STTY(1) — UNIX Programmer’s Manual
NAME
stty − set terminal options
SYNOPSIS
stty [ option ... ]
DESCRIPTION
Stty sets certain I/O options on the current output terminal, placing its output on the diagnostic output. With no argument, it reports the speed of the terminal and the settings of the options which are different from their defaults. Use of one of the following options modifies the output as described:
all All normally used option settings are reported.
everything
Everything stty knows about is printed.
speed The terminal speed alone is printed on the standard output.
size The terminal (window) sizes are printed on the standard output, first rows and then columns. The option strings are selected from the following set:
even allow even parity input
−even disallow even parity input
odd allow odd parity input
−odd disallow odd parity input
non allow no parity input; same as ‘−even −odd’
−non allow any parity input; same as ‘even odd’
raw raw mode input (no input processing (erase, kill, interrupt, ...); parity bit passed back)
−raw negate raw mode
cooked same as ‘−raw’
cbreak make each character available to read(2) as received; no erase and kill processing, but all other processing (interrupt, suspend, ...) is performed
−cbreak make characters available to read only when newline is received
−nl allow carriage return for new-line, and output CR-LF for carriage return or new-line
nl accept only new-line to end lines
echo echo back every character typed
−echo do not echo characters
lcase map upper case to lower case
−lcase do not map case
tandem enable flow control, so that the system sends out the stop character when its internal queue is in danger of overflowing on input, and sends the start character when it is ready to accept further input
−tandem disable flow control
−tabs replace tabs by spaces when printing
tabs preserve tabs
ek set erase and kill characters to # and @
For the following commands which take a character argument c, you may also specify c as the “u” or “undef”, to set the value to be undefined. A value of “^x”, a 2 character sequence, is also interpreted as a control character, with “^?” representing delete.
erase c set erase character to c (default DEL, but often reset to ^H.)
kill c set kill character to c (default ^U, but often reset to ^X.)
intr c set interrupt character to c (default ^C, but often reset to DEL.)
quit c set quit character to c (default control \.)
start c set start character to c (default control Q.)
stop c set stop character to c (default control S.)
eof c set end of file character to c (default control D.)
brk c set break character to c (default undefined.) This character is an additional character causing wakeup.
cr0 cr1 cr2 cr3
select style of delay for carriage return (see ioctl(2))
nl0 nl1 nl2 nl3
select style of delay for linefeed
tab0 tab1 tab2 tab3
select style of delay for tab
ff0 ff1 select style of delay for form feed
bs0 bs1 select style of delay for backspace
tty33 set all modes suitable for the Teletype Corporation Model 33 terminal.
tty37 set all modes suitable for the Teletype Corporation Model 37 terminal.
vt05 set all modes suitable for Digital Equipment Corp. VT05 terminal
dec set all modes suitable for Digital Equipment Corp. operating systems users; (erase, kill, and interrupt characters to ^?, ^U, and ^C, decctlq and “newcrt”.)
tn300 set all modes suitable for a General Electric TermiNet 300
ti700 set all modes suitable for Texas Instruments 700 series terminal
tek set all modes suitable for Tektronix 4014 terminal
0 hang up phone line immediately
50 75 110 134 150 200 300 600 1200 1800 2400 4800 9600 exta extb
Set terminal baud rate to the number given, if possible. (These are the speeds supported by the DH-11 interface).
rows n The terminal size is recorded as having n rows.
columns n
The terminal size is recorded as having n columns.
cols n is an alias for columns.
A teletype driver which supports the job control processing of csh(1) and more functionality than the basic driver is fully described in tty(4). The following options apply only to it.
new Use new driver (switching flushes typeahead).
old Use old driver.
crt Set options for a CRT (crtbs, ctlecho and, if >= 1200 baud, crterase and crtkill.)
crtbs Echo backspaces on erase characters.
prterase For printing terminal echo erased characters backwards within “\” and “/”.
crterase Wipe out erased characters with “backspace-space-backspace.”
−crterase Leave erased characters visible; just backspace.
crtkill Wipe out input on like kill ala crterase.
−crtkill Just echo line kill character and a newline on line kill.
ctlecho Echo control characters as “^x” (and delete as “^?”.) Print two backspaces following the EOT character (control D).
−ctlecho Control characters echo as themselves; in cooked mode EOT (control-D) is not echoed.
decctlq After output is suspended (normally by ^S), only a start character (normally ^Q) will restart it. This is compatible with DEC’s vendor supplied systems.
−decctlq After output is suspended, any character typed will restart it; the start character will restart output without providing any input. (This is the default.)
tostop Background jobs stop if they attempt terminal output.
−tostop Output from background jobs to the terminal is allowed.
tilde Convert “~” to “`” on output (for Hazeltine terminals).
−tilde Leave poor “~” alone.
flusho Output is being discarded usually because user hit control O (internal state bit).
−flusho Output is not being discarded.
pendin Input is pending after a switch from cbreak to cooked and will be re-input when a read becomes pending or more input arrives (internal state bit).
−pendin Input is not pending.
pass8 Passes all 8 bits through on input, in any mode.
−pass8 Strips the 0200 bit on input except in raw mode.
mdmbuf Start/stop output on carrier transitions (not implemented).
−mdmbuf
Return error if write attempted after carrier drops.
litout Send output characters without any processing.
−litout Do normal output processing, inserting delays, etc.
nohang Don’t send hangup signal if carrier drops.
−nohang Send hangup signal to control process group when carrier drops.
noflsh Inhibit flushing of pending I/O when an interrupt character is typed.
−noflsh Flush pending I/O if an interrupt character is typed.
etxack Diablo style etx/ack handshaking (not implemented).
The following special characters are applicable only to the new teletype driver and are not normally changed.
susp c set suspend process character to c (default control Z).
dsusp c set delayed suspend process character to c (default control Y).
rprnt c set reprint line character to c (default control R).
flush c set flush output character to c (default control O).
werase c set word erase character to c (default control W).
lnext c set literal next character to c (default control V).
Following commands are available to switch the mode of Kanji tty driver.
sjis, mskanji
select shift-JIS terminal mode
euc select EUC terminal mode
jis, jiskanji
select jis terminal mode
ascii, −sjis, −mskanji, −euc, −jis, −jiskanji
cancel kanji terminal mode, select ASCII terminal mode
sys sjis select shift-JIS code as internal kanji code.
sys euc select EUC as internal kanji code.
sys select the value of environment variable SYS_CODE (if SYS_CODE does not exit, SYS_KANJI) as internal kanji code. If both of environment variables do not exit, ‘sjis’ will be used.
Following commands are available only in JIS kanji terminal and they selects the control code used by the driver.
knj.bs1 directs the tty needs only one back space to delete a kanji character (ex. KJ-100).
knj.bs2 directs the tty needs two back space to delete a kanji character
knj.grph directs the tty needs zenkaku space code to blank out a kanji code (ex. NJC-1401)
esc.alw directs the tty always send code sequence shift to ASCII when newline code is received.
jin c set the last character of escape sequence to designate Kanji code to c (default is B).
jout c set the last character of escape sequence to designate ASCII code to c (default is J).
SEE ALSO
ioctl(2), tabs(1), tset(1), tty(4)
NEWS-OSRelease 3.3