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author | Ulrich Drepper <drepper@redhat.com> | 1998-06-23 09:16:39 +0000 |
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committer | Ulrich Drepper <drepper@redhat.com> | 1998-06-23 09:16:39 +0000 |
commit | e951d34052a3e76fa3045de7b9368e65115b1345 (patch) | |
tree | 281a85d58b80cb8ac32975292239a0ac67b81ec1 /manual | |
parent | 520e73a231f021416db0fa4a9116838f8c8f9054 (diff) | |
download | glibc-e951d34052a3e76fa3045de7b9368e65115b1345.tar.gz |
Update.
1998-06-23 Andreas Jaeger <aj@arthur.rhein-neckar.de>
* manual/terminal.texi (Pseudo-Terminals): Correct typos.
Diffstat (limited to 'manual')
-rw-r--r-- | manual/terminal.texi | 19 |
1 files changed, 10 insertions, 9 deletions
diff --git a/manual/terminal.texi b/manual/terminal.texi index e6dc36d6b8..14dda44645 100644 --- a/manual/terminal.texi +++ b/manual/terminal.texi @@ -1837,9 +1837,9 @@ example does so. @cindex pseudo-terminals A @dfn{pseudo-terminal} is a special interprocess communication channel -that acts like a terminal. On one end of the channel is called the +that acts like a terminal. One end of the channel is called the @dfn{master} side or @dfn{master pseudo-terminal device}, the other side -is called the @dfn{slave} side. Data written to the the master side is +is called the @dfn{slave} side. Data written to the master side is received by the slave side as if it was the result of a user typing at an ordinary terminal, and data written to the slave side is sent to the master side as if it was written on an ordinary terminal. @@ -1858,7 +1858,7 @@ implement their terminal emulation functionality. @cindex allocating pseudo-terminals @pindex stdlib.h -This subsection describes functions for allocating a pseudo-terminals, +This subsection describes functions for allocating a pseudo-terminal, and for making this pseudo-terminal available for actual use. These functions are declared in the header file @file{stdlib.h}. @@ -2020,7 +2020,7 @@ These functions, derived from BSD, are available in the separate This function allocates and opens a pseudo-terminal pair, returning the file descriptor for the master in @var{*amaster}, and the file descriptor for the slave in @var{*aslave}. If the argument @var{name} -is not a null pointer, the name file name of the slave pseudo-terminal +is not a null pointer, the file name of the slave pseudo-terminal device is stored in @code{*name}. If @var{termp} is not a null pointer, the terminal attributes of the slave are set to the ones specified in the structure that @var{termp} points to (@pxref{Terminal Modes}). @@ -2031,11 +2031,12 @@ the slave is set to the values specified in the structure that The normal return value from @code{openpty} is @math{0}; a value of @math{-1} is returned in case of failure. -@strong{Warning:} Using the @code{openpty} with @var{name} not set to -@code{NULL} is @strong{very dangerous} because it provides no protection -against overflowing the string @var{name}. You should use the -@code{ttyname} function on the file descriptor returned in @var{*slave} -to find out the file name of the slave pseudo-terminal device instead. +@strong{Warning:} Using the @code{openpty} function with @var{name} not +set to @code{NULL} is @strong{very dangerous} because it provides no +protection against overflowing the string @var{name}. You should use +the @code{ttyname} function on the file descriptor returned in +@var{*slave} to find out the file name of the slave pseudo-terminal +device instead. @end deftypefun @comment pty.h |