
mkfifo /tmp/fifo
0</tmp/fifo cat - >/tmp/logfile
Then, in window2:
(ls -l /tmp/foo /tmp/nofile /tmp/foo1 /tmp/nofile /tmp/nofile; echo successful test; ls /tmp/nofile1111) 2>&1 1>/tmp/fifo | tee /tmp/fifo 1>/dev/pts/2
Where you replace /dev/pts/2 with whatever tty you want the stderr to display.
The reason for the various successful and unsuccessful commands in the subshell is simply to generate a mingled stream of output and error messages, so that you can verify the correct ordering in the log file. Once you understand how it works, replace the “ls” and “echo” commands with scripts or commands of your choosing.
With this method, the ordering of output and error is preserved, the syntax is simple and clean, and there is only a single reference to the output file. Plus there is flexiblity in putting the extra copy of stderr wherever you want.
Try:
command 2>&1 | tee output.txt
Additionally, you can direct stdout and stderr to different places:
command > stdout.txt >& stderr.txt
command > stdout.txt |& program_for_stderr
So some combination of the above should work for you -- e.g. you could save stdout to a file, and stderr to both a file and piping to another program (with tee).
add this at the beginning of your script
#!/bin/bash
set -e
outfile=logfile
exec > >(cat >> $outfile)
exec 2> >(tee -a $outfile >&2)
# write your code here
STDOUT and STDERR will be written to $outfile, only STDERR will be seen on the console

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