I've been given sudo access on one of our development RedHat linux boxes, and I seem to find myself quite often needing to redirect output to a location I don't normally have write access to.
The trouble is, this contrived example doesn't work:
sudo ls -hal /root/ > /root/test.out
I just receive the response:
-bash: /root/test.out: Permission denied
How can I get this to work?
Your command does not work because the redirection is performed by your shell which does not have the permission to write to /root/test.out
. The redirection of the output is not performed by sudo.
There are multiple solutions:
Run a shell with sudo and give the command to it by using the -c
option:
sudo sh -c 'ls -hal /root/ > /root/test.out'
Create a script with your commands and run that script with sudo:
#!/bin/sh
ls -hal /root/ > /root/test.out
Run sudo ls.sh
. See Steve Bennett's answer if you don't want to create a temporary file.
Launch a shell with sudo -s
then run your commands:
[nobody@so]$ sudo -s
[root@so]# ls -hal /root/ > /root/test.out
[root@so]# ^D
[nobody@so]$
Use sudo tee
(if you have to escape a lot when using the -c
option):
sudo ls -hal /root/ | sudo tee /root/test.out > /dev/null
The redirect to /dev/null
is needed to stop tee from outputting to the screen. To append instead of overwriting the output file
(>>
), use tee -a
or tee --append
(the last one is specific to GNU coreutils).
Thanks go to Jd, Adam J. Forster and Johnathan for the second, third and fourth solutions.