xref: /freebsd/share/man/man4/tty.4 (revision 61e21613)
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28.Dd April 3, 2022
29.Dt TTY 4
30.Os
31.Sh NAME
32.Nm tty
33.Nd general terminal interface
34.Sh SYNOPSIS
35.In sys/ioctl.h
36.Sh DESCRIPTION
37This section describes the interface to the terminal drivers
38in the system.
39.Ss Terminal Special Files
40Each hardware terminal port on the system usually has a terminal special device
41file associated with it in the directory ``/dev/'' (for
42example, ``/dev/tty03'').
43When a user logs into
44the system on one of these hardware terminal ports, the system has already
45opened the associated device and prepared the line for normal interactive
46use (see
47.Xr getty 8 . )
48There is also a special case of a terminal file that connects not to
49a hardware terminal port, but to another program on the other side.
50These special terminal devices are called
51.Em ptys
52and provide the mechanism necessary to give users the same interface to the
53system when logging in over a network (using
54.Xr telnet 1
55for example).
56Even in these cases the details of how the terminal
57file was opened and set up is already handled by special software
58in the system.
59Thus, users do not normally need to worry about the details of
60how these lines are opened or used.
61Also, these lines are often used
62for dialing out of a system (through an out-calling modem), but again
63the system provides programs that hide the details of accessing
64these terminal special files (see
65.Xr tip 1 ) .
66.Pp
67When an interactive user logs in, the system prepares the line to
68behave in a certain way (called a
69.Em "line discipline" ) ,
70the particular details of which is described in
71.Xr stty 1
72at the command level, and in
73.Xr termios 4
74at the programming level.
75A user may be concerned with changing
76settings associated with his particular login terminal and should refer
77to the preceding man pages for the common cases.
78The remainder of this man page is concerned
79with describing details of using and controlling terminal devices
80at a low level, such as that possibly required by a program wishing
81to provide features similar to those provided by the system.
82.Ss Terminal File Operations
83All of the following operations are invoked using the
84.Xr ioctl 2
85system call.
86Refer to that man page for a description of the
87.Em request
88and
89.Em argp
90parameters.
91In addition to the ioctl
92.Em requests
93defined here, the specific line discipline
94in effect will define other
95.Em requests
96specific to it (actually
97.Xr termios 4
98defines them as function calls, not ioctl
99.Em requests . )
100The following section lists the available ioctl requests.
101The name of the request, a description of its purpose, and the typed
102.Em argp
103parameter (if any)
104are listed.
105For example, the first entry says
106.Pp
107.D1 Em "TIOCSPGRP int *tpgrp"
108.Pp
109and would be called on the terminal associated with
110file descriptor zero by the following code fragment:
111.Bd -literal
112	int pgrp;
113
114	pgrp = getpgrp();
115	ioctl(0, TIOCSPGRP, &pgrp);
116.Ed
117.Ss Terminal File Request Descriptions
118.Bl -tag -width TIOCGWINSZ
119.It Dv TIOCSETD Fa int *ldisc
120This call is obsolete but left for compatibility.
121Before
122.Fx 8.0 ,
123it would change to the new line discipline pointed to by
124.Fa ldisc .
125.It Dv TIOCGETD Fa int *ldisc
126Return the current line discipline in the integer pointed to by
127.Fa ldisc .
128.It Dv TIOCSBRK Fa void
129Set the terminal hardware into BREAK condition.
130.It Dv TIOCCBRK Fa void
131Clear the terminal hardware BREAK condition.
132.It Dv TIOCSDTR Fa void
133Assert data terminal ready (DTR).
134.It Dv TIOCCDTR Fa void
135Clear data terminal ready (DTR).
136.It Dv TIOCGPGRP Fa int *tpgrp
137Return the current process group with which the terminal is associated
138in the integer pointed to by
139.Fa tpgrp .
140This is the underlying call that implements the
141.Xr termios 4
142.Fn tcgetattr
143call.
144.It Dv TIOCSPGRP Fa int *tpgrp
145Associate the terminal with the process group (as an integer) pointed to by
146.Fa tpgrp .
147This is the underlying call that implements the
148.Xr termios 4
149.Fn tcsetattr
150call.
151.It Dv TIOCGETA Fa struct termios *term
152Place the current value of the termios state associated with the
153device in the termios structure pointed to by
154.Fa term .
155This is the underlying call that implements the
156.Xr termios 4
157.Fn tcgetattr
158call.
159.It Dv TIOCSETA Fa struct termios *term
160Set the termios state associated with the device immediately.
161This is the underlying call that implements the
162.Xr termios 4
163.Fn tcsetattr
164call with the
165.Dv TCSANOW
166option.
167.It Dv TIOCSETAW Fa struct termios *term
168First wait for any output to complete, then set the termios state
169associated with the device.
170This is the underlying call that implements the
171.Xr termios 4
172.Fn tcsetattr
173call with the
174.Dv TCSADRAIN
175option.
176.It Dv TIOCSETAF Fa struct termios *term
177First wait for any output to complete, clear any pending input,
178then set the termios state associated with the device.
179This is the underlying call that implements the
180.Xr termios 4
181.Fn tcsetattr
182call with the
183.Dv TCSAFLUSH
184option.
185.It Dv TIOCOUTQ Fa int *num
186Place the current number of characters in the output queue in the
187integer pointed to by
188.Fa num .
189.It Dv TIOCSTI Fa char *cp
190Simulate typed input.
191Pretend as if the terminal received the character pointed to by
192.Fa cp .
193.It Dv TIOCNOTTY Fa void
194In the past, when a process that did not have a controlling terminal (see
195.Em The Controlling Terminal
196in
197.Xr termios 4 )
198first opened a terminal device, it acquired that terminal as its
199controlling terminal.
200For some programs this was a hazard as they
201did not want a controlling terminal in the first place, and this
202provides a mechanism to disassociate the controlling terminal from
203the calling process.
204It
205.Em must
206be called by opening the file
207.Pa /dev/tty
208and calling
209.Dv TIOCNOTTY
210on that file descriptor.
211.Pp
212The current system does not allocate a controlling terminal to
213a process on an
214.Fn open
215call: there is a specific ioctl called
216.Dv TIOCSCTTY
217to make a terminal the controlling
218terminal.
219In addition, a program can
220.Fn fork
221and call the
222.Fn setsid
223system call which will place the process into its own session - which
224has the effect of disassociating it from the controlling terminal.
225This is the new and preferred method for programs to lose their controlling
226terminal.
227.Pp
228However, environmental restrictions may prohibit the process from being able to
229.Fn fork
230and call the
231.Fn setsid
232system call to disassociate it from the controlling terminal.
233In this case, it must use
234.Dv TIOCNOTTY .
235.It Dv TIOCSTOP Fa void
236Stop output on the terminal (like typing ^S at the keyboard).
237.It Dv TIOCSTART Fa void
238Start output on the terminal (like typing ^Q at the keyboard).
239.It Dv TIOCSCTTY Fa void
240Make the terminal the controlling terminal for the process (the process
241must not currently have a controlling terminal).
242.It Dv TIOCDRAIN Fa void
243Wait until all output is drained, or until the drain wait timeout expires.
244.It Dv TIOCGDRAINWAIT Fa int *timeout
245Return the current drain wait timeout in seconds.
246.It Dv TIOCSDRAINWAIT Fa int *timeout
247Set the drain wait timeout in seconds.
248A value of zero disables timeouts.
249The default drain wait timeout is controlled by the tunable
250.Xr sysctl 8
251OID
252.Va kern.tty_drainwait .
253.It Dv TIOCEXCL Fa void
254Set exclusive use on the terminal.
255No further opens are permitted except by root.
256Of course, this means that programs that are run by
257root (or setuid) will not obey the exclusive setting - which limits
258the usefulness of this feature.
259.It Dv TIOCNXCL Fa void
260Clear exclusive use of the terminal.
261Further opens are permitted.
262.It Dv TIOCFLUSH Fa int *what
263If the value of the int pointed to by
264.Fa what
265contains the
266.Dv FREAD
267bit as defined in
268.In sys/file.h ,
269then all characters in the input queue are cleared.
270If it contains the
271.Dv FWRITE
272bit, then all characters in the output queue are cleared.
273If the value of the integer is zero, then it behaves as if both the
274.Dv FREAD
275and
276.Dv FWRITE
277bits were set (i.e., clears both queues).
278.It Dv TIOCGWINSZ Fa struct winsize *ws
279Put the window size information associated with the terminal in the
280.Va winsize
281structure pointed to by
282.Fa ws .
283The window size structure contains the number of rows and columns (and pixels
284if appropriate) of the devices attached to the terminal.
285It is set by user software
286and is the means by which most full\&-screen oriented programs determine the
287screen size.
288The
289.Va winsize
290structure is defined in
291.In sys/ioctl.h .
292.It Dv TIOCSWINSZ Fa struct winsize *ws
293Set the window size associated with the terminal to be the value in
294the
295.Va winsize
296structure pointed to by
297.Fa ws
298(see above).
299.It Dv TIOCCONS Fa int *on
300If
301.Fa on
302points to a non-zero integer, redirect kernel console output (kernel printf's)
303to this terminal.
304If
305.Fa on
306points to a zero integer, redirect kernel console output back to the normal
307console.
308This is usually used on workstations to redirect kernel messages
309to a particular window.
310.It Dv TIOCMSET Fa int *state
311The integer pointed to by
312.Fa state
313contains bits that correspond to modem state.
314Following is a list of defined variables and the modem state they represent:
315.Pp
316.Bl -tag -width TIOCMXCTS -compact
317.It TIOCM_LE
318Line Enable.
319.It TIOCM_DTR
320Data Terminal Ready.
321.It TIOCM_RTS
322Request To Send.
323.It TIOCM_ST
324Secondary Transmit.
325.It TIOCM_SR
326Secondary Receive.
327.It TIOCM_CTS
328Clear To Send.
329.It TIOCM_CAR
330Carrier Detect.
331.It TIOCM_CD
332Carrier Detect (synonym).
333.It TIOCM_RNG
334Ring Indication.
335.It TIOCM_RI
336Ring Indication (synonym).
337.It TIOCM_DSR
338Data Set Ready.
339.El
340.Pp
341This call sets the terminal modem state to that represented by
342.Fa state .
343Not all terminals may support this.
344.It Dv TIOCMGET Fa int *state
345Return the current state of the terminal modem lines as represented
346above in the integer pointed to by
347.Fa state .
348.It Dv TIOCMBIS Fa int *state
349The bits in the integer pointed to by
350.Fa state
351represent modem state as described above, however the state is OR-ed
352in with the current state.
353.It Dv TIOCMBIC Fa int *state
354The bits in the integer pointed to by
355.Fa state
356represent modem state as described above, however each bit which is on
357in
358.Fa state
359is cleared in the terminal.
360.El
361.Sh IMPLEMENTATION NOTES
362The total number of input and output bytes
363through all terminal devices
364are available via the
365.Va kern.tty_nin
366and
367.Va kern.tty_nout
368read-only
369.Xr sysctl 8
370variables.
371.Sh SEE ALSO
372.Xr stty 1 ,
373.Xr ioctl 2 ,
374.Xr ng_tty 4 ,
375.Xr pty 4 ,
376.Xr termios 4 ,
377.Xr getty 8
378.Sh HISTORY
379A console typewriter device
380.Pa /dev/tty
381and asynchronous communication interfaces
382.Pa /dev/tty[0-5]
383first appeared in
384.At v1 .
385