Greetings to everybody. I would like to know if I can use the pipe and command tee to read from edited file and to write to him e.g. "sed '{s_A_B_}' file | tee file". :confused: I know it doesn't work with > but I don't know anything about it with tee. Thank you for your help. :) (1 Reply)
Hi,
I have a script where i want to log in details to the standard output as well as log file so that its easy for tracing purposes.
I have used the "tee"command.
The problem with this is my scripts lines are getting longer as for each line i have
#!/bin/ksh
echo "hello world" |... (4 Replies)
Someone recently advised me to use the tee command to write to standard out.
Why would you pipe your commands to
tee -a <filename>
rather than just using
>> <filename>
?
For example:
date|tee -a myfile
seems to be the same as
date >> myfile
Is there a benefit to... (5 Replies)
Hello
If anybody knows something about the following please help me.
I am using HP unix.
In a script called test.txt i have the following command
echo ok | tee test1.txt
It works fine.It prints ok on the screen and creates the file test1.txt and puts in the file the "ok".
In the same... (2 Replies)
I have been using the command tee to store the output to a file and also write on the terminal. However I would need to put the program in the background although I would still need to see the file being updated like it was doing when using tee.
Any suggestions on how to look at the log file... (3 Replies)
script1:
#!/bin/ksh
more test.txt
script2: calling the script1
#!/bin/ksh
/tmp/script1.sh 2>&1 | tee tee.log
where test.txt contains ~1200 lines.
When I execute the script2 the more command does not print pagewise it goes to the end of the line, when I remove the tee command it... (4 Replies)
Greetings!
My apologies if this has been answered elsewhere before. What I have is a function (as below) set up to append to either an error log or info log based upon input.
myLOGGER ()
{
if ]; then
logfile=$elog
lastERROR="$1" #used elsewhere in my script
else... (2 Replies)
In the current directory , I have seven files .
But when I use the following command , it lists eight files ( 7 files + file_list.xtx)
ls -1 | tee file_list.xtx | while read line; do echo $line ; done
Does the tee command create the file_list.xtx file first and then executes the ls -1... (1 Reply)
I'm on Ubuntu 14.04 and I manually updated my coreutils so that "tee" is now on version 8.27
I was running a script using bash where there is some write to pipe error at some point causing the tee command to exit abruptly while the script continues to run. The newer version of tee seems to prevent... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: stompadon
2 Replies
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xzdiff
XZDIFF(1) XZ Utils XZDIFF(1)NAME
xzcmp, xzdiff, lzcmp, lzdiff - compare compressed files
SYNOPSIS
xzcmp [cmp_options] file1 [file2]
xzdiff [diff_options] file1 [file2]
lzcmp [cmp_options] file1 [file2]
lzdiff [diff_options] file1 [file2]
DESCRIPTION
xzcmp and xdiff invoke cmp(1) or diff(1) on files compressed with xz(1), lzma(1), gzip(1), or bzip2(1). All options specified are passed
directly to cmp or diff. If only one file is specified, then the files compared are file1 (which must have a suffix of a supported com-
pression format) and file1 from which the compression format suffix has been stripped. If two files are specified, then they are uncom-
pressed if necessary and fed to cmp(1) or diff(1). The exit status from cmp or diff is preserved.
The names lzcmp and lzdiff are provided for backward compatibility with LZMA Utils.
SEE ALSO cmp(1), diff(1), xz(1), gzip(1), bzip2(1), zdiff(1)BUGS
Messages from the cmp(1) or diff(1) programs refer to temporary filenames instead of those specified.
Tukaani 2009-07-05 XZDIFF(1)