I am running Raspbian 9 on my RPi 3 B+ and I have only 6 usable ttys (Ctrl-Alt-F#) while other are blank with blinking cursor. ls /dev
lists 64 such ttys. How do I enable/run something on them?
2 Answers
You can switch ttys from the command line using
sudo chvt 55
This is handy when you run out of Fn keys.
To create a new virtual terminal and run something on it, use openvt
- for example
sudo openvt -c 55 bash
Have a look at man openvt
for more details.
Full disclosure: I don't have access to a Pi connected to a monitor at the moment, so this is tested on Ubuntu. I believe it's fairly standard.

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Question
How come Rpi3B+ Raspbi9 has 50+ TTYs, but I can only use 6? How can greedy me grab more TTYs?
Answer
Well, "tty", or "TeleTYpe", like TeleVision, in the stone age, the tele-typewriter ("typewriter" in turn, is ancient, belonging to my grandmother days) is just a "terminal" to which user inputs something, then system outputs something (sort of GIGO - garbage in, garbage out! :)
A terminal can be a real thing, eg, a bank ATM (Automated Teller Machine/Terminal. BTW, real banks and real human tellers are disappering, being replaced by virtual banks/virtual tellers) , where you input some "logic" thing, say, numbers, ATM returns you real money. How nice!
For Windows and Linux, where everything is a "file", TTY can be a simulate/emulate/"process" thing, eg puTTY, which is a software/process thing, emulating a terminal (don't ask me what is the different between "simulation" and emulation - google it! :).
And for greedy newbies wanting more TTYs, I usually recommend to play with real USB TTL adapter/cables. “TTL“ here refers to UART/RS232 in TTL (Transistor Transistor Logic, but those adapters are actually not using TTL, but CMOS). The more real USB/TTY adapters you use, the more fake terminals you have.
How confusing! Go read the references below to clarify your mind. But there is no guarantee that the more your read, the more you become confused! :)
References
Linux tty Command Tutorial for Beginners - HowToForge
Q1. What is tty?
In essence, tty is short for teletype, but it's more popularly known as terminal. It's basically a device (implemented in software nowadays) that allows you to interact with the system by passing on the data (your input) to the system, and displaying the output produced by the system.
ttys can be of different types. For example, graphical consoles that you can access with the Ctrl+Alt+Fn key combination, or terminal emulators like Gnome terminal that run inside an X session. To learn more about tty, head here
Q2. How tty command works?
Usage is pretty straight forward - just run 'tty', and the output will contain name of the terminal connected to standard output (or, in other words, name of the current terminal).
Why are there so many [more than 50!] /dev/tty in Linux? - superuser.com
The ttys are not just input/output devices. They also do a special job of acting as the controlling terminal for a session, like sending signals (Ctrl+C). /dev/ttyNN are virtual consoles, which are full screen displays on the monitor.
/dev/tty0 is a special device, which points to the current terminal. So, irrespective of where you run it from(any virtual console), anything read from/written to tty0 goes to your current terminal.
/dev/tty is at process level, it can be ttyn(tty1, tty2,...), ttySn(ttyS0, ttyS1), pty(pts/0, pts/1), and something else.
/dev/tty0 is a alias of current(foreground) virtual console, so it could be tty1, tty2, and so on. Notice that ttyS0 is not a alias; It's the first serial port.
/dev/console is the system console, it points to /dev/tty0 as a default. It can be ttyn, ttySn, ttyUSBn, lpn, and so on.
Roughly, /dev/tty > /dev/cosole > /dev/tty0

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systemd-getty-generator
should be looked at. – Ghanima May 13 '19 at 08:48