To silence the output of a command, we redirect either stdout or stderr — or both — to /dev/null. To select which stream to redirect, we need to provide the FD number to the redirection operator.
The echo command ends with a line break by default. To suppress this, you can set the control character \c at the end of the respective output.
You can send output to /dev/null, by using command >/dev/null syntax. However, this will not work when command will use the standard error (FD # 2). So you need to modify >/dev/null as follows to redirect both output and errors to /dev/null.
&>word (and >&word redirects both stdout and stderr to the result of the expansion of word. In the cases above that is the file 1 . 2>&1 redirects stderr (fd 2) to the current value of stdout (fd 1).
{
/your/first/command
/your/second/command
} &> /dev/null
To eliminate output from commands, you have two options:
Close the output descriptor file, which keeps it from accepting any more input. That looks like this:
your_command "Is anybody listening?" >&-
Usually, output goes either to file descriptor 1 (stdout) or 2 (stderr). If you close a file descriptor, you'll have to do so for every numbered descriptor, as &>
(below) is a special BASH syntax incompatible with >&-
:
/your/first/command >&- 2>&-
Be careful to note the order: >&-
closes stdout, which is what you want to do; &>-
redirects stdout and stderr to a file named -
(hyphen), which is not what what you want to do. It'll look the same at first, but the latter creates a stray file in your working directory. It's easy to remember: >&2
redirects stdout to descriptor 2 (stderr), >&3
redirects stdout to descriptor 3, and >&-
redirects stdout to a dead end (i.e. it closes stdout).
Also beware that some commands may not handle a closed file descriptor particularly well ("write error: Bad file descriptor"), which is why the better solution may be to...
Redirect output to /dev/null
, which accepts all output and does nothing with it. It looks like this:
your_command "Hello?" > /dev/null
For output redirection to a file, you can direct both stdout and stderr to the same place very concisely, but only in bash:
/your/first/command &> /dev/null
Finally, to do the same for a number of commands at once, surround the whole thing in curly braces. Bash treats this as a group of commands, aggregating the output file descriptors so you can redirect all at once. If you're familiar instead with subshells using ( command1; command2; )
syntax, you'll find the braces behave almost exactly the same way, except that unless you involve them in a pipe the braces will not create a subshell and thus will allow you to set variables inside.
{
/your/first/command
/your/second/command
} &> /dev/null
See the bash manual on redirections for more details, options, and syntax.
You can redirect stdout to /dev/null.
yum install nano > /dev/null
Or you can redirect both stdout and stderr,
yum install nano &> /dev/null
.
But if the program has a quiet option, that's even better.
A process normally has two outputs to screen: stdout (standard out), and stderr (standard error).
Normally informational messages go to sdout
, and errors and alerts go to stderr
.
You can turn off stdout
for a command by doing
MyCommand >/dev/null
and turn off stderr
by doing:
MyCommand 2>/dev/null
If you want both off, you can do:
MyCommand 2>&1 >/dev/null
The 2>&1
says send stderr to the same place as stdout.
You can redirect the output to /dev/null
. For more info regarding /dev/null read this link.
You can hide the output of a comand in the following ways :
echo -n "Installing nano ......"; yum install nano > /dev/null; echo " done.";
Redirect the standard output to /dev/null
, but not the standard error. This will show the errors occurring during the installation, for example if yum
cannot find a package.
echo -n "Installing nano ......"; yum install nano &> /dev/null; echo " done.";
While this code will not show anything in the terminal since both standard error and standard output are redirected and thus nullified to /dev/null
.
>/dev/null 2>&1
will mute both stdout
and stderr
yum install nano >/dev/null 2>&1
You should not use bash in this case to get rid of the output. Yum does have an option -q
which suppresses the output.
You'll most certainly also want to use -y
echo "Installing nano..."
yum -y -q install nano
To see all the options for yum, use man yum
.
.SILENT:
Type " .SILENT: " in the beginning of your script without colons.
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