A pipe ( | ) is used to send output of one command to some other command. Many a time, use of pipe simplifies our task to a great extent. I'll discuss a few examples
Count number of files in a directory
ls | wc -l
List all users on a system who are running some processes (process owners)
ps -ef | cut -d " " -f1 | sort | uniq
List all process-listings that contain the word "mozilla"
ps -ef | grep mozilla
Find the word "services" in all .htm files
find . -name "*.htm" | xargs grep "services"
Sort lines in a file and print on the console
cat filename | sort
Killing mozilla
ps -ef | grep "mozilla" | cut -f1 | xargs kill
Print last 10 lines of a file
tail filename | lpr
Here's a good page on Linux Tips.
This wikipedia page has more information on unix pipes.
Monday, April 10, 2006
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2 comments:
Hey actually this pipe commands design is based on pipe and filter architecture style. This type of style is very useful for frequent modification or addition of new components (filter). Actually I heard unix pipe command example during my architecture course.
Shrinivas
You are right. Pipes and filters are related. See the wikipedia article.
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