cat /dev/urandom
Lane
lane at joeandlane.com
Wed Jul 27 01:12:08 GMT 2005
On Tuesday 26 July 2005 20:03, you wrote:
> I don't use backticks, so this'll have the equivalent "$()".
>
> The command: cat /dev/urandom
> is passed to the shell and the shell executes "cat" and sends
> the output to the screen without possibility of executing anything
> (except the magic stuff recognized by your terminal emulator -- I hope
> it can't execute stuff).
>
> The command: $(cat /dev/random)
> is passed to the shell, where it does "command substitution" on
> it first and then executes it, where "it" is the output of the
> cat command, which could be destructive.
>
> Simpler tests are:
>
> pwd
> echo pwd
> $(echo pwd)
> echo $(echo pwd)
I think the backticks (and shell variables) actually send the output to a
pipe, not the screen.
I use them in recursive shell scripts, on occasion, which are run by the cron
daemon.
Either technique can be a blessing ... or a curse, depending on how you use
them.
lane
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