Shell: redirect stdout to /dev/null and stderr to stdout
How about this:
./script 3>&1 1>/dev/null 2>&3 | ./other-script
The idea is to "backup" stdout descriptor, close the original stdout and then redirect strerr to saved stdout.
Its much similar to the solution provided by geirha, but its more explicit (bash coding can easily become very obscured).
You want
./script 2>&1 1>/dev/null | ./other-script
The order here is important. Let's assume stdin (fd 0), stdout (fd 1) and stderr (fd 2) are all connected to a tty initially, so
0: /dev/tty, 1: /dev/tty, 2: /dev/tty
The first thing that gets set up is the pipe. other-script's stdin gets connected to the pipe, and script's stdout gets connected to the pipe, so script's file descriptors so far look like:
0: /dev/tty, 1: pipe, 2: /dev/tty
Next, the redirections occur, from left to right. 2>&1
makes fd 2 go wherever fd 1 is currently going, which is the pipe.
0: /dev/tty, 1: pipe, 2: pipe
Lastly, 1>/dev/null
redirects fd1 to /dev/null
0: /dev/tty, 1: /dev/null, 2: pipe
End result, script's stdout is silenced, and its stderr is sent through the pipe, which ends up in other-script's stdin.
Also see http://bash-hackers.org/wiki/doku.php/howto/redirection_tutorial
Also note that 1>/dev/null
is synonymous to, but more explicit than >/dev/null