\section{Built-in Module \module{termios}} \declaremodule{builtin}{termios} \modulesynopsis{\POSIX{} style tty control.} \indexii{\POSIX{}}{I/O control} \indexii{tty}{I/O control} This module provides an interface to the \POSIX{} calls for tty I/O control. For a complete description of these calls, see the \POSIX{} or \UNIX{} manual pages. It is only available for those \UNIX{} versions that support \POSIX{} \emph{termios} style tty I/O control (and then only if configured at installation time). All functions in this module take a file descriptor \var{fd} as their first argument. This must be an integer file descriptor, such as returned by \code{sys.stdin.fileno()}. This module should be used in conjunction with the \module{TERMIOS}\refstmodindex{TERMIOS} module, which defines the relevant symbolic constants (see the next section). The module defines the following functions: \begin{funcdesc}{tcgetattr}{fd} Return a list containing the tty attributes for file descriptor \var{fd}, as follows: \code{[}\var{iflag}, \var{oflag}, \var{cflag}, \var{lflag}, \var{ispeed}, \var{ospeed}, \var{cc}\code{]} where \var{cc} is a list of the tty special characters (each a string of length 1, except the items with indices \constant{TERMIOS.VMIN} and \constant{TERMIOS.VTIME}, which are integers when these fields are defined). The interpretation of the flags and the speeds as well as the indexing in the \var{cc} array must be done using the symbolic constants defined in the \module{TERMIOS} module. \end{funcdesc} \begin{funcdesc}{tcsetattr}{fd, when, attributes} Set the tty attributes for file descriptor \var{fd} from the \var{attributes}, which is a list like the one returned by \function{tcgetattr()}. The \var{when} argument determines when the attributes are changed: \constant{TERMIOS.TCSANOW} to change immediately, \constant{TERMIOS.TCSADRAIN} to change after transmitting all queued output, or \constant{TERMIOS.TCSAFLUSH} to change after transmitting all queued output and discarding all queued input. \end{funcdesc} \begin{funcdesc}{tcsendbreak}{fd, duration} Send a break on file descriptor \var{fd}. A zero \var{duration} sends a break for 0.25--0.5 seconds; a nonzero \var{duration} has a system dependent meaning. \end{funcdesc} \begin{funcdesc}{tcdrain}{fd} Wait until all output written to file descriptor \var{fd} has been transmitted. \end{funcdesc} \begin{funcdesc}{tcflush}{fd, queue} Discard queued data on file descriptor \var{fd}. The \var{queue} selector specifies which queue: \constant{TERMIOS.TCIFLUSH} for the input queue, \constant{TERMIOS.TCOFLUSH} for the output queue, or \constant{TERMIOS.TCIOFLUSH} for both queues. \end{funcdesc} \begin{funcdesc}{tcflow}{fd, action} Suspend or resume input or output on file descriptor \var{fd}. The \var{action} argument can be \constant{TERMIOS.TCOOFF} to suspend output, \constant{TERMIOS.TCOON} to restart output, \constant{TERMIOS.TCIOFF} to suspend input, or \constant{TERMIOS.TCION} to restart input. \end{funcdesc} \subsection{Example} \nodename{termios Example} Here's a function that prompts for a password with echoing turned off. Note the technique using a separate \function{tcgetattr()} call and a \keyword{try} ... \keyword{finally} statement to ensure that the old tty attributes are restored exactly no matter what happens: \begin{verbatim} def getpass(prompt = "Password: "): import termios, TERMIOS, sys fd = sys.stdin.fileno() old = termios.tcgetattr(fd) new = termios.tcgetattr(fd) new[3] = new[3] & ~TERMIOS.ECHO # lflags try: termios.tcsetattr(fd, TERMIOS.TCSADRAIN, new) passwd = raw_input(prompt) finally: termios.tcsetattr(fd, TERMIOS.TCSADRAIN, old) return passwd \end{verbatim} \section{Standard Module \module{TERMIOS}} \declaremodule[TERMIOSuppercase]{standard}{TERMIOS} \modulesynopsis{The symbolic constants required to use the \module{termios} module.} \indexii{\POSIX{}}{I/O control} \indexii{tty}{I/O control} This module defines the symbolic constants required to use the \module{termios}\refbimodindex{termios} module (see the previous section). See the \POSIX{} or \UNIX{} manual pages (or the source) for a list of those constants. Note: this module resides in a system-dependent subdirectory of the Python library directory. You may have to generate it for your particular system using the script \file{Tools/scripts/h2py.py}.