My overarching program is a shell script. This shell script calls a C program that I need to pipe input to, and ultimately the C program will create a shell.
However, when I pipe my input into the C program within the shell script
Do_Other_Stuff
./my_prog < file1
I can't get the shell to stay alive. Running just,
Do_Other_Stuff
./my_prog
works, as I have to input the stdin myself, and the shell correctly spawns when my_prog exits. I'm pretty sure wrapping up the ./my_prog call in a C program, and compiling and running that would work, but I'm curious as to whether there's a cleaner way with shell.
I've tried several combinations of using cat file1 | ./my_prog and using & in different situations, and haven't had any success.
Thanks!
Try:
cat file1 - | ./myprog
Many programs recognize the "filename" - to mean stdin.
Do you have access to the C program source code? My guess is that the C program is using istty(0) to determine if stdin is coming from a terminal. It probably only creates an interactive shell when that is the case. Using stdin redirection, whether from a file or a pipe, means that istty(0) returns false.
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