What is the command required to redirect the standard error descriptor to a file called error.txt in unix?
I have this command so far:
find / -name "report*" ________ error.txt
You can use the stderr handler 2 like this:
find / -name "report*" 2>error.txt
See an example:
$ ls a1 a2
ls: cannot access a2: No such file or directory  <--- this is stderr
a1                                               <--- this is stdout
$ ls a1 a2 2>error.txt
a1
$ cat error.txt 
ls: cannot access a2: No such file or directory  <--- just stderr was stored
As read in BASH Shell: How To Redirect stderr To stdout ( redirect stderr to a File ), these are the handlers:
| Handle | Name | Description | 
|---|---|---|
| 0 | stdin | Standard input (stdin) | 
| 1 | stdout | Standard output (stdout) | 
| 2 | stderr | Standard error (stderr) | 
Note the difference with &>error.txt, that redirects both stdout and stderr (see Redirect stderr and stdout in a bash script or How to redirect both stdout and stderr to a file):
$ ls a1 a2 &>error.txt
$ cat error.txt 
ls: cannot access a2: No such file or directory  <--- stdout and stderr
a1                                               <--- were stored