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Understanding File Descriptors & Redirection in Linux
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πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡Έ United Statesβ€’July 6, 2026

Understanding File Descriptors & Redirection in Linux

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Originally published byDev.to

File Descriptors

What is a File Descriptors

A file descriptor is simply a non-negative integer that the opreting system uses to identify an open file or I/O resources. in linux eveything is treating as a file, including a regular file, pipes, sockets, and devices. Every process starts with three standard file descriptor.

  • 0 – stdin (standard input)

  • 1 – stdout (standard output)

  • 2 – stderr (standard error)

Redirection in Linux

>

single greater-than (>) redirection in linux used to overwrite the file. for example:-

echo "Hello" > file.txt

>>

double greater-than (>>) used to append in the file. for example:-

echo "My Name is Dharam" >> file.txt

<

less-than use to input from a file. for example:-

wc -c < file.txt

2>

redirect error to a file

ls -la not-exist-file.txt 2> error.log

2>&1

redirect error and without error output

ls -l file.txt test.txt > output.txt 2>&1

&> and &>>

sort version of 2>&1, this redirection also use to output and error.

tee

tee command used to view and redirect output.

ls -l testfile.txt | tee output.txt

| - Pipe

Pipe (|): Sends the output of one command directly as the input to another command.

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