1.\" Copyright (c) 1990, 1993, 1994 2.\" The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved. 3.\" 4.\" This code is derived from software contributed to Berkeley by 5.\" the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Inc. 6.\" 7.\" Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without 8.\" modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions 9.\" are met: 10.\" 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright 11.\" notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. 12.\" 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright 13.\" notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the 14.\" documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution. 15.\" 3. All advertising materials mentioning features or use of this software 16.\" must display the following acknowledgement: 17.\" This product includes software developed by the University of 18.\" California, Berkeley and its contributors. 19.\" 4. Neither the name of the University nor the names of its contributors 20.\" may be used to endorse or promote products derived from this software 21.\" without specific prior written permission. 22.\" 23.\" THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE REGENTS AND CONTRIBUTORS ``AS IS'' AND 24.\" ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE 25.\" IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE 26.\" ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE REGENTS OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE 27.\" FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL 28.\" DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS 29.\" OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) 30.\" HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT 31.\" LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY 32.\" OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF 33.\" SUCH DAMAGE. 34.\" 35.\" @(#)stty.1 8.4 (Berkeley) 4/18/94 36.\" $FreeBSD$ 37.\" 38.Dd April 18, 1994 39.Dt STTY 1 40.Os 41.Sh NAME 42.Nm stty 43.Nd set the options for a terminal device interface 44.Sh SYNOPSIS 45.Nm 46.Op Fl a | Fl e | Fl g 47.Op Fl f Ar file 48.Op operands 49.Sh DESCRIPTION 50The 51.Nm 52utility sets or reports on terminal 53characteristics for the device that is its standard input. 54If no options or operands are specified, it reports the settings of a subset 55of characteristics as well as additional ones if they differ from their 56default values. 57Otherwise it modifies 58the terminal state according to the specified arguments. 59Some combinations of arguments are mutually 60exclusive on some terminal types. 61.Pp 62The following options are available: 63.Bl -tag -width indent 64.It Fl a 65Display all the current settings for the terminal to standard output 66as per 67.St -p1003.2 . 68.It Fl e 69Display all the current settings for the terminal to standard output 70in the traditional 71.Tn BSD 72``all'' and ``everything'' formats. 73.It Fl f 74Open and use the terminal named by 75.Ar file 76rather than using standard input. The file is opened 77using the 78.Dv O_NONBLOCK 79flag of 80.Fn open , 81making it possible to 82set or display settings on a terminal that might otherwise 83block on the open. 84.It Fl g 85Display all the current settings for the terminal to standard output 86in a form that may be used as an argument to a subsequent invocation of 87.Nm 88to restore the current terminal state as per 89.St -p1003.2 . 90.El 91.Pp 92The following arguments are available to set the terminal 93characteristics: 94.Ss Control Modes: 95.Pp 96Control mode flags affect hardware characteristics associated with the 97terminal. This corresponds to the c_cflag in the termios structure. 98.Bl -tag -width Fl 99.It Cm parenb Pq Fl parenb 100Enable (disable) parity generation 101and detection. 102.It Cm parodd Pq Fl parodd 103Select odd (even) parity. 104.It Cm cs5 cs6 cs7 cs8 105Select character size, if possible. 106.It Ar number 107Set terminal baud rate to the 108number given, if possible. 109If the 110baud rate is set to zero, modem 111control is no longer 112asserted. 113.It Cm ispeed Ar number 114Set terminal input baud rate to the 115number given, if possible. 116If the 117input baud rate is set to zero, the 118input baud rate is set to the 119value of the output baud 120rate. 121.It Cm ospeed Ar number 122Set terminal output baud rate to 123the number given, if possible. 124If 125the output baud rate is set to 126zero, modem control is 127no longer asserted. 128.It Cm speed Ar number 129This sets both 130.Cm ispeed 131and 132.Cm ospeed 133to 134.Ar number . 135.It Cm hupcl Pq Fl hupcl 136Stop asserting modem control 137(do not stop asserting modem control) on last close. 138.It Cm hup Pq Fl hup 139Same as hupcl 140.Pq Fl hupcl . 141.It Cm cstopb Pq Fl cstopb 142Use two (one) stop bits per character. 143.It Cm cread Pq Fl cread 144Enable (disable) the receiver. 145.It Cm clocal Pq Fl clocal 146Assume a line without (with) modem 147control. 148.It Cm crtscts Pq Fl crtscts 149Enable (disable) RTS/CTS flow control. 150.El 151.Ss Input Modes: 152This corresponds to the c_iflag in the termios structure. 153.Bl -tag -width Fl 154.It Cm ignbrk Pq Fl ignbrk 155Ignore (do not ignore) break on 156input. 157.It Cm brkint Pq Fl brkint 158Signal (do not signal) 159.Dv INTR 160on 161break. 162.It Cm ignpar Pq Fl ignpar 163Ignore (do not ignore) characters with parity 164errors. 165.It Cm parmrk Pq Fl parmrk 166Mark (do not mark) characters with parity errors. 167.It Cm inpck Pq Fl inpck 168Enable (disable) input parity 169checking. 170.It Cm istrip Pq Fl istrip 171Strip (do not strip) input characters 172to seven bits. 173.It Cm inlcr Pq Fl inlcr 174Map (do not map) 175.Dv NL 176to 177.Dv CR 178on input. 179.It Cm igncr Pq Fl igncr 180Ignore (do not ignore) 181.Dv CR 182on input. 183.It Cm icrnl Pq Fl icrnl 184Map (do not map) 185.Dv CR 186to 187.Dv NL 188on input. 189.It Cm ixon Pq Fl ixon 190Enable (disable) 191.Dv START/STOP 192output 193control. 194Output from the system is 195stopped when the system receives 196.Dv STOP 197and started when the system 198receives 199.Dv START , 200or if 201.Cm ixany 202is set, any character restarts output. 203.It Cm ixoff Pq Fl ixoff 204Request that the system send (not 205send) 206.Dv START/STOP 207characters when 208the input queue is nearly 209empty/full. 210.It Cm ixany Pq Fl ixany 211Allow any character (allow only 212.Dv START ) 213to restart output. 214.It Cm imaxbel Pq Fl imaxbel 215The system imposes a limit of 216.Dv MAX_INPUT 217(currently 255) characters in the input queue. If 218.Cm imaxbel 219is set and the input queue limit has been reached, 220subsequent input causes the system to send an ASCII BEL 221character to the output queue (the terminal beeps at you). Otherwise, 222if 223.Cm imaxbel 224is unset and the input queue is full, the next input character causes 225the entire input and output queues to be discarded. 226.El 227.Ss Output Modes: 228This corresponds to the c_oflag of the termios structure. 229.Bl -tag -width Fl 230.It Cm opost Pq Fl opost 231Post-process output (do not 232post-process output; ignore all other 233output modes). 234.It Cm onlcr Pq Fl onlcr 235Map (do not map) 236.Dv NL 237to 238.Dv CR-NL 239on output. 240.It Cm oxtabs Pq Fl oxtabs 241Expand (do not expand) tabs to spaces on output. 242.El 243.Ss Local Modes: 244.Pp 245Local mode flags (lflags) affect various and sundry characteristics of terminal 246processing. 247Historically the term "local" pertained to new job control features 248implemented by Jim Kulp on a 249.Tn Pdp 11/70 250at 251.Tn IIASA . 252Later the driver ran on the first 253.Tn VAX 254at Evans Hall, UC Berkeley, where the job control details 255were greatly modified but the structure definitions and names 256remained essentially unchanged. 257The second interpretation of the 'l' in lflag 258is ``line discipline flag'' which corresponds to the 259.Ar c_lflag 260of the 261.Ar termios 262structure. 263.Bl -tag -width Fl 264.It Cm isig Pq Fl isig 265Enable (disable) the checking of 266characters against the special control 267characters 268.Dv INTR , QUIT , 269and 270.Dv SUSP . 271.It Cm icanon Pq Fl icanon 272Enable (disable) canonical input 273.Pf ( Dv ERASE 274and 275.Dv KILL 276processing). 277.It Cm iexten Pq Fl iexten 278Enable (disable) any implementation 279defined special control characters 280not currently controlled by icanon, 281isig, or ixon. 282.It Cm echo Pq Fl echo 283Echo back (do not echo back) every 284character typed. 285.It Cm echoe Pq Fl echoe 286The 287.Dv ERASE 288character shall (shall 289not) visually erase the last character 290in the current line from the 291display, if possible. 292.It Cm echok Pq Fl echok 293Echo (do not echo) 294.Dv NL 295after 296.Dv KILL 297character. 298.It Cm echoke Pq Fl echoke 299The 300.Dv KILL 301character shall (shall 302not) visually erase the 303current line from the 304display, if possible. 305.It Cm echonl Pq Fl echonl 306Echo (do not echo) 307.Dv NL , 308even if echo 309is disabled. 310.It Cm echoctl Pq Fl echoctl 311If 312.Cm echoctl 313is set, echo control characters as ^X. Otherwise control characters 314echo as themselves. 315.It Cm echoprt Pq Fl echoprt 316For printing terminals. 317If set, echo erased characters backwards within ``\\'' 318and ``/''. Otherwise, disable this feature. 319.It Cm noflsh Pq Fl noflsh 320Disable (enable) flush after 321.Dv INTR , QUIT , SUSP . 322.It Cm tostop Pq Fl tostop 323Send (do not send) 324.Dv SIGTTOU 325for background output. This causes background jobs to stop if they attempt 326terminal output. 327.It Cm altwerase Pq Fl altwerase 328Use (do not use) an alternate word erase algorithm when processing 329.Dv WERASE 330characters. 331This alternate algorithm considers sequences of 332alphanumeric/underscores as words. 333It also skips the first preceding character in its classification 334(as a convenience since the one preceding character could have been 335erased with simply an 336.Dv ERASE 337character.) 338.It Cm mdmbuf Pq Fl mdmbuf 339If set, flow control output based on condition of Carrier Detect. Otherwise 340writes return an error if Carrier Detect is low (and Carrier is not being 341ignored with the 342.Dv CLOCAL 343flag.) 344.It Cm flusho Pq Fl flusho 345Indicates output is (is not) being discarded. 346.It Cm pendin Pq Fl pendin 347Indicates input is (is not) pending after a switch from non-canonical 348to canonical mode and will be re-input when a read becomes pending 349or more input arrives. 350.El 351.Ss Control Characters: 352.Bl -tag -width Fl 353.It Ar control-character Ar string 354Set 355.Ar control-character 356to 357.Ar string . 358If string is a single character, 359the control character is set to 360that character. 361If string is the 362two character sequence "^-" or the 363string "undef" the control character 364is disabled (i.e. set to 365.Pf { Dv _POSIX_VDISABLE Ns } . ) 366.Pp 367Recognized control-characters: 368.Bd -ragged -offset indent 369.Bl -column character Subscript 370.It control- 371.It character Ta Subscript Ta Description 372.It _________ Ta _________ Ta _______________ 373.It eof Ta Tn VEOF Ta EOF No character 374.It eol Ta Tn VEOL Ta EOL No character 375.It eol2 Ta Tn VEOL2 Ta EOL2 No character 376.It erase Ta Tn VERASE Ta ERASE No character 377.It erase2 Ta Tn VERASE2 Ta ERASE2 No character 378.It werase Ta Tn VWERASE Ta WERASE No character 379.It intr Ta Tn VINTR Ta INTR No character 380.It kill Ta Tn VKILL Ta KILL No character 381.It quit Ta Tn VQUIT Ta QUIT No character 382.It susp Ta Tn VSUSP Ta SUSP No character 383.It start Ta Tn VSTART Ta START No character 384.It stop Ta Tn VSTOP Ta STOP No character 385.It dsusp Ta Tn VDSUSP Ta DSUSP No character 386.It lnext Ta Tn VLNEXT Ta LNEXT No character 387.It reprint Ta Tn VREPRINT Ta REPRINT No character 388.It status Ta Tn VSTATUS Ta STATUS No character 389.El 390.Ed 391.It Cm min Ar number 392.It Cm time Ar number 393Set the value of min or time to 394number. 395.Dv MIN 396and 397.Dv TIME 398are used in 399Non-Canonical mode input processing 400(-icanon). 401.El 402.Ss Combination Modes: 403.Pp 404.Bl -tag -width Fl 405.It Ar saved settings 406Set the current terminal 407characteristics to the saved settings 408produced by the 409.Fl g 410option. 411.It Cm evenp No or Cm parity 412Enable parenb and cs7; disable 413parodd. 414.It Cm oddp 415Enable parenb, cs7, and parodd. 416.It Fl parity , evenp , oddp 417Disable parenb, and set cs8. 418.It Cm \&nl Pq Fl \&nl 419Enable (disable) icrnl. 420In addition 421-nl unsets inlcr and igncr. 422.It Cm ek 423Reset 424.Dv ERASE , 425.Dv ERASE2 , 426and 427.Dv KILL 428characters 429back to system defaults. 430.It Cm sane 431Resets all modes to reasonable values for interactive terminal use. 432.It Cm tty 433Set the line discipline to the standard terminal line discipline 434.Dv TTYDISC . 435.It Cm crt Pq Fl crt 436Set (disable) all modes suitable for a CRT display device. 437.It Cm kerninfo Pq Fl kerninfo 438Enable (disable) the system generated status line associated with 439processing a 440.Dv STATUS 441character (usually set to ^T). The status line consists of the 442system load average, the current command name, its process ID, the 443event the process is waiting on (or the status of the process), the user 444and system times, percent cpu, and current memory usage. 445.It Cm columns Ar number 446The terminal size is recorded as having 447.Ar number 448columns. 449.It Cm cols Ar number 450is an alias for 451.Cm columns . 452.It Cm rows Ar number 453The terminal size is recorded as having 454.Ar number 455rows. 456.It Cm dec 457Set modes suitable for users of Digital Equipment Corporation systems ( 458.Dv ERASE , 459.Dv KILL , 460and 461.Dv INTR 462characters are set to ^?, ^U, and ^C; 463.Dv ixany 464is disabled, and 465.Dv crt 466is enabled.) 467.It Cm extproc Pq Fl extproc 468If set, this flag indicates that some amount of terminal processing is being 469performed by either the terminal hardware or by the remote side connected 470to a pty. 471.It Cm raw Pq Fl raw 472If set, change the modes of the terminal so that no input or output processing 473is performed. 474If unset, change the modes of the terminal to some reasonable 475state that performs input and output processing. Note that since the 476terminal driver no longer has a single 477.Dv RAW 478bit, it is not possible to intuit what flags were set prior to setting 479.Cm raw . 480This means that unsetting 481.Cm raw 482may not put back all the setting that were previously in effect. 483To set the terminal into a raw state and then accurately restore it, the following 484shell code is recommended: 485.Bd -literal 486save_state=$(stty -g) 487stty raw 488\&... 489stty "$save_state" 490.Ed 491.It Cm size 492The size of the terminal is printed as two numbers on a single line, 493first rows, then columns. 494.El 495.Ss Compatibility Modes: 496.Pp 497These modes remain for compatibility with the previous version of 498the 499.Nm 500command. 501.Bl -tag -width Fl 502.It Cm all 503Reports all the terminal modes as with 504.Cm stty Fl a 505except that the control characters are printed in a columnar format. 506.It Cm everything 507Same as 508.Cm all . 509.It Cm cooked 510Same as 511.Cm sane . 512.It Cm cbreak 513If set, enables 514.Cm brkint , ixon , imaxbel , opost , 515.Cm isig , iexten , 516and 517.Fl icanon . 518If unset, same as 519.Cm sane . 520.It Cm new 521Same as 522.Cm tty . 523.It Cm old 524Same as 525.Cm tty . 526.It Cm newcrt Pq Fl newcrt 527Same as 528.Cm crt . 529.It Cm pass8 530The converse of 531.Cm parity . 532.It Cm tandem Pq Fl tandem 533Same as 534.Cm ixoff . 535.It Cm decctlq Pq Fl decctlq 536The converse of 537.Cm ixany . 538.It Cm crterase Pq Fl crterase 539Same as 540.Cm echoe . 541.It Cm crtbs Pq Fl crtbs 542Same as 543.Cm echoe . 544.It Cm crtkill Pq Fl crtkill 545Same as 546.Cm echoke . 547.It Cm ctlecho Pq Fl ctlecho 548Same as 549.Cm echoctl . 550.It Cm prterase Pq Fl prterase 551Same as 552.Cm echoprt . 553.It Cm litout Pq Fl litout 554The converse of 555.Cm opost . 556.It Cm tabs Pq Fl tabs 557The converse of 558.Cm oxtabs . 559.It Cm brk Ar value 560Same as the control character 561.Cm eol . 562.It Cm flush Ar value 563Same as the control character 564.Cm discard . 565.It Cm rprnt Ar value 566Same as the control character 567.Cm reprint . 568.El 569.Sh DIAGNOSTICS 570The 571.Nm 572utility exits 0 on success, and >0 if an error occurs. 573.Sh SEE ALSO 574.Xr termios 4 575.Sh STANDARDS 576The 577.Nm 578function is expected to be 579.St -p1003.2 580compatible. The flags 581.Fl e 582and 583.Fl f 584are 585extensions to the standard. 586