write - write to another user
The write utility shall read lines from the user's standard input and write them to the terminal of another user. When first invoked, it shall write the message:
Message from sender-login-id (sending-terminal) [date]...
to user_name. When it has successfully completed the connection, the sender's terminal shall be alerted twice to indicate that what the sender is typing is being written to the recipient's terminal.
If the recipient wants to reply, this can be accomplished by typing:
write sender-login-id [sending-terminal]
upon receipt of the initial message. Whenever a line of input as delimited by an NL, EOF, or EOL special character (see the Base Definitions volume of IEEE Std 1003.1-2001, Chapter 11, General Terminal Interface) is accumulated while in canonical input mode, the accumulated data shall be written on the other user's terminal. Characters shall be processed as follows:
Typing <alert> shall write the alert character to the recipient's terminal.
Typing the erase and kill characters shall affect the sender's terminal in the manner described by the termios interface in the Base Definitions volume of IEEE Std 1003.1-2001, Chapter 11, General Terminal Interface.
Typing the interrupt or end-of-file characters shall cause write to write an appropriate message ( "EOT\n" in the POSIX locale) to the recipient's terminal and exit.
Typing characters from LC_CTYPE classifications print or space shall cause those characters to be sent to the recipient's terminal.
When and only when the stty iexten local mode is enabled, the existence and processing of additional special control characters and multi-byte or single-byte functions is implementation-defined.
Typing other non-printable characters shall cause implementation-defined sequences of printable characters to be written to the recipient's terminal.
To write to a user who is logged in more than once, the terminal argument can be used to indicate which terminal to write to; otherwise, the recipient's terminal is selected in an implementation-defined manner and an informational message is written to the sender's standard output, indicating which terminal was chosen.
Permission to be a recipient of a write message can be denied or granted by use of the mesg utility. However, a user's privilege may further constrain the domain of accessibility of other users' terminals. The write utility shall fail when the user lacks the appropriate privileges to perform the requested action.
The following operands shall be supported:
Lines to be copied to the recipient's terminal are read from standard input.
The following environment variables shall affect the execution of write:
If an interrupt signal is received, write shall write an appropriate message on the recipient's terminal and exit with a status of zero. It shall take the standard action for all other signals.
An informational message shall be written to standard output if a recipient is logged in more than once.
The standard error shall be used only for diagnostic messages.
The recipient's terminal is used for output.
The following exit values shall be returned:
Default.
The following sections are informative.
The talk utility is considered by some users to be a more usable utility on full-screen terminals.
The write utility was included in this volume of IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 since it can be implemented on all terminal types. The standard developers considered the talk utility, which cannot be implemented on certain terminals, to be a "better" communications interface. Both of these programs are in widespread use on historical implementations. Therefore, the standard developers decided that both utilities should be specified.
The format of the terminal name is unspecified, but the descriptions of ps, talk, who, and write require that they all use or accept the same format.
mesg , talk , who , the Base Definitions volume of IEEE Std 1003.1-2001, Chapter 11, General Terminal Interface
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