Technical data

SunOS 5.5 Devices pts(7D)
NAME pts STREAMS pseudo-tty slave driver
DESCRIPTION The pseudo-tty subsystem simulates a terminal connection, where the master side
represents the terminal and the slave represents the user process’s special device end
point. In order to use the pseudo-tty subsystem, a node for the master side driver
/dev/ptmx and N nodes for the slave driver (N is determined at installation time) must be
installed. The names of the slave devices are /dev/pts/M where M has the values 0
through N-1. When the master device is opened, the corresponding slave device is
automatically locked out. No user may open that slave device until its permissions are
adjusted and the device unlocked by calling functions grantpt(3C) and unlockpt(3C).
The user can then invoke the open system call with the name that is returned by the
ptsname(3C) function. See the example below.
Only one open is allowed on a master device. Multiple opens are allowed on the slave
device. After both the master and slave have been opened, the user has two file descrip-
tors which are end points of a full duplex connection composed of two streams automati-
cally connected at the master and slave drivers. The user may then push modules onto
either side of the stream pair. The user needs to push the ptem(7M) and ldterm(7M)
modules onto the slave side of the pseudo-terminal subsystem to get terminal semantics.
The master and slave drivers pass all messages to their adjacent queues. Only the
M_FLUSH needs some processing. Because the read queue of one side is connected to the
write queue of the other, theFLUSHR flag is changed to the FLUSHW flag and vice versa.
When the master device is closed an M_HANGUP message is sent to the slave device
which will render the device unusable. The process on the slave side gets the errno
ENXIO when attempting to write on that stream but it will be able to read any data
remaining on the stream head read queue. When all the data has been read, read returns
0 indicating that the stream can no longer be used. On the last close of the slave device, a
0-length message is sent to the master device. When the application on the master side
issues a read() or getmsg() and 0 is returned, the user of the master device decides
whether to issue a close() that dismantles the pseudo-terminal subsystem. If the master
device is not closed, the pseudo-tty subsystem will be available to another user to open
the slave device. Since 0-length messages are used to indicate that the process on the
slave side has closed and should be interpreted that way by the process on the master
side, applications on the slave side should not write 0-length messages. If that occurs, the
write returns 0, and the 0-lengthmessage is discarded by the ptem module.
The standard STREAMS system calls can access the pseudo-tty devices. The slave devices
support the O_NDELAY andO_NONBLOCK flags.
EXAMPLES int fdm fds;
char slavename;
extern char ptsname();
fdm = open("/dev/ptmx", O_RDWR); /open master /
grantpt(fdm); /change permission ofslave /
unlockpt(fdm); /unlock slave /
modified 21 Aug 1992 7D-265