TERMIO(7) |
Linux Programmer's Manual |
TERMIO(7) |
NAME
termio - System V terminal driver interface
DESCRIPTION
termio is the name of the old System V terminal driver interface. This interface defined a
termio structure used to store terminal settings, and a range of
ioctl(2) operations to get and set terminal attributes.
The
termio interface is now obsolete: POSIX.1-1990 standardized a modified version of this interface, under the name
termios. The POSIX.1 data structure differs slightly from the System V version, and POSIX.1 defined a suite of functions to replace the various
ioctl(2) operations that existed in System V. (This was done because
ioctl(2) was unstandardized, and its variadic third argument does not allow argument type checking.)
If you're looking for page called "termio", then you can probably find most of the information that you seek in either
termios(3) or
tty_ioctl(4).
SEE ALSO
reset(1),
setterm(1),
stty(1),
termios(3),
tty(4),
tty_ioctl(4)
COLOPHON
This page is part of release 3.53 of the Linux
man-pages project. A description of the project, and information about reporting bugs, can be found at http://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/.