The simplest way is to use shell redirection in the script: mirrordir --exclude /mnt / /mnt/hda4 > /my/log/file This redirects STDOUT to /my/log/file, truncating the file first. If you want to append to the end of the file instead of overwriting it, do this: mirrordir --exclude /mnt / /mnt/hda4 >> /my/log/file If you also want any errors generated by your command written to the log file, you can do this: mirrordir --exclude /mnt / /mnt/hda4 >> /my/log/file 2>&1 The 2>&1 redirects STDERR to STDOUT, which has previously been redirected to /my/log/file. If you're doing a lot of redirects in a script, you can use the exec command to redirect all STDOUT and STDERR, like this: #!/bin/bash exec >> /my/log/file exec 2>> /my/error/file mirrordir --exclude /mnt / /mnt/hda4 another_command more_commands This will redirect the output of the rest of the script to /my/log/file, and redirect the errors generated by the rest of the script to /my/error/file. This comes in handy when you have lots of commands and you want them all redirected to one place. You can also get fancy and write your output to the screen AND a log file (or two, or three...): mirrordir --exclude /mnt / /mnt/hda4 | tee -a /my/log/file /my/other/file The output of the mirrordir command appears on your screen, and is also appended to (-a) /my/log/file and /my/other/file. ~Jeff On Tuesday, January 28, 2003 9:09 AM, Scott H wrote: > I have a little script that I want to use to > mirror one partition to another, using mirrordir > via a cron job. I want the script to log it's > output to a log file, like .../messages, or a > custom one, like .../mirrordir.log. How do I get > it to do this, either in the script itself, or by > telling cron to put output there? Here sort of > what the script looks like: > > #!/bin/sh > date > echo "Mirrordir says:" > mirrordir --exclude /mnt / /mnt/hda4 > date > echo "Done." > > TIAFAH! > > Scott