start page | rating of books | rating of authors | reviews | copyrights

Perl Cookbook

Perl CookbookSearch this book
Previous: 15.7. Ringing the Terminal Bell Chapter 15
User Interfaces
Next: 15.9. Checking for Waiting Input
 

15.8. Using POSIX termios

Problem

You'd like to manipulate your terminal characteristics directly.

Solution

Use the POSIX termios interface.

Description

Think of everything you can do with the stty command  - you can set everything from special characters to flow control and carriage-return mapping. The standard POSIX module provides direct access to the low-level terminal interface to implement stty -like capabilities in your program.

Example 15.2 finds what your tty's erase and kill characters are (probably backspace and Ctrl-U). Then it sets them back to their original values out of antiquity, # and @ , and has you type something. It restores them when done.

Example 15.2: demo POSIX termios

#!/usr/bin/perl -w # demo POSIX termios  use POSIX qw(:termios_h);  $term = POSIX::Termios->new; $term->getattr(fileno(STDIN));  $erase = $term->getcc(VERASE); $kill = $term->getcc(VKILL); printf "Erase is character %d, %s\n", $erase, uncontrol(chr($erase)); printf "Kill is character %d, %s\n", $kill, uncontrol(chr($kill));  $term->setcc(VERASE, ord('#')); $term->setcc(VKILL, ord('@')); $term->setattr(1, TCSANOW);  print("erase is #, kill is @; type something: "); $line = <STDIN>; print "You typed: $line";  $term->setcc(VERASE, $erase); $term->setcc(VKILL, $kill); $term->setattr(1, TCSANOW);  sub uncontrol {

     local $_ = shift;     s/([\200-\377])/sprintf("M-%c",ord($1) & 0177)/eg;     s/([\0-\37\177])/sprintf("^%c",ord($1) ^ 0100)/eg;     return $_; } 

Here's a module called HotKey that implements a readkey function in pure Perl. It doesn't provide any benefit over Term::ReadKey, but it shows POSIX termios in action:

# HotKey.pm package HotKey;  @ISA = qw(Exporter); @EXPORT = qw(cbreak cooked readkey);  use strict; use POSIX qw(:termios_h); my ($term, $oterm, $echo, $noecho, $fd_stdin);  $fd_stdin = fileno(STDIN); $term     = POSIX::Termios->new(); $term->getattr($fd_stdin); $oterm     = $term->getlflag();  $echo     = ECHO | ECHOK | ICANON; $noecho   = $oterm & ~$echo;  sub cbreak {     $term->setlflag($noecho);  # ok, so i don't want echo either     $term->setcc(VTIME, 1);     $term->setattr($fd_stdin, TCSANOW); }  sub cooked {     $term->setlflag($oterm);     $term->setcc(VTIME, 0);     $term->setattr($fd_stdin, TCSANOW); }  sub readkey {     my $key = '';     cbreak();     sysread(STDIN, $key, 1);     cooked();     return $key; }  END { cooked() }  1;





See Also

POSIX Programmer's Guide , by Donald Lewine; O'Reilly & Associates (1991); the documentation for the standard POSIX module, also in Chapter 7 of Programming Perl ; Recipe 15.6 ; Recipe 15.9


Previous: 15.7. Ringing the Terminal Bell Perl Cookbook Next: 15.9. Checking for Waiting Input
15.7. Ringing the Terminal Bell Book Index 15.9. Checking for Waiting Input