Browse Source

Making st.1 more descriptive about -l and fix -l in st.c.

master
Christoph Lohmann 9 years ago
parent
commit
aa5d4c3b34
2 changed files with 19 additions and 4 deletions
  1. +18
    -3
      st.1
  2. +1
    -1
      st.c

+ 18
- 3
st.1 View File

@ -89,9 +89,24 @@ embeds st within the window identified by
.I windowid
.TP
.BI \-l " line"
use a tty line instead of a pseudo terminal.
When this flag is used
remaining arguments are used as flags for stty.
use a tty
.I line
instead of a pseudo terminal.
.I line
should be a (pseudo-)serial device (e.g. /dev/ttySO on Linux for serial port
0).
When this flag is given
remaining arguments are used as flags for
.BR stty(1).
By default st initializes the serial line to 8 bits, no parity, 1 stop bit
and a 38400 baud rate. The speed is set by appending it as last argument
(e.g. 'st -l 115200'). Arguments before the last one are
.BR stty(1)
flags. If you want to set odd parity on 115200 baud use for example 'st -l
parenb parodd 115200'. Set the number of bits by using for example 'st -l cs7
115200'. See
.BR stty(1)
for more arguments and cases.
.TP
.B \-v
prints version information to stderr, then exits.


+ 1
- 1
st.c View File

@ -4294,7 +4294,7 @@ usage(void)
" [-i] [-t title] [-T title] [-w windowid] [-e command ...]"
" [command ...]\n"
" st [-a] [-v] [-c class] [-f font] [-g geometry] [-o file]\n"
" [-i] [-t title] [-T title] [-w windowid] [-l line]"
" [-i] [-t title] [-T title] [-w windowid] -l line"
" [stty_args ...]\n",
argv0);
}


Loading…
Cancel
Save