TTYS(5) — NEWS-OS Programmer’s Manual
NAME
ttys − terminal initialization data
DESCRIPTION
The ttys file contains information that is used by various routines to initialize and control the use of terminal special files. This information is read with the getttyent(3) library routines.
There is one line in the ttys file per special file. Fields are separated by tabs and/or spaces. Some fields may contain more than one word and should be enclosed in double quotes. Blank lines and comments can appear anywhere in the file; comments are delimited by # and new line. Unspecified fields default to null.
The first field is the terminal’s entry in the device directory, /dev. The second field of the file is the command to execute for the line, typically getty(8), which performs such tasks as baud-rate recognition, reading the login name, and calling login(1). It can be, however, any desired command, for example the start up for a window system terminal emulator or some other daemon process, and can contain multiple words if quoted. The third field is the type of terminal normally connected to that tty line, as found in the termcap(5) data base file. The remaining fields set flags in the ty_status entry (see getttyent(3)) or specify a window system process that init(8) will maintain for the terminal line. As flag values, the strings on and off specify whether init should execute the command given in the second field, while secure in addition to on allows root to login on this line. These flag fields should not be quoted. The string window= is followed by a quoted command string which init will execute before starting getty. If the line ends in a comment, the comment is included in the ty_comment field of the ttyent structure.
EXAMPLES
#
# namegettytypestatuscomments
#
console"/etc/getty std.9600" news on secure
tty00"/etc/getty std.9600"nwp511on
tty01"/etc/getty std.9600"vt220on
ttyp0nonenetworksecure
ttyp1nonenetworksecure
The first example permits root login on the console at 9600 baud, the second and third lines allow login at 9600 baud with terminal types of "NWP-511" and "VT220" respectively without root login, the fourth and fifth lines are examples of network pseudo ttys which should not have getty enabled on them,
FILES
/etc/ttys
SEE ALSO
login(1),
getttyent(3), gettytab(5), init(8), getty(8)
NEWS-OSRelease 4.2.1R