mgetty(8)


NAME

   mgetty - smart modem getty

SYNOPSIS

   mgetty [options] ttydevice [gettydefs]

DESCRIPTION

   Mgetty is a ``smart'' getty replacement, designed to be used with hayes
   compatible  data  and  data/fax  modems.   Mgetty  knows  about   modem
   initialization, manual modem answering (so your modem doesn't answer if
   the machine isn't ready), UUCP locking (so you can use the same  device
   for  dial-in  and  dial-out).   Mgetty  provides very extensive logging
   facilities.

   This manpage doesn't try to detail mgetty  setup  in  detail,  it  just
   lists  the  most  important options. For detailed instructions, see the
   info file mgetty.info (mgetty.texi).

OPTIONS

   -k <space>
          Tells mgetty to leave <space> kbytes free on disk when receiving
          a fax.

   -x <debug level>
          Use  the  given  level  of  verbosity  for  logging - 0 means no
          logging,  9  is  really  noisy.  The   log   file   is   usually
          /tmp/log_mg.<device>

   -s <speed>
          Set the port speed to use, e.g. "-s 19200".

   -r     Tells  mgetty  that it is running on a direct line. UUCP locking
          is done, but no modem initialization whatsoever.

   -p <login prompt>
          Use the given string to prompt  users  for  their  login  names.
          Various  tokens  are allowed in this string. These tokens are: @
          for the system name, \n, \r, \g, 	, \v,  \f,  \t  for  newline,
          carriage  return,  bell, backspace, vertical tab, form feed, and
          tab, respectively.  \P and  \L  will  expand  to  the  tty  name
          ("ttyS0").  \Y  will give the Caller ID, \I the "CONNECT foobar"
          string returned by the modem, and \S will output the port speed.
          \s,  \m,  \V,  \R  represent  the operating system, the hardware
          name, the OS version, the OS release.  \N and \U give the number
          of  users  currently  logged  in.   \C  will be changed into the
          result of ctime(), and \D and \T will output the date and  time,
          respectively.    Finally,    \<digit>    will   use   digit   as
          octal/decimal/hexadecimal representation  of  the  character  to
          follow.

          The default prompt is specified at compile time.

   -n #   Tells mgetty to pick up the phone after the #th RING. Default is
          1.

   -R <t> Tells mgetty to go into "ringback" (aka "ring-twice") mode. That
          means:  the first call is never answered, instead the caller has
          to hang up after the phone RINGs, wait 30 seconds, and then call
          again  in the next <t> seconds for mgetty to pick up. If no call
          comes, mgetty will exit.

          I do not really recommend using this, better get a second  phone
          line for the modem.

   -i <issue file>
          Output  <issue  file> instead of /etc/issue before prompting for
          the user name. The same token substitutions as for the the login
          prompt are done in this file.

   -D     Tells mgetty that the modem is to be treated as a DATA modem, no
          fax initalization is attempted.

   -F     Tells mgetty that DATA calls  are  not  allowed  and  the  modem
          should be set to Fax-Only.

   -C <class>
          Tells mgetty how to treat the modem. Possible values for <class>
          are "auto" (default, try to find out whether the modem  supports
          fax), "cls2" (use the class 2 fax command set, even if the modem
          supports class 2.0), "c2.0" (use the class 2.0 fax command set),
          "data" (data only, exactly as the -D switch).

   -S <g3 file>
          If  a  call  comes in and requests fax polling, mgetty will send
          the named file. Note: not all fax modems support poll sending.

   -I <fax id>
          Use the given fax station ID for fax  identification.  Not  used
          for data modems.

   -b     Open  the  port  in blocking mode. Best used in combination with
          "-r". This is the default if mgetty is called as getty.  You may
          want  to  use  this  if you want to make use of the two-device /
          kernel-locking scheme of the Linux and SunOS  operating  systems
          (/dev/ttyS..  and  /dev/cua..). I do not recommend it, it's just
          include for completeness, and to be able  to  use  mgetty  as  a
          full-featured getty replacement.

   -a     Use  autobauding.  That  is,  after a connection is made, mgetty
          parses the "CONNECT foo" response code of the modem and sets the
          port  speed  to  the  first  integer  found  after the "CONNECT"
          string, "foo" in this example.  You  need  this  if  your  modem
          insist  on  changing  its  DTE  speed to match the line speed. I
          recommend against using it, better leave the port  speed  locked
          at  a  fixed  value. The feature is included because there exist
          old modems that cannot use a fixed (locked) port speed.

   -m 'expect send ...'
          Set the "chat sequence" that is used to  initialize  the  modem.
          For  an  empty  expect part, use empty double quotes (""). Since
          the sequence contains spaces, you have to enclose all of  it  in
          single quotes(''). Example:

          mgetty -m '"" ATH0 OK'

FILES

   /etc/mgetty/mgetty.config
          Main configuration file.

   /etc/mgetty/login.config
          controls  whether  (and  when)  mgetty  should  call  some other
          program for user login instead of /bin/login. How this  is  done
          is explained in this file.

   /etc/mgetty/dialin.config
          controls  acceptance/denial  of  incoming  calls  based  on  the
          caller's number.  Available only if you  have  "caller  ID"  and
          your modem supports it.

   /etc/nologin.ttyxx
          controls  whether  mgetty should pick up the phone upon incoming
          calls. If the file exists, calls are completely ignored. You can
          use  this,  for example, to stop mgetty during day time, and let
          it  pick  up  at  night   only,   by   creating   and   removing
          /etc/nologin.ttyxx via the cron program at the appropriate time.

   /etc/issue
          will  be  printed  after a connection is established, and before
          the with the '-i' option.

   /var/log/mgetty/mg_ttyxx.log
          Debug log file, see below.

DIAGNOSTICS

   If mgetty doesn't work the way it should, the main source of diagnostic
   data     is     the     log    file.     It    can    be    found    in
   "/var/log/mgetty/mg_ttyxx.log"  (for  the   mgetty   process   handling
   "ttyxx").   If it doesn't contain enough details, enhance the log level
   with the '-x' option to mgetty, e.g. "-x 5".

   Many of the common problems and solutions are discussed in  the  mgetty
   manual    and    the    FAQ.     Please    see    the   WWW   page   at
   http://alpha.greenie.net/mgetty/ for both.

BUGS

   Not all of mgetty configuration can be done  at  run-time  yet.  Things
   like  flow  control  and  file  paths (log file / lock file) have to be
   configured by changing the source and recompiling.

   Users never read manuals...

SEE ALSO

   g32pbm(1), sendfax(8), getty(8), mgettydefs(4), mgetty.info

AUTHOR

   mgetty is Copyright (C) 1993 by Gert Doering, <gert@greenie.muc.de>.





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