termios
— POSIX style tty control¶This module provides an interface to the POSIX calls for tty I/O control. For a complete description of these calls, see termios(2) Unix manual page. It is only available for those Unix versions that support POSIX termios style tty I/O control configured during installation.
All functions in this module take a file descriptor fd as their first
argument. This can be an integer file descriptor, such as returned by
sys.stdin.fileno()
, or a file object, such as sys.stdin
itself.
This module also defines all the constants needed to work with the functions provided here; these have the same name as their counterparts in C. Please refer to your system documentation for more information on using these terminal control interfaces.
The module defines the following functions:
termios.
tcgetattr
(fd)¶Return a list containing the tty attributes for file descriptor fd, as
follows: [iflag, oflag, cflag, lflag, ispeed, ospeed, cc]
where cc is a
list of the tty special characters (each a string of length 1, except the
items with indices VMIN
and VTIME
, which are integers when
these fields are defined). The interpretation of the flags and the speeds as
well as the indexing in the cc array must be done using the symbolic
constants defined in the termios
module.
termios.
tcsetattr
(fd, when, attributes)¶Set the tty attributes for file descriptor fd from the attributes, which is
a list like the one returned by tcgetattr()
. The when argument
determines when the attributes are changed: TCSANOW
to change
immediately, TCSADRAIN
to change after transmitting all queued output,
or TCSAFLUSH
to change after transmitting all queued output and
discarding all queued input.
termios.
tcsendbreak
(fd, duration)¶Send a break on file descriptor fd. A zero duration sends a break for 0.25 –0.5 seconds; a nonzero duration has a system dependent meaning.
termios.
tcdrain
(fd)¶Wait until all output written to file descriptor fd has been transmitted.
termios.
tcflush
(fd, queue)¶Discard queued data on file descriptor fd. The queue selector specifies
which queue: TCIFLUSH
for the input queue, TCOFLUSH
for the
output queue, or TCIOFLUSH
for both queues.
termios.
tcflow
(fd, action)¶Suspend or resume input or output on file descriptor fd. The action
argument can be TCOOFF
to suspend output, TCOON
to restart
output, TCIOFF
to suspend input, or TCION
to restart input.
See also
tty
Here’s a function that prompts for a password with echoing turned off. Note the
technique using a separate tcgetattr()
call and a try
...
finally
statement to ensure that the old tty attributes are restored
exactly no matter what happens:
def getpass(prompt="Password: "):
import 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 = input(prompt)
finally:
termios.tcsetattr(fd, termios.TCSADRAIN, old)
return passwd