getty man page on NeXTSTEP

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GETTY(8)							      GETTY(8)

NAME
       getty  - set terminal mode

SYNOPSIS
       /usr/etc/getty [ type [ tty ] ]

DESCRIPTION
       Getty  is  usually  invoked  by	init(8) to open and initialize the tty
       line, read a login name, and invoke login(1).  getty attempts to	 adapt
       the system to the speed and type of terminal being used.

       The  argument  tty  is  the special device file in /dev to open for the
       terminal (e.g., ``ttyh0'').  If there is no argument or the argument is
       ``-'', the tty line is assumed to be open as file descriptor 0.

       The  type  argument  can	 be used to make getty treat the terminal line
       specially.  This argument is used as  an	 index	into  the  gettytab(5)
       database, to determine the characteristics of the line.	If there is no
       argument, or there is no such table, the default	 table	is  used.   If
       there  is  no  /etc/gettytab  a	set  of	 system	 defaults is used.  If
       indicated by the table located, getty will clear the  terminal  screen,
       print  a	 banner	 heading, and prompt for a login name.	Usually either
       the banner of the login prompt will include the system hostname.	  Then
       the user's name is read, a character at a time.	If a null character is
       received, it is assumed to be  the  result  of  the  user  pushing  the
       `break'	(`interrupt')  key.  The speed is usually then changed and the
       `login:' is typed again; a second `break' changes the speed  again  and
       the  `login:'  is typed once more.  Successive `break' characters cycle
       through the same standard set of speeds.

       The  user's  name  is  terminated  by  a	 new-line  or  carriage-return
       character.   The	 latter	 results  in  the  system  being  set to treat
       carriage returns appropriately (see tty(4)).

       The user's name is  scanned  to	see  if	 it  contains  any  lower-case
       alphabetic  characters; if not, and if the name is nonempty, the system
       is told to map any future upper-case characters into the	 corresponding
       lower-case characters.

       Finally, login is called with the user's name as an argument.

       Most  of the default actions of getty can be circumvented, or modified,
       by a suitable gettytab table.

       Getty can be set to timeout after some interval, which will cause  dial
       up  lines  to  hang  up	if  the	 login	name is not entered reasonably
       quickly.

DIAGNOSTICS
       ttyxx: No such device or address.  ttyxx: No such file or  address.   A
       terminal	 which	is turned on in the ttys file cannot be opened, likely
       because the requisite lines are either not configured into the  system,
       the   associated	 device	 was  not  attached  during  boot-time	system
       configuration, or the special file in /dev does not exist.

FILES
       /etc/gettytab

SEE ALSO
       gettytab(5), init(8), login(1), ioctl(2), tty(4), ttys(5)

4th Berkeley Distribution	 May 22, 1986			      GETTY(8)
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