What's the difference of redirect an output using ">", "&>", ">&" and "2&>"?
What's the difference of redirect an output using >, &>, >& and 2&>?开发者_StackOverflow社区
>redirects stdout to a file2>&redirects file handle "2" (almost always stderr) to some other file handle (it's generally written as2>&1, which redirects stderr to the same place as stdout).&>and>&redirect both stdout and stderr to a file. It's normally written as&>file(or>&file). It's functionally the same as>file 2>&1.2>redirects output to file handle 2 (usually stderr) to a file.
1> (or >) is for stdout, the output of a command. 2> is for stderr, the error output of the command.
This page is a bit wordy, but has good explanations and examples of the different command combinations.
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