> Hi, > > I keep seeing a reference to what looks like two pre-populated variables > in shell scripts.  Actually this one is in a crontab. > > Something like this :  /home/user-name/directory-name/scriptname.php > >/dev/null 2>&1 > > What is the number 1 and 2?  Is there others? Unix and copycats, like Linux use small non-negative integers to identify files that may be read from or written to. They are known as file descriptors. By convention, the first 3 file descriptors have a special meaning. 0 is standard input, 1 is standard output, and 2 is standard error. Normally, each process inherits these 3 file descriptors from its parent process but the shell allows you to "redirect" them to other files. Examples: echo hello >newfile # Creates the file "newfile" and writes # "hello\n" to it. echo hello >/dev/null # Writes "hello\n" to /dev/null, where it # disappears echo hello 2>newfile2 # Creates the file "newfile2" and puts # error messages from "echo hello" into it. # Since "echo hello" won't output any error # messages, "newfile2" will be an empty file. echo hello 2>&1 # Redirects the error output of the command # into the same file where the standard # output goes. So, "scriptname.php >/dev/null 2>&1" says to redirect the standard output of scriptname.php into the bit bucket and then to redirect the standard error output to the same place. -Dale