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Piping an interactive session to a file

Tags:

bash

unix

tee

I have made a toy interactive console program that is basically an interpreter:

$ myprogram
> this is user input
this is program output

I want to pipe the full session, both user input and program output, into a log file. I can do this like so:

$ cat | tee >(myprogram | tee -a file.log) >> file.log
> this is user input
this is program output
$ cat file.log
> this is user input
this is program output

So the above session will display to the terminal as usual but will also be duplicated to the log file.

Is there a better way to do this? I don't like how I have to write the log file twice, nor how I have to remember to wipe it before running this command.

like image 930
Dave Avatar asked Sep 15 '13 11:09

Dave


4 Answers

As two processes can't read the same input two tees are needed, one which reads terminal input and writes to program standard input and file.log another which reads program standard output and writes into terminal output and file.log:

tee -a file.log | program | tee -a file.log
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Nahuel Fouilleul Avatar answered Oct 28 '22 10:10

Nahuel Fouilleul


script — make typescript of terminal session:

script -c "myprogram" file.log

The whole session will be logged to file.log

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Robert Strind Avatar answered Oct 28 '22 09:10

Robert Strind


The simpler form could be

tee >(myprogram) | tee -a file.log

If you want to prevent input being shown again to the screen:

tee -a file.log | myprogram | tee -a file.log
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konsolebox Avatar answered Oct 28 '22 10:10

konsolebox


An easy way is to use the script command. It just stores your whole terminal session. Run it with:

script my-interactive-session.log program
like image 2
sunsations Avatar answered Oct 28 '22 08:10

sunsations