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Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Lost redirecting stderr & stdout to 3 files - one each plus combined Post 303010490 by jim mcnamara on Tuesday 2nd of January 2018 09:50:28 AM
Old 01-02-2018
For Solaris 10 onward you have bash as part of the standard distribution. ksh88 is a good shell but bash has some better features for this kind of project. SuSe and RH both use bash by default. ksh on those two machines is really dash - dash is supposed to be 98% ksh compliant - but in fact you are likely introducing another level unneeded complexity. Please consider the project in a single shell seriously.

Following on Scrutinizer's good answer:

What you really should consider is some sort of job scheduler that can track a bunch of processes and their outputs for you. IMO, you are going to have to tinker with this setup from now on into the future. So, if you need an ongoing hobby this is one way to create one.

If you let us know your OS versions maybe we can make some suggestions. Also software like nagios can keep track of many multiple logs simultaneously. Without all the extra file fiddling you are working on.
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FD(4)							   BSD Kernel Interfaces Manual 						     FD(4)

NAME
fd, stdin, stdout, stderr -- file descriptor files DESCRIPTION
The files /dev/fd/0 through /dev/fd/# refer to file descriptors which can be accessed through the file system. If the file descriptor is open and the mode the file is being opened with is a subset of the mode of the existing descriptor, the call: fd = open("/dev/fd/0", mode); and the call: fd = fcntl(0, F_DUPFD, 0); are equivalent. Opening the files /dev/stdin, /dev/stdout and /dev/stderr is equivalent to the following calls: fd = fcntl(STDIN_FILENO, F_DUPFD, 0); fd = fcntl(STDOUT_FILENO, F_DUPFD, 0); fd = fcntl(STDERR_FILENO, F_DUPFD, 0); Flags to the open(2) call other than O_RDONLY, O_WRONLY and O_RDWR are ignored. IMPLEMENTATION NOTES
By default, /dev/fd is provided by devfs(5), which provides nodes for the first three file descriptors. Some sites may require nodes for additional file descriptors; these can be made available by mounting fdescfs(5) on /dev/fd. FILES
/dev/fd/# /dev/stdin /dev/stdout /dev/stderr SEE ALSO
tty(4), devfs(5), fdescfs(5) BSD
June 9, 1993 BSD
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