Question

I'm taking a look at the code to the 'less' utility, specifically how it gets keyboard input. Interestingly, on line 80 of ttyin.c, it sets the file descriptor to read from:

     /*
      * Try /dev/tty.
      * If that doesn't work, use file descriptor 2,
      * which in Unix is usually attached to the screen,
      * but also usually lets you read from the keyboard.
      */
  #if OS2
      /* The __open() system call translates "/dev/tty" to "con". */
      tty = __open("/dev/tty", OPEN_READ);
  #else
      tty = open("/dev/tty", OPEN_READ);
  #endif
      if (tty < 0)
          tty = 2;

Isn't file descriptor 2 stderr? If so, WTH?! I thought keyboard input was sent through stdin.

Interestingly, even if you do ls -l * | less, after the file finishes loading, you can still use the keyboard to scroll up and down, but if you do ls -l * | vi, then vi will yell at you because it doesn't read from stdin. What's the big idea? How did I end up in this strange new land where stderr is both a way to report errors to the screen and read from the keyboard? I don't think I'm in Kansas anymore...

Was it helpful?

Solution

$ ls -l /dev/fd/
lrwx------ 1 me me 64 2009-09-17 16:52 0 -> /dev/pts/4
lrwx------ 1 me me 64 2009-09-17 16:52 1 -> /dev/pts/4
lrwx------ 1 me me 64 2009-09-17 16:52 2 -> /dev/pts/4

When logged in at an interative terminal, all three standard file descriptors point to the same thing: your TTY (or pseudo-TTY).

$ ls -fl /dev/std{in,out,err}
lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 4 2009-09-13 01:57 /dev/stdin -> fd/0
lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 4 2009-09-13 01:57 /dev/stdout -> fd/1
lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 4 2009-09-13 01:57 /dev/stderr -> fd/2

By convention, we read from 0 and write to 1 and 2. However, nothing prevents us from doing otherwise.

When your shell runs ls -l * | less, it creates a pipe from ls's file descriptor 1 to less's file descriptor 0. Obviously, less can no longer read the user's keyboard input from file descriptor 0 – it tries to get the TTY back however it can.

If less has not been detached from the terminal, open("/dev/tty") will give it the TTY.

However, in case that fails... what can you do? less makes one last attempt at getting the TTY, assuming that file descriptor 2 is attached to the same thing that file descriptor 0 would be attached to, if it weren't redirected.

This is not failproof:

$ ls -l * | setsid less 2>/dev/null

Here, less is given its own session (so it is no longer a part of the terminal's active process group, causing open("/dev/tty") to fail), and its file descriptor 2 has been changed – now less exits immediately, because it is outputting to a TTY yet it fails to get any user input.

OTHER TIPS

Well... first off, you seem to missing the open() call which opens '/dev/tty'. It only uses file descriptor 2 if the call to open() fails. On a standard Linux system, and probably many Unices, '/dev/tty' exists and is unlikely to cause a fail.

Secondly, the comment at the top provides a limited amount of explanation as to why they fall back to file descriptor 2. My guess is that stdin, stdout, and stderr are pretty much connected to '/dev/tty/' anyway, unless redirected. And since the most common redirections for for stdin and/ or stdout (via piping or < / >), but less often for stderr, odds on are that using stderr would be most likely to still be connect to the "keyboard".

The same question with an answer ultimately from the person who asked it is on linuxquestions although they quote slightly different source from less. And no, I don't understand most of it so I can't help beyond that :)

It appears to be Linux specific functionality that sends keyboard input to FD 2.

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