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ttyI

ttyi(4)                          Special files                         ttyi(4)



NAME
       ttyI - ISDN character devices with modem emulator

DESCRIPTION
       ttyI[0-63] are emulated tty devices of the Linux ISDN subsystem.  These
       devices can be used in the same way as the traditional  serial  devices
       ttySx.   The official major device numbers are 43 for ttyI .  The minor
       device numbers start with 0 and end with 63.

       The ISDN tty devices are equipped with a modem emulation implementing a
       set of traditional and some special AT commands. This provides easy use
       together with almost all communication software that  uses  modem  com-
       mands:  minicom(1),  seyon(1),  XCept(1), uucico(8), mgetty(8), dip(8),
       pppd(8) and more. When enabled during kernel configuration, the  emula-
       tor  is  capable  of a reduced set of commands to support audio. To use
       audio features, an ISDN card with a audio-capable low-level  driver  is
       needed.  Currently  the  only  audio-capable  drivers are the teles and
       HiSax driver.

       The line disciplines are handled by the kernel so that SLIP, CSLIP  and
       asynchronous PPP are possible.

       The port speed of the ISDN tty devices is always 64000 bps.


AT COMMAND SET
       The  description  of AT commands here does not cover audio related com-
       mands. For a description of audio related commands, see  isdn_audio(4).
       The following AT commands are supported by ISDN tty devices:

       ATA    Answer an incoming call.

       ATDnum Dial  number  num.   Allowed are digits [0-9] and the characters
              ",", "#", ".", "*", "W", "P", "T", "S", "-". The characters  are
              ignored  except  of "S" which indicates a SPV if it precedes the
              number (only German 1TR6 ISDN).

       ATE0   Echo off.

       ATE1   Echo on (default).

       ATH    Hang up.

       ATH0   Hang up.

       ATH1   Off hook (ignored).

       ATI    Return device Information ("ISDN for Linux...").

       ATI0   Return device Information ("ISDN for Linux...").

       ATI1   Return device Information ("ISDN for Linux...").

       ATI2   Return Statistics of last connection.

       ATO    Return from command mode to online mode (data mode).

       ATQ0   Enable result codes (default).

       ATQ1   Disable result codes.

       ATSx=y Set register x to value y.

       ATSx?  Show content of register x.

       ATSx.y=z
              Set register x, bit y to value z

       ATSx.y?
              Show bit y of register x.

       ATV0   Print result code as number.

       ATV1   Print result code as text (default).

       ATZ    Reset all registers and load profile values.

       AT&Bx  Set packet size of outgoing packets to value x  (maximum  4000).
              The actual packet size depends on the hardware driver and may be
              smaller than x (e.g. with the teles driver). There  will  be  no
              error  message  if  the value is bigger than the hardware driver
              can process. However the size of the outgoing  packets  will  be
              set correctly.

       AT&D2  DTR  falling edge: hang up and return to command mode (default).

       AT&D3  DTR falling edge: hang up, return to command mode and reset  all
              registers.

       AT&Ex  Set MSN (Euro-ISDN, EDSS1) or EAZ (German 1TR6) to value x.  For
              MSNs, x is a string of digits representing the local phone  num-
              ber,  while for EAZs x should be only the last digit of the Num-
              ber.

       AT&F   Set all registers and profile to "factory-defaults".

       AT&Lplist
              Set list of phone numbers to listen on.   plist  is  a  list  of
              wildcard patterns separated by semicolon. If this is set, it has
              precedence over the MSN set by AT&E.

       AT&V   Show current register settings.

       AT&W0  Write registers  and  EAZ/MSN  to  profile.  (You  need  to  run
              iprofd(8) for making changes permanent.)

       AT&X0  Disable BTX-Mode (default).

       AT&X1  Enable BTX-Mode.

ESCAPE SEQUENCE
       During a data connection, the driver can be set to command mode by typ-
       ing in delay+++delay.  The escape character (default "+")  may  be  set
       via register 2. The delay must be at least 1.5 seconds and between each
       escape character the pause must not exceed 0.5 seconds.  ATO brings the
       modem emulation back to data mode.

REGISTERS
       0 (default 0)
              Number  of  rings  on  which the "modem" will answer. (S0=0 will
              disable auto answering).

       1 (default 0)
              Counts and stores the number of rings from an incoming call.

       2 (default 43 = '+')
              ASCII code of the escape character.

       3 (default 13 = CR)
              ASCII code of Carriage Return.

       4 (default 10 = LF)
              ASCII code of Line Feed.

       5 (default 8 = BS)
              ASCII code of Backspace.

       6 (default 3)
              Duration, in number of seconds, modem waits before dialling.

       7 (default 60)
              Wait time for carrier in seconds.

       8 (default 2)
              Pause time for comma (',') in dial command in seconds (ignored).

       9 (default 6)
              Carrier detect time in tenths of seconds (ignored).

       10 (default 7)
              Wait  time  until hangup after carrier loss in tenths of seconds
              (ignored).

       11 (default 70)
              Duration and delay  in  milliseconds  for  touch  tone  dialling
              (ignored).

       12 (default 69)
              Bit-mapped register.
              Bit  Description
              0    0 = Suppress response messages.
                   1 = Show response messages.
              1    0 = Response messages as text.
                   1 = Numeric response messages.
              2    0 = Echo off.
                   1 = Echo on.
              3    0 = DCD always on.
                   1 = DCD follows carrier.
              4    0 = CTS follows RTS.
                   1 = Ignore RTS, CTS always on.
              5    0 = Low-edge on DTR: Hangup and return
                        to command mode.
                   1 = Same as 0 but also resets all
                        registers.
              6    0 = DSR always on.
                   1 = DSR on only if channel is available.
              7    0 = Cisco-PPP-flag-hack off.
                   1 = Cisco-PPP-flag-hack on.

       13 (default 4)
              Bit-mapped register.
              Bit  Description
              0    0 = Use delayed sending of data.
                   1 = Immediately send data.
              1    0 = T.70 protocol off.
                   1 = T.70 protocol on.
              2    0 = Don't hangup on DTR low.
                   1 = Hangup on DTR low.
              3    0 = Standard response messages.
                   1 = Extended response messages.
              4    0 = CALLER NUMBER before every RING.
                   1 = CALLER NUMBER after first RING.
              5    0 = Disable extended T.70 protocol.
                   1 = Enable extended T.70 protocol.
              6    0 = Disable RUNG message.
                   1 = RUNG on cancelled incoming call.
              7    0 = Disable display messages from net.
                   1 = Enable disable messages from net.

       14 (default 0)
              Layer-2 protocol.
               0 = X75/LAPB with I-frames.
               1 = X75/LAPB with UI-frames.
               2 = X75/LAPB with BUI-frames.
               3 = HDLC.
               4 = TRANSPARENT.
              10 = Analog Modem. (only if hardware supports this)
              11 = Fax G3. (only if hardware supports this)

       15 (default 0)
              Layer-3 protocol.
              0 = transparent
              1 = transparent with audio features (e.g. DSP)
              2 = Fax G3

       16 (default 250)
              Outgoing packet size / 16.

       17     reserved.

       18 (default 4)
              Service-Octet-1 to accept or to be used on dial out.
              Bit-mapped register.
              Bit  Description
              0    Service 1 (audio) when set.
              1    Service 5 (BTX) when set.
              2    Service 7 (data) when set.

              Note:  It is possible to set more than one bit. In this case, on
                     outgoing calls, the most significant 1-bit is  chosen  to
                     select  the outgoing service octet. On incoming calls the
                     selected services are accepted, contents of  register  14
                     is  ignored and the Layer-2-protocol is automatically set
                     with the following values to match  the  service  of  the
                     incoming call:

                     Incoming service audio (Reg. 20.0 = 1)
                             L2-protocol is set to 4 (TRANSPARENT).

                     Incoming service BTX (Reg. 20.1 = 1)
                             L2-protocol is set to 0 (X75/LAPB with I-frames).

                     Incoming service date (Reg. 20.2 = 1)
                             L2-protocol is set to 0 (X75/LAPB with I-frames).

       19 (default 0)
              Service-Octet-2 (ignored when using EDSS1).

       20 (read only)
              Service-Octet-1  of last incoming call. This bit-mapped register
              is set on incoming call (during RING). Mapping is the same  like
              register 18.

       21 (read only)
              Bit-mapped  register.  Set on incoming call (during RING) to the
              value of octet 3 of calling  party  number  Information  Element
              (Numbering plan).  See section 4.5.10 of ITU Q.931.

       22 (read only)
              Bit-mapped  register.  Set on incoming call (during RING) to the
              value of octet 3a of calling party  number  Information  Element
              (Screening info).  See section 4.5.10 of ITU Q.931.

       23 (default 0)
              Bit-mapped register.
              Bit  Description
              0    0 = Disable CPN extended RING.
                   1 = Enable CPN extended RING.
              1    0 = Disable CPN extended FCON.
                   1 = Enable CPN extended FCON.


       NOTE   There  used  also  be  cui devices (major device number 44), but
              since the cua devices for regular tty devices are no longer sup-
              ported  in  the  kernel,  these are also no longer supported for
              ISDN4linux.


AUTHOR
       Fritz Elfert <fritz@isdn4linux.de>
       modified by Paul Slootman <paul@isdn4linux.de>


SEE ALSO
       icnctrl(8), telesctrl(8), isdninfo(4), isdn_audio(4), isdnctrl(8).



ISDN 4 Linux 3.1pre4              2002/01/31                           ttyi(4)