TTY_IOCTL(4) manual page
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tty_ioctl - ioctls for terminals and serial lines
#include
<termios.h>
int ioctl(int fd, int cmd, ...);
The ioctl(2)
call for
terminals and serial ports accepts many possible command arguments. Most
require a third argument, of varying type, here called argp or arg.
Use
of ioctl makes for nonportable programs. Use the POSIX interface described
in termios(3)
whenever possible.
- TCGETS struct
termios *argp
- Equivalent to tcgetattr(fd, argp).
Get the current serial port settings.
- TCSETS const struct termios *argp
- Equivalent
to tcsetattr(fd, TCSANOW, argp).
Set the current serial port settings.
- TCSETSW const struct termios *argp
- Equivalent to tcsetattr(fd, TCSADRAIN, argp).
Allow the output buffer to drain, and set the current serial port settings.
- TCSETSF const struct termios *argp
- Equivalent to tcsetattr(fd, TCSAFLUSH,
argp).
Allow the output buffer to drain, discard pending input, and set the current
serial port settings.
The following four ioctls are just like TCGETS, TCSETS,
TCSETSW, TCSETSF, except that they take a struct termio * instead of a struct
termios *.
- TCGETA struct termio *argp
- TCSETA const struct termio *argp
- TCSETAW const
struct termio *argp
- TCSETAF const struct termio *argp
The termios structure of a terminal can be locked. The lock is
itself a termios structure, with nonzero bits or fields indicating a locked
value.
- TIOCGLCKTRMIOS struct termios *argp
- Gets the locking status of the
termios structure of the terminal.
- TIOCSLCKTRMIOS const struct termios *argp
- Sets the locking status of the termios structure of the terminal. Only a
process with the CAP_SYS_ADMIN capability can do this.
Window sizes are kept in the kernel, but not used by the kernel (except
in the case of virtual consoles, where the kernel will update the window
size when the size of the virtual console changes, for example, by loading
a new font).
The following constants and structure are defined in <sys/ioctl.h>.
- TIOCGWINSZ struct winsize *argp
- Get window size.
- TIOCSWINSZ const struct winsize
*argp
- Set window size.
The struct used by these ioctls is defined as
struct winsize {
unsigned short ws_row;
unsigned short ws_col;
unsigned short ws_xpixel; /* unused */
unsigned short ws_ypixel; /* unused */
};
When the window size changes, a SIGWINCH signal is sent to the foreground
process group.
- TCSBRK int arg
- Equivalent to tcsendbreak(fd,
arg).
If the terminal is using asynchronous serial data transmission, and arg
is zero, then send a break (a stream of zero bits) for between 0.25 and
0.5 seconds. If the terminal is not using asynchronous serial data transmission,
then either a break is sent, or the function returns without doing anything.
When arg is nonzero, nobody knows what will happen.
(SVr4, UnixWare, Solaris,
Linux treat tcsendbreak(fd,arg) with nonzero arg like tcdrain(fd). SunOS
treats arg as a multiplier, and sends a stream of bits arg times as long
as done for zero arg. DG/UX and AIX treat arg (when nonzero) as a time interval
measured in milliseconds. HP-UX ignores arg.)
- TCSBRKP int arg
- So-called "POSIX
version" of TCSBRK. It treats nonzero arg as a timeinterval measured in
deciseconds, and does nothing when the driver does not support breaks.
- TIOCSBRK void
- Turn break on, that is, start sending zero bits.
- TIOCCBRK void
- Turn break
off, that is, stop sending zero bits.
- TCXONC int arg
- Equivalent to tcflow(fd, arg).
See tcflow(3)
for the argument values TCOOFF, TCOON, TCIOFF, TCION.
- FIONREAD int *argp
- Get the number of bytes in the input
buffer.
- TIOCINQ int *argp
- Same as FIONREAD.
- TIOCOUTQ int *argp
- Get the number
of bytes in the output buffer.
- TCFLSH int arg
- Equivalent to tcflush(fd, arg).
See tcflush(3)
for the argument values TCIFLUSH, TCOFLUSH, TCIOFLUSH.
- TIOCSTI const char *argp
- Insert the given byte in the input queue.
- TIOCCONS void
- Redirect output that would have gone to /dev/console
or /dev/tty0 to the given terminal. If that was a pseudoterminal master,
send it to the slave. In Linux before version 2.6.10, anybody can do this
as long as the output was not redirected yet; since version 2.6.10, only
a process with the CAP_SYS_ADMIN capability may do this. If output was redirected
already EBUSY is returned, but redirection can be stopped by using this
ioctl with fd pointing at /dev/console or /dev/tty0.
- TIOCSCTTY int
arg
- Make the given terminal the controlling terminal of the calling process.
The calling process must be a session leader and not have a controlling
terminal already. For this case, arg should be specified as zero.
If this
terminal is already the controlling terminal of a different session group,
then the ioctl fails with EPERM, unless the caller has the CAP_SYS_ADMIN
capability and arg equals 1, in which case the terminal is stolen, and
all processes that had it as controlling terminal lose it.
- TIOCNOTTY void
- If the given terminal was the controlling terminal of the calling process,
give up this controlling terminal. If the process was session leader, then
send SIGHUP and SIGCONT to the foreground process group and all processes
in the current session lose their controlling terminal.
- TIOCGPGRP pid_t *argp
- When successful, equivalent to *argp = tcgetpgrp(fd).
Get the process group ID of the foreground process group on this terminal.
- TIOCSPGRP const pid_t *argp
- Equivalent to tcsetpgrp(fd, *argp).
Set the foreground process group ID of this terminal.
- TIOCGSID pid_t *argp
- Get the session ID of the given terminal. This will fail with ENOTTY in
case the terminal is not a master pseudoterminal and not our controlling
terminal. Strange.
- TIOCEXCL void
- Put the terminal into exclusive
mode. No further open(2)
operations on the terminal are permitted. (They
will fail with EBUSY, except for a process with the CAP_SYS_ADMIN capability.)
- TIOCNXCL void
- Disable exclusive mode.
- TIOCGETD int *argp
- Get
the line discipline of the terminal.
- TIOCSETD const int *argp
- Set the line
discipline of the terminal.
- TIOCPKT const int *argp
- Enable (when *argp is nonzero) or disable packet mode. Can be applied to
the master side of a pseudoterminal only (and will return ENOTTY otherwise).
In packet mode, each subsequent read(2)
will return a packet that either
contains a single nonzero control byte, or has a single byte containing
zero (aq aq) followed by data written on the slave side of the pseudoterminal.
If the first byte is not TIOCPKT_DATA (0), it is an OR of one or more of
the following bits:
TIOCPKT_FLUSHREAD The read queue for the terminal is flushed.
TIOCPKT_FLUSHWRITE The write queue for the terminal is flushed.
TIOCPKT_STOP Output to the terminal is stopped.
TIOCPKT_START Output to the terminal is restarted.
TIOCPKT_DOSTOP The start and stop characters are ^S/^Q.
TIOCPKT_NOSTOP The start and stop characters are not ^S/^Q.
While this mode is in use, the presence of control status information
to be read from the master side may be detected by a select(2)
for exceptional
conditions.
This mode is used by rlogin(1)
and rlogind(8)
to implement
a remote-echoed, locally ^S/^Q flow-controlled remote login.
The BSD ioctls
TIOCSTOP, TIOCSTART, TIOCUCNTL, TIOCREMOTE have not been implemented under
Linux.
- TIOCMGET int *argp
- get the status of modem bits.
- TIOCMSET const
int *argp
- set the status of modem bits.
- TIOCMBIC const int *argp
- clear the
indicated modem bits.
- TIOCMBIS const int *argp
- set the indicated modem bits.
Bits used by these four ioctls:
TIOCM_LE DSR (data set ready/line enable)
TIOCM_DTR DTR (data terminal ready)
TIOCM_RTS RTS (request to send)
TIOCM_ST Secondary TXD (transmit)
TIOCM_SR Secondary RXD (receive)
TIOCM_CTS CTS (clear to send)
TIOCM_CAR DCD (data carrier detect)
TIOCM_CD see TIOCM_CAR
TIOCM_RNG RNG (ring)
TIOCM_RI see TIOCM_RNG
TIOCM_DSR DSR (data set ready)
- TIOCGSOFTCAR int *argp
- ("Get software carrier flag")
Get the status of the CLOCAL flag in the c_cflag field of the termios structure.
- TIOCSSOFTCAR const int *argp
- ("Set software carrier flag") Set the CLOCAL
flag in the termios structure when *argp is nonzero, and clear it otherwise.
If the CLOCAL flag for a line is off, the hardware carrier detect (DCD)
signal is significant, and an open(2)
of the corresponding terminal will
block until DCD is asserted, unless the O_NONBLOCK flag is given. If CLOCAL
is set, the line behaves as if DCD is always asserted. The software carrier
flag is usually turned on for local devices, and is off for lines with
modems.
For the TIOCLINUX ioctl, see console_ioctl(4)
.
#include <linux/tty.h>
- TIOCTTYGSTRUCT struct tty_struct *argp
- Get
the tty_struct corresponding to fd.
The ioctl(2)
system
call returns 0 on success. On error, it returns -1 and sets errno appropriately.
- EINVAL
- Invalid command parameter.
- ENOIOCTLCMD
- Unknown command.
- ENOTTY
- Inappropriate fd.
- EPERM
- Insufficient permission.
Check the condition
of DTR on the serial port.
#include <termios.h>
#include <fcntl.h>
#include <sys/ioctl.h>
int
main(void)
{
int fd, serial;
fd = open("/dev/ttyS0", O_RDONLY);
ioctl(fd, TIOCMGET, &serial);
if (serial & TIOCM_DTR)
puts("TIOCM_DTR is not set");
else
puts("TIOCM_DTR is set");
close(fd);
}
ioctl(2)
, termios(3)
, console_ioctl(4)
, pty(7)
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/.
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