You may use tee to duplicate command for processing whole stream by many command:
( ( seq 1 10 | tee /dev/fd/5 | sed s/^/line..\ / >&4 ) 5>&1 | wc -l ) 4>&1
line.. 1
line.. 2
line.. 3
line.. 4
line.. 5
line.. 6
line.. 7
line.. 8
line.. 9
line.. 10
10
or split line by line, using bash:
while read line ;do
echo cmd1 $line
read line && echo cmd2 $line
read line && echo cmd3 $line
done < <(seq 1 10)
cmd1 1
cmd2 2
cmd3 3
cmd1 4
cmd2 5
cmd3 6
cmd1 7
cmd2 8
cmd3 9
cmd1 10
Finaly there is a way for running cmd1, cmd2 and cmd3 only once with 1/3 of stream as STDIN:
( ( ( seq 1 10 |
tee /dev/fd/5 /dev/fd/6 |
sed -ne '1{:a;p;N;N;N;s/^.*\n//;ta;}' |
cmd1 >&4
) 5>&1 |
sed -ne '2{:a;p;N;N;N;s/^.*\n//;ta;}' |
cmd2 >&4
) 6>&1 |
sed -ne '3{:a;p;N;N;N;s/^.*\n//;ta;}' |
cmd3 >&4
) 4>&1
command_1: 1
command_1: 4
command_1: 7
command_1: 10
Command-2: 2
Command-2: 5
Command-2: 8
command 3: 3
command 3: 6
command 3: 9
For trying this, you could use:
alias cmd1='sed -e "s/^/command_1: /"' \
cmd2='sed -e "s/^/Command_2: /"' \
cmd3='sed -e "s/^/Command_3: /"'
For using one stream on different process if on same script, you could do:
(
for ((i=(RANDOM&7);i--;));do
read line;
echo CMD1 $line
done
for ((i=RANDOM&7;i--;));do
read line
echo CMD2 $line
done
while read line ;do
echo CMD3 $line
done
)
CMD1 1
CMD1 2
CMD1 3
CMD2 4
CMD2 5
CMD2 6
CMD2 7
CMD2 8
CMD2 9
CMD3 10
For this, you may have to transform your separated scripts into bash function to be able to build one overall script.
Another way could be to ensure each script won't output anything to STDOUT, than add a cat at end of each script to be able to chain them:
#!/bin/sh
for ((i=1;1<n;i++));do
read line
pRoCeSS the $line
echo >output_log
done
cat
Final command could look like:
seq 1 10 | cmd1 | cmd2 | cmd2