agetty — alternative Linux getty
agetty
[−8ihLmnUw
] [ −f
issue_file ] [ −l
login_program ] [ −I
init ] [ −t
timeout ] [ −H
login_host ] port baud_rate,...
[term]
agetty
[−8ihLmnw
] [ −f
issue_file ] [ −l
login_program ] [ −I
init ] [ −t
timeout ] [ −H
login_host ] baud_rate,... port
[term]
agetty opens
a tty port, prompts for a login name and invokes the
/bin/login command. It is normally invoked by init(8)
.
agetty has
several non-standard
features that
are useful for hard-wired and for dial-in lines:
Adapts the tty settings to parity bits and to erase, kill, end-of-line and uppercase characters when it reads a login name. The program can handle 7-bit characters with even, odd, none or space parity, and 8-bit characters with no parity. The following special characters are recognized: @ and Control-U (kill); #, DEL and back space (erase); carriage return and line feed (end of line).
Optionally deduces the baud rate from the CONNECT messages produced by Hayes(tm)-compatible modems.
Optionally does not hang up when it is given an already opened line (useful for call-back applications).
Optionally does not display the contents of the
/etc/issue
file.
Optionally displays an alternative issue file
instead of /etc/issue
.
Optionally does not ask for a login name.
Optionally invokes a non-standard login program
instead of /bin/login
.
Optionally turns on hard-ware flow control
Optionally forces the line to be local with no need for carrier detect.
This program does not use the /etc/gettydefs
(System V) or /etc/gettytab
(SunOS 4) files.
port
A path name relative to the /dev
directory. If a "-" is
specified, agetty assumes that
its standard input is already connected to a tty port
and that a connection to a remote user has already been
established.
Under System V, a "-" port
argument should be
preceded by a "--".
A comma-separated list of one or more baud rates. Each time agetty receives a BREAK character it advances through the list, which is treated as if it were circular.
Baud rates should be specified in descending order, so that the null character (Ctrl-@) can also be used for baud rate switching.
term
The value to be used for the TERM environment variable. This overrides whatever init(8) may have set, and is inherited by login and the shell.
Assume that the tty is 8-bit clean, hence disable parity detection.
−h
Enable hardware (RTS/CTS) flow control. It is left up to the application to disable software (XON/XOFF) flow protocol where appropriate.
−i
Do not display the contents of /etc/issue
(or other) before writing
the login prompt. Terminals or communications hardware
may become confused when receiving lots of text at the
wrong baud rate; dial-up scripts may fail if the login
prompt is preceded by too much text.
−f
issue_file
Display the contents of issue_file
instead of
/etc/issue
. This allows
custom messages to be displayed on different terminals.
The −i option will override this option.
−I
initstring
Set an initial string to be sent to the tty or modem before sending anything else. This may be used to initialize a modem. Non printable characters may be sent by writing their octal code preceded by a backslash (\). For example to send a linefeed character (ASCII 10, octal 012) write \012.
−l
login_program
Invoke the specified login_program
instead of
/bin/login. This allows the use of a non-standard login
program (for example, one that asks for a dial-up
password or that uses a different password file).
−H
login_host
Write the specified login_host
into the utmp
file. (Normally, no login host is given, since
agetty is
used for local hardwired connections and consoles.
However, this option can be useful for identifying
terminal concentrators and the like.
−m
Try to extract the baud rate the CONNECT status message produced by Hayes(tm)−compatible modems. These status messages are of the form: "<junk><speed><junk>". agetty assumes that the modem emits its status message at the same speed as specified with (the first) baud_rate value on the command line.
Since the −m
feature may fail on heavily-loaded systems, you still
should enable BREAK processing by enumerating all
expected baud rates on the command line.
−n
Do not prompt the user for a login name. This can be used in connection with −l option to invoke a non-standard login process such as a BBS system. Note that with the −n option, agetty gets no input from user who logs in and therefore won't be able to figure out parity, character size, and newline processing of the connection. It defaults to space parity, 7 bit characters, and ASCII CR (13) end-of-line character. Beware that the program that agetty starts (usually /bin/login) is run as root.
−t
timeout
Terminate if no user name could be read within
timeout
seconds. This option should probably not be used with
hard-wired lines.
−L
Force the line to be a local line with no need for carrier detect. This can be useful when you have a locally attached terminal where the serial line does not set the carrier detect signal.
−U
Turn on support for detecting an uppercase only terminal. This setting will detect a login name containing only capitals as indicating an uppercase only terminal and turn on some upper to lower case conversions. Note that this has no support for any unicode characters.
−w
Wait for the user or the modem to send a
carriage-return or a linefeed character before sending
the /etc/issue
(or other)
file and the login prompt. Very useful in connection
with the −I option.
This section shows examples for the process field of an
entry in the /etc/inittab
file.
You'll have to prepend appropriate values for the other
fields. See inittab(5)
for more
details.
For a hard-wired line or a console tty:
/sbin/agetty 9600 ttyS1
For a directly connected terminal without proper carriage detect wiring: (try this if your terminal just sleeps instead of giving you a password: prompt.)
/sbin/agetty −L 9600 ttyS1 vt100
For a old style dial-in line with a 9600/2400/1200 baud modem:
/sbin/agetty −mt60 ttyS1 9600,2400,1200
For a Hayes modem with a fixed 115200 bps interface to the machine: (the example init string turns off modem echo and result codes, makes modem/computer DCD track modem/modem DCD, makes a DTR drop cause a dis-connection and turn on auto-answer after 1 ring.)
/sbin/agetty −w −I 'ATE0Q1&D2&C1S0=1\015' 115200 ttyS1
The issue-file (/etc/issue
or the file set with the −f option) may contain certain
escape codes to display the system name, date and time etc.
All escape codes consist of a backslash (\) immediately
followed by one of the letters explained below.
b
Insert the baudrate of the current line.
d
Insert the current date.
s
Insert the system name, the name of the operating system.
l
Insert the name of the current tty line.
m
Insert the architecture identifier of the machine, eg. i486
n
Insert the nodename of the machine, also known as the hostname.
o
Insert the NIS domainname of the machine.
O
Insert the DNS domainname of the machine.
r
Insert the release number of the OS, eg. 1.1.9.
t
Insert the current time.
u
Insert the number of current users logged in.
U
Insert the string "1 user" or "<n> users" where <n> is the number of current users logged in.
v
Insert the version of the OS, eg. the build-date etc.
/etc/issue
file:This is \n.\o (\s \m \r) \t
displays as
This is thingol.orcan.dk (Linux i386 1.1.9) 18:29:30
/var/run/utmp, the system status file.
/etc/issue, printed before the login prompt.
/dev/console, problem reports (if syslog(3) is not used).
/etc/inittab,
init(8)
configuration file.
The baud-rate detection feature (the −m
option) requires that agetty be scheduled soon
enough after completion of a dial-in call (within 30 ms with
modems that talk at 2400 baud). For robustness, always use
the −m
option in
combination with a multiple baud rate command-line argument,
so that BREAK processing is enabled.
The text in the /etc/issue
file (or other) and the login prompt are always output with
7-bit characters and space parity.
The baud-rate detection feature (the −m
option) requires that the modem
emits its status message after raising the DCD
line.
Depending on how the program was configured, all
diagnostics are written to the console device or reported via
the syslog(3) facility. Error messages are produced if the
port
argument does
not specify a terminal device; if there is no utmp entry for
the current process (System V only); and so on.
W.Z. Venema <[email protected]> Eindhoven University of Technology Department of Mathematics and Computer Science Den Dolech 2, P.O. Box 513, 5600 MB Eindhoven, The Netherlands Peter Orbaek <[email protected]> Linux port and more options. Still maintains the code. Eric Rasmussen <[email protected]> Added −f option to display custom login messages on different terminals.