Museum

Home

Lab Overview

Retrotechnology Articles

⇒ Online Manual

Media Vault

Software Library

Restoration Projects

Artifacts Sought

Related Articles

alarm(2)

read(2)

write(2)

termio(7)

uucp(1C)



dial(3C)             COMPATIBILITY FUNCTIONS             dial(3C)



NAME
     dial - establish an outgoing terminal line connection

SYNOPSIS
     #include <dial.h>

     int dial (CALL call);

     void undial (int fd);

DESCRIPTION
     dial returns a file-descriptor for a terminal line open  for
     read/write.   The  argument  to  dial  is  a  CALL structure
     (defined in the dial.h header file).  When finished with the
     terminal  line,  the  calling  program must invoke undial to
     release the semaphore that has been set during  the  alloca-
     tion of the terminal device.

     The definition of CALL in the dial.h header file is:

     typedef struct {
          struct termio *attr;   /* pointer to termio attribute struct */
          int     baud;  /* transmission data rate */
          int     speed; /* 212A modem: low=300, high=1200 */
          char    *line; /* device name for out-going line */
          char    *telno;        /* pointer to tel-no digits string */
          int     modem; /* specify modem control for direct lines */
          char    *device;       /* unused */
          int     dev_len;       /* unused */
     } CALL;

     The CALL element speed is intended only for use with an out-
     going  dialed call, in which case its value should be either
     300 or 1200 to identify the 113A  modem,  or  the  high-  or
     low-speed  setting  on  the  212A  modem. Note that the 113A
     modem or the  low-speed  setting  of  the  212A  modem  will
     transmit at any rate between 0 and 300 bits per second. How-
     ever, the high-speed setting of the 212A modem transmits and
     receives  at  1200  bits  per second only.  The CALL element
     baud is for the desired transmission baud rate.   For  exam-
     ple,  one  might set baud to 110 and speed to 300 (or 1200).
     However, if speed is set to 1200, baud must be set  to  high
     (1200).   If  the  desired terminal line is a direct line, a
     string pointer to its device-name should be  placed  in  the
     line  element  in the CALL structure.  Legal values for such
     terminal device names are kept in the Devices file.  In this
     case,  the  value  of  the baud element should be set to -1.
     This value will cause dial to determine  the  correct  value
     from  the  Devices file.  The telno element is for a pointer
     to a character string representing the telephone  number  to
     be  dialed.   Such numbers may consist only of these charac-
     ters:



          Last change: C Programming Language Utilities         1





dial(3C)             COMPATIBILITY FUNCTIONS             dial(3C)



       0-9  dial 0-9
       *    dial *
       #    dial #
       =    wait for secondary dial tone
       -    delay for approximately 4 seconds

     The CALL element modem is used to specify modem control  for
     direct lines.  This element should be non-zero if modem con-
     trol is required.  The CALL element attr is a pointer  to  a
     termio structure, as defined in the termio.h header file.  A
     NULL value for this pointer element may  be  passed  to  the
     dial function, but if such a structure is included, the ele-
     ments specified in it will be set for the outgoing  terminal
     line  before the connection is established.  This setting is
     often important for certain attributes such  as  parity  and
     baud-rate.

     The CALL elements device and dev_len  are  no  longer  used.
     They  are  retained  in the CALL structure for compatibility
     reasons.

FILES
     /etc/uucp/Devices
     /etc/uucp/Systems
     /var/spool/uucp/LCK..tty-device

SEE ALSO
     alarm(2), read(2), write(2).
     termio(7) in the System Administrator's Reference Manual.
     uucp(1C) in the User's Reference Manual.

DIAGNOSTICS
     On failure, a negative value indicating the reason  for  the
     failure  will  be  returned.   Mnemonics  for these negative
     indices as listed here are  defined  in  the  dial.h  header
     file.
          INTRPT  -1     /* interrupt occurred */
          D_HUNG  -2     /* dialer hung (no return from write) */
          NO_ANS  -3     /* no answer within 10 seconds */
          ILL_BD  -4     /* illegal baud-rate */
          A_PROB  -5     /* acu problem (open() failure) */
          L_PROB  -6     /* line problem (open() failure) */
          NO_Ldv  -7     /* can't open Devices file */
          DV_NT_A -8     /* requested device not available */
          DV_NT_K -9     /* requested device not known */
          NO_BD_A -10    /* no device available at requested baud */
          NO_BD_K -11    /* no device known at requested baud */
          DV_NT_E -12    /* requested speed does not match */
          BAD_SYS -13    /* system not in Systems file*/

NOTES




          Last change: C Programming Language Utilities         2





dial(3C)             COMPATIBILITY FUNCTIONS             dial(3C)



     Including the dial.h header file automatically includes  the
     termio.h header file.

     An alarm(2) system  call  for  3600  seconds  is  made  (and
     caught)  within  the dial module for the purpose of ``touch-
     ing'' the LCK.. file and constitutes the  device  allocation
     semaphore  for the terminal device.  Otherwise, uucp(1C) may
     simply delete the LCK..  entry  on  its  90-minute  clean-up
     rounds.  The alarm may go off while the user program is in a
     read(2) or write(2) system call, causing an  apparent  error
     return.   If  the  user  program expects to be around for an
     hour or more, error returns from reads should be checked for
     (errno==EINTR), and the read possibly reissued.










































          Last change: C Programming Language Utilities         3



Typewritten Software • bear@typewritten.org • Edmonds, WA 98026