Question

Can anyone tell me the difference? for example:
if I have a file a.txt with the following content:

a
b
c

what would be the difference between cat a.txt | cat and cat < a.txt
It seems to me that they all simulate STDIN, is that correct, or are there differences? Thanks a lot.

Was it helpful?

Solution

Piping works from one process to another (the cats in the first example), and hence requires two processes cooperating. Redirection is handled by the shell itself. This can matter when doing things in the shell such as working with variables.

OTHER TIPS

The redirection does not "simulate STDIN". When you redirect, the file is the stdin for the process. In particular, many programs have different behavior if the input is a regular file than if it is a pipe or a tty, so you may get different behavior. For example:

$ < file perl -E 'say "is a regular file" if -f STDIN'
is a regular file
$ cat file | perl -E 'say "is a regular file" if -f STDIN'

Firstly, two results are same. Nothing to say.

For the work principle of cat a.txt | cat, the first cat takes argument a.txt, then prints its content. You pipe the stdout of the first to stdin of the second. The second cat finds no argument so it reads content from stdin, and prints it.

Because you use < in the second command, system replaces stdin of cat with file stream of a.txt. Anything else is same as the second cat in the first case.

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