NAME¶
openpty, login_tty, forkpty - terminal utility functions
SYNOPSIS¶
#include <pty.h>
int openpty(int *amaster, int *aslave, char *name,
const struct termios *termp,
const struct winsize *winp);
pid_t forkpty(int *amaster, char *name,
const struct termios *termp,
const struct winsize *winp);
#include <utmp.h>
int login_tty(int fd);
Link with -lutil.
DESCRIPTION¶
The
openpty() function finds an available pseudoterminal and returns file
descriptors for the master and slave in
amaster and
aslave. If
name is not NULL, the filename of the slave is returned in
name.
If
termp is not NULL, the terminal parameters of the slave will be set
to the values in
termp. If
winp is not NULL, the window size of
the slave will be set to the values in
winp.
The
login_tty() function prepares for a login on the terminal
fd
(which may be a real terminal device, or the slave of a pseudoterminal as
returned by
openpty()) by creating a new session, making
fd the
controlling terminal for the calling process, setting
fd to be the
standard input, output, and error streams of the current process, and closing
fd.
The
forkpty() function combines
openpty(),
fork(2), and
login_tty() to create a new process operating in a pseudoterminal. The
file descriptor of the master side of the pseudoterminal is returned in
amaster, and the filename of the slave in
name if it is not
NULL. The
termp and
winp arguments, if not NULL, will determine
the terminal attributes and window size of the slave side of the
pseudoterminal.
RETURN VALUE¶
If a call to
openpty(),
login_tty(), or
forkpty() is not
successful, -1 is returned and
errno is set to indicate the error.
Otherwise,
openpty(),
login_tty(), and the child process of
forkpty() return 0, and the parent process of
forkpty() returns
the process ID of the child process.
ERRORS¶
openpty() will fail if:
- ENOENT
- There are no available terminals.
login_tty() will fail if
ioctl(2) fails to set
fd to the
controlling terminal of the calling process.
forkpty() will fail if either
openpty() or
fork(2) fails.
These are BSD functions, present in glibc. They are not standardized in POSIX.
NOTES¶
The
const modifiers were added to the structure pointer arguments of
openpty() and
forkpty() in glibc 2.8.
In versions of glibc before 2.0.92,
openpty() returns file descriptors
for a BSD pseudoterminal pair; since glibc 2.0.92, it first attempts to open a
UNIX 98 pseudoterminal pair, and falls back to opening a BSD pseudoterminal
pair if that fails.
BUGS¶
Nobody knows how much space should be reserved for
name. So, calling
openpty() or
forkpty() with non-NULL
name may not be
secure.
SEE ALSO¶
fork(2),
ttyname(3),
pty(7)
COLOPHON¶
This page is part of release 3.74 of the Linux
man-pages project. A
description of the project, information about reporting bugs, and the latest
version of this page, can be found at
http://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/.