ttcompat(7M) STREAMS Modules ttcompat(7M)
NAME
ttcompat - V7, 4BSD and XENIX STREAMS compatibility module
SYNOPSIS
#define BSD_COMP
#include <sys/stropts.h>
#include <sys/ioctl.h>
ioctl(fd, I_PUSH, "ttcompat");
DESCRIPTION
ttcompat is a STREAMS module that translates the ioctl calls supported by the older Version 7, 4BSD, and XENIX terminal drivers into the
ioctl calls supported by the termio interface (see termio(7I)). All other messages pass through this module unchanged; the behavior of read
and write calls is unchanged, as is the behavior of ioctl calls other than the ones supported by ttcompat.
This module can be automatically pushed onto a stream using the autopush mechanism when a terminal device is opened; it does not have to
be explicitly pushed onto a stream. This module requires that the termios interface be supported by the modules and the application can
push the driver downstream. The TCGETS, TCSETS, and TCSETSF ioctl calls must be supported. If any information set or fetched by those ioctl
calls is not supported by the modules and driver downstream, some of the V7/4BSD/XENIX functions may not be supported. For example, if the
CBAUD bits in the c_cflag field are not supported, the functions provided by the sg_ispeed and sg_ospeed fields of the sgttyb structure
(see below) will not be supported. If the TCFLSH ioctl is not supported, the function provided by the TIOCFLUSH ioctl will not be sup-
ported. If the TCXONC ioctl is not supported, the functions provided by the TIOCSTOP and TIOCSTART ioctl calls will not be supported. If
the TIOCMBIS and TIOCMBIC ioctl calls are not supported, the functions provided by the TIOCSDTR and TIOCCDTR ioctl calls will not be sup-
ported.
The basic ioctl calls use the sgttyb structure defined by <sys/ttold.h> (included by <sys/ioctl.h>):
struct sgttyb {
char sg_ispeed;
char sg_ospeed;
char sg_erase;
char sg_kill;
int sg_flags;
};
The sg_ispeed and sg_ospeed fields describe the input and output speeds of the device. If the speed set on the device is over B38400,
then it is reported as B38400 for compatibility reasons. If it is set to B38400 and the current speed is over B38400, the change is
ignored. See TIOCGETP and TIOCSETP below. The sg_erase and sg_kill fields of the argument structure specify the erase and kill characters
respectively, and reflect the values in the VERASE and VKILL members of the c_cc field of the termios structure.
The sg_flags field of the argument structure contains several flags that determine the system's treatment of the terminal. They are mapped
into flags in fields of the terminal state, represented by the termios structure.
Delay type 0 (NL0, TAB0, CR0, FF0, BS0) is always mapped into the equivalent delay type 0 in the c_oflag field of the termios structure.
Other delay mappings are performed as follows:
+-----------------------+-----------------------------------+
| sg_flags | c_oflag |
+-----------------------+-----------------------------------+
|BS1 | BS1 |
+-----------------------+-----------------------------------+
|FF1 | VT1 |
+-----------------------+-----------------------------------+
|CR1 | CR2 |
+-----------------------+-----------------------------------+
|CR2 | CR3 |
+-----------------------+-----------------------------------+
|CR3 | CR0 (not supported) |
+-----------------------+-----------------------------------+
|TAB1 | TAB1 |
+-----------------------+-----------------------------------+
|TAB2 | TAB2 |
+-----------------------+-----------------------------------+
|XTABS | TAB3 |
+-----------------------+-----------------------------------+
|NL1 | ONLRET|CR1 |
+-----------------------+-----------------------------------+
|NL2 | NL1 |
+-----------------------+-----------------------------------+
|NL3 | NL0 (not supported) |
+-----------------------+-----------------------------------+
If previous TIOCLSET or TIOCLBIS ioctl calls have not selected LITOUT or PASS8 mode, and if RAW mode is not selected, the ISTRIP flag is
set in the c_iflag field of the termios structure, and the EVENP and ODDP flags control the parity of characters sent to the terminal and
accepted from the terminal, as follows:
0 (neither EVENP nor ODDP) Parity is not to be generated on output or checked on input. The character size is set to CS8 and the
PARENB flag is cleared in the c_cflag field of the termios structure.
EVENP Even parity characters are to be generated on output and accepted on input. The INPCK flag is set in the
c_iflag field of the termios structure, the character size is set to CS7 and the PARENB flag is set in the
c_iflag field of the termios structure.
ODDP Odd parity characters are to be generated on output and accepted on input. The INPCK flag is set in the
c_iflag, the character size is set to CS7 and the PARENB and PARODD flags are set in the c_iflag field of
the termios structure.
EVENP|ODDP or ANYP Even parity characters are to be generated on output and characters of either parity are to be accepted
on input. The INPCK flag is cleared in the c_iflag field, the character size is set to CS7 and the PARENB
flag is set in the c_iflag field of the termios structure.
The RAW flag disables all output processing (the OPOST flag in the c_oflag field, and the XCASE and IEXTEN flags in the c_iflag field are
cleared in the termios structure) and input processing (all flags in the c_iflag field other than the IXOFF and IXANY flags are cleared
in the termios structure). Eight bits of data, with no parity bit are accepted on input and generated on output; the character size is set
to CS8 and the PARENB and PARODD flags are cleared in the c_cflag field of the termios structure. The signal-generating and line-editing
control characters are disabled by clearing the ISIG and ICANON flags in the c_iflag field of the termios structure.
The CRMOD flag turns input carriage return characters into linefeed characters, and output linefeed characters to be sent as a carriage
return followed by a linefeed. The ICRNL flag in the c_iflag field, and the OPOST and ONLCR flags in the c_oflag field, are set in the
termios structure.
The LCASE flag maps upper-case letters in the ASCII character set to their lower-case equivalents on input (the IUCLC flag is set in the
c_iflag field), and maps lower-case letters in the ASCII character set to their upper-case equivalents on output (the OLCUC flag is set in
the c_oflag field). Escape sequences are accepted on input, and generated on output, to handle certain ASCII characters not supported by
older terminals (the XCASE flag is set in the c_lflag field).
Other flags are directly mapped to flags in the termios structure:
+--------------------+--------------------------------------+
| sg_flags | Flags in termios structure |
+--------------------+--------------------------------------+
|CBREAK |Complement of ICANON in c_lflag field |
+--------------------+--------------------------------------+
|ECHO |ECHO in c_lflag field |
+--------------------+--------------------------------------+
|TANDEM |IXOFF in c_iflag field |
+--------------------+--------------------------------------+
Another structure associated with each terminal specifies characters that are special in both the old Version 7 and the newer 4BSD terminal
interfaces. The following structure is defined by <sys/ttold.h>:
struct tchars {
char t_intrc; /* interrupt */
char t_quitc; /* quit */
char t_startc; /* start output */
char t_stopc; /* stop output */
char t_eofc; /* end-of-file */
char t_brkc; /* input delimiter (like nl) */
};
XENIX defines the tchar structure as tc. The characters are mapped to members of the c_cc field of the termios structure as follows:
tchars c_cc index
t_intrc VINTR
t_quitc VQUIT
t_startc VSTART
t_stopc VSTOP
t_eofc VEOF
t_brkc VEOL
Also associated with each terminal is a local flag word (TIOCLSET and TIOCLGET), specifying flags supported by the new 4BSD terminal
interface. Most of these flags are directly mapped to flags in the termios structure:
+-------------------+---------------------------------------+
| Local flags | Flags in termios structure |
+-------------------+---------------------------------------+
|LCRTBS | Not supported |
+-------------------+---------------------------------------+
|LPRTERA | ECHOPRT in the c_lflag field |
+-------------------+---------------------------------------+
|LCRTERA | ECHOE in the c_lflag field |
+-------------------+---------------------------------------+
|LTILDE | Not supported |
+-------------------+---------------------------------------+
|LMDMBUF | Not supported |
+-------------------+---------------------------------------+
|LTOSTOP | TOSTOP in the c_lflag field |
+-------------------+---------------------------------------+
|LFLUSHO | FLUSHO in the c_lflag field |
+-------------------+---------------------------------------+
|LNOHANG | CLOCAL in the c_cflag field |
+-------------------+---------------------------------------+
|LCRTKIL | ECHOKE in the c_lflag field |
+-------------------+---------------------------------------+
|LPASS8 | CS8 in the c_cflag field |
+-------------------+---------------------------------------+
|LCTLECH | CTLECH in the c_lflag field |
+-------------------+---------------------------------------+
|LPENDIN | PENDIN in the c_lflag field |
+-------------------+---------------------------------------+
|LDECCTQ | Complement of IXANY in the c_iflag |
| | field |
+-------------------+---------------------------------------+
|LNOFLSH | NOFLSH in the c_lflag field |
+-------------------+---------------------------------------+
Each flag has a corresponding equivalent sg_flags value. The sg_flags definitions omit the leading "L"; for example, TIOCSETP with sg_flags
set to TOSTOP is equivalent to TIOCLSET with LTOSTOP.
Another structure associated with each terminal is the ltchars structure which defines control characters for the new 4BSD terminal inter-
face. Its structure is:
struct ltchars {
char t_suspc; /* stop process signal */
char t_dsuspc; /* delayed stop process signal */
char t_rprntc; /* reprint line */
char t_flushc; /*flush output (toggles) */
char t_werasc; /* word erase */
char t_lnextc; /* literal next character */
};
The characters are mapped to members of the c_cc field of the termios structure as follows:
+-------------------+---------------------------------------+
| ltchars | c_cc index |
+-------------------+---------------------------------------+
|t_suspc | VSUS |
+-------------------+---------------------------------------+
|t_dsuspc | VDSUSP |
+-------------------+---------------------------------------+
|t_rprntc | VREPRINT |
+-------------------+---------------------------------------+
|t_flushc | VDISCARD |
+-------------------+---------------------------------------+
|t_werasc | VWERASE |
+-------------------+---------------------------------------+
|t_lnextc | VLNEXT |
+-------------------+---------------------------------------+
IOCTLS
ttcompat responds to the following ioctl calls. All others are passed to the module below.
TIOCGETP The argument is a pointer to an sgttyb structure. The current terminal state is fetched; the appropriate
characters in the terminal state are stored in that structure, as are the input and output speeds. If
the speed is over B38400, then B38400 is returned. The values of the flags in the sg_flags field are
derived from the flags in the terminal state and stored in the structure.
TIOCEXCL Set ``exclusive-use'' mode; no further opens are permitted until the file has been closed.
TIOCNXCL Turn off ``exclusive-use'' mode.
TIOCSETP The argument is a pointer to an sgttyb structure. The appropriate characters and input and output speeds in
the terminal state are set from the values in that structure, and the flags in the terminal state are set
to match the values of the flags in the sg_flags field of that structure. The state is changed with a
TCSETSF ioctl so that the interface delays until output is quiescent, then throws away any unread charac-
ters, before changing the modes. If the current device speed is over B38400 for either input or output
speed, and B38400 is specified through this interface for that speed, the actual device speed is not
changed. If the device speed is B38400 or lower or if some speed other than B38400 is specified, then the
actual speed specified is set.
TIOCSETN The argument is a pointer to an sgttyb structure. The terminal state is changed as TIOCSETP would change
it, but a TCSETS ioctl is used, so that the interface neither delays nor discards input.
TIOCHPCL The argument is ignored. The HUPCL flag is set in the c_cflag word of the terminal state.
TIOCFLUSH The argument is a pointer to an int variable. If its value is zero, all characters waiting in input or
output queues are flushed. Otherwise, the value of the int is treated as the logical OR of the FREAD and
FWRITE flags defined by <sys/file.h>. If the FREAD bit is set, all characters waiting in input queues are
flushed, and if the FWRITE bit is set, all characters waiting in output queues are flushed.
TIOCSBRK The argument is ignored. The break bit is set for the device. (This is not supported by ttcompat. The
underlying driver must support TIOCSBRK.)
TIOCCBRK The argument is ignored. The break bit is cleared for the device. (This is not supported by ttcompat. The
underlying driver must support TIOCCBRK.)
TIOCSDTR The argument is ignored. The Data Terminal Ready bit is set for the device.
TIOCCDTR The argument is ignored. The Data Terminal Ready bit is cleared for the device.
TIOCSTOP The argument is ignored. Output is stopped as if the STOP character had been typed.
TIOCSTART The argument is ignored. Output is restarted as if the START character had been typed.
TIOCGETC The argument is a pointer to a tchars structure. The current terminal state is fetched, and the appropri-
ate characters in the terminal state are stored in that structure.
TIOCSETC The argument is a pointer to a tchars structure. The values of the appropriate characters in the terminal
state are set from the characters in that structure.
TIOCLGET The argument is a pointer to an int. The current terminal state is fetched, and the values of the local
flags are derived from the flags in the terminal state and stored in the int pointed to by the argument.
TIOCLBIS The argument is a pointer to an int whose value is a mask containing flags to be set in the local flags
word. The current terminal state is fetched, and the values of the local flags are derived from the flags
in the terminal state; the specified flags are set, and the flags in the terminal state are set to match
the new value of the local flags word.
TIOCLBIC The argument is a pointer to an int whose value is a mask containing flags to be cleared in the local flags
word. The current terminal state is fetched, and the values of the local flags are derived from the flags
in the terminal state; the specified flags are cleared, and the flags in the terminal state are set to
match the new value of the local flags word.
TIOCLSET The argument is a pointer to an int containing a new set of local flags. The flags in the terminal state
are set to match the new value of the local flags word. (This ioctl was added because sg_flags was once a
16 bit value. The local modes controlled by TIOCLSET are equivalent to the modes controlled by TIOCSETP
and sg_flags.)
TIOCGLTC The argument is a pointer to an ltchars structure. The values of the appropriate characters in the terminal
state are stored in that structure.
TIOCSLTC The argument is a pointer to an ltchars structure. The values of the appropriate characters in the terminal
state are set from the characters in that structure.
FIORDCHK Returns the number of immediately readable characters. The argument is ignored. (This ioctl is handled in
the stream head, not in the ttcompat module.)
FIONREAD Returns the number of immediately readable characters in the int pointed to by the argument. (This ioctl is
handled in the stream head, not in the ttcompat module.)
The following ioctls are returned as successful for the sake of compatibility. However, nothing significant is done (that is, the state of
the terminal is not changed in any way, and no message is passed through to the underlying tty driver).
TIOCSETD LDOPEN
TIOCGETD LDCLOSE
DIOCSETP LDCHG
DIOCSETP LDSETT
DIOCGETP LDGETT
The following old ioctls are not supported by ttcompat, but are supported by Solaris tty drivers. As with all ioctl not otherwise listed
in this documentation, these are passed through to the underlying driver and are handled there.
TIOCREMOTE
TIOCGWINSZ TIOCSWINSZ
The following ioctls are not supported by ttcompat, and are generally not supported by Solaris tty drivers. They are passed through, and
the tty drivers return EINVAL.
LDSMAP TIOCNOTTY
LDGMAP TIOCOUTQ
LDNMAP
(Note: LDSMAP, LDGMAP, and LDNMAP are defined in <sys/termios.h>.)
SEE ALSO
ioctl(2), termios(3C), ldterm(7M), termio(7I)
SunOS 5.10 2 Oct 2001 ttcompat(7M)