GETTY(8) COMMAND REFERENCE GETTY(8) NAME getty - set terminal mode SYNOPSIS /etc/getty [ type ] DESCRIPTION Getty is invoked by init(8) immediately after a terminal is opened, following the making of a connection. While reading the name getty attempts to adapt the system to the speed and type of terminal being used. Init calls getty with type, an argument specified by the ttys file entry for the terminal line. Type can be used to make getty treat the line specially. It is used as an index into the gettytab(5) database to determine the characteristics of the line. If there is no type argument, or there is no table corresponding to type in gettytab, the default table is used. If there is no /etc/gettytab a set of system defaults is used. If indicated by the table located, getty will clear the terminal screen, print a banner heading, and prompt for a login name. Usually either the banner or the login prompt will include the system hostname. Then the user's name is read, a character at a time. If a null character is received, it is assumed to be the result of the user pushing the ``break'' (``interrupt'') key. The speed is usually then changed and the ``login:'' is typed again; a second ``break'' changes the speed again and the ``login:'' is typed once more. Successive ``break'' characters cycle through the same standard set of speeds. The user's name is terminated by a new-line or carriage- return character. The latter results in the system being set to treat carriage returns appropriately (see tty(4)). The user's name is scanned to see if it contains any lower- case alphabetic characters; if not, and if the name is non- empty, the system is told to map any future upper-case characters into the corresponding lower-case characters. Finally, login is called with the user's name as an argument. Most of the default actions of getty can be circumvented, or modified, by a suitable gettytab table. Getty can be set to timeout after some interval, which will cause dial-up lines to hang up if the login name is not entered reasonably quickly. Printed 4/6/89 1
GETTY(8) COMMAND REFERENCE GETTY(8) FILES /etc/gettytab data base describing terminal lines /etc/ttys terminal initialization data CAVEATS Currently, the format of /etc/ttys limits the permitted table names to a single character. SEE ALSO login(1), ioctl(2), tty(4), gettytab(5), ttys(5), and init(8). Printed 4/6/89 2
%%index%% na:264,78; sy:342,223; de:565,2987; fi:3888,214; ca:4102,194; se:4296,261; %%index%%000000000108