How to pipe stdout while keeping it on screen ? (and not to a output file)

时光总嘲笑我的痴心妄想 提交于 2019-11-27 05:50:35

Here is a solution that works at on any Unix / Linux implementation, assuming it cares to follow the POSIX standard. It works on some non Unix environments like cygwin too.

echo 'ee' | tee /dev/tty | foo

Reference: The Open Group Base Specifications Issue 7 IEEE Std 1003.1, 2013 Edition, §10.1:

/dev/tty

Associated with the process group of that process, if any. It is useful for programs or shell procedures that wish to be sure of writing messages to or reading data from the terminal no matter how output has been redirected. It can also be used for applications that demand the name of a file for output, when typed output is desired and it is tiresome to find out what terminal is currently in use. In each process, a synonym for the controlling terminal

Some environments like Google Colab have been reported not to implement /dev/tty while still having their tty command returning a usable device. Here is a workaround:

tty=$(tty)
echo 'ee' | tee $tty | foo

or with an ancient Bourne shell:

tty=`tty`
echo 'ee' | tee $tty | foo

Another thing to try is:

echo 'ee' | tee >(foo)

The >(foo) is a process substitution.

Access to "/dev/stdout" is denied on some systems, but access to the user terminal is given by "/dev/tty". Using "wc" for "foo", the above examples work OK (on linux, OSX, etc.) as:

% echo 'Hi' | tee /dev/tty | wc Hi 1 1 3

To add a count at the bottom of a list of matching files, I use something like:
% ls [A-J]* | tee /dev/tty | wc -l

To avoid having to remember all this, I define aliases:
% alias t tee /dev/tty
% alias wcl wc -l

so that I can simply say:
% ls [A-J]* | t | wcl


POSTSCRIPT: For the younger set, who might titter at its pronunciation as "titty", I might add that "tty" was once the common abbreviation for a "teletype" terminal, which used a roll of yellow paper and had round keys that often stuck.

Try:

$ echo 'ee' | tee /dev/stderr | foo

If using stderr is an option, of course.

first you need to figure out the terminal associated with your screen (or whichever screen you want the output to display on):

tty

then you can tee the output to that terminal and pipe the other copy through your foo program:

echo ee | tee /dev/pty/2 | foo
易学教程内所有资源均来自网络或用户发布的内容,如有违反法律规定的内容欢迎反馈
该文章没有解决你所遇到的问题?点击提问,说说你的问题,让更多的人一起探讨吧!