Redirect output of time command in unix into a variable in bash?
Solution 1:
X=`(time ls) 2>&1 | grep real`
Solution 2:
See BashFAQ/032.
$ # captures output of command and time
$ time=$( TIMEFORMAT="%R"; { time ls; } 2>&1 ) # note the curly braces
$ # captures the time only, passes stdout through
$ exec 3>&1 4>&2
$ time=$(TIMEFORMAT="%R"; { time ls 1>&3 2>&4; } 2>&1)
bar baz
$ exec 3>&- 4>&-
The time will look like "0.000" using TIMEFORMAT="%R"
which will be the "real" time.
Solution 3:
Time writes its output to STDERR rather than STDOUT. Making matters worse, by default 'time' is a shell builtin command, so if you attempt 'time ls 2>&1' the '2>&1' only applies to 'ls'.
The solution would probably be something like:
/usr/bin/time -f 'real %e' -o OUTPUT_FILE ls > /dev/null 2>&1<br>
REALTIME=$(cat OUTPUT_FILE | cut -f 2 -d ' ')
There are more fancy ways to do it, but that is the clear/simple way.