NAME
syscons, sc — the console driverSYNOPSIS
options MAXCONS=Noptions SC_ALT_MOUSE_IMAGE
options SC_CUT_SEPCHARS=_characters_
options SC_CUT_SPACES2TABS
options SC_DISABLE_KDBKEY
options SC_DISABLE_REBOOT
options SC_HISTORY_SIZE=N
options SC_MOUSE_CHAR=C
options SC_NO_CUTPASTE
options SC_NO_FONT_LOADING
options SC_NO_HISTORY
options SC_NO_PALETTE_LOADING
options SC_NO_SUSPEND_VTYSWITCH
options SC_NO_SYSMOUSE
options SC_PIXEL_MODE
options SC_TWOBUTTON_MOUSE
options SC_NORM_ATTR=_attribute_
options SC_NORM_REV_ATTR=_attribute_
options SC_KERNEL_CONS_ATTR=_attribute_
options SC_KERNEL_CONS_ATTRS=_attributes_
options SC_KERNEL_CONS_REV_ATTR=_attribute_
options SC_DFLT_FONT
makeoptions SC_DFLT_FONT=_font_name_
device sc In /boot/device.hints:
hint.sc.0.at="isa"
hint.sc.0.vesa_mode=0x103 In /boot/loader.conf:
kern.vty=sc
DESCRIPTION
The syscons driver provides multiple virtual terminals. It resembles the SCO color console driver. The syscons driver is implemented on top of the keyboard driver (atkbd(4)) and the video card driver (vga(4)) and so requires both of them to be configured in the system. There can be only one syscons device defined in the system.Virtual Terminals
The syscons driver provides multiple virtual terminals which appear as if they were separate terminals. One virtual terminal is considered current and exclusively occupies the screen and the keyboard; the other virtual terminals are placed in the background. In order to use virtual terminals, they must be individually marked ``on'' in /etc/ttys so that getty(8) will recognize them to be active and run login(1) to let the user log in to the system. By default, only the first eight virtual terminals are activated in /etc/ttys. You press theAlt
key and a switch key to
switch between virtual terminals. The following table summarizes the
correspondence between the switch key and the virtual terminal.
Alt-F1 ttyv0 Alt-F7 ttyv6 Shift-Alt-F1 ttyva Alt-F2 ttyv1 Alt-F8 ttyv7 Shift-Alt-F2 ttyvb Alt-F3 ttyv2 Alt-F9 ttyv8 Shift-Alt-F3 ttyvc Alt-F4 ttyv3 Alt-F10 ttyv9 Shift-Alt-F4 ttyvd Alt-F5 ttyv4 Alt-F11 ttyva Shift-Alt-F5 ttyve Alt-F6 ttyv5 Alt-F12 ttyvb Shift-Alt-F6 ttyvf
PrintScreen
key on the AT Enhanced
keyboard) to cycle available virtual terminals.
The default number of available virtual terminals is 16. This can be changed
with the kernel configuration option
MAXCONS
(see below).
Note that the X server usually requires a virtual terminal for display purposes,
so at least one terminal must be left unused by
getty(8) so that it can be used by the X server.
Key Definitions and Function Key Strings
The syscons driver, in conjunction with the keyboard driver, allows the user to change key definitions and function key strings. The kbdcontrol(1) command will load a key definition file (known as ``keymap'' file), dump the current keymap, and assign a string to a function key. See keyboard(4) and kbdmap(5) for the keymap file. You may want to set the keymap variable in /etc/rc.conf.local to the desired keymap file so that it will be automatically loaded when the system starts up.Software Font
For most modern video cards, e.g., VGA, the syscons driver and the video card driver allow the user to change the font used on the screen. The vidcontrol(1) command can be used to load a font file from /usr/share/syscons/fonts. The font comes in various sizes: 8x8, 8x14 and 8x16. The 8x16 font is typically used for the VGA card in the 80-column-by-25-line mode. Other video modes may require different font sizes. It is better to always load all three sizes of the same font. You may set font8x8, font8x14 and font8x16 variables in /etc/rc.conf to the desired font files so that they will be automatically loaded when the system starts up. Optionally you can specify a particular font file as the default. See theSC_DFLT_FONT
option below.
Screen Map
If your video card does not support software fonts, you may still be able to achieve a similar effect by re-mapping the font built into your video card. Use vidcontrol(1) to load a screen map file which defines the mapping between character codes.Mouse Support and Copy-and-Paste
You can use your mouse to copy text on the screen and paste it as if it was typed by hand. You must be running the mouse daemon moused(8) and enable the mouse cursor in the virtual terminal via vidcontrol(1). Pressing mouse button 1 (usually the left button) will start selection. Releasing button 1 will end the selection process. The selected text will be marked by inverting foreground and background colors. You can press button 3 (usually the right button) to extend the selected region. The selected text is placed in the copy buffer and can be pasted at the cursor position by pressing button 2 (usually the middle button) as many times as you like. If your mouse has only two buttons, you may want to use theSC_TWOBUTTON_MOUSE
option below to make the
right button to paste the text. Alternatively you can make the mouse daemon
emulate the middle button. See the man page for
moused(8) for more details.
Back Scrolling
The syscons driver allows the user to browse the output which has ``scrolled off'' the top of the screen. Press the ``slock'' key (usuallyScrllLock
/
Scroll Lock
or
Pause
on many keyboards) and the terminal
is in the ``scrollback'' mode. It is indicated by the
Scroll Lock
LED. Use the arrow keys, the
Page Up/Down
keys and the
Home/End
keys to scroll buffered terminal
output. Press the ``slock'' key again to get back to the normal terminal mode.
The size of the scrollback buffer can be set by the
SC_HISTORY_SIZE
option described below.
Screen Saver
The syscons driver can be made to put up the screen saver if the current virtual terminal is idle, that is, the user is not typing on the keyboard nor moving the mouse. See splash(4) and vidcontrol(1) for more details.DRIVER CONFIGURATION
Kernel Configuration Options
The following kernel configuration options control the syscons driver.MAXCONS=N
- This option sets the number of virtual terminals to N. The default value is 16.
SC_ALT_MOUSE_IMAGE
- This option selects the alternative way of displaying the
mouse cursor in the virtual terminal. It may be expensive for some video
cards to draw the arrow-shaped cursor, and you may want to try this
option. However, the appearance of the alternative mouse cursor may not be
very appealing. Note that if you use the
SC_NO_FONT_LOADING
option then you must also use this option if you wish to be able to use the mouse. SC_CUT_SEPCHARS=_characters_
- This options specifies characters that will be looked for
when the driver searches for words boundaries when doing cut operation. By
default, its value is “
\x20
” — a space character. SC_CUT_SPACES2TABS
- This options instructs the driver to convert leading spaces into tabs when copying data into cut buffer. This might be useful to preserve indentation when copying tab-indented text.
SC_DISABLE_KDBKEY
- This option disables the ``debug'' key combination (by
default, it is
Alt-Esc
, orCtl-PrintScreen
). It will prevent users from entering the kernel debugger (KDB) by pressing the key combination. KDB will still be invoked when the kernel panics or hits a break point if it is included in the kernel. If this option is not defined, this behavior may be controlled at runtime by the sysctl(8) variable hw.syscons.kbd_debug. SC_DISABLE_REBOOT
- This option disables the ``reboot'' key (by default, it is
Ctl-Alt-Del
), so that the casual user may not accidentally reboot the system. If this option is not defined, this behavior may be controlled at runtime by the sysctl(8) variable hw.syscons.kbd_reboot. SC_HISTORY_SIZE=N
- Sets the size of back scroll buffer to N lines. The default value is 100.
SC_MOUSE_CHAR=C
- Unless the
SC_ALT_MOUSE_IMAGE
option above is specified, the syscons driver reserves four consecutive character codes in order to display the mouse cursor in the virtual terminals in some systems. This option specifies the first character code to C to be used for this purpose. The default value is 0xd0. A good candidate is 0x03. SC_PIXEL_MODE
- Adds support for pixel (raster) mode console. This mode is
useful on some laptop computers, but less so on most other systems, and it
adds substantial amount of code to syscons. If this option is NOT defined,
you can reduce the kernel size a lot. See the
VESAMODE
flag below. SC_TWOBUTTON_MOUSE
- If you have a two button mouse, you may want to add this option to use the right button of the mouse to paste text. See Mouse Support and Copy-and-Paste above.
SC_NORM_ATTR=_attribute_
SC_NORM_REV_ATTR=_attribute_
SC_KERNEL_CONS_ATTR=_attribute_
SC_KERNEL_CONS_ATTRS=_attributes_
SC_KERNEL_CONS_REV_ATTR=_attribute_
- These options will set the default colors. Available colors
are defined in
<machine/pc/display.h>.
See EXAMPLES below.
SC_KERNEL_CONS_ATTRS
is a character string giving a sequence of attributes in binary format. The sequence will be repeated up to the number of CPUs. Beware that the string must not be null, since the kernel divides by its length. SC_DFLT_FONT
- This option will specify the default font. Available fonts are: iso, iso2, koi8-r, koi8-u, cp437, cp850, cp865, cp866 and cp866u. 16-line, 14-line and 8-line font data will be compiled in. Without this option, the syscons driver will use whatever font is already loaded in the video card, unless you explicitly load a software font at startup. See EXAMPLES below.
SC_NO_SUSPEND_VTYSWITCH
- This option, which is also available as loader(8) tunable and sysctl(8) variable hw.syscons.sc_no_suspend_vtswitch, disables switching between virtual terminals (graphics <-> text) during suspend/resume (ACPI and APM). Use this option if your system is freezing when you are running X and trying to suspend.
SC_NO_CUTPASTE
- This option disables ``copy and paste'' operation in virtual terminals.
SC_NO_FONT_LOADING
- The syscons driver can load
software fonts on some video cards. This option removes this feature. Note
that if you still wish to use the mouse with this option then you must
also use the
SC_ALT_MOUSE_IMAGE
option. SC_NO_HISTORY
- This option disables back-scrolling in virtual terminals.
SC_NO_SYSMOUSE
- This option removes mouse support in the
syscons driver. The mouse daemon
moused(8) will fail if this option is
defined. This option implies the
SC_NO_CUTPASTE
option too.
Driver Flags
The following driver flags can be used to control the syscons driver. Driver flags can be set with the hint.sc.0.flags tunable, either in /boot/device.hints, or else at the loader prompt (see loader(8)).- 0x0080 (VESAMODE)
- This option puts the video card in the VESA mode specified
by /boot/device.hints variable
vesa_mode during kernel initialization.
Note that in order for this flag to work, the kernel must be compiled with
the
SC_PIXEL_MODE
option explained above. A list of the available mode can be obtained via vidcontrol(1). - 0x0100 (AUTODETECT_KBD)
- This option instructs the syscons driver to periodically scan for a keyboard device if it is not currently attached to one. Otherwise, the driver only probes for a keyboard once during bootup.
Loader Tunables
These settings can be entered at the loader(8) prompt or in loader.conf(5).- kern.vty
- When both syscons and
vt(4) have been compiled into the kernel, the
one to use for the system console can be selected by setting this variable
to ‘
sc
’ or ‘vt
’. The GENERIC kernel uses vt(4) when this value is not set.
FILES
- /dev/console
- /dev/consolectl
- /dev/ttyv?
- virtual terminals
- /etc/ttys
- terminal initialization information
- /usr/share/syscons/fonts/*
- font files
- /usr/share/syscons/keymaps/*
- key map files
- /usr/share/syscons/scrmaps/*
- screen map files
EXAMPLES
As the syscons driver requires the keyboard driver and the video card driver, the kernel configuration file should contain the following lines.device atkbdc device atkbd device vga device sc device splash
hint.atkbdc.0.at="isa" hint.atkbdc.0.port="0x060" hint.atkbd.0.at="atkbdc" hint.atkbd.0.irq="1" hint.vga.0.at="isa" hint.sc.0.at="isa"
options
SC_NORM_ATTR=(FG_GREEN|BG_BLACK)
options
SC_NORM_REV_ATTR=(FG_YELLOW|BG_GREEN)
options
SC_KERNEL_CONS_ATTR=(FG_LIGHTRED|BG_BLACK)
options
SC_KERNEL_CONS_REV_ATTR=(FG_BLACK|BG_RED)
SC_KERNEL_CONS_ATTR
is not set, or
is set to its default of bright white on black, the following line will set 4
red-ish colors for printing kernel messages in colors depending on the CPU.
options
SC_KERNEL_CONS_ATTRS=\"\x0c\x04\x40\x0e\"
options
SC_KERNEL_CONS_ATTRS=\"\x0f\"
options SC_DFLT_FONT
makeoptions SC_DFLT_FONT=cp850
device sc
SEE ALSO
kbdcontrol(1), login(1), vidcontrol(1), atkbd(4), atkbdc(4), keyboard(4), screen(4), splash(4), ukbd(4), vga(4), vt(4), kbdmap(5), rc.conf(5), ttys(5), config(8), getty(8), kldload(8), moused(8)HISTORY
The syscons driver first appeared in FreeBSD 1.0.AUTHORS
The syscons driver was written by Søren Schmidt <[email protected]>. This manual page was written by Kazutaka Yokota <[email protected]>.CAVEATS
The amount of data that is possible to insert from the cut buffer is limited by the {MAX_INPUT
}, a system limit on the
number of bytes that may be stored in the terminal input queue - usually 1024
bytes (see termios(4)).
BUGS
This manual page is incomplete and urgently needs revision.June 2, 2018 | Debian |