PTY-TTY pair problem. Please help!
Mark Gerolimatos
gerolima at Neon.Stanford.EDU
Thu May 30 13:25:45 AEST 1991
>>>>>>> Assuming SunOS 4.1.1 <<<<<<<<
I have a very silly brain dead program (binary only, SunOS) which for some
silly reason assumes a bidirectional device (read: tty) as both its I and
its O. No problem with that, but I want to use a swado-tty now, instead of
tty{a,b}.
First, I manually find an available swado-tty (yes, this is gross, but I have
no choice: remember, binaries only!), and then try out:
dd if=/etc/whatever of=/dev/ptyXX
simultaneously with
dd if=/dev/ttyXX of=/dev/tty
Works (but only as long as the second process is started first! Weird!).
Swapping the pty and tty also works (no matter which is run first!).
So, I writes me a simple program to test this out myself (below). Now, I can
write to ttyXX, and get the data from ptyXX (by running the program twice),
BUT NOT THE OTHER WAY AROUND! Is there something I have to do to make this
happen? Funny IOCTL (doubtful)? Run as root (please say no)?
Additional note: When I open both the PTY and the TTY read/write, a write
to the TTY followed by an immedeate read from it blocks on the read. BUT
a write to the PTY followed by an immedeate read from it gets the data
just written! Why?
As time is of the essence, I'd appreceate mailed responses, as well
as posted.
Thanks!
-Mark
gerolima at neon.stanford.edu
@wdl1.wdl.loral.com
@wdl12.wdl.loral.com
8< 8< 8< cut here >8 >8 >8
/**** The problem described herein deals only with SunOS 4.1.1....
***** does something totally different on some unremembered version
***** of ULTRIX
****/
/* compile, -o writer , then link the executable to some other name, say
** writer
** Then, note that:
** writer /dev/ttyXX (find a suitable pty[p-z][0-9a-f])
** reader /dev/ptyXX
** gets the data from writer to reader, while
** writer /dev/ptyXX
** reader /dev/ttyXX
** doesn't (ie reader blocks on the read)!
** What gives?!?
*/
#include <stdio.h>
#include <sys/file.h>
die (st)
char *st;
{
perror(st);
exit(0);
}
main (argc,argv)
int argc; char **argv;
{
int fd,result, writer = 0;
char buffer[1024];
fd = open(argv[1],O_RDWR);
if(fd < 0)
die("open");
if(!strcmp(argv[0],"writer"))
writer++;
if(writer)
{
while(1)
{
fprintf(stderr,"-> ");
if(gets(buffer) == NULL)
{
close(fd);
exit(0);
}
result = write(fd,buffer,strlen(buffer));
/* note that placing a read here gets the same
** data that was just written when the output file
** is /dev/ptyXX
*/
if(result < 0)
die("write");
}
}
else /*reader */
{
while(1)
{
result = read(fd,buffer,80);
if(result == 0)
exit(0);
if(result < 0)
die("read");
buffer[result] = '\0';
fprintf(stderr,"%s\n",buffer);
}
}
}
More information about the Comp.unix.questions
mailing list