tee - duplicate standard input
tee [-ai][file...]
The tee utility shall copy standard input to standard output, making a copy in zero or more files. The tee utility shall not buffer output.
If the -a option is not specified, output files shall be written (see File Read, Write, and Creation.
The tee utility shall conform to the Base Definitions volume of IEEE Std 1003.1-2001, Section 12.2, Utility Syntax Guidelines.
The following options shall be supported:
- -a
- Append the output to the files.
- -i
- Ignore the SIGINT signal.
The following operands shall be supported:
- file
- A pathname of an output file. Processing of at least 13 file operands shall be supported.
The standard input can be of any type.
None.
The following environment variables shall affect the execution of tee:
- LANG
- Provide a default value for the internationalization variables that are unset or null. (See the Base Definitions volume of IEEE Std 1003.1-2001, Section 8.2, Internationalization Variables for the precedence of internationalization variables used to determine the values of locale categories.)
- LC_ALL
- If set to a non-empty string value, override the values of all the other internationalization variables.
- LC_CTYPE
- Determine the locale for the interpretation of sequences of bytes of text data as characters (for example, single-byte as opposed to multi-byte characters in arguments).
- LC_MESSAGES
- Determine the locale that should be used to affect the format and contents of diagnostic messages written to standard error.
- NLSPATH
- [XSI] Determine the location of message catalogs for the processing of LC_MESSAGES .
Default, except that if the -i option was specified, SIGINT shall be ignored.
The standard output shall be a copy of the standard input.
The standard error shall be used only for diagnostic messages.
If any file operands are specified, the standard input shall be copied to each named file.
None.
The following exit values shall be returned:
- 0
- The standard input was successfully copied to all output files.
- >0
- An error occurred.
If a write to any successfully opened file operand fails, writes to other successfully opened file operands and standard output shall continue, but the exit status shall be non-zero. Otherwise, the default actions specified in Utility Description Defaults apply.
The tee utility is usually used in a pipeline, to make a copy of the output of some utility.
The file operand is technically optional, but tee is no more useful than cat when none is specified.
Save an unsorted intermediate form of the data in a pipeline:
... | tee unsorted | sort > sorted
The buffering requirement means that tee is not allowed to use ISO C standard fully buffered or line-buffered writes. It does not mean that tee has to do 1-byte reads followed by 1-byte writes.
It should be noted that early versions of BSD ignore any invalid options and accept a single '-' as an alternative to -i. They also print a message if unable to open a file:
"tee: cannot access %s\n", <pathname>Historical implementations ignore write errors. This is explicitly not permitted by this volume of IEEE Std 1003.1-2001.
Some historical implementations use O_APPEND when providing append mode; others use the lseek() function to seek to the end-of-file after opening the file without O_APPEND. This volume of IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 requires functionality equivalent to using O_APPEND; see File Read, Write, and Creation.
None.
Introduction, cat, the System Interfaces volume of IEEE Std 1003.1-2001, lseek()
First released in Issue 2.
IEEE PASC Interpretation 1003.2 #168 is applied.