vcs
VCS(4) Linux Programmer's Manual VCS(4)
NAME
vcs, vcsa - virtual console memory
DESCRIPTION
/dev/vcs0 is a character device with major number 7 and minor number 0,
usually of mode 0644 and owner root.tty. It refers to the memory of
the currently displayed virtual console terminal.
/dev/vcs[1-63] are character devices for virtual console terminals,
they have major number 7 and minor number 1 to 63, usually mode 0644
and owner root.tty. /dev/vcsa[0-63] are the same, but including
attributes, and prefixed with four bytes giving the screen dimensions
and cursor position: lines, columns, x, y. (x = y = 0 at the top left
corner of the screen.)
These replace the screendump ioctls of console(4), so the system admin-
istrator can control access using file system permissions.
The devices for the first eight virtual consoles may be created by:
for x in 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8; do
mknod -m 644 /dev/vcs$x c 7 $x;
mknod -m 644 /dev/vcsa$x c 7 $[$x+128];
done
chown root:tty /dev/vcs*
No ioctl() requests are supported.
EXAMPLES
You may do a screendump on vt3 by switching to vt1 and typing cat
/dev/vcs3 >foo. Note that the output does not contain newline charac-
ters, so some processing may be required, like in fold -w 81 /dev/vcs3
| lpr or (horrors) setterm -dump 3 -file /proc/self/fd/1.
The /dev/vcsa0 device is used for Braille support.
This program displays the character and screen attributes under the
cursor of the second virtual console, then changes the background color
there:
#include <unistd.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <fcntl.h>
int main() {
int fd;
struct {char lines, cols, x, y;} scrn;
char ch, attrib;
fd = open("/dev/vcsa2", O_RDWR);
(void)read(fd, &scrn, 4);
(void)lseek(fd, 4 + 2*(scrn.y*scrn.cols + scrn.x), 0);
(void)read(fd, &ch, 1);
(void)read(fd, &attrib, 1);
printf("ch='%c' attrib=0x%02x\n", ch, attrib);
attrib ^= 0x10;
(void)lseek(fd, -1, 1);
(void)write(fd, &attrib, 1);
return 0;
}
FILES
/dev/vcs[0-63]
/dev/vcsa[0-63]
AUTHOR
Andries Brouwer <aeb@cwi.nl>
HISTORY
Introduced with version 1.1.92 of the Linux kernel.
SEE ALSO
console(4), tty(4), ttys(4), selection(1)
Linux 1995-02-19 VCS(4)