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mgettydefs(4)		     mgetty_sendfax manual		 mgettydefs(4)

NAME
       mgettydefs - speed and terminal settings used by mgetty

DESCRIPTION
       The  /etc/gettydefs  file contains information used by mgetty(1) to set
       up the speed and terminal settings for a line.  It also supplies infor‐
       mation on what the login prompt should look like.

       Many  versions  of  UNIX	 have  a  version  of getty(1) that also reads
       /etc/gettydefs.	Both  mgetty  and  getty  expect  similar  formats  in
       /etc/gettydefs except that, when used by mgetty, extended functionality
       is available.  Even so, the additional functions are simply ignored  by
       standard	 getty,	 so they can co-exist using the same file.  Note, how‐
       ever, that mgetty  can  be  compiled  to	 use  a	 file  different  from
       /etc/gettydefs  if  your	 getty	gets upset about the extensions.  This
       manual page documents /etc/gettydefs and describes the  extended	 func‐
       tionality  available  when used by mgetty(1).  This document will refer
       to getty(1) except where mgetty's behaviour is different.

       Each entry in /etc/gettydefs has the following format:

	      label# initial-flags # final-flags # login-prompt #next-label

       Each entry is followed by a blank line.	The  login  prompt  field  can
       contain quoted characters which will be converted to other values.  The
       sequences and their substitutions are:

       \n	      newline

       \r	      carriage return

       \g	      beep

       \b	      backspace

       \v	      vertical tab (VT)

       \f	      formfeed

       \t	      tab

       \L	      portname

       \C	      time in ctime(3) format.

       \N	      number of users currently logged in

       \U	      number of users currently logged in

       \D	      date in DD/MM format

       \T	      time in hh:mm:ss format

       \I	      modem CONNECT attributes

       \sequence      where "sequence" is a  valid  strtol  format,  such  as:
		      \0nnn (octal), \0xnnn (hex), or \nnn (decimal).

       Note that standard getty usually only supports \b, \r and \n.

       The various fields are:

       label	      This  is	the  string against which getty tries to match
		      its second argument.  It is often	 the  speed,  such  as
		      1200,  at	 which the terminal is supposed to run, but it
		      need not be (see below).

       initial-flags  These flags are the initial ioctl(2) settings  to	 which
		      the  terminal  is	 to  be	 set if a terminal type is not
		      specified to getty.  The flags  that  getty  understands
		      are  the	ones  listed in termio(7)).  mgetty is usually
		      compiled for termios(7) and often has  a	more  complete
		      set than getty.

       Normally only the speed flag is required in the
		      initial-flags.  getty automatically sets the terminal to
		      raw input mode and takes care of the  other  flags.   If
		      the "-s" option is used with mgetty(1) the speed setting
		      is ignored.  The initial-flag settings remain in	effect
		      until getty executes login(1).

       final-flags    These  flags  take  the same values as the initial-flags
		      and are set just before getty executes login.  The speed
		      flag  is	again  required,  except with mgetty if the -s
		      flag was supplied.  Two other commonly specified	final-
		      flags are TAB3, so that tabs are sent to the terminal as
		      spaces, and HUPCL, so that the line is hung  up  on  the
		      final close.

       login-prompt   This  entire  field  is  printed	as  the	 login-prompt.
		      Unlike the above fields where white space (a space,  tab
		      or new-line) is ignored, they are included in the login-
		      prompt field.  This field is ignored if the "-p"	option
		      has been specified to mgetty(1).

       next-label     specifies	 the  label  to	 use  if the user user types a
		      <break> character, or getty detects a  reception	error.
		      Getty  searches  for  the	 entry	with next-label as its
		      label field and set up the terminal for those  settings.
		      Usually,	a series of speeds are linked together in this
		      fashion, into a closed set; for instance, 2400 linked to
		      1200,  which  in turn is linked to 300, which finally is
		      linked to 2400.  next-label is ignored with mgetty(1).

       Several additional composite settings are available  for	 initial-flags
       and final-flags.	 The following composite flags are supported by mgetty
       and are usually supported by getty:

       SANE		   equivalent  to  ``stty  sane''.   (BRKINT,  IGNPAR,
			   ISTRIP,  ICRNL,  IXON,  OPOST,  CS8,	 CREAD,	 ISIG,
			   ICANON, ECHO, ECHOK)

       ODDP		   Odd parity (CS7, PARENB, PARODD)

       PARITY,EVENP	   even parity (CS7, PARENB)

       -ODDP,-PARITY,-EVENP
			   no parity (resets PARENB, PARODD, and sets CS8)

       RAW		   raw I/O (no canonical processing) (turns off OPOST,
			   ICANON)

       -RAW,COOKED	   enable   canonical	processing  (turns  on	OPOST,
			   ICANON)

       NL		   Ignore newlines.  (ICRNL, ONLCR)

       -NL		   Respect newlines (turns INLCR, IGNCR, ICRNL, ONLCR,
			   OCRNL, ONLRET off)

       LCASE		   Ignore  case	 -  treat  all	as lowercase.  (IUCLC,
			   OLCUC, XCASE) Is set if mgetty  believes  login  is
			   entirely uppercase.

       -LCASE		   Repect case (turns off IUCLC, OLCUC and XCASE)

       TABS		   output tabs as tabs

       -TABS,TAB3	   output tabs as spaces

       EK		   Sets VERASE to "#" and VKILL to CKILL respectively.
			   (note that while many gettys default VERASE to "#".
			   mgetty defaults VERASE to backspace.)

       Additionally, mgetty (but not getty) can set any of the control charac‐
       ters listed in the c_cc termio(termios) structure by  the  use  of  two
       tokens:

       <character name> <value>

       Eg:

       VERASE ^h

       The  value can be set as ``^<character>'', ``\nnn'' or ``\<character>''
       (normal UNIX \ escapes).

       See the termio(7) or termios(7) manual pages to a list of  which	 ``V''
       variables  can  be  changed.  Note that many of these can be changed in
       the c_cc array, but won't have any effect.

       If getty is called without  a  second  argument,	 the  first  entry  of
       /etc/gettydefs  is  used	 by  getty,  thus  making  the	first entry of
       /etc/gettydefs the default entry.  It is also used if getty cannot find
       the specified label.  Mgetty use a default label of ``n'', but this can
       be changed in the configuration.	 If /etc/gettydefs itself is  missing,
       there is one entry built into the command which brings up a terminal at
       300 (configuration parameter in mgetty) baud.

       It is strongly recommended that after making or	modifying  /etc/getty‐
       defs,  it  be  run through getty with the check option to be sure there
       are no errors.

EXAMPLES
       The following two lines show an example of 300/1200 baud toggle,	 which
       is useful for dial-up ports:

	      1200# B1200 HUPCL # B1200 SANE IXANY TAB3 #login: #300
	      300# B300 HUPCL # B300 SANE IXANY TAB3 #login: #1200

       The  following  line  shows  a typical 9600 baud entry for a hard-wired
       connection (not currently supported for mgetty):

	      9600# B9600 # B9600 SANE IXANY IXANY ECHOE TAB3 #login: #9600

       The following line is a typical smart-modem setup, suitable for mgetty:

	      19200mg#
		  B19200 #
		  B19200 SANE VERASE \b VINTR \003 HUPCL #
		  \n\D \T \N Users @!login: #19200mg

FILES
       /etc/gettydefs

SEE ALSO
       mgetty(8), getty(8), login(1), ioctl(2), termio(7), termios(7).

greenie				   4 Dec 93			 mgettydefs(4)
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