The term pipeline has meaning in electrical and mechanical systems, as well as in software. In general, the term represents the concept of splitting a job into subprocesses in which the output of one subprocess feeds into the next (much like water flows from one pipe segment to the next).
A mechanical example of a pipeline is a washer/dryer system for clothing. Instead of having one unit that both washes and dries, we have two units that together form a pipeline (the output of the washer enters the drier). If washing takes 1 hour and drying takes 1 hour, the pipeline allows us to finish a full load of laundry every hour, compared to every 2 hours if you had a single (non-pipelined) unit that washed and then dried. It still requires two hours for an item of clothing to complete its wash/dry cycle of course.
Electrically, pipelines are used in microprocessors to allow complex logic sequences to execute at faster speeds. Pipelines are related to the engineering concepts of throughput and latency. See Instruction pipeline for a better discussion.
In computer software, a pipeline is a command line feature prevalent in UNIX and other UNIX-like operating systems. Douglas McIlroy, one of the authors of the early UNIX command shells, noticed that much of the time they were processing the output of one program as the input to another. The UNIX pioneers established a means of chaining the running programs together as co-processes[?] so that the output of the first program becomes the input to the second. This was to become the famous pipes and filters design pattern. A pipeline may be extended to any number of commands with the output of one serving as the input to the next.
Commonly filter programs are used in a UNIX pipeline and they usually obey a few conventions: line structured records, reading data from the standard input, and writing to the standard output.
Below is an example of a pipeline that implements a kind of spell checker for this page.
curl /wiki/Pipeline | sed 's/[^a-zA-Z ]//g' | tr[?] 'A-Z ' 'a-z\n' | grep '[a-z]' | sort -u | comm -23 - /usr/dict/words
Here is an explanation of the pipeline:
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