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openpty(3)                  Library Functions Manual                 openpty(3)

NAME
       openpty, login_tty, forkpty - terminal utility functions

LIBRARY
       System utilities library (libutil, -lutil)

SYNOPSIS
       #include <pty.h>

       int openpty(int *amaster, int *aslave, char *name,
                     const struct termios *termp,
                     const struct winsize *winp);
       pid_t forkpty(int *amaster, char *name,
                     const struct termios *termp,
                     const struct winsize *winp);

       #include <utmp.h>

       int login_tty(int fd);

DESCRIPTION
       The  openpty()  function  finds  an available pseudoterminal and returns
       file descriptors for the master and slave in  amaster  and  aslave.   If
       name  is  not  NULL,  the filename of the slave is returned in name.  If
       termp is not NULL, the terminal parameters of the slave will be  set  to
       the  values in termp.  If winp is not NULL, the window size of the slave
       will be set to the values in winp.

       The login_tty() function prepares for a login on the  terminal  referred
       to  by  the  file descriptor fd (which may be a real terminal device, or
       the slave of a pseudoterminal as returned by openpty())  by  creating  a
       new session, making fd the controlling terminal for the calling process,
       setting  fd  to  be the standard input, output, and error streams of the
       current process, and closing fd.

       The forkpty() function combines openpty(), fork(2), and  login_tty()  to
       create  a  new process operating in a pseudoterminal.  A file descriptor
       referring to master side of the pseudoterminal is returned  in  amaster.
       If name is not NULL, the buffer it points to is used to return the file-
       name  of the slave.  The termp and winp arguments, if not NULL, will de-
       termine the terminal attributes and window size of the slave side of the
       pseudoterminal.

RETURN VALUE
       If a call to openpty(), login_tty(), or forkpty() is not successful,  -1
       is  returned  and  errno  is  set  to  indicate  the  error.  Otherwise,
       openpty(), login_tty(), and the child process of forkpty() return 0, and
       the parent process of forkpty() returns the  process  ID  of  the  child
       process.

ERRORS
       openpty() fails if:

       ENOENT There are no available terminals.

       login_tty()  fails if ioctl(2) fails to set fd to the controlling termi-
       nal of the calling process.

       forkpty() fails if either openpty() or fork(2) fails.

ATTRIBUTES
       For an explanation of the terms used in this section, see attributes(7).
       ┌─────────────────────────────┬───────────────┬────────────────────────┐
       │ Interface                   Attribute     Value                  │
       ├─────────────────────────────┼───────────────┼────────────────────────┤
       │ forkpty(), openpty()        │ Thread safety │ MT-Safe locale         │
       ├─────────────────────────────┼───────────────┼────────────────────────┤
       │ login_tty()                 │ Thread safety │ MT-Unsafe race:ttyname │
       └─────────────────────────────┴───────────────┴────────────────────────┘

STANDARDS
       BSD.

HISTORY
       The const modifiers were added to the  structure  pointer  arguments  of
       openpty() and forkpty() in glibc 2.8.

       Before  glibc  2.0.92,  openpty()  returns  file  descriptors  for a BSD
       pseudoterminal pair; since glibc 2.0.92, it first  attempts  to  open  a
       UNIX  98 pseudoterminal pair, and falls back to opening a BSD pseudoter-
       minal pair if that fails.

BUGS
       Nobody knows how much space should be reserved for  name.   So,  calling
       openpty() or forkpty() with non-NULL name may not be secure.

SEE ALSO
       fork(2), ttyname(3), pty(7)

Linux man-pages 6.9.1              2024-05-02                        openpty(3)

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