wsconscfg(8) - NetBSD Manual Pages

WSCONSCFG(8)            NetBSD System Manager's Manual            WSCONSCFG(8)


NAME
wsconscfg - configure virtual terminals on a wscons display
SYNOPSIS
wsconscfg [-f ctldev] [-t type] [-e emul] index wsconscfg [-f ctldev] -d [-F] index wsconscfg [-f ctldev] -k | -m [-d] [index]
DESCRIPTION
The wsconscfg tool allows to create and delete virtual terminals on dis- play devices controlled by the wscons terminal framework if the underly- ing display hardware driver supports multiple screens. Further it con- trols the assignment of keyboards to displays. The index argument speci- fies which virtual terminal is to be configured; the allowed numbers are from 0 to an implementation-specified value (currently 7, allowing for 8 virtual terminals on a display). In keyboard configuration mode, it specifies the wskbd(4) device to attach or detach. Without further op- tion arguments, a virtual terminal is created with implementation specif- ic properties and a default terminal emulation variant selected at kernel compile time. The options are: -f ctldev Specify the control device of the wscons display to operate on. Default is /dev/ttyEcfg. -d Delete the specified terminal. A terminal opened by a program will not be deleted unless the -F option is applied. Terminals used by the operating system console or a graphics program (X server) cannot be deleted. With the -k flag, the keyboard specified by index will be detached from the wscons display. With the -m flag, the multiplexor specified by index will be detached from the wscons display. -F Force deleting of a terminal even if it is in use by a user space program. -k Do keyboard related operations instead of virtual screen con- figuration. Without other flags, a keyboard will be attached to the display device. The index argument can be omitted, in this case the first free keyboard will be used. -m Do multiplexor related operations instead of virtual screen configuration. Without other flags, a multiplexor will be at- tached to the display device. -t type Specify a screen type to use. Screen types refer to display format, colour depth and other low-level display properties. Valid type arguments are defined by the underlying display de- vice driver. -e emul Specify the terminal emulation to use for the virtual termi- nal. The set of available terminal emulations is determined at kernel compile time. See wscons(4) for details. Typically, the wsconscfg utility will be invoked in system startup by the /etc/rc.d/wscons script, controlled by the /etc/wscons.conf configuration file.
FILES
/etc/wscons.conf
EXAMPLES
wsconscfg -t 80x50 -e vt100 1 Configure screen 1 (i.e. the second), it will get the type `80x50' and use the VT100 terminal emulation. (Note: `80x50' is a screen type offered by the vga(4) display driver. In this particular case, an 8x8-font must be loaded before to make the screen useful. See wsfontload(8).) wsconscfg -k Connect the first unconnected keyboard to the display.
SEE ALSO
wscons(4), wskbd(4), wsconsctl(8), wsfontload(8)
BUGS
There should be an easy way to get a list of the screen types available on a display, and of the emulations supported by the kernel. NetBSD 1.6.2 January 12, 1999 2

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