2.11BSD/man/cat4/tty.0
TTY(4) UNIX Programmer's Manual TTY(4)
NAME
tty - general terminal interface
SYNOPSIS
#include <sgtty.h>
DESCRIPTION
This section describes both a particular special file
/dev/tty and the terminal drivers used for conversational
computing.
Line disciplines.
The system provides different _l_i_n_e _d_i_s_c_i_p_l_i_n_e_s for control-
ling communications lines. In this version of the system
there are two disciplines available for use with terminals:
old The old (Version 7) terminal driver. This is some-
times used when using the standard shell _s_h(1).
new The standard Berkeley terminal driver, with features
for job control; this must be used when using
_c_s_h(1).
Line discipline switching is accomplished with the TIOCSETD
_i_o_c_t_l:
int ldisc = LDISC;
ioctl(f, TIOCSETD, &ldisc);
where LDISC is OTTYDISC for the standard tty driver and
NTTYDISC for the ``new'' driver. The standard (currently
old) tty driver is discipline 0 by convention. Other dis-
ciplines may exist for special purposes, such as use of com-
munications lines for network connections. The current line
discipline can be obtained with the TIOCGETD _i_o_c_t_l. Pending
input is discarded when the line discipline is changed.
All of the low-speed asynchronous communications ports can
use any of the available line disciplines, no matter what
hardware is involved. The remainder of this section
discusses the "old" and "new" disciplines.
The control terminal.
When a terminal file is opened, it causes the process to
wait until a connection is established. In practice, user
programs seldom open these files; they are opened by
_g_e_t_t_y(8) or _r_l_o_g_i_n_d(8C) and become a user's standard input
and output file.
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If a process which has no control terminal opens a terminal
file, then that terminal file becomes the control terminal
for that process. The control terminal is thereafter inher-
ited by a child process during a _f_o_r_k(2), even if the con-
trol terminal is closed.
The file /dev/tty is, in each process, a synonym for a _c_o_n_-
_t_r_o_l _t_e_r_m_i_n_a_l associated with that process. It is useful
for programs that wish to be sure of writing messages on the
terminal no matter how output has been redirected. It can
also be used for programs that demand a file name for out-
put, when typed output is desired and it is tiresome to find
out which terminal is currently in use.
A process can remove the association it has with its con-
trolling terminal by opening the file /dev/tty and issuing
an
ioctl(f, TIOCNOTTY, 0);
This is often desirable in server processes.
Process groups.
Command processors such as _c_s_h(1) can arbitrate the terminal
between different _j_o_b_s by placing related jobs in a single
process group and associating this process group with the
terminal. A terminal's associated process group may be set
using the TIOCSPGRP _i_o_c_t_l(2):
ioctl(fildes, TIOCSPGRP, &pgrp);
or examined using TIOCGPGRP, which returns the current pro-
cess group in _p_g_r_p. The new terminal driver aids in this
arbitration by restricting access to the terminal by
processes which are not in the current process group; see
Job access control below.
Modes.
The terminal drivers have three major modes, characterized
by the amount of processing on the input and output charac-
ters:
cooked The normal mode. In this mode lines of input are
collected and input editing is done. The edited
line is made available when it is completed by a
newline, or when the _t__b_r_k_c character (normally
undefined) or _t__e_o_f_c character (normally an EOT,
control-D, hereafter ^D) is entered. A carriage
return is usually made synonymous with newline in
this mode, and replaced with a newline whenever it
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is typed. All driver functions (input editing,
interrupt generation, output processing such as
tab expansion, etc.) are available in this mode.
CBREAK This mode eliminates the character, word, and line
editing input facilities, making the input charac-
ter available to the user program as it is typed.
Flow control, literal-next and interrupt process-
ing are still done in this mode. Output process-
ing is done.
RAW This mode eliminates all input processing and
makes all input characters available as they are
typed; no output processing is done either.
The style of input processing can also be very different
when the terminal is put in non-blocking I/O mode; see the
FNDELAY flag described in _f_c_n_t_l(2). In this case a _r_e_a_d(2)
from the control terminal will never block, but rather
return an error indication (EWOULDBLOCK) if there is no
input available.
A process may also request that a SIGIO signal be sent it
whenever input is present and also whenever output queues
fall below the low-water mark. To enable this mode the
FASYNC flag should be set using _f_c_n_t_l(2).
Input editing.
A UNIX terminal ordinarily operates in full-duplex mode.
Characters may be typed at any time, even while output is
occurring, and are only lost when the system's character
input buffers become completely choked, which is rare, or
when the user has accumulated the maximum allowed number of
input characters that have not yet been read by some pro-
gram. Currently this limit is 256 characters. In RAW mode,
the terminal driver throws away all input and output without
notice when the limit is reached. In CBREAK or cooked mode
it refuses to accept any further input and, if in the new
line discipline, rings the terminal bell.
Input characters are normally accepted in either even or odd
parity with the parity bit being stripped off before the
character is given to the program. By clearing either the
EVEN or ODD bit in the flags word it is possible to have
input characters with that parity discarded (see the Summary
below.)
In all of the line disciplines, it is possible to simulate
terminal input using the TIOCSTI _i_o_c_t_l, which takes, as its
third argument, the address of a character. The system pre-
tends that this character was typed on the argument
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terminal, which must be the control terminal except for the
super-user (this call is not in standard version 7 UNIX).
Input characters are normally echoed by putting them in an
output queue as they arrive. This may be disabled by clear-
ing the ECHO bit in the flags word using the _s_t_t_y(3C) call
or the TIOCSETN or TIOCSETP _i_o_c_t_ls (see the Summary below).
In cooked mode, terminal input is processed in units of
lines. A program attempting to read will normally be
suspended until an entire line has been received (but see
the description of SIGTTIN in Job access control and of
FIONREAD in Summary, both below.) No matter how many charac-
ters are requested in the read call, at most one line will
be returned. It is not, however, necessary to read a whole
line at once; any number of characters may be requested in a
read, even one, without losing information.
During input, line editing is normally done, with the erase
character _s_g__e_r_a_s_e (by default, DELETE) logically erasing
the last character typed and the _s_g__k_i_l_l character (default,
^U: control-U) logically erasing the entire current input
line. These characters never erase beyond the beginning of
the current input line or an eof.
The drivers normally treat either a carriage return or a
newline character as terminating an input line, replacing
the return with a newline and echoing a return and a line
feed. If the CRMOD bit is cleared in the local mode word
then the processing for carriage return is disabled, and it
is simply echoed as a return, and does not terminate cooked
mode input.
In the new driver there is a literal-next character (nor-
mally ^V) which can be typed in both cooked and CBREAK mode
preceding _a_n_y character to prevent its special meaning to
the terminal handler.
The new terminal driver also provides two other editing
characters in normal mode. The word-erase character, nor-
mally ^W, erases the preceding word, but not any spaces
before it. For the purposes of ^W, a word is defined as a
sequence of non-blank characters, with tabs counted as
blanks. Finally, the reprint character, normally ^R,
retypes the pending input beginning on a new line. Retyping
occurs automatically in cooked mode if characters which
would normally be erased from the screen are fouled by pro-
gram output.
Input echoing and redisplay
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The terminal driver has several modes for handling the echo-
ing of terminal input, controlled by bits in a local mode
word.
_H_a_r_d_c_o_p_y _t_e_r_m_i_n_a_l_s. When a hardcopy terminal is in use, the
LPRTERA bit is normally set in the local mode word. Charac-
ters which are logically erased are then printed out back-
wards preceded by `\' and followed by `/' in this mode.
_C_R_T _t_e_r_m_i_n_a_l_s. When a CRT terminal is in use, the LCRTBS bit
is normally set in the local mode word. The terminal driver
then echoes the proper number of erase characters when input
is erased; in the normal case where the erase character is a
^H this causes the cursor of the terminal to back up to
where it was before the logically erased character was
typed. If the input has become fouled due to interspersed
asynchronous output, the input is automatically retyped.
_E_r_a_s_i_n_g _c_h_a_r_a_c_t_e_r_s _f_r_o_m _a _C_R_T. When a CRT terminal is in
use, the LCRTERA bit may be set to cause input to be erased
from the screen with a "backspace-space-backspace" sequence
when character or word deleting sequences are used. A
LCRTKIL bit may be set as well, causing the input to be
erased in this manner on line kill sequences as well.
_E_c_h_o_i_n_g _o_f _c_o_n_t_r_o_l _c_h_a_r_a_c_t_e_r_s. If the LCTLECH bit is set in
the local state word, then non-printing (control) characters
are normally echoed as ^X (for some X) rather than being
echoed unmodified; delete is echoed as ^?.
The normal modes for use on CRT terminals are speed depen-
dent. At speeds less than 1200 baud, the LCRTERA and
LCRTKILL processing is painfully slow, and _s_t_t_y(1) normally
just sets LCRTBS and LCTLECH; at speeds of 1200 baud or
greater all of these bits are normally set. _S_t_t_y(1) summar-
izes these option settings and the use of the new terminal
driver as "newcrt."
Output processing.
When one or more characters are written, they are actually
transmitted to the terminal as soon as previously-written
characters have finished typing. (As noted above, input
characters are normally echoed by putting them in the output
queue as they arrive.) When a process produces characters
more rapidly than they can be typed, it will be suspended
when its output queue exceeds some limit. When the queue
has drained down to some threshold the program is resumed.
Even parity is normally generated on output. The EOT char-
acter is not transmitted in cooked mode to prevent terminals
that respond to it from hanging up; programs using RAW or
CBREAK mode should be careful.
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The terminal drivers provide necessary processing for cooked
and CBREAK mode output including parity generation. The
driver will also optionally expand tabs into spaces, where
the tab stops are assumed to be set every eight columns, and
optionally convert newlines to carriage returns followed by
newline. These functions are controlled by bits in the tty
flags word; see Summary below.
Finally, in the new terminal driver, there is a output flush
character, normally ^O, which sets the LFLUSHO bit in the
local mode word, causing subsequent output to be flushed
until it is cleared by a program or more input is typed.
This character has effect in both cooked and CBREAK modes
and causes pending input to be retyped if there is any pend-
ing input. An _i_o_c_t_l to flush the characters in the input or
output queues, TIOCFLUSH, is also available.
Flow control.
There are two characters (the stop character, normally ^S,
and the start character, normally ^Q) which cause output to
be suspended and resumed respectively. Extra stop charac-
ters typed when output is already stopped have no effect,
unless the start and stop characters are made the same, in
which case output resumes.
A bit in the flags word may be set to put the terminal into
TANDEM mode. In this mode the system produces a stop char-
acter (default ^S) when the input queue is in danger of
overflowing, and a start character (default ^Q) when the
input has drained sufficiently. This mode is useful when
the terminal is actually another machine that obeys those
conventions.
If software flow control is not sufficient (it begins fail-
ing above 4800 bits per second on slow systems) RTS/CTS flow
control is now available. Hardware flow control causes RTS
to be dropped when the remote system (modem) should cease
sending and to be raised when additional data can be
accepted. If the remote system drops CTS then the local
host ceases sending data until the CTS is raised. Hardware
flow control is enabled via the TIOCLBIS (or TIOCLBIC or
TIOCLSET) function and the bit LRTSCTS.
Line control and breaks.
There are several _i_o_c_t_l calls available to control the state
of the terminal line. The TIOCSBRK _i_o_c_t_l will set the break
bit in the hardware interface causing a break condition to
exist; this can be cleared (usually after a delay with
_s_l_e_e_p(3)) by TIOCCBRK. Break conditions in the input are
reflected as a null character in RAW mode or as the
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interrupt character in cooked or CBREAK mode. The TIOCCDTR
_i_o_c_t_l will clear the data terminal ready condition; it can
be set again by TIOCSDTR.
When the carrier signal from the dataset drops (usually
because the user has hung up his terminal) a SIGHUP hangup
signal is sent to the processes in the distinguished process
group of the terminal; this usually causes them to ter-
minate. The SIGHUP can be suppressed by setting the LNOHANG
bit in the local state word of the driver. Access to the
terminal by other processes is then normally revoked, so any
further reads will fail, and programs that read a terminal
and test for end-of-file on their input will terminate
appropriately.
It is possible to ask that the phone line be hung up on the
last close with the TIOCHPCL _i_o_c_t_l; this is normally done on
the outgoing lines and dialups.
Interrupt characters.
There are several characters that generate interrupts in
cooked and CBREAK mode; all are sent to the processes in the
control group of the terminal, as if a TIOCGPGRP _i_o_c_t_l were
done to get the process group and then a _k_i_l_l_p_g(2) system
call were done, except that these characters also flush
pending input and output when typed at a terminal ('_a`'_l_a
TIOCFLUSH). The characters shown here are the defaults; the
field names in the structures (given below) are also shown.
The characters may be changed.
^C t_intrc (ETX) generates a SIGINT signal. This is the
normal way to stop a process which is no longer
interesting, or to regain control in an interactive
program.
^\ t_quitc (FS) generates a SIGQUIT signal. This is used
to cause a program to terminate and produce a core
image, if possible, in the file core in the current
directory.
^Z t_suspc (EM) generates a SIGTSTP signal, which is used
to suspend the current process group.
^Y t_dsuspc (SUB) generates a SIGTSTP signal as ^Z does,
but the signal is sent when a program attempts to read
the ^Y, rather than when it is typed.
Job access control.
When using the new terminal driver, if a process which is
not in the distinguished process group of its control
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terminal attempts to read from that terminal its process
group is sent a SIGTTIN signal. This signal normally causes
the members of that process group to stop. If, however, the
process is ignoring SIGTTIN, has SIGTTIN blocked, or is in
the middle of process creation using _v_f_o_r_k(2)), the read
will return -1 and set _e_r_r_n_o to EIO.
When using the new terminal driver with the LTOSTOP bit set
in the local modes, a process is prohibited from writing on
its control terminal if it is not in the distinguished pro-
cess group for that terminal. Processes which are holding
or ignoring SIGTTOU signals or which are in the middle of a
_v_f_o_r_k(2) are excepted and allowed to produce output.
Terminal/window sizes. In order to accommodate terminals and
workstations with variable-sized windows, the terminal
driver provides a mechanism for obtaining and setting the
current terminal size. The driver does not use this infor-
mation internally, but only stores it and provides a uniform
access mechanism. When the size is changed, a SIGWINCH sig-
nal is sent to the terminal's process group so that
knowledgeable programs may detect size changes. This facil-
ity was added in 4.3BSD and is not available in earlier ver-
sions of the system.
Summary of modes.
Unfortunately, due to the evolution of the terminal driver,
there are 4 different structures which contain various por-
tions of the driver data. The first of these (sgttyb) con-
tains that part of the information largely common between
version 6 and version 7 UNIX systems. The second contains
additional control characters added in version 7. The third
is a word of local state added in 4BSD, and the fourth is
another structure of special characters added for the new
driver. In the future a single structure may be made avail-
able to programs which need to access all this information;
most programs need not concern themselves with all this
state.
_B_a_s_i_c _m_o_d_e_s: _s_g_t_t_y.
The basic _i_o_c_t_ls use the structure defined in <_s_g_t_t_y._h>:
struct sgttyb {
char sg_ispeed;
char sg_ospeed;
char sg_erase;
char sg_kill;
shortsg_flags;
};
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The _s_g__i_s_p_e_e_d and _s_g__o_s_p_e_e_d fields describe the input and
output speeds of the device according to the following
table, which corresponds to the DEC DH-11 interface. If
other hardware is used, impossible speed changes are
ignored. Symbolic values in the table are as defined in
<_s_g_t_t_y._h>.
B0 0 (hang up dataphone)
B50 1 50 baud
B75 2 75 baud
B110 3 110 baud
B134 4 134.5 baud
B150 5 150 baud
B200 6 200 baud
B300 7 300 baud
B600 8 600 baud
B1200 9 1200 baud
B1800 10 1800 baud
B2400 11 2400 baud
B4800 12 4800 baud
B9600 13 9600 baud
EXTA 14 External A
EXTB 15 External B
Code conversion and line control required for IBM 2741's
(134.5 baud) must be implemented by the user's program. The
half-duplex line discipline required for the 202 dataset
(1200 baud) is not supplied; full-duplex 212 datasets work
fine.
The _s_g__e_r_a_s_e and _s_g__k_i_l_l fields of the argument structure
specify the erase and kill characters respectively.
(Defaults are DELETE and ^U.)
The _s_g__f_l_a_g_s field of the argument structure contains
several bits that determine the system's treatment of the
terminal:
XTABS 0004000 Expand tabs on output
EVENP 0000200 Even parity allowed on input
ODDP 0000100 Odd parity allowed on input
RAW 0000040 Raw mode: wake up on all characters, 8-bit interface
CRMOD 0000020 Map CR into LF; output LF as CR-LF
ECHO 0000010 Echo (full duplex)
CBREAK 0000002 Return each character as soon as typed
TANDEM 0000001 Automatic inbound xon/xoff flow control
XTABS, causes tabs to be replaced by the appropriate number
of spaces on output.
The flags for even and odd parity control parity checking on
input and generation on output in cooked and CBREAK mode
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(unless LPASS8 is enabled, see below). Even parity is gen-
erated on output unless ODDP is set and EVENP is clear, in
which case odd parity is generated. Input characters with
the wrong parity, as determined by EVENP and ODDP, are
ignored in cooked and CBREAK mode.
RAW disables all processing save output flushing with
LFLUSHO; full 8 bits of input are given as soon as it is
available; all 8 bits are passed on output. A break condi-
tion in the input is reported as a null character. If the
input queue overflows in raw mode all data in the input and
output queues are discarded; this applies to both new and
old drivers.
CRMOD causes input carriage returns to be turned into new-
lines, and output and echoed new-lines to be output as a
carriage return followed by a line feed.
CBREAK is a sort of half-cooked (rare?) mode. Programs can
read each character as soon as typed, instead of waiting for
a full line; all processing is done except the input edit-
ing: character and word erase and line kill, input reprint,
and the special treatment of \ and EOT are disabled.
TANDEM mode causes the system to produce a stop character
(default ^S) whenever the input queue is in danger of over-
flowing, and a start character (default ^Q) when the input
queue has drained sufficiently. It is useful for flow con-
trol when the `terminal' is really another computer which
understands the conventions.
Note: The same ``stop'' and ``start'' characters are used
for both directions of flow control; the _t__s_t_o_p_c character
is accepted on input as the character that stops output and
is produced on output as the character to stop input, and
the _t__s_t_a_r_t_c character is accepted on input as the character
that restarts output and is produced on output as the char-
acter to restart input.
_B_a_s_i_c _i_o_c_t_l_s
A large number of _i_o_c_t_l(2) calls apply to terminals. Some
have the general form:
#include <sgtty.h>
ioctl(fildes, code, arg)
struct sgttyb *arg;
The applicable codes are:
TIOCGETP Fetch the basic parameters associated with
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the terminal, and store in the pointed-to
_s_g_t_t_y_b structure.
TIOCSETP Set the parameters according to the pointed-
to _s_g_t_t_y_b structure. The interface delays
until output is quiescent, then throws away
any unread characters, before changing the
modes.
TIOCSETN Set the parameters like TIOCSETP but do not
delay or flush input. Input is not
preserved, however, when changing to or from
RAW.
With the following codes _a_r_g is ignored.
TIOCEXCL Set "exclusive-use" mode: no further opens
are permitted until the file has been closed.
TIOCNXCL Turn off "exclusive-use" mode.
TIOCHPCL When the file is closed for the last time,
hang up the terminal. This is useful when
the line is associated with an ACU used to
place outgoing calls.
With the following codes _a_r_g is a pointer to an int.
TIOCGETD _a_r_g is a pointer to an int into which is
placed the current line discipline number.
TIOCSETD _a_r_g is a pointer to an int whose value
becomes the current line discipline number.
TIOCFLUSH If the int pointed to by _a_r_g has a zero
value, all characters waiting in input or
output queues are flushed. Otherwise, the
value of the int is for the FREAD and FWRITE
bits defined in <sys/file.h>; if the FREAD
bit is set, all characters waiting in input
queues are flushed, and if the FWRITE bit is
set, all characters waiting in output queues
are flushed.
The remaining calls are not available in vanilla version 7
UNIX. In cases where arguments are required, they are
described; _a_r_g should otherwise be given as 0.
TIOCSTI the argument points to a character which the
system pretends had been typed on the termi-
nal.
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TIOCSBRK the break bit is set in the terminal.
TIOCCBRK the break bit is cleared.
TIOCSDTR data terminal ready is set.
TIOCCDTR data terminal ready is cleared.
TIOCSTOP output is stopped as if the ``stop'' charac-
ter had been typed.
TIOCSTART output is restarted as if the ``start'' char-
acter had been typed.
TIOCGPGRP _a_r_g is a pointer to an int into which is
placed the process group ID of the process
group for which this terminal is the control
terminal.
TIOCSPGRP _a_r_g is a pointer to an int which is the value
to which the process group ID for this termi-
nal will be set.
TIOCOUTQ returns in the int pointed to by _a_r_g the
number of characters queued for output to the
terminal.
FIONREAD returns in the long pointed to by _a_r_g the
number of characters immediately readable
from the argument descriptor. This works for
files, pipes, and terminals.
_T_c_h_a_r_s
The second structure associated with each terminal specifies
characters that are special in both the old and new terminal
interfaces: The following structure is defined in
<_s_y_s/_i_o_c_t_l._h>, which is automatically included in <_s_g_t_t_y._h>:
struct tchars {
char t_intrc; /* interrupt */
char t_quitc; /* quit */
char t_startc; /* start output */
char t_stopc; /* stop output */
char t_eofc; /* end-of-file */
char t_brkc; /* input delimiter (like nl) */
};
The default values for these characters are ^C, ^\, ^Q, ^S,
^D, and -1. A character value of -1 eliminates the effect
of that character. The _t__b_r_k_c character, by default -1,
acts like a new-line in that it terminates a `line,' is
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echoed, and is passed to the program. The `stop' and
`start' characters may be the same, to produce a toggle
effect. It is probably counterproductive to make other spe-
cial characters (including erase and kill) identical. The
applicable _i_o_c_t_l calls are:
TIOCGETC Get the special characters and put them in the
specified structure.
TIOCSETC Set the special characters to those given in the
structure.
_L_o_c_a_l _m_o_d_e
The third structure associated with each terminal is a local
mode word. The bits of the local mode word are:
LCRTBS 000001 Backspace on erase rather than echoing erase
LPRTERA 000002 Printing terminal erase mode
LCRTERA 000004 Erase character echoes as backspace-space-backspace
LMDMBUF 000020 Stop/start output when carrier drops
LLITOUT 000040 Suppress output translations
LTOSTOP 000100 Send SIGTTOU for background output
LFLUSHO 000200 Output is being flushed
LNOHANG 000400 Don't send hangup when carrier drops
LRTSCTS 001000 RTS/CTS flow control
LCRTKIL 002000 BS-space-BS erase entire line on line kill
LPASS8 004000 Pass all 8 bits through on input, in any mode
LCTLECH 010000 Echo input control chars as ^X, delete as ^?
LPENDIN 020000 Retype pending input at next read or input character
LDECCTQ 040000 Only ^Q restarts output after ^S, like DEC systems
LNOFLSH 100000 Inhibit flushing of pending I/O when an interrupt character is typed.
The applicable _i_o_c_t_l functions are:
TIOCLBIS _a_r_g is a pointer to an int whose value is a
mask containing the bits to be set in the
local mode word.
TIOCLBIC _a_r_g is a pointer to an int whose value is a
mask containing the bits to be cleared in the
local mode word.
TIOCLSET _a_r_g is a pointer to an int whose value is
stored in the local mode word.
TIOCLGET _a_r_g is a pointer to an int into which the
current local mode word is placed.
_L_o_c_a_l _s_p_e_c_i_a_l _c_h_a_r_s
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TTY(4) UNIX Programmer's Manual TTY(4)
The final control structure associated with each terminal is
the _l_t_c_h_a_r_s structure which defines control characters for
the new terminal driver. Its structure is:
struct ltchars {
char t_suspc; /* stop process signal */
char t_dsuspc; /* delayed stop process signal */
char t_rprntc; /* reprint line */
char t_flushc; /* flush output (toggles) */
char t_werasc; /* word erase */
char t_lnextc; /* literal next character */
};
The default values for these characters are ^Z, ^Y, ^R, ^O,
^W, and ^V. A value of -1 disables the character.
The applicable _i_o_c_t_l functions are:
TIOCSLTC _a_r_g is a pointer to an _l_t_c_h_a_r_s structure which
defines the new local special characters.
TIOCGLTC _a_r_g is a pointer to an _l_t_c_h_a_r_s structure into
which is placed the current set of local special
characters.
_W_i_n_d_o_w/_t_e_r_m_i_n_a_l _s_i_z_e_s
Each terminal has provision for storage of the current ter-
minal or window size in a _w_i_n_s_i_z_e structure, with format:
struct winsize {
unsigned short ws_row; /* rows, in characters */
unsigned short ws_col; /* columns, in characters */
unsigned short ws_xpixel; /* horizontal size, pixels */
unsigned short ws_ypixel; /* vertical size, pixels */
};
A value of 0 in any field is interpreted as ``undefined;''
the entire structure is zeroed on final close.
The applicable _i_o_c_t_l functions are:
TIOCGWINSZ
_a_r_g is a pointer to a struct winsize into which will be
placed the current terminal or window size information.
TIOCSWINSZ
_a_r_g is a pointer to a struct winsize which will be used
to set the current terminal or window size information.
If the new information is different than the old infor-
mation, a SIGWINCH signal will be sent to the
terminal's process group.
Printed 11/26/99 April 10, 1997 14
TTY(4) UNIX Programmer's Manual TTY(4)
FILES
/dev/tty
/dev/tty*
/dev/console
SEE ALSO
csh(1), stty(1), tset(1), ioctl(2), sigvec(2), stty(3C),
getty(8)
Printed 11/26/99 April 10, 1997 15