Provided by: manpages-dev_6.7-2_all bug

NAME

       termios,   tcgetattr,   tcsetattr,   tcsendbreak,   tcdrain,  tcflush,  tcflow,  cfmakeraw,  cfgetospeed,
       cfgetispeed, cfsetispeed, cfsetospeed, cfsetspeed - get and set terminal attributes,  line  control,  get
       and set baud rate

LIBRARY

       Standard C library (libc, -lc)

SYNOPSIS

       #include <termios.h>
       #include <unistd.h>

       int tcgetattr(int fd, struct termios *termios_p);
       int tcsetattr(int fd, int optional_actions,
                     const struct termios *termios_p);

       int tcsendbreak(int fd, int duration);
       int tcdrain(int fd);
       int tcflush(int fd, int queue_selector);
       int tcflow(int fd, int action);

       void cfmakeraw(struct termios *termios_p);

       speed_t cfgetispeed(const struct termios *termios_p);
       speed_t cfgetospeed(const struct termios *termios_p);

       int cfsetispeed(struct termios *termios_p, speed_t speed);
       int cfsetospeed(struct termios *termios_p, speed_t speed);
       int cfsetspeed(struct termios *termios_p, speed_t speed);

   Feature Test Macro Requirements for glibc (see feature_test_macros(7)):

       cfsetspeed(), cfmakeraw():
           Since glibc 2.19:
               _DEFAULT_SOURCE
           glibc 2.19 and earlier:
               _BSD_SOURCE

DESCRIPTION

       The  termios  functions  describe  a  general terminal interface that is provided to control asynchronous
       communications ports.

   The termios structure
       Many of the functions described here have a termios_p argument that is a pointer to a termios  structure.
       This structure contains at least the following members:

           tcflag_t c_iflag;      /* input modes */
           tcflag_t c_oflag;      /* output modes */
           tcflag_t c_cflag;      /* control modes */
           tcflag_t c_lflag;      /* local modes */
           cc_t     c_cc[NCCS];   /* special characters */

       The  values that may be assigned to these fields are described below.  In the case of the first four bit-
       mask fields, the definitions of some of the associated flags that may  be  set  are  exposed  only  if  a
       specific feature test macro (see feature_test_macros(7)) is defined, as noted in brackets ("[]").

       In  the  descriptions  below,  "not  in POSIX" means that the value is not specified in POSIX.1-2001, and
       "XSI" means that the value is specified in POSIX.1-2001 as part of the XSI extension.

       c_iflag flag constants:

       IGNBRK Ignore BREAK condition on input.

       BRKINT If IGNBRK is set, a BREAK is ignored.  If it is not set but BRKINT is set, then a BREAK causes the
              input  and  output  queues  to  be  flushed,  and if the terminal is the controlling terminal of a
              foreground process group, it will cause a SIGINT to be sent  to  this  foreground  process  group.
              When neither IGNBRK nor BRKINT are set, a BREAK reads as a null byte ('\0'), except when PARMRK is
              set, in which case it reads as the sequence \377 \0 \0.

       IGNPAR Ignore framing errors and parity errors.

       PARMRK If this bit is set, input bytes with parity or framing  errors  are  marked  when  passed  to  the
              program.   This bit is meaningful only when INPCK is set and IGNPAR is not set.  The way erroneous
              bytes are marked is with two preceding bytes, \377 and \0.  Thus, the program actually reads three
              bytes  for one erroneous byte received from the terminal.  If a valid byte has the value \377, and
              ISTRIP (see below) is not set, the program might confuse it with the prefix that  marks  a  parity
              error.   Therefore,  a  valid  byte \377 is passed to the program as two bytes, \377 \377, in this
              case.

              If neither IGNPAR nor PARMRK is set, read a character with a parity error or framing error as \0.

       INPCK  Enable input parity checking.

       ISTRIP Strip off eighth bit.

       INLCR  Translate NL to CR on input.

       IGNCR  Ignore carriage return on input.

       ICRNL  Translate carriage return to newline on input (unless IGNCR is set).

       IUCLC  (not in POSIX) Map uppercase characters to lowercase on input.

       IXON   Enable XON/XOFF flow control on output.

       IXANY  (XSI) Typing any character will restart stopped output.  (The default is to allow just  the  START
              character to restart output.)

       IXOFF  Enable XON/XOFF flow control on input.

       IMAXBEL
              (not in POSIX) Ring bell when input queue is full.  Linux does not implement this bit, and acts as
              if it is always set.

       IUTF8 (since Linux 2.6.4)
              (not in POSIX) Input is UTF8; this allows character-erase to  be  correctly  performed  in  cooked
              mode.

       c_oflag flag constants:

       OPOST  Enable implementation-defined output processing.

       OLCUC  (not in POSIX) Map lowercase characters to uppercase on output.

       ONLCR  (XSI) Map NL to CR-NL on output.

       OCRNL  Map CR to NL on output.

       ONOCR  Don't output CR at column 0.

       ONLRET The  NL  character is assumed to do the carriage-return function; the kernel's idea of the current
              column is set to 0 after both NL and CR.

       OFILL  Send fill characters for a delay, rather than using a timed delay.

       OFDEL  Fill character is ASCII DEL  (0177).   If  unset,  fill  character  is  ASCII  NUL  ('\0').   (Not
              implemented on Linux.)

       NLDLY  Newline  delay  mask.   Values  are  NL0  and  NL1.   [requires  _BSD_SOURCE  or  _SVID_SOURCE  or
              _XOPEN_SOURCE]

       CRDLY  Carriage return delay mask.   Values  are  CR0,  CR1,  CR2,  or  CR3.   [requires  _BSD_SOURCE  or
              _SVID_SOURCE or _XOPEN_SOURCE]

       TABDLY Horizontal  tab  delay  mask.   Values  are  TAB0,  TAB1,  TAB2,  TAB3 (or XTABS, but see the BUGS
              section).  A value of TAB3, that is, XTABS, expands tabs to spaces (with  tab  stops  every  eight
              columns).  [requires _BSD_SOURCE or _SVID_SOURCE or _XOPEN_SOURCE]

       BSDLY  Backspace  delay  mask.   Values  are  BS0  or  BS1.   (Has  never  been  implemented.)  [requires
              _BSD_SOURCE or _SVID_SOURCE or _XOPEN_SOURCE]

       VTDLY  Vertical tab delay mask.  Values are VT0 or VT1.

       FFDLY  Form feed delay  mask.   Values  are  FF0  or  FF1.   [requires  _BSD_SOURCE  or  _SVID_SOURCE  or
              _XOPEN_SOURCE]

       c_cflag flag constants:

       CBAUD  (not in POSIX) Baud speed mask (4+1 bits).  [requires _BSD_SOURCE or _SVID_SOURCE]

       CBAUDEX
              (not  in  POSIX)  Extra  baud  speed  mask  (1  bit), included in CBAUD.  [requires _BSD_SOURCE or
              _SVID_SOURCE]

              (POSIX says that the baud speed is stored  in  the  termios  structure  without  specifying  where
              precisely,  and provides cfgetispeed() and cfsetispeed() for getting at it.  Some systems use bits
              selected by CBAUD in c_cflag, other systems  use  separate  fields,  for  example,  sg_ispeed  and
              sg_ospeed.)

       CSIZE  Character size mask.  Values are CS5, CS6, CS7, or CS8.

       CSTOPB Set two stop bits, rather than one.

       CREAD  Enable receiver.

       PARENB Enable parity generation on output and parity checking for input.

       PARODD If set, then parity for input and output is odd; otherwise even parity is used.

       HUPCL  Lower modem control lines after last process closes the device (hang up).

       CLOCAL Ignore modem control lines.

       LOBLK  (not  in  POSIX) Block output from a noncurrent shell layer.  For use by shl (shell layers).  (Not
              implemented on Linux.)

       CIBAUD (not in POSIX) Mask for input speeds.  The values for the CIBAUD bits are the same as  the  values
              for  the  CBAUD  bits,  shifted  left  IBSHIFT  bits.  [requires _BSD_SOURCE or _SVID_SOURCE] (Not
              implemented in glibc, supported on Linux via TCGET* and TCSET* ioctls; see ioctl_tty(2))

       CMSPAR (not in POSIX) Use "stick" (mark/space) parity (supported on certain serial devices): if PARODD is
              set, the parity bit is always 1; if PARODD is not set, then the parity bit is always 0.  [requires
              _BSD_SOURCE or _SVID_SOURCE]

       CRTSCTS
              (not in POSIX) Enable RTS/CTS (hardware) flow control.  [requires _BSD_SOURCE or _SVID_SOURCE]

       c_lflag flag constants:

       ISIG   When any of the characters INTR, QUIT, SUSP, or DSUSP are  received,  generate  the  corresponding
              signal.

       ICANON Enable canonical mode (described below).

       XCASE  (not  in  POSIX;  not  supported  under  Linux) If ICANON is also set, terminal is uppercase only.
              Input is converted to lowercase, except for  characters  preceded  by  \.   On  output,  uppercase
              characters  are  preceded  by  \  and  lowercase characters are converted to uppercase.  [requires
              _BSD_SOURCE or _SVID_SOURCE or _XOPEN_SOURCE]

       ECHO   Echo input characters.

       ECHOE  If ICANON is also set, the ERASE character erases the preceding input character, and WERASE erases
              the preceding word.

       ECHOK  If ICANON is also set, the KILL character erases the current line.

       ECHONL If ICANON is also set, echo the NL character even if ECHO is not set.

       ECHOCTL
              (not  in  POSIX)  If  ECHO is also set, terminal special characters other than TAB, NL, START, and
              STOP are echoed as ^X, where X is the character with ASCII code  0x40  greater  than  the  special
              character.   For  example,  character  0x08  (BS)  is  echoed  as  ^H.   [requires  _BSD_SOURCE or
              _SVID_SOURCE]

       ECHOPRT
              (not in POSIX) If ICANON and ECHO are also set, characters are printed as they are  being  erased.
              [requires _BSD_SOURCE or _SVID_SOURCE]

       ECHOKE (not  in  POSIX)  If  ICANON is also set, KILL is echoed by erasing each character on the line, as
              specified by ECHOE and ECHOPRT.  [requires _BSD_SOURCE or _SVID_SOURCE]

       DEFECHO
              (not in POSIX) Echo only when a process is reading.  (Not implemented on Linux.)

       FLUSHO (not in POSIX; not supported under Linux) Output is being flushed.  This flag is toggled by typing
              the DISCARD character.  [requires _BSD_SOURCE or _SVID_SOURCE]

       NOFLSH Disable  flushing  the input and output queues when generating signals for the INT, QUIT, and SUSP
              characters.

       TOSTOP Send the SIGTTOU signal to the process group of a background process which tries to write  to  its
              controlling terminal.

       PENDIN (not in POSIX; not supported under Linux) All characters in the input queue are reprinted when the
              next character  is  read.   (bash(1)  handles  typeahead  this  way.)   [requires  _BSD_SOURCE  or
              _SVID_SOURCE]

       IEXTEN Enable  implementation-defined input processing.  This flag, as well as ICANON must be enabled for
              the special characters EOL2, LNEXT, REPRINT, WERASE to be interpreted, and for the IUCLC  flag  to
              be effective.

       The  c_cc  array  defines  the  terminal  special  characters.  The symbolic indices (initial values) and
       meaning are:

       VDISCARD
              (not in POSIX; not supported under Linux; 017, SI, Ctrl-O) Toggle: start/stop  discarding  pending
              output.  Recognized when IEXTEN is set, and then not passed as input.

       VDSUSP (not in POSIX; not supported under Linux; 031, EM, Ctrl-Y) Delayed suspend character (DSUSP): send
              SIGTSTP signal when the character is read by the user program.  Recognized when  IEXTEN  and  ISIG
              are set, and the system supports job control, and then not passed as input.

       VEOF   (004, EOT, Ctrl-D) End-of-file character (EOF).  More precisely: this character causes the pending
              tty buffer to be sent to the waiting user program without waiting for end-of-line.  If it  is  the
              first  character  of  the line, the read(2) in the user program returns 0, which signifies end-of-
              file.  Recognized when ICANON is set, and then not passed as input.

       VEOL   (0, NUL) Additional end-of-line character (EOL).  Recognized when ICANON is set.

       VEOL2  (not in POSIX; 0, NUL) Yet another end-of-line character (EOL2).  Recognized when ICANON is set.

       VERASE (0177, DEL, rubout, or 010, BS, Ctrl-H, or also #)  Erase  character  (ERASE).   This  erases  the
              previous  not-yet-erased  character, but does not erase past EOF or beginning-of-line.  Recognized
              when ICANON is set, and then not passed as input.

       VINTR  (003, ETX, Ctrl-C, or also 0177, DEL, rubout) Interrupt character (INTR).  Send a  SIGINT  signal.
              Recognized when ISIG is set, and then not passed as input.

       VKILL  (025,  NAK,  Ctrl-U, or Ctrl-X, or also @) Kill character (KILL).  This erases the input since the
              last EOF or beginning-of-line.  Recognized when ICANON is set, and then not passed as input.

       VLNEXT (not in POSIX; 026, SYN, Ctrl-V) Literal next (LNEXT).  Quotes the next input character, depriving
              it of a possible special meaning.  Recognized when IEXTEN is set, and then not passed as input.

       VMIN   Minimum number of characters for noncanonical read (MIN).

       VQUIT  (034,  FS,  Ctrl-\) Quit character (QUIT).  Send SIGQUIT signal.  Recognized when ISIG is set, and
              then not passed as input.

       VREPRINT
              (not in POSIX; 022, DC2, Ctrl-R) Reprint unread characters (REPRINT).  Recognized when ICANON  and
              IEXTEN are set, and then not passed as input.

       VSTART (021,  DC1,  Ctrl-Q)  Start  character  (START).   Restarts  output stopped by the Stop character.
              Recognized when IXON is set, and then not passed as input.

       VSTATUS
              (not in POSIX; not supported under Linux; status request: 024,  DC4,  Ctrl-T).   Status  character
              (STATUS).   Display  status  information  at  terminal,  including state of foreground process and
              amount of CPU time it has consumed.  Also sends a SIGINFO signal (not supported on Linux)  to  the
              foreground process group.

       VSTOP  (023,  DC3,  Ctrl-S)  Stop character (STOP).  Stop output until Start character typed.  Recognized
              when IXON is set, and then not passed as input.

       VSUSP  (032, SUB, Ctrl-Z) Suspend character (SUSP).  Send SIGTSTP signal.  Recognized when ISIG  is  set,
              and then not passed as input.

       VSWTCH (not  in  POSIX; not supported under Linux; 0, NUL) Switch character (SWTCH).  Used in System V to
              switch shells in shell layers, a predecessor to shell job control.

       VTIME  Timeout in deciseconds for noncanonical read (TIME).

       VWERASE
              (not in POSIX; 027, ETB, Ctrl-W) Word erase (WERASE).  Recognized when ICANON and IEXTEN are  set,
              and then not passed as input.

       An  individual  terminal special character can be disabled by setting the value of the corresponding c_cc
       element to _POSIX_VDISABLE.

       The above symbolic subscript values are all different, except that VTIME, VMIN may have the same value as
       VEOL,  VEOF, respectively.  In noncanonical mode the special character meaning is replaced by the timeout
       meaning.  For an explanation of VMIN and VTIME, see the description of noncanonical mode below.

   Retrieving and changing terminal settings
       tcgetattr() gets the parameters associated with the object referred by fd and stores them in the  termios
       structure  referenced by termios_p.  This function may be invoked from a background process; however, the
       terminal attributes may be subsequently changed by a foreground process.

       tcsetattr() sets the parameters associated with  the  terminal  (unless  support  is  required  from  the
       underlying  hardware  that  is  not  available)  from  the  termios  structure  referred to by termios_p.
       optional_actions specifies when the changes take effect:

       TCSANOW
              the change occurs immediately.

       TCSADRAIN
              the change occurs after all output written to fd has been transmitted.  This option should be used
              when changing parameters that affect output.

       TCSAFLUSH
              the  change occurs after all output written to the object referred by fd has been transmitted, and
              all input that has been received but not read will be discarded before the change is made.

   Canonical and noncanonical mode
       The setting of the ICANON canon flag in c_lflag determines whether the terminal is operating in canonical
       mode (ICANON set) or noncanonical mode (ICANON unset).  By default, ICANON is set.

       In canonical mode:

       •  Input  is  made available line by line.  An input line is available when one of the line delimiters is
          typed (NL, EOL, EOL2; or EOF at the start of line).  Except in the case of EOF, the line delimiter  is
          included in the buffer returned by read(2).

       •  Line  editing  is  enabled  (ERASE,  KILL;  and if the IEXTEN flag is set: WERASE, REPRINT, LNEXT).  A
          read(2) returns at most one line of input; if the read(2) requested fewer bytes than are available  in
          the current line of input, then only as many bytes as requested are read, and the remaining characters
          will be available for a future read(2).

       •  The maximum line length is 4096 chars (including the terminating newline character); lines longer than
          4096  chars  are truncated.  After 4095 characters, input processing (e.g., ISIG and ECHO* processing)
          continues, but any input data after 4095 characters up to (but not including) any terminating  newline
          is  discarded.   This  ensures that the terminal can always receive more input until at least one line
          can be read.

       In noncanonical mode input is available immediately (without the user having  to  type  a  line-delimiter
       character),  no  input  processing is performed, and line editing is disabled.  The read buffer will only
       accept 4095 chars; this provides the necessary space for a newline char if the input mode is switched  to
       canonical.   The settings of MIN (c_cc[VMIN]) and TIME (c_cc[VTIME]) determine the circumstances in which
       a read(2) completes; there are four distinct cases:

       MIN == 0, TIME == 0 (polling read)
              If data is available, read(2) returns  immediately,  with  the  lesser  of  the  number  of  bytes
              available, or the number of bytes requested.  If no data is available, read(2) returns 0.

       MIN > 0, TIME == 0 (blocking read)
              read(2) blocks until MIN bytes are available, and returns up to the number of bytes requested.

       MIN == 0, TIME > 0 (read with timeout)
              TIME  specifies the limit for a timer in tenths of a second.  The timer is started when read(2) is
              called.  read(2) returns either when at least one byte of data is available,  or  when  the  timer
              expires.   If  the timer expires without any input becoming available, read(2) returns 0.  If data
              is already available at the time of the call to read(2), the call behaves as though the  data  was
              received immediately after the call.

       MIN > 0, TIME > 0 (read with interbyte timeout)
              TIME specifies the limit for a timer in tenths of a second.  Once an initial byte of input becomes
              available, the timer is restarted after each further byte is received.  read(2) returns  when  any
              of the following conditions is met:

              •  MIN bytes have been received.

              •  The interbyte timer expires.

              •  The  number  of  bytes  requested  by  read(2) has been received.  (POSIX does not specify this
                 termination condition, and on some other implementations read(2) does not return in this case.)

              Because the timer is started only after the initial byte becomes available, at least one byte will
              be  read.   If  data  is already available at the time of the call to read(2), the call behaves as
              though the data was received immediately after the call.

       POSIX does not specify whether the setting of the O_NONBLOCK file status flag takes precedence  over  the
       MIN  and  TIME  settings.   If  O_NONBLOCK is set, a read(2) in noncanonical mode may return immediately,
       regardless of the setting of MIN or TIME.  Furthermore, if no data is available, POSIX permits a  read(2)
       in noncanonical mode to return either 0, or -1 with errno set to EAGAIN.

   Raw mode
       cfmakeraw()  sets  the  terminal  to  something like the "raw" mode of the old Version 7 terminal driver:
       input is available character by character, echoing is disabled, and all special  processing  of  terminal
       input and output characters is disabled.  The terminal attributes are set as follows:

           termios_p->c_iflag &= ~(IGNBRK | BRKINT | PARMRK | ISTRIP
                           | INLCR | IGNCR | ICRNL | IXON);
           termios_p->c_oflag &= ~OPOST;
           termios_p->c_lflag &= ~(ECHO | ECHONL | ICANON | ISIG | IEXTEN);
           termios_p->c_cflag &= ~(CSIZE | PARENB);
           termios_p->c_cflag |= CS8;

   Line control
       tcsendbreak()  transmits a continuous stream of zero-valued bits for a specific duration, if the terminal
       is using asynchronous serial data transmission.  If duration is zero, it transmits zero-valued  bits  for
       at least 0.25 seconds, and not more than 0.5 seconds.  If duration is not zero, it sends zero-valued bits
       for some implementation-defined length of time.

       If the terminal is not using asynchronous serial data transmission, tcsendbreak() returns without  taking
       any action.

       tcdrain() waits until all output written to the object referred to by fd has been transmitted.

       tcflush() discards data written to the object referred to by fd but not transmitted, or data received but
       not read, depending on the value of queue_selector:

       TCIFLUSH
              flushes data received but not read.

       TCOFLUSH
              flushes data written but not transmitted.

       TCIOFLUSH
              flushes both data received but not read, and data written but not transmitted.

       tcflow() suspends transmission or reception of data on the object referred to by  fd,  depending  on  the
       value of action:

       TCOOFF suspends output.

       TCOON  restarts suspended output.

       TCIOFF transmits a STOP character, which stops the terminal device from transmitting data to the system.

       TCION  transmits a START character, which starts the terminal device transmitting data to the system.

       The default on open of a terminal file is that neither its input nor its output is suspended.

   Line speed
       The  baud  rate  functions  are  provided for getting and setting the values of the input and output baud
       rates in the termios structure.  The new values do not take  effect  until  tcsetattr()  is  successfully
       called.

       Setting  the  speed  to B0 instructs the modem to "hang up".  The actual bit rate corresponding to B38400
       may be altered with setserial(8).

       The input and output baud rates are stored in the termios structure.

       cfgetospeed() returns the output baud rate stored in the termios structure pointed to by termios_p.

       cfsetospeed() sets the output baud rate stored in the termios structure pointed to by termios_p to speed,
       which must be one of these constants:

              B0
              B50
              B75
              B110
              B134
              B150
              B200
              B300
              B600
              B1200
              B1800
              B2400
              B4800
              B9600
              B19200
              B38400
              B57600
              B115200
              B230400
              B460800
              B500000
              B576000
              B921600
              B1000000
              B1152000
              B1500000
              B2000000

       These constants are additionally supported on the SPARC architecture:

              B76800
              B153600
              B307200
              B614400

       These constants are additionally supported on non-SPARC architectures:

              B2500000
              B3000000
              B3500000
              B4000000

       Due  to  differences  between  architectures,  portable  applications  should  check if a particular Bnnn
       constant is defined prior to using it.

       The zero baud rate, B0, is used to terminate the connection.  If B0 is specified, the modem control lines
       shall  no longer be asserted.  Normally, this will disconnect the line.  CBAUDEX is a mask for the speeds
       beyond those defined in POSIX.1 (57600 and above).  Thus, B57600 & CBAUDEX is nonzero.

       Setting the baud rate to a value other than those defined by Bnnn constants is possible via  the  TCSETS2
       ioctl; see ioctl_tty(2).

       cfgetispeed() returns the input baud rate stored in the termios structure.

       cfsetispeed()  sets the input baud rate stored in the termios structure to speed, which must be specified
       as one of the Bnnn constants listed above for cfsetospeed().  If the  input  baud  rate  is  set  to  the
       literal  constant  0 (not the symbolic constant B0), the input baud rate will be equal to the output baud
       rate.

       cfsetspeed() is a 4.4BSD extension.  It takes the same arguments as cfsetispeed(), and  sets  both  input
       and output speed.

RETURN VALUE

       cfgetispeed() returns the input baud rate stored in the termios structure.

       cfgetospeed() returns the output baud rate stored in the termios structure.

       All other functions return:

       0      on success.

       -1     on failure and set errno to indicate the error.

       Note  that tcsetattr() returns success if any of the requested changes could be successfully carried out.
       Therefore, when making multiple changes it may be necessary to follow this call with a  further  call  to
       tcgetattr() to check that all changes have been performed successfully.

ATTRIBUTES

       For an explanation of the terms used in this section, see attributes(7).

       ┌──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┬───────────────┬─────────┐
       │InterfaceAttributeValue   │
       ├──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┼───────────────┼─────────┤
       │tcgetattr(), tcsetattr(), tcdrain(), tcflush(), tcflow(), tcsendbreak(),      │ Thread safety │ MT-Safe │
       │cfmakeraw(), cfgetispeed(), cfgetospeed(), cfsetispeed(), cfsetospeed(),      │               │         │
       │cfsetspeed()                                                                  │               │         │
       └──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┴───────────────┴─────────┘

STANDARDS

       tcgetattr()
       tcsetattr()
       tcsendbreak()
       tcdrain()
       tcflush()
       tcflow()
       cfgetispeed()
       cfgetospeed()
       cfsetispeed()
       cfsetospeed()
              POSIX.1-2008.

       cfmakeraw()
       cfsetspeed()
              BSD.

HISTORY

       tcgetattr()
       tcsetattr()
       tcsendbreak()
       tcdrain()
       tcflush()
       tcflow()
       cfgetispeed()
       cfgetospeed()
       cfsetispeed()
       cfsetospeed()
              POSIX.1-2001.

       cfmakeraw()
       cfsetspeed()
              BSD.

NOTES

       UNIX V7  and  several later systems have a list of baud rates where after the values B0 through B9600 one
       finds the two constants EXTA, EXTB ("External A" and "External B").  Many systems extend  the  list  with
       much higher baud rates.

       The  effect  of  a  nonzero  duration with tcsendbreak() varies.  SunOS specifies a break of duration * N
       seconds, where N is at least 0.25, and not more than 0.5.  Linux, AIX, DU, Tru64 send a break of duration
       milliseconds.   FreeBSD  and  NetBSD and HP-UX and MacOS ignore the value of duration.  Under Solaris and
       UnixWare, tcsendbreak() with nonzero duration behaves like tcdrain().

BUGS

       On the Alpha architecture before Linux 4.16 (and glibc before glibc 2.28), the XTABS value was  different
       from  TAB3  and  it  was  ignored  by  the  N_TTY line discipline code of the terminal driver as a result
       (because as it wasn't part of the TABDLY mask).

SEE ALSO

       reset(1), setterm(1), stty(1), tput(1), tset(1),  tty(1),  ioctl_console(2),  ioctl_tty(2),  cc_t(3type),
       speed_t(3type), tcflag_t(3type), setserial(8)