I assume that the program will call the glibc function isatty() to check whether stdin/stdout is a terminal or not. That's common for programs which use colorized output on terminals or other features of an ANSI terminal like cursor positioning or line erasing / redrawing.
You can trick the program using the LD_PRELOAD environment variable. LD_PRELOAD is handled by the ELF linker and tells that a dynamic library should be loaded before all others. Using this feature it is possible to override library functions, in your case the glibc function isatty().
Here comes an example:
libisatty.c
/**
* Overrides the glibc function. Will always return true.
*
* Note: Although this should be ok for most applications it can
* lead to unwanted side effects. It depends on the question
* why the programm calls isatty()
*/
int isatty(int param) {
return 1;
}
Makefile
# Make the shared Library
lib: libisatty.c
gcc -shared -Wl,-soname,libisatty.so.1 -o libisatty.so.1.0 libisatty.c
ln -s libisatty.so.1.0 libisatty.so.1
ln -s libisatty.so.1 libisatty.so
Run:
make lib
It should build fine, I've tested it on Ubuntu12.04 AMD 64.
Now it's time to test the library. :) I've used the command ls --color=auto for tests. ls calls isatty() to decide whether it should colorize it's output or not. If the output is redirected to a file or a pipe it won't be colorized. You can test this easily using the following commands:
ls --color=auto # should give you colorized output
ls --color=auto | cat # will give you monochrome output
Now we'll try the second command again using the LD_PRELOAD environment var:
LD_PRELOAD=libisatty.so ls --color=auto | cat
You should see colorized output.
/usr/bin/program file.txtdoesn't work? – Explosion Pills Feb 25 at 1:39/usr/bin/program < file.txt? – squiguy Feb 25 at 1:42