Duplicating a stream using tee

In some cases, it's necessary to print an output on stdout and save an output in a file. In general, command output can either be printed or can be saved in a file. To solve it, the tee command is used. This command reads from the standard input and writes to both standard output and files. The syntax of tee will be as follows:

tee [OPTION] [FILE …]

The tee command copies the output to each FILE and also to stdout. The OPTIONS can be as follows:

Option

Description

-a, --append

This appends to the FILE instead of overwriting

-i, --ignore-interrupts

This ignores interrupt signals, if any

Writing an output to stdout and file: In general, to write an output to stdout and file, we will call the same command twice, with and without redirection. For example, the following command shows how to print an output on stdout and save it to a file:

$  ls /usr/bin/*.pl  # Prints output on stdout
/usr/bin/rsyslog-recover-qi.pl  /usr/bin/syncqt.pl
$  ls /usr/bin/*.pl> out.txt    # Saves output in file out.txt

We can do both the tasks by running the ls command once using the tee command as follows:

$  ls /usr/bin/*.pl| tee  out.txt    # Output gets printed to stdout and saved in out.txt
/usr/bin/rsyslog-recover-qi.pl
/usr/bin/syncqt.pl
$ cat out.txt      #Checking content of out.txt
/usr/bin/rsyslog-recover-qi.pl
/usr/bin/syncqt.pl

We can also specify multiple filenames to tee for an output to be written in each file. This copies the output to all files:

$ ls /usr/bin/*.pl| tee  out1.txt out2.txt
/usr/bin/rsyslog-recover-qi.pl
/usr/bin/syncqt.pl

By running the above commands, the output will be also written to the out1.txt and out2.txt files:

$ cat out1.txt
/usr/bin/rsyslog-recover-qi.pl
/usr/bin/syncqt.pl
$ cat out2.txt
/usr/bin/rsyslog-recover-qi.pl
/usr/bin/syncqt.pl

Writing an output to stdout and appending to a file

The tee command also allows you to append the output to a file instead of overwriting a file. This can be done using the -a option with tee. Appending an output to a file is useful when we want to write an output of various commands or an error log of different command execution in a single file.

For example, if we want to keep the output of running the ls and echo commands in the out3.txt file and also display results on stdout, we can do as follows:

$ echo "List of perl file in /usr/bin/ directory" | tee out3.txt
List of perl file in /usr/bin/ directory

$ ls /usr/bin/*.pl| tee  -a out3.txt
/usr/bin/rsyslog-recover-qi.pl
/usr/bin/syncqt.pl

$ cat out3.txt    # Content of file
List of perl file in /usr/bin/ directory
/usr/bin/rsyslog-recover-qi.pl
/usr/bin/syncqt.pl

Sending an output to multiple commands

We can also use the tee command to provide an output of a command as an input to multiple commands. This is done by sending the tee output to pipe:

$ df -h | tee out4.txt | grep tmpfs | wc -l
7

Here, the output of the df -h command is saved to the out4.txt file, the stdout output is redirected to the grep command, and the output of the search result from grep is further redirected to the wc command. At the end, the result of wc is printed on stdout.

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