Field Descriptions |
|
c_iflag |
Describes the basic terminal input control. The initial input-control value is all bits clear. The possible input modes are:
IGNBRK |
Ignores the break condition. In the context of asynchronous serial data transmission, a break condition is defined as a sequence of zero-valued bits that continues for more than the time required to send 1 byte. The entire sequence of zero-valued bits is interpreted as a single break condition, even if it continues for an amount of time equivalent to more than one byte. If the IGNBRK flag is set, a break condition detected on input is ignored, which means that the break condition is not put on the input queue and therefore not read by any process. |
BRKINT |
Interrupts the signal on the break condition. If the IGNBRK flag is not set and the BRKINT flag is set, the break condition flushes the input and output queues. If the terminal is the controlling terminal of a foreground process group, the break condition generates a single SIGINT signal to that foreground process group. If neither the IGNBRK nor the BRKINT flag is set, a break condition is read as a single \0. If the PARMRK flag is set, a break condition is read as \377, \0, \0. |
IGNPAR |
Ignores characters with parity errors. If this flag is set, a byte with a framing or parity error (other than break) is ignored. |
PARMRK |
Marks parity errors. If the PARMRK flag is set and the IGNPAR flag is not set, a byte with a framing or parity error (other than break) is given to the application as the three-character sequence \377, \0, x, where \377, \0 is a two-character flag preceding each sequence and x is the data of the character received in error. To avoid ambiguity in this case, if the ISTRIP flag is not set, a valid character of \377 is given to the application as \377, \377. If neither the IGNPAR nor the PARMRK flag is set, a framing or parity error (other than break) is given to the application as a single character, \0. |
INPCK |
Enables input parity checking. If this flag is set, input parity checking is enabled. If not set, input parity checking is disabled. This allows for output parity generation without input parity errors. |
ISTRIP |
Strips characters. If this flag is set, valid input characters are first stripped to 7 bits; otherwise, all 8 bits are processed. |
INLCR |
Maps a new-line character (NL) to a carriage return (CR) on input. If this flag is set, a received NL character is translated into a CR character. |
IGNCR |
Ignores a CR character. If this flag is set, a received CR character is ignored and not read. |
ICRNL |
Maps a CR character to an NL character on input. If the ICRNL flag is set and the IGNCR flag is not set, a received CR character is translated into an NL character. |
IUCLC |
Maps uppercase to lowercase on input. If this flag is set, a received uppercase, alphabetic character is translated into the corresponding lowercase character. |
IXON |
Enables start and stop output control. If this flag is set, a received STOP character suspends output and a received START character restarts output. When the IXON flag is set, START and STOP characters are not read, but merely perform flow-control functions. When the IXON flag is not set, the START and STOP characters are read. |
IXANY |
Enables any character to restart output. If this flag is set, any input character restarts output that was suspended. |
IXOFF |
Enables start-and-stop input control. If this flag is set, the system transmits a STOP character when the input queue is nearly full and a START character when enough input has been read that the queue is nearly empty again. |
|
c_oflag |
Specifies how the system treats output. The initial output-control value is "all bits clear". The possible output modes are:
OPOST |
Post processes output. If this flag is set, output characters are post-processed as indicated by the remaining flags; otherwise, characters are transmitted without change. |
OLCUC |
Maps lowercase to uppercase on output. If this flag is set, a lowercase alphabetic character is transmitted as the corresponding uppercase character. This function is often used in conjunction with the IUCLC input mode. |
ONLCR |
Maps NL to CR-NL on output. If this flag is set, the NL character is transmitted as the CR-NL character pair. |
OCRNL |
Maps CR to NL on output. If this flag is set, the CR character is transmitted as the NL character. |
ONOCR |
Indicates no CR output at column 0 (first position). If this flag is set, no CR character is transmitted when at column 0 (first position). |
ONLRET |
NL performs the CR function. If this flag is set, the NL character is assumed to do the carriage-return function. The column pointer is set to 0, and the delay specified for carriage return is used. If neither the ONLCR, OCRNL, ONOCR, nor ONLRET flag is set, the NL character is assumed to do the line-feed function only. The column pointer remains unchanged. The column pointer is also set to 0 if the CR character is actually transmitted. |
The delay bits specify how long a transmission stops to allow for mechanical or other movement when certain characters are sent to the terminal. The actual delays depend on line speed and system load.
OFILL |
Uses fill characters for delay. If this flag is set, fill characters are transmitted for a delay instead of a timed delay. This is useful for high baud rate terminals that need only a minimal delay. |
OFDEL |
If this flag is set, the fill character is DEL. If this flag is not set, the fill character is NULL. |
NLDLY |
Selects the new-line character delays. This is the mask to use before comparing to NL0 and NL1:
NL0 |
Specifies no delay. |
NL1 |
Specifies one delay of approximately 0.10 seconds. If the ONLRET flag is set, the carriage-return delays are used instead of the new-line delays. If the OFILL flag is set, two fill characters are transmitted. |
|
CRDLY |
Selects the carriage-return delays. This is the mask to use before comparing to CR0, CR1, CR2, and CR3:
CR0 |
Specifies no delay. |
CR1 |
Specifies that the delay is dependent on the current column position. If the OFILL flag is set, two fill characters are transmitted. |
CR2 |
Specifies a delay of approximately 0.10 seconds. If the OFILL flag is set, this delay transmits four fill characters. |
CR3 |
Specifies one delay of approximately 0.15 seconds. |
|
TABDLY |
Selects the horizontal-tab delays. This is the mask to use before comparing to TAB0, TAB1, TAB2, and TAB3. If the OFILL flag is set, any of these delays (except TAB3) transmit two fill characters:
TAB0 |
Specifies no delay. |
TAB1 |
Specifies that the delay is dependent on the current column position. If the OFILL flag is set, two fill characters are transmitted. |
TAB2 |
Specifies a delay of approximately 0.10 seconds. |
TAB3 |
Specifies that tabs are to be expanded into spaces. |
|
BSDLY |
Selects the backspace delays. This is the mask to use before comparing to BS0 and BS1:
BS0 |
Specifies no delay. |
BS1 |
Specifies a delay of approximately 0.05 seconds. If the OFILL flag is set, this delay transmits one fill character. |
|
VTDLY |
Selects the vertical-tab delays. This is the mask to use before comparing to VT0 and VT1:
VT0 |
Specifies no delay. |
VT1 |
Specifies one delay of approximately 2 seconds. |
|
FFDLY |
Selects the form-feed delays. This is a mask to use before comparing to FF0 and FF1:
FF0 |
Specifies no delay. |
FF1 |
Specifies a delay of approximately 2 seconds. |
|
|
c_cflag |
Describes the hardware control of the terminal. In addition to the basic control modes, this field uses the following control characters:
CBAUD |
Specifies baud rate. These bits specify the baud rate for a connection. For any particular hardware, impossible speed changes are ignored.
B0 |
Specifies a zero baud rate which is used to hang up the connection. If B0 is specified, the `data terminal ready' signal is not asserted. As a result, the line is usually disconnected. This delay transmits two fill characters. Normally, this disconnects the line. |
B50 |
Specifies 50 baud. |
B75 |
Specifies 75 baud. |
B110 |
Specifies 110 baud. |
B134 |
Specifies 134.5 baud. |
B150 |
Specifies 150 baud. |
B200 |
Specifies 200 baud. |
B300 |
Specifies 300 baud. |
B600 |
Specifies 600 baud. |
B1200 |
Specifies 1200 baud. |
B1800 |
Specifies 1800 baud. |
B2400 |
Specifies 2400 baud. |
B4800 |
Specifies 4800 baud. |
B9600 |
Specifies 9600 baud. |
B19200 |
Specifies 19,200 baud. |
B38400 |
Specifies 38,400 baud. |
EXTA |
Specifies External A. |
EXTB |
Specifies External B. |
|
CSIZE |
Specifies the character size. These bits specify the character size, in bits, for both transmit and receive operations. The character size does not include the parity bit, if one is used:
CS5 |
5 bits |
CS6 |
6 bits |
CS7 |
7 bits |
CS8 |
8 bits |
|
CSTOPB |
Specifies the number of stop bits. If this flag is set, 2 stop bits are sent; otherwise, only 1 stop bit is sent. |
CREAD |
Enables the receiver. If this flag is set, the receiver is enabled. Otherwise, characters are not received. |
PARENB |
Enables parity. If this flag is set, parity generation and detection is enabled and a parity bit is added to each character. |
PARODD |
Specifies odd parity. If parity is enabled, the PARODD flag specifies odd parity if set. If parity is enabled and the PARODD flag is not set, even parity is used. |
HUPCL |
Hangs up on last close. If this flag is set, the line is disconnected when the last process closes the line or when the process terminates (when the `data terminal ready' signal drops). |
CLOCAL |
Specifies a local line. If this flag is set, the line is assumed to have a local, direct connection with no modem control. If not set, modem control (dial-up) is assumed. |
|
c_lflag |
Controls various terminal functions. The initial value after an open is "all bits clear." This field uses the following mask name symbols:
ISIG |
Enables signals. If this flag is set, each input character is checked against the INTR and QUIT special control characters. If an input character matches one of these control characters, the function associated with that character is performed. If the ISIG function is not set, checking is not done. |
ICANON |
Enables canonical input. If this flag is set, it turns on canonical processing, which enables the erase and kill edit functions as well as the assembly of input characters into lines delimited by NL, EOF, and EOL characters. If the ICANON flag is not set, read requests are satisfied directly from the input queue. In this case, a read request is not satisfied until one of the following conditions is met:
- The minimum number of characters specified by the MIN value are received.
- The time-out value specified by the TIME value has expired since the last character was received.
As a result bursts of input can be read, while still allowing single-character input. The MIN and TIME values are stored in the positions for the EOF and EOL characters, respectively.
The character values of
MIN
and
TIME
are converted to their ascii equivalents to get the numeric value.
The time value represents tenths of seconds. |
XCASE |
Enables canonical uppercase and lowercase presentation. If this flag is set along with the ICANON flag, an uppercase letter (or the uppercase letter translated to lowercase by the IUCLC input mode) is accepted on input by preceding it with a \ (backslash) character. The output is then also preceded by a backslash character. In this mode, the output generates and the input accepts the following escape sequences:
For |
Use |
` (grave) |
\ ` |
| |
\ ! |
~ |
\ ^ |
{ |
\ ( |
} |
\ ) |
\ |
\ \ |
For example, A is input as \a, \n as \\n, and \N as \\\n. |
NOFLSH |
Disables queue flushing. If this flag is set, the normal flushing of the input and output queues associated with the INTR and QUIT characters is not done. |
ECHO |
Enables echo. If this flag is set, characters are echoed as they are received.
When the ICANON flag is set, the following echo functions are possible: |
ECHOE |
Echoes the erase character as Backspace-Space-Backspace. If the ECHO and ECHOE flags are both set, the ERASE character is echoed as one or more ASCII Backspace-Space-Backspace sequences, which clears the last characters from the screen. |
ECHOK |
Echoes the NL character after kill. If the ECHOK flag is set, the NL character is echoed after the kill character is received. This emphasizes that the line is deleted. |
ECHONL |
Echoes the NL character. If the ECHONL flag is set, the NL character is echoed even if the ECHO flag is not set. This is useful for terminals that are set to "local echo" (also referred to as "half-duplex"). |
|
c_cc |
Specifies an array that defines the special control characters. The relative positions and initial values for each function are:
VINTR |
Indexes the INTR special character (Ctrl-c), which is recognized on input if the ISIG flag is set. The INTR character generates a SIGINT signal, which is sent to all processes in the foreground process group for which the terminal is the controlling terminal. If the ISIG flag is set, the INTR character is discarded when processed. |
VQUIT |
Indexes the QUIT special character (Ctrl-\), which is recognized on input if the ISIG flag is set. The QUIT character generates a SIGQUIT signal, which is sent to all processes in the foreground process group for which the terminal is the controlling terminal, and writes a core image file into the current working directory. If the ISIG flag is set, the QUIT character is discarded when processed. |
VERASE |
Indexes the ERASE special character (Backspace), which is recognized on input if the ICANON flag is set. The ERASE character does not erase beyond the beginning of the line as delimited by a NL, EOL, EOF, or EOL2 character. If the ICANON flag is set, the ERASE character is discarded when processed. |
VKILL |
Indexes the KILL special character (Ctrl-u), which is recognized on input if the ICANON flag is set. The KILL character deletes the entire line, as delimited by an NL, EOL, EOF, or EOL2 character. If the ICANON flag is set, the KILL character is discarded when processed. |
VEOF |
Indexes the EOF special character (Ctrl-d), which is recognized on input if the ICANON flag is set. When EOF is received, all the characters waiting to be read are immediately passed to the process, without waiting for a new line, and the EOF is discarded. If the EOF is received at the beginning of a line (no characters are waiting), a character count of zero is returned from the read, indicating an end-of-file. If the ICANON flag is set, the EOF character is discarded when processed. |
VEOL |
Indexes the EOL special character (Ctrl-@ or ASCII NULL), which is recognized on input if the ICANON flag is set. EOL is an additional line delimiter, like NL, and is not normally used. |
VEOL2 |
Indexes the EOL2 special character (Ctrl-@ or ASCII NULL), which is recognized on input if the ICANON flag is set. EOL2 is another additional line delimiter, like NL, and is not normally used. |
VMIN |
Indexes the MIN value, which is not a special character. The use of the MIN value is described in the discussion of non-canonical mode input processing in "POSIX (termios.h File) Line Discipline" in AIX General Programming Concepts: Writing and Debugging Programs. |
VTIME |
Indexes the TIME value, which is not a special character. The use of the TIME value is described in the discussion of non-canonical mode input processing in "POSIX (termios.h File) Line Discipline" in AIX General Programming Concepts: Writing and Debugging Programs. |
The character values for the following control characters can be changed:
INTR |
ERASE |
EOF |
EOL2 |
QUIT |
KILL |
EOL |
The ERASE, KILL, and EOF characters can also be escaped (preceded with a backslash) so that no special processing is done. |