attachtty

Langue: en

Version: May 31, 2001 (debian - 07/07/09)

Section: 1 (Commandes utilisateur)

NAME

detachtty, attachtty - run an interactive program with io to a unix-domain socket

SYNOPSIS

detachtty [--no-detach] [--dribble-file  dribblename] [--log-file  name] [--pid-file  pidname] socket-path command [arguments-to-command]...
attachtty /var/run/cliki-socket
attachtty username@f.q.d.n:/var/run/cliki-socket

DESCRIPTION

detachtty lets you run interactive programs non-interactively, and connect to them (optionally over the network) when you do need to interact with them. command is run on a pseudo-terminal, and data is copied between it and a unix(7)-domain socket named socket-path. command runs with the current user's permissions and environment variables.

attachtty is used to connect to a process running under detachtty. It copies between socket-path and stdin/out. It also catches SIGINT and arranges for it to be forwarded to the command, so the user may use Control-C in the usual fashion.

If you've used screen, it's a similar concept. Compared to screen, detachtty has


 * no capability to swap between different screens (it doesn't co-opt C-a)


 * no tty emulation (you can sanely use it in emacs comint modes)


 * no features (less to go wrong)


 * no configuration file


 * ability to spawn ssh to securely connect across the network

OPTIONS

These programs approximately follow the usual GNU command line syntax, using long options that start with two dashes (`--'). For detachtty, the options are
--no-detach
Don't fork into the background. Useful if you wish to start the program from inittab(5)
--dribble-file  dribblename
All input from and to the program being run is copied into dribblename (if unspecified, it is discarded)
--log-file  name
Status messages (client connects, disconnects, errors) are sent to name (if unspecified, they go to standard error)
--pid-file  pidname
The process ID of attachtty is written to pidname. See SIGNALS
socket-path
The unix-domain socket. If access to command should be in any way restricted, so should this socket - i.e. it is recommended that you put it in a mode 700 directory.
command arguments
The command to run (which is searched for in the normal way). All remaining command line parameters are passed to it as arguments

attachtty takes a single argument, which is either the path to socket-path, or a "remote path" of the form username@host:socket-path where username@host is passed to ssh. No provision is made to accept password input, so ssh must be able to make a connection without needing it. See ssh-agent(1)

To detach from the tty without exiting from the server process, send attachtty any signal that it doesn't catch. See the SIGNALS section

NOTES

detachtty does not search the user's PATH environment variable for the program to execute, so a full pathname must be provided.

If you get an immediate "Child terminated, exiting" message from detachtty, this usually means that the program you specified was not found or could not be executed (on Linux 2.4, execve(1) succeeds even if it didn't, so to speak).

You will probably go insane a lot more slowly if you use absolute pathnames for all filename arguments.

SIGNALS

Sending SIGHUP to the process identified by pidname will cause detachtty to close and reopen its log files.

Sending SIGQUIT to an attachtty process (usually from the keyboard with ^\) will cause it to detach from the tty and quit leaving the server process running. Sometimes you need to press it twice

SEE ALSO

screen(1), ssh(1), ssh-agent(1), sbcl(1).

AUTHOR

Written by Daniel Barlow <dan@telent.net>, and a cast of units.