xref: /freebsd/libexec/getty/gettytab.5 (revision cbd30a72ca196976c1c700400ecd424baa1b9c16)
1.\" Copyright (c) 1983, 1991, 1993
2.\"	The Regents of the University of California.  All rights reserved.
3.\"
4.\" Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
5.\" modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
6.\" are met:
7.\" 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
8.\"    notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
9.\" 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
10.\"    notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
11.\"    documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
12.\" 3. Neither the name of the University nor the names of its contributors
13.\"    may be used to endorse or promote products derived from this software
14.\"    without specific prior written permission.
15.\"
16.\" THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE REGENTS AND CONTRIBUTORS ``AS IS'' AND
17.\" ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE
18.\" IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE
19.\" ARE DISCLAIMED.  IN NO EVENT SHALL THE REGENTS OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE
20.\" FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL
21.\" DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS
22.\" OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION)
23.\" HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT
24.\" LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY
25.\" OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF
26.\" SUCH DAMAGE.
27.\"
28.\"     from: @(#)gettytab.5	8.4 (Berkeley) 4/19/94
29.\" $FreeBSD$
30.\" "
31.Dd February 2, 2017
32.Dt GETTYTAB 5
33.Os
34.Sh NAME
35.Nm gettytab
36.Nd terminal configuration data base
37.Sh SYNOPSIS
38.Nm
39.Sh DESCRIPTION
40The
41.Nm
42file
43is a simplified version of the
44.Xr termcap 5
45data base
46used to describe terminal lines.
47The initial terminal login process
48.Xr getty 8
49accesses the
50.Nm
51file each time it starts, allowing simpler
52reconfiguration of terminal characteristics.
53Each entry in the data base
54is used to describe one class of terminals.
55.Pp
56There is a default terminal class,
57.Va default ,
58that is used to set global defaults for all other classes.
59(That is, the
60.Va default
61entry is read, then the entry for the class required
62is used to override particular settings.)
63.Sh CAPABILITIES
64Refer to
65.Xr termcap 5
66for a description of the file layout.
67The
68.Va default
69column below lists defaults obtained if there is
70no entry in the table obtained, nor one in the special
71.Va default
72table.
73.Bl -column Name Type /usr/bin/login
74.It Sy "Name	Type	Default	Description"
75.It "ac	str	unused	expect-send chat script for modem answer"
76.It "al	str	unused	user to auto-login instead of prompting"
77.It "ap	bool	false	terminal uses any parity"
78.It "bk	str	0377	alternate end of line character (input break)"
79.It "c0	num	unused	tty control flags to write messages"
80.It "c1	num	unused	tty control flags to read login name"
81.It "c2	num	unused	tty control flags to leave terminal as"
82.It "ce	bool	false	use crt erase algorithm"
83.It "ck	bool	false	use crt kill algorithm"
84.It "cl	str" Ta Dv NULL Ta
85.No "screen clear sequence"
86.It "co	bool	false	console - add"
87.Ql \en
88after login prompt
89.It "ct	num	10	chat timeout for"
90.Va \&ac
91and
92.Va \&ic
93scripts
94.It "dc	num	0	chat debug bitmask"
95.It "de	num	0	delay secs and flush input before writing first prompt"
96.It "df	str	%+	the" Xr strftime 3 "format used for \&%d in the banner message"
97.It "ds	str" Ta So Li ^Y Sc Ta
98.No "delayed suspend character"
99.It "dx	bool	false	set"
100.Dv DECCTLQ
101.It "ec	bool	false	leave echo"
102.Em OFF
103.It "ep	bool	false	terminal uses even parity"
104.It "er	str" Ta So Li ^? Sc Ta
105.No "erase character"
106.It "et	str" Ta So Li ^D Sc Ta
107.No "end of text"
108.Pq Dv EOF
109character
110.It "ev	str" Ta Dv NULL Ta
111.No "initial environment"
112.It "f0	num	unused	tty mode flags to write messages"
113.It "f1	num	unused	tty mode flags to read login name"
114.It "f2	num	unused	tty mode flags to leave terminal as"
115.It "fl	str" Ta So Li ^O Sc Ta
116.No "output flush character"
117.It "hc	bool	false	do"
118.Em NOT
119hangup line on last close
120.It "he	str" Ta Dv NULL Ta
121.No "hostname editing regular expression"
122.It "hn	str	hostname	hostname"
123.It "ht	bool	false	terminal has real tabs"
124.It "hw	bool	false	do cts/rts hardware flow control"
125.It "i0	num	unused	tty input flags to write messages"
126.It "i1	num	unused	tty input flags to read login name"
127.It "i2	num	unused	tty input flags to leave terminal as"
128.It "ic	str	unused	expect-send chat script for modem initialization"
129.It "if	str	unused	display named file before prompt, like /etc/issue"
130.It "ig	bool	false	ignore garbage characters in login name"
131.It "im	str" Ta Dv NULL Ta
132.No "initial (banner) message"
133.It "in	str" Ta So Li ^C Sc Ta
134.No "interrupt character"
135.It "is	num	unused	input speed"
136.It "kl	str" Ta So Li ^U Sc Ta
137.No "kill character"
138.It "l0	num	unused	tty local flags to write messages"
139.It "l1	num	unused	tty local flags to read login name"
140.It "l2	num	unused	tty local flags to leave terminal as"
141.It "lm	str	login:	login prompt"
142.It "ln	str" Ta So Li ^V Sc Ta
143.No "``literal next'' character"
144.It "lo	str" Ta Pa /usr/bin/login Ta
145.No "program to exec when name obtained"
146.It "mb	bool	false	do flow control based on carrier"
147.It "nc	bool	false	terminal does not supply carrier (set clocal)"
148.It "nl	bool	false	terminal has (or might have) a newline character"
149.It "np	bool	false	terminal uses no parity (i.e. 8-bit characters)"
150.It "nx	str	default	next table (for auto speed selection)"
151.It "o0	num	unused	tty output flags to write messages"
152.It "o1	num	unused	tty output flags to read login name"
153.It "o2	num	unused	tty output flags to leave terminal as"
154.It "op	bool	false	terminal uses odd parity"
155.It "os	num	unused	output speed"
156.It "pc	str" Ta So Li \e0 Sc Ta
157.No "pad character"
158.It "pe	bool	false	use printer (hard copy) erase algorithm"
159.It "pf	num	0	delay"
160between first prompt and following flush (seconds)
161.It "pl	bool	false	start PPP login program unconditionally if"
162.Va \&pp
163is specified
164.It "pp	str	unused	PPP login program"
165.It "ps	bool	false	line connected to a"
166.Tn MICOM
167port selector
168.It "qu	str" Ta So Li \&^\e Sc Ta
169.No "quit character"
170.It "rp	str" Ta So Li ^R Sc Ta
171.No "line retype character"
172.It "rt	num	unused	ring timeout when using"
173.Va \&ac
174.It "rw	bool	false	do"
175.Em NOT
176use raw for input, use cbreak
177.It "sp	num	unused	line speed (input and output)"
178.It "su	str" Ta So Li ^Z Sc Ta
179.No "suspend character"
180.It "tc	str	none	table continuation"
181.It "to	num	0	timeout (seconds)"
182.It "tt	str" Ta Dv NULL Ta
183.No "terminal type (for environment)"
184.It "ub	bool	false	do unbuffered output (of prompts etc)"
185.It "we	str" Ta So Li ^W Sc Ta
186.No "word erase character"
187.It "xc	bool	false	do"
188.Em NOT
189echo control chars as
190.Ql ^X
191.It "xf	str" Ta So Li ^S Sc Ta Dv XOFF
192(stop output) character
193.It "xn	str" Ta So Li ^Q Sc Ta Dv XON
194(start output) character
195.It "Lo	str	C	the locale name used for \&%d in the banner message"
196.El
197.Pp
198The following capabilities are no longer supported by
199.Xr getty 8 :
200.Bl -column Name Type /usr/bin/login
201.It "bd	num	0	backspace delay"
202.It "cb	bool	false	use crt backspace mode"
203.It "cd	num	0	carriage-return delay"
204.It "fd	num	0	form-feed (vertical motion) delay"
205.It "lc	bool	false	terminal has lower case"
206.It "nd	num	0	newline (line-feed) delay"
207.It "uc	bool	false	terminal is known upper case only"
208.El
209.Pp
210If no line speed is specified, speed will not be altered
211from that which prevails when getty is entered.
212Specifying an input or output speed will override
213line speed for stated direction only.
214.Pp
215Terminal modes to be used for the output of the message,
216for input of the login name,
217and to leave the terminal set as upon completion,
218are derived from the boolean flags specified.
219If the derivation should prove inadequate,
220any (or all) of these three may be overridden
221with one of the
222.Va \&c0 ,
223.Va \&c1 ,
224.Va \&c2 ,
225.Va \&i0 ,
226.Va \&i1 ,
227.Va \&i2 ,
228.Va \&l0 ,
229.Va \&l1 ,
230.Va \&l2 ,
231.Va \&o0 ,
232.Va \&o1 ,
233or
234.Va \&o2
235numeric specifications, which can be used to specify
236(usually in octal, with a leading '0')
237the exact values of the flags.
238These flags correspond to the termios
239.Va c_cflag ,
240.Va c_iflag ,
241.Va c_lflag ,
242and
243.Va c_oflag
244fields, respectively.
245Each these sets must be completely specified to be effective.
246The
247.Va \&f0 ,
248.Va \&f1 ,
249and
250.Va \&f2
251are excepted for backwards compatibility with a previous incarnation of
252the TTY sub-system.
253In these flags the bottom 16 bits of the (32 bits)
254value contain the sgttyb
255.Va sg_flags
256field, while the top 16 bits represent the local mode word.
257.Pp
258Should
259.Xr getty 8
260receive a null character
261(presumed to indicate a line break)
262it will restart using the table indicated by the
263.Va \&nx
264entry.
265If there is none, it will re-use its original table.
266.Pp
267Delays are specified in milliseconds, the nearest possible
268delay available in the tty driver will be used.
269Should greater certainty be desired, delays
270with values 0, 1, 2, and 3 are interpreted as
271choosing that particular delay algorithm from the driver.
272.Pp
273The
274.Va \&cl
275screen clear string may be preceded by a (decimal) number
276of milliseconds of delay required (a la termcap).
277This delay is simulated by repeated use of the pad character
278.Va \&pc .
279.Pp
280The initial message, login message, and initial file;
281.Va \&im ,
282.Va \&lm
283and
284.Va \&if
285may include any of the following character sequences, which expand to
286information about the environment in which
287.Xr getty 8
288is running.
289.Bl -tag -offset indent -width \&%xxxxxxxxxxxxxx
290.It \&%d
291The current date and time formatted according to the
292.Va \&Lo
293and
294.Va \&df
295strings.
296.It \&%h
297The hostname of the machine, which is normally obtained from the
298system using
299.Xr gethostname 3 ,
300but may also be overridden by the
301.Va \&hn
302table entry.
303In either case it may be edited with the
304.Va \&he
305POSIX
306.Dq extended
307regular expression, which is matched against the hostname.
308If there are no parenthesized subexpressions in the pattern,
309the entire matched string is used as the final hostname;
310otherwise, the first matched subexpression is used instead.
311If the pattern does not match, the original hostname is not modified.
312.It \&%t
313The tty name.
314.It "\&%m, \&%r, \&%s, \&%v"
315The type of machine, release of the operating system, name of the
316operating system, and version of the kernel, respectively, as
317returned by
318.Xr uname 3 .
319.It \&%%
320A
321.Dq %
322character.
323.El
324.Pp
325When getty execs the login process, given
326in the
327.Va \&lo
328string (usually
329.Dq Pa /usr/bin/login ) ,
330it will have set
331the environment to include the terminal type, as indicated
332by the
333.Va \&tt
334string (if it exists).
335The
336.Va \&ev
337string, can be used to enter additional data into
338the environment.
339It is a list of comma separated strings, each of which
340will presumably be of the form
341.Li name=value .
342.Pp
343If a non-zero timeout is specified, with
344.Va \&to ,
345then getty will exit within the indicated
346number of seconds, either having
347received a login name and passed control
348to
349.Xr login 1 ,
350or having received an alarm signal, and exited.
351This may be useful to hangup dial in lines.
352.Pp
353Output from
354.Xr getty 8
355is even parity unless
356.Va \&op
357or
358.Va \&np
359is specified.
360The
361.Va \&op
362string
363may be specified with
364.Va \&ap
365to allow any parity on input, but generate odd parity output.
366Note: this only applies while getty is being run,
367terminal driver limitations prevent a more complete
368implementation.
369The
370.Xr getty 8
371utility does not check parity of input characters in
372.Dv RAW
373mode.
374.Pp
375If a
376.Va \&pp
377string is specified and a PPP link bring-up sequence is recognized,
378getty will invoke the program referenced by the
379.Va \&pp
380option.
381This can be used to handle incoming PPP calls.
382If the
383.Va \&pl
384option is true as well,
385.Xr getty 8
386will skip the user name prompt and the PPP detection phase, and will
387invoke the program specified by
388.Va \&pp
389instantly.
390.Pp
391.Nm Getty
392provides some basic intelligent modem handling by providing a chat
393script feature available via two capabilities:
394.Pp
395.Bl -tag -offset indent -width \&xxxxxxxx -compact
396.It ic
397Chat script to initialize modem.
398.It ac
399Chat script to answer a call.
400.El
401.Pp
402A chat script is a set of expect/send string pairs.
403When a chat string starts,
404.Nm getty
405will wait for the first string, and if it finds it, will send the
406second, and so on.
407Strings specified are separated by one or more tabs or spaces.
408Strings may contain standard ASCII characters and special 'escapes',
409which consist of a backslash character followed by one or more
410characters which are interpreted as follows:
411.Pp
412.Bl -tag -offset indent -width \&xxxxxxxx -compact
413.It \ea
414bell character.
415.It \eb
416backspace.
417.It \en
418newline.
419.It \ee
420escape.
421.It \ef
422formfeed.
423.It \ep
424half-second pause.
425.It \er
426carriage return.
427.It \eS , \es
428space character.
429.It \et
430tab.
431.It \exNN
432hexadecimal byte value.
433.It \e0NNN
434octal byte value.
435.El
436.Pp
437Note that the
438.Ql \ep
439sequence is only valid for send strings and causes a half-second
440pause between sending the previous and next characters.
441Hexadecimal values are, at most, 2 hex digits long, and octal
442values are a maximum of 3 octal digits.
443.Pp
444The
445.Va \&ic
446chat sequence is used to initialize a modem or similar device.
447A typical example of an init chat script for a modem with a
448hayes compatible command set might look like this:
449.Pp
450.Dl :ic="" ATE0Q0V1\er OK\er ATS0=0\er OK\er:
451.Pp
452This script waits for nothing (which always succeeds), sends
453a sequence to ensure that the modem is in the correct mode
454(suppress command echo, send responses in verbose mode),
455and then disables auto-answer.
456It waits for an "OK" response before it terminates.
457The init sequence is used to check modem responses to ensure that
458the modem is functioning correctly.
459If the init script fails to complete,
460.Nm getty
461considers this to be fatal, and results in an error logged via
462.Xr syslogd 8 ,
463and exiting.
464.Pp
465Similarly, an answer chat script is used to manually answer the
466phone in response to (usually) a "RING".
467When run with an answer script,
468.Nm getty
469opens the port in non-blocking mode, clears any extraneous input
470and waits for data on the port.
471As soon as any data is available, the answer chat script is
472started and scanned for a string, and responds according to
473the answer chat script.
474With a hayes compatible modem, this would normally look something
475like:
476.Pp
477.Dl :ac=RING\er ATA\er CONNECT:
478.Pp
479This causes the modem to answer the call via the "ATA" command,
480then scans input for a "CONNECT" string.
481If this is received before a
482.Va \&ct
483timeout, then a normal login sequence commences.
484.Pp
485The
486.Va \&ct
487capability specifies a timeout for all send and expect strings.
488This timeout is set individually for each expect wait and send
489string and must be at least as long as the time it takes for
490a connection to be established between a remote and local
491modem (usually around 10 seconds).
492.Pp
493In most situations, you will want to flush any additional
494input after the connection has been detected, and the
495.Va \&de
496capability may be used to do that, as well as delay for a
497short time after the connection has been established during
498which all of the connection data has been sent by the modem.
499.Sh SEE ALSO
500.Xr login 1 ,
501.Xr gethostname 3 ,
502.Xr uname 3 ,
503.Xr termcap 5 ,
504.Xr getty 8 ,
505.Xr telnetd 8
506.Sh HISTORY
507The
508.Nm
509file format appeared in
510.Bx 4.2 .
511.Sh BUGS
512The special characters (erase, kill, etc.) are reset to system defaults
513by
514.Xr login 1 .
515In
516.Em all
517cases, '#' or '^H' typed in a login name will be treated as
518an erase character, and '@' will be treated as a kill character.
519.Pp
520The delay stuff is a real crock.
521Apart form its general lack of flexibility, some
522of the delay algorithms are not implemented.
523The terminal driver should support sane delay settings.
524.Pp
525The
526.Xr termcap 5
527format is horrid, something more rational should
528have been chosen.
529