command output redirection using '-< <( ... )'
The
<(openssl dgst -sha256 filename)
construct is a process substitution. It creates a file (or FIFO) behind the scenes and passes its name back to the command sequence.
<
is a regular file redirection, redirecting the contents of the behind-the-scenes file to stdin
and
-
is a placeholder recognized by sed
to indicate that its input is coming from stdin
.
Since sed
is perfectly capable of reading from files, the -<
seems unnecessary in this context;
sed 's/^.*= //' <(openssl dgst -sha256 filename)
should work just as well.
The <( COMMAND )
Bash construct is called process substitution.
It evaluates the COMMAND
inside and redirects its output to a FIFO, a named pipe that gets a virtual file descriptor inside /dev/fd
assigned. It acts like a temporary file that contains the output of the evaluated command.
The <
Bash construct is called input redirection.
It takes a file descriptor on the right side and redirects its content to the STDIN (standard input) of the command on the left side.
The -
is not a Bash construct but an argument for sed
that specifies its input file. The special value -
means to read from STDIN (which is also sed
's default, so it could be omitted).
sed 's/^.*= //' - < <(openssl dgst -sha256 filename)
This line first runs openssl dgst -sha256 filename
and caches its output in a FIFO. The file descriptor representing this named pipe is treated as input file that gets redirected to the STDIN of sed 's/^.*= //' -
. This sed
command reads from STDIN and removes every character before a "=" symbol followed by a space.