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While using nohup to put a command to run in background some of content appear in terminal.

cp: error reading ‘/mnt/tt/file.txt’: Input/output error
cp: failed to extend ‘/mnt/tt/file.txt’: Input/output error

I want to save that content to a file.

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    @terdon This is a more specific question, and it rightly shows up in google search for the more specific question, which is a good thing.
    – nroose
    Apr 23, 2019 at 17:53
  • @nroose yes, and it will keep showing up, that won't change. But any new answers should go to the more general question.
    – terdon
    Apr 23, 2019 at 18:36

2 Answers 2

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There are two main output streams in Linux (and other OSs), standard output (stdout) and standard error (stderr). Error messages, like the ones you show, are printed to standard error. The classic redirection operator (command > file) only redirects standard output, so standard error is still shown on the terminal. To redirect stderr as well, you have a few choices:

  1. Redirect stdout to one file and stderr to another file:

    command > out 2>error
    
  2. Redirect stdout to a file (>out), and then redirect stderr to stdout (2>&1):

    command >out 2>&1
    
  3. Redirect both to a file (this isn't supported by all shells, bash and zsh support it, for example, but sh and ksh do not):

    command &> out
    

For more information on the various control and redirection operators, see here.

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    So hashdeep -rXvvl -j 30 -k checksums.txt /mnt/app/ >> result_hashdeep.txt 2> error_hashdeep.txt & or hashdeep -rXvvl -j 30 -k checksums.txt /mnt/app/ >> result_hashdeep.txt 2>&1 or hashdeep -rXvvl -j 30 -k checksums.txt /mnt/app/ &> result_mixed.txt May 18, 2015 at 12:59
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    @AndréM.Faria yes. But the last two commands are equivalent, they will send both error and output to the same file.
    – terdon
    May 18, 2015 at 13:17
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    As in the link you provided, I could use |& instead of 2>&1 they are equivalent, thanks for you time. May 18, 2015 at 13:38
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    @rohith I know this is a necro, but, you can do command | sudo -S tee file > /dev/null 2>&1
    – Ascherer
    Oct 11, 2018 at 21:58
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    I couldn't get &> out to work in sh, only bash. Cron users beware, use 2>&1 instead.
    – Mike McKay
    Jun 3, 2019 at 11:41
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First thing to note is that there's couple of ways depending on your purpose and shell, therefore this requires slight understanding of multiple aspects. Additionally, certain commands such as time and strace write output to stderr by default, and may or may not provide a method of redirection specific to that command

Basic theory behind redirection is that a process spawned by shell (assuming it is an external command and not shell built-in) is created via fork() and execve() syscalls, and before that happens another syscall dup2() performs necessary redirects before execve() happens. In that sense, redirections are inherited from the parent shell. The m&>n and m>n.txt inform the shell on how to perform open() and dup2() syscall (see also How input redirection works, What is the difference between redirection and pipe, and What does & exactly mean in output redirection )

Shell redirections

Most typical, is via 2> in Bourne-like shells, such as dash (which is symlinked to /bin/sh) and bash; first is the default and POSIX-compliant shell and the other is what most users use for interactive session. They differ in syntax and features, but luckily for us error stream redirection works the same (except the &> non standard one). In case of csh and its derivatives, the stderr redirection doesn't quite work there.

Let's come back to 2> part. Two key things to notice: > means redirection operator, where we open a file and 2 integer stands for stderr file descriptor; in fact this is exactly how POSIX standard for shell language defines redirection in section 2.7:

[n]redir-op word

For simple > redirection, the 1 integer is implied for stdout, i.e. echo Hello World > /dev/null is just the same as echo Hello World 1>/dev/null. Note, that the integer or redirection operator cannot be quoted, otherwise shell doesn't recognize them as such, and instead treats as literal string of text. As for spacing, it's important that integer is right next to redirection operator, but file can either be next to redirection operator or not, i.e. command 2>/dev/null and command 2> /dev/null will work just fine.

The somewhat simplified syntax for typical command in shell would be

 command [arg1] [arg2]  2> /dev/null

The trick here is that redirection can appear anywhere. That is both 2> command [arg1] and command 2> [arg1] are valid. Note that for bash shell, there there exists &> way to redirect both stdout and stderr streams at the same time, but again - it's bash specific and if you're striving for portability of scripts, it may not work. See also Ubuntu Wiki and What is the difference between &> and 2>&1.

Note: The > redirection operator truncates a file and overwrites it, if the file exists. The 2>> may be used for appending stderr to file.

If you may notice, > is meant for one single command. For scripts, we can redirect stderr stream of the whole script from outside as in myscript.sh 2> /dev/null or we can make use of exec built-in. The exec built-in has the power to rewire the stream for the whole shell session, so to speak, whether interactively or via script. Something like

#!/bin/sh
exec 2> ./my_log_file.txt
stat /etc/non_existing_file

In this example, the log file should show stat: cannot stat '/etc/non_existing_file': No such file or directory.

Yet another way is via functions. As kopciuszek noted in his answer, we can write function declaration with already attached redirection, that is

some_function(){
    command1
    command2
} 2> my_log_file.txt

Commands writing to stderr exclusively

Commands such as time and strace write their output to stderr by default. In case of time command, the only viable alternative is to redirect output of whole command , that is

time echo foo 2>&1 > file.txt

alternatively, synchronous list or subshell could be redirected if you want to separate the output ( as shown in related post ):

{ time sleep 1 2> sleep.stderr ; } 2> time.txt

Other commands, such as strace or dialog provide means to redirect stderr. strace has -o <filename.txt> option which allows specifying filename where output should be written. There is also an option for writing a textfile for each subprocess that strace sees. The dialog command writes the text user interface to stdout but output to stderr, so in order to save its output to variable ( because var=$(...) and pipelines only receives stderr ) we need to swap the file descriptors

result=$(dialog --inputbox test 0 0 2>&1 1>/dev/tty);

but additionally, there is --output-fd flag, which we also can utilize. There's also the method of named pipes. I recommend reading the linked post about the dialog command for thorough description of what's happening.

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