NAME | SYNOPSIS | DESCRIPTION | APPLICATION PROGRAMMING INTERFACE | IOCTLS | ERRORS | FILES | ATTRIBUTES | SEE ALSO | DIAGNOSTICS
#include <fcntl.h>
#include <sys/termios.h>
open("/dev/term/n", mode);
open("/dev/tty/n", mode);
open("/dev/cua/n", mode);
The asy module is a loadable STREAMS driver that provides basic support for the standard UARTS that use Intel-8250, National Semiconductor-16450 and 16550 hardware, in addition to basic asynchronous communication support. The asy module supports those termio(7I) device control functions specified by flags in the c_cflag word of the termios structure, and by the IGNBRK, IGNPAR, PARMRK, or INPCK flags in the c_iflag word of the termios structure. All other termio(7I) functions must be performed by STREAMS modules pushed atop the driver. When a device is opened, the ldterm(7M) and ttcompat(7M) STREAMS modules are automatically pushed on top of the stream, providing the standard termio(7I) interface.
The character-special devices /dev/term/a and /dev/term/b are used to access the two standard serial ports (COM1 and COM2) on an x86 system. The asy module supports up to four serial ports, including the standard ports. Device names are typically used to provide a logical access point for a dial-in line that is used with a modem.
To allow a single tty line to be connected to a modem and used for incoming
and outgoing calls, a special feature is available that is controlled by the
minor device number. By accessing character-special devices with names of
the form /dev/cua/n, it is
possible to open a port without the Carrier Detect
signal being asserted, either through hardware or an equivalent software mechanism.
These devices are commonly known as dial-out lines.
This module is affected by the setting of certain eeprom variables. For information on parameters that are persistent across reboots, see the eeprom(1M) man page.
In Solaris 8 and later versions, the default setting for ttya-ignore-cd and ttya-trs-dtr-off is true. To avoid having their modems fail, users of Solaris 7 (and earlier versions) should change the settings of ttya-ignore-cd and ttya-trs-dtr-off to false.
Once a /dev/cua/n line
is opened, the corresponding tty line cannot be opened until the /dev/cua/n line is closed. A blocking
open will wait until the /dev/cua/n
line is closed (which will drop Data Terminal Ready
,
after which Carrier Detect
will usually drop as well)
and carrier is detected again. A non-blocking open will return an error. If
the /dev/ttydn line has been
opened successfully (usually only when carrier is recognized on the modem),
the corresponding /dev/cua/n
line cannot be opened. This allows a modem to be attached to /dev/term/[n] (renamed from /dev/tty[n]) and used for dial-in (by enabling
the line for login in /etc/inittab) or dial-out (by tip(1) or uucp(1C)) as /dev/cua/n when no one is logged in on
the line.
The standard set of termio ioctl() calls are supported by asy.
Breaks can be generated by the TCSBRK, TIOCSBRK, and TIOCCBRK ioctl() calls.
The input and output line speeds may be set to any speed that is supported by termio. The speeds cannot be set independently; for example, when the output speed is set, the input speed is automatically set to the same speed.
When the asy module is used to service the serial console port, it supports a BREAK condition that allows the system to enter the debugger or the monitor. The BREAK condition is generated by hardware and it is usually enabled by default.
A BREAK condition originating from erroneous electrical signals cannot be distinguished from one deliberately sent by remote DCE. The Alternate Break sequence can be used as a remedy against this. Due to a risk of incorrect sequence interpretation, SLIP and certain other binary protocols should not be run over the serial console port when Alternate Break sequence is in effect. Although PPP is a binary protocol, it is able to avoid these sequences using the ACCM feature in RFC 1662. For Solaris PPP 4.0, you do this by adding the following line to the /etc/ppp/options file (or other configuration files used for the connection; see pppd(1M) for details):
asyncmap 0x00002000By default, the Alternate Break sequence is a three character sequence: carriage return, tilde and control-B (CR ~ CTRL-B), but may be changed by the driver. For more information on breaking (entering the debugger or monitor), see kbd(1) and kb(7M).
An open() will fail under the following conditions:
The unit being opened does not exist.
The dial-out device is being opened while the dial-in device is already open, or the dial-in device is being opened with a no-delay open and the dial-out device is already open.
The unit has been marked as exclusive-use by another process with a TIOCEXCL ioctl() call.
The open was interrupted by the delivery of a signal.
dial-in tty lines
dial-out tty lines
asy configuration file
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes:
ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE |
---|---|
Architecture | x86 |
tip(1), kbd(1), uucp(1C), eeprom(1M), pppd(1M), ioctl(2), open(2), termios(3C), attributes(5), ldterm(7M), ttcompat(7M), kb(7M), termio(7I)
The hardware overrun occurred before the input character could be serviced.
The driver's character input ring buffer overflowed before it could be serviced.
NAME | SYNOPSIS | DESCRIPTION | APPLICATION PROGRAMMING INTERFACE | IOCTLS | ERRORS | FILES | ATTRIBUTES | SEE ALSO | DIAGNOSTICS