问题
Suppose I have the following command in bash:
one | two
one
runs for a long time producing a stream of output and two
performs a quick operation on each line of that stream, but two
doesn't work at all unless the first value it reads tells it how many values to read per line. one
does not output that value, but I know what it is in advance (let's say it's 15
). I want to send a 15\n
through the pipe before the output of one
. I do not want to modify one
or two
.
My first thought was to do:
echo "$(echo 15; one)" | two
That gives me the correct output, but it doesn't stream through the pipe at all until the command one
finishes. I want the output to start streaming right away through the pipe, since it takes a long time to execute (months).
I also tried:
echo 15; one | two
Which, of course, outputs 15, but doesn't send it through the pipe to two
.
Is there a way in bash to pass '15\n' through the pipe and then start streaming the output of one
through the same pipe?
回答1:
You just need the shell grouping construct:
{ echo 15; one; } | two
The spaces around the braces and the trailing semicolon are required.
To test:
one() { sleep 5; echo done; }
two() { while read line; do date "+%T - $line"; done; }
{ printf "%s\n" 1 2 3; one; } | two
16:29:53 - 1
16:29:53 - 2
16:29:53 - 3
16:29:58 - done
回答2:
Use command grouping:
{ echo 15; one; } | two
Done!
回答3:
You could do this with sed:
Example 'one' script, emits one line per second to show it's line buffered and running.
#!/bin/bash
while [ 1 ]; do
echo "TICK $(date)"
sleep 1
done
Then pipe that through this sed command, note that for your specific example 'ArbitraryText' will be the number of fields. I used ArbitraryText so that it's obvious that this is the inserted text. On OSX, -l is unbuffered with GNU Sed I believe it's -u
$ ./one | sed -l '1i\
> ArbitraryText
> '
What this does is it instructs sed to insert one line before processing the rest of your file, everything else will pass through untouched.
The end result is processed line-by-line without chunk buffering (or, waiting for the input script to finish)
ArbitraryText
TICK Fri Jun 28 13:26:56 PDT 2013
...etc
You should be able to then pipe that into 'two' as you would normally.
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/17372765/how-do-i-prepend-to-a-stream-in-bash