On Wed, Jul 12, 2023 at 12:06 PM David G. Johnston
<david.g.johns...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> On Tue, Jul 11, 2023 at 8:52 PM jian he <jian.universal...@gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>> hi.
>>
>> test.sql content:
>> --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>> do $$
>> begin
>>   raise info 'information message %', now() ;
>>   raise debug 'debug message %', now();
>>   raise notice 'notice message %', now();
>> end $$;
>> --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>> psql -af test.sql > test.out
>>
>
> You've only redirected stdout (file # 1 - implied), the "raise" stuff goes to 
> stderr (file # 2)
>
> IIRC you can do:
>
> psql -af test.sql > test.out 2>&1
>
> (order matters, left-to-right)
>
> But you can search online for "output redirection in Linux" or some such if 
> you want to learn the Linux command line better.
>
> David J.
>

thanks.
I don't know that "raise" stuff goes to stderr.
To get rid of the line numbers, I use "psql -a < test.sql > test.out
2>&1 " to get the expected result.


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