On Thu, 2004-08-12 at 16:09, Oliver Elphick wrote: > "2>" redirects standard error
I forgot to say "&1" means the file open on file descriptor 1, which is always standard output. So "2>&1" means send standard error to standard output, so that a pipe (which just takes standard output) can see the errors as well. All that you can find in the man page for bash or sh or whatever your shell is. (If you used csh or tcsh, I think the syntax would be different.) Oliver ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 4: Don't 'kill -9' the postmaster