The cfgetispeed() function shall extract the input baud rate
from the termios structure to which the
termios_p argument points.
This function shall return exactly the value in the termios
data structure, without interpretation.
The term "baud" is used historically here, but is not technically
correct. This is properly "bits per second", which may not
be the same as baud. However, the term is used because of the historical
usage and understanding.
The cfgetospeed(), cfgetispeed(), cfsetospeed(),
and cfsetispeed()
functions do not take arguments as numbers, but rather as symbolic
names. There are two reasons for this:
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1.
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Historically, numbers were not used because of the way the rate was
stored in the data structure. This is retained even though a
function is now used.
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2.
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More importantly, only a limited set of possible rates is at all portable,
and this constrains the application to that set.
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There is nothing to prevent an implementation accepting as an extension
a number (such as 126), and since the encoding of the
Bxxx symbols is not specified, this can be done to avoid introducing
ambiguity.
Setting the input baud rate to zero was a mechanism to allow for split
baud rates. Clarifications in this volume of
IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 have made it possible to determine whether
split rates are supported and to support them without
having to treat zero as a special case. Since this functionality is
also confusing, it has been declared obsolescent. The 0
argument referred to is the literal constant 0, not the symbolic constant
B0. This volume of IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 does
not preclude B0 from being defined as the value 0; in fact, implementations
would likely benefit from the two being equivalent.
This volume of IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 does not fully specify whether
the previous cfsetispeed() value is retained after a tcgetattr()
as the actual value or as zero. Therefore, conforming applications
should
always set both the input speed and output speed when setting either.
In historical implementations, the baud rate information is traditionally
kept in c_cflag. Applications should be written
to presume that this might be the case (and thus not blindly copy
c_cflag), but not to rely on it in case it is in some
other field of the structure. Setting the c_cflag field absolutely
after setting a baud rate is a non-portable action
because of this. In general, the unused parts of the flag fields might
be used by the implementation and should not be blindly
copied from the descriptions of one terminal device to another.
cfgetospeed() , cfsetispeed() , cfsetospeed() ,
tcgetattr() , the Base Definitions volume of
IEEE Std 1003.1-2001, Chapter 11, General Terminal Interface, <termios.h>