In Unix-like computer operating systems (and, to some extent, Windows), a pipeline is the original software pipeline: a set of processes chained by their standard streams, so that the output of each process (stdout) feeds directly as input (stdin) to the next one. Each connection is implemented by an anonymous pipe. Filter programs are often used in this configuration.
The concept was invented by Douglas McIlroy for Unix shells and it was named by analogy to a physical pipeline.
Examples
Simple example
ls -l | less
In this example, ls is the Unix directory lister, and less is an inter...