1Downloaded from http://www.lafn.org/~dave/linux/Serial-Programming-HOWTO.txt
2Seems to be somewhat old, but contains useful bits for getty.c hacking
3============================================================================
4
5  The Linux Serial Programming HOWTO, Part 1 of 2
6  By Vernon C. Hoxie
7  v2.0 10 September 1999
8
9  This document describes how to program communications with devices
10  over a serial port on a Linux box.
11  ______________________________________________________________________
12
13  Table of Contents
14
15  1. Copyright
16
17  2. Introduction
18
19  3. Opening
20
21  4. Commands
22
23  5. Changing Baud Rates
24
25  6. Additional Control Calls
26
27     6.1 Sending a "break".
28     6.2 Hardware flow control.
29     6.3 Flushing I/O buffers.
30
31  7. Modem control
32
33  8. Process Groups
34
35     8.1 Sessions
36     8.2 Process Groups
37     8.3 Controlling Terminal
38        8.3.1 Get the foreground group process id.
39        8.3.2 Set the foreground process group id of a terminal.
40        8.3.3 Get process group id.
41
42  9. Lockfiles
43
44  10. Additional Information
45
46  11. Feedback
47
48  ______________________________________________________________________
49
50  1.  Copyright
51
52  The Linux Serial-Programming-HOWTO is copyright (C) 1997 by Vernon
53  Hoxie.  Linux HOWTO documents may be reproduced and distributed in
54  whole or in part, in any medium physical or electronic, as long as
55  this copyright notice is retained on all copies. Commercial
56  redistribution is allowed and encouraged; however, the author would
57  like to be notified of any such distributions.
58
59  All translations, derivative works, or aggregate works incorporating
60  this Linux HOWTO document must be covered under this copyright notice.
61  That is, you may not produce a derivative work from this HOWTO and
62  impose additional restrictions on its distribution.
63
64  This version is a complete rewrite of the previous Serial-Programming-
65  HOWTO  by Peter H. Baumann,  <mailto:Peter.Baumann@dlr.de>
66
67  2.  Introduction
68
69  This HOWTO will attempt to give hints about how to write a program
70  which needs to access a serial port.  Its principal focus will be on
71  the Linux implementation and what the meaning of the various library
72  functions available.
73
74  Someone asked about which of several sequences of operations was
75  right.  There is no absolute right way to accomplish an outcome.  The
76  options available are too numerous.  If your sequences produces the
77  desired results, then that is the right way for you.  Another
78  programmer may select another set of options and get the same results.
79  His method is right for him.
80
81  Neither of these methods may operate properly with some other
82  implementation of UNIX.  It is strange that many of the concepts which
83  were implemented in the SYSV version have been dumped.  Because UNIX
84  was developed by AT&T and much code has been generated on those
85  concepts, the AT&T version should be the standard to which others
86  should emulate.
87
88  Now the standard is POSIX.
89
90  It was once stated that the popularity of UNIX and C was that they
91  were created by programmers for programmers.  Not by scholars who
92  insist on purity of style in deference to results and simplicity of
93  use.  Not by committees with people who have diverse personal or
94  proprietary agenda.  Now ANSI and POSIX have strayed from those
95  original clear and simply concepts.
96
97  3.  Opening
98
99  The various serial devices are opened just as any other file.
100  Although, the fopen(3) command may be used, the plain open(2) is
101  preferred.  This call returns the file descriptor which is required
102  for the various commands that configure the interface.
103
104  Open(2) has the format:
105
106       #include <fcntl.h>
107       int open(char *path, int flags, [int mode]);
108
109  In addition to the obvious O_RDWR, O_WRONLY and O_RDONLY, two
110  additional flags are available.  These are O_NONBLOCK and O_NOCTTY.
111  Other flags listed in the open(2) manual page are not applicable to
112  serial devices.
113
114  Normally, a serial device opens in "blocking" mode.  This means that
115  the open() will not return until the Carrier Detect line from the port
116  is active, e.g. modem, is active.  When opened with the O_NONBLOCK
117  flag set, the open() will return immediately regardless of the status
118  of the DCD line.  The "blocking" mode also affects the read() call.
119
120  The fcntl(2) command can be used to change the O_NONBLOCK flag anytime
121  after the device has been opened.
122
123  The device driver and the data passing through it are controlled
124  according to settings in the struct termios.  This structure is
125  defined in "/usr/include/termios.h".  In the Linux tree, further
126  reference is made to "/usr/include/asm/termbits.h".
127  In blocking mode, a read(2) will block until data is available or a
128  signal is received.  It is still subject to state of the ICANON flag.
129
130  When the termios.c_lflag ICANON bit is set, input data is collected
131  into strings until a NL, EOF or EOL character is received.  You can
132  define these in the termios.c_cc[] array.  Also, ERASE and KILL
133  characters will operate on the incoming data before it is delivered to
134  the user.
135
136  In non-canonical mode, incoming data is quantified by use of the
137  c_cc[VMIN and c_cc[VTIME] values in termios.c_cc[].
138
139  Some programmers use the select() call to detect the completion of a
140  read().  This is not the best way of checking for incoming data.
141  Select() is part of the SOCKETS scheme and too complex for most
142  applications.
143
144  A full explanation of the fields of the termios structure is contained
145  in termios(7) of the Users Manual.  A version is included in Part 2 of
146  this HOWTO document.
147
148  4.  Commands
149
150  Changes to the struct termios are made by retrieving the current
151  settings, making the desired changes and transmitting the modified
152  structure back to the kernel.
153
154  The historic means of communicating with the kernel was by use of the
155  ioctl(fd, COMMAND, arg) system call.  Then the purists in the
156  computer industry decided that this was not genetically consistent.
157  Their argument was that the argument changed its stripes.  Sometimes
158  it was an int, sometimes it was a pointer to int and other times it
159  was a pointer to struct termios.  Then there were those times it was
160  empty or NULL.  These variations are dependent upon the COMMAND.
161
162  As a alternative, the tc* series of functions were concocted.
163
164  These are:
165
166       int tcgetattr(int filedes, struct termios *termios_p);
167       int tcsetattr(int filedes, int optional_actions,
168                     const struct termios *termios_p);
169
170  instead of:
171
172       int ioctl(int filedes, int command,
173                 struct termios *termios_p);
174
175  where command is TCGETS or one of TCSETS, TCSETSW or TCSETSF.
176
177  The TCSETS command is comparable to the TCSANOW optional_action for
178  the tc* version.  These direct the kernel to adopt the changes
179  immediately.  Other pairs are:
180
181    command   optional_action   Meaning
182    TCSETSW   TCSADRAIN         Change after all output has drained.
183    TCSETSF   TCSAFLUSH         Change after all output has drained
184                                then discard any input characters
185                                not read.
186
187  Since the return code from either the ioctl(2) or the tcsetattr(2)
188  commands only indicate that the command was processed by the kernel.
189  These do not indicate whether or not the changes were actually
190  accomplished.  Either of these commands should be followed by a call
191  to:
192
193       ioctl(fd, TCGETS, &new_termios);
194
195  or:
196
197       tcgetattr(fd, &new_termios);
198
199  A user function which makes changes to the termios structure should
200  define two struct termios variables.  One of these variables should
201  contain the desired configuration.  The other should contain a copy of
202  the kernels version.  Then after the desired configuration has been
203  sent to the kernel, another call should be made to retrieve the
204  kernels version.  Then the two compared.
205
206  Here is an example of how to add RTS/CTS flow control:
207
208       struct termios my_termios;
209       struct termios new_termios;
210
211       tcgetattr(fd, &my_termios);
212       my_termios.c_flag |= CRTSCTS;
213       tcsetattr(fd, TCSANOW, &my_termios);
214       tcgetattr(fd, &new_termios);
215       if (memcmp(my_termios, new_termios,
216            sizeof(my_termios)) != 0) {
217           /* do some error handling */
218       }
219
220  5.  Changing Baud Rates
221
222  With Linux, the baud rate can be changed using a technique similar to
223  add/delete RTS/CTS.
224
225  struct termios my_termios;
226  struct termios new_termios;
227
228  tcgetattr(fd, &my_termios);
229  my_termios.c_flag &= ~CBAUD;
230  my_termios.c_flag |= B19200;
231  tcsetattr(fd, TCSANOW, &my_termios);
232  tcgetattr(fd, &new_termios);
233  if (memcmp(my_termios, new_termios,
234       sizeof(my_termios)) != 0) {
235      /* do some error handling */
236  }
237
238  POSIX adds another method.  They define:
239
240       speed_t cfgetispeed(const struct termios *termios_p);
241       speed_t cfgetospeed(const struct termios *termios_p);
242
243  library calls to extract the current input or output speed from the
244  struct termios pointed to with *termio_p.  This is a variable defined
245  in the calling process.  In practice, the data contained in this
246  termios, should be obtained by the tcgetattr() call or an ioctl() call
247  using the TCGETS command.
248
249  The companion library calls are:
250
251       int cfsetispeed(struct termios *termios_p, speed_t speed);
252       int cfsetospeed(struct termios *termios_p, speed_t speed);
253
254  which are used to change the value of the baud rate in the locally
255  defined *termios_p.  Following either of these calls, either a call to
256  tcsetattr() or ioctl() with one of TCSETS, TCSETSW or TCSETSF as the
257  command to transmit the change to the kernel.
258
259  The cf* commands are preferred for portability.  Some weird Unices use
260  a considerably different format of termios.
261
262  Most implementations of Linux use only the input speed for both input
263  and output.  These functions are defined in the application program by
264  reference to <termios.h>.  In reality, they are in
265  /usr/include/asm/termbits.h.
266
267  6.  Additional Control Calls
268
269  6.1.  Sending a "break".
270
271       int ioctl(fd, TCSBRK, int arg);
272       int tcsendbreak(fd, int arg);
273
274  Send a break:  Here the action differs between the conventional
275  ioctl() call and the POSIX call.  For the conventional call, an arg of
276  '0' sets the break control line of the UART for 0.25 seconds.  For the
277  POSIX command, the break line is set for arg times 0.1 seconds.
278
279  6.2.  Hardware flow control.
280
281       int ioctl(fd, TCXONC, int action);
282       int tcflow(fd, int action);
283
284  The action flags are:
285
286  o  TCOOFF  0  suspend output
287
288  o  TCOON   1  restart output
289
290  o  TCIOFF  2  transmit STOP character to suspend input
291
292  o  TCION   3  transmit START character to restart input
293
294  6.3.  Flushing I/O buffers.
295
296       int ioctl(fd, TCFLSH, queue_selector);
297       int tcflush(fd, queue_selector);
298
299  The queue_selector flags are:
300
301  o  TCIFLUSH  0  flush any data not yet read from the input buffer
302
303  o  TCOFLUSH  1  flush any data written to the output buffer but not
304     yet transmitted
305
306  o  TCIOFLUSH 2  flush both buffers
307
308  7.  Modem control
309
310  The hardware modem control lines can be monitored or modified by the
311  ioctl(2) system call.  A set of comparable tc* calls apparently do not
312  exist.  The form of this call is:
313
314       int ioctl(fd, COMMAND, (int *)flags);
315
316  The COMMANDS and their action are:
317
318  o  TIOCMBIS  turn on control lines depending upon which bits are set
319     in flags.
320
321  o  TIOCMBIC  turn off control lines depending upon which bits are
322     unset in flags.
323  o  TIOCMGET  the appropriate bits are set in flags according to the
324     current status
325
326  o  TIOCMSET  the state of the UART is changed according to which bits
327     are set/unset in 'flags'
328
329     The bit pattern of flags refer to the following control lines:
330
331  o  TIOCM_LE      Line enable
332
333  o  TIOCM_DTR     Data Terminal Ready
334
335  o  TIOCM_RTS     Request to send
336
337  o  TIOCM_ST      Secondary transmit
338
339  o  TIOCM_SR      Secondary receive
340
341  o  TIOCM_CTS     Clear to send
342
343  o  TIOCM_CAR     Carrier detect
344
345  o  TIOCM_RNG     Ring
346
347  o  TIOCM_DSR     Data set ready
348
349  It should be noted that some of these bits are controlled by the modem
350  and the UART cannot change them but their status can be sensed by
351  TIOCMGET.  Also, most Personal Computers do not provide hardware for
352  secondary transmit and receive.
353
354  There are also a pair of ioctl() to monitor these lines.  They are
355  undocumented as far as I have learned.  The commands are TIOCMIWAIT
356  and TCIOGICOUNT.  They also differ between versions of the Linux
357  kernel.
358
359  See the lines.c file in my "serial_suite" for an example of how these
360  can be used see  <ftp://scicom.alphacd.com/pub/linux/serial_suite>
361
362  8.  Process Groups
363
364  8.1.  Sessions
365
366  8.2.  Process Groups
367
368  Any newly created process inherits the Process Group of its creator.
369  The Process Group leader has the same PID as PGID.
370
371  8.3.  Controlling Terminal
372
373  There are a series of ioctl(2) and tc*(2) calls which can be used to
374  monitor or to change the process group to which the device is
375  attached.
376
377  8.3.1.  Get the foreground group process id.
378
379  If there is no foreground group, a number not representing an existing
380  process group is returned.  On error, a -1 is returned and errno is
381  set.
382
383       int ioctl(fd, TIOCGPGRP, (pid_t *)pid);
384       int tcgetpgrp(fd, (pid_t *)pid);
385
386  8.3.2.  Set the foreground process group id of a terminal.
387
388  The fd must be the controlling terminal and be associated with the
389  session of the calling process.
390
391       int ioctl(fd, TIOCSPGRP, (pid_t *)pid);
392       int tcsetpgrp(fd, (pid_t *)pid);
393
394  8.3.3.  Get process group id.
395
396       int ioctl(fd, TIOCGPGRP, &(pid_t)pid);
397       int tcgetpgrp(fd, &(pid_t)pid);
398
399  9.  Lockfiles
400
401  Any process which accesses a serial device should first check for the
402  existence of lock file for the desired device.  If such a lock lock
403  file exists, this means that the device may be in use by another
404  process.
405
406  Check my "libdevlocks-x.x.tgz" at
407  <ftp://scicom.alphacdc.com/pub/linux> for an example of how these lock
408  files should be utilized.
409
410  10.  Additional Information
411
412  Check out my "serial_suite.tgz" for more information about programming
413  the serial ports at   <mailto:vern@zebra.alphacdc.com>.  There some
414  examples and some blurbs about setting up modems and comments about
415  some general considerations.
416
417  11.  Feedback
418
419  Please send me any corrections, questions, comments, suggestions, or
420  additional material. I would like to improve this HOWTO!  Tell me
421  exactly what you don't understand, or what could be clearer.  You can
422  reach me at  <mailto:vern@zebra.alphacdc.com> via email.  Please
423  include the version number of the Serial-Programming-HOWTO when
424  writing.
425