PTY(7) manual page
Table of Contents
pty - pseudoterminal interfaces
A
pseudoterminal (sometimes abbreviated "pty") is a pair of virtual character
devices that provide a bidirectional communication channel. One end of the
channel is called the master; the other end is called the slave. The slave
end of the pseudoterminal provides an interface that behaves exactly like
a classical terminal. A process that expects to be connected to a terminal,
can open the slave end of a pseudoterminal and then be driven by a program
that has opened the master end. Anything that is written on the master end
is provided to the process on the slave end as though it was input typed
on a terminal. For example, writing the interrupt character (usually control-C)
to the master device would cause an interrupt signal (SIGINT) to be generated
for the foreground process group that is connected to the slave. Conversely,
anything that is written to the slave end of the pseudoterminal can be
read by the process that is connected to the master end. Pseudoterminals
are used by applications such as network login services (ssh(1)
, rlogin(1)
,
telnet(1)
), terminal emulators, script(1)
, screen(1)
, and expect(1)
.
Historically,
two pseudoterminal APIs have evolved: BSD and System V. SUSv1 standardized
a pseudoterminal API based on the System V API, and this API should be
employed in all new programs that use pseudoterminals.
Linux provides both
BSD-style and (standardized) System V-style pseudoterminals. System V-style
terminals are commonly called UNIX 98 pseudoterminals on Linux systems.
Since kernel 2.6.4, BSD-style pseudoterminals are considered deprecated (they
can be disabled when configuring the kernel); UNIX 98 pseudoterminals should
be used in new applications.
An unused UNIX 98 pseudoterminal
master is opened by calling posix_openpt(3)
. (This function opens the master
clone device, /dev/ptmx; see pts(4)
.) After performing any program-specific
initializations, changing the ownership and permissions of the slave device
using grantpt(3)
, and unlocking the slave using unlockpt(3)
), the corresponding
slave device can be opened by passing the name returned by ptsname(3)
in
a call to open(2)
.
The Linux kernel imposes a limit on the number of available
UNIX 98 pseudoterminals. In kernels up to and including 2.6.3, this limit
is configured at kernel compilation time (CONFIG_UNIX98_PTYS), and the
permitted number of pseudoterminals can be up to 2048, with a default setting
of 256. Since kernel 2.6.4, the limit is dynamically adjustable via /proc/sys/kernel/pty/max,
and a corresponding file, /proc/sys/kernel/pty/nr, indicates how many pseudoterminals
are currently in use. For further details on these two files, see proc(5)
.
BSD-style pseudoterminals are provided as precreated
pairs, with names of the form /dev/ptyXY (master) and /dev/ttyXY (slave),
where X is a letter from the 16-character set [p-za-e], and Y is a letter
from the 16-character set [0-9a-f]. (The precise range of letters in these
two sets varies across UNIX implementations.) For example, /dev/ptyp1 and
/dev/ttyp1 constitute a BSD pseudoterminal pair. A process finds an unused
pseudoterminal pair by trying to open(2)
each pseudoterminal master until
an open succeeds. The corresponding pseudoterminal slave (substitute "tty"
for "pty" in the name of the master) can then be opened.
/dev/ptmx
(UNIX 98 master clone device)
/dev/pts/* (UNIX 98 slave devices)
/dev/pty[p-za-e][0-9a-f] (BSD master devices)
/dev/tty[p-za-e][0-9a-f] (BSD slave devices)
A description of the TIOCPKT
ioctl(2)
, which controls packet mode operation, can be found in tty_ioctl(4)
.
The BSD ioctl(2)
operations TIOCSTOP, TIOCSTART, TIOCUCNTL, and TIOCREMOTE
have not been implemented under Linux.
select(2)
, setsid(2)
, forkpty(3)
,
openpty(3)
, termios(3)
, pts(4)
, tty(4)
, tty_ioctl(4)
This page
is part of release 3.78 of the Linux man-pages project. A description of the
project, information about reporting bugs, and the latest version of this
page, can be found at http://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/.
Table of Contents