ttyname(3) — Subroutines
NAME
ttyname, isatty, ttyname_r − Get the name of a terminal
SYNOPSIS
#include <unistd.h>
char ∗ttyname(
int file−descriptor ); int isatty(
int file−descriptor ); int ttyname_r(
int file−descriptor,
char ∗buffer,
int len );
LIBRARY
Standard C Library (libc)
STANDARDS
Interfaces documented on this reference page conform to industry standards as follows:
ttyname_r(): POSIX.1c
isatty(), ttyname(): XSH4.2
Refer to the standards(5) reference page for more information about industry standards and associated tags.
PARAMETERS
file-descriptor
Specifies an open file descriptor.
buffer
Points to a buffer in which the terminal name is stored.
lenSpecifies the length of the buffer pointed to by the buffer parameter.
DESCRIPTION
The ttyname() function gets the name of a terminal. It returns a pointer to a string containing the null-terminated pathname of the terminal device associated with the file-descriptor parameter.
The isatty() function determines if the device associated with the file-descriptor parameter is a terminal.
NOTES
The ttyname() function returns a pointer to thread-specific data. Subsequent calls to this function from the same thread overwrite this data.
RETURN VALUES
Upon successful completion, the ttyname() function returns a pointer to a string identifying a terminal device. A NULL pointer is returned if the file-descriptor parameter does not describe a terminal device in the /dev directory.
Upon successful completion, the isatty() function returns a value of 1 if the specified file-descriptor parameter is associated with a terminal. Otherwise, it returns a value of zero (0).
[POSIX] Upon successful completion, the ttyname_r() function stores the terminal name as a null-terminated string in the buffer pointed to by the buffer parameter and returns a value of 0 (zero). Otherwise, it returns an error number.
[Tru64 UNIX] The obsolete version of ttyname_r() functions the same way as the POSIX version, except it returns a -1 upon unsuccessful completion.
ERRORS
If the isatty() function fails, errno may be set to the following value:
[ENOTTY]
The file associated with file-descriptor is not a terminal.
If the ttyname_r() function fails, errno may be set to the following value:
[EINVAL]
The buffer parameter is a null pointer or the len parameter was too short to store the string.
SEE ALSO
Functions: ttyslot(3)
Standards: standards(5)