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These functions perform miscellaneous control actions on terminal
devices. As regards terminal access, they are treated like doing
output: if any of these functions is used by a background process on its
controlling terminal, normally all processes in the process group are
sent a SIGTTOU
signal. The exception is if the calling process
itself is ignoring or blocking SIGTTOU
signals, in which case the
operation is performed and no signal is sent. See section Job Control.
Function: int tcsendbreak (int filedes, int duration)
This function generates a break condition by transmitting a stream of zero bits on the terminal associated with the file descriptor filedes. The duration of the break is controlled by the duration argument. If zero, the duration is between 0.25 and 0.5 seconds. The meaning of a nonzero value depends on the operating system.
This function does nothing if the terminal is not an asynchronous serial data port.
The return value is normally zero. In the event of an error, a value
of -1
is returned. The following errno
error conditions
are defined for this function:
EBADF
ENOTTY
Function: int tcdrain (int filedes)
The tcdrain
function waits until all queued
output to the terminal filedes has been transmitted.
The return value is normally zero. In the event of an error, a value
of -1
is returned. The following errno
error conditions
are defined for this function:
EBADF
ENOTTY
EINTR
Function: int tcflush (int filedes, int queue)
The tcflush
function is used to clear the input and/or output
queues associated with the terminal file filedes. The queue
argument specifies which queue(s) to clear, and can be one of the
following values:
TCIFLUSH
Clear any input data received, but not yet read.
TCOFLUSH
Clear any output data written, but not yet transmitted.
TCIOFLUSH
Clear both queued input and output.
The return value is normally zero. In the event of an error, a value
of -1
is returned. The following errno
error conditions
are defined for this function:
EBADF
ENOTTY
EINVAL
It is unfortunate that this function is named tcflush
, because
the term "flush" is normally used for quite another operation--waiting
until all output is transmitted--and using it for discarding input or
output would be confusing. Unfortunately, the name tcflush
comes
from POSIX and we cannot change it.
Function: int tcflow (int filedes, int action)
The tcflow
function is used to perform operations relating to
XON/XOFF flow control on the terminal file specified by filedes.
The action argument specifies what operation to perform, and can be one of the following values:
TCOOFF
TCOON
TCIOFF
TCION
For more information about the STOP and START characters, see section Special Characters.
The return value is normally zero. In the event of an error, a value
of -1
is returned. The following errno
error conditions
are defined for this function:
EBADF
ENOTTY
EINVAL
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