Provided by: util-linux_2.31.1-0.4ubuntu3.7_amd64 bug

NAME

       agetty - alternative Linux getty

SYNOPSIS

       agetty [options] port [baud_rate...] [term]

DESCRIPTION

       agetty  opens  a  tty  port, prompts for a login name and invokes the /bin/login command.  It is normally
       invoked by init(8).

       agetty has several non-standard features that are useful for hardwired and for dial-in lines:

       •      Adapts the tty settings to parity bits and to erase, kill, end-of-line  and  uppercase  characters
              when it reads a login name.  The program can handle 7-bit characters with even, odd, none or space
              parity, and 8-bit characters with no parity.  The following  special  characters  are  recognized:
              Control-U  (kill);  DEL  and  backspace (erase); carriage return and line feed (end of line).  See
              also the --erase-chars and --kill-chars options.

       •      Optionally deduces the baud rate  from  the  CONNECT  messages  produced  by  Hayes(tm)-compatible
              modems.

       •      Optionally  does  not  hang  up  when  it  is  given  an already opened line (useful for call-back
              applications).

       •      Optionally does not display the contents of the /etc/issue file.

       •      Optionally displays an alternative issue file instead of /etc/issue.

       •      Optionally does not ask for a login name.

       •      Optionally invokes a non-standard login program instead of /bin/login.

       •      Optionally turns on hardware flow control.

       •      Optionally forces the line to be local with no need for carrier detect.

       This program does not use the /etc/gettydefs (System V) or /etc/gettytab (SunOS 4) files.

ARGUMENTS

       port   A path name relative to the /dev directory.  If a  "-"  is  specified,  agetty  assumes  that  its
              standard  input  is  already  connected  to  a tty port and that a connection to a remote user has
              already been established.

              Under System V, a "-" port argument should be preceded by a "--".

       baud_rate,...
              A comma-separated list of one or more baud rates.  Each time agetty receives a BREAK character  it
              advances through the list, which is treated as if it were circular.

              Baud  rates  should be specified in descending order, so that the null character (Ctrl-@) can also
              be used for baud-rate switching.

              This argument is optional and unnecessary for virtual terminals.

              The default for serial  terminals  is  keep  the  current  baud  rate  (see  --keep-baud)  and  if
              unsuccessful then default to '9600'.

       term   The  value to be used for the TERM environment variable.  This overrides whatever init(8) may have
              set, and is inherited by login and the shell.

              The default is 'vt100', or 'linux' for Linux on a virtual terminal, or 'hurd' for GNU  Hurd  on  a
              virtual terminal.

OPTIONS

       -8, --8bits
              Assume that the tty is 8-bit clean, hence disable parity detection.

       -a, --autologin username
              Automatically  log  in  the  specified user without asking for a username or password.  Using this
              option causes an -f username option and argument to be added to the /bin/login command line.   See
              --login-options, which can be used to modify this option's behavior.

       -c, --noreset
              Do not reset terminal cflags (control modes).  See termios(3) for more details.

       -E, --remote
              Typically  the  login(1)  command  is  given  a  remote  hostname when called by something such as
              telnetd(8).  This option allows agetty to pass what it is using for a hostname to login(1) for use
              in utmp(5).  See --host, login(1), and utmp(5).

              If  the  --host fakehost option is given, then an -h fakehost option and argument are added to the
              /bin/login command line.

              If the --nohostname option is given, then an -H option is added to the /bin/login command line.

              See --login-options.

       -f, --issue-file issue_file
              Display the contents of issue_file instead of /etc/issue.   This  allows  custom  messages  to  be
              displayed on different terminals.  The --noissue option will override this option.

       -h, --flow-control
              Enable  hardware  (RTS/CTS)  flow  control.   It is left up to the application to disable software
              (XON/XOFF) flow protocol where appropriate.

       -H, --host fakehost
              Write the specified fakehost into the utmp file.  Normally, no login host is given,  since  agetty
              is  used  for  local  hardwired  connections and consoles.  However, this option can be useful for
              identifying terminal concentrators and the like.

       -i, --noissue
              Do not display the contents of /etc/issue (or other) before writing the login  prompt.   Terminals
              or communications hardware may become confused when receiving lots of text at the wrong baud rate;
              dial-up scripts may fail if the login prompt is preceded by too much text.

       -I, --init-string initstring
              Set an initial string to be sent to the tty or modem before sending anything else.   This  may  be
              used  to  initialize  a  modem.   Non-printable characters may be sent by writing their octal code
              preceded by a backslash (\).  For example, to send a linefeed character  (ASCII  10,  octal  012),
              write \012.

       -J, --noclear
              Do not clear the screen before prompting for the login name.  By default the screen is cleared.

       -l, --login-program login_program
              Invoke  the  specified login_program instead of /bin/login.  This allows the use of a non-standard
              login program.  Such a program could, for example, ask for a dial-up password or use  a  different
              password file. See --login-options.

       -L, --local-line[=mode]
              Control  the CLOCAL line flag.  The optional mode argument is 'auto', 'always' or 'never'.  If the
              mode argument is omitted, then the default is 'always'.  If the --local-line option is  not  given
              at all, then the default is 'auto'.

              always Forces  the  line  to  be a local line with no need for carrier detect.  This can be useful
                     when you have a locally attached terminal where the serial line does not set  the  carrier-
                     detect signal.

              never  Explicitly  clears  the  CLOCAL flag from the line setting and the carrier-detect signal is
                     expected on the line.

              auto   The agetty default.  Does not modify the CLOCAL setting and follows the setting enabled  by
                     the kernel.

       -m, --extract-baud
              Try  to  extract  the  baud  rate from the CONNECT status message produced by Hayes(tm)-compatible
              modems.  These status messages are of the form: "<junk><speed><junk>".  agetty  assumes  that  the
              modem  emits its status message at the same speed as specified with (the first) baud_rate value on
              the command line.

              Since the --extract-baud feature may fail on heavily-loaded systems, you still should enable BREAK
              processing by enumerating all expected baud rates on the command line.

       --list-speeds
              Display supported baud rates.  These are determined at compilation time.

       -n, --skip-login
              Do  not prompt the user for a login name.  This can be used in connection with the --login-program
              option to invoke a non-standard  login  process  such  as  a  BBS  system.   Note  that  with  the
              --skip-login option, agetty gets no input from the user who logs in and therefore will not be able
              to figure out parity, character size, and newline processing of the connection.   It  defaults  to
              space  parity, 7 bit characters, and ASCII CR (13) end-of-line character.  Beware that the program
              that agetty starts (usually /bin/login) is run as root.

       -N, --nonewline
              Do not print a newline before writing out /etc/issue.

       -o, --login-options "login_options"
              Options  and arguments that  are passed to login(1). Where \u is replaced by the login  name.  For
              example:

                  --login-options '-h darkstar -- \u'

              See --autologin, --login-program and --remote.

              Please read the SECURITY NOTICE below before using this option.

       -p, --login-pause
              Wait  for  any  key before dropping to the login prompt.  Can be combined with --autologin to save
              memory by lazily spawning shells.

       -r, --chroot directory
              Change root to the specified directory.

       -R, --hangup
              Call vhangup() to do a virtual hangup of the specified terminal.

       -s, --keep-baud
              Try to keep the existing baud rate.  The baud rates from the command line  are  used  when  agetty
              receives a BREAK character.

       -t, --timeout timeout
              Terminate if no user name could be read within timeout seconds.  Use of this option with hardwired
              terminal lines is not recommended.

       -U, --detect-case
              Turn on support for detecting an uppercase-only terminal.  This setting will detect a  login  name
              containing  only capitals as indicating an uppercase-only terminal and turn on some upper-to-lower
              case conversions.  Note that this has no support for any Unicode characters.

       -w, --wait-cr
              Wait for the user or the modem to send a carriage-return or a linefeed  character  before  sending
              the  /etc/issue  file  (or  others)  and  the login prompt.  This is useful with the --init-string
              option.

       --nohints
              Do not print hints about Num, Caps and Scroll Locks.

       --nohostname
              By default the hostname will be printed.  With this option enabled, no hostname  at  all  will  be
              shown.

       --long-hostname
              By  default the hostname is only printed until the first dot.  With this option enabled, the fully
              qualified hostname by gethostname(3P) or (if not found) by getaddrinfo(3) is shown.

       --erase-chars string
              This option specifies additional characters that should be interpreted as a backspace ("ignore the
              previous  character") when the user types the login name.  The default additional ´erase´ has been
              ´#´, but since util-linux 2.23 no additional erase characters are enabled by default.

       --kill-chars string
              This option specifies additional characters that should be interpreted  as  a  kill  ("ignore  all
              previous  characters") when the user types the login name.  The default additional ´kill´ has been
              ´@´, but since util-linux 2.23 no additional kill characters are enabled by default.

       --chdir directory
              Change directory before the login.

       --delay number
              Sleep seconds before open tty.

       --nice number
              Run login with this priority.

       --reload
              Ask all running agetty instances to reload and update their displayed prompts, if the user has not
              yet  commenced  logging  in.   After  doing  so  the  command  will  exit.   This feature might be
              unsupported on systems without Linux inotify(7).

       --version
              Display version information and exit.

       --help Display help text and exit.

EXAMPLES

       This section shows examples for the process field of an entry in the /etc/inittab file.  You'll  have  to
       prepend appropriate values for the other fields.  See inittab(5) for more details.

       For a hardwired line or a console tty:

              /sbin/agetty 9600 ttyS1

       For  a  directly  connected terminal without proper carrier-detect wiring (try this if your terminal just
       sleeps instead of giving you a password: prompt):

              /sbin/agetty --local-line 9600 ttyS1 vt100

       For an old-style dial-in line with a 9600/2400/1200 baud modem:

              /sbin/agetty --extract-baud --timeout 60 ttyS1 9600,2400,1200

       For a Hayes modem with a fixed 115200 bps interface to the machine (the example  init  string  turns  off
       modem  echo  and  result  codes, makes modem/computer DCD track modem/modem DCD, makes a DTR drop cause a
       disconnection, and turns on auto-answer after 1 ring):

              /sbin/agetty --wait-cr --init-string 'ATE0Q1&D2&C1S0=1 15' 115200 ttyS1

SECURITY NOTICE

       If you use the --login-program and --login-options options, be aware that a malicious  user  may  try  to
       enter lognames with embedded options, which then get passed to the used login program.  Agetty does check
       for a leading "-" and makes sure the logname gets passed as one parameter (so embedded  spaces  will  not
       create  yet  another parameter), but depending on how the login binary parses the command line that might
       not be sufficient.  Check that the used login program cannot be abused this way.

       Some  programs use "--" to indicate that the rest  of  the  commandline  should  not  be  interpreted  as
       options.  Use this feature if available by passing "--" before the username gets passed by \u.

ISSUE ESCAPES

       The  issue-file  (/etc/issue,  or  the  file set with the --issue-file option) may contain certain escape
       codes to display the system name, date, time etcetera.  All escape  codes  consist  of  a  backslash  (\)
       immediately followed by one of the characters listed below.

       4 or 4{interface}
              Insert  the  IPv4  address  of  the  specified  network interface (for example: \4{eth0}).  If the
              interface argument is not specified, then select the first fully  configured  (UP,  non-LOCALBACK,
              RUNNING)  interface.  If not any configured interface is found, fall back to the IP address of the
              machine's hostname.

       6 or 6{interface}
              The same as \4 but for IPv6.

       b      Insert the baudrate of the current line.

       d      Insert the current date.

       e or e{name}
              Translate the human-readable name to an escape sequence and insert it (for  example:  \e{red}Alert
              text.\e{reset}).   If  the  name  argument  is  not  specified,  then  insert \033.  The currently
              supported names are: black, blink, blue, bold, brown, cyan,  darkgray,  gray,  green,  halfbright,
              lightblue, lightcyan, lightgray, lightgreen, lightmagenta, lightred, magenta, red, reset, reverse,
              and yellow.  All unknown names are silently ignored.

       s      Insert the system name (the name of the operating system).  Same as 'uname -s'.  See also  the  \S
              escape code.

       S or S{VARIABLE}
              Insert  the  VARIABLE  data  from  /etc/os-release.  If this file does not exist then fall back to
              /usr/lib/os-release.  If the VARIABLE argument is not specified, then  use  PRETTY_NAME  from  the
              file  or  the  system  name (see \s).  This escape code allows to keep /etc/issue distribution and
              release independent.  Note that \S{ANSI_COLOR} is converted to the real terminal escape sequence.

       l      Insert the name of the current tty line.

       m      Insert the architecture identifier of the machine.  Same as 'uname -m'.

       n      Insert the nodename of the machine, also known as the hostname.  Same as 'uname -n'.

       o      Insert the NIS domainname of the machine.  Same as 'hostname -d'.

       O      Insert the DNS domainname of the machine.

       r      Insert the release number of the OS.  Same as 'uname -r'.

       t      Insert the current time.

       u      Insert the number of current users logged in.

       U      Insert the string "1 user" or "<n> users" where <n> is the number of current users logged in.

       v      Insert the version of the OS, that is, the build-date and such.

       An example.  On my system, the following /etc/issue file:

              This is \n.\o (\s \m \r) \t

       displays as:

              This is thingol.orcan.dk (Linux i386 1.1.9) 18:29:30

FILES

       /var/run/utmp
              the system status file.

       /etc/issue
              printed before the login prompt.

       /etc/os-release /usr/lib/os-release
              operating system identification data.

       /dev/console
              problem reports (if syslog(3) is not used).

       /etc/inittab
              init(8) configuration file for SysV-style init daemon.

BUGS

       The baud-rate detection feature (the --extract-baud option) requires that agetty be scheduled soon enough
       after  completion  of  a dial-in call (within 30 ms with modems that talk at 2400 baud).  For robustness,
       always use the --extract-baud option in combination with a multiple baud rate command-line  argument,  so
       that BREAK processing is enabled.

       The  text  in the /etc/issue file (or other) and the login prompt are always output with 7-bit characters
       and space parity.

       The baud-rate detection feature (the --extract-baud option) requires that  the  modem  emits  its  status
       message after raising the DCD line.

DIAGNOSTICS

       Depending  on  how  the  program  was  configured,  all  diagnostics are written to the console device or
       reported via the syslog(3) facility.  Error messages are produced if the port argument does not specify a
       terminal device; if there is no utmp entry for the current process (System V only); and so on.

AUTHORS

       Werner Fink ⟨werner@suse.de⟩
       Karel Zak ⟨kzak@redhat.com⟩

       The original agetty for serial terminals was written by W.Z. Venema <wietse@wzv.win.tue.nl> and ported to
       Linux by Peter Orbaek <poe@daimi.aau.dk>.

AVAILABILITY

       The   agetty   command   is   part   of    the    util-linux    package    and    is    available    from
       https://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/utils/util-linux/.