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Command: stty | Section: 1 | Source: OpenBSD | File: stty.1
STTY(1) FreeBSD General Commands Manual STTY(1)
NAME
stty - set the options for a terminal device interface
SYNOPSIS
stty [-a | -e | -g] [-f file] [operands]
DESCRIPTION
The stty utility sets or reports on terminal characteristics for the
device that is its standard input. If no options or operands are
specified, it reports the settings of a subset of characteristics as well
as additional ones if they differ from their default values. Otherwise
it modifies the terminal state according to the specified arguments.
Some combinations of arguments are mutually exclusive on some terminal
types.
The options are as follows:
-a Display all the current settings for the terminal to standard
output.
-e Display all the current settings for the terminal to standard
output in the traditional BSD "all" and "everything" formats.
-f file
Open and use the terminal named by file rather than using
standard input. The file is opened using the O_NONBLOCK flag of
open(2), making it possible to set or display settings on a
terminal that might otherwise block on the open.
-g Display all the current settings for the terminal to standard
output in a form that may be used as an argument to a subsequent
invocation of stty to restore the current terminal state. The
output does not contain any characters that require quoting, to
avoid word expansion by the shell.
The following arguments are available to set the terminal
characteristics:
Control modes
Control mode flags affect hardware characteristics associated with the
terminal. This corresponds to the c_cflag in the termios structure.
parenb (-parenb)
Enable (disable) parity generation and detection.
parodd (-parodd)
Select odd (even) parity.
cs5 cs6 cs7 cs8
Select character size, if possible.
number Set terminal baud rate to the number given, if possible. If the
baud rate is set to zero, modem control is no longer asserted.
ispeed number
Set terminal input baud rate to the number given, if possible.
If the input baud rate is set to zero, the input baud rate is set
to the value of the output baud rate.
ospeed number
Set terminal output baud rate to the number given, if possible.
If the output baud rate is set to zero, modem control is no
longer asserted.
speed number
This sets both ispeed and ospeed to number.
hupcl (-hupcl)
Stop asserting modem control (do not stop asserting modem
control) on last close.
hup (-hup)
Same as hupcl (-hupcl).
cstopb (-cstopb)
Use two (one) stop bits per character.
cread (-cread)
Enable (disable) the receiver.
clocal (-clocal)
Assume a line without (with) modem control.
crtscts (-crtscts)
Enable (disable) RTS/CTS flow control.
Input modes
This corresponds to the c_iflag in the termios structure.
ignbrk (-ignbrk)
Ignore (do not ignore) break on input.
brkint (-brkint)
Signal (do not signal) INTR on break.
ignpar (-ignpar)
Ignore (do not ignore) parity errors.
parmrk (-parmrk)
Mark (do not mark) parity errors.
inpck (-inpck)
Enable (disable) input parity checking.
istrip (-istrip)
Strip (do not strip) input characters to seven bits.
inlcr (-inlcr)
Map (do not map) NL to CR on input.
igncr (-igncr)
Ignore (do not ignore) CR on input.
icrnl (-icrnl)
Map (do not map) CR to NL on input.
iuclc (-iuclc)
Translate (do not translate) upper case to lower case on input.
ixon (-ixon)
Enable (disable) START/STOP output control. Output from the
system is stopped when the system receives STOP and started when
the system receives START, or if ixany is set, any character
restarts output.
ixoff (-ixoff)
Request that the system send (not send) START/STOP characters
when the input queue is nearly empty/full.
ixany (-ixany)
Allow any character (allow only START) to restart output.
imaxbel (-imaxbel)
The system imposes a limit of MAX_INPUT (currently 255)
characters in the input queue. If imaxbel is set and the input
queue limit has been reached, subsequent input causes the system
to send an ASCII BEL character to the output queue (the terminal
beeps at you). Otherwise, if imaxbel is unset and the input
queue is full, the next input character causes the entire input
and output queues to be discarded.
Output modes
This corresponds to the c_oflag of the termios structure.
opost (-opost)
Post-process output (do not post-process output; ignore all other
output modes).
onlcr (-onlcr)
Map (do not map) NL to CR-NL on output.
ocrnl (-ocrnl)
Translate (do not translate) carriage return to newline on
output.
onocr (-onocr)
Carriage return is not output (is output) at column 0.
onlret (-onlret)
Newline performs (does not perform) carriage return on output.
olcuc (-olcuc)
Translate (do not translate) lower case to upper case on output.
oxtabs (-oxtabs)
Expand (do not expand) tabs to spaces on output.
onoeot (-onoeot)
Discard (do not discard) EOFs on output.
Local modes
Local mode flags (lflags) affect various and sundry characteristics of
terminal processing. Historically the term "local" pertained to new job
control features implemented by Jim Kulp on a PDP 11/70 at IIASA. Later
the driver ran on the first VAX at Evans Hall, UC Berkeley, where the job
control details were greatly modified but the structure definitions and
names remained essentially unchanged. The second interpretation of the
`l' in lflag is "line discipline flag" which corresponds to the c_lflag
of the termios structure.
isig (-isig)
Enable (disable) the checking of characters against the special
control characters INTR, QUIT, and SUSP.
icanon (-icanon)
Enable (disable) canonical input (ERASE and KILL processing).
iexten (-iexten)
Enable (disable) any implementation defined special control
characters not currently controlled by icanon, isig, or ixon.
echo (-echo)
Echo back (do not echo back) every character typed.
echoe (-echoe)
The ERASE character shall (shall not) visually erase the last
character in the current line from the display, if possible.
echok (-echok)
Echo (do not echo) NL after KILL character.
echoke (-echoke)
The KILL character shall (shall not) visually erase the current
line from the display, if possible.
echonl (-echonl)
Echo (do not echo) NL, even if echo is disabled.
echoctl (-echoctl)
If echoctl is set, echo control characters as `^X'. Otherwise
control characters echo as themselves.
echoprt (-echoprt)
For printing terminals. If set, echo erased characters backwards
within `\' and `/'. Otherwise, disable this feature.
noflsh (-noflsh)
Disable (enable) flush after INTR, QUIT, SUSP.
tostop (-tostop)
Send (do not send) SIGTTOU for background output. This causes
background jobs to stop if they attempt terminal output.
altwerase (-altwerase)
Use (do not use) an alternate word erase algorithm when
processing WERASE characters. This alternate algorithm considers
sequences of alphanumeric/underscores as words. It also skips
the first preceding character in its classification (as a
convenience since the one preceding character could have been
erased with simply an ERASE character).
mdmbuf (-mdmbuf)
If set, flow control output based on condition of Carrier Detect.
Otherwise writes return an error if Carrier Detect is low (and
Carrier is not being ignored with the CLOCAL flag).
flusho (-flusho)
Indicates output is (is not) being discarded.
pendin (-pendin)
Indicates input is (is not) pending after a switch from non-
canonical to canonical mode and will be re-input when a read
becomes pending or more input arrives.
xcase (-xcase)
Upper and lower case is (is not) handled canonically on input and
output with iuclc and olcuc.
Control characters
control-character string
Set control-character to string. If string is a single
character, the control character is set to that character. If
string is the two character sequence `^-' or the string "undef",
the control character is disabled (i.e. set to
{_POSIX_VDISABLE}).
Recognized control-characters:
Control Subscript Description
character
eof VEOF EOF character
eol VEOL EOL character
eol2 VEOL2 EOL2 character
erase VERASE ERASE character
werase VWERASE WERASE character
intr VINTR INTR character
kill VKILL KILL character
quit VQUIT QUIT character
susp VSUSP SUSP character
start VSTART START character
stop VSTOP STOP character
dsusp VDSUSP DSUSP character
lnext VLNEXT LNEXT character
reprint VREPRINT REPRINT character
status VSTATUS STATUS character
min number
time number
Set the value of min or time to number. MIN and TIME are used in
non-canonical mode input processing (-icanon).
Combination modes
saved settings
Set the current terminal characteristics to the saved settings
produced by the -g option.
evenp or parity
Enable parenb and cs7; disable parodd.
oddp Enable parenb, cs7, and parodd.
-parity, -evenp, -oddp
Disable parenb and set cs8.
nl (-nl)
Enable (disable) icrnl. In addition, -nl unsets inlcr and igncr.
ek Reset ERASE and KILL characters back to system defaults.
sane Resets all modes to reasonable values for interactive terminal
use.
tty Set the line discipline to the standard terminal line discipline
TTYDISC.
crt (-crt)
Set (disable) all modes suitable for a CRT display device.
kerninfo (-kerninfo)
Enable (disable) the system generated status line associated with
processing a STATUS character (usually set to `^T'). The status
line consists of the system load average, the current command
name, its process ID, the event the process is waiting on (or the
status of the process), the user and system times, percent CPU,
and current memory usage.
columns number
The terminal size is recorded as having number columns.
cols number
This is an alias for columns.
rows number
The terminal size is recorded as having number rows.
dec Set modes suitable for users of Digital Equipment Corporation
systems (ERASE, KILL, and INTR characters are set to ^?, ^U, and
^C; ixany is disabled, and crt is enabled).
extproc (-extproc)
If set, this flag indicates that some amount of terminal
processing is being performed by either the terminal hardware or
by the remote side connected to a pty.
raw (-raw)
If set, change the modes of the terminal so that no input or
output processing is performed. If unset, change the modes of
the terminal to some reasonable state that performs input and
output processing. Note that since the terminal driver no longer
has a single RAW bit, it is not possible to intuit what flags
were set prior to setting raw. This means that unsetting raw may
not put back all the setting that were previously in effect. To
set the terminal into a raw state and then accurately restore it,
the following shell code is recommended:
save_state=$(stty -g)
stty raw
...
stty "$save_state"
size The size of the terminal is printed as two numbers on a single
line, first rows, then columns.
Compatibility modes
These modes remain for compatibility with the previous version of the
stty command.
all Reports all the terminal modes as with stty -a except that the
control characters are printed in a columnar format.
everything
Same as all.
cooked Same as sane.
cbreak If set, enables brkint, ixon, imaxbel, opost, isig, iexten, and
-icanon. If unset, same as sane.
new Same as tty.
old Same as tty.
newcrt (-newcrt)
Same as crt.
pass8 The converse of parity.
tandem (-tandem)
Same as ixoff.
decctlq (-decctlq)
The converse of ixany.
crterase (-crterase)
Same as echoe.
crtbs (-crtbs)
Same as echoe.
crtkill (-crtkill)
Same as echoke.
ctlecho (-ctlecho)
Same as echoctl.
prterase (-prterase)
Same as echoprt.
lcase (-lcase)
Same as iuclc, olcuc and xcase.
litout (-litout)
The converse of opost.
tabs (-tabs)
The converse of oxtabs.
brk value
Same as the control character eol.
flush value
Same as the control character discard.
rprnt value
Same as the control character reprint.
Control operations
These operations are not modes, but rather commands to be performed by
the tty layer.
ostart Performs a "start output" operation, as normally done by an
incoming START character when ixon is set.
ostop Performs a "stop output" operation, as normally done by an
incoming STOP character when ixon is set.
EXIT STATUS
The stty utility exits 0 on success, and >0 if an error occurs.
SEE ALSO
termios(4), tty(4)
STANDARDS
The stty utility is compliant with the IEEE Std 1003.1-2008 ("POSIX.1")
specification.
The flags [-ef], the operands altwerase, cols, columns, crt, crtscts,
dec, echoke, extproc, flusho, imaxbel, kerninfo, mdmbuf, onlcr, onoeot,
ostart, ostop, oxtabs, pendin, rows, size, speed, and tty, and the
control characters eol2, dsusp, lnext, reprint, status, and werase are
all extensions to that specification.
The operands iuclc, olcuc, and xcase are marked by IEEE Std 1003.1-2008
("POSIX.1") as legacy items; the operands listed in Compatibility modes
can also be considered legacy.
The operands bs0-1, cr0-3, ff0-1, nl0-1, ocrnl, ofdel, ofill, onlret,
onocr, raw, tab0-3, tabs, and vt0-1 are marked by IEEE Std 1003.1-2008
("POSIX.1") as being an X/Open System Interfaces option. Of those, only
ocrnl, onlret, onocr, raw, and tabs are supported by this implementation
of stty, and behaviour for tabs differs.
HISTORY
A stty command appeared in Version 2 AT&T UNIX.
FreeBSD 14.1-RELEASE-p8 March 31, 2022 FreeBSD 14.1-RELEASE-p8