TTY line discipline
Lucio de Re
lucio at beam.UUCP
Tue Jul 17 00:12:33 AEST 1990
We first encountered this problem in Xenix (System V, Version 2.3.2), but
experimentation showed that it occurs in Intel Unix System V, Release 3.2.2
as well.
The symptoms are as follows: using the standard (and only?) line
discipline, the following termio settings had a strange side effect:
n_ctrl.c_iflag &= ~(INLCR | IGNCR | ICRNL | IUCLC );
n_ctrl.c_iflag |= IXOFF;
n_ctrl.c_lflag &= ~(ICANON | ISIG);
n_ctrl.c_cc[VINTR] = 255; /* these seem to disable ... */
n_ctrl.c_cc[VQUIT] = 255; /* ... */
n_ctrl.c_cc[VERASE] = 255; /* ... */
n_ctrl.c_cc[VKILL] = 255; /* ... the relevant function */
n_ctrl.c_cc[VMIN] = 1; /* character count */
n_ctrl.c_cc[VTIME] = 50; /* time limit */
that is, a null character on input would trigger the timeout
condition. As a result, the null is swallowed by the line discipline
and cannot be received. If the timeout is set to zero, the problem
does not arise, and nulls are accepted as normal characters.
Unfortunately for us, we require both unprocessed input and timeouts;
we could compromise and use alarm calls to provide the timeout, but
the cost in system resources seems prohibitive (and is a kludge).
I had occasion to discuss this personally with a gentleman from SCO,
who was at the time guest at an exhibition, and he felt that this
behaviour should not be the case. We subsequently tested the behaviour
on a machine running Intel Unix System V Version 3.2.2 (albeit an
early BellTech release) and found the same effect.
A number of possibilities arise:
(a) a fix to the existing line discipline may have removed
the problem in kernels more recent than the ones we are using;
(b) what we find problematic may be intentional and we may have to
resort to a different line discipline to cater for our needs;
(c) what we want may be impossible for reasons that we have
overlooked.
To the NET I ask:
(i) is the behaviour I described intentional or erroneous?
(ii) Whether or not it is intentional, is it possible to add line
disciplines to an existing device driver without requiring
the source for the device driver (said SCO gentleman feels it
has been done)?
(iii) where can one find guidelines or alternative device drivers
for the kernels we use that will make it possible for our
requirements to be met?
(iv) if it should be imperative that we use alarm calls to satisfy
our requirements, what would be the underlying cost in terms
of kernel and other resources?
(To expand here, we would have to issue an alarm call whenever
one or more characters are input; a later alarm call would
cancel the previous one, nevertheless we could land up with a
ridiculous amount of overheads.)
Thanks very much to all who can provide us with some direction on
these points.
Lucio de Re (lucio at proxima.UUCP).
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