vcsa man page on CentOS

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VCS(4)			   Linux Programmer's Manual			VCS(4)

NAME
       vcs, vcsa - virtual console memory

DESCRIPTION
       /dev/vcs0 is a character device with major number 7 and minor number 0,
       usually of mode 0644 and owner root.tty.	 It refers to  the  memory  of
       the currently displayed virtual console terminal.

       /dev/vcs[1-63]  are  character  devices	for virtual console terminals,
       they have major number 7 and minor number 1 to 63,  usually  mode  0644
       and  owner  root.tty.   /dev/vcsa[0-63]	are  the  same,	 but including
       attributes, and prefixed with four bytes giving the  screen  dimensions
       and  cursor position: lines, columns, x, y.  (x = y = 0 at the top left
       corner of the screen.)

       These replace the screendump ioctls of console(4), so the system admin‐
       istrator can control access using file system permissions.

       The devices for the first eight virtual consoles may be created by:

	   for x in 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8; do
	       mknod -m 644 /dev/vcs$x c 7 $x;
	       mknod -m 644 /dev/vcsa$x c 7 $[$x+128];
	   done
	   chown root:tty /dev/vcs*

       No ioctl() requests are supported.

EXAMPLE
       You  may	 do  a	screendump  on	vt3 by switching to vt1 and typing cat
       /dev/vcs3 >foo. Note that the output does not contain  newline  charac‐
       ters,  so some processing may be required, like in fold -w 81 /dev/vcs3
       | lpr or (horrors) setterm -dump 3 -file /proc/self/fd/1.

       The /dev/vcsa0 device is used for Braille support.

       This program displays the character and	screen	attributes  under  the
       cursor of the second virtual console, then changes the background color
       there:

	   #include <unistd.h>
	   #include <stdlib.h>
	   #include <stdio.h>
	   #include <fcntl.h>

	   int main() {
	       int fd;
	       char *device = "/dev/vcsa2";
	       struct {unsigned char lines, cols, x, y;} scrn;
	       char ch, attrib;

	       fd = open(device, O_RDWR);
	       if (fd < 0) {
		   perror(device);
		   exit(1);
	       }
	       (void) read(fd, &scrn, 4);
	       (void) lseek(fd, 4 + 2*(scrn.y*scrn.cols + scrn.x), 0);
	       (void) read(fd, &ch, 1);
	       (void) read(fd, &attrib, 1);
	       printf("ch='%c' attrib=0x%02x\n", ch, attrib);
	       attrib ^= 0x10;
	       (void) lseek(fd, -1, 1);
	       (void) write(fd, &attrib, 1);
	       return 0;
	   }

FILES
       /dev/vcs[0-63]
       /dev/vcsa[0-63]

AUTHOR
       Andries Brouwer <aeb@cwi.nl>

HISTORY
       Introduced with version 1.1.92 of the Linux kernel.

SEE ALSO
       gpm(8), console(4), tty(4), ttyS(4)

Linux				  1995-02-19				VCS(4)
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