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bash script write executing time in a file

I need to write the time taken to execute this command in a txt file:

time ./program.exe

How can I do in bash script?

I try with >> time.txt but that doesn't work (the output does not go to file and does go to the screen).

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Getting time in bash to write to a file is hard work. It is a bash built-in command. (On Mac OS X, there's an external command, /usr/bin/time, that does a similar job but with a different output format and less recalcitrance.)

You need to use:

(time ./program.exe) 2> time.txt

It writes to standard error (hence the 2> notation). However, if you don't use the sub-shell (the parentheses), it doesn't work; the output still comes to the screen.


Alternatively, and without a sub-shell, you can use:

{ time ./program.exe; } 2> time.txt

Note the space after the open brace and the semi-colon; both are necessary on a single line. The braces must appear where a command could appear, and must be standalone symbols. (If you struggle hard enough, you'll come up with ...;}|something or ...;}2>&1. Both of these identify the brace as a standalone symbol, though. If you try ...;}xyz, the shell will (probably) fail to find a command called }xyz, though.)


I need to run more command in more terminal. If I do this:

 xterm -xrm '*hold: true' -e (time ./Program.exe) >> time.exe & sleep 2

it doesn't work and tells me Syntax error: "(" unexpected. How do I fix this?

You would need to do something like:

xterm -xrm '*hold: true' -e sh -c "(time ./Program.exe) 2> time.txt & sleep 2"

The key change is to run the shell with the script coming from the argument to the -c option; you can replace sh with /bin/bash or an equivalent name. That should get around any 'Syntax error' issues. I'm not quite sure what triggers that error, though, so there may be a simpler and better way to deal with it. It's also conceivable that xterm's -e option only takes a single string argument, in which case, I suppose you'd use:

xterm -xrm '*hold: true' -e 'sh -c "(time ./Program.exe) 2> time.txt & sleep 2"'

You can manual bash xterm as well as I can.

I'm not sure why you run the timed program in background mode, but that's your problem, not mine. Similarly, the sleep 2 is not obviously necessary if the hold: true keeps the terminal open.


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