Piping the stdout
of a command into the stdin of another
is a powerful technique. But, what if you need to pipe the
stdout of multiple
commands? This is where process
substitution comes in.
Process substitution feeds the
output of a process (or
processes) into the stdin of another
process.
>(command_list)
<(command_list)
Process substitution uses
/dev/fd/<n> files to send the
results of the process(es) within parentheses to another process.
[108]
There is no space between the the “<” or “>” and the parentheses. Space there would give an error message.
bash$echo >(true)/dev/fd/63bash$echo <(true)/dev/fd/63bash$echo >(true) <(true)/dev/fd/63 /dev/fd/62bash$wc <(cat /usr/share/dict/linux.words)483523 483523 4992010 /dev/fd/63bash$grep script /usr/share/dict/linux.words | wc262 262 3601bash$wc <(grep script /usr/share/dict/linux.words)262 262 3601 /dev/fd/63
Bash creates a pipe with two file
descriptors, --fIn and
fOut--. The stdin
of true connects
to fOut (dup2(fOut, 0)),
then Bash passes a /dev/fd/fIn
argument to echo. On systems lacking
/dev/fd/<n> files, Bash may use
temporary files. (Thanks, S.C.)
Process substitution can compare the output of two different commands, or even the output of different options to the same command.
bash$comm <(ls -l) <(ls -al)total 12 -rw-rw-r-- 1 bozo bozo 78 Mar 10 12:58 File0 -rw-rw-r-- 1 bozo bozo 42 Mar 10 12:58 File2 -rw-rw-r-- 1 bozo bozo 103 Mar 10 12:58 t2.sh total 20 drwxrwxrwx 2 bozo bozo 4096 Mar 10 18:10 . drwx------ 72 bozo bozo 4096 Mar 10 17:58 .. -rw-rw-r-- 1 bozo bozo 78 Mar 10 12:58 File0 -rw-rw-r-- 1 bozo bozo 42 Mar 10 12:58 File2 -rw-rw-r-- 1 bozo bozo 103 Mar 10 12:58 t2.sh
Process substitution can compare the contents of two directories -- to see which filenames are in one, but not the other.
diff <(ls $first_directory) <(ls $second_directory)
Some other usages and uses of process substitution:
read -a list < <( od -Ad -w24 -t u2 /dev/urandom ) # Read a list of random numbers from /dev/urandom, #+ process with "od" #+ and feed into stdin of "read" . . . # From "insertion-sort.bash" example script. # Courtesy of JuanJo Ciarlante.
PORT=6881 # bittorrent # Scan the port to make sure nothing nefarious is going on. netcat -l $PORT | tee>(md5sum ->mydata-orig.md5) | gzip | tee>(md5sum - | sed 's/-$/mydata.lz2/'>mydata-gz.md5)>mydata.gz # Check the decompression: gzip -d<mydata.gz | md5sum -c mydata-orig.md5) # The MD5sum of the original checks stdin and detects compression issues. # Bill Davidsen contributed this example #+ (with light edits by the ABS Guide author).
cat <(ls -l) # Same as ls -l | cat sort -k 9 <(ls -l /bin) <(ls -l /usr/bin) <(ls -l /usr/X11R6/bin) # Lists all the files in the 3 main 'bin' directories, and sorts by filename. # Note that three (count 'em) distinct commands are fed to 'sort'. diff <(command1) <(command2) # Gives difference in command output. tar cf >(bzip2 -c > file.tar.bz2) $directory_name # Calls "tar cf /dev/fd/?? $directory_name", and "bzip2 -c > file.tar.bz2". # # Because of the /dev/fd/<n> system feature, # the pipe between both commands does not need to be named. # # This can be emulated. # bzip2 -c < pipe > file.tar.bz2& tar cf pipe $directory_name rm pipe # or exec 3>&1 tar cf /dev/fd/4 $directory_name 4>&1 >&3 3>&- | bzip2 -c > file.tar.bz2 3>&- exec 3>&- # Thanks, Stéphane Chazelas
Here is a method of circumventing the problem of an echo piped to a while-read loop running in a subshell.
Example 23.1. Code block redirection without forking
#!/bin/bash
# wr-ps.bash: while-read loop with process substitution.
# This example contributed by Tomas Pospisek.
# (Heavily edited by the ABS Guide author.)
echo
echo "random input" | while read i
do
global=3D": Not available outside the loop."
# ... because it runs in a subshell.
done
echo "\$global (from outside the subprocess) = $global"
# $global (from outside the subprocess) =
echo; echo "--"; echo
while read i
do
echo $i
global=3D": Available outside the loop."
# ... because it does NOT run in a subshell.
done < <( echo "random input" )
# ^ ^
echo "\$global (using process substitution) = $global"
# Random input
# $global (using process substitution) = 3D: Available outside the loop.
echo; echo "##########"; echo
# And likewise . . .
declare -a inloop
index=0
cat $0 | while read line
do
inloop[$index]="$line"
((index++))
# It runs in a subshell, so ...
done
echo "OUTPUT = "
echo ${inloop[*]} # ... nothing echoes.
echo; echo "--"; echo
declare -a outloop
index=0
while read line
do
outloop[$index]="$line"
((index++))
# It does NOT run in a subshell, so ...
done < <( cat $0 )
echo "OUTPUT = "
echo ${outloop[*]} # ... the entire script echoes.
exit $?
Example 23.2. Redirecting the output of process substitution into a loop.
#!/bin/bash
# psub.bash
# As inspired by Diego Molina (thanks!).
declare -a array0
while read
do
array0[${#array0[@]}]="$REPLY"
done < <( sed -e 's/bash/CRASH-BANG!/' $0 | grep bin | awk '{print $1}' )
# Sets the default 'read' variable, $REPLY, by process substitution,
#+ then copies it into an array.
echo "${array0[@]}"
exit $?
# ====================================== #
bash psub.bash
#!/bin/CRASH-BANG! done #!/bin/CRASH-BANG!
A reader sent in the following interesting example of process substitution.
# Script fragment taken from SuSE distribution:
# --------------------------------------------------------------#
while read des what mask iface; do
# Some commands ...
done < <(route -n)
# ^ ^ First < is redirection, second is process substitution.
# To test it, let's make it do something.
while read des what mask iface; do
echo $des $what $mask $iface
done < <(route -n)
# Output:
# Kernel IP routing table
# Destination Gateway Genmask Flags Metric Ref Use Iface
# 127.0.0.0 0.0.0.0 255.0.0.0 U 0 0 0 lo
# --------------------------------------------------------------#
# As Stéphane Chazelas points out,
#+ an easier-to-understand equivalent is:
route -n |
while read des what mask iface; do # Variables set from output of pipe.
echo $des $what $mask $iface
done # This yields the same output as above.
# However, as Ulrich Gayer points out . . .
#+ this simplified equivalent uses a subshell for the while loop,
#+ and therefore the variables disappear when the pipe terminates.
# --------------------------------------------------------------#
# However, Filip Moritz comments that there is a subtle difference
#+ between the above two examples, as the following shows.
(
route -n | while read x; do ((y++)); done
echo $y # $y is still unset
while read x; do ((y++)); done < <(route -n)
echo $y # $y has the number of lines of output of route -n
)
More generally spoken
(
: | x=x
# seems to start a subshell like
: | ( x=x )
# while
x=x < <(:)
# does not
)
# This is useful, when parsing csv and the like.
# That is, in effect, what the original SuSE code fragment does.[108] This has the same effect as a named pipe (temp file), and, in fact, named pipes were at one time used in process substitution.