This section describes the flags for the c_lflag member of the
struct termios structure. These flags generally control
higher-level aspects of input processing than the input modes flags
described in Input Modes, such as echoing, signals, and the choice
of canonical or noncanonical input.
The c_lflag member itself is an integer, and you change the flags
and fields using the operators &, |, and ^. Don't
try to specify the entire value for c_lflag—instead, change
only specific flags and leave the rest untouched (see Setting Modes).
— Macro: tcflag_t ICANON
This bit, if set, enables canonical input processing mode. Otherwise,
input is processed in noncanonical mode. See Canonical or Not.
— Macro: tcflag_t ECHO
If this bit is set, echoing of input characters back to the terminal
is enabled.
— Macro: tcflag_t ECHOE
If this bit is set, echoing indicates erasure of input with the ERASE
character by erasing the last character in the current line from the
screen. Otherwise, the character erased is re-echoed to show what has
happened (suitable for a printing terminal).
This bit only controls the display behavior; the ICANON bit by
itself controls actual recognition of the ERASE character and erasure of
input, without which ECHOE is simply irrelevant.
— Macro: tcflag_t ECHOPRT
This bit is like ECHOE, enables display of the ERASE character in
a way that is geared to a hardcopy terminal. When you type the ERASE
character, a `\' character is printed followed by the first
character erased. Typing the ERASE character again just prints the next
character erased. Then, the next time you type a normal character, a
`/' character is printed before the character echoes.
This is a BSD extension, and exists only in BSD systems and the
GNU system.
— Macro: tcflag_t ECHOK
This bit enables special display of the KILL character by moving to a
new line after echoing the KILL character normally. The behavior of
ECHOKE (below) is nicer to look at.
If this bit is not set, the KILL character echoes just as it would if it
were not the KILL character. Then it is up to the user to remember that
the KILL character has erased the preceding input; there is no
indication of this on the screen.
This bit only controls the display behavior; the ICANON bit by
itself controls actual recognition of the KILL character and erasure of
input, without which ECHOK is simply irrelevant.
— Macro: tcflag_t ECHOKE
This bit is similar to ECHOK. It enables special display of the
KILL character by erasing on the screen the entire line that has been
killed. This is a BSD extension, and exists only in BSD systems and the
GNU system.
— Macro: tcflag_t ECHONL
If this bit is set and the ICANON bit is also set, then the
newline ('\n') character is echoed even if the ECHO bit
is not set.
— Macro: tcflag_t ECHOCTL
If this bit is set and the ECHO bit is also set, echo control
characters with `^' followed by the corresponding text character.
Thus, control-A echoes as `^A'. This is usually the preferred mode
for interactive input, because echoing a control character back to the
terminal could have some undesired effect on the terminal.
This is a BSD extension, and exists only in BSD systems and the
GNU system.
— Macro: tcflag_t ISIG
This bit controls whether the INTR, QUIT, and SUSP characters are
recognized. The functions associated with these characters are performed
if and only if this bit is set. Being in canonical or noncanonical
input mode has no affect on the interpretation of these characters.
You should use caution when disabling recognition of these characters.
Programs that cannot be interrupted interactively are very
user-unfriendly. If you clear this bit, your program should provide
some alternate interface that allows the user to interactively send the
signals associated with these characters, or to escape from the program.
See Signal Characters.
— Macro: tcflag_t IEXTEN
POSIX.1 gives IEXTEN implementation-defined meaning,
so you cannot rely on this interpretation on all systems.
On BSD systems and the GNU system, it enables the LNEXT and DISCARD characters.
See Other Special.
— Macro: tcflag_t NOFLSH
Normally, the INTR, QUIT, and SUSP characters cause input and output
queues for the terminal to be cleared. If this bit is set, the queues
are not cleared.
— Macro: tcflag_t TOSTOP
If this bit is set and the system supports job control, then
SIGTTOU signals are generated by background processes that
attempt to write to the terminal. See Access to the Terminal.
The following bits are BSD extensions; they exist only in BSD systems
and the GNU system.
— Macro: tcflag_t ALTWERASE
This bit determines how far the WERASE character should erase. The
WERASE character erases back to the beginning of a word; the question
is, where do words begin?
If this bit is clear, then the beginning of a word is a nonwhitespace
character following a whitespace character. If the bit is set, then the
beginning of a word is an alphanumeric character or underscore following
a character which is none of those.
See Editing Characters, for more information about the WERASE character.
— Macro: tcflag_t FLUSHO
This is the bit that toggles when the user types the DISCARD character.
While this bit is set, all output is discarded. See Other Special.
— Macro: tcflag_t NOKERNINFO
Setting this bit disables handling of the STATUS character.
See Other Special.
— Macro: tcflag_t PENDIN
If this bit is set, it indicates that there is a line of input that
needs to be reprinted. Typing the REPRINT character sets this bit; the
bit remains set until reprinting is finished. See Editing Characters.
Published under the terms of the GNU General Public License