X-Git-Url: https://ruderich.org/simon/gitweb/?p=coloredstderr%2Fcoloredstderr.git;a=blobdiff_plain;f=README;h=5e2209efdd37a5c29813359150938da8f770e31f;hp=e00fdfaf2be4186fa4cafdabed62511049ecf06c;hb=2c55827f6f2c231a8f166e015df4c5c3818c8ba4;hpb=b24bd8dc4367f3adc443e4acb954326f38098c53 diff --git a/README b/README index e00fdfa..5e2209e 100644 --- a/README +++ b/README @@ -6,6 +6,8 @@ coloredstderr is a small library which uses 'LD_PRELOAD' to color stderr. Like all solutions using 'LD_PRELOAD' it only works with dynamically linked binaries. Statically linked binaries, for example valgrind, are not supported. +setuid binaries are also not supported ('LD_PRELOAD' disabled for security +reasons). It was inspired by stderred [2]. Similar solutions (using 'LD_PRELOAD') @@ -31,6 +33,32 @@ DEPENDENCIES - dynamic linker/loader which supports 'LD_PRELOAD' (e.g. GNU/Linux's ld.so) +INSTALLATION +------------ + + ./configure && make && make check + +Then either install the library with `make install` or just copy it from +`src/.libs/` to wherever you want to install it: + + rm -f /destination/path/for/library/libcoloredstderr.so + cp -L src/.libs/libcoloredstderr.so /destination/path/for/library/ + +*Important:* If you install `libcoloredstderr.so` manually, make sure _not_ to +use plain `cp` to overwrite an existing `libcoloredstderr.so` file which is in +use! Doing so will crash most processes which were started with 'LD_PRELOAD' +set to this file. This is not a bug in coloredstderr, but a general problem. +`cp` truncates the file which causes the `mmap()` ed library to be in an +inconsistent state causing a segmentation fault when using any functions of +the library. Just remove the file first and then copy it. `make install` +handles the install in this way and is therefore not affected. + +As a simple safeguard, `make` builds and installs the `libcoloredstderr.so` +file non-writable to prevent accidental overwrites. Even if the overwrite is +forced with `cp -f`, the file is unlinked and recreated by `cp` because the +file is non-writable, preventing the problem. + + USAGE ----- @@ -57,8 +85,7 @@ A default setup could look like this: The following additional environment variables are available: - 'COLORED_STDERR_PRE' - String to write before each write to stderr, defaults to "\033[91m" (bright - red). + String to write before each write to stderr, defaults to "\033[31m" (red). - 'COLORED_STDERR_POST' String to write after each write to stderr, defaults to "\033[0m" (reset color). @@ -67,18 +94,41 @@ The following additional environment variables are available: terminal, e.g. when writing to a file. By default, only writes to a terminal are colored. +All environment variables starting with 'COLORED_STDERR_PRIVATE_*' are +internal variables used by the implementation and should not be set manually. +See the source for details. + + +To set custom colors as pre/post strings you can use the `$''` feature of Bash +and Zsh: + + export COLORED_STDERR_PRE=$'\033[91m' # bright red + export COLORED_STDERR_POST=$'\033[0m' # default + +Or to be more compatible you can use the following which should work in any +Bourne shell: + + esc=`printf '\033'` + COLORED_STDERR_PRE="${esc}[91m" # red + COLORED_STDERR_POST="${esc}[0m" # default + export COLORED_STDERR_PRE COLORED_STDERR_POST + DEBUG ----- To enable debug mode, configure coloredstderr with '--enable-debug'. +*Important:* Debug mode enables `assert()`s in the code which might abort the +process using 'LD_PRELOAD' if an error condition is detected! + Debug mode is slower than normal mode. To log only warnings without the -overhead of debug mode use '--enable-warnings'. +overhead of debug mode use '--enable-warnings'. `assert()`s are not enabled +with '--enable-warnings', so it's safe to use. -Debug messages are written to the file `colored_stderr_debug_log.txt` in the -current working directory _if_ it exists. If it exists debug messages are -appended. Be careful, this file might grow very quickly. +Debug messages are appended to the file `colored_stderr_debug_log.txt` in the +current working directory _if_ it exists. Be careful, this file might grow +very quickly. *Important:* Warnings are written to `$HOME/colored_stderr_warning_log.txt` even if it _does not_ exist (only if debug or warning mode is enabled)! If it @@ -86,6 +136,14 @@ doesn't exist it's created. An existing file isn't overwritten, but the warnings are appended at the end. +KNOWN ISSUES +------------ + +- `{fputc,putc,putchar}_unlocked()` are not hooked when writing to stdout + (which might be redirected to stderr). Can't be fixed as the compiler + inlines the code into the program without calling any function. + + BUGS ----