In Linux, the pipe command lets you sends the output of one command to another. Piping, as the term suggests, can redirect the standard output, input, or error of one process to another for further processing.

The syntax for the pipe or unnamed pipe command is the | character between any two commands:

Command-1 | Command-2 | …| Command-N

Here, the pipe cannot be accessed via another session; it is created temporarily to accommodate the execution of Command-1 and redirect the standard output. It is deleted after successful execution.

contents.txt

ls -al

grep

contents.txt

cat

grep

awk

grep

contents.txt

wc -l

In the example above,contains a list of all files in a particular directory—specifically, the output of thecommand. We firstthe filenames with the "file" keyword fromby piping (as shown), so the output of thecommand is provided as the input for thecommand. Next, we add piping to execute thecommand, which displays the 9column from the filtered output from thecommand. We can also count the number of rows inusing thecommand.

A named pipe can last until as long as the system is up and running or until it is deleted. It is a special file that follows the FIFO (first in, first out) mechanism. It can be used just like a normal file; i.e., you can write to it, read from it, and open or close it. To create a named pipe, the command is:

mkfifo <pipe-name>

This creates a named pipe file that can be used even over multiple shell sessions.

Another way to create a FIFO named pipe is to use this command:

mknod p <pipe-name>

To redirect a standard output of any command to another process, use the > symbol. To redirect a standard input of any command, use the < symbol.

As shown above, the output of the ls -al command is redirected to contents.txt and inserted in the file. Similarly, the input for the tail command is provided as contents.txt via the < symbol.

Here, we have created a named pipe, my-named-pipe , and redirected the output of the ls -al command into the named pipe. We can the open a new shell session and cat the contents of the named pipe, which shows the output of the ls -al command, as previously supplied. Notice the size of the named pipe is zero and it has a designation of "p".

So, next time you're working with commands at the Linux terminal and find yourself moving data between commands, hopefully a pipe will make the process quick and easy.