The ttysize
was the original implementation for SunOS 3.0 (February 1986), and soon after made obsolete by winsize
, which adds the size of the window in pixels. Here's
what the definitions look like in <sys/ttycom.h>
from SunOS 4:
/*
* Window/terminal size structure.
* This information is stored by the kernel
* in order to provide a consistent interface,
* but is not used by the kernel.
*
* Type must be "unsigned short" so that types.h not required.
*/
struct winsize {
unsigned short ws_row; /* rows, in characters */
unsigned short ws_col; /* columns, in characters */
unsigned short ws_xpixel; /* horizontal size, pixels - not used */
unsigned short ws_ypixel; /* vertical size, pixels - not used */
};
#define TIOCGWINSZ _IOR(t, 104, struct winsize) /* get window size */
#define TIOCSWINSZ _IOW(t, 103, struct winsize) /* set window size */
/*
* Sun version of same.
*/
struct ttysize {
int ts_lines; /* number of lines on terminal */
int ts_cols; /* number of columns on terminal */
};
#define TIOCSSIZE _IOW(t,37,struct ttysize)/* set tty size */
#define TIOCGSIZE _IOR(t,38,struct ttysize)/* get tty size */
The data types are different (an integer would waste memory), and the fields have different names.
The ttysize
structure has long been obsolete: if either is provided by the system, winsize
is supported. That wasn't true when porting ncurses to SCO OpenServer in 1997, as noted in this chunk from lib_setup.c:
/*
* SCO defines TIOCGSIZE and the corresponding struct. Other systems (SunOS,
* Solaris, IRIX) define TIOCGWINSZ and struct winsize.
*/
#ifdef TIOCGSIZE
# define IOCTL_WINSIZE TIOCGSIZE
# define STRUCT_WINSIZE struct ttysize
# define WINSIZE_ROWS(n) (int)n.ts_lines
# define WINSIZE_COLS(n) (int)n.ts_cols
#else
# ifdef TIOCGWINSZ
# define IOCTL_WINSIZE TIOCGWINSZ
# define STRUCT_WINSIZE struct winsize
# define WINSIZE_ROWS(n) (int)n.ws_row
# define WINSIZE_COLS(n) (int)n.ws_col
# endif
#endif
You might notice that Linux is not mentioned in the comment. According to comments in asm-sparc64/ioctls.h, the ioctl for ttysize
was unsupported as of 2.6.16:
/* Note that all the ioctls that are not available in Linux have a
* double underscore on the front to: a) avoid some programs to
* think we support some ioctls under Linux (autoconfiguration stuff)
*/
...
#define TIOCCONS _IO('t', 36)
#define __TIOCSSIZE _IOW('t', 37, struct sunos_ttysize) /* SunOS Specific */
#define __TIOCGSIZE _IOR('t', 38, struct sunos_ttysize) /* SunOS Specific */
#define TIOCGSOFTCAR _IOR('t', 100, int)
#define TIOCSSOFTCAR _IOW('t', 101, int)
#define __TIOCUCNTL _IOW('t', 102, int) /* SunOS Specific */
#define TIOCSWINSZ _IOW('t', 103, struct winsize)
#define TIOCGWINSZ _IOR('t', 104, struct winsize)
A much earlier comment in 1995 added the definitions (without the double-underscore). Possibly a few programs used that with Linux, although winsize
was well established on most platforms before Linux was begun. A little more digging finds that the double-underscore was introduced in 1996 (patch-2.1.9 linux/include/asm-sparc/ioctls.h). Given that, very few programs would have used it with Linux.
Further reading: