stty hupcl ixon ixoff

Peeter Joot picture Peeter Joot · Jun 21, 2011 · Viewed 7.9k times · Source

I'm seeing stty, not a typewritter messages on hpux (despite an interactive terminal check?), and am guessing that these are due to the stty lines in my .kshrc file:

case $- in
*i* )
    stty hupcl ixon ixoff
    stty erase '^?' kill '^U' intr '^C' eof '^D' susp '^Z'
;;
esac

Two questions:

1) I know why the erase line is there, since backspace doesn't work without it. These .kshrc lines I've inherited, but don't know what they do.

Anybody know the point of the hupcl ixon ixoff lines? The stty man page isn't particularly enlightening:

hupcl (-hupcl)           Hang up (do not hang up) modem connection on
                         last close.

ixon (-ixon)             Enable (disable) START/STOP output control.
                         Output is stopped by sending an ASCII DC3 and
                         started by sending an ASCII DC1.

ixoff (-ixoff)           Request that the system send (not send)
                         START/STOP characters when the input queue is
                         nearly empty/full.

2) Is there a different way to check for interactive terminals. I had tty -s ; if [ $? ] before but that also appears to be noisy on hpux.

Answer

bpo picture bpo · Aug 5, 2011

ixon and ixoff are used to insist that Ctrl-s and Ctrl-q be interpreted as control flow (scroll lock) signals. They're the default on most systems, but if you have a fast connection and/or don't anticipate a volume of output that your terminal can't handle, you're fine to turn them off.

I typically use stty -ixon -ixoff so I can reclaim the Ctrl-s and Ctrl-q key bindings for more modern purposes (e.g. "save" and "quit").

For more details: https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/12107/how-to-unfreeze-after-accidentally-pressing-ctrl-s-in-a-terminal#12146