Man page - mgettydefs(4)
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Manual
mgettydefs
NAMEDESCRIPTION
EXAMPLES
FILES
SEE ALSO
NAME
mgettydefs - speed and terminal settings used by mgetty
DESCRIPTION
The /etc/gettydefs file contains information used by mgetty (1) to set up the speed and terminal settings for a line. It also supplies information on what the login prompt should look like.
Many versions of UNIX have a version of getty (1) that also reads /etc/gettydefs . Both mgetty and getty expect similar formats in /etc/gettydefs except that, when used by mgetty , extended functionality is available. Even so, the additional functions are simply ignored by standard getty , so they can co-exist using the same file. Note, however, that mgetty can be compiled to use a file different from /etc/gettydefs if your getty gets upset about the extensions. This manual page documents /etc/gettydefs and describes the extended functionality available when used by mgetty (1). This document will refer to getty (1) except where mgetty βs behaviour is different.
Each entry in /etc/gettydefs has the following format:
label# initial-flags # final-flags # login-prompt #next-label
Each entry is followed by a blank line. The login prompt field can contain quoted characters which will be converted to other values. The sequences and their substitutions are:
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\n |
newline |
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\r |
carriage return |
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\g |
beep |
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\b |
backspace |
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\v |
vertical tab (VT) |
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\f |
formfeed |
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\t |
tab |
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\L |
portname |
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\C |
time in ctime (3) format. |
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\N |
number of users currently logged in |
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\U |
number of users currently logged in |
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\D |
date in DD/MM format |
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\T |
time in hh:mm:ss format |
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\I |
modem CONNECT attributes |
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\sequence |
where "sequence" is a valid strtol format, such as: \0nnn (octal), \0xnnn (hex), or \nnn (decimal). |
Note that standard getty usually only supports \b, \r and \n.
The various fields are:
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label |
This is the string against which getty tries to match its second argument. It is often the speed, such as 1200 , at which the terminal is supposed to run, but it need not be (see below). |
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initial-flags |
These flags are the initial ioctl (2) settings to which the terminal is to be set if a terminal type is not specified to getty . The flags that getty understands are the ones listed in termio (7)). mgetty is usually compiled for termios (7) and often has a more complete set than getty . |
Normally only the speed flag is required in the
initial-flags . getty automatically sets the terminal to raw input mode and takes care of the other flags. If the "-s" option is used with mgetty (1) the speed setting is ignored. The initial-flag settings remain in effect until getty executes login (1).
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final-flags |
These flags take the same values as the initial-flags and are set just before getty executes login . The speed flag is again required, except with mgetty if the -s flag was supplied. Two other commonly specified final-flags are TAB3 , so that tabs are sent to the terminal as spaces, and HUPCL , so that the line is hung up on the final close. |
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login-prompt |
This entire field is printed as the login-prompt . Unlike the above fields where white space (a space, tab or new-line) is ignored, they are included in the login-prompt field. This field is ignored if the "-p" option has been specified to mgetty (1). |
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next-label |
specifies the label to use if the user user types a <break> character, or getty detects a reception error. Getty searches for the entry with next-label as its label field and set up the terminal for those settings. Usually, a series of speeds are linked together in this fashion, into a closed set; for instance, 2400 linked to 1200 , which in turn is linked to 300 , which finally is linked to 2400 . next-label is ignored with mgetty (1). |
Several additional composite settings are available for initial-flags and final-flags . The following composite flags are supported by mgetty and are usually supported by getty :
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SANE |
equivalent to ββstty saneββ. (BRKINT, IGNPAR, ISTRIP, ICRNL, IXON, OPOST, CS8, CREAD, ISIG, ICANON, ECHO, ECHOK) |
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ODDP |
Odd parity (CS7, PARENB, PARODD) |
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PARITY , EVENP |
even parity (CS7, PARENB) |
-ODDP , -PARITY , -EVENP
no parity (resets PARENB, PARODD, and sets CS8)
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RAW |
raw I/O (no canonical processing) (turns off OPOST, ICANON) |
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-RAW , COOKED |
enable canonical processing (turns on OPOST, ICANON) |
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NL |
Ignore newlines. (ICRNL, ONLCR) |
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-NL |
Respect newlines (turns INLCR, IGNCR, ICRNL, ONLCR, OCRNL, ONLRET off) |
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LCASE |
Ignore case - treat all as lowercase. (IUCLC, OLCUC, XCASE) Is set if mgetty believes login is entirely uppercase. |
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-LCASE |
Repect case (turns off IUCLC, OLCUC and XCASE) |
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TABS |
output tabs as tabs |
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-TABS , TAB3 |
output tabs as spaces |
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EK |
Sets VERASE to "#" and VKILL to CKILL respectively. (note that while many gettys default VERASE to "#". mgetty defaults VERASE to backspace.) |
Additionally, mgetty (but not getty ) can set any of the control characters listed in the c_cc termio(termios) structure by the use of two tokens:
<character name> <value>
Eg:
VERASE Λh
The value can be set as ββΛ<character>ββ, ββ\nnnββ or ββ\<character>ββ (normal UNIX \ escapes).
See the termio (7) or termios (7) manual pages to a list of which ββVββ variables can be changed. Note that many of these can be changed in the c_cc array, but wonβt have any effect.
If getty is called without a second argument, the first entry of /etc/gettydefs is used by getty , thus making the first entry of /etc/gettydefs the default entry. It is also used if getty cannot find the specified label . Mgetty use a default label of ββnββ, but this can be changed in the configuration. If /etc/gettydefs itself is missing, there is one entry built into the command which brings up a terminal at 300 (configuration parameter in mgetty ) baud.
It is strongly recommended that after making or modifying /etc/gettydefs , it be run through getty with the check option to be sure there are no errors.
EXAMPLES
The following two lines show an example of 300/1200 baud toggle, which is useful for dial-up ports:
1200# B1200
HUPCL # B1200 SANE IXANY TAB3 #login: #300
300# B300 HUPCL # B300 SANE IXANY TAB3 #login: #1200
The following line shows a typical 9600 baud entry for a hard-wired connection (not currently supported for mgetty ):
9600# B9600 # B9600 SANE IXANY IXANY ECHOE TAB3 #login: #9600
The following line is a typical smart-modem setup, suitable for mgetty :
19200mg#
B19200 #
B19200 SANE VERASE \b VINTR \003 HUPCL #
\n\D \T \N Users @!login: #19200mg
FILES
/etc/gettydefs
SEE ALSO
mgetty(8), getty(8), login(1), ioctl(2), termio(7), termios(7).