11-14-2010
You need to check what structure takes/return the specific ioctl() you are evoking. See your Unix documentation.
On Linux, it seems to be the interface flag, see /usr/include/net/if.h, standard interface flag enum.
HTH,
Loïc
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TERMIO(7) Linux Programmer's Manual TERMIO(7)
NAME
termio - the System V terminal driver interface
DESCRIPTION
termio is the name of the old System V terminal driver interface. This interface defined a termio structure used to store terminal set-
tings, and a range of ioctl(2) operations to get and set terminal attributes.
The termio interface is now obsolete: POSIX.1-1990 standardized a modified version of this interface, under the name termios. The POSIX.1
data structure differs slightly from the System V version, and POSIX.1 defined a suite of functions to replace the various ioctl(2) opera-
tions that existed in System V. (This was done because ioctl(2) was unstandardized, and its variadic third argument does not allow argu-
ment type checking.)
If you're looking for page called "termio", then you can probably find most of the information that you seek in either termios(3) or
tty_ioctl(4).
SEE ALSO
termios(3), tty_ioctl(4)
COLOPHON
This page is part of release 3.27 of the Linux man-pages project. A description of the project, and information about reporting bugs, can
be found at http://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/.
Linux 2006-12-28 TERMIO(7)