| 1 | .\"*************************************************************************** | 
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| 2 | .\" Copyright (c) 1998-2004,2005 Free Software Foundation, Inc.              * | 
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| 3 | .\"                                                                          * | 
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| 22 | .\"                                                                          * | 
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| 27 | .\"*************************************************************************** | 
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| 28 | .\" | 
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| 29 | .\" $Id: tset.1,v 1.15 2005/03/20 18:27:09 tom Exp $ | 
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| 30 | .TH tset 1 "" | 
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| 31 | .SH NAME | 
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| 32 | \fBtset\fR, \fBreset\fR - terminal initialization | 
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| 33 | .SH SYNOPSIS | 
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| 34 | \fBtset\fR [\fB-IQVcqrsw\fR] [\fB-\fR] [\fB-e\fR \fIch\fR] [\fB-i\fR \fIch\fR] [\fB-k\fR \fIch\fR] [\fB-m\fR \fImapping\fR] [\fIterminal\fR] | 
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| 35 | .br | 
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| 36 | \fBreset\fR [\fB-IQVcqrsw\fR] [\fB-\fR] [\fB-e\fR \fIch\fR] [\fB-i\fR \fIch\fR] [\fB-k\fR \fIch\fR] [\fB-m\fR \fImapping\fR] [\fIterminal\fR] | 
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| 37 | .SH DESCRIPTION | 
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| 38 | \&\fBTset\fR initializes terminals. | 
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| 39 | \fBTset\fR first determines the type of terminal that you are using. | 
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| 40 | This determination is done as follows, using the first terminal type found. | 
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| 41 | .PP | 
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| 42 | 1. The \fBterminal\fR argument specified on the command line. | 
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| 43 | .PP | 
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| 44 | 2. The value of the \fBTERM\fR environmental variable. | 
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| 45 | .PP | 
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| 46 | 3. (BSD systems only.) The terminal type associated with the standard | 
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| 47 | error output device in the \fI/etc/ttys\fR file.  (On Linux and | 
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| 48 | System-V-like UNIXes, \fIgetty\fR does this job by setting | 
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| 49 | \fBTERM\fR according to the type passed to it by \fI/etc/inittab\fR.) | 
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| 50 | .PP | 
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| 51 | 4. The default terminal type, ``unknown''. | 
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| 52 | .PP | 
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| 53 | If the terminal type was not specified on the command-line, the \fB-m\fR | 
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| 54 | option mappings are then applied (see the section | 
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| 55 | .B TERMINAL TYPE MAPPING | 
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| 56 | for more information). | 
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| 57 | Then, if the terminal type begins with a question mark (``?''), the | 
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| 58 | user is prompted for confirmation of the terminal type.  An empty | 
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| 59 | response confirms the type, or, another type can be entered to specify | 
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| 60 | a new type.  Once the terminal type has been determined, the terminfo | 
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| 61 | entry for the terminal is retrieved.  If no terminfo entry is found | 
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| 62 | for the type, the user is prompted for another terminal type. | 
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| 63 | .PP | 
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| 64 | Once the terminfo entry is retrieved, the window size, backspace, interrupt | 
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| 65 | and line kill characters (among many other things) are set and the terminal | 
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| 66 | and tab initialization strings are sent to the standard error output. | 
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| 67 | Finally, if the erase, interrupt and line kill characters have changed, | 
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| 68 | or are not set to their default values, their values are displayed to the | 
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| 69 | standard error output. | 
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| 70 | Use the \fB-c\fP or \fB-w\fP option to select only the window sizing | 
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| 71 | versus the other initialization. | 
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| 72 | If neither option is given, both are assumed. | 
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| 73 | .PP | 
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| 74 | When invoked as \fBreset\fR, \fBtset\fR sets cooked and echo modes, | 
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| 75 | turns off cbreak and raw modes, turns on newline translation and | 
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| 76 | resets any unset special characters to their default values before | 
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| 77 | doing the terminal initialization described above.  This is useful | 
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| 78 | after a program dies leaving a terminal in an abnormal state.  Note, | 
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| 79 | you may have to type | 
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| 80 |  | 
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| 81 | \fB<LF>reset<LF>\fR | 
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| 82 |  | 
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| 83 | (the line-feed character is normally control-J) to get the terminal | 
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| 84 | to work, as carriage-return may no longer work in the abnormal state. | 
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| 85 | Also, the terminal will often not echo the command. | 
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| 86 | .PP | 
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| 87 | The options are as follows: | 
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| 88 | .TP 5 | 
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| 89 | .B -c | 
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| 90 | Set control characters and modes. | 
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| 91 | .B -e | 
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| 92 | Set the erase character to \fIch\fR. | 
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| 93 | .TP | 
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| 94 | .B -I | 
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| 95 | Do not send the terminal or tab initialization strings to the terminal. | 
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| 96 | .TP | 
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| 97 | .B -i | 
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| 98 | Set the interrupt character to \fIch\fR. | 
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| 99 | .TP | 
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| 100 | .B -k | 
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| 101 | Set the line kill character to \fIch\fR. | 
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| 102 | .TP | 
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| 103 | .B -m | 
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| 104 | Specify a mapping from a port type to a terminal. | 
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| 105 | See the section | 
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| 106 | .B TERMINAL TYPE MAPPING | 
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| 107 | for more information. | 
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| 108 | .TP | 
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| 109 | .B -Q | 
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| 110 | Do not display any values for the erase, interrupt and line kill characters. | 
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| 111 | Normally \fBtset\fR displays the values for control characters which | 
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| 112 | differ from the system's default values. | 
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| 113 | .TP | 
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| 114 | .B -q | 
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| 115 | The terminal type is displayed to the standard output, and the terminal is | 
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| 116 | not initialized in any way.  The option `-' by itself is equivalent but | 
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| 117 | archaic. | 
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| 118 | .TP | 
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| 119 | .B -r | 
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| 120 | Print the terminal type to the standard error output. | 
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| 121 | .TP | 
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| 122 | .B -s | 
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| 123 | Print the sequence of shell commands to initialize the environment variable | 
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| 124 | \fBTERM\fR to the standard output. | 
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| 125 | See the section | 
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| 126 | .B SETTING THE ENVIRONMENT | 
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| 127 | for details. | 
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| 128 | .TP | 
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| 129 | .B -V | 
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| 130 | reports the version of ncurses which was used in this program, and exits. | 
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| 131 | .TP | 
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| 132 | .B -w | 
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| 133 | Resize the window to match the size deduced via \fBsetupterm\fP. | 
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| 134 | Normally this has no effect, | 
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| 135 | unless \fBsetupterm\fP is not able to detect the window size. | 
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| 136 | .PP | 
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| 137 | The arguments for the \fB-e\fR, \fB-i\fR, and \fB-k\fR | 
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| 138 | options may either be entered as actual characters or by using the `hat' | 
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| 139 | notation, i.e. control-h may be specified as ``^H'' or ``^h''. | 
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| 140 | . | 
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| 141 | .SH SETTING THE ENVIRONMENT | 
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| 142 | It is often desirable to enter the terminal type and information about | 
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| 143 | the terminal's capabilities into the shell's environment. | 
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| 144 | This is done using the \fB-s\fR option. | 
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| 145 | .PP | 
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| 146 | When the \fB-s\fR option is specified, the commands to enter the information | 
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| 147 | into the shell's environment are written to the standard output.  If | 
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| 148 | the \fBSHELL\fR environmental variable ends in ``csh'', the commands | 
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| 149 | are for \fBcsh\fR, otherwise, they are for \fBsh\fR. | 
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| 150 | Note, the \fBcsh\fR commands set and unset the shell variable | 
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| 151 | \fBnoglob\fR, leaving it unset.  The following line in the \fB.login\fR | 
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| 152 | or \fB.profile\fR files will initialize the environment correctly: | 
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| 153 |  | 
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| 154 | eval \`tset -s options ... \` | 
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| 155 |  | 
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| 156 | .SH TERMINAL TYPE MAPPING | 
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| 157 | When the terminal is not hardwired into the system (or the current | 
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| 158 | system information is incorrect) the terminal type derived from the | 
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| 159 | \fI/etc/ttys\fR file or the \fBTERM\fR environmental variable is often | 
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| 160 | something generic like \fBnetwork\fR, \fBdialup\fR, or \fBunknown\fR. | 
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| 161 | When \fBtset\fR is used in a startup script it is often desirable to | 
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| 162 | provide information about the type of terminal used on such ports. | 
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| 163 | .PP | 
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| 164 | The purpose of the \fB-m\fR option is to map | 
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| 165 | from some set of conditions to a terminal type, that is, to | 
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| 166 | tell \fBtset\fR | 
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| 167 | ``If I'm on this port at a particular speed, guess that I'm on that | 
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| 168 | kind of terminal''. | 
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| 169 | .PP | 
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| 170 | The argument to the \fB-m\fR option consists of an optional port type, an | 
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| 171 | optional operator, an optional baud rate specification, an optional | 
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| 172 | colon (``:'') character and a terminal type.  The port type is a | 
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| 173 | string (delimited by either the operator or the colon character).  The | 
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| 174 | operator may be any combination of ``>'', ``<'', ``@'', and ``!''; ``>'' | 
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| 175 | means greater than, ``<'' means less than, ``@'' means equal to | 
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| 176 | and ``!'' inverts the sense of the test. | 
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| 177 | The baud rate is specified as a number and is compared with the speed | 
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| 178 | of the standard error output (which should be the control terminal). | 
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| 179 | The terminal type is a string. | 
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| 180 | .PP | 
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| 181 | If the terminal type is not specified on the command line, the \fB-m\fR | 
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| 182 | mappings are applied to the terminal type.  If the port type and baud | 
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| 183 | rate match the mapping, the terminal type specified in the mapping | 
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| 184 | replaces the current type.  If more than one mapping is specified, the | 
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| 185 | first applicable mapping is used. | 
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| 186 | .PP | 
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| 187 | For example, consider the following mapping: \fBdialup>9600:vt100\fR. | 
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| 188 | The port type is dialup , the operator is >, the baud rate | 
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| 189 | specification is 9600, and the terminal type is vt100.  The result of | 
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| 190 | this mapping is to specify that if the terminal type is \fBdialup\fR, | 
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| 191 | and the baud rate is greater than 9600 baud, a terminal type of | 
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| 192 | \fBvt100\fR will be used. | 
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| 193 | .PP | 
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| 194 | If no baud rate is specified, the terminal type will match any baud rate. | 
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| 195 | If no port type is specified, the terminal type will match any port type. | 
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| 196 | For example, \fB-m dialup:vt100 -m :?xterm\fR | 
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| 197 | will cause any dialup port, regardless of baud rate, to match the terminal | 
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| 198 | type vt100, and any non-dialup port type to match the terminal type ?xterm. | 
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| 199 | Note, because of the leading question mark, the user will be | 
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| 200 | queried on a default port as to whether they are actually using an xterm | 
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| 201 | terminal. | 
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| 202 | .PP | 
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| 203 | No whitespace characters are permitted in the \fB-m\fR option argument. | 
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| 204 | Also, to avoid problems with meta-characters, it is suggested that the | 
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| 205 | entire \fB-m\fR option argument be placed within single quote characters, | 
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| 206 | and that \fBcsh\fR users insert a backslash character (``\e'') before | 
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| 207 | any exclamation marks (``!''). | 
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| 208 | .SH HISTORY | 
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| 209 | The \fBtset\fR command appeared in BSD 3.0.  The \fBncurses\fR implementation | 
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| 210 | was lightly adapted from the 4.4BSD sources for a terminfo environment by Eric | 
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| 211 | S. Raymond <esr@snark.thyrsus.com>. | 
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| 212 | .SH COMPATIBILITY | 
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| 213 | The \fBtset\fR utility has been provided for backward-compatibility with BSD | 
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| 214 | environments (under most modern UNIXes, \fB/etc/inittab\fR and \fIgetty\fR(1) | 
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| 215 | can set \fBTERM\fR appropriately for each dial-up line; this obviates what was | 
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| 216 | \fBtset\fR's most important use).  This implementation behaves like 4.4BSD | 
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| 217 | tset, with a few exceptions specified here. | 
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| 218 | .PP | 
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| 219 | The \fB-S\fR option of BSD tset no longer works; it prints an error message to stderr | 
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| 220 | and dies.  The \fB-s\fR option only sets \fBTERM\fR, not \fBTERMCAP\fP.  Both these | 
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| 221 | changes are because the \fBTERMCAP\fR variable is no longer supported under | 
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| 222 | terminfo-based \fBncurses\fR, which makes \fBtset -S\fR useless (we made it die | 
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| 223 | noisily rather than silently induce lossage). | 
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| 224 | .PP | 
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| 225 | There was an undocumented 4.4BSD feature that invoking tset via a link named | 
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| 226 | `TSET` (or via any other name beginning with an upper-case letter) set the | 
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| 227 | terminal to use upper-case only.  This feature has been omitted. | 
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| 228 | .PP | 
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| 229 | The \fB-A\fR, \fB-E\fR, \fB-h\fR, \fB-u\fR and \fB-v\fR | 
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| 230 | options were deleted from the \fBtset\fR | 
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| 231 | utility in 4.4BSD. | 
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| 232 | None of them were documented in 4.3BSD and all are | 
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| 233 | of limited utility at best. | 
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| 234 | The \fB-a\fR, \fB-d\fR, and \fB-p\fR options are similarly | 
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| 235 | not documented or useful, but were retained as they appear to be in | 
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| 236 | widespread use.  It is strongly recommended that any usage of these | 
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| 237 | three options be changed to use the \fB-m\fR option instead.  The | 
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| 238 | -n option remains, but has no effect.  The \fB-adnp\fR options are therefore | 
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| 239 | omitted from the usage summary above. | 
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| 240 | .PP | 
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| 241 | It is still permissible to specify the \fB-e\fR, \fB-i\fR, and \fB-k\fR options without | 
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| 242 | arguments, although it is strongly recommended that such usage be fixed to | 
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| 243 | explicitly specify the character. | 
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| 244 | .PP | 
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| 245 | As of 4.4BSD, executing \fBtset\fR as \fBreset\fR no longer implies the \fB-Q\fR | 
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| 246 | option.  Also, the interaction between the - option and the \fIterminal\fR | 
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| 247 | argument in some historic implementations of \fBtset\fR has been removed. | 
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| 248 | .SH ENVIRONMENT | 
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| 249 | The \fBtset\fR command uses the \fBSHELL\fR and \fBTERM\fR | 
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| 250 | environment variables. | 
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| 251 | .SH FILES | 
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| 252 | .TP 5 | 
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| 253 | /etc/ttys | 
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| 254 | system port name to terminal type mapping database (BSD versions only). | 
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| 255 | .TP | 
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| 256 | @TERMINFO@ | 
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| 257 | terminal capability database | 
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| 258 | .SH SEE ALSO | 
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| 259 | csh(1), | 
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| 260 | sh(1), | 
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| 261 | stty(1), | 
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| 262 | setupterm(3), | 
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| 263 | tty(4), | 
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| 264 | termcap(5), | 
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| 265 | ttys(5), | 
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| 266 | environ(7) | 
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| 267 | .\"# | 
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| 268 | .\"# The following sets edit modes for GNU EMACS | 
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| 269 | .\"# Local Variables: | 
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| 270 | .\"# mode:nroff | 
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| 271 | .\"# fill-column:79 | 
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| 272 | .\"# End: | 
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| 273 |  | 
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