+++ /dev/null
-Description: Upstream changes introduced in version 301-1~b1
- This patch has been created by dpkg-source during the package build.
- Here's the last changelog entry, hopefully it gives details on why
- those changes were made:
- .
- ckermit (301-1~b1) unstable; urgency=low
- .
- * New upstream release (Closes: #633156).
- * Moved to main, ckermit is now DFSG-free!.
- * Updated copyright, kermit is now under a BSD-like license.
- * Being in main means we can finally enable crypto. This enables
- us to close a 10 year old bug! (Closes: #95135).
- + use make target linux+krb5+openssl.
- + add ssl-dev and libkrb5-dev to Build-Depends.
- * Removed socks support because:
- + libsocks4 doesn't support socks5, and is orphaned.
- + socks support causes problems with avahi.
- + you can get the same functionality with 'tsocks kermit'.
- * Removed all patches from debian/patches, all taken upstream.
- * Temporarily use -O1 until segfault with -O2+krb5+iksd is fixed.
- * debian/rules: use dh minimal rules file.
- * Bump debhelper build depends to (>= 7.0.50~) for dh override support.
- * Update PAM config, now just includes common-auth, common-account
- and common-session.
- * Propitiate lintian:
- + remove ./ from override paths.
- + add override unusual-interpreter #!/usr/bin/kermit.
- + add spelling override. 'IF WRITEABLE' is a valid kermit
- command, so we are stuck with that spelling.
- + drop leading 'a' from Description.
- + debian/watch: remove dh-make boilerplate.
- + Standards-Version: 3.9.2 (no changes).
- .
- The person named in the Author field signed this changelog entry.
-Author: Ian Beckwith <ianb@debian.org>
-Bug-Debian: http://bugs.debian.org/95135
-Bug-Debian: http://bugs.debian.org/633156
-
----
-The information above should follow the Patch Tagging Guidelines, please
-checkout http://dep.debian.net/deps/dep3/ to learn about the format. Here
-are templates for supplementary fields that you might want to add:
-
-Origin: <vendor|upstream|other>, <url of original patch>
-Bug: <url in upstream bugtracker>
-Bug-Debian: http://bugs.debian.org/<bugnumber>
-Bug-Ubuntu: https://launchpad.net/bugs/<bugnumber>
-Forwarded: <no|not-needed|url proving that it has been forwarded>
-Reviewed-By: <name and email of someone who approved the patch>
-Last-Update: <YYYY-MM-DD>
-
---- /dev/null
-+++ ckermit-301/ckututor.txt
-@@ -0,0 +1,1912 @@
-+
-+ [1]The Columbia Crown The Kermit Project | Columbia University
-+ 612 West 115th Street, New York NY 10025 USA o [2]kermit@columbia.edu
-+ ...since 1981
-+ [3]Home [4]Kermit 95 [5]C-Kermit [6]Scripts [7]Current [8]New [9]FAQ
-+ [10]Support
-+
-+ C-KERMIT 9.0 UNIX MANUAL PAGE AND TUTORIAL
-+
-+ Frank da Cruz
-+ [11]The Kermit Project, [12]Columbia University
-+
-+ [ [13]PDF version ] [ [14]Nroff version ]
-+
-+ This document is intended to give the beginner sufficient
-+ information to make basic (if not advanced) use of C-Kermit 9.0.
-+ Although it might be rather long for a Unix manual page (about 1600
-+ lines), it's still far shorter than the [15]C-Kermit manual, which
-+ should be consulted for advanced topics such as customization,
-+ character-sets, scripting, etc. We also attempt to provide a clear
-+ structural overview of C-Kermit's many capabilities, functional
-+ areas, states, and modes and their interrelation, that should be
-+ helpful to beginners and veterans alike, as well as to those
-+ upgrading to the new release. Thanks to Christine Gianone for her
-+ work on this document before she was laid off in 2005.
-+
-+ Most recent update: Tue Jun 28 09:02:45 2011
-+
-+CONTENTS
-+
-+ * [16]DESCRIPTION
-+ * [17]SYNOPSIS
-+ * [18]OPTIONS
-+ * [19]COMMAND LANGUAGE
-+ * [20]INITIALIZATION FILE
-+ * [21]MODES OF OPERATION
-+ * [22]MAKING CONNECTIONS
-+ * [23]TRANSFERRING FILES WITH KERMIT
-+ * [24]KERMIT CLIENT/SERVER CONNECTIONS
-+
-+ * [25]KERMIT'S BUILT-IN FTP AND HTTP CLIENTS
-+ * [26]INTERNET KERMIT SERVICE
-+ * [27]SECURITY
-+ * [28]ALTERNATIVE COMMAND-LINE PERSONALITIES
-+ * [29]LICENSE
-+ * [30]OTHER TOPICS
-+ * [31]DOCUMENTATION AND UPDATES
-+ * [32]FILES
-+ * [33]AUTHORS
-+
-+DESCRIPTION [34]Top [35]Contents [36]Next
-+
-+[37]C-Kermit is an all-purpose communications software package from the
-+[38]Kermit Project at [39]Columbia University that:
-+
-+ * Is portable to many platforms, Unix and non-Unix alike.
-+ * Can make both serial and network connections.
-+ * Can conduct interactive terminal sessions over its connection.
-+ * Can transfer text or binary files over the same connection.
-+ * Can convert text-file character sets in terminal mode or file
-+ transfer.
-+ * Is customizable in every aspect of its operation.
-+
-+ C-Kermit is a modem program, a Telnet client, an Rlogin client, an FTP
-+ client, an HTTP client, and on selected platforms, also an X.25 client.
-+ It can make its own secure Internet connections using IETF-approved
-+ security methods including Kerberos IV, Kerberos V, SSL/TLS, and SRP
-+ and it can also make SSH (Secure Shell) connections through your
-+ external SSH client application. It can be the far-end file-transfer or
-+ client/server partner of your desktop Kermit client. It can also accept
-+ incoming dialed and network connections. It can even be installed as an
-+ Internet service on its own standard TCP socket, 1649 [[40]RFC2839,
-+ [41]RFC2840].
-+
-+ And perhaps most important, everything you can do "by hand"
-+ (interactively) with C-Kermit, can be "scripted" (automated) using its
-+ built-in cross-platform transport-independent script programming
-+ language, which happens to be identical to its interactive command
-+ language.
-+
-+ This manual page offers an overview of C-Kermit 9.0 for Unix ("Unix" is
-+ an operating system family that includes AIX, DG/UX, FreeBSD, HP-UX,
-+ IRIX, Linux, Mac OS X, NetBSD, OpenBSD, Open Server, Open Unix, QNX,
-+ Solaris, SunOS, System V R3, System V R4, Tru64 Unix, Unixware, Xenix,
-+ and many others). For thorough coverage, please consult the published
-+ C-Kermit manual and supplements (see [42]DOCUMENTATION below). For
-+ further information about C-Kermit, Kermit software for other
-+ platforms, and Kermit manuals, visit the Kermit Project website:
-+
-+ [43]http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/
-+
-+ This is a longer-than-average manual page, and yet it barely scratches
-+ the surface. Don't be daunted. C-Kermit is a large and complex package,
-+ evolving over decades of practice and experience, but that doesn't mean
-+ it's hard to learn or use. Its most commonly used functions are
-+ explained here with pointers to additional information elsewhere.
-+
-+ [44]Kermit Home [45]C-Kermit Home [46]C-Kermit FAQ
-+
-+SYNOPSIS [47]Top [48]Contents [49]Next [50]Previous
-+
-+Usage: kermit [filename] [-x arg [-x arg]...[-yyy]..] [ {=,--,+} text ] ]
-+Or: kermit URL
-+
-+ * -x is an option requiring an argument;
-+ * -y is an option with no argument.
-+
-+ If the first command-line argument is the name of a file,
-+ interactive-mode commands are executed from the file. The '=' (or "--")
-+ argument tells Kermit not to parse the remainder of the command line,
-+ but to make the words following '=' available as \%1, \%2, ... \%9. The
-+ "+" argument is like "=" but for use in "kerbang scripts" (explained
-+ [51]below). A second command-line format allows the one and only
-+ argument to be a [52]Telnet, FTP, HTTP, or IKSD URL.
-+
-+ Order of execution:
-+
-+ 1. [53]The command file (if any).
-+ 2. [54]The initialization file, if any, unless suppressed with -Y.
-+ 3. [55]The customization file (if it is executed by the initialization
-+ file).
-+ 4. [56]The command-line URL (if any, and if so, execution stops here).
-+ 5. [57]Command-line options (if any).
-+ 6. [58]Interactive commands.
-+
-+ Some command-line options can cause actions (such as -s to send a
-+ file); others just set parameters. If any action options are included
-+ on the command line, Kermit exits when finished unless also given the
-+ -S ("stay") option. If no action options are given, no initialization
-+ or command files contained an EXIT or QUIT command, and no fatal errors
-+ occurred, Kermit issues its prompt and waits for you to type commands.
-+
-+ Bear in mind that C-Kermit can be built with selected features
-+ disabled, and also that certain features are not available on all
-+ platforms. For example, C-Kermit can't be built with TCP/IP support
-+ on a platform that does not have TCP/IP header files and libraries
-+ (and even if Kermit does include TCP/IP support, it can't be used to
-+ make TCP/IP connections on a computer that does not have a TCP/IP
-+ stack installed). If your version of C-Kermit lacks a feature
-+ mentioned here, use its SHOW FEATURES command to see what might have
-+ been excluded.
-+
-+ C-Kermit has three kinds of commands: regular single-letter
-+ command-line options, extended-format command-line options, and
-+ interactive commands.
-+
-+ [59]Kermit Home [60]C-Kermit Home [61]C-Kermit FAQ
-+
-+OPTIONS [62]Top [63]Contents [64]Next [65]Previous <- (Most people should
-+click Next to skip around this section...)
-+
-+Like most Unix commands, C-Kermit can be be given options on the command
-+line. But C-Kermit also can be used interactively by giving it [66]commands
-+composed of words, which are more intuitive than cryptic command-line
-+options, and more flexible too. In other words, you don't have to use
-+C-Kermit's command-line options, but they are available if you want to. (By
-+the same token, you don't have to use its interactive commands either -- you
-+can use either or both in any combination.)
-+
-+C-Kermit is generally installed in the PATH as "kermit", and therefore is
-+invoked by typing the word "kermit" (lowercase) at the shell prompt, and then
-+pressing the Return or Enter key. If you wish to include command-line
-+options, put them after the word "kermit" but before pressing Return or
-+Enter, separated by spaces, for example:
-+
-+ $ kermit -s ckermit.tar.gz
-+
-+ ('$' is the shell prompt; "kermit -s ckermit.tar.gz" is what you type,
-+ followed by Return or Enter.)
-+
-+ Here is a list of C-Kermit's single-letter command-line options, which
-+ start with a single dash (-), in ASCII ("alphabetical") order.
-+ Alphabetic case is significant (-A is not the same as -a). The Action?
-+ column contains Y for action options and N for non-action options.
-+
-+ Option Action? Description
-+ -0 N (digit zero) 100% transparent Connect state for "in-the-middle"
-+ operation: 8 bits, no parity, no escape character, everything passes
-+ through.
-+ -8 N (digit eight) Connection is 8-bit clean (this is the default in
-+ C-Kermit 9.0). Equivalent to the EIGHTBIT command, which in turn is a
-+ shortcut for SET TERMINAL BYTESIZE 8, SET COMMAND BYTESIZE 8, SET
-+ PARITY NONE.
-+ -9 arg N (digit nine) Make a connection to an FTP server. Equivalent to
-+ the FTP OPEN command.
-+ Argument: IP-address-or-hostname[:optional-TCP-port].
-+ NOTE: C-Kermit also has a separate FTP command-line personality, with
-+ regular FTP-like command-line syntax. [67]More about this below.
-+ -A N Kermit is to be started as an Internet service (IKSD) (only from
-+ inetd.conf).
-+ -B N Kermit is running in Batch or Background (no controlling
-+ terminal). To be used in case Kermit doesn't automatically sense its
-+ background status. Equivalent to the SET BACKGROUND ON command.
-+ -C arg N Interactive-mode Commands to be executed.
-+ Argument: Commands separated by commas, list in doublequotes.
-+ -D arg N Delay before starting to send in Remote mode. Equivalent to
-+ the SET DELAY command.
-+ Argument: Number of seconds.
-+ -E N Exit automatically when connection closes. Equivalent to SET EXIT
-+ ON-DISCONNECT ON.
-+ -F arg N Use an open TCP connection.
-+ Argument: Numeric file descriptor of open TCP connection.
-+ Also see: -j, -J.
-+ -G arg Y Get file(s) from server, send contents to standard output,
-+ which normally would be piped to another process.
-+ Argument: Remote file specification, in quotes if it contains
-+ metacharacters.
-+ Also see: -g, -k.
-+ -H N Suppress program startup Herald and greeting.
-+ -I N Tell Kermit it has a reliable connection, to force streaming to be
-+ used where it normally would not be. Equivalent to the SET RELIABLE ON
-+ command.
-+ -J arg N "Be like Telnet." Like -j but implies -E.
-+ Argument: IP hostname/address optionally followed by service.
-+ NOTE: C-Kermit also has a separate Telnet command-line personality,
-+ with regular Telnet-like command-line syntax. [68]More about this
-+ below.
-+ -L N Recursive directory descent for files in -s option.
-+ -M arg N My user name (for use with Telnet, Rlogin, FTP, etc).
-+ Equivalent to the SET LOGIN USER command.
-+ Argument: Username string.
-+ -O Y (Uppercase letter O) Be a server for One command only. Also see:
-+ -x.
-+ -P N Don't convert file (Path) names of transferred files. Equivalent
-+ to SET FILE NAMES LITERAL.
-+ -Q N Quick Kermit protocol settings. Equivalent to the FAST command.
-+ This is the default in C-Kermit 7.0 and later.
-+ -R N Remote-only (this just makes IF REMOTE true).
-+ -S N Stay (enter command parser after action options).
-+ -T N Force Text mode for file transfer; implies -V. Equivalent to SET
-+ TRANSFER MODE MANUAL, SET FILE TYPE TEXT.
-+ -V N Disable automatic per-file text/binary switching. Equivalent to
-+ SET TRANSFER MODE MANUAL.
-+ -Y N Skip (don't execute) the initialization file.
-+ -a arg N As-name for file(s) in -s, -r, or -g.
-+ Argument: As-name string (alternative filename). When receiving files,
-+ this can be a directory name.
-+ -b arg N Speed for serial device. Equivalent to SET SPEED.
-+ Argument: Numeric Bits per second for serial connections.
-+ -c Y Enter Connect state before transferring files.
-+ -d N Create a debug.log file with detailed debugging information (a
-+ second -d adds timestamps). Equivalent to LOG DEBUG but takes effect
-+ sooner.
-+ -e arg N Maximum length for incoming Kermit file-transfer packets.
-+ Equivalent to SET RECEIVE PACKET-LENGTH.
-+ Argument: Length in bytes.
-+ -f Y Send a FINISH command to a Kermit server.
-+ -g arg N Get file(s) from a Kermit server.
-+ Argument: File specification on other computer, in quotes if it
-+ contains metacharacters. Equivalent to GET.
-+ Also see: -a, -G, -r.
-+ -h Y Print Help text for single-letter command-line options (pipe thru
-+ 'more' to prevent scrolling).
-+ -i N Force binary (Image) mode for file transfer; implies -V.
-+ Equivalent to SET TRANSFER MODE MANUAL, SET FILE TYPE BINARY.
-+ -j arg N Make a TCP/IP connection.
-+ Argument: IP host name/address and optional service name or number.
-+ Equivalent to the TELNET command.
-+ Also see: -J, -F.
-+ -k Y Receive file(s) to standard output, which normally would be piped
-+ to another process.
-+ Also see: -r, -G.
-+ -l arg N (Lowercase letter L) Make a connection on the given serial
-+ communications device. Equivalent to the SET LINE (SET PORT) command.
-+ Argument: Serial device name, e.g. /dev/ttyS0.
-+ -m arg N Modem type for use with the -l device. Equivalent to the SET
-+ MODEM TYPE command.
-+ Argument: Modem name as in SET MODEM TYPE command, e.g. "usrobotics".
-+ -n Y Enter Connect state after transferring files (historical).
-+ -p arg N Parity. Equivalent to the SET PARITY command.
-+ Argument: One of the following: e(ven), o(dd), m(ark), n(one), s(pace).
-+ -q N Quiet (suppress most messages). Equivalent to SET QUIET ON.
-+ -r Y Receive file(s). Equivalent to the RECEIVE command.
-+ Argument: (none, but see -a)
-+ -s arg N Send file(s).
-+ Argument: One or more local file specifications. Equivalent to the SEND
-+ command.
-+ Also see: -a.
-+ -t N (Historical) Xon (Ctrl-Q) Turnaround character for half-duplex
-+ connections (used on serial linemode connections to old mainframes).
-+ Equivalent to SET DUPLEX HALF, SET HANDSHAKE XON.
-+ -v arg N Window size for Kermit protocol (ignored when streaming).
-+ Equivalanet to SET WINDOW-SIZE.
-+ Argument: Number, 1 to 32.
-+ -w N Incoming files Write over existing files. Equivalent to SET FILE
-+ COLLISION OVERWRITE.
-+ -x Y Enter server mode. Equivalent to the SERVER command. Also see: -O.
-+ -y arg N Alternative initialization file.
-+ Argument: Filename.
-+ -z N Force foreground behavior. To be used in case Kermit doesn't
-+ automatically sense its foreground status. Equivalent to the SET
-+ BACKGROUND OFF command.
-+
-+ Extended command-line options (necessary because single-letter ones are
-+ about used up) start with two dashes (--), with words rather than
-+ single letters as option names. If an extended option takes an
-+ argument, it is separated from the option word by a colon (:). Extended
-+ options include:
-+
-+ Option
-+ Description
-+
-+ --bannerfile:filename File to display upon startup or IKSD login.
-+ --cdfile:filename File to be sent for display to the client when server
-+ changes directory (filename is relative to the changed-to directory).
-+ --cdmessage:{on,off} Enable/disable the server CD message feature.
-+ --help Prints usage message for extended options.
-+ --helpfile:filename Designates a file containing custom text to replace
-+ the top-level HELP command.
-+ --nointerrupts Disables keyboard interrupts.
-+ --noperms Disables the Kermit protocol file Permissions attribute, to
-+ prevent transmission of file permissions (protection) from sender to
-+ receiver.
-+
-+ Plus several other [69]IKSD-Only options.
-+
-+ See the [70]file-transfer section for examples of command-line
-+ invocation.
-+
-+ COMMAND LANGUAGE [71]Top [72]Contents [73]Next [74]Previous
-+
-+ * [75]Command Files, Macros, and Scripts
-+ * [76]Command List
-+
-+ C-Kermit's interactive command language is the subject of a
-+ [77]622-page book and another several hundred pages of updates, far too
-+ much for a manual page. But it's not hard to get started. At the shell
-+ prompt, just type "kermit" to get C-Kermit's interactive command
-+ prompt:
-+
-+ $ kermit
-+ (/current/directory) C-Kermit>
-+
-+ Begin by typing "help" (and then press the Return or Enter key) for a
-+ top-level overview, read it, and go from there. Your second command
-+ should probably be "intro" (introduction). Note the prompt shows your
-+ current directory (unless you tell Kermit to prompt you with something
-+ else).
-+
-+ Interactive commands are composed mainly of regular English words,
-+ usually in the form of imperative sentences, such as:
-+
-+ send oofa.txt
-+
-+ which tells Kermit to send (transfer) the file whose name is oofa.txt,
-+ or:
-+
-+ set transfer mode automatic
-+
-+ which sets Kermit's "transfer mode" to "automatic" (whatever that
-+ means).
-+
-+ While typing commands, you can abbreviate, ask for help (by pressing
-+ the "?" key anywhere in a command), complete keywords or filenames
-+ (with the Tab or Esc key), and edit your typing with Backspace or
-+ Delete, Ctrl-W, Ctrl-U, etc. You can also recall previous commands,
-+ save your command history, and who knows what else. Give the INTRO
-+ command for details.
-+
-+ C-Kermit has hundreds of commands, and they can be issued in infinite
-+ variety and combinations, including commands for:
-+
-+ * Making connections (SET LINE, DIAL, TELNET, SSH, FTP, CONNECT, ...)
-+ * Breaking connections (HANGUP, CLOSE)
-+ * Transferring files (SEND, GET, RECEIVE, MOVE, RESEND, ...)
-+ * Establishing preferences (SET)
-+ * Displaying preferences (SHOW)
-+ * Managing local files (CD, DELETE, MKDIR, DIRECTORY, RENAME, TYPE,
-+ ...)
-+ * Managing remote files (RCD, RDEL, RMKDIR, RDIR, ...)
-+ * Using local files (FOPEN, FCLOSE, FREAD, FWRITE)
-+ * Programming (TAKE, DEFINE, IF, FOR, WHILE, SWITCH, DECLARE, ...)
-+ * Interacting with the user (ECHO, ASK, ...)
-+ * Interacting with a remote computer (INPUT, OUTPUT, ...)
-+ * Interacting with local programs (RUN, EXEC, PTY, ...)
-+ * Logging things (LOG SESSION, LOG PACKETS, LOG DEBUG, ...)
-+
-+ And of course QUIT or EXIT to get out and HELP to get help, and for
-+ programmers: loops, decision making, variables, arrays, associative
-+ arrays, integer and floating point arithmetic, macros, built-in and
-+ user-defined functions, string manipulation, pattern matching, block
-+ structure, scoping, recursion, and all the rest. To get a list of all
-+ C-Kermit's commands, type a question mark (?) at the prompt. To get a
-+ description of any command, type HELP followed by the name of the
-+ command, for example:
-+
-+ help send
-+
-+ The command interruption character is Ctrl-C (hold down the Ctrl key
-+ and press the C key).
-+
-+ The command language "escape character", used to introduce variable
-+ names, function invocations, and so on, is backslash (\). If you need
-+ to include a literal backslash in a command, type two of them, e.g.:
-+
-+ get c:\\k95\\k95custom.ini
-+
-+ Command Files, Macros, and Scripts
-+
-+ A file containing Kermit commands is called a Kermit command file or
-+ Kermit script. It can be executed with Kermit's TAKE command:
-+
-+ (/current/dir) C-Kermit> take commandfile
-+
-+ (where "commandfile" is the name of the command file). Please don't
-+ pipe a command file into Kermit's standard input (which might or might
-+ not work); if you have Kermit commands in a file, tell Kermit to TAKE
-+ the file.
-+
-+ In Unix only, a Kermit command file can also be executed directly by
-+ including a "kerbang" line as the first line of the file:
-+
-+ #!/usr/local/bin/kermit +
-+
-+ That is, a top line that starts with "#!", followed immediately by the
-+ full path of the Kermit executable, and then, if the Kermit script is
-+ to be given arguments on the command line, a space and a plus sign. The
-+ script file must also have execute permission:
-+
-+ chmod +x commandfile
-+
-+ Except for the " +" part, this is exactly the same as you would do for
-+ a shell script, a Perl script, etc. Here's a simple but useless example
-+ script that regurgitates its arguments (up to three of them):
-+
-+ #!/usr/local/bin/kermit +
-+ if defined \%1 echo "Argument 1: \%1"
-+ if defined \%2 echo "Argument 2: \%2"
-+ if defined \%3 echo "Argument 3: \%3"
-+ if defined \%4 echo "etc..."
-+ exit
-+
-+ If this file is stored in your current directory as "commandfile",
-+ then:
-+
-+ ./commandfile one two three four five
-+
-+ prints:
-+
-+ Argument 1: one
-+ Argument 2: two
-+ Argument 3: three
-+ etc...
-+
-+ This illustrates the basic structure of a standalone Kermit script: the
-+ "kerbang line", then some commands. It should end with "exit" unless
-+ you want the Kermit prompt to appear when it is finished. \%1 is the
-+ first argument, \%2 the second, and so on.
-+
-+ You can also create your own commands by defining named macros composed
-+ of other Kermit commands (or macros). Here's a simple example:
-+
-+ define mydial {
-+ set modem type usrobotics
-+ set port /dev/ttyS0
-+ if fail end 1
-+ set speed 57600
-+ dial \%1
-+ if success connect
-+ }
-+
-+ This shows how you can combine many commands into one command, "mydial"
-+ in this case (you can use any name you like, provided it does not clash
-+ with the name of a built-in command). When this macro definition is in
-+ effect, you can type commands like:
-+
-+ mydial 7654321
-+
-+ and it executes all the commands in macro definition, substituting the
-+ first operand ("7654321") for the formal parameter ("\%1") in the
-+ definition. This saves you from having to type lots of commands every
-+ time you want to make a modem call.
-+
-+ One way to have the macro definition in effect is to type the
-+ definition at the Kermit prompt. Another way is to store the definition
-+ in a file and TAKE the file. If you want the the definition to be in
-+ effect automatically every time you start Kermit, put the definition in
-+ your initialization or customization file (explained [78]below).
-+
-+ Here's a somewhat more ambitious example:
-+
-+ define mydelete {
-+ local trash
-+ assign trash \v(home)trashcan/
-+ if not defined \%1 end 1 "Delete what?"
-+ if wild \%1 end 1 "Deleting multiple files is too scary"
-+ if not exist \%1 end 1 "I can't find \%1"
-+ if not directory \m(trash) {
-+ mkdir \m(trash)
-+ if fail end 1 "No trash can"
-+ }
-+ rename /list \%1 \m(trash)
-+ }
-+ define myundelete {
-+ local trash
-+ assign trash \v(home)trashcan/
-+ if not defined \%1 end 1 "Undelete what?"
-+ if wild \%1 end 1 "Undeleting multiple files is too hard"
-+ if not directory \m(trash) end 1 "No trash can"
-+ if not exist \m(trash)\%1 end 1 "I can't find \%1 in trash can"
-+ rename /list \m(trash)\%1 .
-+ }
-+
-+ These macros are not exactly production quality (they don't handle
-+ filenames that include path segments, they don't handle multiple files,
-+ etc), but you get the idea: you can pass arguments to macros, they can
-+ check them and make other kinds of decisions, and the commands
-+ themselves are relatively intuitive and intelligible.
-+
-+ If you put the above lines into your initialization or customization
-+ file, you'll have MYDELETE and MYUNDELETE commands available every time
-+ you start Kermit, at least as long as you don't suppress execution of
-+ the initialization file. (Exercise for the reader: Make these macros
-+ generally useful: remove limitations, add trashcan display, browsing,
-+ emptying, etc.)
-+
-+ Kerbang scripts execute without the initialization file. This to keep
-+ them portable and also to make them start faster. If you want to write
-+ Kerbang scripts that depend on the initialization file, include the
-+ command
-+
-+ take \v(home).kermrc
-+
-+ at the desired spot in the script. By the way, \v(xxx) is a built-in
-+ variable (xxx is the variable name, "home" in this case). To see what
-+ built-in variables are available, type "show variables" at the C-Kermit
-+ prompt. To see what else you can show, type "show ?". \m(xxx) is a user
-+ defined variable (strictly speaking, it is a macro used as a variable).
-+
-+ Command List
-+
-+ C-Kermit has more than 200 top-level commands, and some of these, such
-+ as SET, branch off into hundreds of subcommands of their own, so it's
-+ not practical to describe them all here. Instead, here's a concise list
-+ of the most commonly used top-level commands, grouped by category. To
-+ learn about each command, type "help" followed by the command name,
-+ e.g. "help set". Terms such as Command state and Connect state are
-+ explained in subsequent sections.
-+
-+ Optional fields are shown in [ italicized brackets ]. filename means
-+ the name of a single file. filespec means a file specification that is
-+ allowed to contain wildcard characters like '*' to match groups of
-+ files. options are (optional) switches like /PAGE, /NOPAGE, /QUIET,
-+ etc, listed in the HELP text for each command. Example:
-+
-+ send /recursive /larger:10000 /after:-1week /except:*.txt *
-+
-+ which can be read as "send all the files in this directory and all the
-+ ones underneath it that are larger than 10000 bytes, no more than one
-+ week old, and whose names don't end with ".txt".
-+
-+ Basic Commands
-+
-+ HELP Requests top-level help.
-+ HELP command Requests help about the given command.
-+ INTRODUCTION Requests a brief introduction to C-Kermit.
-+ LICENSE Displays the C-Kermit software copyright and license.
-+ VERSION Displays C-Kermit's version number.
-+ EXIT [ number ] Exits from Kermit with the given status code. Synonyms:
-+ QUIT, E, Q.
-+ TAKE filename [ parameters... ] Executes commands from the given file.
-+ LOG item [ filename ] Keeps a log of the given item in the given file.
-+ [ DO ] macro [ parameters... ] Executes commands from the given
-+ macro.
-+ SET parameter value Sets the given parameter to the given value.
-+ SHOW category Shows settings in a given category.
-+ STATUS Tells whether previous command succeeded or failed.
-+ DATE [ date-and/or-time ] Shows current date-time or interprets given
-+ date-time.
-+ RUN [ extern-command [ parameters... ] Runs the given external command.
-+ Synonym: !.
-+ EXEC [ extern-command [ params... ] Kermit overlays itself with the
-+ given command.
-+ SUSPEND Stops Kermit and puts it in the background. Synonym: Z.
-+
-+ Local File Management
-+
-+ TYPE [ options ] filename Displays the contents of the given file.
-+ MORE [ options ] filename Equivalent to TYPE /PAGE (pause after each
-+ screenful).
-+ CAT [ options ] filename Equivalent to TYPE /NOPAGE.
-+ HEAD [ options ] filename Displays the first few lines of a given file.
-+ TAIL [ options ] filename Displays the last few lines of a given file.
-+ GREP [ options ] pattern filespec Displays lines from files that match
-+ the pattern. Synonym: FIND.
-+ DIRECTORY [ options ] [ filespec ] Lists files (built-in, many
-+ options).
-+ LS [ options ] [ filespec ] Lists files (runs external "ls" command).
-+ DELETE [ options ] [ filespec ] Deletes files. Synonym: RM.
-+ PURGE [ options ] [ filespec ] Removes backup (*.~n~) files.
-+ COPY [ options ] [ filespecs... ] Copies files. Synonym: CP.
-+ RENAME [ options ] [ filespecs... ] Renames files. Synonym: MV.
-+ CHMOD [ options ] [ filespecs... ] Changes permissions of files.
-+ TRANSLATE filename charsets filename ] Converts file's character set.
-+ Synonym: XLATE.
-+ CD Changes your working directory to your home directory.
-+ CD directory Changes your working directory to the one given.
-+ CDUP Changes your working directory one level up.
-+ PWD Displays your working directory.
-+ BACK Returns to your previous working directory.
-+ MKDIR [ directory ] Creates a directory.
-+ RMDIR [ directory ] Removes a directory.
-+
-+ Making Connections
-+
-+ SET LINE [ options ] devicename Opens the named serial port.
-+ Synonym: SET PORT.
-+ OPEN LINE [ options ] devicename Same as SET LINE. Synonym: OPEN PORT.
-+ SET MODEM TYPE [ name ] Tells Kermit what kind of modem is on the port.
-+ DIAL [ number ] Tells Kermit to dial the given phone number with the
-+ modem.
-+ REDIAL Redials the most recently dialed phone number.
-+ ANSWER
-+ Waits for and answers an incoming call on the modem.
-+ AUTHENTICATE [ parameters... ] Performs secure authentication on a
-+ TCP/IP connection.
-+ SET NETWORK TYPE { TCP/IP, X.25, ... } Selects network type for
-+ subsequent SET HOST commands.
-+ SET HOST [ options ] host [ port ] Opens a network connection to the
-+ given host and port.
-+ SET HOST [ options ] * port Waits for an incoming TCP/IP connection on
-+ the given port.
-+ TELNET [ options ] host Opens a Telnet connection to the host and
-+ enters Connect state.
-+ RLOGIN [ options ] host Opens an Rlogin connection to the host and
-+ enters Connect state.
-+ IKSD [ options ] host Opens a connection to an Internet Kermit Service.
-+ SSH [ options ] host Opens an SSH connection to the host and enters
-+ Connect state.
-+ FTP OPEN host [ options ] Opens an FTP connection to the host.
-+ HTTP [ options ] OPEN host Opens an HTTP connection to the host.
-+ PTY external-command Runs the command on a pseudoterminal as if it were
-+ a connection.
-+ PIPE external-command Runs the command through a pipe as if it were a
-+ connection.
-+
-+ Using Connections
-+
-+ CONNECT [ options ] Enters Connect (terminal) state.
-+ Synonym: C.
-+ REDIRECT command Redirects the given external command over the
-+ connection.
-+ TELOPT command Sends a Telnet protocol command (Telnet connections
-+ only).
-+ Ctrl-\C "Escapes back" from Connect state to Command state.
-+ Ctrl-\B (In Connect state) Sends a BREAK signal (serial or Telnet).
-+ Ctrl-\! (In Connect state) Enters inferior shell; "exit" to return.
-+ Ctrl-\? (In Connect state) Shows a menu of other escape-level options.
-+ Ctrl-\Ctrl-\ (In Connect state) Type two Ctrl-Backslashes to send one
-+ of them.
-+ SET ESCAPE [ character ] Changes Kermit's Connect-state escape
-+ character.
-+
-+ Closing Connections
-+
-+ HANGUP Hangs up the currently open serial-port or network connection.
-+ CLOSE Closes the currently open serial-port or network connection.
-+ SET LINE (with no devicename) Closes the currently open
-+ serial-port or network connection.
-+ SET HOST (with no hostname) Closes the currently open serial-port or
-+ network connection.
-+ FTP CLOSE Closes the currently open FTP connection.
-+ HTTP CLOSE Closes the currently open HTTP connection.
-+ EXIT Also closes all connections. Synonym: QUIT.
-+ SET EXIT WARNING OFF Suppresses warning about open connections on exit
-+ or close.
-+
-+ File Transfer
-+
-+ SEND [ options ] filename [ as-name ] Sends the given file. Synonym:
-+ S.
-+ SEND [ options ] filespec Sends all files that match.
-+ RESEND [ options ] filespec Resumes an interupted SEND from the point
-+ of failure.
-+ RECEIVE [ options ] [ as-name ] Waits passively for files to arrive.
-+ Synonym: R.
-+ LOG TRANSACTIONS [ filename ] Keeps a record of file transfers.
-+ FAST Use fast file-transfer settings (default).
-+ CAUTIOUS Use cautious and less fast file-transfer settings.
-+ ROBUST Use ultra-conservative and slow file-transfer settings.
-+ STATISTICS [ options ] Gives statistics about the most recent file
-+ transfer.
-+ WHERE After transfer: "Where did my files go?".
-+ TRANSMIT [ options ] [ filename ] Sends file without protocol. Synonym:
-+ XMIT.
-+ LOG SESSION [ filename ] Captures remote text or files without
-+ protocol.
-+ SET PROTOCOL [ name... ] Tells Kermit to use an external file-transfer
-+ protocol.
-+ FTP { PUT, MPUT, GET, MGET, ... } FTP client commands.
-+ HTTP { PUT, GET, HEAD, POST, ... } HTTP client commands.
-+
-+ Kermit Server
-+
-+ ENABLE, DISABLE Controls which features can be
-+ used by clients.
-+ SET SERVER Sets parameters prior to entering Server state.
-+ SERVER Enters Server state.
-+
-+ Client of Kermit or FTP Server
-+
-+ [ REMOTE ] LOGIN [ user password ] Logs in to a Kermit server or IKSD
-+ that requires it.
-+ [ REMOTE ] LOGOUT Logs out from a Kermit server or IKSD.
-+ SEND [ options ] filename [ as-name ] Sends the given file to the
-+ server. Synonyms: S, PUT.
-+ SEND [ options ] filespec Sends all files that match.
-+ RESEND [ options ] filespec Resumes an interupted SEND from the point
-+ of failure.
-+ GET [ options ] remote-filespec Asks the server to send the given
-+ files. Synonym: G.
-+ REGET [ options ] remote-filespec Resumes an interrupted GET from the
-+ point of failure.
-+ REMOTE CD [ directory ] Asks server to change its working directory.
-+ Synonym: RCD.
-+ REMOTE PWD [ directory ] Asks server to display its working directory.
-+ Synonym: RPWD.
-+ REMOTE DIRECTORY [ filespec... ] Asks server to send a directory
-+ listing. Synonym: RDIR.
-+ REMOTE DELETE [ filespec... ] Asks server to delete files. Synonym:
-+ RDEL.
-+ REMOTE [ command... ] (Many other commands: "remote ?" for a list).
-+ MAIL [ options ] filespec Sends file(s) to be delivered as e-mail
-+ (Kermit only).
-+ FINISH Asks the server to exit server state (Kermit only).
-+ BYE Asks the server to log out and close the connection.
-+
-+ Script Programming
-+ DEFINE, DECLARE, UNDEFINE, UNDECLARE, ASSIGN, EVALUATE,
-+ SEXPRESSION, ARRAY, SORT, INPUT, OUTPUT, IF, FOR, WHILE, SWITCH,
-+ GOTO, ECHO, ASK, GETC, GETOK, ASSERT, WAIT, SLEEP, FOPEN, FREAD,
-+ FWRITE, FCLOSE, STOP, END, RETURN, LEARN, SHIFT, TRACE, VOID,
-+ INCREMENT, DECREMENT, ... For these and many more you'll need to
-+ consult the [79]manual and supplements, and/or visit the
-+ [80]Kermit Script Library, which also includes a brief tutorial.
-+ Hint: HELP LEARN to find out how to get Kermit to write simple
-+ scripts for you.
-+
-+ Many of Kermit's commands have synonyms, variants, relatives, and so
-+ on. For example, MSEND is a version of SEND that accepts a list of file
-+ specifications to be sent, rather than just one file specification, and
-+ MPUT is a synonym of MSEND. MOVE means to SEND and then DELETE the
-+ source file if successful. MMOVE is like MOVE, but accepts a list of
-+ filespecs, and so on. These are described in the [81]full
-+ documentation.
-+
-+ Use question mark to feel your way through an unfamiliar command, as in
-+ this example (the part you type is underlined):
-+
-+ C-Kermit> remote ? One of the following:
-+ assign delete help login print rename space
-+ cd directory host logout pwd rmdir type
-+ copy exit kermit mkdir query set who
-+ C-Kermit> remote set ? One of the following:
-+ attributes file retry transfer
-+ block-check receive server window
-+ C-Kermit> remote set file ? One of the following:
-+ character-set incomplete record-length
-+ collision names type
-+ C-Kermit> remote set file names ? One of the following:
-+ converted literal
-+ C-Kermit> remote set file names literal
-+ C-Kermit>
-+
-+ This is called menu on demand: you get a menu when you want one, but
-+ menus are not forced on you even when know what you're doing. Note that
-+ you can also abbreviate most keywords, and you can complete them with
-+ the Tab or Esc key. Also note that ? works for filenames too, and that
-+ you can use it in the middle of a keyword or filename, not just at the
-+ beginning. For example, "send x?" lists all the files in the current
-+ directory whose names start with 'x'.
-+
-+ [82]Kermit Home [83]C-Kermit Home [84]C-Kermit FAQ
-+
-+ INITIALIZATION FILE [85]Top [86]Contents [87]Next [88]Previous
-+
-+ In its default configuration, C-Kermit executes commands from a file called
-+ .kermrc in your home directory when it starts, unless it is given the -Y or -y
-+ command-line option. Custom configurations might substitute a shared
-+ system-wide initialization file. The SHOW FILE command tells what
-+ initialization file, if any, was used. The standard initialization file
-+ "chains" to an individual customization file, .mykermc, in the home directory,
-+ in which each user can establish her/his own preferences, define macros, and
-+ so on.
-+
-+ Since execution of the initialization file (at least the standard one) makes
-+ C-Kermit take longer to start, it might be better not to have an
-+ initialization file, especially now that Kermit's default startup
-+ configuration is well attuned to modern computing and networking -- in other
-+ words, you no longer have do anything special to make Kermit transfers go
-+ fast. So instead of having an initialization file that is executed every time
-+ Kermit starts, you might consider making one or more kerbang scripts (with
-+ names other that .kermrc) that do NOT include an "exit" command, and invoke
-+ those when you need the settings, macro definitions, and/or scripted actions
-+ they contain, and invoke C-Kermit directly when you don't.
-+
-+ To put it another way... We still distribute the standard initialization file
-+ since it's featured in the manual and backwards compatibility is important to
-+ us. But there's no harm in not using it if you don't need the stuff that's in
-+ it (services directory, dialing directory, network directory, and associated
-+ macro definitions). On the other hand, if there are settings or macros you
-+ want in effect EVERY time you use Kermit, the initialization file (or the
-+ customization file it chains to) is the place to put them, because that's the
-+ only place Kermit looks for them automatically each time you start it.
-+
-+ [89]Kermit Home [90]C-Kermit Home [91]C-Kermit FAQ
-+ MODES OF OPERATION [92]Top [93]Contents [94]Next [95]Previous
-+
-+ Kermit is said to be in Local mode if it has made a connection to another
-+ computer, e.g. by dialing it or establishing a Telnet connection to it. The
-+ other computer is remote, so if you start another copy of Kermit on the remote
-+ computer, it is said to be in Remote mode (as long as it has not made any
-+ connections of its own). The local Kermit communicates over the communications
-+ device or network connection, acting as a conduit between the the remote
-+ computer and your keyboard and screen. The remote Kermit is the file-transfer
-+ partner to the local Kermit and communicates only through its standard input
-+ and output.
-+
-+ At any moment, a Kermit program can be in any of the following states. It's
-+ important to know what they are and how to change from one to the other.
-+
-+ Command state
-+
-+ In this state, Kermit reads commands from:
-+
-+ + Your keyboard; or:
-+ + A file, or:
-+ + A macro definition.
-+
-+ You can exit from Command state back to Unix with the EXIT or
-+ QUIT command (same thing). You can enter Connect state with any
-+ of various commands (CONNECT, DIAL, TELNET, etc). You can enter
-+ file transfer state with commands like SEND, RECEIVE, and GET.
-+ You can enter Server state with the SERVER command. The TAKE
-+ command tells Kermit to read and execute commands from a file.
-+ The (perhaps implied) DO command tells Kermit to read and
-+ execute commands from a macro definition. While in Command
-+ state, you can interrupt any command, macro, or command file by
-+ typing Ctrl-C (hold down the Ctrl key and press the C key); this
-+ normally brings you back to the prompt.
-+
-+ Shell state
-+
-+ You can invoke an inferior shell or external command from the
-+ Kermit command prompt by using the PUSH, RUN (!), EDIT, or
-+ BROWSE command. While the inferior shell or command is active,
-+ Kermit is suspended and does nothing. Return to Kermit Command
-+ state by exiting from the inferior shell or application.
-+
-+ Connect state
-+
-+ In this state, which can be entered only when in Local mode
-+ (i.e. when Kermit has made a connection to another computer),
-+ Kermit is acting as a terminal to the remote computer. Your
-+ keystrokes are sent to the remote computer and characters that
-+ arrive over the communication connection are displayed on your
-+ screen. This state is entered when you give a CONNECT, DIAL,
-+ TELNET, RLOGIN, or IKSD command. You can return to command state
-+ by logging out of the remote computer, or by typing:
-+
-+ Ctrl-\c
-+
-+ That is: Hold down the Ctrl key and press the backslash key,
-+ then let go of the Ctrl key and press the C key. This is called
-+ escaping back. Certain other escape-level commands are also
-+ provided; type Ctrl-\? for a list. For example, you can enter
-+ Shell state with:
-+
-+ Ctrl-\!
-+
-+ To send a Ctrl-\ to the host while in Connect state, type two of
-+ them in a row. See HELP CONNECT and HELP SET ESCAPE for more
-+ info.
-+
-+ Local file-transfer state
-+
-+ In this state, Kermit is sending packets back and forth with the
-+ other computer in order to transfer a file or accomplish some
-+ other file-related task. And at the same time, it is displaying
-+ its progress on your screen and watching your keyboard for
-+ interruptions. In this state, the following single-keystroke
-+ commands are accepted:
-+
-+ X Interrupt the current file and go on to the next (if any).
-+ Z Interrupt the current file and skip all the rest.
-+ E Like Z but uses a "stronger" protocol (use if X or Z don't work).
-+ Ctrl-C Interrupt file-transfer mode (use if Z or E don't work).
-+
-+ Kermit returns to its previous state (Command or Connect) when
-+ the transfer is complete or when interrupted successfully by X,
-+ Z, E, or Ctrl-C (hold down the Ctrl key and press the C key).
-+
-+ Remote file-transfer state
-+
-+ In this state, Kermit is exchanging file-transfer packets with
-+ its local partner over its standard i/o. It leaves this state
-+ automatically when the transfer is complete. In case you find
-+ your local Kermit in Connect state and the remote one in
-+ File-transfer state (in which it seems to ignore your
-+ keystrokes), you can usually return it to command state by
-+ typing three Ctrl-C's in a row. If that doesn't work, return
-+ your local Kermit to Command state (Ctrl-\ C) and type
-+ "e-packet" and then press the Return or Enter key; this forces a
-+ fatal Kermit protocol error.
-+
-+ Remote Server state
-+
-+ This is like Remote File-transfer state, except it never returns
-+ automatically to Command state. Rather, it awaits further
-+ instructions from the client program; that is, from your Local
-+ Kermit program. You can return the Remote Server to its previous
-+ state by issuing a "finish" command to the client, or if you are
-+ in Connect state, by typing three Ctrl-C's in a row. You can
-+ tell the server job to log out and break the connection by
-+ issuing a "bye" command to the client.
-+
-+ Local Server state
-+
-+ Like Remote-Server state, but in local mode, and therefore with
-+ its file-transfer display showing, and listening for single-key
-+ commands, as in Local File-transfer state. Usually this state is
-+ entered automatically when a remote Kermit program gives a GET
-+ command.
-+
-+ C-Kermit, Kermit 95, and MS-DOS Kermit all can switch automatically from
-+ Connect state to Local File-transfer state when you initiate a file transfer
-+ from the remote computer by starting Kermit and telling it to send or get a
-+ file, in which case, Connect state is automatically resumed after the file
-+ transfer is finished.
-+
-+ Note that C-Kermit is not a terminal emulator. It is a communications
-+ application that you run in a terminal window (e.g. console or Xterm). The
-+ specific emulation, such as VT100, VT220, Linux Console, or Xterm, is provided
-+ by the terminal window in which you are running C-Kermit. Kermit 95 and MS-DOS
-+ Kermit, on the other hand, are true terminal emulators. Why is C-Kermit not a
-+ terminal emulator? [96]CLICK HERE to read about it.
-+
-+ [97]Kermit Home [98]C-Kermit Home [99]C-Kermit FAQ
-+ MAKING CONNECTIONS [100]Top [101]Contents [102]Next [103]Previous
-+
-+ Here is how to make different kinds of connections using interactive Kermit
-+ commands (as noted above, you can also make connections with command-line
-+ options). Note that you don't have to make connections with Kermit. It can
-+ also be used on the far end of a connection as the remote file transfer and
-+ management partner of your local communications software.
-+
-+ Making a Telnet Connection
-+
-+ At the C-Kermit command prompt, simply type:
-+
-+ telnet foo.bar.com ; Substitute desired host name or address.
-+ telnet xyzcorp.com 3000 ; You can also include a port number.
-+
-+ If the connection is successful, Kermit automically enters
-+ Connect state. When you logout from the remote host, Kermit
-+ automatically returns to its prompt. More info: HELP TELNET,
-+ HELP SET TELNET, HELP SET TELOPT. Also see the [104]IKSD section
-+ below.
-+
-+ Making an Rlogin connection
-+
-+ This is just like Telnet, except you have to be root to do it
-+ because Rlogin uses a privileged TCP port:
-+
-+ rlogin foo.bar.com ; Substitute desired host name or address.
-+
-+ More info: HELP RLOGIN.
-+
-+ Making an SSH Connection
-+
-+ Unlike Telnet and Rlogin, SSH connections are not built-in, but
-+ handled by running your external SSH client through a
-+ pseudoterminal. Using C-Kermit to control the SSH client gives
-+ you all of Kermit's features (file transfer, character-set
-+ conversion, scripting, etc) over SSH.
-+
-+ ssh foo.bar.com ; Substitute desired host name or address.
-+
-+ More info: HELP SSH, HELP SET SSH.
-+
-+ Dialing with a Modem
-+
-+ If it's an external modem, make sure it is connected to a usable
-+ serial port on your computer with a regular (straight-through)
-+ [105]modem cable, and to the telephone jack with a telephone
-+ cable, and that it's turned on. Then use these commands:
-+
-+ set modem type usrobotics ; Or other supported type
-+ set line /dev/ttyS0 ; Specify device name
-+ set speed 57600 ; Or other desired speed
-+ set flow rts/cts ; Most modern modems support this
-+ set dial method tone ; (or pulse)
-+ dial 7654321 ; Dial the desired number
-+
-+ Type "set modem type ?" for a list of supported modem types. If
-+ you omit the SET MODEM TYPE command, the default type is
-+ "generic-high-speed", which should work for most modern
-+ AT-command-set modems. If the line is busy, Kermit redials
-+ automatically. If the call does not succeed, use "set dial
-+ display on" and try it again to watch what happens. If the call
-+ succeeds, Kermit enters Connect state automatically and returns
-+ to its prompt automatically when you log out from the remote
-+ computer or the connection is otherwise lost.
-+
-+ You can also dial from a modem that is accessible by Telnet,
-+ e.g. to a reverse terminal server. In this case the command
-+ sequence is:
-+
-+ set host ts.xxx.com 2000 ; Terminal-server and port
-+ set modem type usrobotics ; Or other supported type
-+ set dial method tone ; (or pulse)
-+ dial 7654321 ; Dial the desired number
-+
-+ If the terminal server supports the Telnet Com Port Option,
-+ [106]RFC 2217, you can also give serial-port related commands
-+ such as SET SPEED, SET PARITY, and so on, and Kermit relays them
-+ to the terminal server using the protocol specified in the RFC.
-+
-+ More info: HELP SET MODEM, HELP SET LINE, HELP SET SPEED, HELP
-+ SET FLOW, HELP DIAL, HELP SET DIAL, HELP SET MODEM, HELP SET
-+ CARRIER-WATCH, SHOW COMMUNICATIONS, SHOW MODEM, SHOW DIAL.
-+
-+ Direct Serial Port
-+
-+ Connect the two computers, A and B, with a [107]null modem cable
-+ (or two modem cables interconnected with a null-modem adapter or
-+ modem eliminator). From Computer A:
-+
-+ set modem type none ; There is no modem
-+ set line /dev/ttyS0 ; Specify device name
-+ set carrier-watch off ; If DTR and CD are not cross-connected
-+ set speed 57600 ; Or other desired speed
-+ set flow rts/cts ; If RTS and CTS are cross-connected
-+ set flow xon/xoff ; If you can't use RTS/CTS
-+ set parity even ; (or "mark" or "space", if necessary)
-+ set stop-bits 2 ; (rarely necessary)
-+ connect ; Enter Connect (terminal) state
-+
-+ This assumes Computer B is set up to let you log in. If it
-+ isn't, you can run a copy of Kermit on Computer B and follow
-+ approximately the same directions. More info: As above plus HELP
-+ CONNECT.
-+
-+ With modems or direct serial connections, you might also have to "set parity
-+ even" (or "mark" or "space") if it's a 7-bit connection.
-+
-+ Of the connection types listed above, only one can be open at a time. However,
-+ any one of these can be open concurrently with an [108]FTP or HTTP session.
-+ Each connection type can be customized to any desired degree, scripted,
-+ logged, you name it. See the manual.
-+
-+ NOTE: On selected platforms, C-Kermit also can make X.25 connections. See the
-+ manual for details.
-+
-+ [109]Kermit Home [110]C-Kermit Home [111]C-Kermit FAQ
-+ TRANSFERRING FILES WITH KERMIT [112]Top [113]Contents [114]Next [115]Previous
-+
-+ * [116]Downloading Files
-+ * [117]Uploading Files
-+ * [118]Kermit Transfers the Old-Fashioned Way
-+ * [119]If File Transfer Fails
-+ * [120]Advanced Kermit File Transfer Features
-+ * [121]Non-Kermit File Transfer
-+
-+ There is a [122]widespread and persistent belief that Kermit is a slow
-+ protocol. This is because, until recently, it used conservative tuning by
-+ default to make sure file transfers succeeded, rather than failing because
-+ they overloaded the connection. Some extra commands (or command-line options,
-+ like -Q) were needed to make it go fast, but nobody bothered to find out about
-+ them. Also, it takes two to tango: most non-Kermit-Project Kermit protocol
-+ implementations really ARE slow. The best file-transfer partners for C-Kermit
-+ are: another copy of [123]C-Kermit (7.0 or later) and [124]Kermit 95. These
-+ combinations work well and they work fast by default. MS-DOS Kermit is good
-+ too, but you have to tell it to go fast (by giving it the FAST command).
-+
-+ Furthermore, all three of these Kermit programs support "autodownload" and
-+ "autoupload", meaning that when they are in Connect state and a Kermit packet
-+ comes in from the remote, they automatically switch into file transfer mode.
-+
-+ And plus, C-Kermit and K95 also switch automatically between text and binary
-+ mode for each file, so there is no need to "set file type binary" or "set file
-+ type text", or to worry about files being corrupted because they were
-+ transferred in the wrong mode.
-+
-+ What all of these words add up to is that now, when you use up-to-date Kermit
-+ software from the Kermit Project, file transfer is not only fast, it's
-+ ridiculously easy. You barely have to give any commands at all.
-+
-+ Downloading Files
-+
-+ Let's say you have [125]Kermit 95, [126]C-Kermit, or [127]MS-DOS
-+ Kermit on your desktop computer, with a connection to a Unix
-+ computer that has C-Kermit installed as "kermit". To download a
-+ file (send it from Unix to your desktop computer), just type the
-+ following command at your Unix shell prompt:
-+
-+ kermit -s oofa.txt
-+
-+ (where oofa.txt is the filename). If you want to send more than
-+ one file, you can put as many filenames as you want on the
-+ command line, and they can be any combination of text and
-+ binary:
-+
-+ kermit -s oofa.txt oofa.zip oofa.html oofa.tar.gz
-+
-+ and/or you can use wildcards to send groups of files:
-+
-+ kermit -s oofa.*
-+
-+ If you want to send a file under an assumed name, use:
-+
-+ kermit -s friday.txt -a today.txt
-+
-+ This sends the file friday.txt but tells the receiving Kermit
-+ that its name is today.txt. In all cases, as noted, when the
-+ file transfer is finished, your desktop Kermit returns
-+ automatically to Connect state. No worries about escaping back,
-+ re-connecting, text/binary mode switching. Almost too easy,
-+ right?
-+
-+ Uploading Files
-+
-+ To upload files (send them from your desktop computer to the
-+ remote Unix computer) do the same thing, but use the -g (GET)
-+ option instead of -s:
-+
-+ kermit -g oofa.txt
-+
-+ This causes your local Kermit to enter server mode; then the
-+ remote Kermit program requests the named file and the local
-+ Kermit sends it and returns automatically to Connect state when
-+ done.
-+
-+ If you want to upload multiple files, you have have use shell
-+ quoting rules, since these aren't local files:
-+
-+ kermit -g "oofa.txt oofa.zip oofa.html oofa.tar.gz"
-+ kermit -g "oofa.*"
-+
-+ If you want to upload a file but store it under a different
-+ name, use:
-+
-+ kermit -g friday.txt -a today.txt
-+
-+ Kermit Transfers the Old-Fashioned Way
-+
-+ If your desktop communications software does not support
-+ autoupload or autodownload, or it does not include Kermit server
-+ mode, the procedure requires more steps.
-+
-+ To download a file, type:
-+
-+ kermit -s filename
-+
-+ on the host as before, but if nothing happens automatically in
-+ response to this command, you have to switch your desktop
-+ communications software into Kermit Receive state. This might be
-+ done by escaping back using keyboard characters or hot keys
-+ (Alt-x is typical) and/or with a command (like RECEIVE) or a
-+ menu. When the file transfer is complete, you have to go back to
-+ Connect state, Terminal emulation, or whatever terminology
-+ applies to your desktop communications software.
-+
-+ To upload a file, type:
-+
-+ kermit -r
-+
-+ on the host (rather than "kermit -g"). This tells C-Kermit to
-+ wait passively for a file to start arriving. Then regain the
-+ attention of your desktop software (Alt-x or whatever) and
-+ instruct it to send the desired file(s) with Kermit protocol.
-+ When the transfer is finished, return to the Connect or Terminal
-+ screen.
-+
-+ If File Transfer Fails
-+
-+ Although every aspect of Kermit's operation can be finely tuned,
-+ there are also three short and simple "omnibus tuning" commands
-+ you can use for troubleshooting:
-+
-+ FAST
-+ Use fast file-transfer settings. This has been the default
-+ since C-Kermit 7.0 now that most modern computers and
-+ connections support it. If transfers fail with fast
-+ settings, try . . .
-+
-+ CAUTIOUS
-+ Use cautious but not paranoid settings. File transfers, if
-+ they work, will go at medium speed. If not, try . . .
-+
-+ ROBUST
-+ Use the most robust, resilient, conservative, safe, and
-+ reliable settings. File transfers will almost certainly
-+ work, but they will be quite slow (of course this is a
-+ classic tradeoff; ROBUST was C-Kermit's default tuning in
-+ versions 6.0 and earlier, which made everybody think
-+ Kermit protocol was slow). If ROBUST doesn't do the trick,
-+ try again with SET PARITY SPACE first in case it's not an
-+ 8-bit connection.
-+
-+ Obviously the success and performance of a file transfer also
-+ depends on C-Kermit's file transfer partner. Up-to-date, real
-+ [128]Kermit Project partners are recommended because they
-+ contain the best Kermit protocol implementations and because
-+ [129]we can support them in case of trouble.
-+
-+ If you still have trouble, consult Chapter 10 of [130]Using
-+ C-Kermit, or send email to [131]kermit-support@columbia.edu.
-+
-+ Advanced Kermit File-Transfer Features
-+
-+ Obviously there is a lot more to Kermit file transfer, including
-+ all sorts of interactive commands, preferences, options,
-+ logging, debugging, troubleshooting, and anything else you can
-+ imagine but that's what the [132]manual and updates are for.
-+ Here are a few topics you can explore if you're interested by
-+ Typing HELP for the listed commands:
-+
-+ Logging transfers:
-+ LOG TRANSACTIONS (HELP LOG)
-+
-+ Automatic per-file text/binary mode switching:
-+ SET TRANSFER MODE { AUTOMATIC, MANUAL } (HELP SET
-+ TRANSFER).
-+
-+ Cross-platform recursive directory tree transfer:
-+ SEND /RECURSIVE, GET /RECURSIVE (HELP SEND, HELP GET).
-+
-+ File collision options:
-+ SET FILE COLLISION { OVERWRITE, BACKUP, DISCARD, ... }
-+ (HELP SET FILE).
-+
-+ Update mode (only transfer files that changed since last time):
-+ SET FILE COLLISION UPDATE (HELP SET FILE).
-+
-+ Filename selection patterns:
-+ (HELP WILDCARD).
-+
-+ Flexible file selection:
-+ SEND (or GET) /BEFORE /AFTER /LARGER /SMALLER /TYPE
-+ /EXCEPT, ...
-+
-+ Character-set conversion:
-+ SET { FILE, TRANSFER } CHARACTER-SET, ASSOCIATE, ...
-+
-+ File/Pathname control:
-+ SET { SEND, RECEIVE } PATHNAMES, SET FILE NAMES.
-+
-+ Atomic file movement:
-+ SEND (or GET) /DELETE /RENAME /MOVE-TO
-+
-+ Transferring to/from standard i/o of other commands:
-+ SEND (or GET) /COMMAND
-+
-+ Recovery of interrupted transfer from point of failure:
-+ RESEND, REGET (HELP RESEND, HELP REGET).
-+
-+ Non-Kermit File Transfer
-+
-+ You can also use C-Kermit to transfer files with FTP or HTTP
-+ Internet protocols; [133]see below.
-+
-+ On a regular serial or Telnet connection where the other
-+ computer doesn't support Kermit protocol at all, you have
-+ several options. For example, if your desktop communications
-+ software supports Zmodem, use "rz" and "sz" on the host rather
-+ than Kermit. But if Kermit is your desktop software, and you are
-+ using it to make calls or network connections to other computers
-+ that don't support Kermit protocol (or that don't have a good
-+ implementation of it), then if your computer also has external
-+ X, Y, or Zmodem programs that are redirectable, Kermit can use
-+ them as external protocols. HELP SET PROTOCOL for details.
-+
-+ You can also capture "raw" data streams from the other computer
-+ with LOG SESSION (HELP LOG and HELP SET SESSION-LOG for
-+ details), and you can upload files without any protocol at all
-+ with TRANSMIT (HELP TRANSMIT, HELP SET TRANSMIT).
-+
-+ [134]Kermit Home [135]C-Kermit Home [136]C-Kermit FAQ
-+
-+ KERMIT CLIENT/SERVER CONNECTIONS [137]Top [138]Contents [139]Next
-+ [140]Previous
-+
-+ On any kind of connection you can make with Kermit -- serial, TCP/IP, X.25,
-+ etc -- you can set up a convenient client/server relationship between your
-+ Kermit client (the one that made the connection) and the Kermit program on the
-+ far end of the connection (the remote Kermit) by putting the remote Kermit in
-+ server mode. This is normally done by giving it a SERVER command, or by
-+ starting it with the -x command-line option. In some cases ([141]Internet
-+ Kermit Service, SSH connections to a Kermit subsystem, or specially configured
-+ hosts), there is already a Kermit server waiting on the far end. Here is a
-+ quick synopsis of the commands you can give to the client for interacting with
-+ the server:
-+
-+ SEND [ switches ] filename
-+ Sends the named file to the server. The filename can include
-+ wildcards. Lots of switches are available for file selection,
-+ etc. Type HELP SEND at the client prompt for details.
-+
-+ GET [ switches ] filename
-+ Asks the server to send the named file. The filename can include
-+ wildcards. Type HELP GET at the client prompt for details.
-+
-+ BYE
-+ Terminates the server and closes your connection to it.
-+
-+ FINISH
-+ Terminates the server. If you started the server yourself, this
-+ leaves the remote host at its shell prompt. If it was a
-+ dedicated server (such as IKSD or an SSH subsystem), FINISH is
-+ equivalent to BYE.
-+
-+ SET LOCUS { LOCAL, REMOTE, AUTO }
-+ (C-Kermit 8.0.201 and later, K95 1.1.21 and later) This tells
-+ the client whether file-management commands like CD, PWD,
-+ DIRECTORY, DELETE, MKDIR, etc, should be executed locally or by
-+ the server. In this type of connection, the default is LOCAL.
-+ Use SET LOCUS REMOTE if you want Kermit to behave like an FTP
-+ client, in which case these commands are executed remotely, and
-+ their local versions must have an L prefix: LCD, LPWD,
-+ LDIRECTORY, etc. When LOCUS is LOCAL, then the remote versions
-+ must have an R prefix: RCD, RPWD, RDIRECTORY, etc. HELP SET
-+ LOCUS for details. SHOW COMMAND to see current locus.
-+
-+ The following commands are affected by SET LOCUS:
-+
-+ CD, LCD, RCD
-+ Change (working, current) directory. HELP CD for details.
-+
-+ CDUP, LCDUP, RCDUP
-+ CD one level up.
-+
-+ DIRECTORY, LDIRECTORY, RDIRECTORY
-+ Produce a directory listing. Many options are available for local
-+ listings. HELP DIRECTORY for details.
-+
-+ DELETE, LDELETE, RDELETE
-+ Deletes files or directories. Many options available, HELP DELETE.
-+
-+ RENAME, LRENAME, RRENAME
-+ Renames files or directories. Many options available, HELP RENAME.
-+
-+ MKDIR, LMKDIR, RMKDIR
-+ Creates a directory. HELP MKDIR.
-+
-+ RMDIR, LRMDIR, RRMDIR
-+ Removes a directory. HELP RMDIR. There are dozens -- maybe hundreds --
-+ of other commands, described in the built-in help, on the website,
-+ and/or in the published or online manuals. But even if you don't have
-+ access to documentation, you can "set locus remote" and then use pretty
-+ much the same commands you would use with any FTP client.
-+
-+ [142]Kermit Home [143]C-Kermit Home [144]C-Kermit FAQ
-+
-+ KERMIT'S BUILT-IN FTP AND HTTP CLIENTS [145]Top [146]Contents [147]Next
-+ [148]Previous
-+
-+ Kermit's FTP client is like the regular Unix FTP client that you're used to,
-+ but with some differences:
-+
-+ * It has lots more commands and features.
-+ * You can have an FTP session and a regular Kermit serial or Telnet
-+ session open at the same time.
-+ * FTP sessions can be fully automated.
-+
-+ By default Kermit's FTP client tries its best to present the same user
-+ interface as a regular FTP client: PUT, GET, DIR, CD, BYE, etc, should
-+ work the same, even though some of these commands have different
-+ meaning in Kermit-to-Kermit connections; for example, CD, DIR, RENAME,
-+ etc, in Kermit act locally, whereas in FTP they are commands for the
-+ server. This might cause some confusion, but as in all things Kermit,
-+ you have total control:
-+
-+ * The [149]SET LOCUS command lets you specify where file management
-+ commands should be executed -- locally or remotely -- for any kind
-+ of connection.
-+ * Any FTP command can be prefixed with the word "FTP" to remove any
-+ ambiguity.
-+
-+ Pending publication of the next edition of the manual, the Kermit FTP
-+ client is thoroughly documented at the Kermit Project website:
-+
-+ [150]http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ftpclient.html
-+
-+ You also can use HELP FTP and HELP SET FTP to get descriptions of
-+ Kermit's FTP-related commands.
-+
-+ The HTTP client is similar to the FTP one, except you prefix each
-+ command with HTTP instead of FTP: HTTP OPEN, HTTP GET, HTTP PUT, HTTP
-+ CLOSE, etc. Type HELP HTTP for details, or visit the to view the
-+ [151]manual supplements. HTTP connections can be open at the same time
-+ as regular serial or Telnet connections and FTP connections. So Kermit
-+ can manage up to three types connections simultaneously.
-+
-+ [152]Kermit Home [153]C-Kermit Home [154]C-Kermit FAQ [155]FTP Client
-+ [156]HTTP Client
-+
-+ INTERNET KERMIT SERVICE [157]Top [158]Contents [159]Next [160]Previous
-+
-+ C-Kermit can be configured and run as an Internet service (called IKSD),
-+ similar to an FTP server (FTPD) except you can (but need not) interact with it
-+ directly, plus it does a lot more than an FTP server can do. The TCP port for
-+ IKSD is 1649. It uses Telnet protocol. C-Kermit can be an Internet Kermit
-+ Server, or it can be a client of an IKSD. You can make connections from
-+ C-Kermit to an IKSD with any of the following commands:
-+
-+ telnet foo.bar.edu 1649
-+ telnet foo.bar.edu kermit ; if "kermit" is listed in /etc/services
-+ iksd foo.bar.edu
-+
-+ The IKSD command is equivalent to a TELNET command specifying port
-+ 1649. For more information about making and using connections to an
-+ IKSD, see:
-+
-+ [161]http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/cuiksd.html
-+
-+ You can run an Internet Kermit Service on your own computer too (if you
-+ are the system administrator). For instructions, see:
-+
-+ [162]http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/iksd.html
-+
-+ [163]Kermit Home [164]C-Kermit Home [165]C-Kermit FAQ
-+
-+ SECURITY [166]Top [167]Contents [168]Next [169]Previous
-+
-+ All of C-Kermit's built-in TCP/IP networking methods (Telnet, Rlogin, IKSD,
-+ FTP, and HTTP) can be secured by one or more of the following IETF-approved
-+ methods:
-+
-+ * MIT Kerberos IV
-+ * MIT Kerberos V
-+ * SSL/TLS
-+ * Stanford SRP
-+
-+ For complete instructions see:
-+
-+ [170]http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/security.html
-+
-+ And as noted previously, you can also make SSH connections with
-+ C-Kermit if you already have an SSH client installed.
-+
-+ [171]Kermit Home [172]C-Kermit Home [173]C-Kermit FAQ
-+
-+ ALTERNATIVE COMMAND-LINE PERSONALITIES [174]Top [175]Contents [176]Next
-+ [177]Previous
-+
-+ When invoked as "kermit" or any other name besides any of the special ones,
-+ C-Kermit has the command-line options described above in the [178]OPTIONS
-+ section. However, if you invoke C-Kermit using any of the following names:
-+
-+ telnet Telnet client
-+ ftp FTP client
-+ http HTTP client
-+ https Secure HTTP client
-+
-+ Kermit's command-line personality changes to match. This can be done (among
-+ other ways) with symbolic links (symlinks). For example, if you want C-Kermit
-+ to be your regular Telnet client, or the Telnet helper of your Web browser,
-+ you can create a link like the following in a directory that lies in your PATH
-+ ahead of the regular telnet program:
-+
-+ ln -s /usr/local/bin/kermit telnet
-+
-+ Now when you give a "telnet" command, you are invoking Kermit instead,
-+ but with its Telnet command-line personality so, for example:
-+
-+ telnet xyzcorp.com
-+
-+ Makes a Telnet connection to xyzcorp.com, and Kermit exits
-+ automatically when the connection is closed (just like the regular
-+ Telnet client). Type "telnet -h" to get a list of Kermit's
-+ Telnet-personality command-line options, which are intended to be as
-+ compatible as possible with the regular Telnet client.
-+
-+ Similarly for FTP:
-+
-+ ln -s /usr/local/bin/kermit ftp
-+
-+ And now type "ftp -h" to see its command-line options, and use command
-+ lines just like you would give your regular FTP client:
-+
-+ ftp -n xyzcorp.com
-+
-+ but with additional options allowing an entire session to be specified
-+ on the command line, as explained in the C-Kermit [179]FTP client
-+ documentation.
-+
-+ And similarly for HTTP:
-+
-+ ln -s /usr/local/bin/kermit http
-+ ./http -h
-+ ./http www.columbia.edu -g kermit/index.html
-+
-+ Finally, if Kermit's first command-line option is a Telnet, FTP, IKSD,
-+ or HTTP URL, Kermit automatically makes the appropriate kind of
-+ connection and, if indicated by the URL, takes the desired action:
-+
-+ kermit telnet:xyzcorp.com ; Opens a Telnet session
-+ kermit telnet://olga@xyzcorp.com ; Ditto for user olga
-+ kermit ftp://olga@xyzcorp.com/public/oofa.zip ; Downloads a file
-+ kermit kermit://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/f/READ.ME ; Ditto for IKSD
-+ kermit iksd://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/f/READ.ME ; (This works too)
-+ kermit http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html ; Grabs a web page
-+ kermit https://wwws.xyzcorp.com/secret/plan.html ; Grabs a secure web page
-+
-+ [180]Kermit Home [181]C-Kermit Home [182]C-Kermit FAQ
-+
-+ LICENSE [183]Top [184]Contents [185]Next [186]Previous
-+
-+ On or before 30 June 2011, barring unforeseen circumstances, [187]C-Kermit 9.0
-+ will be released with the [188]Revised 3-Clause BSD License. This is a
-+ certifed [189]Open Source license, and it means that C-Kermit no longer needs
-+ to be licensed for commercial redistribution. Technical support for Kermit
-+ software will not be available from Columbia University after June 30th.
-+
-+ [190]Kermit Home [191]C-Kermit Home [192]C-Kermit FAQ
-+ OTHER TOPICS [193]Top [194]Contents [195]Next [196]Previous
-+
-+ There's way more to C-Kermit than we've touched on here -- troubleshooting,
-+ customization, character sets, dialing directories, sending pages, script
-+ writing, and on and on, all of which are covered in the manual and updates and
-+ supplements. For the most up-to-date information on documentation (or updated
-+ documentation itself) visit the Kermit Project website:
-+
-+ [197]http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/
-+
-+ There you will also find [198]Kermit software packages for other platforms:
-+ different Unix varieties, Windows, DOS, VMS, IBM mainframes, and many others:
-+ 20+ years' worth.
-+
-+ [199]Kermit Home [200]C-Kermit Home [201]C-Kermit FAQ
-+ DOCUMENTATION AND UPDATES [202]Top [203]Contents [204]Next [205]Previous
-+
-+ The manual for C-Kermit is:
-+
-+ 1. Frank da Cruz and Christine M. Gianone, [206]Using C-Kermit, Second
-+ Edition, Digital Press / Butterworth-Heinemann, Woburn, MA, 1997,
-+ 622 pages, ISBN 1-55558-164-1. This is a printed book. It covers
-+ C-Kermit 6.0.
-+ 2. The C-Kermit 7.0 Supplement:
-+ [207]http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html
-+ 3. The C-Kermit 8.0 Supplement:
-+ [208]http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html
-+ 4. The C-Kermit 9.0 Supplement:
-+ [209]http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit90.html
-+
-+ The C-Kermit home page is here:
-+
-+ [210]http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+
-+ Visit this page to learn about new versions, Beta tests, and other
-+ news; to read case studies and tutorials; to download source code,
-+ install packages, and [211]prebuilt binaries for many platforms. Also
-+ visit:
-+
-+ [212]http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/scriptlib.html
-+ The Kermit script library and tutorial
-+
-+ [213]http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/newfaq.html
-+ The Kermit FAQ (Frequently Asked Questions about Kermit)
-+
-+ [214]http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckfaq.html
-+ The C-Kermit FAQ (Frequently Asked Questions about C-Kermit)
-+
-+ [215]http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/security.html
-+ The Kermit security reference.
-+
-+ [216]http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/telnet.html
-+ C-Kermit Telnet client documentation.
-+
-+ [217]http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/studies.html
-+ Case studies.
-+
-+ [218]http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcbwr.html
-+ General C-Kermit Hints and Tips.
-+
-+ [219]http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html
-+ Unix C-Kermit Hints and Tips.
-+
-+ [220]http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckvbwr.html
-+ VMS C-Kermit Hints and Tips.
-+
-+ [221]http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html
-+ Unix C-Kermit Installation Instructions
-+
-+ [222]http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckvins.html
-+ VMS C-Kermit Installation Instructions
-+
-+ [223]http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/support.html
-+ Technical support.
-+
-+ [224]http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/k95tutorial.html
-+ Kermit 95 tutorial (this document).
-+
-+ [225]comp.protocols.kermit.misc
-+ The Kermit newsgroup (unmoderated).
-+
-+ [226]Kermit Home [227]C-Kermit Home [228]C-Kermit FAQ
-+
-+ FILES [229]Top [230]Contents [231]Next [232]Previous
-+
-+ [233]The Revised 3-Clause License
-+ C-Kermit license.
-+
-+ [234]~/.kermrc
-+ Initialization file.
-+
-+ [235]~/.mykermrc
-+ Customization file.
-+
-+ ~/.kdd
-+ Kermit dialing directory (see manual).
-+
-+ ~/.knd
-+ Kermit network directory (see manual).
-+
-+ ~/.ksd
-+ Kermit services directory (see manual).
-+
-+ [236]ckuins.html
-+ Installation instructions for Unix.
-+
-+ [237]ckcbwr.html
-+ General C-Kermit bugs, hints, tips.
-+
-+ [238]ckubwr.html
-+ Unix-specific C-Kermit bugs, hints, tips.
-+
-+ [239]ckcplm.html
-+ C-Kermit program logic manual.
-+
-+ [240]ckccfg.html
-+ C-Kermit compile-time configuration options.
-+
-+ ssh
-+ (in your PATH) SSH connection helper.
-+
-+ rz, sz, etc.
-+ (in your PATH) external protocols for XYZmodem.
-+
-+ /var/spool/locks (or whatever)
-+ UUCP lockfile for dialing out (see [241]installation
-+ instructions).
-+
-+ [242]Kermit Home [243]C-Kermit Home [244]C-Kermit FAQ
-+
-+ AUTHORS [245]Top [246]Contents [247]Previous
-+
-+ Frank da Cruz and Jeffrey E Altman
-+ The Kermit Project - Columbia Univerity
-+ 612 West 115th Street
-+ New York NY 10025-7799
-+ USA
-+
-+ 1985-present, with contributions from hundreds of others all over the
-+ world.
-+ __________________________________________________________________
-+
-+
-+ C-Kermit 9.0 Unix Manual Page and Tutorial / [248]kermit@columbia.edu
-+ / 30 June 2011
-+
-+References
-+
-+ 1. http://www.columbia.edu/
-+ 2. mailto:kermit@columbia.edu
-+ 3. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 4. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/k95.html
-+ 5. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 6. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckscripts.html
-+ 7. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/current.html
-+ 8. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/whatsnew.html
-+ 9. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckfaq.html
-+ 10. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/support.html
-+ 11. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/
-+ 12. http://www.columbia.edu/
-+ 13. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.pdf
-+ 14. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/test/text/ckuker.nr
-+ 15. http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1555581641?ie=UTF8&tag=aleidmoreldom-20&linkCode=as2&camp=1789&creative=9325&creativeASIN=1555581641
-+ 16. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#description
-+ 17. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#synopsis
-+ 18. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#options
-+ 19. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#commands
-+ 20. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#initfile
-+ 21. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#modes
-+ 22. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#connections
-+ 23. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#transfer
-+ 24. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#server
-+ 25. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#ftp
-+ 26. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#iksd
-+ 27. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#security
-+ 28. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#personae
-+ 29. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#license
-+ 30. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#other
-+ 31. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#documentation
-+ 32. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#files
-+ 33. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#authors
-+ 34. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#top
-+ 35. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#contents
-+ 36. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#synopsis
-+ 37. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 38. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/
-+ 39. http://www.columbia.edu/
-+ 40. ftp://ftp.isi.edu/in-notes/rfc2839.txt
-+ 41. ftp://ftp.isi.edu/in-notes/rfc2840.txt
-+ 42. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#documentation
-+ 43. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/
-+ 44. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/
-+ 45. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 46. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckfaq.html
-+ 47. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#top
-+ 48. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#contents
-+ 49. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#options
-+ 50. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#synopsis
-+ 51. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#kerbang
-+ 52. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#personae
-+ 53. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#kerbang
-+ 54. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#initfile
-+ 55. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#initfile
-+ 56. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#personae
-+ 57. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#options
-+ 58. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#commands
-+ 59. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/
-+ 60. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 61. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckfaq.html
-+ 62. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#top
-+ 63. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#contents
-+ 64. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#commands
-+ 65. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#description
-+ 66. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#commands
-+ 67. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#personae
-+ 68. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#personae
-+ 69. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#iksd
-+ 70. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#transfer
-+ 71. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#top
-+ 72. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#contents
-+ 73. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#initfile
-+ 74. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#options
-+ 75. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#kerbang
-+ 76. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#cmdlist
-+ 77. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#documentation
-+ 78. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#initfile
-+ 79. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#documentation
-+ 80. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckscripts.html
-+ 81. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#documentation
-+ 82. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/
-+ 83. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 84. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckfaq.html
-+ 85. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#top
-+ 86. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#contents
-+ 87. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#modes
-+ 88. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#commands
-+ 89. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/
-+ 90. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 91. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckfaq.html
-+ 92. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#top
-+ 93. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#contents
-+ 94. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#connections
-+ 95. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#initfile
-+ 96. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckfaq.html#term
-+ 97. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/
-+ 98. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 99. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckfaq.html
-+ 100. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#top
-+ 101. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#contents
-+ 102. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#transfer
-+ 103. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#modes
-+ 104. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#iksd
-+ 105. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/cable.html
-+ 106. ftp://ftp.isi.edu/in-notes/rfc2217.txt
-+ 107. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/cable.html
-+ 108. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#ftp
-+ 109. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/
-+ 110. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 111. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckfaq.html
-+ 112. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#top
-+ 113. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#contents
-+ 114. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#server
-+ 115. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#connections
-+ 116. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#download
-+ 117. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#upload
-+ 118. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#oldfashioned
-+ 119. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#trouble
-+ 120. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#advanced
-+ 121. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#nonkermit
-+ 122. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/kermit.html#notslow
-+ 123. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 124. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/k95.html
-+ 125. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/k95.html
-+ 126. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 127. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/mskermit.html
-+ 128. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/
-+ 129. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/support.html
-+ 130. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckmanual.html
-+ 131. mailto:kermit-support@columbia.edu
-+ 132. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#documentation
-+ 133. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#ftp
-+ 134. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/
-+ 135. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 136. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckfaq.html
-+ 137. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#top
-+ 138. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#contents
-+ 139. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#ftp
-+ 140. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#transfer
-+ 141. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#iksd
-+ 142. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/
-+ 143. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 144. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckfaq.html
-+ 145. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#top
-+ 146. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#contents
-+ 147. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#iksd
-+ 148. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#transfer
-+ 149. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#server
-+ 150. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ftpclient.html
-+ 151. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#documentation
-+ 152. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/
-+ 153. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 154. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckfaq.html
-+ 155. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit3.html#x3
-+ 156. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit3.html#x2.2
-+ 157. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#top
-+ 158. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#contents
-+ 159. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#security
-+ 160. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#ftp
-+ 161. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/cuiksd.html
-+ 162. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/iksd.html
-+ 163. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/
-+ 164. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 165. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckfaq.html
-+ 166. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#top
-+ 167. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#contents
-+ 168. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#personae
-+ 169. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#iksd
-+ 170. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/security.html
-+ 171. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/
-+ 172. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 173. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckfaq.html
-+ 174. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#top
-+ 175. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#contents
-+ 176. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#license
-+ 177. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#iksd
-+ 178. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#options
-+ 179. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit3.html#x3.1.2
-+ 180. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/
-+ 181. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 182. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckfaq.html
-+ 183. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#top
-+ 184. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#contents
-+ 185. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#other
-+ 186. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#personae
-+ 187. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ck90.html
-+ 188. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/cu-bsd-license.html
-+ 189. http://www.opensource.org/
-+ 190. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/
-+ 191. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 192. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckfaq.html
-+ 193. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#top
-+ 194. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#contents
-+ 195. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#documentation
-+ 196. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#license
-+ 197. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/
-+ 198. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/howtoget.html
-+ 199. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/
-+ 200. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 201. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckfaq.html
-+ 202. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#top
-+ 203. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#contents
-+ 204. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#files
-+ 205. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#other
-+ 206. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckmanual.html
-+ 207. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html
-+ 208. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html
-+ 209. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit90.html
-+ 210. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 211. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ck80binaries.html
-+ 212. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/scriptlib.html
-+ 213. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/newfaq.html
-+ 214. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckfaq.html
-+ 215. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/security.html
-+ 216. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/telnet.html
-+ 217. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/studies.html
-+ 218. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcbwr.html
-+ 219. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html
-+ 220. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckvbwr.html
-+ 221. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html
-+ 222. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckvins.html
-+ 223. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/support.html
-+ 224. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/k95tutorial.html
-+ 225. news:comp.protocols.kermit.misc
-+ 226. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/
-+ 227. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 228. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckfaq.html
-+ 229. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#top
-+ 230. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#contents
-+ 231. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#authors
-+ 232. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#documentation
-+ 233. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/cu-bsd-license.html
-+ 234. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckermit.ini
-+ 235. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckermod.ini
-+ 236. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html
-+ 237. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcbwr.html
-+ 238. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html
-+ 239. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcplm.html
-+ 240. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html
-+ 241. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html
-+ 242. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/
-+ 243. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 244. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckfaq.html
-+ 245. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#top
-+ 246. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#contents
-+ 247. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html#files
-+ 248. mailto:kermit@columbia.edu
---- /dev/null
-+++ ckermit-301/ckuins.txt
-@@ -0,0 +1,3575 @@
-+
-+ [1]The Columbia Crown The Kermit Project | Columbia University
-+ 612 West 115th Street, New York NY 10025 USA o [2]kermit@columbia.edu
-+ ...since 1981
-+ [3]Home [4]Kermit 95 [5]C-Kermit [6]Scripts [7]Current [8]New [9]FAQ
-+ [10]Support
-+
-+C-Kermit 9.0 Installation Instructions and Options for Unix
-+
-+ [ [11]Contents ] [ [12]C-Kermit ] [ [13]Kermit Home ]
-+
-+ Frank da Cruz
-+ The Kermit Project
-+ Columbia University
-+
-+ As of C-Kermit version: 9.0.300, 30 June 2011
-+ This file last updated: Tue Jun 28 08:28:08 2011 (New York City
-+ time)
-+
-+ IF YOU ARE READING A PLAIN-TEXT version of this document, it is a
-+ plain-text copy of a Web page. You can visit the original (and possibly
-+ more up-to-date) Web page here:
-+
-+[14]http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html
-+
-+CONTENTS
-+
-+ [15]OVERVIEW
-+ 1. [16]INTERNET QUICK START
-+ 2. [17]INSTALLING FROM PACKAGES
-+ 3. [18]INSTALLING PREBUILT BINARIES
-+ 4. [19]BUILDING FROM SOURCE CODE
-+ 5. [20]INSTALLING THE KERMIT FILES
-+ 6. [21]INSTALLING UNIX C-KERMIT FROM DOS-FORMAT DISKETTES
-+ 7. [22]CHECKING THE RESULTS
-+ 8. [23]REDUCING THE SIZE OF THE EXECUTABLE PROGRAM IMAGE
-+ 9. [24]UNIX VERSIONS
-+ 10. [25]DIALING OUT AND COORDINATING WITH UUCP
-+ 11. [26]RUNNING UNIX C-KERMIT SETUID OR SETGID
-+ 12. [27]CONFIGURING UNIX WORKSTATIONS
-+ 13. [28]BIZARRE BEHAVIOR AT RUNTIME
-+ 14. [29]CRASHES AND CORE DUMPS
-+ 15. [30]SYSLOGGING
-+ 16. [31]BUILDING SECURE VERSIONS OF C-KERMIT 9.0
-+ 17. [32]INSTALLING C-KERMIT AS AN SSH SERVER SUBSYSTEM
-+
-+OVERVIEW
-+
-+ [ [33]Top ] [ [34]Contents ] [ [35]Next ]
-+
-+ WARNING: This document contains notes that have been accumulating
-+ since the mid 1980s. Many of the products and Unix versions
-+ mentioned here have not been heard of in a long while, but that does
-+ not necessarily mean they are not still running in some obscure
-+ nook.
-+
-+ This file contains Unix-specific information. A lot of it. Unlike most
-+ other packages, C-Kermit tries very hard to be portable to every Unix
-+ variety (and every release of each one) known to exist, including many
-+ that are quite old, as well as to other platforms like VMS, AOS/VS,
-+ VOS, OS-9, the BeBox, the Amiga, etc.
-+
-+ Since C-Kermit gets so deeply into the file system, i/o system, and
-+ other areas that differ radically from one Unix platform to the next,
-+ this means that a lot can go wrong when you try to install C-Kermit on
-+ (for example) a new release of a particular variety of Unix, in which
-+ certain things might have changed that C-Kermit depended upon.
-+
-+ This file concentrates on installation. For a description of general
-+ configuration options for C-Kermit, please read the [36]Configurations
-+ Options document. For troubleshooting after installation, see the
-+ [37]General Hints and Tips and [38]Unix-Specific Hints and Tips
-+ documents. The latter, in particular, contains lots of information on
-+ lots of specific Unix platforms. If you want to work on the source
-+ code, see the [39]C-Kermit Program Logic Manual
-+
-+ You may install C-Kermit:
-+
-+ * From an "[40]install package", if one is available.
-+ * As a [41]prebuilt binary, if available, plus accompanying text
-+ files.
-+ * By building from [42]source code.
-+
-+1. INTERNET QUICK START
-+
-+ [ [43]Top ] [ [44]Contents ] [ [45]Next ] [ [46]Previous ]
-+
-+ If your Unix computer is on the Internet and it has a C compiler,
-+ here's how to download, build, and install C-Kermit directly from the
-+ "tarballs" or Zip archives:
-+
-+ 1. Make a fresh directory and cd to it.
-+ 2. Download the C-Kermit source code:
-+ [47]ftp://www.columbia.edu/kermit/archives/cku211.tar.Z (compress
-+ format) or [48]ftp://www.columbia.edu/kermit/archives/cku211.tar.gz
-+ (gunzip format). If those links don't work, FTP transfers are being
-+ blocked; try these HTTP links instead:
-+ [49]http://kermit.columbia.edu/ftp/archives/cku211.tar.Z (compress
-+ format) or
-+ [50]http://kermit.columbia.edu/ftp/archives/cku211.tar.gz (gunzip
-+ format).
-+ 3. Uncompress the compressed tar file with "uncompress" or "gunzip",
-+ according to which type of compressed file you downloaded. (If you
-+ don't understand this, you could download a (much larger)
-+ uncompressed tar archive directly:
-+ [51]ftp://www.columbia.edu/kermit/archives/cku211.tar or
-+ [52]http://kermit.columbia.edu/ftp/archives/cku211.tar
-+ 4. Now type "tar xvf cku211.tar" to unpack the individual files from
-+ the tar archive.
-+ 5. Type "rm cku211.tar" to get rid of the tar archive, which is no
-+ longer needed.
-+ 6. Read the comments at the top of the makefile to find out which
-+ target to use and then type the appropriate "make" command, such as
-+ "make linux", "make solaris8", etc.
-+ 7. This produces a binary in your current directory called "wermit".
-+ Start it by typing "./wermit" and [53]try it out to make sure it
-+ works. Then read [54]Section 5 for how to install it, or simply
-+ copy the wermit binary to the desired public directory, rename it
-+ to kermit, and give it the needed permissions (and, if it is going
-+ to be used to dial out, give it the same group and owner and
-+ permissions as the cu, tip, or minicom program).
-+
-+ For secure installations, see [55]Sections 5 and [56]16.
-+
-+2. INSTALLING FROM PACKAGES
-+
-+ [ [57]Top ] [ [58]Contents ] [ [59]Next ] [ [60]Previous ]
-+
-+ Various Unix varieties -- Linux, Solaris, AIX, etc -- now incorporate
-+ the idea of "install packages", and many users expect to find all new
-+ applications in this format. A selection of install packages might be
-+ available for any given release of C-Kermit, but there is a tradeoff
-+ between convenience and safety. Unix presents several notable problems
-+ to the builder of install packages:
-+
-+ a. Since C-Kermit is portable to many non-Unix platforms (VMS, VOS,
-+ AOS/VS, etc), some of the files in the C-Kermit distribution do not
-+ fit into the Unix application model. In particular, C-Kermit
-+ includes some plain text files (described in [61]Section 5) and
-+ Unix has no standard place to put such files. Typical Unix package
-+ managers do not allow for them. Where should they go, and how will
-+ the user know where to find them?
-+ b. Installation of any program that will be used to make modem calls
-+ requires some important decisions from the installer regarding
-+ security and privilege.
-+
-+ Item (b) is discussed at length in [62]Sections 10 and [63]11 of this
-+ document, but the package-related aspects are also given here. The
-+ basic problem is that Unix dialout devices and the UUCP "lock files"
-+ that regulate contention for them (described in [64]Section 10) are
-+ usually protected against "world". Therefore, the install procedure
-+ must either run as root in order to give the Kermit binary the required
-+ permissions, group, and/or owner, or else the dialout devices and
-+ associated directories must be open for group or world reading and
-+ writing. Otherwise, the Kermit program just installed WILL NOT WORK for
-+ dialing out.
-+
-+ Thus, a well-crafted installation procedure should present the options
-+ and allow the installer to choose the method, if any, for regulating
-+ access to the dialout devices:
-+
-+ a. Check the permissions of the lockfile directory and the dialout
-+ devices. If they do not allow group or world R/W access, then:
-+ b. "Your UUCP lockfile directory and/or dialout devices require
-+ privilege to access. You must either change their permissions or
-+ install Kermit with privileges."
-+ c. "If you wish to install Kermit with privileges, it will be given
-+ the same owner, group, and permissions as the cu program so it can
-+ use the dialout devices." (This is increasingly problematic as some
-+ newer Unix systems like Mac OS X don't have a cu program, or even a
-+ serial port!)
-+ d. If they choose (c) but the user is not root, give a message that
-+ the install procedure can be run only by root and then quit.
-+
-+ It should go without saying, of course, that any binaries that are to
-+ be included in an install package should be built fresh on the exact
-+ platform (e.g. Red Hat 8.0 on Intel) for which the package is targeted;
-+ prebuilt binaries ([65]next section) from other sites are likely to
-+ have library mismatches. [66]CLICK HERE for more about building
-+ C-Kermit install packages.
-+
-+ The Kermit Project does not have the resources or the expertise to make
-+ install packages for every platform. Most install packages, therefore,
-+ are contributed by others, and they do not necessarily follow the
-+ guidelines given above. Pay attention to what they do.
-+
-+ If you are an end user who has obtained a C-Kermit install package for
-+ a particular platform, you should be aware that some additional steps
-+ might needed if you want to use Kermit to dial out. Read [67]Section 10
-+ for details.
-+
-+3. INSTALLING PREBUILT BINARIES
-+
-+ [ [68]Top ] [ [69]Contents ] [ [70]Next ] [ [71]Previous ]
-+
-+ Hundreds of prebuilt C-Kermit binaries are available on the CDROM in
-+ the BINARY tree [NOTE: The C-Kermit CDROM is still for version 7.0],
-+ and at our ftp site in the [72]kermit/bin area (with names starting
-+ with "ck"), also accessible on the [73]C-Kermit website. To install a
-+ prebuilt binary:
-+
-+ a. Rename the binary to "wermit".
-+ b. Make sure it works; some tests are suggested in [74]Section 7.
-+ c. Follow steps (b) through (e) in [75]Section 4.
-+ d. Install related files as described in [76]Section 5.
-+
-+ But first... Please heed the following cautions:
-+
-+ a. If you pick the wrong binary, it won't work (or worse).
-+ b. Even when you pick the appropriate binary, it still might not work
-+ due to shared-library mismatches, etc. (see [77]Section 4.0).
-+ c. Don't expect a binary built on or for version n of your OS to work
-+ on version n - x (where x > 0). However, it is supposed to be safe
-+ to run a binary built on (or for) an older OS release on a newer
-+ one (but is [78]increasingly less so as time-honored principles of
-+ stability and backwards compatibility go fading into obscurity).
-+
-+ Therefore, it is always better to build your own binary from source
-+ code ([79]next section) if you can. But since it is increasingly common
-+ for Unix systems (not to mention VMS and other OS's) to be delivered
-+ without C compilers, it is sometimes not possible. In such cases, try
-+ the most appropriate prebuilt binary or binaries, and if none of them
-+ work, [80]contact us and we'll see what we can do to help.
-+
-+4. BUILDING FROM SOURCE CODE
-+
-+ [ [81]Top ] [ [82]Contents ] [ [83]Next ] [ [84]Previous ]
-+
-+ Also see: [85]Section 8 and [86]Section 9.
-+
-+ C-Kermit is designed to be built and used on as many platforms as
-+ possible: Unix and non-Unix, old and new (and ancient), ANSI C and K&R.
-+ The Unix version does not use or depend on any external tools for
-+ building except the "make" utility, the C compiler, the linker, and the
-+ shell. It does not use any external automated configuration tools such
-+ as configure, autoconf, automake, libtool, etc. Everything in C-Kermit
-+ has been built by hand based on direct experience or reports or
-+ contributions from users of each platform.
-+
-+ The [87]C-Kermit makefile contains the rules for building the program
-+ for each of the hundreds of different kinds of Unix systems that
-+ C-Kermit attempts to support. It covers all Unix variations since about
-+ 1980 -- pretty much everything after Unix V6. Separate makefiles are
-+ used for [88]Plan 9 and [89]2.x BSD.
-+
-+ Prerequisites:
-+
-+ * The C compiler, linker, and make program must be installed.
-+ * The C libraries and header files must be installed (*).
-+ * The C-Kermit source code and makefile in your current directory.
-+ * The C-Kermit text files ([90]Section 5) in your current directory.
-+
-+ * This is becoming problematic in this new age of "selective
-+ installs" e.g. of Linux packages. C-Kermit builds will often fail
-+ because replying "no" to some obscure Linux installation option
-+ will result in missing libraries or header files. Ditto on
-+ platforms like AIX and Solaris that don't come with C compilers,
-+ and then later have gcc installed, but are still missing crucial
-+ libraries, like libm (math).
-+
-+ Plus:
-+
-+ * For TCP/IP networking support, the sockets library and related
-+ header files must be installed.
-+ * The math library for floating-point arithmetic support (can be
-+ deselected by adding -DNOFLOAT to CFLAGS and removing -lm from
-+ LIBS).
-+ * Many and varied security libraries for building a secure version
-+ (Kerberos, SSL/TLS, SRP, Zlib,...) These are required only if you
-+ select a secure target.
-+ * For the curses-based fullscreen file-ransfer display, the curses or
-+ ncurses header file(s) and library, and probably also the termcap
-+ and/or termlib library. Note that the names and locations of these
-+ files and libraries are likely to change capriciously with every
-+ new release of your Unix product. If you discover that the C-Kermit
-+ build procedure fails because your curses and/or termxxx headers or
-+ libraries are not named or located as expected, please [91]let us
-+ know. In the meantime, work around by installing symlinks.
-+ * IMPORTANT: Modern Linux distributions might give you the choice
-+ during installation of whether to install the "ncurses development
-+ package" (perhaps called "ncurses-devel"). If you did not install
-+ it, you won't be able to build C-Kermit with curses support
-+ included. In this case, either go back and install ncurses, or else
-+ choose (or create) a non-curses makefile target for your platform.
-+ To install the ncurses developers tools in Red Hat Linux, do
-+ "apt-get install ncurses-developer" or if you have the CD:
-+
-+mount redhat cdrom
-+goto RedHat/RPMS
-+rpm -ivh ncurses-devel*.rpm
-+or to have the exact name ls ncurse* and load as
-+rpm -ivh filename
-+then leave the cdrom and unmount it.
-+
-+ * In AIX you might have to go back and install any or all of:
-+
-+bos.adt.base
-+bos.adt.include
-+bos.adt.lib
-+bos.adt.libm
-+bos.adt.utils
-+
-+ from the first installation CD.
-+
-+ Depending on where you got it, the makefile might need to be renamed
-+ from ckuker.mak to makefile. Directions:
-+
-+ a. Type "make xxx" where xxx is the name of the makefile target most
-+ appropriate to your platform, e.g. "make linux", "make aix43", etc.
-+ Read the [92]comments at the top of the makefile for a complete
-+ list of available targets (it's a long list).
-+ b. Test the resulting 'wermit' file (see [93]Section 7 for
-+ suggestions). If it's OK, proceed; otherwise [94]notify us.
-+
-+ NOTE: steps (c) through (e) can be accomplished using the
-+ [95]makefile 'install' target as described in [96]Section 5.4.
-+ c. Rename the 'wermit' file to 'kermit', copy it to the desired binary
-+ directory (such as /usr/local/bin or /opt/something), and if it is
-+ to be used for dialing out, give it the same owner, group, and
-+ permissions as the 'cu' program (IMPORTANT: read [97]Sections 10
-+ and [98]11 for details).
-+ d. Install the man page, ckuker.nr, with your other man pages.
-+ e. Install the accompanying text files (see [99]Section 5).
-+ f. If you want C-Kermit to also offer a Telnet command-line
-+ personality, make a symbolic link as follows:
-+
-+cd directory-where-kermit-binary-is
-+ln -s kermit telnet
-+
-+ If you want C-Kermit to be the default Telnet client, make sure the
-+ directory in which you created the symlink is in the PATH ahead of
-+ the where the regular Telnet client is.
-+ g. If you want C-Kermit to also offer an FTP command-line personality,
-+ make a symlink called "ftp" as in (f).
-+ h. If you want C-Kermit to also offer an FTTP command-line
-+ personality, make a symlink called "http" as in (f).
-+ i. If you want to offer an Internet Kermit Service, follow the
-+ directions in the [100]IKSD Administrator's Guide.
-+
-+4.0. Special Considerations for C-Kermit 8.0-9.0
-+
-+ [ [101]Top ] [ [102]Contents ] [ [103]Next ]
-+
-+ Also see: [104]C-Kermit Configuration Options
-+
-+ SECTION CONTENTS
-+
-+4.1. [105]The Unix Makefile
-+4.2. [106]The C-Kermit Initialization File
-+4.3. [107]The 2.x BSD Makefile
-+4.4. [108]The Plan 9 Makefile
-+4.5. [109]Makefile Failures
-+
-+ (Also see the [110]Configurations Options document, [111]Section 8).
-+
-+ Lots of new features have been added in versions 7.0 and 8.0 that
-+ require access to new symbols, APIs, libraries, etc, and this will no
-+ doubt cause problems in compiling, linking, or execution on platforms
-+ where 6.0 and earlier built without incident. This section contains
-+ what we know as of the date of this file.
-+
-+ The first category concerns the new Kermit Service Daemon (IKSD; see
-+ the [112]IKSD Administrator's Guide for details):
-+
-+ The wtmp File
-+ When C-Kermit is started as an IKSD (under inetd), it makes
-+ syslog and wtmp entries, and also keeps its own ftpd-like log.
-+ The code assumes the wtmp log is /var/log/wtmp on Linux and
-+ /usr/adm/wtmp elsewhere. No doubt this assumption will need
-+ adjustment. Use -DWTMPFILE=path to override at compile time
-+ (there is also a runtime override). See [113]iksd.html for
-+ details.
-+
-+ UTMP, utsname(), etc
-+ C-Kermit 7.0 gets as much info as it can about its job -- mainly
-+ for IKSD logging -- from utmp. But of course utmp formats and
-+ fields differ, and for that matter, there can be two different
-+ header files, <utmp.h> and <utmpx.h>. Look for HAVEUTMPX and
-+ HAVEUTHOST in [114]ckufio.c and let me know of any needed
-+ adjustments.
-+
-+ Password lookup
-+ IKSD needs to authenticate incoming users against the password
-+ list. In some cases, this requires the addition of -lcrypt (e.g.
-+ in Unixware 2.x). In most others, the crypt functions are in the
-+ regular C library. If you get "crypt" as an unresolved symbol at
-+ link time, add -lcrypt to LIBS. If your site has local
-+ replacement libraries for authentication, you might need a
-+ special LIBS clause such as "LIBS=-L/usr/local/lib -lpwent".
-+
-+ These days most Unix systems take advantage of shadow password
-+ files or Pluggable Authentication Modules (PAM). If your system
-+ uses shadow passwords you must add -DCK_SHADOW to the CFLAGS
-+ list. If your system requires PAM you must add -DCK_PAM to the
-+ CFLAGS and -lpam -ldl to LIBS.
-+
-+ getusershell()
-+ This is called by the IKSD at login time to see if a user has
-+ been "turned off". But many Unix platforms lack this function.
-+ In that case, you will get unresolved symbol reports at link
-+ time for _getusershell, _endusershell; to work around, add
-+ -DNOGETUSERSHELL.
-+
-+ initgroups()
-+ This is called by IKSD after successful authentication. But some
-+ platforms do not have this function, so obviously it can't be
-+ called there, in which case add -DNOINITGROUPS.
-+
-+ setreuid(), setreuid(), setregid() not found or "deprecated"
-+ Find out what your Unix variety wants you to use instead, and
-+ make appropriate substitutions in routine zvpass(), module
-+ [115]ckufio.c, and [116]let us know.
-+
-+ printf()
-+ IKSD installs a printf() substitute to allow redirection of
-+ printf-like output to the connection. However, this can conflict
-+ with some curses libraries. In this case, separate binaries must
-+ be built for IKSD and non-IKSD use.
-+
-+ If you encounter difficulties with any of the above, and you are not
-+ interested in running C-Kermit as an IKSD, then simply add NOIKSD to
-+ CFLAGS and rebuild. Example:
-+
-+make sco286
-+(get lots of errors)
-+make clean
-+make sco286 "KFLAGS=-DNOIKSD"
-+
-+ Some non-IKSD things to watch out for:
-+
-+ Return type of main()
-+ The main() routine is in [117]ckcmai.c. If you get complaints
-+ about "main: return type is not blah", define MAINTYPE on the CC
-+ command line, e.g.:
-+
-+make xxx "KFLAGS=-DMAINTYPE=blah
-+
-+ (where blah is int, long, or whatever). If the complaint is
-+ "Attempt to return a value from a function of type void" then
-+ add -DMAINISVOID:
-+
-+make xxx "KFLAGS=-DMAINISVOID=blah
-+
-+ DNS Service Records
-+ This feature allows a remote host to redirect C-Kermit to the
-+ appropriate socket for the requested service; e.g. if C-Kermit
-+ requests service "telnet" and the host offers Telnet service on
-+ port 999 rather than the customary port 23. If you get
-+ compile-time complaints about not being able to find <resolv.h>,
-+ <netdb.h>, or <arpa/nameser.h>, add -DNO_DNS_SRV to CFLAGS. If
-+ you get link-time complaints about unresolved symbols res_search
-+ or dn_expand, try adding -lresolve to LIBS.
-+
-+ \v(ipaddress)
-+ If "echo \v(ipaddress)" shows an empty string rather than your
-+ local IP address, add -DCKGHNLHOST to CFLAGS and rebuild.
-+
-+ <sys/wait.h>
-+ If this file can't be found at compile time, add -DNOREDIRECT to
-+ CFLAGS. This disables the REDIRECT and PIPE commands and
-+ anything else that needs the wait() system service.
-+
-+ syslog()
-+ C-Kermit can now write syslog records. Some older platforms
-+ might not have the syslog facility. In that case, add
-+ -DNOSYSLOG. Others might have it, but require addition of
-+ -lsocket to LIBS (SCO OSR5 is an example). See [118]Section 15.
-+
-+ putenv()
-+ If "_putenv" comes up as an undefined symbol, add -DNOPUTENV to
-+ CFLAGS and rebuild.
-+
-+ "Passing arg1 of 'time' from incompatible pointer"
-+ This is a mess. See the mass of #ifdefs in the appropriate
-+ module, [119]ckutio.c or [120]ckufio.c.
-+
-+ gettimeofday()
-+ Wrong number of arguments. On most platforms, gettimeofday()
-+ takes two arguments, but on a handful of others (e.g. Motorola
-+ System V/88 V4, SNI Reliant UNIX 5.43, etc) it takes one. If
-+ your version of gettimeofday() is being called with two args but
-+ wants one, add -DGTODONEARG.
-+
-+ "Assignment makes pointer from integer without a cast"
-+ This warning might appear in [121]ckutio.c or [122]ckufio.c. (or
-+ elsewhere), and usually can be traced to the use of a system or
-+ library function that returns a pointer but that is not declared
-+ in the system header files even though it should be. Several
-+ functions are commonly associated with this error:
-+
-+ + getcwd(): Add -DDCLGETCWD to CFLAGS and rebuild.
-+ + popen() : Add -DDCLPOPEN to CFLAGS and rebuild.
-+ + fdopen(): Add -DDCLFDOPEN to CFLAGS and rebuild.
-+
-+ "Operands of = have incompatible types"
-+ "Incompatible types in assignment"
-+ If this comes from [123]ckcnet.c and comes from a statement
-+ involving inet_addr(), try adding -DINADDRX to CFLAGS. If that
-+ doesn't help, then try adding -DNOMHHOST.
-+
-+ Complaints about args to get/setsockopt(), getpeername(), getsockname()
-+ These are all in [124]ckcnet.c. Different platforms and OS's and
-+ versions of the same OS change this all the time: int, size_t,
-+ unsigned long, etc. All the affected variables are declared
-+ according to #ifdefs within ckcnet.c, so find the declarations
-+ and adjust the #ifdefs accordingly.
-+
-+ size_t
-+ In case of complaints about "unknown type size_t", add
-+ -DSIZE_T=int (or other appropriate type) to CFLAGS.
-+
-+ 'tz' undefined
-+ Use of undefined enum/struct/union 'timezone'
-+ Left of 'tv_sec' specifies undefined struct/union 'timeval' And
-+ similar complaints in [125]ckutio.c: Add -DNOGFTIMER and/or
-+ -DNOTIMEVAL.
-+
-+ Symlinks
-+ The new built-in DIRECTORY command should show symlinks like "ls
-+ -l" does. If it does not, check to see if your platform has the
-+ lstat() and readlink() functions. If so, add -DUSE_LSTAT and
-+ -DCKSYMLINK to CFLAGS and rebuild. On the other hand, if lstat()
-+ is unresolved at link time, add -DNOLSTAT to CFLAGS. If
-+ readlink() is also unresolved, add -DNOSYMLINK.
-+
-+ realpath()
-+ Link-time complains about realpath() -- find the library in
-+ which it resides and add it to LIBS (example for Unixware 7.1:
-+ "-lcudk70") or add -DNOREALPATH to CFLAGS and rebuild. If built
-+ with realpath() but debug log file is truncated or mangled,
-+ ditto (some realpath() implementations behave differently from
-+ others). If built with realpath() and seemingly random core
-+ dumps occur during file path resolution, ditto.
-+
-+ Failure to locate header file <term.h>
-+ Usually happens on Linux systems that have the C compiler
-+ installed, but not the ncurses package (see comments about
-+ selective installs above). Go back and install ncurses, or use
-+ "make linuxnc" (Linux No Curses).
-+
-+ "Can't find shared library libc.so.2.1"
-+ "Can't find shared library libncurses.so.3.0", etc...
-+ You are trying to run a binary that was built on a computer that
-+ has different library versions than your computer, and your
-+ computer's loader is picky about library version numbers.
-+ Rebuild from source on your computer.
-+
-+ Time (struct tm) related difficulties:
-+ Errors like the following:
-+
-+"ckutio.c", line 11994: incomplete struct/union/enum tm: _tm
-+"ckutio.c", line 11995: error: cannot dereference non-pointer type
-+"ckutio.c", line 11995: error: assignment type mismatch
-+"ckutio.c", line 11997: warning: using out of scope declaration: localtime
-+"ckutio.c", line 11997: error: unknown operand size: op "="
-+"ckutio.c", line 11997: error: assignment type mismatch
-+"ckutio.c", line 11998: error: undefined struct/union member: tm_year
-+"ckutio.c", line 12000: error: undefined struct/union member: tm_mon
-+"ckutio.c", line 12001: error: undefined struct/union member: tm_mday
-+"ckutio.c", line 12002: error: undefined struct/union member: tm_hour
-+"ckutio.c", line 12003: error: undefined struct/union member: tm_min
-+"ckutio.c", line 12004: error: undefined struct/union member: tm_sec
-+
-+ are due to failure to include the appropriate time.h header
-+ files. Unix platforms generally have one or more of the
-+ following: <time.h>, <sys/time.h>, and <sys/timeb.h>. Any
-+ combination of these might be required. Defaults are set up for
-+ each makefile target. The defaults can be corrected on the CC
-+ command line by adding the appropriate definition from the
-+ following list to CFLAGS:
-+
-+-DTIMEH Include <time.h>
-+-DNOTIMEH Don't include <time.h>
-+-DSYSTIMEH Include <sys/time.h>
-+-DNOSYSTIMEH Don't include <sys/time.h>
-+-DSYSTIMEBH Include <sys/timeb.h>
-+-DNOSYSTIMEBH Don't include <sys/timeb.h>
-+
-+ Note that <sys/timeb.h> is relatively scarce in the System V and
-+ POSIX environments; the only platform of recent vintage where it
-+ was/is used is OSF/1 and its derivatives (Digital Unix and Tru64
-+ Unix).
-+
-+ Struct timeval and/or timezone not declared:
-+ In some cases, merely including the appropriate time.h header
-+ files is still not enough. POSIX.1 does not define the timeval
-+ struct, and so the items we need from the header are protected
-+ against us by #ifndef _POSIX_SOURCE or somesuch. In this case,
-+ we have to declare the timeval (and timezone) structs ourselves.
-+ To force this, include -DDCLTIMEVAL in CFLAGS.
-+
-+ Warnings about dn_expand() Argument #4
-+ WARNING: argument is incompatible with prototyp. It's the old
-+ char versus unsigned char stupidity again. Try to find a
-+ compiler switch like GCC's "-funsigned-char". Failing that, add
-+ -DCKQUERYTYPE=xxx to CFLAGS, where xxx is whatever 'man
-+ dn_expand' tells you the type of the 4th argument should be
-+ (presumably either char or unsigned char; in the latter case use
-+ CHAR to avoid confusion caused by multiple words.
-+
-+ Switch Table Overflow (in [126]ckcuni.c)
-+ Add -DNOUNICODE to CFLAGS.
-+
-+ Compile-time warnings about ck_out() or tgetstr() or tputs():
-+ Easy solution: Add -DNOTERMCAP to CFLAGS. But then you lose the
-+ SCREEN function. Real solution: Try all different combinations
-+ of the following CFLAGS:
-+
-+-DTPUTSARGTYPE=char -DTPUTSFNTYPE=int
-+-DTPUTSARGTYPE=int -DTPUTSFNTYPE=void
-+
-+ Until the warnings go away, except maybe "ck_outc: return with a
-+ value in a function returning void", and in that case also add
-+ -DTPUTSISVOID.
-+
-+ "Passing arg 1 of to tputs() makes pointer from integer without a
-+ cast":
-+ Add -DTPUTSARG1CONST to CFLAGS.
-+
-+ "Undefined symbol: dup2"
-+ Add -DNOZEXEC to CFLAGS.
-+
-+ "header file 'termcap.h' not found"
-+ Add -DNOHTERMCAP to CFLAGS.
-+
-+ Other difficulties are generally of the "where is curses.h and what is
-+ it called this week?" variety (most easily solved by making symlinks in
-+ the include and lib directories), or overzealous complaints regarding
-+ type mismatches in function calls because of the totally needless and
-+ silly signed versus unsigned char conflict (*), etc. In any case,
-+ please send any compilation or linking warnings or errors to the
-+ author, preferably along with fixes.
-+
-+ * C-Kermit does not use the signed property of chars at all anywhere,
-+ ever. So if all chars and char *'s can be made unsigned at compile
-+ time, as they can in gcc with "-funsigned-char", they should be.
-+
-+ IMPORTANT: If you find any of these hints necessary for a particular
-+ make target (or you hit upon others not listed here), PLEASE SEND A
-+ REPORT TO:
-+
-+[127]kermit-support@columbia.edu
-+
-+4.1. The Unix Makefile
-+
-+ [ [128]Top ] [ [129]Contents ] [ [130]Section Contents ] [ [131]Next ]
-+ [ [132]Previous ]
-+
-+ If your distribution does not contain a file with the name "makefile"
-+ or "Makefile", then rename the file called ckuker.mak to makefile:
-+
-+mv ckuker.mak makefile
-+
-+ Then type "make xxx", where xxx is the platform you want to build
-+ C-Kermit for. These are listed in the [133]comments at the top of the
-+ makefile. For example, to build C-Kermit for Linux, type:
-+
-+make linux
-+
-+ Here are some typical examples:
-+
-+ Target Description
-+ linux Linux, any version on any hardware platform
-+ openbsd OpenBSD, any version on any hardware platform
-+ aix43 AIX 4.3
-+ aix43g AIX 4.3, built with gcc
-+ solaris9 Solaris 9
-+ solaris9g Solaris 9 built with gcc
-+ hpux1100 HP-UX 11-point-anything
-+
-+ The makefile is quite long, and at least two versions of Unix, SCO
-+ Xenix/286 and 2.x BSD, cannot cope with its length. An attempt to "make
-+ sco286" gives the message "Make: Cannot alloc mem for env.. Stop".
-+ Solution: edit away some or all of the nonrelevant material from the
-+ makefile. (A separate version of the makefile is provided for BSD 2.x:
-+ ckubs2.mak but C-Kermit 8.0 can't be built for BSD 2.x -- it has simply
-+ grown too large.)
-+
-+ Some make programs reportedly cannot handle continued lines (lines
-+ ending in backslash (\)). If you have a problem with the makefile, try
-+ editing the makefile to join the continued lines (remove the
-+ backslashes and the following linefeed).
-+
-+ Other makefile troubles may occur because tabs in the makefile have
-+ somehow been converted to spaces. Spaces and tabs are distinct in Unix
-+ makefiles.
-+
-+ Similarly, carriage returns might have been added to the end of each
-+ line, which also proves confusing to most Unix versions of make.
-+
-+ Check to see if there are comments about your particular version in its
-+ makefile target itself. In a text editor such as EMACS or VI, search
-+ for the make entry name followed by a colon, e.g. "linux:" (if you
-+ really are building C-Kermit for Linux, do this now).
-+
-+ Check to see if there are comments about your particular version in the
-+ [134]ckubwr.txt file ([135]CLICK HERE for the Web version).
-+
-+ If you have trouble with building [136]ckwart.c, or running the
-+ resulting wart preprocessor program on [137]ckcpro.w:
-+
-+ 1. Just "touch" the [138]ckcpro.c file that comes in the distribution
-+ and then give the "make" command again, or:
-+ 2. Compile ckwart.c "by hand": cc -o wart ckwart.c, or:
-+ 3. Try various other tricks. E.g. one Linux user reported that that
-+ adding the "static" switch to the rule for building wart fixed
-+ everything:
-+
-+wart: ckwart.$(EXT)
-+ $(CC) -static -o wart ckwart.$(EXT) $(LIBS)
-+
-+ If your compiler supports a compile-time option to treat ALL chars (and
-+ char *'s, etc) as unsigned, by all means use it -- and send me email to
-+ let me know what it is (I already know about gcc -funsigned-char).
-+
-+ To add compilation options (which are explained later in this document)
-+ to your makefile target without editing the makefile, include
-+ "KFLAGS=..." on the make command line, for example:
-+
-+make linux KFLAGS=-DNODEBUG
-+make bsd "KFLAGS=-DKANJI -DNODEBUG -DNOTLOG -DDYNAMIC -UTCPSOCKET"
-+
-+ Multiple options must be separated by spaces. Quotes are necessary if
-+ the KFLAGS= clause includes spaces. The KFLAGS are added to the end of
-+ the CFLAGS that are defined in the selected makefile target. For
-+ example, the "bsd" entry includes -DBSD4 -DTCPSOCKET, so the second
-+ example above compiles Kermit with the following options:
-+
-+-DBSD4 -DTCPSOCKET -DKANJI -DNODEBUG -DNOTLOG -DDYNAMIC -UTCPSOCKET
-+
-+ (Notice how "-UTCPSOCKET" is used to negate the effect of the
-+ "-DTCPSOCKET" option that is included in the makefile target.)
-+
-+ WARNING: Be careful with KFLAGS. If you build C-Kermit, change some
-+ files, and then run make again using the same make entry but specifying
-+ different KFLAGS than last time, make won't detect it and you could
-+ easily wind up with inconsistent object modules, e.g. some of them
-+ built with a certain option, others not. When in doubt, "make clean"
-+ first to make sure all your object files are consistent. Similarly, if
-+ you change CFLAGS, LIBS, or any other items in the makefile, or you
-+ rebuild using a different makefile target, "make clean" first.
-+
-+ If you create a new makefile target, use static linking if possible.
-+ Even though this makes your C-Kermit binary bigger, the resulting
-+ binary will be more portable. Dynamically linked binaries tend to run
-+ only on the exact configuration and version where they were built; on
-+ others, invocation tends to fail with a message like:
-+
-+Can't find shared library "libc.so.2.1"
-+
-+4.2. The C-Kermit Initialization File
-+
-+ [ [139]Top ] [ [140]Contents ] [ [141]Section Contents ] [ [142]Next ]
-+ [ [143]Previous ]
-+
-+ (This section is obsolete.) Read [144]Section 5 about the
-+ initialization file.
-+
-+4.3. The 2.x BSD Makefile
-+
-+ [ [145]Top ] [ [146]Contents ] [ [147]Section Contents ] [ [148]Next ]
-+ [ [149]Previous ]
-+
-+ This section is obsolete. C-Kermit 6.0 was the last release that
-+ could be built on PDP-11 based BSD versions.
-+
-+4.4. The Plan 9 Makefile
-+
-+ [ [150]Top ] [ [151]Contents ] [ [152]Section Contents ] [ [153]Next ]
-+ [ [154]Previous ]
-+
-+ Use the separate makefile [155]ckpker.mk. NOTE: The Plan 9 version of
-+ C-Kermit 8.0 has not yet been built. There should be no impediment to
-+ building it. However, even when built successfully, certain key
-+ features are missing, notably TCP/IP networking.
-+
-+4.5. Makefile Failures
-+
-+ [ [156]Top ] [ [157]Contents ] [ [158]Section Contents ] [
-+ [159]Previous ]
-+
-+ First, be sure the source files are stored on your current disk and
-+ directory with the right names (in lowercase). Second, make sure that
-+ the makefile itself does not contain any lines with leading spaces:
-+ indented lines must all start with horizontal TAB, and no spaces.
-+
-+ Then make sure that your Unix PATH is defined to find the appropriate
-+ compiler for your makefile target. For example, on SunOS systems, "make
-+ sunos41" builds C-Kermit for the BSD environment, and assumes that
-+ /usr/ucb/cc will be used for compilation and linking. If your PATH has
-+ /usr/5bin ahead of /usr/ucb, you can have problems at compile or link
-+ time (a commonly reported symptom is the inability to find "ftime"
-+ during linking). Fix such problems by redefining your Unix PATH, or by
-+ specifying the appropriate "cc" in CC= and CC2= statements in your
-+ makefile target.
-+
-+ During edits 166-167, considerable effort went into making C-Kermit
-+ compilable by ANSI C compilers. This includes prototyping all of
-+ C-Kermit's functions, and including the ANSI-defined system header
-+ files for system and library functions, as defined in K&R, second
-+ edition: <string.h>, <stdlib.h>, <unistd.h> (except in NeXTSTEP this is
-+ <libc.h>), and <sys/stdtypes.h>. If you get warnings about any of these
-+ header files not being found, or about argument mismatches involving
-+ pid_t, uid_t, or gid_t, look in ckcdeb.h and make amendments. C-Kermit
-+ assumes it is being compiled by an ANSI-compliant C compiler if
-+ __STDC__ is defined, normally defined by the compiler itself. You can
-+ force ANSI compilation without defining __STDC__ (which some compilers
-+ won't let you define) by including -DCK_ANSIC on the cc command line.
-+
-+ On the other hand, if your compiler defines __STDC__ but still
-+ complains about the syntax of Kermit's function prototypes, you can
-+ disable the ANSI-style function prototyping by including -DNOANSI on
-+ the command line.
-+
-+ For SCO OpenServer, UNIX, ODT, and XENIX compilations, be sure to pick
-+ the most appropriate [160]makefile target, and be sure you have
-+ installed an SCO development system that is keyed to your exact SCO
-+ operating system release, down to the minor version (like 2.3.1).
-+
-+ Also note that SCO distributes some of its libraries in encrypted form,
-+ and they must be decrypted before C-Kermit can be linked with them. If
-+ not, you might see a message like:
-+
-+ld: file /usr/lib/libsocket.a is of unknown type: magic number = 6365
-+
-+ To decrypt, you must supply a key (password) that came with your
-+ license. Call SCO for further info.
-+
-+ If your compiler uses something other than int for the pid (process id)
-+ data type, put -DPID_T=pid_t or whatever in your CFLAGS.
-+
-+ If you get complaints about unknown data types uid_t and gid_t, put
-+ -DUID_T=xxx -DGID_T=yyy in your CFLAGS, where xxx and yyy are the
-+ appropriate types.
-+
-+ If your compilation fails because of conflicting or duplicate
-+ declarations for sys_errlist, add -DUSE_STRERROR or -DNDSYSERRLIST to
-+ CFLAGS.
-+
-+ If your compilation dies because getpwnam() is being redeclared (or
-+ because of "conflicting types for getwpnam"), add -DNDGPWNAM to your
-+ CFLAGS. If that doesn't work, then add -DDCGPWNAM to your CFLAGS (see
-+ ckufio.c around line 440).
-+
-+ If the compiler complains about the declaration of getpwnam() during an
-+ ANSI C compilation, remove the declaration from ckufio.c or change the
-+ argument in the prototype from (char *) to (const char *).
-+
-+ If you get complaints that getpwuid() is being called with an improper
-+ type, put -DPWID_T=xx in your CFLAGS.
-+
-+ If you get compile-time warnings that t_brkc or t_eofc (tchars
-+ structure members, used in BSD-based versions) are undefined, or
-+ structure-member- related warnings that might be traced to this fact,
-+ add -DNOBRKC to CFLAGS.
-+
-+ If you get a linker message to the effect that _setreuid or _setregid
-+ is not defined, add -DNOSETREU to CFLAGS, or add -DCKTYP_H=blah to
-+ CFLAGS to make C-Kermit read the right <types.h>-kind-of-file to pick
-+ up these definitions.
-+
-+ If you get a message that _popen is undefined, add -DNOPOPEN to CFLAGS.
-+
-+ If you get a complaint at compile time about an illegal pointer-integer
-+ combination in ckufio.c involving popen(), or at link time that _popen
-+ is an undefined symbol, add the declaration "FILE *popen();" to the
-+ function zxcmd() in ckufio.c (this declaration is supposed to be in
-+ <stdio.h>). If making this change does not help, then apparently your
-+ Unix does not have the popen() function, so you should add -DNOPOPEN to
-+ your make entry, in which case certain functions involving "file" i/o
-+ to the standard input and output of subprocesses will not be available.
-+
-+ If your linker complains that _getcwd is undefined, you can add a
-+ getcwd() function to ckufio.c, or add it to your libc.a library using
-+ ar:
-+
-+#include <stdio.h>
-+
-+char *
-+getcwd(buf,size) char *buf; int size; {
-+#ifndef NOPOPEN
-+#ifdef DCLPOPEN
-+ FILE *popen();
-+#endif
-+ FILE *pfp;
-+
-+ if (!buf) return(NULL);
-+ if (!(pfp = popen("pwd","r"))) return(NULL);
-+ fgets(buf,size-2,pfp);
-+ pclose(pfp);
-+ buf[strlen(buf)-1] = '\0';
-+ return((char *)buf);
-+#else
-+ buf[0] = '\0';
-+ return(NULL);
-+#endif /* NOPOPEN */
-+}
-+
-+#ifdef NOPOPEN
-+FILE *popen(s,t) char *s,*t; {
-+ return(NULL);
-+}
-+#endif /* NOPOPEN */
-+
-+ If you get complaints about NPROC having an invalid value, add a valid
-+ definition for it (depends on your system), as in the cray entry.
-+
-+ If you get some symbol that's multiply defined, it probably means that
-+ a variable name used by Kermit is also used in one of your system
-+ libraries that Kermit is linked with. For example, under PC/IX some
-+ library has a variable or function called "data", and the variable
-+ "data" is also used extensively by Kermit. Rather than edit the Kermit
-+ source files, just put a -D in the make entry CFLAGS to change the
-+ Kermit symbol at compile time. In this example, it might be
-+ -Ddata=xdata.
-+
-+ Some symbol is defined in your system's header files, but it produces
-+ conflicts with, or undesired results from, Kermit. Try undefining the
-+ symbol in the makefile target's CFLAGS, for example -UFIONREAD.
-+
-+ Some well-known symbol is missing from your system header files. Try
-+ defining in the makefile target's CFLAGS, for example -DFREAD=1.
-+
-+ You get many warnings about pointer mismatches. This probably means
-+ that Kermit is assuming an int type for signal() when it should be
-+ void, or vice-versa. Try adding -DSIG_I (for integer signal()) or
-+ -DSIG_V (for void) to CFLAGS. Or just include KFLAGS=-DSIG_V (or
-+ whatever) in your "make" command, for example:
-+
-+make bsd KFLAGS=-DSIG_V
-+
-+ You get many messages about variables that are declared and/or set but
-+ never used. It is difficult to avoid these because of all the
-+ conditional compilation in the program. Ignore these messages.
-+
-+ Some of C-Kermit's modules are so large, or contain so many character
-+ string constants, or are so offensive in some other way, that some C
-+ compilers give up and refuse to compile them. This is usually because
-+ the -O (optimize) option is included in the make entry. If this happens
-+ to you, you can (a) remove the -O option from the make entry, which
-+ will turn off the optimizer for ALL modules; or (b) compile the
-+ offending module(s) by hand, including all the switches from make entry
-+ except for -O, and then give the appropriate "make" command again; or
-+ (c) increase the value of the -Olimit option, if your compiler supports
-+ this option; or (d) change the [161]makefile target to first compile
-+ each offending module explicitly without optimization, then compile the
-+ others normally (with optimization), for example:
-+
-+#Fortune 32:16, For:Pro 2.1 (mostly like 4.1bsd)
-+ft21:
-+ @echo 'Making C-Kermit $(CKVER) for Fortune 32:16 For:Pro 2.1...'
-+ $(MAKE) ckuusx.$(EXT) "CFLAGS= -DNODEBUG -DBSD4 -DFT21 -DNOFILEH \
-+ -SYM 800 \ -DDYNAMIC -DNOSETBUF -DCK_CURSES $(KFLAGS) -DPID_T=short"
-+ $(MAKE) ckuxla.$(EXT) "CFLAGS= -DNODEBUG -DBSD4 -DFT21 -DNOFILEH \
-+ -SYM 800 \ -DDYNAMIC -DNOSETBUF -DCK_CURSES $(KFLAGS) -DPID_T=short"
-+ $(MAKE) ckudia.$(EXT) "CFLAGS= -DNODEBUG -DBSD4 -DFT21 -DNOFILEH \
-+ -SYM 800 \ -DDYNAMIC -DNOSETBUF -DCK_CURSES $(KFLAGS) -DPID_T=short"
-+ $(MAKE) wermit "CFLAGS= -O -DNODEBUG -DBSD4 -DFT21 -DNOFILEH -SYM 800 \
-+ -DDYNAMIC -DNOSETBUF -DCK_CURSES $(KFLAGS) -DPID_T=short" \
-+ "LNKFLAGS= -n -s" "LIBS= -lcurses -ltermcap -lv -lnet"
-+
-+ As an extreme example, some compilers (e.g. gcc on the DG AViiON) have
-+ been known to dump core when trying to compile ckwart.c with
-+ optimization. So just do this one "by hand":
-+
-+cc -o wart ckwart.c
-+
-+ or:
-+
-+touch ckcpro.c
-+
-+ and then give the "make" command again.
-+
-+ Speaking of wart, it is unavoidable that some picky compilers might
-+ generate "statement unreachable" messages when compiling ckcpro.c.
-+ Unreachable statements can be generated by the wart program, which
-+ generates ckcpro.c automatically from [162]ckcpro.w, which translates
-+ lex-like state/input constructions into a big switch/case construction.
-+
-+ Some function in Kermit wreaks havoc when it is called. Change all
-+ invocations of the function into a macro that evaluates to the
-+ appropriate return code that would have been returned by the function
-+ had it been called and failed, for example: -Dzkself()=0. Obviously not
-+ a good idea if the function is really needed.
-+
-+ If you have just installed SunOS 4.1.2 or 4.1.3, you might find that
-+ C-Kermit (and any other C program) fails to link because of unresolved
-+ references from within libc. This is because of a mistake in Sun's
-+ /usr/lib/shlib.etc files for building the new libc. Change the libc
-+ Makefile so that the "ld" lines have "-ldl" at the end. Change the
-+ README file to say "mv xccs.multibyte. xccs.multibyte.o" and follow
-+ that instruction.
-+
-+5. INSTALLING THE KERMIT FILES
-+
-+ [ [163]Top ] [ [164]Contents ] [ [165]Next ] [ [166]Previous ]
-+
-+ SECTION CONTENTS
-+
-+5.1. [167]The C-Kermit Initialization File
-+5.2. [168]Text Files
-+5.3. [169]Installing the Kermit Files
-+5.4. [170]The Makefile Install Target
-+
-+ The C-Kermit executable does not need any external files to run.
-+ Unlike, say, the cu program, which on most platforms is useless unless
-+ you (as root) edit the /usr/spool/uucp/Systems and
-+ /usr/spool/uucp/Devices files to supply whatever obscure and
-+ undocumented syntax is required to match some supposedly user-friendly
-+ mnemonic to the real pathname of whatever device you want to use,
-+ Kermit runs on its own without needing any external configuration
-+ files, and lets you refer to device (and network hosts and services) by
-+ their own natural undisguised names.
-+
-+ Nevertheless, a number of external files can be installed along with
-+ the C-Kermit executable if you wish. These include configuration and
-+ customization files that are read by Kermit as well as documentation
-+ files to be read by people. All of this material is (a) optional, and
-+ (b) available on the Kermit website:
-+
-+[171]http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/
-+
-+ and usually in a more pleasant form, perhaps also with updated content.
-+ So if your computer is on the Internet, there is no need to install
-+ anything but the Kermit executable if users know how to find the Kermit
-+ website (and if they don't, Kermit's "help" command tells them).
-+
-+5.1. The C-Kermit Initialization File
-+
-+ In C-Kermit 7.0 and earlier, the standard initialization file was a key
-+ C-Kermit component because:
-+
-+ a. It "loaded" the dialing and network directories.
-+ b. It defined all the macros and variables for the services directory.
-+ c. It defined macros for quickly changing Kermit's file-transfer
-+ performance tuning.
-+
-+ The standard initialization file is quite long (more than 600 lines)
-+ and requires noticeable processing time (the slower the computer, the
-+ more noticeable), yet few people actually use the services directory,
-+ whose definition takes up most of its bulk. Meanwhile, in C-Kermit 8.0,
-+ many of the remaining functions of the standard initialization file are
-+ now built in; for example, the FAST, CAUTIOUS, and ROBUST commands.
-+
-+ More to the point, many of the settings that could be made only in the
-+ initialization and customization files can now be picked up from
-+ environment variables. The first group identifies initialization and
-+ directory files:
-+
-+ CKERMIT_INI
-+ The path of your Kermit initialization file, if any. This
-+ overrides the built-in search for $HOME/.kermrc.
-+
-+ K_CHARSET
-+ The character set used for encoding local text files. Equivalent
-+ to SET FILE CHARACTER-SET.
-+
-+ K_DIAL_DIRECTORY
-+ The full pathname of one or more Kermit dialing directory files.
-+ Equivalent to SET DIAL DIRECTORY.
-+
-+ K_NET_DIRECTORY
-+ The full pathname of one or more Kermit network directory files.
-+ Equivalent to SET NETWORK DIRECTORY.
-+
-+ K_INFO_DIRECTORY
-+ K_INFO_DIR
-+ The full pathname of a directory containing Kermit (if any)
-+ containing ckubwr.txt and other Kermit text files. Overrides
-+ Kermit's built-in search for this directory.
-+
-+ The next group is related to dialing modems:
-+
-+ K_COUNTRYCODE
-+ The telephonic numeric country code for this location, e.g. 1
-+ for North America or 39 for Italy. It is recommended that this
-+ one be set for all users, system-wide. Not only is it used to
-+ process portable-format dialing directory entries, but it is
-+ also compared against Kermit's built-in list of "tone countries"
-+ to see if tone dialing can be used. Equivalent to Kermit's SET
-+ DIAL COUNTRY-CODE command.
-+
-+ K_AREACODE
-+ The telephonic numeric area code for this location, e.g. 212 for
-+ Manhattan, New York, USA. Recommend this one also be set
-+ system-wide, so shared portable-format dialing directories will
-+ work automatically for everybody. Equivalent to Kermit's SET
-+ DIAL AREA-CODE command.
-+
-+ K_DIAL_METHOD
-+ TONE or PULSE. Equivalent to Kermit's SET DIAL METHOD command.
-+ If a dial method is not set explicitly (or implicitly from the
-+ country code), Kermit does not specify a dialing method, and
-+ uses the modem's default method, which tends to be pulse.
-+
-+ K_INTL_PREFIX
-+ The telephonic numeric international dialing prefix for this
-+ location. Equivalent to Kermit's SET DIAL INTL-PREFIX command.
-+
-+ K_LD_PREFIX
-+ The telephonic numeric long-distance dialing prefix for this
-+ location. Equivalent to Kermit's SET DIAL LD-PREFIX command.
-+
-+ K_PBX_ICP
-+ The telephonic numeric PBX internal call prefix for this
-+ location. Equivalent to Kermit's SET DIAL PBX-INSIDE-PREFIX
-+ command.
-+
-+ K_PBX_OCP
-+ The telephonic numeric PBX external call prefix for this
-+ location. Equivalent to Kermit's SET DIAL PBX-OUTSIDE-PREFIX
-+ command.
-+
-+ K_PBX_XCH
-+ The telephonic numeric PBX exchange (first part of the
-+ subscriber number). Equivalent to Kermit's SET DIAL PBX-EXCHANGE
-+ command.
-+
-+ K_TF_AREACODE
-+ A list of one or more telephonic numeric toll-free area codes.
-+
-+ K_TF_PREFIX
-+ The telephonic numeric toll-free dialing prefix, in case it is
-+ different from the long-distance prefix. Equivalent to Kermit's
-+ SET DIAL TF-PREFIX command.
-+
-+ The final group includes well-known environment variables that are also
-+ used by Kermit:
-+
-+ CDPATH
-+ Where the CD command should look for relative directory names.
-+
-+ SHELL
-+ The path of your Unix shell. Used by the RUN (!) command to
-+ choose the shell to execute its arguments.
-+
-+ USER
-+ Your Unix username.
-+
-+ EDITOR
-+ The name or path of your preferred editor (used by the EDIT
-+ command). Equivalent to SET EDITOR.
-+
-+ BROWSER
-+ The name or path of your preferred web browser (used by the
-+ BROWSE command). Equivalent to Kermit's SET BROWSER command.
-+
-+ Does this mean the initialization file can be abolished? I think so.
-+ Here's why:
-+
-+ * Kermit already does everything most people want it to do without
-+ one.
-+ * Important site-specific customizations can be done with global
-+ environment variables.
-+ * There is no longer any need for everybody to have to use the
-+ standard initialization file.
-+ * This means that your initialization file, if you want one, can
-+ contain your own personal settings, definitions, and preferences,
-+ rather than 600 lines of "standard" setups.
-+ * If you still want the services directory, you can either TAKE the
-+ standard initialization file (which must be named anything other
-+ than $HOME/.kermrc to avoid being executed automatically every time
-+ you start Kermit), or you can make it a kerbang script and execute
-+ it "directly" (the [172]makefile install target does this for you
-+ by putting ckermit.ini in the same directory as the Kermit binary,
-+ adding the appropriate Kerbang line to the top, and giving it
-+ execute permission).
-+
-+ In fact, you can put any number of kerbang scripts in your PATH to
-+ start up C-Kermit in different ways, to have it adopt certain settings,
-+ make particular connections, execute complicated scripts, whatever you
-+ want.
-+
-+5.2. Text Files
-+
-+ These are entirely optional. Many of them are to be found at the Kermit
-+ website in HTML form (i.e. as Web pages with clickable links, etc), and
-+ very likely also more up to date. Plain-text files that correspond to
-+ Web pages were simply "dumped" by Lynx from the website to plain ASCII
-+ text. The format is whatever Lynx uses for this purpose. If you wish,
-+ you can install them on your computer as described in the [173]next
-+ section.
-+
-+ [174]COPYING.TXT
-+ Copyright notice, permissions, and disclaimer.
-+
-+ [175]ckermit.ini
-+ The standard initialization file, intended more for reference
-+ (in most cases) than actual use; see [176]Section 5.1.
-+
-+ [177]ckermod.ini
-+ A sample customization file.
-+
-+ [178]ckermit70.txt
-+ Supplement to [179]Using C-Kermit for version 7.0. Available on
-+ the Kermit website as:
-+ [180]http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html
-+
-+ [181]ckermit80.txt
-+ Supplement to [182]Using C-Kermit for version 8.0. Available on
-+ the Kermit website as:
-+ [183]http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html
-+
-+ [184]ckcbwr.txt
-+ The general C-Kermit hints and tips ("beware") file. Available
-+ on the Kermit website as:
-+ [185]http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcbwr.html
-+
-+ [186]ckubwr.txt
-+ The Unix-specific C-Kermit hints and tips file. Available on the
-+ Kermit website as:
-+ [187]http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html
-+
-+ [188]ckuins.txt
-+ Unix C-Kermit Installation Instructions (this file). Available
-+ on the Kermit website as:
-+ [189]http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html
-+
-+ [190]ckccfg.txt
-+ C-Kermit compile-time configuration options. Available on the
-+ Kermit website as:
-+ [191]http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html
-+
-+ [192]ckcplm.txt
-+ The C-Kermit program logic manual. Available on the Kermit
-+ website as:
-+ [193]http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcplm.html
-+
-+ [194]ca_certs.pem
-+ Certificate Authority certificates for secure connections (see
-+ [195]Section 16).
-+
-+5.3. Installing the Kermit Files
-+
-+ There is an "install" target in the [196]makefile that you can use if
-+ you wish. However, since every site has its own layout and
-+ requirements, it is often better to install the Kermit files by hand.
-+ You don't have to use the makefile install target to install C-Kermit.
-+ This is especially true since not all sites build C-Kermit from source,
-+ and therefore might not even have the makefile. But you should read
-+ this section in any case.
-+
-+ If your computer already has an older version of C-Kermit installed,
-+ you should rename it (e.g. to "kermit6" or "kermit7") so in case you
-+ have any trouble with the new version, the old one is still
-+ available.
-+
-+ In most cases, you need to be root to install C-Kermit, if only to gain
-+ write access to directories in which the binary and manual page are to
-+ be copied. The C-Kermit binary should be installed in a directory that
-+ is in the users' PATH, but that is not likely to be overwritten when
-+ you install a new version of the operating system. A good candidate
-+ would be the /usr/local/bin/ directory, but the specific choice is site
-+ dependent. Example (assuming the appropriate Kermit binary is stored in
-+ your current directory as "wermit", e.g. because you just built it from
-+ source and that's the name the makefile gave it):
-+
-+mv wermit /usr/local/bin/kermit
-+chmod 755 /usr/local/bin/kermit
-+
-+ or (only after you finish reading this section!) simply:
-+
-+make install
-+
-+ IMPORTANT: IF C-KERMIT IS TO BE USED FOR DIALING OUT, you must also do
-+ something to give it access to the dialout devices and lockfile
-+ directories. The 'install' target does not attempt to set Kermit's
-+ owner, group, and permissions to allow dialing out. This requires
-+ privileges, open eyes, and human decision-making. Please read
-+ [197]Sections 10 and [198]11 below, make the necessary decisions, and
-+ then implement them by hand as described in those sections.
-+
-+ You should also install the man page, which is called ckuker.nr, in the
-+ man page directory for local commands, such as /usr/man/man1/, renamed
-+ appropriately, e.g. to kermit.1. This is also taken care of by "make
-+ install".
-+
-+ Optionally, the text files listed in the [199]previous section can be
-+ placed in a publicly readable directory. Suggested directory names are:
-+
-+/usr/local/doc/kermit/
-+/usr/local/lib/kermit/
-+/usr/share/lib/kermit/
-+/opt/kermit/doc/
-+
-+ (or any of these without the "/kermit"). Upon startup, C-Kermit checks
-+ the following environment variables whose purpose is to specify the
-+ directory where the C-Kermit text files are, in the following order:
-+
-+K_INFO_DIRECTORY
-+K_INFO_DIR
-+
-+ If either of these is defined, C-Kermit checks for the existence of the
-+ ckubwr.txt file (Unix C-Kermit Hints and Tips). If not found, it checks
-+ the directories listed above (both with and without the "/kermit") plus
-+ several others to see if they contain the ckubwr.txt file. If found,
-+ various C-Kermit messages can refer the user to this directory.
-+
-+ Finally, if you want to put the source code files somewhere for people
-+ to look at, you can do that too.
-+
-+5.4. The Makefile Install Target
-+
-+ The makefile "install" target does almost everything for you if you
-+ give it the information it needs by setting the variables described
-+ below. You can use this target if:
-+
-+ * You downloaded the [200]complete C-Kermit archive and built
-+ C-Kermit from source; or:
-+ * You downloaded an [201]individual C-Kermit binary and the
-+ [202]C-Kermit text-file archive, and your computer has a "make"
-+ command.
-+
-+ Here are the parameters you need to know:
-+
-+ BINARY
-+ Name of the binary you want to install as "kermit". Default:
-+ "wermit".
-+
-+ prefix
-+ (lower case) If you define this variable, its value is prepended
-+ to all the following xxxDIR variables (8.0.211 and later).
-+
-+ DESTDIR
-+ If you want to install the Kermit files in a directory structure
-+ like /opt/kermit/bin/, /opt/kermit/doc/, /opt/kermit/src/, then
-+ define DESTIR as the root of this structure; for example,
-+ /opt/kermit. The DESTDIR string should not end with a slash. By
-+ default, DESTDIR is not defined. If it is defined, but the
-+ directory does not exist, the makefile attempts to create it,
-+ which might require you to be root. Even so, this can fail if
-+ any segments in the path except the last one do not already
-+ exist. WARNING: If the makefile creates any directories, it
-+ gives them a mode of 755, and the default owner and group.
-+ Modify these by hand if necessary.
-+
-+ BINDIR
-+ Directory in which to install the Kermit binary (and the
-+ standard C-Kermit initialization file, if it is found, as a
-+ Kerbang script). If DESTDIR is defined, BINDIR must start with a
-+ slash. BINDIR must not end with a slash. If DESTDIR is defined,
-+ BINDIR is a subdirectory of DESTDIR. If BINDIR does not exist,
-+ the makefile attempts to create it as with DESTDIR. Default:
-+ /usr/local/bin.
-+
-+ MANDIR
-+ Directory in which to install the C-Kermit manual page as
-+ "kermit" followed by the manual-chapter extension (next item).
-+ Default: /usr/man/man1. If MANDIR is defined, the directory must
-+ already exist.
-+
-+ MANEXT
-+ Extension for the manual page. Default: 1 (digit one).
-+
-+ SRCDIR
-+ Directory in which to install the C-Kermit source code. If
-+ DESTDIR is defined, this is a subdirectory of DESTDIR. Default:
-+ None.
-+
-+ CERTDIR
-+ For secure builds only: Directory in which to install the
-+ ca_certs.pem file. This must be the verification directory used
-+ by programs that use the SSL libraries at your site. Default:
-+ none. Possibilities include: /usr/local/ssl, /opt/ssl,
-+ /usr/lib/ssl, . . . If CERTDIR is defined, the directory
-+ must already exist.
-+
-+ INFODIR
-+ Directory in which to install the C-Kermit text files. If
-+ DESTDIR is defined, this is a subdirectory of DESTDIR. Default:
-+ None. If INFODIR is defined but does not exist, the makefile
-+ attempts to create it, as with DESTDIR.
-+
-+ Examples:
-+
-+ make install
-+ Installs "wermit" as /usr/local/bin/kermit with permissions 755,
-+ the default owner and group, and no special privileges. The
-+ manual page is installed as /usr/man/man1/kermit.1. Text files
-+ are not copied anywhere, nor are the sources.
-+
-+ make MANDIR= install
-+ Just like "make install" but does not attempt to install the
-+ manual page.
-+
-+ make DESTDIR=/opt/kermit BINDIR=/bin SRCDIR=/src INFODIR=/doc install
-+ Installs the Kermit binary "wermit" as /opt/kermit/bin/kermit,
-+ puts the source code in /opt/kermit/src, and puts the text files
-+ in /opt/kermit/doc, creating the directories if they don't
-+ already exist, and puts the man page in the default location.
-+
-+ make BINDIR=/usr/local/bin CERTDIR=/usr/local/ssl install
-+ Installs the Kerberized Kermit binary "wermit" as
-+ /usr/local/bin/kermit, puts the CA Certificates file in
-+ /usr/local/ssl/, and the man page in the normal place.
-+
-+ For definitive information, see the makefile. The following is
-+ excerpted from the 8.0.211 makefile:
-+
-+# The following symbols are used to specify library and header file locations
-+# Redefine them to the values used on your system by:
-+# . editing this file
-+# . defining the values on the command line
-+# . defining the values in the environment and use the -e option
-+#
-+prefix = /usr/local
-+srproot = $(prefix)
-+sslroot = $(prefix)
-+manroot = $(prefix)
-+
-+K4LIB=-L/usr/kerberos/lib
-+K4INC=-I/usr/kerberos/include
-+K5LIB=-L/usr/kerberos/lib
-+K5INC=-I/usr/kerberos/include
-+SRPLIB=-L$(srproot)/lib
-+SRPINC=-I$(srproot)/include
-+SSLLIB=-L$(sslroot)/ssl/lib
-+SSLINC=-I$(sslroot)/ssl/include
-+...
-+WERMIT = makewhat
-+BINARY = wermit
-+DESTDIR =
-+BINDIR = $(prefix)/bin
-+MANDIR = $(manroot)/man/man1
-+MANEXT = 1
-+SRCDIR =
-+INFODIR =
-+CERTDIR =
-+
-+6. INSTALLING UNIX C-KERMIT FROM DOS-FORMAT DISKETTES
-+
-+ [ [203]Top ] [ [204]Contents ] [ [205]Next ] [ [206]Previous ]
-+
-+ This section is obsolete. We don't distribute C-Kermit on diskettes
-+ any more because (a)there is no demand, and (b) it no longer fits.
-+
-+ If you received a DOS-format diskette containing a binary executable
-+ C-Kermit program plus supporting text files, be sure to chmod +x the
-+ executable before attempting to run it.
-+
-+ In version 5A(190) and later, all the text files on the C-Kermit
-+ DOS-format diskettes are in Unix format: LF at the end of each line
-+ rather than CRLF. This means that no conversions are necessary when
-+ copying to your Unix file system, and that all the files on the
-+ diskette, text and binary, can be copied together. The following
-+ comments apply to the DOS-format diskettes furnished with version
-+ 5A(189) and earlier or to other DOS-format diskettes you might have
-+ obtained from other sources.
-+
-+ If you have received C-Kermit on MS-DOS format diskettes (such as those
-+ distributed by Columbia University), you should make sure that your
-+ DOS-to-Unix conversion utility (such as "dosread") both: (1) changes
-+ line terminators in all files from carriage-return linefeed (CRLF) to
-+ just linefeed (LF) (such as "dosread -a") and remove any Ctrl-Z's, and
-+ (2) that all filenames are converted from uppercase to lowercase. If
-+ these conversions were not done, you can use the following shell script
-+ on your Unix system to do them:
-+
-+---(cut here)---
-+#!/bin/sh
-+#
-+# Shell script to convert C-Kermit DOS-format files into Unix format.
-+# Lowercases the filenames, strips out carriage returns and Ctrl-Z's.
-+#
-+x=$1 # the name of the source directory
-+y=$2 # the name of the target directory if [ $# -lt 2 ]; then
-+ echo "usage: $0 source-directory target-directory"
-+ exit 1
-+fi
-+if cd $1 ; then
-+ echo "Converting files from $1 to $2"
-+else
-+ echo "$0: cannot cd to $1"
-+ exit 1
-+fi
-+for i in *; do
-+ j=`echo $i | tr 'A-Z' 'a-z'`
-+ echo $x/$i =\> $y/$j
-+ tr -d '\015\032' < $i > $y/$j
-+done
-+---(cut here)---
-+
-+ Cut out this shell script, save it as "convert.sh" (or any other name
-+ you prefer), then "chmod +x convert.sh". Then, create a new, empty
-+ directory to put the converted files in, and then "convert.sh /xxx
-+ /yyy" where /xxx is the name of the directory where the PC-format files
-+ are, and /yyy is the name of the new, empty directory. The converted
-+ files will appear in the new directory.
-+
-+7. CHECKING THE RESULTS
-+
-+ [ [207]Top ] [ [208]Contents ] [ [209]Next ] [ [210]Previous ]
-+
-+ First some quick checks for problems that can be easily corrected by
-+ recompiling with different options:
-+
-+ DIRECTORY listing is garbage
-+ Permissions, size, and date are random garbage (but the
-+ filenames are correct) in a C-Kermit DIRECTORY listing. On some
-+ platforms, the lstat() function is present but simply doesn't
-+ work; try adding -DNOLSTAT to CFLAGS and rebuild. If that
-+ doesn't fix it, also add -DNOLINKBITS. If it's still not fixed,
-+ remove -DNOLSTAT and -DNOLINKBITS and add -DNOSYMLINK.
-+
-+ curses
-+ When you make a connection with C-Kermit and transfer files
-+ using the fullscreen (curses) file-transfer display, and then
-+ get the C-Kermit> prompt back afterwards, do characters echo
-+ when you type them? If not, the curses library has altered the
-+ buffering of /dev/tty. Try rebuilding with KFLAGS=-DCK_NEWTERM.
-+ If it already has -DCK_NEWTERM in CFLAGS, try removing it. If
-+ that doesn't help, then rebuild with -DNONOSETBUF (yes, two
-+ NO's). If none of this works (and you can't fix the code), then
-+ either don't use the fullscreen display, or rebuild with
-+ -DNOCURSES.
-+
-+ Ctrl-L or any SCREEN command crashes C-Kermit:
-+ Rebuild with -DNOTERMCAP.
-+
-+ No prompt after CONNECT:
-+ After escaping back from CONNECT mode, does your C-Kermit>
-+ prompt disappear? (Yet, typing "?" still produces a command
-+ list, etc) In that case, add -DCKCONINTB4CB to CFLAGS and
-+ rebuild.
-+
-+ Here is a more thorough checklist can use to tell whether your version
-+ of C-Kermit was built correctly for your Unix system, with hints on how
-+ to fix or work around problems:
-+
-+ a. Start C-Kermit (usually by typing "./wermit" in the directory where
-+ you ran the makefile). Do you see the C-Kermit> prompt? If not,
-+ C-Kermit incorrectly deduced that it was running in the background.
-+ The test is in conbgt() in [211]ckutio.c. If you can fix it for
-+ your system, please send in the fix (Hint: read about "PID_T"
-+ below). Otherwise, you can force C-Kermit to foreground mode by
-+ starting it with the -z command line option, as in "kermit -z", or
-+ giving the interactive command SET BACKGROUND OFF.
-+ b. When you type characters at the C-Kermit prompt, do they echo
-+ immediately? If not, something is wrong with concb() and probably
-+ the other terminal mode settings routines in [212]ckutio.c. Be sure
-+ you have used the most appropriate make entry.
-+ c. At the C-Kermit> prompt, type "send ./?". C-Kermit should list all
-+ the files in the current directory. If not, it was built for the
-+ wrong type of Unix file system. Details below. In the meantime, try
-+ SET WILDCARD-EXPANSION SHELL as a workaround.
-+ d. CD to a directory that contains a variety of files, symlinks, and
-+ subdirectories and give a DIRECTORY command at the C-Kermit>
-+ prompt. Do the permissions, size, and date appear correct? If not
-+ see [213]Section 4.0.
-+ e. Assuming your platform supports long file names, create a file with
-+ a long name in your current directory, e.g.:
-+
-+$ touch thisisafilewithaveryveryveryveryveryveryveryverylooooooooongname
-+
-+ (you might need to make it longer than this, perhaps as long as 257
-+ or even 1025 characters).
-+ Check with ls to see if your version of Unix truncated the name.
-+ Now start C-Kermit and type "send thisis<ESC>". Does Kermit
-+ complete the name, showing the same name as ls did? If not, wrong
-+ filesystem. Read on.
-+ f. Make sure that Kermit has the maximum path length right. Just type
-+ SHOW FILE and see what it says about this. If it is too short,
-+ there could be some problems at runtime. To correct, look in
-+ [214]ckcdeb.h to see how the symbol CKMAXPATH is set and make any
-+ needed adjustments.
-+ g. Send a file to your new Kermit program from a different Kermit
-+ program that is known to work. Is the date/timestamp of the new
-+ file identical to the original? If not, adjustments are needed in
-+ zstrdt() in [215]ckufio.c.
-+ h. Go to another computer (Computer B) from which you can send files
-+ to C-Kermit. Connect Computer B to the computer (A) where you are
-+ testing C-Kermit. Then:
-+ i. Send a file from B to A. Make sure it transferred OK and was
-+ created with the the right name.
-+ j. Send a file from B to A, specifying an "as-name" that is very, very
-+ long (longer than the maximum name length on computer A). Check to
-+ make sure that the file was received OK and that its name was
-+ truncated to Computer A's maximum length. If not, check the
-+ MAXNAMLEN definition in [216]ckufio.c.
-+ k. Tell C-Kermit on Computer A to "set receive pathnames relative" and
-+ then send it a file from Computer B specifying an as-name that
-+ contains several directory segments:
-+
-+send foo dir1/dir2/dir3/foo
-+
-+ Check to make sure that dir1/dir2/dir3/foo was created in Computer
-+ A's current directory (i.e. that three levels of directories were
-+ created).
-+ l. Repeat step k, but make each path segment in the pathname longer
-+ than Computer A's maximum name length. Make sure each directory
-+ name, and the final filename, were truncated properly.
-+ m. Type Ctrl-C (or whatever your Unix interrupt character is) at the
-+ prompt. Do you get "^C..." and a new prompt? If instead, you get a
-+ core dump (this shouldn't happen any more) "rm core" and then
-+ rebuild with -DNOCCTRAP added to your CFLAGS. If it did work, then
-+ type another Ctrl-C. If this does the same thing as the first one,
-+ then Ctrl-C handling is OK. Otherwise, the SIGINT signal is either
-+ not getting re-armed (shouldn't happen) or is being masked off
-+ after the first time it is caught, in which case, if your Unix is
-+ POSIX-based, try rebuilding C-Kermit with -DCK_POSIX_SIG.
-+ n. Type Ctrl-Z (or whatever your Unix suspend character is) to put
-+ C-Kermit in the background. Did it work? If nothing happened, then
-+ (a)your version of Unix does not support job control, or (b) your
-+ version of C-Kermit was probably built with -DNOJC. If your session
-+ became totally frozen, then you are probably running C-Kermit on a
-+ Unix version that supports job control, but under a shell that
-+ doesn't. If that's not the case, look in the congm() and psuspend()
-+ routines in [217]ckutio.c and see if you can figure out what's
-+ wrong. If you can't, rebuild with -DNOJC.
-+ o. Give a SET LINE command for a dialout device, e.g. "set line
-+ /dev/tty00". If you got some kind of permission or access denied
-+ message, go read [218]Section 10 and then come back here.
-+ p. After giving a successful SET LINE command, type "show comm" to see
-+ the communication parameters. Do they make sense?
-+ q. Type "set speed ?" and observe the list of available speeds. Is it
-+ what you expected? If not, see [219]Section 2) of the
-+ [220]Configurations Options document.
-+ r. Give a SET SPEED command to change the device's speed. Did it work?
-+ (Type "show comm" again to check.)
-+ s. Try dialing out: SET MODEM TYPE , SET LINE , SET SPEED , DIAL . If
-+ it doesn't work, keep reading. After dialing, can you REDIAL?
-+ t. If your version was built with TCP/IP network support, try the
-+ TELNET command.
-+ u. Transfer some files in remote mode on incoming asynchronous serial
-+ (direct or modem) connections, and on incoming network (telnet,
-+ rlogin, terminal server) connections. If you get lots of errors,
-+ try different SET FLOW settings on the remote Kermit program.
-+ v. Establish a serial connection from C-Kermit to another computer
-+ (direct or dialed) and transfer some files. If you have network
-+ support, do the same with a network connection.
-+ w. If your version was built with fullscreen file transfer display
-+ support, check that it works during local-mode file transfer. Also,
-+ check C-Kermit's operation afterwards: is the echoing funny? etc
-+ etc. If there are problems, see [221]Section 4.
-+ x. If your version was built with script programming language support,
-+ TAKE the ckedemo.ksc file to give it a workout.
-+ y. Does C-Kermit interlock correctly with UUCP-family programs (cu,
-+ tip, uucp, etc)? If not, read the section [222]DIALING OUT AND
-+ COORDINATING WITH UUCP below.
-+ z. Modem signals... Give a SET LINE command to a serial device and
-+ then type the SHOW MODEM command. If it says "Modem signals
-+ unavailable in this version of Kermit", then you might want to look
-+ at the ttgmdm() routine in [223]ckutio.c and add the needed code --
-+ if indeed your version of Unix provides a way to get modem signals
-+ (some don't; e.g. modem signals are a foreign concept to POSIX,
-+ requiring politically incorrect workarounds).
-+ aa. If it says "Modem signals unavailable", then it is likely that the
-+ API for getting modem signals is provided, but it doesn't actually
-+ do anything (e.g. ioctl(ttyfd,TIOCMGET,&x) returns EINVAL).
-+ ab. In any case, it still should be able to manipulate the DTR signal.
-+ To test, SET LINE , SET MODEM NONE, and HANGUP. The DTR light
-+ should go out momentarily. If it doesn't, see if you can add the
-+ needed code for your system to the tthang() routine in
-+ [224]ckutio.c.
-+ ac. If your version of Kermit has the SET FLOW RTS/CTS command, check
-+ to see if it works: give Kermit this command, set your modem for
-+ RTS/CTS, transfer some files (using big packet and window sizes)
-+ and watch the RTS and CTS lights on the modem. If they go on and
-+ off (and Kermit does not get packet errors), then it works. If your
-+ version of Kermit does not have this command, but your version of
-+ Unix does support hardware flow control, take a look at the
-+ tthflow() command in [225]ckutio.c and see if you can add the
-+ needed code (see the section on [226]HARDWARE FLOW CONTROL below).
-+ (And please [227]send back any added code, so that others can
-+ benefit from it and it can be carried forward into future
-+ releases.)
-+ ad. If C-Kermit starts normally and issues its prompt, echoing is
-+ normal, etc, but then after returning from a CONNECT session, the
-+ prompt no longer appears, try rebuilding with -DCKCONINTB4CB.
-+ ae. (8.0.206 or later) Type some commands at the C-Kermit prompt. Can
-+ you use the Up-arrow and Down-arrow keys on your keyboard to access
-+ Kermit's command history? If not, and you're a programmer, take a
-+ look at the USE_ARROWKEYS sections of ckucmd.c.
-+
-+8. REDUCING THE SIZE OF THE EXECUTABLE PROGRAM IMAGE
-+
-+ [ [228]Top ] [ [229]Contents ] [ [230]Next ] [ [231]Previous ]
-+
-+ Also see: [232]C-Kermit Configuration Options
-+
-+ a. Many of C-Kermit's options and features can be deselected at
-+ compile time. The greatest savings at the least sacrifice in
-+ functionality is to disable the logging of debug information by
-+ defining NODEBUG during compilation. See the [233]Configurations
-+ Options document for further information.
-+ b. Use shared libraries rather than static linking. This is the
-+ default on many Unix systems anyway. However, executables built for
-+ dynamic linking with shared libraries are generally not portable
-+ away from the machine they were built on, so this is recommended if
-+ the binary is for your use only.
-+ c. Most Unix systems have a "strip" command to remove symbol table
-+ information from an executable program image. "man strip" for
-+ further information. The same effect can be achieved by including
-+ "-s" among the link flags when building C-Kermit.
-+ d. SCO, Interactive, and some other Unix versions have an "mcs"
-+ command. "mcs -d wermit" can be used to delete the contents of the
-+ ".comment" section from the executable program image.
-+ e. Many modern optimizers can be instructed to optimize for space
-+ rather than execution efficiency. Check the CFLAGS in the makefile
-+ target, adjust as desired.
-+
-+9. UNIX VERSIONS
-+
-+ [ [234]Top ] [ [235]Contents ] [ [236]Next ] [ [237]Previous ]
-+
-+ SECTION CONTENTS
-+
-+9.1 [238]Standards
-+ 9.1.1. [239]POSIX
-+ 9.1.2. [240]ANSI C
-+ 9.1.3. [241]Other Standards
-+9.2. [242]Library Issues
-+9.3. [243]Unix File System Peculiarities
-+9.4. [244]Hardware Flow Control
-+9.5. [245]Terminal Speeds
-+9.6. [246]Millisecond Sleeps
-+9.7. [247]Nondestructive Input Buffer Peeking
-+9.8. [248]Other System-Dependent Features
-+9.9. [249]Terminal Interruption
-+
-+ There are several major varieties of Unix: Bell Laboratories Seventh
-+ Edition, AT&T System V, Berkeley Standard Distribution (BSD), and
-+ POSIX. Each has many, many subvarieties and descendents, and there are
-+ also hybrids that exhibit symptoms of two or more varieties, plus
-+ special quirks of their own.
-+
-+ Seventh edition versions of C-Kermit include the compile-time option
-+ -DV7 in the CFLAGS string in the makefile target. Various V7-based
-+ implementations are also supported: -DCOHERENT, -DMINIX, etc.
-+
-+ AT&T-based versions of Unix Kermit include the compile-time option
-+ -DATTSV (standing for AT∓T Unix System V). This applies to System
-+ III and to System V up to and including Release 2. For System V Release
-+ 3, the flag -DSVR3 should be used instead (which also implies -DATTSV).
-+ This is because the data type of signal() and several other functions
-+ was changed between SVR2 and SVR3. For System V Release 4, include
-+ -DSVR4 because of changes in UUCP lockfile conventions; this also
-+ implies -DSVR3 and -DATTSV.
-+
-+ For BSD, the flag -BSDxx must be included, where xx is the BSD version
-+ number, for example BSD4 (for version 4.2 or later, using only 4.2
-+ features), -DBSD41 (for BSD 4.1 only), -DBSD43 (for 4.3), -DBSD29 (BSD
-+ 2.9 for DEC PDP-11s). -DBSD44 is for 4.4BSD, which is the basis of
-+ FreeBSD, NetBSD, OpenBSD, BSDI, and Mac OS X, and which contains many
-+ POSIX features, and has little relation to 4.3BSD and earlier.
-+
-+ For POSIX, include the flag -DPOSIX. POSIX defines a whole new set of
-+ terminal i/o functions that are not found in traditional AT&T or
-+ Berkeley implementations, and also defines the symbol _POSIX_SOURCE,
-+ which is used in many system and library header files, mainly to
-+ disable non-POSIX (i.e. useful) features.
-+
-+ Note (circa 1997): In order to enable serial speeds higher than 38400
-+ bps, it is generally necessary to add -DPOSIX (among other things),
-+ since the older terminal APIs can not accommodate the new speeds -- out
-+ o' bits. But this often also means wholesale conversion to POSIX APIs.
-+ In general, just try adding -DPOSIX and then see what goes wrong. Be
-+ wary of features disappearing: when _POSIX_SOURCE is defined, all sorts
-+ of things that were perfectly OK before suddenly become politically
-+ incorrect -- like reading modem signals, doing hardware flow control,
-+ etc. POSIX was evidently not designed with serial communication in
-+ mind!
-+
-+ Case in point: In UnixWare 7.0, #define'ing POSIX causes strictness
-+ clauses in the header files to take effect. These prevent <sys/time.h>
-+ from defining the timeval and timezone structs, which are needed for
-+ all sorts of things (like select()). Thus, if we want the high serial
-+ speeds, we have to circumvent the POSIX clauses.
-+
-+ Similarly in SCO OpenServer R5.0.4 where, again, we must use the POSIX
-+ APIs to get at serial speeds higher than 38400, but then doing so
-+ removes hardware flow control -- just when we need it most! In cases
-+ like this, dirty tricks are the only recourse (search for SCO_OSR504 in
-+ [250]ckutio.c for examples).
-+
-+ For reasons like this, Unix implementations tend to be neither pure
-+ AT&T nor pure BSD nor pure POSIX, but a mixture of two or more of
-+ these, with "compatibility features" allowing different varieties of
-+ programs to be built on the same computer. In general, Kermit tries not
-+ to mix and match but to keep a consistent repertoire throughout.
-+ However, there are certain Unix implementations that only work when you
-+ mix and match. For example, the Silicon Graphics IRIX operating system
-+ (prior to version 3.3) is an AT&T Unix but with a BSD file system. The
-+ only way you can build Kermit successfully for this configuration is to
-+ include -DSVR3 plus the special option -DLONGFN, meaning "pretend I was
-+ built with -DBSDxx when it's time to compile file-related code". See
-+ the "iris" makefile target.
-+
-+9.1. Standards
-+
-+ [ [251]Top ] [ [252]Section Contents ] [ [253]Contents ] [ [254]Next ]
-+
-+ SUBSECTION CONTENTS
-+
-+9.1.1. [255]POSIX
-+9.1.2. [256]ANSI C
-+9.1.3. [257]Other Standards
-+
-+ In edits 166-167 (1988-89), C-Kermit was heavily modified to try to
-+ keep abreast of new standards while still remaining compatible with old
-+ versions of C and Unix. There are two new standards of interest: ANSI C
-+ (as described in Kernighan and Ritchie, "The C Programming Language",
-+ Second Edition, Prentice Hall, 1988) and POSIX.1 (IEEE Standard 1003.1
-+ and ISO/IEC 9945-1, 1990, "Portable Operating System Interface"). These
-+ two standards have nothing to do with each other: you can build
-+ C-Kermit with a non-ANSI compiler for a POSIX system, or for a
-+ non-POSIX system with with an ANSI compiler.
-+
-+9.1.1. POSIX
-+
-+ POSIX.1 defines a repertoire of system functions and header files for
-+ use by C language programs. Most notably, the ioctl() function is not
-+ allowed in POSIX; all ioctl() functions have been replaced by
-+ device-specific functions like tcsetattr(), tcsendbreak(), etc.
-+
-+ Computer systems that claim some degree of POSIX compliance have made
-+ some attempt to put their header files in the right places and give
-+ them the right names, and to provide system library functions with the
-+ right names and calling conventions. Within the header files,
-+ POSIX-compliant functions are supposed to be within #ifdef
-+ _POSIX_SOURCE..#endif conditionals, and non-POSIX items are not within
-+ these conditionals.
-+
-+ If Kermit is built with neither -D_POSIX_SOURCE nor -DPOSIX, the
-+ functions and header files of the selected version of Unix (or VMS,
-+ etc) are used according to the CFLAGS Kermit was built with.
-+
-+ If Kermit is built with -D_POSIX_SOURCE but not -DPOSIX, then one of
-+ the -DBSD or -DATTSV flags (or one that implies them) must also be
-+ defined, but it still uses only the POSIX features in the system header
-+ files. This allows C-Kermit to be built on BSD or AT&T systems that
-+ have some degree of POSIX compliance, but still use BSD or AT&T
-+ specific features.
-+
-+ The dilimma is this: it is often necessary to define _POSIX_SOURCE to
-+ get at new or modern features, such as high serial speeds and the APIs
-+ to deal with them. But defining _POSIX_SOURCE also hides other APIs
-+ that Kermit needs, for example the ones dealing with modem signals
-+ (others are listed just below). Thus all sorts of hideous contortions
-+ are often required to get a full set of features.
-+
-+ The POSIX standard does not define anything about uucp lockfiles. "make
-+ posix" uses NO (repeat, NO) lockfile conventions. If your
-+ POSIX-compliant Unix version uses a lockfile convention such as HDBUUCP
-+ (see below), use the "posix" entry, but include the appropriate
-+ lockfile option in your KFLAGS on the "make" command line, for example:
-+
-+make posix "KFLAGS=-DHDBUUCP"
-+
-+ POSIX.1 also lacks certain other features that Kermit needs. For
-+ example:
-+
-+ * There is no defined way for an application to do wildcard matching
-+ of filenames. Kermit uses the inode in the directory structure, but
-+ POSIX.1 does not include this concept. (Later POSIX revisions
-+ include functions named (I think) glob() and fnmatch(), but these
-+ functions are not yet in Kermit, and might not be appropriate in
-+ any case.)
-+ * There is no POSIX mechanism for sensing or controlling modem
-+ signals, nor to enable RTS/CTS or other hardware flow control.
-+ * There is no select() for multiplexing i/o, and therefore no TCP/IP.
-+ * There is no way to check if characters are waiting in a
-+ communications device (or console) input buffer, short of trying to
-+ read them -- no select(), ioctl(fd,FIONREAD,blah), rdchk(), etc.
-+ This is bad for CONNECT mode and bad for sliding windows.
-+ * No way to do a millisecond sleep (no nap(), usleep(), select(),
-+ etc).
-+ * There is no popen().
-+
-+ So at this point, there cannot be one single fully functional POSIX
-+ form of C-Kermit unless it also has "extensions", as do Linux, QNX,
-+ etc.
-+
-+ More on POSIX (quoting from a newsgroup posting by Dave Butenhof):
-+
-+ Standards tend to look at themselves as "enabling". So POSIX
-+ standards say that, in order to use POSIX functions, a program must
-+ define some macro that will put the development environment in
-+ "POSIX mode". For the ancient POSIX 1003.1-1990, the symbol is
-+ _POSIX_SOURCE. For recent revisions, it's _POSIX_C_SOURCE with an
-+ appropriate value. POSIX 1003.1-1996 says that, to use its features
-+ in a portable manner, you must define _POSIX_C_SOURCE=199506L before
-+ including any header files.
-+
-+ But for Solaris, or Digital Unix, the picture is different. POSIX is
-+ one important but small part of the universe. Yet POSIX
-+ unconditionally and unambiguously REQUIRES that, when
-+ _POSIX_C_SOURCE=199506L, ALL of the functions and definitions
-+ required by the standard, and NO others (except in specific
-+ restricted namespaces, specifically "_" followed by an uppercase
-+ letter or "__" followed by a lowercase letter) shall be visible.
-+ That kinda puts a cramp on BSD and SVID support, because those
-+ require names that are not in the "protected" POSIX namespaces. It's
-+ ILLEGAL to make those symbols visible, unless you've done something
-+ else that's beyond the scope of POSIX to allow the system to infer
-+ that you didn't really mean it.
-+
-+ In most cases, you should just compile, with no standards-related
-+ macros defined. The system will make available every interface and
-+ definition that isn't incompatible with the "main stream". There may
-+ indeed be cases where two standards cross, and you really can't use
-+ both together. But, in general, they play nicely together as long as
-+ you don't do anything rash -- like telling the system that it's not
-+ allowed to let them.
-+
-+ In the area of threads, both Solaris and Digital Unix support
-+ incompatible thread APIs. We have POSIX and DCE, they have POSIX and
-+ UI. The nasty areas are in the _r routines and in some aspects of
-+ signal behavior. You cannot compile a single source file that uses
-+ both semantics. That's life. It sounds as if Solaris defaults to the
-+ UI variants, but allows you to define this _POSIX_THREAD_SEMANTICS
-+ to get around it. We default to POSIX, and allow you to define
-+ _PTHREAD_USE_D4 (automatically defined by the cc "-threads" switch)
-+ to select the DCE thread variants. That default, because you're
-+ operating outside of any individual standard, is really just a
-+ marketing decision.
-+
-+9.1.2. ANSI C
-+
-+ [ [258]Top ] [ [259]Contents ] [ [260]Section Contents ] [
-+ [261]Subsection Contents ] [ [262]Next ] [ [263]Previous ]
-+
-+ The major difference between ANSI C and earlier C compilers is function
-+ prototyping. ANSI C allows function arguments to be checked for type
-+ agreement, and (when possible) type coercion in the event of a
-+ mismatch. For this to work, functions and their arguments must be
-+ declared before they are called. The form for function declarations is
-+ different in ANSI C and non-ANSI C (ANSI C also accepts the earlier
-+ form, but then does not do type checking).
-+
-+ As of edit 167, C-Kermit tries to take full advantage of ANSI C
-+ features, especially function prototyping. This removes many bugs
-+ introduced by differing data types used or returned by the same
-+ functions on different computers. ANSI C features are automatically
-+ enabled when the symbol __STDC__ is defined. Most ANSI C compilers,
-+ such as GNU CC and the new DEC C compiler define this symbol
-+ internally.
-+
-+ On the downside, ANSI C compilation increases the
-+ administrative/bureacratic burden, spewing out countless unneeded
-+ warnings about mismatched types, especially when we are dealing with
-+ signed and unsigned characters, requiring casts everywhere to shut up
-+ the mindless complaints -- there is no use for signed chars in Kermit
-+ (or probably anywhere else). Some compilers, mercifully, include a
-+ "treat all chars as unsigned" option, and when available it should be
-+ used -- not only to stop the warnings, but also to avoid unhelpful sign
-+ extension on high-bit characters.
-+
-+ To force use of ANSI C prototypes, include -DCK_ANSIC on the cc command
-+ line. To disable the use of ANSI prototypes, include -DNOANSI.
-+
-+9.1.3. Other Standards
-+
-+ [ [264]Top ] [ [265]Contents ] [ [266]Section Contents ] [
-+ [267]Subsection Contents ] [ [268]Next ] [ [269]Previous ]
-+
-+ As the years go by, standards with-which-all-must-comply continue to
-+ pile up: AES, XPG2, XPG3, XPG4, FIPS 151-2, successive generations of
-+ POSIX, OSF/1, X/Open, Spec 1170, UNIX95, Open Group UNIX98, ISO/IEC
-+ 9945 parts 1-4, ISO 9899, 88Open, OS 99, Single Unix Specification
-+ (SUS, [270]IEEE 1003.1-2001, not to mention "mature standards" like V7,
-+ 4.2/4.3BSD, System V R3 and R4 (SVID2 and SVID3), 4.4BSD (the basis for
-+ BSDI, OpenBSD, NetBSD, FreeBSD, Mac OS X etc), /usr/group, plus
-+ assorted seismic pronouncements of the neverending series of ephemeral
-+ corporate consortia, not to mention the libc-vs-glibc turmoil in the
-+ Linux arena and who knows what else.
-+
-+ None of these standards simplifies life for portable applications like
-+ C-Kermit -- each one is simply one more environment to support (or
-+ circumvent, as in many cases these standards do more harm than good by
-+ denying access to facilities we need, e.g. as noted in above in
-+ [271]9.1.1).
-+
-+9.2. Library Issues
-+
-+ [ [272]Top ] [ [273]Contents ] [ [274]Section Contents ] [
-+ [275]Subsection Contents ] [ [276]Next ] [ [277]Previous ]
-+
-+ On most modern platforms, applications are -- and often must be --
-+ dynamically linked. This has numerous advantages (smaller executables,
-+ ability to patch a library and thereby patch all applications that use
-+ it, etc), but also causes some headaches: most commonly, the library ID
-+ built into the executable at link time does not match the ID of the
-+ corresponding library on the target system, and so the loader refuses
-+ to let the application run.
-+
-+ This problem only gets worse over time. In the Linux and *BSD world, we
-+ also have totally different libraries (each with their own names and
-+ numbering systems) that cover the same territory; for example, curses
-+ vs ncurses, libc versus glibc. Combinations proliferate and any given
-+ Unix computer might have any combination. For this reason it is
-+ becoming increasingly difficult to produce a "Linux binary" for a given
-+ architecture (e.g. PC or Alpha). There has to be a separate binary for
-+ (at least) every combination of curses vs ncurses and libc vs glibc.
-+
-+ In such cases, the best advice is for every user to build C-Kermit from
-+ source code on the system where it will run. Too bad most commercial
-+ Unix vendors have stopped including C compilers with the operating
-+ system!
-+
-+9.3. Unix File System Peculiarities
-+
-+ [ [278]Top ] [ [279]Contents ] [ [280]Section Contents ] [ [281]Next ]
-+ [ [282]Previous ]
-+
-+ Normally, including a BSD, System-V, POSIX, or DIRENT flag in the make
-+ entry selects the right file system code. But some versions of Unix are
-+ inconsistent in this regard, and building in the normal way either
-+ gives compiler or linker errors, or results in problems at runtime,
-+ typically failure to properly expand wildcard file specifications when
-+ you do something like "send *.*", or failure to recognize long
-+ filenames, as in "send filewithaveryveryveryveryverylongname".
-+
-+ C-Kermit is supposed to know about all the various styles of Unix file
-+ systems, but it has to be told which one to use when you build it,
-+ usually in the makefile target CFLAGS as shown below, but you might
-+ also have to add something like -I/usr/include/bsd to CFLAGS, or
-+ something like -lbsd to LIBS.
-+
-+ C-Kermit gives you the following CFLAGS switches to adapt to your file
-+ system's peculiarities:
-+
-+-DDIRENT - #include <dirent.h>
-+-DSDIRENT - #include <sys/dirent.h>
-+-DNDIR - #include <ndir.h>
-+-DXNDIR - #include <sys/ndir.h>
-+-DRTU - #include "/usr/lib/ndir.h", only if NDIR and XNDIR not defined.
-+-DSYSUTIMH - #include <sys/utime.h> for setting file creation dates.
-+-DUTIMEH - #include <utime.h> for setting file creation dates.
-+
-+ (Note, RTU should only be used for Masscomp RTU systems, because it
-+ also selects certain other RTU-specific features.)
-+
-+ If none of these is defined, then <sys/dir.h> is used. IMPORTANT: If
-+ your system has the file /usr/include/dirent.h then be sure to add
-+ -DDIRENT to your makefile target's CFLAGS. "dirent" should be used in
-+ preference to any of the others, because it supports all the features
-+ of your file system, and the others probably don't.
-+
-+ Having selected the appropriate directory header file, you might also
-+ need to tell Kermit how to declare the routines and variables it needs
-+ to read the directory. This happens most commonly on AT&T System-V
-+ based UNIXes, particularly System V R3 and earlier, that provide long
-+ file and directory names (longer than 14 characters). Examples include
-+ certain releases of HP-UX, DIAB DNIX, older versions of Silicon
-+ Graphics IRIX, and perhaps also MIPS. In this case, try adding -DLONGFN
-+ to your makefile target.
-+
-+ Another problem child is <sys/file.h>. Most Unix C-Kermit versions need
-+ to #include this file from within [283]ckufio.c and [284]ckutio.c, but
-+ some not only do not need to include it, but MUST not include it
-+ because (a) it doesn't exist, or (b) it has already been included by
-+ some other header file and it doesn't protect itself against multiple
-+ inclusion, or (c) some other reason that prevents successful
-+ compilation. If you have compilation problems that seem to stem from
-+ including this file, then add the following switch to CFLAGS in your
-+ makefile target:
-+
-+-DNOFILEH
-+
-+ There are a few odd cases where <sys/file.h> must be included in one of
-+ the cku[ft]io.c files, but not the other. In that case, add the
-+ aforementioned switch, but go into the file that needs <sys/file.h> and
-+ add something like this:
-+
-+#ifdef XXX /* (where XXX is a symbol unique to your system) */
-+#undef NOFILEH
-+#endif /* XXX */
-+
-+ before the section that includes <sys/file.h>.
-+
-+ Kermit's SEND command expands wildcard characters "?" and "*" itself.
-+ Before version 5A, commands like "send *" would send all regular
-+ (non-directory) files, including "hidden files" (whose names start with
-+ "."). In version 5A, the default behavior is to match like the Bourne
-+ shell or the ls command, and not include files whose names start with
-+ dot. Such files can still be sent if the dot is included explicitly in
-+ the SEND command: "send .oofa, send .*". To change back to the old way
-+ and let leading wildcard characters match dot files, include the
-+ following in your CFLAGS:
-+
-+-DMATCHDOT
-+
-+ (In C-Kermit 6.0, there is also a command to control this at runtime.)
-+
-+ Complaints about data-type mismatches:
-+
-+ * If you get compile-time complaints about data type mismatches for
-+ process-ID related functions like getpid(), add -DPID_T=pid_t.
-+ * If you get compile-time complaints about data type mismatches for
-+ user ID related functions like getuid(), add -DUID_T=uid_t.
-+ * If you get compile-time complaints about data type mismatches for
-+ user-ID related functions like getgid(), add -DGID_T=gid_t.
-+ * If you get compile-time complaints about data type mismatches for
-+ getpwuid(), add -DPWID_T=uid_t (or whatever it should be).
-+
-+ File creation dates: C-Kermit attempts to set the creation date/time of
-+ an incoming file according to the date/time given in the file's
-+ attribute packet, if any. If you find that the dates are set
-+ incorrectly, you might need to build Kermit with the -DSYSUTIMEH flag,
-+ to tell it to include <sys/utime.h>. If that doesn't help, look at the
-+ code in zstrdt() in [285]ckufio.c.
-+
-+9.4. Hardware Flow Control
-+
-+ [ [286]Top ] [ [287]Contents ] [ [288]Section Contents ] [ [289]Next ]
-+ [ [290]Previous ]
-+
-+ Hardware flow control is a problematic concept in many popular Unix
-+ implementations. Often it is lacking altogether, and when available,
-+ the application program interface (API) to it is inconsistent from
-+ system to system. Here are some examples:
-+
-+ a. POSIX does not support hardware flow control.
-+ b. RTS/CTS flow control support MIGHT be available for System V R3 and
-+ later if /usr/include/termiox.h exists (its successful operation
-+ also depends on the device driver, and the device itself, not to
-+ mention the [291]cable, etc, actually supporting it). If your
-+ SVR3-or-later Unix system does have this file, add:
-+
-+-DTERMIOX
-+
-+ to your CFLAGS. If the file is in /usr/include/sys instead, add:
-+
-+-DSTERMIOX
-+
-+ Note that the presence of this file does not guarantee that RTS/CTS
-+ will actually work -- that depends on the device-driver
-+ implementation (reportedly, many Unix versions treat
-+ hardware-flow-control related ioctl's as no-ops).
-+ c. Search ("grep -i") through /usr/include/*.h and
-+ /usr/include/sys/*.h for RTS or CTS and see what turns up. For
-+ example, in SunOS 4.x we find "CRTSCTS". Figuring out how to use it
-+ is another question entirely! In IBM AIX RS/6000 3.x, we have to
-+ "add" a new "line discipline" (and you won't find uppercase RTS or
-+ CTS symbols in the header files).
-+ d. NeXTSTEP and IRIX, and possibly others, support hardware flow
-+ control, but do not furnish an API to control it, and thus on these
-+ systems Kermit has no command to select it -- instead, a special
-+ device name must be used. (NeXTSTEP: /dev/cufa instead of /dev/cua;
-+ IRIX: /dev/ttyf00)
-+
-+ See the routine tthflow() in [292]ckutio.c for details. If you find
-+ that your system offers hardware flow control selection under program
-+ control, you can add this capability to C-Kermit as follows:
-+
-+ a. See if it agrees with one of the methods already used in tthflow().
-+ if not, add new code, appropriately #ifdef'd.
-+ b. Add -DCK_RTSCTS to the compiler CFLAGS in your makefile target or
-+ define this symbol within the appropriate #ifdefs in [293]ckcdeb.h.
-+
-+ To illustrate the difficulties with RTS/CTS, here is a tale from Jamie
-+ Watson <jw@adasoft.ch>, who added the RTS/CTS code for the RS/6000,
-+ about his attempts to do the same for DEC ULTRIX:
-+
-+ "The number and type of hardware signals available to/from a serial
-+ port vary between different machines and different types of serial
-+ interfaces on each machine. This means that, for example, there are
-+ virtually no hardware signals in or out available on the DECsystem
-+ 3000/3100 series; on the DECsystem 5000/2xx series all modem signals
-+ in/out are present on both built-in serial ports; on the DECsystem
-+ 5100 some ports have all signals and some only have some; and so
-+ on... It looks to me as if this pretty well rules out any attempt to
-+ use hardware flow control on these platforms, even if we could
-+ figure out how to do it. The confusion on the user level about
-+ whether or not it should work for any given platform or port would
-+ be tremendous. And then it isn't clear how to use the hardware
-+ signals even in the cases where the device supports them."
-+
-+ 9.5. Terminal Speeds
-+
-+ [ [294]Top ] [ [295]Contents ] [ [296]Section Contents ] [ [297]Next ]
-+ [ [298]Previous ]
-+
-+ The allowable speeds for the SET SPEED command are defined in
-+ [299]ckcdeb.h. If your system supports speeds that are not listed in
-+ "set speed ?", you can add definitions for them to ckcdeb.h.
-+
-+ Then if the speed you are adding is one that was never used before in
-+ Kermit, such as 921600, you'll also need to add the appropriate
-+ keywords to spdtab[] in [300]ckuus3.c, and the corresponding case to
-+ ttsspd() in [301]ckutio.c.
-+
-+ 9.6. Millisecond Sleeps
-+
-+ [ [302]Top ] [ [303]Contents ] [ [304]Section Contents ] [ [305]Next ]
-+ [ [306]Previous ]
-+
-+ There is no standard for millisecond sleeps, but at least five
-+ different functions have appeared in various Unix versions that can be
-+ used for this purpose: nap() (mostly in System V), usleep() (found at
-+ least in SunOS and NeXT OS), select() (found in 4.2BSD and later, and
-+ part of any TCP/IP sockets library), nanosleep(), and sginap(). If you
-+ have any of these available, pick one (in this order of preference, if
-+ you have more than one):
-+
-+-DSELECT: Include this in CFLAGS if your system has the select() function.
-+-DNAP: Include this in CFLAGS if your system has the nap() function.
-+-USLEEP: Include this in CFLAGS if your system has the usleep() function.
-+
-+ NOTE: The nap() function is assumed to be a function that puts the
-+ process to sleep for the given number of milliseconds. If your system's
-+ nap() function does something else or uses some other units of time
-+ (like the NCR Tower 32, which uses clock-ticks), do not include -DNAP.
-+
-+ Reportedly, all versions of System V R4 for Intel-based computers, and
-+ possibly also SVR3.2, include nap() as a kernel call, but it's not in
-+ the library. To include code to use it via syscall(3112,x), without
-+ having to include Xenix compatibility features, include the following
-+ compile-time option:
-+
-+-DNAPHACK
-+
-+ 9.7. Nondestructive Input Buffer Peeking
-+
-+ [ [307]Top ] [ [308]Contents ] [ [309]Section Contents ] [ [310]Next ]
-+ [ [311]Previous ]
-+
-+ Some AT&T Unix versions have no way to check if input is waiting on a
-+ tty device, but this is a very important feature for Kermit. Without
-+ it, sliding windows might not work very well (or at all), and you also
-+ have to type your escape character to get Kermit's attention in order
-+ to interrupt a local-mode file transfer. If your system offers an
-+ FIONREAD ioctl, the build procedure should pick that up automatically
-+ and use it, which is ideal.
-+
-+ If your system lacks FIONREAD but has a select() function, this can be
-+ used instead. If the build procedure fails to include it (SHOW FEATURES
-+ will list SELECT), then you can add it to your CFLAGS:
-+
-+-DSELECT
-+
-+ Conversely, if the build procedure tries to use select() when it really
-+ is not there, add:
-+
-+-DNOSELECT
-+
-+ Note: select() is not part of System V nor of POSIX, but it has been
-+ added to various System-V- and POSIX-based systems as an extension.
-+
-+ Some System-V variations (SCO Xenix/UNIX/ODT and DIAB DNIX) include a
-+ rdchk() function that can be used for buffer peeking. It returns 0 if
-+ no characters are waiting and 1 if characters are waiting (but unlike
-+ FIONREAD, it does not tell the actual number). If your system has
-+ rdchk(), add:
-+
-+-DRDCHK: Include this in CFLAGS if your system has the rdchk() function.
-+
-+ Otherwise, if your version of Unix has the poll() function (and the
-+ /usr/include/poll.h file) -- which appears to be a standard part of
-+ System V going back to at least SVR3, include:
-+
-+-DCK_POLL
-+
-+ 9.8. Other System-Dependent Features
-+
-+ [ [312]Top ] [ [313]Contents ] [ [314]Section Contents ] [ [315]Next ]
-+ [ [316]Previous ]
-+
-+ Systems with <termios.h> might have the symbol IEXTEN defined. This is
-+ used to turn "extended features" in the tty device driver on and off,
-+ such as Ctrl-O to toggle output flushing, Ctrl-V to quote input
-+ characters, etc.
-+
-+ In most Unix implementations, it should be turned off during Kermit
-+ operation, so if [317]ckutio.c finds this symbol, it uses it. This is
-+ necessary, at least, on BSDI. On some systems, however, IEXTEN is
-+ either misdefined or misimplemented. The symptom is that CR, when typed
-+ to the command processor, is echoed as LF, rather than CRLF. This
-+ happens (at least) on Convex/OS 9.1. The solution is to add the
-+ following symbol to the makefile target's CFLACS:
-+
-+-DNOIEXTEN
-+
-+ However, in at least one Unix implementation, QNX 4.21, IEXTEN must be
-+ set before hardware flow control can be used.
-+
-+ In edits 177 and earlier, workstation users noticed a "slow screen
-+ writing" phenomenon during interactive command parsing. This was traced
-+ to a setbuf() call in [318]ckutio.c that made console (stdout) writes
-+ unbuffered. This setbuf() call has been there forever, and could not be
-+ removed without some risk. Kermit's operation was tested on the NeXT in
-+ edit 178 with the setbuf() call removed, and the slow-writing symptom
-+ was cured, and everything else (command parsing, proper wakeup on ?,
-+ ESC, Ctrl-U, and other editing characters, terminal emulation,
-+ remote-mode and local-mode file transfer, etc) seemed to work as well
-+ as or better than before. In subsequent edits, this change was made to
-+ many other versions too, with no apparent ill effects. To remove the
-+ setbuf() call for your version of Kermit, add:
-+
-+-DNOSETBUF
-+
-+ Later reports indicate that adding -DNOSETBUF has other beneficial
-+ effects, like cutting down on swapping when Kermit is run on
-+ workstations with small memories. But BEWARE: on certain small Unix
-+ systems, notably the AT&T 6300 and 3B1 (the very same ones that benefit
-+ from NOSETBUF), NOSETBUF seems to conflict with CK_CURSES. The program
-+ builds and runs OK, but after once using the curses display, echoing is
-+ messed up. In this case, we use a System-V specific variation in the
-+ curses code, using newterm() to prevent System V from altering the
-+ buffering. See makefile entries for AT&T 6300 and 3B1.
-+
-+ The Unix version of C-Kermit includes code to switch to file descriptor
-+ zero (stdin) for remote-mode file transfer. This code is necessary to
-+ prevent Kermit from giving the impression that it is "idle" during file
-+ transfers, which, at some sites, can result in the job being logged out
-+ in the middle of an active file transfer by idle-job monitors.
-+
-+ However, this feature can interfere with certain setups; for example,
-+ there is a package which substitutes a pty/tty pair for /dev/tty and
-+ sets file descriptor 0 to be read-only, preventing Kermit from sending
-+ packets. Or... When a Unix shell is invoked under the PICK environment,
-+ file descriptor 0 is inoperative.
-+
-+ To remove this feature and allow Kermit to work in such environments,
-+ add the compile-time option:
-+
-+-DNOFDZERO
-+
-+ On some versions of Unix, earlier releases of C-Kermit were reported to
-+ render a tty device unusable after a hangup operation. Examples include
-+ IBM AIX on the RT PC and RS/6000. A typical symptom of this phenomenon
-+ is that the DIAL command doesn't work, but CONNECTing to the device and
-+ dialing manually do work. A further test is to SET DIAL HANGUP OFF,
-+ which should make dialing work once by skipping the pre-dial hangup.
-+ However, after the connection is broken, it can't be used any more:
-+ subsequent attempts to DIAL the same device don't work. The cure is
-+ usually to close and reopen the device as part of the hangup operation.
-+ To do this, include the following compile-time option:
-+
-+-DCLSOPN
-+
-+ Similarly, there is a section of code in ttopen(), which does another
-+ close(open()) to force the O_NDELAY mode change. On some systems, the
-+ close(open()) is required to make the mode change take effect, and
-+ apparently on most others it does no harm. But reportedly on at least
-+ one System V R4 implementation, and on SCO Xenix 3.2, the close(open())
-+ operation hangs if the device lacks carrier, EVEN THOUGH the CLOCAL
-+ characteristic has just been set to avoid this very problem. If this
-+ happens to you, add this to your CFLAGS:
-+
-+-DNOCOTFMC
-+
-+ or, equivalently, in your KFLAGS on the make command line. It stands
-+ for NO Close(Open()) To Force Mode Change.
-+
-+ C-Kermit renames files when you give a RENAME command and also
-+ according to the current SET FILE COLLISION option when receiving
-+ files. The normal Unix way to rename a file is via two system calls:
-+ link() and unlink(). But this leaves open a window of vulnerability.
-+ Some Unix systems also offer an atomic rename(oldname,newname)
-+ function. If your version of Unix has this function, add the following
-+ to your CFLAGS:
-+
-+-DRENAME
-+
-+ C-Kermit predefines the RENAME for several Unix versions in
-+ [319]ckcdeb.h (SVR4, SUNOS41, BSD44, AIXRS, etc). You can tell if
-+ rename() is being used if the SHOW FEATURES command includes RENAME in
-+ the compiler options list. If the predefined RENAME symbol causes
-+ trouble, then add NORENAME to your CFLAGS. Trouble includes:
-+
-+ a. Linker complains that _rename is an unresolved symbol.
-+ b. Linking works, but Kermit's RENAME command doesn't work (which
-+ happens because older versions of rename() might have their
-+ arguments reversed).
-+
-+ If rename() is not used, then Kermit uses link()/unlink(), which is
-+ equivalent except it is not atomic: there is a tiny interval in which
-+ some other process might "do something" to one of the files or links.
-+
-+ Some Unix systems (Olivetti X/OS, Amdahl UTS/V, ICL SVR3, etc) define
-+ the S_ISREG and S_ISDIR macros incorrectly. This is compensated for
-+ automatically in [320]ckufio.c. Other systems might have this same
-+ problem. If you get a compile-time error message regarding S_ISREG
-+ and/or S_ISDIR, add the following to your CFLAGS:
-+
-+-DISDIRBUG
-+
-+ Finally, here's a symbol you should NEVER define:
-+
-+-DCOMMENT
-+
-+ It's used for commenting out blocks of code. If for some reason you
-+ find that your compiler has COMMENT defined, then add -UCOMMENT to
-+ CFLAGS or KFLAGS! Similarly, some header files have been known to
-+ define COMMENT, in which case you must add "#undef COMMENT" to each
-+ C-Kermit source module, after all the #includes.
-+
-+ 9.9. Terminal Interruption
-+
-+ [ [321]Top ] [ [322]Contents ] [ [323]Section Contents ] [ [324]Next ]
-+ [ [325]Previous ]
-+
-+ When C-Kermit enters interactive command mode, it sets a Control-C
-+ (terminal keyboard interrupt = SIGINT) trap to allow it to return to
-+ the command prompt whenever the user types Control-C (or whatever is
-+ assigned to be the interrupt character). This is implemented using
-+ setjmp() and longjmp(). On some systems, depending on the machine
-+ architecture and C compiler and who knows what else, you might get
-+ "Memory fault (coredump)" or "longjmp botch" instead of the desired
-+ effect (this should not happen in 5A(190) and later). In that case, add
-+ -DNOCCTRAP to your CFLAGS and rebuild the program.
-+
-+ Job control -- the ability to "suspend" C-Kermit on a Unix system by
-+ typing the "susp" character (normally Ctrl-Z) and then resume execution
-+ later (with the "fg" command) -- is a tricky business. C-Kermit must
-+ trap suspend signals so it can put the terminal back into normal mode
-+ when you suspend it (Kermit puts the terminal into various strange
-+ modes during interactive command parsing, CONNECT, and file transfer).
-+ Supporting code is compiled into C-Kermit automatically if <signal.h>
-+ includes a definition for the SIGTSTP signal. HOWEVER... some systems
-+ define this signal without supporting job control correctly. You can
-+ build Kermit to ignore SIGTSTP signals by including the -DNOJC option
-+ in CFLAGS. (You can also do this at runtime by giving the command SET
-+ SUSPEND OFF.)
-+
-+ NOTE: As of version 5A(190), C-Kermit makes another safety check.
-+ Even if job control is available in the operating system (according
-+ to the numerous checks made in congm()), it will still disable the
-+ catching of SIGTSTP signals if SIGTSTP was set to SIG_IGN at the
-+ time C-Kermit was started.
-+
-+ System V R3 and earlier systems normally do not support job control. If
-+ you have an SVR3 system that does, include the following option in your
-+ CFLAGS:
-+
-+-DSVR3JC
-+
-+ On systems that correctly implement POSIX signal handling, signals can
-+ be handled more reliably than in Bell, Berkeley, or AT&T Unixes. On
-+ systems (such as QNX) that are "strictly POSIX", POSIX signal handling
-+ *must* be used, otherwise no signal will work more than once. If you
-+ have POSIX-based system and you find that your version of Kermit
-+ responds to Ctrl-C (SIGINT) or Ctrl-Z (SIGTSTP) only once, then you
-+ should add the following option to your CFLAGS:
-+
-+-DCK_POSIX_SIG
-+
-+ But be careful; some POSIX implementations, notably 4.4BSD, include
-+ POSIX signal handling symbols and functions as "stubs" only, which do
-+ nothing. Look in <signal.h> for sigsetjmp and siglongjmp and read the
-+ comments.
-+
-+10. DIALING OUT AND COORDINATING WITH UUCP
-+
-+ [ [326]Top ] [ [327]Contents ] [ [328]Next ] [ [329]Previous ]
-+
-+ The short version (general):
-+
-+ In order for C-Kermit to be able to dial out from your Unix
-+ computer, you need to give it the same owner, group, and permissions
-+ as your other dialout programs, such as cu, tip, minicom, uucp,
-+ seyon, etc.
-+
-+ The short version for Linux only:
-+
-+ Since Red Hat 7.2, about 2002, Linux does not leave the lockfile
-+ handling to each application, but instead provides an external
-+ application, /usr/sbin/lockdev, that all applications should invoke
-+ when they need to access a serial port; lockdev locks and unlocks
-+ the port without requiring the application to have privileges, since
-+ the privileges on the lockfile directory are assigned to lockdev.
-+ C-Kermit 8.0.211 and later support this method. But C-Kermit still
-+ needs to be able to open the port itself, and therefore if the
-+ port's permissions do not allow read/write access to the general
-+ public, the general rule must still be followed: in the most common
-+ case, it must be SETGID to the group uucp (explained below). If a
-+ pre-8.0.211 version of C-Kermit is to be installed for use with
-+ serial ports on any version of Linux, it must still be installed as
-+ described in the following sections.
-+
-+ The long version:
-+
-+ Make sure your dialout line is correctly configured for dialing out (as
-+ opposed to login). The method for doing this is different for each kind
-+ of Unix. Consult your system documentation for configuring lines for
-+ dialing out (for example, Sun SPARCstation IPC users should read the
-+ section "Setting up Modem Software" in the Desktop SPARC Sun System and
-+ Network Manager's Guide, or the Terminals and Modems section of the HP
-+ manual, "Configuring HP-UX for Peripherals" (e.g. /usr/sbin/sam =>
-+ Peripheral Devices => Terminals and Modems => Add Modem).
-+
-+ Unlike most other multiuser, multitasking operating systems, Unix
-+ allows multiple users to access the same serial device at the same
-+ time, even though there is no earthly reason why two users should do
-+ this. When they do, user A will read some of the incoming characters,
-+ and user B will read the others. In all likelihood, neither user will
-+ see them all. Furthermore, User B can hang up User A's call, and so
-+ one.
-+
-+ Rather than change Unix to enforce exclusive access to serial devices
-+ such as ttys, when it might still have been possible, Unix developers
-+ opted for a "lock file" mechanism. Any process that wants to open a tty
-+ device should first check to see if a file of a certain name exists,
-+ and if so, not to open the device. If the file does not exist, the
-+ process creates the file and then opens the device. When the process
-+ closes the device, it destroys the lockfile. This procedure was
-+ originated for use with Unix's UUCP, CU, and TIP programs, and so these
-+ lockfiles are commonly called "UUCP lockfiles" (UUCP = Unix-to-Unix
-+ Copy Program).
-+
-+ As you can imagine, this method is riddled with pitfalls:
-+
-+ * If a process does not observe the prevailing lockfile convention,
-+ then it can interfere with other "polite" processes. And in fact,
-+ very few Unix applications or commands handle lockfiles at all; an
-+ original design goal of Unix was that "everything is a file", and
-+ countless utilities operate on files directly (by opening them) or
-+ indirectly through redirection of standard i/o, without creating or
-+ looking for lockfiles.
-+ * If a process crashes while it has the device open, the lockfile is
-+ left behind, preventing further processes from using the device.
-+ * Various versions of Unix use different names for the lockfiles, put
-+ them in different directories, with different owners and groups and
-+ permissions, and specify their contents differently.
-+ * On a given platform, the lockfile conventions may change from one
-+ Unix release to the next (for example, SunOS 4.0 to 4.1) or, in the
-+ case of Linux, across different distributions.
-+ * The same tty device might have more than one name, and most
-+ lockfile conventions don't allow for this. Similarly for symbolic
-+ links.
-+
-+ In an attempt to address the problem of "stale" lockfiles, most UUCP
-+ implementations put the PID (Process ID) of the creating process in the
-+ lockfile. Thus, another process that wants to open the corresponding
-+ device can check not only for the lockfile itself, but also can check
-+ the PID for validity. But this doesn't work well either:
-+
-+ * PIDs are stored in diverse formats that change with every new
-+ release (short, integer, long, or string in any of various
-+ formats). If the reading program does not follow the same
-+ convention as the writing program, it can diagnose a valid PID to
-+ be invalid, and therefore not honor the lock.
-+ * PIDs recycle. If the lockfile was created by PID 1234, which later
-+ crashed without removing the lockfile, and then a new process 1234
-+ exists a the time the lockfile is checked, the lockfile will be
-+ improperly taken as valid, and access to the device denied
-+ unnecessarily.
-+
-+ Several techniques address the problem of multiple names for the same
-+ device:
-+
-+ * Multiple lockfiles. For example, if the user opens a device through
-+ a symlink, a lockfile is created for both the symlink name and the
-+ true name (obtained from readlink()). However, when multiple
-+ drivers are installed for the same device (e.g. /dev/cua,
-+ /dev/cufa, etc), this approach won't work unless all applications
-+ *know* all the different names for the same device and make
-+ lockfiles for all of them, which is obviously not practical.
-+ * Lockfiles whose names are not based on the device name. These
-+ lockfiles generally have names like LK.inode/major/minor, where
-+ inode, major, and minor are numbers, which will always be the same
-+ for any physical device, no matter what its name. This form of
-+ lockfile is used in System V R4 and its derivatives, such as
-+ Solaris, UnixWare, etc. If lockfiles must be used (as opposed to,
-+ say, kernel-based locks), this would seem to be the most effective
-+ form.
-+
-+ Most versions of Unix were not designed to accommodate third-party
-+ communications software; thus vendors of these Unix products feel no
-+ compunction about changing lockfile conventions from release to
-+ release, since they also change their versions of the cu, uucp, tip,
-+ etc, programs at the same time to match. And since the source code to
-+ these programs might not be published, it is difficult for makers of
-+ third-party products like C-Kermit to find out what the new conventions
-+ are. It also forces release of new versions of C-Kermit whenever the OS
-+ vendor makes a change like this.
-+
-+ Some Unix vendors have taken a small step to simplify communications
-+ application development for their products: the inclusion of lockfile
-+ routines in the standard system C runtime libraries to shield the
-+ application from the details of lockfile management (IBM AIX is an
-+ example). When such routines are used, communications applications do
-+ not need modification when lockfile conventions change (although they
-+ will need recompiling if the routines are statically linked into the
-+ application). In the AIX example, the simple function calls ttylock(),
-+ ttyunlock(), and ttylocked() replace hundreds of lines of ugly code in
-+ C-Kermit that attempts to keep pace with every release of every Unix
-+ product over the last 20 years. Inclusion of ttylock() code occurs
-+ when:
-+
-+-DUSETTYLOCK
-+
-+ is included in the CFLAGS.
-+
-+ If such routines are available, they should be used. The rest of this
-+ section applies when they are not.
-+
-+ To fit in with UUCP and other Unix-based serial-port communication
-+ software, C-Kermit must have the same idea as your system's uucp, cu,
-+ and tip programs about what the UUCP lock directory is called, what the
-+ lockfile itself is called, and what its contents should be. In most
-+ cases, C-Kermit preprocessor flags create the appropriate configuration
-+ at compile time if the appropriate makefile target was used (see
-+ [330]ckutio.c). The following CFLAGS options can be used to override
-+ the built-in configuration:
-+
-+ -DLCKDIR
-+ Tells Kermit that the UUCP lock directory is
-+ /usr/spool/uucp/LCK.
-+
-+ -DACUCNTRL
-+ Tells Kermit to use the BSD 4.3 acucntrl() program to turn off
-+ getty (login) on the line before using it, and restore getty
-+ when done.
-+
-+ -DHDBUUCP
-+ Include this if your system uses Honey DanBer UUCP, in which the
-+ lockfile directory and format are relatively standardized.
-+
-+ -DLOCK_DIR=\\\"/xxx/yyy\\\"
-+ Gives the lock directory name explicitly. The triple quoting is
-+ necessary. For example:
-+
-+CFLAGS= -DBSD4 -DLOCK_DIR=\\\"/usr/local/locks\\\" -DNODEBUG
-+
-+ (NOTE: The triple quoting assumes this is a "top-level" make
-+ entry, and not a make entry that calls another one.)
-+
-+ -DLFDEVNO The lockfile name uses the tty device inode and major and
-+ minor
-+ numbers: LK.dev.maj.min, as in Sys V R4, e.g. LK.035.044.008.
-+
-+ When the LK.inode.major.minor form is used, a single lockfile is
-+ enough. Otherwise, a single lockfile rarely suffices. For example, in
-+ Linux, it is common to have a /dev/modem symbolic link to an actual
-+ dialout device, like /dev/cua0 or /dev/ttyS0, whose purpose is to hide
-+ the details of the actual driver from the user. So if one user opens
-+ /dev/modem, a lockfile called LCK..modem is created, which does not
-+ prevent another user from simulataneously opening the same device by
-+ its real name.
-+
-+ On SCO Unix platforms, we have a slightly different problem: the same
-+ device is, by convention, known by "lowercase" and "uppercase" names,
-+ depending on whether it has modem control. So by convention,
-+ communications programs are supposed to create the lockfiles based on
-+ the lowercase name. But some programs don't follow this convention. In
-+ HP-UX, we have several different names for each serial device. And so
-+ on.
-+
-+ For this reason, on platforms where the LK.inode.major.minor form is
-+ not used, C-Kermit also creates a secondary lockfile (which is simply a
-+ link to the first) if:
-+
-+ a. The given device name is a symbolic link. The secondary link is
-+ based on the device's real name.
-+ b. On SCO: The device name is not a symbolic link, but it contains
-+ uppercase letters. The primary link is based on the lowercase name;
-+ the secondary link is based on the name that was given.
-+ c. On HP-UX: The device name starts with "cu". The primary link is
-+ based on the name that was given; the secondary link is based on
-+ the corresponding "ttyd" device, e.g. "LCK..cua0p0" and
-+ "LCK..ttyd0p0".
-+
-+ NOTE: symlinks are not handled in HP-UX.
-+
-+ Honey DanBer (HDB) UUCP, the basis of many UUCP implementations, has
-+ two characteristics:
-+
-+ a. Lockfiles are kept in /usr/spool/locks/ (usually).
-+ b. A lockfile contains the process id (pid) in ASCII, rather than as
-+ an int.
-+
-+ Non-HDB selections assume the lockfile contains the pid in int form
-+ (or, more precisely, in PID_T form, where PID_T is either int or pid_t,
-+ depending on your system's C library and header files). (b), by the
-+ way, is subject to interpretation: the numeric ASCII string may or may
-+ not be terminated by a newline, it may or may not have leading spaces
-+ (or zeros), and the number of leading spaces or zeros can differ, and
-+ the differences can be significant.
-+
-+ Even if you build the program with the right lockfile option, you can
-+ still have problems when you try to open the device. Here are the error
-+ messages you can get from SET LINE, and what they mean:
-+
-+ a. "Timed out, no carrier." This one is not related to lockfiles. It
-+ means that you have SET CARRIER ON xx, where xx is the number of
-+ seconds to wait for carrier, and carrier did not appear within xx
-+ seconds. Solution: SET CARRIER AUTO or OFF.
-+ b. "Sorry, access to lock denied." Kermit has been configured to use
-+ lockfiles, but (a)the lockfile directory is write-protected against
-+ you, or (b) it does not exist. The "access to lock denied" message
-+ will tell you the reason. If the directory does not exist, check to
-+ make sure Kermit is using the right name. Just because version n of
-+ your Unix used a certain lockfile directory is no gurantee that
-+ version n.1 does not use a different one. Workaround: ask the
-+ system administrator to install a symbolic link from the old name
-+ to the new name. Other solutions: (see below)
-+ c. "Sorry, access to tty device denied." The tty device that you
-+ specified in your SET LINE command is read/write protected against
-+ you. Solution: (see below)
-+ d. "Sorry, device is in use." The tty device you have specified is
-+ currently being used by another user. A prefatory message gives you
-+ an "ls -l" listing of the lockfile, which should show the username
-+ of the person who created it, plus a message "pid = nnn" to show
-+ you the process id of the user's program. Solutions: try another
-+ device, wait until the other user is finished, ask the other user
-+ to hurry up, or ask the system manager for help.
-+ e. "Sorry, can't open connection: reason". The device cannot be opened
-+ for some other reason, which is listed.
-+ f. "sh: /usr/lib/uucp/acucntrl: not found". This means your Kermit
-+ program was built with the -DACUCNTRL switch, but your computer
-+ system does not have the BSD 4.3 acucntrl program. Solution:
-+ install the acucntrl program if you have it, or rebuild Kermit
-+ without the -DACUCNTRL switch.
-+
-+ There are two solutions for problems (b) and (c), both of which involve
-+ intervention by your Unix system administrator (superuser):
-+
-+ a. Have the superuser change the permission of the lockfile directory
-+ and to the tty devices so that everyone on the system has
-+ read/write permission.
-+
-+su% chmod 777 /usr/spool/locks (or whatever the path is)
-+su% chmod 666 /dev/ttyXX
-+
-+ One risk here is that people can write lots of junk into the
-+ lockfile directory, delete other people's files in the lockfile
-+ directory, and intercept other people's data as it goes in and out
-+ of the tty device. The major danger here would be intercepting a
-+ privileged password. Of course, any user could write a short,
-+ ordinary, unprivileged program to do exactly the same thing if the
-+ tty device was world read/writeable. The other risk as that
-+ telephone calls are not controlled -- anybody on your system can
-+ make them, without having to belong to any particular group, and
-+ this could run up your phone bill.
-+ b. Use groups to regulate access. Normally the lockfile directory and
-+ and the dialout devices will have the same group (such as uucp). If
-+ so, then put everybody who's allowed to dial out into that group,
-+ and make sure that the lockfile directory and the tty devices have
-+ group read AND write permission. Example:
-+
-+su% chmod 770 /usr/spool/locks (or whatever the path is)
-+su% chmod 660 /dev/ttyXX
-+
-+ User whatever tool is available on your platform to add users to
-+ the appropropriate group (e.g. edit the /etc/group file).
-+ c. Have the superuser change Kermit to run setuid and/or setgid to the
-+ owner and/or group of the lockfile directory and the tty devices if
-+ necessary), typically uucp (see [331]next section), but NOT root.
-+ Example:
-+
-+su% chown uucp kermit - or - chgrp uucp kermit
-+su% chmod u+s kermit (setuid) - or - chmod g+s kermit (setgid)
-+
-+ and then make sure the lockfile directory, and the tty devices,
-+ have owner (setuid) and/or group (setgid) write permission. For
-+ example:
-+
-+su% chmod o+rwx /usr/spool/uucp
-+su% chown uucp /dev/ttyXX ; chmod 600 /dev/ttyXX
-+
-+ In some cases, the owner and group must be distinct; the key point
-+ is that read/write access is required to both the UUCP lockfile
-+ directory and the tty itself.
-+
-+ If you make C-Kermit setuid or setgid to root, it refuses to run:
-+
-+Fatal: C-Kermit setuid to root!
-+
-+ Example:
-+
-+crw-r----- 1 uucp uucp 5, 67 Feb 11 06:23 /dev/cua3
-+drwxrwxr-x 3 root uucp 1024 Feb 11 06:22 /var/lock
-+
-+ requires suid uucp to get read/write access on /dev/cua3 and sgid to
-+ get read/write access on /var/lock (since you can't set Kermit's uid or
-+ gid to root).
-+
-+ The reason Kermit can't be setuid or setgid to root has to do with
-+ the fact that some Unix OS's can't switch user or group IDs in that
-+ case. Unfortunately, the prohibition against making Kermit setuid or
-+ setgid to root means that Unix C-Kermit can't be used to make rlogin
-+ connections by non-root users. (The rlogin port is privileged, which
-+ is why the regular rlogin command is setuid root -- which is safe
-+ because the rlogin program never has to create or access files like
-+ Kermit does.)
-+
-+ For the lockfile mechanism to achieve its desired purpose -- prevention
-+ of access to the same tty device by more than one process at a time --
-+ ALL programs on a given computer that open, read or write, and close
-+ tty devices must use the SAME lockfile conventions. Unfortunately, this
-+ is often not the case. Here is a typical example of how this can go
-+ wrong: In SunOS 4.0 and earler, the lockfile directory was
-+ /usr/spool/uucp; in 4.1 it was changed to /var/spool/locks in the quest
-+ for political correctness. Consequently, any third-party programs (such
-+ as C-Kermit) that were not modified to account for this change,
-+ recompiled, and reinstalled, did not use the same lockfiles as uucp,
-+ tip, etc, and so the entire purpose of the lockfile is defeated.
-+
-+ What if your Unix system does not have UUCP installed? For example, you
-+ have a Unix workstation, and you do not use uucp, cu, or tip, or UUCP
-+ was not even supplied with your version of Unix (QNX is an example). In
-+ this case, you have two choices:
-+
-+ a. If there may be more than one person running Kermit at the same
-+ time, competing for the same tty device, then create a special
-+ lockfile directory just for Kermit, for example, /usr/spool/kermit,
-+ and make sure you have read/write access to it. Then add the
-+ following to your makefile target CFLAGS, as shown earlier:
-+
-+-DLOCK_DIR=\\\"/usr/spool/kermit\\\"
-+
-+ b. If you are the only user on your workstation, and no other
-+ processes will ever be competing with Kermit for the dialout tty
-+ device, then add -DNOUUCP to your makefile target's CFLAGS and
-+ rebuild Kermit.
-+
-+11. RUNNING UNIX C-KERMIT SETUID OR SETGID
-+
-+ [ [332]Top ] [ [333]Contents ] [ [334]Next ] [ [335]Previous ]
-+
-+ Even if you don't intend to run C-Kermit setuid, somebody else might
-+ come along and chown and chmod it after it has been built. You should
-+ be sure that it is built correctly to run setuid on your system. For
-+ POSIX and AT&T Unix based versions, you don't have to do anything
-+ special.
-+
-+ For 4.2 and 4.3 BSD-based Unix versions, you normally need not add
-+ anything special to the makefile. The program assumes that the
-+ setreuid() and setregid() functions are available, without which we
-+ cannot switch back and forth between real and effective uids. If "make"
-+ complains that _setreuid or _setregid is/are not defined, add
-+ -DNOSETREU to CFLAGS. In this case it is very likely (but not certain)
-+ that you cannot protect ttys and lockfiles against people and have them
-+ run Kermit setuid.
-+
-+ If make does not complain about this, you should find out whether your
-+ BSD version (4.3 or other systems like SunOS 4.x that claim to include
-+ BSD 4.3 compatibility) includes the saved-setuid feature (see long
-+ notes under edit 146 in ckc178.upd). If it does, then add -DSAVEDUID to
-+ CFLAGS.
-+
-+ IMPORTANT NOTE: Most Unix system documentation will not give you the
-+ required information. To determine whether your Unix system supplies
-+ the the saved-original-effective-user/group-id feature, use the
-+ ckuuid.c program. Read and follow the instructions in the comments
-+ at the beginning.
-+
-+ C-Kermit for 4.4BSD-based systems automatically use sete[ug]id(). See
-+ [336]ckutio.c.
-+
-+ If you have a version of Unix that is not BSD-based, but which supplies
-+ the setreuid() and setregid() functions, and these are the only way to
-+ switch between real and effective uid, add -DSETREUID to your makefile
-+ target.
-+
-+ WARNING: There are two calls to access() in [337]ckufio.c, by which
-+ Kermit checks to see if it can create an output file. These calls
-+ will not work correctly when (a)you have installed C-Kermit setuid
-+ or setgid on a BSD-based Unix system, and (b) the
-+ saved-original-effective-uid/gid feature is not present, and (c) the
-+ access() function always checks what it believes to be the real ID
-+ rather than the effective ID. This is the case, for example, in
-+ Olivetti X/OS and in NeXTSTEP. In such cases, you can force correct
-+ operation of access() calls by defining the symbol SW_ACC_ID at
-+ compile time in CFLAGS.
-+
-+ If you have a version of Unix that does not allow a process to switch
-+ back and forth between its effective and real user and group ids
-+ multiple times, you probably should not attempt to run Kermit setuid,
-+ because once having given up its effective uid or gid (which it must do
-+ in order to transfer files, fork a shell, etc) it can never get it
-+ back, and so it can not use the original effective uid or gid to create
-+ or delete uucp lockfiles. In this case, you'll either have to set the
-+ permissions on your lockfile directory to make them publicly
-+ read/writable, or dispense with locking altogether.
-+
-+ MORAL: Are you thoroughly sickened and/or frightened by all that you
-+ have just read? You should be. What is the real answer? Simple. Serial
-+ devices -- such as ttys and magnetic tapes -- in Unix should be opened
-+ with exclusive access only, enforced by the Unix kernel. Shared access
-+ has no conceivable purpose, legitimate or otherwise, except by
-+ privileged system programs such as getty. The original design dates
-+ from the late 1960s, when Unix was developed for laboratory use under a
-+ philosophy of trust by people within shouting distance of each other --
-+ but even then, no useful purpose was served by this particular form of
-+ openness; it was probably more of a political statement. Since the
-+ emergence of Unix from the laboratory into the commercial market, we
-+ have seen every vestige of openness -- but this one -- stripped away.
-+ I'd like to see some influential Unix maker take the bold step of
-+ making the simple kernel change required to enforce exclusive access to
-+ serial devices. (Well, perhaps not so simple when bidirectionality must
-+ also be a goal -- but then other OS's like VMS solved this problem
-+ decades ago.)
-+
-+12. CONFIGURING UNIX WORKSTATIONS
-+
-+ [ [338]Top ] [ [339]Contents ] [ [340]Next ] [ [341]Previous ]
-+
-+ On desktop workstations that are used by only the user at the console
-+ keyboard, C-Kermit is always used in local mode. But as delivered,
-+ C-Kermit runs in remote mode by default. To put it in local mode at
-+ startup, you can put a SET LINE command in your .mykermrc.
-+
-+ You can also build C-Kermit to start up in local mode by default. To do
-+ this, include the following in the CFLAGS in your makefile target:
-+
-+-DDFTTY=\\\"/dev/ttyxx\\\"
-+
-+ where ttyxx is the name of the device you will be using for
-+ communications. Presently there is no way of setting the default modem
-+ type at compile time, so use this option only for direct lines.
-+
-+ C-Kermit does not work well on certain workstations if it is not run
-+ from within a terminal window. For example, you cannot start C-Kermit
-+ on a NeXT by launching it directly from NeXTstep. Similarly for Sun
-+ workstations in the Open Windows environment. Run Kermit in a terminal
-+ window.
-+
-+13. BIZARRE BEHAVIOR AT RUNTIME
-+
-+ [ [342]Top ] [ [343]Contents ] [ [344]Next ] [ [345]Previous ]
-+
-+ See the "beware file",
-+
-+ [346]ckubwr.txt, for hints about runtime misbehavior. This section
-+ lists some runtime problems that can be cured by rebuilding C-Kermit.
-+
-+ The program starts, but there is no prompt, and certain operations
-+ don't work (you see error messages like "Kermit command error in
-+ background execution"). This is because Kermit thinks it is running in
-+ the background. See conbgt() in [347]ckutio.c. Try rebuilding Kermit
-+ with:
-+
-+ -DPID_T=pid_t
-+
-+ added to your CFLAGS. If that doesn't help, find out the actual data
-+ type for pids (look in types.h or similar file) and use it in place of
-+ "pid_t", for example:
-+
-+ -DPID_T=short
-+
-+ Unexplainable and inappropriate error messages ("Sockets not supported
-+ on this device", etc) have been traced in at least one case to a lack
-+ of agreement between the system header files and the actual kernel.
-+ This happened because the GNU C compiler (gcc) was being used. gcc
-+ wants to have ANSI-C-compliant header files, and so part of the
-+ installation procedure for gcc is (or was) to run a shell script called
-+ "fixincludes", which translates the system's header files into a
-+ separate set of headers that gcc likes. So far so good. Later, a new
-+ version of the operating system is installed and nobody remembers to
-+ run fixincludes again. From that point, any program compiled with gcc
-+ that makes use of header files (particularly ioctl.h) is very likely to
-+ misbehave. Solution: run fixincludes again, or use your system's
-+ regular C compiler, libraries, and header files instead of gcc.
-+
-+14. CRASHES AND CORE DUMPS
-+
-+ [ [348]Top ] [ [349]Contents ] [ [350]Next ] [ [351]Previous ]
-+
-+ If C-Kermit constitently dumps core at the beginning of a file
-+ transfer, look in SHOW FEATURES for CKREALPATH. If found, rebuild with
-+ -DNOREALPATH and see if that fixes the problem (some UNIXes have
-+ realpath() but it doesn't work).
-+
-+ Total failure of the Kermit program can occur because of bad memory
-+ references, bad system calls, or problems with dynamic memory
-+ allocation. First, try to reproduce the problem with debugging turned
-+ on: run Kermit with the -d command-line option (for example, "wermit
-+ -d") and then examine the resulting debug.log file. The last entry
-+ should be in the vicinity of the crash. In VMS, a crash automatically
-+ produces a "stack dump" which shows the routine where the crash occurs.
-+ In some versions of Unix, you can get a stack dump with "adb" -- just
-+ type "adb wermit core" and then give the command "$c", then Ctrl-D to
-+ quit (note: replace "wermit" by "kermit" or by the full pathname of the
-+ executable that crashed if it is not in the current directory). Or use
-+ gdb to get a backtrace, etc.
-+
-+ In edit 186, one implementation, UNISYS 5000/95 built with "make
-+ sys5r3", has been reported to run out of memory very quickly (e.g.
-+ while executing a short initialization file that contains a SET DIAL
-+ DIRECTORY command). Debug logs show that malloc calls are failing,
-+ reason unknown. For this and any other implementation that gives error
-+ messages about "malloc failure" or "memory allocation failure", rebuild
-+ the program *without* the -DDYNAMIC CFLAGS definition, for example:
-+
-+make sys5r3 KFLAGS=-UDYNAMIC
-+
-+ As of edit 169, C-Kermit includes a malloc() debugging package which
-+ you may link with the Kermit program to catch runtime malloc errors.
-+ See the makefile entries for sunos41md and nextmd for examples of how
-+ to select malloc debugging. Once you have linked Kermit with the malloc
-+ debugger, it will halt with an informative message if a malloc-related
-+ error occurs and, if possible, dump core. For this reason,
-+ malloc-debugging versions of Kermit should be built without the "-s"
-+ link option (which removes symbols, preventing analysis of the core
-+ dump). You have several ways to track down the malloc error: Analyze
-+ the core dump with adb. Or reproduce the problem with "log debug" and
-+ then look at the code around the last debug.log entry. If you have gcc,
-+ build the program with "-g" added to CFLAGS and then debug it with gdb,
-+ e.g.
-+
-+gdb wermit
-+break main
-+run
-+.. set other breakpoints or watchpoints
-+continue
-+
-+ Watchpoints are especially useful for finding memory leaks, but they
-+ make the program run about a thousand times slower than usual, so don't
-+ set them until the last possible moment. When a watchpoint is hit, you
-+ can use the "where" command to find out which C-Kermit source statement
-+ triggered it.
-+
-+ If you have the Pure Software Inc "Purify" product, see the sunos41cp
-+ makefile entry for an example of how to use it to debug C-Kermit.
-+
-+15. SYSLOGGING
-+
-+ [ [352]Top ] [ [353]Contents ] [ [354]Next ] [ [355]Previous ]
-+
-+ "Syslogging" means recording selected information in the system log via
-+ the Unix syslog() facility, which is available in most Unix versions.
-+ Syslogging is not done unless C-Kermit is started with:
-+
-+--syslog:n
-+
-+ on the command-line, where n is a number greater than 0 to indicate the
-+ level of syslogging. See [356]Section 4.2 of the [357]IKSD
-+ Administrator's Guide for details.
-+
-+ Obviously you can't depend on users to include --syslog:3 (or whatever)
-+ on the command line every time they start C-Kermit, so if you want
-+ certain kinds of records to be recorded in the system log, you can
-+ build C-Kermit with forced syslogging at the desired level; for
-+ example, to record logins and dialouts:
-+
-+make linux KFLAGS=-DSYSLOGLEVEL=2
-+
-+ Levels 2 and 3 are the most likely candidates for this treatment. Level
-+ 2 forces logging of all successful dialout calls (e.g. for checking
-+ against or phone bills), and level 3 records all connections (SET LINE
-+ or SET HOST / TELNET / RLOGIN, etc) so you can see who is connecting
-+ out from your system, and to where, e.g. for security auditing.
-+
-+ Level 2 and 3 records are equivalent to those in the connection log;
-+ see the [358]C-Kermit 7.0 Supplement) for a detailed description of the
-+ connection log.
-+
-+16. BUILDING SECURE VERSIONS OF C-KERMIT 8.0
-+
-+ [ [359]Top ] [ [360]Contents ] [ [361]Next ] [ [362]Previous ]
-+
-+ C-Kermit 7.0 and later may be built with Kerberos(TM) and/or SRP(TM)
-+ (Secure Remote Password) and/or SSL/TLS security for strong
-+ authentication and encryption of Internet connections. These security
-+ methods require external libraries that, in their binary forms, are
-+ restricted from export by USA law. See the [363]Kermit Security
-+ Reference) for details. C-Kermit binaries themselves are likewise
-+ restricted; the C-Kermit binaries that are available for public
-+ download on the Internet are not allowed to contain the security
-+ options.
-+
-+ Sample makefile entries are provided for Linux and many other operating
-+ systems. A list of secure makefile entries is included in the Makefile.
-+ Complete instructions on building C-Kermit 8.0 with MIT Kerberos;
-+ Secure Remote Password; and/or OpenSSL can be found in the [364]Kermit
-+ Security Reference.
-+
-+ SSL/TLS and Kerberos builds are increasingly problematic with the
-+ "deprecation" of DES. There is code to detect the presence or absence
-+ of DES in the OpenSSL builds, but it doesn't always work because
-+ sometimes the SSL libraries are present but routines are missing from
-+ them.
-+
-+ * First of all remember that if your SSL and/or Kerberos header files
-+ and libraries are not in the default place, you'll need to override
-+ the assumed paths. To find out what the default places are type
-+ "make show", e.g.:
-+
-+[~/kermit] make show
-+prefix=/usr/local
-+srproot=/usr/local
-+sslroot=/usr/local
-+manroot=/usr/local
-+K4LIB=-L/usr/kerberos/lib
-+K4INC=-I/usr/kerberos/include
-+K5LIB=-L/usr/kerberos/lib
-+K5INC=-I/usr/kerberos/include
-+SRPLIB=-L/usr/local/lib
-+SRPINC=-I/usr/local/include
-+SSLLIB=-L/usr/local/ssl/lib
-+SSLINC=-I/usr/local/ssl/include
-+[~/kermit]
-+
-+ * You can override any or all of these by putting assignments on the
-+ 'make' command line; examples:
-+
-+make linux+krb5 \
-+ "K5INC=-I/usr/include/" \
-+ "K5LIB=-L/usr/lib64/"
-+
-+make solaris9g+ssl \
-+ "SSLLIB=-L/opt/openssl-0.9.8q/lib" \
-+ "SSLINC=-I/opt/openssl-0.9.8q/include"
-+
-+ Or by setting and exporting environment variables prior to giving
-+ the 'make' command, as in this example in which (after Beta.01 was
-+ uploaded) C-Kermit was successfully linked with OpenSSL 1.0.0d,
-+ which was installed alongside OpenSSL 0.9.8r on the same computer.
-+ Note the use of the '-i' option instead of '-I' to force gcc to
-+ include the right header files (thanks to Nelson Beebe for this):
-+
-+export PATH=/usr/bin:$PATH
-+export SSLINC=-isystem/usr/include
-+export "SSLLIB=-L/usr/lib -Wl,-rpath,/usr/lib"
-+make linux+ssl
-+
-+ -i is explained in 'man gcc'; there is a change in what -I does
-+ that could have ramifications for many makefile targets, not just
-+ Kermit. And -Wl and -rpath are explained in 'man ld'; the idea is
-+ build a binary from which useful reports can be obtained with ldd.
-+ * Building with OpenSSL versions prior to 0.9.7 doesn't work, even
-+ though C-Kermit is designed to work with both the old and new
-+ versions. This could probably be fixed if anybody cares.
-+ * If a Kerberos or SSL build fails at link time because
-+ des_ecb3_encrypt, des_random_seed, and/or des_set_odd_parity come
-+ up missing, redo the build with -UCK_DES:
-+
-+make netbsd+krb5+ssl \
-+ "K5INC=-I/usr/local/include" \
-+ "K5LIB=-L/usr/local/kerblib" KFLAGS=-UCK_DES
-+
-+ I suppose all the SSL and Kerberos targets could be recoded to
-+ figure this out automatically (i.e. that DES is installed but with
-+ some entry points missing), but it wouldn't be pretty.
-+ * Different Kerberos and OpenSSL distributions can be installed with
-+ different options; certain libraries might be missing or named
-+ differently (for example, libgssapi vs libgssapi_krb5). Some, but
-+ not all, of the C-Kermit makefile targets have been fixed to take
-+ some of these variations into account by testing for them, most
-+ notably the linux ones, linux+ssl, linux+krb5, and linux+krb5+ssl.
-+ Probably every target that builds with OpenSSL or Kerberos needs
-+ the same treatment but I won't have time.
-+ * Why doesn't C-Kermit just use Autoconf? Mainly because the makefile
-+ is full of targets for platforms that don't have Autoconf or any
-+ other tool like it. (Another reason is that I've always preferred
-+ that Kermit have the least dependencies possible on external
-+ toolsets.) Perhaps certain targets could be converted to use them,
-+ especially Linux because there are so many variations among
-+ distributions and versions. Anybody who wants to make, say, an
-+ Autonf-based Linux target, be my guest, but bear in mind that one
-+ Linux target is supposed to work for all versions and distributions
-+ of Linux on all platforms. Well, one target for Linux by itself,
-+ another for Linux with OpenSSL, another for Linux with Kerberos 5,
-+ and another for Linux with Kerberos 5 and OpenSSL. Each of these is
-+ supposed to work on any Linux version with any version of
-+ Kerberos 5 or OpenSSL.
-+
-+ Also note that Kerberos support is for the MIT version only, Heimdal
-+ and others are not supported (never have been). Of course anybody can
-+ pitch in and add or improve support for whatever they want.
-+
-+17. INSTALLING C-KERMIT AS AN SSH SERVER SUBSYSTEM
-+
-+ [ [365]Top ] [ [366]Contents ] [ [367]Previous ]
-+
-+ This requires C-Kermit 8.0.206 or later and an SSH v2 server. If you
-+ list C-Kermit as a Subsystem in the SSH v2 server configuration file
-+ (as, for example, SFTP is listed), users can make SSH connections
-+ direct to a Kermit server as explained here:
-+
-+[368]http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/skermit.html
-+
-+ The name and location of the SSH server configuration file depends on
-+ your platform, which SSH product(s) you have, etc. C-Kermit itself must
-+ be referred to in this file as "kermit-sshsub". On the host, install
-+ the C-Kermit 8.0.211 binary in the normal way. Then, in the same
-+ directory as the C-Kermit binary, make a symbolic link:
-+
-+ln -s kermit kermit-sshsub
-+
-+ (Note: the "make install" makefile target does this for you.) Then in
-+ the sshd configuration file, add a line:
-+
-+Subsystem kermit /some/path/kermit-sshsub
-+
-+ (where /some/path is the fully specified directory where the symlink
-+ is.) This is similar to the line that sets up the SFTP susbsystem.
-+ Example:
-+
-+Subsystem sftp /usr/local/libexec/sftp-server
-+Subsystem kermit /usr/local/bin/kermit-sshsub
-+
-+ The mechanics might vary for other SSH servers; "man sshd" for details.
-+ The method shown here is used because the OpenSSH server does not
-+ permit the subsystem invocation to include command-line options.
-+ C-Kermit would have no way of knowing that it should enter Server mode
-+ if it were not called by a special name.
-+
-+ [ [369]Top ] [ [370]Contents ] [ [371]C-Kermit Home ] [ [372]C-Kermit
-+ 9.0 Overview ] [ [373]Kermit Home ]
-+ __________________________________________________________________
-+
-+
-+ C-Kermit 9.0 Unix Installation Instructions / The Kermit Project /
-+ Columbia University / 30 June 2011
-+
-+References
-+
-+ 1. http://www.columbia.edu/
-+ 2. mailto:kermit@columbia.edu
-+ 3. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 4. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/k95.html
-+ 5. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 6. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckscripts.html
-+ 7. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/current.html
-+ 8. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/whatsnew.html
-+ 9. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/faq.html
-+ 10. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/support.html
-+ 11. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#contents
-+ 12. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 13. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 14. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html
-+ 15. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x0
-+ 16. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x1
-+ 17. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x2
-+ 18. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x3
-+ 19. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x4
-+ 20. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x5
-+ 21. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x6
-+ 22. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x7
-+ 23. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x8
-+ 24. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x9
-+ 25. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x10
-+ 26. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x11
-+ 27. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x12
-+ 28. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x13
-+ 29. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x14
-+ 30. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x15
-+ 31. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x16
-+ 32. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x17
-+ 33. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#top
-+ 34. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#contents
-+ 35. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x1
-+ 36. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html
-+ 37. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcbwr.html
-+ 38. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html
-+ 39. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcplm.html
-+ 40. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x2
-+ 41. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x3
-+ 42. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x4
-+ 43. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#top
-+ 44. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#contents
-+ 45. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x2
-+ 46. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x0
-+ 47. ftp://www.columbia.edu/kermit/archives/cku211.tar.Z
-+ 48. ftp://www.columbia.edu/kermit/archives/cku211.tar.gz
-+ 49. http://kermit.columbia.edu/ftp/archives/cku211.tar.Z
-+ 50. http://kermit.columbia.edu/ftp/archives/cku211.tar.gz
-+ 51. ftp://www.columbia.edu/kermit/archives/cku211.tar
-+ 52. http://kermit.columbia.edu/ftp/archives/cku211.tar
-+ 53. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x7
-+ 54. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x5
-+ 55. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x5
-+ 56. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x16
-+ 57. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#top
-+ 58. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#contents
-+ 59. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x3
-+ 60. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x1
-+ 61. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x5
-+ 62. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#X10
-+ 63. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x11
-+ 64. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x10
-+ 65. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x3
-+ 66. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ck80packages.html
-+ 67. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x10
-+ 68. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#top
-+ 69. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#contents
-+ 70. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x4
-+ 71. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x2
-+ 72. ftp://www.columbia.edu/kermit/bin/
-+ 73. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ck80binaries.html
-+ 74. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x7
-+ 75. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#build
-+ 76. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x5
-+ 77. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x4
-+ 78. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckfaq.html#version
-+ 79. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x4
-+ 80. mailto:kermit@columbia.edu
-+ 81. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#top
-+ 82. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#contents
-+ 83. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x5
-+ 84. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x3
-+ 85. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x8
-+ 86. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x9
-+ 87. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/makefile
-+ 88. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckpker.mk
-+ 89. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckubsd.mak
-+ 90. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x5
-+ 91. mailto:kermit-support@columbia.edu
-+ 92. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/makefile
-+ 93. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x7
-+ 94. mailto:kermit-support@columbia.edu
-+ 95. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/makefile
-+ 96. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x5.4
-+ 97. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x10
-+ 98. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x11
-+ 99. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x5
-+ 100. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/iksd.html
-+ 101. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#top
-+ 102. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#contents
-+ 103. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x4.1
-+ 104. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html
-+ 105. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x4.1
-+ 106. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x4.2
-+ 107. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x4.3
-+ 108. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x4.4
-+ 109. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x4.5
-+ 110. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html
-+ 111. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html#x8
-+ 112. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/iksd.html
-+ 113. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/iksd.html
-+ 114. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckufio.c
-+ 115. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckufio.c
-+ 116. mailto:kermit-support@columbia.edu
-+ 117. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckcmai.c
-+ 118. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x15
-+ 119. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckutio.c
-+ 120. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckufio.c
-+ 121. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckutio.c
-+ 122. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckufio.c
-+ 123. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckcnet.c
-+ 124. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckcnet.c
-+ 125. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckutio.c
-+ 126. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckcuni.c
-+ 127. mailto:kermit-support@columbia.edu
-+ 128. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#top
-+ 129. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#contents
-+ 130. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x4
-+ 131. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x4.2
-+ 132. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x4.0
-+ 133. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/makefile
-+ 134. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckubwr.txt
-+ 135. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html
-+ 136. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckwart.c
-+ 137. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckcpro.w
-+ 138. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckcpro.c
-+ 139. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#top
-+ 140. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#contents
-+ 141. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x4
-+ 142. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x4.3
-+ 143. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x4.1
-+ 144. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x5
-+ 145. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#top
-+ 146. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#contents
-+ 147. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x4
-+ 148. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x4.4
-+ 149. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x4.2
-+ 150. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#top
-+ 151. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#contents
-+ 152. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x4
-+ 153. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x4.5
-+ 154. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x4.3
-+ 155. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckpker.mk
-+ 156. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#top
-+ 157. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#contents
-+ 158. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x4
-+ 159. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x4.4
-+ 160. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/makefile
-+ 161. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/makefile
-+ 162. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckcpro.w
-+ 163. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#top
-+ 164. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#contents
-+ 165. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x6
-+ 166. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x4
-+ 167. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x5.1
-+ 168. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x5.2
-+ 169. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x5.3
-+ 170. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x5.4
-+ 171. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/
-+ 172. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x5.4
-+ 173. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x5.3
-+ 174. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/COPYING.TXT
-+ 175. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckermit.ini
-+ 176. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x5.1
-+ 177. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckermod.ini
-+ 178. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckermit70.txt
-+ 179. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ck60manual.html
-+ 180. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html
-+ 181. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckermit80.txt
-+ 182. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ck60manual.html
-+ 183. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html
-+ 184. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckcbwr.txt
-+ 185. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcbwr.html
-+ 186. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckubwr.txt
-+ 187. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html
-+ 188. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckuins.txt
-+ 189. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html
-+ 190. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckccfg.txt
-+ 191. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html
-+ 192. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckcplm.txt
-+ 193. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcplm.html
-+ 194. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ca_certs.pem
-+ 195. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x16"
-+ 196. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/makefile
-+ 197. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x?
-+ 198. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x11
-+ 199. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x5.2
-+ 200. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html#download
-+ 201. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ck80binaries.html
-+ 202. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html#download
-+ 203. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#top
-+ 204. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#contents
-+ 205. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x7
-+ 206. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x5
-+ 207. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#top
-+ 208. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#contents
-+ 209. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x8
-+ 210. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x6
-+ 211. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckutio.c
-+ 212. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckutio.c
-+ 213. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x4.0
-+ 214. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckcdeb.h
-+ 215. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckufio.c
-+ 216. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckufio.c
-+ 217. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckutio.c
-+ 218. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x10
-+ 219. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html#x2
-+ 220. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html
-+ 221. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x4
-+ 222. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x10
-+ 223. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckutio.c
-+ 224. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckutio.c
-+ 225. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckutio.c
-+ 226. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x9.4
-+ 227. mailto:kermit-support@columbia.edu
-+ 228. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#top
-+ 229. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#contents
-+ 230. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x9
-+ 231. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x7
-+ 232. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html
-+ 233. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html
-+ 234. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#top
-+ 235. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#contents
-+ 236. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x10
-+ 237. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x8
-+ 238. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x9.1
-+ 239. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x9.1.1
-+ 240. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x9.1.2
-+ 241. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x9.1.3
-+ 242. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x9.2
-+ 243. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x9.3
-+ 244. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x9.4
-+ 245. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x9.5
-+ 246. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x9.6
-+ 247. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x9.7
-+ 248. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x9.8
-+ 249. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x9.9
-+ 250. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckutio.c
-+ 251. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#top
-+ 252. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x9
-+ 253. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#contents
-+ 254. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x9.2
-+ 255. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x9.1.1
-+ 256. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x9.1.2
-+ 257. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x9.1.3
-+ 258. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#top
-+ 259. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#contents
-+ 260. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x9
-+ 261. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x9.1
-+ 262. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x9.1.3
-+ 263. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x9.1.1
-+ 264. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#top
-+ 265. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#contents
-+ 266. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x9
-+ 267. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x9.1
-+ 268. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x9.2
-+ 269. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x9.1.2
-+ 270. http://www.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/007904975/
-+ 271. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x9.1.1
-+ 272. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#top
-+ 273. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#contents
-+ 274. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x9
-+ 275. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x9.1
-+ 276. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x9.3
-+ 277. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x9.1
-+ 278. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#top
-+ 279. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#contents
-+ 280. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x9
-+ 281. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x9.4
-+ 282. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x9.2
-+ 283. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckufio.c
-+ 284. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckutio.c
-+ 285. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckufio.c
-+ 286. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#top
-+ 287. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#contents
-+ 288. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x9
-+ 289. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x9.5
-+ 290. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x9.3
-+ 291. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/cable.html
-+ 292. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckutio.c
-+ 293. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckcdeb.h
-+ 294. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#top
-+ 295. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#contents
-+ 296. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x9
-+ 297. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x9.6
-+ 298. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x9.4
-+ 299. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckcdeb.h
-+ 300. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckuus3.c
-+ 301. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckutio.c
-+ 302. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#top
-+ 303. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#contents
-+ 304. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x9
-+ 305. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x9.7
-+ 306. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x9.5
-+ 307. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#top
-+ 308. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#contents
-+ 309. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x9
-+ 310. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x9.8
-+ 311. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x9.6
-+ 312. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#top
-+ 313. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#contents
-+ 314. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x9
-+ 315. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x9.9
-+ 316. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x9.7
-+ 317. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckutio.c
-+ 318. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckutio.c
-+ 319. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckcdeb.h
-+ 320. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckufio.c
-+ 321. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#top
-+ 322. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#contents
-+ 323. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x9
-+ 324. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x10
-+ 325. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x9.8
-+ 326. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#top
-+ 327. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#contents
-+ 328. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x11
-+ 329. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x9
-+ 330. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckutio.c
-+ 331. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x11
-+ 332. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#top
-+ 333. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#contents
-+ 334. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x12
-+ 335. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x10
-+ 336. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckutio.c
-+ 337. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckufio.c
-+ 338. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#top
-+ 339. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#contents
-+ 340. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x13
-+ 341. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x11
-+ 342. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#top
-+ 343. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#contents
-+ 344. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x14
-+ 345. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x12
-+ 346. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckubwr.txt
-+ 347. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckutio.c
-+ 348. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#top
-+ 349. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#contents
-+ 350. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x15
-+ 351. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x13
-+ 352. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#top
-+ 353. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#contents
-+ 354. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x16
-+ 355. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x14
-+ 356. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/uiksd.html#x4.2
-+ 357. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/uiksd.html
-+ 358. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit2.html
-+ 359. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#top
-+ 360. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#contents
-+ 361. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x17
-+ 362. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x15
-+ 363. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/security.html
-+ 364. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/security80.html
-+ 365. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#top
-+ 366. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#contents
-+ 367. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x16
-+ 368. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/skermit.html
-+ 369. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#top
-+ 370. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#contents
-+ 371. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 372. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ck90updates.html
-+ 373. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
---- /dev/null
-+++ ckermit-301/ckubwr.txt
-@@ -0,0 +1,5353 @@
-+
-+ [1]The Columbia Crown The Kermit Project | Columbia University
-+ 612 West 115th Street, New York NY 10025 USA o [2]kermit@columbia.edu
-+ ...since 1981
-+ [3]Home [4]Kermit 95 [5]C-Kermit [6]Scripts [7]Current [8]New [9]FAQ
-+ [10]Support
-+
-+C-Kermit Unix Hints and Tips
-+
-+ Frank da Cruz
-+ [11]The Kermit Project, [12]Columbia University
-+
-+ As of: C-Kermit 9.0.300 30 June 2011
-+ This page last updated: Mon Jun 27 16:01:50 2011 (New York USA Time)
-+
-+ IF YOU ARE READING A PLAIN-TEXT version of this document, note it is
-+ a plain-text dump of a Web page. You can visit the original (and
-+ possibly more up-to-date) Web page here:
-+
-+ [13]http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html
-+
-+ Since the material in this file has been accumulating since 1985,
-+ some (much) of it might be dated. [14]Feedback from experts on
-+ particular OS's and platforms is always welcome.
-+
-+ [ [15]C-Kermit ] [ [16]Installation Instructions ] [ [17]TUTORIAL ]
-+
-+CONTENTS
-+
-+ 1. [18]INTRODUCTION
-+ 2. [19]PREBUILT C-KERMIT BINARIES
-+ 3. [20]PLATFORM-SPECIFIC NOTES
-+ 4. [21]GENERAL UNIX-SPECIFIC LIMITATIONS AND BUGS
-+ 5. [22]INITIALIZATION AND COMMAND FILES
-+ 6. [23]COMMUNICATION SPEED SELECTION
-+ 7. [24]COMMUNICATIONS AND DIALING
-+ 8. [25]HARDWARE FLOW CONTROL
-+ 9. [26]TERMINAL CONNECTION AND KEY MAPPING
-+ 10. [27]FILE TRANSFER
-+ 11. [28]EXTERNAL FILE TRANSFER PROTOCOLS
-+ 12. [29]SECURITY
-+ 13. [30]MISCELLANEOUS USER REPORTS
-+ 14. [31]THIRD-PARTY DRIVERS
-+
-+ Quick Links: [ [32]Linux ] [ [33]*BSD ] [[34]Mac OS X] [ [35]AIX ] [
-+ [36]HP-UX ] [ [37]Solaris ] [ [38]SCO ] [ [39]DEC/Compaq ]
-+
-+1. INTRODUCTION
-+
-+ [ [40]Top ] [ [41]Contents ] [ [42]Next ]
-+
-+ SECTION CONTENTS
-+
-+ 1.1. [43]Documentation
-+ 1.2. [44]Technical Support
-+ 1.3. [45]The Year 2000
-+ 1.4. [46]The Euro
-+
-+ THIS IS WHAT USED TO BE CALLED the "beware file" for the Unix version
-+ of C-Kermit, previously distributed as ckubwr.txt and, before that, as
-+ ckuker.bwr, after the fashion of old Digital Equipment Corporation
-+ (DEC) software releases that came with release notes (describing what
-+ had changed) and a "beware file" listing known bugs, limitations,
-+ "non-goals", and things to watch out for. The C-Kermit beware file has
-+ been accumulating since 1985, and it applies to many different hardware
-+ platforms and operating systems, and many versions of them, so it is
-+ quite large. Prior to C-Kermit 8.0, it was distributed only in
-+ plain-text format. Now it is available as a Web document with links,
-+ internal cross references, and so on, to make it easier to use.
-+
-+ This document applies to Unix C-Kermit in general, as well as to
-+ specific Unix variations like [47]Linux, [48]AIX, [49]HP-UX,
-+ [50]Solaris, and so on, and should be read in conjunction with the
-+ [51]platform-independent C-Kermit beware file, which contains similar
-+ information, but applying to all versions of C-Kermit (VMS, Windows,
-+ OS/2, AOS/VS, VOS, etc, as well as to Unix).
-+
-+ There is much in this document that is (only) of historical interest.
-+ The navigation links should help you skip directly to the sections that
-+ are relevant to you. Numerous offsite Web links are supposed to lead to
-+ further information but, as you know, Web links go stale frequently and
-+ without warning. If you can supply additional, corrected, updated, or
-+ better Web links, please feel free to [52]let me know.
-+
-+1.1. Documentation
-+
-+ [ [53]Top ] [ [54]Contents ] [ [55]Next ]
-+
-+ C-Kermit 6.0 is documented in the book [56]Using C-Kermit, Second
-+ Edition, by Frank da Cruz and Christine M. Gianone, Digital Press,
-+ Burlington, MA, USA, ISBN 1-55558-164-1 (1997), 622 pages. This remains
-+ the definitive C-Kermit documentation. Until the third edition is
-+ published (sorry, there is no firm timeframe for this), please also
-+ refer to:
-+
-+ [57]Supplement to Using C-Kermit, Second Edition, For C-Kermit 7.0
-+ Thorough documentation of features new to version 7.0.
-+
-+ [58]Supplement to Using C-Kermit, Second Edition, For C-Kermit 8.0
-+ Thorough documentation of features new to version 8.0.
-+
-+ [59]Supplement to Using C-Kermit, Second Edition, For C-Kermit 9.0
-+ Thorough documentation of features new to version 9.0.
-+
-+1.2. Technical Support
-+
-+ [ [60]Top ] [ [61]Contents ] [ [62]Section Contents ] [ [63]Next ] [
-+ [64]Previous ]
-+
-+ For information on how to get technical support, please visit:
-+
-+ [65]http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/support.html
-+
-+1.3. The Year 2000
-+
-+ [ [66]Top ] [ [67]Contents ] [ [68]Section Contents ] [ [69]Next ] [
-+ [70]Previous ]
-+
-+ The Unix version of C-Kermit, release 6.0 and later, is "Year 2000
-+ compliant", but only if the underlying operating system is too. Contact
-+ your Unix operating system vendor to find out which operating system
-+ versions, patches, hardware, and/or updates are required. (Quite a few
-+ old Unixes are still in operation in the new millenium, but with their
-+ date set 28 years in the past so at least the non-year parts of the
-+ calendar are correct.)
-+
-+ As of C-Kermit 6.0 (6 September 1996), post-millenium file dates are
-+ recognized, transmitted, received, and reproduced correctly during the
-+ file transfer process in C-Kermit's File Attribute packets. If
-+ post-millenium dates are not processed correctly on the other end, file
-+ transfer still takes place, but the modification or creation date of
-+ the received file might be incorrect. The only exception would be if
-+ the "file collision update" feature is being used to prevent
-+ unnecessary transfer of files that have not changed since the last time
-+ a transfer took place; in this case, a file might be transferred
-+ unnecessarily, or it might not be transferred when it should have been.
-+ Correct operation of the update feature depends on both Kermit programs
-+ having the correct date and time.
-+
-+ Of secondary importance are the time stamps in the transaction and/or
-+ debug logs, and the date-related script programming constructs, such as
-+ \v(date), \v(ndate), \v(day), \v(nday), and perhaps also the
-+ time-related ones, \v(time) and \v(ntime), insofar as they might be
-+ affected by the date. The \v(ndate) is a numeric-format date of the
-+ form yyyymmdd, suitable for both lexical and numeric comparison and
-+ sorting: e.g. 19970208 or 20011231. If the underlying operating system
-+ returns the correct date information, these variables will have the
-+ proper values. If not, then scripts that make decisions based on these
-+ variables might not operate correctly.
-+
-+ Most date-related code is based upon the C Library asctime() string,
-+ which always has a four-digit year. In Unix, the one bit of code in
-+ C-Kermit that is an exception to this rule is several calls to
-+ localtime(), which returns a pointer to a tm struct, in which the year
-+ is presumed to be expressed as "years since 1900". The code depends on
-+ this assumption. Any platforms that violate it will need special
-+ coding. As of this writing, no such platforms are known.
-+
-+ Command and script programming functions that deal with dates use
-+ C-Kermit specific code that always uses full years.
-+
-+1.4. The Euro
-+
-+ [ [71]Top ] [ [72]Contents ] [ [73]Section Contents ] [ [74]Previous ]
-+
-+ C-Kermit 7.0 and later support Unicode (ISO 10646), ISO 8859-15 Latin
-+ Alphabet 9, PC Code Page 858, Windows Code Pages 1250 and 1251, and
-+ perhaps other character sets, that encode the Euro symbol, and can
-+ translate among them as long as no intermediate character-set is
-+ involved that does not include the Euro.
-+
-+2. PREBUILT C-KERMIT BINARIES
-+
-+ [ [75]Top ] [ [76]Contents ] [ [77]Next ] [ [78]Previous ]
-+
-+ It is often dangerous to run a binary C-Kermit (or any other) program
-+ built on a different computer. Particularly if that computer had a
-+ different C compiler, libraries, operating system version, processor
-+ features, etc, and especially if the program was built with shared
-+ libraries, because as soon as you update the libraries on your system,
-+ they no longer match the ones referenced in the binary, and the binary
-+ might refuse to load when you run it, in which case you'll see error
-+ messages similar to:
-+
-+ Could not load program kermit
-+ Member shr4.o not found or file not an archive
-+ Could not load library libcurses.a[shr4.o]
-+ Error was: No such file or directory
-+
-+ (These samples are from AIX.) To avoid this problem, we try to build
-+ C-Kermit with statically linked libraries whenever we can, but this is
-+ increasingly impossible as shared libraries become the norm.
-+
-+ It is often OK to run a binary built on an earlier OS version, but it
-+ is rarely possible (or safe) to run a binary built on a later one, for
-+ example to run a binary built under Solaris 8 on Solaris 2.6. Sometimes
-+ even the OS-or-library patch/ECO level makes a difference.
-+
-+ A particularly insidious problem occurs when a binary was built on a
-+ version of the OS that has patches from the vendor (e.g. to libraries);
-+ in many cases you won't be able to run such a binary on an unpatched
-+ version of the same platform.
-+
-+ When in doubt, build C-Kermit from the source code on the computer
-+ where it is to be run (if possible!). If not, ask us for a binary
-+ specific to your configuration. We might have one, and if we don't, we
-+ might be able to find somebody who will build one for you.
-+
-+3. NOTES ON SPECIFIC UNIX VERSIONS
-+
-+ [ [79]Top ] [ [80]Contents ] [ [81]Next ] [ [82]Previous ]
-+
-+ SECTION CONTENTS
-+
-+ 3.0. [83]C-KERMIT ON PC-BASED UNIXES
-+ 3.1. [84]C-KERMIT AND AIX
-+ 3.2. [85]C-KERMIT AND HP-UX
-+ 3.3. [86]C-KERMIT AND LINUX
-+ 3.4. [87]C-KERMIT AND NEXTSTEP
-+ 3.5. [88]C-KERMIT AND QNX
-+ 3.6. [89]C-KERMIT AND SCO
-+ 3.7. [90]C-KERMIT AND SOLARIS
-+ 3.8. [91]C-KERMIT AND SUNOS
-+ 3.9. [92]C-KERMIT AND ULTRIX
-+ 3.10. [93]C-KERMIT AND UNIXWARE
-+ 3.11. [94]C-KERMIT AND APOLLO SR10
-+ 3.12. [95]C-KERMIT AND TANDY XENIX 3.0
-+ 3.13. [96]C-KERMIT AND OSF/1 (DIGITAL UNIX) (TRU64 UNIX)
-+ 3.14. [97]C-KERMIT AND SGI IRIX
-+ 3.15. [98]C-KERMIT AND THE BEBOX
-+ 3.16. [99]C-KERMIT AND DG/UX
-+ 3.17. [100]C-KERMIT AND SEQUENT DYNIX
-+ 3.18. [101]C-KERMIT AND {FREE,OPEN,NET}BSD
-+ 3.19. [102]C-KERMIT AND MAC OS X
-+ 3.20. [103]C-KERMIT AND COHERENT
-+
-+ The following sections apply to specific Unix versions. Most of them
-+ contain references to FAQs (Frequently Asked Questions), but these tend
-+ to be ephemeral. For possibly more current information see:
-+
-+ [104]http://www.faqs.org
-+ [105]http://aplawrence.com/Unixart/newtounix.html
-+
-+ One thread that runs through many of them, and implicitly perhaps
-+ through all, concerns the problems that occur when trying to dial out
-+ on a serial device that is (also) enabled for dialing in. The
-+ "solutions" to this problem are many, varied, diverse, and usually
-+ gross, involving configuring the device for bidirectional use. This is
-+ done in a highly OS-dependent and often obscure manner, and the effects
-+ (good or evil) are also highly dependent on the particular OS (and
-+ getty variety, etc). Many examples are given in the [106]OS-specific
-+ sections below.
-+
-+ An important point to keep in mind is that C-Kermit is a
-+ cross-platform, portable software program. It was not designed
-+ specifically and only for your particular Unix version, or for that
-+ matter, for Unix in particular at all. It also runs on VMS, AOS/VS,
-+ VOS, and other non-Unix platforms. All the Unix versions of C-Kermit
-+ share common i/o modules, with compile-time #ifdef constructions used
-+ to account for the differences among the many Unix products and
-+ releases. If you think that C-Kermit is behaving badly or missing
-+ something on your particular Unix version, you might be right -- we
-+ can't claim to be expert in hundreds of different OS / version /
-+ hardware / library combinations. If you're a programmer, take a look at
-+ the source code and [107]send us your suggested fixes or changes. Or
-+ else just [108]send us a report about what seems to be wrong and we'll
-+ see what we can do.
-+
-+3.0. C-KERMIT ON PC-BASED UNIXES
-+
-+ [ [109]Top ] [ [110]Contents ] [ [111]Section Contents ] [ [112]Next ]
-+
-+ Also see: [113]http://www.pcunix.com/.
-+
-+ SECTION CONTENTS
-+
-+ 3.0.1. [114]Interrupt Conflicts
-+ 3.0.2. [115]Windows-Specific Hardware
-+ 3.0.3. [116]Modems
-+ 3.0.4. [117]Character Sets
-+ 3.0.5. [118]Keyboard, Screen, and Mouse Access
-+ 3.0.6. [119]Laptops
-+
-+3.0.1. Interrupt Conflicts
-+
-+ [ [120]Top ] [ [121]Contents ] [ [122]Section Contents ] [ [123]Next ]
-+
-+ PCs are not the best platform for real operating systems like Unix. The
-+ architecture suffers from numerous deficiencies, not the least of which
-+ is the stiflingly small number of hardware interrupts (either 7 or 15,
-+ many of which are preallocated). Thus adding devices, using multiple
-+ serial ports, etc, is always a challenge and often a nightmare. The
-+ free-for-all nature of the PC market and the lack of standards combined
-+ with the diversity of Unix OS versions make it difficult to find
-+ drivers for any particular device on any particular version of Unix.
-+
-+ Of special interest to Kermit users is the fact that there is no
-+ standard provision in the PC architecture for more than 2 communication
-+ (serial) ports. COM3 and COM4 (or higher) will not work unless you (a)
-+ find out the hardware address and interrupt for each, (b) find out how
-+ to provide your Unix version with this information, and (c) actually
-+ set up the configuration in the Unix startup files (or whatever other
-+ method is used). Watch out for interrupt conflicts, especially when
-+ using a serial mouse, and don't expect to be able to use more than two
-+ serial ports.
-+
-+ The techniques for resolving interrupt conflicts are different for each
-+ operating system (Linux, NetBSD, etc). In general, there is a
-+ configuration file somewhere that lists COM ports, something like this:
-+
-+ com0 at isa? port 0x3f8 irq 4 # DOS COM1
-+ com1 at isa? port 0x2f8 irq 3 # DOS COM2
-+
-+ The address and IRQ values in this file must agree with the values in
-+ the PC BIOS and with the ports themselves, and there must not be more
-+ than one device with the same interrupt. Unfortunately, due to the
-+ small number of available interrupts, installing new devices on a PC
-+ almost always creates a conflict. Here is a typical tale from a Linux
-+ user (Fred Smith) about installing a third serial port:
-+
-+ ...problems can come from a number of causes. The one I fought with
-+ for some time, and finally conquered, was that my modem is on an
-+ add-in serial port, cua3/IRQ5. By default IRQ5 has a very low
-+ priority, and does not get enough service in times when the system
-+ is busy to prevent losing data. This in turn causes many resends.
-+ There are two 'fixes' that I know of, one is to relax hard disk
-+ interrupt hogging by using the correct parameter to hdparm, but I
-+ don't like that one because the hdparm man page indicates it is
-+ risky to use. The other one, the one I used, was to get 'irqtune'
-+ and use it to give IRQ5 the highest priority instead of nearly the
-+ lowest. Completely cured the problem.
-+
-+ Here's another one from a newsgroup posting:
-+
-+ After much hair pulling, I've discovered why my serial port won't
-+ work. Apparently my [PC] has three serial devices (two comm ports
-+ and an IR port), of which only two at a time can be active. I looked
-+ in the BIOS setup and noticed that the IR port was activated, but
-+ didn't realize at the time that this meant that COM2 was thereby
-+ de-activated. I turned off the IR port and now the serial port works
-+ as advertised.
-+
-+3.0.2. Windows-Specific Hardware
-+
-+ [ [124]Top ] [ [125]Contents ] [ [126]Section Contents ] [ [127]Next ]
-+ [ [128]Previous ]
-+
-+ To complicate matters, the PC platform is becoming increasingly and
-+ inexorably Windows-oriented. More and more add-on devices are "Windows
-+ only" -- meaning they are incomplete and rely on proprietary
-+ Windows-based software drivers to do the jobs that you would expect the
-+ device itself to do. PCMCIA, PCI, or "Plug-n-Play" devices are rarely
-+ supported on PC-based Unix versions such as SCO; Winmodems,
-+ Winprinters, and the like are not supported on any Unix variety (with
-+ [129]a few exceptions). The self-proclaimed Microsoft PC 97 (or later)
-+ standard only makes matters worse since its only purpose to ensure that
-+ PCs are "optimized to run Windows 95 and Windows NT 4.0 and future
-+ versions of these operating systems".
-+
-+ With the exception noted (the Lucent modem, perhaps a handful of others
-+ by the time you read this), drivers for "Win" devices are available
-+ only for Windows, since the Windows market dwarfs that of any
-+ particular Unix brand, and for that matter all Unixes (or for that
-+ matter, all non-Windows operating systems) combined. If your version of
-+ Unix (SCO, Linux, BSDI, FreeBSD, etc) does not support a particular
-+ device, then C-Kermit can't use it either. C-Kermit, like any Unix
-+ application, must access all devices through drivers and not directly
-+ because Unix is a real operating system.
-+
-+ Don't waste time thinking that you, or anybody else, could write a
-+ Linux (or other Unix) driver for a Winmodem or other "Win" device.
-+ First of all, these devices generally require realtime control, but
-+ since Unix is a true multitasking operating system, realtime device
-+ control is not possible outside the kernel. Second, the specifications
-+ for these devices are secret and proprietary, and each one (and each
-+ version of each one) is potentially different. Third, a Winmodem driver
-+ would be enormously complex; it would take years to write and debug, by
-+ which time it would be obsolete.
-+
-+ A more recent generation of PCs (circa 1999-2000) is marketed as
-+ "Legacy Free". One can only speculate what that could mean. Most likely
-+ it means it will ONLY run the very latest versions of Windows, and is
-+ made exclusively of Winmodems, Winprinters, Winmemory, and Win-CPU-fans
-+ (Legacy Free is a concept [130]pioneered by Microsoft).
-+
-+ Before you buy a new PC or add-on equipment, especially serial ports,
-+ internal modems, or printers, make sure they are compatible with your
-+ version of Unix. This is becoming an ever-greater challenge; only a
-+ huge company like Microsoft can afford to be constantly cranking out
-+ and/or verifying drivers for the thousands of video boards, sound
-+ cards, network adapters, SCSI adapters, buses, etc, that spew forth in
-+ an uncontrolled manner from all corners of the world on a daily basis.
-+ With very few exceptions, makers of PCs assemble the various components
-+ and then verify them only with Windows, which they must do since they
-+ are, no doubt, preloading the PC with Windows. To find a modern PC that
-+ is capable of running a variety of non-Windows operating systems (e.g.
-+ Linux, SCO OpenServer, Unixware, and Solaris) is a formidable challenge
-+ requiring careful study of each vendor's "compatibility lists" and
-+ precise attention to exact component model numbers and revision levels.
-+
-+3.0.3. Modems
-+
-+ [ [131]Top ] [ [132]Contents ] [ [133]Section Contents ] [ [134]Next ]
-+ [ [135]Previous ]
-+
-+ External modems are recommended:
-+
-+ * They don't need any special drivers.
-+ * You can use the lights and speaker to troubleshoot dialing.
-+ * You can share them among all types of computers.
-+ * You can easily turn them off and on when power-cycling seems
-+ warranted.
-+ * They are more likely to have manuals.
-+
-+ Internal PC modems (even when they are not Winmodems, which is
-+ increasingly unlikely in new PCs) are always trouble, especially in
-+ Unix. Even when they work for dialing out, they might not work for
-+ dialing in, etc. Problems that occur when using an internal modem can
-+ almost always be eliminated by switching to an external one. Even when
-+ an internal modem is not a Winmodem or Plug-n-Play, it is often a
-+ no-name model of unknown quality -- not the sort of thing you want
-+ sitting directly on your computer's bus. (Even if it does not cause
-+ hardware problems, it probably came without a command list, so no Unix
-+ software will know how to control it.) For more about Unix compatible
-+ modems, see:
-+
-+ [136]http://www.idir.net/~gromitkc/winmodem.html
-+
-+ Remember that PCs, even now -- more than two decades after they were
-+ first introduced -- are not (in general) capable of supporting more
-+ than 2 serial devices. Here's a short success story from a recent
-+ newsgroup posting: "I have a Diamond SupraSonic II dual modem in my
-+ machine. What I had to end up doing is buying a PS/2 mouse and port and
-+ install it. Had to get rid of my serial mouse. I also had to disable
-+ PnP in my computer bios. I was having IRQ conflicts between my serial
-+ mouse and 'com 3'. Both modems work fine for me. My first modem is
-+ ttyS0 and my second is ttyS1." Special third-party multiport boards
-+ such as [137]DigiBoard are available for certain Unix platforms
-+ (typically SCO, maybe Linux) that come with special platform-specific
-+ drivers.
-+
-+3.0.4. Character Sets
-+
-+ [ [138]Top ] [ [139]Contents ] [ [140]Section Contents ] [ [141]Next ]
-+ [ [142]Previous ]
-+
-+ PCs generally have PC code pages such as CP437 or CP850, and these are
-+ often used by PC-based Unix operating systems, particularly on the
-+ console. These are supported directly by C-Kermit's SET FILE
-+ CHARACTER-SET and SET TERMINAL CHARACTER-SET commands. Some PC-based
-+ Unix versions, such as recent Red Hat Linux releases, might also
-+ support Microsoft Windows code pages such as CP1252, or even Latin
-+ Alphabet 1 itself (perhaps displayed with CP437 glyphs). (And work is
-+ in progress to support Unicode UTF8 in Linux.)
-+
-+ Certain Windows code pages are not supported directly by C-Kermit, but
-+ since they are ISO Latin Alphabets with nonstandard "extensions" in the
-+ C1 control range, you can substitute the corresponding Latin alphabet
-+ (or other character set) in any C-Kermit character-set related
-+ commands:
-+
-+ Windows Code Page Substitution
-+ CP 1004 Latin-1
-+ CP 1051 HP Roman-8
-+
-+ Other Windows code pages are mostly (or totally) incompatible with
-+ their Latin Alphabet counterparts (e.g. CP1250 and Latin-2), and
-+ several of these are already supported by C-Kermit 7.0 and later (1250,
-+ 1251, and 1252).
-+
-+3.0.5. Keyboard, Screen, and Mouse Access
-+
-+ [ [143]Top ] [ [144]Contents ] [ [145]Section Contents ] [ [146]Next ]
-+ [ [147]Previous ]
-+
-+ Finally, note that as a real operating system, Unix (unlike Windows)
-+ does not provide the intimate connection to the PC keyboard, screen,
-+ and mouse that you might expect. Unix applications can not "see" the
-+ keyboard, and therefore can not be programmed to understand F-keys,
-+ Editing keys, Arrow keys, Alt-key combinations, and the like. This is
-+ because:
-+
-+ a. Unix is a portable operating system, not only for PCs;
-+ b. Unix sessions can come from anywhere, not just the PC's own
-+ keyboard and screen; and:
-+ c. even though it might be possible for an application that actually
-+ is running on the PC's keyboard and screen to access these devices
-+ directly, there are no APIs (outside of X) for this.
-+
-+3.0.6. Laptops
-+
-+ [ [148]Top ] [ [149]Contents ] [ [150]Section Contents ] [
-+ [151]Previous ]
-+
-+ (To be filled in . . .)
-+
-+3.1. C-KERMIT AND AIX
-+
-+ [ [152]Top ] [ [153]Contents ] [ [154]Section Contents ] [ [155]Next ]
-+ [ [156]Previous ]
-+
-+ SECTION CONTENTS
-+
-+ 3.1.1. [157]AIX: General
-+ 3.1.2. [158]AIX: Network Connections
-+ 3.1.3. [159]AIX: Serial Connections
-+ 3.1.4. [160]AIX: File Transfer
-+ 3.1.5. [161]AIX: Xterm Key Map
-+
-+ For additional information see:
-+ * [162]http://www.emerson.emory.edu/services/aix-faq/
-+ * [163]http://www.faqs.org/faqs/by-newsgroup/comp/comp.unix.aix.html
-+ * [164]http://www.cis.ohio-state.edu/hypertext/faq/usenet/aix-faq/top
-+ .html
-+ * [165]http://aixpdslib.seas.ucla.edu/
-+ * [166]http://www.rootvg.net (AIX history)
-+ * [167]ftp://rtfm.mit.edu/pub/usenet/news.answers/aix-faq/part1
-+ * [168]ftp://mirrors.aol.com/pub/rtfm/usenet-by-hierarchy/comp/unix/a
-+ ix
-+
-+ and/or read the [169]comp.unix.aix newsgroup.
-+ ________________________________________________________________________
-+
-+3.1.1. AIX: General
-+
-+ [ [170]Top ] [ [171]Contents ] [ [172]Section Contents ] [ [173]Next ]
-+
-+ About AIX version numbers: "uname -a" tells the two-digit version
-+ number, such as 3.2 or 4.1. The three-digit form can be seen with the
-+ "oslevel" command (this information is unavailable at the API level and
-+ is reportedly obtained by scanning the installed patch list).
-+ Supposedly all three-digit versions within the same two-digit version
-+ (e.g. 4.3.1, 4.3.2) are binary compatible; i.e. a binary built on any
-+ one of them should run on all others, but who knows. Most AIX advocates
-+ tell you that any AIX binary will run on any AIX version greater than
-+ or equal to the one under which it was built, but experience with
-+ C-Kermit suggests otherwise. It is always best to run a binary built
-+ under your exact same AIX version, down to the third decimal place, if
-+ possible. Ideally, build it from source code yourself. Yes, this advice
-+ would be easier to follow if AIX came with a C compiler.
-+ ________________________________________________________________________
-+
-+3.1.2. AIX: Network Connections
-+
-+ [ [174]Top ] [ [175]Contents ] [ [176]Section Contents ] [ [177]Next ]
-+ [ [178]Previous ]
-+
-+ File transfers into AIX 4.2 or 4.3 through the AIX Telnet or Rlogin
-+ server have been observed to fail (or accumulate huge numbers of
-+ correctable errors, or even disconnect the session), when exactly the
-+ same kind of transfers into AIX 4.1 work without incident, as do such
-+ transfers into all non-AIX platforms on the same kind of connections
-+ (with a few exceptions noted elsewhere in this document). AIX 4.3.3
-+ seems to be particularly fragile in this regard; the weakness seems to
-+ be in its pseudoterminal (pty) driver. High-speed streaming transfers
-+ work perfectly, however, if the AIX Telnet server and pty driver are
-+ removed from the picture; e.g, by using "set host * 3000" on AIX.
-+
-+ The problem can be completely cured by replacing the IBM Telnet server
-+ with [179]MIT's Kerberos Telnet server -- even if you don't actually
-+ use the Kerberos part. Diagnosis: AIX pseudoterminals (which are
-+ controlled by the Telnet server to give you a login terminal for your
-+ session) have quirks that not even IBM knows about. The situation with
-+ AIX 5.x is not known, but if it has the same problem, the same cure is
-+ available.
-+
-+ Meanwhile, the only remedy when going through the IBM Telnet server is
-+ to cut back on Kermit's performance settings until you find a
-+ combination that works:
-+
-+ * SET STREAMING OFF
-+ * SET WINDOW-SIZE small-number
-+ * SET { SEND, RECEIVE } PACKET-LENGTH small-number
-+ * SET PREFIXING { CAUTIOUS, ALL }
-+
-+ In some cases, severe cutbacks are required, e.g. those implied by the
-+ ROBUST command. Also be sure that the AIX C-Kermit on the remote end
-+ has "set flow none" (which is the default). NOTE: Maybe this one can
-+ also be addressed by starting AIX telnetd with the "-a" option. The
-+ situation with SSH connections is not known, but almost certainly the
-+ same.
-+
-+ When these problems occur, the system error log contains:
-+
-+ LABEL: TTY_TTYHOG
-+ IDENTIFIER: 0873CF9F
-+ Type: TEMP
-+ Resource Name: pts/1
-+
-+ Description
-+ TTYHOG OVER-RUN
-+
-+ Failure Causes
-+ EXCESSIVE LOAD ON PROCESSOR
-+
-+ Recommended Actions
-+ REDUCE SYSTEM LOAD.
-+ REDUCE SERIAL PORT BAUD RATE
-+
-+ Before leaving the topic of AIX pseudoterminals, it is very likely that
-+ Kermit's PTY and SSH commands do not work well either, for the same
-+ reason that Telnet connections into AIX don't work well. A brief test
-+ with "pty rlogin somehost" got a perfectly usable terminal (CONNECT)
-+ session, but file-transfer problems like those just described.
-+
-+ Reportedly, telnet from AIX 4.1-point-something to non-Telnet ports
-+ does not work unless the port number is in the /etc/services file; it's
-+ not clear from the report whether this is a problem with AIX Telnet (in
-+ which case it would not affect Kermit), or with the sockets library (in
-+ which case it would). The purported fix is IBM APAR IX61523.
-+
-+ C-Kermit SET HOST or TELNET from one AIX 3.1 (or earlier) system to
-+ another won't work right unless you set your local terminal type to
-+ something other than AIXTERM. When your terminal type is AIXTERM, AIX
-+ TELNET sends two escapes whenever you type one, and the AIX telnet
-+ server swallows one of them. This has something to do with the "hft"
-+ device. This behavior seems to be removed in AIX 3.2 and later.
-+ ________________________________________________________________________
-+
-+3.1.3. AIX: Serial Connections
-+
-+ [ [180]Top ] [ [181]Contents ] [ [182]Section Contents ] [ [183]Next ]
-+ [ [184]Previous ]
-+
-+ In AIX 3, 4, or 5, C-Kermit won't be able to "set line /dev/tty0" (or
-+ any other dialout device) if you haven't installed "cu" or "uucp" on
-+ your system, because installing these is what creates the UUCP lockfile
-+ directory. If SET LINE commands always result in "Sorry, access to lock
-+ denied", even when C-Kermit has been given the same owner, group, and
-+ permissions as cu:
-+
-+ -r-sr-xr-x 1 uucp uucp 67216 Jul 27 1999 cu
-+
-+ and even when you run it as root, then you must go back and install
-+ "cu" from your AIX installation media.
-+
-+ According to IBM's "From Strength to Strength" document (21 April
-+ 1998), in AIX 4.2 and later "Async supports speeds on native serial
-+ ports up to 115.2kbps". However, no API is documented to achieve serial
-+ speeds higher than 38400 bps. Apparently the way to do this -- which
-+ might or might not work only on the IBM 128-port multiplexer -- is:
-+
-+ cxma-stty fastbaud /dev/tty0
-+
-+ which, according to "man cxma-stty":
-+
-+ fastbaud Alters the baud rate table, so 50 baud becomes 57600 baud.
-+ -fastbaud Restores the baud rate table, so 57600 baud becomes 50
-+ baud.
-+
-+ Presumably (but not certainly) this extrapolates to 110 "baud" becomes
-+ 76800 bps, and 150 becomes 115200 bps. So to use high serial speeds in
-+ AIX 4.2 or 4.3, the trick would be to give the "cxma-stty fastbaud"
-+ command for the desired tty device before starting Kermit, and then use
-+ "set speed 50", "set speed 110", or "set speed 150" to select 56700,
-+ 76800, or 115200 bps. It is not known whether cxma-stty requires
-+ privilege.
-+
-+ According to one report, "Further investigation with IBM seems to
-+ indicate that the only hardware capable of doing this is the 128-port
-+ multiplexor with one (or more) of the 16 port breakout cables (Enhanced
-+ Remote Async Node 16-Port EIA-232). We are looking at about CDN$4,000
-+ in hardware just to hang a 56kb modem on there. Of course, we can then
-+ hang 15 more, if we want. This hardware combo is described to be good
-+ to 230.4kbps."
-+
-+ Another report says (quote from AIX newsgroup, March 1999):
-+
-+ The machine type and the adapter determine the speed that one can
-+ actually run at. The older microchannel machines have much slower
-+ crystal frequencies and may not go beyond 76,800. A feature put into
-+ AIX 421 allows one to key in non-POSIX baud rates and if the uart
-+ can support that speed, it will get set. this applies also to 43p's
-+ and beyond. 115200 is the max for the 43P's native serial port. As
-+ crytal frequencies continue to increase, the built-in serial ports
-+ speeds will improve. To use 'uucp' or 'ate' at the higher baud
-+ rates, configure the port for the desired speed, but set the speed
-+ of uucp or ate to 50. Any non-POSIX speeds set in the ttys
-+ configuration will the be used. In the case of the 128-port adapters
-+ or the ISA 8-port or PCI 8-port adapter, there are only a few higher
-+ baud rates.
-+
-+ a. Change the port to enable high baud rates:
-+ + B50 for 57600
-+ + B75 for 76800
-+ + B110 for 115200
-+ + B200 for 230000
-+ b. chdev -l ttyX -a fastbaud=enable
-+ + For the 128 ports original style rans, only 57600 bps is
-+ supported.
-+ + For the new enhanced RANs, up to 230Kbps is supported.
-+
-+ In AIX 2.2.1 on the RT PC with the 8-port multiplexer, SET SPEED 38400
-+ gives 9600 bps, but SET SPEED 19200 gives 19200 (on the built-in S1
-+ port).
-+
-+ Note that some RS/6000s (e.g. the IBM PowerServer 320) have nonstandard
-+ rectangular 10-pin serial ports; the DB-25 connector is NOT a serial
-+ port; it is a parallel printer port. IBM cables are required for the
-+ serial ports, (The IBM RT PC also had rectangular serial ports --
-+ perhaps the same as these, perhaps different.)
-+
-+ If you dial in to AIX through a modem that is connected directly to an
-+ AIX port (e.g. on the 128-port multiplexer) and find that data is lost,
-+ especially when uploading files to the AIX system (and system error
-+ logs report buffer overruns on the port):
-+
-+ 1. Make sure the port and modem are BOTH configured for hardware
-+ (RTS/CTS) flow control. The port is configured somewhere in the
-+ system configuration, outside of Kermit.
-+ 2. Tell C-Kermit to "set flow keep"; experimentation shows that SET
-+ FLOW RTS/CTS has no effect when used in remote mode (i.e. on
-+ /dev/tty, as opposed to a specify port device).
-+ 3. Fixes for bugs in the original AIX 4.2 tty (serial i/o) support and
-+ other AIX bugs are available from IBM at:
-+ [185]http://service.software.ibm.com/rs6000/
-+
-+ Downloads -> Software Fixes -> Download FixDist gets an application
-+ for looking up known problems.
-+
-+ Many problems reported with bidirectional terminal lines on AIX 3.2.x
-+ on the RS/6000. Workaround: don't use bidirectional terminal lines, or
-+ write a shell-script wrapper for Kermit that turns getty off on the
-+ line before starting Kermit, or before Kermit attempts to do the SET
-+ LINE. (But note: These problems MIGHT be fixed in C-Kermit 6.0 and
-+ later.) The commands for turning getty off and on (respectively) are
-+ /usr/sbin/pdisable and /usr/sbin/penable.
-+ ________________________________________________________________________
-+
-+3.1.4. AIX: File Transfer
-+
-+ [ [186]Top ] [ [187]Contents ] [ [188]Section Contents ] [ [189]Next ]
-+ [ [190]Previous ]
-+
-+ Evidently AIX 4.3 (I don't know about earlier versions) does not allow
-+ open files to be overwritten. This can cause Kermit transfers to fail
-+ when FILE COLLISION is OVERWRITE, where they might work on other Unix
-+ varieties or earlier AIX versions.
-+
-+ Transfer of binary -- and maybe even text -- files can fail in AIX if
-+ the AIX terminal has particular port can have character-set translation
-+ done for it by the tty driver. The following advice from a
-+ knowledgeable AIX user:
-+
-+ [This feature] has to be checked (and set/cleared) with a separate
-+ command, unfortunately stty doesn't handle this. To check:
-+
-+ $ setmaps
-+ input map: none installed
-+ output map: none installed
-+
-+ If it says anything other than "none installed" for either one, it
-+ is likely to cause a problem with kermit. To get rid of installed
-+ maps:
-+
-+ $ setmaps -t NOMAP
-+
-+ However, I seem to recall that with some versions of AIX before
-+ 3.2.5, only root could change the setting. I'm not sure what
-+ versions - it might have only been under AIX 3.1 that this was true.
-+ At least with AIX 3.2.5 an ordinary user can set or clear the maps.
-+
-+ On the same problem, another knowledgeable AIX user says:
-+
-+ The way to get information on the NLS mapping under AIX (3.2.5
-+ anyway) is as follows. From the command line type:
-+
-+ lsattr -l tty# -a imap -a omap -E -H
-+
-+ Replace the tty number for the number sign above. This will give a
-+ human readable output of the settings that looks like this;
-+
-+ # lsattr -l tty2 -a imap -a omap -E -H
-+ attribute value description user_settable
-+
-+ imap none INPUT map file True
-+ omap none OUTPUT map file True
-+
-+ If you change the -H to a -O, you get output that can easily be
-+ processed by another program or a shell script, for example:
-+
-+ # lsattr -l tty2 -a imap -a omap -E -O
-+ #imap:omap
-+ none:none
-+
-+ To change the settings from the command line, the chdev command is
-+ used with the following syntax.
-+
-+ chdev -l tty# -a imap='none' -a omap='none'
-+
-+ Again substituting the appropriate tty port number for the number
-+ sign, "none" being the value we want for C-Kermit. Of course, the
-+ above can also be changed by using the SMIT utility and selecting
-+ devices - tty. (...end quote)
-+
-+ In 2007 I noticed the following on high-speed SSH connections (local
-+ network) into AIX 5.3: streaming transfers into AIX just don't work.
-+ The same might be true for Telnet connections; I have no way to check.
-+ It appears that the AIX pty driver and/or the SSH (and possibly Telnet)
-+ server are not capable of receiving a steady stream of incoming data at
-+ high speed. Solution: unknown. Workaround: put "set streaming off" in
-+ your .kermrc or .mykermrc file, since streaming is the default for
-+ network connections.
-+ ________________________________________________________________________
-+
-+3.1.5. AIX: Xterm Key Map
-+
-+ [ [191]Top ] [ [192]Contents ] [ [193]Section Contents ] [
-+ [194]Previous ]
-+
-+ Here is a sample configuration for setting up an xterm keyboard for
-+ VT220 or higher terminal emulation on AIX, courtesy of Bruce Momjian,
-+ Drexel Hill, PA. Xterm can be started like this:
-+
-+ xterm $XTERMFLAGS +rw +sb +ls $@ -tm 'erase ^? intr ^c' -name vt220 \
-+ -title vt220 -tn xterm-220 "$@" &
-+
-+---------------------------------------------------------------------------
-+ XTerm*VT100.Translations: #override \n\
-+ <Key>Home: string(0x1b) string("[3~") \n \
-+ <Key>End: string(0x1b) string("[4~") \n
-+ vt220*VT100.Translations: #override \n\
-+ Shift <Key>F1: string("[23~") \n \
-+ Shift <Key>F2: string("[24~") \n \
-+ Shift <Key>F3: string("[25~") \n \
-+ Shift <Key>F4: string("[26~") \n \
-+ Shift <Key>F5: string("[K~") \n \
-+ Shift <Key>F6: string("[31~") \n \
-+ Shift <Key>F7: string("[31~") \n \
-+ Shift <Key>F8: string("[32~") \n \
-+ Shift <Key>F9: string("[33~") \n \
-+ Shift <Key>F10: string("[34~") \n \
-+ Shift <Key>F11: string("[28~") \n \
-+ Shift <Key>F12: string("[29~") \n \
-+ <Key>Print: string(0x1b) string("[32~") \n\
-+ <Key>Cancel: string(0x1b) string("[33~") \n\
-+ <Key>Pause: string(0x1b) string("[34~") \n\
-+ <Key>Insert: string(0x1b) string("[2~") \n\
-+ <Key>Delete: string(0x1b) string("[3~") \n\
-+ <Key>Home: string(0x1b) string("[1~") \n\
-+ <Key>End: string(0x1b) string("[4~") \n\
-+ <Key>Prior: string(0x1b) string("[5~") \n\
-+ <Key>Next: string(0x1b) string("[6~") \n\
-+ <Key>BackSpace: string(0x7f) \n\
-+ <Key>Num_Lock: string(0x1b) string("OP") \n\
-+ <Key>KP_Divide: string(0x1b) string("Ol") \n\
-+ <Key>KP_Multiply: string(0x1b) string("Om") \n\
-+ <Key>KP_Subtract: string(0x1b) string("OS") \n\
-+ <Key>KP_Add: string(0x1b) string("OM") \n\
-+ <Key>KP_Enter: string(0x1b) string("OM") \n\
-+ <Key>KP_Decimal: string(0x1b) string("On") \n\
-+ <Key>KP_0: string(0x1b) string("Op") \n\
-+ <Key>KP_1: string(0x1b) string("Oq") \n\
-+ <Key>KP_2: string(0x1b) string("Or") \n\
-+ <Key>KP_3: string(0x1b) string("Os") \n\
-+ <Key>KP_4: string(0x1b) string("Ot") \n\
-+ <Key>KP_5: string(0x1b) string("Ou") \n\
-+ <Key>KP_6: string(0x1b) string("Ov") \n\
-+ <Key>KP_7: string(0x1b) string("Ow") \n\
-+ <Key>KP_8: string(0x1b) string("Ox") \n\
-+ <Key>KP_9: string(0x1b) string("Oy") \n
-+
-+ ! <Key>Up: string(0x1b) string("[A") \n\
-+ ! <Key>Down: string(0x1b) string("[B") \n\
-+ ! <Key>Right: string(0x1b) string("[C") \n\
-+ ! <Key>Left: string(0x1b) string("[D") \n\
-+
-+ *visualBell: true
-+ *saveLines: 1000
-+ *cursesemul: true
-+ *scrollKey: true
-+ *scrollBar: true
-+
-+3.2. C-KERMIT AND HP-UX
-+
-+ [ [195]Top ] [ [196]Contents ] [ [197]Section Contents ] [ [198]Next ]
-+ [ [199]Previous ]
-+
-+ SECTION CONTENTS
-+
-+ 3.2.0. [200]Common Problems
-+ 3.2.1. [201]Building C-Kermit on HP-UX
-+ 3.2.2. [202]File Transfer
-+ 3.2.3. [203]Dialing Out and UUCP Lockfiles in HP-UX
-+ 3.2.4. [204]Notes on Specific HP-UX Releases
-+ 3.2.5. [205]HP-UX and X.25
-+
-+ REFERENCES
-+
-+ For further information, read the [206]comp.sys.hp.hpux newsgroup.
-+
-+ C-Kermit is included as part of the HP-UX operating system by contract
-+ between Hewlett Packard and Columbia University for HP-UX 10.00 and
-+ later. Each level of HP-UX includes a freshly built C-Kermit binary in
-+ /bin/kermit, which should work correctly. Binaries built for regular
-+ HP-UX may be used on Trusted HP-UX and vice-versa, except for use as
-+ IKSD because of the different authentication methods.
-+
-+ Note that HP does not update C-Kermit versions for any but its most
-+ current HP-UX release. So, for example, HP-UX 10.20 has C-Kermit 6.0;
-+ 11.00 has C-Kermit 7.0, and 11.22 has 8.0. Of course, as with all
-+ software, older Kermit versions have bugs (such as buffer overflow
-+ vulnerabilities) that are fixed in later versions. From time to time,
-+ HP discovers one of these (long-ago fixed) bugs and issues a security
-+ alert for the older OS's, recommending some draconian measure to avoid
-+ the problem. The true fix in each situation is to install the current
-+ release of C-Kermit.
-+
-+3.2.0. Common Problems
-+
-+ [ [207]Top ] [ [208]Contents ] [ [209]Section Contents ] [ [210]Next ]
-+
-+ Some HP workstations have a BREAK/RESET key. If you hit this key while
-+ C-Kermit is running, it might kill or suspend the C-Kermit process.
-+ C-Kermit arms itself against these signals, but evidently the
-+ BREAK/RESET key is -- at least in some circumstances, on certain HP-UX
-+ versions -- too powerful to be caught. (Some report that the first
-+ BREAK/RESET shows up as SIGINT and is caught by C-Kermit's former
-+ SIGINT handler even when SIGINT is currently set to SIG_IGN; the second
-+ kills Kermit; other reports suggest the first BREAK/RESET sends a
-+ SIGTSTP (suspend signal) to Kermit, which it catches and suspends
-+ itself. You can tell C-Kermit to ignore suspend signals with SET
-+ SUSPEND OFF. You can tell C-Kermit to ignore SIGINT with SET COMMAND
-+ INTERRUPTION OFF. It is not known whether these commands also grant
-+ immunity to the BREAK/RESET key (one report states that with SET
-+ SUSPEND OFF, the BREAK/RESET key is ignored the first four times, but
-+ kills Kermit the 5th time). In any case:
-+
-+ 1. If this key is mapped to SIGINT or SIGTSTP, C-Kermit catches or
-+ ignores it, depending on which mode (CONNECT, command, etc) Kermit
-+ is in.
-+ 2. If it causes HP-UX to kill C-Kermit, there is nothing C-Kermit can
-+ do to prevent it.
-+
-+ When HP-UX is on the remote end of the connection, it is essential that
-+ HP-UX C-Kermit be configured for Xon/Xoff flow control (this is the
-+ default, but in case you change it and then experience file-transfer
-+ failures, this is a likely reason).
-+
-+3.2.1. Building C-Kermit on HP-UX
-+
-+ [ [211]Top ] [ [212]Contents ] [ [213]Section Contents ] [ [214]Next ]
-+ [ [215]Previous ]
-+
-+ This section applies mainly to old (pre-10.20) HP-UX version on old,
-+ slow, and/or memory-constrained hardware.
-+
-+ During the C-Kermit 6.0 Beta cycle, something happened to ckcpro.w (or,
-+ more precisely, the ckcpro.c file that is generated from it) which
-+ causes HP optimizing compilers under HP-UX versions 7.0 and 8.0
-+ (apparently on all platforms) as well as under HP-UX 9.0 on Motorola
-+ platforms only, to blow up. In versions 7.0 and 8.0 the problem has
-+ spread to other modules.
-+
-+ The symptoms vary from the system grinding to a halt, to the compiler
-+ crashing, to the compilation of the ckcpro.c module taking very long
-+ periods of time, like 9 hours. This problem is handled by compiling the
-+ modules that tickle it without optimization; the new C-Kermit makefile
-+ takes care of this, and shows how to do it in case the same thing
-+ begins happening with other modules.
-+
-+ On HP-UX 9.0, a kernel parameter, maxdsiz (maximum process data segment
-+ size), seems to be important. On Motorola systems, it is 16MB by
-+ default, whereas on RISC systems the default is much bigger. Increasing
-+ maxdsiz to about 80MB seems to make the problem go away, but only if
-+ the system also has a lot of physical memory -- otherwise it swaps
-+ itself to death.
-+
-+ The optimizing compiler might complain about "some optimizations
-+ skipped" on certain modules, due to lack of space available to the
-+ optimizer. You can increase the space (the incantation depends on the
-+ particular compiler version -- see the [216]makefile), but doing so
-+ tends to make the compilations take a much longer time. For example,
-+ the "hpux0100o+" makefile target adds the "+Onolimit" compiler flag,
-+ and about an hour to the compile time on an HP-9000/730. But it *does*
-+ produce an executable that is about 10K smaller :-)
-+
-+ In the makefile, all HP-UX entries automatically skip optimization of
-+ problematic modules.
-+
-+3.2.2. File Transfer
-+
-+ [ [217]Top ] [ [218]Contents ] [ [219]Section Contents ] [ [220]Next ]
-+ [ [221]Previous ]
-+
-+ Telnet connections into HP-UX versions up to and including 11.11 (and
-+ possibly 11.20) tend not to lend themselves to file transfer due to
-+ limitations, restrictions, and/or bugs in the HP-UX Telnet server
-+ and/or pseudoterminal (pty) driver.
-+
-+ In C-Kermit 6.0 (1996) an unexpected slowness was noted when
-+ transferring files over local Ethernet connections when an HP-UX system
-+ (9.05 or 10.00) was on the remote end. The following experiment was
-+ conducted to determine the cause. C-Kermit 6.0 was used; the situation
-+ is slightly better using C-Kermit 7.0's streaming feature and HP-UX
-+ 10.20 on the far end.
-+
-+ The systems were HP-UX 10.00 (on 715/33) and SunOS 4.1.3 (on Sparc-20),
-+ both on the same local 10Mbps Ethernet, packet length 4096, parity
-+ none, control prefixing "cautious", using only local disks on each
-+ machine -- no NFS. In the C-Kermit 6.0 (ACK/NAK) case, the window size
-+ was 20; in the streaming case there is no window size (i.e. it is
-+ infinite). The test file was C-Kermit executable, transferred in binary
-+ mode. Conditions were relatively poor: the Sun and the local net
-+ heavily loaded; the HP system is old, slow, and memory-constrained.
-+
-+ C-Kermit 6.0... C-Kermit 7.0...
-+ Local Remote ACK/NAK........ Streaming......
-+ Client Server Send Receive Send Receive
-+ Sun HP 36 18 64 18
-+ HP HP 25 15 37 16
-+ HP Sun 77 83 118 92
-+ Sun Sun 60 60 153 158
-+
-+ So whenever HP is the remote we have poor performance. Why?
-+
-+ * Changing file display to CRT has no effect (so it's not the curses
-+ library on the client side).
-+ * Changing TCP RECV-BUFFER or SEND-BUFFER has little effect.
-+ * Telling the client to make a binary-mode connection (SET TELNET
-+ BINARY REQUESTED, which successfully negotiates a binary
-+ connection) has no effect on throughput.
-+
-+ BUT... If I start HP-UX C-Kermit as a TCP service:
-+
-+ set host * 3000
-+ server
-+
-+ and then from the client "set host xxx 3000", I get:
-+
-+ C-Kermit 6.0... C-Kermit 7.0...
-+ Local Remote ACK/NAK........ Streaming......
-+ Client Server Send Receive Send Receive
-+ Sun HP 77 67 106 139
-+ HP HP 50 50 64 62
-+ HP Sun 57 85 155 105
-+ Sun Sun 57 50 321 314
-+
-+ Therefore the HP-UX telnet server or pty driver seems to be adding more
-+ overhead than the SunOS one, and most others. When going through this
-+ type of connection (a remote telnet server) there is little Kermit can
-+ do improve matters, since the telnet server and pty driver are between
-+ the two Kermits, and neither Kermit program can have any influence over
-+ them (except putting the Telnet connection in binary mode, but that
-+ doesn't help).
-+
-+ (The numbers for the HP-HP transfers are lower than the others since
-+ both Kermit processes are running on the same slow 33MHz CPU.)
-+
-+ Matters seem to have deteriorated in HP-UX 11. Now file transfers over
-+ Telnet connections fail completely, rather than just being slow. In the
-+ following trial, a Telnet connection was made from Kermit 95 to HP-UX
-+ 11.11 on an HP-9000/785/B2000 over local 10Mbps Ethernet running
-+ C-Kermit 8.00 in server mode (under the HP-UX Telnet server):
-+
-+ Text........ Binary......
-+ Stream Pktlen GET SEND GET SEND
-+ On 4000 Fail Fail Fail Fail
-+ Off 4000 Fail Fail Fail Fail
-+ Off 2000 OK Fail OK Fail
-+ On 2000 OK Fail OK Fail
-+ On 3000 Fail Fail Fail Fail
-+ On 2500 Fail Fail Fail Fail
-+ On 2047 OK Fail OK Fail
-+ On 2045 OK Fail OK Fail
-+ Off 500 OK OK OK OK
-+ On 500 OK Fail OK Fail
-+ On 240 OK Fail OK Fail
-+
-+ As you can see, downloads are problematic unless the receiver's Kermit
-+ packet length is 2045 or less, but uploads work only with streaming
-+ disabled and the packet length restricted to 500. To force file
-+ transfers to work on this connection, the desktop Kermit must be told
-+ to:
-+
-+ set streaming off
-+ set receive packet-length 2000
-+ set send packet-length 500
-+
-+ However, if a connection is made between the same two programs on the
-+ same two computers over the same network, but this time a direct
-+ socket-to-socket connection bypassing the HP-UX Telnet server and pty
-+ driver (tell HP-UX C-Kermit to "set host /server * 3000 /raw"; tell
-+ desktop client program to "set host blah 3000 /raw"), everything works
-+ perfectly with the default Kermit settings (streaming, 4K packets,
-+ liberal control-character unprefixing, 8-bit transparency, etc):
-+
-+ Text........ Binary......
-+ Stream Pktlen GET SEND GET SEND
-+ On 4000 OK OK OK OK
-+
-+ And in this case, transfer rates were approximately 900,000 cps. To
-+ verify that the behavior reported here is not caused by the new Kermit
-+ release, the same experiment was performed on a Telnet connection from
-+ the same PC over the same network to the old 715/33 running HP-UX 10.20
-+ and C-Kermit 8.00. Text and binary uploads and downloads worked
-+ perfectly (albeit slowly) with all the default settings -- streaming,
-+ 4K packets, etc.
-+
-+3.2.3. Dialing Out and UUCP Lockfiles in HP-UX
-+
-+ [ [222]Top ] [ [223]Contents ] [ [224]Section Contents ] [ [225]Next ]
-+ [ [226]Previous ]
-+
-+ HP workstations do not come with dialout devices configured; you have
-+ to do it yourself (as root). First look in /dev to see what's there;
-+ for example in HP-UX 10.00 or later:
-+
-+ ls -l /dev/cua*
-+ ls -l /dev/tty*
-+
-+ If you find a tty0p0 device but no cua0p0, you'll need to creat one if
-+ you want to dial out; the tty0p0 does not work for dialing out. It's
-+ easy: start SAM; in the main Sam window, double-click on Peripheral
-+ Device, then in the Peripheral Devices window, double-click on
-+ Terminals and Modems. In the Terminals and Modems dialog, click on
-+ Actions, then choose "Add modem" and fill in the blanks. For example:
-+ Port number 0, speed 57600 (higher speeds tend not to work reliably),
-+ "Use device for calling out", do NOT "Receive incoming calls" (unless
-+ you know what you are doing), leave "CCITT modem" unchecked unless you
-+ really have one, and do select "Use hardware flow control (RTS/CTS)".
-+ Then click OK. This creates cua0p0 as well as cul0p0 and ttyd0p0
-+
-+ If the following sequence:
-+
-+ set line /dev/cua0p0 ; or other device
-+ set speed 115200 ; or other normal speed
-+
-+ produces the message "?Unsupported line speed". This means either that
-+ the port is not configured for dialout (go into SAM as described above
-+ and make sure "Use device for calling out" is selected), or else that
-+ speed you have given (such as 460800) is supported by the operating
-+ system but not by the physical device (in which case, use a lower speed
-+ like 57600).
-+
-+ In HP-UX 9.0, serial device names began to change. The older names
-+ looked like "/dev/cua00", "/dev/tty01", etc (sometimes with only one
-+ digit). The newer names have two digits with the letter "p" in between.
-+ HP-UX 8.xx and earlier have the older form, HP-UX 10.00 and later have
-+ the newer form. HP-UX 9.xx has the newer form on Series 800 machines,
-+ and the older form on other hardware models. The situation is
-+ summarized in the following table (the Convio 10.0 column applies to
-+ HP-UX 10 and 11).
-+
-+ Converged HP-UX Serial I/O Filenames : TTY Mux Naming
-+ ---------------------------------------------------------------------
-+ General meaning Old Form S800 9.0 Convio 10.0
-+ ---------------------------------------------------------------------
-+ tty* hardwired ports tty<YY> tty<X>p<Y> tty<D>p<p>
-+ diag:mux<X> diag:mux<D>
-+ ---------------------------------------------------------------------
-+ ttyd* dial-in modems ttyd<YY> ttyd<X>p<Y> ttyd<D>p<p>
-+ diag:ttyd<X>p<Y> diag:ttyd<D>p<p>
-+ ---------------------------------------------------------------------
-+ cua* auto-dial out cua<YY> cua<X>p<Y> cua<D>p<p>
-+ diag:cua<X>p<Y>
-+ ---------------------------------------------------------------------
-+ cul* dial-out cul<YY> cul<X>p<Y> cul<D>p<p>
-+ diag:cul<X>p<Y>
-+ ---------------------------------------------------------------------
-+ <X>= LU (Logical Unit) <D>= Devspec (decimal card instance)
-+ <Y> or <YY> = Port <p>= Port
-+
-+ For dialing out, you should use the cua or cul devices. When C-Kermit's
-+ CARRIER setting is AUTO or ON, C-Kermit should pop back to its prompt
-+ automatically if the carrier signal drops, e.g. when you log out from
-+ the remote computer or service. If you use the tty<D>p<d> (e.g. tty0p0)
-+ device, the carrier signal should be ignored. The tty<D>p<d> device
-+ should be used for direct connections where the carrier signal does not
-+ follow RS-232 conventions (use the cul device for hardwired connections
-+ through a true null modem). Do not use the ttyd<D>p<d> device for
-+ dialing out.
-+
-+ Kermit's access to serial devices is controlled by "UUCP lockfiles",
-+ which are intended to prevent different users using different software
-+ programs (Kermit, cu, etc, and UUCP itself) from accessing the same
-+ serial device at the same time. When a device is in use by a particular
-+ user, a file with a special name is created in:
-+
-+ /var/spool/locks (HP-UX 10.00 and later)
-+ /usr/spool/uucp (HP-UX 9.xx and earlier)
-+
-+ The file's name indicates the device that is in use, and its contents
-+ indicates the process ID (pid) of the process that is using the device.
-+ Since serial devices and the locks directory are not both publicly
-+ readable and writable, Kermit and other communication software must be
-+ installed setuid to the owner (bin) of the serial device and setgid to
-+ the group (daemon) of the /var/spool/locks directory. Kermit's setuid
-+ and setgid privileges are enabled only when opening the device and
-+ accessing the lockfiles.
-+
-+ Let's say "unit" means a string of decimal digits (the interface
-+ instance number) followed (in HP-UX 10.00 and later) by the letter "p"
-+ (lowercase), followed by another string of decimal digits (the port
-+ number on the interface), e.g.:
-+
-+ "0p0", "0p1", "1p0", etc (HP-UX 10.00 and later)
-+ "0p0", "0p1", "1p0", etc (HP-UX 9.xx on Series 800)
-+ "00", "01", "10", "0", etc (HP-UX 9.xx not on Series 800)
-+ "00", "01", "10", "0", etc (HP-UX 8.xx and earlier)
-+
-+ Then a normal serial device (driver) name consists of a prefix ("tty",
-+ "ttyd", "cua", "cul", or possibly "cuad" or "culd") followed by a unit,
-+ e.g. "cua0p0". Kermit's treatment of UUCP lockfiles is as close as
-+ possible to that of the HP-UX "cu" program. Here is a table of the
-+ lockfiles that Kermit creates for unit 0p0:
-+
-+ Selection Lockfile 1 Lockfile 2
-+ /dev/tty0p0 LCK..tty0p0 (none)
-+* /dev/ttyd0p0 LCK..ttyd0p0 (none)
-+ /dev/cua0p0 LCK..cua0p0 LCK..ttyd0p0
-+ /dev/cul0p0 LCK..cul0p0 LCK..ttyd0p0
-+ /dev/cuad0p0 LCK..cuad0p0 LCK..ttyd0p0
-+ /dev/culd0p0 LCK..culd0p0 LCK..ttyd0p0
-+ <other> LCK..<other> (none)
-+
-+ (* = Dialin device, should not be used.)
-+
-+ In other words, if the device name begins with "cu", a second lockfile
-+ for the "ttyd" device, same unit, is created, which should prevent
-+ dialin access on that device.
-+
-+ The <other> case allows for symbolic links, etc, but of course it is
-+ not foolproof since we have no way of telling which device is really
-+ being used.
-+
-+ When C-Kermit tries to open a dialout device whose name ends with a
-+ "unit", it searches the lockfile directory for all possible names for
-+ the same unit. For example, if user selects /dev/cul2p3, Kermit looks
-+ for lockfiles named:
-+
-+ LCK..tty2p3
-+ LCK..ttyd2p3
-+ LCK..cua2p3
-+ LCK..cul2p3
-+ LCK..cuad2p3
-+ LCK..culd2p3
-+
-+ If any of these files are found, Kermit opens them to find out the ID
-+ (pid) of the process that created them; if the pid is still valid, the
-+ process is still active, and so the SET LINE command fails and the user
-+ is informed of the pid so s/he can use "ps" to find out who is using
-+ the device.
-+
-+ If the pid is not valid, the file is deleted. If all such files (i.e.
-+ with same "unit" designation) are successfully removed, then the SET
-+ LINE command succeeds; up to six messages are printed telling the user
-+ which "stale lockfiles" are being removed.
-+
-+ When the "set line" command succeeds in HP-UX 10.00 and later, C-Kermit
-+ also creates a Unix System V R4 "advisory lock" as a further precaution
-+ (but not guarantee) against any other process obtaining access to the
-+ device while you are using it.
-+
-+ If the selected device was in use by "cu", Kermit can't open it,
-+ because "cu" has changed its ownership, so we never get as far as
-+ looking at the lockfiles. In the normal case, we can't even look at the
-+ device to see who the owner is because it is visible only to its
-+ (present) owner. In this case, Kermit says (for example):
-+
-+ /dev/cua0p0: Permission denied
-+
-+ When Kermit releases a device it has successfully opened, it removes
-+ all the lockfiles that it created. This also happens whenever Kermit
-+ exits "under its own power".
-+
-+ If Kermit is killed with a device open, the lockfile(s) are left
-+ behind. The next Kermit program that tries to assign the device, under
-+ any of its various names, will automatically clean up the stale
-+ lockfiles because the pids they contain are invalid. The behavior of cu
-+ and other communication programs under these conditions should be the
-+ same.
-+
-+ Here, by the way, is a summary of the differences between the HP-UX
-+ port driver types from John Pezzano of HP:
-+
-+ There are three types of device files for each port.
-+
-+ The ttydXXX device file is designed to work as follows:
-+
-+ 1. The process that opens it does NOT get control of the port until CD
-+ is asserted. This was intentional (over 15 years ago) to allow
-+ getty to open the port but not control it until someone called in.
-+ If a process wants to use the direct or callout device files
-+ (ttyXXX and culXXX respectively), they will then get control and
-+ getty would be blocked. This eliminated the need to use uugetty
-+ (and its inherent problems with lock files) for modems. You can see
-+ this demonstrated by the fact that "ps -ef" shows a ? in the tty
-+ column for the getty process as getty does not have the port yet.
-+ 2. Once CD is asserted, the port is controlled by getty (or the
-+ process handling an incoming call) if there was no process using
-+ the port. The ? in the "ps" command now shows the port. At this
-+ point, the port accepts data.
-+
-+ Therefore you should use either the callout culXXX device file
-+ (immediate control but no data until CD is asserted) or the direct
-+ device file ttyXXX which gives immediate control and immediate data
-+ and which ignores by default modem control signals.
-+
-+ The ttydXXX device should be used only for callin and my
-+ recommendation is to use it only for getty and uugetty.
-+
-+3.2.4 Notes on Specific HP-UX Releases
-+
-+ SECTION CONTENTS
-+
-+ 3.2.4.1. [227]HP-UX 11
-+ 3.2.4.2. [228]HP-UX 10
-+ 3.2.4.3. [229]HP-UX 9
-+ 3.2.4.4. [230]HP-UX 8
-+ 3.2.4.5. [231]HP-UX 7 and Earlier
-+
-+3.2.4.1. HP-UX 11
-+
-+ [ [232]Top ] [ [233]Contents ] [ [234]Section Contents ] [ [235]Next ]
-+
-+ As noted in [236]Section 3.2.2, the HP-UX 11 Telnet server and/or
-+ pseudoterminal driver are a serious impediment to file transfer over
-+ Telnet connections into HP-UX. If you have a Telnet connection into
-+ HP-UX 11, tell your desktop Kermit program to:
-+
-+ set streaming off
-+ set receive packet-length 2000
-+ set send packet-length 500
-+
-+ File transfer speeds over connections from HP-UX 11 (dialed or Telnet)
-+ are not impeded whatsoever, and can go at whatever speed is allowed by
-+ the connection and the Kermit partner on the far end.
-+
-+ PA-RISC binaries for HP-UX 10.20 or later should run on any PA-RISC
-+ system, S700 or S800, as long as the binary was not built under a later
-+ HP-UX version than the host operating system. HP-UX 11.00 and 11.11 are
-+ only for PA-RISC systems. HP-UX 11.20 is only for IA64 (subsequent
-+ HP-UX releases will be for both PA-RISC and IA64). To check binary
-+ compatibility, the following C-Kermit 8.0 binaries were run
-+ successfully on an HP-9000/785 with HP-UX 11.11:
-+
-+ * Model 7xx HP-UX 10.20
-+ * Model 8xx HP-UX 10.20
-+ * Model 7xx HP-UX 11.00
-+ * Model 8xx HP-UX 11.00
-+ * Model 7xx HP-UX 11.11
-+ * Model 8xx HP-UX 11.11
-+
-+ Binaries built under some of the earlier HP-UX releases, such as 9.05,
-+ might also work, but only if built for the same hardware family (e.g.
-+ s700).
-+
-+3.2.4.2. HP-UX 10
-+
-+ [ [237]Top ] [ [238]Contents ] [ [239]Section Contents ] [ [240]Next ]
-+ [ [241]Previous ]
-+
-+ Beginning in HP-UX 10.10, libcurses is linked to libxcurses, the new
-+ UNIX95 (X/Open) version of curses, which has some serious bugs; some
-+ routines, when called, would hang and never return, some would dump
-+ core. Evidently libxcurses contains a select() routine, and whenever
-+ C-Kermit calls what it thinks is the regular (sockets) select(), it
-+ gets the curses one, causing a segmentation fault. There is a patch for
-+ this from HP, PHCO_8086, "s700_800 10.10 libcurses patch", "shared lib
-+ curses program hangs on 10.10", "10.10 enhanced X/Open curses core
-+ dumps due to using wrong select call", 96/08/02 (you can tell if the
-+ patch is installed with "what /usr/lib/libxcurses.1"; the unpatched
-+ version is 76.20, the patched one is 76.20.1.2). It has been verified
-+ that C-Kermit works OK with the patched library, but results are not
-+ definite for HP-UX 10.20 or higher.
-+
-+ To ensure that C-Kermit works even on non-patched HP-UX 10.10 systems,
-+ separate makefile entries are provided for HP-UX 10.00/10.01, 10.10,
-+ 10.20, etc, in which the entries for 10.10 and above link with
-+ libHcurses, which is "HP curses", the one that was used in 10.00/10.01.
-+ HP-UX 11.20 and later, however, link with libcurses, as libHcurses
-+ disappeared in 11.20.
-+
-+3.2.4.3. HP-UX 9
-+
-+ [ [242]Top ] [ [243]Contents ] [ [244]Section Contents ] [ [245]Next ]
-+ [ [246]Previous ]
-+
-+ HP-UX 9.00 and 9.01 need patch PHNE_10572 (note: this replaces
-+ PHNE_3641) for hptt0.o, asio0.o, and ttycomn.o in libhp-ux.a. Contact
-+ Hewlett Packard if you need this patch. Without it, the dialout device
-+ (tty) will be hung after first use; subsequent attempts to use will
-+ return an error like "device busy". (There are also equivalent patches
-+ for s700 9.03 9.05 9.07 (PHNE_10573) and s800 9.00 9.04 (PHNE_10416).
-+
-+ When C-Kermit is in server mode, it might have trouble executing REMOTE
-+ HOST commands. This problem happens under HP-UX 9.00 (Motorola) and
-+ HP-UX 9.01 (RISC) IF the C-Shell is the login shell AND with the
-+ C-Shell Revision 70.15. Best thing is to install HP's Patch PHCO_4919
-+ for Series 300/400 and PHCO_5015 for the Series 700/800. PHCO_5015 is
-+ called "s700_800 9.X cumulative csh(1) patch with memory leak fix"
-+ which works for HP-UX 9.00, 9.01, 9.03, 9.04, 9.05 and 9.07. At least
-+ you need C-Shell Revision 72.12!
-+
-+ C-Kermit works fine -- including its curses-based file-transfer display
-+ -- on the console terminal, in a remote session (e.g. when logged in to
-+ the HP 9000 on a terminal port or when telnetted or rlogin'd), and in
-+ an HP-VUE hpterm window or an xterm window.
-+
-+3.2.4.4. HP-UX 8
-+
-+ [ [247]Top ] [ [248]Contents ] [ [249]Section Contents ] [ [250]Next ]
-+ [ [251]Previous ]
-+
-+ To make C-Kermit work on HP-UX 8.05 on a model 720, obtain and install
-+ HP-UX patch PHNE_0899. This patch deals with a lot of driver issues,
-+ particularly related to communication at higher speeds.
-+
-+ One user reports:
-+
-+ On HP-UX 8 DON'T install 'tty patch' PHKL_4656, install PHKL_3047
-+ instead! Yesterday I tried this latest tty patch PHKL_4656 and had
-+ terrible problems. This patch should fix RTS/CTS problems. With text
-+ transver all looks nice. But when I switched over to binary files
-+ the serial interface returned only rubish to C-Kermit. All sorts of
-+ protocol, CRC and packed errors I had. After several tests and after
-+ uninstalling that patch, all transvers worked fine. MB's of data
-+ without any errors. So keep your fingers away from that patch. If
-+ anybody needs the PHKL_3047 patch I have it here. It is no longer
-+ availabel from HP's patch base.
-+
-+3.2.4.5. HP-UX 7 and Earlier
-+
-+ [ [252]Top ] [ [253]Contents ] [ [254]Section Contents ] [
-+ [255]Previous ]
-+
-+ When transferring files into HP-UX 5 or 6 over a Telnet connection, you
-+ must not use streaming, and you must not use a packet length greater
-+ than 512. However, you can use streaming and longer packets when
-+ sending files from HP-UX on a Telnet connection. In C-Kermit 8.0, the
-+ default receive packet length for HP-UX 5 and 6 was changed to 500 (but
-+ you can still increase it with SET RECEIVE PACKET-LENGTH if you wish,
-+ e.g. for non-Telnet connections). Disable streaming with SET STREAMING
-+ OFF.
-+
-+ The HP-UX 5.00 version of C-Kermit does not include the fullscreen
-+ file-transfer because of problems with the curses library.
-+
-+ If HP-UX 5.21 with Wollongong TCP/IP is on the remote end of a Telnet
-+ connection, streaming transfers to HP-UX invariably fail. Workaround:
-+ SET STREAMING OFF. Packets longer than about 1000 should not be used.
-+ Transfers from these systems, however, can use streaming and/or longer
-+ packets.
-+
-+ Reportedly, "[there is] a bug in C-Kermit using HP-UX version 5.21 on
-+ the HP-9000 series 500 computers. It only occurs when the controlling
-+ terminal is using an HP-27140 six-port modem mux. The problem is not
-+ present if the controlling terminal is logged into an HP-27130
-+ eight-port mux. The symptom is that just after dialing successfully and
-+ connecting Kermit locks up and the port is unusable until both forks of
-+ Kermit and the login shell are killed." (This report predates C-Kermit
-+ 6.0 and might no longer apply.)
-+
-+3.2.5. HP-UX and X.25
-+
-+ [ [256]Top ] [ [257]Contents ] [ [258]Section Contents ] [
-+ [259]Previous ]
-+
-+ Although C-Kermit presently does not include built-in support for HP-UX
-+ X.25 (as it does for the Sun and IBM X.25 products), it can still be
-+ used to make X.25 connections as follows: start Kermit and then telnet
-+ to localhost. After logging back in, start padem as you would normally
-+ do to connect over X.25. Padem acts as a pipe between Kermit and X.25.
-+ In C-Kermit 7.0, you might also be able to avoid the "telnet localhost"
-+ step by using:
-+
-+ C-Kermit> pty padem address
-+
-+ This works if padem uses standard i/o (who knows?).
-+
-+3.3. C-KERMIT AND LINUX
-+
-+ [ [260]Top ] [ [261]Contents ] [ [262]Section Contents ] [ [263]Next ]
-+ [ [264]Previous ]
-+
-+ SECTION CONTENTS
-+
-+ 3.3.1. [265]Problems Building C-Kermit for Linux
-+ 3.3.2. [266]Problems with Serial Devices in Linux
-+ 3.3.3. [267]Terminal Emulation in Linux
-+ 3.3.4. [268]Dates and Times
-+ 3.3.5. [269]Startup Errors
-+ 3.3.6. [270]The Fullscreen File Transfer Display
-+
-+ (August 2010) Reportedly C-Kermit packages for certain Linux
-+ distributions such as Centos and Ubuntu have certain features
-+ disabled, for example the SSH command, SET HOST PTY /SSH, and
-+ perhaps anything else to do with SSH and/or pseudoterminals and who
-+ knows what else. If you download the regular package ("tarball")
-+ from the Kermit Project and build from it ("make linux"), everything
-+ is fine.
-+
-+ C-Kermit in Ubuntu 10.04 and 9.10 was reported slow to start because
-+ it was trying to resolve the IP address 255.255.255.255. Later, also
-+ in recent Debian versions. The following is seen in the strace:
-+
-+write(3, "RESOLVE-ADDRESS 255.255.255.255\n", 32)
-+
-+ This is not Kermit Project code. Turns out to be something in
-+ glibc's resolver, and can be fixed by changing /etc/nsswitch.conf,
-+ but it might break other software, such as [271]Avahi or anything
-+ (such as Gnome, Java, or Cups) that depends on it. I'm not sure
-+ where it happens; I don't think Kermit tries to get its IP address
-+ at startup time, only when it's needed or asked for, e.g. when
-+ making a connection or evaluating \v(ipaddress).
-+
-+ REFERENCES
-+
-+ For further information, read the [272]comp.os.linux.misc,
-+ [273]comp.os.linux.answers, and other Linux-oriented newsgroups, and
-+ see:
-+
-+ The Linux Document Project (LDP)
-+ [274]http://www.tldp.org/
-+
-+ The Linux FAQ
-+ [275]http://www.tldp.org/FAQ/Linux-FAQ.html
-+
-+ The Linux HOWTOs (especially the Serial HOWTO)
-+
-+ [276]http://www.tldp.org/HOWTO/Serial-HOWTO.html
-+
-+ [277]http://tldp.org/HOWTO/Modem-HOWTO.html
-+
-+ [278]ftp://sunsite.unc.edu/pub/Linux/docs/HOWTO
-+
-+ [279]ftp://tsx-11.mit.edu/pub/linux/docs/HOWTO
-+
-+ [280]http://www.tldp.org/HOWTO/
-+
-+ [281]http://www.tldp.org/hmirrors.html
-+
-+ Linux Vendor Tech Support Pages:
-+
-+ [282]http://www.redhat.com/apps/support/
-+
-+ [283]http://www.debian.org/support
-+
-+ [284]http://www.slackware.com/support/
-+
-+ [285]http://www.caldera.com/support/
-+
-+ [286]SUSE Linux Support
-+
-+ [287]http://www.mandrake.com/support/
-+
-+ [288]http://www.turbolinux.com/support/
-+
-+ Linux Winmodem Support
-+ [289]http://www.linmodems.org/
-+
-+ Also see general comments on PC-based Unixes in [290]Section 3.0.
-+
-+ What Linux version is it? -- "uname -a" supplies only kernel
-+ information, but these days it's the distribution that matters: Red Hat
-+ 7.3, Debian 2.2, Slackware 8.0, etc. Unfortunately there's no
-+ consistent way to get the distribution version. Usually it's in a
-+ distribution-specific file:
-+
-+ Red Hat: /etc/issue or /etc/redhat-release
-+ Debian: /etc/debian_version
-+ Slackware: /etc/slackware-version (at least in later versions)
-+
-+ Did you know: DECnet is available for Linux? See:
-+
-+ [291]http://linux.dreamtime.org/decnet/
-+
-+ (But there is no support for it in C-Kermit -- anybody interested in
-+ adding it, please [292]let me know).
-+
-+ Before proceeding, let's handle the some of the most frequently asked
-+ question in the Linux newsgroups:
-+
-+ 1. Neither C-Kermit nor any other Linux application can use Winmodems,
-+ except in the [293]rare cases where Linux drivers have been written
-+ for them. See [294]Section 3.0.2 for details.
-+ 2. "Why does it take such a long time to make a telnet connection to
-+ (or from) my Linux PC?" (this applies to C-Kermit and to regular
-+ Telnet). Most telnet servers these days perform reverse DNS lookups
-+ on the client (for security and/or logging reasons). If the Telnet
-+ client's address cannot be found by the server's local DNS server,
-+ the DNS request goes out to the Internet at large, and this can
-+ take quite some time. The solution to this problem is to make sure
-+ that both client and host are registered in DNS, and that the
-+ registrations are exported. C-Kermit itself performs reverse DNS
-+ lookups unless you tell it not to; this is to allow C-Kermit to let
-+ you know which host it is actually connected to in case you have
-+ made a connection to a host pool (multihomed host). You can disable
-+ C-Kermit's reverse DNS lookup with SET TCP REVERSE-DNS-LOOKUP OFF.
-+ 3. (Any question that has the word "Telnet" in it...) The knee-jerk
-+ reaction is "don't use Telnet, use SSH!" There's nothing wrong with
-+ Telnet. In fact it's far superior to SSH as a protocol in terms of
-+ features and extensibility, not to mention platform neutrality. The
-+ issue lurking behind the knee-jerk reaction is security. SSH is
-+ thought to be secure, whereas Telnet is thought to be insecure.
-+ This is true for clear-text Telnet (because passwords travel in the
-+ clear across the network), but apparently few people realize that
-+ [295]secure Telnet clients and servers have been available for
-+ years, and these are more secure than SSH (for reasons explained
-+ [296]HERE).
-+ 4. (Any question that has the word "FTP" in it...) The knee-jerk
-+ reaction being "Don't use FTP, use SCP!" (or SFTP). Same answer as
-+ above, but moreso. SCP and SFTP are not only not platform neutral,
-+ they're diversity-hostile. They transfer files only in binary mode,
-+ which mangles text files across different platforms, to the same
-+ degree the platform's text-file record format and character set
-+ differ. An extreme example would be an Variable-Block format EBCDIC
-+ text file on an IBM mainframe, binary transfer of which to Unix
-+ would do you little good indeed. FTP was designed with diversity in
-+ mind and secure versions are available.
-+
-+3.3.1. Problems Building C-Kermit for Linux
-+
-+ [ [297]Top ] [ [298]Contents ] [ [299]Section Contents ] [ [300]Next ]
-+
-+ Modern Linux distributions like Red Hat give you a choice at
-+ installation whether to include "developer tools". Obviously, you can't
-+ build C-Kermit or any other C program from source code if you have not
-+ installed the developer tools. But to confuse matters, you might also
-+ have to choose (separately) to install the "curses" or "ncurses"
-+ terminal control library; thus it is possible to install the C compiler
-+ and linker, but omit the (n)curses library and headers. If curses is
-+ not installed, you will not be able to build a version of C-Kermit that
-+ supports the fullscreen file-transfer display, in which case you'll
-+ need to use the "linuxnc" makefile target (nc = No Curses) or else
-+ install ncurses before building.
-+
-+ There are all sorts of confusing issues caused by the many and varied
-+ Linux distributions. Some of the worst involve the curses library and
-+ header files: where are they, what are they called, which ones are they
-+ really? Other vexing questions involve libc5 vs libc6 vs glibc vs
-+ glibc2 (C libraries), gcc vs egcs vs lcc (compilers), plus using or
-+ avoiding features that were added in a certain version of Linux or a
-+ library or a distribution, and are not available in others. As of
-+ C-Kermit 8.0, these questions should be resolved by the "linux"
-+ makefile target itself, which does a bit of looking around to see
-+ what's what, and then sets the appropriate CFLAGS.
-+
-+3.3.2. Problems with Serial Devices in Linux
-+
-+ [ [301]Top ] [ [302]Contents ] [ [303]Section Contents ] [ [304]Next ]
-+ [ [305]Previous ]
-+
-+ Also see: "man setserial", "man irqtune".
-+ And: [306]Sections 3.0, [307]6, [308]7, and [309]8 of this document.
-+
-+ NOTE: Red Hat Linux 7.2 and later include a new API that allows
-+ serial-port arbitration by non-setuid/gid programs. This API has not
-+ yet been added to C-Kermit. If C-Kermit is to be used for dialing
-+ out on Red Hat 7.2 or later, it must still be installed as described
-+ in in Sections [310]10 and [311]11 of the [312]Installation
-+ Instructions.
-+
-+ Don't expect it to be easy. Queries like the following are posted to
-+ the Linux newsgroups almost daily:
-+
-+ Problem of a major kind with my Compaq Presario 1805 in the sense
-+ that the pnpdump doesn't find the modem and the configuration tells
-+ me that the modem is busy when I set everything by hand!
-+
-+ I have <some recent SuSE distribution>, kernel 2.0.35. Using the
-+ Compaq tells me that the modem (which is internal) is on COM2, with
-+ the usual IRQ and port numbers. Running various Windows diagnostics
-+ show me AT-style commands exchanged so I have no reason to beleive
-+ that it is a Winmodem. Also, the diagnostics under Win98 tell me
-+ that I am talking to an NS 16550AN.
-+
-+ [Editor's note: This does not necessarily mean it isn't a Winmodem.]
-+
-+ Under Linux, no joy trying to talk to the modem on /dev/cua1 whether
-+ via minicom, kppp, or chat; kppp at least tells me that tcgetattr()
-+ failed.
-+
-+ Usage of setserial:
-+
-+ setserial /dev/cua1 port 0x2F8 irq 3 autoconfig
-+ setserial -g /dev/cua1
-+
-+ tells me that the uart is 'unknown'. I have tried setting the UART
-+ manullay via. setserial to 16550A, 16550, and the other one (8550?)
-+ (I didn't try 16540). None of these manual settings resulted in any
-+ success.
-+
-+ A look at past articles leads me to investigate PNP issues by
-+ calling pnpdump but pnpdump returns "no boards found". I have looked
-+ around on my BIOS (Phoenix) and there is not much evidence of it
-+ being PNP aware. However for what it calls "Serial port A", it
-+ offers a choice of Auto, Disabled or Manual settings (currently set
-+ to Auto), but using the BIOS interface I tried to change to 'manual'
-+ and saw the default settings offered to be were 0x3F8 and IRQ 4
-+ (COM1). The BIOS menus did not give me any chance to configure COM2
-+ or any "modem". I ended up not saving any BIOS changes in the course
-+ of my investigations.
-+
-+ You can also find out a fair amount about your PC's hardware
-+ configuration in the text files in /proc, e.g.:
-+
-+ -r--r--r-- 1 root 0 Sep 4 14:00 /proc/devices
-+ -r--r--r-- 1 root 0 Sep 4 14:00 /proc/interrupts
-+ -r--r--r-- 1 root 0 Sep 4 14:00 /proc/ioports
-+ -r--r--r-- 1 root 0 Sep 4 14:00 /proc/pci
-+
-+ From the directory listing they look like empty files, but in fact they
-+ are text files that you "cat":
-+
-+$ cat /proc/pci
-+ Bus 0, device 14, function 0:
-+ Serial controller: US Robotics/3Com 56K FaxModem Model 5610 (rev 1).
-+ IRQ 10.
-+ I/O at 0x1050 [0x1057].
-+
-+$ setserial -g /dev/ttyS4
-+/dev/ttyS4, UART: 16550A, Port: 0x1050, IRQ: 10
-+
-+$ cat /proc/ioports
-+1050-1057 : US Robotics/3Com 56K FaxModem Model 5610
-+ 1050-1057 : serial(auto)
-+
-+$ cat /proc/interrupts
-+ CPU0
-+ 0: 7037515 XT-PIC timer
-+ 1: 2 XT-PIC keyboard
-+ 2: 0 XT-PIC cascade
-+ 4: 0 XT-PIC serial
-+ 8: 1 XT-PIC rtc
-+ 9: 209811 XT-PIC usb-uhci, eth0
-+ 14: 282015 XT-PIC ide0
-+ 15: 6 XT-PIC ide1
-+
-+ Watch out for PCI, PCMCIA and Plug-n-Play devices, Winmodems, and the
-+ like (see cautions in [313]Section 3.0 Linux supports Plug-n-Play
-+ devices to some degree via the isapnp and pnpdump programs; read the
-+ man pages for them. (If you don't have them, look on your installation
-+ CD for isapnptool or download it from sunsite or a sunsite mirror or
-+ other politically correct location du jour).
-+
-+ PCI modems do not use standard COM port addresses. The I/O address and
-+ IRQ are assigned by the BIOS. All you need to do to get one working,
-+ find out the I/O address and interrupt number with (as root) "lspci -v
-+ | more" and then give the resulting address and interrupt number to
-+ setserial.
-+
-+ Even when you have a real serial port, always be wary of interrupt
-+ conflicts and similar PC hardware configuration issues: a PC is not a
-+ real computer like other Unix workstations -- it is generally pieced
-+ together from whatever random components were the best bargain on the
-+ commodity market the week it was built. Once it's assembled and boxed,
-+ not even the manufacturer will remember what it's made of or how it was
-+ put together because they've moved on to a new model. Their job is to
-+ get it (barely) working with Windows; for Linux and other OS's you are
-+ on your own.
-+
-+ "set line /dev/modem" or "set line /dev/ttyS2", etc, results in an
-+ error, "/dev/modem is not a tty". Cause unknown, but obviously a driver
-+ issue, not a Kermit one (Kermit uses "isatty()" to check that the
-+ device is a tty, so it knows it will be able to issue all the
-+ tty-related ioctl's on it, like setting the speed & flow control). Try
-+ a different name (i.e. driver) for the same port, e.g. "set line
-+ /dev/cua2" or whatever.
-+
-+ To find what serial ports were registered at the most recent system
-+ boot, type (as root): "grep tty /var/log/dmesg".
-+
-+ "set modem type xxx" (where xxx is the name of a modem) followed by
-+ "set line /dev/modem" or "set
-+ line /dev/ttyS2", etc, hangs (but can be interrupted with Ctrl-C).
-+ Experimentation shows that if the modem is configured to always assert
-+ carrier (&C0) the same command does not hang. Again, a driver issue.
-+ Use /dev/cua2 (or whatever) instead. (Or not -- hopefully none of these
-+ symptoms occurs in C-Kermit 7.0 or later.)
-+
-+ "set line /dev/cua0" reports "Device is busy", but "set line
-+ /dev/ttyS0" works OK.
-+
-+ In short: If the cua device doesn't work, try the corresponding ttyS
-+ device. If the ttyS device doesn't work, try the corresponding cua
-+ device -- but note that Linux developers do not recommend this, and are
-+ phasing out the cua devices. From /usr/doc/faq/howto/Serial-HOWTO:
-+
-+ 12.4. What's The Real Difference Between the /dev/cuaN And /dev/ttySN
-+ Devices?
-+ The only difference is the way that the devices are opened. The
-+ dialin devices /dev/ttySN are opened in blocking mode, until CD
-+ is asserted (ie someone connects). So, when someone wants to use
-+ the /dev/cuaN device, there is no conflict with a program
-+ watching the /dev/ttySN device (unless someone is connected of
-+ course). The multiple /dev entries, allow operation of the same
-+ physical device with different operating characteristics. It
-+ also allows standard getty programs to coexist with any other
-+ serial program, without the getty being retrofitted with locking
-+ of some sort. It's especially useful since standard Unix kernel
-+ file locking, and UUCP locking are both advisory and not
-+ mandatory.
-+
-+ It was discovered during development of C-Kermit 7.0 that rebuilding
-+ C-Kermit with -DNOCOTFMC (No Close/Open To Force Mode Change) made the
-+ aforementioned problem with /dev/ttyS0 go away. It is not yet clear,
-+ however, what its affect might be on the /dev/cua* devices. As of 19
-+ March 1998, this option has been added to the CFLAGS in the makefile
-+ entries for Linux ("make linux").
-+
-+ Note that the cua device is now "deprecated", and new editions of Linux
-+ will phase (have phased) it out in favor of the ttyS device. See (if
-+ it's still there):
-+
-+ [314]http://linuxwww.db.erau.edu/mail_archives/linux-kernel/Mar_98/1441.html
-+
-+ (no, of course it isn't; you'll have to use your imagination). One user
-+ reported that C-Kermit 7.0, when built with egcs 1.1.2 and run on Linux
-+ 2.2.6 with glibc 2.1 (hardware unknown but probably a PC) dumps core
-+ when given a "set line /dev/ttyS1" command. When rebuilt with gcc, it
-+ works fine.
-+
-+ All versions of Linux seem to have the following deficiency: When a
-+ modem call is hung up and CD drops, Kermit can no longer read the modem
-+ signals; SHOW COMMUNICATIONS says "Modem signals not available". The
-+ TIOCMGET ioctl() returns -1 with errno 5 ("I/O Error").
-+
-+ The Linux version of POSIX tcsendbreak(), which is used by C-Kermit to
-+ send regular (275msec) and long (1.5sec) BREAK signals, appears to
-+ ignore its argument (despite its description in the man page and info
-+ topic), and always sends a regular 275msec BREAK. This has been
-+ observed in Linux versions ranging from Debian 2.1 to Red Hat 7.1.
-+
-+3.3.3. Terminal Emulation in Linux
-+
-+ [ [315]Top ] [ [316]Contents ] [ [317]Section Contents ] [ [318]Next ]
-+ [ [319]Previous ]
-+
-+ C-Kermit is not a terminal emulator. For a brief explanation of why
-+ not, see [320]Section 3.0.5. For a fuller explanation, [321]ClICK HERE.
-+
-+ In Unix, terminal emulation is supplied by the Window in which you run
-+ Kermit: the regular console screen, which provides Linux Console
-+ "emulation" via the "console" termcap entry, or under X-Windows in an
-+ xterm window, which gives VTxxx emulation. An xterm that includes color
-+ ANSI and VT220 emulation is available with Xfree86:
-+
-+ [322]http://dickey.his.com/xterm/xterm.html
-+
-+ Before starting C-Kermit in an xterm window, you might need to tell the
-+ xterm window's shell to "stty sane".
-+
-+ To set up your PC console keyboard to send VT220 key sequences when
-+ using C-Kermit as your communications program in an X terminal window
-+ (if it doesn't already), create a file somewhere (e.g. in /root/)
-+ called .xmodmaprc, containing something like the following:
-+
-+ keycode 77 = KP_F1 ! Num Lock => DEC Gold (PF1)
-+ keycode 112 = KP_F2 ! Keypad / => DEC PF1
-+ keycode 63 = KP_F3 ! Keypad * => DEC PF3
-+ keycode 82 = KP_F4 ! Keypad - => DEC PF4
-+ keycode 111 = Help ! Print Screen => DEC Help
-+ keycode 78 = F16 ! Scroll Lock => DEC Do
-+ keycode 110 = F16 ! Pause => DEC Do
-+ keycode 106 = Find ! Insert => DEC Find
-+ keycode 97 = Insert ! Home => DEC Insert
-+ keycode 99 = 0x1000ff00 ! Page Up => DEC Remove
-+ keycode 107 = Select ! Delete => DEC Select
-+ keycode 103 = Page_Up ! End => DEC Prev Screen
-+ keycode 22 = Delete ! Backspace sends Delete (127)
-+
-+ Then put "xmodmap filename" in your .xinitrc file (in your login
-+ directory), e.g.
-+
-+ xmodmap /root/.xmodmaprc
-+
-+ Of course you can move things around. Use the xev program to find out
-+ key codes.
-+
-+ Console-mode keys are mapped separately using loadkeys, and different
-+ keycodes are used. Find out what they are with showkey.
-+
-+ For a much more complete VT220/320 key mapping for [323]Xfree86 xterm,
-+ [324]CLICK HERE.
-+
-+3.3.4. Dates and Times
-+
-+ [ [325]Top ] [ [326]Contents ] [ [327]Section Contents ] [ [328]Next ]
-+ [ [329]Previous ]
-+
-+ If C-Kermit's date-time (e.g. as shown by its DATE command) differs
-+ from the system's date and time:
-+
-+ a. Make sure the libc to which Kermit is linked is set to GMT or is
-+ not set to any time zone. Watch out for mixed libc5/libc6 systems;
-+ each must be set indpendently.
-+ b. If you have changed your TZ environment variable, make sure it is
-+ exported. This is normally done in /etc/profile or /etc/TZ.
-+
-+3.3.5. Startup Errors
-+
-+ [ [330]Top ] [ [331]Contents ] [ [332]Section Contents ] [ [333]Next ]
-+ [ [334]Previous ]
-+
-+ C-Kermit should work on all versions of Linux current through March
-+ 2003, provided it was built on the same version you have, with the same
-+ libraries and header files (just get the source code and "make linux").
-+ Binaries tend not to travel well from one Linux machine to another, due
-+ to their many differences. There is no guarantee that a particular
-+ C-Kermit binary will not stop working at a later date, since Linux
-+ tends to change out from under its applications. If that happens,
-+ rebuild C-Kermit from source. If something goes wrong with the build
-+ process, look on the [335]C-Kermit website for a newer version. If you
-+ have the latest version, then [336]report the problem to us.
-+
-+ Inability to transfer files in Red Hat 7.2: the typical symptom would
-+ be if you start Kermit and tell it to RECEIVE, it fails right away with
-+ "?/dev/tty: No such device or address" or "?Bad file descriptor". One
-+ report says this is because of csh, and if you change your shell to
-+ bash or other shell, it doesn't happen. Another report cite bugs in Red
-+ Hat 7.2 Telnetd "very seldom (if ever) providing a controlling tty, and
-+ lots of other people piled on saying they have the same problem.") A
-+ third theory is that this happens only when Linux has been installed
-+ without "virtual terminal support".
-+
-+ A search of RedHat's errata pages shows a bug advisory (RHBA-2001-153)
-+ issued 13 November 2001, but updated 6 December, about this same
-+ symptom (but with tcsh and login.) Seems that login was not always
-+ assigning a controlling TTY for the session, which would make most use
-+ of "/dev/tty" somewhat less than useful.
-+
-+ [337]http://www.redhat.com/support/errata/RHBA-2001-153.html
-+
-+ Quoting: "Due to terminal handling problems in /bin/login, tcsh would
-+ not find the controlling terminal correctly, and a shell in single user
-+ mode would exhibit strange terminal input characteristics. This update
-+ fixes both of these problems."
-+
-+ Since the Red Hat 5.1 release (circa August 1998), there have been
-+ numerous reports of prebuilt Linux executables, and particularly the
-+ Kermit RPM for Red Hat Linux, not working; either it won't start at
-+ all, or it gives error messages about "terminal type unknown" and
-+ refuses to initialize its curses support. The following is from the
-+ [338]Kermit newsgroup:
-+
-+ From: rchandra@hal9000.buf.servtech.com
-+ Newsgroups: comp.protocols.kermit.misc
-+ Subject: Red Hat Linux/Intel 5.1 and ncurses: suggestions
-+ Date: 22 Aug 1998 15:54:46 GMT
-+ Organization: Verio New York
-+ Keywords: RedHat RPM 5.1
-+
-+ Several factors can influence whether "linux" is recognized as a
-+ terminal type on many Linux systems.
-+
-+ 1. Your program, or the libraries it linked with (if statically
-+ linked), or the libraries it dynamically links with at runtime, are
-+ looking for an entry in /etc/termcap that isn't there. (not likely,
-+ but possible... I believe but am not certain that this is a very
-+ old practice in very old [n]curses library implementations to use a
-+ single file for all terminal descriptions.)
-+ 2. Your program, or the libraries...are looking for a terminfo file
-+ that just plain isn't there. (also not so likely, since many people
-+ in other recent message threads said that other programs work OK).
-+ 3. Your program, or the libraries...are looking for a terminfo file
-+ that is stored at a pathname that isn't expected by your program,
-+ the libraries--and so on. I forgot if I read this in the errata Web
-+ page or where exactly I discovered this (Netscape install? Acrobat
-+ install?), but it may just be that one libc (let's say for sake of
-+ argument, libc5, but I don't know this to be true) expects your
-+ terminfo to be in /usr/share/terminfo, and the other (let's say
-+ libc6/glibc) expects /usr/lib/terminfo. I remember that the
-+ specific instructions in this bugfix/workaround were to do the
-+ following or equivalent:
-+ cd /usr/lib
-+ ln -s ../share/terminfo ./terminfo
-+
-+ or:
-+ ln -s /usr/share/terminfo /usr/lib/terminfo
-+
-+ So what this says is that the terminfo database/directory structure
-+ can be accessed by either path. When something goes to reference
-+ /usr/lib/terminfo, the symlink redirects it to essentially
-+ /usr/share/terminfo, which is where it really resides on your
-+ system. I personally prefer wherever possible to use relative
-+ symlinks, because they still hold, more often than break, across
-+ mount points, particularly NFS mounts, where the directory structure
-+ may be different on the different systems.
-+
-+ Evidently the terminfo file moved between Red Hat 5.0 and 5.1, but Red
-+ Hat did not include a link to let applications built prior to 5.1 find
-+ it. Users reported that installing the link fixes the problem.
-+
-+3.3.6. The Fullscreen File Transfer Display
-+
-+ [ [339]Top ] [ [340]Contents ] [ [341]Section Contents ] [
-+ [342]Previous ]
-+
-+ Starting with ncurses versions dated 1998-12-12 (about a year before
-+ ncurses 5.0), ncurses sets the terminal for buffered i/o, but
-+ unfortunately is not able to restore it upon exit from curses (via
-+ endwin()). Thus after a file transfer that uses the fullscreen file
-+ transfer display, the terminal no longer echos nor responds immediately
-+ to Tab, ?, and other special command characters. The same thing happens
-+ on other platforms that use ncurses, e.g. FreeBSD. Workarounds:
-+
-+ * Use SET XFER DISPLAY BRIEF, CRT, SERIAL, or NONE instead of
-+ FULLSCREEN; or:
-+ * Rebuild with KFLAGS=-DNONOSETBUF (C-Kermit 8.0)
-+
-+ In Red Hat 7.1, when using C-Kermit in a Gnome terminal window, it was
-+ noticed that when the fullscreen file transfer display exits (via
-+ endwin()), the previous (pre-file-transfer-display) screen is restored.
-+ Thus you can't look at the completed display to see what happened. This
-+ is a evidently a new feature of xterm. I can only speculate that
-+ initscreen() and endwin() must send some kind of special escape
-+ sequences that command xterm to save and restore the screen. To defeat
-+ this effect, tell Linux you have a vt100 or other xterm-compatible
-+ terminal that is not actually an xterm, or else tell Kermit to SET
-+ TRANSFER DISPLAY to something besides FULLSCREEN.
-+
-+3.4. C-KERMIT AND NEXTSTEP
-+
-+ [ [343]Top ] [ [344]Contents ] [ [345]Section Contents ] [ [346]Next ]
-+ [ [347]Previous ]
-+
-+ Run C-Kermit in a Terminal, Stuart, or xterm window, or when logged in
-+ remotely through a serial port or TELNET connection. C-Kermit does not
-+ work correctly when invoked directly from the NeXTSTEP File Viewer or
-+ Dock. This is because the terminal-oriented gtty, stty, & ioctl calls
-+ don't work on the little window that NeXTSTEP pops up for non-NeXTSTEP
-+ applications like Kermit. CBREAK and No-ECHO settings do not take
-+ effect in the command parser -- commands are parsed strictly line at a
-+ time. "set line /dev/cua" works. During CONNECT mode, the console stays
-+ in cooked mode, so characters are not transmitted until carriage return
-+ or linefeed is typed, and you can't escape back. If you want to run
-+ Kermit directly from the File Viewer, then launch it from a shell
-+ script that puts it in the desired kind of window, something like this
-+ (for "Terminal"):
-+
-+ Terminal -Lines 24 -Columns 80 -WinLocX 100 -WinLocY 100 $FONT $FONTSIZE \
-+ -SourceDotLogin -Shell /usr/local/bin/kermit &
-+
-+ C-Kermit does not work correctly on a NeXT with NeXTSTEP 3.0 to which
-+ you have established an rlogin connection, due to a bug in NeXTSTEP
-+ 3.0, which has been reported to NeXT.
-+
-+ The SET CARRIER command has no effect on the NeXT -- this is a
-+ limitation of the NeXTSTEP serial-port device drivers.
-+
-+ Hardware flow control on the NeXT is selected not by "set flow rts/cts"
-+ in Kermit (since NeXTSTEP offers no API for this), but rather, by using
-+ a specially-named driver for the serial device: /dev/cufa instead
-+ /dev/cua; /dev/cufb instead of /dev/cub. This is available only on
-+ 68040-based NeXT models (the situation for Intel NeXTSTEP
-+ implementations is unknown).
-+
-+ NeXT-built 68030 and 68040 models have different kinds of serial
-+ interfaces; the 68030 has a Macintosh-like RS-422 interface, which
-+ lacks RTS and CTS signals; the 68040 has an RS-423 (RS-232 compatible)
-+ interface, which supports the commonly-used modem signals. WARNING: the
-+ connectors look exactly the same, but the pins are used in completely
-+ DIFFERENT ways -- different cables are required for the two kinds of
-+ interfaces.
-+
-+ IF YOU GET LOTS OF RETRANSMISSIONS during file transfer, even when
-+ using a /dev/cuf* device and the modem is correctly configured for
-+ RTS/CTS flow control, YOU PROBABLY HAVE THE WRONG KIND OF CABLE.
-+
-+ On the NeXT, Kermit reportedly (by TimeMon) causes the kernel to use a
-+ lot of CPU time when using a "set line" connection. That's because
-+ there is no DMA channel for the NeXT serial port, so the port must
-+ interrupt the kernel for each character in or out.
-+
-+ One user reported trouble running C-Kermit on a NeXT from within NeXT's
-+ Subprocess class under NeXTstep 3.0, and/or when rlogin'd from one NeXT
-+ to another: Error opening /dev/tty:, congm: No such device or address.
-+ Diagnosis: Bug in NeXTSTEP 3.0, cure unknown.
-+
-+3.5. C-KERMIT AND QNX
-+
-+ [ [348]Top ] [ [349]Contents ] [ [350]Section Contents ] [ [351]Next ]
-+ [ [352]Previous ]
-+
-+ See also: The [353]comp.os.qnx newsgroup.
-+
-+ Support for QNX 4.x was added in C-Kermit 5A(190). This is a
-+ full-function implementation, thoroughly tested on QNX 4.21 and later,
-+ and verified to work in both 16-bit and 32-bit versions. The 16-bit
-+ version was dropped in C-Kermit 7.0 since it can no longer be built
-+ successfully (after stripping most most features, I succeeded in
-+ getting it to compile and link without complaint, but the executable
-+ just beeps when you run it); for 16-bit QNX 4.2x, use C-Kermit 6.0 or
-+ earlier, or else [354]G-Kermit.
-+
-+ The 32-bit version (and the 16-bit version prior to C-Kermit 7.0)
-+ supports most of C-Kermit's advanced features including TCP/IP, high
-+ serial speeds, hardware flow-control, modem-signal awareness, curses
-+ support, etc.
-+
-+ BUG: In C-Kermit 6.0 on QNX 4.22 and earlier, the fullscreen file
-+ transfer display worked fine the first time, but was fractured on
-+ subsequent file transfers. Cause and cure unknown. In C-Kermit 7.0 and
-+ QNX 4.25, this no longer occurs. It is not known if it would occur in
-+ C-Kermit 7.0 or later on earlier QNX versions.
-+
-+ Dialout devices are normally /dev/ser1, /dev/ser2, ..., and can be
-+ opened explicitly with SET LINE. Reportedly, "/dev/ser" (no unit
-+ number) opens the first available /dev/sern device.
-+
-+ Like all other Unix C-Kermit implementations, QNX C-Kermit does not
-+ provide any kind of terminal emulation. Terminal specific functions are
-+ provided by your terminal, terminal window (e.g. QNX Terminal or
-+ xterm), or emulator.
-+
-+ QNX C-Kermit, as distributed, does not include support for UUCP
-+ line-locking; the QNX makefile entries (qnx32 and qnx16) include the
-+ -DNOUUCP switch. This is because QNX, as distributed, does not include
-+ UUCP, and its own communications software (e.g. qterm) does not use
-+ UUCP line locking. If you have a UUCP product installed on your QNX
-+ system, remove the -DNOUUCP switch from the makefile entry and rebuild.
-+ Then check to see that Kermit's UUCP lockfile conventions are the same
-+ as those of your UUCP package; if not, read the [355]UUCP lockfile
-+ section of the [356]Installation Instructions and make the necessary
-+ changes to the makefile entry (e.g. add -DHDBUUCP).
-+
-+ QNX does, however, allow a program to get the device open count. This
-+ can not be a reliable form of locking unless all applications do it, so
-+ by default, Kermit uses this information only for printing a warning
-+ message such as:
-+
-+ C-Kermit>set line /dev/ser1
-+ WARNING - "/dev/ser1" looks busy...
-+
-+ However, if you want to use it as a lock, you can do so with:
-+
-+ SET QNX-PORT-LOCK { ON, OFF }
-+
-+ This is OFF by default; if you set in ON, C-Kermit will fail to open
-+ any dialout device when its open count indicates that another process
-+ has it open. SHOW COMM (in QNX only) displays the setting, and if you
-+ have a port open, it also shows the open count.
-+
-+ As of C-Kermit 8.0, C-Kermit's "open-count" form of line locking works
-+ only in QNX4, not in QNX6 (this might change in a future C-Kermit
-+ release).
-+
-+3.6. C-KERMIT AND SCO
-+
-+ [ [357]Top ] [ [358]Contents ] [ [359]Section Contents ] [ [360]Next ]
-+ [ [361]Previous ]
-+
-+ SECTION CONTENTS
-+
-+3.6.1. [362]SCO XENIX
-+3.6.2. [363]SCO UNIX and OSR5
-+3.6.3. [364]Unixware
-+3.6.4. [365]Open UNIX 8
-+
-+ REFERENCES
-+
-+ * The comp.unix.sco.* newsgroups.
-+ * [366]Section 3.10 below for Unixware.
-+ * The following FAQs:
-+
-+ The comp.sco.misc FAQ:
-+ [367]http://aplawrence.com/SCOFAQ/
-+
-+ Caldera (SCO) comp.unix.sco.programmer FAQ:
-+ [368]http://www.zenez.com/cgi-bin/scoprogfaq/faq.pl
-+
-+ The UnixWare 7/OpenUNIX 8 FAQ:
-+ [369]http://www.zenez.com/cgi-bin/scouw7faq/faq.pl
-+ [370]http://zenez.pcunix.com/cgi-bin/scouw7faq/faq.pl
-+
-+ High Speed Modems for SCO Unix:
-+ [371]http://pcunix.com/Unixart/modems.html
-+
-+ The UnixWare FAQ
-+ [372]http://www.freebird.org/faq/
-+
-+ The UnixWare 1.x and 2.0 Programmer FAQ
-+ [373]http://www.freebird.org/faq/developer.html
-+
-+ Caldera Support Knowledge Base
-+ [374]http://support.caldera.com/caldera
-+
-+ [375]http://stage.caldera.com/ta/
-+ Caldera (SCO) Technical Article Search Center
-+
-+ [376]http://aplawrence.com/newtosco.html
-+ New to SCO (Tony Lawrence)
-+
-+ The same comments regarding terminal emulation and key mapping apply to
-+ SCO operating systems as to all other Unixes. C-Kermit is not a
-+ terminal emulator, and you can't use it to map F-keys, Arrow keys, etc.
-+ The way to do this is with xmodmap (xterm) or loadkeys (console). For a
-+ brief explanation, see [377]Section 3.0.5. For a fuller explanation,
-+ [378]ClICK HERE.
-+
-+ Also see general comments on PC-based Unixes in [379]Section 3.0.
-+
-+3.6.1. SCO XENIX
-+
-+ [ [380]Top ] [ [381]Contents ] [ [382]Section Contents ] [ [383]Next ]
-+
-+ Old Xenix versions... Did you know: Xenix 3.0 is *older* than Xenix
-+ 2.0?
-+
-+ In Xenix 2.3.4 and probably other Xenix versions, momentarily dropping
-+ DTR to hang up a modem does not work. DTR goes down but does not come
-+ up again. Workaround: Use SET MODEM HANGUP-METHOD MODEM-COMMAND.
-+ Anybody who would like to fix this is welcome to take a look at
-+ tthang() in [384]ckutio.c. Also: modem signals can not be read in
-+ Xenix, and the maximum serial speed is 38400.
-+
-+ There is all sorts of confusion among SCO versions, particularly when
-+ third- party communications boards and drivers are installed, regarding
-+ lockfile naming conventions, as well as basic functionality. As far as
-+ lockfiles go, all bets are off if you are using a third-party multiport
-+ board. At least you have the source code. Hopefully you also have a C
-+ compiler :-)
-+
-+ Xenix 2.3.0 and later claim to support RTSFLOW and CTSFLOW, but this is
-+ not modern bidirectional hardware flow control; rather it implements
-+ the original RS-232 meanings of these signals for unidirectional
-+ half-duplex line access: If both RTSFLOW and CTSFLOW bits are set,
-+ Xenix asserts RTS when it wants to send data and waits for CTS
-+ assertion before it actually starts sending data (also, reportedly,
-+ even this is broken in Xenix 2.3.0 and 2.3.1).
-+
-+3.6.2. SCO UNIX AND OSR5
-+
-+ [ [385]Top ] [ [386]Contents ] [ [387]Section Contents ] [ [388]Next ]
-+ [ [389]Previous ]
-+
-+ SCO systems tend to use different names (i.e. drivers) for the same
-+ device. Typically /dev/tty1a refers to a terminal device that has no
-+ modem control; open, read, write, and close operations do not depend on
-+ carrier. On the other hand, /dev/tty1A (same name, but with final
-+ letter upper case), is the same device with modem control, in which
-+ carrier is required (the SET LINE command does not complete until
-+ carrier appears, read/write operations fail if there is no carrier,
-+ etc).
-+
-+ SCO OpenServer 5.0.5 and earlier do not support the reading of modem
-+ signals. Thus "show comm" does not list modem signals, and C-Kermit
-+ does not automatically pop back to its prompt when the modem hangs up
-+ the connection (drops CD). The ioctl() call for this is simply not
-+ implmented, at least not in the standard drivers. OSR5.0.6 attempts to
-+ deal with modem signals but fails; however OSR5.0.6a appears to
-+ function properly.
-+
-+ Dialing is likely not to work well in SCO OpenServer 5.0.x because many
-+ of the serial-port APIs simply do not operate when using the standard
-+ drivers. For example, if DTR is dropped by the recommended method
-+ (setting speed to 0 for half a seconds, then restoring the speed), DTR
-+ and RTS go down but never come back up. When in doubt SET MODEM
-+ HANGUP-METHOD MODEM-COMMAND or SET DIAL HANGUP OFF.
-+
-+ On the other hand, certain functions that might not (do not) work right
-+ or at all when using SCO drivers (e.g. high serial speeds, hardware
-+ flow control, and/or reading of modem signals) might work right when
-+ using third-party drivers. (Example: hardware flow control works,
-+ reportedly, only on uppercase device like tty1A -- not tty1a -- and
-+ only when CLOCAL is clear when using the SCO sio driver, but there are
-+ no such restrictions in, e.g., [390]Digiboard drivers).
-+
-+ One user reports that he can't transfer large files with C-Kermit under
-+ SCO OSR5.0.0 and 5.0.4 -- after the first 5K, everything falls apart.
-+ Same thing without Kermit -- e.g. with ftp over a PPP connection.
-+ Later, he said that replacing SCO's SIO driver with FAS, an alternative
-+ communications driver, made the problem go away:
-+
-+ [391]ftp://ftp.fu-berlin.de/pub/unix/driver/fas
-+
-+ With regard to bidirectional serial ports on OpenServer 5.0.4, the
-+ following advice appeared on an SCO-related newsgroup:
-+
-+ No amount of configuration information is going to help you on 5.0.4
-+ unless it includes the kludge for the primary problem. With almost
-+ every modem, the 5.0.4 getty will barf messages and may or may not
-+ connect. There are 2 solutions and only one works on 5.0.4. Get the
-+ atdialer binary from a 5.0.0 system and substitute it for the native
-+ 5.0.4 atdialer. The other solution is to upgrade to 5.0.5. And, most
-+ of all, on any OpenServer products, do NOT run the badly broken
-+ Modem Manager. Configure the modems in the time honored way that
-+ dates back to Xenix.
-+
-+ Use SCO-provided utilities for switching the directionality of a modem
-+ line, such as "enable" and "disable" commands. For example, to dial out
-+ on tty1a, which is normally set up for logins:
-+
-+ disable tty1a
-+ kermit -l /dev/tty1a
-+ enable tty1a
-+
-+ If a tty device is listed as an ACU in /usr/lib/uucp/Devices and is
-+ enabled, getty resets the ownership and permissions to uucp.uucp and
-+ 640 every time the device is released. If you want to use the device
-+ only for dialout, and you want to specify other owners or permissions,
-+ you should disable it in /usr/lib/uucp/Devices; this will prevent getty
-+ from doing things to it. You should also changes the device's file
-+ modes in /etc/conf/node.d/sio by changing fields 5-7 for the desired
-+ device(s); this determines how the devices are set if you relink the
-+ kernel.
-+
-+ One SCO user of C-Kermit 5A(190) reported that only one copy of Kermit
-+ can run at a time when a Stallion Technologies multiport boards are
-+ installed. Cause, cure, and present status unknown (see [392]Section 14
-+ for more info regarding Stallion).
-+
-+ Prior to SCO OpenServer 5.0.4, the highest serial port speed supported
-+ by SCO was 38400. However, in some SCO versions (e.g. OSR5) it is
-+ possible to map rarely-used lower speeds (like 600 and 1800) to higher
-+ ones like 57600 and 115200. To find out how, go to
-+ [393]http://www.sco.com/ and search for "115200". In OSR5.0.4, serial
-+ speeds up to 921600 are supported through the POSIX interface; C-Kermit
-+ 6.1.193 or later, when built for OSR5.0.4 using /bin/cc (NOT the UDK,
-+ which hides the high-speed definitions from CPP), supports these
-+ speeds, but you might be able to run this binary on earlier releases to
-+ get the high serial speeds, depending on various factors, described by
-+ Bela Lubkin of SCO:
-+
-+ Serial speeds under SCO Unix / Open Desktop / OpenServer
-+ ========================================================
-+ Third party drivers (intelligent serial boards) may provide any speeds
-+ they desire; most support up to 115.2Kbps.
-+
-+ SCO's "sio" driver, which is used to drive standard serial ports with
-+ 8250/16450/16550 and similar UARTs, was limited to 38400bps in older
-+ releases. Support for rates through 115.2Kbps was added in the
-+ following releases:
-+
-+ SCO OpenServer Release 5.0.0 (requires supplement "rs40b")
-+ SCO OpenServer Release 5.0.2 (requires supplement "rs40a" or "rs40b")
-+ SCO OpenServer Release 5.0.4 or later
-+ SCO Internet FastStart Release 1.0.0 or later
-+
-+ SCO supplements are at [394]ftp://ftp.sco.com/; the "rs40" series are
-+ under directory /Supplements/internet
-+
-+ Kermit includes the high serial speeds in all OSR5 builds, but that
-+ does not necessarily mean they work. For example, on our in-house 5.0.5
-+ system, SET SPEED 57600 or higher seems to succeed (no error occurs)
-+ but when we read the speed back the driver says it is 50. Similarly,
-+ 76800 becomes 75, and 115200 becomes 110. Testing shows the resulting
-+ speed is indeed the low one we read back, not the high one we asked
-+ for. Moral: Use speeds higher than 38400 with caution on SCO OSR5.
-+
-+ Reportedly, if you have a script that makes a TCP/IP SET HOST (e.g.
-+ Telnet) connection to SCO 3.2v4.2 with TCP/IP 1.2.1, and then does the
-+ following:
-+
-+ script $ exit
-+ hangup
-+
-+ this causes a pseudoterminal (pty) to be consumed on the SCO system; if
-+ you do it enough times, it will run out of ptys. An "exit" command is
-+ being sent to the SCO shell, and a HANGUP command is executed locally,
-+ so the chances are good that both sides are trying to close the
-+ connection at once, perhaps inducing a race condition in which the
-+ remote pty is not released. It was speculated that this would be fixed
-+ by applying SLS net382e, but it did not. Meanwhile, the workaround is
-+ to insert a "pause" between the SCRIPT and HANGUP commands. (The
-+ situation with later SCO releases is not known.)
-+
-+ SCO UNIX and OpenServer allow their console and/or terminal drivers to
-+ be configured to translate character sets for you. DON'T DO THIS WHEN
-+ USING KERMIT! First of all, you don't need it -- Kermit itself already
-+ does this for you. And second, it will (a) probably ruin the formatting
-+ of your screens (depending on which emulation you are using); and (b)
-+ interfere with all sorts of other things -- legibility of non-ASCII
-+ text on the terminal screen, file transfer, etc. Use:
-+
-+ mapchan -n
-+
-+ to turn off this feature.
-+
-+ Note that there is a multitude of SCO entries in the makefile, many of
-+ them exhibiting an unusually large number of compiler options. Some
-+ people actually understand all of this. Reportedly, things are settling
-+ down with SCO OpenServer 5.x and Unixware 7 (and Open UNIX 8 and who
-+ knows what the next one will be -- Linux probably) -- the SCO UDK
-+ compiler is said to generate binaries that will run on either platform,
-+ by default, automatically. When using gcc or egcs, on the other hand,
-+ differences persist, plus issues regarding the type of binary that is
-+ generated (COFF, ELF, etc), and where and how it can run. All of this
-+ could stand further clarification by SCO experts.
-+
-+3.6.3. Unixware
-+
-+ [ [395]Top ] [ [396]Contents ] [ [397]Section Contents ] [ [398]Next ]
-+ [ [399]Previous ]
-+
-+ Unixware changed hands several times before landing at SCO, and so has
-+ its [400]own section in this document. (Briefly: AT&T UNIX Systems
-+ Laboratories sold the rights to the UNIX name and to System V R4 (or
-+ R5?) to Novell; later Novell spun its UNIX division off into a new
-+ company called Univel, which eventually was bought by SCO, which later
-+ was bought by Caldera, which later sort of semi-spun-off SCO...)
-+
-+3.6.4. Open UNIX 8
-+
-+ [ [401]Top ] [ [402]Contents ] [ [403]Section Contents ] [
-+ [404]Previous ]
-+
-+ SCO was bought by Caldera in 2000 or 2001 and evolved Unixware 7.1 into
-+ Caldera Open UNIX 8.00. It's just like Unixware 7.1 as far as Kermit is
-+ concerned (the Unixware 7.1 makefile target works for Open UNIX 8.00,
-+ and in fact a Unixware 7.1 Kermit binary built on Unixware 7.1 runs
-+ under OU8; a separate OU8 makefile target exists simply to generate an
-+ appropriate program startup herald). Open Unix is now defunct;
-+ subsequent releases are called UnixWare again (e.g. UnixWare 7.1.3).
-+
-+3.7. C-KERMIT AND SOLARIS
-+
-+ [ [405]Top ] [ [406]Contents ] [ [407]Section Contents ] [ [408]Next ]
-+ [ [409]Previous ]
-+
-+ SECTION CONTENTS
-+
-+3.7.1. [410]Serial Port Configuration
-+3.7.2. [411]Serial Port Problems
-+3.7.3. [412]SunLink X.25
-+3.7.4. [413]Sun Workstation Keyboard Mapping
-+3.7.5. [414]Solaris 2.4 and Earlier
-+
-+ REFERENCES
-+
-+ * The [415]comp.unix.solaris newsgroup
-+ * [416]http://access1.sun.com/
-+ * [417]http://docs.sun.com/
-+ * [418]http://www.sunhelp.com/
-+ * [419]http://www.wins.uva.nl/pub/solaris/solaris2/
-+ * [420]http://www.wins.uva.nl/cgi-bin/sfaq.cgi
-+ * [421]ftp://ftp.wins.uva.nl/pub/solaris
-+ * [422]http://www.science.uva.nl/pub/solaris/solaris2.html
-+
-+ And about serial communications in particular, see "Celeste's Tutorial
-+ on Solaris 2.x Modems and Terminals":
-+
-+ [423]http://www.stokely.com/
-+
-+ In particular:
-+
-+ [424]http://www.stokely.com/unix.sysadm.resources/faqs.sun.html
-+
-+ For PC-based Solaris, also see general comments on PC-based Unixes in
-+ [425]Section 3.0. Don't expect Solaris or any other kind of Unix to
-+ work right on a PC until you resolve all interrupt conflicts. Don't
-+ expect to be able to use COM3 or COM4 (or even COM2) until you have
-+ configured their addresses and interrupts.
-+
-+3.7.1. Serial Port Configuration
-+
-+ [ [426]Top ] [ [427]Contents ] [ [428]Section Contents ] [ [429]Section
-+ Contents ] [ [430]Next ]
-+
-+ Your serial port can't be used -- or at least won't work right -- until
-+ it is enabled in Solaris. For example, you get a message like "SERIAL:
-+ Operation would block" when attempting to dial. This probably indicates
-+ that the serial port has not been enabled for use with modems. You'll
-+ need to follow the instructions in your system setup or management
-+ manual, such as (e.g.) the Desktop SPARC Sun System & Network Manager's
-+ Guide, which should contain a section "Setting up Modem Software"; read
-+ it and follow the instructions. These might (or might not) include
-+ running a program called "eeprom", editing some system configuration
-+ file (such as, for example:
-+
-+ /platform/i86pc/kernel/drv/asy.conf
-+
-+ and then doing a configuration reboot, or running some other programs
-+ like drvconfig and devlinks. "man eeprom" for details.
-+
-+ Also, on certain Sun models like IPC, the serial port hardware might
-+ need to have a jumper changed to make it an RS-232 port rather than
-+ RS-423.
-+
-+ eeprom applies only to real serial ports, not to "Spiff" devices
-+ (serial port expander), in which case setup with Solaris' admintool is
-+ required.
-+
-+ Another command you might need to use is pmadm, e.g.:
-+
-+ pmadm -d -p zsmon -s tty3
-+ pmadm -e -p zsmon -s tty3
-+
-+ You can use the following command to check if a process has the device
-+ open:
-+
-+ fuser -f /dev/term/3
-+
-+ In some cases, however (according to Sun support, May 2001) "It is
-+ still possible that a zombie process has hold of the port EVEN IF there
-+ is no lock file and the fuser command comes up empty. In that case, the
-+ only way to resolve the problem is by rebooting."
-+
-+ If you can't establish communication through a serial port to a device
-+ that is not asserting CD (Carrier Detect), try setting the environment
-+ variable "ttya-ignore-cd" to "true" (replace "ttya" with the port
-+ name).
-+
-+3.7.2. Serial Port Problems
-+
-+ [ [431]Top ] [ [432]Contents ] [ [433]Section Contents ] [ [434]Next ]
-+ [ [435]Previous ]
-+
-+ Current advice from Sun is to always the /dev/cua/x devices for dialing
-+ out, rather than the /dev/term/x. Nevertheless, if you have trouble
-+ dialing out with one, try the other.
-+
-+ Reportedly, if you start C-Kermit and "set line" to a port that has a
-+ modem connected to it that is not turned on, and then "set flow
-+ rts/cts", there might be some (unspecified) difficulties closing the
-+ device because the CTS signal is not coming in from the modem.
-+
-+3.7.3. SunLink X.25
-+
-+ [ [436]Top ] [ [437]Contents ] [ [438]Section Contents ] [ [439]Next ]
-+ [ [440]Previous ]
-+
-+ The built-in SunLink X.25 support for Solaris 2.3/2.4./25 and SunLink
-+ 8.01 or 9.00 works OK provided the X.25 system has been installed and
-+ initialized properly. Packet sizes might need to be reduced to 256,
-+ maybe even less, depending on the configuration of the X.25
-+ installation. On one connection where C-Kermit 6.0 was tested, very
-+ large packets and window sizes could be used in one direction, but only
-+ very small ones would work in the other.
-+
-+ In any case, according to Sun, C-Kermit's X.25 support is superfluous
-+ with SunLink 8.x / Solaris 2.3. Quoting an anonymous Sun engineer:
-+
-+ ... there is now no need to include any X.25 code within kermit. As
-+ of X.25 8.0.1 we support the use of kermit, uucp and similar
-+ protocols over devices of type /dev/xty. This facility was there in
-+ 8.0, and should also work on the 8.0 release if patch 101524 is
-+ applied, but I'm not 100% sure it will work in all cases, which is
-+ why we only claim support from 8.0.1 onwards.
-+
-+ When configuring X.25, on the "Advanced Configuration->Parameters"
-+ screen of the x25tool you can select a number of XTY devices. If you
-+ set this to be > 1, press Apply, and reboot, you will get a number
-+ of /dev/xty entries created.
-+
-+ Ignore /dev/xty0, it is a special case. All the others can be used
-+ exactly as if they were a serial line (e.g. /dev/tty) connected to a
-+ modem, except that instead of using Hayes-style commands, you use
-+ PAD commands.
-+
-+ From kermit you can do a 'set line' command to, say, /dev/xty1, then
-+ set your dialing command to be "CALL 12345678", etc. All the usual
-+ PAD commands will work (SET, PAR, etc).
-+
-+ I know of one customer in Australia who is successfully using this,
-+ with kermit scripts, to manage some X.25-connected switches. He used
-+ standard kermit, compiled for Solaris 2, with X.25 8.0 xty devices.
-+
-+3.7.4. Sun Workstation Keyboard Mapping
-+
-+ [ [441]Top ] [ [442]Contents ] [ [443]Section Contents ] [ [444]Next ]
-+ [ [445]Previous ]
-+
-+ Hints for using a Sun workstation keyboard for VT emulation when
-+ accessing VMS, from the [446]comp.os.vms newsgroup:
-+
-+ From: Jerry Leichter <leichter@smarts.com>
-+ Newsgroups: comp.os.vms
-+ Subject: Re: VT100 keyboard mapping to Sun X server
-+ Date: Mon, 19 Aug 1996 12:44:21 -0400
-+
-+ > I am stuck right now using a Sun keyboard (type 5) on systems
-+ running SunOS
-+ > and Solaris. I would like to use EVE on an OpenVMS box with
-+ display back to
-+ > the Sun. Does anyone know of a keyboard mapping (or some other
-+ procedure)
-+ > which will allow the Sun keyboard to approximate a VT100/VT220?
-+
-+ You can't get it exactly - because the keypad has one fewer key -
-+ but you can come pretty close. Here's a set of keydefs I use:
-+
-+ keycode 101=KP_0
-+ keycode 119=KP_1
-+ keycode 120=KP_2
-+ keycode 121=KP_3
-+ keycode 98=KP_4
-+ keycode 99=KP_5
-+ keycode 100=KP_6
-+ keycode 75=KP_7
-+ keycode 76=KP_8
-+ keycode 77=KP_9
-+ keycode 52=KP_F1
-+ keycode 53=KP_F2
-+ keycode 54=KP_F3
-+ keycode 57=KP_Decimal
-+ keycode 28=Left
-+ keycode 29=Right
-+ keycode 30=KP_Separator
-+ keycode 105=KP_F4
-+ keycode 78=KP_Subtract
-+ keycode 8=Left
-+ keycode 10=Right
-+ keycode 32=Up
-+ keycode 33=Down
-+ keycode 97=KP_Enter
-+
-+ Put this in a file - I use "keydefs" in my home directory and feed
-+ it into xmodmap:
-+
-+ xmodmap - <$HOME/keydefs
-+
-+ This takes care of the arrow keys and the "calculator" key cluster.
-+ The "+" key will play the role of the DEC "," key. The Sun "-" key
-+ will be like the DEC "-" key, though it's in a physically different
-+ position - where the DEC PF4 key is. The PF4 key is ... damn, I'm
-+ not sure where "key 105" is. I *think* it may be on the leftmost key
-+ of the group of four just above the "calculator" key cluster.
-+
-+ I also execute the following (this is all in my xinitrc file):
-+
-+ xmodmap -e 'keysym KP_Decimal = KP_Decimal'
-+ xmodmap -e 'keysym BackSpace = Delete BackSpace' \
-+ -e 'keysym Delete = BackSpace Delete'
-+ xmodmap -e 'keysym KP_Decimal = Delete Delete KP_Decimal'
-+ xmodmap -e 'add mod1 = Meta_R'
-+ xmodmap -e 'add mod1 = Meta_L'
-+
-+ Beware of one thing about xmodmap: Keymap changes are applied to the
-+ *whole workstation*, not just to individual windows. There is, in
-+ fact, no way I know of to apply them to individual windows. These
-+ definitions *may* confuse some Unix programs (and/or some Unix
-+ users).
-+
-+ If you're using Motif, you may also need to apply bindings at the
-+ Motif level. If just using xmodmap doesn't work, I can try and dig
-+ that stuff up for you.
-+
-+3.7.5. Solaris PPP Connections
-+
-+ [ [447]Top ] [ [448]Contents ] [ [449]Section Contents ] [ [450]Next ]
-+ [ [451]Previous ]
-+
-+ The following is a report from a user of C-Kermit 8.0 on Solaris 8 and
-+ 9, who had complained that while Kermit file transfers worked perfectly
-+ on direct (non-PPP) dialout connections, they failed miserably on PPP
-+ connections. We suggested that the PPP dialer probably was not setting
-+ the port and/or modem up in the same way that Kermit did:
-+
-+ I want to get back on this and tell you what the resolution was. You
-+ pointed me in the direction of flow control, which turned out to be
-+ the key.
-+
-+ Some discussion on the comp.unix.solaris newsgroup led to some
-+ comments from Greg Andrews about the need to use the uucp driver to
-+ talk to the modem (/dev/cua/a). I had to remind Greg that no matter
-+ what the manpages for the zs and se drivers say, the ppp that Sun
-+ released with Solaris 8 7/01, and has in Solaris 9, is a setuid root
-+ program, and simply trying to make a pppd call from user space
-+ specifying /dev/cua/a would fail because of permissions. Greg
-+ finally put the question to the ppp people, who came back with
-+ information that is not laid out anywhere in the docs available for
-+ Solaris users. Namely, put /dev/cua/a in one of the priviledged
-+ options files in the /etc/ppp directory. That, plus resetting the
-+ OBP ttya-ignore-cd flag (this is Sun hardware) to false, seems to
-+ have solved the problems.
-+
-+ While I note that I had installed Kermit suid to uucp to use
-+ /dev/cua/a on this particular box, it seems to run fine through
-+ /dev/term/a. Not so with pppd.
-+
-+ With this change in place, I seem to be able to upload and download
-+ through telnet run on Kermit with the maximum length packets. I note
-+ that the window allocation display does show STREAMING, using
-+ telnet. Running ssh on Kermit, I see the standard 1 of 30 windows
-+ display, and note that there appears to be a buffer length limit
-+ between 1000 and 2000 bytes. Run with 1000, and it's tick-tock,
-+ solid as a rock. With 2000 I see timeout errors and RTS/CTS action
-+ on the modem.
-+
-+ Kermit's packet-length and other controls let you make adjustments like
-+ this to get around whatever obstacles might be thrown up -- in this
-+ case (running Kermit over ssh), the underling Solaris PTY driver.
-+
-+3.7.6. Solaris 2.4 and Earlier
-+
-+ [ [452]Top ] [ [453]Contents ] [ [454]Section Contents ] [
-+ [455]Previous ]
-+
-+ C-Kermit can't be compiled successfully under Solaris 2.3 using
-+ SUNWspro cc 2.0.1 unless at least some of the following patches are
-+ applied to cc (it is not known which one(s), if any, fix the problem):
-+
-+ * 100935-01 SparcCompiler C 2.0.1: bad code generated when addresses
-+ of two double arguments are involved
-+ * 100961-05 SPARCcompilers C 2.0.1: conditional expression with
-+ function returning structure gives wrong value
-+ * 100974-01 SparcWorks 2.0.1: dbx jumbo patch
-+ * 101424-01 SPARCworks 2.0.1 maketool SEGV's instantly on Solaris 2.3
-+
-+ With unpatched cc 2.0.1, the symptom is that certain modules generate
-+ truncated object files, resulting in many unresolved references at link
-+ time.
-+
-+ The rest of the problems in this section have to do with
-+ bidirectional terminal ports and the Solaris Port Monitor. A bug in
-+ C-Kermit 5A ticked a bug in Solaris. The C-Kermit bug was fixed in
-+ version 6.0, and the Solaris bug was fixed in 2.4 (I think, or maybe
-+ 2.5).
-+
-+ Reportedly, "C-Kermit ... causes a SPARCstation running Solaris 2.3 to
-+ panic after the modem connects. I have tried compiling C-Kermit with
-+ Sun's unbundled C compiler, with GCC Versions 2.4.5 and 2.5.3, with
-+ make targets 'sunos51', 'sunos51tcp', 'sunos51gcc', and even 'sys5r4',
-+ and each time it compiles and starts up cleanly, but without fail, as
-+ soon as I dial the number and get a 'CONNECT' message from the modem, I
-+ get:
-+
-+ BAD TRAP
-+ kermit: Data fault
-+ kernel read fault at addr=0x45c, pme=0x0
-+ Sync Error Reg 80 <INVALID>
-+ ...
-+ panic: Data Fault.
-+ ...
-+ Rebooting...
-+
-+ The same modem works fine for UUCP/tip calling." Also (reportedly),
-+ this only happens if the dialout port is configured as in/out via
-+ admintool. If it is configured as out-only, no problem. This is the
-+ same dialing code that works on hundreds of other System-V based Unix
-+ OS's. Since it should be impossible for a user program to crash the
-+ operating system, this problem must be chalked up to a Solaris bug.
-+ Even if you SET CARRIER OFF, CONNECT, and dial manually by typing
-+ ATDTnnnnnnn, the system panics as soon as the modem issues its CONNECT
-+ message. (Clearly, when you are dialing manually, C-Kermit does not
-+ know a thing about the CONNECT message, and so the panic is almost
-+ certainly caused by the transition of the Carrier Detect (CD) line from
-+ off to on.) This problem was reported by many users, all of whom say
-+ that C-Kermit worked fine on Solaris 2.1 and 2.2. If the speculation
-+ about CD is true, then a possible workaround might be to configure the
-+ modem to leave CD on (or off) all the time. Perhaps by the time you
-+ read this, a patch will have been issued for Solaris 2.3.
-+
-+ The following is from Karl S. Marsh, Systems & Networks Administrator,
-+ AMBIX Systems Corp, Rochester, NY:
-+
-+ Environment: Solaris 2.3 Patch 101318-45 C-Kermit 5A(189) (and
-+ presumably this applies to 188 and 190 also). eeprom setting:
-+
-+ ttya-rts-dtr-off=false
-+ ttya-ignore-cd=false
-+ ttya-mode=19200,8,n,8,-
-+
-+ To use C-Kermit on a bidirectional port in this environment, do not
-+ use admintool to configure the port. Use admintool to delete any
-+ services running on the port and then quit admintool and issue the
-+ following command:
-+
-+ pmadm -a -p zsmon -s ttyb -i root -fu -v 1 -m "`ttyadm -b -d /dev/term/b \
-+ -l conttyH -m ldterm,ttcompat -s /usr/bin/login -S n`"
-+
-+ [NOTE: This was copied from a blurry fax, so please check it
-+ carefully] where:
-+
-+ -a = Add service
-+ -p = pmtag (zsmon)
-+ -s = service tag (ttyb)
-+ -i = id to be associated with service tag (root)
-+ -fu = create utmp entry
-+ -v = version of ttyadm
-+ -m = port monitor-specific portion of the port monitor administrative file
-+ entry for the service
-+ -b = set up port for bidirectional use
-+ -d = full path name of device
-+ -l = which ttylabel in the /etc/ttydefs file to use
-+ -m = a list of pushable STREAMS modules
-+ -s = pathname of service to be invoked when connection request received
-+ -S = software carrier detect on or off (n = off)
-+
-+ "This is exactly how I was able to get Kermit to work on a
-+ bi-directional port without crashing the system."
-+
-+ On the Solaris problem, also see SunSolve Bug ID 1150457 ("Using
-+ C-Kermit, get Bad Trap on receiving prompt from remote system").
-+ Another user reported "So, I have communicated with the Sun tech
-+ support person that submitted this bug report [1150457]. Apparently,
-+ this bug was fixed under one of the jumbo kernel patches. It would seem
-+ that the fix did not live on into 101318-45, as this is EXACTLY the
-+ error that I see when I attempt to use kermit on my system."
-+
-+ Later (Aug 94)... C-Kermit dialout successfully tested on a Sun4m with
-+ a heavily patched Solaris 2.3. The patches most likely to have been
-+ relevant:
-+
-+ * 101318-50: SunOS 5.3: Jumbo patch for kernel (includes libc, lockd)
-+ * 101720-01: SunOS 5.3: ttymon - prompt not always visible on a modem
-+ connection
-+ * 101815-01: SunOS 5.3: Data fault in put() NULL queue passed from
-+ ttycommon_qfull()
-+ * 101328-01: SunOS 5.3: Automation script to properly setup tty ports
-+ prior to PCTS execution
-+
-+ Still later (Nov 94): another user (Bo Kullmar in Sweden) reports that
-+ after using C-Kermit to dial out on a bidirectional port, the port
-+ might not answer subsequent incoming calls, and says "the problem is
-+ easy enough to fix with the Serial Port Manager; I just delete the
-+ service and install it again using the graphical interface, which
-+ underneath uses commands like sacadm and pmadm." Later Bo reports, "I
-+ have found that if I run Kermit with the following script then it
-+ works. This script is for /dev/cua/a, "-s a" is the last a in
-+ /dev/cua/a:
-+
-+ #! /bin/sh
-+ kermit
-+ sleep 2
-+ surun pmadm -e -p zsmon -s a
-+
-+3.8. C-KERMIT AND SUNOS
-+
-+ [ [456]Top ] [ [457]Contents ] [ [458]Section Contents ] [ [459]Next ]
-+ [ [460]Previous ]
-+
-+ For additional information, see "Celeste's Tutorial on SunOS 4.1.3+
-+ Modems and Terminals":
-+
-+ [461]http://www.stokely.com/
-+
-+ For FAQs, etc, from Sun, see:
-+ * [462]http://access1.sun.com/
-+
-+ For history of Sun models and SunOS versions, see (should be all the
-+ same):
-+ * [463]http://www.ludd.luth.se/~bear/project/sun/sun.hardware.txt
-+ * [464]ftp://ftp.netcom.com/pub/ru/rubicon/sun.hdwr.ref
-+ * [465]ftp://ftp.intnet.net/pub/SUN/Sun-Hardware-Ref
-+
-+ Sun SPARCstation users should read the section "Setting up Modem
-+ Software" in the Desktop SPARC Sun System & Network Manager's Guide. If
-+ you don't set up your serial ports correctly, Kermit (and other
-+ communications software) won't work right.
-+
-+ Also, on certain Sun models like IPC, the serial port hardware might
-+ need to have a jumper changed to make it an RS-232 port rather than
-+ RS-423.
-+
-+ Reportedly, C-Kermit does not work correctly on a Sun SPARCstation in
-+ an Open Windows window with scrolling enabled. Disable scrolling, or
-+ else invoke Kermit in a terminal emulation window (xterm, crttool,
-+ vttool) under SunView (this might be fixed in later SunOS releases).
-+
-+ On the Sun with Open Windows, an additional symptom has been reported:
-+ outbound SunLink X.25 connections "magically" translate CR typed at the
-+ keyboard into LF before transmission to the remote host. This doesn't
-+ happen under SunView.
-+
-+ SET CARRIER ON, when used on the SunOS 4.1 version of C-Kermit
-+ (compiled in the BSD universe), causes the program to hang
-+ uninterruptibly when SET LINE is issued for a device that is not
-+ asserting carrier. When Kermit is built in the Sys V universe on the
-+ same computer, there is no problem (it can be interrupted with Ctrl-C).
-+ This is apparently a limitation of the BSD-style tty driver.
-+
-+ SunOS 4.1 C-Kermit has been observed to dump core when running a
-+ complicated script program under cron. The dump invariably occurs in
-+ ttoc(), while trying to output a character to a TCP/IP TELNET
-+ connection. ttoc() contains a write() call, and when the system or the
-+ network is very busy, the write() call can get stuck for long periods
-+ of time. To break out of deadlocks caused by stuck write() calls, there
-+ is an alarm around the write(). It is possible that the core dump
-+ occurs when this alarm signal is caught. (This one has not been
-+ observed recently -- possibly fixed in edit 190.)
-+
-+ On Sun computers with SunOS 4.0 or 4.1, SET FLOW RTS/CTS works only if
-+ the carrier signal is present from the communication device at the time
-+ when C-Kermit enters packet mode or CONNECT mode. If carrier is not
-+ sensed (e.g. when dialing), C-Kermit does not attempt to turn on
-+ RTS/CTS flow control. This is because the SunOS serial device driver
-+ does not allow characters to be output if RTS/CTS is set (CRTSCTS) but
-+ carrier (and DSR) are not present. Workaround (maybe): SET CARRIER OFF
-+ before giving the SET LINE command, establish the connection, then SET
-+ FLOW RTS/CTS
-+
-+ It has also been reported that RTS/CTS flow control under SunOS 4.1
-+ through 4.1.3 works only on INPUT, not on output, and that there is a
-+ patch from Sun to correct this problem: Patch-ID# T100513-04, 20 July
-+ 1993 (this patch might apply only to SunOS 4.1.3). It might also be
-+ necessary to configure the eeprom parameters of the serial port; e.g.
-+ do the following as root at the shell prompt:
-+
-+ eeprom ttya-ignore-cd=false
-+ eeprom ttya-rts-dtr-off=true
-+
-+ There have been reports of file transfer failures on Sun-3 systems when
-+ using long packets and/or large window sizes. One user says that when
-+ this happens, the console issues many copies of this message:
-+
-+ chaos vmunix: zs1: ring buffer overflow
-+
-+ This means that SunOS is not scheduling Kermit frequently enough to
-+ service interrupts from the zs serial device (Zilog 8350 SCC serial
-+ communication port) before its input silo overflows. Workaround: use
-+ smaller packets and/or a smaller window size, or use "nice" to increase
-+ Kermit's priority. Use hardware flow control if available, or remove
-+ other active processes before running Kermit.
-+
-+ SunLink X.25 support in C-Kermit 5A(190) was built and tested
-+ successfully under SunOS 4.1.3b and SunLink X.25 7.00.
-+
-+3.9. C-KERMIT AND ULTRIX
-+
-+ [ [466]Top ] [ [467]Contents ] [ [468]Section Contents ] [ [469]Next ]
-+ [ [470]Previous ]
-+
-+ See also: The [471]comp.unix.ultrix and [472]comp.sys.dec newsgroups.
-+
-+ There is no hardware flow control in Ultrix. That's not a Kermit
-+ deficiency, but an Ultrix one.
-+
-+ When sending files to C-Kermit on a Telnet connection to a remote
-+ Ultrix system, you must SET PREFIXING ALL (or at least prefix more
-+ control characters than are selected by SET PREFIXING CAUTIOUS).
-+
-+ Reportedly, DEC ULTRIX 4.3 is immune to C-Kermit's disabling of
-+ SIGQUIT, which is the signal that is generated when the user types
-+ Ctrl-\, which kills the current process (i.e. C-Kermit) and dumps core.
-+ Diagnosis and cure unknown. Workaround: before starting C-Kermit -- or
-+ for that matter, when you first log in because this applies to all
-+ processes, not just Kermit -- give the following Unix command:
-+
-+ stty quit undef
-+
-+ Certain operations driven by RS-232 modem signal do not work on
-+ DECstations or other DEC platforms whose serial interfaces use MMP
-+ connectors (DEC version of RJ45 telephone jack with offset tab). These
-+ connectors convey only the DSR and DTR modem signals, but not carrier
-+ (CD), RTS, CTS, or RI. Use SET CARRIER OFF to enable communication, or
-+ "hotwire" DSR to CD.
-+
-+ The maximum serial speed on the DECstation 5000 is normally 19200, but
-+ various tricks are available (outside Kermit) to enable higher rates.
-+ For example, on the 5000/200, 19200 can be remapped (somehow, something
-+ to do with "a bit in the SIR", whatever that is) to 38400, but in
-+ software you must still refer to this speed as 19200; you can't have
-+ 19200 and 38400 available at the same time.
-+
-+ 19200, reportedly, is also the highest speed supported by Ultrix, but
-+ NetBSD reportedly supports speeds up to 57600 on the DECstation,
-+ although whether and how well this works is another question.
-+
-+ In any case, given the lack of hardware flow control in Ultrix, high
-+ serial speeds are problematic at best.
-+
-+3.10. C-KERMIT AND UNIXWARE
-+
-+ [ [473]Top ] [ [474]Contents ] [ [475]Section Contents ] [ [476]Next ]
-+ [ [477]Previous ]
-+
-+ See also:
-+ * The Freebird Project (Unixware software repository)
-+ [478]http://www.freebird.org/
-+ * The UnixWare FAQ: [479]http://www.freebird.org/faq/
-+ * The following newsgroups:
-+ + [480]comp.unix.unixware.misc
-+ + [481]comp.unix.sco.misc.
-+
-+ Also see general comments on PC-based Unixes in [482]Section 3.0. By
-+ the way, this section is separate from the SCO (Caldera) section
-+ because at the time this section was started, Unixware was owned by a
-+ company called Univel. Later it was sold to Novell, and then to SCO.
-+ Still later, SCO was sold to Caldera.
-+
-+ In Unixware 2.0 and later, the preferred serial device names (drivers)
-+ are /dev/term/00 (etc), rather than /dev/tty00 (etc). Note the
-+ following correspondence of device names and driver characteristics:
-+
-+ New name Old name Description
-+ /dev/term/00 /dev/tty00 ???
-+ /dev/term/00h /dev/tty00h Modem signals and hardware flow control
-+ /dev/term/00m /dev/tty00m Modem signals(?)
-+ /dev/term/00s /dev/tty00s Modem signals and software flow control
-+ /dev/term/00t /dev/tty00t ???
-+
-+ Lockfile names use device.major.minor numbers, e.g.:
-+
-+ /var/spool/locks/LK.7679.003.005
-+
-+ The minor number varies according to the device name suffix (none, h,
-+ m, s, or t). Only the device and major number are compared, and thus
-+ all of the different names for the same physical device (e.g. all of
-+ those shown in the table above) interlock effectively.
-+
-+ Prior to UnixWare 7, serial speeds higher than 38400 are not supported.
-+ In UnixWare 7, we also support 57600 and 115200, plus some unexpected
-+ ones like 14400, 28800, and 76800, by virtue of a strange new
-+ interface, evidently peculiar to UnixWare 7, discovered while digging
-+ through the header files: tcsetspeed(). Access to this interface is
-+ allowed only in POSIX builds, and thus the UnixWare 7 version of
-+ C-Kermit is POSIX-based, unlike C-Kermit for Unixware 1.x and 2.x
-+ (since the earlier UnixWare versions did not support high serial
-+ speeds, period).
-+
-+ HOWEVER, turning on POSIX features engages all of the "#if
-+ (!_POSIX_SOURCE)" clauses in the UnixWare header files, which in turn
-+ prevent us from having modem signals, access to the hardware flow
-+ control APIs, select(), etc -- in short, all the other things we need
-+ in communications software, especially when high speeds are used. Oh
-+ the irony. And so C-Kermit must be shamelessly butchered -- as it has
-+ been so many times before -- to allow us to have the needed features
-+ from the POSIX and non-POSIX worlds. See the UNIXWAREPOSIX sections of
-+ [483]ckutio.c.
-+
-+ After the butchery, we wind up with Unixware 2.x having full
-+ modem-signal capability, but politically-correct Unixware 7.x lacking
-+ the ability to automatically detect a broken connection when carrier
-+ drops.
-+
-+ Meanwhile the Unixware tcsetspeed() function allows any number at all
-+ (any long, 0 or positive) as an argument and succeeds if the number is
-+ a legal bit rate for the serial device, and fails otherwise. There is
-+ no list anywhere of legal speeds. Thus the SET SPEED keyword table
-+ ("set speed ?" to see it) is hardwired based on trial and error with
-+ all known serial speeds, the maximum being 115200. However, to allow
-+ for the possibility that other speeds might be allowed in the future
-+ (or with different port drivers), the SET SPEED command for UnixWare 7
-+ only allows you to specify any number at all; a warning is printed if
-+ the number is not in the list, but the number is accepted anyway; the
-+ command succeeds if tcsetspeed() accepts the number, and fails
-+ otherwise.
-+
-+ In C-Kermit 8.0 testing, it was noticed that the POSIX method for
-+ hanging up the phone by dropping DTR (set speed 0, pause, restore
-+ speed) did not actually drop DTR. The APIs do not return any error
-+ indication, but nothing happens. I changed tthang() to skip the special
-+ case I had made for Unixware and instead follow the normal path: if
-+ TIOCSDTR is defined use that, otherwise blah blah... It turns out
-+ TIOCSDTR *is* defined, and it works.
-+
-+ So in Unixware (at least in 2.1.3) we can read modem signals, hangup by
-+ toggling DTR, and so on, BUT... But once the remote hangs up and
-+ Carrier drops, the API for reading modem signals ceases to function;
-+ although the device is still open, the TIOCMGET ioctl always raises
-+ errno 6 = ENXIO, "No such device or address".
-+
-+ Old business:
-+
-+ Using C-Kermit 6.0 on the UnixWare 1.1 Application Server, one user
-+ reported a system panic when the following script program is executed:
-+
-+ set line /dev/tty4
-+ set speed 9600
-+ output \13
-+ connect
-+
-+ The panic does not happen if a PAUSE is inserted:
-+
-+ set line /dev/tty4
-+ set speed 9600
-+ pause 1
-+ output \13
-+ connect
-+
-+ This is using a Stallion EasyIO card installed as board 0 on IRQ 12 on
-+ a Gateway 386 with the Stallion-supplied driver. The problem was
-+ reported to Novell and Stallion and (reportedly) is now fixed.
-+
-+3.11. C-KERMIT AND APOLLO SR10
-+
-+ [ [484]Top ] [ [485]Contents ] [ [486]Section Contents ] [ [487]Next ]
-+ [ [488]Previous ]
-+
-+ Reportedly, version 5A(190), when built under Apollo SR10 using "make
-+ sr10-bsd", compiles, links, and executes OK, but leaves the terminal
-+ unusable after it exits -- the "cs7" or "cs8" (character size)
-+ parameter has become cs5. The terminal must be reset from another
-+ terminal. Cause and cure unknown. Suggested workaround: Wrap Kermit in
-+ a shell script something like:
-+
-+ kermit @*
-+ stty sane
-+
-+3.12. C-KERMIT AND TANDY XENIX 3.0
-+
-+ [ [489]Top ] [ [490]Contents ] [ [491]Section Contents ] [ [492]Next ]
-+ [ [493]Previous ]
-+
-+ C-Kermit 7.0 was too big to be built on Tandy Xenix, even in a minimum
-+ configuration; version 6.0 is the last one that fits.
-+
-+ Reportedly, in C-Kermit 6.0, if you type lots of Ctrl-C's during
-+ execution of the initialization file, ghost Kermit processes will be
-+ created, and will compete for the keyboard. They can only be removed
-+ via "kill -9" from another terminal, or by rebooting. Diagnosis --
-+ something strange happening with the SIGINT handler while the process
-+ is reading the directory (it seems to occur during the SET PROMPT
-+ [\v(dir)] ... sequence). Cure: unknown. Workaround: don't interrupt
-+ C-Kermit while it is executing its init file on the Tandy 16/6000.
-+
-+3.13. C-KERMIT AND OSF/1 (DIGITAL UNIX) (TRU64 UNIX)
-+
-+ [ [494]Top ] [ [495]Contents ] [ [496]Section Contents ] [ [497]Next ]
-+ [ [498]Previous ]
-+
-+ While putting together and testing C-Kermit 8.0, it was discovered that
-+ binaries built for one version of Tru64 Unix (e.g. 4.0G) might exhibit
-+ very strange behavior if run on a different version of Tru64 Unix (e.g.
-+ 5.1A). The typical symptom was that a section of the initialization
-+ file would be skipped, notably locating the dialing and/or network
-+ directory as well as finding and executing the customization file,
-+ ~/.mykermrc. This problem also is reported to occur on Tru64 Unix 5.0
-+ (Rev 732) even when running a C-Kermit binary that was built there.
-+ However, the Tru64 5.1A binary works correctly on 5.0. Go figure.
-+
-+ When making Telnet connections to a Digital Unix or Tru64 system, and
-+ your Telnet client forwards your user name, the Telnet server evidently
-+ stuffs the username into login's standard input, and you see:
-+
-+ login: ivan
-+ Password:
-+
-+ This is clearly going to play havoc with scripts that look for
-+ "login:". Workaround (when Kermit is your Telnet client): SET LOGIN
-+ USER to nothing, to prevent Kermit from sending your user ID.
-+
-+ Before you can use a serial port on a new Digital Unix system, you must
-+ run uucpsetup to enable or configure the port. Evidently the /dev/tty00
-+ and 01 devices that appear in the configuration are not usable;
-+ uucpsetup turns them into /dev/ttyd00 and 01, which are. Note that
-+ uucpsetup and other uucp-family programs are quite primitive -- they
-+ only know about speeds up to 9600 bps and their selection of modems
-+ dates from the early 1980s. None of this affects Kermit, though -- with
-+ C-Kermit, you can use speeds up to 115200 bps (at least in DU4.0 and
-+ later) and modern modems with hardware flow control and all the rest.
-+
-+ Reportedly, if a modem is set for &S0 (assert DSR at all times), the
-+ system resets or drops DTR every 30 seconds; reportedly DEC says to set
-+ &S1.
-+
-+ Digital Unix 3.2 evidently wants to believe your terminal is one line
-+ longer than you say it is, e.g. when a "more" or "man" command is
-+ given. This is has nothing to do with C-Kermit, but tends to annoy
-+ those who use Kermit or other terminal emulators to access Digital Unix
-+ systems. Workaround: tell Unix to "stty rows 23" (or whatever).
-+
-+ Reportedly, there is some bizarre behavior when trying to use a version
-+ of C-Kermit built on one Digital Unix 4.0 system on another one,
-+ possibly due to differing OS or library revision levels; for example,
-+ the inability to connect to certain TCP/IP hosts. Solution: rebuild
-+ C-Kermit from source code on the system where you will be using it.
-+
-+ Digital Unix tgetstr() causes a segmentation fault. C-Kermit 7.0 added
-+ #ifdefs to avoid calling this routine in Digital Unix. As a result, the
-+ SCREEN commands always send ANSI escape sequences -- even though curses
-+ knows your actual terminal type.
-+
-+ Reportedy the Tru64 Unix 4.0E 1091 Telnet server does not tolerate
-+ streaming transfers into itself, at least not when the sending Kermit
-+ is on the same local network. Solution: tell one Kermit or the other
-+ (or both) to "set streaming off". This might or might be the case with
-+ earlier and/or later Tru64, Digital Unix, and OSF/1 releases.
-+
-+3.14. C-KERMIT AND SGI IRIX
-+
-+ [ [499]Top ] [ [500]Contents ] [ [501]Section Contents ] [ [502]Next ]
-+ [ [503]Previous ]
-+
-+ See also:
-+ * The [504]comp.sys.sgi.misc and [505]comp.sys.sgi.admin newsgroups.
-+ [506]The SGI website
-+ * The SGI FAQ:
-+ + [507]http://www-viz.tamu.edu/~sgi-faq/
-+ + [508]ftp://viz.tamu.edu/pub/sgi/faq/
-+
-+ About IRIX version numbers: "uname -a" tells the "two-digit" version
-+ number, such as "5.3" or "6.5". The three-digit form can be seen with
-+ "uname -R". (this information is unavailable at the simple API level).
-+ Supposedly all three-digit versions within the same two-digit version
-+ (e.g. 6.5.2, 6.5.3) are binary compatible; i.e. a binary built on any
-+ one of them should run on all others. The "m" suffix denotes just
-+ patches; the "f" suffix indicates that features were added.
-+
-+ An IRIX binary built on lower MIPS model (Instruction Set Architecture,
-+ ISA) can run on higher models, but not vice versa:
-+
-+ MIPS1 R3000 and below
-+ MIPS2 R4000
-+ MIPS3 R4x00
-+ MIPS4 R5000 and above
-+
-+ Furthermore, there are different Application Binary Inferfaces (ABIs):
-+
-+ COFF 32 bits, IRIX 5.3, 5.2, 5.1, 4.x and below
-+ o32 ELF 32 bits, IRIX 5.3, 6.0 - 6.5
-+ N32 ELF 32 bits, IRIX 6.2 - 6.5
-+ N64 ELF 64 bits, IRIX 6.2 - 6.5
-+
-+ Thus a prebuilt IRIX binary works on a particular machine only if (a)
-+ the machine's IRIX version (to one decimal place) is equal to or
-+ greater than the version under which the binary was built; (b) the
-+ machine's MIPS level is greater or equal to that of the binary; and (c)
-+ the machine supports the ABI of the binary. If all three conditions are
-+ not satisfied, of course, you can build a binary yourself from source
-+ code since, unlike some other Unix vendors, SGI does supply a C
-+ compiler and libraries.
-+
-+ SGI did not supply an API for hardware flow control prior to IRIX 5.2.
-+ C-Kermit 6.1 and higher for IRIX 5.2 and higher supports hardware flow
-+ control in the normal way, via "set flow rts/cts".
-+
-+ For hardware flow control on earlier IRIX and/or C-Kermit versions, use
-+ the ttyf* (modem control AND hardware flow control) devices and not the
-+ ttyd* (direct) or ttym* (modem control but no hardware flow control)
-+ ones, and obtain the proper "hardware handshaking" cable from SGI,
-+ which is incompatible with the ones for the Macintosh and NeXT even
-+ though they look the same ("man serial" for further info) and tell
-+ Kermit to "set flow keep" and "set modem flow rts/cts".
-+
-+ Serial speeds higher than 38400 are available in IRIX 6.2 and later, on
-+ O-class machines (e.g. Origin, Octane) only, and are supported by
-+ C-Kermit 7.0 and later. Commands such as "set speed 115200" may be
-+ given on other models (e.g. Iris, Indy, Indigo) but will fail because
-+ the OS reports an invalid speed for the device.
-+
-+ Experimentation with both IRIX 5.3 and 6.2 shows that when logged in to
-+ IRIX via Telnet, that remote-mode C-Kermit can't send files if the
-+ packet length is greater than 4096; the Telnet server evidently has
-+ this restriction (or bug), since there is no problem sending long
-+ packets on serial or rlogin connections. However, it can receive files
-+ with no problem if the packet length is greater than 4096. As a
-+ workaround, the FAST macro for IRIX includes "set send packet-length
-+ 4000". IRIX 6.5.1 does not have this problem, so evidently it was fixed
-+ some time after IRIX 6.2. Tests show file-transfer speeds are better
-+ (not worse) with 8K packets than with 4K packets from IRIX 6.5.1.
-+
-+ Reportedly some Indys have bad serial port hardware. IRIX 5.2, for
-+ example, needs patch 151 to work around this; or upgrade to a later
-+ release. Similarly, IRIX 5.2 has several problems with serial i/o, flow
-+ control, etc. Again, patch or upgrade.
-+
-+ Reportedly on machines with IRIX 4.0, Kermit cannot be suspended by
-+ typing the suspend ("swtch") character if it was started from csh, even
-+ though other programs can be suspended this way, and even though the Z
-+ and SUSPEND commands still work correctly. This is evidently because
-+ IRIX's csh does not deliver the SIGTSTP signal to Kermit. The reason
-+ other programs can be suspended in the same environment is probably
-+ that they do not trap SIGTSTP themselves, so the shell is doing the
-+ suspending rather than the application.
-+
-+ Also see notes about IRIX 3.x in the [509]C-Kermit for Unix
-+ Installation Instructions.
-+
-+ If you have problems making TCP/IP connections in versions of IRIX
-+ built with GCC 2.95.2, see the bugs section of:
-+
-+ [510]http://freeware.sgi.com/Installable/gcc-2.95.2.html.
-+
-+ Reportedly, if you allow gcc to compile C-Kermit on Irix you should be
-+ aware that there might be problems with some of the network code. The
-+ specifics are at
-+ [511]http://freeware.sgi.com/Installable/gcc-2.95.2.html; scroll down
-+ to the "known bugs" section at the end of the document.
-+
-+3.15. C-KERMIT AND THE BEBOX
-+
-+ [ [512]Top ] [ [513]Contents ] [ [514]Section Contents ] [ [515]Next ]
-+ [ [516]Previous ]
-+
-+ See also: The [517]comp.sys.be newsgroup.
-+
-+ The BeBox has been discontinued and BeOS repositioned for PC platforms.
-+ The POSIX parts of BeOS are not finished, nor is the sockets library,
-+ therefore a fully functional version of C-Kermit is not possible. In
-+ version 6.0 of C-Kermit, written for BeOS DR7, it was possible to:
-+
-+ * set line /dev/serial2 (and probably the other serial ports)
-+ * set speed 115200 (and at least some of the lower baud rates)
-+ * connect
-+ * set modem type hayes (and likely others, too)
-+ * dial phone-number
-+ * set send packet-length 2048 (other lengths for both send and
-+ receive)
-+ * set receive packet length 2048
-+ * set file type binary (text mode works, too) (with remote kermit
-+ session in server mode)
-+ * put bedrop.jpg
-+ * get bedrop.jpg
-+ * get bedrop.jpg bedrop.jpg2
-+ * finish, bye
-+
-+ The following do not work:
-+ * kermit does not detect modem hangup
-+ * !/RUN/PUSH [commandline command]
-+ * Running kermit in remote mode
-+ * Using other protocols (x/y/zmodem)
-+ * TCP networking interface (Be's TCP/IP API has a ways to go, still)
-+
-+ C-Kermit does not work on BeOS DR8 because of changes in the underlying
-+ APIs. Unfortunately not enough changes were made to allow the regular
-+ POSIX-based C-Kermit to work either. Note: the lack of a fork() service
-+ requires the select()-based CONNECT module, but there is no select().
-+ There is a select() in DR8, but it doesn't work.
-+
-+ C-Kermit 7.0 was built for BeOS 4.5 and works in remote mode. It does
-+ not include networking support since the APIs are still not there. It
-+ is not known if dialing out works, but probably not. Be experts are
-+ welcome to lend a hand.
-+
-+3.16. C-KERMIT AND DG/UX
-+
-+ [ [518]Top ] [ [519]Contents ] [ [520]Section Contents ] [ [521]Next ]
-+ [ [522]Previous ]
-+
-+ Somebody downloaded the C-Kermit 6.0 binary built under DG/UX 5.40 and
-+ ran it under DG/UX 5.4R3.10 -- it worked OK except that file dates for
-+ incoming files were all written as 1 Jan 1970. Cause and cure unknown.
-+ Workaround: SET ATTRIBUTE DATE OFF. Better: Use a version of C-Kermit
-+ built under and for DG/UX 5.4R3.10.
-+
-+3.17. C-KERMIT AND SEQUENT DYNIX
-+
-+ [ [523]Top ] [ [524]Contents ] [ [525]Section Contents ] [ [526]Next ]
-+ [ [527]Previous ]
-+
-+ Reportedly, when coming into a Sequent Unix (DYNIX) system through an
-+ X.25 connection, Kermit doesn't work right because the Sequent's
-+ FIONREAD ioctl returns incorrect data. To work around, use the
-+ 1-character-at-a-time version of myread() in ckutio.c (i.e. undefine
-+ MYREAD in ckutio.c and rebuild the program). This is unsatisfying
-+ because two versions of the program would be needed -- one for use over
-+ X.25, and the other for serial and TCP/IP connections.
-+
-+3.18. C-KERMIT AND FREEBSD, OPENBSD, and NETBSD
-+
-+ [ [528]Top ] [ [529]Contents ] [ [530]Section Contents ] [ [531]Next ]
-+ [ [532]Previous ]
-+
-+ Some NebBSD users have reported difficulty escaping back from CONNECT
-+ mode, usually when running NetBSD on non-PC hardware. Probably a
-+ keyboard issue.
-+
-+ NetBSD users have also reported that C-Kermit doesn't pop back to the
-+ prompt if the modem drops carrier. This needs to be checked out & fixed
-+ if possible.
-+
-+ (All the above seems to work properly in C-Kermit 7.0 and later.)
-+
-+3.19. C-KERMIT AND MAC OS X
-+
-+ [ [533]Top ] [ [534]Contents ] [ [535]Section Contents ] [ [536]Next ]
-+ [ [537]Previous ]
-+
-+ Mac OS X is Apple's 4.4BSD Unix variety, closely related to FreeBSD,
-+ but different. "uname -a" is singularly uninformative, as in Linux,
-+ giving only the Darwin kernel version number. The way to find out the
-+ actual Mac OS X version is with
-+
-+ /usr/bin/sw_vers -productName
-+ /usr/bin/sw_vers -productVersion
-+
-+ or:
-+
-+ fgrep -A 1 'ProductVersion'
-+ /System/Library/CoreServices/SystemVersion.plist
-+
-+ Here are some points to be aware of:
-+
-+ * A big gotcha for Kermit users is that Mac OS X does not support
-+ serial ports and, as far as I can tell, doesn't support its
-+ built-in modem either, for anything other than making Internet
-+ connections. Macintoshes capable of running Mac OS X, such as the
-+ G5 and later, come without serial ports and without any APIs to
-+ support them, and also without the UUCP family of programs
-+ (including cu), nor any standard for serial-port lockfile
-+ directory.
-+ * Early versions of Mac OS X came without Curses, Termlib, or
-+ Terminfo libraries. Later versions seem to have ncurses (it would
-+ seem that Mac OS X 10.3.9 was the first mature and complete version
-+ of Mac OS X). Kermit uses curses for its file-transfer display. See
-+ elsewhere about curses-vs-ncurses confusion.
-+ * In the HFS+ file system, filenames are case-folded. Thus "makefile"
-+ and "Makefile" are the same file. So, for example, suppose you are
-+ sending two distinct files, Foo and FOO, from (say) Linux to Mac OS
-+ X. This will produce a file collision that will be handled
-+ according to Mac OS X C-Kermit's FILE COLLISION setting, which by
-+ default is BACKUP, so the Mac will wind up with files called FOO
-+ and Foo.~1~.
-+ * HSF+ files that are composed of a resource fork and a data fork...
-+ I doubt that C-Kermit does anything useful with them. There is no
-+ code in C-Kermit for traditional two-forked Macintosh files, but it
-+ could be added if there is any demand (code for this existed in
-+ [538]Mac Kermit, the old pre-Mac-OS-X Macintosh version of
-+ C-Kermit).
-+ * In case you want to transfer a traditional Macintosh text file (or
-+ data fork of a file that is plain text), you can use these C-Kermit
-+ commands:
-+
-+set file eol cr
-+set file character-set apple-quickdraw
-+send /text filename
-+
-+ * File or pathnames that include spaces must be enclosed in either
-+ doublequotes or curly braces in C-Kermit commands.
-+ * Mac OS X can use a third-party package manager called "fink".
-+ Various fink packages for C-Kermit are floating around that are not
-+ standard releases. For example, there's a C-Kermit 8.0.201 package
-+ in which C-Kermit was modifed (at least) to use a UUCP lockfile
-+ directory that does not exist on vanilla Mac OS X systems.
-+
-+Mac OS X and Serial Ports
-+
-+ Apple is in the forefront of companies that believe serial ports have
-+ no use in the modern world and so has simply eliminated all traces of
-+ them from its machines and OS. But of course serial ports are still
-+ needed to connect not only to external modems, but also to the control
-+ ports of hubs, routers, terminal servers, PBXs, and similar devices,
-+ not to mention barcode readers, POS systems and components, speaking
-+ devices, hand calculators such as the HP48, automated factory-floor
-+ equipment, and scientific, medical, and lab equipment (to name a few).
-+ Among workers in these areas, there is a need to add serial ports back
-+ onto this platform, which is being filled by third-party products such
-+ as the [539]Keyspan High Speed USB Serial Adapter USA-19HS, which has a
-+ DB-9 male connector. To use the Keyspan device, you must install the
-+ accompanying device drivers, which winds up giving you serial ports
-+ with names like /dev/cu.USA19H3b1P1.1, /dev/cu.KeySerial1,
-+ /dev/tty.KeySerial1.
-+
-+ C-Kermit 9.0 works "out of the box" with third-party serial ports on
-+ Mac OS X, because it is built by default ("make macosx") without the
-+ "UUCP lockfile" feature. If you have C-Kermit 9.0 on a personal
-+ Macintosh, you can skip the next section.
-+
-+Mac OS X Serial Ports with C-Kermit 8.0 and earlier
-+
-+ In earlier versions of C-Kermit, you'll need to either build a special
-+ -DNOUUCP version, or deal with the UUCP port contention sytem in
-+ [540]all its glory (this is usually an exercise in futility because any
-+ other applications on your Mac that use the serial port will not
-+ necessarily follow the same conventions):
-+
-+ 1. su (or sudo -s)
-+ chgrp xxxx /var/spool/lock
-+ chmod g+w /var/spool/lock
-+ chgrp xxxx /dev/cu.*
-+ (where xxxx is the name of the group for users to whom serial-port
-+ access is to be granted). Use "admin" or other existing group, or
-+ create a new group if desired. NB:
-+
-+ In the absence of official guidance from Apple or anyone else, we
-+ choose /var/spool/lock as the lockfile directory because this
-+ directory (a) already exists on vanilla Mac OS X installations, and
-+ (b) it is the directory used for serial-port lockfiles on many other
-+ platforms.
-+ 2. Put all users who need access to the serial port in the same group.
-+ 3. Make sure the serial device files that are to be used by C-Kermit
-+ have group read-write permission and (if you care) lack world
-+ read-write permission, e.g.:
-+
-+ chmod g+rw,o-rw /dev/cu.*
-+
-+ If you do the above, then there's no need to become root to use Kermit,
-+ or to make Kermit suid or sgid. Just do this:
-+
-+chmod 775 wermit
-+mv wermit /usr/local/kermit
-+
-+ (or whatever spot is more appropriate, e.g. /usr/bin/). For greater
-+ detail about installation, [541]CLICK HERE.
-+
-+ Alternatively, to build a pre-9.0 version of C-Kermit without UUCP
-+ lockfile support, set the NOUUCP flag; e.g. (for Mac OS 10.4):
-+
-+ make macosx10.4 KFLAGS=-DNOUUCP
-+
-+ This circumvents the SET PORT failure "?Access to lockfile directory
-+ denied". But it also sacrifices Kermit's ability to ensure that only
-+ one copy of Kermit can have the device open at a time, since Mac OS X
-+ is the same as all other varieties of Unix in that exclusive access to
-+ serial ports is not enforced in any way. But if it's for your own
-+ desktop machine that nobody else uses, a -DNOUUCP version might be
-+ adequate and preferable to the alternatives.
-+
-+ To build C-Kermit 9.0 with UUCP support, do:
-+
-+ make macosx KFLAGS=-UNOUUCP
-+
-+ (note: "-U", not "-D).
-+
-+RS-232 versus RS-422
-+
-+ Meanwhile, back when Macs had serial ports, they were not RS-232 (the
-+ standard for connecting computers with nearby modems) but rather RS-422
-+ or -423 (a standard for connecting serial devices over longer
-+ distances). Macintosh serial ports do not support modems well because
-+ they do not have enough wires (or more properly in the case RS-422/423,
-+ wire pairs) to convey a useful subset of modem signals.
-+
-+ Keyspan also sells a [542]USB Twin Serial Adapter that gives you two
-+ Mini-Din8 RS-422 ports, that are no better (or worse) for communicating
-+ with modems or serial devices than a real Mac Din-8 port was. In
-+ essense, you get Data In, Data Out, and two modem signals. It looks to
-+ me as if the signals chosen by Keyspan are RTS and CTS. This gives you
-+ hardware flow control, but at the expense of Carrier Detect. Thus to
-+ use C-Kermit with a Keyspan USB serial port, you must tell C-Kermit to:
-+
-+set modem type none ; (don't expect a modem)
-+set carrier-watch off ; (ignore carrier signal)
-+set port /dev/cu.USA19H3b1P1.1 ; (open the port)
-+set flow rts/cts ; (this is the default)
-+set speed 57600 ; (or whatever)
-+connect ; (or DIAL or whatever)
-+
-+ Use Ctrl-\C in the normal manner to escape back to the C-Kermit>
-+ prompt. Kermit can't pop back to its prompt automatically when Carrier
-+ drops because there is no Carrier signal in the physical interface.
-+
-+ Here's a typical sequence for connecting to Cisco devices (using a
-+ mixture of command-line options and interactive commands at the
-+ prompt):
-+
-+$ ckermit -l /dev/cu.USA19H3b1P1.1 -b 9600
-+C-Kermit> set carrier-watch off
-+C-Kermit> connect
-+
-+ Instructions for the built-in modem (if any) remain to be written due
-+ to lack of knowledge. If you can contribute instructions, hints, or
-+ tips, please [543]send them in.
-+
-+3.20. C-KERMIT AND COHERENT
-+
-+ [ [544]Top ] [ [545]Contents ] [ [546]Section Contents ] [
-+ [547]Previous ]
-+
-+ Also see:
-+
-+ [548]http://www.uni-giessen.de/faq/archiv/coherent-faq.general/msg000
-+ 00.html
-+
-+ Mark Williams COHERENT was perhaps the first commercial Unix-based
-+ operating system for PCs, first appearing about 1983 or -84 for the
-+ PC/XT (?), and popular until about 1993, when Linux took over.
-+ C-Kermit, as of version 8.0, is still current for COHERENT 386 4.2
-+ (i.e. only for i386 and above). Curses is included, but lots of other
-+ features are omitted due to lack of the appropriate OS features, APIs,
-+ libraries, hardware, or just space: e.g. TCP/IP, floating-point
-+ arithmetic, learned scripts. Earlier versions of COHERENT ran on 8086
-+ and 80286, but these are to small to build or run C-Kermit, but
-+ G-Kermit should be OK (as might be ancient versions of C-Kermit).
-+
-+ You can actually build a version with floating point support -- just
-+ take -DNOFLOAT out of CFLAGS and add -lm to LIBS; NOFLOAT is the
-+ default because COHERENT tends to run on old PCs that don't have
-+ floating-point hardware. You can also add "-f" to CFLAGS to have it
-+ link in the floating-point emulation library. Also I'm not sure why
-+ -DNOLEARN is included, since it depends on select(), which COHERENT
-+ has.
-+
-+4. GENERAL UNIX-SPECIFIC HINTS, LIMITATIONS, AND BUGS
-+
-+ [ [549]Top ] [ [550]Contents ] [ [551]Next ] [ [552]Previous ]
-+
-+4.1. Modem Signals
-+
-+ There seems to be an escalating demand for the ability to control "dumb
-+ serial devices" (such as "smartcard readers", barcode readers, etc) by
-+ explicitly manipulating modem signals, particularly RTS. This might
-+ have been easy to do in DOS, where there is no operating system
-+ standing between the application and the serial device, but it is
-+ problematic in Unix, where modem signals are controlled by the serial
-+ device driver. If the driver does not provide an API for doing this,
-+ then the application can't do it. If it does provide an API, expect it
-+ to be totally different on each Unix platform, since there is no
-+ standard for this.
-+
-+4.2. NFS Troubles
-+
-+ Beginning with C-Kermit 6.0, the default C-Kermit prompt includes your
-+ current (working) directory; for example:
-+
-+ [/usr/olga] C-Kermit>
-+
-+ (In C-Kermit 7.0 the square braces were replaced by round parentheses
-+ to avoid conflicts with ISO 646 national character sets.)
-+
-+ If that directory is on an NFS-mounted disk, and NFS stops working or
-+ the disk becomes unavailable, C-Kermit will hang waiting for NFS and/or
-+ the disk to come back. Whether you can interrupt C-Kermit when it is
-+ hung this way depends on the specific OS. Kermit has called the
-+ operating systems's getcwd() function, and is waiting for it to return.
-+ Some versions of Unix (e.g. HP-UX 9.x) allow this function to be
-+ interrupted with SIGINT (Ctrl-C), others (such as HP-UX 8.x) do not. To
-+ avoid this effect, you can always use SET PROMPT to change your prompt
-+ to something that does not involve calling getcwd(), but if NFS is not
-+ responding, C-Kermit will still hang any time you give a command that
-+ refers to an NFS-mounted directory. Also note that in some cases, the
-+ uninterruptibility of NFS-dependent system or library calls is
-+ considered a bug, and sometimes there are patches. For HP-UX, for
-+ example:
-+
-+ replaced by:
-+ HP-UX 10.20 libc PHCO_8764 PHCO_14891/PHCO_16723
-+ HP-UX 10.10 libc PHCO_8763 PHCO_14254/PHCO_16722
-+ HP-UX 9.x libc PHCO_7747 S700 PHCO_13095
-+ HP-UX 9.x libc PHCO_6779 S800 PHCO_11162
-+
-+4.3. C-Kermit as Login Shell
-+
-+ You might have reason to make C-Kermit the login shell for a specific
-+ user, by entering the pathname of Kermit (possibly with command-line
-+ switches, such as -x to put it in server mode) into the shell field of
-+ the /etc/passwd file. This works pretty well. In some cases, for
-+ "ultimate security", you might want to use a version built with
-+ -DNOPUSH (see the [553]Configurations Options document for this, but
-+ even if you don't, then PUSHing or shelling out from C-Kermit just
-+ brings up a new copy of C-Kermit (but warning: this does not prevent
-+ the user from explicitly running a shell; e.g. "run /bin/sh"; use
-+ NOPUSH to prevent this).
-+
-+4.4. C-Kermit versus screen and splitvt
-+
-+ C-Kermit file transfers will probably not work if attemped through the
-+ "splitvt" or GNU "screen" programs because the screen optimization (or
-+ at least, line wrapping, control-character absorption) done by this
-+ package interferes with Kermit's packets.
-+
-+ The same can apply to any other environment in which the user's session
-+ is captured, monitored, recorded, or manipulated. Examples include the
-+ 'script' program (for making a typescript of a session), the
-+ Computronics PEEK package and pksh (at least versions of it prior to
-+ 1.9K), and so on.
-+
-+ You might try the following -- what we call "doomsday Kermit" --
-+ settings to push packets through even the densest and most obstructive
-+ connections, such as "screen" and "splitvt" (and certain kinds of 3270
-+ protocol emulators): Give these commands to BOTH Kermit programs:
-+
-+ SET FLOW NONE
-+ SET CONTROL PREFIX ALL
-+ SET RECEIVE PACKET-LENGTH 70
-+ SET RECEIVE START 62
-+ SET SEND START 62
-+ SET SEND PAUSE 100
-+ SET BLOCK B
-+
-+ If it works, it will be slow.
-+
-+4.5. C-Kermit versus DOS Emulators
-+
-+ On Unix workstations equipped with DOS emulators like SoftPC, watch out
-+ for what these emulators do to the serial port drivers. After using a
-+ DOS emulator, particularly if you use it to run DOS communications
-+ software, you might have to reconfigure the serial ports for use by
-+ Unix.
-+
-+4.6. C-Kermit versus Job Control
-+
-+ Interruption by Ctrl-Z makes Unix C-Kermit try to suspend itself with
-+ kill(0,SIGTSTP), but only on platforms that support job control, as
-+ determined by whether the symbol SIGTSTP is defined (or on POSIX or
-+ SVR4 systems, if syconf(_SC_JOB_CONTROL) or _POSIX_JOB_CONTROL in
-+ addition to SIGTSTP). However, if Kermit is running under a login shell
-+ (such as the original Bourne shell) that does not support job control,
-+ the user's session hangs and must be logged out from another terminal,
-+ or hung up on. There is no way Kermit can defend itself against this.
-+ If you use a non-job control shell on a computer that supports job
-+ control, give a command like "stty susp undef" to fix it so the suspend
-+ signal is not attached to any particular key, or give the command SET
-+ SUSPEND OFF to C-Kermit, or build C-Kermit with -DNOJC.
-+
-+4.7. Dates and Times
-+
-+ Unix time conversion functions typically apply locale rules to return
-+ local time in terms of any seasonal time zone change in effect for the
-+ given date. The diffdate function assumes that the same timezone rules
-+ are in effect for both dates, but a date with timezone information will
-+ be converted to the local time zone in effect at the given time, e.g.,
-+ a GMT specification will produce either a Standard Time or Daylight
-+ Savings Time, depending on which applies at the given time. An example
-+ using the 2001 seasonal change from EDT (-0400) to EST (-0500):
-+
-+ C-Kermit> DATE 20011028 05:01:02 GMT ; EDT
-+ 20011028 01:01:02
-+ C-Kermit> DATE 20011028 06:01:02 GMT ; EST
-+ 20011028 01:01:02
-+ C-Kermit>
-+
-+ but the implicit change in timezone offset is not recognized:
-+
-+ C-Kermit> echo \fdiffdate(20011028 05:01:02 GMT, 20011028 06:01:02 GMT)
-+ +0:00
-+ C-Kermit>
-+
-+ Date/time arithmetic, offsets, delta times, and timezone support are
-+ new to C-Kermit 8.0, and might be expected to evolve and improve in
-+ subsequent releases.
-+
-+ On some platforms, files downloaded with HTTP receive the current
-+ timestamp, rather than the HTTP "Last Modified" time (this can be fixed
-+ by including utime.h, e.g. in SunOS and Tru64...).
-+
-+4.8. Pseudoterminals
-+
-+ The SSH and PTY commands work by assigning a pseudoterminal and reading
-+ and writing from it. Performance varies according to the specific
-+ platform ranging from very fast to very flow.
-+
-+ SSH and PTY commands can fail if (a) all pseudoterminals are in use; or
-+ (b) you do not have read/write access to the pseudoterminal that was
-+ assigned. An example of (b) was reported with the Zipslack Slackware
-+ Linux distribution, in which the pseudoterminals were created with
-+ crw-r--r-- permission, instead of crw-rw-rw-.
-+
-+4.9. Miscellaneous
-+
-+ * Reportedly, the Unix C-Kermit server, under some conditions, on
-+ certain particular systems, fails to log out its login session upon
-+ receipt of a BYE command. Before relying on the BYE command
-+ working, test it a few times to make sure it works on your system:
-+ there might be system configuration or security mechanisms to
-+ prevent an inferior process (like Kermit) from killing a superior
-+ one (like the login shell).
-+ * On AT&T 7300 (3B1) machines, you might have to "stty nl1" before
-+ starting C-Kermit. Do this if characters are lost during
-+ communications operations.
-+ * Under the bash shell (versions prior to 1.07 from CWRU), "pushing"
-+ to an inferior shell and then exiting back to Kermit leaves Kermit
-+ in the background such that it must be explicitly fg'd. This is
-+ reportedly fixed in version 1.07 of bash (and definitely in modern
-+ bash versions).
-+
-+5. INITIALIZATION AND COMMAND FILES
-+
-+ [ [554]Top ] [ [555]Contents ] [ [556]Next ] [ [557]Previous ]
-+
-+ C-Kermit's initialization file for Unix is .kermrc (lowercase, starts
-+ with period) in your home directory, unless Kermit was built with the
-+ system-wide initialization-file option (see the [558]C-Kermit for Unix
-+ Installation Instructions).
-+
-+ C-Kermit identifies your home directory based on the environment
-+ variable, HOME. Most Unix systems set this variable automatically when
-+ you log in. If C-Kermit can't find your initialization file, check your
-+ HOME variable:
-+
-+ echo $HOME (at the Unix prompt)
-+
-+ or:
-+
-+ echo \$(HOME) (at the C-Kermit prompt)
-+
-+ If HOME is not defined, or is defined incorrectly, add the appropriate
-+ definition to your Unix .profile or .login file, depending on your
-+ shell:
-+
-+ setenv HOME full-pathname-of-your-home-directory (C-Shell, .login file)
-+
-+ or:
-+
-+ HOME=full-pathname-of-your-home-directory (sh, ksh, .profile file)
-+ export HOME
-+
-+ NOTE: Various other operations depend on the correct definition of
-+ HOME. These include the "tilde-expansion" feature, which allows you to
-+ refer to your home directory as "~" in filenames used in C-Kermit
-+ commands, e.g.:
-+
-+ send ~/.kermrc
-+
-+ as well as the \v(home) variable.
-+
-+ Prior to version 5A(190), C-Kermit would look for its initialization
-+ file in the current directory if it was not found in the home
-+ directory. This feature was removed from 5A(190) because it was a
-+ security risk. Some people, however, liked this behavior and had
-+ .kermrc files in all their directories that would set up things
-+ appropriately for the files therein. If you want this behavior, you can
-+ accomplish it in various ways, for example:
-+
-+ * Create a shell alias, for example:
-+ alias kd="kermit -Y ./.kermrc"
-+
-+ * Create a .kermrc file in your home directory, whose contents are:
-+ take ./.kermrc
-+
-+ Suppose you need to pass a password from the Unix command line to a
-+ C-Kermit script program, in such a way that it does not show up in "ps"
-+ or "w" listings. Here is a method (not guaranteed to be 100% secure,
-+ but definitely more secure than the more obvious methods):
-+
-+ echo mypassword | kermit myscript
-+
-+ The "myscript" file contains all the commands that need to be executed
-+ during the Kermit session, up to and including EXIT, and also includes
-+ an ASK or ASKQ command to read the password from standard input, which
-+ has been piped in from the Unix 'echo' command, but it must not include
-+ a CONNECT command. Only "kermit myscript" shows up in the ps listing.
-+
-+6. COMMUNICATION SPEED SELECTION
-+
-+ [ [559]Top ] [ [560]Contents ] [ [561]Next ] [ [562]Previous ]
-+
-+ Version-7 based Unix implementations, including 4.3 BSD and earlier and
-+ Unix systems based upon BSD, use a 4-bit field to record a serial
-+ device's terminal speed. This leaves room for 16 speeds, of which the
-+ first 14 are normally:
-+
-+ 0, 50, 75, 110, 134.5, 150, 200, 300, 600, 1200, 1800, 2400, 4800,
-+ and 9600
-+
-+ The remaining two are usually called EXTA and EXTB, and are defined by
-+ the particular Unix implementation. C-Kermit determines which speeds
-+ are available on your system based on whether symbols for them are
-+ defined in your terminal device header files. EXTA is generally assumed
-+ to be 19200 and EXTB 38400, but these assumptions might be wrong, or
-+ they might not apply to a particular device that does not support these
-+ speeds. Presumably, if you try to set a speed that is not legal on a
-+ particular device, the driver will return an error, but this can not be
-+ guaranteed.
-+
-+ On these systems, it is usually not possible to select a speed of 14400
-+ bps for use with V.32bis modems. In that case, use 19200 or 38400 bps,
-+ configure your modem to lock its interface speed and to use RTS/CTS
-+ flow control, and tell C-Kermit to SET FLOW RTS/CTS and SET DIAL
-+ SPEED-MATCHING OFF.
-+
-+ The situation is similar, but different, in System V. SVID Third
-+ Edition lists the same speeds, 0 through 38400.
-+
-+ Some versions of Unix, and/or terminal device drivers that come with
-+ certain third-party add-in high-speed serial communication interfaces,
-+ use the low "baud rates" to stand for higher ones. For example, SET
-+ SPEED 50 gets you 57600 bps; SET SPEED 75 gets you 76800; SET SPEED 110
-+ gets 115200.
-+
-+ SCO ODT 3.0 is an example where a "baud-rate-table patch" can be
-+ applied that can rotate the tty driver baud rate table such that
-+ 600=57600 and 1800=115k baud. Similarly for Digiboard
-+ multiport/portservers, which have a "fastbaud" setting that does this.
-+ Linux has a "setserial" command that can do it, etc.
-+
-+ More modern Unixes support POSIX-based speed setting, in which the
-+ selection of speeds is not limited by a 4-bit field. C-Kermit 6.1
-+ incorporates a new mechanism for finding out (at compile time) which
-+ serial speeds are supported by the operating system that does not
-+ involve editing of source code by hand; on systems like Solaris 5.1,
-+ IRIX 6.2, and SCO OSR5.0.4, "set speed ?" will list speeds up to 460800
-+ or 921600. In C-Kermit 7.0 and later:
-+
-+ 1. If a symbol for a particular speed (say B230400 for 230400 bps)
-+ appears in whatever header file defines acceptable serial speeds
-+ (e.g. <termbits.h> or <sys/termios.h> or <sys/ttydev.h>, etc), the
-+ corresponding speed will appear in C-Kermit's "set speed ?" list.
-+ 2. The fact that a given speed is listed in the header files and
-+ appears in C-Kermit's list does not mean the driver will accept it.
-+ For example, a computer might have some standard serial ports plus
-+ some add-on ones with different drivers that accept a different
-+ repertoire of speeds.
-+ 3. The fact that a given speed is accepted by the driver does not
-+ guarantee the underlying hardware can accept it.
-+
-+ When Kermit is given a "set speed" command for a particular device, the
-+ underlying system service is called to set the speed; its return code
-+ is checked and the SET SPEED command fails if the return code indicates
-+ failure. Regardless of the system service return status, the device's
-+ speed is then read back and if it does not match the speed that was
-+ requested, an error message is printed and the command fails.
-+
-+ Even when the command succeeds, this does not guarantee successful
-+ operation at a particular speed, especially a high one. That depends on
-+ electricity, information theory, etc. How long is the cable, what is
-+ its capacitance, how well is it shielded, etc, not to mention that
-+ every connection has two ends and its success depends on both of them.
-+ (With the obvious caveats about internal modems, is the cable really
-+ connected, interrupt conflicts, etc etc etc).
-+
-+ Note, in particular, that there is a certain threshold above which
-+ modems can not "autobaud" -- i.e. detect the serial interface speed
-+ when you type AT (or whatever else the modem's recognition sequence
-+ might be). Such modems need to be engaged at a lower speed (say 2400 or
-+ 9600 or even 115200 -- any speed below their autobaud threshold) and
-+ then must be given a modem-specific command (which can be found in the
-+ modem manual) to change their interface speed to the desired higher
-+ speed, and then the software must also be told to change to the new,
-+ higher speed.
-+
-+ For additional information, read [563]Section 9.5 of the Installation
-+ Instructions, plus any platform-specific notes in [564]Section 3 above.
-+
-+7. COMMUNICATIONS AND DIALING
-+
-+ [ [565]Top ] [ [566]Contents ] [ [567]Next ] [ [568]Previous ]
-+
-+7.1. Serial Ports and Modems
-+
-+ If you SET LINE to a serial port modem-control device that has nothing
-+ plugged in to it, or has a modem connected that is powered off, and you
-+ have not given a prior SET MODEM TYPE or SET CARRIER-WATCH OFF command,
-+ the SET LINE command is likely to hang. In most cases, you can Ctrl-C
-+ out. If not, you'll have to kill C-Kermit from another terminal.
-+
-+ Similarly, if you give a SET MODEM TYPE HAYES (or USR, or any other
-+ modem type besides DIRECT, NONE, or UNKNOWN) and then SET LINE to an
-+ empty port, the subsequent close (implicit or explicit) is liable to
-+ hang or even crash (through no fault of Kermit's -- the hanging or
-+ crashing is inside a system call such as cfsetospeed() or close()).
-+
-+ The SET CARRIER-WATCH command works as advertised only if the
-+ underlying operating system and device drivers support this feature; in
-+ particular only if a read() operation returns immediately with an error
-+ code if the carrier signal goes away or, failing that, if C-Kermit can
-+ obtain the modem signals from the device driver (you can tell by giving
-+ a "set line" command to a serial device, and then a "show
-+ communications" command -- if modem signals are not listed, C-Kermit
-+ won't be able to detect carrier loss, the WAIT command will not work,
-+ etc). Of course, the device itself (e.g. modem) must be configured
-+ appropriately and the cables convey the carrier and other needed
-+ signals, etc.
-+
-+ If you dial out from Unix system, but then notice a lot of weird
-+ character strings being stuck into your session at random times
-+ (especially if they look like +++ATQ0H0 or login banners or prompts),
-+ that means that getty is also trying to control the same device. You'll
-+ need to dial out on a device that is not waiting for a login, or else
-+ disable getty on the device.
-+
-+ As of version 7.0, C-Kermit makes explicit checks for the Carrier
-+ Detect signal, and so catches hung-up connections much better than 6.0
-+ and earlier. However, it still can not be guaranteed to catch every
-+ ever CD on-to-off transition. For example, when the HP-UX version of
-+ C-Kermit is in CONNECT mode on a dialed connection and CARRIER-WATCH ON
-+ or AUTO, and you turn off the modem, HP-UX is stuck in a read() that
-+ never returns. (C-Kermit does not pop back to its prompt automatically,
-+ but you can still escape back.)
-+
-+ If, on the other hand, you log out from the remote system, and it hangs
-+ up, and CD drops on the local modem, C-Kermit detects this and pops
-+ back to the prompt as it should. (Evidently there can be a difference
-+ between CD and DSR turning off at the same time, versus CD turning off
-+ while DSR stays on; experimentation with &S0/&S1/&S2 on your modem
-+ might produce the desired results).
-+
-+ When Unix C-Kermit exits, it closes (and must close) the communications
-+ device. If you were dialed out, this will most likely hang up the
-+ connection. If you want to get out of Kermit and still use Kermit's
-+ communication device, you have several choices:
-+
-+ 1. Shell out from Kermit or suspend Kermit, and refer to the device
-+ literally (as in "term -blah -blah < /dev/cua > /dev/cua").
-+ 2. Shell out from Kermit and use the device's file descriptor which
-+ Kermit makes available to you in the \v(ttyfd) variable.
-+ 3. Use C-Kermit's REDIRECT command.
-+ 4. Use C-Kermit new EXEC /REDIRECT command.
-+
-+ If you are having trouble dialing:
-+
-+ 1. Make sure the dialout line is configured correctly. More about this
-+ below.
-+ 2. Make sure all necessary patches are installed for your operating
-+ system.
-+ 3. If you can't dial on a "bidirectional" line, then configure it for
-+ outbound-only (remove the getty) and try again. (The mechanisms --
-+ if any -- for grabbing bidirectional lines for dialout vary wildly
-+ among Unix implementations and releases, and C-Kermit -- which runs
-+ on well over 300 different Unix variations -- makes no effort to
-+ keep up with them; the recommended method for coping with this
-+ situation is to wrap C-Kermit in a shell script that takes the
-+ appropriate actions.)
-+ 4. Make sure C-Kermit's SET DIAL and SET MODEM parameters agree with
-+ the modem you are actually using -- pay particular attention to SET
-+ DIAL SPEED-MATCHING.
-+ 5. If MODEM HANGUP-METHOD is set to RS232-SIGNAL, change it to
-+ MODEM-COMMAND. Or vice-versa.
-+ 6. Try SET DIAL HANGUP OFF before the DIAL command. Also, SET DIAL
-+ DISPLAY ON to watch what's happening. See [569]Section 8 of the
-+ [570]Installation Instructions.
-+ 7. Read pages 50-67 of [571]Using C-Kermit.
-+ 8. As a last resort, don't use the DIAL command at all; SET CARRIER
-+ OFF and CONNECT to the modem and dial interactively, or write a
-+ script program to dial the modem.
-+
-+ Make sure your dialout line is correctly configured for dialing out (as
-+ opposed to login). The method for doing this is different for each kind
-+ of Unix system. Consult your system documentation for configuring lines
-+ for dialing out (for example, Sun SparcStation IPC users should read
-+ the section "Setting up Modem Software" in the Desktop SPARC Sun System
-+ & Network Manager's Guide; HP-9000 workstation users should consult the
-+ manual Configuring HP-UX for Peripherals, etc).
-+
-+ Symptom: DIAL works, but a subsequent CONNECT command does not.
-+ Diagnosis: the modem is not asserting Carrier Detect (CD) after the
-+ connection is made, or the cable does not convey the CD signal. Cure:
-+ Reconfigure the modem, replace the cable. Workaround: SET CARRIER OFF
-+ (at least in System-V based Unix versions).
-+
-+ For Berkeley-Unix-based systems (4.3BSD and earlier), Kermit includes
-+ code to use LPASS8 mode when parity is none, which is supposed to allow
-+ 8-bit data and Xon/Xoff flow control at the same time. However, as of
-+ edit 174, this code is entirely disabled because it is unreliable: even
-+ though the host operating system might (or might not) support LPASS8
-+ mode correctly, the host access protocols (terminal servers, telnet,
-+ rlogin, etc) generally have no way of finding out about it and
-+ therefore render it ineffective, causing file transfer failures. So as
-+ of edit 174, Kermit once again uses rawmode for 8-bit data, and so
-+ there is no Xon/Xoff flow control during file transfer or terminal
-+ emulation in the Berkeley-based versions (4.3 and earlier, not 4.4).
-+
-+ Also on Berkeley-based systems (4.3 and earlier), there is apparently
-+ no way to configure a dialout line for proper carrier handling, i.e.
-+ ignore carrier during dialing, require carrier thereafter, get a fatal
-+ error on any attempt to read from the device after carrier drops (this
-+ is handled nicely in System V by manipulation of the CLOCAL flag). The
-+ symptom is that carrier loss does not make C-Kermit pop back to the
-+ prompt automatically. This is evident on the NeXT, for example, but not
-+ on SunOS, which supports the CLOCAL flag. This is not a Kermit problem,
-+ but a limitation of the underlying operating system. For example, the
-+ cu program on the NeXT doesn't notice carrier loss either, whereas cu
-+ on the Sun does.
-+
-+ On certain AT&T Unix systems equipped with AT&T modems, DIAL and HANGUP
-+ don't work right. Workarounds: (1) SET DIAL HANGUP OFF before
-+ attempting to dial; (2) If HANGUP doesn't work, SET LINE, and then SET
-+ LINE <device> to totally close and reopen the device. If all else
-+ fails, SET CARRIER OFF.
-+
-+ C-Kermit does not contain any particular support for AT&T DataKit
-+ devices. You can use Kermit software to dial in to a DataKit line, but
-+ C-Kermit does not contain the specialized code required to dial out
-+ from a DataKit line. If the Unix system is connected to DataKit via
-+ serial ports, dialout should work normally (e.g. set line /dev/ttym1,
-+ set speed 19200, connect, and then see the DESTINATION: prompt, from
-+ which you can connect to another computer on the DataKit network or to
-+ an outgoing modem pool, etc). But if the Unix system is connected to
-+ the DataKit network through the special DataKit interface board, then
-+ SET LINE to a DataKit pseudodevice (such as /dev/dk031t) will not work
-+ (you must use the DataKit "dk" or "dkcu" program instead). In C-Kermit
-+ 7.0 and later, you can make Kermit connections "though" dk or dkcu
-+ using "set line /pty".
-+
-+ In some BSD-based Unix C-Kermit versions, SET LINE to a port that has
-+ nothing plugged in to it with SET CARRIER ON will hang the program (as
-+ it should), but it can't be interrupted with Ctrl-C. The interrupt trap
-+ is correctly armed, but apparently the Unix open() call cannot be
-+ interrupted in this case. When SET CARRIER is OFF or AUTO, the SET LINE
-+ will eventually return, but then the program hangs (uninterruptibly)
-+ when the EXIT or QUIT command (or, presumably, another SET LINE
-+ command) is given. The latter is probably because of the attempt to
-+ hang up the modem. (In edit 169, a timeout alarm was placed around this
-+ operation.)
-+
-+ With SET DIAL HANGUP OFF in effect, the DIAL command might work only
-+ once, but not again on the same device. In that case, give a CLOSE
-+ command to close the device, and then another SET LINE command to
-+ re-open the same device. Or rebuild your version of Kermit with the
-+ -DCLSOPN compile-time switch.
-+
-+ The DIAL command says "To cancel: Type your interrupt character
-+ (normally Ctrl-C)." This is just one example of where program messages
-+ and documentation assume your interrupt character is Ctrl-C. But it
-+ might be something else. In most (but not necessarily all) cases, the
-+ character referred to is the one that generates the SIGINT signal. If
-+ Ctrl-C doesn't act as an interrupt character for you, type the Unix
-+ command "stty -a" or "stty all" or "stty everything" to see what your
-+ interrupt character is. (Kermit could be made to find out what the
-+ interrupt character is, but this would require a lot of
-+ platform-dependent coding and #ifdefs, and a new routine and interface
-+ between the platform-dependent and platform-independent parts of the
-+ program.)
-+
-+ In general, the hangup operation on a serial communication device is
-+ prone to failure. C-Kermit tries to support many, many different kinds
-+ of computers, and there seems to be no portable method for hanging up a
-+ modem connection (i.e. turning off the RS-232 DTR signal and then
-+ turning it back on again). If HANGUP, DIAL, and/or Ctrl-\H do not work
-+ for you, and you are a programmer, look at the tthang() function in
-+ ckutio.c and see if you can add code to make it work correctly for your
-+ system, and send the code to the address above. (NOTE: This problem has
-+ been largely sidestepped as of edit 188, in which Kermit first attempts
-+ to hang up the modem by "escaping back" via +++ and then giving the
-+ modem's hangup command, e.g. ATH0, when DIAL MODEM-HANGUP is ON, which
-+ is the default setting.)
-+
-+ Even when Kermit's modem-control software is configured correctly for
-+ your computer, it can only work right if your modem is also configured
-+ to assert the CD signal when it is connected to the remote modem and to
-+ hang up the connection when your computer drops the DTR signal. So
-+ before deciding Kermit doesn't work with your modem, check your modem
-+ configuration AND the cable (if any) connecting your modem to the
-+ computer -- it should be a straight-through [572]modem cable conducting
-+ the signals FG, SG, TD, RD, RTS, CTS, DSR, DTR, CD, and RI.
-+
-+ Many Unix systems keep aliases for dialout devices; for example,
-+ /dev/acu might be an alias for /dev/tty00. But most of these Unix
-+ systems also use UUCP lockfile conventions that do not take this
-+ aliasing into account, so if one user assigns (e.g.) /dev/acu, then
-+ another user can still assign the same device by referring to its other
-+ name. This is not a Kermit problem -- Kermit must follow the lockfile
-+ conventions used by the vendor-supplied software (cu, tip, uucp).
-+
-+ The SET FLOW-CONTROL KEEP option should be given *before* any
-+ communication (dialing, terminal emulation, file transfer,
-+ INPUT/OUTPUT/TRANSMIT, etc) is attempted, if you want C-Kermit to use
-+ all of the device's preexisting flow-control related settings. The
-+ default flow-control setting is XON/XOFF, and it will take effect when
-+ the first communication-related command is given, and a subsequent SET
-+ FLOW KEEP command will not necessarily know how to restore *all* of the
-+ device's original flow-control settings.
-+
-+7.2. Network Connections
-+
-+ C-Kermit tries to use the 8th bit for data when parity is NONE, and
-+ this generally works on real Unix terminal (tty) devices, but it often
-+ does not work when the Unix system is accessed over a network via
-+ telnet or rlogin protocols, including (in many cases) through terminal
-+ servers. For example, an Encore computer with Annex terminal servers
-+ only gives a 7-bit path if the rlogin protocol is selected in the
-+ terminal server but it gives the full 8 bits if the proprietary RDP
-+ protocol is used.
-+
-+ If file transfer does not work through a host to which you have
-+ rlogin'd, use "rlogin -8" rather than "rlogin". If that doesn't work,
-+ tell both Kermit programs to "set parity space".
-+
-+ The Encore TELNET server does not allow long bursts of input. When you
-+ have a TELNET connection to an Encore, tell C-Kermit on the Encore to
-+ SET RECEIVE PACKET-LENGTH 200 or thereabouts.
-+
-+8. HARDWARE FLOW CONTROL
-+
-+ [ [573]Top ] [ [574]Contents ] [ [575]Next ] [ [576]Previous ]
-+
-+ SET FLOW RTS/CTS is available in Unix C-Kermit only when the underlying
-+ operating system provides an Application Program Interface (API) for
-+ turning this feature on and off under program control, which turns out
-+ to be a rather rare feature among Unix systems. To see if your Unix
-+ C-Kermit version supports hardware flow control, type "set flow ?" at
-+ the C-Kermit prompt, and look for "rts/cts" among the options. Other
-+ common situations include:
-+
-+ 1. The API is available, so "set flow rts/cts" appears as a valid
-+ C-Kermit command, but it doesn't do anything because the device
-+ driver (part of the operating system) was never coded to do
-+ hardware flow control. This is common among System V R4
-+ implementations (details below).
-+ 2. The API is not available, so "set flow rts/cts" does NOT appear as
-+ a valid C-Kermit command, but you can still get RTS/CTS flow
-+ control by selecting a specially named device in your SET LINE
-+ command. Examples:
-+ + NeXTSTEP: /dev/cufa instead of /dev/cua, /dev/cufb instead of
-+ /dev/cub (68040 only; "man zs" for further info).
-+ + IRIX: /dev/ttyf2 instead of /dev/ttyd2 or /dev/ttym2 ("man 7
-+ serial").
-+ 3. The API is available, doesn't work, but a workaround as in (2) can
-+ be used.
-+ 4. The API is available, but Kermit doesn't know about it. In these
-+ cases, you can usually use an stty command to enable RTS/CTS on the
-+ device, e.g. "stty crtscts" or "stty ctsflow", "stty rtsflow",
-+ before starting Kermit, and then tell Kermit to SET FLOW KEEP.
-+ 5. No API and no special device drivers. Hardware flow control is
-+ completely unavailable.
-+
-+ System V R4 based Unixes are supposed to supply a <termiox.h> file,
-+ which gives Kermit the necessary interface to command the terminal
-+ driver to enable/disable hardware flow control. Unfortunately, but
-+ predictably, many implementations of SVR4 whimsically place this file
-+ in /usr/include/sys rather than /usr/include (where SVID clearly
-+ specifies it should be; see SVID, Third Edition, V1, termiox(BA_DEV).
-+ Thus if you build C-Kermit with any of the makefile entries that
-+ contain -DTERMIOX or -DSTERMIOX (the latter to select <sys/termiox.h>),
-+ C-Kermit will have "set flow rts/cts" and possibly other hardware
-+ flow-control related commands. BUT... That does not necessarily mean
-+ that they will work. In some cases, the underlying functions are simply
-+ not coded into the operating system.
-+
-+ WARNING: When hardware flow control is available, and you enable in
-+ Kermit on a device that is not receiving the CTS signal, Kermit can
-+ hang waiting for CTS to come up. This is most easily seen when the
-+ local serial port has nothing plugged in to it, or is connected to an
-+ external modem that is powered off.
-+
-+9. TERMINAL CONNECTION AND KEY MAPPING
-+
-+ [ [577]Top ] [ [578]Contents ] [ [579]Next ] [ [580]Previous ]
-+
-+ C-Kermit is not a terminal emulator. Refer to page 147 of [581]Using
-+ C-Kermit, 2nd Edition: "Most versions of C-Kermit -- Unix, VMS, AOS/VS,
-+ VOS, etc -- provide terminal connection without emulation. These
-+ versions act as a 'semitransparent pipe' between the remote computer
-+ and your terminal, terminal emulator, console driver, or window, which
-+ in turn emulates (or is) a specific kind of terminal." The environment
-+ in which you run C-Kermit is up to you.
-+
-+ If you are an X Windows user, you should be aware of an alternative to
-+ xterm that supports VT220 emulation, from Thomas E. Dickey:
-+
-+ [582]http://dickey.his.com/xterm/xterm.html
-+
-+ Unix C-Kermit's SET KEY command currently can not be used with keys
-+ that generate "wide" scan codes or multibyte sequences, such as
-+ workstation function or arrow keys, because Unix C-Kermit does not have
-+ direct access to the keyboard.
-+
-+ However, many Unix workstations and/or console drivers provide their
-+ own key mapping feature. With xterm, for example, you can use 'xmodmap'
-+ ("man xmodmap" for details); here is an xterm mapping to map the Sun
-+ keyboard to DEC VT200 values for use with VT-terminal oriented
-+ applications like VMS EVE:
-+
-+ keycode 101=KP_0
-+ keycode 119=KP_1
-+ keycode 120=KP_2
-+ keycode 121=KP_3
-+ keycode 98=KP_4
-+ keycode 99=KP_5
-+ keycode 100=KP_6
-+ keycode 75=KP_7
-+ keycode 76=KP_8
-+ keycode 77=KP_9
-+ keycode 52=KP_F1
-+ keycode 53=KP_F2
-+ keycode 54=KP_F3
-+ keycode 57=KP_Decimal
-+ keycode 28=Left
-+ keycode 29=Right
-+ keycode 30=KP_Separator
-+ keycode 105=KP_F4
-+ keycode 78=KP_Subtract
-+ keycode 8=Left
-+ keycode 10=Right
-+ keycode 32=Up
-+ keycode 33=Down
-+ keycode 97=KP_Enter
-+
-+ Users of Linux consoles can use loadkeys ("man dumpkeys loadkeys
-+ keytables" for details. The format used by loadkeys is compatible with
-+ that used by Xmodmap, although it is not definitely certain that the
-+ keycodes are compatible for different keyboard types (e.g. Sun vs HP vs
-+ PC, etc).
-+
-+10. FILE TRANSFER
-+
-+ [ [583]Top ] [ [584]Contents ] [ [585]Next ] [ [586]Previous ]
-+
-+ On most platforms, C-Kermit can not handle files longer than 2^31 or
-+ 2^32 bytes long, because it uses the traditional file i/o APIs that use
-+ 32-bit words to represent the file size. To accommodate longer files,
-+ we would have to switch to a new and different API. Unfortunately, each
-+ platform has a different one, a nightmare to handle in portable code.
-+ The C-Kermit file code was written in the days long before files longer
-+ than 2GB were supported or even contemplated in the operating systems
-+ where C-Kermit ran.
-+
-+ If uploads (or downloads) fail immediately, give the CAUTIOUS command
-+ to Kermit and try again. If they still fail, then try SET PREFIXING
-+ ALL. If they still fail, try SET PARITY SPACE. If they still fail, try
-+ ROBUST.
-+
-+ If reception (particularly of large files and/or binary files) begins
-+ successfully but then fail constently after a certain amount of bytes
-+ have been sent, check:
-+
-+ * Your ulimit ("ulimit -a")
-+ * The amount of available space on the target disk ("df ." or "df -k
-+ .")
-+ * Your personal disk quota (platform- and site-dependent)
-+ * The maximum file size on the receiver's file system (e.g. 2GB in
-+ old verions the Linux VFS file system, and/or in applications that
-+ have not been recoded to use new "large file" APIs).
-+ * If it's an NFS-mounted disk (if so, try uploading to a local disk)
-+ * Is there an "idle limit" on the receiving end?
-+
-+ If none of these seem to explain it, then the problem is not size
-+ related, but reflects some clash between the file contents and the
-+ characteristics of the connection, in which case follow the
-+ instructions in the first paragraph of this section.
-+
-+ Suppose two copies of Kermit are receiving files into the same
-+ directory, and the files have the same name, e.g. "foo.bar". Whichever
-+ one starts first opens an output file called "foo.bar". The second one
-+ sees there is already a foo.bar file, and so renames the existing
-+ foo.bar to foo.bar.~1~ (or whatever). When the first file has been
-+ received completely, Kermit goes to change its modification time and
-+ permissions to those given by the file sender in the Attribute packet.
-+ But in Unix, the APIs for doing this take a filename, not a file
-+ descriptor. Since the first Kermit's file has been renamed, and the
-+ second Kermit is using the original name, the first Kermit changes the
-+ modtime and permissions of the second Kermit's file, not its own.
-+ Although there might be a way to work around this in the code, e.g.
-+ using inode numbers to keep track of which file is which, this would be
-+ tricky and most likely not very portable. It's better to set up your
-+ application to prevent such things from happening, which is easy enough
-+ using the script language, filename templates, etc.
-+
-+ Suppose you start C-Kermit with a command-line argument to send or
-+ receive a file (e.g. "kermit -r") and then type Ctrl-\c immediately
-+ afterwards to escape back and initiate the other end of the transfer,
-+ BUT your local Kermit's escape character is not Ctrl-\. In this case,
-+ the local Kermit passes the Ctrl-\ to the remote system, and if this is
-+ Unix, Ctrl-\ is likely to be its SIGQUIT character, which causes the
-+ current program to halt and dump core. Well, just about the first thing
-+ C-Kermit does when it starts is to disable the SIGQUIT signal. However,
-+ it is still possible for SIGQUIT to cause Kermit to quit and dump core
-+ if it is delivered while Kermit is being loaded or started, before the
-+ signal can be disabled. There's nothing Kermit itself can do about
-+ this, but you can prevent it from happening by disabling SIGQUIT in
-+ your Unix session. The command is usually something like:
-+
-+ stty quit undef
-+
-+ Unix C-Kermit does not reject incoming files on the basis of size.
-+ There appears to be no good (reliable, portable) way to determine in
-+ advance how much disk space is available, either on the device, or
-+ (when quotas or other limits are involved) to the user.
-+
-+ Unix C-Kermit discards all carriage returns from incoming files when in
-+ text mode.
-+
-+ If C-Kermit has problems creating files in writable directories when it
-+ is installed setuid or setgid on BSD-based versions of Unix such as
-+ NeXTSTEP 3.0, it probably needs to be rebuilt with the -DSW_ACC_ID
-+ compilation switch.
-+
-+ If you SET FILE DISPLAY FULLSCREEN, and C-Kermit complains "Sorry,
-+ terminal type not supported", it means that the terminal library
-+ (termcap or termlib) that C-Kermit was built with does not know about a
-+ terminal whose name is the current value of your TERM environment
-+ variable. If this happens, but you want to have the fullscreen file
-+ transfer display, EXIT from C-Kermit and set a Unix terminal type from
-+ among the supported values that is also supported by your terminal
-+ emulator, or else have an entry for your terminal type added to the
-+ system termcap and/or terminfo database.
-+
-+ If you attempt to suspend C-Kermit during local-mode file transfer and
-+ then continue it in the background (via bg), it will block for "tty
-+ output" if you are using the FULLSCREEN file transfer display. This is
-+ apparently a problem with curses. Moving a local-mode file transfer
-+ back and forth between foreground and background works correctly,
-+ however, with the SERIAL, CRT, BRIEF, or NONE file transfer displays.
-+
-+ If C-Kermit's command parser no longer echoes, or otherwise acts
-+ strangely, after returning from a file transfer with the fullscreen
-+ (curses) display, and the curses library for your version of Unix
-+ includes the newterm() function, then try rebuilding your version of
-+ C-Kermit with -DCK_NEWTERM. Similarly if it echoes doubly, which might
-+ even happen during a subsequent CONNECT session. If rebuilding with
-+ -DCK_NEWTERM doesn't fix it, then there is something very strange about
-+ your system's curses library, and you should probably not use it. Tell
-+ C-Kermit to SET FILE DISPLAY CRT, BRIEF, or anything else other than
-+ FULLSCREEN, and/or rebuild without -DCK_CURSES, and without linking
-+ with (termlib and) curses. Note: This problem seemed to have escalated
-+ in C-Kermit 7.0, and -DCK_NEWTERM had to be added to many builds that
-+ previously worked without it: Linux, AIX 4.1, DG/UX, etc. In the Linux
-+ case, it is obviously because of changes in the (n)curses library; the
-+ cause in the other cases is not known.
-+
-+ C-Kermit creates backup-file names (such as "oofa.txt.~1~") based on
-+ its knowledge of the maximum filename length on the platform where it
-+ is running, which is learned at compile time, based on MAXNAMLEN or
-+ equivalent symbols from the system header files. But suppose C-Kermit
-+ is receiving files on a Unix platform that supports long filenames, but
-+ the incoming files are being stored on an NFS-mounted file system that
-+ supports only short names. NFS maps the external system to the local
-+ APIs, so C-Kermit has no way of knowing that long names will be
-+ truncated. Or that C-Kermit is running on a version of Unix that
-+ supports both long-name and short-name file systems simultaneously
-+ (such as HP-UX 7.00). This can cause unexpected behavior when creating
-+ backup files, or worse. For example, you are sending a group of files
-+ whose names are differentiated only by characters past the point at
-+ which they would be truncated, each file will overwrite the previous
-+ one upon arrival.
-+
-+11. EXTERNAL FILE TRANSFER PROTOCOLS
-+
-+ [ [587]Top ] [ [588]Contents ] [ [589]Next ] [ [590]Previous ]
-+
-+ SECTION CONTENTS
-+
-+ 11.1. [591]C-Kermit as an External Protocol
-+ 11.2. [592]Invoking External Protocols from C-Kermit
-+
-+ Unix C-Kermit can be used in conjunction with other communications
-+ software in various ways. C-Kermit can be invoked from another
-+ communications program as an "external protocol", and C-Kermit can also
-+ invoke other communication software to perform external protocols.
-+
-+ This sort of operation makes sense only when you are dialing out from
-+ your Unix system (or making a network connection from it). If the Unix
-+ system is the one you have dialed in to, you don't need any of these
-+ tricks. Just run the desired software on your Unix system instead of
-+ Kermit. When dialing out from a Unix system, the difficulty is getting
-+ two programs to share the same communication device in spite of the
-+ Unix UUCP lockfile mechanism, which would normally prevent any sharing,
-+ and preventing the external protocol from closing (and therefore
-+ hanging up) the device when it exits back to the program that invoked
-+ it.
-+
-+11.1. C-KERMIT AS AN EXTERNAL PROTOCOL
-+
-+ [ [593]Top ] [ [594]Contents ] [ [595]Section Contents ] [ [596]Next ]
-+
-+ (This section deleted; see [597]Using C-Kermit, 2nd Ed, Chapter 14.)
-+
-+ "pcomm" is a general-purpose terminal program that provides file
-+ transfer capabilities itself (X- and YMODEM variations) and the ability
-+ to call on external programs to do file transfers (ZMODEM and Kermit,
-+ for example). You can tell pcomm the command to send or receive a file
-+ with an external protocol:
-+ Send Receive
-+ ZMODEM sz filename rz
-+ Kermit kermit -s filename kermit -r
-+
-+ pcomm runs external programs for file transfer by making stdin and
-+ stdout point to the modem port, and then exec-ing "/bin/sh -c xxx"
-+ (where xxx is the appropriate command). However, C-Kermit does not
-+ treat stdin and stdout as the communication device unless you instruct
-+ it:
-+
-+
-+ Send Receive
-+ Kermit kermit -l 0 -s filename kermit -l 0 -r
-+
-+ The "-l 0" option means to use file descriptor 0 for the communication
-+ device.
-+
-+ In general, any program can pass any open file descriptor to C-Kermit
-+ for the communication device in the "-l" command-line option. When
-+ Kermit is given a number as the argument to the "-l" option, it simply
-+ uses it as a file descriptor, and it does not attempt to close it upon
-+ exit.
-+
-+ Here's another example, for Seyon (a Linux communication program).
-+ First try the technique above. If that works, fine; otherwise... If
-+ Seyon does not give you a way to access and pass along the file
-+ descriptor, but it starts up the Kermit program with its standard i/o
-+ redirected to its (Seyon's) communications file descriptor, you can
-+ also experiment with the following method, which worked here in brief
-+ tests on SunOS. Instead of having Seyon use "kermit -r" or "kermit -s
-+ filename" as its Kermit protocol commands, use something like this
-+ (examples assume C-Kermit 6.0):
-+
-+ For serial connections:
-+
-+ kermit -YqQl 0 -r <-- to receive
-+ kermit -YqQl 0 -s filename(s) <-- to send one or more files
-+
-+ For Telnet connections:
-+
-+ kermit -YqQF 0 -r <-- to receive
-+ kermit -YqQF 0 -s filename(s) <-- to send one or more files
-+
-+ Command line options:
-+
-+ Y - skip executing the init file
-+ Q - use fast file transfer settings (default in 8.0)
-+ l 0 - transfer files using file descriptor 0 for a serial connection
-+ F 0 - transfer files using file descriptor 0 for a Telnet connection
-+ q - quiet - no messages
-+ r - receive
-+ s - send
-+
-+11.2. INVOKING EXTERNAL PROTOCOLS FROM C-KERMIT
-+
-+ [ [598]Top ] [ [599]Contents ] [ [600]Section Contents ] [
-+ [601]Previous ]
-+
-+ (This section is obsolete, but not totally useless. See Chapter 14
-+ of [602]Using C-Kermit, 2nd Edition).
-+
-+ After you have opened a communication link with C-Kermit's SET LINE
-+ (SET PORT) or SET HOST (TELNET) command, C-Kermit makes its file
-+ descriptor available to you in the \v(ttyfd) variable so you can pass
-+ it along to other programs that you RUN from C-Kermit. Here, for
-+ example, C-Kermit runs itself as an external protocol:
-+
-+ C-Kermit>set modem type hayes
-+ C-Kermit>set line /dev/acu
-+ C-Kermit>set speed 2400
-+ C-Kermit>dial 7654321
-+ Call complete.
-+ C-Kermit>echo \v(ttyfd)
-+ 3
-+ C-Kermit>run kermit -l \v(ttyfd)
-+
-+ Other programs that accept open file descriptors on the command line
-+ can be started in the same way.
-+
-+ You can also use your shell's i/o redirection facilities to assign
-+ C-Kermit's open file descriptor (ttyfd) to stdin or stdout. For
-+ example, old versions of the Unix ZMODEM programs, sz and rz, when
-+ invoked as external protocols, expect to find the communication device
-+ assigned to stdin and stdout with no option for specifying any other
-+ file descriptor on the sz or rz command line. However, you can still
-+ invoke sz and rz as exterior protocols from C-Kermit if your current
-+ shell ($SHELL variable) is ksh (the Korn shell) or bash (the
-+ Bourne-Again shell), which allows assignment of arbitrary file
-+ descriptors to stdin and stdout:
-+
-+ C-Kermit> run rz <&\v(ttyfd) >&\v(ttyfd)
-+
-+ or:
-+
-+ C-Kermit> run sz oofa.zip <&\v(ttyfd) >&\v(ttyfd)
-+
-+ In version 5A(190) and later, you can use C-Kermit's REDIRECT command,
-+ if it is available in your version of C-Kermit, to accomplish the same
-+ thing without going through the shell:
-+
-+ C-Kermit> redirect rz
-+
-+ or:
-+
-+ C-Kermit> redirect sz oofa.zip
-+
-+ A complete set of rz,sz,rb,sb,rx,sx macros for Unix C-Kermit is defined
-+ in the file ckurzsz.ini. It automatically chooses the best redirection
-+ method (but is redundant since C-Kermit 6.0, which now has built-in
-+ support for external protocols via its SET PROTOCOL command).
-+
-+ Note that external protocols can be used on C-Kermit SET LINE or SET
-+ HOST connections only if they operate through standard input and
-+ standard output. If they open their own connections, Kermit can't
-+ redirect them over its own connection.
-+
-+12. SECURITY
-+
-+ [ [603]Top ] [ [604]Contents ] [ [605]Next ] [ [606]Previous ]
-+
-+ As of version 7.0, C-Kermit supports a wide range of security options
-+ for authentication and encryption: Kerberos 4, Kerberos 5 / GSSAPI,
-+ SSL/TLS, and SRP. See the separate [607]security document for details.
-+
-+13. MISCELLANEOUS USER REPORTS
-+
-+ [ [608]Top ] [ [609]Contents ] [ [610]Next ] [ [611]Previous ]
-+
-+Date: Thu, 12 Mar 92 1:59:25 MEZ
-+From: Walter Mecky <walter@rent-a-guru.de>
-+Subject: Help.Unix.sw
-+To: svr4@pcsbst.pcs.com, source@usl.com
-+
-+PRODUCT: Unix
-+RELEASE: Dell SVR4 V2.1 (is USL V3.0)
-+MACHINE: AT-386
-+PATHNAME: /usr/lib/libc.so.1
-+ /usr/ccs/lib/libc.a
-+ABSTRACT: Function ttyname() does not close its file descriptor
-+DESCRIPTION:
-+ ttyname(3C) opens /dev but never closes it. So if it is called
-+ often enough the open(2) in ttyname() fails. Because the broken
-+ ttyname() is in the shared lib too all programs using it can
-+ fail if they call it often enough. One important program is
-+ uucico which calls ttyname for every file it transfers.
-+
-+
-+ Here is a little test program if your system has the bug:
-+
-+#include <stdlib.h>
-+#include <stdio.h>
-+main() {
-+ int i = 0;
-+ while (ttyname(0) != NULL)
-+ i++;
-+ perror("ttyname");
-+ printf("i=%d\n", i);
-+}
-+
-+ If this program runs longer than some seconds you don't have the bug.
-+
-+ WORKAROUND: None FIX: Very easy if you have source code.
-+
-+ Another user reports some more explicit symptoms and recoveries:
-+
-+> What happens is when invoking ckermit we get one of the following
-+> error messages:
-+> You must set line
-+> Not a tty
-+> No more processes.
-+> One of the following three actions clears the peoblem:
-+> shutdown -y -g0 -i6
-+> kill -9 the ttymon with the highest PID
-+> Invoke sysadm and disable then enable the line you want to use.
-+> Turning off respawn of sac -t 300 and going to getty's and uugetty's
-+> does not help.
-+>
-+> Also C-Kermit reports "?timed out closing /dev/ttyxx".
-+> If this happens all is well.
-+
-+------------------------------
-+
-+ (Note: the following problem also occurs on SGI and probably many other
-+ Unix systems):
-+
-+ From: James Spath <spath@jhunix.hcf.jhu.edu>
-+ To: Info-Kermit-Request@cunixf.cc.columbia.edu
-+ Date: Wed, 9 Sep 1992 20:20:28 -0400
-+ Subject: C-Kermit vs uugetty (or init) on Sperry 5000
-+
-+ We have successfully compiled the above release on a Unisys/Sperry
-+ 5000/95. We used the sys5r3 option, rather than sys5r2 since we have
-+ VR3 running on our system. In order to allow dialout access to
-+ non-superusers, we had to do "chmod 666 /dev/tty###, where it had been
-+ -rw--w--w- (owned by uucp), and to do "chmod +w /usr/spool/locks". We
-+ have done text and binary file transfers through local and remote
-+ connections.
-+
-+ The problem concerning uucp ownership and permissions is worse than I
-+ thought at first. Apparently init or uugetty changes the file
-+ permissions after each session. So I wrote the following C program to
-+ open a set of requested tty lines. I run this for any required outgoing
-+ line prior to a Kermit session.
-+
-+ ------ cut here -------
-+/* opentty.c -- force allow read on tty lines for modem i/o */
-+/* idea from: restrict.c -- System 5 Admin book Thomas/Farrow p. 605 */
-+/* /jes jim spath {spath@jhunix.hcj.jhu.edu } */
-+/* 08-Sep-92 NO COPYRIGHT. */
-+/* this must be suid to open other tty lines */
-+
-+/* #define DEBUG */
-+#define TTY "/dev/tty"
-+#define LOK "/usr/spool/locks/LCK..tty"
-+#include <stdio.h>
-+
-+/* allowable lines: */
-+#define TOTAL_LINES 3
-+static char allowable[TOTAL_LINES][4] = { "200", "201", "300" };
-+static int total=TOTAL_LINES;
-+int allow;
-+
-+/* states: */
-+#define TTY_UNDEF 0
-+#define TTY_LOCK 1
-+#define TTY_OKAY 2
-+
-+main(argc, argv)
-+int argc; char *argv[]; {
-+ char device[512];
-+ char lockdev[512];
-+ int i;
-+ if (argc == 1) {
-+ fprintf(stderr, "usage: open 200 [...]\n");
-+ }
-+ while (--argc > 0 && (*++argv) != NULL ) {
-+#ifdef DEBUG
-+ fprintf(stderr, "TRYING: %s%s\n", TTY, *argv);
-+#endif
-+ sprintf(device, "%s%s", TTY, *argv);
-+ sprintf(lockdev, "%s%s", LOK, *argv);
-+ allow = TTY_UNDEF; i = 0;
-+ while (i <= total) { /* look at all defined lines */
-+#ifdef DEBUG
-+ fprintf(stderr, "LOCKFILE? %s?\n", lockdev);
-+#endif
-+ if (access(lockdev, 00) == 0) {
-+ allow=TTY_LOCK;
-+ break;
-+ }
-+#ifdef DEBUG
-+ fprintf(stderr, "DOES:%s==%s?\n", allowable[i], *argv);
-+#endif
-+ if (strcmp(allowable[i], *argv) == 0)
-+ allow=TTY_OKAY;
-+ i++;
-+ }
-+#ifdef DEBUG
-+ fprintf(stderr, "allow=%d\n", allow);
-+#endif
-+ switch (allow) {
-+ case TTY_UNDEF:
-+ fprintf (stderr, "open: not allowed on %s\n", *argv);
-+ break;
-+ case TTY_LOCK:
-+ fprintf (stderr, "open: device locked: %s\n", lockdev);
-+ break;
-+ case TTY_OKAY:
-+ /* attempt to change mode on device */
-+ if (chmod (device, 00666) < 0)
-+ fprintf (stderr, "open: cannot chmod on %s\n", device);
-+ break;
-+ default:
-+ fprintf (stderr, "open: FAULT\n");
-+ }
-+ }
-+ exit (0);
-+}
-+
-+14. THIRD-PARTY DRIVERS
-+
-+ [ [612]Top ] [ [613]Contents ] [ [614]Next ] [ [615]Previous ]
-+
-+ Unix versions, especially those for PCs (SCO, Unixware, etc) might be
-+ augmented by third-party communication-board drivers from Digiboard,
-+ Stallion, etc. These can sometimes complicate matters for Kermit
-+ considerably since Kermit has no way of knowing that it is going
-+ through a possibly nonstandard driver. Various examples are listed in
-+ the earlier sections of this document; search for Stallion, Digiboard,
-+ etc. Additionally:
-+
-+ * The Stallion Technologies EasyConnection serial board driver does
-+ not always report the state of DSR as low. From Stallion (October
-+ 1997): "Unfortunately, this is a bug in our driver. We have
-+ implemented all of the other TIOMC functions, eg DTR, DCD, RTS and
-+ CTS, but not DSR. Our driver should report the actual state of DSR
-+ on those of our cards that have a DSR signal. That the driver
-+ always reports DSR as not asserted (0), is a bug in the driver. The
-+ driver should be either reporting the state of DSR correctly on
-+ those cards that support DSR or as always asserted (1) on those
-+ cards that do not have a DSR signal. This will be fixed in a future
-+ version of our drivers; at this time I cannot say when this will
-+ be." And later, "As far as I can tell, we don't support the
-+ termios/termiox ioctls that relate specifically to DSR and RI; all
-+ the rest are supported. This will, as I mentioned earlier, be fixed
-+ in the next release of our ATA software."
-+ - World Wide Escalation Support, Stallion Technologies, Toowong
-+ QLD, [616]support@stallion.oz.au.
-+
-+ Later (December 1997, from the same source):
-+
-+ * We have now released a new version of the ATA software, version
-+ 5.4.0. This version fixes the problem with the states of the DSR
-+ and RI signals and how they were being reported by the driver. This
-+ is the problem that you reported in October. The DSR signal is
-+ reported correctly on those cards that support the DSR signal, such
-+ as the early revision of the EasyIO card and the EasyConnection 8D4
-+ panel, and as always asserted on those cards that do not support
-+ the DSR signal in the hardware. The new driver is available from
-+ our Web site, [617]www.stallion.com, in the /drivers/ata5/UnixWare
-+ directory.
-+
-+ [ [618]Top ] [ [619]Contents ] [ [620]C-Kermit Home ] [ [621]C-Kermit
-+ 8.0 Overview ] [ [622]Kermit Home ]
-+ __________________________________________________________________
-+
-+ C-Kermit 8.0 Unix Hints and Tips / [623]The Kermit Project /
-+ [624]Columbia University / [625]kermit@columbia.edu
-+
-+References
-+
-+ 1. http://www.columbia.edu/
-+ 2. mailto:kermit@columbia.edu
-+ 3. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 4. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/k95.html
-+ 5. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 6. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckscripts.html
-+ 7. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/current.html
-+ 8. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/whatsnew.html
-+ 9. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/faq.html
-+ 10. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/support.html
-+ 11. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/
-+ 12. http://www.columbia.edu/
-+ 13. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html
-+ 14. mailto:kermit-support@columbia.edu
-+ 15. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 16. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html
-+ 17. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html
-+ 18. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x1
-+ 19. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x2
-+ 20. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3
-+ 21. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x4
-+ 22. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x5
-+ 23. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x6
-+ 24. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x7
-+ 25. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x8
-+ 26. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x9
-+ 27. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x10
-+ 28. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x11
-+ 29. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x12
-+ 30. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x13
-+ 31. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x14
-+ 32. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.3
-+ 33. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.18
-+ 34. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.19
-+ 35. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.1
-+ 36. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.2
-+ 37. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.7
-+ 38. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.6
-+ 39. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.13
-+ 40. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#top
-+ 41. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#contents
-+ 42. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x2
-+ 43. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x1.1
-+ 44. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x1.2
-+ 45. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x1.3
-+ 46. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x1.4
-+ 47. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.3
-+ 48. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.1
-+ 49. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.2
-+ 50. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.7
-+ 51. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcbwr.html
-+ 52. mailto:kermit-support@columbia.edu
-+ 53. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#top
-+ 54. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#contents
-+ 55. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x1.2
-+ 56. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ck60manual.html
-+ 57. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html
-+ 58. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html
-+ 59. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit90.html
-+ 60. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#top
-+ 61. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#contents
-+ 62. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x1
-+ 63. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x1.3
-+ 64. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x1.1
-+ 65. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/support.html
-+ 66. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#top
-+ 67. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#contents
-+ 68. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x1
-+ 69. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x1.4
-+ 70. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x1.2
-+ 71. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#top
-+ 72. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#contents
-+ 73. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x1
-+ 74. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x1.3
-+ 75. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#top
-+ 76. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#contents
-+ 77. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3
-+ 78. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x1
-+ 79. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#top
-+ 80. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#contents
-+ 81. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x4
-+ 82. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x2
-+ 83. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.0
-+ 84. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.1
-+ 85. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.2
-+ 86. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.3
-+ 87. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.4
-+ 88. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.5
-+ 89. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.6
-+ 90. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.7
-+ 91. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.8
-+ 92. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.9
-+ 93. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.10
-+ 94. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.11
-+ 95. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.12
-+ 96. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.13
-+ 97. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.14
-+ 98. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.15
-+ 99. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.16
-+ 100. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.17
-+ 101. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.18
-+ 102. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.19
-+ 103. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.20
-+ 104. http://www.faqs.org/
-+ 105. http://aplawrence.com/Unixart/newtounix.html
-+ 106. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3
-+ 107. mailto:kermit-support@columbia.edu
-+ 108. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/support.html
-+ 109. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#top
-+ 110. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#contents
-+ 111. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3
-+ 112. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.1
-+ 113. http://www.pcunix.com/
-+ 114. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.0.1
-+ 115. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.0.2
-+ 116. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.0.3
-+ 117. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.0.4
-+ 118. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.0.5
-+ 119. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.0.6
-+ 120. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#top
-+ 121. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#contents
-+ 122. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.0
-+ 123. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.0.2
-+ 124. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#top
-+ 125. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#contents
-+ 126. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.0
-+ 127. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.0.3
-+ 128. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.0.1
-+ 129. http://www.linmodems.org/
-+ 130. http://www.microsoft.com/hwdev/platform/PCdesign/LR/default.asp
-+ 131. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#top
-+ 132. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#contents
-+ 133. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.0
-+ 134. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.0.4
-+ 135. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.0.2
-+ 136. http://www.idir.net/~gromitkc/winmodem.html
-+ 137. http://www.digi.com/
-+ 138. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#top
-+ 139. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#contents
-+ 140. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.0
-+ 141. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.0.5
-+ 142. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.0.3
-+ 143. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#top
-+ 144. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#contents
-+ 145. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.0
-+ 146. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.0.6
-+ 147. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.0.4
-+ 148. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#top
-+ 149. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#contents
-+ 150. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.0
-+ 151. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.0.5
-+ 152. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#top
-+ 153. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#contents
-+ 154. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3
-+ 155. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.2
-+ 156. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.0
-+ 157. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.1.1
-+ 158. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.1.2
-+ 159. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.1.3
-+ 160. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.1.4
-+ 161. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.1.5
-+ 162. http://www.emerson.emory.edu/services/aix-faq/
-+ 163. http://www.faqs.org/faqs/by-newsgroup/comp/comp.unix.aix.html
-+ 164. http://www.cis.ohio-state.edu/hypertext/faq/usenet/aix-faq/top.html
-+ 165. http://aixpdslib.seas.ucla.edu/
-+ 166. http://www.rootvg.net(AIXhistory)/
-+ 167. ftp://rtfm.mit.edu/pub/usenet/news.answers/aix-faq/part1
-+ 168. ftp://mirrors.aol.com/pub/rtfm/usenet-by-hierarchy/comp/unix/aix
-+ 169. news:comp.unix.aix
-+ 170. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#top
-+ 171. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#contents
-+ 172. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.1
-+ 173. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.1.2
-+ 174. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#top
-+ 175. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#contents
-+ 176. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.1
-+ 177. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.1.3
-+ 178. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.1.1
-+ 179. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/security.html#servers
-+ 180. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#top
-+ 181. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#contents
-+ 182. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.1
-+ 183. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.1.4
-+ 184. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.1.2
-+ 185. http://service.software.ibm.com/rs6000/
-+ 186. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#top
-+ 187. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#contents
-+ 188. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.1
-+ 189. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.1.5
-+ 190. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.1.3
-+ 191. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#top
-+ 192. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#contents
-+ 193. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.1
-+ 194. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.1.4
-+ 195. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#top
-+ 196. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#contents
-+ 197. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3
-+ 198. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.3
-+ 199. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.1
-+ 200. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.2.0
-+ 201. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.2.1
-+ 202. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.2.2
-+ 203. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.2.3
-+ 204. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.2.4
-+ 205. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.2.5
-+ 206. news:comp.sys.hp.hpux
-+ 207. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#top
-+ 208. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#contents
-+ 209. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.2
-+ 210. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.2.1
-+ 211. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#top
-+ 212. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#contents
-+ 213. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.2
-+ 214. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.2.2
-+ 215. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.2.0
-+ 216. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/f/makefile
-+ 217. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#top
-+ 218. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#contents
-+ 219. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.2
-+ 220. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.2.3
-+ 221. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.2.1
-+ 222. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#top
-+ 223. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#contents
-+ 224. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.2
-+ 225. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.2.4
-+ 226. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.2.2
-+ 227. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.2.4.1
-+ 228. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.2.4.2
-+ 229. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.2.4.3
-+ 230. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.2.4.4
-+ 231. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.2.4.5
-+ 232. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#top
-+ 233. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#contents
-+ 234. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.2
-+ 235. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.2.4.2
-+ 236. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.2.2
-+ 237. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#top
-+ 238. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#contents
-+ 239. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.2.4
-+ 240. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.2.4.3
-+ 241. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.2.4.1
-+ 242. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#top
-+ 243. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#contents
-+ 244. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.2.4
-+ 245. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.2.4.4
-+ 246. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.2.4.2
-+ 247. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#top
-+ 248. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#contents
-+ 249. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.2.4
-+ 250. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.2.4.5
-+ 251. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.2.4.3
-+ 252. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#top
-+ 253. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#contents
-+ 254. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.2.4
-+ 255. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.2.4.4
-+ 256. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#top
-+ 257. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#contents
-+ 258. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.2
-+ 259. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.2.4
-+ 260. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#top
-+ 261. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#contents
-+ 262. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3
-+ 263. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.4
-+ 264. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.2
-+ 265. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.3.1
-+ 266. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.3.2
-+ 267. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.3.3
-+ 268. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.3.4
-+ 269. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.3.5
-+ 270. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.3.6
-+ 271. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Avahi_(software)
-+ 272. news:comp.os.linux.misc
-+ 273. news:comp.os.linux.answers
-+ 274. http://www.tldp.org/
-+ 275. http://www.tldp.org/FAQ/Linux-FAQ.html
-+ 276. http://www.tldp.org/HOWTO/Serial-HOWTO.html
-+ 277. http://tldp.org/HOWTO/Modem-HOWTO.html
-+ 278. ftp://sunsite.unc.edu/pub/Linux/docs/HOWTO
-+ 279. ftp://tsx-11.mit.edu/pub/linux/docs/HOWTO
-+ 280. http://www.tldp.org/HOWTO/
-+ 281. http://www.tldp.org/hmirrors.html
-+ 282. http://www.redhat.com/apps/support/
-+ 283. http://www.debian.org/support
-+ 284. http://www.slackware.com/support/
-+ 285. http://www.caldera.com/support/
-+ 286. http://www.novell.com/support/microsites/microsite.do
-+ 287. http://www.mandrake.com/support/
-+ 288. http://www.turbolinux.com/support/
-+ 289. http://www.linmodems.org/
-+ 290. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.0
-+ 291. http://linux.dreamtime.org/decnet/
-+ 292. mailto:kermit-support@columbia.edu
-+ 293. http://www.linmodems.org/
-+ 294. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.0.2
-+ 295. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/security.html#servers
-+ 296. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/sshclient.html
-+ 297. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#top
-+ 298. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#contents
-+ 299. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3
-+ 300. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.3.2
-+ 301. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#top
-+ 302. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#contents
-+ 303. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.3
-+ 304. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.3.3
-+ 305. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.3.1
-+ 306. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.0
-+ 307. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x6
-+ 308. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x7
-+ 309. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x8
-+ 310. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x10
-+ 311. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x11
-+ 312. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html
-+ 313. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.0
-+ 314. http://linuxwww.db.erau.edu/mail_archives/linux-kernel/Mar_98/1441.html
-+ 315. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#top
-+ 316. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#contents
-+ 317. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.3
-+ 318. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.3.4
-+ 319. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.3.2
-+ 320. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.0.5
-+ 321. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckfaq.html#term
-+ 322. http://dickey.his.com/xterm/xterm.html
-+ 323. http://dickey.his.com/xterm/xterm.html
-+ 324. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/f/xmodmap.txt
-+ 325. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#top
-+ 326. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#contents
-+ 327. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.3
-+ 328. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.3.5
-+ 329. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.3.3
-+ 330. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#top
-+ 331. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#contents
-+ 332. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.3
-+ 333. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.3.6
-+ 334. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.3.4
-+ 335. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 336. mailto:kermit-support@columbia.edu
-+ 337. http://www.redhat.com/support/errata/RHBA-2001-153.html
-+ 338. news:comp.protocols.kermit.misc
-+ 339. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#top
-+ 340. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#contents
-+ 341. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.3
-+ 342. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.3.5
-+ 343. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#top
-+ 344. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#contents
-+ 345. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3
-+ 346. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.5
-+ 347. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.3
-+ 348. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#top
-+ 349. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#contents
-+ 350. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3
-+ 351. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.6
-+ 352. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.4
-+ 353. news:comp.os.qnx
-+ 354. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/gkermit.html
-+ 355. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x10
-+ 356. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html
-+ 357. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#top
-+ 358. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#contents
-+ 359. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3
-+ 360. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.7
-+ 361. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.5
-+ 362. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.6.1
-+ 363. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.6.2
-+ 364. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.6.3
-+ 365. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.6.4
-+ 366. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.10
-+ 367. http://aplawrence.com/SCOFAQ/
-+ 368. http://www.zenez.com/cgi-bin/scoprogfaq/faq.pl
-+ 369. http://www.zenez.com/cgi-bin/scouw7faq/faq.pl
-+ 370. http://zenez.pcunix.com/cgi-bin/scouw7faq/faq.pl
-+ 371. http://pcunix.com/Unixart/modems.html
-+ 372. http://www.freebird.org/faq/
-+ 373. http://www.freebird.org/faq/developer.html
-+ 374. http://support.caldera.com/caldera
-+ 375. http://stage.caldera.com/ta/
-+ 376. http://aplawrence.com/newtosco.html
-+ 377. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.0.5
-+ 378. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckfaq.html#term
-+ 379. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.0
-+ 380. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#top
-+ 381. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#contents
-+ 382. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.6
-+ 383. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.6.1
-+ 384. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckutio.c
-+ 385. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#top
-+ 386. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#contents
-+ 387. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.6
-+ 388. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.6.3
-+ 389. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.6.1
-+ 390. http://www.digi.com/
-+ 391. ftp://ftp.fu-berlin.de/pub/unix/driver/fas
-+ 392. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x14
-+ 393. http://www.sco.com/
-+ 394. ftp://ftp.sco.com/
-+ 395. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#top
-+ 396. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#contents
-+ 397. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.6
-+ 398. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.6.4
-+ 399. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.6.2
-+ 400. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.10
-+ 401. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#top
-+ 402. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#contents
-+ 403. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.6
-+ 404. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.6.3
-+ 405. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#top
-+ 406. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#contents
-+ 407. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3
-+ 408. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.8
-+ 409. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.6
-+ 410. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.7.1
-+ 411. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.7.2
-+ 412. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.7.3
-+ 413. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.7.4
-+ 414. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.7.5
-+ 415. news:comp.unix.solaris
-+ 416. http://access1.sun.com/
-+ 417. http://docs.sun.com/
-+ 418. http://www.sunhelp.com/
-+ 419. http://www.wins.uva.nl/pub/solaris/solaris2/
-+ 420. http://www.wins.uva.nl/cgi-bin/sfaq.cgi
-+ 421. ftp://ftp.wins.uva.nl/pub/solaris
-+ 422. http://www.science.uva.nl/pub/solaris/solaris2.html
-+ 423. http://www.stokely.com/
-+ 424. http://www.stokely.com/unix.sysadm.resources/faqs.sun.html
-+ 425. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.0
-+ 426. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#top
-+ 427. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#contents
-+ 428. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3
-+ 429. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.7
-+ 430. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.7.2
-+ 431. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#top
-+ 432. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#contents
-+ 433. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.7
-+ 434. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.7.3
-+ 435. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.7.1
-+ 436. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#top
-+ 437. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#contents
-+ 438. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.7
-+ 439. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.7.4
-+ 440. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.7.2
-+ 441. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#top
-+ 442. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#contents
-+ 443. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.7
-+ 444. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.7.5
-+ 445. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.7.3
-+ 446. news:comp.os.vms
-+ 447. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#top
-+ 448. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#contents
-+ 449. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.7
-+ 450. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.7.6
-+ 451. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.7.4
-+ 452. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#top
-+ 453. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#contents
-+ 454. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.7
-+ 455. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.7.5
-+ 456. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#top
-+ 457. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#contents
-+ 458. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3
-+ 459. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.9
-+ 460. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.7
-+ 461. http://www.stokely.com/
-+ 462. http://access1.sun.com/
-+ 463. http://www.ludd.luth.se/~bear/project/sun/sun.hardware.txt
-+ 464. ftp://ftp.netcom.com/pub/ru/rubicon/sun.hdwr.ref
-+ 465. ftp://ftp.intnet.net/pub/SUN/Sun-Hardware-Ref
-+ 466. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#top
-+ 467. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#contents
-+ 468. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3
-+ 469. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.10
-+ 470. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.8
-+ 471. news:comp.unix.ultrix
-+ 472. news:comp.sys.dec
-+ 473. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#top
-+ 474. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#contents
-+ 475. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3
-+ 476. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.11
-+ 477. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.9
-+ 478. http://www.freebird.org/
-+ 479. http://www.freebird.org/faq/
-+ 480. news:comp.unix.unixware.misc
-+ 481. news:comp.unix.sco.misc
-+ 482. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.0
-+ 483. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/f/ckutio.c
-+ 484. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#top
-+ 485. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#contents
-+ 486. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3
-+ 487. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.12
-+ 488. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.10
-+ 489. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#top
-+ 490. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#contents
-+ 491. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3
-+ 492. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.13
-+ 493. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.11
-+ 494. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#top
-+ 495. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#contents
-+ 496. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3
-+ 497. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.14
-+ 498. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.12
-+ 499. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#top
-+ 500. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#contents
-+ 501. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3
-+ 502. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.15
-+ 503. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.13
-+ 504. news:comp.sys.sgi.misc
-+ 505. news:comp.sys.sgi.admin
-+ 506. http://www.sgi.com/
-+ 507. http://www-viz.tamu.edu/~sgi-faq/
-+ 508. ftp://viz.tamu.edu/pub/sgi/faq/
-+ 509. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html
-+ 510. http://freeware.sgi.com/Installable/gcc-2.95.2.html
-+ 511. http://freeware.sgi.com/Installable/gcc-2.95.2.html
-+ 512. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#top
-+ 513. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#contents
-+ 514. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3
-+ 515. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.16
-+ 516. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.14
-+ 517. news:comp.sys.be
-+ 518. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#top
-+ 519. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#contents
-+ 520. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3
-+ 521. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.17
-+ 522. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.15
-+ 523. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#top
-+ 524. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#contents
-+ 525. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3
-+ 526. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.18
-+ 527. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.16
-+ 528. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#top
-+ 529. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#contents
-+ 530. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3
-+ 531. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.19
-+ 532. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.17
-+ 533. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#top
-+ 534. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#contents
-+ 535. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3
-+ 536. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.20
-+ 537. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.18
-+ 538. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/mac.html
-+ 539. http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0000VYJRY?ie=UTF8&tag=aleidmoreldom-20&linkCode=as2&camp=1789&creative=390957&creativeASIN=B0000VYJRY
-+ 540. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x10
-+ 541. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html
-+ 542. http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B000FX61MS?ie=UTF8&tag=aleidmoreldom-20&linkCode=as2&camp=1789&creative=390957&creativeASIN=B000FX61MS
-+ 543. mailto:kermit@columbia.edu
-+ 544. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#top
-+ 545. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#contents
-+ 546. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3
-+ 547. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3.19
-+ 548. http://www.uni-giessen.de/faq/archiv/coherent-faq.general/msg00000.html
-+ 549. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#top
-+ 550. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#contents
-+ 551. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x5
-+ 552. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3
-+ 553. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html
-+ 554. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#top
-+ 555. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#contents
-+ 556. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x6
-+ 557. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x4
-+ 558. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html
-+ 559. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#top
-+ 560. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#contents
-+ 561. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x7
-+ 562. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x5
-+ 563. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#9.5
-+ 564. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x3
-+ 565. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#top
-+ 566. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#contents
-+ 567. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x8
-+ 568. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x6
-+ 569. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x8
-+ 570. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html
-+ 571. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ck60manual.html
-+ 572. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/cable.html
-+ 573. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#top
-+ 574. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#contents
-+ 575. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x9
-+ 576. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x7
-+ 577. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#top
-+ 578. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#contents
-+ 579. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x10
-+ 580. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x8
-+ 581. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ck60manual.html
-+ 582. http://dickey.his.com/xterm/xterm.html
-+ 583. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#top
-+ 584. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#contents
-+ 585. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x11
-+ 586. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x9
-+ 587. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#top
-+ 588. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#contents
-+ 589. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x12
-+ 590. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x10
-+ 591. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x11.1
-+ 592. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x11.2
-+ 593. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#top
-+ 594. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#contents
-+ 595. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x11
-+ 596. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x11.2
-+ 597. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ck60manual.html
-+ 598. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#top
-+ 599. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#contents
-+ 600. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x11
-+ 601. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x11.1
-+ 602. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ck60manual.html
-+ 603. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#top
-+ 604. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#contents
-+ 605. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x13
-+ 606. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x11
-+ 607. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/security.html
-+ 608. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#top
-+ 609. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#contents
-+ 610. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x14
-+ 611. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x12
-+ 612. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#top
-+ 613. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#contents
-+ 614. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x15
-+ 615. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#x14
-+ 616. mailto:support@stallion.oz.au
-+ 617. http://www.stallion.com/
-+ 618. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#top
-+ 619. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html#contents
-+ 620. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 621. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ck80.html
-+ 622. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 623. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 624. http://www.columbia.edu/
-+ 625. mailto:kermit@columbia.edu
---- /dev/null
-+++ ckermit-301/ckermit.ini
-@@ -0,0 +1,8 @@
-+COMMENT - Standard C-Kermit initialization file
-+;
-+echo
-+echo The very long standard initialization file that was distributed
-+echo with C-Kermit 6, 7, and 8 is no longer recommended as "standard",
-+echo since its features were little used. It is still available in
-+echo the C-Kermit distribution as ockermit.ini.
-+echo
---- /dev/null
-+++ ckermit-301/ckc300.txt
-@@ -0,0 +1,7820 @@
-+C-KERMIT 9.0 CHANGE LOG (Changes since 8.0.207 / K95 2.1.3 January 2003)
-+
-+ Chronological order.
-+ Go to the bottom to find the newest edits.
-+
-+ F. da Cruz, The Kermit Project, Columbia University, NYC.
-+ Last update: 28 June 2011.
-+
-+FTP USER, FTP ACCOUNT, plus the various prompts and switches for FTP username,
-+password, and account all neglected to strip quotes, and in most cases quotes
-+are necessary to specify a username that contains spaces. ckcftp.c,
-+15 Jan 2003.
-+
-+FTP MPUT f1 f2 f3... gets a parse error if any of the fn's do not match an
-+existing file. This is bad for scripts. In doftpput(), cmfdb() looks for
-+keywords (switches) or CMIFI. When it hits CMIFI, it exits from the initial
-+parse loop and then does additional cmifi()s in a loop until done. The most
-+obvious fix is to parse each field with cmfdb(CMIFI,CMFLD), i.e. fall back to
-+CMFLD if CMIFI doesn't match anything. Then if CMFLD was used, we don't add
-+the filespec to the list. This is a rather big change but it seems to work.
-+No error messages or failures happen for non-matching fields, but an error
-+message is printed (and the MPUT command fails) if none of the fields match
-+any files. This fix got in too late for 2.1.3; workaround: use C-Shell
-+like wildcard list (ftp mput "{*.abc,foo.*}"). ckcftp.c, 16 Jan 2003.
-+
-+GREP did not pass its pattern through the expander, thus variables could
-+not be used for patterns. This must have been an oversight -- I can't find
-+anything in my notes about it. Fixed in dogrep(): ckuus6.c, 24 Jan 2003.
-+
-+New makefile target for HP-UX 11.xx with OpenSSL from Tapani Tarvainen.
-+makefile, 31 Jan 2003.
-+
-+From Jeff:
-+ . Avoid core dump when dereferencing tnc_get_signature(): ckuus4.c.
-+ . Bump version numbers to 8.0.208, 2.1.4: ckcmai.c.
-+
-+Added /NOLOGIN to FTP [OPEN]. ckcftp.c, 10 Feb 2003.
-+
-+Don't dump core if FTP DEBUG is ON and FTP OPEN does not include a service.
-+openftp(): ckcftp.c, 10 Feb 2003.
-+
-+HELP PATTERN text incorrectly identified commands and functions with
-+floating and anchored patterns. The corrected lists are:
-+Floating: GREP, TYPE /MATCH:, /EXCEPT: patterns, \farraylook(),
-+Anchored: IF MATCH, file-matching wildcards, \fsearch(), \frsearch()
-+ckuus2.c, 10 Feb 2003.
-+
-+INPUT n \fpattern(xxx) did not work for case-independent comparisons.
-+Fixed in doinput(): ckuus4.c, 10 Feb 2003.
-+
-+It seems \fpattern() didn't work with MINPUT at all. There was no code to
-+handle \fpattern() in the MINPUT parse loop, so it never worked. The code
-+had to be totally rewritten to use cmfld() in a loop, rather than cmtxt()
-+and then cksplit(). Furthermore, whenever any of the fields was an
-+\fjoin(), this had to be split. ckuusr.c, 10 Feb 2003.
-+
-+Macro replacement via \m() and \fdefinition() does not work as advertised
-+(i.e. case sensitively) for associative array elements; e.g. \m(xxx<abc>) is
-+treated the same as \m(xxx<ABC>), contrary to section 7.10.10 of the C-Kermit
-+7.0 update notes, and to the fact that the two really do exist separately.
-+Fixed by adding a static function isaarray(s) which succeeds if s is an
-+associative array reference and fails otherwise, and then having \m()
-+and \fdef() call mxxlook() (case-sensitive lookup) if isaarray(), otherwise
-+(as before) mxlook()). ckuus4.c, 11 Feb 2003.
-+
-+Fixed FTP OPEN to allow the /USER switch to override SET FTP AUTOLOGIN OFF,
-+just as /NOLOGIN overrides SET FTP AUTOLOGIN ON. ckcftp.c, 11 Feb 2003.
-+
-+In K95, "set key \1234 \27H" (any SET KEY command in which the first char of
-+the definition was backslash, and the ONLY character after the backslash
-+quantity was an uppercase letter, that letter would be lowercased). Diagnosis:
-+xlookup() poking its argument (see notes from July 2000). Jeff sent a fix.
-+ckucmd.c, 15 Feb 2003.
-+
-+Ran my S-Expression torture test to make sure Sexps still worked. They do,
-+except the bitwise & and | operators were broken, e.g. (& 7 2) and (| 1 2 4)
-+get "Invalid operand" errors. Jeff's code had added an early failure return
-+from the lookup loop when when a single-byte keyword matched a keyword that
-+started with the same byte but was more than one byte long. So "&" would hit
-+"&&" and fail instead of continuing its search (xlookup tables aren't sorted
-+so there can be no early return). Fixed in xlookup(): ckucmd.c, 16 Feb 2003.
-+
-+Got rid of "krbmit" target from makefile. It's still there, but we don't
-+use it any more. All secure targets now use "xermit", and produce a binary
-+called wermit, just like the regular ones do (except the old ckucon.c ones).
-+Non-secure targets, since they don't define any of the security symbols,
-+wind up compiling and linking to (mostly) empty security modules. makefile,
-+15 Feb 2003.
-+
-+Added \fcvtdate(xxx,3) to format its result in MDTM format (yyyymmddhhmmss,
-+all numeric, no spaces or punctuation). Of course these numeric strings
-+are too big to be 32-bit numbers and are useless for arithmetic, but they're
-+useful for lexical comparison, etc. ckuus[24].c, 16 Feb 2003.
-+
-+The following FTP commands did not set FAILURE when they failed: RMDIR,
-+CD, CDUP, Fixed in the corresponding doftpblah() routines. ckcftp.c,
-+16 Feb 2003.
-+
-+RENAME would sometimes not print an error message when it failed, e.g. in K95
-+when the destination file already existed. ckuus6.c, 17 Feb 2003.
-+
-+Fixed COPY error messages, which did not come out in standard format when
-+/LIST was not included. ckuus6.c, 17 Feb 2003.
-+
-+Fixed #ifdefs in ck_crp.c to allow nonsecure builds on old platforms like
-+System V/68 R3. 19 Feb 2003.
-+
-+Similar treatment for ck_ssl.c. 20 Feb 2003.
-+
-+From Jeff, 21 Feb 2003:
-+ . AIX53 and AIX52 symbols for ckcdeb.h, makefile.
-+ . New gcc targets for various AIX 4.x/5.x versions: makefile.
-+ . Copyright date updates: ck_crp.c, ck_ssl.c.
-+ . ENABLE/DISABLE QUERY broken because keyword table out of order: ckuusr.c.
-+ . Fixed the use of HTTP proxies for HTTP [RE]OPEN for Unix: ckcnet.c.
-+
-+Also for K95 only: Allow file transfer when K95 is invoked on the remote end
-+of a connection to a Pragma Systems Terminal Server connection; automatically
-+SET EXIT HANGUP OFF when invoked with open port handle ("k95 -l nnnn").
-+
-+"cd a*" failed even when "a*" matched only one directory. Fixed in cmifi():
-+ckucmd.c, 21 Feb 2003.
-+
-+In the Unix version, replace "extern int errno;" with "#include <errno.h>"
-+if __GLIBC__ is defined, since glibc now defines a thread-specific errno.
-+ckcdeb.h, 26 Feb 2003.
-+
-+Added #ifdefs to skip compilation of ckuath.c in nonsecure builds. Tested
-+by building both secure and regular versions in Linux. ckuath.c, 26 Feb 2003.
-+
-+Ran the build-in-84-different-configurations script on Linux to make sure it
-+still builds with all different combinations of feature selection options.
-+All OK. 26 Feb 2003.
-+
-+Built on VMS. Needed to add a prototype for mxxlook*() to ckuusr.h; built
-+OK otherwise. 26 Feb 2003.
-+
-+From Jeff: More #ifdef shuffling for nonsecure builds: ckuath.c, ck_ssl.c,
-+27 Feb 2003.
-+
-+Added code to ensure \v(download) ends in a directory separator in Unix,
-+Windows, and OS/2. ckuus7.c, 27 Feb 2003.
-+
-+Added code to K95 zfnqfp() to tack on directory separator when returning
-+a directory name. ckofio.c, 27 Feb 2003.
-+
-+Somehow an old copy of ckuath.c popped to replace the new one. Put the new
-+one back. 28 Feb 2003.
-+
-+From Jeff: Fix typo in my K95 zfnqfp() code from yesterday; fixes for handling
-+UNCs uniformly, no matter which way their slashes are leaning. ckofio.c,
-+28 Feb 2003.
-+
-+At Jeff Mezei's suggestion, separate text and binary mode open sequences
-+for VMS session log. ckvfio.c, 28 Feb 2003.
-+
-+Added freebsd48 target for FreeBSD 4.8. makefile, 1 Mar 2003.
-+
-+Changed Mac OS X entries to include -DUSE_STRERROR. makefile, 2 Mar 2003.
-+
-+Fixed GETOK /GUI to evaluate its text argument. ckuus6.c, 3 Mar 2003.
-+
-+Jeff fixed the K95 Dialer QUICK dialog to (a) allow templates, and (b) have
-+a Save-As option. 3 Mar 2003.
-+
-+Jeff fixed a problem with the Xmodem-CRC checksum being crunched whenever
-+there was a retransmission. 7 Mar 2003.
-+
-+Added target/banner for Tru64 5.1B. makefile, ckuver.h, 5 Mar 2003.
-+
-+In Unix, the zcopy() routine (used by the COPY command) reset the user's umask
-+to 0 for the remainder of the Kermit process lifetime. The bug was in
-+ckufio.c 8.0.194, 24 Oct 2002, and is fixed in ckufio.c 8.0.195, 6 Mar 2003.
-+Of course this happened after building 155 C-Kermit 8.0.208 binaries. (But
-+before officially releasing 8.0.208.)
-+
-+In the VMS version, changed:
-+
-+ while ((n--) && xx_inc(2) > -1) ;
-+to:
-+ while ((n--) && xx_inc(2) >= 0) ;
-+
-+to suppress the "...is being compared with a relational operator to a constant
-+whose value is not greater than zero" warning. ckvtio.c, 7 Mar 2002.
-+
-+Added a debug call to dologend in hopes of catching overzealous Locus
-+switching, which seems to happen only in K95. ckuus3.c, 7 Mar 2002.
-+
-+Rebuilt binaries for some of the more current Unix releases: AIX 4.3.3-5.1,
-+Solaris 7-9 , Red Hat 7.0-8.0, Slackware 8.1, Freebsd 4.7-4.8, NetBSD 1.6,
-+OpenBSD 3.2, Unixware 7.1.3, Open Unix 8, OSR5.0.6a, etc. A Unix binary with
-+COPY umask fix shows a 6 Mar 2003 date for "UNIX File support" in SHOW
-+VERSIONS; a binary without the fix shows 24 Oct 2002.
-+
-+C-Kermit 8.0.208 dated 14 March 2003 released on 10 March 2003.
-+
-+---8.0.208---
-+
-+From Jeff 13 Mar 2003:
-+ . Updated SSL module allows importation of tickets from host.
-+ . freebsd50+openssl target: makefile.
-+ . FTP PUT /PERMISSIONS error message for K95: ckcftp.c.
-+
-+Fixed MINPUT to strip quotes or braces from around targets (this was broken
-+on Feb 10th). Thanks to Jason Heskett for discovering and reporting this
-+(killer) bug. ckuusr.c, 14 Mar 2003.
-+
-+Changed version number to 209 Dev.00. ckcmai.c, 14 Mar 2003.
-+
-+While debugging the alphapage script, I found that the command "minput 8 \6\13
-+\21\13 \13\27\4\13 \30\13" gets "?Not confirmed" in 8.0.208 and 8.0.209, but
-+not in 206 and earlier. This problem too was introduced on Feb 10th by
-+changing MINPUT parsing from cmtxt() followed by cksplit() to cmfld() in a
-+loop. cmfld() uses setatm() to return its result and of course setatm()
-+breaks on \13. Changing setatm() not to do this would break everything else.
-+But cmfld() has no arguments that let us tell it to do anything different in
-+this case. Changing the API would be a disaster. The only solution is to add
-+an "MINPUT ACTIVE" (minputactive) global variable that tells cmfld() to tell
-+setatm() not to break on CR. Now MINPUT with braced targets containing CR
-+and/or LF works in 209, 206, and 201 (but not 208). ckucmd.c, ckuusr.c,
-+ckuus5.c, 15 Mar 2003.
-+
-+MINPUT n \fjoin(&a) works OK if all the members of \&a[] are text strings, but
-+if they are strings of control chars (as above), they don't get separated by
-+the spaces. For example in:
-+
-+ dcl \&a[] = "\4\5" "\6\7" xxx
-+ minput 10 \fjoin(&a)
-+
-+MINPUT gets two targets: "aaa" and "\4\5 \6\7 xxx". The bug was in the
-+cksplit() call in the \fjoin() case of MINPUT: it needed to specify an
-+include set consisting of all the control characters except NUL. ckuusr.c,
-+16 Mar 2003.
-+
-+But there's still a problem:
-+
-+ dcl \&a[] = "\4\5\13\10" "\6\7" "xxx"
-+
-+creates an array whose first member is "^D^E (one doublequote included). But
-+if braces are used instead, there's no problem. Same deal as MINPUT: cmfld()
-+breaks on CR or LF, thus the end quote is lost. If I set minputactive for
-+DECLARE initializers too, that fixes it. Is there any reason not to do this?
-+Can't think of any (famous last words)... ckuusr.c, 16 Mar 2003.
-+
-+Since it has multiple applications, changed the flag's name from minputactive
-+to keepallchars. ckucmd.c, ckuus[r5].c, 16 Mar 2003.
-+
-+\v(exedir) wasn't being set correctly (it included the program name as well
-+as the directory). Fixed in getexedir(): ckuus4.c, 16 Mar 2003.
-+
-+SET CARRIER-WATCH <Esc> "auto matic" (spurious space in supplied keyword).
-+Cosmetic only; it still worked. Fixed in setdcd(): ckuus3.c, 16 Mar 2003.
-+
-+"directory a b c" listed too many files -- all files whose names END WITH a,
-+b, or c, rather than the files whose names WERE a, b, or c. Diagnosis: The
-+filespec is changed into a pattern: {a,b,c}, which is the correct form. It is
-+passed to nzxpand(), which goes through the directory getting filenames and
-+sending each one to ckmatch() with the given pattern. ckmatch() receives the
-+correct pattern but then prepends a "*" -- that's not right. It's not just
-+in filename matching either. The following succeeds when it shouldn't:
-+
-+ if match xxxxc {{a,b,c}} <command>
-+
-+Changing ckmatch() to not prepend the "*" to each segment fixes the command
-+above but breaks lots of others. Running through the "match" torture-test
-+script shows the problem occurs only when the {a,b,c} list is the entire
-+pattern, and not embedded within a larger pattern. Testing for this case
-+fixed the problem. ckmatch(): ckclib.c, 16 Mar 2003.
-+
-+Fixed FTP MODTIME to not print anything if QUIET ON. ckcftp.c, 16 Mar 2003.
-+
-+Picked up a new ckuath.c from Jeff, not sure what the changes are. 16 Mar 2003.
-+
-+Did a few regular and secure builds to make sure I didn't wreck anything.
-+
-+Changed version number to 209 (final). ckcmai.c, 16 Mar 2003.
-+
-+Jason Heskett found another bug: if you define a macro FOO inside the
-+definition of another macro BAR, and FOO's definition includes an odd number
-+of doublequotes (such as 1), FOO's definition absorbs the rest of BAR's
-+definition. Example:
-+
-+ def TEST {
-+ .foo = {X"}
-+ sho mac foo
-+ }
-+ do test
-+ sho mac foo
-+
-+Results in:
-+
-+ foo = {X"}, sho mac foo
-+
-+Diagnosis: the TEST definition becomes:
-+
-+ def TEST .foo = {X"}, sho mac foo
-+
-+and the macro reader is erroneously treating the doublequote as an open
-+quote, and then automatically closes the quote at the end of the definition.
-+The error is that a doublequote should be significant only at the beginning of
-+a field. But the macro reader isn't a command parser; it doesn't know what
-+a field is -- it's just looking for commas and skipping over quoted ones.
-+First we have to fix an oversight: SET COMMAND DOUBLEQUOTING OFF should have
-+worked here, but it wasn't tested in this case. Fixed in getncm(): ckuus5.c,
-+17 Mar 2003.
-+
-+There are only certain cases where it makes sense to treat doublequotes as
-+signicant:
-+
-+ . An open quote must be at the beginning or preceded by a space.
-+ . A close quote is only at the end or else followed by a space.
-+
-+This too was fixed in getncm(): ckuus5.c, 17 Mar 2003.
-+
-+A fix from Jeff SSL/TLS FTP data decoding. ckcftp.c, 18 Mar 2003.
-+
-+Tried building C-Kermit on a Cray Y-MP with UNICOS 9.0. "int suspend",
-+declared in ckcmai.c and used in many modules, conflicts with:
-+
-+ unistd.h:extern int suspend __((int _Category, int _Id));
-+
-+The "=Dsuspend=xsuspend" trick doesn't work for this; there is no way around
-+the conflict other than to rename the variable: ckcmai.c, ckutio.c,
-+ckuus[35xy].c. 26 Mar 2003. VMS and K95 not affected.
-+
-+OK that gets us past ckcmai.c... Then in ckutio.c I had to add a new #ifdef
-+around the LFDEVNO setting, because the Cray didn't have mkdev.h. Could not
-+find a Cray-specific manifest symbol, so I made a new makefile target (cray9)
-+that sets this symbol. Having done this I have no idea what kind of lockfile
-+would be created, but I also doubt if anybody dials out from a Cray. The
-+binary should run a C90, J90, or Y-MP. makefile, 26 Mar 2003.
-+
-+Added a target for SCO OSR5.0.7. makefile, ckuver.h, 30 Mar 2003.
-+
-+Changed since 208:
-+makefile ckuver.h ckcmai.c ckclib.c ckcftp.c ckucmd.c ckuus*.c ckutio.c.
-+
-+---8.0.209---
-+
-+From Mark Sapiro, a fix for the March 17th doubleqote fix, getncm(): ckuus5.c,
-+4 Apr 2003.
-+
-+From Jeff, 29 Apr 2003:
-+ . Corrected target for HP-UX 11.00 + OpenSSL: makefile,
-+ . Do not allow WILL AUTH before WONT START_TLS: ckctel.h ckctel.c
-+ . Add hooks for SFTP and SET/SHOW SFTP: ckcdeb.h ckuusr.h ckuusr.c ckuus3.c
-+ . Add SKERMIT ckuusr.h ckuusr.c
-+ . Add ADM-5 terminal emulation: ckuus7.c, ckuus5.c
-+ . Uncomment and update HELP SET SSH V2 AUTO-REKEY: ckuus2.c
-+ . Enable IF TERMINAL-MACRO and IF STARTED-FROM-DIALER for C-Kermit: ckuus6.c
-+ . Fix conflicting NOSCROLL keyword definition: ckuusr.h
-+ . Set ttname when I_AM_SSH: ckuusy.c
-+ . Add extended arg parsing for SSH, Rlogin, Telnet: ckuusy.c, ckuus4.c
-+ . Security updates: ckuath.c, ck_ssl.c
-+ . Change K95 version number to 2.2.0: ckcmai.c
-+ . Save K95 term i/o state before executing keyboard macro: ckuus4.c
-+ . Add tests for SSH Subsystem active during INPUT/OUTPUT/CONNECT: ckuus[45].c
-+ . Enable K95 SET SSH V2 AUTO-REKEY: ckuus3.c
-+
-+SFTP and SET SFTP subcommands are implemented up to the case statements.
-+
-+Files of mine that Jeff hadn't picked up:
-+ ckuver.h ckcftp.c ckutio.c ckuusx.c (just minor changes for last build-all)
-+
-+On 4 Jan 2003, SET RECEIVE MOVE-TO was changed to convert is argument to an
-+absolute path, which made it impossible to specify a relative path, then
-+move to different directories and have it apply relatively to each directory.
-+Changed this as follows:
-+
-+ . Parser uses cmtxt() rather than cmdir() so it won't fail at parse time.
-+ . If path is absolute, we fail at parse time if directory doesn't exist.
-+ . In reof() we run the the path through xxstring (again, in case deferred
-+ evaluation of variables is desired) and then, if not null, use it.
-+ . If the directory doesn't exist, rename() fails and reof() returns -4,
-+ resulting in a protocol error (this is not a change). We do NOT create
-+ the directory on the fly.
-+
-+I also fixed SET SEND/RECEIVE RENAME-TO to parse with cmtxt() rather than
-+cmdir(), since it's parsing a text template, not a directory name, e.g.
-+"set receive rename-to file-\v(time)-v(date)-\v(pid)". This was totally
-+broken, since when I don't know. We don't call xxstring() in this parse, so
-+evaluation is always deferred -- I'd better not change this. ckuus7.c,
-+ckcfns.c, 1 May 2003.
-+
-+From Jeff, Sat May 3 14:15:23 2003:
-+ . Pick up the right isascii definition for K95: ckctel.c
-+ . malloc... ckuath.c (new safe malloc routines for K95)
-+ . Add author listing: ckuus5.c
-+ . SSH Heartbeat support (K95 only): ckuus[23].c
-+ . Prescan --height and --width to avoid window resizing at startup: ckuusy.c
-+ . Add checks for fatal() or doexit() called from sysinit(): ckuusx.c
-+ . Move some K95-specific definitions to ckoker.h: ckcdeb.h
-+ . Add support for ON_CD macro in zchdir(): ckufio.c
-+ . Add a command to let FTP client authenticate with SSLv2: ckcftp.c
-+ . Fix parsing of FTP file facts like "UNIX.mode": ckcftp.c
-+
-+ON_CD will need some explaining (to be done). It's implemented for Unix,
-+VMS, WIndows, and OS/2.
-+
-+The FTP file facts fix came from first exposure to the new OpenBSD FTP
-+server: ftp://ftp7.usa.openbsd.org/pub/os/OpenBSD/3.3/i386/
-+The period in "UNIX.mode" caused an erroneous word break, adding junk to
-+the filename.
-+
-+About the malloc changes, Jeff says "K95 is not behaving well in low memory
-+environments. I'm not sure that C-Kermit does much better. The program does
-+not crash but it certainly does not behave the way the user expects it to.
-+I'm beginning to think that any malloc() error should be treated as fatal."
-+
-+Not visible in these changes because it's in K95-specific modules: Jeff made
-+SET ATTRIBUTES OFF and SET ATTRIBUTES DATE OFF apply to XYZMODEM transfers.
-+
-+From Jeff, 11 May 2003:
-+ . Add support for SSH Keepalive to relevant SET command (K95): ckuus3.c
-+ . Reduce max overlapped i/o requests from 30 to 7 (K95): ckuus7.c
-+ . Don't call sysinit() in fatal(): ckuusx.c.
-+ . Some new conditionalizations for SSL module: ck_ssl.c
-+
-+The doublequote-parsing fixes from March and April broke the SWITCH statement,
-+which is implemented by internally defining, then executing, a macro. If I
-+drop back to the old dumb handling of doublequotes, everything is fixed except
-+the problem of March 17th. But can we really expect getncm() to pre-guess
-+what the parser is going to do? getncm()'s only job is to find command
-+boundaries, which are represented by commas. Commas, however, is needed IN
-+commands too. We take a comma literally if it is quoted with \, or is inside
-+a matched pair of braces, parens, or doublequotes. It is not unreasonable to
-+require a doublequote in a macro definition to be prefixed by \ when it is to
-+be taken literally. The proper response to Jason Heskett's complaint of March
-+17th should have been to leave the code alone and recommand an appropriate
-+form of quoting:
-+
-+ def TEST {
-+ .foo = {X\"}
-+ sho mac foo
-+ }
-+
-+And this is what I have done. Another reason for sticking with the old method
-+is that it's explainable. The "improved" method, even if it worked, would be
-+be impossible to explain. Btw, in testing this I noticed that the switch-test
-+script made 8.0.201 dump core. Today's version is fine. The problem with
-+quoted strings inside of IF {...} clauses and FOR and WHILE loops is fixed
-+too. Perhaps "unbroken" would be a better word. ckuus5.c, 11 May 2003.
-+
-+Vace discovered that FTP MGET /EXCEPT:{... (with an unterminated /EXCEPT list)
-+could crash Kermit. Fixed in ckcftp.c, 11 May 2003.
-+
-+CONTINUE should not affect SUCCESS/FAILURE status. ckuusr.c, 11 May 2003.
-+
-+Fixed an oversight that goes back 15 years. While \{123} is allowed for
-+decimal codes, \x{12} and \o{123} were never handled. ckucmd.c, 11 May 2003.
-+
-+Added support for Red Hat <baudboy.h> and /usr/sbin/lockdev. Supposedly this
-+allows Kermit to be installed without setuid or setgid bits and still be able
-+to lock and use the serial device. Compiles and starts, but not tested.
-+ckcdeb.h, makefile, ckutio.c, ckuus5.c, 16 May 2003.
-+
-+From Jeff: FTP ASCII send data to host when FTP /SSL was in use was broken.
-+ftp_dpl is set to Clear when FTP /SSL is in use. This was causing the data to
-+be written to the socket with send() instead of the OpenSSL routines.
-+ckcftp.c, ckuath.c, 21 May 2003.
-+
-+From Jeff: Stuff for Kerberos 524: ckcdeb.h. Fixes for FTP; "FTP ASCII send
-+data did not properly compute the end of line translations. On Unix (and
-+similar platforms) the end of line was correct for no character sets but
-+incorrect when character sets were specified. On Windows/OS2, the end of line
-+was correct when character sets were specified and incorrect when they were
-+not. On MAC, both were broken. Also, FTP Send Byte counts were incorrect
-+when character sets were specified." ckcftp.c. 17 Jun 2003.
-+
-+From Jeff: fixes to HTTP /AGENT: and /USER: switch action: ckcnet.c ckuus3.c
-+ck_crp.c ckcftp.c ckuus2.c ckuusy.c ckuusr.c ckcnet.h, 21 Jun 2003.
-+
-+From Jeff: Fix SET DIALER BACKSPACE so it can override a previous SET KEY
-+(e.g. from INI file): ckuus7.c. Some SSL/TLS updates: ck_ssl.c. HTTP support
-+for VMS and other VMS improvements (e.g. a way to not have to hardwire the
-+C-Kermit version number into the build script) from Martin Vorlaender:
-+ckcnet.h, ckuus[r3].c, ckcdeb.h, ckvtio.c, ckcnet.c, ckvker.com. Built on
-+Solaris (gcc/ansi) and SunOS (cc/k&r). The new VMS script tests the VMS
-+version and includes HTTP support only for VMS 6.2 or later. 2 Jul 2003.
-+
-+Tried to build on our last VMS system but it seems to be dead. Looks like a
-+head crash (makes really loud noises, boot says DKA0 not recognized) (fooey, I
-+just paid good money to renew the VMS license). Tried building at another
-+site with:
-+
-+ Process Software MultiNet V4.3 Rev A-X,
-+ Compaq AlphaServer ES40, OpenVMS AXP V7.3
-+ Compaq C V6.4-008 on OpenVMS Alpha V7.3
-+
-+Had to make a few corrections to ckvker.com. But still, compilation of
-+ckcnet.c bombs, indicating that the SELECT definition somehow got lost
-+somewhere since the 209 release (i.e. no SELECT type is defined so it falls
-+thru to "SELECT is required for this code"). But I don't see anything in
-+ckcdeb.h or ckcnet.[ch] that would explain this. Not ckvker.com either
-+(putting the old one back gives the same result). OK, I give up, maybe it's
-+just that I haven't tried building it on MultiNet recently. What about UCX?
-+Aha, builds fine there except for warnings about mlook, dodo, and parser in
-+ckvfio.c (because of ON_CD) -- I suppose I have #include <ckucmd.h>... (done)
-+Anyhow it builds OK and the HTTP code is active and almost works (HTTP OPEN
-+works; HTTP GET seems to succeed but creates an empty file every time). Tried
-+building under MultiNet at another installation; same bad result.
-+
-+OK so why won't it build for MultiNet? Comparing ckcnet.c with the 209
-+version, not a single #ifdef or #include is changed. Tried building with
-+p3="NOHTTP" -- builds OK, aha. Where's the problem? Not ckcnet.h...
-+Not ckcdeb.h... OK I give up, will revisit this next time I get time to
-+do anything with the code.
-+
-+Later Jeff said "Martin did not implement VMS networking for the HTTP code.
-+All he did was activate the #define HTTP which happens to work because his
-+connections are using SSL/TLS connections. http_inc(), http_tol(), etc have
-+no support for VMS networking regardless of whether it is UCX or MULTINET.
-+The vast majority of HTTP connections are not secured by SSL/TLS. It makes no
-+sense to support HTTP on VMS until someone is willing to either do the work or
-+pay have the work done to implement VMS networking in that code base." So the
-+fix is to not enable HTTP for VMS after all. Removed the CKHTTP definition
-+for VMS from ckcdeb.h, 6 Jul 2003.
-+
-+Fixed ckvfio.c to #include <ckuusr.h> (instead of <ckucmd.h>) to pick up
-+missing prototypes. 6 Jul 2003.
-+
-+From Arthur Marsh: solaris2xg+openssl+zlib+srp+pam+shadow and the corresponding
-+Solaris 7 target. makefile, 6 Jul 2003.
-+
-+Remove duplicate #includes for <sys/stat.h>, <errno.h>, and <ctype.h> from
-+ckcftp.c. 6 Jul 2003.
-+
-+Add -DUSE_MEMCPY to Motorola SV/68 targets because of shuffled #includes in
-+ckcftp.c. 8 Jul 2003.
-+
-+From Jeff: Fix problems mixing SSL and SRP without Kerberos. Plus a few minor
-+#define comment changes and a reshuffling of #defines in ckcdeb.h to allow me
-+to build on X86 Windows without Kerberos. ckcdeb.h, ck_crp.c, ckuath.c,
-+10 Jul 2003.
-+
-+From Jeff: updated ckuat2.h and ckuath.c, 29 Jul 2003.
-+
-+Mats Peterson noticed that a very small Latin-1 file would be incorrectly
-+identified as UCS-2 by scanfile(). Fixed in ckuusx.c, 29 Jul 2003.
-+
-+Fixed ACCESS macro definition to account for the fact that FIND is now a
-+built-in command. ckermit.ini, 30 Jul 2003.
-+
-+From Jeff: Fix for typo in urlparse() (svc/hos): ckuusy.c, 18 Aug 2003.
-+
-+From Jeff: Redhat9 makefile targets (needed for for OpenSSL 0.9.7):
-+makefile, 19 Aug 2003.
-+
-+GREP /NOLIST and /COUNT did too much magic, with some undesirable fallout:
-+"GREP /NOLIST /COUNT:x args" printed "file:count" for each file. "GREP
-+/COUNT:x /NOLIST args" did not print "file:count", but neither did it set the
-+count variable. Removed the magic. Also one of the GREP switches,
-+/LINENUMBERS, was out of order. Fixed in ckuus6.c, 20 Aug 2003.
-+
-+From Jeff: "Reorganizing code to enable building with different subsets of
-+options; a few typos corrected as well." ckcdeb.h, ckuver.h (for RH9),
-+ckcnet.c, ckuus7.c, ckuus3.c: 24 Aug 2003.
-+
-+Scanfile misidentified a big PDF file as text because the first 800K of it
-+*was* text (most other PDF files were correctly tagged as binary). Fixed
-+by adding a check for the PDF signature at the beginning of the file.
-+scanfile(): ckuusx.c, 25 Aug 2003.
-+
-+Ditto for PostScript files, but conservatively. Signature at beginning of
-+file must begin with "%!PS-Ado". If it's just "%!" (or something nonstandard
-+like "%%Creator: Windows PSCRIPT") we do a regular scan. Also added "*.ps"
-+to all binary filename patterns. ckuusx.c, 4 Sep 2003.
-+
-+Ditto (but within #ifndef NOPCLSCAN) for PCL (<ESC>E) and PJL (<ESC>%) files,
-+but no binpatterns (note: ".PCL" is the extension for TOPS-20 EXEC scripts).
-+ckuusx.c, 4 Sep 2003.
-+
-+Added comments about OpenSSL 0.9.7 to all linux+openssl targets.
-+makefile, 4 Sep 2003.
-+
-+From Jeff: Added - #define ALLOW_KRB_3DES_ENCRYPT. When this symbol is defined
-+at compilation Kermit will allow non-DES session keys to be used during Telnet
-+Auth. These session keys can then be used for Telnet Encrypt. The reason
-+this is not compiled on by default is that the MIT Kerberos Telnet does not
-+follow the RFC for constructing keys for ENCRYPT DES when the keys are longer
-+than 8 bytes in length. ckuath.c, ckuus5.c, 4 Sep 2003.
-+
-+"ftp mget a b c" succeeded if one or more of the files did not exist, even
-+with "set ftp error-action proceed". This is because the server's NLST file
-+list does not include any files that don't exist, so the client never even
-+tries to get them. Fortunately, the way the code is structured, this one was
-+easy to fix. ckcftp.c, 14 Sep 2003.
-+
-+From Jeff: Corrected code in ckcnet.c to ensure that Reverse DNS Lookups are
-+not performed if tcp_rdns is OFF. Fixed ck_krb5_getrealm() to actually return
-+the realm of the credentials cache and not the default realm specified in the
-+krb5.conf file. Previously krb5_cc_get_principal() was not being called.
-+Fixed ck_krb5_is_tgt_valid() to test the TGT in the current ccache and not the
-+TGT constructed from the default realm. ckcnet.c, ckuath.c, 14 Sep 2003.
-+
-+Marco Bernardi noticed that IF DIRECTORY could produce a false positive if
-+the argument directory had previously been referenced but then removed. This
-+is because of the clever isdir() cache that was added to speed up recursion
-+through big directory trees. Changed IF DIRECTORY to make a second check
-+(definitive but more expensive) if isdir() succeeds, and changed the
-+directory-deleting routine, ckmkdir(), to flush the directory cache (UNIX
-+only -- this also should be done in K95 but it's not critical). This was
-+done by adding a routine, clrdircache() to ckufio.c, which sets prevstat
-+to -1 and prevpath[0] to NUL. ckcfn3.c, ckuus6.c, ckufio.c, 18 Sep 2003.
-+
-+Marco reported the second fix still didn't work for him (even though it did
-+for me). Rather than try to figure out why, I concluded that the directory
-+cache is just not safe: a directory found a second ago might have been deleted
-+or renamed not only by Kermit but by some other process. Why did I add this
-+in the first place? The log says:
-+
-+ Some debug logs showed that isdir() is often called twice in a row on the
-+ same file. Rather than try to sort out clients, I added a 1-element cache
-+ to Unix isdir(). ckufio.c, 24 Apr 2000.
-+
-+Experimentation with DIR and DIR /RECURSIVE does not show this happening at
-+all. So I #ifdef'd out the directory cache (see #ifdef ISDIRCACHE in ckufio.c;
-+ISDIRCACHE is not defined) and backed off the previous changes: ckufio.c,
-+ckcfn3.c, ckuus6.c, 28 Sep 2003.
-+
-+From Jeff: Replace the compile time ALLOW_KRB_3DES_ENCRYPT with a run-time
-+command SET TELNET BUG AUTH-KRB5-DES which defaults to ON: ckctel.[ch],
-+ckuus[234].c, ck_crp.c, ckuath.c. 4 Oct 2003.
-+
-+Allow DIAL RETRIES to be any positive number, and catch negative ones.
-+Also added code to check for atoi() errors (e.g. truncation). At least on
-+some platforms (e.g. Solaris) atoi() is supposed to set errno, but it
-+doesn't. ckuus3.c, ckucmd.c, 4 Oct 2003.
-+
-+Added /DEFAULT: to ASK-class commands (ASK, ASKQ, GETOK):
-+
-+ . For popups: no way to send defaults to popup_readtext() or popup_readpass().
-+ . For GUI ASK[Q], pass default to gui_txt_dialog().
-+ . For GUI GETOK, convert "yes" "ok" or "no" default to number for uq_ok().
-+ . For Text GETOK, add default to cmkey().
-+ . For Text ASK[Q], add default to cmtxt().
-+ . For GETC, GETKEY, and READ: no changes.
-+
-+GETOK, ASK, and ASKQ with /TIMEOUT: no longer fail when the timer goes off
-+if a /DEFAULT was supplied. The GUI functions (uq_blah) don't seem to
-+support timeouts. Only the text version has been tested. ckuus[26].c,
-+4 Oct 2003.
-+
-+From Jeff: add /DEFAULT: for popups. ckuus6.c. 6 Oct 2003.
-+
-+Change SET DIAL INTERVAL to be like SET DIAL RETRIES. ckuus[34].c, 6 Oct 2003.
-+
-+Added target for HP-UX 10/11 + OpenSSL built with gcc, from Chris Cheney.
-+Makefile, 12 Oct 2003.
-+
-+From Jeff, 6 Nov 2003:
-+ . #ifdef adjustments: ckcftp.c, ckcdeb.h
-+ . Fix spurious consumption of first byte(s) on Telnet connection: ckctel.c
-+ . Another HP PJL test for scanfile: ckuusx.c.
-+ . K95: Recognize DG4xx protected fields in DG2xx emulation: ckuus7.c.
-+ . Add SSLeay version display to SHOW AUTH command: ckuus7.c
-+ . Improved SET MOUSE CLEAR help text: ckuus2.c.
-+ . Improved Kverbs help text: ckuus2.c (+ new IBM-3151 Kverbs).
-+ . Some changes to ck_ssl.c, ckuath.c.
-+
-+From PeterE, 10 Nov 2003:
-+ . Improved HP-UX 10/11 makefile targets for OpenSSL.
-+ . #ifdef fix for OpenSSL on HP-UX: ck_ssl.c.
-+
-+Another new makefile from PeterE with improved and integrated HP-UX targets.
-+12 Nov 2003.
-+
-+A couple fixes to the solaris9g+krb5+krb4+openssl+shadow+pam+zlib target
-+from Jeff. Added a solaris9g+openssl+shadow+pam+zlib target. makefile,
-+21 Nov 2003.
-+
-+From Jeff, 30 Nov 2003:
-+ . Fix SEND /MOVE-TO: ckuusr.c.
-+ . Fix K95 SET TITLE to allow quotes/braces around text: ckuus7.c.
-+ . Improved "set term autodownload ?" response: ckuus5.c.
-+ . Fix SHOW FEATURES to specify the protocol for encryption: ckuus5.c
-+ . Make {SEND, RECEIVE} {MOVE-TO, RENAME-TO} work for XYZMODEM (K95 only).
-+
-+From Jeff: 7 Jan 2004:
-+ . At one point Frank started to add a timer parameter to the
-+ uq_txt() function but he only did it for the non-ANSI
-+ compilers. I added it for the ANSI compilers, fixed the
-+ prototypes and provided a default value easily changed
-+ DEFAULT_UQ_TIMEOUT: ckcker.h, ckuus[36].c, ck_ssl.c, ckcftp.c, ckuath.c.
-+ . Fixed SET TERMINAL DEBUG ON (typo in variable name): ckuus7.c.
-+ . Fixed BEEP INFORMATION; previously it made no sound, now uses
-+ MB_ICONQUESTION. ckuusx.c.
-+
-+From Ian Beckwith <ian@nessie.mcc.ac.uk> (Debianization), 7 Jan 2004:
-+ . Search dir/ckermit for docs, as well as dir/kermit in cmdini(): ckuus5.c.
-+ . New linux+krb5+krb4+openssl+shadow+pam target (kitchen sink minus SRP,
-+ which Debian does not distribute): makefile.
-+ ? Mangles the DESTDIR support in makefile to install into a staging area:
-+ makefile (I didn't take this one yet).
-+
-+Updated copyright notices for 2004, all modules. 7 Jan 2004.
-+
-+Added INPUT /NOMATCH, allowing INPUT to be used for a fixed amount of time
-+without attempting to match any text or patterns, so it's no longer
-+necessary to "input 600 STRING_THAT_WILL_NEVER_COME". If /NOMATCH is
-+included, INPUT succeeds if the timeout expires, with \v(instatus) = 1
-+(meaning "timed out"); fails upon interruption or i/o error. ckuusr.h,
-+ckuus[r24].c, 7 Jan 2004.
-+
-+Added SET INPUT SCALE-FACTOR <float>. This scales all INPUT timeouts by the
-+given factor, allowing time-sensitive scripts to be adjusted to changing
-+conditions such as congested networks or different-speed modems without
-+having to change each INPUT-class command. This affects only those timeouts
-+that are given in seconds, not as wall-clock times. Although the scale
-+factor can have a fractional part, the INPUT timeout is still an integer.
-+Added this to SHOW INPUT, and added a \v(inscale) variable for it.
-+ckuusr.h, ckuus[r257].c, 7 Jan 2004.
-+
-+undef \%a, \fverify(abc,\%a) returns 0, which makes it look as if \%a is a
-+string composed of a's, b's, and/or c's, when in fact it contains nothing.
-+Changed \fverify() to return -1 in this case. ckuus4.c, 12 Jan 2004.
-+
-+\fcode(xxx) returned an empty string if its argument string was empty. This
-+makes it unsafe to use in arithmetic or boolean expressions. Changed it to
-+return 0 if its argument was missing, null, or empty. ckuus4.c, 12 Jan 2004.
-+
-+Updated \verify() and \fcode() help text. ckuus2.c, 12 Jan 2004.
-+
-+While setting up IKSD, Ian Beckwith noticed that including the --initfile:
-+option caused Kermit to start parsing its own Copyright string as if it were
-+the command line, and eventually crash. I couldn't reproduce on Solaris /
-+Sparc but I could in Linux / i386 (what Ian is using) -- a change from Jeff
-+on 28 Apr 2003 set the command-line arg pointer to a literal empty string in
-+prescan() about line 1740 of of ckuus4.c; the pointer is incremented next
-+time thru the loop, resulting in random memory being referenced. Fixed by
-+setting the pointer to NULL instead of "". ckuus4.c, 12 Jan 2004.
-+
-+declare \&a[999999999999999] would dump core on some platforms. atoi()
-+or whatever would truncate the dimension to maxint. When we add 1 to the
-+result, we get a negative number, which is used as an index, loop test, etc.
-+Fixed both dodcl() and dclarray() to check for (n+1 < 0). ckuus[r5].c,
-+12 Jan 2004.
-+
-+Unix zchki() would fail on /dev/tty, which is unreasonable. This prevented
-+FOPEN /READ from reading from the terminal. zchki() already allowed for
-+/dev/null, so I added /dev/tty to the list of specials. Ditto for FOPEN
-+/WRITE and zchko(). ckufio.c 13 Jan 2004.
-+
-+Added untabify() routine to ckclib.[ch], 13 Jan 2004.
-+Added FREAD /TRIM and /UNTABIFY. ckuus[27].c, 13 Jan 2004.
-+Added \funtabify(). ckuusr.h, ckuus[24].c, 13 Jan 2004.
-+
-+Dat Nguyen noticed that (setq u 'p') followed by (u) dumped core. This was
-+caused by an over-clever optimization that skipped mallocs for short
-+literals, but then went on later to try to free one that hadn't been
-+malloc'd. Fixed in dosexp(): ckuus3.c, 14 Jan 2004.
-+
-+Catch another copyright date. ckuus5.c, 14 Jan 2004.
-+
-+Fixed SWITCH to work even when SET COMMAND DOUBLEQUOTE OFF (from Mark
-+Sapiro). ckuus5.c, 15 Jan 2004.
-+
-+Changed version to 8.0.211 so scripts can test for recently added features.
-+ckcmai.c, 15 Jan 2004.
-+
-+Fixed a glitch in K95 "help set port". ckuus2.c, 20 Jan 2004.
-+
-+Fix from Jeff: Connections to a TLS-aware protocol which require a reconnect
-+upon certificate verification failure could not reconnect if the connection
-+was initiated from the command line or via a URL. ckctel.c ckcmai.c
-+ckuusr.c ckuus7.c ckuusy.c, 20 Jan 2004.
-+
-+From Alex Lewin: makefile target and #ifdef for Mac OS X 10.3 (Panther):
-+makefile, ckcnet.c, 7 Feb 2004.
-+
-+Added KFLAGS to sco32v507 targets to make PTY and SSH commands work. The
-+same flags could probably also be added to earlier OSR5 targets but they
-+have not been tested there. makefile, 7 Feb 2004.
-+
-+Checked a complaint that "LOCAL &a" did not make array \&a[] local. Indeed
-+it did not, and can not. You have to use the full syntax in the LOCAL
-+command, "LOCAL \&a[]", or else it doesn't know it's not a macro named &a.
-+7 Feb 2004.
-+
-+Fixed some confusion in creating IKSD database file and temp-file names.
-+I was calling zfnqfp() without remembering that the path member of the
-+returned struct included the filename, so to get just the directory name,
-+I needed to strip the filename from the right. ckuusy.c, 2 Mar 2004.
-+
-+New ckuath.c, ck_ssl.c from Jeff. 2 Mar 2004.
-+
-+Updated Jeff's affiliation in VERSION command text. ckuusr.c, 2 Mar 2004.
-+
-+Designation changed from Dev.00 to Beta.01. ckcmai.c, 2 Mar 2004.
-+
-+Fixed zrename() syslogging -- it had success and failure reversed.
-+Beta.02: ckufio.c, 4 Mar 2004.
-+
-+Problem: when accessing IKSD via a kermit:// or iksd:// URL, and a user ID
-+is given but no password, doxarg() set the password to "" instead of leaving
-+it NULL, but all the tests in dourl() are for NULL. Fixed in doxarg():
-+ckuusy.c, 5 Mar 2004.
-+
-+The logic in dourl() about which macro to construct (login and connect,
-+login and get directory listing, or login and fetch a file) was a bit off,
-+so all three cases were not handled. ckcmai.c, 5 Mar 2004.
-+
-+Trial Beta builds:
-+ . HP-UX B.11.11 PA-RISC
-+ . HP-UX B.11.23 IA64
-+ . Tru64 4.0G Alpha
-+ . Tru64 5.1B Alpha
-+ . Debian 3.0 i386
-+ . Red Hat ES 2.1 i386
-+ . Slackware 9.1 i386
-+ . VMS 7.3-1 Alpha + UCX 5.3
-+ . VMS 7.3-1 Alpha no TCP/IP
-+ . VMS 7.3 Alpha MultiNet 4.3 A-X
-+ . SCO UnixWare 7.1.4 i386
-+ . SCO OSR5.0.7 i386
-+ . Solaris 9 Sparc
-+
-+Fixed compiler warning in doxarg() caused by typo (NULL instead of NUL) in
-+the 5 March doxarg() edit. ckuusy.c, 9 Mar 2004.
-+
-+IKSD (kermit://) command-line URLs did not work right if the client had
-+already preauthenticated with Kerberos or somesuch because they tried to log
-+in again with REMOTE LOGIN. The macros constructed in doxarg() needed to
-+check \v(authstate) before attempting REMOTE LOGIN. ckcmai.c, 10 Mar 2004.
-+
-+Added ckuker.nr to x.sh (ckdaily upload) and updated ckuker.nr with current
-+version number and dates. 10 Mar 2004.
-+
-+Replaced hardwired references to /usr/local in makefile with $(prefix)
-+(which defaults to /usr/local, but can be overridden on the command line),
-+suggested by Nelson Beebe for use with Configure. 10 Mar 2004.
-+
-+From Nelson Beebe: In the Kermit makefile in the install target commands,
-+line 981 reads:
-+
-+ cp $(BINARY) $(DESTDIR)$(BINDIR)/kermit || exit 1;\
-+
-+Could you please add this line before it:
-+
-+ rm -f $(DESTDIR)$(BINDIR)/kermit;\
-+
-+Some sites (mine included) keep multiple versions of software around,
-+with hard links between $(prefix)/progname and $(prefix)/progname-x.y.z.
-+Failure to remove the $(prefix)/progname at "make install" time then
-+replaces the old $(prefix)/progname-x.y.z with the new one, destroying
-+an old version that the site wanted to be preserved. makefile, 10 Mar 2004.
-+
-+Minor syntax and typo fixes (mostly prototypes): ckcdeb.h, ckcfns.c,
-+ckclib.c, ckufio.c, ckuusr.h, ckuusx.c, 10 Mar 2004. (I still have a few
-+more to do.)
-+
-+Added CC=$(CC) CC2=$(CC2) to many (but not all) makefile targets that
-+reference other makefile targets. On some platforms (notably AIX, Solaris,
-+SunOS) there are specific targets for different compilers, so I skipped
-+those. makefile, 10 Mar 2004.
-+
-+Added error checking to kermit:// URL macros, so they don't plow ahead
-+after the connection is closed. ckcmai.c, 11 Mar 2004.
-+
-+Added FreeBSD 4.9 and 5.1 targets (only the herald is affected).
-+makefile, ckuver.h, 11 Mar 2004.
-+
-+Added "LIBS=-lcrypt" to bsd44 targets since nowadays crypt is almost always
-+unbundled from libc. Also added explanatory notes. makefile, 11 Mar 2004.
-+
-+Changed MANDIR to default to $(manroot)/man/man1, and manroot to default
-+to $(prefix). More adding of CC=$(CC) clauses: {Free,Net,Open}BSD, 4.4BSD.
-+makefile, 11 Mar 2004.
-+
-+Miscellaneous cleanups: ckuusx.c, ckcnet.c, ckufio.c, 11 Mar 2004.
-+
-+Corrected the check in the linux target to see if /usr/include/crypt.h
-+exists, and if so to define HAVE_CRYPT_H, which is used in ckcdeb.h to
-+#include <crypt.h> to get the prototype for crypt() and prevent bogus
-+conversions on its return type on 64-bit platforms (the previous test wasn't
-+quite right and the resulting symbol wasn't spelled right). makefile,
-+12 Mar 2004.
-+
-+From Jeff, 14 Mar 2004:
-+ . Initialize localuidbuf[] in tn_snenv(): ckctel.c.
-+ . Remove remote-mode checks in hupok() for K95G only (why?): ckuus3.c.
-+ . Add help text for new K95-only TYPE /GUI switches: ckuus2.c.
-+ . TYPE /GUI parsing, ...: ckuusr.c.
-+ . TYPE /GUI action, dotype(): ckuus6.c
-+ . Change Jeff's affiliation: most modules.
-+
-+20 Mar 2004: Looked into adding long file support, i.e. handling files more
-+than 2GB (or 4GB) long. Discovered very quickly this would be a major
-+project. Each platform has a different API, or environment, or transition
-+plan, or whatever -- a nightmare to handle in portable code. At the very
-+least we'll need to convert a lot of Kermit variables from long or unsigned
-+long to some new Kermit type, which in turn is #defined or typedef'd
-+appropriately for each platform (to off_t or size_t or whatever). Then we
-+have to worry about the details of open() vs fopen(); printf() formats (%lld
-+vs %Ld vs %"PRId64"...), platforms like HP-UX where you might have to use
-+different APIs for different file systems on the same computer, etc. We'll
-+need to confront this soon, but let's get a good stable 8.0.211 release out
-+first! Meanwhile, for future reference, here are a few articles:
-+
-+General: http://freshmeat.net/articles/view/709/
-+Linux: http://www.ece.utexas.edu/~luo/linux_lfs.html
-+HP-UX: http://devrsrc1.external.hp.com/STK/partner/lg_files.pdf
-+Solaris: http://wwws.sun.com/software/whitepapers/wp-largefiles/largefiles.pdf
-+
-+Looked into FTP timeouts. It appears I can just call empty() (which is
-+nothing more than a front end for select()) with the desired timeout before
-+any kind of network read. If it returns <= 0, we have a timeout. This is
-+not quite the same as using alarm() / signal() around a recv() (which could
-+get stuck) but alarm() / signal() are not not used in the FTP module and are
-+not naturally portable to Windows, but select() is already in use in the FTP
-+module for both Unix and Windows. This form of timeout could be used
-+portably for both command response and data reads. What about writes to the
-+command or data socket? They can get stuck for hours and hours without
-+returning too, but the select() approach won't help here -- we need the
-+actual send() or recv() to time out, or be wrapped in an alarm()/signal()
-+kind of mechanism. But if we can do that for sends, we can also do it for
-+receives. Better check with Jeff before I start programming anything.
-+20 Mar 2004.
-+
-+Later: Decided to postpone the above two projects (ditto IPv6) until after
-+8.0.211 is released because both will have major impacts on portability.
-+Grumble: all i/o APIs should have been designed from the beginning with a
-+timeout parameter. To this day, hardly any have this feature.
-+
-+3-4 Apr 2004: More 8.0.211 Beta.02+ test builds:
-+
-+ . FreeBSD 3.3
-+ . FreeBSD 4.4
-+ . Linux Debian 2.1
-+ . Linux RH 6.1
-+ . Linux RH 7.1
-+ . Linux RH 7.2
-+ . Linux RH 9 (with 84 different combinations of feature selection)
-+ . Linux SuSE 6.4
-+ . Linux SuSE 7.0
-+ . NetBSD 1.4.1
-+ . NetBSD 1.5.2
-+ . OpenBSD 2.5
-+ . OpenBSD 3.0
-+ . QNX 4.25
-+ . SCO UnixWare 2.1.3
-+ . SCO UnixWare 7.1.4
-+ . SCO OpenServer 5.0.7
-+ . SCO XENIX 2.3.4 (no TCP)
-+
-+Changes needed: None.
-+
-+Problem: SCO XENIX 2.3.4 network build failed in the FTP module with
-+header-file syntax and conflicting-definitions trouble. I'm not going to
-+try to fix it; 8.0.209 built OK with FTP, so we'll just keep that one
-+available.
-+
-+Got access to VMS 8.1 on IA64. Building the nonet version of C-Kermit
-+required minor modifications to ckvvms.h, ckv[ft]io.c, and ckvcon.c, to
-+account for a third architecture. Also to SHOW FEATURES in ckuus5.c. Once
-+that was done, the UCX 5.5 version built OK too. Starts OK, makes Telnet
-+connection OK, sends files. Has some obvious glitches though -- "stat"
-+after a file transfer reports 0 elapsed time (in fact it was 00:09:48) and
-+1219174400 cps (when in fact it was 10364). This doesn't happen on the
-+Alpha. Btw, the IA64 binary is twice as big as the Alpha one. Changed
-+to Beta.03. 5 Apr 2004.
-+
-+Fixed the ckdaily script to include the makefile and man page in the Zip
-+file (they were not included because the Zip file was intended mainly for
-+VMS users, but some Unix users prefer Zip to tar.gz). 6 Apr 2004.
-+
-+Traced problems in VMS/IA64 statistics report to rftimer()/gftimer() in
-+ckvtio.c, which use sys$ and lib$ calls to figure elapsed time. These work
-+on VAX and Alpha but not IA64. Sent a report to the chief engineer of the
-+IA64 VMS port; he says it's probably a bug in VMS 8.1 (which is not a real
-+release); he'll make sure it's fixed in 8.2. As an experiment, tried
-+swapping in the Unix versions of these routines (which call gettimeofday()
-+etc). They seem work just fine (it hung a couple times but I think that's
-+because the underlying system hung too; trying it later on a new connection,
-+it was fine; however I noticed a BIG discrepancy in throughput between
-+sending and receiving). Moved definitions for VMS64BIT and VMSI64 to
-+ckcdeb.h so all modules can use them and added them to the SHOW FEATURES
-+display. Added VMSV80 definition to build procedure. Beta.03+. ckcdeb.h,
-+ckcuus5.c, ckcvvms.h, ckvtio.c, ckvker.com, 6 Apr 2004.
-+
-+While doing the build-all, I noticed the VMS version did not build with
-+Multinet or older UCX versions, always with the same errors -- undeclared
-+variables, undefined symbols, all TCP/IP related. This didn't happen a
-+couple weeks ago... Somehow the order of #includes was messed up --
-+ckuusr.h depended on symbols that are defined in ckcnet.h, but ckcnet.h
-+was being included after ckuusr.h... this was compounded by two missing
-+commas in ckvker.com. 11 Apr 2004.
-+
-+Removed Beta designation, released as 8.0.211, 10 Apr 2004.
-+
-+I had somehow lost the edit to ckutio.c that changed the UUCP lockfile for
-+Mac OS X from /var/spool/uucp to /var/spool/lock. So I slipped it in and
-+re-uploaded version 8.0.211. You can tell the difference because SHOW
-+VERSIONS has 17 Apr 2004 for the Communications I/O module. Also the 10.3
-+executable now has a designer banner: "Mac OS X 10.3". makefile, ckuver.h,
-+ckutio.c, ckuus[45].c, 17 Apr 2004.
-+
-+---8.0.211---
-+
-+Removed "wermit" from "make clean" (how did it get there?). makefile.
-+
-+From Jeff, applied 10 May 2004.
-+ . Rearrange #ifdefs that define OS/2-only features. ckcdeb.h.
-+ . Fix two strncat()s that should have been ckstrncat()s. ckuus7.c.
-+ . Fix two strncat()s that should have been ckstrncat()s. ckuus4.c.
-+ . Fix one strncat(). ckcfns.c.
-+ . SET FTP CHAR ON used backwards byte order when output to screen. ckcfns.c.
-+ . Fix two strncat()s. ckuus3.c.
-+ . Add SET NETWORK TYPE NAMED-PIPE for K95. ckuus3.c.
-+ . Add "No active connections" message to hupok(). ckuus3.c.
-+ . Fix many strncat()s. ckcnet.c.
-+ . Fix some strncat()s. ckcftp.c
-+ . Make FTP port unsigned short for 16383 < port < 65536. ckcftp.c.
-+ . Improvements to FTP USER command. ckcftp.c.
-+ . Fix FEAT parsing to allow for various forms of whitespace. ckcftp.c.
-+
-+S-Expression (AND FOO BAR) would not short-circuit if FOO's value was 0,
-+even though short-circuiting code has been there since Day 1. Similarly for
-+(OR BAR FOO). Turns out the first operand was a special case that bypassed
-+the short-circuit check. Fixed in dosexp(): ckuus3.c, 10 May 2004.
-+
-+Red Hat 7.3 (and maybe others) <baudboy.h> referenced open() without first
-+ensuring it was declared. The declaration is in <fcntl.h>, which is after
-+<baudboy.h> in ckutio.c series of #includes. Made a special case for this.
-+ckutio.c (see comments), 10 May 2004.
-+
-+If the local Kermit's parity is set to SPACE and then a file arrives via
-+autodownload, automatic parity detection improperly switches it to NONE.
-+Fixed in rpack() by switching parity automatically only if parchk() returns
-+> 0 (rather than > -1), since NONE and SPACE are indistinguishable. A
-+bigger problem still remains: autodownload does not work at all if the
-+sender is using actual parity bits (even, odd, or mark) and the receiver's
-+parity is NONE. ckcfn2.c, 10 May 2004.
-+
-+When a DIAL MACRO is defined and the phone number is comprised of more than
-+one "word" (i.e. contains spaces), the dial macro loses the second and
-+subsequent words after the first call. Fixed in xdial() by inserting quotes
-+around phone number before passing it to xdial(). ckuus6.c, 10 May 2004.
-+
-+DIAL MACRO fix was not right; the quotes were kept as part of the phone
-+number and sent to the modem. dodo() pokes its argument to separate the
-+macro argument string into its component arguments. xdial() is called
-+repeatedly on the same string, so after the first time, a NUL has been
-+deposited after the first word of the telephone number. The fix is to have
-+xdial() create a pokeable copy of its argument string before calling
-+dodo(dial-macro,args...). It might seem odd that dodo pokes its argument,
-+but making copies would be would be prohibitive in space and time.
-+ckuus6.c, 23 May 2004.
-+
-+FTP CD did not strip braces or quotes from around its argument. Fixed in
-+doftprmt(): ckcftp.c, 23 May 2004.
-+
-+Added client side of REMOTE MESSAGE/RMESSAGE/RMSG: ckuus[r27].c, 23 May 2004.
-+
-+Server side of REMOTE MESSAGE: ckcpro.w, 23 May 2004.
-+
-+From Dave Sneddon: an updated CKVKER.COM containing a fix where the
-+COMPAQ_SSL symbol was not defined but later referenced which generated an
-+undefined symbol error. ckvker.com, 5 Jan 2005.
-+
-+From Andy Tanenbaum (28 May 2005):
-+ . Fix an errant prototype in ckcker.h and ckucmd.h - () instead of (void).
-+ . Add support for MINIX 3.0. makefile, ckutio.c, ckufio.c, ckuver.h.
-+
-+Fixed messed-up sndhlp() call which apparently had been jiggered to
-+compensate for the bad prototype which has now been fixed, ckcpro.w,
-+12 Jun 2005.
-+
-+From Jeff (12 June 2005):
-+ . Security updates. ck_ssl.c, ck_crp.c, ckuath.c.
-+ . Fix bug in K95 SET PRINTER CHARACTER-SET. ckuus3.c.
-+ . Add printer character-set to K95 SHOW PRINTER display. ckuus5,c
-+ . Add SET MSKERMIT FILE-RENAMING to K95. ckuus7.c, ckuusr.h.
-+ . Add help for K95 SET MSKERMIT. ckuus2.c.
-+ . Add SET GUI CLOSE to K95. ckuusr.h, ckuus2.c, ckuus3.c
-+ . Add help text for K95 SET GUI MENUBAR and TOOLBAR. ckuus2.c.
-+ . Add --noclose command-line option for K95. ckuusy.c
-+ . Add PAM support for Mac OS X. ckufio.c.
-+ . Add GSSAPI support for Mac OS X. ckcftp.c.
-+ . Pick up more URL options. ckcker.h, ckuusy.c.
-+ . Fix bug in delta-time calculation across year boundary. ckucmd.c.
-+ . Add Secure Endpoints to copyright notices. ckcmai.c.
-+ . Fix FTP HELP to override unverbose setting. ckcftp.c.
-+ . Fix assorted minor typos.
-+
-+From Matthias Kurz: automatic herald generation for NetBSD 2.0 and later,
-+"make netbsd2". ckuver.h, makefile, 12 Jun 2005.
-+
-+Added SET TERMINAL LF-DISPLAY, like CR-DISPLAY but for linefeed rather than
-+carriage return. ckuusr.h, ckuus[257x].c, 12 Jun 2005.
-+
-+Made a command-line option --unbuffered to do what the -DNONOSETBUF
-+compile-time option does, i.e. force unbuffered console i/o. Unix only.
-+ckuusr.h, ckuusy.c, ckutio.c, 12 Jun 2005.
-+
-+Fixed getiact() (which displays TERM IDLE-ACTION setting) to display
-+space as \{32}. ckuus7.c, 12 Jun 2005.
-+
-+Added LMV as a synonym for LRENAME, which is itself a synonym for LOCAL
-+RENAME. ckuusr.c, 12 Jun 2005.
-+
-+Put HELP SET TERMINAL DG-UNIX-MODE text where it belonged. ckuus2.c,
-+12 Jun 2005.
-+
-+Added IF LINK (Unix only) to test if a filename is a symlink. Uses the most
-+simpleminded possible method, calls readlink() to see if it succeeds or fails.
-+No other method is dependable across different Unixes. This code should be
-+portable because I already use readlink() elsewhere within exactly the same
-+#ifdefs. ckufio.c, ckuus2.c, ckuus6.c, 12 Jun 2005.
-+
-+Fixed a bug in which \fdir() wouldn't work when its argument was the nonwild
-+name of a directory file. zxpand(): ckufio.c, 12 Jun 2005.
-+
-+Made \fdirectory() a synonym for \fdirectories(). Made \fdir() an
-+acceptable abbreviation for these, even though it clashes with \fdirname(),
-+which still works as before. ckuus4.c, 12 Jun 2005.
-+
-+Added the long-needed \flopx() function, to return rightmost pieces of
-+strings, such as file extensions. \fstripx() and \flopx() are the
-+orthogonal functions we need to pick filenames apart from the right:
-+\stripx(foo.tar.gz) = foo.tar; flopx(foo.tar.gz) = gz. ckuusr.h, ckuusr.c,
-+ckuus2.c, 12 Jun 2005.
-+
-+Removed reference to defunct fax number, ckcmai.c, 12 Jun 2005.
-+
-+Added -DHAVE_PTMX to linux+krb5+openssl+zlib+shadow+pam. From Timothy Folks.
-+makefile, 12 Jun 2005.
-+
-+Built on Solaris 9 and NetBSD 2.0.
-+
-+From Jeff: New build target for Mac OS X 10.3 with Kerberos 5 and SSL.
-+makefile, 14 Jun 2005.
-+
-+Fixed error in ckuver.h NetBSD #ifdefs. 15 Jun 2005.
-+
-+Fixed SET TERMINAL IDLE-ACTION OUTPUT to work as documented, namely if the
-+output string is empty, to send a NUL. Previously there was no way to make
-+it send a NUL. ckuus7.c, 15 Jun 2005.
-+
-+Suppose (in Unix, for example) a filename contains wildcard characters, such
-+as {abc}.txt. When referring to such a file (e.g. in a SEND command), these
-+characters can be quoted, e.g. \{abc\}.txt. But if the file list has been
-+obtained programmatically, e.g. stored in an array, there is no way, short
-+of tedious, complicated, and error-prone string processing, to reference the
-+file. For this we need a way to disable wildcard processing. I added { ON,
-+OFF } choices for the SET WILD and SHOW FILE commands: ckuusr.h, ckuus[234].c.
-+{ ON, OFF } turns wildcarding off and on without affecting the { KERMIT,
-+SHELL } agent choice; it does this by setting a new and separate global
-+variable, wildena. Added semantics to ckufio.c. Crude but effective. It
-+might have been more Unixlike to add Yet Another form of quoting but we
-+have enough of that already (later maybe I'll add a \function() for this).
-+Needs to be propogated to Windows and VMS. 15 Jun 2005.
-+
-+Improved and fixed typos in HELP WILDCARD and HELP PATTERN. ckuus2.c,
-+15 Jun 2005.
-+
-+The GREP command, and probably anything else that uses ckmatch() for pattern
-+matching, failed on patterns like */[0-3]*.html. The [a-b] handler, when
-+failing to match at the current position, neglected to back up the pattern
-+and try again on the remainder of the string. I also fixed another case, in
-+which matching a literal string a*b?c against the pattern a[*?]*[?*]c caused
-+ckmatch() to recurse until it blew up. ckclib.c, 16 Jun 2005.
-+
-+Added builds and designer banner for Solaris 10. makefile, ckuver.h,
-+27 Jun 2005.
-+
-+Defined CKHTTP for NetBSD, the HTTP code builds and works fine there.
-+ckcdeb.h, 2 Jul 2005.
-+
-+Added #ifndef OSF40..#endif around definition of inet_aton() in ck_ssl()
-+to allow building in Tru64. Added tru64-51b+openssl to makefile.
-+15 Jul 2005.
-+
-+HTTP GET would fail if the URL contained any metacharacters, no matter how
-+much you quoted them. Although it uses cmfld() to parse the (partial) URL,
-+it then uses cmofi() to get the output filename, which by default is the
-+"filename" from the URL, which might be something like "rankem.asp?id=1639".
-+cmofi() refuses to accept unquoted metacharacters in "filenames" and that's
-+what happens in this case if the output filename is not specified. Worked
-+around this by disabling wildcard processing around HTTP GET using the new
-+"wildena" variable from June 15th. ckuusr.c, 18 Jul 2005.
-+
-+Fixed the June 16th fix to the pattern matcher. I fixed a real problem, but
-+I made an unrelated optimization that introduced new ones. ckclib.c,
-+18 Jul 2005.
-+
-+Added missing help text for \fb64encode() and \fb64decode(). ckuus2.c,
-+18 Jul 2005.
-+
-+Changed SET WILD OFF help text to warn that this setting prevents the
-+creation of backup files (later I'll have to see if something more useful
-+can be done about this). ckuus2.c, 18 Jul 2005.
-+
-+Built OK on Mac OS X 10.4.2 using macosx103 target (but with some
-+"signedness" warnings in ckcnet.c and ckcftp.c). Built on Unixware 7.1.4
-+with uw7 target. 27-28 Jul 2005.
-+
-+Added -DCKHTTP to Mac OS X 10.3-.4 KFLAGS. Makefile, 4 Aug 2005.
-+
-+Built on BSDI 4.3.1. Added -DCKHTTP.
-+
-+Compact substring notation extended to accept not only start:length but also
-+start-end notation. Thus \s(foo[12:18]) means the substring of foo starting
-+at position 12 of length 18, and tne new \s(foo[12-18]) means the substring
-+of foo starting at position 12 and ending with position 18. Ditto for
-+\:(\%a), etc. ckuus4.c, 9 Aug 2005.
-+
-+See correspondence with Mark Sapiro, Nov 2003 and Sep 2004, about certain
-+variations on IF syntax having been broken by the introduction of "immediate
-+macros" circa 1999. It seems the problem -- variables not being expanded --
-+always occurs in the ELSE part when (a) the IF condition is false; (b) the
-+ELSE command is "standalone", i.e. expressed as a separate command after the
-+IF command (original C-Kermit 5A syntax), and (c) its command list is a block.
-+This would suggest the problem is in the XXELS parser.
-+
-+Going back to 1999, I find this:
-+ Fixed a problem Jim Whitby noticed with quoting in ELSE statements. This
-+ problem was introduced when I unified IF and XIF, and occurs only when
-+ ELSE begins on a line, followed by a { command list } rather than a single
-+ command. The solution (gross) was to make a special version of pushcmd()
-+ (called pushqcmd()) for this situation, which doubles backslashes while
-+ copying, BUT ONLY IF it's a command list (i.e. starts with "{"); otherwise
-+ we break lots of other stuff. Result passes Jim's test and still passes
-+ ckedemo.ksc and iftest.ksc. ckucmd.c, ckuus6.c, 27 Sep 99.
-+
-+I undid this change and it made no difference to all the other IF
-+constructions (in fact, it fixed an urelated one that was broken, so now
-+iftest scores 54 out of 54, instead of 53). However, it does not fix the
-+ELSE problem; in fact it pushes it all the way in the other direction:
-+
-+ The opposite occurs any time you try to execute an immediate macro inside a
-+ macro or any other { block }: not only is the variable evaluated, it is
-+ evaluated into nothing. It looks like this happens only in immediate
-+ macros, i.e. *commands* that start with '{'. So maybe we really have two
-+ isolated problems, that can each be fixed.
-+
-+The situation is illustrated by this simple script:
-+
-+ def xx {
-+ if false { echo \%1, echo \%2 }
-+ else { echo \%3, echo \%4 }
-+ }
-+ xx one two three four
-+
-+With pushqcmd() it echoes the variable names literally; with pushcmd() it
-+echoes empty lines. Since ELSE, when its argument is a block, dispatches
-+to the immediate-macro handler, it seems we have unified the two problems,
-+so fixing one should fix the other.
-+
-+The problem is that we define a new temporary macro and then call dodo() to
-+execute it. But if the definition contains macro arguments, we have added a
-+new level of macro invocation, thus wiping out the current level of args.
-+The cure is to expand the variables in the immediate macro in the current
-+context, before executing it. This means simply changing the cmtxt() call
-+that reads the immediate macro to specify xxsting as its processing
-+function, rather than NULL, which is used for real macros to defer their
-+argument evaluation until after the macro entered. ckuusr.c, 11 Aug 2005.
-+
-+Added a new makefile target, macosx10.4, for Mac OS X 10.4. This one uses
-+an undocumented trick to get the otherwise unavailable-except-by-clicking
-+Mac OS X version number (in this case 10.4.2) and stuff it into the HERALD
-+string. makefile, 11 Aug 2005.
-+
-+Built OK on Solaris 9, Solaris 10 (with a few implicit declaration warnings
-+in ckuusx.c), Mac OS X 10.4.2 (with some warnings in ckcnet.c and ckcftp.c),
-+Mac OS X 10.3.9 (also using the macos10.4 entry, which gets the right
-+version number, and gets no warnings at all), RH Enterprise Linux AS4 on AMD
-+x86_64, Tru64 Unix 4.0F, SCO UnixWare 7.1.4
-+
-+For docs and/or scriptlib: Unix C-Kermit can be a stdin/out filter. The
-+trick is to use the ASK, ASKQ, or GETC command for input, specifying no
-+prompt, and ECHO or XECHO for output, e.g.:
-+
-+while true {
-+ ask line
-+ if fail exit 0
-+ echo \freverse(\m(line))
-+}
-+exit 0
-+
-+FOPEN didn't do anything with the channel number if the open failed, so any
-+subsequent command that tried to reference it would get a parse error it was
-+undefined or non-numeric, not very helpful. Changed FOPEN to set the
-+channel number to -1 if the file can't be opened. Now subsequent operations
-+on the channel fail with "Channel -1: File not open". I also added two
-+magic channel numbers: -8 means that any FILE command (besides OPEN and
-+STATUS) on that channel is a noop that succeeds silently; -9 is a noop that
-+fails silently. So now it's possible to simply set a channel number to one
-+of these values to disable i/o to certain file without getting lots of error
-+messages. dofile(): ckuus7.c, 12 Aug 2005.
-+
-+Added automatic herald construction for UnixWare 7. makefile, 12 Aug 2005.
-+
-+Unix isdir() never allowed for arguments that started with tilde, so gave
-+incorrect results for ~/tmp/ or ~fdc. The problem was mainly invisible
-+since most commands that parsed file or directory names used cmifi(), cmdir(),
-+etc, which did the conversions themselves. But IF DIRECTORY was an exception,
-+since its operand had to be treated as just text, and then tested after it
-+was parsed. ckufio.c, 13 Aug 2005.
-+
-+Fixed the following:
-+"ckuusx.c", line 8959: warning: implicit function declaration: ckgetpeer
-+"ckufio.c", line 1869: warning: implicit function declaration: ttwait
-+"ckufio.c", line 2941: warning: implicit function declaration: mlook
-+"ckufio.c", line 2943: warning: implicit function declaration: dodo
-+"ckufio.c", line 2944: warning: implicit function declaration: parser
-+"ckcftp.c", line 2625: warning: implicit function declaration: delta2sec
-+"ckcftp.c", line 4071: warning: no explicit type given for parameter: prm
-+"ckcftp.c", line 8389: warning: no explicit type given for parameter: brief
-+ckuusx.c, ckufio.c, ckcftp.c, ckucmd.h. 13 Aug 2005.
-+
-+Unbuffered stdout code has never worked because the setbuf(stdout,NULL) call
-+has to occur before the stdout has been used. The reason it's needed is
-+that some Kermit code writes to stderr (which is unbuffered) and other code
-+writes to stdout, and therefore typescripts can come out jumbled. Robert
-+Simmons <robertls@nortel.com> provided the needed clue when he insisted it
-+worked only when executed at the very beginning of main(). So I moved the
-+code to that spot. But since now we also want to make unbuffered a runtime
-+(command-line) option, I had to do a clunky by-hand pre-prescan inline in
-+main() to look thru argv[], even before prescan() was called. ckcmai.c,
-+ckutio.c, ckuusy.c, 13 Aug 2005. (Now that this works, it might be a good
-+idea to remove all use of stderr from Kermit.)
-+
-+Managed, after some finagling, to build a 64-bit version on Solaris 10 at
-+Utah Math with Sun cc. (Can't make any gcc builds at all, 32- or 64-bit,
-+they all blow up in <sys/siginfo.h>.) New target: solaris10_64. makefile,
-+15 Aug 2005.
-+
-+The 64-bit Solaris 10 version compiles and links OK and transfers files in
-+remote mode. It can make FTP connections and use them, but Telnet connections
-+always fail with "network unreachable". This is with all default libs and
-+include files. Nelson has a separate set in /usr/local, which he references
-+explicitly in all his 64-bit builds, but using these makes no difference.
-+Some data type is wrong in ckcnet.c. But telnet works fine in 64-bit Linux
-+and Tru64 builds. Debug logs trace the difference to netopen() (of course),
-+the spot where we test the results of inet_addr(), which is already marked
-+suspicious for 64-bit builds. It seems that inet_addr() is of type in_addr_t,
-+which in turn is u_int32, i.e. an unsigned 32-bit int. Yet the man page says
-+that failure is indicated by returning -1. I guess this doesn't matter in
-+32-bit builds, but in the 64-bit world, the test for failure didn't work
-+right. I made a Solaris-specific workaround, and checked that it works in
-+both 32-bit and 64-builds. I really hate typedefs. ckcnet.c, 15 Aug 2005.
-+
-+Changed the plain-text version (as opposed to the popup or GUI version - the
-+GUI version, at least, already does this) of ASKQ to echo keystrokes
-+asterisks rather than simply not echo anything, so it's easier to see what
-+you're doing, the effects of editing, etc. Experimental; for now, there's
-+no way to disable this. Not sure if there needs to be. Anyway, to get this
-+working required a fair amount of cleaning up of gtword(), which was echoing
-+different ways in different places. ckuus6.c, ckucmd.c, 15 Aug 2005.
-+
-+Added a solaris9_64 target for building a 64-bit version on Solaris 9 with
-+Sun cc. Verified, using the DIR command and \fsize() function on a 4.4GB
-+file, that the Solaris 64-bit version of Kermit gets the size correctly, and
-+that it can copy such a file (thus its fopen/fread/fwrite/fclose interface
-+works right). Initiated a large-file transfer between here and Utah over
-+SSH and verified that it puts the correct file size in the A packet when
-+sending; the right quantites are shown on the file transfer display (file
-+size CPS, percent done, etc). But even at 5Mb/sec, it takes a good while to
-+transfer 4.4GB, more than 2 hours (not streaming; 30 window slots, 4K
-+packets, maybe it would go faster with streaming)... After an hour or so,
-+it filled up the partition and gave up (gracefully) before it reached the
-+2GB frontier (drained its pending packets, closed the partial file).
-+Restarted at 12:54, this time with streaming and 8K packets (the speed
-+wasn't significantly different). This time it transferred 95% of the file
-+(4187660288 bytes) before failing because the disk filled up. Went to Utah
-+and started a transfer between two Solaris 10/Sparc hosts; this goes about 8
-+times faster. The transfer completed successfully after 17m41s. All fields
-+in the f.t. display looked right the whole time. Then I verified various
-+other 64-bit combinations transferring the same 4.4GB file:
-+
-+ To................
-+ From Sol Amd i64 Tru
-+ Sol OK OK OK OK Sol = Solaris 10 / Sparc
-+ Amd OK Amd = AMD x86_64 RH Enterprise Linux AS4
-+ i64 OK i64 = Intel IA64, RH 2.1AS
-+ Tru Tru = Tru64 Unix 4.0F Alpha
-+
-+(The other combinations are difficult to test for logistical reasons.)
-+
-+Tried sending the same long file with Kermit's FTP client. It chugged along
-+for a while until I stopped it; it would have taken hours to complete.
-+There is no indication that it wouldn't have worked, assuming the FTP server
-+could also handle long files, which who knows. Anyway, Kermit showed all
-+the right data on the display screen. 17 Aug 2005.
-+
-+On AMD x86_64 and IA64 native 64-bit Linux builds, the pty routines did not
-+work at all. ptsname() dumped core. If I commented out ptsname(), then the
-+next thing dumped core. The same code works on the other 64-bit builds.
-+Poking around, I see that this version of Linux has an openpty() function,
-+which I could try using instead of the current API -- grantpty(), etc. Then
-+I see that openpty() is already coded into Kermit's pty module,
-+conditionalized under HAVE_OPENPTY, which has never before been defined for
-+any build. I added a test to the makefile linux target (look for the
-+openpty() prototype in <pty.h>, if found define HAVE_OPENPTY as a CFLAG and
-+also add -lutil to LNKFLAGS). Works fine on the problem builds, and also
-+on previously working 32-bit builds. makefile, 17 Aug 2005.
-+
-+Fixed a bug in the ASKQ echo asterisks code, which made the VMS version of
-+C-Kermit always echo asterisks. Turns out that some code in the main parse
-+loop to reset command-specific flags was in the wrong place, which had other
-+effects too, for example ASKQ temporarily turns off debug logging as a
-+security measure, but the code to turn it back on was skipped in most cases.
-+Some other side effects related to the DIRECTORY and CD commands might have
-+been possible but I haven't seen them. ckuus[56].c, 23 Aug 2005.
-+
-+Problem reported when sending a file to VMS when the name in the F packet
-+starts with a device specification and does not include a directory field,
-+and PATHNAMES are RELATIVE. Example: dsk:foo.bar becomes f_oo.bar. The
-+code assumes that if there is a device field, it is followed by a directory
-+field, and it inserts a dot after the '[', which in this case is not there.
-+Later the dot becomes '_' because of the only-one-dot rule. Solution: only
-+insert the dot if there really is an opening bracket. nzrtol(): ckvfio.c,
-+23 Aug 2005.
-+
-+A report on the newsgroup complains that C-Kermit and K95 servers were
-+sending REMOTE DIR listings with only #J line terminators, rather than #M#J.
-+Yet all the other REMOTE xxx responses arrived with #M#J. snddir() was
-+neglecting to switch to text mode. ckcfns.c, 26 Aug 2005.
-+
-+Back to long files. What happens if 32-bit Kermit is sent a long file?
-+It gets an A-packet that looks like this:
-+
-+ ^A_"A."U1""B8#120050815 18:28:03!'42920641*4395073536,#775-!7@ )CP
-+
-+The 32-bit receiver reacts like so:
-+
-+ gattr length[4395073536]=100106240
-+
-+the first number being the string from the A-packet, the second being the
-+value of the long int it was converted to by atol(). Clearly not equal in
-+this case. When this happens Kermit should reject the file instead of
-+accepting it and then getting a horrible error a long time later. Added
-+code to gattr() to convert the result of atol() back to a string and compare
-+it with the original string; if they're not equal, reject the file on the
-+assumption that the only reason this could happen is overflow. Also some
-+other code in case the sender sends the only LENGTHK attribute. Now files
-+whose lengths are too big for a long int are rejected right away, provided
-+the sender sends the length in an A packet ahead of the file itself. If
-+this new code should ever cause a problem, it can be bypassed with SET
-+ATTRIBUTE LENGTH OFF. ckcfn3.c, 26 Aug 2005.
-+
-+As I recall from when I was testing this a few weeks ago, when the too-big
-+length is not caught at A-packet time, the transfer fails more or less
-+gracefully when the first attempt is made to write past the limit. I went
-+to doublecheck this by sending a big file from the 64-bit Solaris10 version
-+to a 32-bit Mac OS X version that does not have today's code. The Mac
-+thinks the incoming file is 2GB long when it's really 4GB+. But in this
-+case, something new happens! Although the percent done and transfer rate go
-+negative, the file keeps coming. It would seem that Mac OS X lets us create
-+long files without using any special APIs. The transfer runs to completion.
-+Mac OS X Kermit says SUCCESS (but gets the byte count and cps wrong, of
-+course). But then a STATUS command says FAILURE. The file was, however,
-+transferred successfully; it is exactly the same length and compares byte
-+for byte with the original. This tells me that in the Mac OS X version --
-+and how many others like it??? -- today's rejection code should not be
-+enabled. Meanwhile I put today's new code in #ifndef NOCHECKOVERFLOW..#endif,
-+and defined this symbol in the Mac OS X 10.4 target. Over time, I'll have
-+to find out what other platforms have this characteristic. And of course
-+I'll also have to do something about file-transfer display, statistics, and
-+status. makefile, ckcfn3.c, 26 Aug 2005.
-+
-+From now on I'm going to bump the Dev.xx number each time I upload a new
-+ckdaily. This one will be Dev.02. ckckmai.c, 26 Aug 2005.
-+
-+Got rid of all the extraneous FreeBSD 4 and 5 build targets. Now there's
-+one (freebsd) for all FreeBSD 4.1 and later. makefile, 27 Aug 2005.
-+
-+Mac OS X 10.4 (Tiger) is a 64-bit OS. Building C-Kermit 0n 10.4.2 without
-+any special switches stilll gives a 32-bit executable. Ditto building with
-+-mpowerpc64. Further investigation turned up a tip sheet on MySQL that says
-+you have to include all of these: -mpowerpc64 -mcpu=G5 -mtune=G5 -arch
-+ppc64. That did the trick. New makefile target: macosx10.4_64. But the
-+10.4.2 system I tried did not have 64-bit [n]curses or resolv libs, so this
-+build has no -DNOCURSES -DNO_DNS_SRV. makefile, 27 Aug 2005.
-+
-+Created a symbol CK_64BIT to indicate true 64-bit builds at compile time.
-+Added 64-bit announcement to the startup herald and the VERSION text.
-+ckcdeb.h, ckuus[r5].c, 27 Aug 2005.
-+
-+Added a built-in variable \v(bits) to indicate the size of the build
-+(16, 32, 64, or whatever else sizeof() might report). ckuusr.h, ckuus4.c,
-+27 Aug 2005.
-+
-+Got rid of all the warnings in 64-bit Mac OS X about args to getsockopt(),
-+getsockname(), and getpeername(), and the comparisons on the return value
-+of inet_addr(). ckcnet.[ch], 27 Aug 2005.
-+
-+Now to check the effects on other builds...
-+ Linux on AMD64: ok.
-+ Linux on IA64: ok.
-+ Linux on i386: ok.
-+ Mac OS X 10.3.9 32-bit: ok.
-+ Solaris 10 64-bit: ok.
-+ Solaris 9 32-bit: ok.
-+ Tru64 4.0F: ok.
-+ FreeBSD 4.11: ok.
-+ FreeBSD 5.4 ia64 (64-bit): ok.
-+ FreeBSD 5.4 i386 (32-bit): ok.
-+
-+The Tru64 5.1B build totally blew up because they have their own unique
-+sockopt/etc length-argument data type (int!), so I had to roll back on using
-+socklen_t for this in all 64-bit builds. Checked to make sure it still
-+builds on Tru64 4.0F after this change (it does). ckcnet.h, 27 Aug 2005.
-+
-+The HP-UX 11i/ia64 build comes out to be 32-bit but thinks it's 64-bit.
-+CK_64BIT is set because __ia64 is defined. So how do I actually make a
-+64-bit HP-UX build? I tried adding +DD64 to CFLAGS, and this generates
-+64-bit object files but linking fails to find the needed 64-bit libs
-+(e.g. -lm). For now I added an exception for HPUX to the CK_64BIT
-+definition section. ckcdeb.h, 27 Aug 2005.
-+
-+Took the time to verify my recollection about the "graceful failure" on a
-+regular Pentium Linux system when receiving a too-big file... OK, it's not
-+exactly graceful. It gets a "File size limit exceeded" error; the message
-+is printed in the middle of the file-transfer display, apparently not by
-+Kermit, and Kermit exits immediately. Looks like a trap... Yup. "File
-+size limit exceeded" is SIGXFSZ (25). What happens if we set it to SIG_IGN?
-+Just the right thing: The receiver gets "Error writing data" at 2147483647
-+bytes, sends E-packet to sender with this message, and recovers with total
-+grace (drains packet buffers, returns to prompt). ckutio.c, 27 Aug 2005.
-+
-+Backed off from rejecting a file because its announced size overflows a
-+long. Now instead, I set the file size to -2 (a negative size means the
-+size is unknown, but we have always used -1 for this; -2 means "unknown and
-+probably too big"). In this case, the f-t display says:
-+
-+ File Size: POSSIBLY EXCEEDS LOCAL FILE SIZE LIMIT
-+
-+then the user can interrupt it with X or whatever, or can let it run and
-+see if maybe (as in the case of Mac OS X) it will be accepted anyway. This
-+way, we skip all the bogus calculations of percent done, time remaining, etc.
-+ckcfn3.c, ckuusx.c, 27 Aug 2005.
-+
-+Discovered that VMS C-Kermit on Alpha and IA64 is a 32-bit application;
-+sizeof(long) == sizeof(char *) == 4. Tried adding /POINTER_SIZE=64 to VMS
-+DECC builds on Alpha and IA64, but the results aren't great. Tons of
-+warnings about pointer size mismatches between Kermit pointers and RMS ones,
-+and the executable doesn't run. It appears that access to long files
-+would require a lot of hacking, similar to what's needed for 32-bit Linux.
-+
-+--- Dev.02: 27 Aug 2005 ---
-+
-+From Jeff, 28 Aug 2005.
-+ . Fix SSH GLOBAL-KNOWN-HOSTS-FILE / USER-KNOWN-HOSTS-FILE parsing, ckuus3.c.
-+ . Pick up K95STARTFLAGS from environment, ckuus4.c.
-+ . Fix some typos in command-line processing (-q), ckuus4.c.
-+ . Be sure to suppress herald if started with -q, ckuus7.c.
-+ . Fix ssh command-line switches, ckuusy.c.
-+
-+Eric Smutz complained that HTTP POST was adding an extraneous blank line,
-+which prevented his application from successfully posting. RFC 2616 states
-+(in Section 4.1):
-+
-+ In the interest of robustness, servers SHOULD ignore any empty
-+ line(s) received where a Request-Line is expected. In other words, if
-+ the server is reading the protocol stream at the beginning of a
-+ message and receives a CRLF first, it should ignore the CRLF.
-+
-+ Certain buggy HTTP/1.0 client implementations generate extra CRLF's
-+ after a POST request. To restate what is explicitly forbidden by the
-+ BNF, an HTTP/1.1 client MUST NOT preface or follow a request with an
-+ extra CRLF.
-+
-+This seems pretty clear. One section of code in http_post() (just above the
-+postopen: label) was appending a CRLF to a buffer whose last already was
-+terminated by CRLF, and then appended a second CRLF; thus two empty lines.
-+I removed the second one. ckcnet.c, 28 Aug 2005.
-+
-+I looked into the 64-bitness of NetBSD, it seems to be like Linux and
-+FreeBSD on 64-bit hardware, i.e. you just build it there and it works, at
-+least on Alpha and AMD64, going back to NetBSD 1.4 or 1.5. But I don't have
-+access to any of these for verification and documentation on the Web is
-+scanty.
-+
-+Checked PeterE's complaint again of warnings in ckutio.c about parameter
-+list of get[ug]id() and gete[ug]id(). When I "make hpux1100o" on HP-UX
-+11.11 (PA-RISC), there are definitely no warnings. He says the same thing
-+happens on 10.xx, but I don't have access to that any more. I also did
-+"make hpux1100o" on HP-UX 11.23 (11i v2) (PA-RISC), also no warnings.
-+(Except in both cases, a warning about a comment within a comment in
-+/usr/include/sys/ptyio.h). On HP-UX 11i v2 on Itanium, however, there are
-+TONS of warnings, mostly of the "variable set but never used" kind. Also
-+"dollar sign used in identifier". Tracking this last one down, I see it's
-+complaining about code that's in #ifdefs for other platforms, such as
-+Apollo Aegis. Is "aegis" defined in HP-UX 11i v2/IA64? No! (It would show
-+up in SHOW FEATURES if it was.) Some phase of the compiler is complaining
-+about code that it should be skipping (and that, in fact, it *is* skipping
-+it because the build is successful). It's as if cc is running lint for me
-+but not telling lint which macros are defined and which are not.
-+
-+Verified that 64-bit linking fails in the same way for HP-UX 11i v2 on both
-+IA64 and PA-RISC. Sent a query to HP.
-+
-+Compiling ckcnet.c and ckcftp.c got the familiar sockopt-related warnings on
-+HP-UX 11i v2; turns out it is just like Tru64 Unix in using an int for the
-+length argument. Added another special case and the warnings went away.
-+ckcnet.h, 28 Aug 2005.
-+
-+Added some stuff to SHOW FEATURES to see what kinds of macros are exposed
-+(e.g. INT_MAX, LONG_MAX, LLONG_MAX, etc) and also show sizeof(long long) and
-+sizeof(off_t). Building this code all over the place will give me an idea
-+of how widespread these data types are, and to what extent I can tell
-+whether they are available from clues in the header files. (At first
-+glance, it appears that I'm not picking up <limits.h>, but adding an
-+#include for it is just asking for trouble.) No complaints about long long
-+or off_t from Solaris 9 or recent Linuxes. ckuus5.c, 28 Aug 2005.
-+
-+Fixed a warning in HP-UX 10 and 11 stemming from some old-style prototypes
-+in ckutio.c for get[re][gu]id(). ckutio.c, 29 Aug 2005.
-+
-+Updated minix3 target from Andy Tanenbaum. makefile, 29 Aug 2005.
-+
-+PeterE confirms that "long long" and off_t are available in all HP-UX 10 and
-+11, and in HP-UX 9 on PA-RISC but not Motorola. 30 Aug 2005.
-+
-+Got 64-bit builds to work on HP-UX. According to my notes, John Bigg of HP
-+said (in 1999) that HP-UX 10.30 and later require PA-RISC 1.1, and do not
-+work on PA-RISC 1.0. But is PA 1.0 64-bit or what? Today, Alex McKale of
-+HP said "The 64-bit binaries will work on all machines that have the same or
-+later release of HP-UX (excluding PA-RISC 1.1 machines)". Still need
-+clarification... Maybe it's that all IA64 builds can be 64-bit but I need
-+dual builds for PA-RISC. Meanwhile I started transfer of a 4GB+ file from
-+Solaris to HP-UX 11i but it exceeded some quota on the HP long before it
-+approached the 2G point. It failed cleanly and up until then it was working
-+fine (numbers, stats, etc). 30 Aug 2005.
-+
-+Support of large files in 32-bit builds began in 10.20. 64-bit application
-+support began in 11.00, but not all machines that run 11.00 support 64 bits.
-+About long files, see HP /usr/share/doc/lg_files.txt.
-+
-+PeterE found that certain patterns can still make Kermit loop; example:
-+
-+ if match T01011-00856-21-632-073 *[abc] { echo GOOD } else { echo BAD }
-+ if match T01011-00856-21-632-073 *[a-z] { echo GOOD } else { echo BAD }
-+
-+The minimum offending pattern is * followed immediately by an [xxx]
-+construction, followed by anything else, including nothing. Previous
-+versions of Kermit handled this one correctly, without looping (but failed
-+certain matches that should have succeeded). The new section of code I
-+added on 15 June, upon failure to match, advances the string pointer and
-+backs up the pattern to the previous pattern, and starts again
-+(recursively). However, there needed to be a corresponding check at entry
-+for an empty target string. ckmatch(): ckclib.c, 12 Sep 2005.
-+
-+PeterE discovered that "kermit -y filethatdoesnotexit" gives an erroneous
-+error message that names the user's customization, rather than the name
-+given on the command line. doinit(): ckuus5.c, 12 Sep 2005.
-+
-+FREAD does not get an error if it tries to read a record or file or piece of
-+file that is too big for its buffer. In particular, FREAD /SIZE:xxx seems
-+to succeed even if less than xxx was read. It should fail unless, perhaps,
-+it successfully read up to the end of the file. Furthermore, if xxx is
-+bigger than the file buffer size, it should complain. The buffer is
-+line[LINBUFSIZ], 32K. The lack of failure was due to code in dofile() that
-+adjusted the given size silently if it was greater than the buffer size,
-+which I removed, and also added a check when parsing the /SIZE: switch.
-+dofile(): ckuus7.c, 12 Sep 2005.
-+
-+That still didn't help with FREAD /SIZE:n returning less than n bytes, even
-+when they were available. That's because the underlying routine, z_in(),
-+didn't check fread()'s return code, which is the number of bytes read.
-+If fread() has smaller buffers, it needs to be called in a loop. z_in():
-+ckuus7.c, 12 Sep 2005.
-+
-+Flen() fails on strings of length 8192 or more. The limitation is in the
-+callers of zzstring, which seem to be specifying an 8K buffer, in this case
-+fneval(). The operable symbols are FNVALL (max length of value returned by
-+a function) and MAXARGLEN (maximum length of an argument to a function). I
-+changed both of these for BIGBUFOK builds to be CMDBL. Buffers can never be
-+infinite, there has to be a limit. It's important to make everything work
-+consistently within that limit, and to make something useful happen when the
-+limit is exceeded. At this point, I can probably also increase the limits
-+for modern 32-bit systems, and certainly for 64-bit ones. Also there's no
-+point in worrying about 16-bit platforms any more; earlier C-Kermit versions
-+can still be used on them if necessary. ckuusr.h, 12 Sep 2005.
-+
-+Special #ifdefs for finding resolv.h and nameser.h in MINIX3 from Andy
-+Tanenbaum. ckcnet.c, 20 Sep 2005.
-+
-+PeterE noticed that ckmatch(), even though it works pretty well now, does a
-+lot of extra and unnecessary recursion after determining the string and
-+pattern do not match, at least when the pattern is of the form *[abc].
-+After several false starts I was able reduce this effect to a minor level
-+(but not eliminate it all together) by changing a while loop into a do loop.
-+ckmatch(): ckclib.c, 15 Oct 2005.
-+
-+Added -DNOLONGLONG to HP-UX 8.00 and earlier builds, and to Motorola-based
-+HP-UX 9.00 builds. This is simply to inhibit the test for whether "long
-+long" is supported by the compiler, since when it isn't, the module
-+containing the test won't compile. makefile, ckuus5.c, 16 Oct 2005.
-+
-+Making ASKQ always echo askterisks is a bad idea, because when it doesn't
-+echo, it's the perfect way to read silently from stdin, e.g. in a CGI script
-+(INPUT can also be used for this but it's not as straightforward). So I put
-+the default for ASKQ back to no echoing, then gave ASKQ its own switch
-+table, which is the same as for ASK with the addition of an /ECHO:x switch,
-+which tells what character to echo. ckucmd.c, ckuus[26].c, 17 Oct 2005.
-+
-+Fixed a bug in FTP GET /COMMAND filename commandname; it always dumped core
-+dereferencing a null string (the nonexistent local asname). ckcftp.c,
-+17 Oct 2005.
-+
-+For docs: if you don't like the funny business that happens when you type
-+an IF command at the prompt, use XIF instead and it won't happen. Also note
-+that commands like "if xxx { echo blah } else { echo blah blah }" don't
-+work when typed at the prompt; you have to use XIF for this.
-+
-+Back to ckmatch()... Under certain conditions (e.g. patterns like *[abc])
-+failure to match would not stop the recursion because the string and pattern
-+arguments are on the stack, as they must be, so there was no way for level
-+n-1 to know that level n had detected a definitive nonmatch and that no
-+further attempts at matching were required. The right way to handle this is
-+to recode the whole thing as coroutines, the cheap way out is with a global
-+static flag. Works perfectly, in the sense that the match.ksc test results
-+are identical to what they were before and the extra backing up and
-+recursion are eliminated. (The Oct 15th fix wasn't really a fix, it broke
-+a couple of cases.) ckclib.c, 20 Oct 2005.
-+
-+ckuus7.c(2987): warning #267: the format string requires additional arguments
-+(in PURGE command); fixed 20 Oct 2005.
-+
-+From Andy Tanenbaum, final changes for MINIX3: #ifdef out the inline
-+definitions for gettimeofday() and readlink(). ckutio.c, 23 Oct 2005.
-+
-+From Jeff: struct gss_trials initializers changed from gss_mech_krb5 to
-+ck_gss_mech_krb5. ckcftp.c, 23 Oct 2005.
-+
-+From Jeff: some improvements to K95 GUI SHOW TERMINAL. ckuus5.c, 23 Oct 2005.
-+
-+Found and corrected some misplaced #ifdefs in shofeat(), ckuus5.c, 23 Oct 2005.
-+
-+--- Dev.03 ---
-+
-+Fixed a compiler warning in a debug() statement in zzstring() by adding
-+parens. ckuus4.c, 24 Oct 2005.
-+
-+Added -DNOLONGLONG to sv68r3v6 target, makefile, 25 Oct 2005.
-+
-+New makefile targets for HP-UX from PeterE to handle the 'long long'
-+situation. 26 Oct 2005.
-+
-+From Jeff: changes to support OpenSSL 0.9.8, ck_ssl.h. ckcasc.h has had
-+short names defined for ASCII control characters for 20-some years but now
-+they are causing conflicts, so EM becomes XEM (also for OpenSSL 0.9.8).
-+Changed K95's default terminal type from VT320 to VT220 because VT320
-+termcaps/terminfos are disappearing from Unix hosts: ckuus7.c. Reorganize
-+the data-types section of SHOW FEATURES to add more macro tests for integral
-+sizes and to provide for the proper printf formatting in order to allow the
-+sizes to be output ("You are going to need to be careful because %llx is not
-+supported on all platforms. On Windows, it is the same as %lx, 32 bits"):
-+ckuus5.c, 26 Oct 2005.
-+
-+Defined NOLONGLONG ckcdeb.h for various old platforms where we know we are
-+never going to need 64-bit ints (even if they support a long long datatype,
-+chances are pretty slim they supported 64-bit file sizes). ckcdeb.h,
-+26 Oct 2005.
-+
-+PeterE noticed that GOTO targets can only be 50 characters long. This was
-+by design, a long time ago, on the assumption that nobody would make longer
-+labels. But in SWITCH statements, case labels can be variables that expand
-+to anything at all. If we chop them off at 50, we might execute the wrong
-+case. Changed the maximum label size to be 8K, and added code to dogoto()
-+to check when a label or target is too long and fail, to prevent spurious
-+GOTO or SWITCH results. ckuusr.h, ckuus[r6].c, 26 Oct 2005.
-+
-+Testing revealed there was still a problem with SWITCH case labels that were
-+variables that expanded into long strings. Turns out that I was being
-+too clever when I decided that, if the SWITCH macro was n1 characters long
-+and the case-label search target was n2 characters long, I only had to
-+search the first n1-n2+1 characters of the macro definition. That was true
-+before I allowed case labels to be variables, but not any more! Fixed in
-+dogoto(): ckuus5.c, 26 Oct 2005.
-+
-+--- Dev.04 ---
-+
-+Dev.04 didn't actually contain Jeff's data-type changes to shofeat(),
-+I think I saved the wrong buffer in EMACS... Fixed now. 27 Oct 2005.
-+
-+PeterE corrected a typo in the HP-UX 7.00 makefile target. 27 Oct 2005.
-+
-+PeterE had been reporting problems stress-testing the new SWITCH code, but
-+only on HP-UX 9, primarily stack overrun. Turns out to be the HP-UX 9
-+optimizing compiler's fault. No optimization, no problems.
-+
-+PeterE found that even when dogoto() detects a string that is too long
-+and fails, this does not stop SWITCH from producing a result, which can not
-+possibly be trusted. Changed the part of dogoto() that handles this to
-+not just fail, but also to exit the script immediately and return to top
-+level. ckuus6.c, 28 Oct 2005.
-+
-+An idea popped into my head after having typed too many commands like "dir
-+ck[cuw]*.[cwh]" to check the list of matching files, and then having to
-+retype the same filespec in a SEND command: Why not unleash some unused
-+control character such as Ctrl-K to spit out the most recently entered input
-+filespec? It was easy, just a few lines in cmifi2() and gtword(), plus a
-+couple declarations. To see all the changes, search for "lastfile" (all the
-+new code is protected by #ifndef NOLASTFILE). ckucmd.c, 28 Oct 2005.
-+
-+I added a new variable \v(lastfilespec) that expands to the same last
-+filespec, for use in scripts. ckuusr.h, ckuus4.c, 28 Oct 2005.
-+
-+The Unix version of C-Kermit failed to put anything in the session log if
-+SET TERMINAL DEBUG ON. Rearranged the pertinent clause so logging happens
-+independent of TERMINAL DEBUG. For now, since the user who noticed this
-+wanted debug format to go into the session log, that's what I do. The
-+alternative would be to just log the raw incoming stream as usual, or to add
-+Yet Another SET Command to choose. ckucns.c, 11 Nov 2005.
-+
-+Fixed HELP INTRO text. ckuus2.c, 11 Nov 2005.
-+
-+Added NOLONGLONG for SV68. ckcdeb.h, 11 Nov 2005.
-+
-+--- Dev.05 ---
-+
-+Added a debug() statement in FTP secure_getbyte() to see what's going on
-+with Muhamad Taufiq Tajuddin's 205-byte-per-second FTP/SSL downloads.
-+
-+--- Dev.06 ---
-+
-+Result: nothing, SSL_get_error() does not report any errors. Suggested
-+testing SSL_read()'s return code, if 0 don't update the screen.
-+
-+Created a new data type CK_OFF_T in ckcdeb.h that will eventually resolve
-+to whatever each platform uses for file sizes and offsets. ckcdeb.h,
-+17 Nov 2005.
-+
-+Made a new library routine ckfstoa() that converts a file size or offset to
-+a string. This is to solve the problem with having to use different
-+printf() formats for different representations of file size (int, long, long
-+long, off_t, signed, unsigned, etc). Replaced a few printf("%l",size) with
-+printf("%s",ckfstoa(size)) with the expected results. This is just a start,
-+the definitions will need adjustment for many platforms, variables need to
-+be redeclared, and all the offending printf's (and printw's) will have to
-+hunted down and converted. ckclib.[ch], ckuus4.c, 17 Nov 2005.
-+
-+Built a minimal version on Linux with:
-+make linux "KFLAGS=-DNOLOCAL -DNOICP -DNOCSETS -DNODEBUG"
-+Worked fine, result was 260K on i686. 21 Nov 2005.
-+
-+Discovered that Kermit's date parser, contrary to the documentation, failed
-+to handle strings like "Wed, 13 Feb 2002 17:43:02 -0800 (PST)", which are
-+commonly found in email. This was because of an overzealous and misguided
-+check in the code; once removed, all was well. ckucmd.c, 26 Nov 2005.
-+
-+Added a new format code 4 to \fcvtdate() to emit asctime() format, used in
-+BSD-format email message envelopes (i.e. the "From " line). shuffledate(),
-+ckucmd.c, ckuus[24].c, 26 Nov 2005.
-+
-+Added a new function \femailaddress(). Given a From: or Sender: header line
-+from an RFC2822-format email address, extracts and returns the actual email
-+address, such as kermit@columbia.edu. ckuusr.h, ckuus[42].c, 26 Nov 2005.
-+
-+Using the new functions, I wrote a script to fetch mail from a POP3 server
-+over a TLS connection. But the line-at-a-time input (needed for changing
-+line terminators and byte-stuffing text lines that start with "From ") is
-+slow, 17 sec to read 29 messages totaling 175K.
-+
-+Added INPUT /CLEAR so INPUT can be started with a clean buffer without
-+requiring a sepearate CLEAR INPUT command. ckuusr.h, ckuus[r24].c,
-+27 Nov 2005.
-+
-+One thing that INPUT was never able to do well was read and save the
-+complete incoming data stream. That's because, while waiting for its
-+target, the buffer might overflow wrap around. Yet there was never a way to
-+tell it to stop when its buffer fills up and let me save it. I added a
-+/NOWRAP switch that does this. If the buffer fills up before any other
-+completion criterion is met, INPUT returns failure, but with \v(instatus)
-+set to 6 (the next available instatus value). Thus a program that wants to
-+read and save (say) an email message from a POP server, which could be any
-+length at all, and which terminates with <CRLF>.<CRLF> could do this:
-+
-+ set flag off
-+ while open connection {
-+ input /nowrap 10 \13\10.\13\10 # Wait for <CRLF>.<CRLF>
-+ if success {
-+ frwrite /string \%o {\freplace(\v(input),\13\10.\13\10,\13\10)}
-+ set flag on
-+ break
-+ } else if ( == \v(instatus) 6 || == \v(instatus) 1 ) {
-+ frwrite /string \%o {\v(input)}
-+ continue
-+ }
-+ break
-+ }
-+ if flag (handle success)
-+
-+Note carefully the braces around the FWRITE text; without them, trailing
-+spaces would be lost.
-+
-+Previously the only way to INPUT an entire data stream without losing
-+anything (assuming it was ordinary lines of text that were not "too long"),
-+was line-by-line:
-+
-+ while open connection {
-+ input /clear 10 \13\10
-+ if fail break
-+ if eq "\v(input)" "$ \13\10" break
-+ fwrite /string \%o {\freplace(\v(input),\13\10,\10)}
-+ }
-+
-+The new code is 3 times faster using the default INPUT buffer length of 4K.
-+Raising it to 16K makes it 3.6 times faster (not worth it). Changing the
-+POP3 script to use INPUT /NOWRAP makes it about twice as fast (it does more;
-+it has to do all the byte-stuffing and unstuffing). 27 Nov 2005.
-+
-+Changed ssl_display_xxx() to just return if SET QUIET ON. Otherwise there
-+is no way to suppress the messages. Also protected a previously unprotected
-+printf("[SSL - OK]\r\n"); by if ( ssl_verbose_flag ). ck_ssl.c,
-+28 Nov 2005.
-+
-+Discovered that FOPEN /APPEND doesn't work if the file doesn't exist. It
-+uses cmiofi() which is a super-hokey front end to cmifi2(). I had code to
-+call it but for some reason it was commented out, with a note to the effect
-+it didn't work. I uncommented it but that didn't help much. So I wrote an
-+entirely new cmiofi() that works exactly as it should, using chained FDBs,
-+_CMIFI to _CMOFI (I think the original cmiofi() predated chained FDBs).
-+ckuus7.c, ckucmd.c, 29 Nov 2005.
-+
-+Getting rid of the awful hacks required to call cmiofi() meant I also had to
-+change the EDIT command, which is the only other place where it's used.
-+Unfortunately now it's no longer possible to give EDIT without a filename
-+(to just start an empty editor) but I doubt anyone will notice. ckuusr.c,
-+29 Nov 2005.
-+
-+IF KERBANG didn't always work right. If a kerbang script TAKEs another
-+kerbang script, the second one should have IF KERBANG false, but it didn't.
-+Added a check for \v(cmdlevel) == 1. Now you can write a wrapper that runs
-+a kerbang script in a loop, and the latter can use IF KERBANG to know
-+whether to EXIT (if called at top level) or END (if called by another
-+script, thus allowing -- in this case -- the loop to continue). ckuus6.c,
-+29 Nov 2005.
-+
-+Changed \flop() and flopx() functions to take a third argument, a number
-+signifying at which occurrence of the break character to lop, so:
-+
-+ \flopx(sesame.cc.columbia.edu) = edu
-+ \flopx(sesame.cc.columbia.edu,,2) = columbia.edu
-+
-+ckuus[24].c, 1 Dec 2005.
-+
-+Built OK on VMS 7.2-1 with MultiNet 4.4. Built with and without OpenSSL on
-+Linux OK, ditto Solaris 9. Built OK on RH Linux AS4 on X86_64 (64-bit);
-+"show var fsize" (using new ckfstoa()) works OK there. Also Mac OS X 10.3.9
-+(32-bit), Tru64 UNIX 4.0F (64-bit), HP-UX 11iv2 (64-bit) (picky new compiler
-+spews out tons of useless warnings), FreeBSD 6.0 on ia64 (64-bit).
-+
-+--- Dev.07 ---
-+
-+Changed "make netbsd" to be a synonym for "make netbsd2" because the
-+original netbsd target was ancient. Renamed it to netbsd-old. makefile,
-+3 Dec 2005.
-+
-+Updated INPUT and MINPUT help text. ckuus2.c, 3 Dec 2005.
-+
-+Discovered that on a SET PORT /SSL connection, Kermit treats incoming
-+0xff data bytes (e.g. sent from the POP server) as IACs and goes into Telnet
-+negotiations. Jeff says "You will need to implement NP_SSLRAW and NP_TLSRAW
-+that do the same as NP_TCPRAW but negotiate SSL or TLS as appropriate."
-+This was not as easy as it sounded, because apparently a lot of the Telnet
-+code is used by SSL and TLS even when Telnet protocol is not being executed.
-+I wound up doing this as follows: I added /SSL-RAW and /TLS-RAW to the
-+switch table. Rather than disable Telnet, they do exactly what the /SSL and
-+/TLS switches do, but also set a special flag. This flag is checked in only
-+two place: netclos() (to prevent Kermit from sending TELNET LOGOUT when
-+closing the connection), and tn_doop() (to prevent Kermit from reacting to
-+incoming IACs; it makes tn_doop() return(3), which means "quoted IAC", which
-+causes the caller to keep the IAC as data). ckcnet.h, ckctel.h, ckctel.c,
-+ckuus7.c, 4 Dec 2005.
-+
-+The INPUT command did not account for tn_doop() returning 3. Fixed in
-+doinput(), ckuus4.c, 4 Dec 2005.
-+
-+Added another debug() statement in FTP secure_getbyte() to see what's going on
-+with Muhamad Taufiq Tajuddin's 205-byte-per-second FTP/SSL downloads, plus
-+new code to test SSL_read()'s return code (byte count); if 0 don't update
-+the screen. ckcftp.c, 4 Dec 2005.
-+
-+--- Dev.08 ---
-+
-+Fixed a typo in the non-ANSIC definition of ckfstoa(). ckclib.c, 7 Dec 2005.
-+
-+Our Ctrl-C trap (the ON_CTRLC macro) wasn't working for kerbang files.
-+Rearranged some code to make it work. ckcmai.c, 8 Dec 2005.
-+
-+Started converting code to use CK_OFF_T for file sizes and offsets, and
-+all [s]printf's to replace "%ld" or whatever with "%s", and the size
-+variable with a call to ckfstoa(). Since I haven't actually changed the
-+definition of CK_OFF_T from what all the size variables were to begin
-+with (i.e. long), it shouldn't do any harm. So far just ckcfn3.c
-+10 Dec 2005.
-+
-+An updated HP-UX 9.xx makefile target from PeterE to fix a core dump that
-+happens on that platform due to insufficient resources. 14 Dec 2005.
-+
-+Added debug() statements to http_blah() routines to tell whether the
-+connection is "chunked". There seems to be a bad performance problem.
-+ckcnet.c, 14 Dec 2005.
-+
-+PeterE complained about ugly DIRECTORY error message, ?No files match -
-+"{blah}". The braces are used internally in case the user typed more than
-+one filespec. I changed the error message to remove them. Ditto DELETE.
-+ckuus6.c, 15 Dec 2005.
-+
-+The problem with HTTP downloads is that Kermit always does single-character
-+read() or socket_read() calls (or the SSL equivalent); see http_inc(). I
-+added buffering code for non-SSL connections only but it's gross because it
-+has to swap ttyfd and httpfd before calling nettchk(). I tried making a
-+nettchk() clone that accepts a file descriptor as an argument but it didn't
-+work because too many other routines that are invoked directly or implicitly
-+by nettchk() (such as in_chk()) are still hardwired to use ttyfd. HTTP GETs
-+are now 20 times faster on the local network (the improvement is less
-+dramatic over a clogged Internet). ckcnet.[ch], 15 Dec 2005.
-+
-+--- Dev.09 ---
-+
-+HTTP file-descriptor swapping is not thread safe. Doing it right, of
-+course, is a big deal, so for now I just don't define HTTP_BUFFERING for
-+Windows. ckcnet.c, 15 Dec 2005.
-+
-+Noticed that HTTP not included in FreeBSD and OpenBSD builds. Fixed in
-+ckcdeb.h, 22 Dec 2005.
-+
-+Fleshed out 32/64-bit data type definitions and changed struct zattr
-+(file attribute structure) members length and lengthk to have the new
-+CK_OFF_T type. Changed final arguments of debug() and tlog() to be the new
-+LONGLONG type. ckcdeb.h, 22 Dec 2005.
-+
-+Changed ckfstoa() to return a signed number in string form, rather than an
-+unsigned one. That's because off_t is signed (thank goodness). Added the
-+inverse function, ckatofs() so we can convert file sizes and offsets back
-+and forth between binary number and string. ckclib.c, 22 Dec 2005.
-+
-+Changed Attribute Packet reader to convert incoming file size attribute
-+with ckatofs() rather than atol(). ckcfn3.c, 22 Dec 2005.
-+
-+Converted debug(), tlog(), ckscreen(), etc, to handle potentially "long long"
-+arguments by making their "n" argument CK_OFF_T. ckuusx.c, ckcdeb.h,
-+22 Dec 2005.
-+
-+Converted the rest of the source files to use CK_OFF_T for all file size
-+and offset and byte-count related variables, and converted all references to
-+these variables in printfs to go through ckfstoa(). Then I built it on
-+Linux/i386 with:
-+
-+ make linux "KFLAGS=-D_LARGEFILE_SOURCE -D_FILE_OFFSET_BITS=64"
-+
-+which makes off_t be 64 bits and magically makes all the regular file APIs
-+use 64-bit sizes and offsets without changing the API calls in the source
-+code. It's going to be a lot of work to get through all the kinks but I was
-+able to send a long file, do directory listings of long files, do
-+\fsize(longfile), etc. When it sends a file, the length is shown correctly
-+in the A packet. If the receiver does not support big numbers, it receives
-+the file OK anyway, without showing the size, the thermometer, or percent
-+done (and then will get an error when the file keeps coming after the 2G
-+mark). Kermit 95 actually refuses long files for "Size", but only if the
-+announced is less than 2^63 bytes. When today's Linux version receives a
-+file, it shows the length correctly in the file-transfer display, as well as
-+percent done, thermometer, etc. Also built this version on true 64-bit
-+Linux, and it worked fine. Many files changed, 22 Dec 2005.
-+
-+For the record, this API is specified in X/Open's Single UNIX Specification
-+Version 2, which is branded as UNIX 98. It is called Large File Support, or
-+LFS, and was developed at the Large File Summit.
-+
-+It looks like the operative feature-test macro in glibc for transitional
-+large file support is __USE_LARGEFILE64. So if this is defined, we can also
-+supply _LARGEFILE_SOURCE and _FILE_OFFSET_BITS=64 automatically for 32-bit
-+Linux builds. But there's a Catch-22, you don't know if this is defined
-+until you read the header files, but you have to define _LARGEFILE_SOURCE
-+and _FILE_OFFSET_BITS before you read the header files. Maybe it's good
-+enough to grep through <features.h> for __USE_LARGEFILE64. makefile,
-+23 Dec 2005.
-+
-+Checked this on true 64-bit Linux. The same symbols are defined in CFLAGS,
-+but they do no harm; it builds without complaint and works fine. 24 Dec 2005.
-+
-+Built it on Red Hat Linux 6.1 from 1999. This picked up the long file
-+support too. Guess 6.1 isn't old enough to not have it! Kermit seems to
-+work OK on regular files but I don't have enough disk space to create a long
-+file, and my bigfile.c program (which creates a long file containing only 1
-+byte) doesn't work ("fseeko: invalid argument"). It looks like parts of
-+this API were visible in Linux before they were actually working.
-+24 Dec 2005.
-+
-+Converted all fseek() and ftell() to macros that expand to fseek() and ftell()
-+or fseeko() and ftello() depending on whether _LARGEFILE_SOURCE is defined.
-+ckufio.c, ckuus7.c, ckuusx.c, 24 Dec 2005.
-+
-+Made a CK_OFF_T version of cmnum(). It would be a very big deal to just
-+change cmnum() to return a new type, so another idea is to rename cmnum() to
-+something else, cmnumw(), change its result argument to CK_OFF_T, and then
-+make a stub cmnum() to call it to get an int, then call cmnumw() explicitly
-+any time we need a big number. ckucmd.c, 24 Dec 2005.
-+
-+Calling cmnumw() directly requires changes to each routine that uses it.
-+The INCREMENT and DECREMENT commands, for example, required changes to
-+doincr(), varval(), and incvar(), and all references to them. ckuusr.[ch],
-+ckuus[56].c, 24 Dec 2005.
-+
-+Calling cmnumw() in chained FDBs required defining a new function code,
-+_CMNUW, adding a new member to the OFDB struct for returning wide results,
-+and adding a new case to cmfdb(). ckucmd.[ch], 24 Dec 2005.
-+
-+Changed FSEEK and FCOUNT to use the new chained FDB interface, now we can
-+seek and look past 2GB. ckuus7.c, 24 Dec 2005.
-+
-+Next come switches, which store their results in a struct stringint. This
-+struct was defined in each module where it was used (ckuus[r367].c, ckcftp.c).
-+I moved the definition to ckuusr.h and added a wval member, which can be
-+referenced by any switch-parsing code that calls cmnumw(). 24 Dec 2005.
-+
-+Changed SEND /CALIBRATE:n to allow big values of n. This makes it possible
-+to test the protocol aspects of long-file transfer without actually having a
-+long file handy. ckuusr.c, 24 Dec 2005.
-+
-+SEND /SMALLER-THAN:n, SEND /LARGER-THAN:n, and and SEND /START:n also now
-+allow large values of n. ckuusr.c, 24 Dec 2005.
-+
-+Changed the algebraic expression evaluator to use wide values.
-+ckuus5.c, 24 Dec 2005.
-+
-+Fixed ckfstoa() to handle the case when n is negative and (0 - n) is also
-+negative, which happens for numbers 2^(n-1) or greater, where n is the
-+number of bits in the word size we're dealing with, e.g. 64, in which case
-+2^63 has its sign bit set so seems to be negative. In such cases, ckfstoa()
-+returns "OVERFLOW" instead of a numeric string. We'll have to see how this
-+plays out but I think it's better to cause a parse error and stop things
-+dead than to return a spurious number. ckclib.c, 24 Dec 2005.
-+
-+Converted the S-Expression handler to use wide integers. ckuus3.c, 24 Dec 2005.
-+
-+Took all the LONGLONG stuff out of ckcdeb.h, we don't need it.
-+
-+All of these changes result in 64-bit arithmetic (more or less) on 32-bit
-+Linux, as well as on true 64-bit platforms.
-+
-+Rebuilt today's code on Solaris 9 in the 32-bit and 64-bit worlds, on Red
-+Hat 6.1, Red Hat AS4.2. I haven't bothered trying a 32/64 hybrid build for
-+Solaris, since I can build a pure 64-bit version there. Quick tests show
-+the large-number arithmetic works OK in all cases except, of course, on pure
-+32-bit builds (unfortunately I can't find a running Linux system old enough
-+to verify this for Linux, but it's true for other 32-bit platforms).
-+24 Dec 2005.
-+
-+Tried building a hybrid version on Solaris 9 after all since the LFS API is
-+ostensibly the same as for Linux:
-+
-+ make solaris9 "KFLAGS=-D_LARGEFILE_SOURCE -D_FILE_OFFSET_BITS=64"
-+
-+It built smoothly and the resulting binary is 2.5MB compared to 3.4MB for
-+the 100% 64-bit version. Looks like a keeper. For now, added solaris9lfs
-+and solaris10lfs entries to the makefile but if these work on PCs we can
-+make these the regular entries for Solaris 9 and 10. 27 Dec 2005.
-+
-+Built on Mac OS X 10.4 with the regular target. It seems that in that case,
-+off_t is 64 bits anyway. Noticed that a lot of stuff didn't work, like
-+exponentiation in S-Expressions. Tried building it as above, which worked,
-+and now CK_OFF_T is 64 bits instead of 32, but (^ 2 30) is still 2.0. In
-+fact 2-to-the-any-power is 2.0. It seems that the Mac OS X version did not
-+have FNFLOAT defined. It also seems that every test in dosexp() like:
-+
-+ if (result != fpresult) fpflag++;
-+
-+should have been protected by #ifdef FNFLOAT..#endif /* FNFLOAT */ -- a
-+double-ended break, as they say in the nuclear power industry. ckuus3.c,
-+27 Dec 2005.
-+
-+Added GREP /EXCEPT:pattern. ckuus[26].c, 27 Dec 2005.
-+
-+Fixed a problem with uninitialized pv[].wval (switch-parsing parameter-value)
-+members that showed up on certain platforms or with certain compilers. Now
-+the Mac OS X 10.4 version works. ckuus[r367].c, ckcftp.c, 28 Dec 2005.
-+
-+Built on Unixware 7.1.1, a pure 32-bit build, seems fine. Rebuilt on Red
-+Hat AS 4.2 just to make sure I didn't break anything, it's OK. No testing
-+on HP-UX, etc, because HP testdrive file sytem is full, can't upload anything.
-+29 Dec 2005.
-+
-+Commented out the SHOW FEATURES section that displays constants like
-+INT_MAX, CHAR_MAX, etc, because printing each value in the appropriate
-+format is too tricky, and we don't need them anyway. ckuus5.c, 29 Dec 2005.
-+
-+Updated ckvfio.c to use CK_OFF_T for the relevant variables. Built and
-+tested on VMS/Alpha 7.2: file transfer in remote mode; making a Telnet
-+connection and then local-mode file transfer; S-Expressions, all OK. Also
-+built a no-net version OK. 29 Dec 2005.
-+
-+Built and tested on Red Hat AS4 AMD X86_64, used it to upload new sources to
-+FreeBSD 4.11. Built on FreeBSD 4.11/i386. Here's another one where off_t
-+is 64 bits, even though long is 32 bits. But it seems to work ok, not sure
-+why, when CK_OFF_T is 32 bits. There is no _LARGEFILE_SOURCE stuff in the
-+header files. 29 Dec 2005.
-+
-+Built on Mac OS X 10.3.9 using the new macosx10.4 target to pick up LFS.
-+Works fine.
-+
-+Built on Red Hat Linux 4WS on IA64 (64-bit). Now this one is odd, stat()
-+fails on big files. It happens also if I use the "linuxnolfs" target, which
-+does not define _USE_LARGEFILE or _FILE_OFFSET_BITS=64. DIRECTORY BIGFILE
-+shows the size as -1, but if "log debug", it says "no files match", i.e.
-+different behavior, observer effect. I hate when that happens.
-+
-+Let's see if that's an anomoly... Built on Tru64 Unix 4.0F (64-bit Alpha).
-+It sees long files just fine. Rebuilt and checked on x86_64 again... fine.
-+OK, let's not worry about IA64 yet.
-+
-+Another small fix to the HP-UX 9.0 target from PeterE. makefile, 29 Dec 2005.
-+
-+---Dev.10---
-+
-+Code adjustments from Jeff, mainly to the SSL and TLS Raw mode code from
-+several weeks ago, plus changing some data types in the security code to
-+CK_OFF_T, plus a different data type for CK_OFF_T for K95 because Windows
-+size_T isn't signed. This presumably will allow large-number arithmetic but
-+it will not give large file access because that will require replacing all C
-+library file i/o calls (esp. in ckofio.c) with native Windows APIs. Build
-+on Solaris 9 with and without SSL and on Linux RH AS4.2 with and without
-+SSL. ck_crp.c, ck_ssl.c, ck_ssl.h, ckcdeb.h, ckcftp.c, ckcmai.c, ckcnet.c,
-+ckcnet.h, ckctel.c, ckuat2.h, ckuus4.c, ckuus7.c, ckuusr.c, 30 Dec 2005.
-+
-+It was reported that WRITE SESSION always returned a failure status, even
-+when it succeeded. The problem was that Unix versions of zsout() and
-+zsoutl(), for the session log only, were using write() and returning
-+write()'s return code, which is different from what zsout() and zsoutl() are
-+documented to return. Also plugged a couple potential holes in zsoutx()
-+that I noticed while I was in the neighborhood. ckufio.c, 30 Dec 2005.
-+
-+Added FSEEK /FIND:pattern. This form of FSEEK accepts all the other
-+switches and arguments and performs the desired seek. Then, if the seek was
-+successful, it starts from that point and reads through the file, line by
-+line, searching for the first line that contains the given string or matches
-+the given (unanchored) pattern and, if found, sets the file pointer to the
-+beginning of that line. Useful, e.g., for very long timestamped logs, where
-+you want to start processing at a certain date or time; searching for a
-+particular string is much faster than doing date comparisons on each line.
-+ckuus[27].c, 30 Dec 2005.
-+
-+It was annoying me that FILE STATUS (FSTATUS) required a channel number to
-+be given even if only one file was open, so I supplied the correct default
-+in that case. ckuus7.c, 30 Dec 2005.
-+
-+INPUT /NOWRAP, added recently, is used for efficiently copying the INPUT
-+stream intact, but it's not good for matching because if the INPUT target is
-+broken between the end of the previous buffer and the beginning of the next
-+one, the context is lost and the match does not occur. I thought of several
-+ways around this, but they all involve saving a huge amount of context --
-+old input buffers, the arrays of target strings and corresponding match
-+positions, etc. The alternative is fairly simple but it's not transparent
-+to the user. Here's what I did in a POP script:
-+
-+ .eom := "\13\10.\13\10"
-+ set flag off # FLAG ON = success
-+ while ( open connection && not flag ) {
-+ .oldinput := \fright(\v(input),8) # Save tail of previous INPUT buffer
-+ input /clear /nowrap 4 \m(eom) # Get new INPUT buffer
-+ if success { # INPUT matched - good
-+ .s := {\freplace(\v(input),\m(eom),\13\10)}
-+ set flag on
-+ } else { # No match
-+ .s := \v(input) # Check if target crossed the border
-+ .oldinput := \m(oldinput)\fsubstr(\v(input),1,8)
-+ if \findex(\m(eom),\m(oldinput)) set flag on
-+ }
-+ ...
-+ }
-+
-+I think this will be easier to explain than any dangerous and grotesque
-+magic I might put into doinput() itself. For now, added a few words about
-+this to HELP INPUT. ckuus2.c, 30 Dec 2005.
-+
-+Back to the pattern matcher. Noticed that "IF MATCH index.html [a-hj-z]*"
-+succeeded when it should have failed. In ckmatch(), the clist section
-+needed one more clause: it can't float the pattern if an asterisk does not
-+occur in the pattern before the clist. This change fixes the problem
-+without breaking any other cases that weren't already broken, most of which
-+involve slists, i.e. {string,string,string,...}. ckclib.c, 30 Dec 2005.
-+
-+Tried FSEEK /FIND: on a largish file (over 100,000 lines), using it to seek
-+to a line near the end. It took 0.756 seconds, compared with Unix grep,
-+which did the same thing in 0.151 sec. That's because C-Kermit is using
-+ckmatch(). But if the search target is not a pattern, it should be a bit
-+faster to use ckindex(). Yup, 0.554 sec, a 36% improvement. Can't expect
-+to compete with grep, though; it's highly tuned for its single purpose.
-+ckclib.[ch], ckuus7.c, 1 Jan 2006.
-+
-+Updated visible copyright dates to 2006: ckcmai.c, ckuus2.c, ckuus5.c,
-+1 Jan 2006.
-+
-+Noticed that NetBSD 2.0.3 has 64-bit off_t, and that _LARGEFILE_SOURCE is
-+mentioned in <stdio.h>. Tried building Kermit with _LARGEFILE_SOURCE added
-+to CFLAGS, it's good. Added it to the netbsd target. makefile, 1 Jan 2006.
-+
-+Fixed typo, #ifdef CK_NOLONGLONG in ckuus5.c should have been #ifndef
-+CK_LONGLONG (which, it turns out, we don't use anyway). 2 Jan 2005.
-+
-+Observed that FreeBSD 4.x has a 64-bit off_t, but does not use the
-+_LARGEFILE_SOURCE convention. Reasoning that all versions of FreeBSD have
-+off_t (I was able to check back to FreeBSD 3.3), I simply #define CK_OFF_T
-+to be off_t in ckcdeb.h within #ifdef __FreeBSD__ .. #endif. Another one
-+down. This can be done for any platform that is guaranteed to have off_t.
-+Turns out FreeBSD 3.3 has 64-bit off_t too. 2 Jan 2005.
-+
-+OpenBSD, same as FreeBSD. Also, added OS-version-getting thing to makefile
-+target for the program herald, as in the other BSDs. Built on OpenBSD 2.5
-+from 1998, it has 64-bit off_t too. ckcdeb.h, makefile, 2 Jan 2005.
-+
-+Dumping the command stack every time there's an error is really too much.
-+I added SET COMMAND ERROR-DISPLAY {0,1,2,3} to set the verbosity level of
-+error messages. Only level 3 dumps the stack. ckuus[235].c, 2 Jan 2005.
-+
-+Built on HP-UX 11.11 with _LARGEFILE_SOURCE and _FILE_OFFSET_BITS=64. The
-+result works fine as far as I can tell. It sees big files, it can open
-+them, seek to positions past the 2^31 boundary. It can send large files.
-+It can do large-number arithmetic (^ 2 62). The only problem is that during
-+compilation, every single modules warns:
-+
-+ cc: "/usr/include/sys/socket.h", line 504: warning 562: Redeclaration of
-+ "sendfile" with a different storage class specifier: "sendfile" will have
-+ internal linkage.
-+ cc: "/usr/include/sys/socket.h", line 505: warning 562: Redeclaration of
-+ "sendpath" with a different storage class specifier: "sendpath" will have
-+ internal linkage.
-+
-+These warnings should be perfectly harmless since they are not coming from
-+C-Kermit code, nor does C-Kermit use either one of those functions. These
-+warnings don't come out in HP-UX 11i v2, but on that one we get tons and tons
-+of picky compiler warnings (variables set but not used, defined but not
-+referenced, etc). A couple, however, turned out to be valid; one case of
-+"expression has no effect", and two of "string format incompatible with
-+data type" (I missed a couple file-size printfs).
-+
-+There were also numerous warnings about signedness mismatch or sign
-+conversion of constants like IAC (0xff). Does the HP-UX Optimizing Compiler
-+have a compiler flag to make all chars unsigned? Yes, +uc, but the man page
-+says "Be careful when using this option. Your application may have problems
-+interfacing with HP-UX system libraries and other libraries that do not use
-+this option". Sigh, better not use it.
-+
-+After reviewing "HP-UX Large Files White Paper Version 1.4" and HP's
-+"Writing Portable Code" documents, I added -D_LARGEFILE_SOURCE
-+-D_FILE_OFFSET_BITS=64 to the hpux1000 target, which is the basis for all
-+HP-UX 10.00 and later builds. Large files are available in HP-UX 10.20 and
-+later. 10.00 and 10.10 were not real releases, and anyway these flags
-+should be harmless there unless the large-file implementation was only
-+partly done. Built OK on both PA-RISC and IA64, optimized and plain.
-+makefile, 4 Jan 2006.
-+
-+Built on FreeBSD 6.0 on IA64. All OK except I got a warning about the
-+argument passed to time() in logwtmp() in ckufio.c. This section had
-+already been partially fixed; thus I put the improved version into
-+#ifdef CK_64BIT, which is our newly available symbol that should be
-+automatically defined for any true 64-bit build. ckufio.c, 4 Jan 2006.
-+
-+Finally got around to testing Jeff's changes to SSL/TLS RAW mode from
-+December 30th against our POP server. It didn't work, couldn't log in.
-+Tried backing off the ckctel.c changes first; that allowed login and
-+communication, but it did not suppress activation of Telnet protocol
-+whenever a 0xff byte arrived. Backed off the rest of the changes and now
-+all is OK again. ckctel.c, ckcnet.c, ckuus7.c, 9 Jan 2006.
-+
-+Built on NetBSD 1.4.1 (1999), found that it did not like the large file
-+assumption -- fseeko() and ftello() do not exist; added a clause to the
-+netbsd target to check for fseeko and not define _LARGEFILE_SOURCE if not
-+found. Oddly enough, off_t is 64 bits anyway, but it doesn't look like the
-+APIs are half-done. For example, stat() uses off_t (64 bits) for the file
-+length, but fseek() uses long (32 bits) and there is no 64-bit analog.
-+Anyway the new netbsd target works on both 1.4.1 and 1.5.2 (no large files)
-+and on 2.0.3 (large files). makefile, 9 Jan 2006.
-+
-+Built on QNX-32 4.25, which has no large file support. Got a few strange
-+compiler (WatCom) warnings, but it built and runs OK. Noticed that file
-+transfers into QNX over a Telnet connection can't use streaming, but that's
-+nothing new to this version; same thing happens with C-Kermit 7.0. 9 Jan 2006.
-+
-+Built on IRIX 6.5. I didn't bother with large files there because it does
-+not support the _LARGEFILE_SOURCE interface; you have to change all the APIs
-+at the source level from blah() to blah64(). Seems to work fine as a 32-bit
-+app even though its off_t is 64 bits. Tried a pure 64-bit IRIX 6.5 build
-+but it dies in ckcnet.c when it hits SOCKOPT_T and GSOCKNAME_T with "The
-+identifier 'socklen_t' is undefined".
-+
-+Looks like I no longer have access to SCO OSR5.
-+
-+Made a pure 32-bit build on SCO UnixWare 7.1.4, all OK. Found that this
-+version also supports LFS, added it to the uw7 target. makefile, 9 Jan 2006.
-+
-+--- Dev.11 ---
-+
-+Evidently the HP-UX bundled (non-ANSI non-optimizing) compiler doesn't like
-+long integers in switch expressions. Changed three examples of these in the
-+S-expression code. ckuus3.c, 10 Jan 2006.
-+
-+A section of tstats() where GFTIMER isn't defined (e.g. on Motorola
-+sv68r3v6) was garbled. Fixed in ckcfn2.c, 10 Jan 2006.
-+
-+A fix for setting 921600 bps on Linux from Paul Fulghum, Microgate Systems Ltd.
-+ttgspd(): ckutio.c, 11 Jan 2006.
-+
-+Noticed that when I changed the compact substring notation code back on
-+August 9th, I broke the ability to use arithmetic expressions within the
-+brackets, which explains some rather odd behavior I saw with some of my
-+scripts. Looking more deeply into this, I also see that all the parsers I
-+have been using up to now for this, as well as for array bounds pairs, have
-+been inadequate because they never allowed for nested constructions, such as
-+a member of a bounds pair that itself was an array element, possibly with
-+another array element as a subscript. I wrote a new routine for this,
-+called boundspair(), which is like arraybounds() except it accepts an extra
-+argument, an array of characters that can serve as bounds-pair delimiters,
-+and it returns the pair separator that was encountered in another new
-+argument. For the alternative substring notation for [startpos-endpos] I
-+had to change the delimiter from '-' to '_' because '-' can be used in
-+arithmetic but '_' is not a recognized operator. This is so I can parse,
-+e.g. [a:b] or [a_b] in the same context, and then find out which form was
-+used, e.g. \s(line[9:12]) or \s(line[9_12]); the first string is 4 bytes
-+long, the second is 12. Everything seems to be OK now. \s(line[10]) gives
-+everything starting at 10, but \s(line[10:0]) gives the null string. Bad
-+syntax in the bounds pairs results in a null string; missing pieces of the
-+bounds pair result in defaults that should be compatible with previous
-+behavior. ckuus[45].c, ckuusr.h, 13 Jan 2005.
-+
-+Changed arraybounds() to call boundsdpair(). This was a rather drastic
-+change, not strictly necessary, but I think I got all the kinks out.
-+ckuus5.c, 13 Jan 2005.
-+
-+Changes from PeterE to the makefile for HP-UX 6 and 7, to accommodate bigger
-+symbol tables, etc. 19 Jan 2005.
-+
-+Determined that SCO OSR5.0.6 (and earlier) do(es) not support large files.
-+Don't know about 5.0.7. 30 Jan 2005.
-+
-+Created a new build target for SCO OSR6.0.0. Gets the exact 6.x.x version
-+dynamically. Supports large files and big-number arithmetic via CK_OFF_T.
-+The sockopt() family of functions changed the data types of some of their
-+arguments since OSR5. It was already possible to define SOCKOPT_T and
-+GSOCKNAME_T from the command line but I had to add code to also allow this
-+for GPEERNAME_T too. ckcnet.c, makefile, 30 Jan 2005.
-+
-+Apparently, ever since C-Kermit 7.0 was released, it has never been possible
-+to use a variable for the as-name in a RECEIVE command in Kermit 95. This
-+is because evaluation of the as-name field was deferred until after we could
-+check whether it might be a directory name (which, in Windows, could start
-+with a backslash). This little bit of magic was not a good idea, magic
-+hardly ever is. I changed the code to evaluate both as-name fields in the
-+normal way. If they want to receive to a directory called "\%1", they'll
-+just have to spell it differently. The workaround is to turn the whole
-+command into a macro and evaluate it before executing it, e.g.:
-+
-+ assign xx receive /as-name:\%1
-+ do xx
-+
-+ckuus6.c, 1 Feb 2006.
-+
-+Built OK on FreeBSD 6.1 on AMD64. Adjusted some copyrights and date stamps.
-+ckcmai.c, makefile, 8 Feb 2006.
-+
-+--- Dev.12 ---
-+
-+Fixed a signed/unsigned char warning in the new boundspair() calling code
-+in the compact substring notation handler. ckuus4.c, 9 Feb 2006.
-+
-+Removed a spurious extra linux+openssl label from the makefile, added
-+solaris10g_64 synonym. 9 Feb 2006.
-+
-+Satisfied myself that LFS is OK on Solaris 10 i386, and I'm going to assume
-+it's also OK on Solaris 9. Made LFS standard for all Solaris 9 and 10
-+builds (including the secure ones) except the explicitly 64-bit ones, and
-+made the provisional solarisXXlfs targets into synonyms. makefile, 9 Feb 2006.
-+
-+--- Dev.13 ---
-+
-+Further attempts at SSL/TLS message suppression when QUIET is ON.
-+ck_ssl.c, 16 Feb 2006.
-+
-+From J.Scott Kasten: (quote...) I just uploaded a patch to /kermit/incoming.
-+The file name is "jsk-patch-for-cku211.diff". I have also included the
-+patch as ASCII text in this email below. This patch may be applied to the
-+cku211.tar.gz source code via:
-+ cd cku211, patch -p1 <../jsk-patch-for-cku211.diff
-+The patch adds 4 new build targets:
-+ netbsdwoc - a stripped no curses target for iksd used.
-+ netbsdse - security enhanced target with srp, ssl, and zlib.
-+ irix65gcc - build on SGI Irix 6.5 platform using gcc.
-+ irix65se - security enhanced target with srp, ssl, and zlib.
-+The patch fixes one build target:
-+ irix64gcc - The "-s" option is not supported by gcc under Irix.
-+I thank all of you in the Kermit Project for such a fine utility. I
-+recently had to get a 16 MB file overseas across a spotty communications
-+link to repair a computer remotely. Kermit was the only thing that could do
-+the job, so I wanted to contribute these patches back to the mainstream to
-+say thanks. This digitally signed email is a binding contract that
-+officially assigns the rights to the source code patch (shown below) that I
-+developed to the Kermit Project at Columbia University. (...end quote)
-+ck_ssl.c, makefile, 23 Feb 2006.
-+
-+Changed the new NetBSD target names to be consistent with the conventions
-+used in most other targets:
-+
-+ netbsdwoc -> netbsdnc
-+ netbsdse -> netbsd+ssl+srp+zlib
-+ irix65se -> irix65+ssl+srp+zlib
-+
-+and removed old, now superfluous, NetBSD targets (old-netbsd, netbst15,
-+netbst16), leaving synonym labels in their place. Also updated (crudely)
-+the Linux target variations (curses instead of nocurses, no curses at all)
-+to be (appropriately modified) copies of the current linux target. It would
-+be nicer to combine them, but this gets the job done. makefile, 23 Feb 2006.
-+
-+--- Dev.14 ---
-+
-+Fixed the HELP command when used with tokens like @, ^, #, and ;. The first
-+two had been omitted from the table. The second two required a new path
-+into the guts of the parser, since comments are normally stripped at a very
-+low level. ckuus[r2].c, ckucmd.c, 24 Feb 2006.
-+
-+Built on AIX 5.1 ("make aix51") without incident. Then I tried:
-+
-+ make aix51 "KFLAGS=-D_LARGEFILE_SOURCE -D_FILE_OFFSET_BITS=64"
-+
-+This had no effect. I found the relevant document ath the IBM website. It
-+says to use -D_LARGE_FILES instead. I added this to the AIX 4.2 target
-+since (a) IBM says large files are supported by AIX 4.2 and later, and (b)
-+all Kermit AIX targets past 4.2 use the 4.2 one. Plus a clause to make
-+sure CK_OFF_T is defined appropriately. ckcdeb.h, makefile, 6 Mar 2006.
-+
-+Added a 32-bit aix51+openssl target. Builds OK, works fine (tested against
-+our SSL POP server). Tried I tried adding -D_LARGE_FILES. It seems to work
-+fine, so we'll keep it. Cleaned up the other aix5blah entries a bit also.
-+makefile, 6 Mar 2006.
-+
-+Fixes from J. Scott Kasten to the IRIX 6.4 and 6.5 makefile targets. They
-+were badly wrong. makefile, 6 Mar 2006.
-+
-+The reason Kermit was looping on directories in IRIX was a classic
-+"double-ended break". The makefile targets failed to define DIRENT so
-+Kermit was open/read on directories rather than opendir()/readdir(). But
-+then it was also failing to account for the fact that read() would return -1
-+on error. The makefile fix adds -DDIRENT, and the read() case in traverse()
-+now properly terminates its loop on error. ckufio.c, 6 Mar 2006.
-+
-+--- Dev.14 ---
-+
-+In response to a complaint that C-Kermit would not build on HP-UX 11 with
-+OpenSSL, I tried it myself on both 11.11/PA-RISC and 11i v2/Itanium. It built
-+OK on both but I had to add a new target (hpux1000o+openssl-nozlib) for no
-+Zlib since these boxes did not have it installed. makefile, 9 Mar 2006.
-+
-+Added OpenSSL version number display to SHOW FEATURES. ckuus5.c, 9 Mar 2006.
-+
-+Gavin Graham noticed that FTP [M]GET /DELETE /MOVE-TO: was rejected with
-+"?Sorry, /DELETE conflicts with /MOVE or /RENAME". This check belongs in the
-+PUT code but not in the GET code. Commented it out and tested the result.
-+The combination is now accepted but then Kermit refuses the incoming file as
-+if it had been given a /SMALLER-THAN: or /LARGER-THAN: switch, which it didn't
-+happen. Turns out there was one more place where I wasn't initializing the
-+new "wide int" member of the switch-parsing pv[] struct. Once this was fixed,
-+the /MOVE-TO part still didn't work. Turned out the /DELETE case was part of
-+a long if-else-if-else- chain, which effectively made /DELETE and /MOVE-TO: or
-+/RENAME-TO: mutually exclusive. Fixed this, now it works fine. ckcftp.c,
-+13 Mar 2006.
-+
-+Got access to AIX 5.3, built there, all OK, including large files. 13 Mar 2006.
-+
-+--- Dev.16 ---
-+
-+Patches from Mark Sapiro to suppress getsockopt() and getsockname() warnings
-+in Mac OS X. ckcnet.[ch], 18 Mar 2006.
-+
-+In response to a complaint from Clarence Dold, tried "make redhat9" (which
-+is the rather dated target that tried to include all forms of security) on
-+RH Linux AS4.3, it failed miserably. I made a new makefile target, removing
-+Kerberos IV and got a lot farther. But then in ckcftp.c, the following
-+struct definition:
-+
-+ struct {
-+ CONST gss_OID_desc * CONST * mech_type;
-+ char *service_name;
-+ } gss_trials[] = {
-+ { &ck_gss_mech_krb5, "ftp" },
-+ { &ck_gss_mech_krb5, "host" },
-+ };
-+
-+refers to a variable, ck_gss_mech_krb5, that is not defined anywhere. Up
-+above, however, is a static definition for gss_mech_krb5, so I changed the
-+struct definition to match. Next, in ckuath.c, the compiler could not find
-+the com_err.h file. Turns out in Linux this is in a subdirectory, et, so we
-+have to add a -I clause to the makefile target for this. Made a target for
-+Linux+SSL only. Made a target for Linux+Krb5 only; this required moving an
-+#ifdef in ckuus7.c to prevent an unguarded reference to SSLEAY_VERSION.
-+New targets: linux+krb5+ssl, linux+krb5, linux+krb5. ckcftp.c, ckuus7.c,
-+makefile, 27 Mar 2006.
-+
-+New targets of HP-UX 10/11 with OpenSSL from PeterE. makefile, 27 Mar 2006.
-+
-+Added large file/integer support to SHOW FEATURES. ckuus5.c, 27 Mar 2006.
-+
-+Built OK on Solaris 9 and 10 with gcc (someone was complaining that this
-+didn't work, but that was 8.0.211).
-+
-+Started build on a Sun 3/80 mc68030 with NetBSD 2.0 and gcc 3.3.3. But it
-+died with an assembler error in ckcfn2.c (compiler bug). 27 Mar 2006.
-+
-+--- Dev.17 ---
-+
-+NebBSD 2.0 build completed by turning off optimization on ckcfn2.c
-+("KFLAGS=-O0"). Result supports 64-bit ints and, presumably, large files.
-+uname -p = "m68k", -m = "sun3". 29 Mar 2006.
-+
-+Corrected an omission in applying PeterE's updates to the HP-UX targets.
-+makefile, 28 Mar 2006.
-+
-+solaris2xg+krb5+krb4+openssl+shadow:
-+
-+Tried resurrecting the solaris2xg+krb5+krb4+openssl+shadow target. It asks
-+to link with libdes but there is no libdes. Removed -ldes from the target,
-+now at least it builds and runs wart. The compilation blows up in ckcftp.c
-+for missing header files:
-+
-+ ckcftp.c:462: kerberosIV/krb.h: No such file or directory
-+ ckcftp.c:500: gssapi/gssapi_generic.h: No such file or directory
-+ ckcftp.c:501: gssapi/gssapi_krb5.h: No such file or directory
-+
-+Got a bit farther by adding appropriate -I's and -L's to KFLAGS but it still
-+dies compiling (or linking?) ckcftp.c, but it doesn't say exactly why. OK,
-+deferred.
-+
-+Added SET SEXPRESSION TRUNCATE-ALL-RESULTS { ON, OFF }. This can be used
-+for force integer arithmetic in any kind of calculation that requires it,
-+such as date calculations. This is a global setting, not on any kind of
-+stack. Also, updated SHOW SEXP and added HELP SET SEXP which wasn't there
-+before. ckuus[23].c, 30 Mar 2006.
-+
-+To make the RENAME command a bit more useful, need to add some switches.
-+But it shares a switch table, qvswtab[], with some other commands. Broke
-+this off into its own switch table. ckuus6.c, 17 Apr 2006.
-+
-+Added RENAME switch values that can be used in the same table with the DELETE
-+switch values, which are shared by many commands. ckuusr.h, 17 Apr 2006.
-+
-+Discovered that the RENAME command could be entered without any arguments
-+and it would still succeed. Fixed in dorenam(): ckuus6.c, 17 Apr 2006.
-+
-+Added parsing for RENAME /UPPER:option (to uppercase the file name(s)),
-+/LOWER:option (to lowercase), and /REPLACE:{{s1}{s2}} (to do string
-+replacement on the filename(s)), but not the semantics. When any of these
-+switches is given, the target ("to") name is not parsed; they act on the
-+source name. The /LOWER: switch takes keyword args to specify whether it
-+should act only only files that have all UPPER case latters, or on ALL files
-+(i.e., including files with mixed-case names); similarly for the /UPPER:
-+switch. There is some creative parsing allowing these to be given with or
-+without a colon and keyword argument, which works fine except if you include
-+the colon but no argument, execute the command (which works fine), and then
-+recall the command. I haven't yet decided about the interaction among these
-+switches. Clearly if /UPPER is given after /LOWER, it overrides. But if
-+/UPPER (or /LOWER) is given with /REPLACE, what should happen? ckuus6.c,
-+17 Apr 2006.
-+
-+Filled in actions for RENAME /UPPER: and /LOWER: for the single file case,
-+and tested all combinations of switch values and filename configurations.
-+Once that was OK, moved the code out into a separate routine, renameone(),
-+and then called it from both the single-file case and the multifile case.
-+ckuus6.c, 19 Apr 2006.
-+
-+Added RENAME /SIMULATE. Filled in the code for string replacement, needs
-+testing. ckuus6.c, 20 Apr 2006.
-+
-+Changed /REPLACE options to allow a negative number to specify an occurrence
-+from the right, so -1 means the last occurrence, -2 means the next-to-last,
-+etc. ckuus6.c, 24 Apr 2006.
-+
-+Added RENAME /COLLISION:{OVERWRITE,PROCEED,FAIL}. This is implemented but
-+not tested. ckuus6.c, 24 Apr 2006.
-+
-+Worked on RENAME /COLLISION:FAIL. I decided it was less than useful to ...
-+
-+Added SET RENAME { COLLISION, LIST } to let user change default collision
-+and listing actions. ckuusr.[ch], ckuus[36].c, 25 Apr 2006.
-+
-+Experimented with parsing for /CONVERT:cset1:cset2. The problem here is
-+that there is no straightforward way for a switch to have multiple
-+arguments. Or is there...? If I parse cset1 with cmswi() rather than
-+cmkey(), it almost works; the only problem is that the character-set
-+keywords don't have CM_ARG set, so they don't know to stop on, and ignore, a
-+colon. If I make a copy of the table and set CM_ARG in the flags field for
-+each keyword, it works fine: if I Tab in the first name, it fills itself
-+out, supplies a colon, and waits for the second name. So in the code, the
-+first time that RENAME /CONVERT is invoked, I put code to copy fcstab[] and
-+set CM_ARG in each flags field. Works fine, and now we know how to make a
-+switch that takes multiple arguments. ckuus6.c, 24 Apr 2006.
-+
-+I thought I had a function to convert the character set of a string but I
-+don't, so actually implementing /CONVERT: will be difficult.
-+
-+Actually the parsing wasn't that easy either. It works OK interactively,
-+but not in a TAKE file. To make a long story short, I had to change
-+gtword() and cmkey2() to not require "/" at the beginning of a switch, and
-+then to parse arguments-that-are-followed-by-other-arguments as if they were
-+switches, so that they can end with colon rather than space. This might
-+seem dangerous, but switches always have "/" at the beginning, so the check
-+is superfluous. ckucmd.c, 26 Apr 2006.
-+
-+Back to /CONVERT... Once I was able to get the code to call cvtstring() I
-+was able to debug it (at first it was skipping every second character). And
-+now we have a general-purpose string-translating function we can call from
-+anywhere. Requires that C-Kermit be built with Unicode support.
-+ckuus6.c, 26 Apr 2006.
-+
-+Added SHOW RENAME. ckuusr.h, ckuus[r5].c, 26 Apr 2006.
-+
-+Conditionalized some Unix/Windows assumptions in renameone() so the code
-+could work in VMS. ckuus6.c, 2 May 2006.
-+
-+Added RENAME /FIXSPACES to change all spaces in the filename(s) to
-+underscore or any other character or string that is given. This is just a
-+special case of RENAME /REPLACE:{{ }{x}} with easier syntax.
-+ckuusr.h, ckuus6.c, 2 May 2006.
-+
-+Added an "all-but" control to the /REPLACE options:
-+/REPLACE:{{.}{_}{~1}} means replace all but the first (this one works);
-+/REPLACE:{{.}{_}{~-1}} means replace all but the last (this one not yet).
-+ckuus6.c, 2 May 2006.
-+
-+Filled in the second one ("all but" the given occurrence). The algorithm is
-+simply to reverse the three strings and then use the same code as we use in
-+the left-right-case, and then unreverse the result. At first I used
-+yystring() for this but yikes, what a bad design! So I made a better
-+string-reversal routine, gnirts(), for this (luckily yystring() is only used
-+in one place, for which its design is appropriate). ckuus6.c, 3-4 May 2006.
-+
-+Added code to handle the case where the file being renamed includes a path
-+specification. In this case we separate the path, apply the renaming
-+functions to the filename only, and then at the end rejoin the original
-+filename with the path, and join the new name with same path or, if a
-+destination directory was given, with that. ckuus6.c, 4 May 2006.
-+
-+Added HELP SET RENAME and updated HELP RENAME. ckuus2.c, 4 May 2006.
-+
-+"Tom Violin" (Tom Hansen) noticed that the first time you FOPEN a file,
-+Kermit's memory consumption goes way up. In fact there's a warning to that
-+effect in the code, where, upon first open, a potentially big array of
-+potentially big structs is allocated. I rewrote the code to allocate each
-+array member (struct ckz_file) as needed, i.e. when a file is opened, and to
-+free it when the file is closed (or the open fails). This was actually
-+quite a lot of work, which is why I didn't do it the first time around:
-+every single "." had to be changed to "->". Every check for a valid
-+channel first had to check if the channel's struct was allocated and every
-+other reference to z_file[i]->anything had to be prechecked that z_file[i]
-+was not a NULL pointer. Also I made some improvements to FILE STATUS, and I
-+fixed FILE CLOSE to default the channel number if only one channel was open,
-+as I did for FILE STATUS a while back. ckuus7.c, Cinco de mayo 2006.
-+
-+Ran my old BUILDS script that builds C-Kermit with about 100 different
-+combinations of feature-selection switches. Fixed a few small glitches so
-+now they all build OK (except can't do NOANSI builds any more on recent
-+Linuxes because of varargs()). ckuus3.c, ckuus5.c, ckuus6.c, ckuus7.c,
-+ckucmd.c, ckcfns.c, 6 May 2006.
-+
-+Fixed RENAME /LOWER and /UPPER, when given with no colon or agrument, to
-+default to ALL. ckuus6.c, 13 May 2006.
-+
-+Built on VMS 7.2-1, tested new RENAME command there; seems to be OK.
-+13 May 2006.
-+
-+--- Dev.18 ---
-+
-+I wanted to test large files against RESEND but I don't have access to any
-+system that can run C-Kermit and that also has enough space for a large
-+file. I created a "fake" large file on Linux (3G hole plus 1 byte), and
-+sent it over a localhost connection, and interrupted it repeatedly and then
-+initiated a RESEND at the sender. In each case, it picked up where it left
-+off. But before the 2G boundary was crossed the disk filled up.
-+Inconclusive. 14 May 2006.
-+
-+PeterE got a warning in the new FILE OPEN code when building in HP-UX 9.
-+I added a cast, built on HP-UX 11, no more complaint. However there
-+are warnings about internal vs external bindings of sendpath and sendfile
-+in every module. Too bad, these are not Kermit tokens, it's a conflict in
-+HP's header files. Marc Sapiro doesn't see them; probably it's something
-+on the HP testdrive site. ckuus7.c, 17 May 2006.
-+
-+Fixed the tru64-51b+openssl target -- the terminating doublequote of KFLAGS
-+was missing -- and also the osf target, which failed to import the LIBS
-+definition from whatever other target invoked it. Now the SSL build goes OK
-+on Tru64 5.1B. Replaced x.tar.z in the download areas without declaring a
-+new Dev number. The new one has a makefile with today's date. Software
-+engineering at its best! makefile, 18 May 2006.
-+
-+Scott Kasten noted that the estimated-time-remaining calculation would go
-+bonkers on LFS systems when RESENDing a large file. It looks like the
-+shocps() and shoetl() functions escaped the CK_OFF_T conversion. I made
-+what seemed to be the right adjustments, and then was lucky enough to find a
-+computer that had enough free disk space for me to send a large file,
-+interrupt it several times, resend it, all seems to be OK. 28 May 2006.
-+Later Scott verified these changes independently for Linux, but the problems
-+in IRIX remain.
-+
-+Patches from Scott Kasten for large files on IRIX 6.5: ckcdeb.h, makefile,
-+12 Jun 2006.
-+
-+--- Dev.19 ---
-+
-+Added a new function for dealing with JPGs and GIFs:
-+
-+\fpicture(filename,&a)
-+ returns 0 if file not recognized or can't be opened;
-+ returns 1 if landscape, 2 if portrait or square.
-+ If array given, element 1 is width, element 2 is height.
-+
-+ckuusr.h, ckuus4.c, 19 Jun 2006.
-+
-+Scott Kasten reports that the FTP client can transfer large files OK, at
-+least in Linux, but has trouble with recovery:
-+
-+ . Kermit takes a very long time to start the transfer, sometimes over
-+ 30 minutes. Suspect the ftp server is counting the bytes in a long file?
-+ Or maybe it's a text-mode transfer and it's counting the lines? Probably
-+ in response to Kermit's SIZE command.
-+
-+ . The size shown in the FT display is wrong by a random amount. And of
-+ course so are the progress bar, percent done, and time remaining.
-+
-+ . The file, however, is transferred correctly. REGET works correctly too.
-+
-+I tried setting up a test scenario locally but our Solaris FTP server does
-+not support large files:
-+
-+ FTP SENT [SIZE BIGFILE]
-+ FTP RCVD [550 BIGFILE: not a plain file.]
-+ FTP SENT [PASV]
-+ FTP RCVD [227 Entering Passive Mode (128,59,48,24,246,37)]
-+ FTP SENT [RETR BIGFILE]
-+ FTP RCVD [550 BIGFILE: Value too large for defined data type.]
-+
-+Created the same 3GB on a Tru64 Unix system that allows FTP access. Made
-+the connection from C-Kermit on Solaris (32-bit with LFS):
-+
-+ 16:46:12.908 FTP SENT [SIZE BIGFILE]
-+ 16:46:12.947 FTP RCVD [213 3000000001]
-+
-+Note that it takes less than half a second to get the reply. Now I start
-+the download and then interrupt it at about 2%:
-+
-+ 16:46:12.979 FTP SENT [TYPE I]
-+ 16:46:13.174 FTP RCVD [200 Type set to I.]
-+ 16:46:13.226 FTP SENT [PASV]
-+ 16:46:13.262 FTP RCVD [227 Entering Passive Mode (15,170,178,171,11,37)]
-+ 16:46:13.299 FTP SENT [RETR BIGFILE]
-+ 16:46:13.337 FTP RCVD [150 Opening BINARY mode data connection for BIGFILE..]
-+ 16:47:24.895 FTP RCVD [426 Transfer aborted. Data connection closed.]
-+ 16:47:24.934 FTP RCVD [226 Abort successful]
-+ 16:47:24.991 FTP SENT [MDTM BIGFILE]
-+ 16:47:25.028 FTP RCVD [213 20060706204458]
-+
-+Now I do a REGET:
-+
-+ 16:51:55.321 FTP SENT [PASV]
-+ 16:51:55.357 FTP RCVD [227 Entering Passive Mode (15,170,178,171,11,43)]
-+ 16:51:55.394 FTP SENT [REST 122736640]
-+ 16:51:55.430 FTP RCVD [350 Restarting at 122736640. Send STORE or RETRIEVE..]
-+ 16:51:55.431 FTP SENT [RETR BIGFILE]
-+ 16:51:55.469 FTP RCVD [150 Opening BINARY mode data connection for BIGFILE..]
-+
-+This worked perfectly, as far as I can tell; the FT display picked up in the
-+right place; the thermometer, percent done, and estimated time remaining
-+were the same as when we left off last time. I did the same thing several
-+more times, everything was OK. It would have taken a really long time to
-+let this run to completion, but I think this demonstrates that Scott's
-+symptoms are server-dependent. No changes. 6 July 2006.
-+
-+Checked current code on VMS 8.2-1 on IA64 / UCX 5.5, builds fine.
-+No changes. Updated listing at HP. 6 July 2006.
-+
-+Checked FTP GET of large file in ASCII mode against Tru64 FTP server. It
-+was fine, and there was no delay in the server's response to our SIZE command
-+(as there would be if it were scanning the entire file to count how many
-+bytes would be required to send it in text mode). 7 Jul 2006.
-+
-+Tested FTP PUT big file against Tru64, OK. Ditto FTP RESEND big file:
-+
-+ C-Kermit>resend BIGFILE
-+ PUT BIGFILE (binary) (3000000001 bytes)---> PASV
-+ 227 Entering Passive Mode (15,170,178,171,13,186)
-+ ---> SIZE BIGFILE
-+ 213 343211280
-+ ---> MDTM BIGFILE
-+ 213 20060707141243
-+ ---> APPE BIGFILE
-+ 150 Opening BINARY mode data connection for BIGFILE (128.59.59.56,45470).
-+
-+Made REPUT a synonym for RESEND. ckuusr.c, 7 Jul 2006.
-+
-+Added FTP REPUT and FTP RESEND since previously there was no FTP-prefixed
-+command for recovering uploads, only the regular RESEND command, which might
-+not have been obvious to people. ckcftp.c, 7 Jul 2006.
-+
-+Added help text for FTP RESEND and REPUT and amended RESEND help text.
-+ckcftp.c, ckuus2.c, 7 Jul 2006.
-+
-+Changed name of \fpicture() to \fpictureinfo() and added help text. By the
-+way, ImageMagick can do this too: identify -format "%w %h" dscf0520.jpg.
-+The advantage of having it in Kermit is that not everybody has ImageMagick.
-+ckuus[24].c, 7 Jul 2006.
-+
-+Changed the numeric comparisons = < > <= >= != to allow long integers by
-+changing the data type to CK_OFF_T, etc. ckuus6.c, 7 Jul 2006.
-+
-+Noticed that \fkeywordvalue(foo=this is a string) only kept the first word.
-+Fixed it to keep the whole definition. Also added \fkwvalue() as a briefer
-+synomym. ckuus4.c, 7 Jul 2006
-+
-+Sometimes we want to check if a file's status before we've FOPEN'd it, in
-+which case the channel variable is likely to be empty and \f_status(\%c)
-+would get an error. Making the obvious change didn't fix this, however. It
-+turns out that the function evaluator failed to adjust argn (argument count)
-+when trailing arguments were empty, and argn was being used in this case,
-+and probably others, to test whether an argument existed. I added code to
-+adjust argn to reflect the number of aruments up to and including the
-+rightmost non-empty one. ckuus4.c, 7 Jul 2006.
-+
-+Fixed \fstripb() to not dump core if second argument is missing.
-+ckuus4.c, 7 Jul 2006.
-+
-+Discovered that it was not obvious what pattern to use to match strings
-+enclosed in square brackets. "if match [abc] \[*\]" didn't work. Neither
-+did various other tricks like NCRs for the brackets. However, "if match
-+[abc] \\[*\\]" does work. Trying to fix this would no doubt break 100 other
-+things, so let's call it a feature. 7 Jul 2006.
-+
-+Added \fgetpidinfo(n) to return info about a process ID; for now it simply
-+returns 1 if the process is alive and 0 if not (or -1 if the argument is
-+bad or missing or on any kind of error). ckuusr.h, ckuus[24].c, 7 Jul 2006.
-+
-+The "where-did-my-file-go" message seemed to be ending with a LF rather
-+than CRLF, probably because the terminal modes had not yet been restored,
-+leaving the next prompt hanging below it, rather than on the left margin,
-+if C-Kermit exited immediately after the transfer. Fixed by changing
-+all \n's to \r\n's in wheremsg(): ckcpro.w, 8 Jul 2006.
-+
-+Added \v(lastkwval) so we can retrieve programmatically the keyword most
-+recently processed by \fkeywordval(). ckuusr.h, ckuus4.c, 9 Jul 2006.
-+
-+--- Dev.20 ---
-+
-+Added #ifdef SV68, #include <unistd.h>, #endif because Unix System V/68 on
-+Motorola choked on the SEEK_CUR reference without it. ckuus4.c, 10 Jul 2006.
-+
-+Make \fkeywordval(xxx) undefine xxx (i.e. when a keyword is given with no
-+value). This way command-line keywords will always override preexisting
-+default definitions, whether they have a value or not, which makes it easier
-+to parse command lines like "foo=bar blah xx=yy". ckuus[24].c, 12 Jul 2006.
-+
-+On 29 Nov 2005 I changed IF KERBANG to solve a problem (see entry for that
-+date), but introduced a new one; namely that you can't have (e.g.) a FATAL
-+macro that uses IF KERBANG to decide whether to EXIT all the way or STOP
-+back to the prompt. Changed it again, this time to require not that the
-+command level be 1, but that the command *file* level be 0 (i.e. that we are
-+in the top-level command file, irrespective of the command or macro level,
-+but not in a subfile). ckuus6.c, 12 Jul 2006.
-+
-+It is unhelpful when Kermit gets a syntax error in the middle of a big
-+compound statement block (e.g. FOR or WHILE loop) and dumps out the whole
-+thing in an error message. I changed the two places where this can happen
-+to call a new routine that, instead of dumping out the entire cmdbuf,
-+checks its length first and if it's more than a line long, truncates it
-+and adds an ellipsis. ckuus6.c, 12 Jul 2006.
-+
-+The new RENAME command didn't give very good error messages, e.g. if the
-+filespec didn't match any files. Fixed in dorenam(): ckuus6.c, 12 Jul 2006.
-+
-+Fixed DIR /TOP to work if the /TOP:n argument was omitted, defaulting
-+to 10. domydir(): ckuus6.c, 12 Jul 2006.
-+
-+Added DIR /COUNT:v to count the number of files that match the given
-+criteria and store result in the variable v. ckuusr.h, ckuus[r26].c,
-+24 Aug 2006.
-+
-+Added HDIRECTORY as an invisible synonym for DIR /SORT:SIZE /REVERSE.
-+Can be used with other switches, of course, so (e.g.) HD /TOP shows the
-+ten biggest files. ckuusr.h, ckuus[r26].c, 24 Aug 2006.
-+
-+DIR /FOLLOWLINKS and /NOFOLLOWLINKS always did the same thing; the switch
-+was ignored, a symlink is always followed. Fixed in ckuus6.c, 24 Aug 2006.
-+
-+Added DIR /NOLINKS, which means don't show or count symlinks at all.
-+ckuusr.h, ckuus[r26].c, 24 Aug 2006.
-+
-+Build on Solaris 9 and NetBSD 3.0, 24 Aug 2006.
-+
-+Added a missing definition for LOCK_DIR in the Linux HAVE_BAUDBOY case,
-+suggested by Gerry Belanger. ckutio.c, 6 Oct 2006.
-+
-+Suggested by Jim Crapuchettes: \v(dialmessage) is the text string
-+corresponding to \v(dialstatus). ckuusr.h, ckuus4.c, 6 Oct 2006.
-+
-+Soewono Effendi sent code for exit sequence to leave DTR on; this amounted
-+to unsetting HPUCL in c_cflag. I did it a simpler way, hopefully portable
-+to all Unixes, but who knows at this late date. The code is inside
-+#ifndef CK_NOHUPCL..#endif in case it causes trouble. It is executed if
-+SET EXIT HANGUP is OFF and a serial port was open at the time Kermit exits
-+(or closes it explicitly). ttclos(): ckutio.c, 6 Oct 2006.
-+
-+Built on Solaris9/Sparc; FreeBSD 6.2/AMD64; NetBSD 3.0/i386; HP-UX 11i v2;
-+SCO OSR6.00.
-+
-+--- Dev.21 ---
-+
-+Added netbsd+openssl target to makefile. Built OK (NetBSD 3.0, OpenSSL
-+0.9.7d) except with some warnings in ck_crp.c. Connects and logs in OK to a
-+secure site. 10 Oct 2006.
-+
-+Added a debug statement to ftp_hookup() to record the TCP port that was used.
-+ckcftp.c, 11 Oct 2006.
-+
-+Built with OpenSSL 0.9.7l on Solaris 9. Built with OpenSSL 0.9.8d on
-+Solaris 9; connects and logs in to a secure site. 11 Oct 2006.
-+
-+The new RENAME command didn't work if both the source and destination names
-+included directory segments, e.g. "rename /tmp/foo ~/bar" (see notes of
-+4 May 2006). This was fixed in renameone() by a special case in which
-+the second argument is given but it is a filename, not a directory name.
-+ckuus6.c, 11 Oct 2006.
-+
-+Fixed unguarded reference to dialmsg[] for \fdialmessage(), noticed by
-+Gerry Belanger. ckuus4.c, 12 Oct 2006.
-+
-+Added a TOUCH command that does what UNIX touch does: creates the file if it
-+does not exist, updates the timestamp if it does. If a wildcard is given,
-+it operates only on existing files. It shares the DIRECTORY command parser,
-+so all the same file selection switches can be given. ckuusr.[ch],
-+ckuus[26].c, 12 Oct 2006.
-+
-+PeterE noticed that if you FOPEN a file, do some seeks or reads, then FCLOSE
-+it, then FOPEN it again (or open a different one), some of the old
-+information is still there (e.g. current line number). This is an artifact
-+of the changes of May 4th. Now the file closing and opening routines are a
-+bit more careful about scrubbing and initializing the file info struct.
-+ckuus7.c, 12 Oct 2006.
-+
-+--- Dev.22 ---
-+
-+Built OK on Red Hat Linux AS4 with both "make linux" and "make linuxnc".
-+15 Oct 2006.
-+
-+DIRECTORY /BRIEF ignored file selection switches and always listed all
-+files. This was because of how I cleverly called filhelp() (the routine
-+that lists matching files when ? is typed in a filename field) and, of
-+course, filhelp() doesn't know anything about the DIRECTORY command's file
-+selections. Changed filhelp() to accept all the args needed for passing
-+along to fileselect(), renamed it to xfilhelp(), and made a filhelp() stub
-+that chains to xfilhelp() with null selections. ckcker.h, ckucmd.[ch],
-+ckuus6.c, 29 Nov 2006.
-+
-+SHOW CONNECTION for an SSH connection said the connection type was "NET"
-+rather than "SSH". Fixed in dolognet(): ckuus3.c, 29 Nov 2006.
-+
-+SHOW CONNECTION didn't show the TCP port number. This command works by
-+parsing the current connection log entry string, which doesn't have a field
-+for this, but which sometimes shows the port number as part of the hostname
-+(but more often not). Added code to dolognet() to log the TCP port number,
-+if known. This involved adding a gettcpport() function to ckcnet.c.
-+ckcnet.[ch], ckuus3.c, 29 Nov 2006.
-+
-+This was impossible: def \%1 upper, echo \f\%1(abc) -- i.e. to "compose" a
-+function name. Fixed in zzstring(). But note that it's still not possible
-+to do this: def \%1 \fupper, echo \%1(abc) -- because at the point where
-+"\fupper" is encountered, which is automatically fed to fneval(), the
-+argument list hasn't been read yet. ckuus4.c, 29 Nov 2006.
-+
-+The meaningless Lisp command (=) would cause Kermit to hang. Due to some
-+idiosyncracy in the parser, it would see this as ((=) and would go into
-+"wait for the closing paren" mode. There was already a hack in the code to
-+compensate for this, but it didn't work. I fixed the hack but I don't
-+understand the real problem. Anyway, comparing Kermit with real (Franz)
-+Lisp I discovered that comparison operators do not require two arguments, as
-+Kermit has been doing, although they do require at least one. I changed
-+Kermit to not require two, so now all the comparison predicates behave
-+exactly like Franz Lisp, including getting an error if there are no args).
-+ckuus[r3].c, 29 Nov 2006.
-+
-+From to-do list: Make a way to inhibit pattern matching in SWITCH labels.
-+It's already there; just quote the wildcard characters; the only trick is
-+that for some reason (such as that SWITCH is really an internally defined
-+macro), a double quote is needed:
-+
-+ switch \%1 {
-+ :a\\*z, echo literally "a*z", break
-+ :abcxyz, echo literally "abcxyz", break
-+ :a*z, echo a...z, break
-+ :default, echo NO MATCH
-+ }
-+
-+In first case, the asterisk is taken literally; in the third it's a
-+metacharacter and the label matches any string that starts with 'a' and
-+ends with 'z'.
-+
-+Array initializion would quit early if any initializers were undefined,
-+e.g. "decl \&a[] = \%a \%b \%c" would stop at the first element if \%b
-+was not defined, even though \%c might be defined. Fixed in dodcl():
-+ckuusr.c, 30 Nov 2006.
-+
-+DIR /ARRAY:a filespec, when the filespec does not match any files,
-+terminates with the array undeclared. It would be better to return a
-+declared but empty array (\&a[0] = 0). The code is already there to do
-+that, but isn't working. And yet "declare \&a[0]" does indeed create a
-+0-element array ("show array" shows a dimension of 0). Turns out there were
-+two problems; one was the careless recycling of a local variable ("array"),
-+resulting in failure to create \&a[] (but not any other array). Fixed in
-+domydir(): ckuus6.c, 30 Nov 2006.
-+
-+The other problem was that dclarray(), when called with an array name and a
-+dimension of zero, does two different things depending on whether the array
-+already existed. There is still a fair amount of confusion about whether a
-+dimension of 0 indicates an array with 1 element (as it should) or a
-+nonexistent array. We call dclarray() with a size of 0 to undeclare an
-+array but we also need to able able to declare an array with only element 0.
-+I changed dclarray() to treat a negative dimension as a command to destroy
-+the array, and 0 or positive as a command to create the array with the given
-+dimension. ckuus[r56].c, 30 Nov 2006.
-+
-+Next problem: when chkarray() returns 0, this should not be interpreted to
-+mean the array does not exist. Looks like the only place this happened was
-+in \fcontents(); fixed in ckuus4.c, 30 Nov 2006.
-+
-+If we include file selectors with DIR /ARRAY:&a and some of the files that
-+match the given filespec but don't fit the selectors, the array's dimension
-+is bigger than its number of elements. Added code at the end of domydir()
-+to resize the array so \fdim() returns the number of filenames in the array,
-+and also made sure that element 0 contains that number too. ckuus6.c,
-+30 Nov 2006.
-+
-+This would be a nice elegant way to loop over a bunch of files, if it worked:
-+
-+ for \%i 1 \ffiles(*) 1 { rename \fnextfile() xxx_\flpad(\%i,3,0) }
-+
-+But in this loop, Kermit skips every other file (beginning with the first)
-+and then runs out of files halfway through the loop. Why? Because in
-+commands like RENAME and DELETE, the filename parser is in a chained FDB
-+with the switch parser. First the switch parser, cmswi(), gets its hands on
-+\fnextfile(), passing it through the evaluator and thus getting the first
-+filename, which it then sees is not a switch, so now the field is parsed by
-+the next parser in the chain, cmifi(), which causes \fnextfile() to be
-+executed again. In fact, the FOR loop has nothing to do with; the same
-+thing happens like this:
-+
-+ void \ffiles(*)
-+ delete \fnextfile()
-+
-+This deletes not the first file, but the second one. Obviously users can be
-+told not to refer to \fnextfile() in chained-fdb fields:
-+
-+ for \%i 1 \ffiles(*) 1 { .f := \fnextfile(), delete \m(f) }
-+
-+but this is hardly intuitive. I had some clever ideas of how to make
-+\fnextfile() work as expected in this context but it's way too much magic.
-+Better to simply document that \fnextfile() is "deprecated" and the array
-+format should be used:
-+
-+ for \%i 1 \ffiles(*,&a) 1 { delete \&a[\%i] }
-+
-+The difference is, an array element doesn't change every time it's referred to!
-+
-+Added a /PRESERVE switch to the COPY command to preserve the timestamp and
-+permissions of the file. I did this using the Kermit APIs so it should work
-+for any version of C-Kermit or K95. ckuus[26].c, 30 Nov 2006.
-+
-+Added COPY /OVERWRITE:{ALWAYS,NEVER,OLDER,NEWER} to control name collisions
-+when copying across directories. ckuus[26].c, 1 Dec 2006.
-+
-+--- Dev.23 ---
-+
-+Fixed a bug in SET TELNET PROMPT-FOR-USERID, SET AUTH KERBEROS[45] PROMPT,
-+and SET AUTH SRP PROMPT in which the user's string was compared with a
-+literal (s == ""), reported by Pavol Rusnak. Worse, empty strings (if the
-+test succeeded) were turned into null pointers, and then fed to strlen().
-+Fixed in ckuus3.c, 5 Dec 2006.
-+
-+Added an optional 4th argument to \findex(), \frindex(), \fsearch(), and
-+\frsearch(): the desired occurrence number of the searched-for string.
-+\frsearch() was a bit tricky. ckuus[24].c, 7 Dec 2006.
-+
-+Added \fcount(s1,s2) to tell the number of occurrences of s1 in s2.
-+ckuus[24].c, 8 Dec 2006.
-+
-+Added \ffunction(s1) to tell if a given built-in function is available.
-+ckuus[24].c, 8 Dec 2006.
-+
-+Changed RENAME /COLLISION:PROCEED to be /COLLISION:SKIP, which is clearer.
-+ckuus[26].c, 8 Dec 2006.
-+
-+For communication protocols: INPUT /COUNT:n to read exactly n characters
-+without any matching. Can be used, for example, with CONTENT_LENGTH in CGI
-+scripts; NUL characters are counted but not collected. ckuusr.[ch],
-+ckuus4.c, 8 Dec 2006.
-+
-+There was a bad bug in the date-parsing routines; it's been there for years.
-+If a date string includes a timezone, e.g. "Sat, 9 Dec 2006 19:26:23 EST",
-+and converting to GMT changes the date, the variables for day, month, and
-+year (which are used later) were not updated, and the final result was a day
-+off. Fixed in cmcvtdate(): ckucmd.c, 10 Dec 2006.
-+
-+Built OK with SSL/TLS. Tested with the POP script, found that I broke INPUT
-+when adding the /COUNT feature; there was a path through the code that could
-+leave the "anychar" variable unset and therefore random. Fixed in
-+doinput(). The POP script, which does not use /COUNT, works again and so
-+does a new CGI script, which does use /COUNT. ckuus4.c, 10 Dec 2006.
-+
-+Supplied a missing comma in the help-text array for HELP SET TERMINAL, which
-+resulted in bad formatting in K95 around SET SNI-FIRMWARE-VERSIONS.
-+ckuus2.c, 10 Dec 2006.
-+
-+Made "help locus" a synonym for "help set locus". ckuusr.[ch], ckuus2.c,
-+11 Dec 2006.
-+
-+This morning the Columbia FTP server was malfunctioning in a perfect way
-+for me to implement and test an FTP timeout mechanism. The server would
-+close the data connection after sending the file, but the client never saw
-+the close and was stuck forever in a recv(). I added code to do a select()
-+on the data connection prior to entering the recv(), with a timeout on the
-+select() that the user can establish with SET FTP TIMEOUT. Built and tested
-+on Solaris 9, clear-text FTP. Also built cleanly for FTPS and tested
-+against a server that does not hang; I don't have access to an FTPS server
-+that would tickle the timeout code. ckcftp.c, 11 Dec 2006.
-+
-+--- Dev.24 ---
-+
-+Fixed a bug in the INPUT /COUNT: parser: the array of search strings was
-+never initialized, which didn't matter before, but with /COUNT:, if the
-+first element was not a NULL pointer, we'd treat it as a search string, and
-+then if it happened to match something in the input stream, the operation
-+would stop before the count was exhausted. Fixed by (a) initializing the
-+array, and (b) ignoring any search strings if /COUNT: was given. ckuusr.c,
-+13 Dec 2006.
-+
-+Removed a debug() statement from zsattr() that suddenly started making some
-+version of gcc complain, reported by Gerry Belanger. ckufio.c, 13 Dec 2006.
-+
-+--- Dev.25 ---
-+
-+Some casts for the 3 interior args of the new select() call in ckcftp.c
-+for HP-UX 9. 14 Dec 2006.
-+
-+Changed \fkeywordvalue() to accept a string rather than a single word
-+as its second argument, so that more than one separator could be specified,
-+and to return -1 on error, 0 if it found nothing, 1 if given a kewyord but
-+no value, and 2 if there was a keyword and a value. dokwval(): ckuus[24].c,
-+14 Dec 2006.
-+
-+Checked FTP timeout on command channel with FTP DIRECTORY of a big directory
-+using a path into our ftp server that preserves the hanging behavior. The
-+timeout was actually working, but the failure condition wasn't propogating
-+back to the user, and there was no error message. Fixed in doftprecv2() and
-+failftprecv2(): ckcftp.c, 15 Dec 2006.
-+
-+Added the obvious timeout checks for FTP uploads, but I have no way to test
-+the code since our misbehaving FTP server does not hang when receiving
-+files, only when sending them. But uploads work both with and without a
-+timeout set, so at least no harm is done. ckcftp.c, 17 Dec 2006.
-+
-+When downloading with FILE DESTINATION NOWHERE (= /CALIBRATE), Kermit still
-+checked the size of the incoming file and refused it if there wasn't enough
-+free disk space, on platforms (such as VMS) where zchkspa()) actually works;
-+reported by Bob Gezelter. ckcfn3.c, 18 Dec 2006.
-+
-+Built on Mac OS X 10.4.8 and NetBSD 3.1_RC3, all OK. 19 Dec 2006.
-+
-+--- Dev.26 ---
-+
-+Built on VMS 7.3-2/Alpha. Had to squelch a couple compiler warnings by
-+changing some ints in the new \fpictureinfo() code from unsigned to signed,
-+and fix a typo in the prototype for the new gettcpport() function.
-+ckcnet.h, ckuus4.c, 22 Dec 2006.
-+
-+--- Dev.27 ---
-+
-+Parameterized pty routines and all references to them for file descriptor,
-+rather than to use global ttyfd, thus allowing ptys to be created for
-+different purposes. Tested on Solaris 9 and Mac OS X 10.4.8, with "set host
-+/connect /pty emacs" (fine in both cases), and (more to the point) "set host
-+/connect /pty kermit" -- here we make a connection from one Kermit process
-+to another and transfer a file; works fine and wasn't especially slow either;
-+a good sign. ckcdeb.h, ckutio.c, ckupty.c, 22 Dec 2006.
-+
-+Created a new version of ttruncmd() called ttyptycmd(), which works by
-+calling do_pty() to get a pty to run the command on, and then in a loop,
-+reads from the pty and writes to the net and reads from the net and writes
-+to the pty, using select() to which of those it should do on each pass.
-+First cut just uses single-byte reads and writes. Tested using Kermit
-+itself as an external protocol. Works but slowly: 6000cps. Zmodem doesn't
-+work at all. ckutio.c, 24 Dec 2006.
-+
-+Changed single-character read() and write() to buffered reads and writes,
-+with ttxin() and ttol() used for network i/o. Using Kermit as the external
-+protocol, this gives 450Kcps (about 1/3 normal on this connection).
-+
-+But now there's a problem: the loop doesn't know when to stop. How does it
-+know when the process that is running on the pty has exited? With single
-+character read()'s that are executed unconditionally when select() says the
-+pty has data waiting, as in the first pass, I get EIO if there actually
-+isn't any, and can exit the loop. But now, to avoid blocking, I call
-+in_chk() to see how much data is waiting, and I don't try to read anything
-+if it says nothing is waiting. If the process associated with the pty file
-+descriptor has terminated, in_chk() would presumably get some kind of error,
-+but it doesn't. I changed do_pty to return the pid of the fork where it
-+execs its command so we can check the pid with kill(pid,0) when in_chk() of
-+the pty says 0, but this doesn't help either; it seems like the process is
-+not exiting, but of course it is.
-+
-+I could not find any legitimate way to test when the pty fork terminated.
-+Select() always says the pty file descriptor was ready, no matter what.
-+Select() never reports an exception on the pty file descriptor;
-+in_chk(ptyfd) returns 0 and not an error. read(ptyfd,...) gets 0 but not an
-+error. fcntl(ptyfd,...) doesn't get an error. Finally I tried
-+write(ptyfd,c,0) and this indeed gets EIO (i/o error). With this, using
-+Kermit as the external protocol works fine in Solaris but I tend to think
-+this trick will not be very portable (it isn't). 24 Dec 2006.
-+
-+Made ttptycmd() use a more intelligent buffering scheme, fixed a few things
-+about how I was setting up the select() call that should address some of
-+yesterday's problems. Still doesn't work but it's progress. A: 25 Dec 2006.
-+
-+Debugging yesterday's code... Still, the error conditions are never set,
-+we never detect when the pty closes. In Solaris, if select() says ptyfd is
-+ready to read but in_chk() says there are no characters there, we can treat
-+this as a loop-exit condition. But in NetBSD, in_chk() always says 0 when
-+used on a pty (but works OK on a serial or net connection).
-+
-+Realized I could not use in_chk() on the pty because there is too much
-+baggage with the communication path -- myread(), etc etc) -- so I replaced
-+this with a simple ioctl(ptyfd,FIONREAD,&n). This works fine in Solaris but
-+always returns 0 in NetBSD, despite what the man page says (i.e. that this
-+function can be used on any file descriptor).
-+
-+OK, let's see.... select() does not return useful results. It says
-+characters are waiting on ptyfd when they are not, and it never detects the
-+closure of the pty..... Well of course not, because we are the ones who
-+have to close it. Just because the process has stopped doesn't mean the pty
-+is closed. So we're back to square one, how do we know when to close it?
-+ckupty.c seems to keep the process ID in a global variable, pty_fork_pid
-+(which is not the same as the pid now returned by do_pty(), which is
-+useless, but I don't understand why). But it doesn't matter because when we
-+kill(pty_fork_pid,0), we still get no error of any kind, even after we know
-+the process has exited. I am completely flummoxed. select() lies, and even
-+if it didn't, there is simply no completion criterion. In the loop,
-+select() always says that the pty is ready to read. To be continued.
-+26 Dec 2006.
-+
-+Back to Square One, single-byte reads and writes.
-+
-+ . This works for both ripple and Kermit.
-+ . Doesn't work for Zmodem but we'll deal with that later.
-+ . In this case FD_ISSET(ptyfd) is still true after pty closes.
-+
-+But the ensuing read() gets EIO so we know the pty is gone. That means the
-+same thing should happen in the buffered version, no? Yes; I went back to
-+the buffered version and replaced all the other nonworking tests by a
-+blocking read of 1 byte on the pty and this detects the termination. Now:
-+
-+ . ripple works perfectly (of course it's only one-way).
-+ . Kermit fails
-+
-+Let's call the remote, forked, redirected, external Kermit A and its
-+local partner B. A sends its S-packet, B receives it OK and Acks.
-+A apparently does not receive the ACK in time, so sends the S again, but OK.
-+followed immediately by the F. B Acks the F. A sends the A, B Acks it.
-+But now A sends a piece of the previous F packet and the the first piece
-+of a D packet.
-+
-+Clearly the buffering is messed up. Sure enough, there was an extraneous
-+statement incrementing a read pointer in a write section. Removing that
-+cleared up the problems with Kermit, now we can send and receive substantial
-+files efficiently in remote mode. Zmodem seems to work too, except that at
-+the beginning a bunch of "**B0800000000022d"'s are stuffed into Kermit's
-+command buffer, so after the transfer we get some error messages.
-+
-+In local mode, over a Telnet connection, Kermit works fine. Zmodem works
-+OK too except it doesn't finish right, so at the very end rz on the far end
-+is still waiting for something; if I cancel out of it with ^X^X^X^X^X, it
-+deletes the file. So there still is something wrong with the termination
-+test.
-+
-+Also you don't see anything on your screen when running Kermit or Zmodem
-+this way. That's to be expected, since they are using stdio for the
-+transfer, so they can't also be displaying progress or other messages.
-+
-+Built this on NetBSD again... Seems to work this time, but has trouble
-+finishing, like Zmodem. Hmmm, on closer examination, it turns out that
-+since in_chk() always returns 0 on the ptyfd, we fall into our new
-+single-byte read code, so it's really slow, like 10K cps on a connection
-+where 1M is the norm. 27 Dec 2006.
-+
-+Switched the pty from buffer peeking (FIONREAD) and blocking reads to to
-+nonblocking reads (O_NONBLOCK / O_NDELAY). Works just fine on NetBSD except
-+now we no longer get EIO at the end when trying to read from the pty process
-+that has exited. In fact, we're back to square one again. not ioctl(), not
-+fcntl(), not select(), not even read() gets an i/o error after the pty
-+process exits. But in NetBSD, we have to use nonblocking reads because ...
-+Hmmmm, maybe switch the fd between blocking and nonblocking for the test...
-+Nope, NetBSD seems to be hopeless (later, Ed Ravin confirmed that similar
-+problems have been observed with other applications that try to do this).
-+
-+Switching to Linux, I see that yesterday's Solaris code (blocking reads)
-+works exactly the same way on Linux.
-+
-+Tried today's O_NDELAY method on Solaris. It works perfectly. And then I
-+moved this one to Linux and it works perfectly there too. Except in both
-+cases we have the wierd thing with Zmodem at the end, but I think that's
-+because rz/sz don't use standard i/o. On NetBSD, it still hangs at the end.
-+
-+Turns out that testing the pid works in NetBSD, even though it didn't in
-+Solaris. Turns out read() gets an i/o error in Solaris and Linux but not
-+in NetBSD. So checking the read result first, and then checking the pid
-+if read() got zero bytes catches all three. 28 Dec 2006.
-+
-+Now the question of return code. In the original ttruncmd() function, we do
-+a fork() and a wait(). When the external protocol program finishes, wait()
-+gives us its return code and we can pass it on through \v(pexitstat) as well
-+ttruncmd's own return code. But ttptycmd() has to interact with the pty
-+continuously, so it can't just sit back and wait() for it. Instead we have
-+to detect when the process has exited and then call waitpid() on the fork
-+pid, before shutting down the pty. Tested on Solaris using Kermit as the
-+external protocol and then inducing failure, or letting it run to
-+completion. FAILURE and SUCCESS set appropriately in each case. Tested
-+with Zmodem too, works OK except for the aforementioned cosmetic glitch at
-+the end. Tested on NetBSD, all OK.
-+
-+To make K5 connection to Panix from Spam:
-+
-+ set telnet debug on
-+ authenticate K5 init /realm:PANIX.COM /password:xxxxx
-+ set host shell.panix.com 23 /k5login
-+
-+Good... Now I try to send a file from Spam to Panix over the K5 connection
-+using Kermit itself as the external protocol. It fails. Inspection of the
-+debug log on the far side shows that the S-Packet was received correctly,
-+good! This means we are reading the clear-text S-Packet from the external
-+Kermit program, and that ttol() is encrypting appropriately.
-+
-+The remote Kermit sends the Ack and goes to read the next packet: ttinl()
-+calls myfillbuf() and:
-+
-+ SVORPOSIX myfillbuf calling read()
-+ SVORPOSIX myfillbuf=0 <-- read returns 0
-+ SVORPOSIX myfillbuf ttcarr=2
-+ SVORPOSIX myfillbuf errno=0 <-- and reports no error
-+ HEXDUMP: mygetbuf read (-3 bytes)
-+ mygetbuf errno=0
-+ ttinl myread failure, n=-3
-+ ttinl myread errno=0
-+ ttinl non-EINTR -3[closing]
-+
-+This happens because myfillbuf() deliberately returns -3 when read() gets 0
-+bytes. I don't understand why this happens but the real problem is yet to
-+come. The local Kermit (the one that has made the secure connection and is
-+running the external protocol through ttptycmd()) eventually figures out
-+that the transfer failed and when we reconnect, we get total garbage -- the
-+encryption either stopped happening, or got out of sync.
-+
-+Looking at the local debug log, ttol() is doing its job, converting the
-+initial "kermit -r\13" from plaintext to cyphertext, as shown by the
-+hexdumps. Then it enters ttptycmd()... Hmmmm, wait, how can it send the
-+"kermit -r" before it starts the external protocol? Never mind, worry about
-+that later... Anyway, ttptycmd() says:
-+
-+ ttptycmd loop top have_pty=1
-+ ttptycmd loop top have_net=1
-+ ttptycmd FD_SET ptyfd in
-+ ttptycmd FD_SET ttyfd in
-+ ttptycmd nfds=5
-+ ttptycmd select=1
-+ ttptycmd FD_ISSET ttyfd in
-+ ...
-+ ttptycmd in_chk(ttyfd) n=11
-+ ttptycmd ttxin n=11
-+
-+ttxin() asks for 11 bytes, myfillbuf() gets 11 bytes, and hexdump() shows
-+the cyphertext, there doesn't seem to be any decrypting going on. Hmmm, it
-+looks like the regular code calls ttinc() in a loop, rather than ttxin().
-+Maybe ttxin() doesn't have decryption hooks. No, that's not it, the code is
-+there, but the Kermit packet reader does not use ttxin(), it uses ttinl().
-+But of course we can't use that for external protocols because it's designed
-+only to read Kermit packets. Substituting a loop of ttinc()s for the ttxin()
-+call fixes things (and stangely enough, it seems to be faster). And now we
-+have our first external protocol transfer over a secure connection (external
-+Kermit program, Linux over Kerberos 5 to NetBSD). Zmodem worked too for a
-+short file but "something happens" with longer ones. 29 Dec 2006.
-+
-+New makefile target for Linux with Kerberos 5, linux+krb5, that doesn't
-+include anything extra from SSL or other security methods (but apparently it
-+is still necessary to include -DOPENSSL_097 in order to get the right names
-+for the DES routines?). Ditto netbsd+krb5 for NetBSD, except in this case
-+-DOPENSSL_097 is not necessary. makefile, 30 Dec 2006.
-+
-+Note to myself: On Panix:
-+
-+ export LD_LIBRARY_PATH=/usr/local/kerblib
-+ make netbsd+krb5 "K5LIB=-L/usr/local/kerblib" "K5INC=-I/usr/local/include"
-+
-+Can't telnet-k5 from newly built Kermit on NetBSD; partway through the
-+negotiations, just after "TELNET RCVD SB ENCRYPTION SUPPORT DES_CFB64
-+DES_OFB64 IAC SE" it dumps core. The last two lines in debug.log after
-+this are:
-+
-+ tn_sb[len]=5
-+ encrypt_support[cnt]=2
-+
-+Rebuilding with -DOPENSSL_097 doesn't change anything. Ed Ravin said they
-+have two different Kerberos installations, Heimdahl and MIT; maybe some
-+mixup between the two explains the problem (Jeff concurs). The core dump
-+occurs in ck_crp: encrypt_support():
-+
-+ debug(F100,"XXX ep not NULL","",0);
-+ type = ep->start ? (*ep->start)(DIR_ENCRYPT, 0) : 0; <-- Here
-+ debug(F101,"XXX new type","",type);
-+
-+Anyway, I can log in with Kerberos 5 to Panix OK from Columbia (sesame)
-+using 8.0.201. So let's try to resurrect the Solaris version with everything:
-+
-+ solaris9g+krb5+krb4+openssl+shadow+pam+zlib
-+
-+I hunted around to find where the current library and header file
-+directories were... Last time I tried this (March 2006) it bombed, not
-+finding libdes. Instead we have /opt/kerberos5125/lib/libdes425.a. Made a
-+new cu-specific target that includes this; now we get farther; it blows up
-+in ckcftp.c with tons of errors and warnings, which we can worry about
-+later. Building again with -DNOFTP, it gets to ckuath.c (the first security
-+module) and:
-+
-+ ckuath.c:151:18: error: krb5.h: No such file or directory
-+ ckuath.c:152:21: error: profile.h: No such file or directory
-+ ckuath.c:153:21: error: com_err.h: No such file or directory
-+ ckuath.c:176:28: error: kerberosIV/krb.h: No such file or directory
-+ In file included from /opt/openssl-0.9.8d/include/openssl/des.h:101,
-+ from ckuath.c:219:
-+
-+Found krb5.h in /opt/kerberos5125/include/krb5.h, added a -I for this
-+directory ... Now we get lots of warnings in ckuath.c, but it completes OK,
-+then we wind up bombing out in ck_crp.c; I don't know why -- there are all
-+the same warnings (related to argument passing to DES functions), but no
-+errors. I have no clue.
-+
-+Tried to resurrect the solaris2x+krb4 target; this required changing -lkrb
-+to -lkrb4 and -ldes to -ldes425. Lots of warnings in ckutio.c, ckcnet.c,
-+ckctel.c, then it bombs out in ckcftp.c because it can't find krb.h. I
-+found it, adjusted the -I flags, but now it bombs because krb.h itself
-+#includes <kerberosIV/des.h>, which of course it can't find because the
-+brackets mean it's looking in /usr/include/kerberosIV/, which, of course,
-+the sys folks have removed. Giving up on Solaris again. Later, Jeff said
-+"Solaris does not publicly export the krb5 libraries. You need to build
-+the MIT Kerberos libraries separately and link to them." 30 December 2006.
-+
-+Changed copyright date to 2007. ckcmai.c, 1 Jan 2007.
-+
-+With Ed Ravin's help, successfully built C-Kermit with Kerberos 5 and
-+OpenSSL (netbsd+krb5+openssl+zlib), but it does not make K5 connections; it
-+gets hung up in the Telnet negotiations. 3 Jan 2007.
-+
-+Downloaded MIT Kerberos 5 v1.4.4 to Solaris 9, 54MB worth. This is just so
-+I can build a Kerberized C-Kermit for testing ttyptycmd(). Ran the
-+configure program, got a few warnings but it didn't fail (should it?) Did
-+"make install", specifying a private directory but it failed immediately
-+with "cannot stat libkrb5support.so.0.0: No such file or directory".
-+OK, I tried. 3 Jan 2007.
-+
-+Made a new makefile target for Mac OS X, macosx10.4+krb5+ssl, ran it on Mac
-+OS X 10.4.8. It bombs out in ckcftp.c with: ckcftp.c:551: error: static
-+declaration of 'gss_mech_krb5' follows non-static declaration
-+/usr/include/gssapi/gssapi_krb5.h:76: error: previous declaration of
-+'gss_mech_krb5' was here". Ditto for gss_mech_krb5_old, gss_nt_krb5_name,
-+and gss_nt_krb5_principal. Tried again with -DNOFTP. We get lots of
-+warnings in the network modules, but they complete. But ck_ssl.c bombed
-+with a conflict between its own declarations of encrypt_output and
-+decrypt_input and the ones in ckuat2.h; removed the prototypes from the
-+latter (as Jeff advised) it built OK and it works OK too. Built with FTP
-+too, but with link-time warnings about the aformentioned gss_* symbols.
-+#ifdef'd them out (gss_mech_krb5, gss_mech_krb5_old, gss_mech_name, and
-+gss_mech_principal) for MACOSX, where these symbols are exported by the
-+library. Now it all compiles and links OK, and runs OK too. 3 Jan 2007.
-+
-+Spent a day hunting around for a version of Zmodem that would build and
-+execute on Mac OS X, finally found one. Now at last I could try a Zmodem
-+external-protocol transfer over a secure connection. But phooey, C-Kermit's
-+pty support didn't work on this box. Kermit finds master /dev/ptypa OK,
-+then in ptyint_void_association() tries to open /dev/tty but gets ERRNO=6
-+"device not configured" (which is apparently OK, because the same thing
-+happens on other platforms where this works), then tries to open slave
-+/dev/ttypa and gets ERRNO=13 "permission denied" because, indeed, I don't
-+have r/w permission on the device. Left a message. 4 Jan 2007.
-+
-+Changed TRANSMIT /BINARY output buffer size from 252 to 508 to avoid
-+TCP fragmentation. Need to add a SET command for this later.
-+ckuus4.c, 5 Jan 2007.
-+
-+Found another Mac where the ptys weren't protected against me, make a K5
-+connection and transferred a largish file with Zmodem with zero glitches,
-+except it was kind of slow, 84K cps. Well, we're doing single-character
-+reads on the net (ttinc()'s instead of ttxin()). Hmmm, but then I did it
-+again and got 2.2Mcps. Success was reported, but it actually didn't work;
-+it only sent the first quarter of the file.... Oh well, at least now we
-+have a testbed. 5 Jan 2007.
-+
-+Tried again, saw that the file is actually transferred instantly but then
-+we're not picking up the protocol at the end. Theory: after the transfer
-+finishes, we come back to the prompt on the remote host, which means we have
-+something to read from the net and write to the pty, but the pty has already
-+exited. AFTER THE PTY IS GONE, WE DO NOT WANT TO READ FROM THE NET ANY
-+MORE. Adding this test makes Kermit succeed right away when sending the
-+same largish file, with a transfer rate of 4M cps, that's better. But the
-+rz program on the far end is evidently not receiving the goodbye handshake
-+from the receiver, because it sits there foreever in its *B09002402009418
-+mode until I ^X^X^X^X^X out of it, at which point it deletes the file it
-+already received, not very helpful. In the code, I read from the pty if the
-+pty is open and there is room in the buffer. This means that when we get to
-+the end, either there is no room in the buffer (unlikely) or the last bit
-+sent by sz before exiting was cut off when the fork closed. Why do we get
-+in this fix only with Zmodem and not with Kermit?
-+
-+In Mac OS X, after sz exits, we get ERRNO=5 if we try to write to the pty,
-+but we still get no errors after that if we try to read from it. Still,
-+prior to this we did more than 20 unproductive nonblocking reads from the
-+pty (no error, no bytes) without incident; there did not seem to be anything
-+waiting. In fact, the last thing we read from the pty were the text
-+messages that are issued at the end of the transfer: "rz 3.73 1-30-03
-+finished." After which it pauses a second and spits out a message about
-+UNREGISTERED COPY.
-+
-+Figured out how to build lrzsz, in hopes that the previous problems were
-+with rzsz and crzsz's fiddling with file descriptors, but I get the same
-+behavior. Which is good, I guess, because if I can fix one, I fix them all.
-+Or not... Testing lrz by itself (not under C-Kermit), I see that it doesn't
-+work at all with Kermit's own Zmodem implementation.
-+
-+OK, here's one problem: at the end of the transfer, the Omen Zmodems print
-+stuff like "Please read the license agreement", Kermit dutifully reads this
-+from the pty and sends it to the host, the host shell says "Please: command
-+not found", issues its prompt again, which Kermit reads, feeds to the pty,
-+and apparently the pty echoes it, so we send it back to the host, and there
-+ensues an infinite loop of getty babble until the pty closes. Now, there
-+ought to be a way to make the external protocol shut up, like Kermit's
-+-q(uiet) flag, but these are unregistered versions so you can't shut up the
-+messages. In fact, the transfer works, but the getty babble at the end
-+ruins the experience. Now I'm beginning to wonder how any of these programs
-+ever worked as external protocols. Hmmm, now that I try it, I see the
-+same thing happens the old way, when using ttruncmd() rather than ttptycmd().
-+
-+Reading the crzsz documentation I see it says that messages come out on
-+stderr. OK, that's progress. In ckupty.c I try redirecting 2 to /dev/null.
-+Well good, this filters out the messages from csz, but we still get getty
-+babble on the prompt. In the debug log, we read the last bunch of stuff
-+from net, 618 bytes of Zmodem stuff... Now what happens?
-+
-+Zmodem on the remote exits, the host prints its prompt. Kermit, of course,
-+reads the prompt from the net, now come to the bottom of the loop and we
-+have 7 bytes to write to the pty, and no error condition, so we continue the
-+loop. select() says that the pty is ready for writing. We write the 7
-+bytes and and get no error. Loop again, this time select() says the pty has
-+data waiting. Sure enough we get the prompt back, and send it to the net,
-+and thus begins the getty babble. There are two causes for this:
-+
-+ 1. crzsz does not exit immediately; it sleeps for 10 seconds after
-+ printing its nag message.
-+
-+ 2. During this interval the pty seems to be echoing what is sent to it.
-+ csz is not echoing; I checked. Anyway, removing the pause doesn't
-+ seem to make a difference.
-+
-+ttptycmd() needs to:
-+
-+ . TELL the pty module to redirect stderr to /dev/null
-+ . SET PTY TO NOECHO (master or slave?)
-+
-+Tried setting the pty to noecho:
-+
-+ termbuf.c_lflag &= ~(ECHO|ECHOE|ECHOK);
-+
-+and this seemed to stop the getty babble. After the file transfer, I read
-+back the prompt from the host shell, I write the prompt bytes to the pty;
-+there is no error. And now select() simply hangs forever (or times out if
-+a timeout is set). The question here is: why didn't writing to the pty
-+produce an error? And, because we never detect the pty has exited, we can't
-+set a good return code. 5 Jan 2007.
-+
-+Moved pty fork testing to a separate routine, pty_get_status(), and
-+added a call to it from the place where we time out, in case the fork
-+terminated; then we can get and return its status. 6 Jan 2007.
-+
-+Added calls to pty_get_status() to every place where we suspect a pty error,
-+tried again with lrzsz, crzsz, and regular rzsz. All three work, but in
-+each case waitpid() indicates that the sz program gave exit code 1 (failure).
-+ckutio.c, 7 Jan 2007.
-+
-+Changing the subject... On my test system, every time I execute ttptycmd(),
-+I get "permission denied" on /dev/ttyp3. Then I run it again and get to
-+ttyp4 which is OK. I wanted to skip past any pty for which I lack
-+permission and try the next without raising an error. Added debugging code:
-+
-+ 16:25:23.524 pty_getpty() pty master open error[/dev/ptyp0]=5
-+ 16:25:23.524 pty_getpty() pty master open error[/dev/ptyp1]=5
-+ 16:25:23.524 pty_getpty() pty master open error[/dev/ptyp2]=5
-+ 16:25:23.524 pty_getpty() found pty master[/dev/ptyp3]
-+ 16:25:23.524 pty_getpty() slavebuf [2][/dev/ttyp3]
-+
-+So it already was skipping past open errors; ttyp3 was opened successfully.
-+The problem is that ptyp3 is rw-rw-rw-, but the corresponding master,
-+ttyp3, is rw--r----. It seems the code assumes that if the master can be
-+opened, then so can the corresponding slave. Unfortunately, the code is
-+not structured to allow us to skip ahead to the next master if the slave
-+can't be opened. 7 Jan 2007.
-+
-+Spent a couple hours trying to rearrange the code in the pty module to skip
-+past inaccessible slaves but it was a rabbit hole, not worth it, backed off.
-+8 Jan 2008.
-+
-+Tried an upload over a secure connection using lsz. Unexpectedly, this time
-+it worked; not only was the file (about 0.5MB) transferred correctly, but
-+Kermit detected the fork's termination and got the pid's exit status, and,
-+for the first time, correctly reported a successful transfer. I have no
-+idea why this works today and not yesterday. More tests; it works most of
-+the time. It works with csz and with regular sz too.
-+
-+(days later...)
-+
-+ckucns.c seems to do the right thing; it recognize the ZSTART string,
-+activates the Zmodem-Receive APC, and returns. doconect() sees the APC and
-+begins to execute it. The RECEIVE command results in a call to the GET
-+command parser, doxget() (IS THAT RIGHT?), then comes a ttflui(), which
-+throws away a bunch of stuff. Finally we get to ttptycmd(), we get a pty
-+and run lrz in it, select() says stuff is waiting from the pty, but read
-+returns 0, errno 0. Skipping the ttflui() in doxget() if the protocol was
-+not Kermit didn't seem to make difference. ckuus6.c, 8 Jan 2007.
-+
-+The problem is that in this case, reads from the pty never get anything (no
-+data, no error), write always gets an error. It's as if the pty was not
-+being set up right, or we're using the wrong file descriptor. And if we
-+skip the autodownload? Same thing.
-+
-+OK, putting downloads aside for a moment, let's get uploads working as well
-+as possible. At this point we have the odd situation (at least in this
-+configuration) that the upload succeeds, but now for some reason we are
-+unable to read the exit status from the process, even though this was
-+working before, so ttptycmd() returns 0 (failure), yet Kermit reports
-+success.
-+
-+Well, it turns out that kill(pty_fork_pid,0) was gumming up the works.
-+If we use only waitpid() all is well, I think. waitpid() with WNOHANG
-+returns -1 with status -1 errno 0 if the pid has not exited, and it returns
-+the pid and status > -1 if the process has exited. Fixed pty_get_status()
-+to do it this way. ckutio.c, 7 Jan 2007.
-+
-+Let's move this from Mac OS to NetBSD and see how it works. Well, the file
-+transfer was just fine, but then I used some sexps to calculate the elapsed
-+time and transfer rate, and Kermit hung in dosexp(). Fine, ignoring that...
-+The debug log shows that ttptycmd() gets the pty OK, master and slave, the
-+i/o goes smoothly, and waitpid() does its job perfectly. Solaris, same
-+deal; ttruncmd() goes smoothly, but then the sexps afterward get "Arithmetic
-+exception". Turns out there was a BAD bug in dosexp() that allowed an
-+integer division by 0 to occur under certain circumstances; it's always been
-+there. Fixed in dosexp(): ckuus3.c, 8 Jan 2007.
-+
-+After noticing a few problems running the pop.ksc script in production over
-+the past year, rewrote \femailaddress() to be more reliable and a lot
-+simpler. ckuus4.c, 9 Jan 2007.
-+
-+Back to ttptycmd()... When we left off, we could send but not receive. Set
-+up a test case using Kermit as the external protocol for receiving a short
-+file. If I SET STREAMING OFF and use short packets, it actually does work,
-+so it's not a complete failure to function, but apparently a lack of flow
-+control for the pty. Began by completing the parameterization of the pty
-+module, so it can be called for interactive use (fc 0) or for running
-+protocols (1). Confirmed that everything works at least as well as before
-+(e.g. "set host /pty emacs" vs external protocols). ckcdeb.h, ckutio.c,
-+ckupty.c, 9 Jan 2007.
-+
-+Found in HP-UX "man 7 pty" a description of ioctl(fd,TIOCTTY,fc) which is
-+exactly what we want: fc 0 turns off all termio processing and guarantees an
-+ininterrupted, unmolested, flow-controlled stream of bytes in both
-+directions. This function also exists in Linux, but not in Solaris, NetBSD,
-+or Mac OS X (TIOCNOTTY is not what we want, it does something else entirely).
-+
-+Another possibility is TIOCREMOTE, which "causes input to the pseudoterminal
-+to be flow controlled and not input edited, regardless of the terminal
-+mode". This one exists in at least HPUX, NetBSD, Solaris, and Mac OS X.
-+
-+Solaris: builds OK, but at runtime we get ENOTTY ("Inappropriate ioctl for
-+device"). By the time this happens, it's hard to tell from the code whether
-+the fd we're using is for the master or the slave; TIOCREMOTE can be used
-+only on the master. Close inspection shows that I am indeed doing that;
-+ptyfd as seen by ttptycmd() is truly the master, i.e. the /dev/ptyXX device,
-+not the /dev/ttyXX device (the slave fd can't be seen at all, as it exists
-+only in a separate fork). OK, so now we know that TIOCREMOTE can't be used
-+on Solaris.
-+
-+NetBSD: Somehow, whether as a result of today's fiddling or the phase of the
-+moon, the code in pty_open_slave() that tries to open /dev/tty started
-+failing on NetBSD ("Device not configured"). Changing it to be run only if
-+fc == 0 (which doesn't seem to hurt anything), once again I get ENOTTY on
-+the TIOCREMOTE ioctl. Zmodem works but Kermit totally fails (the fork exits
-+immediately with an exit code of 0, even though it didn't do anything).
-+
-+Mac OS X: Exactly the same sequence and results as NetBSD.
-+
-+Linux: It did not execute the new ioctl at all; apparently the TIOC symbols
-+are hidden or not exported or something.
-+
-+Where we stand:
-+ . Downloads don't work
-+ . Uploads got slow again
-+ . Kermit doesn't work at all as an external protocol
-+
-+Actually if I take the debugging out it goes fast, but it doesn't finish.
-+
-+All today's work on ttptycmd() looks like a dead end. To roll back to
-+yesterday:
-+
-+ cp ckutio.c-20070108 ckutio.c
-+ cp ckupty.c-20070108 ckupty.c
-+ cp ckupty.h-20070108 ckupty.h
-+
-+or to continue with today's:
-+
-+ cp ckutio.c-20070109 ckutio.c
-+ cp ckupty.c-20070109 ckupty.c
-+ cp ckupty.h-20070109 ckupty.h
-+
-+Comparing Monday's and Tuesday's pty-related code, the differences are:
-+ 1. Passing of function code to and among pty modules.
-+ 2. Skipping the TIOCSCTTY ioctl and the open("/dev/tty") test.
-+ 3. Attempting to put pty in TIOCTTY or TIOCREMOTE mode.
-+
-+Commenting out 2 and 3 should put us back where we were on Monday if the
-+parameterization was done right. And with this, on Solaris, downloading
-+with Kermit external protocol works but slowly, 8K cps, with or without
-+debugging. Debug log does not show any obvious bottlenecks; select() takes
-+anywhere between no time at all and 0.1 seconds to return. If I increase
-+the pty-net buffer size from 1K to 4K, the rate goes up to 55K cps. If I
-+make it 8K I get 136K cps. With 16K I get 346K cps. 32K: 395K cps -- this
-+last one isn't worth the doubling. But at 24K I get 490K cps, sometimes
-+twice that. Let's stick with 24K for now. Downloading with Zmodem (rzsz)
-+works at the same rate, but now we're back to seeing the getty babble
-+(Several "**B0800000000022d") at the end. 10 Jan 2007.
-+
-+Moving to Mac OS X, everything works the same as on Solaris, except I don't
-+get the Zmodem getty babble there, not even with Omen rzsz. Tested sends
-+in both remote and local mode, the latter over a secure Kerberos 5 Telnet
-+connection, using C-Kermit, rzsz, lrzsz, and crzsz, all good. 10 Jan 2007.
-+
-+Now we're back where we were yesterday morning, but with better throughput.
-+The big issue then was receiving files. But yikes, now it works! Not only
-+that, I got a transfer rate of 2.1M cps. That's using Kermit protocol,
-+streaming, and big (4K) packets. Which didn't work before. Not a fluke
-+either, I uploaded bigger and bigger files up to 6MB, they all went
-+smoothly, at rates between 1 and 2 MBps. 10 Jan 2007.
-+
-+Not so great in Zmodem land, however. If I start the external-protocol
-+receiver on the far end, escape back and start a Zmodem send... nothing.
-+If I leave the remote C-Kermit at its prompt (where it supposed to recognize
-+the Zmodem start string), still nothing. On the other hand, if I do it
-+with a script instead of by hand:
-+
-+ def xx output take blah\13, send /proto:zmodem \%1
-+
-+it works, at least intermittently. But that's in remote mode. We won't be
-+using this in remote mode. In local mode, where we have a secure connection
-+to another computer, it seems we can read from the pty and write to the net,
-+but we time out waiting to read from the net; nothing arrives. Well, we
-+know that i/o works both ways, so there is some kind of screwup with the
-+Zmodem protocol start itself. Increasing the (still hardwired timeout) from
-+5 to 22sec and driving the whole process with a script so as to avoid
-+autodownload as well as manual dexterity effects... It just sits there
-+forever, way longer than 22 sec. ^C'ing out, I see that sz was indeed
-+started on the far end and the protocol was executing. But it looks like
-+the receiver (the one running under ttptycmd()) is getting trashed packets,
-+because (a) it seems to be sending the same thing over and over again, and
-+(b) sometimes it waits as long as 10 seconds before anything arrives from
-+the remote. Maybe I was too impatient; I interrupted it after 4 minutes but
-+it seems to have been making some progress. Whenever there was data
-+available to read from the net, it was always 65 bytes, and it was not
-+actually the same data over and over. This is using lrz as the external
-+protocol. crz gets a bit farther. In this case we read up to 24K at a
-+gulp, but the amount varies a lot. It looks like we took in about 1.2MB of
-+Zmodem protocol data, but were only able to output the first 20K of the
-+file. Clearly there were lots of errors. In the end, the crz exits with
-+status 1 (failure).
-+
-+Anyway it looks like we're back at needing to find a way to accomplish
-+something like TIOCREMOTE on the pty, which is where we came in. 10 Jan 2007.
-+
-+Without any way to make the pty transparent and flow controlled, it would
-+seem to make sense to write to the pty in smaller chunks than we do to the
-+net. I left the read-from-pty-write-to-net buffer at 24K and changed the
-+read-from-net-write-to-pty buffer to 48 bytes.
-+
-+Upload using lsz worked but took about 3 minutes. Actually it didn't work.
-+On the local end it seemed to work, but the file did not appear on the
-+remote end. Tried this several times, each time with different results,
-+adding more debugging each time. The problem this time was that the pty
-+read could get EWOULDBLOCK. Changed the code to not treat this as an error,
-+now Zmodem uploads are solid again except I never got EWOULDBLOCK again
-+either, even though I repeated the same upload about 1000 times (with
-+throughput of over 2MBps even with debugging on), so the test for it has
-+not been exercised.
-+
-+OK, uploads still work. Back to downloading... The very first pty read
-+gets 0 bytes, followed by the fork test that shows that it exited with
-+exit status 2.
-+
-+Next we try starting sz with some different options on the far end:
-+
-+ -q: quiet (no messages):
-+ for some reason this gets totally stuck.
-+ it looks as if this option is misdocumented;
-+ sz seems to be sending the letter C (as in Xmodem 1K or whatever)
-+
-+ -e: escape (all control chars):
-+ first attempt to read pty finds the process gone with exit status 2.
-+
-+ -k: send 1k blocks:
-+ this one didn't stop immediately. It reads 48 bytes from net, writes
-+ 48 to the pty with no error. Then reads 21 bytes from the pty, writes
-+ them to the net OK. Then reads 48 bytes from net, writes them to pty OK,
-+ reads 21 from pty, writes to net OK, etc etc... It appears to have
-+ worked but (final read from pty returned 0, fork test showed lrz exited
-+ with status 0), but only 754 bytes were received from the net when the
-+ file is 420K...
-+
-+Well this only goes to show that the faster we shove stuff into the pty, the
-+worse it gets. Zmodem downloads won't work unless we can make the pty
-+transparent and flow-controlled. So to summarize today's developments:
-+
-+ . separated in/out buffer sizes
-+ . handled EWOULDBLOCK
-+ . found out that sz options don't help much
-+
-+11 Jan 2007.
-+
-+Next day. This has got to be the most delicate code ever, it's like
-+Whack-A-Mole, fix A and B pops up. Even without touching it, something that
-+worked perfectly a 2:00 doesn't work at all an hour later. Maybe I could
-+have used pipes instead of ptys, but pipes have problems of their own.
-+There has to be a way to do this. The telnet server, the SSH server, etc --
-+they all run on ptys, and we can upload files to them with Kermit. Why?
-+Because Kermit puts its terminal into all the right modes using the
-+time-honored methods of ttpkt() and ttvt(). Perhaps all we need is a copy
-+of ttpkt() that operates on the pty.
-+
-+On that theory, let's go back to Kermit as the external protocol.
-+It's important to suppress all messages and displays. With that,
-+uploads work fine, no hitches.
-+
-+Downloads: We fail right away. The debug log shows the Kermit program that
-+we are starting in the pty says:
-+
-+ "" - Invalid command-line option, type "kermit -h" for help.
-+
-+But of course we are not giving it an invalid command-line option.
-+Switching to gkermit for the external protocol, now we see that no matter
-+command-line options we use, we read 0d 0d 0a from the pty and then the
-+next time we go to read from the pty we get 0 bytes and waitpid() says the
-+program has exited with status 1.
-+
-+Why should downloading be different from uploading? ttptycmd has no idea,
-+it does everything the same. The only difference would seem to be which
-+side sends first, but even that tends to get washed out by each program's
-+startup messages.
-+
-+Downloading with Kermit worked 2 days ago, what's different now? The buffer
-+sizes. Putting the net-to-pty back up to 24K (from 48 bytes)... Now it
-+works again.
-+
-+Conclusion: Kermit conditions the pty correctly, Zmodem does not. Therefore
-+ttruncmd() must duplicate what ttpkt() does.
-+
-+Or not. Because rz works fine on ssh/telnet ptys too. But not on our pty.
-+lrz exits immediately with status code 2 = 01000 but there are no clues in
-+the lrz.c source code, I don't even see this exit status set anywhere.
-+Unredirecting stderr, I see that the error is "lrz: garbage on command line".
-+
-+Why do both Kermit and Zmodem sometimes think they are receiving an invalid
-+command line? If I could capture the garbage...
-+
-+Side trip #1: ("pty.log",O_WRONLY) gives "no such file or directory".
-+Changed this to ("pty.log",O_CREAT,0644) and now it doesn't get an error,
-+and it creates the file, but not with 0644 permissions, and with nothing
-+written in it. How come nothing works?
-+
-+Fine, the debug log shows that ttptycmd() receives the correct string
-+(e.g. "lrz -v"). It passes it to do_pty() correctly, and do_pty() passes it
-+to exec_cmd(), which runs cksplit() on it, coming up (in this case) with
-+"lrz" and "-v", which is right, and then:
-+
-+ args = q->a_head + 1;
-+ execvp(args[0],args);
-+
-+execvp() wants the args array to have a null element at the end. cksplit()
-+does indeed do that, or at least the code is there. Added code to exec_cmd()
-+to verify the argument list and that it is null-terminated. So far it is.
-+
-+Anyway, we have traffic between the Zmodem partners, but no joy.
-+Commenting out the bit that redirects stderr, now I can see it on my screen
-+in real time:
-+
-+ lrz waiting to receive.Retry 0: Bad CRC
-+ Retry 0: Got ERROR
-+ Retry 0: TIMEOUT
-+ Retry 0: TIMEOUT
-+ Retry 0: TIMEOUT
-+ Retry 0: TIMEOUT
-+
-+etc etc, forever. Trying sz -e on the far end, I get:
-+
-+ Retry 0: Bad CRC
-+ Retry 0: Garbage count exceeded
-+ Retry 0: Garbage count exceeded
-+ Retry 0: Garbage count exceeded
-+ Retry 0: Garbage count exceeded
-+ Retry 0: Garbage count exceeded
-+ Retry 0: Garbage count exceeded
-+ Retry 0: Garbage count exceeded
-+ ...
-+ Retry 0: Got ERROR
-+ Retry 0: Bad CRC
-+ Retry 0: Got ERROR
-+ Retry 0: Got ERROR
-+ lrz: xxufio.c removed.
-+
-+So apparently it's not a matter of escaping. Trying some other stuff, I
-+caught the command-line problem in the act:
-+
-+ lrz: garbage on commandline
-+ Try `lrz --help' for more information.
-+
-+Debug log shows:
-+
-+ cksplit result[lrz]=1
-+ cksplit result[-v]=2
-+ exec_cmd arg[lrz]=0
-+ exec_cmd arg[-v]=1
-+ exec_cmd arg[]=2
-+
-+An empty string at the end instead of a null pointer. I really do not see
-+any way that could happen, but rather than dig into cksplit() again after
-+all these years I added a test for this in exec_cmd(), which, of course
-+after adding it, never encountered this behavior again.
-+
-+Fiddled with pty buffer size again. Made it 512 bytes instead of 24K.
-+Zmodem downloads are the same (Rety 0: TIMEOUT, over and over). But I don't
-+see what the problem is -- every time we receive n bytes from the net, we
-+write n bytes successfully to the pty and there are no errors. But it also
-+looks like the remote sender is sending the file header over and over
-+because it's not receiving an acknowledgment. If we're not losing data,
-+then maybe it's a transparency problem.
-+
-+Tried uncommenting the TIOCblah stuff I commented out before. Now instead
-+of only timeouts I get:
-+
-+ lrz waiting to receive.Retry 0: Bad CRC
-+ Retry 0: Got ERROR
-+ Retry 0: Bad CRC
-+ Retry 0: Got ERROR
-+ Retry 0: Bad CRC
-+ Retry 0: Got ERROR
-+ Retry 0: TIMEOUT
-+
-+which is odd because the TIOCREMOTE ioctl failed with errno 14, EFAULT,
-+bad address, which should indicate it had no effect. We're still receiving
-+data from the remote in tiny chunks (from 12 to 65 bytes), apparently the
-+same stuff (file header), and writing them to the pty successfully but
-+nothing...
-+
-+Looked at cloning ttpkt() for the pty, but these stupid routines use global
-+tty mode structs so it's not going to be easy.
-+
-+Well, we got exactly nowhere today, but I think I'll leave stderr as it is
-+so users will see some feedback; no reason not to.
-+
-+WHY DO KERMIT DOWNLOADS WORK AND ZMODEM NOT?
-+
-+Is it 8-bit transparency? Up til now I've been testing with text files.
-+If I try to download a binary what happens? Fails after 99 seconds. Packet
-+log from the far end shows that as soon as the first packet containing 8-bit
-+data is sent, everything stops. At least I got one of these:
-+
-+ 17:23:56.475 exec_cmd arg[gkermit]=0
-+ 17:23:56.475 exec_cmd arg[-qr]=1
-+ 17:23:56.475 exec_cmd arg[]=2
-+ 17:23:56.475 exec_cmd SUBSTITUTING NULL=2 <-- the code I just added
-+
-+Doing this again shows the same thing on the near end. All the 7-bit-only
-+packets are sent and acknowledged OK. Three 8-bit data packets arrive and
-+nothing else happens after that. This is with G-Kermit.
-+
-+The same thing happens with C-Kermit receiving. But if I change C-Kermit's
-+.kermrc to turn off streaming and use a short packet length:
-+
-+The transfer works, even though it's sending 8-bit bytes. So the problem is
-+not 8-bit data after all, per se. Facts:
-+
-+ . Kermit can receive streaming transfers of 7-bit files.
-+ . Kermit can not receive streaming transfers of 8-bit files.
-+ . Kermit can receive nonstreaming transfers of 8-bit files with short packets.
-+ . Kermit can receive nonstreaming transfers of 8-bit files with 1K packets.
-+ . Kermit can receive nonstreaming transfers of 8-bit files with 4K packets.
-+
-+So it's the combination of streaming and 8-bit data? 12 Jan 2007.
-+
-+As a test I made a new routine pty_make_raw() that does cfmakeraw() (a
-+nonportable "POSIX-like" function known to be used on ptys in applications
-+that do approximately what we're attempting). Results:
-+
-+ Solaris: errno 25 - inappropriate ioctl for device.
-+
-+This happens even when we try to get the terminal modes with tcgetattr(),
-+which is completely nuts. We pass it the file descriptor of the pty master,
-+which is supposed to work. But in Mac OS X, there are no errors. But
-+downloads still don't work; lots of errors but the pattern is different.
-+Using a very small buffer:
-+
-+ Retry 0: Bad CRC
-+ Retry 0: Garbage count exceeded
-+ Retry 0: Garbage count exceeded
-+ Retry 0: Got TIMEOUT
-+ Retry 0: TIMEOUT
-+ Retry 0: Bad CRC
-+ Retry 0: Bad CRC
-+ Retry 0: Garbage count exceeded
-+ Retry 0: Garbage count exceeded
-+ Retry 0: TIMEOUT
-+ Retry 0: Got ERROR
-+ Retry 0: TIMEOUT
-+ Retry 0: Garbage count exceeded
-+ Retry 0: Garbage count exceeded
-+ Retry 0: Bad CRC
-+
-+Using a bigger buffer:
-+
-+ Retry 0: Garbage count exceeded
-+ Retry 0: Garbage count exceeded
-+ Retry 0: Garbage count exceeded
-+ Retry 0: Garbage count exceeded
-+ Retry 0: Garbage count exceeded
-+ Retry 0: Garbage count exceeded
-+ (several screensful)
-+
-+Various other combinations... Nothing seems to work.
-+
-+Insight: telnetd does exactly what we want to do, sort of.
-+But it uses TIOCPKT, so every time it reads from pty, it receives
-+one control byte and then the data bytes, which would complicate our
-+buffering scheme considerably. Anyway the TIOCPKT ioctl() fails on
-+Mac OS X with 14 "Bad address".
-+
-+Also see: snoopserver.c (found in Google). It seems to do things in a
-+slightly different way -- it sets stdout to raw and then dups it to the
-+slave side of the pty?
-+
-+Maybe it's a mistake to use the ckupty.c routines. They are designed for
-+creating and accessing an interactive session. Maybe just copy one of the
-+other programs.
-+
-+18 Jan 2007. Tried going back to blocking rather than nonblocking reads
-+to see if it would make a difference, after all the other changes. Nope.
-+OK, let's look at some of these other programs...
-+
-+snoopserver.c. I don't know exactly what this is or where it's from or what
-+platform it runs on and there are no comments to speak of, but it does
-+approximately what ttptycmd() does. To get a pty it uses openpty():
-+
-+ if (openpty(&pty, &tty, NULL, NULL, NULL) == -1)
-+
-+then creates a fork. In the fork, it closes the pty (master) and
-+manipulates the modes of the tty (slave), dups tty to be stdio, and then
-+doex execv() on the command. Meanwhile the upper fork closes the tty
-+(slave), gets the attributes of stdin, using atexit() to have them
-+automatically restored on exit. Then it sets stdin to raw mode and enters
-+the select() loop on stdin, the pty master, and the net. It uses regular
-+blocking reads. It does not use TIOCPKT or anything like it.
-+
-+openpty() is supported on: Linux, Mac OS X, NetBSD, FreeBSD, ...
-+openpty() is NOT supported on: Solaris, HP-UX, ...
-+
-+ 1. Try copying the pty code, but keep everything else the same.
-+
-+I did this; it compiles and starts OK, upper fork (ttptycmd) debug log shows
-+no errors, but nothing happens. Logs show that the Kermit program that is
-+started in the subfork seems to die as soon as it reaches eof on its init
-+file. The good news, at least, is that select() doesn't report report that
-+the pty is ready to be read. Clearly the file descriptors aren't being
-+assigned as expected, or as before.
-+
-+In ckupty.c getptyslave() dup2's the slave fd to 0 and 1. The new code
-+does exactly the same thing. Debug log makes it look like the forked kermit
-+is not receiving its command line. But now I'm not even sure that the
-+forked kermit started at all. ps from another terminal doesn't show it.
-+
-+19 Jan 2007: Noticed that in snoopserver, the select() calls use standard
-+input and output file descriptors, rather than the pty master. Made that
-+change... In doing that I had to look at every file descriptor in every
-+line of code and discovered a couple mistakes, fixed them, put back the
-+original code but with the fixes, tried it, but no change; can upload OK but
-+still can't download with Zmodem without lots of errors and ultimate
-+failure. Going back to the alternative version and trying to get the the
-+file descriptors sorted out, now it appears that the external Kermit program
-+never even starts in the lower fork. After a bit more fiddling I sort that
-+out, but now when the lower Kermit program goes to open "/dev/tty" it gets
-+errno 6 "Device not configured". Forcing it to use stdio with "-l 0", it
-+gets past this and actually sends its first packet. But the Kermit on top
-+reads nothing from the pty.
-+
-+Next, I change the pty fd from STDIN_FILENO and STDOUT_FILENO to slavefd.
-+No difference. Next I comment out the dup2() calls. This time I get some
-+action. The transfer starts, but only one packet comes. Log shows that
-+the lower Kermit sends its S packet. The upper Kermit receives the ACK
-+but the lower Kermit never gets it. The write to the pty succeeds, no
-+error. Different combinations give different results. If write to master
-+and read from the slave, I get packets in both directions but tons of
-+errors.... This happens only if I comment out the dup2()'s.
-+
-+25 Jan 2007: After leaving it sit for a while, and realizing that what I'm
-+trying to do has to be possible because so much other software does the same
-+thing (e.g. Telnet servers), I put things back to how they were originally
-+-- the upper fork (Kermit) uses the master and the lower fork the slave.
-+The upper fork puts the master in raw mode, the lower fork puts the slave in
-+raw mode. The lower fork dup2's the slave fd to stdin/out. Send file in
-+remote mode using external Kermit: works OK but select() times out at the
-+end. This means that the self-contained pty code in ttptycmd() is sorted
-+out -- all the file descriptors go to the right place, etc, and now we can
-+use this routine as a testbed, rather than the original ckupty.c-based one.
-+
-+But send with lsz, csz, and regular rz: Nothing happens, times out after 0
-+bytes of i/o. Once again, Kermit works, Zmodem doesn't. The reason for
-+running Zmodem in a pty is so its i/o will work as it does on a terminal,
-+no matter how it may fiddle the file descriptors. So why don't we see a
-+single byte come out?
-+
-+Commenting out pty_make_raw(), I get a successful Zmodem send using lsz.
-+csz manages to get the filename across, but then gets stuck. regular sz, on
-+the other hand, works perfectly. Testing csz by itself (not under Kermit),
-+I see it fails in exactly the same way ("Got phony ZEOF", etc). OK, forget
-+crzsz.
-+
-+OK, let's move to local mode over a Kerberized Telnet connection...
-+Uploading (sending) with external Kermit protocol... works.
-+Downloading (receiving) with external Kermit protocol... works.
-+Uploading with sz... works.
-+Downloading with lrz... Gets tons of errors and fails.
-+
-+Running pty_make_raw() on the slave but not on the master: no difference.
-+Running pty_make_raw() on the master but not on the slave: no difference.
-+
-+Back where we started... Either:
-+
-+ . Zmodem is overdriving the pty, no matter what modes we put it in.
-+ . It's a transparency problem.
-+
-+Theoretically we should be able to test these by using different sz switches:
-+ -q: quiet (should always use this)
-+ -e: escape all control characters
-+ -B n: Buffer n bytes (rather than whole file)
-+ -L n: Packet length
-+ -l n: Frame length (>= packet length)
-+ -w n: Window size
-+ -4: 4K blocksize (doesn't help)
-+
-+-q by itself doesn't help.
-+-q -e, this one worked but still got about 100 errors and was very slow.
-+-q -e -l 200 -L 100, failed fast and bad.
-+-q -e -w 1. Failed quickly.
-+-q -e -w 1 -B 100. Eventually failed.
-+-q -w 1, Eventually failed.
-+-q -l 1024, this gets much more errors, definitely need -e.
-+-q -e -l 1024, got pretty far before failing.
-+-q -e -w 1 -l 1024, also got pretty far before failing.
-+-q -e, this one got farthest of all, about 48K, before getting errors.
-+
-+In the latter combinations that work somewhat better, we always get up to
-+16K, or 32K, or 48K, before the errors start coming out and piling up.
-+Sometimes the errors are recoverable and we receive as much as 300K
-+successfully before giving up.
-+
-+Now that we have data flowing pretty well (but not well enough), tried
-+reinstating pty_make_raw(), but it hurt more than helped.
-+
-+As a sanity check, I tried transferring from the same host over the same
-+kind of connection (Kerberized Telnet) directly to K95's built-in Zmodem
-+protocol, and that worked fine. So the problem is definitely in the pty.
-+Or more precisely, where Kermit writes incoming net data to the pty master.
-+
-+26 Jan 2007: Tried changing the size of the net-to-pty buffer from 24K to
-+1K. Result: total failure. Set both buffers to 1K. Still total failure.
-+Set both to 4K: now we get about 45K of data, then failure. Put them both
-+back to 24K, still fails totally -- the same code that worked pretty well
-+yesterday. Actually, no downloads work, not even Kermit, not even of
-+text files.
-+
-+27 Jan 2007: Since I have not been able to find a way to make ptys work for
-+this, I made a third copy of this routine, this time using pipes instead of
-+ptys. The disadvantage here is that if the external protocol does not use
-+stdio, the pipes won't work, but one thing a time...
-+
-+Inferior Kermit starts in lower fork, but when it tries to send its first
-+packet it gets errno=9 EBADF, Bad File Descriptor. Substituting G-Kermit as
-+the external protocol, which is simpler, reveals that the problem is that
-+the external protocol gets errors when it tries to manipulate the its stdio
-+file descriptors with ioctls, etc; these are not valid for a pipe. The pipe
-+mechanism itself works. If I take out the test for ttpkt() failing in
-+gkermit, the file transfer works OK. Trying Zmodem... Sending works OK;
-+receiving works a lot better than with ptys (it got 360K into the file
-+before failing). Making the buffers smaller, doesn't help.
-+
-+I'm starting to wonder if the problem might be in my buffering code, rather
-+than in the pty or pipe interface... Try making a version that does
-+single-character reads and writes.
-+
-+This one reads the first packet from the lower Kermit and sends it. It is
-+recognized by the other Kermit, which sends an ACK. We see the ^A of the
-+ACK, but then select() times out on the next character -- OF COURSE: because
-+at a lower level, it has already been read. We have to check the myread
-+buffer, and then call select() only if it's empty. Making this change:
-+
-+ . SEND with G-Kermit works (but very slowly).
-+ . SEND with lsz works but gets a lot of errors, eventually succeeds.
-+
-+Let's work our way back... With the same changes to the buffered pipe version:
-+
-+ . SEND with G-Kermit/streaming works (fast).
-+ . SEND with lsz works too (fast), but we get gubbish at the end.
-+ . RECEIVE with Kermit fails because "/dev/tty is not a terminal device".
-+ . RECEIVE with rsz... lots of errors ("garbage count exceeded") but succeeded.
-+
-+But maybe now we're seeing pipe artifacts, so going back one more step to
-+the version that gets its own pty and starts its own fork:
-+
-+ . SEND with G-Kermit/Streaming works (fast) but select() times out at the end.
-+
-+Another breakthrough: Moved the write pieces to below the read pieces. This
-+is what was preventing the buffer reset code from working -- with the writes
-+done before the reads, we never catch up and can never reset the buffers.
-+
-+ . SEND with G-Kermit/streaming works (fast) (but there's a pause at the end)
-+ . SEND with lsz works (fast) (but there's a pause at the end)
-+ . RECEIVE with rsz... lots of errors ("garbage count exceeded") and fails.
-+ . RECEIVE with Kermit -- nothing happens (it thinks it succeeded), then we
-+ reconnect, terminal sees S packet and goes into autodownload
-+
-+From the log it looks like ttpkt() fails in the lower Kermit. Switching
-+this with the hacked G-Kermit... it gets "transmission error on reliable
-+link". Tried again with real Kermit below, this time with "-l 0" and not
-+streaming. This was actually working, but slowly, I don't see any NAKs in
-+the packet log, but then select() timed out.
-+
-+28 Jan 2007: Restored both the calls to pty_make_raw():
-+
-+ . SEND with C-Kermit streaming works, but slow (54Kcps)
-+ . Ditto, but with debugging off -- hangs forever.
-+ . Ditto, but using G-Kermit instead of C-Kermit -- also hangs forever.
-+
-+Backed off on calling pty_make_raw(). Same thing.
-+Reduced size of net-to-pty buffer. Same thing.
-+
-+15 Feb 2007... Decided to give up on this and publish it as is, in hopes
-+that somebody with more experience with ptys can make it work, because I'm
-+just going in circles. So today I just have to get the code into shape so
-+people could choose among the three alternative routines. The second one,
-+yttyptycmd(), is the one that uses openpty(), which is not portable, so it
-+can be enabled only for Mac OS X, NetBSD, FreeBSD, and Linux, or by also
-+defining HAVE_OPENTPY at compile time. Anyway, if you build Kermit in the
-+normal way, you get the regular behavior -- ttruncmd() is used to execute
-+external protocols. If you build it with -DXTTPTYCMD, you get the first
-+version of ttptycmd(); with -DYTTPTYCMD the second, and with -DZTTPTYCMD the
-+third.
-+
-+(Then some interruptions, then...)
-+
-+From Jeff, fix hostname comparison in X.509 certificate checking to work
-+right in the case of names that contain no periods. dNSName_cmp(): cl_ssl.c,
-+21 Feb 2007.
-+
-+John Dunlap noticed some strange behavior when transferring files between
-+home base and the EM-APEX oceanographic floats via satellite... long story,
-+but every so often the transfer would get stuck for a long time, and it
-+happened only when C-Kermit was sending a file and received two or more
-+packets (Ack or Nak) back to back from the float. Years ago I added some
-+lookahead code to ttinl() to clear the input buffer of any interpacket junk
-+so that, in the windowing case, we wouldn't be tricked next time around into
-+thinking a packet was waiting to be read when there wasn't. The code, which
-+has been there for a while, was a bit fractured; luckily, it would be
-+executed only when the debug log was active so it didn't have much effect.
-+The problem was that if the SOP came immediately after the EOP, it could be
-+missed because the loop read the next character before checking the current
-+one. Fixed by rearranging the loop. Also I changed it so it would execute
-+in all cases, not only when the debug log was active. Also, cleaned up a
-+bunch of confusing #ifdefs and removed some chunks that had been commented
-+out for years, decades maybe. ttinl(): ckutio.c, 21-22 Feb 2007.
-+
-+Added NOW keyword info to HELP DATE, plus a tip about how to convert to UTC;
-+suggested by Arthur Marsh. ckuus2.c, 22 Feb 2007.
-+
-+When an FTP client sends NLST to the server and no matching files are found,
-+the server is supposed to respond with an error message on the control
-+channel and nothing on the data channel. However it seems that at least one
-+server sends the error message back on the data channel, as if it were a
-+filename ("/bin/ls: blah: No such file or directory"), and on the control
-+channel there is no error indication ("226 ASCII Transfer complete"). At
-+this point remote_files() has a listfile and, if a match pattern was given,
-+it looks through list to see if any of the lines match the given filename,
-+e.g. "blah". This makes FTP CHECK give false positives. The problem
-+(diagnosed by Jeff) is that the match pattern was not given in this case, so
-+it takes some random default action, resulting in the spurious success
-+return. Fixed by using the user's string as the pattern. Not tested,
-+however, since I don't have access to a server that behaves this way.
-+ckcftp.c, 22 Feb 2007.
-+
-+If an external-protocol file transfer fails, don't print Kermit-specific
-+hints. ckuus5.c, 22 Feb 2007.
-+
-+One more time with ttinl(). Got rid of the "csave" junk, which never could
-+have worked (which is no doubt why it was in a debugging section). The
-+problem was that saving the beginning of the next packet locally did not
-+synchronize with the buffer clearing (ttflui()) done at a higher level,
-+between calls to ttinl(). So now, the lookahead code, if it finds the
-+beginning an as-yet unread packet, puts it back at the head of the input
-+queue. This way, if the protocol engine clears the input buffer, it will
-+get the whole packet, not just the part after the SOH. ckutio.c, 24 Feb 2007.
-+
-+From Steven M Schweda, Saint Paul, MN: adaptation of large file support to
-+VMS (it was already possible to transfer large files in VMS C-Kermit but the
-+file-transfer display and statistics were wrong). And a minimal adaptation
-+of the FTP client to VMS -- no RMS, no special VMS file stuff, Stream_LF and
-+binary files only, developed and tested only with UCX. SSL/TLS is
-+supported. The source-code changes are minimal; most have nothing to do
-+with VMS, but with header files, prototypes, and data types (e.g. ftp_port
-+int rather than short, various signed/unsigned conflicts) to shut up
-+compiler warnings. Some of these could be dangerous in terms of
-+portability; I've marked them with /* SMS 2007/02/15 */. ckcfns.c,
-+ckcnet.h, ck_ssl.h, ckuus3.c, ckuus4.c, ckvfio.c, ckcftp.c, ckvker.mms
-+(which was rewritten to actually reflect the source module dependencies),
-+ckvker.com (also heavily modified). ckvker.com (the "makefile" for VMS
-+C-Kermit) now indludes "F" and "I" option flags for the large File and
-+Internal ftp features, plus better handling of Vax/Alpha/IA64 distinction.
-+26 Feb 2007.
-+
-+Changed NetBSD targets to include -DHAVE_OPENPTY and -lutil, so they
-+can use openpty(). makefile, 26 Feb 2007.
-+
-+Built on Solaris without and with SSL OK.
-+Built on NetBSD with Kerberos 5, OK.
-+Built on Mac OS X 10.4, regular version, OK.
-+Built on Mac OS X 10.4 with SSL and Kerberos 5, OK.
-+
-+On VMS 7.2-1/Alpha with MultiNet 4.4A-X...
-+
-+'CC' 'CCOPT' KSP:ckuus3
-+%DCL-W-TKNOVF, command element is too long - shorten
-+ \CKUUS4.OBJ "'CC' 'CCOPT' KSP:ckuus4" "KSP:ckuus4.c KSP:ckcsym.h KSP:ckcdeb.h
-+ KSP:ckclib.h" "KSP:ckcasc.h KSP:ckcker.h KSP:ckcnet.h KSP:ckvioc.h"
-+"KSP:ckctel.h KSP:ckuusr.h KSP:ckucmd.h KSP:ckuver.h" "KSP:ckcxla.h
-+ KSP:ckuxla.h KSP:ckcuni.h KSP:ckuath.h"
-+
-+The new rule for ckuus4.c was too long. I removed one file from the
-+dependency list (ckcxla.h, which will probably never change again) and that
-+made it OK. Built Nonet and Net versions OK, but this is without the new
-+stuff.
-+
-+"make f" (large-file support) on VMS 7.2-1...
-+'CC' 'CCOPT' KSP:ckuus4
-+ if (CKFSEEK(fp,(CK_OFF_T)j,SEEK_CUR) != 0) {
-+........................^
-+%CC-I-IMPLICITFUNC, In this statement, the identifier "fseeko" is implicitly
-+declared as a function.
-+
-+Ditto for ftello and fseeko in various other places, and then fseeko and
-+ftello come up up undefined at link time.
-+
-+The rule for ckcftp in "make i" (Internal FTP support) had the same problem.
-+I removed ckcxla.h from its dependency list too, but "utime" comes up
-+undeclared at compile time and undefined at link time.
-+
-+Verdict: neither one of the two new features can be used in VMS 7.2 or
-+earlier, but the code still builds OK if you don't ask for them.
-+
-+VMS 8.3 on IA64... Can't build anything:
-+%MMS-F-BADTARG, Specified target (WERMIT) does not exist in description file
-+
-+27 Feb 2007: Changed CKVKER.COM to keep all its dependencies but use a
-+shorter logical name (Steven M Schweda). The problem on VMS 8.3 is that MMS
-+now supports case-sensitive file systems, and so it can't find anything.
-+Workaround: bypass MMS (include "m" in P1). With this, "@ckvker.com ifm"
-+builds OK on HP Testdrive, but I can't test the new features since outbound
-+connections are not allowed there. As for fseeko(), ftello(), and utime(),
-+they simply are not availble prior to VMS 7.3. It would probably be a good
-+idea to test for this in CKVKER.COM, but actually it is possible to install
-+newer C's and CRTLs on older VMS versions, so don't stand in their way.
-+
-+28 Feb 2007: With additional chages from SMS, and then some further
-+adjustments, I was able to build the FTP version on VMS 7.2-1. First I
-+tested it with GET of a binary file, but it transferred it in text mode.
-+After a few more attempts with PUT and GET, it crashed with "floating/decimal
-+divide by zero" in ckscreen, ckuusx.c line 27859. Of course, that's the
-+listing line, not the source line, and I don't have a listing.
-+
-+To get a listing, I deleted CKUUSX.OBJ and then did:
-+
-+ $ make i "" "" "/LIST"
-+
-+Surprisingly, it recompiled everything.
-+
-+Anyway, the divide by zero happened in a section of code where the divisor
-+was not checked, but it was a section of code we should not have been
-+executing at all, since the file-transfer display was fullscreen, and this
-+was in the "brief" section. Anyway, I added the needed check. Again, it
-+recompiles everything. Maybe there's no MMS on grumpy -- right, there isn't.
-+
-+ANYWAY... Try to GET a binary file like this:
-+
-+ binary
-+ ---> TYPE I
-+ 200 Type set to I.
-+ get gkermit
-+ ---> TYPE A
-+ 200 Type set to A.
-+ ---> SIZE gkermit
-+ 550 gkermit: file too large for SIZE.
-+ GET gkermit (text) (-1 bytes)---> TYPE A
-+
-+Anyway... "get /binary gkermit" downloads it, seemingly correctly (the byte
-+count is right).
-+
-+But "put /binary gkermit.;1" results in a 0-length GKERMIT file being sent.
-+Here's the debug log:
-+
-+FTP PUT gnfile[DISK$MSA4:[C.FDC.NET]gkermit.;1]=1
-+ftp putfile flg[DISK$MSA4:[C.FDC.NET]gkermit.;1]=0
-+zltor fncnv[DISK$MSA4:[C.FDC.NET]gkermit.;1]=-1
-+FTP PUT nzltor[GKERMIT]
-+zfnqfp 1[DISK$MSA4:[C.FDC.NET]gkermit.;1]=675
-+zfnqfp 2[DISK$MSA4:[C.FDC.NET]GKERMIT.;1]=31
-+zfnqfp 3[DISK$MSA4:[C.FDC.NET]GKERMIT.;1]=31
-+zrelnam result 2[gkermit.;1]
-+ftp sendrequest restart[DISK$MSA4:[C.FDC.NET]gkermit.;1]=0
-+openi name[DISK$MSA4:[C.FDC.NET]gkermit.;1]
-+openi sndsrc=-1
-+openi file number=2
-+zopeni[DISK$MSA4:[C.FDC.NET]gkermit.;1]=2
-+zopeni fp=0
-+chkfn=2
-+chkfn return=0
-+zopeni fixed file format - using blk I/O
-+zopeni binary flag at open=1
-+zopeni ifile_bmode=1
-+zopeni binary=1
-+zopeni RMS operations completed ok
-+openi zopeni 1[DISK$MSA4:[C.FDC.NET]gkermit.;1]=1
-+ftpcmd cmd[PASV]
-+FTP SENT [PASV]
-+FTP RCVD [227 Entering Passive Mode (166,84,1,2,233,216)]
-+initconn connect ok
-+FTP SENT [STOR GKERMIT]
-+FTP RCVD [150 Opening BINARY mode data connection for 'GKERMIT'.]
-+doftpsend2 ftpcode[STOR]=150
-+
-+ Here is where the file is supposed to be read and sent but there is nothing
-+ in the log between the "doftpsend2 ftpcode" line and the following line.
-+
-+rftimer status=1
-+gftimer status 1=1
-+gftimer status 2=1409025
-+gftimer status 3=1409025
-+gftimer s[0.000000]
-+zclose n=2
-+chkfn=2
-+chkfn return=1
-+zclose ZIFILE RMS operations completed ok
-+ftp getreply lcs=0
-+ftp getreply rcs=-1
-+ftp getreply fc=0
-+FTP RCVD [226 Transfer complete.]
-+ftp getreply[226 Transfer complete.]=2
-+doftpsend2 ok=0
-+
-+Everything is OK up until we go to send the file, then it behaves as if we
-+got EOF immediately and so closes the data connection, and reports success;
-+an empty copy of the file is left on the far end.
-+
-+Starting over with a text file.... PUT LOGIN.COM gets another divide by
-+zero. But it happened in the code I just fixed, which is impossible. Swell.
-+I recompiled everything and this time the upload worked, and downloading it
-+again worked too.
-+
-+But a binary file still can't be uploaded. Trying to upload a text file
-+after doing this seems to succeed (reports the right number of bytes sent)
-+but nothing appears on the far side.
-+
-+SUMMARY:
-+
-+ To download a text file: GET /ASCII blah.txt (/ASCII is optional)
-+ To download a binary file: GET /BINARY blah.bin (/BINARY is required)
-+ To upload a text file: PUT blah.txt (/ASCII switch not needed)
-+ To upload a binary file: PUT /BINARY blah.bin (doesn't work)
-+
-+Problems:
-+ . Why doesn't BINARY "stick"?
-+ . Why don't binary uploads work?
-+
-+The culprit seems to be the VMS version of zxin(). In the FTP module,
-+zxin() is called only when sending binary files. In VMS, zxin() is just
-+a front end for C-Library fread(). It probably needs to do just do
-+zminchar() in a loop, like binary mode does, but calling zzout instead
-+of xxout. Or something like that. FINISH THIS TOMORROW (debug on grumpy).
-+
-+2 Mar 2007: New logs from John Dunlap.
-+
-+ema-1636-log-0175.dbg: C-Kermit uploads a short file. It receives an Ack for
-+the Z packet it just sent, tailgated by the beginning of a Nak for the next
-+packet. When the second SOH is encountered, it is put back in the myread
-+queue. Then the protocol engine, to which we return the Ack, says, "I have
-+the packet I wanted so I'm clearing the buffer", and away go the first two
-+bytes of the Nak from the myread buffer. Then, having just received the Ack
-+of our Z packet, we send our B, and go to read the reply. in_chk finds 0 in
-+the myread buffer (which we just cleared) and 6 waiting to be read from the
-+comms channel, which it does, obtaining the remaining 6 bytes of the Nak,
-+which it properly discards. (The reason this is proper is that, having
-+already received the Ack for the last packet it sent, no Ack or Nak that
-+arrives subsequently -- in the non-windowing case -- could possibly affect
-+what it does next.) Since it hasn't yet found a good packet, it keeps
-+reading, and now it finds the Ack to the B, as soon as it showed up. This
-+is how it's supposed to work. No time was lost because of anything that
-+C-Kermit did.
-+
-+ema-1636-log-0174.dbg: C-Kermit uploads a short file. It sends Data packet
-+#3 and receives the Ack followed immediately by the first 3 bytes of a Nak
-+for packet 4. When it gets to the SOH of the second packet, it pushes it
-+back in the queue. Again, input() flushes the input buffer (myread queue
-+and device buffer). C-Kermit detects EOF on the file it is sending, and
-+sends the Z packet. Then it reads the remaining bytes of the Nak,
-+which it discards, and then it finds the Ack for Z which comes in 23 seconds
-+later, sends the B, gets a Nak for the B, sends the B again, gets the Ack
-+for the B 4 seconds later, and done. Again, it's working right and losing
-+no time.
-+
-+The question remains: what would happen if the protocol engine did not clear
-+the buffer? Would ttinl() retrieve all packets in sequence even when they
-+come back to back? To test this, I had C-Kermit send a file using 30 window
-+slots and observed the stream of Acks in the reverse direction:
-+
-+ HEXDUMP: mygetbuf read (16 bytes)
-+ 01 25 23 59 2f 52 39 0d | 01 25 24 59 2b 26 31 0d .%#Y/R9. .%$Y+&1.
-+ ttinl lookahead my_count=9
-+ ttinl lookahead removed=^M
-+ ttinl lookahead pushback SOP=^A
-+ HEXDUMP: ttinl got (7 bytes)
-+ 01 25 23 59 2f 52 39 | .%#Y/R9
-+ RECEIVE BUFFERS:
-+ buffer inuse address length data type seq flag retries
-+ 0 1 29212 9667 0 Y 3 0
-+ [\ 1%#Y]
-+ ...
-+ in_chk my_count=8
-+ ...
-+ ttinl lookahead my_count=1
-+ ttinl lookahead removed=^M
-+ HEXDUMP: ttinl got (7 bytes)
-+ 01 25 24 59 2b 26 31 | .%$Y+&1
-+ RECEIVE BUFFERS:
-+ buffer inuse address length data type seq flag retries
-+ 0 1 29212 9667 0 Y 4 0
-+ [\ 1%$Y]
-+
-+Here we can see that the pushed-back SOH was properly retrieved next time
-+around, and the tailgating Ack was not lost. This scenario repeats itself
-+212 times in the log, and there are no screwups.
-+
-+Back to VMS FTP... The problem with sending binary files is that zxin()
-+uses C-Library fopen()/fread() instead of RMS, so it can't access the input
-+file, which was opened by zopeni(), which is totally RMS-ified in VMS
-+C-Kermit. For VMS only, I replaced the zxin() loop by a zminchar() loop
-+like the one used in text mode, except without the character set or
-+record-format conversion. Tested by PUT /BINARY of some binary files, which
-+worked fine. ckcftp.c, 2 Mar 2007.
-+
-+Next problem... VMS C-Kermit ftp client sending binary files in text mode.
-+Variation 1: We just send the file. zopeni() is supposed to detect that
-+it's a binary file and automatically set the mode. And it does:
-+
-+ zopeni fixed file format - using blk I/O
-+ zopeni binary flag at open=0
-+ zopeni ifile_bmode=1
-+ zopeni binary=0
-+ zopeni autoswitch from TEXT to BINARY
-+ zopeni RMS operations completed ok
-+
-+but then in gnfile():
-+
-+ if (!server || (server && ((whatru & WMI_FLAG) == 0)))
-+ binary = gnf_binary; /* Restore prevailing transfer mode */
-+
-+Well, since VMS sets text/binary mode automatically when sending files,
-+this code can (and should) be skipped in VMS. gnfile(): ckcfns.c, 2 Mar 2007.
-+
-+Variation 2: BINARY or SET FILE TYPE BINARY doesn't force binary mode. But
-+SET FTP TYPE BINARY does. But BINARY does indeed call doftptyp() so what's
-+the problem? We do indeed set ftp_typ to 1 but it gets reset somewhere
-+before we call zopeni(). But then zopeni() puts it back to 1. Tracing
-+through a transfer, it looks like all of this works right, it's only that
-+the file transfer display says TEXT when the transfer is really in binary
-+mode. This is because screen() is called before openi(). I wonder if we
-+can call scrft() from the ftp module... No, that would be too easy. OK,
-+sendrequest calls openi() and sets the file mode; putfile() calls
-+screen(SCR_FN), which prints the transfer mode. But putfile calls
-+sendrequest() after it puts up the screen that says the file type. So it
-+looks like sendrequest() has to call screen(SCR_FN) again if it changes the
-+file type. OK, that did it. ckuusx.c, ckcftp.c, 2 Mar 2007.
-+
-+The BINARY and TEXT (ASCII) commands do not inhibit automatic type switching
-+in VMS. They don't in Unix either. They never have. Should they? I think
-+so, otherwise what good are they? Plus we want the Kermit FTP client to
-+behave like the others. I added code for this but it doesn't work, due to
-+the layers and layers of text/binary detection and switching and
-+if-this-but-then-if-that... Anyway, no harm done. The normal rule is:
-+when you PUT a file, Kermit figures out on a per-file basis whether to use
-+text or binary mode unless you include a /TEXT (/ASCII) or /BINARY switch
-+in the PUT (or MPUT) command. ckuus[r3].c, ckcftp.c, 2 Mar 2007.
-+
-+Wed Mar 7 16:21:13 2007 WROTE SHORT TEST PROGRAM for ttruncmd (the openpty
-+version) on Mac OS X. On dulce: ~/kermit/ttpty.c / ttpty.sh. It starts the
-+external protocol in the lower fork. The command to run is a command-line
-+argument. Sending and receiving files with Kermit works OK. But again, the
-+standalone program totally fails when I use sz or lsz as the external
-+protocol. So it looks like we can rule out any environmental effects of
-+running the code inside C-Kermit.
-+
-+Mon Mar 12 16:52:20 2007: Put some effort into making ttpty.c more useful;
-+added a debug log. Found that for some reason, at least on Mac OS X,
-+select() always timed out at the the end. I added a SIGCHLD alarm and that
-+seems to handle the fork exit condition very nicely. Now we can send (say)
-+a 3MB file at good speed on Ethernet (1Mcps) considering the debugging, etc,
-+and it terminates instantly. But when sending a file into ttptycmd (with
-+"gkermit -r"), things go wrong at the end -- the Z packet is never
-+acknowledged. This is reproducible. Maybe this is a good lead.... The log
-+shows that select() timed out, even though the gkermit fork had not yet
-+exited (or finished). It looks like gkermit sent the Ack, ttpty.c read it
-+from the pty and sent it out the net:
-+
-+ 0003: read pty=8 <-- read Ack from pty
-+ 0003: loop top have_pty=1
-+ 0003: loop top have_net=1
-+ 0003: FD_SET pty_in
-+ 0003: FD_SET ttyfd in
-+ 0003: FD_SET ttyfd out=8
-+ 0003: nfds=5
-+ 0003: select=1
-+ 0003: FD_ISSET ttyfd out
-+ 0003: write net=8 <-- send ack to net
-+ 0003: loop top have_pty=1
-+ 0003: loop top have_net=1
-+ 0003: FD_SET pty_in
-+ 0003: FD_SET ttyfd in
-+ 0003: nfds=5
-+ 0009: select=0
-+ 0009: select timeout - have_pty=1
-+
-+But Ack never arrived. This is a streaming transfer. But nope, streaming
-+is not the problem. If I disable streaming ("gkermit -Sr"), we hang in in
-+the middle of sending the data. If I use small packets, we don't hang:
-+1000 is OK, 2000 is not. In fact, the cutoff is 1024. OK, TBC...
-+
-+Wed 14 Mar 2007: Receiving a file thru ttpty "gkermit -e 1200 -Srd"
-+produces a debug log that shows that gkermit gets a lot of EAGAIN errors
-+when it tries to read from its stdin. In fact, it takes 6 tries (read()
-+calls) to read the S packet (27 bytes). Then when the first data packet
-+arrives (1200 bytes), read() never returns even one single byte. The
-+timeout interval is 15 seconds and it times out repeatedly. Added a
-+primitive hex dump to the ttpty debug log for each read/write (showing only
-+the first 24 characters and the last character, so it fits on one line).
-+Tried uploading a file. The S, F, and A packets (short) are received and
-+Ack'd OK, but then ttpty select() times out, never receiving even one byte
-+from the D packet. Clearly, when the pty driver receives a burst of > 1K
-+bytes, stops working. As before, if I limit the packets to < 1K, it works
-+fine.
-+
-+Can I send an 8-bit binary file? Nope. ttpty reads the binary data just
-+fine from the net and writes it exactly as it was received to the pty, but
-+the first time we write an 8-bit byte, we never hear back from the PTY
-+again. But the log shows that when the initial 7-bit packets from the pty,
-+it looks like the PTY is not in rawmode, because these packets end with ^J
-+rather than ^M. Calling pty_make_raw() on the masterfd and slavefd
-+explicitly, however, doesn't change anything. It doesn't matter if I do
-+this in the lower fork or the upper fork. So maybe it's the actual
-+semantics of pty_make_raw() that are wrong.
-+
-+Thu 15 Mar 2007: Went thru all the terminal mode flags in Mac OS X; didn't
-+help. Changed hex dump to show whole packet. Put hex dump routine in a
-+private copy of G-Kermit. Tried to transfer an 8-bit file, logging both
-+ttpty and gkermit. Compared what ttpty received on stdin with what it sent
-+to the pty (same) and what was received by G-Kermit (same). Then I realized
-+that my little test program was not putting its controlling terminal into
-+raw mode; when I did that, I could upload binary files (streaming, 2MB/sec).
-+And with Zmodem too (with rz; lrz doesn't work for some reason). Looking
-+back at the original in ckutio.c, I see that ttptycmd() never called
-+ttpkt(). Maybe that was the trouble all along. (Yup, but maybe not the
-+whole trouble.)
-+
-+Moving back to C-Kermit and the original ttptycmd() routine, adding the call
-+to ttpkt(), and stripping out a lot of cruft, and moving the pty_make_raw()
-+code to ckupty.c, Kermit uploads and downloads (streaming) work fine in
-+Solaris. Zmodem sends a file, but then the transfer hangs at the very end,
-+as if the signoff protocol were lost. This happens on Solaris. If I move
-+back to Mac OS X, everything works just fine. Then, making a Kerberized
-+connection from the Mac to NetBSD, I can send files from the Mac with both
-+Zmodem and Kermit. Receiving... Kermit OK. Zmodem... Nope. "rz:
-+Persistent CRC or other ERROR" (and created a 265MB debug.log!)
-+
-+Fri 16 Mar 2007: ttptycmd() was for sending files with Zmodem across
-+encrypted connections. But it occurred to me that it's necessary for
-+clear-text connections too; e.g. Telnet, where 0xff has to be doubled. Of
-+course Zmodem doesn't do that itself, so there's no way Zmodem external
-+protocol could work when executed over a Telnet connection, and in fact
-+it doesn't. I wonder why I ever thought it did.
-+
-+Wed 21 Mar 2007: Back to where we left off a week ago. Trying C-Kermit's
-+ttptycmd() on the Mac again, in remote mode:
-+
-+ . G-Kermit send txt (kst): OK 832Kcps
-+ . G-Kermit recv txt (kr): OK 425Kcps
-+ . G-Kermit send bin (ksb): OK 1000Kcps
-+ . G-Kermit recv bin (kr): OK 188Kcps
-+
-+And Zmodem:
-+
-+ . sz txt (zst): OK 563Kcps
-+ . sz bin (zsb): OK 714Kcps
-+ . rz txt (zr): OK 863Kcps
-+ . rz bin (zr): OK 198Kcps
-+
-+So in remote mode, everything works. Now let's try a clear-text Telnet
-+connection...
-+
-+ . G-Kermit send txt (kst): OK 841Kcps
-+ . G-Kermit recv txt (krt): OK 391Kcps
-+ . G-Kermit send bin (ksb): OK 811Kcps
-+ . G-Kermit recv bin (krb): OK 171Kcps
-+
-+And Zmodem over the same clear-text telnet connection:
-+
-+ . sz txt (zst): OK 91Kcps (*)
-+
-+Kermit is sending sz messages like "sz 3.73 1-30-03 finished." to the
-+host, which tries to execute them, after the transfer is finished.
-+Of course "sz" is a command, but:
-+
-+ sz: cannot open 3.73: No such file or directory
-+ sz: cannot open 1-30-03: No such file or directory
-+ sz: cannot open finished.: No such file or directory
-+
-+Did I lose that code that dis-redirects stderr when I went back to using the
-+pty code from the ckupty module? No, it's there and it's being executed.
-+Apparently the copy of sz I have is writing its "finished" message to stdout
-+because "sz blah 2> /dev/null" does not suppress it. Starting again with
-+lsz instead of sz:
-+
-+ . sz txt (lzst): OK 413Kcps
-+ . sz bin (lzsb): OK FAILED (*)
-+ . rz txt (lzrt): OK
-+ . rz bin (lzrb): OK
-+
-+(*) Sigh. Using lsz, we get "garbage count exceeded" errors and eventual
-+failure. But using regular sz, we get the extraneous message that starts
-+sz on the far tend, and the resulting getty babble.
-+
-+But even without changing the code, it will work one minute, and then fail
-+consistently the next. For example, I was able to send files with sz
-+successfully over and over, but with the getty babble at the end. Then,
-+after trying lsz and then going back to sz, every attempt at sending a file
-+quits with "Got ZCAN". The difference has to be that Kermit always does at
-+least some minimal encoding of C0/C1 control characters such NUL and DEL and
-+IAC, and I doubt that Zmodem does.
-+
-+http://zssh.sourceforge.net/ says:
-+
-+ If file transfer is initiated but never completes (ie a line like :
-+
-+ Bytes Sent: 0/ 513 BPS:0 ETA 00:00 Retry 0: Got ZCAN
-+
-+ can be seen, but transfer never completes), chances are the pty/tty on one
-+ of the systems are not 8-bit clean. (Linux is 8-bit clean, NetBSD is not).
-+ Using the -e (escape) option of rz should solve this problem.
-+
-+It doesn't, at least not with lrz. And yes, the receiving end happens to be
-+NetBSD. But it looks like the zssh people have been down this road too.
-+
-+But with rz and sz, it worked. Once. Twice. Three times. But of course,
-+with the getty babble at the end. This can be taken care of by doing:
-+
-+ rz -eq ; cat > foo
-+
-+which puts "sz 3.73 1-30-03 finished" and any other messages in foo (but you
-+have to type ^D to finish the cat). Using this method I was also able to
-+send an 8K binary file that contained a test pattern of all 256 possible byte
-+values. Then I tried a 3MB binary executable. All OK. So here we go again:
-+
-+ . sz txt (zst): OK
-+ . sz bin (zsb): OK
-+ . rz txt (zrt):
-+ . rz bin (zrb):
-+
-+Downloading fails about halfway through a fairly large file. I tried an
-+even bigger file, guaranteed to be 100% ASCII; same thing -- halfway
-+through: "rz: Persistent CRC or other ERROR". But it worked with a smaller
-+version of the same file (82K versus 2MB). Tried again with the bigger
-+version, it failed in exactly the same way at exactly the same spot: byte
-+number 1048320. But this is just ASCII text so it can't be a transparency
-+problem. Substituting another plain ASCII file of the same size but totally
-+different contents, it doesn't fail (2.36MB). Back to the previous file, it
-+fails again, but in a different spot (832960). So it's not totally
-+deterministic.
-+
-+To round things out, I tried downloading the binary test-pattern file; it's
-+only 8K. This failed.
-+
-+ -4, --try-4k go up to 4K blocksize
-+ -B, --bufsize N buffer N bytes (N==auto: buffer whole file)
-+ -e, --escape escape all control characters (Z)
-+ -E, --rename force receiver to rename files it already has
-+ -L, --packetlen N limit subpacket length to N bytes (Z)
-+ -l, --framelen N limit frame length to N bytes (l>=L) (Z)
-+
-+Tried again with "sz -L 256 -B 256 -4aeq". Doesn't change anything.
-+
-+NOTE: Mac OS X rz 3.73 1-30-03 does not support -e.
-+NetBSD rz 0.12.20 does support -e.
-+
-+Thu 22 Mar 2007: It occurs to me that ttpkt() might still be a problem;
-+maybe it's the network connection and not the pty that is not transparent
-+enough. To test this theory I did "stty raw ; stty -a" and then copied all
-+of the flag values into ttpkt in the BSD44ORPOSIX section:
-+
-+ . rz txt (zrt): OK (2.36MB file, worked 2 out of 3 times)
-+ . rz bin (zrb): "rz: Persistent CRC or other ERROR"
-+
-+A little more fiddling with the flags and I got the 8K binary test pattern
-+to SEEM to download OK (in the sense that rz gave a 0 return code) but the
-+file itself was truncated, always at 224. If I changed the test pattern
-+file to not include any bytes with value 224 (0xe0) or 255 (0xff), the
-+download worked. So we have a transparency problem somewhere. The debug
-+log shows that all byte values are being received from the network correctly
-+so the problem has to occur when we try to feed them to the pty.
-+
-+But no amount of twiddling with the termios flags seems to let these
-+characters pass through. Of course, since they are not in the C0 or C1
-+control range, "sz -e" doesn't quote them (which it does by prefixing with
-+Ctrl-X and then adding 0x40 to the byte value so (e.g.) NUL becomes ^X@.
-+Note that 255 does not cause problems because it coincides with the IAC
-+character; the remote Telnet server doubles outbound IACs, and Kermit's
-+ttinc() undoubles them automatically (as the log shows).
-+
-+Trying to send a different file (a C-Kermit binary) shows that 255 is the
-+real killer; the file is truncated where the first one appears (at about
-+6K), even though some 224's precede it. Going back to the remote-mode test,
-+I see the same thing happens with the binary test-pattern file, if I send it
-+from K95 direct to rz-under-C-Kermit-in-remote-mode. So it has nothing to
-+do with C-Kermit having a network connection. Yet if I send the same file
-+direct from K95 to rz, it goes OK and the result is not truncated, so it's
-+not Zmodem either. The data arrives to C-Kermit intact, so the failure is
-+definitely in writing it to the rz process through the slave and master ptys.
-+
-+BUT if I send the same file from K95 to rz-under-ttpty, that works. What's
-+the difference? Suppose I just transplant ttpty literally into C-Kermit...
-+It makes no difference. When receiving the test-pattern, it truncates it
-+in exactly the same place.
-+
-+Well, all this is on Mac OS X. What if I move it to a different platform?
-+OK, building on Solaris and following the exact same procedure, ttptycmd()
-+doesn't even use the network connection. I think that's because rzsz on
-+Solaris is hardwired to use the controlling terminal and can't be
-+redirected, even in a pty?
-+
-+Moved to NetBSD.
-+
-+ . sz txt (zst): Failed ("Got ZCAN")
-+ . sz bin (zsb):
-+ . rz txt (zrt): OK
-+ . rz bin (zrb):
-+
-+Well, this is a big mess. Sending doesn't work (or sometimes it does but
-+reports that it didn't). Receiving... well, actually it's the same thing;
-+the file is completely transferred but then the final protocol handshake is
-+lost. The local C-Kermit returns to its prompt, but rz is still running:
-+
-+ Retry 0: Got TIMEOUT
-+ Retry 0: TIMEOUT
-+ Retry 0: Got TIMEOUT
-+ Retry 0: TIMEOUT
-+ Retry 0: Got TIMEOUT
-+ Retry 0: TIMEOUT
-+ Retry 0: Got TIMEOUT
-+ Retry 0: TIMEOUT
-+ Retry 0: Got TIMEOUT
-+ Retry 0: TIMEOUT
-+ Retry 0: Got TIMEOUT
-+
-+I don't see how that is even possible. Even after I exit from Kermit the
-+messages keep coming, even though ps doesn't show the rz process anywhere.
-+Looking at the code, I see a place where end_pty() was still commented out
-+from the ttpty.c episode, I uncommented it. But still:
-+
-+ . sz txt (zst): Fails ("Got ZCAN")
-+ . sz bin (zsb): Fails instantly (but with no diagnostic)
-+ . rz txt (zrt): OK
-+ . rz bin (zrb): Fails with tons of "Bad CRC", "Gargage Count exceeded"
-+
-+Conclusion for the day: I think this is hopeless. Even if I can get it to
-+work somewhere, the results depend on the exact Zmodem software, how it uses
-+stdin/out vs stderr versus getting its own nonredirectable file descriptor,
-+versus the Zmodem version on the other end and which options are available
-+on each, versus the pty and select() quirks on each platform, and on and on.
-+It will be so hard to explain and to set up that nobody would ever use it.
-+It would be better to just implement Zmodem internally.
-+
-+Fri 23 Mar 2007: Went back to the small test program, ttpty.c. Tried
-+setting both the master and the slave pty to rawmode, even though I have
-+never seen any other software that did this. I had it receive the binary
-+test pattern file; it worked. I made a bigger test-pattern file, 3MB,
-+containing single, double, and triple copies of each byte in byte order and
-+in random order, this one was accepted too.
-+
-+So it would seem that the ckupty.c module is something to avoid after all.
-+It's full of stuff I don't understand and probably should not undo. So
-+changing C-Kermit's ttptycmd() to manage its own pty again, using openpty()
-+(which is not portable), I got it all to work in remote mode: Kermit
-+text/binary up/down and Zmodem text/binary up/down. But in local mode on
-+the client side of a Telnet connection...
-+
-+ zst: OK, but we still get the getty babble at the end that starts sz.
-+ zsb: OK, ditto. This is with the 3MB test-pattern file.
-+ zrt: Not OK -- "Persistent CRC or other ERROR"
-+ zrb: Not OK -- got the cutoff at 224 again "Persistent CRC or other ERROR"
-+
-+It's close. But actually this was still with USE_CKUPTY_C defined. When I
-+undefined it, it was back to being totally broken. Start over. (Check the
-+new cfmakeraw() code.)
-+
-+Tue 27 Mar 2007: Starting over. Back to ttpty.c. Let's verify, VERY
-+CAREFULLY, that it really does work, using the most stressful of the four
-+tests: sending the big (3.2768MB) binary test pattern from K95 into rz
-+through ttpty, logging everything. ttpty definitely receives the big file
-+smoothly with no errors or hiccups when I have it set to use the master side
-+of the pty for i/o. The application program (Zmodem in this case) runs on
-+the slave, and the network and/or control program communicates with the
-+master. This implies that Zmodem controls the terminal modes of the slave,
-+and ttpty should be concerned with those of the master. Doing it this way
-+in ttpty confirms this.
-+
-+Fine. But if I tell ttpty to SEND a file with sz, nothing happens. Ditto
-+with lsz. Select times out waiting for input from the pty. But if I
-+manually tell K95 to RECEIVE /PROTOCOL:ZMODEM it works OK. Somehow sz's
-+initial B000000 string is being swallowed somewhere, and it's waiting for
-+a reply from the receiver. sigh... But "ttpty gkermit -s filename" works
-+fine. What's the difference? It has nothing to do with stdout vs stderr;
-+sz is not writing to stderr at all. Is it some timing thing between the
-+forks? Aha. It's that I change the modes of the pty master in one fork
-+while sz is already starting in the other fork.
-+
-+OK, good, now for the first time we have Kermit and Zmodem both able to
-+upload and download a large worst-case binary test-pattern file... in
-+remote mode. Now taking today's lessons and fitting them back into
-+C-Kermit so I can try it local mode...
-+
-+Using G-Kermit as the external protocol, first in remote mode... All good:
-+text/binary up/down. The "halting problem" is solved by SIGCHLD, which
-+catches fork termination instantly and lets ttptycmd() know there is no more
-+pty. Zmodem:
-+
-+ zst: OK
-+ zsb: OK
-+ zrt: OK
-+ zrb: OK
-+
-+That's a first. Next, repeat in local mode, in which C-Kermit is the client
-+and has made a Telnet connection to another host over a secure (Kerberos V)
-+connection:
-+
-+ kst: OK zst: ...
-+ ksb: OK
-+ krt: OK
-+ krb: OK
-+
-+It seems we can never end a day on a high note. Somehow I seem to have
-+broken regular internal Kermit protocol transfers over encrypted connections
-+-- the en/decryption engine loses sync. But they still work OK over a
-+clear-text Telnet connection.
-+
-+Today's code in ~/80/dulce.tar (27 Mar 2007).
-+
-+Added makefile target solaris10g+openssl. Gathered all the standard CFLAGS
-+for Solaris into cdcdeb.h so they don't have to be included in every single
-+makefile target for Solaris. On local Solaris 10 host OpenSSL is in
-+/opt/openssl-0.9.8e/. Tried the new makefile target, works OK. Also made
-+solaris10+openssl for Sun CC, but couldn't test it because I can't find any
-+Solaris 10 host that has Sun CC. Built with gcc at another site that has
-+OpenSSL 0.9.8f-dev, all OK. ckcdeb.h, makefile, 24 Jun 2007.
-+
-+It occurs to me that Kermit transfers on secure connections might have been
-+broken by the changes I made back in February to ttinl() for John Dunlap.
-+Here, for the first time, we invoke myunrd() to push a byte back into the
-+input queue, and there is also some funny business with "csave", which
-+changed, and which an old comment notes that it has to be treated specially
-+when encrypting. So it could be that the broken Kermit transfer has nothing
-+to do with the work on external protocols, and that putting back the
-+previous ttinl() will fix it. But now I can't seem to make a Kerberized
-+connection from Panix to Panix, even though I can make one from Columbia to
-+Panix. This means I have to build a Kerberized binary from the current
-+source code on either Solaris or Mac OS X. Trying Solaris
-+first... [~/solaris9k5/mk5.sh] This didn't work the first time due to
-+undefined krb5_init_ets, which is referenced if MIT_CURRENT is not defined
-+(it should be for Kerberos 5 1.05 and later and we have 1.42 here), tried
-+again with -DMIT_CURRENT=1... Nope, that one totally blew up in ck_crp.c.
-+Later, Jeff says krb5_init_ets is a no-op in Kerberos 1.4.x and later,
-+so I added an #ifdef (NO_KRB5_INIT_ETS) for skipping it; now it builds and
-+runs OK. ckuath.c, makefile, 9 Jul 2007.
-+
-+Meanwhile, using C-Kermit on Mac OS X, which makes the Kerberized connection
-+just fine, but still has the problem transferring files over it. Packet log
-+shows:
-+
-+ s-00-01-^A9 Sz/ @-#Y3~Z! z0___F"U1@A^M
-+ r-00-01-^A9 Y~/ @-#Y3~^>J)0___J"U1@I
-+ s-01-01-^A(!Fx.x)(V^M
-+ r-xx-08-<timeout>
-+ S-01-08-^A(!Fx.x)(V^M
-+ r-xx-08-<timeout>
-+ S-01-08-^A(!Fx.x)(V^M
-+ r-xx-16-<timeout>
-+
-+Note that S packet is sent, received, and Ack'd OK. The F packet is sent but
-+is never Ack'd. Tried this several times and noticed that it's just
-+receiving that is screwed up, not sending. After ^C'ing out of the
-+transfer, I can still type commands, and they are executed on the far end,
-+but the results coming back are gibberish. Mon Jul 9 16:08:22 2007 (come
-+back to this later... substitute Dev.27 ttinl for current one and see if
-+the problem goes away, and if so, conditionalize the new code for clear-text
-+connections).
-+
-+Built C-Kermit with Kerberos 5 on Solaris with a version of ckutio.c that
-+uses the old ttinl() and transferred a file OK over a Kerberized connection.
-+So now it's just a matter of reconciling the old and new ttinl. The easiest
-+way to do this is to have new ttinl() chain to old ttinl() if the connection
-+is encrypted, which is what I did and it works fine. At some point the two
-+versions of ttinl() should be reconciled. ckutio.c, 12 Aug 2007.
-+
-+There was a function, islink(), used in only one place (ckuus6.c) that had
-+the same name as a commonly used scalar variable, and it was missing a
-+prototype. Changed its name to isalink() and added the prototype (Unix
-+only), ckuus6.c, ckufio.c, ckcdeb.h. 12 Aug 2007.
-+
-+Revisiting the ASCII and BINARY top-level commands, which are supposed to
-+be like in other FTP clients, but don't seem to have any effect. I added a
-+new routine to the FTP module, doftpglobaltype(), that sets the global,
-+sticky, permanent transfer mode (ASCII or BINARY) (TENEX could be added to
-+if anybody asks). These commands (now that they work) are different from
-+SET FTP TYPE { ASCII, BINARY }, which set the *default* transfer mode when
-+automatic switching fails for a given file. ckuusr.c, ckcftp.c, 12 Aug 2007.
-+ (notify: Matt <mlist@cmcflex.com>)
-+
-+Even though the code hasn't changed, suddenly we're getting:
-+
-+ "ckuusx.c", line 5682: warning: implicit function declaration: tgetent
-+ "ckuusx.c", line 6183: warning: implicit function declaration: tgetstr
-+ "ckuusx.c", line 6262: warning: implicit function declaration: tputs
-+ "ckuusx.c", line 6266: warning: implicit function declaration: tgoto
-+
-+in ckuusx.c on Solaris 9. <curses.h> is still in /usr/include, dated 2002.
-+A quick search shows the missing functions are hiding in <term.h>, which
-+until now was included only in Linux. Added a USE_TERM_H clause. No, that
-+doesn't help, the prototypes are not selected at compile time; there are
-+#ifdefs in that file that skip over these prototypes. I had to put them in
-+the code under #ifdef BUG999..#endif (I could have used a longer name like
-+#ifdef ADD_PROTOTYPES_FOR_CURSES_FUNCTIONS, but that would not be portable).
-+ckuusx.c, 12 Aug 2007.
-+
-+Also:
-+
-+ "ckuusx.c", line 9232: warning: implicit function declaration: creat
-+
-+This is called in the IKSD dababase code, used for getting a lockfile.
-+creat() is a Unixism in code that is supposed to be portable. But IKSD only
-+runs on Unix and Windows, so I assume the Windows C library has a creat()
-+function. Anyway, suddenly the Solaris header files seem to have blocked
-+whatever path previously existed to the creat() prototype (which is in
-+<fcntl.h>), so I added an #include in the appropriate spot. ckuusx.c,
-+12 Aug 2007.
-+
-+Kermit functions for converting the number base -- \fradix(), \fhexify(),
-+\unfhexify() -- did not work with big numbers; ckradix() was missed in the
-+CK_OFF_T conversion. Fixed in ckclib.c, 12 Aug 2007.
-+
-+Updated the help text for ASCII, BINARY, and SET FTP TYPE to clarify the
-+semantics. ckuus2.c, ckcftp.c, 12 Aug 2007.
-+
-+Error messages were printed upon failure to open any of the four log file,
-+even with SET QUIET ON. Fixed in ckuus4.c, 12 Aug 2007.
-+
-+Built OK on NetBSD 1.3_RC3. Tried to build secure version but the libraries
-+had disappeared. 13 Aug 2007.
-+
-+Built OK on Mac OS X 10.4.9. Tried the secure version, macosx10.4+krb5+ssl.
-+Here we get the usual pile of "pointer targets in passing argument 1 of
-+(function name) differ in signedness", regarding security functions, but it
-+built OK. 13 Aug 2007.
-+
-+Reconciling the two ttinl's... On encrypted connections myread() returns
-+encrypted bytes; ttinl() has to decrypt them; it wasn't doing this in the
-+lookahead section so I fixed it. The new code works on both encrypted and
-+clear-text connections. I removed the chaining to oldttinl(), and
-+oldttinl() itself. ckutio.c, 13 Aug 2007.
-+
-+ (Wouldn't it make more sense and be more efficient and less confusing
-+ for myfillbuf() to do the decrypting?)
-+
-+When C-Kermit uses Zmodem as an external protocol, it doesn't seem to scan
-+files before sending them to set text or binary mode appropriately. It's
-+that external protocols bypass Kermit's whole "get next file" mechanism; the
-+(possibly wild) filespec is simply passed to the external protocol program.
-+Changing this would be a very big deal. But if only one file is being sent
-+(the filespec is not wild) it's easy enough to check. I added this to the
-+external protocols section of the protocol module. It can be overridden in
-+any of the regular ways (/TEXT or /BINARY switch on SEND command, SET
-+PATTERNS OFF, SET TRANSFER MODE MANUAL, etc). ckcpro.w, 13 Aug 2007.
-+
-+[FTP SEND /RECURSIVE]
-+Peter Crowley reported a problem with FTP recursive uploads getting the
-+directory tree wrong when the previous pathname was a left substring of the
-+new pathname (e.g. foo/bar/ and foo/bar2/). The logic did not handle this
-+case and created the bar2 directory as a subdirectory of bar, rather than as
-+a parallel directory. Fixed in syncdir() and tested with various edge cases.
-+ckcftp.c 14 Aug 2007.
-+
-+ notify <peter.crowley@alumni.utexas.net>
-+
-+Added CD messages to FTP BRIEF display to track the ups and downs of
-+recursive uploads. ckcftp.c, 14 Aug 2007.
-+
-+The OUTPUT command gave a misleading error message ("Connection to xxx not
-+open") when used on a serial port that was, indeed, open but was not
-+presenting the Carrier signal, when CARRIER-WATCH was not OFF. Added a new
-+message for this, and some others. ckuus5.c, 14 Aug 2007.
-+
-+Sending from the command line, e.g. kermit -s foo, did not give an
-+informative error message if the file could not be found or opened. Fixed
-+in ckuusy.c, 14 Aug 2007.
-+
-+OK, back to ttptycmd.... It seems that back on March 27th, I got everything
-+working but I thought that there was still something wrong with it because
-+an unrelated problem so I put it aside. The version of ttpty.c from that
-+date worked OK, and it looks like I updated ckutio.c from it, but that
-+version of ckutio.c was put aside. Since then I have been working on the
-+ckutio.c version that was NOT put aside and so now I have to reconcile the
-+two:
-+
-+ ~/80/ttypty/20070327/ckutio.c
-+ ~/80/ckutio.c
-+
-+As a first cut I did this simply by replacing the contents of the #ifdef
-+CK_REDIR section of the latter with that of the former. Of course in
-+Solaris this comes up with openty() implicitly declared at compile time and
-+unresolved at link time. So the first task is to get HAVE_OPENPTY defined
-+for platforms that have it and have the others use the ttruncmd(). For
-+starters I put an #ifdef block in ckcdeb.h that defines HAVE_OPENPTY for
-+Linux, FreeBSD, NetBSD, OpenBSD, and Mac OS X. Ones that don't have
-+openpty() include AIX, HP-UX, and Solaris. Others like SCO I don't know but
-+I doubt it. The real solution is to get the ckupty.c module to work but one
-+thing at a time... This version is supposed work with secure builds on the
-+openpty() platforms, and on the others like Solaris, if an external protocol
-+is attempted on a secure (encrypted) connection, an error message is
-+printed and the command fails. ckutio.c, 14 Aug 2007.
-+
-+How to test? Apparently I did all my testing on Panix before, and that's
-+where all my Zmodem builds are, but now when I build a Kerberized version
-+(which works if I do it on the right pool host), it won't make a local
-+connection, and there is no other place I can connect to that has a
-+Kerberized Telnet server. I can, however, connect to Panix from here, using
-+the same code, but on Mac OS X...
-+
-+Slight detour: Got access to AIX again (5.3.0.0). Picky compiler, some
-+things needed fixing.... Also it says "1506-507 (W) No licenses available.
-+Contact your program supplier to add additional users. Compilation will
-+proceed shortly" and of course it goes kind of slow. For some reason, I
-+can't do streaming transfers into AIX over a local network (to its SSH
-+server), but windowed transfers are OK. Anyway, noting that we've been
-+using the same basic makefile target since AIX 4.2, changing nothing but the
-+version herald, I made a new target, simply "aix", that picks up the AIX
-+version automatically and sets the herald from it. Ditto for aix+openssl,
-+but on this host requires setting SSLINC and SSLLIB to /opt/ssl/include and
-+/opt/ssl/lib. Also the make program here was extremely sensitive to spacing
-+so I had to make some minor edits to get the link step to work for the SSL
-+version. ckuusy.c, makefile, 14-15 Aug 2007.
-+
-+Got rid of the special Panix secure NetBSD target, replaced it with a
-+regular one, which is invoked in the normal way by defining K5INC and K5LIB
-+to point to to where the stuff is hidden. Cleaned up and modernized the
-+comments in the makefile a bit. makefile 15 Aug 2007.
-+
-+Changed some data types and added some casts to ckctel.c to do away with
-+tons of "pointer targets in passing argument 1 of 'xxx' differ in signedness"
-+warnings. 15 Aug 2007.
-+
-+Set up Mac OS X as the testbed for ttptycmd(), with Panix as the remote
-+partner over a Kerberos 5 connection. The first test is to send a 300K
-+text file with gkermit as the external protocol. It worked fine, and the
-+debug log showed all the right components were active (namely encryption and
-+ttptycmd) [kermit/zmodem send/receive text/binary]:
-+
-+ Kermit Zmodem
-+ kst OK zst OK
-+ ksb OK zsb OK
-+ krt OK zrt OK
-+ krb OK zrb Failed "rz: Persistent CRC or other ERROR"
-+
-+We've seen this before. The problem is 0xff, Telnet IAC, as I proved to
-+myself by constructing a 3MB file that contained every byte but 0xff in every
-+mixture and order and transferring it successfully over the same connection.
-+Presumably the Telnet server is doubling IACs, whereas of course rz is not
-+undoubling, thus the CRC error. This is progress. 15 Aug 2007.
-+
-+Log shows that indeed every IAC in the source file arrives doubled. Adding
-+code to remove the first IAC of every adjacent pair, a small test file with
-+different-length runs of IACs transfers OK. The 3MB all.bin file does not.
-+
-+Starting over... I can receive a big text file with Zmodem OK. The 3.2MB
-+binary test pattern that contains no IACs failed after 1.8MB, but the part
-+that it transferred was OK. A second try, almost the whole thing arrived,
-+it stopped just 584 bytes short of the end. Could be that file size is a
-+separate problem. Making a new copy exactly 1MB long... Well, that's
-+interesting, this one too stopped just short of the end. And again, the
-+same thing. When connecting back to the host, the last Zmodem packet can
-+be seen on the screen; it's as if the local Zmodem exited before reading
-+the last packet... But OK, if I change the options on the remote sz
-+sender to use small blocks, etc, then it works.
-+
-+Now, changing from the 1MB no-IAC-binary test pattern, to the 1MB all-values
-+test pattern, we fail after 81K. But the part that was transferred is
-+correct. Second try, same thing, but 57K. Third: 40K. Each time, upon
-+connecting back, the session is completely dead.
-+
-+IF I HAVE TO undouble IACs for incoming files, don't I have to double them
-+going out? To send a block to net we just call ttol(), but ttol() doesn't
-+do any doubling (because Kermit protocol always quotes 0xff). To see what
-+happens, I changed the ttol() call to ttoc() in a loop that doubles IACs. I
-+tested this by sending the full 3.2MB test pattern, which worked fine.
-+
-+For receiving, it's slow but it works OK with files that don't contain IACs
-+(my concern was that IACs might appear in outbound files or in Zmodem
-+protocol messages). It receives the 1MB no-IAC test pattern, so there are
-+no problems with protocol or timing. But the full test pattern always gets
-+cut off, but at different points, as before, with the remote session dead.
-+Changing the Zmodem receiver from rz to lrz on the local end (since the
-+sender on the remote end is lsz) does not change the behavior.
-+
-+Anyway, I went back and replaced the byte loop with something more
-+efficient, and it goes about 20 times faster. But this doesn't help either,
-+it only makes it fail faster. But aha, what if a doubled IAC is broken
-+across successive pty reads -- we have to make the "previous character"
-+memory persistent. Well, that was a good insight, but it still didn't fix
-+it. The log shows the IAC handling code is working fine.
-+
-+What does sz say? Capturing its stderr to a file... "Retry 1: Got ZCAN".
-+Next time: "Retry 1: Got TIMEOUT". Next time: Got ZCAN.
-+
-+Trying different Zmodem options... apparently I don't need to use short
-+blocks. But I do need to use -e, probably because of Telnet NVT treatment
-+of carriage return; without -e, there is a "persistent CRC error". -O
-+disables timeouts, but this makes no difference.
-+
-+OK, we still have two Big Problems:
-+
-+ 1. When a long file has no IACs, the final < 1K of the file is not received.
-+ 2. When a long file has IACs, the transfer generally stops very early.
-+
-+Problem 1: the transfer consistently fails less than 1K from the end of the
-+file. Upon CONNECT back to the host, a big Zmodem packet is sitting there
-+waiting to be read, which means ttptycmd()'s copy of rz is terminating
-+early. Can we catch it in the debug log? Doing this takes forever and
-+writes a GB to the disk... And then the problem doesn't happen. Also, I
-+can receive a HUGE text file almost instantly with no errors at all.
-+
-+Switching to lrz on the receiving end, now I see the error messages, about
-+300 lines like this:
-+
-+ Retry 0: Garbage count exceeded
-+ Bytes received: 872352/1000000 BPS:85464 ETA 00:01 Retry 0: Bad CRC
-+ Bytes received: 892448/1000000 BPS:86690 ETA 00:01 Retry 0: Bad CRC
-+ Retry 0: Garbage count exceeded
-+ Retry 0: Garbage count exceeded
-+ Retry 0: Garbage count exceeded
-+ Retry 0: Garbage count exceeded
-+ Retry 0: Garbage count exceeded
-+ Retry 0: Garbage count exceeded
-+ Retry 0: Got ERROR
-+ Bytes received: 898336/1000000 BPS:84293 ETA 00:01 Retry 0: Bad CRC
-+ Retry 0: Garbage count exceeded
-+ Retry 0: Garbage count exceeded
-+ Bytes received: 900384/1000000 BPS:83751 ETA 00:01 Bad escape sequence
-+ 2fRe
-+ try 0: Bad data subpacket
-+ Bytes received: 941472/1000000 BPS:86191 ETA 00:00 Retry 0: Bad CRC
-+ Retry 0: Garbage count exceeded
-+
-+Even when it succeeds, it gets these. But if I receive a text file, no
-+matter how big, no errors or retries or timeouts at all. So it appears that
-+there is only one problem: a big-time lack of transparency regarding 8-bit
-+and/or control characters. The odd thing is, it's not that the characters
-+can't get through -- they all can -- but they seem to cause transitory
-+blockages. 16 Aug 2007.
-+
-+Cleaned up the remaining pointer signedness warnings in ckutio.c, but this
-+was a mistake, it broke Kerberos connections completely. Undid the changes.
-+ckutio.c, 17 Aug 2007.
-+
-+Changed all return() in the fork()==0 section of ttptycmd() to exit().
-+ckutio.c, 17 Aug 2007.
-+
-+Tried explicitly setting the slave pty to rawmode. Makes no difference.
-+Tried using the Mac OS X (curses) raw() function, and also system("stty
-+raw"); still no difference. Tried doing all of these in different
-+combinations and orders. I found one combination that cuts the errors about
-+in half, and the transfer of the no-IAC test pattern almost always succeeds
-+(but it's slow). Anyway, it doesn't help much with the test pattern that
-+contains IACs. Well, the code is more solid than it was before but
-+functionally we have not advanced much if we can't download a binary file
-+with Zmodem! On the other hand, we can upload them, and we can transfer
-+text files in both directions, which is an improvement over the previous
-+situation, in which the entire session would hang due to loss of
-+synchronization of the encryption stream.
-+
-+Tried adding -funsigned-char to CFLAGS of Mac OS X target. It does not
-+make the "signedness" warnings go away and it doesn't change the runtime
-+symptoms.
-+
-+I tried a simpler version of pty_make_raw(), the one from Serg Iakovlev, but
-+it was a total failure. That's encouraging though, because it indicates
-+that pty_make_raw() is the right place to be working.
-+
-+Then I made pty_make_raw() set or unset every single terminal flag
-+explicitly. This made no difference, but didn't hurt anything either.
-+
-+Then I made pty_make_raw() explicitly set all the c_cc[] characters to 0
-+(but left c_cc[VMIN] as 1). This made no difference either.
-+
-+I checked pty_make_raw() against ttpkt() and the only difference I found in
-+the terminal flags is that ttpkt() sets IGNPAR thinking it means "ignore
-+parity errors" when really it means "discard any character that has a parity
-+error" (at least according to Iakovlev) -- exactly the opposite. But I
-+tried it both ways, no difference. 17 Aug 2007.
-+
-+I noticed that even Zmodem text receives can fail. They don't get any
-+errors, they just get cut off shortly before the end. (But usually they
-+succeed, and fast too, like 500K cps).
-+
-+What if I don't call pty_make_raw() at all on the slave pty?
-+
-+zrt: EESSSSSSSS: 80% good (E = stopped just before end but no other errors)
-+
-+zrb no-IAC test pattern, short blocks:
-+ 1. S/5 (success with 5 screens of errors.
-+ 2. S/7
-+ 3. S/7
-+ 4. S/6
-+ 5. E/7 (failed just before end)
-+ 6. S/7
-+ 7. S/6
-+ 8. S/6
-+ 9. S/6
-+10. S/4
-+
-+So, lots of errors, but it recovered 90% of the time.
-+Next, same thing, but without requesting short blocks:
-+
-+ 1. E/5
-+ 2. S/5
-+ 3. E/4
-+ 4. S/5
-+ 5. S/5
-+ 6. S/5
-+ 7. X/0 (hard failure right away: "Got ZCAN"
-+ 8. S/5
-+ 9. S/5
-+10. S/5
-+
-+So it doesn't look like short blocks make that much difference. Now what if
-+I turn off prefixing? Bad CRC, fails immediately every time. Putting back
-+pty_make_raw(slave), it still fails hard.
-+
-+Tried a new strategy with pty_make_raw(): rather than modify existing flags,
-+I set all flags to 0, and then turn on only those few that we need like CS8.
-+Now we get only 2.5 screens of errors instead 4-7 and the transfer rate is
-+higher for binary files (all of the previous ones were under 100K CPS, while
-+for text files it was 400-500K CPS):
-+
-+ 1. S/2 195669 CPS
-+ 2. S/2 194720
-+ 3. E/3
-+ 4. S/2 192550
-+ 5. S/3 192325
-+ 6. S/3 145066
-+ 7. S/2 200689
-+ 8. S/3 188948
-+ 9. S/2 209461
-+10. S/3 181991
-+
-+I noticed that there was no TIOCSTTY ioctl in the pty/fork setup sequence,
-+which is recommended somewhere, so I tried that and it was a disaster; the
-+entire session hung. I took it back out. 18 Aug 2007.
-+
-+Tried some transfers over a clear-text (not encrypted) connection with the
-+same results: smooth, fast transfer of a big text file (400K cps); rocky but
-+successful transfer of the no-IAC binary pattern file (135K cps). Switching
-+back to ttruncmd(), the same binary file is received at 1.5M cps, and the
-+no-IAC binary file totally fails after too many "Bad CRC"s; and we already
-+know that any file that contains IACs will fail. One might say that
-+ttptycmd() is better in every respect than ttruncmd() except in speed
-+(when it works).
-+
-+Let's see if ttyptycmd still works in remote mode (to local K95):
-+ . sz / text works, but slowly.
-+ . lsz / text works but some wierd errors are reported.
-+ . lsz / binary / no IAC doesn't work at all (CRC-32 mismatch for a header;
-+ Unexpected control character ignored: 13, etc).
-+ . sz / binary / no IAC works OK but slow.
-+ . sz / binary / full test pattern with IAC works OK but slow.
-+ . Sending text into rz fails completely.
-+
-+What about ttruncmd() in remote mode?
-+ . send /text works, fast.
-+ . send /binary works, fast.
-+ . receive /text works, not so fast but not bad.
-+ . receive /binary works, not so fast but not bad.
-+
-+So we use ttruncmd() for remote mode, and we use it for local mode
-+serial-port and modem connections, and we use ttptycmd() on network
-+connections because (a) they might be encrypted, and (b) even if they are
-+not, they use some protocol that we have to handle, e.g. Telnet, Rlogin.
-+19 Aug 2007.
-+
-+Discovered that Sending binary files no longer works. Text is OK, binary
-+transfers don't even start. This happens on both encrypted and clear-text
-+connections. ttptycmd() is being used in both cases. But oddly enough,
-+receiving binary still works as before. What did I break, and when?
-+Oh, it was just the script, when I changed it from using sz to lsz. Putting
-+it back to sz makes it work, even with the full 3.2MB binary pattern with
-+IACs.
-+
-+I backed off the changes I made to ckctel.c to suppress some warnings, in
-+view of the fact that similar changes to ckutio.c broke things so badly.
-+19 Aug 2007.
-+
-+If sz is not given the -e flag, it sends control characters bare, except ^P,
-+^Q, ^S, and ^X. ^X is the control prefix, so ^A is sent ^X followed by A.
-+With -e, all C0 control chars are prefixed, but with ^X, which is, of
-+course, a control character. Interestingly, the C1 analogs of ^P, ^Q, ^S
-+(but not ^X and, unfortunately, not IAC) are also prefixed. -e makes no
-+difference for 8-bit characters.
-+
-+If we have a Telnet connection and the server is in ASCII (NVT) mode, CR is
-+always followed by LF or NUL. Well, it seems the server is putting us
-+(Kermit) in binary mode in this case, but staying in ASCII mode itself.
-+Added code to handle NVT byte stuffing and unstuffing in each direction
-+independently, according to the TRANSMIT_BINARY state in that direction. I
-+made a file containing just the bytes 0-31 and 127 and 128-159 and 255 (66
-+bytes all together) and sending it from the host to C-Kermit, the local log
-+shows that every control character was received correctly and all TELNET
-+conversions were done right -- NUL removed after CR (and only after CR); IAC
-+removed after IAC (and only after an IAC meant as a quote). For the first
-+time, I can receive the 1MB all-values test pattern, but there are still
-+tons of (correctable) CRC errors, so the transfer rate is really awful, like
-+about 5% of what we get with a text file (25Kcps instead of 500).
-+
-+Further experimentation shows that the fundamental transparency problem is
-+fixed; we can receive short files (say, 1K or less) containing absolutely
-+any byte values in any combination with no errors at all. But once the file
-+size reaches (say) 10K, we get CRC errors, like one every 2 or 3K of data.
-+These are not deterministic. In successive transfers of the same file, they
-+come in different spots. It's tempting to blame pty buffer overruns, but
-+then text files would show the same behavior. When a binary file size
-+exceeds, say, 1MB, the chances of successful completion go way down,
-+independent of whether my external protocol is rz or lrz. I like lrz better
-+because the error reports come out on the screen as the transfer is going
-+on. Trying to download a real-world binary file -- a 2.2MB C-Kermit
-+executable -- I get 4500 error messages but the transfer evenually succeeds,
-+with an effective throughput of 21Kcps.
-+
-+Actually it turns out that "sz -a somebigtextfile" (2.2MB) also gets a lot
-+of CRC errors. The -e flag (escape all control characters) makes the same
-+big text file transfer with few or no errors. It's not sure-fire.
-+Sometimes no errors, sometimes one or two, and sometimes a fatal error that
-+kills the transfer.
-+
-+With binary files... a 32K binary file seems to make it every time. 40K
-+fails about 50% of the time. 48K fails 60% and every time it fails, it has
-+created a partial file of exactly 32K (32768 bytes). 96K fails 9 out of 10
-+times, when it fails, the partial file is always 0 bytes, or 32768, or
-+65536, but that just means that rz's file output buffer is 32K.
-+
-+Why, then, do binary files cause trouble if it is not a solid transparency
-+problem? If a certain file can get through once, why can't it get through
-+every time? When a character arrives at the pty, the pty driver probably
-+takes a different path through its code, checking the terminal flags that
-+would affect that character. I tried making Kermit's network read buffers
-+very small but, surprisingly, this made things worse. I also tried making
-+them very much bigger, which didn't help either. 24K still seems to be the
-+right size.
-+
-+So, is it that some characters take longer to process than others? So long
-+that data is lost due to lack of flow control between TCP and the pty? One
-+way to test this theory is to slow Zmodem down. I tried "-l 32" which,
-+according to the man page, tells sz to "wait for the receiver to acknowledge
-+correct data every N (32 <= N <= 1024) characters. This may be used to
-+avoid network over-run when XOFF flow control is lacking." Makes no
-+difference. I also tried the -w (Window) switch, ditto. In fact there are
-+all sorts of options to set the "window size", "packet length", "block
-+size", and "frame length", but with no explanation of what these mean or how
-+they are related. If I crank everything down to minimum value:
-+
-+ lsz q -L 32 -l 32 -w 1
-+
-+I get 50% success with the 96K file instead of 10%. Adding -e, oddly
-+enough, made it worse. I also tried setting the environment variable
-+ZNULLS to different numbers like 512, no help there either.
-+
-+I tried making the read-from-net-write-to-pty buffer small (1K) but leaving
-+the pty-to-net one big. This improves chances of success, but it's
-+intolerably slow (3Kcps when the connection is capable of 500K).
-+
-+I also changed the write-to-pty operation from a single write() call of
-+possibly many K characters to a byte loop, one write() per byte. Same
-+result: success (but still about 300 recoverable errors), throughput 3Kcps.
-+20 Aug 2007.
-+
-+With ttptycmd() configured to write to the pty in a byte loop, it is
-+possible to delay each write. Adding a 10msec delay per character results
-+in a transfer that runs at about 20 cps and (for the 96K test file) would
-+take about 80 minutes to complete. And yet it still gets just as many
-+errors. So it's not a matter of timing either. The errors come, on
-+average, every file 388 bytes, but not at regular intervals.
-+
-+I tried the TIOCREMOTE ioctl on the pty master, as discussed somewhat
-+obliquely in the Mac OS X "man pty" page; "This mode causes input to the
-+pseudo terminal to be flow controlled and not input edited (regardless of
-+the terminal mode)" -- sounds like just the ticket but it made no
-+difference. Actually, looking at a man page on another OS (Solaris), it
-+says this is only for lines of text, EOLs are supplied, so that would mess
-+up the protocol. So remember: don't use this.
-+
-+Tried without O_NDELAY; the behavior was the same but the speed was much
-+slower.
-+
-+Tried switching back to the ckupty.c routines on Mac OS X and found that it
-+works now the same as with openpty(), except that I seem to get more getty
-+babble at the end. But this means I can run some tests on Solaris. I moved
-+the entire test environment from Mac OS X 10.4.9 to Solaris 9. But it
-+doesn't work at all.
-+
-+Trying to figure out the ckupty.c modules again.
-+ . do_pty() calls pty_getpty() which returns in arg1 the fd of the pty master.
-+ . Then it creates a pipe as a way to tell when the child dies
-+ . Then it creates a fork:
-+ - The parent does a blocking read from the pipe
-+ - The child calls getptyslave() to get the pty slave
-+ and writes one byte to the pipe
-+ and then execs the command it's supposed to run
-+Note that the file descriptor of the slave is known only to the lower fork.
-+Therefore the lower fork is the one that has to set all the tty modes, etc.
-+I took care of all that but the ckupty.c method doesn't work at all on
-+Solaris. But it works "fine" on Mac OS X (the 32K all-bytes test file
-+transfers instantly with no errors, but the 96K one errors out).
-+
-+The problem on Solaris is that pty_make_raw() fails on the masterfd (but not
-+on the slavefd) with errno 25 "ioctl inappropriate for device". It doesn't
-+matter whether I do it in ckupty.c or ckutio.c. I found a web page on
-+kde.org that says Solaris does not allow tcget/setattr() on a pty master.
-+But the Sun "knowledge base" is not open to the public. Well, presumably
-+changes made to the slave are reflected in the master (comments in Solaris
-+telnetd seem to confirm this...) Let's come back to Solaris later.
-+
-+Moving to a Linux with lrzsz installed... Built a Kerberos 5 version with
-+USE_CKUPTY_C. Like on Mac OS X, it transfers short files OK and chokes on
-+longer ones. Switched to openpty(), it behaves the same. So the problems
-+on Mac OS X are evidently not OS-specific, which is good I guess, since that
-+means finding the way around them will apply to more than one platform.
-+21 Aug 2007.
-+
-+Look into TIOCSCTTY again. On System V based OS's, opening a pty acquires a
-+controlling terminal automatically. On BSD-based OS's, no; you have to use
-+the TIOCSCTTY on the slave file descriptor to give it one. I'm not sure why
-+a controlling terminal would be needed, except that without one, the virtual
-+device "/dev/tty" does not exist for the process that runs on the pty, and
-+maybe the application that runs there (e.g. rzsz) checks for it. On the
-+downside, having a controlling terminal opens the process up to terminal
-+interrupts like SIGINT and SIGQUIT. Until now I have not been using this
-+ioctl(). Results (in Linux):
-+
-+ With TIOCSCTTY: 96K all-bytes test: 11 screens of errors, then success
-+ Without TIOCSCTTY: exactly the same.
-+
-+Tried the same thing with TIOCNOTTY instead of TIOCSCTTY, with exactly the
-+same results (no effect whatsoever).
-+
-+There has to be a way to make this work, because Zmodem works through
-+telnetd, which basically the same thing as ttptycmd(): a relay between the
-+network and a pty. ttptycmd() is like telnetd backwards. Modern telnetds
-+are not much help; they don't access ptys or the network directly, they go
-+through "mux" devices so I can't see what they're doing to get transparency
-+and flow control. An old BSD telnetd uses packet mode but that would be a
-+big deal...
-+
-+I tried ignoring various signals like SIGTTOU and SITSTP, since some Telnet
-+clients do this. No effect, no difference. Anyway, in Linux the transfers
-+almost always finish OK despite the many errors. There is just some trick
-+I'm missing to make the pty accept a stream of arbitrary bytes without
-+hiccuping.
-+
-+What about Solaris, which uses ckupty.c? In streams-based OS's, where line
-+disciplines and whatnot are pushed on top of the pty, it looks like the pty
-+module saves the file descriptor of the "bare" slave pty (as 'spty') before
-+pushing things onto it, and then later uses spty rather than the regular
-+slave pty file descriptor when getting/setting terminal modes. I'm not sure
-+what this is all about but it's definitely SysVish... It happens if
-+STREAMSPTY is defined, but I noticed that STREAMSPTY is never defined
-+anywhere. I tried defining it so we take an entirely different path through
-+the code. It made absolutely no difference.
-+
-+Then I noticed that HAVE_STREAMS is not defined for Solaris either. Tried
-+defining it, but the session didn't work at all, no i/o. Removing the
-+HAVE_STREAMS definition but keeping the STREAMSPTY defined, I rebuilt and
-+tried "set host /connect /pty emacs". I got an EMACS screen but could not
-+type anything into it, which means that STREAMSPTY should not be defined
-+either. Removed the definition and "set host /pty" works again. So what's
-+the problem with ttptycmd()?
-+
-+In fact, ttptycmd() works on Solaris with Kermit as the external protocol,
-+but not with Zmodem, not even with text files. So again, there is no
-+fundamental problem with the code or the logic, it's Just A Matter Of
-+Transparency to control and/or 8-bit characters -- some trick I don't know
-+about.
-+
-+Looking at the Solaris debug log... I see that ckupty.c is calling
-+init_termbuf() to set the tty modes of the master, not the slave, and
-+set_termbuf() to set them, but you can't do that in Solaris, error 25. This
-+is in getptyslave(). Shouldn't getptyslave() be setting the tty modes of
-+the slave, not the master? I changed it to do this, but like all other
-+changes, it made no difference. I checked to make sure that after the change,
-+"set host /pty /connect emacs" still worked and it did.
-+
-+And then what... I had some code to redirect stderr in ckupty.c that was
-+not being executing due to a typo. When I fixed the typo, poof, Zmodem
-+binary transfers started working, or working as well as they work in Linux
-+and Mac OS X. It turns out that if I don't redirect stderr, sz and rz
-+just don't work. But lsz and lrz do. But if I do redirect it, I don't see
-+the progress messages from lsz/lrz. 22 Aug 2007.
-+
-+Built on HP-UX 11i v3 (B.11.31 U ia64) with optimizing compiler, got tons of
-+picky warnings, but it finished and linked and runs OK. Many of the
-+warnings were like this:
-+
-+ "ckucns.c", line 1606: warning #2068-D: integer conversion resulted in a
-+ change of sign: tnopt[0] = (CHAR) IAC;
-+
-+IAC is defined as 255 in ckctel.h. If I define it as 0xff, I don't get the
-+warnings. I changed the definitions of all the Telnet commands to be in hex
-+notation rather than decimal. If cuts way down on the HP-UX warnings and
-+doesn't seem to cause problems elsewhere. ckctel.h, 23 Aug 2007.
-+
-+Now it looks like Solaris is working but then it hangs at the end. It
-+appears as if the ckupty.c module is blocking SIGCHLD. Debug log shows that
-+when the transfer is complete, we received IAC DM (Telnet Data Mark) after
-+sz's last gasp and before the shell prompt is printed. But calling
-+tn_doop() in this case is a mistake because we are reading the number of
-+bytes that we know are available in a counted loop, but tn_doop() would
-+consume an unknown number of bytes and we would never know when to exit the
-+loop. Anyway, C-Kermit doesn't do anything with DM. Skipping over
-+tn_doop() (and not writing out the Telnet command bytes) fixes the hanging
-+condition at the end, even though SIGCHLD is never raised. ckutio.c,
-+23 Aug 2007.
-+
-+Some tests, Solaris to NetBSD over K5.
-+zst sends ascii.txt, a 2.36MB ascii text file (Kcps / Errors).
-+zrt receives the same file:
-+
-+ zst 587/0 526/0 542/0 434/0 423/0
-+ zrt 827/0 800/0 847/0 FAIL 610/0
-+
-+So text is good. Binary not so good. Here we transfer the 1MB all-bytes
-+pattern file. zrb receives it successfully, but with 1248 errors, at only
-+15Kcps. Sending the same file out always fails:
-+
-+ Begin 20070823 16:32:07: SEND BINARY all2.bin [sz]
-+ Sending: all2.bin
-+ Bytes Sent: 5600/1000000 BPS:12446 ETA 01:19 FAILURE
-+ End 20070823 16:32:13
-+ Elapsed time: 6.617992999999842
-+ cps = 151103.2121067556
-+ lsz: caught signal 1; exiting
-+
-+Decided to move to Linux but found that something is screwed up in Linux
-+C-Kermit with tilde expansion:
-+
-+ send ~/testfiles/all.bin
-+
-+doesn't expand at all (but it did yesterday!). The problem was in the
-+ancient, ancient realuid/setuid handling code; real_uid() no longer works in
-+Linux. I worked around this in whoami() by setting ruid to getuid() if
-+real_uid() returned a negative number. Maybe dangerous, worry about it
-+later. ckufio.c, 23 Aug 2007.
-+
-+ANYWAY... after fixing that, I tested zsb on Linux, and it's broken there
-+too, using openpty(), so it's nothing to do with ckupty.c. After sending
-+the first Zmodem data packet, it just hangs, nothing comes back. In text
-+mode it gets farther, but then the same thing happens. Captured stderr from
-+rz on the far end:
-+
-+ Bytes received: 608/1000000 BPS:21137 ETA 00:47 Retry 0: Bad CRC
-+ Bytes received: 864/1000000 BPS:23540 ETA 00:42 Retry 0: Bad CRC
-+ Bytes received: 1120/1000000 BPS:25003 ETA 00:39 Retry 0: Bad CRC
-+ Bytes received: 5696/1000000 BPS:56988 ETA 00:17 Retry 0: Bad CRC
-+ Bytes received: 9120/1000000 BPS:62227 ETA 00:15 Retry 0: Bad CRC
-+ Bytes received: 9376/1000000 BPS:60766 ETA 00:16 Retry 0: Bad CRC
-+ Bytes received: 9632/1000000 BPS:60361 ETA 00:16 Retry 0: Got TIMEOUT
-+ Retry 0: Sender Canceled
-+ Retry 0: Got ZCAN
-+
-+The local sz, however, doesn't give any error message. ZCAN means: "other
-+end canceled session by sending 5 ^X's" (or user typed them). What actually
-+happens is that ttptycmd()'s select() times out waiting for something from
-+the Zmodem partner and ttptycmd() itself kills the sz fork with SIGHUP.
-+When lsz receives SIGHUP it sends the ZCAN. So the real problem is that
-+after some point we're not receiving anything.
-+
-+I changed the timeout from 4 seconds to 30 seconds and now I see it just
-+stops for long periods of time and then resumes. The lrz log on the
-+receiving end shows tons of timouts, CRC errors, and other errors. The
-+local log shows that lsz wound up sending ZCAN (2 x (10 x ^H, 10 x ^X)).
-+
-+Moving on to another problem... Turns out Ctrl-C (SIGINT) is working right
-+after all. Since I'm using my test scripts like kerbang scripts, Ctrl-C
-+exits through trap(), as it should, closing the connection and cleaning up.
-+If I start Kermit and tell it to TAKE the script, then Ctrl-C brings me back
-+to the prompt with the connection still open (as it should). However, until
-+now I haven't done anything about the fork or the ptys. Added code to
-+trap() to kill the fork and close the master pty. ckuusx.c, 24 Aug 2007.
-+
-+Added code to try to break the deadlock. If select() times out, but we have
-+stuff to write either to the pty or the net, try to do it anyway, even
-+though select() did not say we could. But this doesn't help because when
-+select() times out we don't have anything to write. The problem is that
-+after receiving that last packet from the remote rz, the local lsz doesn't
-+seem to do anything, as if the lower fork wasn't running (and to confirm
-+this hypothesis, sometimes I noticed that when I Ctrl-C'd out of this, the
-+transfer would take off again).
-+
-+Backing up and testing with gkermit rather than zmodem:
-+
-+ kst ripple.txt [824K] OK
-+ kst ascii.txt [1359K] OK
-+ krt ripple.txt -- FAILED
-+
-+It seems that we can't handle streaming. If I set up krt to disable
-+streaming on receipt, it works OK.
-+
-+ krt ripple.txt [824K] OK
-+ krb all2.bin [1000K] OK
-+
-+So here we have no trouble sending but big trouble receiving unless we
-+disable streaming. Whereas with Zmodem we have trouble receiving.
-+
-+But this wasn't happening before, what changed? Using C-Kermit on the far
-+end to receive the file with debug log on, I see that it is sending 4K data
-+packet after 4K data packet, with the local gkermit silent, as expected.
-+About midway through the transfer, the local Kermit sends an error packet
-+"Transmission error on reliable link". Looking at G-Kermit's debug log...
-+It receives the first five 4K data packets OK, but gets a CRC error on the
-+fifth one, and sends the Error packet. So it has received a stream of
-+20-some thousand bytes OK and then messes up. That number sounds a lot like
-+ttptycmd()'s buffer size. I changed the buffer sizes to be different:
-+
-+ Read from pty and write to net: 4K
-+ Read from net and write to pty: 1K
-+
-+This time it received the first 4K packet and failed on the second one.
-+Then I increased the buffers to 98K each, expecting to receive lots more
-+packets successfully but it bombed out on the 5th one. But that's good, it
-+confirms there's no logic error in the buffer management. Just to make
-+sure, though, let's set the buffer size smaller than the packet size and
-+disable streaming. In this case we get 4 good data packets and a CRC error
-+on the 5th one and so we request retransmission, and the next 8 times it
-+arrives it gets a different CRC error, but the 9th copy is OK. Then the
-+next packet comes and it gets a CRC error every time. And this is nothing
-+but plain ASCII text.
-+
-+Switching to remote mode:
-+
-+ REMOTE=1 kk kst
-+
-+(after tricking myself because it was using ttruncmd() for this...) I see
-+that nothing works at all. What did I break? 24 Aug 2007.
-+
-+Fixed ttptycmd() to restore console modes after a remote-mode transfer.
-+ckutio.c, 25 Aug 2007.
-+
-+Noticed that error codes like ESRCH are not available in all modules.
-+That's because of some complicated in #ifdefs in ckcdeb.h that wind up not
-+always #including <errno.h>. But I notice that ckutio.c includes it
-+unconditionally with no ill effects, and so does ckvfio.c. Does any version
-+of Unix at all not have <errno.h>? Added a catch-all clause to ckcdeb.h to
-+#include <errno.h> (in UNIX only) if, after the other clauses, ESRCH was
-+still not defined. ckcdeb.h, 25 Aug 2007.
-+
-+Now back to debugging ttptycmd()... Remote-mode transfers with ttptycmd()
-+were broken in two places, maybe as long as 2 weeks ago (this would have
-+affected non-network transfers too, which I can't test any more).
-+The logic was missing in a couple places for the non-network and/or
-+non-Telnet and/or non-encrypting connections (if statements with no else
-+parts). Fixed in ckutio.c, 25 Aug 2007.
-+
-+Testing remote mode:
-+
-+ kst OK zst OK
-+ ksb OK zsb OK
-+ krt OK zrt OK
-+ krb OK zrb OK
-+
-+Functionally it all works but there are hitches with Zmodem as always.
-+When sending to K95:
-+
-+ . If I send with lsz, there are hundreds of "Subpacket too long" errors,
-+ and the transfer is very slow, but it succeeds.
-+
-+ . If I send with the 1994 Omen version of sz, transmission is instantaneous
-+ and without errors, but then it hangs at the end.
-+
-+ . If I bypass C-Kermit and send direct from lsz or sz, both work fine.
-+
-+So clearly the ptys are getting in the way. The hanging at the end would be
-+caused by the sz process closing before its last output reached the master
-+pty. It would need to do some form of flushing and/or pausing at the end
-+but there's nothing I can do about that; these programs were not designed to
-+be used in this way. Anyway, it only seems to happen with files longer than
-+100K.
-+
-+For local mode, testing in Solaris over our Kerberos 5 connection again:
-+
-+ gkermit lrzsz
-+ kst OK zst FAIL
-+ ksb OK zsb FAIL
-+ krt OK zrt OK but with errors
-+ krb OK zrb FAIL
-+
-+If I use Omen rzsz as the external protocol (e.g. with zst), it blocks
-+redirection and it sends the file to my terminal, rather than over the
-+connection. This would probably be because it finds out the device name of
-+the job's controlling terminal and opens it, to prevent redirection. This
-+is hard to prevent in Solaris because there is no TIOCSTTY ioctl().
-+Supposedly the same thing is accomplished by closing and reopening the slave
-+pty after doing setsid(). I added code to do this, but it made no
-+difference. (If I use lsz instead of sz, it is indeed redirected, but jams
-+up after about 15K.) ckupty.c, 27 Aug 2007.
-+
-+On Mac OS X with sz 3.73 1-30-03, however, the redirection works, so I
-+assume it would also work in Linux, FreeBSD, NetBSD, etc, too. Doing the
-+full test suite on Mac OS X:
-+
-+ gkermit lrzsz rzsz
-+ kst OK zst FAIL (1) OK
-+ ksb OK zsb FAIL (2) OK
-+ krt OK zrt OK (3) OK for 100K file, fails for longer.
-+ krb OK zrb FAIL (4) OK (1MB all-bytes test pattern)
-+
-+(1) 64K file OK every time; 100K file fails every time.
-+(2) 10K file fails every time.
-+(3) Succeeds with 800K file but gets a few recoverable errors.
-+(4) Succeeds with 48K binary file with some errors, fails with longer ones.
-+
-+So actually it looks pretty good, it's just that lrzsz messes up. When
-+sending with lsz if I include -L 512 it sends the 100K test file with no
-+errors, but still chokes on longer ones.
-+
-+Testing on Mac OS X again, but this time over a clear-text Telnet connection:
-+
-+ gkermit lrzsz rzsz
-+ kst OK zst FAIL(1) OK
-+ ksb OK zsb FAIL(2) OK
-+ krt OK zrt OK(3) OK
-+ krb OK zrb FAIL(4) OK
-+
-+(1) Almost worked, finished 777K out of 824K without errors.
-+(2) Got tons of errors, failed in first 30K out of 1000K.
-+(3) OK for 100K file but fails for larger.
-+(4) OK for 48K binary fail but fails for larger.
-+
-+Maybe see if we can do without the OPENPTY part.
-+
-+TOMORROW -- just clean up the code, add some SET / SHOW / HELP commands,
-+document it, and move on.
-+
-+Note: In K95, SET WINDOW sets the Zmodem packet length, 32 - 1024, multiple
-+of 64.
-+
-+SEE ~/80/external.txt
-+
-+Changed ftp port from int to unsigned int. ckcftp.c, 30 Aug 2007.
-+
-+Tried again to build KRB4/KRB5/SSL/TLS version for Solaris 9. Had to update
-+the build procedure again, of course, because of new file and directory
-+names, but ran into problems anyway because the
-+cu-solaris9g+krb5+krb4+openssl+shadow+pam+zlib target was calling another
-+target that did not know about the hardwired pathnames. Integrated the two
-+targets and tried building again. It actually compiled ok (but with lots of
-+warnings from the security modules), but failed at link time with
-+krb5_init_ets not found; fixed that with an #ifdef NO_KRB5_INIT_ETS, now it
-+builds OK but without the ftp client. Tried building it WITH the FTP and
-+that was OK too, no changes needed except to the build procedure. 12 Feb
-+2008, that is: C-Kermit 8.0.212 : 20080212.
-+
-+Tried to build with -DCK_SRP and -lsrp but:
-+
-+ hash_supported ckcftp.o
-+ hash_getdescbyname ckcftp.o
-+ hash_getdescbyid ckcftp.o
-+ cipher_getdescbyname ckcftp.o
-+ krypto_delete ckcftp.o
-+ krypto_new ckcftp.o
-+ cipher_supported ckcftp.o
-+ krypto_msg_priv ckcftp.o
-+ krypto_msg_safe ckcftp.o
-+ hash_getlist ckcftp.o
-+ cipher_getlist ckcftp.o
-+ cipher_getdescbyid ckcftp.o
-+
-+Sent mail to Tom Wu and backed off for now. makefile, 14 Feb 2008.
-+(Tom Wu never answered; seems like SRP is defunct.)
-+
-+The ".blah = xxx" form of variable assignment only worked for variables
-+names of length 22 or less, noticed and fixed by Wolfram Sang. ckucmd.c,
-+5 Mar 2008.
-+
-+In "set host /pty ssh ..." connections, the INPUT command suddenly stopped
-+working. This is in Solaris 9. It happens with all 8.0.* versions of
-+C-Kermit, so it's nothing to do with ttptycmd(). Added some debug()
-+statements but they don't show anything. Turns out there wasn't a problem
-+after all. Wed Mar 26 16:04:53 2008
-+
-+Changed cmifi() to not print "?No files match" (or whatever) if SET QUIET ON.
-+ckucmd.c, 26 Mar 2008.
-+
-+Added \v(remoteip) for the IP address of the host we're connected to,
-+and \v(inmessage) for INPUT status messages corresponding to \v(instatus).
-+ckuusr.h, ckcmai.c, ckuus[24].c, 26 Mar 2008.
-+
-+Made \fkeywordval() strip braces/quotes from the right-hand side so we can
-+handle things like:
-+
-+ password="stringwithspaceatend "
-+
-+ckuus4.c, 6 Aug 2008.
-+
-+Added invisible PUTENV command for UNIX only. Value should not be enclosed
-+in doublequotes. Requires lge \v(buildid) 20080826. ckuusr.[ch], 26 Aug 2008.
-+
-+Added SET VARIABLE-EVALUATION { RECURSIVE, SIMPLE }. This is highly
-+experimental, but also highly desirable if it works out. SIMPLE inhibits
-+the default recursive method of evaluating \%x and \&x[] variables, which
-+is, quite frankly, nuts and makes programming in Kermit at best
-+counterintuitive. I made an exception in the case of array subscripts,
-+because changing how they are evaluated could break a lot of scripts, and
-+anyway there should never be any harm in evaluating them recursively because
-+their final value is always (or should be) numeric, not some string that
-+might contain backslashes. The SET VAR setting is on the stack, just like
-+SET QUIET (it follows the quiet/xquiet code in ckuus[356].c), so macros or
-+command files that change it can't break the script that invokes them.
-+Added \frecurse() to force recursive evaluation of a \%x or \&x[] variable
-+regardless of the VARIABLE-EVALUATION setting. Added \v(vareval) to allow
-+programmatic setting to current setting. Tested on Solaris 9 but should be
-+totally portable. ckuusr.[ch], ckuus[356].c, 11 Sep 2008.
-+
-+From Günter Knauf: 64-bit builds were failing on SuSE Linux because
-+libresolv and libcrypt were in lib64 rather than lib; updated the tests in
-+the linux makefile target to find them. makefile, 12 Jan 2009.
-+
-+Tried building on Red Hat Enterprise Linux Server release 5.3 64-bit.
-+There is no curses or ncurses. "make linuxnc" compiled OK but collapsed at
-+link time looking for crypt(), res_search(), and dn_expand(). Turned out
-+the linuxnc (and linuxc) targets needed the same treatment as the Linux one
-+for 64-bit Linuxes. makefile, 3 Mar 2009.
-+
-+Consolidated the linux targets so we no longer need three separate ones for
-+curses, ncurses, and no curses. "make linux" works ok on computers with and
-+without (n)curses. "make linux+ssl", ditto. "linux+krb5+ssl builds OK but
-+needs -DNO_KRB5_INIT_ETS". Makefile, 3 Mar 2009.
-+
-+Fixed copyright date announced in herald, ckuus5.c, 3 Mar 2009.
-+
-+Patch from Seth Therault to avoid deprecation warning for utmp references
-+in ckufio.c in Mac OS X 10.5 (later, this became a consolidated makefile
-+target that works automatically for at least Mac OS X 10.3.9 through
-+10.5.6). makefile, ckufio.c, 28 April 2009.
-+
-+zshcmd() (the function used by RUN and ! to run external commands) was not
-+falling back as expected in Linux RHEL4/5 if SHELL was not defined in the
-+environment. Also in all Unix versions, there was no indication if a RUN/!
-+command failed (other than the return code) because the specified shell
-+didn't exist or was not executable (e.g. the SHELL environment variable was
-+misdefined). Now it prints the name of the offending shell and the reason
-+it couldn't be executed (Not found, Permission denied, etc). ckufio.c,
-+28 April 2009.
-+
-+There is no easy way to get the last field of string; for example, the
-+extension from a filename, which might have any number of fields. In
-+general we want to be able to get "word number n" counting from the right;
-+\fword() lacks this ability. Now if you give it a negative word number,
-+that says to count from the right; for example \fword(one two three four
-+five, -2) returns "four". ckclib.c, ckuusr.c, 14 May 2009.
-+
-+Fixed a typo in the aix51+openssl (SSLLIBS should have been SSLLIB).
-+From Jason Lehr. makefile, 27 May 2009.
-+
-+Updated the linux+openssl+zlib+shadow+pam target to chain to the new main
-+Linux target. A bunch of other ones remain un-updated. makefile, 12 Jun 2009.
-+
-+Updates to the new Mac OS X 10.5 target from Seth Therault (which is
-+supposed to work on all Mac OS 10-point-anything) to avoid warnings
-+that came up on on Mac OS 10.4.11/Intel. Once this one is proven we should
-+be able to remove/consolidate lots of other ones. makefile, 12 Jun 2009.
-+
-+C-Kermit disables SSL with the message "?OpenSSL libraries do not match
-+required version." if the version of OpenSSL that Kermit was built with is
-+not exactly the same as the version that is loaded dynamically at runtime.
-+This is actually the proper behavior, since APIs are not guaranteed not to
-+change between OpenSSL versions prior to 1.0.0. Made the error message more
-+informative. ck_ssl.c, 26 Aug 2009, and again 28 Aug 2009.
-+
-+AIX 6.1 is out, it is really just a new name for AIX 5.4. Added makefile
-+targets, plus for the first I made AIX 4.2 and later figure out its version
-+number in the makefile target so we don't have to keep adding new -DAIXnn
-+sections to the code, and also get its hardware name (e.g. "powerpc") from
-+uname at make time, rather than hardwiring "rs6000" as I did before.
-+Consolidated all AIX 4.2 and later targets so now just "make aix" or "make
-+aix+ssl" can be used. Except not the gcc ones as they have some quirks so
-+I'd rather not disturb them. Tested this on AIX 5.3.
-+makefile, 28 Aug 2009.
-+
-+From Kinjal Shah, a correction to the Linux makefile entry that allows it
-+find the 64-bit curses or ncurses library. makefile, 29 Aug 2009.
-+
-+Renamed aix4[23]: to oldaix4[23]: in makefile to fix the warning messages
-+I didn't notice before. I didn't want to remove them because they have
-+some special things that might still be needed, if anybody still has these
-+AIX versions. makefile, 29 Aug 2009.
-+
-+Built on RHEL 5.3 64-bit, regular and with OpenSSL 0.9.8e. 31 Aug 2009.
-+
-+Built on NetBSD 5.0.1/i386, regular and with OpenSSL 0.9.9-dev, 1 Sep 2009.
-+
-+Changed SSL message to mention LD_LIBRARY_PATH (Solaris), SHLIB_PATH (HP-UX),
-+LIBPATH (AIX), or LD_LIBRARY_PATH (Linux). ck_ssl.c, 3 Sep 2009
-+
-+Noticed that "make linux+openssl" fails to include -lutil a link time, which
-+it needs for openpty(). That's because this target is obsolete. I renamed
-+it to be oldlinux+openssl and added linux+openssl as a synonym for
-+linux+ssl. makefile, 3 Sep 2009.
-+
-+Tested linux+openssl+zlib+shadow+pam, it's OK. Also linux+krb5. Also
-+linux+krb5+ssl. makefile, 3 Sep 2009.
-+
-+Tried building on Solaris 9 with OpenSSL 0.9.8k with
-+solaris9g+openssl+shadow+pam+zlib, it failed like so:
-+
-+ ck_ssl.c:2875: error: conflicting types for 'inet_aton'
-+ /usr/include/arpa/inet.h:52: previous declaration of 'inet_aton' was here
-+ make[2]: [ck_ssl.o] Error 1
-+ make[2]: Leaving directory hmt/sirius1/prv0/kd/fdc/solaris9ssl'
-+ make[1]: [solaris2xg+openssl+zlib+pam+shadow] Error 2
-+ make[1]: Leaving directory hmt/sirius1/prv0/kd/fdc/solaris9ssl'
-+ make: [solaris9g+openssl+shadow+pam+zlib] Error 2
-+
-+The problem was caused by including an inet_aton() function ck_ssl.c for
-+the benefit of platforms that don't have one in their libraries. This is
-+defeated by including NO_DCL_INET_ATON in KFLAGS. I added this, but then
-+I thought it would be a good idea to automatically sense the OpenSSL
-+version so we can automatically set OPENSSL_097 or OPENSSL_098 rather than
-+bombing out, so I added code to do that too, and also to set the Solaris
-+version number: 9, 10, or 11. The new entry is solaris9g+openssl.
-+ckcdeb.h, makefile, 3 Sep 2009.
-+
-+Fixed a complaint in ckufio.c about implicit declaration of initgroups.
-+ckufio.c, 4 Sep 2009.
-+
-+Built on Solaris 10 with gcc and Sun CC using new solaris{9,10,11} target
-+that is like the new solaris{9,10,11}g one but without the gccisms.
-+makefile, 4 Sep 2009.
-+
-+Changed solaris{9,10,11}g+ssl target to set only the SSL-specific things and
-+then chain to the main solaris{9,10,11}g target. Tested OK on Solaris 9 and
-+10. makefile, 4 Sep 2009.
-+
-+Created solaris{9,10,11}+ssl target that is exactly like the
-+solaris{9,10,11}g+ssl except it chains to the solaris{9,10,11} target
-+instead of the solaris{9,10,11}g one. That is, it builds an SSL version of
-+C-Kermit using Sun CC rather than gcc. makefile, 4 Sep 2009.
-+
-+Tried building on HP-UX 10.20, bundled (non-ANSI) compiler ("make
-+hpux1000"). This failed until I:
-+
-+ . Moved a struct inititialization out of setextern(), ckuus3.c.
-+ . Removed an ANSIism from the declaration of sigchld_handler() in ckutio.c
-+ . Added a cast to strcmp() in zvuser(), ckufio.c.
-+
-+Builds OK now. Built OK with "hpux1000o" (the ANSI compiler) too.
-+And with "hpux1000gcc". Couldn't test "hpux1000o+openssl". 21 Sep 2009.
-+
-+The Sony Playstation 2 and 3 are 64-bit PowerPC platforms that can run Linux
-+if it is installed as an "other OS" on its hard disk; and the Linux kernel
-+since 2.6.21 supports the PS3 without any patching required. Pawel Rogocz
-+reported that "make linuxppc" (one of the old targets that has not yet been
-+integrated into the main "linux" target) compiles OK on 2.6.29-ydl61.3
-+(Yellow Dog Linux release 6.2 'Pyxis'), but fails at link time because
-+'openpty' isn't found, because -lutil was not included, because that part
-+was added only to the main linux target. I asked him to try "make linux"
-+and he sent back a transcript in which there were thousands of errors from
-+the curses code ckuusx.c. Later I tried it myself and it built without a
-+hitch. My theory is that between then and now, a missing piece of the
-+ncurses library (/usr/include/ncursesw) was installed. 21 Sep 2009.
-+
-+HP-UX 9.05 on PA-RISC 9000/712 building with hpux0900 (bundled compiler):
-+ . ckutio.c compilation failed with PENDIN and FLUSHO not defined in
-+ pty_make_raw(). I dummied definitions for them to handle this situation
-+ on this or any other platform where it might crop up.
-+ ckutio.c, 24 Sep 2009.
-+ . Ditto for the PTY module, + IMAXBEL. ckupty.c, 24 Sep 2009.
-+ . References to endusershell() were fatal in the bundled compiler. Changed
-+ the hpux0900 target to define NODCLENDUSERSHELL, and put a special case
-+ in ckufio.c to not put a cast in front of the call if NODCLENDUSERSHELL
-+ is defined. Now it builds and links OK. makefile, ckufio.c, 24 Sep 2009.
-+
-+HP-UX 9.05 on PA-RISC 9000/712 building with hpux0900o (optimizing compiler):
-+ . Warnings in ckutio.c at line 14860 about arguments to select (pointers
-+ are not assignment-compatible). "man select" says arguments are ints.
-+ Defining INTSELECT fixes these warnings but results in fatal errors later
-+ around line 14881 and others in the area involving FD_SET. This was too
-+ involved so I put it back as it was. 24 Sep 2009.
-+
-+Built OK on Solaris 10 with Sun CC. A couple warnings about implicit
-+function declarations for curses routines because apparently they aren't
-+declared in curses.h. Tuff. 25 Sep 2009.
-+
-+Tried building on Solaris 10 with Sun CC and OpenSSL 0.9.8k, and this
-+uncovered various loose ends in the solaris9+openssl target, which I fixed.
-+makefile, 25 Sep 2005.
-+
-+Fixed four typos in printfs in ck_ssl.c, \% instead of just %. 25 Sep 2009.
-+
-+Squelched 20-some complaints about a character array being referred to
-+directly instead of by a pointer, plus several other similar nits to get rid
-+of all the compilation warnings on Solaris 10 with Sun C 5.8 Patch 121015-06
-+2007/10/03. ckctel.c, ckctel.h, 25 Sep 2009.
-+
-+Built the result on the same Solaris 10 system with gcc 4.2.4 using the
-+new solari10g+openssl target, working out a few kinks here too.
-+makefile, 25 Sep 2009.
-+
-+Made consolidated Solaris 9/10/11 64-bit targets for gcc, solaris9g64,
-+solaris10g64, solaris11g64, tested on Solaris 10 Sparc. makefile, 25 Sep 2009.
-+
-+Made consolidated Solaris 9/10/11 64-bit targets for Sun cc: solaris9_64,
-+solaris10_64, solaris11_64. These simply set a couple flags and chain to
-+the main solaris9 target. makefile, 25 Sep 2009.
-+
-+Removed a bunch of old superfluous Solaris 9 and 10 targets: oldsolaris9,
-+oldsolaris9lfs, solaris9g64 solaris9g_64, oldsolaris10 old solaris10lfs,
-+oldsolaris10+openssl, oldsolaris10g+openssl, solaris10_64, oldsolaris10g,
-+solaris10g_64, solaris10g64. There are still plenty more to prune but it's
-+a start. makefile, 25 Sep 2009.
-+
-+Added or fixed some missing prototypes in ckctel.h:
-+fwdx_send_xauth_to_xserver(), fwdx_parse_displayname. 25 Sep 2009.
-+
-+Improved the instructions for building secure versions in the makefile,
-+using this example:
-+
-+ make solaris9+openssl "SSLINC=-I/opt/openssl-0.9.8k/include" \
-+ "SSLLIB=-L/opt/openssl-0.9.8k/lib"
-+
-+makefile, http://kermit.columbia.edu/security.html, 25 Sep 2009.
-+
-+Built on HP-UX 11.11, 26 Sep 2009:
-+ . make hpux1100 (ok)
-+ . make hpux1100gcc (ok)
-+ . make hpux1100o (gets a lot of warnings about sendpath and sendfile,
-+ because they are also declared in <sys/socket.h>, but builds OK)
-+ . make hpux1000gcc+openssl \
-+ SSLINC=-I/opt/openssl/include SSLLIB=-L/opt/openssl/lib
-+
-+Note: sendpath and sendfile are not Kermit symbols. The warnings are coming
-+from socket.h: 'Redeclaration of "sendfile" with a different storage class
-+specifier'. This is nothing new; see notes of 2-4 Jan 2005.
-+
-+From Peter Eichhorn:
-+ . Update to makefile to make current code build OK on HP-UX 8.00.
-+ . Changes to format of some hints to make them more copy-and-pastable.
-+makefile, ckuu5.c, 28 Sep 2009.
-+
-+From Peter Eichhorn: Changes to HP-UX 7.0 target to increase the switch table
-+stack size, which was overflowing. makefile, 30 Sep 2009
-+
-+HP-UX 6.5 (1989), "make hpux0650tcpc"... (8:19...) Needed to not include
-+arpa/inet.h (which doesn't exist) and not use host address lists (add
-+-DNOHADDRLIST), which gets us past ckcnet.c, but in ckcftp.c we bomb out on
-+FD_SETSIZE undefined. Somehow we worked around this in ckcnet.c. Patched
-+in a definition in ckcftp.c, and also added -DINTSELECT to compiler flags.
-+Compiles ok, bombs at link time on bcopy, bzero, FD_ZERO, FD_SET, FD_ISSET.
-+Now it compiles and links OK but dumps core when started. Added
-+-DNOCKGETFQHOST, rebuilt from scratch (takes 35 minutes). It starts OK, but
-+it dumps core when given a "telnet xxx" command, where xxx is a hostname.
-+However, it works OK if an IP address is used: "telnet 123.45.6.78". It
-+took all day to track this down, but now it's fixed (see the #ifdef HPUX6
-+sections of ckcnet.c). So now (for the first time, I think) we have both
-+telnet and ftp in HP-UX 6.x, if anyone cares. ckcnet.[ch], ckcftp.c,
-+makefile, 2 Oct 2009.
-+
-+Changed default SET TERMINAL TYPE type for K95 from vt320 to vt220. This is
-+because Unix OS's such as Solaris have dropped vt320 as a terminal type.
-+settrmtyp(), ckuus7.c, 5 Oct 2009.
-+
-+I moved the PUTENV command code, which was inline, to a function, doputenv().
-+ckuus[r7].c, ckuusr.h, 5 Oct 2009.
-+
-+Changed the UNIX version of SET TERMINAL TYPE to take a value and then do
-+the equivalent of "export TERM=value" by calling doputenv(). This sets
-+\$(TERM) correctly and passes its value along to inferior processes.
-+However, to make this take effect within Kermit itself (for the fullscreen
-+file transfer display and for the SCREEN command, Ctrl-L, etc) I also had to
-+reinitialize the curses database, which is tricky because normally if you
-+feed it an unknown terminal name, it just exits. ckuus7.c, 5 Oct 2009.
-+
-+Changed the little-known and little-used RESET command (which closes all
-+open files) to also put command echoing back to normal in case it got
-+messed up somehow (as in HP-UX 6.5, upon returning from PUSH).
-+ckuusx.c, 5 Oct 2009.
-+
-+For Unix, increased string buffer sizes for wildcard expansion for all
-+platforms that have BIGBUFOK defined from 500000 (0.5M) to 10000000 (10M)
-+bytes, and for 64-bit builds to 2000000000 (2G) bytes. No point making
-+it bigger than that because malloc's argument is a size_t, which is an int.
-+ckufio.c, 5 Oct 2009.
-+
-+Built on Mac OS X 10.4.11, required one minor adjustment to the makefile
-+(-DNODCLINITGROUPS). This was using the macosx10.5 target, which is
-+supposed to be universal like the linux and netbsd targets, but not yet
-+proven. Also built a 64-bit version (-mpowerpc64 -mcpu=G5 -mtune=G5
-+-arch ppc64); it compiles and links OK but won't start: "Bad CPU Type
-+in executable". Fix later... makefile, 5 Oct 2009.
-+
-+Changes from Seth Theriault to suppress signed vs unsigned char warnings in
-+Mac OS 10.5.8 from gcc4, and a new makefile target for Mac OS X (presumably
-+10.3.9 or later) + Kerberos 5 and OpenSSL. ckutio.c, ckuath.c, ckctel.c,
-+ckcnet.c, ckcftp.c, ck_crp.c, makefile, 6 Oct 2009.
-+
-+ Later I had to back out of these, because although it made for a
-+ clean build, in the resulting executable SSL connections didn't work.
-+
-+Tue Oct 6 17:23:27 2009
-+FTP address resolution is broken, but ftp_hookup() hasn't changed.
-+So... (see the #ifdef HPUX6 sections of ckcnet.c) (I did, and I rolled
-+back some of the changes from the other day, but it made no difference.)
-+Putting back the ckcftp.c from a few weeks ago makes no difference.
-+Putting back the ckcnet.c from a few weeks ago makes no difference.
-+
-+Added patches from Seth Theriault so macosx10.5+krb5+openssl would build
-+on Mac OS X 10.3.9. makefile, ckcftp.c, 7 Oct 2009.
-+
-+Built today's code on Linux RHEL4, NetBSD 5.0.1, Solaris 9, and Mac OS X
-+10.4.11, both with and without SSL. The NetBSD system has OpenSSL 0.9.9-dev.
-+7 Oct 2009.
-+
-+In Mac OS X 10.6, the following symbols are unresolved at link time:
-+_des_key_sched, _des_new_random_key, _des_ecb_encrypt,
-+_des_init_random_number_generator, _des_fixup_key_parity. This is
-+with OpenSSL 0.9.8k. But it doesn't happen on other platforms that
-+have 0.9.8k.
-+
-+Added SET SESSION-LOG NULL-TERMINATED-TEXT. This is for the benefit of a
-+speech synthesizer that will speak a line of text only after receiving a
-+NUL character. A more general solution would be to define a filter or
-+whatever, but who has time. ckuus[23x].c, 7 Oct 2009.
-+
-+Consolidated Mac OS X targets, and removed experimental 64-bit ones, because
-+they never could work in 10.5 and earlier because 64-bit libs are missing,
-+and 10.6 and later are 64-bit automatically. makefile, 8 Oct 2009.
-+
-+Built on Mac OS X 10.6.1. It came out automatically as a 64-bit build
-+because __LP64__ is defined somewhere that I can't find. But this explains
-+why the 0.9.8k on 10.6 comes up with missing symbols when the 0.9.8k lib
-+10.5 (or on Solaris or on Linux) does not: it's a different library: "Mach-O
-+64-bit dynamically linked shared library x86_64", rather than "Mach-O
-+dynamically linked shared library ppc". Probably the 64-bit version has
-+some things #ifdef'd out. Added -m32 to the CFLAGS and LNKFLAGS for the
-+macosx+krb5+openssl targets, and it built OK one time. But then the errors
-+came back. makefile, 8 Oct 2009.
-+
-+Updated C-Kermit installation for Mac OS X in ckuwr.html on the website.
-+8 Oct 2009.
-+
-+Tried some things to get around the problem with OpenSSL in Mac OS X 10.6,
-+to no avail. Asked Jeff. He said, "MacOS X no longer includes DES anywhere
-+on the system. Not for SSL, not for Kerberos, not for anything. This will
-+increasingly become the situation on new operating systems. Windows 7 and
-+2008 R2 will also ship with no DES." Sure enough, the Mac OS X Server
-+Upgrading and Migrating document for 10.6 says, "Mac OS X Server v10.6 does
-+not support single DES encryption. It supports AES 128 and 256 encryption
-+types. However, during a migration or upgrade from v10.4 to v10.6, servers
-+that were Kerberized by the v10.5 Open Directory server will not use the AES
-+128 or 256 encryption types. To use the AES 128 or 256 encryption types you
-+must re-Kerberize all servers." 12 Oct 2009.
-+
-+DES and 3DES encryption can be excluding removing the -DCK_DES flag. I
-+removed this one and -DLIBDES (and -m32) and this makes a working 64-bit
-+version. Then I added code to the macosx+krb5+openssl target to use these
-+flags if the Mac OS X version was 10.5 or less and leave them out for 10.6
-+or later. Tested on 10.4.11 and 10.6.1. A better way to do it might have
-+been "nm -gj libssl.dylib | grep des_", but that gives the same results on
-+10.4 and 10.6. Also, 10.6 still has /usr/include/ssl/des.h.
-+makefile, 13 Oct 2009.
-+
-+Next issue:
-+ In file included from ckutio.c:15674:
-+ /usr/lib/gcc/i386-redhat-linux/3.4.6/include/varargs.h:4:2: #error "GCC no
-+ longer implements <varargs.h>."
-+ /usr/lib/gcc/i386-redhat-linux/3.4.6/include/varargs.h:5:2: #error "Revise
-+ your code to use <stdarg.h>."
-+
-+The problem occurs when trying to force a non-ANSIC build with GCC.
-+Changing the source file to include <stdarg.h> instead of <varargs.h>
-+doesn't help because evidently <stdarg.h> requires an ANSI C compiler.
-+Nothing can be done about this. 13 Oct 2009.
-+
-+Next issue: Can't compile ckcftp.c with -DNOCSETS or -DNOSPL; some
-+#ifdef/#endif doesn't match up. Sigh, this is the hardest kind of thing to
-+debug. There's 17,622 lines of code in this module and no tool that I know
-+of.... Wait, I wrote one. But it shows all the #if/#ifdef/#ifndef's and
-+#endifs matching up just fine. Backing off to ckcftp.c of a few days ago
-+(before char / unsigned char casts were added), I see that it builds OK, so
-+I backed off to that one, but put back the special case #ifdef for MACOSX103
-+declaring CONST gss_OID_desc, and it builds OK (the other stuff was purely
-+cosmetic, when will I learn?). ckcftp.c, 13 Oct 2009.
-+
-+Protected cvtstring() and related functions with #ifdef NOCSETS..#endif,
-+and ditto for the character-set conversion code in dorename().
-+ckuus6.c, 13 Oct 2009.
-+
-+Fixed an #endif /* TNCODE */ that was a line too low in ttptycmd(),
-+causing -DNONET builds to fail. ckutio.c, 13 Oct 2009.
-+
-+There was a reference to doputenv() that wasn't guarded by #ifndef NOPUTENV,
-+fixed in ckuus7.c, 13 Oct 2009.
-+
-+Moved doputenv() and settermtyp() out of an #ifdef NOLOCAL section because
-+these are useful even when not making connections. ckuus7.c, 13 Oct 2009.
-+
-+Moved havelfs declaration outside of #ifdef NOXFER because it was also used
-+for other things. ckcmai.c, 13 Oct 2009.
-+
-+COPY /PRESERVE depended on code from the Kermit protocol module, which
-+is omitted in -DNOXFER builds. Disabled COPY /PRESERVE in -DNOXFER
-+builds. ckuus6.c, 14 Oct 2009.
-+
-+SHOW PROTOCOL code for external protocols had to be #ifdef'd out for
-+-DNOPUSH builds. ckuus4.c, 14 Oct 2009.
-+
-+There was some confusion between "No XYZMODEM" and "No extermal protocols";
-+cleared up in ckuus3.c, 14 Oct 2009.
-+
-+After all that, 86 different combinations of feature selections built OK on
-+Linux. And the Kerberized version (K5) works OK on Linux for Telnet and FTP.
-+14 Oct 2009.
-+
-+Changed version number to 9.0. All modules, 16 Oct 2009.
-+
-+Need to make LOG SESSION log to a tty. Right now "log session
-+/dev/ttyKeySerial1" says "Write permission denied" even though the device is
-+crw-rw-rw-. This happens in zchko(), which is called by cmofi(). The
-+problem is that /dev/ is not writeable. I added a Unix-only clause that
-+attempts to open the file for write access using open(), in order to get a
-+file descriptor, which then can be passed to isatty() to check if it's a
-+tty, and if so, to allow access. And then close it. I tested this on Mac
-+OS X as follows:
-+
-+ log session /dev/ttyKeySerial1
-+ telnet somehost
-+
-+The Mac's serial port was connected to the serial port of another computer
-+where Kermit displayed the incoming characters in CONNECT mode. Glitches:
-+
-+ 1. The port has to be set up as desired in advance, outside of Kermit.
-+ 2. log session /dev/ttyKeySerial1 will hang if any required modem signals
-+ are not present when the port is opened.
-+ 3. Bypasses lockfile mechanism - so we do this only if -DNOUUCP.
-+
-+For (2), I tried setting O_NDELAY / O_NONBLOCK, and this allowed zchko() to
-+continue, but then it freezes in the subsequent fopen(). So I changed
-+zopeno() to also check if the device is a serial port, and if so, to open()
-+it with O_NDELAY / O_NONBLOCK, and then convert the file descriptor into a
-+file pointer with fdopen().
-+
-+Now for the speaking device that needs lines to be terminated by NUL...
-+
-+ set session-log binary <-- need to put these in SHOW LOG
-+ set session-log null-padded (and in HELP SET LOG)
-+ set line /dev/ttyKeySerial1
-+
-+This part works.
-+
-+This feature is enabled only for -DNOUUCP builds because serial ports aren't
-+like other Unix files; we would have to create a lockfile, but we can't do
-+that... actually, ttlock() takes a name as an argument, but ttunlck() does
-+not, so there would be no way to remove the lock. Anyway, there is only one
-+API for configuring the port (speed, flow control, etc) and it only works
-+with the SET LINE device, not any random file. To fix this would require
-+massive redesign and changes. ckuus[23].c, ckufio.c, 19-20 Oct 2009.
-+
-+I made -DNOUUCP the default for Mac OS X, since everybody winds up building
-+it that way anyhow. To undo this, do "make macosx KFLAGS=-UNOUUCP".
-+makefile, 21 Oct 2009.
-+
-+Changed SET SESSION-LOG TEXT to strip out ANSI escape sequences;
-+previously there wasn't that much difference between TEXT and BINARY logs.
-+It's still not perfect; for example it doesn't delete characters that the
-+user erased. (Made sure this still builds with -DNOESCSEQ.)
-+ckucns.c, 22 Oct 2009.
-+
-+Changed SHOW LOG to show the SET SESSION-LOG settings, as well as
-+SET DEBUG, which was not shown before. ckuus5.c, 22 Oct 2009.
-+
-+If a series of PUTENV commands is given, each new one undoes the previous
-+one, so only the last definition is seen by the new fork (or by Kermit
-+itself). Turns out you can't feed automatic variables to putenv(); they
-+have to be static, so to allow for multiple PUTENV commands Kermit has to
-+maintain an array of static strings. ckuus7.c, 6 Nov 2009.
-+
-+From Seth Theriault, a better way for the makefile to determine the
-+Mac OS X version number; there's a program for this, sw_ver. makefile,
-+6 Nov 2009.
-+
-+Peter Eichhorn reported that file-transfer failure hints were not coming
-+out since Dev.27. The only change I made since then was to skip them if
-+the file-transfer protocol was not Kermit. I was using the wrong variable
-+in the tests, 'proto' instead of 'protocol'. ckuus5.c, 6 Nov 2009.
-+
-+Changed Mac OS X targets to correctly extract the Mac OS major version
-+from uname -r in order to choose correctly between utmp and utmpx; this
-+wasn't working in 10.6.1. makefile, 6 Nov 2009.
-+
-+Fix from Seth T. for an oversight in the previous edit. Also add
-+MACOSX103 to "show features" display. makefile, ckuus5.c, 10 Nov 2009.
-+
-+Added REJECT as a synonym for DISCARD in SET FILE COLLISION; it's more
-+intuitive and more accurate. ckuus[27].c, 15 Nov 2009.
-+
-+\fsplit() and \fword() always break on 8-bit characters unless you explicitly
-+put every single 8-bit value into the include set, e.g. (for a TSV file):
-+
-+ undef include
-+ for \%i 128 255 1 {
-+ if == \%i 9 continue
-+ .include := \m(include)\fchar(\%i)
-+ }
-+ .\%n := \fsplit(\m(line),&a,\9,\m(include))
-+
-+I changed cksplit() to treat all 8-bit bytes 128-255 as non-break characters
-+by default. It might have made more sense to do this for 160-255 (since
-+128-159 are traditionaly C1 control characters) but thanks to Microsoft
-+tradition is out the window. To treat one or more 8-bit characters as break
-+characters, put them in the break set. This might break some scripts, but I
-+doubt it because this flaw was so awful that if anyone had come up against
-+they would have let me know. ckclib.c, 16 Nov 2009.
-+
-+Changed the netbsd target to set -funsigned-char, since cc on NetBSD is
-+actually gcc. makefile, 16 Nov 2009.
-+
-+Changed macosx targets to get the CPU type from the HOSTTYPE environment
-+variable. Also added getenv("HOSTTYPE") as a last-resort method to set the
-+\v(cpu) variable at runtime (maybe it should be the first resort?)...
-+ckuus4.c, makefile, 16 Nov 2009.
-+
-+Made sure the solaris9_64 and solaris10 targets still work. 16 Nov 2009.
-+
-+Made sure the current source package builds OK on HP-UX 10.20... Got a lot
-+of "warning 6062: Optdriver: Exceeding compiler resource limits in xxx; some
-+optimizations skipped. Use +Onolimit if override desired" but it builds OK.
-+Tested long file transfer; works OK. 17 Nov 2009.
-+
-+Built on FreeBSD 7.2 with and without OpenSSL, all OK. 17 Nov 2009.
-+
-+Built on NetBSD 5.0.1 with and without OpenSSL, all OK, but netbsd+krb5
-+fails with "can't find -lgssapi_krb5"; worked around this with
-+"K5LIB=-L/usr/local/kerblib" (where the lib actually is on this host) but
-+then it failed with "ckcftp.c:13868: error: 'gss_nt_service_name' undeclared".
-+17 Nov 2009.
-+
-+I found a VMS 6.2 system... Takes a loooong time to build there. In
-+ckuusy.c, DEC C didn't like the prototypes and declarations of dorlgarg()
-+and dotnarg() as static so I made them not static. But that didn't help,
-+now it fails at the very end, saying the final #ifdef is an invalid
-+statement. It looks like an #ifdef mismatch that affects only VMS. I ran
-+my #ifdef matcher, it turned up nothing. I substituted a copy of ckuusy.c
-+from 2007, it comes up with the same errors. Then I substituted the copy
-+from 8.0.211 from 2004, and this one compiled OK and, miraculously, the
-+whole mess even linked OK and runs OK. The Alpha binary is 2.84MB. Now I
-+have 4500 lines of code to compare.... I went through the two files line by
-+line and I can't see a single thing wrong. I gave up and tried building the
-+TCP/IP version. It builds fine except for ckuusy.c, with the utterly
-+useless error message:
-+
-+ #endif /* NOCMDL */
-+ ...................^
-+ %CC-E-BADSTMT, Invalid statement.
-+
-+Indicating the last line in the file. Just for the heck of it, I put
-+another line after that one:
-+
-+ /* This is a test */
-+
-+and got:
-+
-+ /* This is a test */
-+ ....................^
-+ %CC-E-BADSTMT, Invalid statement.
-+
-+So it is not objecting to anything in the file. Trying the old LISP trick,
-+I put an extraneous closing bracket after that. Success! Honestly, I don't
-+see anything wrong with file. It's DEC C V5.3-006. I suspect a C bug.
-+I'll leave it like this for now until I get access to some other VMS
-+versions. Another clue is that when building the network version I get a
-+horrible warning I never saw before from a module that hasn't been touched
-+in a very long time (ckvrtl.c). Also, in the network version, I note that
-+the FTP code is not compiled in. We have to try this again with some
-+command-line switches, but it'll do for now. ckuusy.c, 18 Nov 2009.
-+
-+---C-Kermit 9.0 Alpha.01---
-+
-+From Steven Schweda (SMS), the real solution for the VMS closing brace
-+problem, it wasn't a DECC bug, it was a me bug. ckuusy.c, 20 Nov 2009.
-+
-+Rediscovered the new VMS build options: f for Long Files, i for Internal
-+FTP. "make mnf" doesn't work on VMS 6.2, it looks like the VMS definition
-+for CK_OFF_T got lost. Same thing with "make mfi". Come back to this later.
-+
-+From Gerry Belanger, a fix to INPUT /COUNT:n. ckuus4.c, 26 Nov 2009.
-+
-+Added \fsqueeze(s), returns string s with leading and trailing whitespace
-+removed, Tabs converted to Spaces, and multiple spaces converted to single
-+spaces. For now, ASCII only, no options. ckuusr.h, ckuus[24].c, 27 Nov 2009.
-+
-+I wrote a Kermit script to read a big file of addresses on Solaris 9,
-+\fsqueeze()ing each line. After about 14000 lines, there was a malloc
-+failure in getnct() (the command-file reader). There's nothing wrong with
-+\fsqueeze(), the failure is on a deeper level, because the same thing
-+happens if I use \fupper() (which is structurally identical to \fsqueeze())
-+in the same script. The problem is not in getnct() either, because every
-+malloc() is freed (I checked). On the other hand, the same script (with
-+\fupper() instead of \fsqueeze() completes OK in C-Kermit 8.0.201. If I
-+remove the function call (\fsqueeze() or \fupper()) from the script, it also
-+runs OK in 9.0. This seems to point the finger at fnevel(), which contains
-+countless malloc's and free's. But comparing fneval() between 8.0.211 and
-+9.0, I don't see any difference that would explain this behavior -- nothing
-+at all that involves malloc(), makstr(), or free(). Nor any pertinent
-+change in the caller (zzstring) of fneval(). 27 Nov 3009.
-+
-+Another problem is that when this happens, the error is not caught (e.g. by
-+the IF FAIL statement after the command that contains the function call);
-+instead, C-Kermit returns immediately to its prompt. 27 Nov 2009.
-+
-+It could simply be that some of the buffers we allocate are much bigger now.
-+But again, I don't see much difference between 8.0.211 and 9.0; we were
-+already allocating 32K command-related buffers (malloc() takes a size_t, and
-+size_t is an int almost everywere). I built the same source on NetBSD and
-+ran the same script (with \fqueeze()), and it worked fine. Let's worry
-+about this later, if it comes up. 27 Nov 2009.
-+
-+Built OK on Silicon Graphics IRIX 6.5 R10000; regular build OK, SSL and
-+Kerberos builds failed. 30 Nov 3009.
-+
-+Tried to build on Digital Unix 4.0F but it blew up in ckutio.c, apparently
-+not recognizing any of the terminal struct symbols from termios.h. Tried
-+again with gcc, same thing. Tried explicitly #including <sys/termios.h>
-+within #ifdef TRU64, same thing. What could have changed? 30 Nov 2009.
-+
-+Built OK on Linux RHEL5.4/Itanium-2, make linux. The secure build
-+required "FLAGS=-DNO_KRB5_INIT_ETS" and built OK. 30 Nov 2009.
-+
-+Built OK on Digital Unix 4.0F using "make osf" instead of "make tru64-40f".
-+I don't know why the specific target doesn't work, but it's not worth
-+chasing down. 2 Dec 2009.
-+
-+Built OK on MirBSD 10, despite a lot of gratuitous compiler warnings. Built
-+OK on MirBSD 10, OpenBSD 4.5, and Fedora 10. 3 Dec 2009.
-+
-+(Various other successful Unix builds in these weeks...)
-+
-+Built on VMS 7.2 and 8.3 with and without TCP/IP, no problems. 11 Jan 2010.
-+
-+Built on VMS 8.3 with "make fi" to include the FTP client and long-file
-+support (mid Jan 2010).
-+
-+Built on VMS 8.3 with UXC 5.6 and HP SSL 1.3, which is OpenSSL 0.9.7e.
-+It compiled and linked OK but when I tried to make an FTP SSL connection
-+it crashed in SSL$LIBSSL_SHR, which is called from ssl_auth(), after having
-+had TLS accepted as an authentication type, but before actually
-+authenticating. In Unix:
-+
-+ 19. ftp open ftp.somecompany.com /user:pge.com/test_quota /password:xxxxxx
-+Connected to ftp.somecompany.com.
-+220-Somecompany FTP v6.0 for WinSock ready...
-+220 Welcome to the online storage FTP server. Please check the main web
-+site for system announcements and AUP. (O)
-+---> AUTH TLS
-+234 AUTH command OK. Initializing SSL connection.
-+TLS accepted as authentication type
-+SSL DEBUG ACTIVE
-+=>START SSL/TLS connect on COMMAND
-+
-+In VMS:
-+
-+ 19. ftp open ftp.somecompany.com /user:pge.com/test_quota /password:xxxxxx
-+Connected to ftp.somecompany.com.
-+220 Somecompany FTP v6.0 for WinSock ready...
-+---> AUTH TLS
-+234 AUTH command OK. Initializing SSL connection.
-+TLS accepted as authentication type
-+SSL DEBUG ACTIVE
-+%SYSTEM-F-ACCVIO, access violation, reason mask=04, virtual
-+address=FFFFFFFF8001A120, PC=000000000068B118, PS=0000001B
-+
-+Note: The Unix version received the second 220 response, the VMS version did
-+not. That's odd, it's the same code... 25 Jan 2010.
-+
-+Added some essential details to the HELP FSEEK text. ckuus2.c, 25 Jan 2010.
-+
-+Discovered that the result returned by \fsearch() is totally unreliable.
-+This is probably too hard to fix.
-+
-+FSEEK did not pay attention to SET CASE, searches were always case sensitive.
-+Fixed in ckuus7.c, 26 Jan 2010.
-+
-+FSEEK failed to find anything if the search pattern was matched in the first
-+line of the file. Fixed in ckuus7.c, 26 Jan 2010.
-+
-+\fword() and \fsplit().... Another change, but not backwards-incompatible.
-+One may now put the word ALL (just like that, all uppercase) as the include
-+set (4th argument) to indicate that there will be no break characters other
-+than those explicitly given in the break set, e.g. \fsplit(\m(xx),&a,:,ALL)
-+breaks a line only on a colon (:), nothing else. The original rules for
-+cksplit() were more than a little counterintuitive: the default break set is
-+all non alphanums, and the default include set is all alphanums, so if you
-+wanted to parse (say) a CSV file, breaking only on comma, you had to think
-+of all the characters you wanted to keep. This way you just say ALL.
-+ckclib.c, 26 Jan 2010.
-+
-+Speaking of CSV files... How can you put comma as a function argument when
-+comma is the function-argument separator? Use one of these forms:
-+
-+ \fsplit(\m(xx),&a,",",ALL)
-+ \fsplit(\m(xx),&a,{,},ALL)
-+ \fsplit(\m(xx),&a,\44,ALL)
-+ \fsplit(\m(xx),&a,\fchar(44),ALL)
-+
-+From John Dunlap, U. of Washington Applied Physics Lab: 'When "stty -a <
-+/dev/ttyS0 | grep crtscts" shows "crtscts" (not "-crtscts") and when using a
-+three wire serial interface and when asking kermit to not use flow control
-+(set flow none) then "ckutio.c1" (see attachments) fails while "ckutio.c"
-+works. The result of "diff -u ckutio.c1 ckutio.c" is attached as "diffs"'.
-+ckutio.c, 26 Jan 2010.
-+
-+Changed the year from 2009 to 2010 in the modules I worked on today and in
-+the heralds, etc. ckckmai.c, ckuus5.c, ckutio.c, ckclib.c, ckuus7.c,
-+26 Jan 2010.
-+
-+Built on Linux Fedora Core 3, regular and with OpenSSL 0.9.7a. Built on
-+Ubuntu 9.4 OK, but SSL and Kerberos builds failed due to not finding libs
-+and/or header files. I'm sure this could be fixed... 27 Jan 2010.
-+
-+Added SSL, KRB4, and KRB5 to the startup herald for versions that were
-+built with SSL, Kerberos 4, or Kerberos 5. Built OK on Fedora 3 with
-+linux+krb5+ssl and new banner shows correctly. ckuus5.c, 27 Jan 2010.
-+
-+Set NO_KRB5_INIT_ETS by default in ckuath.h since krb5_init_ets() is a no-op
-+in Kerberos 1.4.x and later and in some installations it can't be found,
-+which clobbers the build. ckuath.h, 27 Jan 2010.
-+
-+Adapted to MINIX 3 1.5, the first version that has virtual memory according
-+to Andy T, who should know. On earlier versions (e.g. MINIX 3 1.2) any
-+attempt to build C-Kermit causes the compiler to crash. Now the compiler
-+doesn't crash but it spews out countless warnings about old-fashioned
-+function declarations that I don't get anywhere else. The real problems
-+came in ckutio.c where numerous symbols were undefined at compile time and
-+the POSIX function tcgetpgrp() was not found at link time, even though there
-+is a prototype for it in the MINIX header files, and there is no alternative
-+(since POSIX doesn't let us use ioctl()). Also note that there is some
-+confusion over the compile-time symbols MINIX, MINIX2, MINIX3, and MINIX315.
-+You would expect MINIX to mean "any version of MINIX" but in some parts of
-+ckutio.c it means MINIX 1.0. I sincerely doubt that C-Kermit 9.0 can be
-+built on any version of Minix before 3.1.5 so I removed the confusion and
-+made MINIX mean "any Minix". It builds on 3.1.5 OK now, except for the FTP
-+client. This can probably be fixed but... Modules changed: ckcdeb.h,
-+ckuver.h, ckcmai.c, ckuus5.c, ckutio.c, 1 Feb 2010.
-+
-+Later.. Andy says MINIX does not support job control, so no program is ever
-+in the background. That settles that! 1 Feb 2010.
-+
-+Built OK on Minix, Linux, Mac OS X, Solaris 9, NetBSD 5.0.1... 1 Feb 2010.
-+
-+---C-Kermit 9.0 Alpha.02---
-+
-+From Christian Corti at Uni-Stuttgart.de: fixes to allow building on SunOS
-+4.1, which once was my main development platform but which is long-gone from
-+here. ckupty.c, ckutio.c, 9 Feb 2010. (He says it is also necessary to
-+comment out the "struct winsize" and "struct ttysize" in sys/ioctl.h;
-+otherwise there will be a conflict with sys/ttycom.h (included by termios.h)
-+which also declares these structs. But you need both includes.')
-+
-+From John Dunlap, a fix for Kermit protocol fixed packet-timeout interval
-+going to a unexpected value (missing else clause in two places).
-+ckcfn2.c, 9 Feb 2010.
-+
-+Added an aixg target to build on AIX with gcc when gcc is not installed as
-+cc, and also added CC=$(CC) CC2=$(CC) clauses to the aix and aix+ssl
-+targets. Wow, AIX really loses bigtime when receiving files through its ssh
-+server. Streaming can't be used, sliding windows recover from errors but
-+there are tons of them using the default 4K packets; 500 works much better.
-+Built with IBM cc and gcc, and also tested (successfully) the new aix+ibmssl
-+target, in which the OpenSSL headers and libs are in a standard place.
-+makefile, 9 Feb 2010.
-+
-+In ckupty.h, make the #include <sys/ioctl.h> be #ifndef SUNOS41.
-+From Christian Corti. 10 Feb 2010.
-+
-+Built on VMS E8.4. 12 Feb 2010.
-+
-+Tried to build on a real VAX-11/785 but the machine seems to be seriously
-+wedged. 12-15 Feb 2010.
-+
-+Added note to CKVKER.COM to the effect the the 'f' option has no effect
-+on VAX architecture. 15 Feb 2010.
-+
-+Moved the #include "ckvrtl.h" in the FTP module to below the include for
-+utime.h, because building the VMS version with the 'i' option (meaning
-+"include internal ftp client") results in "struct utimbuf tp" erroring out
-+because struct utimbuf is not defined yet (at least in some version of VMS
-+with some version of C). From Rob Brown, ckcftp.c, 20 Feb 2010.
-+
-+From Martin Vorlaender: new code in VMS C-Kermit build procedure to detect
-+OpenSSL version automatically. ckvker.com, 22 Feb 2010.
-+
-+Added code to INPUT command to strip ANSI escape sequences. It's activated
-+by SET SESSION-LOG TEXT. ckuusr.h: added prototype for chkaes();
-+ckucon.c, ckucns.c: made inesc[] and oldesc[] global instead of static;
-+ckuus4.c: doinput() code for skipping escape sequences. 1 Mar 2010.
-+
-+Peter Eichhorn complained that if you make an ssh connection with Kermit,
-+then log out from the ssh host, and then use a "connect" command to
-+make a new connection to the same host (which you can do with Telnet),
-+Kermit says (e.g.):
-+
-+ DNS Lookup... Can't get address for ssh -e none somehostname
-+ Sorry, can't open ssh -e none somehostname: Error 0
-+
-+I added code to detect and handle this case and it seems to work OK, even
-+though it's kind of a hack. ckuusr.[ch], ckuus7.c, 1 Mar 2010.
-+
-+There has never been a clean way to put debugging messages (ECHO commands)
-+in a script which are executed only if debugging is desired and ignored
-+otherwise. You'd have to set a random variable and test it, or define a
-+macro or whatever. To make this more straightforward, I added SET DEBUG
-+MESSAGE ON/OFF/STDERR, and added a new MESSAGE (syn: MSG) command for printing
-+debugging messages to stdout if SET DEBUG MESSAGE is ON or to stderr if SET
-+DEBUG MESSAGE is STDERR. ckcmai.c, ckuus[r23].c, 12 Mar 2010.
-+
-+Also for debugging and error messages, I added \v(lastcommmand) so that
-+the command that failed can be included in an IF FAIL or DEBUG error message.
-+This works even for commands that have syntax errors.
-+ckuusr.h, ckuus5.c, ckucmd.c, 12 Mar 2010.
-+
-+From SMS for VMS: 'Added/documented P3 options INTSELECT, OLDFIB, OLDIP.
-+Disabled (commented out) automatic definition of NOSETTIME for VMS before
-+V7.2 (vms_ver .lts. "VMS_V72").' ckcdeb.h, ckcftp.c, ckcnet.c, ckuus[2567].c,
-+ckvfio.c, ckvker.com, ckvrtl.[ch], 15 Mar 2010.
-+
-+Exposed inesc[] and oldesc[] for VMS, so new INPUT command escape-sequence
-+stripping can work (really, chkaes() and related global variables should be
-+moved out of ck[uvd]con.c/ckucns.c and into a common module; do that later).
-+ckuusr.h, ckvcon.c, 15 Mar 2010.
-+
-+Built OK on Solaris9, Mac OS X 10.4.11, RHEL4 (32-bit), RHEL5 (64-bit),
-+AIX 5.3, SCO OpenServr 6.0.0... 15 Mar 2010.
-+
-+Not so good on VMS, turns out I made a typo in one of the VMS updates
-+(#ifndef OLDIP instead of #ifdef...). ckcnet.c, 16 Mar 2010.
-+
-+More from SMS for VMS, 16 Mar 2010:
-+ . Set MAXPATH correctly for VMS, ckcdeb.h.
-+ . NAM -> NAML, QIO replaces system( "SET PROTECTION"), bugfixes in
-+ cvtdir() and nzltor(), ... (See comments): ckvfio.c, new ckvrms.h.
-+ (The RMS code in ckvfio.c was almost totally rewritten)
-+ . Moved "NAMX$*" (and related) macros to ckvrms.h, and renamed to
-+ "NAMX_*" (and similar "$" -> "_"), moved "FIB_*" macros from ckvrtl.c.
-+
-+These changes are mainly to accommodate the ODS5 file system, which has
-+longer and mixed-case filenames, and also to execute certain commands
-+(e.g. for setting file protection, deleting directories) directly instead
-+of using a system() command.
-+
-+Built OK on VMS 8.3 (with and without network support). 16 Mar 2010.
-+
-+Failed to build on VMS 6.2. 16 Mar 2010.
-+
-+FreeBSD 8.0 <libutil.h> has a hexdump() prototype that conflicts with the
-+hexdump macro defined in ckcdeb.h. Since the same thing is likely to happen
-+elsewhere, I changed the Kermit macro to ckhexdump as well all references to
-+it: ckcdeb.h, ckcftp.c, ckcnet.c, ckctel.c, ckuath.c, ckutio.c, 16 Mar 2010.
-+
-+Built OK on Digital Unix Tru-64 4.0E using "make osf", 16 Mar 2010.
-+
-+Tried again to build Digital Unix Tru64 4.0E using "make tru64-40e", but
-+something prevents it from picking up the termios symbols and it blows up in
-+ckutio.c, whereas this used to work in earlier C-Kermit versions. This is
-+the only Tru64 system I still have access to, so I can't tell if it's a
-+local peculiarity or what. Note that POSIX is not defined for this build.
-+But if I define it, I get into trouble with "struct timeval". Tried again
-+with "KFLAGS=-DPOSIX -DNOTIMEVAL" but that doesn't help. Tried "make
-+dec-osf" and that worked OK but oddly enough it makes a Kermit with less
-+features than "make osf". 16 Mar 2010.
-+
-+To go with MESSAGE and SET DEBUG MESSAGE, I added IF DEBUG, which is true
-+if SET DEBUG MESSAGE is not OFF and false otherwise. ckuusr.h, ckuus6.c,
-+16 Mar 2010.
-+
-+From SMS: Corrections to my merging of SMS's changes, ckcftp.c, ckvrtl.h.
-+Builds OK on VMS 6.2 now. Also did an SSL build on VMS 8.3 with OpenSSL
-+m0.9.7e and "OPENSSL_DISABLE_OLD_DES_SUPPORT" was included in P3
-+automatically by Martin V's addition to ckvker.com. 17 Mar 2010.
-+
-+From SMS: #include <types.h> earlier for VMS in ckcdeb.h to pick up off_t
-+before it is referenced. This allows C-Kermit to compile on VMS/Alpha 6.2
-+but linking fails on fseeko() and ftello() (and yet, a functional executable
-+is created, and FSEEK works right). Builds the same way with no problems at
-+all on VMS 8.3 / Alpha. In this case we get the full 64-bit arithmetic...
-+Well, 62 bits:
-+
-+ ATLAS::C-Kermit>( ^ 2 63)
-+ 9223372036854775000.0
-+ ATLAS::C-Kermit>( ^ 2 62)
-+ 4611686018427387904
-+
-+whereas on VMS 6.2 we get integers only up to (^ 2 30). 17 Mar 2010.
-+
-+Changed the VMS build procedure to enable large file support automatically
-+for non-VAX and VMS 7.3 or greater. No reason not to include this feature.
-+Changed the sense of the F option to DISABLE large file support in the
-+unlikely case that C-Kermit is being built on a suitable platform but the
-+C library is older than VMS73_ACRTL-V0200, in which case fseeko() and
-+ftello() will come up missing at link time. ckvker.com, 18 Mar 2010.
-+
-+Changed VMS build procedure to include the FTP client in any network build
-+by default. Changed the sense of the I option to exclude the FTP client,
-+in case anybody would want to do that. ckvker.com, 18 Mar 2010.
-+
-+From SMS: updated dependencies in CKVKER.COM, fix the "don't reinclude me"
-+clause in CKVRTL.H. 19 Mar 2010.
-+
-+Built OK on VMS 6.2 and 8.3 with and without networking. Large file support
-+included automatically in VMS 8.3 FTP client included automatically in both
-+network builds. 19 Mar 2010.
-+
-+Changed hexdump() to ckhexdump() in ck_crp.c, which I missed before.
-+19 Mar 2010.
-+
-+---C-Kermit 9.0 Alpha.03---
-+
-+In HP-UX with the bundled-non ANSI compiler, we get warnings about functions
-+such as endusershell(), which are declared void in the header files. But in
-+non-ANSI builds we defind VOID to be int rather than void, so our prototypes
-+are wrong. I checked that HP-UX 9, 10, and 11 all have void datatype and
-+changed the definition of VOID to void in those cases. ckcdeb.h, 29 Mar 2010.
-+
-+Fixed a typo in a debug() statement in cksplit() that was causing some
-+warnings. ckclib.c, 29 Mar 2010.
-+
-+Ditto in tls_load_certs(). ck_ssl.c, 29 Mar 2010.
-+
-+"make hpux1000o+ssl" files with:
-+/usr/ccs/bin/ld: Unsatisfied symbols:
-+ __umoddi3 (code)
-+ __udivdi3 (code)
-+ __eprintf (code)
-+
-+It appears that OpenSSL (0.9.7c in this case) requires -lgcc.
-+And indeed hpux1000gcc+ssl builds fine. 29 Mar 2010.
-+
-+There are various warnings in the SSL code in ckutio.c, ckcftp.c, and
-+ckcnet.c about pointers not being assignment compatible, but I have learned
-+from experience not to try to fix these (see notes from 6 Oct 2009).
-+29 Mar 2010.
-+
-+connect(s, (struct sockaddr *)&hisctladdr, sizeof (hisctladdr)): In FTP,
-+this doesn't work on RHEL5 / Mac OX X 6.1/2 64-bit. But the connect() in
-+Telnet works. On Mac OS X 6.2 I tried changing the socket() call to be like
-+the one in ckcnet.c for Telnet, but it made no difference. On a RHEL5.4
-+system on i386, FTP works fine, so it's not the Red Hat version. On Digital
-+Unix 4.0E 64-bit, same thing:
-+
-+ 11:23:10.722 ftp_hookup[kermit.columbia.edu]=21
-+ 11:23:10.722 ftp hookup A[kermit.columbia.edu]
-+ 11:23:10.722 ftp hookup C[kermit.columbia.edu]
-+ 11:23:10.722 ftp hookup socket=4
-+ 11:23:10.722 ftp hookup HADDRLIST
-+ 11:23:10.723 ftp hookup connect failed=13
-+ 11:23:10.723 ftp hookup bad
-+
-+13 = Permission denied:
-+
-+ [EACCESS] Search permission is denied for a component of the path prefix;
-+ or write access to the named socket is denied.
-+
-+On Gentoo Linux, also on Alpha, the errno is 51: Network is unreachable.
-+Clearly some data type in the sockets structs is out of whack.
-+
-+The third connect() argument is "address length". The address is a
-+struct sockaddr. About the third argument, RHEL5 "man connect" says:
-+
-+ The third argument of connect() is in reality an int (and this is what
-+ 4.x BSD and libc4 and libc5 have). Some POSIX confusion resulted in
-+ the present socklen_t, also used by glibc. See also accept(2).
-+
-+Building on RHEL5 on x86_64, where size_t is 8 and socklen_t is 4, I get a
-+warning:
-+
-+ ckcftp.c: In function 'ftp_hookup':
-+ ckcftp.c:14667: warning:
-+ comparison is always true due to limited range of data
-+
-+Referring to:
-+
-+ if (hisctladdr.sin_addr.s_addr != (unsigned long) -1)
-+
-+This seems to be the problem; if I remove the (unsigned long) cast (in two
-+places), the problem goes away. Actually what I should be comparing it with
-+is INADDR_NONE, which is defined appropriately in some header file, e.g. as
-+0xffffffff. Also I define it explicitly as -1 if it is not defined in any
-+header file (as is the case in Solaris 9). Tested OK on 64-bit RHEL5,
-+32-bit RHEL5, Digital Unix 4.0E 64-bit, Solaris 9 32-bit, Mac OS X 10.4.11
-+32-bit, Mac OS X 10.6.3 64-bit, AIX 5.3, Gentoo Linux 2.6.31 on Alpha
-+64-bit, NetBSD 5.0.1 32-bit.... ckcftp.c, 29 Mar 2010.
-+
-+---C-Kermit 9.0 Alpha.04---
-+
-+Yesterday's VOID redefinition caused problems for HP-UX in ckuusx.c, in the
-+curses section where VOID is undef'd and not used to avoid a conflict with
-+curses.h. As a workaround I defined a new macro CKVOID with the same
-+definition as VOID and used it in the offending section of ckuusx. The real
-+solution is to replace all references to VOID with CKVOID (since VOID is
-+increasingly likely to cause conflicts), but a mass search and replace is
-+not without risks. ckcdeb.h, ckuusx.c, 30 Mar 2010.
-+
-+Changed VOID and CKVOID definition to be 'void' for all HP-UX (verified by
-+PeterE back to HP-UX 6.5, 1989). Still need to check this on HP-UX 5.21;
-+if that's an exception it can be done in the makefile. ckcdeb.h, 30 Mar 2010.
-+
-+The change I made to allow CONNECT to reestablish a previous SSH connection
-+prevented a new SSH connection to a different host to be made. Fixed in
-+ckuus7.c, 30 Mar 2010.
-+
-+Fixed mistaken extern declarations of krb4_errno and krb5_errno as strings
-+in nvlook(); they are ints. Built OK on Mac OS X 10.6.3. ckuus4.c, 30 Mar 2010.
-+
-+A fix to Trusted HP-UX makefile target from PeterE, to account for the
-+equivalence of +openssl and +ssl as target suffixes. 30 Mar 2010.
-+
-+Added a new function \fcvtcsets(string,cset1,cset1) that converts a string
-+from one character set to another. The csets are File Character-Set names.
-+ckuus4.c, 31 Mar 2010.
-+
-+Added a new function \fdecodehex(string,prefix) that decodes a string
-+containing prefixed hex bytes. Default prefix is %%, but any prefix of
-+one of two chars (such as % or 0x) can be specified. ckuusr.h, ckclib.h,
-+ckclib.c, ckuusr.c, 31 Mar 2010.
-+
-+Richard Nolde reports that Kermit can't find -lpam on Fedora 12 because it's
-+in /lib rather than /usr/lib. RHEL5 has symlinks, FC12 should too. Added a
-+note to the makefile. 1 Apr 2010.
-+
-+Build on Solaris 11 for the first time. Had to adjust ckuver.h to get the
-+version herald right. This was on a box that reported its architecture as
-+i86pc. 1 Apr 2010.
-+
-+Added MIME character-set names as invisible synonyms in the file and
-+terminal character-set tables, fcstab[] and tcstab[]. Note that not all the
-+character sets known to Kermit are registered in MIME. But at least now
-+MIME-registered character sets can be referred to by their MIME names, e.g.
-+ISO-8859-1, ISO646-ES, IBM437, WINDOWS-1252. These are not listed if you
-+type ? in a field that is parsing them, unless you type a letter first,
-+e.g. "i?" lists ISO- and IBM set names. Later maybe I'll make parallel
-+tables, or keyword attribute bit that says whether a name is MIME or not.
-+The real benefit of this change is that now Kermit can take its
-+character-set names from external sources like email headers or web logs.
-+ckuxla.c, 1 Apr 2010.
-+
-+Changed the IF command to accept a bare macro name its condition. This will
-+parse and execute correctly if the macro is defined and if it has a numeric
-+value, or if it is not defined, in which case it evaluates to 0 (FALSE). If
-+it is defined but has a non-numeric value, a parse error occurs. ckuus6.c,
-+2 Apr 2010.
-+
-+Added \fstringtype() function. Given a string argument, it tells whether
-+the string is 7bit, 8bit, utf8, binary, etc. ckuusr.h, ckuus[4x].c,
-+2 Apr 2010.
-+
-+Did a few builds to make sure there were no booboos. Solaris 9, NetBSD
-+5.01, Linux RHEL4, HP-UX 10.20 (non-ANSI compiler and ANSI optimizing
-+compiler), Mac OS X 10.4.11, SCO OSR 6.00. 5 Apr 2010.
-+
-+---C-Kermit 9.0 Alpha.05---
-+
-+Increased maximum variable name length from 4K to 16K. Verified that
-+too-long names are caught and recovered from correctly. ckuusr.h, 6 Apr 2010.
-+
-+Implemented a new \fsplit() option for parsing CSV files, which turns out to
-+be a little complicated, because the separator is not just a comma, but a
-+comma and all its surrounding spaces. Also there are special quoting rules
-+for fields with embedded commas and fields with embedded quotes. ckclib.c,
-+7 Apr 2010.
-+
-+---C-Kermit 9.0 Alpha.06---
-+
-+VMS changes from SMS. They build OK, Kermit file transfers are still OK,
-+but FTP text-mode GETs always hang on the 10th 8K network read. Couldn't
-+get a debug log this time. ckcmai.c, ckvfio.c, ckvrms.h, ckvker.com.
-+8 Apr 2010.
-+
-+Changing VNAML from 4K to 16K broke the build on HP-UX 9. Put it back to
-+4K. 9 Apr 2010.
-+
-+John Dunlap, running days-long stress tests between E-Kermit and C-Kermit,
-+found a bug in the packet-reading and -decoding code: If a NAK packet
-+arrives with its length field corrupted to indicate a bigger size, and there
-+are enough bytes following in the pipeline, ttinl() will return a too-long
-+packet (if there are not enough bytes waiting to be read, then ttinl() will
-+properly time out). In the bad case rpack() trusts the packet length, uses
-+it as the basis for computation of the block-check length, which is then
-+used to access memory that might not be there, causing (at least on John's
-+Linux system) a segmentation fault. John added the normal clause to check
-+the result of the block-check calculation, and I changed ttinl() to always
-+break on the eol character (normally carriage return), since this can never
-+appear in a packet, even if we "set control unprefix all". Also added a
-+check to ttinl() to protect against length fields corrupted into illegal
-+values. ckcfn2.c, ckutio.c, 13 Apr 2010.
-+
-+From Lewis McCarthy:
-+ Based on code inspection, C-Kermit appears to have an SSL-related security
-+ vulnerability analogous to that identified as CVE-2009-3767 (see e.g.
-+ http://cve.mitre.org/cgi-bin/cvename.cgi?name=CVE-2009-3767).
-+
-+ I'm attaching a patch for this issue relative to the revision of ck_ssl.c
-+ obtained from a copy of http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ftp/test/tar/x.zip
-+ downloaded on 2010/07/30, which I believe is the latest.
-+
-+ When this flaw was first widely publicized at last year's Black Hat
-+ conference, it was claimed that some public certificate authorities had
-+ indeed issued certificates that could be used to exploit this class of
-+ vulnerability. As far as I know they have not revealed specifically which
-+ public CA(s) had been found issuing such certificates.
-+ Some references: http://www.mseclab.com/?p=180
-+ http://www.theregister.co.uk/2009/07/30/universal_ssl_certificate/
-+
-+Patches added to ck_ssl.c, 4 Aug 2010.
-+
-+Peter Eichhorn reported that "RENAME ../x ." didn't work. This is a side
-+effect of the changes of 2006 to the RENAME command, there was a little
-+confusion in the renameone() routine; fixed in ckuus6.c, 4 Aug 2010.
-+
-+If only one file is FOPEN'd, FCLOSE given with no arguments would close it.
-+Turns out to be a bad idea. Example: program with an input and output file,
-+try to close the output file before it is opened by just typing FCLOSE; this
-+can mess up the input file. For safety FCLOSE has to require a channel
-+number or ALL. ckuus7.c, 4 Aug 2010.
-+
-+Added \fstrcmp(s1,s2,case,start,length), which has the advantage over IF
-+EQU,LGT,LLT that case senstivity can be specified as a function arg, and
-+also substrings can be specified. ckuusr.h, ckuus[24].c, 5 Aug 2010.
-+
-+The CSV feature of Alpha.06 had a subtle flaw, namely that if the last item
-+in a comma separated list was enclosed within doublequotes with a trailing
-+space after the closing doublequote, a spurious empty final element would be
-+created in the result array. Fixed in cksplit(), ckclib.c, 5 Aug 2010.
-+
-+---Alpha.07---
-+
-+The CSV feature of \fsplit() splits a comma-separated list into an array.
-+To turn the array back into a comma separated list, \fjoin(&a,\44,1) almost
-+works, except for elements contain literal doublequotes, such as:
-+
-+ Mohammad "The Greatest" Ali
-+
-+This calls for making a symbolic CSV argument for \fjoin() like the one that
-+was made for \fsplit(): \fjoin(&a,CSV). Also \fjoin(&a,TSV) for
-+Tab-separated list. Thus if Kermit reads a record in CSV format, splits it
-+into an array, and then joins the array back into a CSV record, the result
-+will be equivalent to the original, according to the CSV definition. It
-+might not be identical, because if the result had extraneous spaces before
-+or after the separating commas, these are discarded, but that does not
-+affect the elements themselves. Furthermore it is now possible to convert
-+a comma-separated list into a tab-separated list, and vice versa (which is
-+not a simple matter of changing commas to tabs or vice versa). ckuus4.c,
-+12 Aug 2010.
-+
-+From Joop Boonen 26 Juli 2010: "Added HAVE_LOCKDEV as openSuSE >= 11.3 uses
-+lockdev but not baudboy. They use ttylock directly. The program code has
-+been added so the the program works without a problem." makefile, ckcdeb.h,
-+ckutio.c, ckuus5.c, 23 Aug 2010.
-+
-+---Alpha.08---
-+
-+From Gary Mills at the U of Manitoba: convert Solaris version from BSD ptys
-+to streams ptys because there are only 48 BSD-style ptys and he was running
-+out. No code changes needed, the only change necessary was to add the
-+following flags to the makefile target:
-+
-+ -DHAVE_STREAMS -DHAVE_GRANTPT -DHAVE_PTSNAME
-+ -DPUSH_PTEM -DPUSH_LDTERM -DPUSH_TTCOMPAT
-+
-+makefile, ckcmai.c, 21 Sep 2010.
-+
-+Testing this in Solaris 9 I see that the DES library disappeared. Added
-+code to the solaris9 targets (also used by Solaris 10 and 11) to check for
-+this. makefile, 21 Sep 2010.
-+
-+The Solaris target checked the OpenSSL version automatically to set the
-+right flag, the Linux target didn't. Put the OpenSSL-version testing code
-+in the Linux target too. makefile, 21 Sep 2010.
-+
-+A couple minor changes to the tru64-51b makefile targets from Steven Schweda
-+but there still are some problems with the Tru64 Unix builds.
-+makefile, 21 Sep 2010.
-+
-+---Alpha.09---
-+
-+\fcontents(\&a[3]) got an error if the array was declared but its dimension
-+was less than 3, which is bad when dealing with (say) an array created
-+dynamically by \fsplit(), which might or might not have a third element.
-+In case it doesn't -- i.e. in case we are referring to an out of range
-+element of any array that is declared -- we should just return a null
-+string, as we do with other types of variables that are not defined.
-+For that matter, ditto even if the array is not declared; what useful
-+purpose is served by throwing an error in this case?
-+ckuus4.c, 30 Dec 2010.
-+
-+cksplit() treats \ as a quoting character. If the source string contains
-+backslashes, they are swallowed (or, if doubled, one is kept). That's not
-+good for parsing external data, such as lines read from files, where there
-+are no quoting rules. This came up when parsing CSV files; as a workaround,
-+I made \fsplit() treat backslash as an ordinary character for CSV and TSV
-+splitting (a better solution might be yet another argument that specifies
-+a quote character). ckclib.c, 30 Dec 2010.
-+
-+Began converting C-Kermit to Open Source with the Simplified 3-Clause BSD
-+license. Updated the text for the INTRO, LICENSE, NEWS, and SUPPORT
-+commands. Fixed things so the copyright year to be displayed is defined in
-+one place (ck_cryear in ckcmai.c), rather than hardwired into text strings
-+all over the place. COPYING.TXT, ckcmai.c, ckuus[256].c, 2 Jun 2011.
-+
-+When I added MIME synonyms for Kermit character-set names, I left a bogus
-+entry in the tables ("windows-1251") that was in the wrong place
-+alphabetically, thus preventing most references to file character-set names
-+from working right. Removed the bogus entry. ckuxla.c, 2 Jun 2011.
-+
-+Most combinations work OK, but not translating Cyrillic text from UTF-8
-+to Latin/Cyrillic, and probably the same would be true for any case of
-+converting from UTF-8 or UCS-2 to anything else. The problem was in
-+xgnbyte(), which converts the input stream from the specified character to
-+UCS2; it needed to make a special case for when the input file was already
-+Unicode. Believe it or not, this problem occurred at least as far back as
-+8.0.201 (9.5 years ago) and nobody noticed. So if the fix isn't perfect
-+probably nobody will notice that either. ckcfns.c, 3 Jun 2011.
-+
-+The SET BLOCK CHECK command did not parse all the items in its keyword
-+list. Fixed in ckuus3.c, 3 Jun 2011.
-+
-+For EM-APEX ocean floats project, where buoys in stormy waters have to
-+transmit data through an earth satellite using non-error-correcting modems,
-+John Dunlap ran exhaustive stress tests of Kermit protocol transfers through
-+a simulated connection that injected errors and delays and identified a
-+weakness in Kermit protocol when it is used under extremely bad conditions:
-+If a data byte of the S packet (or its Ack) is corrupted and the 1-byte
-+checksum is also corrupted in such a way that that the checksum matches the
-+corrupted data, the two Kermit programs will disagree as to the negotiated
-+parameters. For example, if file Sender's RPT field is changed from '~' to
-+'^', the receiver will decode the packet incorrectly. Ditto for most of the
-+other parameters. The result is that a corrupted file is received but
-+reported correct. John suggested a new mode of operation in which the Type
-+3 block check is used for all packets. Such a mode can not be negotiated
-+because the negotiation packet itself is assumed by all Kermit programs to
-+have a 1-byte checksum. Added SET BLOCK-CHECK 5 to the parser (with
-+invisible synonym FORCE-3". ckuus3.c, 3 Jun 2011.
-+
-+Added supporting code for SET BLOCK 5: ckcfn[23].c, ckcpro.w, ckcmai.c,
-+ckuus3.c, 3 Jun 2011.
-+
-+Added code to skip the heuristic that S and I packets always have block
-+check type 1. File transfer OK between two C-Kermits with SET BLOCK 5.
-+rpack(): ckcfn2.c, 5 Jun 2011.
-+
-+Made the file receiver put "5" in the block-check-type in its ACK to the
-+S-Packet. spar(): ckcfns.c, 5 Jun 2011.
-+
-+Now the question is: Can we make the file receiver automatically and safely
-+recognize a three-byte block check on an incoming S or I packet? It's
-+tricky because the block check field is not self-identified, it's just the
-+last "n" characters of string indicated by the length field, so correct
-+decoding of the packet depends on stateful knowledge of "n". How about this:
-+rpack() already knows what type of packet it is, so if it's an S or I packet
-+and the 8th byte of the data field is "5" and last 3 bytes, when interpreted
-+as the CRC, match the packet contents, then we accept the packet and switch
-+to BLOCK 5 mode.
-+
-+On the other hand, if the "5" was put there by corruption, the CRC should
-+catch the error. In that case we NAK the packet and presumabely get a
-+different version back. There would be no reason to try to re-read the same
-+packet with a different block check, because the "5" could not possibly be
-+there legitimately unless it had a 3-byte CRC. To be clear, this is
-+cheating. We read the packet contents before we know the packet is correct,
-+then we check that it *is* correct. I made the 4-line change to rpack()
-+and it works OK in the absense of transmission errors. ckcfn2.c, 3 Jun 2011.
-+
-+So the various combinations should work as desired:
-+
-+ . Sender and receiver both support and are told to SET BLOCK 5 ("SB5").
-+ . Sender SB5, but receiver doesn't support it (errors out).
-+ . Sender SB5, receiver supports it but wasn't told (auto-recognizes it).
-+ . Receiver SB5 but sender no (errors out).
-+
-+Note in the last case, the receiver should NOT automatically fall back to
-+standard behavior because if the user said SET BLOCK 5 that means every
-+packet MUST be protected by CRC to prevent the I/S packets from being
-+corrupted.
-+
-+Installed new HELP SET BLOCK-CHECK text. ckuus2.c, 5 Jun 2011.
-+
-+Autodownload didn't work when the S or I packet had a 3-byte block check
-+because kstart() checked it for a 1-byte checksum. Fixed in kstart(),
-+ckcfn2.c, 6 Jun 2011. However, older Kermit versions and programs that
-+claim to do "autodownload" will never recognize this type of packet. No
-+big deal since even if they did, the transfer would fail anyway.
-+
-+Added 'FORCE 3' to E-Kermit, called it EK 1.7. The option is "-b 5". Works
-+OK for sending and receiving, both with and without the new option. Also
-+works with "-b 5" if you send an S packet to it with '5' in the BCT field.
-+Changes were minimal, I have them all in ek17.diff.
-+
-+I could probably also make a new G-Kermit in about 10 minutes, but who cares
-+about G-Kermit... We already have two useful Kermit programs that
-+interoperate with the new protocol. 6 Jun 2011.
-+
-+Replaced the very inadequate help texts for functions \fword() and
-+\fsplit() with new ones. ckuus2.c, 6 Jun 2011.
-+
-+There were a couple reports of file corruption that I was saving for later.
-+Now that now is later I dug up the messages, files, and logs and it turns
-+out that nobody had reported a reproducible case of Kermit corrupting a
-+file. There have been non-reproducible cases though, almost certainly due
-+to corruption of the S or I packet or its ACK, which is why we now have SET
-+BLOCK 5. Even with BLOCK CHECK 5, there is no guarantee that the same thing
-+won't happen, it is just far less likely. Even if we added a 32-bit CRC or
-+even 64-bit one, there would still be a small chance it could happen.
-+
-+7 Jun 2011:
-+
-+Corrected various #ifdefs (or lack of them) when building C-Kermit with
-+different combinations of feature-selection options such as NOCSETS, NOICP,
-+NOLOCAL, NOSPL, NOUNICODE, etc. ckcfns.c ckcmai.c ckcxla.h ckuus2.c
-+ckuus4.c ckuus5.c ckuus6.c ckuusr.c, 7 Jun 2011. After running the script
-+that does all these builds (84 of them) I ran it again to make sure that
-+none of the changes broke builds that succeeded before the changes were made.
-+
-+Built OK on Solaris9 ("make solaris9")
-+Ditto with Krb5 and OpenSSL 0.9.8q ("make solaris9g+openssl+shadow+pam+zlib")
-+
-+Built OK on Mac OS X 10.4.11 ("make macosx").
-+Also "make macosx+krb5+openssl.
-+
-+Built OK on Linux RHEL4 ("make linux").
-+Built OK on Linux RHEL4 with OpenSSL 0.9.7a ("make linux+ssl").
-+Built OK on Linux RHEL5 ("make linux").
-+
-+"make linux+ssl" fails on RHEL5 because of DES, even though the target
-+tests for the presence or absence of the DES libraries. In this case the
-+libraries are there but they lack the functions des_ecb3_encrypt,
-+des_random_seed, and des_set_odd_parity. The build succeeds as:
-+
-+ make linux+ssl KFLAGS=-UCK_SSL
-+
-+Since DES is now considered harmful, Jeff Altman suggests that all OpenSSL
-+builds, even for old versions, should omit it ("If you are building with
-+openssl and no kerberos or srp, just disable DES. Disabling DES will impact
-+telnet and rlogin but it won't matter if you have no ability to negotiate a
-+session key").
-+
-+From Ian Beckwith, patches for Debian Linux:
-+ . Change all '-' to '\(hy' in man page (new pedantry): ckuker.nr.
-+ . Make IKSD authentication (using PAM) ask for a password when an invalid
-+ username has been given, to avoid disclosing which account names are valid:
-+ ckufio.c, ckuus7.c.
-+ . Fix spelling errors: ckcftp.c, ckuus2.c, ckuker.nr, ckcpro.w, ckuusr.h.
-+ . Patch makefile to support install to a staging area with DESTDIR.
-+ . Some other patches (mainly for typos) were for plain-text documentation
-+ files that were generated from Web pages; I updated the web pages.
-+
-+A big corporate C-Kermit user has an application where a local C-Kermit
-+makes a connection to a remote one, uploads some files, and then if the
-+server has any new patch files for the local, it sends the patches and
-+does a REMOTE HOST command to run the patch program. This stopped working
-+in C-Kermit 6.0 or 7.0 when I put a check to prevent it, because "it makes
-+no sense to send REMOTE commands to the local end, because the results are
-+sent back to the remote to be displayed on its screen but it has no screen".
-+That may be true, but if the user needs to control the local from the
-+remote, they should be able to. I removed the checks. This doesn't solve
-+the problem of where the output goes; ideally it would go to the local
-+screen but I don't see any elegant and simple way to make that change.
-+However the output redirectors can still be used with the REMOTE command
-+so the results can be captured to a remote file, which could then be sent.
-+ckuus7.c, 7 Jun 2011.
-+
-+Changed SET VARIABLE-EVALUATION to SET COMMAND VARIABLE-EVALUATION, but left
-+the former version available. ckuusr.c, 9 Jun 2011.
-+
-+Documented the SET COMMAND VARIABLE-EVALUATION command, which I added in
-+2008. ck90.html, 9 Jun 2011.
-+
-+Renamed all old Mac OS X makefile targets to have the prefix "old" to avoid
-+confusing them with the current targets, and made macosx10 a synonym for
-+macosx, so those who used previous makefiles will get a current target
-+without having to know the new name. makefile, 9 Jun 2011.
-+
-+Added XMESSAGE, which is to MESSAGE as XECHO is ECHO: prints the text
-+without a line terminator, so it can be continued by subsequent [X]MESSAGE
-+commands. ckuusr.[ch], 9 Jun 2011.
-+
-+Back to "make linux+ssl" on RHEL5... I took the coward's way out and added
-+code to the makefile target to check whether the build worked (somebody let
-+me know if there is a better way to check), and if not to give a message
-+suggesting they "make clean ; make linux+ssl KFLAGS=-UCK_DES". makefile,
-+9 Jun 2011.
-+
-+Noticed that \frecurse() would dump core if called with no arguments.
-+Fixed in ckuus4.c, 9 Jun 2011.
-+
-+Added \q() as an alternative to the more verbose \fliteral() for quoting
-+strings that contain characters (like \) that would otherwise be significant
-+to Kermit. It's more efficient because it isn't a function call, and 'q'
-+is an intuitive letter to mean 'quote'. It also works better than
-+\fliteral() because functions treat commas and braces specially. ckuus4.c,
-+10 Jun 2011.
-+
-+Built OK on VMS 8.3 on Alpha, no net. DEC C caught a couple glitches in the
-+new code that gcc didn't catch, which I fixed. ckuus[25].c, 10 Jun 2011.
-+
-+Built OK on VMS 8.3 on Alpha with Multinet 5.3. The SSL build failed but
-+I'm not going to worry about it. 10 Jun 2011.
-+
-+Built OK on NetBSD 5.1. 10 Jun 2011.
-+
-+Tried to resurrect my old "build-all" machine, an IBM Netfinity 3500 from
-+1997 with 20-some mountable bootable hard disks with lots of 1990s OS's on
-+them. No dice. I can see the BIOS but not the hard disks. The
-+configuration is still correct because it tries to boot from the mountable
-+hard disk, but it fails (I tried six different ones).
-+
-+Tried to resurrect my old Siemens Nixdorf RM 200 MIPS machine. Booted OK,
-+headless even, but makes a hellish high-pitched whine, like a dentist drill.
-+It's pretty slow too. "make sinix542" (for SINIX 5.4.2) bombed at link
-+time on no rdchk(). Fixed by #including <sys/filio.h>. ckutio.c, 10 Jun 2011.
-+
-+Tried to resurrect my old SCO Xenix 2.3.4 machine, also headless. Amazingly
-+it still works; it can't use a monitor but I can Telnet to it. Had to tweak
-+some #ifdefs but I got a no-net version built successfully. According to my
-+notes, it hasn't been possible to build with TCP/IP since C-Kermit 8.0,
-+but how many people ever had SCO Xenix 2.3.4 with TCP/IP anyway? Anyway we
-+still have the binaries for C-Kermit 7.0. ckuus4.c, 10 Jun 2011.
-+
-+Built OK on AIX 5.3. Built OK on Solaris 10. 11 Jun 2011.
-+
-+Tried harder to revive the build-all machine, now it sort of works, but not
-+all of the bootable OS's work. Built C-Kermit 9.0 OK on OpenBSD 3.0. Built
-+OK on QNX 4.25 but had to #ifdef references to IXANY in ckutio.c and ckupty.
-+Built OK on NetBSD 1.5.1 (2000). Tried "make netbsd+ssl" on this one, it's
-+OpenSSL 0.9.5a 1 Apr 2000, but it bombs out in ckuath.c, no big deal.
-+Another problem in NetBSD 1.5.2 is that even though off_t is 8, CK_OFF_T
-+is 4. Worth noting but not worth fixing unless someone else notices.
-+13 Jun 2011.
-+
-+SuSE 7.0... boots OK but telnet server doesn't work. Can telnet out but
-+it's too flaky, connection drops if I try to transfer a file.
-+
-+OpenBSD 2.5 [1999] OK. Red Hat 7.1 OK. Red Hat 7.1 with OpenSSL 0.9.6
-+not OK, same error as with 0.9.5a:
-+
-+ckuath.c
-+In file included from ck_ssl.h:48,
-+ from ckuath.c:225:
-+/usr/include/openssl/des.h:77: warning: redefinition of `Block'
-+ckuat2.h:86: warning: `Block' previously declared here
-+/usr/include/openssl/des.h:83: redefinition of `struct des_ks_struct'
-+/usr/include/openssl/des.h:91: warning: redefinition of `Schedule'
-+ckuat2.h:90: warning: `Schedule' previously declared here
-+
-+So it appears that OpenSSL support is broken for pre-0.9.7. Tried
-+building it again with -UCK_SSL (since the errors are originating from
-+from des.h)... But it still failed exactly the same way. I found
-+#includes for des.h in ckuath.c and and ck_ssl.h and #ifdef'd them out,
-+but it still fails:
-+
-+In file included from /usr/include/openssl/evp.h:89,
-+ from /usr/include/openssl/x509.h:67,
-+ from /usr/include/openssl/ssl.h:69,
-+ from ck_ssl.h:51,
-+ from ckuath.c:227:
-+/usr/include/openssl/des.h:77: warning: redefinition of `Block'
-+ckuat2.h:86: warning: `Block' previously declared here
-+/usr/include/openssl/des.h:83: redefinition of `struct des_ks_struct'
-+/usr/include/openssl/des.h:91: warning: redefinition of `Schedule'
-+ckuat2.h:90: warning: `Schedule' previously declared here
-+
-+Built OK on Debian 2.1. 13 Jun 2011.
-+
-+On FreeBSD 4.4, it blows up with:
-+ckufio.c: In function vpass':
-+ckufio.c:8201: conflicting types for 'initgroups'
-+/usr/include/unistd.h:154: previous declaration of 'initgroups'
-+ckufio.c:8201: warning: extern declaration of 'initgroups' doesn't match global
-+one. Fixed by defining NODCLINITGROUPS for FreeBSD in ckufio.c. It might not
-+be the right fix, but I don't have a lot of other FreeBSD versions to
-+compare with. Anyway now it builds OK on 4.4, and also on FreeBSD 3.3.
-+ckufio.c, 13 Jun 2011.
-+
-+Tried to build on SCO Open Server 5.0.7 but it fails at link time because
-+it can't find rdchk(). But it's supposed to be there! Come back to this
-+later...
-+
-+Red Hat 6.1 i386 32/64 linux 2332545
-+Red Hat 7.1 i386 32/64 linux 2368528
-+Red Hat EL4 i386 32/74 linux 2363067
-+Red Hat EL5.6 i386 64 linux 2371279
-+Solaris9 sparc 32/64 solaris9 2849896
-+Solaris9+ssl sparc 32/64 solaris9 5021764
-+Solaris10 sparc 32/64 solaris10 2855776
-+QNX i386 32 qnx32 2012323
-+NetBSD 1.5.1 i386 32/64 netbsd 2198055
-+NetBSD 5.1 i386 32/64 netbsd 2159863
-+OpenBSD 2.5 i386 32/64 openbsd 2236036
-+Mac OS X 10.6.7 x86_64 64 macosx 2.7M
-+Mac OS X 10.4.11 ppc 32/64 macosx 2496304
-+Debian 2.1 i386 32/64 linux 2213221
-+FreeBSD 4.4 i386 32/64 freebsd 2291333
-+FreeBSD 3.3 i386 32/64 freebsd 2147370
-+SINIX 5.42 mips 32 sinix542 3319325 (1995)
-+SCO Unixware 2.1.3 i386 32 uw213 2242176
-+SCO OSR6.0.0 i386 32/64 sco_osr600 2368300
-+
-+More builds, 14 June 2011:
-+
-+VMS 6.2 alpha 32 make mn 2556928 No TCP/IP
-+VMS 6.2 alpha 32 make m 3112960 UCX 4.0
-+Solaris 11 i386 32/64 solaris11 2823860
-+Solaris 11 i386 32/64 solaris11+ssl 2993660 OpenSSL 0.9.8l
-+NetBSD 5.1 i386 32/64 netbsd+krb5 2307855 Kerberos 5
-+Linux Slackware 12.1.0 i386 32/65 linux 2175754
-+Linux Fedora 14 i386 32/64 linux 2256514
-+Linux Fedora 14 i386 32/64 linux+ssl ....... OpenSSL 1.0.0d
-+Linux Fedora 14 i386 32/64 linux+krb 2449614 (*)
-+
-+(*) make linux+krb5 "LIBS=$LIBS /lib/libk5crypto.so.3 /lib/libcom_err.so.2"
-+
-+Noticed that netbsd+ssl build on NetBSD 5.1 said "NetBSD 1.5" in its banner.
-+Fixed by replacing the old hardwired target with the new "subroutinized"
-+target a'la linux+ssl and adapting it to NetBSD. makefile, 15 Jun 2011.
-+
-+Same deal for Kerberos 5, make a new netbsd+krb5 target and it builds ok,
-+at least once one figures out where the Kerberos headers and libs are.
-+makefile, 15 Jun 2011.
-+
-+Same deal for the netbsdnc target, now it simply defined NOCURSES and
-+chains to the main netbsd target. makefile, 15 Jun 2011.
-+
-+Tried to build with Kerberos 5 on Solaris, fails because the DES library
-+no longer exists. This one is beyond me, sorry.
-+
-+Made new targets for MirBSD, mirbsd and mirbsd+ssl, makefile 15 Jun 2011.
-+
-+In OpenSUSE 11.2 with OpenSSL 0.9.8r we bomb on undefined references from
-+various DES library routines. Builds OK without DES.
-+
-+Various linux+krb5 builds fail because can't find -lgssapi_krb5
-+
-+SSL builds with OpenSSL < 0.9.7 fail even though there is code to support
-+the older SSL.
-+
-+Fixed some printf %ld vs int instances in the sizeofs section of SHOW FEATURES.
-+ckuus5.c, 15 Jun 2011.
-+
-+Fixed the new linux+ssl target to actually use the SSLINC and SSLLIBS
-+definitions, oops. makefile, 15 Jun 2011.
-+
-+15 June 2011 builds (Beta.01):
-+
-+AIX 5.3 ppc 32/64 aix+ssl 3283846 OpenSSL 0.9.8m
-+NetBSD 5.1 i386 32/64 netbsd 2159863
-+NetBSD 5.1 i386 32/64 netbsd+ssl 2350274 OpenSSL 0.9.9-dev
-+NetBSD 5.1 i386 32/64 netbsd+krb5 2349627 MIT Krb5 1.6.3
-+FreeBSD 8.2 i386 32/64 freebsd 2298414
-+FreeBSD 8.2 i386 32/64 freebsd+ssl 2448961 OpenSSL 0.9.8q
-+OpenBSD 4.7 i386 32/64 openbsd 2266132
-+OpenBSD 4.7 i386 32/64 openbsd+ssl 2409263 OpenSSL 0.9.8k
-+MirBSD 10 i386 32/64 mirbsd 2216601
-+MirBSD 10 i386 32/64 mirbsd+ssl 2358318 OpenSSL 0.9.8r
-+OpenSuse 11.2 x86_64 64 linux 2348468
-+OpenSuse 11.2 x86_64 64 linux+ssl (*) 2546540 OpenSSL 0.9.8r
-+RHEL 5.6 ia64 64 linux 4390687
-+RHEL 5.6 ia64 64 linux+ssl (*) 4775007 OpenSSL 0.9.8e
-+Ubuntu 9.10 i386 32/64 linux 2275523
-+Ubuntu 9.10 i386 32/64 linux+ssl 2466708 OpenSSL 0.9.8r
-+Gentoo 1.12.13 ppc 32/64 linux 2386597
-+Gentoo 1.12.13 ppc64 64 linux 2749015
-+Gentoo 1.12.13 ppc64 64 linux+ssl 3002150 OpenSSL 0.9.8r
-+Gentoo 1.12.13 sparc 32/64 linux 2478382
-+Gentoo 1.12.13 sparc 32/64 linux+ssl 2690499 OpenSSL 0.9.8r
-+Solaris 9 sparc 32/64 solaris9 2849896
-+Solaris 10 i386 32/64 solaris10 2837620
-+IRIX 6.5 R10000 32/64 irix65 2869704
-+
-+* and KFLAGS=-UCK_DES
-+
-+Tried building on NetBSD 5.1 with Heimdal Kerberos using:
-+
-+make netbsd+krb5 \
-+ "KFLAGS=-DHEIMDAL" \
-+ "K5INC=-I/usr/include" \
-+ "K5LIB=-L/usr/lib"
-+
-+It found all its headers OK, but it blew up in ckuath.c. Small wonder,
-+ckccfg.html says:
-+
-+HEIMDAL
-+ Should be defined if Kerberos V support is provided by HEIMDAL. Support
-+ for this option is not complete in C-Kermit 8.0. Anyone interested in
-+ working on this should contact kermit-support.
-+
-+'krb5-config --version' gives the MIT Kerberos 5 version number.
-+
-+Make a new netbsd+krb5+ssl target based on the combination of the new
-+netbsd+ssl and netbsd+krb5 targets. There were lots of warnings in the
-+compilation but no errors, but it produced an executable that starts and
-+does normal things but I have no idea if the SSL or Kerberos functions work.
-+makefile, 16 Jun 2011.
-+
-+Changed the cu-solaris9-krb5 target to test for the presence of DES because
-+DES isn't there, to see if this would allow a Kerberos build to proceed.
-+And it worked, amazing. At least the build completed, I have no way to test
-+the Kerberos part. makefile, 16 Jun 2011.
-+
-+Updated the solaris9+ssl target to do the DES testing. makefile, 16 Jun 2011.
-+
-+Updated cu-solaris+krb5 target to test whether the GSSAPI library is called
-+libgassapi or libgassapi_krb5. makefile, 16 Jun 2011.
-+
-+Added lots of tests to the Linux Kerberos 5 entries, linux+krb5 and
-+linux+krb5+ssl, because some have libk5crypto and some don't; some have
-+libcom_err and some don't; and some have libgssapi_krb5 (e.g. RHEL5,
-+OpenSuse 11.2) whereas others have libgssapi (Gentoo).
-+
-+16 June 2011 builds (Beta.01):
-+
-+NetBSD 5.1 i386 32/64 netbsd+krb5+ssl 2451757 OpenSSL 0.9.9 MIT Krb5 1.6.3
-+Solaris 9 sparc 32/64 solaris9+krb5 2543036 MIT Kerberos 5 1.7.1
-+Solaris 9 sparc 32/64 solaris9+ssl 5021544 OpenSSL 0.9.8q (gcc)
-+Gentoo... ppc 32/64 linux 2386597
-+Gentoo... ppc 32/64 linux+ssl 2593561 OpenSSL 0.9.8r
-+Gentoo... ppc64 64 linux 2749015
-+Gentoo... ppc64 64 linux+ssl 3002150 OpenSSL 0.9.8r
-+RHEL5 x86_64 64 linux+krb5 (*) 2563878 MIT Kerberos 5 1.6.1
-+RHEL5 x86_64 64 linux+krb5+ssl(*) 2563878 MIT Kerberos 5 1.6.1
-+Fedora 14 i386 32/64 linux+krb5+ssl 2539891 MIT Krb5 + OpenSSL 0.9.8r
-+
-+* KFLAGS=-UCK_DES
-+
-+--- C-Kermit 9.0.299 Beta.01 ---
-+
-+sizeof() can return a long or an int, so neither printf("%d",sizeof(blah));
-+or printf("%ld",sizeof(blah)); can be used everywhere. Changed the
-+"sizeofs" section of SHOW FEATURES in the dumbest (and therefore most
-+portable) way to squelch the warnings. ckuus5.c, 17 Jun 2011.
-+
-+From John Dunlap: "Watching the server screen led me to offer a cosmetic
-+patch for ckuusx.c. I noticed that the server screen said it was
-+"RESENDING" when it really wasn't. The attached patch emits blanks to
-+insure that old labels are completely erased." ckuusx.c, 17 Jun 2011.
-+
-+Nelson Beebe found two places where I had SSLLIBS in the makefile instead of
-+SSLLIB. makefile, 18 Jun 2011.
-+
-+More important he knew how to force gcc to load the right header files for
-+OpenSSL 1.0.0d (by using '-isystem' rather than '-I'). Previously it was
-+using the 0.9.8r header files but linking with the 1.0.0d libraries. This
-+is not in the sources or makefile; it's done when giving the 'make' command:
-+
-+ export PATH=/usr/bin:$PATH
-+ export SSLINC=-isystem/usr/include
-+ export "SSLLIB=-L/usr/lib -Wl,-rpath,/usr/lib"
-+ make linux+ssl
-+
-+Folded the previous linux+openssl+zlib+shadow+pam and linux+openssl+shadow
-+targets into linux+ssl. Checked the linuxso (scripting only) target, builds
-+OK, 600K. Made new subroutinized linux+krb5+krb4 target but can't find
-+anyplace to test it. Made new subroutinized linux+shadow+pam target, works
-+fine on RHEL4. Revised comments and lists again. makefile, 18 Jun 2011.
-+
-+For the pluggable-disk OS's that boot OK but lack a working network, I
-+rigged up a serial connection using a DB9-FF null modem cable, and then a
-+DB9-MF modem cable to make it reach. I don't see any modem signals on
-+either end, but the data goes through OK. COM1 on the desktop PC,
-+/dev/ttyS1 or whatever on Lab. Since there are no modem signals, can't use
-+RTS/CTS. At 57600bps with Xon/Xoff, 500-byte packets and sliding windows,
-+transfers work OK at about 5000cps using 5 window slots; takes 8 minutes to
-+transfer the gzipped C-Kermit tarball. Kermit to the rescue. 19 Jun 2011.
-+
-+Transferred the tarball over serial ports to SCO OSR5.0.5 at 38.4Kbps, the
-+highest speed supported, 12 minutes, no errors, 3300cps. Unpack, make
-+sco32v505udk, OK. Also built the TCP/IP version and it almost made an
-+outbound connection, but only once (not a Kermit program but something with
-+the TCP/IP stack). 19 Jun 2011.
-+
-+Ditto for Solaris 2.6/i386, except 57.6Kbps, 4K-byte packets, no problem.
-+Solaris 8/i386, ditto. 19 Jun 2011.
-+
-+SCO OpenServer 5.0.5 i386 32 sco32v505udk 1940964 No TCP/IP
-+SCO OpenServer 5.0.5 i386 32 sco32v505udknet 2314668 With TCP/IP
-+Sun Solaris 2.6 i386 32 solaris26g 4661368
-+Sun Solaris 8 i386 32 solaris8g 4675432
-+
-+When using compact substring notation, \s(xx[4]) returns the whole string
-+xx starting at position 4, but \s(xx[4:]) returns an empty string. Fixed
-+the latter to be like the former. ckuus5.c, 20 Jun 2010.
-+
-+Really it would have been nicer if \s(xx[4]) returned a single character,
-+the 4th character of xx, but it's too late now. Added another "separator"
-+character '.' (period) for that: \s(xx[4.]) is the 4th character of xx.
-+ckuus4.c, 20 Jun 2010.
-+
-+Back to SCO OSR5.0.7... This failed before because 'rdchk' came up unknown
-+at link time, unlike all previous OSR5's, that used rdchk() in place of the
-+FIONREAD ioctl. Added #ifdefs to make a special case for 5.0.7. I'm not
-+sure this is the best way, but this is the minimal change to get it to work.
-+If anybody cares, maybe the same can be done for previous OSR5 releases.
-+ckutio.c, 20 Jun 2010 (search for SCO_OSR507).
-+
-+SCO OpenServer 5.0.7 i386 32 sco32v507 1895724 No TCP/IP
-+SCO OpenServer 5.0.7 i386 32 sco32v507net 2246792 With TCP/IP
-+
-+Checked current code on RHEL4, found that my GSSAPI-lib finding makefile
-+target didn't look in enough places; added some more. makefile, 21 Jun 2011.
-+
-+Got reports back on HPUX from Peter Eichhorn, almost all good on HP-UX 7, 8,
-+9, 10, and 11. 21-22 Jun 2011.
-+
-+Got access to Debian 5.0 and 7-to-be ("Wheezy/Sid"). Regular 'make linux' is
-+OK in Debian 5, but in 7 can't find crypt, res_search, or dn_expand; had
-+to add more library search clauses to 'make linux'. makefile, 21 Jun 2011.
-+
-+In Debian 7.0, libk5crypto could not be found without adding another clause
-+to 'make linux+krb5'. That done, the SSL build (1.0.0d) was OK, as well as
-+the krb5+ssl one. makefile, 21 Jun 2011.
-+
-+I found a Linux box that had both Kerberos 4 and 5 installed and tried 'make
-+linux+krb5+krb4', which failed because of missing DES functions. Tried
-+'make linux+krb5+krb4 KFLAGS=-UCK_DES', but that fails too, even though it
-+doesn't fail for Kerberos 5 alone, so probably some Krb4 code is making
-+unguarded calls to the DES routines. What is really needed is a way to
-+completely strip all DES references from any given build, code and makefile,
-+a big deal. 21 Jun 2011.
-+
-+Fixed some typos in COPYING.TXT (noticed by Ian Beckwith). 24 Jun 2011.
-+
-+Got access to perhaps the last living 4.3BSD VAX system. It doesn't have
-+SEEK_CUR so I had to #ifdef out the \fpicture() function. Aside from that,
-+no problems. ckuus4.c, 24 Jun 2011.
-+
-+I had been wanting the S-Expression (ROUND x) to allow a second argument n,
-+which, if given, tells where the rounding should occur. If n is positive,
-+the number is rounded to n decimal places. If zero, it is rounded to the
-+nearest integet. If positive, the number is rounded to the nearest power of
-+10; e.g. -2 means "to the nearest hundred". If ROUND is used as before,
-+with one argument, it works as before. ckclib.c, ckuus3.c, 25 Jun 2011.
-+
-+From Arthur Marsh, a few more directories to test for libresolv in Linux.
-+makefile, 26 Jun 2011.
-+
-+From Martin Vorlaender, a fix for the VMS file-transfer display and
-+statistics, a place where a file length wasn't being cast to CK_OFF_T
-+in zchki(). ckvfio.c, 28 Jun 2011.
-+
-+Updated version to 9.0.300 and removed the Beta designation.
-+ckcmai.c, makefile, 28 Jun 2011.
-+
-+Removed solaris9_64 target from makefile. It builds but it doesn't work
-+at all. 30 Jun 2011.
-+
-+--- C-Kermit 9.0.300 ---
-+
-+---------------------------------
-+***************************
---- /dev/null
-+++ ckermit-301/ckermit70.txt
-@@ -0,0 +1,17661 @@
-+
-+ [1]The Columbia Crown The Kermit Project | Columbia University
-+ 612 West 115th Street, New York NY 10025 USA o [2]kermit@columbia.edu
-+ ...since 1981
-+ [3]Home [4]Kermit 95 [5]C-Kermit [6]Scripts [7]Current [8]New [9]FAQ
-+ [10]Support
-+
-+Supplement to [11]Using C-Kermit , 2nd Edition
-+
-+For C-Kermit 7.0
-+
-+As of C-Kermit version: 7.0.196
-+This file created: 8 February 2000
-+This file last updated:
-+Mon Sep 13 08:52:41 2010
-+
-+
-+Authors: Frank da Cruz and Christine M. Gianone
-+Address: The Kermit Project
-+ Columbia University
-+ 612 West 115th Street
-+ New York NY 10025-7799
-+ USA
-+Fax: +1 (212) 662-6442
-+E-Mail: [12]kermit-support@columbia.edu
-+Web: [13]http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/
-+Or: [14]http://www.kermit-project.org/
-+Or: [15]http://www.columbia.nyc.ny.us/kermit/
-+
-+NOTICES
-+
-+ This document:
-+ Copyright © 1997, 2000, Frank da Cruz and Christine M. Gianone.
-+ All rights reserved.
-+
-+ Kermit 95:
-+ Copyright © 1995, 2000, Trustees of Columbia University in the
-+ City of New York. All rights reserved.
-+
-+ C-Kermit:
-+ Copyright © 1985, 2000,
-+ Trustees of Columbia University in the City of New York. All
-+ rights reserved. See the C-Kermit [16]COPYING.TXT file or the
-+ copyright text in the [17]ckcmai.c module for disclaimer and
-+ permissions.
-+
-+ When Kerberos(TM) and/or SRP(TM) (Secure Remote Password) and/or SSL
-+ protocol are included:
-+ Portions Copyright © 1990, Massachusetts Institute of
-+ Technology.
-+ Portions Copyright © 1991, 1993 Regents of the University of
-+ California.
-+ Portions Copyright © 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995 by AT&T.
-+ Portions Copyright © 1997, Stanford University.
-+ Portions Copyright © 1995-1997, Eric Young <eay@cryptosoft.com>.
-+
-+ For the full text of the third-party copyright notices, see
-+ [18]Appendix V.
-+
-+WHAT IS IN THIS FILE
-+
-+ This file lists changes made to C-Kermit since the second edition of
-+ the book [19]Using C-Kermit was published and C-Kermit 6.0 was released
-+ in November 1996. Use this file as a supplement to the second edition
-+ of Using C-Kermit until the third edition is published some time in
-+ 2000. If the "most recent update" shown above is long ago, contact
-+ Columbia University to see if there is a newer release.
-+
-+ For further information, also see the [20]CKCBWR.TXT ("C-Kermit
-+ beware") file for hints, tips, tricks, restrictions, frequently asked
-+ questions, etc, plus the system-specific "beware file", e.g.
-+ [21]CKUBWR.TXT for UNIX, [22]CKVBWR.TXT for VMS, etc, and also any
-+ system-specific update files such as KERMIT95.HTM for Kermit 95 (in the
-+ DOCS\MANUAL\ subdirectory of your K95 directory).
-+
-+ This Web-based copy of the C-Kermit 7.0 update notes supersedes the
-+ plain-text CKERMIT2.TXT file. All changes after 19 January 2000
-+ appear only here in the Web version. If you need an up-to-date
-+ plain-text copy, use your Web browser to save this page as plain
-+ text.
-+
-+ABOUT FILENAMES
-+
-+ In this document, filenames are generally shown in uppercase, but on
-+ file systems with case-sensitive names such as UNIX, OS-9, and AOS/VS,
-+ lowercase names are used: [23]ckubwr.txt, [24]ckermit70.txt, etc.
-+
-+ADDITIONAL FILES
-+
-+ Several other files accompany this new Kermit release:
-+
-+ SECURITY.TXT
-+ Discussion of Kermit's new authentication and encryption
-+ features:
-+
-+ + [25]Plain-text version
-+ + [26]HTML (hypertext) version
-+
-+ IKSD.TXT
-+ How to install and manage an Internet Kermit Service Daemon.
-+
-+ + [27]Plain-text version
-+ + [28]HTML (hypertext) version
-+
-+ Also see [29]cuiksd.htm for instructions for use.
-+
-+ TELNET.TXT
-+ A thorough presentation of Kermit's new advanced Telnet features
-+ and controls.
-+
-+ + [30]Plain-text version
-+ + [31]HTML (hypertext) version
-+
-+THE NEW C-KERMIT LICENSE
-+
-+ The C-Kermit license was rewritten for version 7.0 to grant automatic
-+ permission to packagers of free operating-system distributions to
-+ include C-Kermit 7.0. Examples include Linux (GNU/Linux), FreeBSD,
-+ NetBSD, etc. The new license is in the [32]COPYING.TXT file, and is
-+ also displayed by C-Kermit itself when you give the VERSION or
-+ COPYRIGHT command. The new C-Kermit license does not apply to
-+ [33]Kermit 95.
-+
-+ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
-+
-+ Thanks to Jeff Altman, who joined the Kermit Project in 1995, for much
-+ of what you see in C-Kermit 7.0, especially in the networking and
-+ security areas, and his key role in designing and implementing the
-+ Internet Kermit Service Daemon. And special thanks to Lucas Hart for
-+ lots of help with the VMS version; to Peter Eichhorn for continuous
-+ testing on the full range of HP-UX versions and for a consolidated set
-+ of HP-UX makefile targets; and to Colin Allen, Mark Allen, Roger Allen,
-+ Ric Anderson, William Bader, Mitch Baker, Mitchell Bass, Nelson Beebe,
-+ Gerry Belanger, Jeff Bernsten, Mark Berryman, John Bigg, Volker
-+ Borchert, Jonathan Boswell, Tim Boyer, Frederick Bruckman, Kenneth
-+ Cochran, Jared Crapo, Bill Delaney, Igor Sobrado Delgado, Clarence
-+ Dold, Joe Doupnik, John Dunlap, Max Evarts, Patrick French, Carl
-+ Friedberg, Carl Friend, Hirofumi Fujii, Andrew Gabriel, Gabe Garza,
-+ Boyd Gerber, David Gerber, George Gilmer, Hunter Goatley, DJ Hagberg,
-+ Kevin Handy, Andy Harper, Randolph Herber, Sven Holström, Michal
-+ Jaegermann, Graham Jenkins, Dick Jones, Terry Kennedy, Robert D Keys,
-+ Nick Kisseberth, Igor Kovalenko, David Lane, Adam Laurie, Jeff
-+ Liebermann, Eric Lonvick, Hoi Wan Louis, Arthur Marsh, Gregorie Martin,
-+ Peter Mauzey, Dragan Milicic, Todd Miller, Christian Mondrup, Daniel
-+ Morato, Dat Nguyen, Herb Peyerl, Jean-Pierre Radley, Steve Rance,
-+ Stephen Riehm, Nigel Roles, Larry Rosenman, Jay S Rouman, David
-+ Sanderson, John Santos, Michael Schmitz, Steven Schultz, Bob Shair,
-+ Richard Shuford, Fred Smith, Michael Sokolov, Jim Spath, Peter Szell,
-+ Ted T'so, Brian Tillman, Linus Torvalds, Patrick Volkerding, Martin
-+ Vorländer, Steve Walton, Ken Weaverling, John Weekley, Martin Whitaker,
-+ Jim Whitby, Matt Willman, Joellen Windsor, Farrell Woods, and many
-+ others for binaries, hosting, reviews, suggestions, advice, bug
-+ reports, and all the rest over the 3+ year C-Kermit 7.0 development
-+ cycle. Thanks to Russ Nelson and the board of the Open Software
-+ Initiative ([34]http://www.opensource.org) for their cooperation in
-+ developing the new C-Kermit license and to the proprietors of those
-+ free UNIX distributions that have incorporated C-Kermit 7.0 for their
-+ cooperation and support, especially FreeBSD's Jörg Wunsch.
-+
-+NOTE TO KERMIT 95 USERS
-+
-+ Kermit 95 and C-Kermit share the same command and scripting language,
-+ the same Kermit file-transfer protocol implementation, and much else
-+ besides.
-+
-+ Like the book [35]Using C-Kermit, this file concentrates on the aspects
-+ of C-Kermit that are common to all versions: UNIX, VMS, Windows, OS/2,
-+ VOS, AOS/VS, etc. Please refer to your Kermit 95 documentation for
-+ information that is specific to Kermit 95.
-+
-+ C-Kermit 7.0 corresponds to Kermit 95 1.1.19.
-+
-+C-KERMIT VERSIONS AND VERSION NUMBERS
-+
-+ "C-Kermit" refers to all the many programs that are compiled in whole
-+ or in part from common C-language source code, comprising:
-+
-+ * A Kermit file transfer protocol module
-+ * A command parser and script execution module
-+ * A modem-dialing module
-+ * A network support module
-+ * A character-set translation module.
-+
-+ and several others. These "system-independent" modules are combined
-+ with system-dependent modules for each platform to provide the required
-+ input/output functions, and also in some cases overlaid with an
-+ alternative user interface, such as Macintosh Kermit's point-and-click
-+ interface, and in some cases also a terminal emulator, as Kermit 95.
-+
-+ The C-Kermit version number started as 1.0, ... 3.0, 4.0, 4.1 and then
-+ (because of confusion at the time with Berkeley UNIX 4.2), 4B, 4C, and
-+ so on, with the specific edit number in parentheses, for example
-+ 4E(072) or 5A(188). This scheme was used through 5A(191), but now we
-+ have gone back to the traditional numbering scheme with decimal points:
-+ major.minor.edit; for example 7.0.196. Internal version numbers (the
-+ \v(version) variable), however, are compatible in C-Kermit 5A upwards.
-+
-+ Meanwhile, C-Kermit derivatives for some platforms (Windows, Macintosh)
-+ might go through several releases while C-Kermit itself remains the
-+ same. These versions have their own platform-specific version numbers,
-+ such as Kermit 95 1.1.1, 1.1.2, and so on.
-+
-+ C-Kermit Version History:
-+
-+ 1.0 1981-1982 Command-line only, 4.2 BSD UNIX only
-+ 2.0 (*) (who remembers...)
-+ 3.0 May 1984 Command-line only, supports several platforms
-+ 4.0-4.1 Feb-Apr 1985 (*) First interactive and modular version
-+ 4C(050) May 1985
-+ 4D(060) April 1986
-+ 4E(066) August 1987 Long packets
-+ 4E(068) January 1988
-+ 4E(072) January 1989
-+ 4F(095) August 1989 (*) Attribute packets
-+ 5A(188) November 1992 Scripting, TCP/IP, sliding windows (1)
-+ 5A(189) September 1993 Control-char unprefixing
-+ 5A(190) October 1994 Recovery
-+ 5A(191) April 1995 OS/2 only
-+ 6.0.192 September 1996 Intelligent dialing, autodownload, lots more (2)
-+ 6.1.193 1997-98 (*) Development only
-+ 6.1.194 June 1998 K95 only - switches, directory recursion, more
-+ 7.0.195 August 1999 IKSD + more (CU only as K95 1.1.18-CU)
-+ 7.0.196 1 January 2000 Unicode, lots more
-+
-+ (*) Never formally released (4.0 was a total rewrite)
-+ (1) Using C-Kermit, 1st Edition
-+ (2) Using C-Kermit, 2nd Edition
-+
-+CONTENTS
-+
-+ I. [36]C-KERMIT DOCUMENTATION
-+
-+ II. [37]NEW FEATURES
-+
-+ (0) [38]INCOMPATIBILITIES WITH PREVIOUS RELEASES
-+ (1) [39]PROGRAM AND FILE MANAGEMENT AND COMMANDS
-+ 1.0. [40]Bug fixes
-+ 1.1. [41]Command Continuation
-+ 1.2. [42]Editor Interface
-+ 1.3. [43]Web Browser and FTP Interface
-+ 1.4. [44]Command Editing
-+ 1.5. [45]Command Switches
-+ 1.5.1. [46]General Switch Syntax
-+ 1.5.2. [47]Order and Effect of Switches
-+ 1.5.3. [48]Distinguishing Switches from Other Fields
-+ 1.5.4. [49]Standard File Selection Switches
-+ 1.5.5. [50]Setting Preferences for Different Commands
-+ 1.6. [51]Dates and Times
-+ 1.7. [52]Partial Completion of Keywords
-+ 1.8. [53]Command Recall
-+ 1.9. [54]EXIT Messages
-+ 1.10. [55]Managing Keyboard Interruptions
-+ 1.11. [56]Taming the Wild Backslash -- Part Deux
-+ 1.11.1. [57]Background
-+ 1.11.2. [58]Kermit's Quoting Rules
-+ 1.11.3. [59]Passing DOS Filenames from Kermit to Shell Commands
-+ 1.11.4. [60]Using Variables to Hold DOS Filenames
-+ 1.11.5. [61]Passing DOS Filenames as Parameters to Macros
-+ 1.11.6. [62]Passing DOS File Names from Macro Parameters to the D
-+OS Shell
-+ 1.11.7. [63]Passing DOS Filenames to Kermit from the Shell
-+ 1.12. [64]Debugging
-+ 1.13. [65]Logs
-+ 1.14. [66]Automatic File-Transfer Packet Recognition at the Command Pro
-+mpt
-+ 1.15. [67]The TYPE Command
-+ 1.16. [68]The RESET Command
-+ 1.17. [69]The COPY and RENAME Commands
-+ 1.18. [70]The MANUAL Command
-+ 1.19. [71]String and Filename Matching Patterns
-+ 1.20. [72]Multiple Commands on One Line
-+ 1.21. [73]What Do I Have?
-+ 1.22. [74]Generalized File Input and Output
-+ 1.22.1. [75]Why Another I/O System?
-+ 1.22.2. [76]The FILE Command
-+ 1.22.3. [77]FILE Command Examples
-+ 1.22.4. [78]Channel Numbers
-+ 1.22.5. [79]FILE Command Error Codes
-+ 1.22.6. [80]File I/O Variables
-+ 1.22.7. [81]File I/O Functions
-+ 1.22.8. [82]File I/O Function Examples
-+ 1.23. [83]The EXEC Command
-+ 1.24. [84]Getting Keyword Lists with '?'
-+ (2) [85]MAKING AND USING CONNECTIONS
-+ 2.0. [86]SET LINE and SET HOST Command Switches
-+ 2.1. [87]Dialing
-+ 2.1.1. [88]The Dial Result Message
-+ 2.1.2. [89]Long-Distance Dialing Changes
-+ 2.1.3. [90]Forcing Long-Distance Dialing
-+ 2.1.4. [91]Exchange-Specific Dialing Decisions
-+ 2.1.5. [92]Cautions about Cheapest-First Dialing
-+ 2.1.6. [93]Blind Dialing (Dialing with No Dialtone)
-+ 2.1.7. [94]Trimming the Dialing Dialog
-+ 2.1.8. [95]Controlling the Dialing Speed
-+ 2.1.9. [96]Pretesting Phone Number Conversions
-+ 2.1.10. [97]Greater Control over Partial Dialing
-+ 2.1.11. [98]New DIAL-related Variables and Functions
-+ 2.1.12. [99]Increased Flexibility of PBX Dialing
-+ 2.1.13. [100]The DIAL macro - Last-Minute Phone Number Conversions
-+ 2.1.14. [101]Automatic Tone/Pulse Dialing Selection
-+ 2.1.15. [102]Dial-Modifier Variables
-+ 2.1.16. [103]Giving Multiple Numbers to the DIAL Command
-+ 2.2. [104]Modems
-+ 2.2.1. [105]New Modem Types
-+ 2.2.2. [106]New Modem Controls
-+ 2.3. [107]TELNET and RLOGIN
-+ 2.3.0. [108]Bug Fixes
-+ 2.3.1. [109]Telnet Binary Mode Bug Adjustments
-+ 2.3.2. [110]VMS UCX Telnet Port Bug Adjustment
-+ 2.3.3. [111]Telnet New Environment Option
-+ 2.3.4. [112]Telnet Location Option
-+ 2.3.5. [113]Connecting to Raw TCP Sockets
-+ 2.3.6. [114]Incoming TCP Connections
-+ 2.4. [115]The EIGHTBIT Command
-+ 2.5. [116]The Services Directory
-+ 2.6. [117]Closing Connections
-+ 2.7. [118]Using C-Kermit with External Communication Programs
-+ 2.7.0. [119]C-Kermit over tn3270 and tn5250
-+ 2.7.1. [120]C-Kermit over Telnet
-+ 2.7.2. [121]C-Kermit over Rlogin
-+ 2.7.3. [122]C-Kermit over Serial Communication Programs
-+ 2.7.4. [123]C-Kermit over Secure Network Clients
-+ 2.7.4.1. [124]SSH
-+ 2.7.4.2. [125]SSL
-+ 2.7.4.3. [126]SRP
-+ 2.7.4.4. [127]SOCKS
-+ 2.7.4.5. [128]Kerberos and SRP
-+ 2.8. [129]Scripting Local Programs
-+ 2.9. [130]X.25 Networking
-+ 2.9.1. [131]IBM AIXLink/X.25 Network Provider Interface for AIX
-+ 2.9.2. [132]HP-UX X.25
-+ 2.10. [133]Additional Serial Port Controls
-+ 2.11. [134]Getting Access to the Dialout Device
-+ 2.12. [135]The Connection Log
-+ 2.13. [136]Automatic Connection-Specific Flow Control Selection
-+ 2.14. [137]Trapping Connection Establishment and Loss
-+ 2.15. [138]Contacting Web Servers with the HTTP Command
-+ (3) [139]TERMINAL CONNECTION
-+ 3.1. [140]CONNECT Command Switches
-+ 3.2. [141]Triggers
-+ 3.3. [142]Transparent Printing
-+ 3.4. [143]Binary and Text Session Logs
-+ (4) [144]FILE TRANSFER AND MANAGEMENT
-+ 4.0. [145]Bug Fixes, Minor Changes, and Clarifications
-+ 4.1. [146]File-Transfer Filename Templates
-+ 4.1.1. [147]Templates in the As-Name
-+ 4.1.2. [148]Templates on the Command Line
-+ 4.1.3. [149]Post-Transfer Renaming
-+ 4.2. [150]File-Transfer Pipes and Filters
-+ 4.2.1. [151]Introduction
-+ 4.2.1.1. [152]Terminology
-+ 4.2.1.2. [153]Notation
-+ 4.2.1.3. [154]Security
-+ 4.2.2. [155]Commands for Transferring from and to Pipes
-+ 4.2.2.1. [156]Sending from a Command
-+ 4.2.2.2. [157]Receiving to a Command
-+ 4.2.3. [158]Using File-Transfer Filters
-+ 4.2.3.1. [159]The SEND Filter
-+ 4.2.3.2. [160]The RECEIVE Filter
-+ 4.2.4. [161]Implicit Use of Pipes
-+ 4.2.5. [162]Success and Failure of Piped Commands
-+ 4.2.6. [163]Cautions about Using Pipes to Transfer Directory Trees
-+ 4.2.7. [164]Pipes and Encryption
-+ 4.2.8. [165]Commands and Functions Related to Pipes
-+ 4.2.8.1. [166]The OPEN !READ and OPEN !WRITE Commands
-+ 4.2.8.2. [167]The REDIRECT Command
-+ 4.2.8.3. [168]Receiving Mail and Print Jobs
-+ 4.2.8.4. [169]Pipe-Related Functions
-+ 4.3. [170]Automatic Per-File Text/Binary Mode Switching
-+ 4.3.1. [171]Exceptions
-+ 4.3.2. [172]Overview
-+ 4.3.3. [173]Commands
-+ 4.3.4. [174]Examples
-+ 4.4. [175]File Permissions
-+ 4.4.1. [176]When ATTRIBUTES PROTECTION is OFF
-+ 4.4.1.1. [177]Unix
-+ 4.4.1.2. [178]VMS
-+ 4.4.2. [179]When ATTRIBUTES PROTECTION is ON
-+ 4.4.2.1. [180]System-Specific Permissions
-+ 4.4.2.1.1. [181]UNIX
-+ 4.4.2.1.2. [182]VMS
-+ 4.4.2.2. [183]System-Independent Permissions
-+ 4.5. [184]File Management Commands
-+ 4.5.1. [185]The DIRECTORY Command
-+ 4.5.2. [186]The CD and BACK Commands
-+ 4.5.2.1. [187]Parsing Improvements
-+ 4.5.2.2. [188]The CDPATH
-+ 4.5.3. [189]Creating and Removing Directories
-+ 4.5.4. [190]The DELETE and PURGE Commands
-+ 4.6. [191]Starting the Remote Kermit Server Automatically
-+ 4.7. [192]File-Transfer Command Switches
-+ 4.7.1. [193]SEND Command Switches
-+ 4.7.2. [194]GET Command Switches
-+ 4.7.3. [195]RECEIVE Command Switches
-+ 4.8. [196]Minor Kermit Protocol Improvements
-+ 4.8.1. [197]Multiple Attribute Packets
-+ 4.8.2. [198]Very Short Packets
-+ 4.9. [199]Wildcard / File Group Expansion
-+ 4.9.1. [200]In UNIX C-Kermit
-+ 4.9.2. [201]In Kermit 95
-+ 4.9.3. [202]In VMS, AOS/VS, OS-9, VOS, etc.
-+ 4.10. [203]Additional Pathname Controls
-+ 4.11. [204]Recursive SEND and GET: Transferring Directory Trees
-+ 4.11.1. [205]Command-Line Options
-+ 4.11.2. [206]The SEND /RECURSIVE Command
-+ 4.11.3. [207]The GET /RECURSIVE Command
-+ 4.11.4. [208]New and Changed File Functions
-+ 4.11.5. [209]Moving Directory Trees Between Like Systems
-+ 4.11.6. [210]Moving Directory Trees Between Unlike Systems
-+ 4.12. [211]Where Did My File Go?
-+ 4.13. [212]File Output Buffer Control
-+ 4.14. [213]Improved Responsiveness
-+ 4.15. [214]Doubling and Ignoring Characters for Transparency
-+ 4.16. [215]New File-Transfer Display Formats
-+ 4.17. [216]New Transaction Log Formats
-+ 4.17.1. [217]The BRIEF Format
-+ 4.17.2. [218]The FTP Format
-+ 4.18. [219]Unprefixing NUL
-+ 4.19. [220]Clear-Channel Protocol
-+ 4.20. [221]Streaming Protocol
-+ 4.20.1. [222]Commands for Streaming
-+ 4.20.2. [223]Examples of Streaming
-+ 4.20.2.1. [224]Streaming on Socket-to-Socket Connections
-+ 4.20.2.2. [225]Streaming on Telnet Connections
-+ 4.20.2.3. [226]Streaming with Limited Packet Length
-+ 4.20.2.4. [227]Streaming on Dialup Connections
-+ 4.20.2.5. [228]Streaming on X.25 Connections
-+ 4.20.3. [229]Streaming - Preliminary Conclusions
-+ 4.21. [230]The TRANSMIT Command
-+ 4.22. [231]Coping with Faulty Kermit Implementations
-+ 4.22.1. [232]Failure to Accept Modern Negotiation Strings
-+ 4.22.2. [233]Failure to Negotiate 8th-bit Prefixing
-+ 4.22.3. [234]Corrupt Files
-+ 4.22.4. [235]Spurious Cancellations
-+ 4.22.5. [236]Spurious Refusals
-+ 4.22.6. [237]Failures during the Data Transfer Phase
-+ 4.22.7. [238]Fractured Filenames
-+ 4.22.8. [239]Bad File Dates
-+ 4.23. [240]File Transfer Recovery
-+ 4.24. [241]FILE COLLISION UPDATE Clarification
-+ 4.25. [242]Autodownload Improvements
-+ (5) [243]CLIENT/SERVER
-+ 5.0. [244]Hints
-+ 5.1. [245]New Command-Line Options
-+ 5.2. [246]New Client Commands
-+ 5.3. [247]New Server Capabilities
-+ 5.3.1. [248]Creating and Removing Directories
-+ 5.3.2. [249]Directory Listings
-+ 5.4. [250]Syntax for Remote Filenames with Embedded Spaces
-+ 5.5. [251]Automatic Orientation Messages upon Directory Change
-+ 5.6. [252]New Server Controls
-+ 5.7. [253]Timeouts during REMOTE HOST Command Execution
-+ (6) [254]INTERNATIONAL CHARACTER SETS
-+ 6.0. [255]ISO 8859-15 Latin Alphabet 9
-+ 6.1. [256]The HP-Roman8 Character Set
-+ 6.2. [257]Greek Character Sets
-+ 6.3. [258]Additional Latin-2 Character Sets
-+ 6.4. [259]Additional Cyrillic Character Sets
-+ 6.5. [260]Automatic Character-Set Switching
-+ 6.6. [261]Unicode
-+ 6.6.1. [262]Overview of Unicode
-+ 6.6.2. [263]UCS Byte Order
-+ 6.6.2. [264]UCS Transformation Formats
-+ 6.6.3. [265]Conformance Levels
-+ 6.6.4. [266]Relationship of Unicode with Kermit's Other Character Sets
-+ 6.6.5. [267]Kermit's Unicode Features
-+ 6.6.5.1. [268]File Transfer
-+ 6.6.5.2. [269]The TRANSLATE Command
-+ 6.6.5.3. [270]Terminal Connection
-+ 6.6.5.4. [271]The TRANSMIT Command
-+ 6.6.5.5. [272]Summary of Kermit Unicode Commands
-+ 6.7. [273]Client/Server Character-Set Switching
-+ (7) [274]SCRIPT PROGRAMMING
-+ 7.0. [275]Bug Fixes
-+ 7.1. [276]The INPUT Command
-+ 7.1.1. [277]INPUT Timeouts
-+ 7.1.2. [278]New INPUT Controls
-+ 7.1.3. [279]INPUT with Pattern Matching
-+ 7.1.4. [280]The INPUT Match Result
-+ 7.2. [281]New or Improved Built-In Variables
-+ 7.3. [282]New or Improved Built-In Functions
-+ 7.4. [283]New IF Conditions
-+ 7.5. [284]Using More than Ten Macro Arguments
-+ 7.6. [285]Clarification of Function Call Syntax
-+ 7.7. [286]Autodownload during INPUT Command Execution
-+ 7.8. [287]Built-in Help for Functions.
-+ 7.9. [288]Variable Assignments
-+ 7.9.1. [289]Assignment Operators
-+ 7.9.2. [290]New Assignment Commands
-+ 7.10. [291]Arrays
-+ 7.10.1. [292]Array Initializers
-+ 7.10.2. [293]Turning a String into an Array of Words
-+ 7.10.3. [294]Arrays of Filenames
-+ 7.10.4. [295]Automatic Arrays
-+ 7.10.5. [296]Sorting Arrays
-+ 7.10.6. [297]Displaying Arrays
-+ 7.10.7. [298]Other Array Operations
-+ 7.10.8. [299]Hints for Using Arrays
-+ 7.10.9. [300]Do-It-Yourself Arrays
-+ 7.10.10. [301]Associative Arrays
-+ 7.11. [302]OUTPUT Command Improvements
-+ 7.12. [303]Function and Variable Diagnostics
-+ 7.13. [304]Return Value of Macros
-+ 7.14. [305]The ASSERT, FAIL, and SUCCEED Commands.
-+ 7.15. [306]Using Alarms
-+ 7.16. [307]Passing Arguments to Command Files
-+ 7.17. [308]Dialogs with Timed Responses
-+ 7.18. [309]Increased Flexibility of SWITCH Case Labels
-+ 7.19. "[310]Kerbang" Scripts
-+ 7.20. [311]IF and XIF Statement Syntax
-+ 7.20.1. [312]The IF/XIF Distinction
-+ 7.20.2. [313]Boolean Expressions (The IF/WHILE Condition)
-+ 7.21. [314]Screen Formatting and Cursor Control
-+ 7.22. [315]Evaluating Arithmetic Expressions
-+ 7.23. [316]Floating-Point Arithmetic
-+ 7.24. [317]Tracing Script Execution
-+ 7.25. [318]Compact Substring Notation
-+ 7.26. [319]New WAIT Command Options
-+ 7.26.1. [320]Waiting for Modem Signals
-+ 7.26.2. [321]Waiting for File Events
-+ 7.27. [322]Relaxed FOR and SWITCH Syntax
-+ (8) [323]USING OTHER FILE TRANSFER PROTOCOLS
-+ (9) [324]COMMAND-LINE OPTIONS
-+ 9.0. [325]Extended-Format Command-Line Options
-+ 9.1. [326]Command Line Personalities
-+ 9.2. [327]Built-in Help for Command Line Options
-+ 9.3. [328]New Command-Line Options
-+ (10) [329]C-KERMIT AND G-KERMIT
-+
-+III. [330]APPENDICES
-+
-+III.1. [331]Character Set Tables
-+III.1.1. [332]The Hewlett Packard Roman8 Character Set
-+III.1.2. [333]Greek Character Sets
-+III.1.2.1. [334]The ISO 8859-7 Latin / Greek Alphabet
-+III.1.2.2. [335]The ELOT 927 Character Set
-+III.1.2.3. [336]PC Code Page 869
-+III.2. [337]Updated Country Codes
-+
-+IV. [338]ERRATA & CORRIGENDA: Corrections to "Using C-Kermit" 2nd Edition.
-+V. [339]ADDITIONAL COPYRIGHT NOTICES
-+
-+I. C-KERMIT DOCUMENTATION
-+
-+ The user manual for C-Kermit is:
-+
-+ Frank da Cruz and Christine M. Gianone, [340]Using C-Kermit, Second
-+ Edition, Digital Press / Butterworth-Heinemann, Woburn, MA, 1997,
-+ 622 pages, ISBN 1-55558-164-1.
-+
-+ [341]CLICK HERE for reviews.
-+
-+ The present document is a supplement to Using C-Kermit 2nd Ed, not a
-+ replacement for it.
-+
-+ US single-copy price: $52.95; quantity discounts available. Available
-+ in bookstores or directly from Columbia University:
-+
-+ The Kermit Project
-+ Columbia University
-+ 612 West 115th Street
-+ New York NY 10025-7799
-+ USA
-+ Telephone: +1 (212) 854-3703
-+ Fax: +1 (212) 662-6442
-+
-+ Domestic and overseas orders accepted. Price: US $44.95 (US, Canada,
-+ and Mexico). Shipping: $4.00 within the USA; $15.00 to all other
-+ countries. Orders may be paid by MasterCard or Visa, or prepaid by
-+ check in US dollars. Add $65 bank fee for checks not drawn on a US
-+ bank. Do not include sales tax. Inquire about quantity discounts.
-+
-+ You can also order by phone from the publisher, Digital Press /
-+ [342]Butterworth-Heinemann, with MasterCard, Visa, or American Express:
-+
-+ +1 800 366-2665 (Woburn, Massachusetts office for USA & Canada)
-+ +44 1865 314627 (Oxford, England distribution centre for UK & Europe)
-+ +61 03 9245 7111 (Melbourne, Vic, office for Australia & NZ)
-+ +65 356-1968 (Singapore office for Asia)
-+ +27 (31) 2683111 (Durban office for South Africa)
-+
-+ A [343]German-language edition of the First Edition is also available:
-+
-+ Frank da Cruz and Christine M. Gianone, C-Kermit - Einführung und
-+ Referenz, Verlag Heinz Heise, Hannover, Germany (1994). ISBN
-+ 3-88229-023-4. Deutsch von Gisbert W. Selke. Price: DM 88,00. Verlag
-+ Heinz Heise GmbH & Co. KG, Helstorfer Strasse 7, D-30625 Hannover.
-+ Tel. +49 (05 11) 53 52-0, Fax. +49 (05 11) 53 52-1 29.
-+
-+ The [344]Kermit file transfer protocol is specified in:
-+
-+ Frank da Cruz, Kermit, A File Transfer Protocol, Digital Press,
-+ Bedford, MA, 1987, 379 pages, ISBN 0-932376-88-6. US single-copy
-+ price: $39.95. Availability as above.
-+
-+ News and articles about Kermit software and protocol are published
-+ periodically in the journal, [345]Kermit News. Subscriptions are free;
-+ contact Columbia University at the address above.
-+
-+ Online news about Kermit is published in the
-+ [346]comp.protocols.kermit.announce and [347]comp.protocols.kermit.misc
-+ newsgroups.
-+
-+II. NEW FEATURES
-+
-+ Support for the Bell Labs Plan 9 operating system was added to version
-+ 6.0 too late to be mentioned in the book (although it does appear on
-+ the cover).
-+
-+ Specific changes and additions are grouped together by major topic,
-+ roughly corresponding to the chapters of [348]Using C-Kermit.
-+
-+0. INCOMPATIBILITIES WITH PREVIOUS RELEASES
-+
-+ 1. C-Kermit 7.0 uses FAST Kermit protocol settings by default. This
-+ includes "unprefixing" of certain control characters. Because of
-+ this, file transfers that worked with previous releases might not
-+ work in the new release (but it is more likely that they will work,
-+ and much faster). If a transfer fails, you'll get a
-+ context-sensitive hint suggesting possible causes and cures.
-+ Usually SET PREFIXING ALL does the trick.
-+ 2. C-Kermit 7.0 transfers files in BINARY mode by default. To restore
-+ the previous behavior, put SET FILE TYPE TEXT in your C-Kermit
-+ initialization file.
-+ 3. No matter whether FILE TYPE is BINARY or TEXT by default, C-Kermit
-+ 7.0 now switches between text and binary mode automatically on a
-+ per-file basis according to various criteria, including (a) which
-+ kind of platform is on the other end of the connection (if known),
-+ (b) the version of Kermit on the other end, and (c) the file's name
-+ (see [349]Section 4, especially [350]4.3). To disable this
-+ automatic switching and restore the earlier behavior, put SET
-+ TRANSFER MODE MANUAL in your C-Kermit initialization file. To
-+ disable automatic switching for a particular transfer, include a
-+ /TEXT or /BINARY switch with your SEND or GET command.
-+ 4. The RESEND and REGET commands automatically switch to binary mode;
-+ previously if RESEND or REGET were attempted when FILE TYPE was
-+ TEXT, these commands would fail immediately, with a message telling
-+ you they work only when the FILE TYPE is BINARY. Now they simply do
-+ this for you. See [351]Section 4.23 for additional (important)
-+ information.
-+ 5. SET PREFIXING CAUTIOUS and MINIMAL now both prefix linefeed (10 and
-+ 138) in case rlogin, ssh, or cu are "in the middle", since
-+ otherwise <LF>~ might appear in Kermit packets, and this would
-+ cause rlogin, ssh, or cu to disconnect, suspend, escape back, or
-+ otherwise wreck the file transfer. Xon and Xoff are now always
-+ prefixed too, even when Xon/Xoff flow control is not in effect,
-+ since unprefixing them has proven dangerous on TCP/IP connections.
-+ 6. In UNIX, VMS, Windows, and OS/2, the DIRECTORY command is built
-+ into C-Kermit itself rather than implemented by running an external
-+ command or program. The built-in command might not behave the way
-+ the platform-specific external one did, but many options are
-+ available for customization. Of course the underlying
-+ platform-specific command can still be accessed with "!", "@", or
-+ "RUN" wherever the installation does not forbid. In UNIX, the "ls"
-+ command can be accessed directly as "ls" in C-Kermit. See
-+ [352]Section 4.5.1 for details.
-+ 7. SEND ? prints a list of switches rather than a list of filenames.
-+ If you want to see a list of filenames, use a (system-dependent)
-+ construction such as SEND ./? (for UNIX, Windows, or OS/2), SEND
-+ []? (VMS), etc. See [353]Sections 1.5 and [354]4.7.1.
-+ 8. In UNIX, OS-9, and Kermit 95, the wildcard characters in previous
-+ versions were * and ?. In C-Kermit 7.0 they are *, ?, [, ], {, and
-+ }, with dash used inside []'s to denote ranges and comma used
-+ inside {} to separate list elements. If you need to include any of
-+ these characters literally in a filename, precede each one with
-+ backslash (\). See [355]Section 4.9.
-+ 9. SET QUIET { ON, OFF } is now on the command stack, just like SET
-+ INPUT CASE, SET COUNT, SET MACRO ERROR, etc, as described on p.458
-+ of [356]Using C-Kermit, 2nd Edition. This allows any macro or
-+ command file to SET QUIET ON or OFF without worrying about saving
-+ and restoring the global QUIET value. For example, this lets you
-+ write a script that tries SET LINE on lots of devices until it
-+ finds one free without spewing out loads of error messages, and
-+ also without disturbing the global QUIET setting, whatever it was.
-+ 10. Because of the new "." operator (which introduces assignments),
-+ macros whose names begin with "." can not be invoked "by name".
-+ However, they still can be invoked with DO.
-+ 11. The syntax of the EVALUATE command has changed. See [357]Section
-+ 7.9.2. To restore the previous syntax, use SET EVALUATE OLD.
-+ 12. The \v(directory) variable now includes the trailing directory
-+ separator; in previous releases it did not. This is to allow
-+ constructions such as:
-+ cd \v(dir)data.tmp
-+
-+ to work across platforms that might have different directory
-+ notation, such as UNIX, Windows, and VMS.
-+ 13. Prior to C-Kermit 7.0, the FLOW-CONTROL setting was global and
-+ sticky. In C-Kermit 7.0, there is an array of default flow-control
-+ values for each kind of connection, that are applied automatically
-+ at SET LINE/PORT/HOST time. Thus a SET FLOW command given before
-+ SET LINE/PORT/HOST is likely to be undone. Therefore SET FLOW can
-+ be guaranteed to have the desired effect only if given after the
-+ SET LINE/PORT/HOST command.
-+ 14. Character-set translation works differently in the TRANSMIT command
-+ when (a) the file character-set is not the same as the local end of
-+ the terminal character-set, or (b) when the terminal character-set
-+ is TRANSPARENT.
-+
-+1. PROGRAM AND FILE MANAGEMENT AND COMMANDS
-+
-+1.0. Bug Fixes
-+
-+ The following patches were issued to correct bugs in C-Kermit 6.0.
-+ These are described in detail in the 6.0 PATCHES file. All of these
-+ fixes have been incorporated in C-Kermit 6.1 (never released except as
-+ K95 1.1.16-17) and 7.0.
-+
-+ 0001 All UNIX C-Kermit mishandles timestamps on files before 1970
-+ 0002 Solaris 2.5++ Compilation error on Solaris 2.5 with Pro C
-+ 0003 All VMS CKERMIT.INI Fix for VMS
-+ 0004 VMS/VAX/UCX 2.0 C-Kermit 6.0 can't TELNET on VAX/VMS with UCX 2.0
-+ 0005 All C-Kermit Might Send Packets Outside Window
-+ 0006 All MOVE from SEND-LIST does not delete original files
-+ 0007 Solaris 2.5++ Higher serial speeds on Solaris 2.5
-+ 0008 All C-Kermit application file name can't contain spaces
-+ 0009 AT&T 7300 UNIXPC setuid and hardware flow-control problems
-+ 0010 Linux on Alpha Patch to make ckutio.c compile on Linux/Alpha
-+ 0011 OS-9/68000 2.4 Patch to make ck9con.c compile on OS-9/68000 2.4
-+ 0012 MW Coherent 4.2 Patches for successful build on Coherent 4.2
-+ 0013 SINIX-Y 5.43 "delay" variable conflicts with <sys/clock.h>
-+ 0014 VMS/VAX/CMU-IP Subject: Patches for VAX/VMS 5.x + CMU-IP
-+ 0015 All XECHO doesn't flush its output
-+ 0016 VMS CD and other directory operations might not work
-+ 0017 Linux 1.2.x++ Use standard POSIX interface for high serial speeds
-+ 0018 UNIX SET WILDCARD-EXPANSION SHELL dumps core
-+ 0019 All Hayes V.34 modem init string problem
-+ 0020 All READ command does not fail if file not open
-+ 0021 All Problems with long function arguments
-+ 0022 All Certain \function()s can misbehave
-+ 0023 All X MOD 0 crashes program
-+ 0024 All Internal bulletproofing for lower() function
-+ 0025 OpenBSD Real OpenBSD support for C-Kermit 6.0
-+ 0026 All Incorrect checks for macro/command-file nesting depth
-+ 0027 All ANSWER doesn't automatically CONNECT
-+ 0028 All Overzealous EXIT warning
-+ 0029 All OUTPUT doesn't echo when DUPLEX is HALF
-+ 0030 All Minor problems with REMOTE DIRECTORY/DELETE/etc
-+ 0031 All CHECK command broken
-+ 0032 All Problem with SET TRANSMIT ECHO
-+ 0033 UNIX, VMS, etc HELP SET SERVER says too much
-+ 0034 All READ and !READ too picky about line terminators
-+ 0035 All END from inside SWITCH doesn't work
-+ 0036 All Problem telnetting to multihomed hosts
-+ 0037 All Redirection failures in REMOTE xxx > file
-+
-+ REDIRECT was missing in many UNIX C-Kermit implementations; in version
-+ 7.0, it should be available in all of them.
-+
-+1.1. Command Continuation
-+
-+ Comments that start with ";" or "#" can no longer be continued. In:
-+
-+ ; this is a comment -
-+ echo blah
-+
-+ the ECHO command will execute, rather than being taken as a
-+ continuation of the preceding comment line. This allows easy
-+ "commenting out" of commands from macro definitions.
-+
-+ However, the text of the COMMENT command can still be continued onto
-+ subsequent lines:
-+
-+ comment this is a comment -
-+ echo blah
-+
-+ As of version 6.0, backslash is no longer a valid continuation
-+ character. Only hyphen should be used for command continuation. This is
-+ to make it possible to issue commands like "cd a:\" on DOS-like
-+ systems.
-+
-+ As of version 7.0:
-+
-+ * You can quote a final dash to prevent it from being a continuation
-+ character:
-+ echo foo\-
-+
-+ This prints "foo-". The command is not continued.
-+ * You can enter commands such as:
-+ echo foo - ; this is a comment
-+
-+ interactively and they are properly treated as continued commands.
-+ Previously this worked only in command files.
-+
-+1.2. Editor Interface
-+
-+ SET EDITOR name [ options ]
-+ Lets you specify a text-editing program. The name can be a fully
-+ specified pathname like /usr/local/bin/emacs19/emacs, or it can
-+ be the name of any program in your PATH, e.g. "set editor
-+ emacs". In VMS, it must be a DCL command like "edit",
-+ "edit/tpu", "emacs", etc. If an environment variable EDITOR is
-+ defined when Kermit starts, its value is the default editor. You
-+ can also specify options to be included on the editor command
-+ line. Returns to Kermit when the editor exits.
-+
-+ EDIT [ filename ]
-+ If the EDIT command is given without a filename, then if a
-+ previous filename had been given to an EDIT command, it is used;
-+ if not, the editor is started without a file. If a filename is
-+ given, the editor is started on that file, and the filename is
-+ remembered for subsequent EDIT commands.
-+
-+ SHOW EDITOR
-+ Displays the full pathname of your text editor, if any, along
-+ with any command line options, and the file most recently edited
-+ (and therefore the default filename for your next EDIT command).
-+
-+ Related variables: \v(editor), \v(editopts), \v(editfile).
-+
-+1.3. Web Browser and FTP Interface
-+
-+ C-Kermit includes an FTP command, which simply runs the FTP program;
-+ C-Kermit does not include any built-in support for Internet File
-+ Transfer Protocol, nor any method for interacting directly with an FTP
-+ server. In version 7.0, however, C-Kermit lets you specify your FTP
-+ client:
-+
-+ SET FTP-CLIENT [ name [ options ] ]
-+ The name is the name of the FTP executable. In UNIX, Windows, or
-+ OS/2, it can be the filename of any executable program in your
-+ PATH (e.g. "ftp.exe" in Windows, "ftp" in UNIX); elsewhere (or
-+ if you do not have a PATH definition), it must be the fully
-+ specified pathname of the FTP program. If the name contains any
-+ spaces, enclose it braces. Include any options after the
-+ filename; these depend the particular ftp client.
-+
-+ The Web browser interface is covered in the following subsections.
-+
-+1.3.1. Invoking your Browser from C-Kermit
-+
-+ BROWSE [ url ]
-+ Starts your preferred Web browser on the URL, if one is given,
-+ otherwise on the most recently given URL, if any. Returns to
-+ Kermit when the browser exits.
-+
-+ SET BROWSER [ name [ options ] ]
-+ Use this command to specify the name of your Web browser
-+ program, for example: "set browser lynx". The name must be in
-+ your PATH, or else it must be a fully specified filename; in VMS
-+ it must be a DCL command.
-+
-+ SHOW BROWSER
-+ Displays the current browser, options, and most recent URL.
-+
-+ Related variables: \v(browser), \v(browsopts), \v(browsurl).
-+
-+ Also see [358]Section 2.15: Contacting Web Servers with the HTTP
-+ Command.
-+
-+1.3.2. Invoking C-Kermit from your Browser
-+
-+ The method for doing this depends, of course, on your browser. Here are
-+ some examples:
-+
-+ Netscape on UNIX (X-based)
-+ In the Options->Applications section, set your Telnet
-+ application to:
-+
-+ xterm -e /usr/local/bin/kermit/kermit -J %h %p
-+
-+ (replace "/usr/local/bin/kermit/kermit" by C-Kermit's actual
-+ pathname). -J is C-Kermit's command-line option to "be like
-+ Telnet"; %h and %p are Netscape placeholders for hostname and
-+ port.
-+
-+ Lynx on UNIX
-+ As far as we know, this can be done only at compile time. Add
-+ the following line to the Lynx userdefs.h file before building
-+ the Lynx binary:
-+
-+ #define TELNET_COMMAND "/opt/bin/kermit -J"
-+
-+ And then add lines like the following to the Lynx.cfg file:
-+
-+ DOWNLOADER:Kermit binary download:/opt/bin/kermit -i -V -s %s -a %s:TRUE
-+ DOWNLOADER:Kermit text download:/opt/bin/kermit -s %s -a %s:TRUE
-+
-+ UPLOADER:Kermit binary upload:/opt/bin/kermit -i -r -a %s:TRUE
-+ UPLOADER:Kermit text upload:/opt/bin/kermit -r -a %s:TRUE
-+ UPLOADER:Kermit text get:/opt/bin/kermit -g %s:TRUE
-+ UPLOADER:Kermit binary get:/opt/bin/kermit -ig %s:TRUE
-+
-+ But none of the above is necessary if you make C-Kermit your default
-+ Telnet client, which you can do by making a symlink called 'telnet' to
-+ the C-Kermit 7.0 binary. See [359]Section 9.1 for details.
-+
-+1.4. Command Editing
-+
-+ Ctrl-W ("Word delete") was changed in 7.0 to delete back to the
-+ previous non-alphanumeric, rather than all the way back to the previous
-+ space.
-+
-+1.5. Command Switches
-+
-+ As of version 7.0, C-Kermit's command parser supports a new type of
-+ field, called a "switch". This is an optional command modifier.
-+
-+1.5.1. General Switch Syntax
-+
-+ A switch is a keyword beginning with a slash (/). If it takes a value,
-+ then the value is appended to it (with no intervening spaces),
-+ separated by a colon (:) or equal sign (=). Depending on the switch,
-+ the value may be a number, a keyword, a filename, a date/time, etc.
-+ Examples:
-+
-+ send oofa.txt ; No switches
-+ send /binary oofa.zip ; A switch without a value
-+ send /protocol:zmodem oofa.zip ; A switch with a value (:)
-+ send /protocol=zmodem oofa.zip ; A switch with a value (=)
-+ send /text /delete /as-name:x.x oofa.txt ; Several switches
-+
-+ Like other command fields, switches are separated from other fields,
-+ and from each other, by whitespace, as shown in the examples just
-+ above. You can not put them together like so:
-+
-+ send/text/delete/as-name:x.x oofa.txt
-+
-+ (as you might do in VMS or DOS, or as we might once have done in
-+ TOPS-10 or TOPS0-20, or PIP). This is primarily due to ambiguity
-+ between "/" as switch introducer versus "/" as UNIX directory
-+ separator; e.g. in:
-+
-+ send /delete/as-name:foo/text oofa.txt
-+
-+ Does "foo/text" mean the filename is "foo" and the transfer is to be in
-+ text mode, or does it mean the filename is "foo/text"? Therefore we
-+ require whitespace between switches to resolve the ambiguity. (That's
-+ only one of several possible ambiguities -- it is also conceivable that
-+ a file called "text" exists in the path "/delete/as-name:foo/").
-+
-+ In general, if a switch can take a value, but you omit it, then either
-+ a reasonable default value is supplied, or an error message is printed:
-+
-+ send /print:-Plaserwriter oofa.txt ; Value included = print options
-+ send /print oofa.txt ; Value omitted, OK
-+ send /mail:kermit@columbia.edu oofa.txt ; Value included = address
-+ send /mail oofa.txt ; Not OK - address required
-+ ?Address required
-+
-+ Context-sensitive help (?) and completion (Esc or Tab) are available in
-+ the normal manner:
-+
-+ C-Kermit> send /pr? Switch, one of the following:
-+ /print /protocol
-+ C-Kermit> send /pro<ESC>tocol:? File-transfer protocol,
-+ one of the following:
-+ kermit xmodem ymodem ymodem-g zmodem
-+ C-Kermit> send /protocol:k<TAB>ermit
-+
-+ If a switch takes a value and you use completion on it, a colon (:) is
-+ printed at the end of its name to indicate this. If it does not take a
-+ value, a space is printed.
-+
-+ Also, if you type ? in a switch field, switches that take values are
-+ shown with a trailing colon; those that don't take values are shown
-+ without one.
-+
-+1.5.2. Order and Effect of Switches
-+
-+ The order of switches should not matter, except that they are evaluated
-+ from left to right, so if you give two switches with opposite effects,
-+ the rightmost one is used:
-+
-+ send /text /binary oofa.zip ; Sends oofa.zip in binary mode.
-+
-+ Like other command fields, switches have no effect whatsoever until the
-+ command is entered (by pressing the Return or Enter key). Even then,
-+ switches affect only the command with which they are included; they do
-+ not have global effect or side effects.
-+
-+1.5.3. Distinguishing Switches from Other Fields
-+
-+ All switches are optional. A command that uses switches lets you give
-+ any number of them, including none at all. Example:
-+
-+ send /binary oofa.zip
-+ send /bin /delete oofa.zip
-+ send /bin /as-name:mupeen.zip oofa.zip
-+ send oofa.zip
-+
-+ But how does Kermit know when the first "non-switch" is given? It has
-+ been told to look for both a switch and for something else, the data
-+ type of the next field (filename, number, etc). In most cases, this
-+ works well. But conflicts are not impossible. Suppose, for example, in
-+ UNIX there was a file named "text" in the top-level directory. The
-+ command to send it would be:
-+
-+ send /text
-+
-+ But C-Kermit would think this was the "/text" switch. To resolve the
-+ conflict, use braces:
-+
-+ send {/text}
-+
-+ or other circumlocutions such as "send //text", "send /./text", etc.
-+
-+ The opposite problem can occur if you give an illegal switch that
-+ happens to match a directory name. For example:
-+
-+ send /f oofa.txt
-+
-+ There is no "/f" switch (there are several switches that begin with
-+ "/f", so "/f" is ambiguous). Now suppose there is an "f" directory in
-+ the root directory; then this command would be interpreted as:
-+
-+ Send all the files in the "/f" directory, giving each one an as-name
-+ of "oofa.txt".
-+
-+ This could be a mistake, or it could be exactly what you intended;
-+ C-Kermit has no way of telling the difference. To avoid situations like
-+ this, spell switches out in full until you are comfortable enough with
-+ them to know the minimum abbreviation for each one. Hint: use ? and
-+ completion while typing switches to obtain the necessary feedback.
-+
-+1.5.4. Standard File Selection Switches
-+
-+ The following switches are used on different file-oriented commands
-+ (such as SEND, DIRECTORY, DELETE, PURGE) to refine the selection of
-+ files that match the given specification.
-+
-+ /AFTER:date-time
-+ Select only those files having a date-time later than the one
-+ given. See [360]Section 1.6 for date-time formats. Synonym:
-+ /SINCE.
-+
-+ /NOT-AFTER:date-time
-+ Select only those files having a date-time not later than (i.e.
-+ earlier or equal to) the one given. Synonym: /NOT-SINCE.
-+
-+ /BEFORE:date-time
-+ Select only those files having a date-time earlier than the one
-+ given.
-+
-+ /NOT-BEFORE:date-time
-+ Select only those files having a date-time not earlier than
-+ (i.e. later or equal to) the one given.
-+
-+ /DOTFILES
-+ UNIX and OS-9 only: The filespec is allowed to match files whose
-+ names start with (dot) period. Normally these files are not
-+ shown.
-+
-+ /NODOTFILES
-+ (UNIX and OS-9 only) Don't show files whose names start with dot
-+ (period). This is the opposite of /DOTFILES, and is the default.
-+ Note that when a directory name starts with a period, the
-+ directory and (in recursive operations) all its subdirectories
-+ are skipped.
-+
-+ /LARGER-THAN:number
-+ Only select files larger than the given number of bytes.
-+
-+ /SMALLER-THAN:number
-+ Only select files smaller than the given number of bytes.
-+
-+ /EXCEPT:pattern
-+ Specifies that any files whose names match the pattern, which
-+ can be a regular filename, or may contain "*" and/or "?"
-+ metacharacters (wildcards), are not to be selected. Example:
-+
-+ send /except:*.log *.*
-+
-+ sends all files in the current directory except those with a
-+ filetype of ".log". Another:
-+
-+ send /except:*.~*~ *.*
-+
-+ sends all files except the ones that look like Kermit or EMACS
-+ backup files (such as "oofa.txt.~17~") (of course you can also
-+ use the /NOBACKUP switch for this).
-+
-+ The pattern matcher is the same one used by IF MATCH string
-+ pattern ([361]Section 7.4), so you can test your patterns using
-+ IF MATCH. If you need to match a literal * or ? (etc), precede
-+ it by a backslash (\). If the pattern contains any spaces, it
-+ must be enclosed in braces:
-+
-+ send /except:{Foo bar} *.*
-+
-+ The pattern can also be a list of up to 8 patterns. In this
-+ case, the entire pattern must be enclosed in braces, and each
-+ sub-pattern must also be enclosed in braces; this eliminates the
-+ need for designating a separator character, which is likely to
-+ also be a legal filename character on some platform or other,
-+ and therefore a source of confusion. You may include spaces
-+ between the subpatterns but they are not necessary. The
-+ following two commands are equivalent:
-+
-+ send /except:{{ck*.o} {ck*.c}} ck*.?
-+ send /except:{{ck*.o}{ck*.c}} ck*.?
-+
-+ If a pattern is to include a literal brace character, precede it
-+ with "\". Also note the apparent conflict of this list format
-+ and the string-list format described in [362]Section 4.9.1. In
-+ case you want to include a wildcard string-list with braces on
-+ its outer ends as an /EXCEPT: argument, do it like this:
-+
-+ send /except:{{{ckuusr.c,ckuus2.c,ckuus6.c}}} ckuus*.c
-+
-+1.5.5. Setting Preferences for Different Commands
-+
-+ Certain oft-used commands offer lots of switches because different
-+ people have different requirements or preferences. For example, some
-+ people want to be able to delete files without having to watch a list
-+ of the deleted files scroll past, while others want to be prompted for
-+ permission to delete each file. Different people prefer different
-+ directory-listing styles. And so on. Such commands can be tailored with
-+ the SET OPTIONS command:
-+
-+ SET OPTIONS command [ switch [ switch [ ... ] ] ]
-+ Sets each switch as the default for the given command, replacing
-+ the "factory default". Of course you can also override any
-+ defaults established by the SET OPTIONS command by including the
-+ relevant switches in the affected command any time you issue it.
-+
-+ SHOW OPTIONS
-+ Lists the commands that allows option-setting, and the options
-+ currently in effect, if any, for each. Switches that have
-+ synonyms are shown under their primary name; for example. /LOG
-+ and /VERBOSE are shown as /LIST.
-+
-+ Commands for which options may be set include DIRECTORY, DELETE, PURGE,
-+ and TYPE. Examples:
-+
-+ SET OPTIONS DIRECTORY /PAGE /NOBACKUP /HEADING /SORT:DATE /REVERSE
-+ SET OPTIONS DELETE /LIST /NOHEADING /NOPAGE /NOASK /NODOTFILES
-+ SET OPTIONS TYPE /PAGE
-+
-+ Not necessarily all of a command's switches can be set as options. For
-+ example, file selection switches, since these would normally be
-+ different for each command.
-+
-+ Put the desired SET OPTIONS commands in your C-Kermit customization
-+ file for each command whose default switches you want to change every
-+ time you run C-Kermit.
-+
-+1.6. Dates and Times
-+
-+ Some commands and switches take date-time values, such as:
-+
-+ send /after:{8-Feb-2000 10:28:01}
-+
-+ Various date-time formats are acceptable. The rules for the date are:
-+
-+ * The year must have 4 digits.
-+ * If the year comes first, the second field is the month.
-+ * The day, month, and year may be separated by spaces, /, -, or
-+ underscore.
-+ * The month may be numeric (1 = January) or spelled out or
-+ abbreviated in English.
-+
-+ If the date-time string contains any spaces, it must be enclosed in
-+ braces. Examples of legal dates:
-+
-+ Interpretation:
-+ 2000-Feb-8 8 February 2000
-+ {2000 Feb 8} 8 February 2000
-+ 2000/Feb/8 8 February 2000
-+ 2000_Feb_8 8 February 2000
-+ 2000-2-8 8 February 2000
-+ 2000-02-08 8 February 2000
-+ 8-Feb-2000 8 February 2000
-+ 08-Feb-2000 8 February 2000
-+ 12/25/2000 25 December 2000
-+ 25/12/2000 25 December 2000
-+
-+ The last two examples show that when the year comes last, and the month
-+ is given numerically, the order of the day and month doesn't matter as
-+ long as the day is 13 or greater (mm/dd/yyyy is commonly used in the
-+ USA, whereas dd/mm/yyyy is the norm in Europe). However:
-+
-+ 08/02/2000 Is ambiguous and therefore not accepted.
-+
-+ If a date is given, the time is optional and defaults to 00:00:00. If
-+ the time is given with a date, it must follow the date, separated by
-+ space, /, -, or underscore, and with hours, minutes, and seconds
-+ separated by colon (:). Example:
-+
-+ 2000-Feb-8 10:28:01 Represents 8 February 2000, 10:28:01am
-+
-+ If a date is not given, the current date is used and a time is
-+ required.
-+
-+ Time format is hh:mm:ss or hh:mm or hh in 24-hour format, or followed
-+ by "am" or "pm" (or "AM" or "PM") to indicate morning or afternoon.
-+ Examples of times that are acceptable:
-+
-+ Interpretation:
-+ 3:23:56 3:23:56am
-+ 3:23:56am 3:23:56am
-+ 3:23:56pm 3:23:56pm = 15:23:56
-+ 15:23:56 3:23:56pm = 15:23:56
-+ 3:23pm 3:23:00pm = 15:23:00
-+ 3:23PM 3:23:00pm = 15:23:00
-+ 3pm 3:00:00pm = 15:00:00
-+
-+ Examples of legal date-times:
-+
-+ send /after:{8 Feb 2000 10:28:01}
-+ send /after:8_Feb_2000_10:28:01
-+ send /after:8-Feb-2000/10:28:01
-+ send /after:2000/02/08/10:28:01
-+ send /after:2000/02/08_10:28:01
-+ send /after:2000/02/08_10:28:01am
-+ send /after:2000/02/08_10:28:01pm
-+ send /after:2000/02/08_10:28pm
-+ send /after:2000/02/08_10pm
-+ send /after:10:00:00pm
-+ send /after:10:00pm
-+ send /after:10pm
-+ send /after:22
-+
-+ Finally, there is a special all-numeric format you can use:
-+
-+ yyyymmdd hh:mm:ss
-+
-+ For example:
-+
-+ 20000208 10:28:01
-+
-+ This is Kermit's standard date-time format (based on ISO 8601), and is
-+ accepted (among other formats) by any command or switch that requires a
-+ date-time, and is output by any function whose result is a calendar
-+ date-time.
-+
-+ There are no optional parts to this format and it must be exactly 17
-+ characters long, punctuated as shown (except you can substitute
-+ underscore for space in contexts where a single "word" is required).
-+ The time is in 24-hour format (23:00:00 is 11:00pm). This is the format
-+ returned by \fdate(filename), so you can also use constructions like
-+ this:
-+
-+ send /after:\fdate(oofa.txt)
-+
-+ which means "all files newer than oofa.txt".
-+
-+ Besides explicit dates, you can also use the any of the following
-+ shortcuts:
-+
-+ TODAY
-+ Stands for the current date at 00:00:00.
-+
-+ TODAY 12:34:56
-+ Stands for the current date at the given time.
-+
-+ YESTERDAY
-+ Stands for yesterday's date at 00:00:00. A time may also be
-+ given.
-+
-+ TOMORROW
-+ Stands for tomorrow's date at 00:00:00. A time may also be
-+ given.
-+
-+ + number { DAYS, WEEKS, MONTHS, YEARS } [ time ]
-+ Is replaced by the future date indicated, relative to the
-+ current date. If the time is omitted, 00:00:00 is used.
-+ Examples: +3days, +2weeks, +1year, +37months.
-+
-+ - number { DAYS, WEEKS, MONTHS, YEARS } [ time ]
-+
-+ Is replaced by the past date indicated, relative to the current
-+ date. If the time is omitted, 00:00:00 is used.
-+
-+ The time can be separated from the date shortcut by any of the same
-+ separators that are allowed for explicit date-times: space, hyphen,
-+ slash, period, or underscore. In switches and other space-delimited
-+ fields, use non-spaces to separate date/time fields, or enclose the
-+ date-time in braces, e.g.:
-+
-+ purge /before:-4days_12:00:00
-+ purge /before:{- 4 days 12:00:00}
-+
-+ Of course you can also use variables:
-+
-+ define \%n 43
-+ purge /before:-\%ndays_12:00:00
-+
-+ Shortcut names can be abbreviated to any length that still
-+ distinguishes them from any other name that can appear in the same
-+ context, e.g. "TOD" for today, "Y" for yesterday. Also, the special
-+ abbreviation "wks" is accepted for WEEKS, and "yrs" for "YEARS".
-+
-+ (To see how to specify dates relative to a specific date, rather than
-+ the current one, see the [363]\fmjd() function description below.)
-+
-+ You can check date formats with the DATE command. DATE by itself prints
-+ the current date and time in standard format: yyyymmdd hh:mm:ss. DATE
-+ followed by a date and/or time (including shortcuts) converts it to
-+ standard format if it can understand it, otherwise it prints an error
-+ message.
-+
-+ The following variables and functions deal with dates and times; any
-+ function argument designated as "date-time" can be in any of the
-+ formats described above.
-+
-+ \v(day)
-+ The first three letters of the English word for the current day
-+ of the week, e.g. "Wed".
-+
-+ \fday(date-time)
-+ The first three letters of the English word for day of the week
-+ of the given date. If a time is included, it is ignored.
-+ Example: \fday(8 Feb 1988) = "Mon".
-+
-+ \v(nday)
-+ The numeric day of the week: 0 = Sunday, 1 = Monday, ..., 6 =
-+ Saturday.
-+
-+ \fnday(date-time)
-+ The numeric day of the week for the given date. If a time is
-+ included, it is ignored. Example: \fnday(8 Feb 1988) = "1".
-+
-+ \v(date)
-+ The current date as dd mmm yyyy, e.g. "08 Feb 2000" (as in this
-+ example, a leading zero is supplied for day-of-month less than
-+ 10).
-+
-+ \v(ndate)
-+ The current date in numeric format: yyyymmdd, e.g. "20000208".
-+
-+ \v(time)
-+ The current time as hh:mm:ss, e.g. "15:27:14".
-+
-+ \ftime(time)
-+ The given free-format date and/or time (e.g. "3pm") returns the
-+ time (without the date) converted to hh:mm:ss 24-hour format,
-+ e.g. "15:00:00" (the date, if given, is ignored).
-+
-+ \v(ntime)
-+ The current time as seconds since midnight, e.g. "55634".
-+
-+ \v(tftime)
-+ The elapsed time of the most recent file-transfer operation in
-+ seconds.
-+
-+ \v(intime)
-+ The elapsed time for the most recent INPUT command to complete,
-+ in milliseconds.
-+
-+ \fntime(time)
-+ The given free-format date and/or time is converted to seconds
-+ since midnight (the date, if given, is ignored). This function
-+ replaces \ftod2secs(), which is now a synonym for \fntime().
-+ Unlike \ftod2secs(), \fntime() allows a date to be included, and
-+ it allows the time to be in free format (like 3pm), and it
-+ allows the amount of time to be more than 24 hours. E.g.
-+ \fntime(48:00:00) = 172800. Example of use:
-+
-+ set alarm \fntime(48:00:00) ; set alarm 48 hours from now.
-+
-+ \fn2time(seconds)
-+ The given number of seconds is converted to hh:mm:ss format.
-+
-+ \fdate(filename)
-+ Returns the modification date-time of the given file in standard
-+ format: yyyymmdd hh:mm:ss.
-+
-+ \fcvtdate(date-time)
-+ Converts a free-format date and/or time to Kermit standard
-+ format: yyyymmdd hh:mm:ss. If no argument is given, returns the
-+ current date-time in standard format. If a date is given but no
-+ time, the converted date is returned without a time. If a time
-+ is given with no date, the current date is supplied. Examples:
-+
-+ \fcvtdate(4 Jul 2000 2:21:17pm) = 20000704 14:21:17
-+ \fcvtdate() = 20000704 14:21:17 (on 4 Jul 2000 at 2:21:17pm).
-+ \fcvtd(4 Jul 2000) = 20000704
-+ \fcvtd(6pm) = 20000704 18:00:00 (on 4 Jul 2000 at 6:00pm).
-+
-+ \fdayofyear(date-time)
-+ \fdoy(date-time)
-+ Converts a free-format date and/or time to yyyyddd, where ddd is
-+ the 3-digit day of the year, and 1 January is Day 1. If a time
-+ is included with the date, it is returned in standard format. If
-+ a date is included but no time, the date is returned without a
-+ time. If a time is given with no date, the time is converted and
-+ the current date is supplied. If no argument is given, the
-+ current date-time is returned. Synonym: \fdoy(). Examples:
-+
-+ \fddayofyear(4 Jul 2000 2:21:17pm) = 2000185 14:21:17
-+ \fdoy() = 2000185 14:21:17 (on 4 Jul 2000 at 2:21:17pm).
-+ \fdoy(4 Jul 2000) = 2000185
-+ \fdoy(6pm) = 2000185 18:00:00 (on 4 Jul 2000 at 6:00pm).
-+
-+ Note: The yyyyddd day-of-year format is often erroneously referred to
-+ as a Julian date. However, a true Julian date is a simple counting
-+ number, the number of days since a certain fixed day in the past.
-+ [364]See \fmjd() below.
-+
-+ \fdoy2date(date-time)
-+ Converts a date or date-time in day-of-year format to a standard
-+ format date. A yyyyddd-format date must be supplied; time is
-+ optional. The given date is converted to yyyymmdd format. If a
-+ time is given, it is converted to 24-hour format. Examples:
-+
-+ \fdoy2date(2000185) = 20000704
-+ \fdoy2(2000185 3pm) = 20000704 15:00:00
-+
-+ \fmjd(date-time)
-+ Converts free-format date and/or time to a Modified Julian Date
-+ (MJD), the number of days since 17 Nov 1858 00:00:00. If a time
-+ is given, it is ignored. Examples:
-+
-+ \fmjd(4 Jul 2000) = 50998
-+ \fmjd(17 Nov 1858) = 0
-+ \fmjd(16 Nov 1858) = -1
-+
-+ \fmjd2date(mjd)
-+ Converts an MJD (integer) to standard date format, yyyymmdd:
-+
-+ \fmjd2(50998) = 4 Jul 1998
-+ \fmjd2(0) = 17 Nov 1858
-+ \fmjd2(-1) = 16 Nov 1858
-+ \fmjd2(-365) = 17 Nov 1857
-+
-+ MJDs are normal integers and, unlike DOYs, may be added, subtracted,
-+ etc, with each other or with other integers, to obtain meaningful
-+ results. For example, to find out the date 212 days ago:
-+
-+ echo \fmjd2date(\fmjd()-212)
-+
-+ Constructions such as this can be used in any command where a date-time
-+ is required, e.g.:
-+
-+ send /after:\fmjd2date(\fmjd()-212)
-+
-+ to send all files that are not older than 212 days (this is equivalent
-+ to "send /after:-212days").
-+
-+ MJDs also have other regularities not exhibited by other date formats.
-+ For example, \fmodulus(\fmjd(any-date),7) gives the day of the week for
-+ any date (where 4=Sun, 5=Mon, ..., 3=Sat). (However, it is easier to
-+ use \fnday() for this purpose, and it gives the more conventional
-+ result of 0=Sun, 1=Mon, ..., 6=Sat).
-+
-+ Note that if MJDs are to be compared, they must be compared numerically
-+ (IF <, =, >) and not lexically (IF LLT, EQUAL, LGT), whereas DOYs must
-+ be compared lexically if they include a time (which contains ":"
-+ characters); however, if DOYs do not include a time, they may also be
-+ compared numerically.
-+
-+ In any case, lexical comparison of DOYs always produces the appropriate
-+ result, as does numeric comparison of MJDs.
-+
-+ The same comments apply to sorting. Also note that DOYs are fixed
-+ length, but MJDs can vary in length. However, all MJDs between 3 April
-+ 1886 and 30 Aug 2132 are 5 decimal digits long. (MJDs become 6 digits
-+ long on 31 Aug 2132, and 7 digits long on 13 Oct 4596).
-+
-+1.7. Partial Completion of Keywords
-+
-+ Partial completion of keywords was added in C-Kermit 7.0. In prior
-+ versions, if completion was attempted (by pressing the Esc or Tab key)
-+ on a string that matched different keywords, you'd just get a beep. Now
-+ Kermit completes up to the first character where the possibly matching
-+ keywords differ and then beeps. For example:
-+
-+ C-Kermit> send /n<Tab>
-+
-+ which matches /NOT-BEFORE and /NOT-AFTER, now completes up to the dash:
-+
-+ C-Kermit> send /n<Tab>ot-<Beep>
-+
-+ Partial completion works for filenames too (as it has for some years).
-+
-+1.8. Command Recall
-+
-+ C-Kermit has had a command history buffer for some time, which could be
-+ scrolled interactively using control characters or (in Kermit 95 only)
-+ arrow keys. Version 7.0 adds a REDO command that allows the most recent
-+ command matching a given pattern to be re-executed:
-+
-+ { REDO, RR, ^ } [ pattern ]
-+ Search the command history list for the most recent command that
-+ matches the given pattern, and if one is found, execute it
-+ again.
-+
-+ The pattern can be a simple string (like "send"), in which case the
-+ last SEND command is re-executed. Or it can contain wildcard characters
-+ "*" and/or "?", which match any string and any single character,
-+ respectively (note that "?" must be preceded by backslash to override
-+ its normal function of giving help), and in most C-Kermit versions may
-+ also include [] character lists and {} string lists (see [365]Section
-+ 4.9).
-+
-+ The match works by appending "*" to the end of the given pattern (if
-+ you didn't put one there yourself). Thus "redo *oofa" becomes "redo
-+ *oofa*" and therefore matches the most recent command that contains
-+ "oofa" anywhere within the command. If you want to inhibit the
-+ application of the trailing "*", e.g. to force matching a string at the
-+ end of a command, enclose the pattern in braces:
-+
-+ redo {*oofa}
-+
-+ matches the most recent command that ends with "oofa".
-+
-+ REDO commands themselves are not entered into the command history list.
-+ If no pattern is given, the previous (non-REDO) command is re-executed.
-+ The REDOne command is reinserted at the end of the command history
-+ buffer, so the command scrollback character (Ctrl-P, Ctrl-B, or
-+ Uparrow) can retrieve it.
-+
-+ Examples:
-+
-+ C-Kermit> echo foo
-+ foo
-+ C-Kermit> show alarm
-+ (no alarm set)
-+ C-Kermit> echo blah
-+ blah
-+ C-Kermit> redo ; Most recent command
-+ blah
-+ C-Kermit> redo s ; Most recent command starting with "s"
-+ (no alarm set)
-+ C-Kermit> redo echo f ; Most recent command starting with "echo f"
-+ foo
-+ C-Kermit> redo *foo ; Most recent command that has "foo" in it
-+ foo
-+ C-Kermit> <Ctrl-P> ; Scroll back
-+ C-Kermit> echo foo ; The REDOne command is there
-+ C-Kermit> redo {*foo} ; Most recent command that ends with "foo"
-+ foo
-+ C-Kermit>
-+
-+ Since REDO, REDIAL, and REDIRECT all start the same way, and RED is the
-+ designated non-unique abbreviation for REDIAL, REDO must be spelled out
-+ in full. For convenience, RR is included as an invisible easy-to-type
-+ synonym for REDO. You can also use the "^" character for this:
-+
-+ C-Kermit> ^ ; Most recent command
-+ C-Kermit> ^ s ; Most recent command starting with "s"
-+ C-Kermit> ^s ; Ditto (space not required after "^").
-+ C-Kermit> ^*foo ; Most recent command that has "foo" in it.
-+ C-Kermit> ^{*foo} ; Most recent command ends with "foo".
-+
-+ Unlike the manual command-history-scrolling keys, the REDO command can
-+ be used in a script, but it's not recommended (since the command to be
-+ REDOne might not be found, so if the REDO command fails, you can't tell
-+ whether it was because REDO failed to find the requested command, or
-+ because the command was found but it failed).
-+
-+1.9. EXIT Messages
-+
-+ The EXIT and QUIT commands now accept an optional message to be
-+ printed. This makes the syntax of EXIT and QUIT just like END and STOP:
-+
-+ { EXIT, QUIT, END, STOP } [ status-code [ message ] ]
-+
-+ where status-code is a number (0 indicating success, nonzero indicating
-+ failure). This is handy in scripts that are never supposed to enter
-+ interactive mode:
-+
-+ dial 7654321
-+ if fail exit 1 Can't make connection - try again later.
-+
-+ Previously this could only be done in two steps:
-+
-+ dial 7654321
-+ xif fail { echo Can't make connection - try again later, exit 1 }
-+
-+ A status code must be included in order to specify a message. In the
-+ case of EXIT and QUIT, the default status code is contained in the
-+ variable \v(exitstatus), and is set automatically by various events
-+ (file transfer failures, etc; it can also be set explicitly with the
-+ SET EXIT STATUS command). If you want to give an EXIT or QUIT command
-+ with a message, but without changing the exit status from what it
-+ normally would have been, use the \v(exitstatus) variable, e.g.:
-+
-+ exit \v(existatus) Goodbye from \v(cmdfile).
-+
-+ The EXIT status is returned to the system shell or whatever other
-+ process invoked C-Kermit, e.g. in UNIX:
-+
-+ C-Kermit> exit 97 bye bye
-+ bye bye
-+ $ echo $?
-+ 97
-+ $
-+
-+1.10. Managing Keyboard Interruptions
-+
-+ When C-Kermit is in command or file-transfer mode (as opposed to
-+ CONNECT mode), it can be interrupted with Ctrl-C. Version 7.0 adds the
-+ ability to disarm the Ctrl-C interrupt:
-+
-+ SET COMMAND INTERRUPT { ON, OFF }
-+ COMMAND INTERRUPT is ON by default, meaning the Ctrl-C can be
-+ used to interrupt a command or a file transfer in progress. Use
-+ OFF to disable these interruptions, and use it with great
-+ caution for obvious reasons.
-+
-+ SET TRANSFER INTERRUPT { ON, OFF }
-+ This can be used to disable keyboard interruption of file
-+ transfer when C-Kermit is in local mode, or to re-enable it
-+ after it has been disabled. This applies to the X, Z, E, and
-+ similar keys as well as to the system interrupt character,
-+ usually Ctrl-C. This is distinct from SET TRANSFER CANCELLATION,
-+ which tells whether packet mode can be exited by sending a
-+ special sequence of characters.
-+
-+ Several other commands can be interrupted by pressing any key while
-+ they are active. Version 7.0 adds the ability to disable this form of
-+ interruption also:
-+
-+ SET INPUT CANCELLATION { ON, OFF }
-+ Whether an INPUT command in progress can be interrupted by
-+ pressing a key. Normally ON. Setting INPUT CANCELLATION OFF
-+ makes INPUT commands uninterruptible except by Ctrl-C (unless
-+ COMMAND INTERRUPTION is also OFF).
-+
-+ SET SLEEP CANCELLATION { ON, OFF }
-+ Whether a SLEEP, PAUSE, or WAIT command in progress can be
-+ interrupted by pressing a key. Normally ON. Setting SLEEP
-+ CANCELLATION OFF makes these commands uninterruptible except by
-+ Ctrl-C (unless COMMAND INTERRUPTION is also OFF). Synonyms: SET
-+ PAUSE CANCELLATION, SET WAIT CANCELLATION.
-+
-+ So to make certain a script is not interruptible by the user, include
-+ these commands:
-+
-+ SET TRANSFER INTERRUPT OFF
-+ SET SLEEP CANCELLATION OFF
-+ SET INPUT CANCELLATION OFF
-+ SET COMMAND INTERRUPTION OFF
-+
-+ Make sure to turn them back on afterwards if interruption is to be
-+ re-enabled.
-+
-+ When a PAUSE, SLEEP, WAIT, or INPUT command is interrupted from the
-+ keyboard, the new variable \v(kbchar) contains a copy of the (first)
-+ character that was typed and caused the interruption, provided it was
-+ not the command interrupt character (usually Ctrl-C). If these commands
-+ complete successfully or time out without a keyboard interruption, the
-+ \v(kbchar) variable is empty.
-+
-+ The \v(kbchar) variable (like any other variable) can be tested with:
-+
-+ if defined \v(kbchar) command
-+
-+ The command is executed if the variable is not empty.
-+
-+ The \v(kbchar) variable can be reset with WAIT 0 (PAUSE 0, SLEEP 0,
-+ etc).
-+
-+1.11. Taming The Wild Backslash -- Part Deux
-+
-+ [366]Using C-Kermit, 2nd Edition, contains a brief section, "Taming the
-+ Wild Backslash", on page 48, which subsequent experience has shown to
-+ be inadequate for Kermit users intent on writing scripts that deal with
-+ Windows, DOS, and OS/2 filenames, in which backslash (\) is used as the
-+ directory separator. This section fills in the blanks.
-+
-+1.11.1. Background
-+
-+ The Kermit command language shares a certain unavoidable but annoying
-+ characteristic with most other command languages that are capable of
-+ string replacement, namely the necessity to "quote" certain characters
-+ when you want them to be taken literally. This is a consequence of the
-+ facts that:
-+
-+ 1. One or more characters must be set aside to denote replacement,
-+ rather than acting as literal text.
-+ 2. We have only 96 printable characters to work with in ASCII, which
-+ is still the only universally portable character set.
-+ 3. There is no single printable character that is unused everywhere.
-+ 4. Variables are not restricted to certain contexts, as they are in
-+ formal programming languages like C and Fortran, but can appear
-+ anywhere at all within a command, and therefore require special
-+ syntax.
-+
-+ Thus there can be conflicts. To illustrate, the standard UNIX shell
-+ uses dollar sign ($) to introduce variables. So the shell command:
-+
-+ echo $TERM
-+
-+ displays the value of the TERM variable, e.g. vt320. But suppose you
-+ want to display a real dollar sign:
-+
-+ echo The price is $10.20
-+
-+ This causes the shell to evaluate the variable "$1", which might or
-+ might not exist, and substitute its value, e.g.:
-+
-+ The price is 0.20
-+
-+ (in this case the $1 variable had no value.) This is probably not what
-+ you wanted. To force the dollar sign to be taken literally, you must
-+ apply a "quoting rule", such as "precede a character by backslash (\)
-+ to force the shell to take the character literally":
-+
-+ echo The price is \$10.20
-+ The price is $10.20
-+
-+ But now suppose you want the backslash AND the dollar sign to be taken
-+ literally:
-+
-+ echo The price is \\$10.20
-+
-+ This doesn't work, since the first backslash quotes the second one,
-+ thereby leaving the dollar sign unquoted again:
-+
-+ The price is \0.20
-+
-+ Quoting the dollar sign requires addition of a third backslash:
-+
-+ echo The price is \\\$10.20
-+ The price is \$10.20
-+
-+ The first backslash quotes the second one, and the third backslash
-+ quotes the dollar sign.
-+
-+ Every command language -- all UNIX shells, VMS DCL, DOS Batch, AOS/VS
-+ CLI, etc etc -- has similar rules. UNIX shell rules are probably the
-+ most complicated, since many printable characters -- not just one --
-+ are special there: dollar sign, single quote, double quote, backslash,
-+ asterisk, accent grave, number sign, ampersand, question mark,
-+ parentheses, brackets, braces, etc -- practically every
-+ non-alphanumeric character needs some form of quoting if it is to be
-+ taken literally. And to add to the confusion, the UNIX shell offers
-+ many forms of quoting, and many alternative UNIX shells are available,
-+ each using slightly different syntax.
-+
-+1.11.2. Kermit's Quoting Rules
-+
-+ Kermit's basic quoting rules are simple by comparison (there are, of
-+ course, additional syntax requirements for macro definitions, command
-+ blocks, function calls, etc, but they are not relevant here).
-+
-+ The following characters are special in Kermit commands:
-+
-+ Backslash (\)
-+ Introduces a variable, or the numeric representation of a
-+ special character, or a function, or other item for
-+ substitution. If the backslash is followed by a digit or by any
-+ of the following characters:
-+
-+ x, o, d, m, s, f, v, $, %, &, :, {
-+
-+ this indicates a special substitution item; otherwise the
-+ following character is to be taken literally (exceptions: \ at
-+ end of line is taken literally; \n, \b, and \n are special items
-+ in the OUTPUT command only).
-+
-+ Semicolon (;)
-+ (Only when at the beginning of a line or preceded by at least
-+ one space or tab) Introduces a comment.
-+
-+ Number sign (#)
-+ (Only when at the beginning of a line or preceded by at least
-+ one space or tab) Just like semicolon; introduces a comment.
-+
-+ Question mark (?)
-+ (Only at the command prompt - not in command files or macros)
-+ Requests context-sensitive help.
-+
-+ To force Kermit to take any of these characters literally, simply
-+ precede it by a backslash (\).
-+
-+ Sounds easy! And it is, except when backslash also has a special
-+ meaning to the underlying operating system, as it does in DOS, Windows,
-+ and OS/2, where it serves as the directory separator in filenames such
-+ as:
-+
-+ D:\K95\KEYMAPS\READ.ME
-+
-+ Using our rule, we would need to refer to this file in Kermit commands
-+ as follows:
-+
-+ D:\\K95\\KEYMAPS\\READ.ME
-+
-+ But this would not be obvious to new users of Kermit software on DOS,
-+ Windows, or OS/2, and it would be annoying to seasoned ones. Thus
-+ MS-DOS Kermit and Kermit 95 go to rather extreme lengths to allow the
-+ more natural notation, as in:
-+
-+ send d:\k95\keymaps\read.me
-+
-+ The reason this is tricky is that we also need to allow for variables
-+ and other expressions introduced by backslash in the same command. For
-+ example, suppose \%a is a variable whose value is "oofa" (without the
-+ quotes). What does the following command do?
-+
-+ send d:\%a
-+
-+ Does it send the file named "oofa" in the current directory of the D:
-+ disk, or does it send a file named "%a" in the root directory of the D:
-+ disk? This is the kind of trouble we get into when we attempt to bend
-+ the rules in the interest of user friendliness. (The answer is: if the
-+ variable \%a has definition that is the name of an existing file, that
-+ file is sent; if a file d:\%a exists, it is sent; otherwise if both
-+ conditions are true, the variable takes precedence, and the literal
-+ filename can be forced by quoting: \\%a.)
-+
-+ In Kermit 95 (but not MS-DOS Kermit), we also bend the rules another
-+ way by allowing you to use forward slash (/) rather than backslash (\)
-+ as the directory separator:
-+
-+ send d:/k95/keymaps/read.me
-+
-+ This looks more natural to UNIX users, and in fact is perfectly
-+ acceptable to the Windows 95/98/NT and OS/2 operating systems on the
-+ API level. BUT (there is always a "but") the Microsoft shell,
-+ COMMAND.COM, for Windows 95/98 and NT does not allow this notation, and
-+ therefore it can not be used in any Kermit command -- such as RUN --
-+ that invokes the Windows command shell AND your command shell is
-+ COMMAND.COM or any other shell that does not allow forward slash as
-+ directory separator (some alternative shells do allow this).
-+
-+ NOTE: There exists a wide variety of alternative shells from third
-+ parties that do not have this restriction. If you are using a shell
-+ that accepts forward slash as a directory separator, you can stop
-+ reading right now -- UNLESS (there is always an "unless") you want
-+ your scripts to be portable to systems that have other shells. Also
-+ note that some Windows shells might actually REQUIRE forward slashes
-+ (instead of backslashes) as directory separators; we do not treat
-+ this situation below, but the treatment is obvious -- use slash
-+ rather backslash as the directory separator.
-+
-+1.11.3. Passing DOS Filenames from Kermit to Shell Commands
-+
-+ The following Kermit commands invoke the system command shell:
-+
-+ RUN (and its synonyms ! and @)
-+ REDIRECT
-+ PIPE
-+
-+ Each of these commands takes a shell command as an operand. These shell
-+ commands are not, and can not be, parsed by Kermit since Kermit does
-+ not know the syntax of shell commands, and so can't tell the difference
-+ between a keyword, a filename, a variable, a switch, or other item.
-+ Therefore the rules can not be bent since Kermit doesn't know where or
-+ how to bend them. To illustrate (using the regular Windows shell):
-+
-+ run c:\\windows\\command\\chkdsk.exe
-+
-+ works OK, but:
-+
-+ run c:/windows/command/chkdsk.exe
-+
-+ is not accepted by COMMAND.COM. But:
-+
-+ run c:\windows\command\chkdsk.exe
-+
-+ results in Kermit applying its quoting rules before sending the text to
-+ the shell. Since "w" and "c" are not in the list of backslash-item
-+ codes, the backslash means "take the following character literally".
-+ Thus, by the time this filename gets to the Windows shell, it has
-+ become:
-+
-+ c:windowscommandchkdsk.exe
-+
-+ which is probably not what you wanted. (If "w" and "c" were in the
-+ list, the results could be even stranger.) Even more confusing is the
-+ case where a directory or filename starts with one or more digits:
-+
-+ run c:\123\lotus.exe
-+
-+ in which "\123" is the Kermit notation for ASCII character 123, which
-+ happens to be left brace ({), resulting in "c:{lotus.exe".
-+
-+ So when passing filenames to a Windows shell, always use double
-+ backslashes as directory separators, to ensure that the shell gets
-+ single backslashes:
-+
-+ run c:\\windows\\command\\chkdsk.exe
-+ run c:\\123\\lotus.exe
-+
-+ Similar problems might occur with the built-in EDIT, BROWSE, and FTP
-+ commands. These commands result in Kermit building a shell command
-+ internally to invoke the associated helper program; the form of this
-+ command might conflict with the form demanded by certain alternative
-+ shells.
-+
-+1.11.4. Using Variables to Hold DOS Filenames
-+
-+ Now to the next level. Suppose you want to write a script in which
-+ filenames are parameters, and therefore are stored in variables.
-+ Example:
-+
-+ define \%f c:\windows\command\chkdsk.exe
-+ ...
-+ run \%f
-+
-+ Obviously this won't work for the reasons just noted; the RUN command
-+ requires directory separators be coded as double backslashes:
-+
-+ define \%f c:\\windows\\command\\chkdsk.exe
-+ ...
-+ run \%f
-+
-+ This will work; no surprises here. However, if you had used ASSIGN
-+ rather than DEFINE, you might have been surprised after all; review
-+ pages 348-349 of [367]Using C-Kermit (2nd Ed) for the difference
-+ between DEFINE and ASSIGN.
-+
-+ We have said that any Kermit 95 or MS-DOS Kermit command that parses
-+ filenames itself -- SEND, for example -- does not require double
-+ backslashes since it knows it is parsing a filename. So since the
-+ following works:
-+
-+ send c:\windows\command\chkdsk.exe
-+
-+ Should the following also work?
-+
-+ define \%f c:\windows\command\chkdsk.exe
-+ ...
-+ send \%f
-+
-+ Answer: No. Why? Because \%f is evaluated "recursively", to allow for
-+ the possibility that its definition contains further variable
-+ references. This is true of all "backslash-percent-letter" (or -digit)
-+ variables, and also for array references. So \%f becomes
-+ c:\windows\command\chkdsk.exe, which becomes
-+ c:windowscommandchkdsk.exe.
-+
-+ The trick here is to use the "other" kind of variable, that is
-+ evaluated only "one level deep" rather than recursively:
-+
-+ define filename c:\windows\command\chkdsk.exe
-+ ...
-+ send \m(filename)
-+
-+ Similarly if you want to prompt the user for a filename:
-+
-+ ask filename { Please type a filename: }
-+ Please type a filename: c:\windows\command\chkdsk.exe
-+ send \m(filename)
-+
-+1.11.5. Passing DOS Filenames as Parameters to Macros
-+
-+ Suppose you want to pass a DOS filename containing backslashes as a
-+ parameter to a Kermit macro. This raises two issues:
-+
-+ 1. Parameters to macros are "just text" and so are fully evaluated
-+ before they are passed to the macro.
-+ 2. Once inside the macro, the formal parameters \%1, \%2, ... \%9 are
-+ the type of variable that is evaluated recursively.
-+
-+ Thus a DOS filename is ruined once in the act of parsing the macro
-+ invocation, and again when referring to it from within the macro. To
-+ illustrate, suppose "test" is a macro. Then in the invocation:
-+
-+ test c:\mydir\blah.txt
-+
-+ "c:mydirblah.txt" is assigned to \%1. However, if we double the
-+ backslashes:
-+
-+ test c:\\mydir\\blah.txt
-+
-+ "c:\mydir\blah.txt" is assigned to \%1. But then when you refer to \%1
-+ in the macro, it is evaluated recursively, resulting in
-+ "c:mydirblah.txt". To illustrate:
-+
-+ define test echo \%1
-+ test c:\mydir\blah.txt
-+ c:mydirblah.txt
-+ test c:\\mydir\\blah.txt
-+ c:mydirblah.txt
-+ test c:\\\\mydir\\\\blah.txt
-+ c:\mydir\blah.txt
-+
-+ Let's address each part of the problem separately. First, inside the
-+ macro. You can use the \fcontents() function to force a
-+ backslash-percent variable (such as a macro argument) to be evaluated
-+ one level deep instead of recursively, for example:
-+
-+ define test echo { The filename is "\fcontents(\%1)"}
-+
-+ test c:\mydir\blah.txt ; We don't expect this to work
-+ The filename is "c:mydirblah.txt" ; and it doesn't.
-+ test c:\\mydir\\blah.txt ; But this does...
-+ The filename is "c:\mydir\blah.txt"
-+
-+ Thus if the filename arrives inside the macro with single backslashes,
-+ the backslashes are preserved if you always refer to the parameter
-+ through the \fcontents() function.
-+
-+ Now how to ensure that backslashes are not stripped or misinterpreted
-+ when passing a filename to a macro? This brings us back to what we
-+ learned in earlier sections:
-+
-+ 1. If it is a literal filename, either double the backslashes, or (if
-+ the filename is to be used only within Kermit itself and not passed
-+ to a DOS shell, or it is to be passed to an alternative shell that
-+ accepts forward slash as a directory separator), use forward slash
-+ instead of backslash as the directory separator.
-+ 2. If it is a variable that contains a filename, make sure you use a
-+ macro-style variable name, rather than a
-+ backslash-percent-character name.
-+
-+ Examples:
-+
-+ define test echo \fcontents(\%1)
-+ define filename c:\mydir\blah.txt
-+
-+ test c:\\mydir\\blah.txt ; Literal filename with double backslashes
-+ c:\mydir\blah.txt
-+
-+ test c:/mydir/blah.txt ; Literal filename with forward slashes
-+ c:/mydir/blah.txt
-+
-+ test \m(filename) ; Variable
-+ c:\mydir\blah.txt
-+
-+ But what if you don't like these rules and you still want to pass a
-+ literal filename containing single backslashes to a macro? This is
-+ possible too, but a bit tricky: turn command quoting off before
-+ invoking the macro, and then turn it back on inside the macro. Example:
-+
-+ define test set command quoting on, echo \fcontents(\%1)
-+
-+ set command quoting off
-+ test c:\mydir\blah.txt
-+ c:\mydir\blah.txt
-+
-+ Upon return from the macro, command quoting is back on (since the macro
-+ turned it on).
-+
-+ Obviously this trick can not be used if the filename is stored in a
-+ variable, since it prevents the variable from being evaluated.
-+
-+1.11.6. Passing DOS File Names from Macro Parameters to the DOS Shell
-+
-+ Now suppose you need to pass a DOS filename to a macro, and the macro
-+ needs to pass it, in turn, to the Windows shell via (say) Kermit's RUN
-+ command. This works too:
-+
-+ define xrun run \fcontents(\%1)
-+ xrun c:\\windows\\command\\chkdsk.exe
-+
-+ (or you can use the SET COMMAND QUOTING OFF / ON technique described
-+ above to avoid the double backslashes.) But..
-+
-+ xrun c:/windows/command/chkdsk.exe
-+
-+ does not work if the Windows shell does not recognize "/" as a
-+ directory separator. If there is a chance that a filename might be
-+ passed to the macro in this form, the macro will need to convert it to
-+ a form acceptable to the shell:
-+
-+ define xrun run \freplace(\fcontents(\%1),/,\\)
-+
-+ Here we replace all occurrences (if any) of "/" in the argument with
-+ "\" prior to issuing the RUN command. Of course, in order to specify
-+ "\" as a literal character in the \freplace() argument list, we have to
-+ double it.
-+
-+1.11.7. Passing DOS Filenames to Kermit from the Shell
-+
-+ As noted in the manual, the \&@[] array contains Kermit's command-line
-+ arguments. Suppose one of these arguments, say \&@[3], is a DOS
-+ filename such as C:\FOO\BAR\BAZ\OOFA.TXT. (Note: In C-Kermit 7.0 and
-+ K95 1.1.18 and later, command-line arguments after "=" or "--" are also
-+ available in the top-level \%1..9 variables; see [368]Section 7.5.)
-+
-+ Of course you can eliminate any problems by using forward slashes
-+ rather than backslashes in the filename, but sometimes this is not
-+ possible, as when the Kermit command line is being generated by another
-+ program than can only generate "native" format DOS filenames.
-+
-+ As noted in the manual, "\%x" variables and \&x[] arrays are always
-+ evaluated "all the way" (recursively). If the contents of one of these
-+ variables contains backslashes, this causes another level of
-+ evaluation.
-+
-+ There is another kind of variable, which is evaluated only "one level
-+ deep". You can use this to prevent interpretation of the backslashes in
-+ the filenames. Example:
-+
-+ assign filename \fcontents(\&@[3]) ; Transfer contents
-+ ...
-+ send \m(filename)
-+
-+ Or, more simply:
-+
-+ send \fcontents(\&@[3])
-+
-+1.12. Debugging
-+
-+ The debug log is produced when you give a "log debug" command. This is
-+ normally done at the request of the Kermit help desk, for forwarding to
-+ the Kermit developers for analysis as a last resort in troubleshooting
-+ problems. (Last resort because it can grow quite huge in a very short
-+ time.) In cases where timing information is critical to understanding a
-+ problem, you can tell C-Kermit to put a timestamp on each debug log
-+ line by giving the command:
-+
-+ SET DEBUG TIMESTAMP ON
-+
-+ At any time before or after activating the debug log (SET DEBUG
-+ TIMESTAMP OFF turns off timestamping). Timestamps can be turned off and
-+ on as desired while logging. Obviously, they increase the size and
-+ growth rate of the log significantly, and so should be used sparingly.
-+ Timestamps are of the form hh:mm:ss.xxx, where .xxx is thousands of a
-+ second (but is included only on platforms that include this feature).
-+
-+1.13. Logs
-+
-+ In UNIX C-Kermit and in K-95, you can now direct any log to a pipe.
-+ This not only lets you send your logs to places other than disk files,
-+ but also lets you customize them to any desired degree.
-+
-+ LOG { DEBUG, PACKETS, SESSION, TRANSACTION, CONNECTION } { file, pipe }
-+ ...
-+ A "pipe" is the name of a command, preceded by a vertical bar.
-+ If the pipe contains any spaces, it must be enclosed in braces.
-+
-+ Here are some examples for UNIX (always remember the importance of
-+ getting the UNIX shell quoting rules right):
-+
-+ LOG TRANSACTIONS |lpr
-+ This sends the transaction log to the default UNIX printer,
-+ rather than to a file (use "lp" rather than "lpr" if necessary).
-+
-+ LOG TRANSACTIONS {| myfilter > t.log}
-+ For those who don't like the format of the transaction log, or
-+ want to extract certain information from it; write your own
-+ output filter.
-+
-+ LOG SESSION {| lpr -Plaserwriter}
-+ This sends the session log to a specific UNIX printer, rather
-+ than to a file. Note the braces around the pipeline. These are
-+ required because it contains spaces.
-+
-+ LOG DEBUG {| tail -100 > debug.log}
-+ This causes the debug log file to contain only the final 100
-+ lines. Suppose C-Kermit crashes under some unpredictable
-+ circumstances, and you need a debug log to catch it in the act.
-+ But the debug log can grow to huge proportions very quickly,
-+ possibly filling up the disk. Piping the debug log through
-+ "tail" results in keeping only the last 100 lines (or other
-+ number of your choice).
-+
-+ LOG DEBUG {| grep "^TELNET" > debug.log}
-+ This one shows how to log only Telnet negotiations. Piping the
-+ debug log through grep or egrep lets you log only specific
-+ information, rather than everything. "man grep" for further
-+ info.
-+
-+ LOG DEBUG {| gzip -c > debug.log.gz}
-+ Creates a full debug log, but compressed by gzip to save space.
-+
-+ LOG PACKETS {| tr "\\01" "X" | cut -c9- > packet.log}
-+ This one writes the regular packet log, but translates the
-+ Ctrl-A that starts each packet to the letter "X" and removes the
-+ s-nn-nn- notation from the beginning of each line. Note the
-+ double backslash (normal Kermit quoting rules). "man tr" and
-+ "man cut" for further info.
-+
-+ See [369]Section 2.12 for information about the new connection log.
-+
-+1.14. Automatic File-Transfer Packet Recognition at the Command Prompt
-+
-+ Beginning in version 7.0, C-Kermit can recognize Kermit (and in some
-+ cases also Zmodem) file-transfer packets while at its command prompt.
-+ This is convenient (for example), if you escaped back from a remote
-+ Kermit program and told the local Kermit program to send a file, but
-+ forgot to tell the remote Kermit program to receive it (and the local
-+ Kermit did not have the "send a Kermit receive command" feature
-+ available). This feature is controlled by the following command:
-+
-+ SET COMMAND AUTODOWNLOAD { ON, OFF }
-+ When ON, which is the default, the command parser recognizes
-+ Kermit packets when Kermit is in remote mode. An S packet makes
-+ it go into receive mode, an I packet makes it go into server
-+ mode. When OFF, packet recognition is disabled and the behavior
-+ when a packet is received at the command prompt is as it was in
-+ C-Kermit 6.1 and earlier (namely to print an error message).
-+
-+ COMMAND AUTODOWNLOAD is the command-mode equivalent of TERMINAL
-+ AUTODOWNLOAD, which is effective during CONNECT mode.
-+
-+1.15. The TYPE Command
-+
-+ The TYPE command now accepts a selection of optional switches
-+ ([370]Section 1.5), and also sets several variables.
-+
-+ Syntax: TYPE [ switches... ] filename
-+
-+ Variables:
-+
-+ \v(ty_ln)
-+ Line number of current line (during TYPE command; see /PREFIX)
-+
-+ \v(ty_lc)
-+ Line count of file most recently TYPEd.
-+
-+ \v(ty_mc)
-+ Match count of file most recently TYPEd (see /MATCH).
-+
-+ Switches:
-+
-+ /PAGE
-+ If /PAGE is included, Kermit pauses at the end of each screenful
-+ and issues a "more?" prompt. You may press the space bar to view
-+ the next page (screenful), or press "q" or "n" to return to the
-+ C-Kermit prompt. If this switch is given, it overrides the
-+ COMMAND MORE-PROMPTING setting for this command only. If it is
-+ not given, paging is according to COMMAND MORE-PROMPTING.
-+
-+ /NOPAGE
-+ Do not pause at the end of each screenful; show the whole file
-+ (or all selected lines) at once. If this switch is given, it
-+ overrides the COMMAND MORE-PROMPTING setting for this command
-+ only. If it is not given, paging is according to COMMAND
-+ MORE-PROMPTING.
-+
-+ /HEAD[:n]
-+ Only show the first n lines of the file (where n is a number).
-+ If n is omitted, 10 is used.
-+
-+ /TAIL[:n]
-+ Only show the last n lines of the file (where n is a number). If
-+ nis omitted, 10 is used. Note: /HEAD and /TAIL can't be
-+ combined; if you give both switches, only the most recent one is
-+ used.
-+
-+ /MATCH:pattern
-+ Only type lines from the file that match the given pattern (see
-+ [371]Section 4.9.1 for pattern notation). UNIX users familiar
-+ with grep should note a significant difference: there is no
-+ implied "*" at the beginning and end of the pattern. Thus:
-+
-+ TYPE /MATCH:foo Lists lines whose entire contents are "foo".
-+ TYPE /MATCH:foo* Lists lines that start with "foo".
-+ TYPE /MATCH:*foo Lists lines that end with "foo".
-+ TYPE /MATCH:*foo* Lists lines that have "foo" anywhere in them.
-+
-+ /HEAD and /TAIL apply after /MATCH, so "type /tail:20 /match:x*"
-+ shows the last 20 lines in the file that start with "x".
-+
-+ /PREFIX:string
-+ Print the given string at the beginning of each line. The string
-+ may be a constant, a variable, or a quoted variable. If it's an
-+ unquoted variable, its value at the time the TYPE command was
-+ given is used as a constant. If it is a quoted variable, it is
-+ re-evaluated for each line; a useful variable for this context
-+ is \v(ty_ln) (the line number of the current line being typed).
-+ If the prefix is to include spaces, it must be enclosed in
-+ braces. Examples:
-+
-+ type /prefix:{oofa.txt: } /match:*thing* oofa.txt
-+ Prints all lines in oofa.txt that contain "thing" with the
-+ filename itself as the prefix (similar to UNIX grep).
-+
-+ type /prefix:{\v(time). } oofa.txt
-+ Prefixes each line of oofa.txt with the time at which the
-+ TYPE command was given (one backslash)
-+
-+ type /prefix:{\\v(time). } oofa.txt
-+ Prefixes each line of oofa.txt with the time at which that
-+ line is being typed (two backslashes).
-+
-+ type /prefix:{\\v(ty_ln). } oofa.txt
-+ Prefixes each line of oofa.txt with its line number.
-+
-+ type /prefix:{\\flpad(\\v(ty_ln),4). } oofa.txt
-+ Same as the previous example, except the line number is
-+ right-adjusted in a 4-column field.
-+
-+ /WIDTH[:n]
-+ Truncates each line at column n (which must be a number) prior
-+ to printing it. This option can be used for long lines when you
-+ don't want them to wrap. If nis omitted, your current screen
-+ width is used.
-+
-+ /COUNT
-+ Counts lines and -- if /MATCH was included, matches -- but does
-+ not print any lines from the file. The line and match count is
-+ shown at the end, and the variables \v(ty_lc) and \v(ty_lm) are
-+ set accordingly.
-+
-+ SET OPTIONS TYPE { /PAGE, /NOPAGE, /WIDTH:n }
-+ Sets the paging default for TYPE commands, which can be
-+ overridden in any particular TYPE command by including the
-+ desired switch.
-+
-+ If a TYPE command is given with no switch, and no SET OPTIONS TYPE
-+ selection is in effect, paging is according to your COMMAND
-+ MORE-PROMPTING setting (SHOW COMMAND).
-+
-+1.16. The RESET Command
-+
-+ The RESET command, added in 7.0, closes all open files and logs, but
-+ does not affect the open connection (if any).
-+
-+1.17. The COPY and RENAME Commands
-+
-+ As of C-Kermit 7.0, in the UNIX version only, the COPY and RENAME
-+ commands are built in and do not call the underlying platform's COPY or
-+ RENAME command. This allows them to work in "NOPUSH" versions and other
-+ circumstances where it can't access system commands, and it allows file
-+ copying and renaming to be done portably in scripts. The
-+ characteristics of the built-in COPY or RENAME include:
-+ * It fails if the source file is a directory or is wild or lacks read
-+ access.
-+ * It fails if the source file is the destination file.
-+ * It allows the destination file to be a directory, in which case the
-+ source file is copied (or renamed) into it with the same name.
-+ * It overwrites an existing destination file if its permission
-+ allows.
-+ * It sets the new file's permission according to umask but also
-+ carries forward the source file's execute permission bits if the
-+ destination file did not already exist.
-+ * It fails if interrupted by Ctrl-C.
-+ * Upon error, it prints an appropriate message.
-+ * It returns standardized error codes that can be tested by IF
-+ SUCCESS / FAIL.
-+
-+ These commands now also accept the following switches:
-+
-+ /LIST (/LOG, /VERBOSE) = Print "file1 => file2 (OK)" (or error message).
-+ /NOLIST (/NOLOG, /QUIET) = Don't print anything (except error messages).
-+
-+ /NOLIST is the default.
-+
-+ The same built-in code is used by the UNIX C-Kermit server to execute
-+ REMOTE COPY commands (except in this case no switches are available).
-+
-+ The COPY command also accepts the following additional switches. When
-+ any of these are given (and they can be used in any combination except
-+ /SWAP and /APPEND), some of the checks listed above are relaxed, and
-+ thus it might be possible to get into trouble in certain cases, e.g.
-+ when the source and target files are the same file:
-+
-+ /APPEND = Append source file to destination file.
-+ /SWAP-BYTES = Swap bytes (see [372]Section 6.6.5).
-+ /FROMB64 = Decode the source file from Base64 encoding.
-+ /TOB64 = Encode the target file in Base64.
-+
-+ Base64 is the encoding commonly used for enclosures in Internet email.
-+
-+1.18. The MANUAL Command
-+
-+ The MANUAL command can be used to access the appropriate Kermit manual
-+ or other manual. The general syntax is:
-+
-+ MANUAL [ string ]
-+ If the string is omitted, C-Kermit asks the underlying system to
-+ access the C-Kermit manual using whatever method is appropriate
-+ for the system.
-+
-+ The specific action depends on the system. In UNIX, a "man" command is
-+ issued; "kermit" is the default argument but other manual topics may be
-+ specified. If the "man" command allows index or string searching, the
-+ appropriate syntax may be included.
-+
-+ In Kermit 95, the MANUAL command brings up the HTML online K95 manual.
-+
-+ In VMS and elsewhere, "man" is simply translated to "help", with a
-+ default argument of "kermit"; other and/or additional arguments may be
-+ included according to the definition of the system's "help" command.
-+
-+ Correct operation of the "man" command in C-Kermit depends on the
-+ appropriate man page or help topic having been installed in the right
-+ place with the right permissions and format.
-+
-+1.19. String and Filename Matching Patterns
-+
-+ A pattern is a string that includes special notation for matching
-+ classes or sequences of characters. C-Kermit 7.0 / K95 1.1.19 supports
-+ patterns in several places:
-+
-+ * Filenames ([373]Section 4.9)
-+ * SWITCH case labels ([374]Section 7.18)
-+ * The new IF MATCH statement ([375]Section 7.4)
-+ * TYPE /MATCH ([376]Section 1.15)
-+ * SET FILE TEXT-PATTERNS and BINARY-PATTERNS ([377]Section 4.3)
-+ * The \fsearch() and \farraylook() functions ([378]Sections 7.3 and
-+ [379]7.10.7)
-+ * The \fpattern() function used with [M,RE]INPUT ([380]Section 7.1)
-+
-+ Patterns are also called wildcards, especially when used for filename
-+ matching. C-Kermit's pattern syntax is explained in [381]Section 4.9.1,
-+ and also by the HELP WILDCARDS command.
-+
-+1.20. Multiple Commands on One Line
-+
-+ As of C-Kermit 7.0, commands can be grouped together on one line by
-+ separating the commands with commas and enclosing the list in braces.
-+ For example:
-+
-+ C-Kermit> { echo One, echo Two, echo Three }
-+ C-Kermit> do { echo One, echo Two, echo Three }
-+
-+ Command lists can be nested:
-+
-+ [ do ] { echo One, echo Two, if true { echo A, echo B}, echo Three }
-+
-+ and the END command works as it does in macros:
-+
-+ [ do ] { echo One, echo Two, if true end, echo Three }
-+
-+ The "one line" stricture is, of course, pliant to line-continuation
-+ conventions, namely that lines ending in hyphen (-) or left brace ({)
-+ are to be continued. Thus the first example can also be rendered:
-+
-+ [ do ] {
-+ echo One
-+ echo Two
-+ echo Three
-+ }
-+
-+ (the "do" is optional).
-+
-+1.21. What Do I Have?
-+
-+ C-Kermit can be built for hundreds of different platforms with
-+ practically countless configuration options. Certain commands might not
-+ be available in certain configurations, etc. Even on the same platform,
-+ different builds are possible: "maximum functionality", "minimum size",
-+ "maximum performance", and so on. You can find out a lot about the
-+ configuration of your C-Kermit program with the SHOW FEATURES command.
-+ Of course, a lot of what it says, especially in the bottom part, might
-+ seem like gibberish, but can be deciphered with a Rosetta Stone (such
-+ as the C-Kermit source or the [382]ckccfg.txt file). In any case, the
-+ output from SHOW FEATURES might easily explain why some expected
-+ feature is missing, or some buffer is smaller than expected. Here's a
-+ sample of the bottom section for the SunOS version:
-+
-+C-Kermit 7.0.196, 1 Jan 2000
-+
-+Major optional features included:
-+ Network support (type SHOW NET for further info)
-+ Telnet Kermit Option
-+ Hardware flow control
-+ External XYZMODEM protocol support
-+ Latin-1 (West European) character-set translation
-+ Latin-2 (East European) character-set translation
-+ Cyrillic (Russian, Ukrainian, etc) character-set translation
-+ Greek character-set translation
-+ Hebrew character-set translation
-+ Japanese character-set translation
-+ Unicode character-set translation
-+ Pseudoterminal control
-+ REDIRECT command
-+ RESEND command
-+ Fullscreen file transfer display
-+ Control-character unprefixing
-+ Streaming
-+ Autodownload
-+
-+Major optional features not included:
-+ No Kerberos(TM) authentication
-+ No SRP(TM) (Secure Remote Password) protocol
-+ No Secure Sockets Layer (SSL) protocol
-+ No Transport Layer Security (TLS) protocol
-+ No encryption
-+ No X Windows forwarding
-+
-+Host info:
-+ Machine: sun4m
-+ Model: (unknown)
-+ OS: SunOS
-+ OS Release: 4.1.3_U1
-+ OS Version: 4
-+
-+Target: sunos41gsc
-+GCC version: 2.7.2
-+Compiled Dec 31 1999 10:38:54, options:
-+ __GNUC__ __STDC__ _POSIX_JOB_CONTROL _SC_JOB_CONTROL ARRAYREFLEN=1024 BIGBUFOK
-+ BROWSER BSD4 CK_ANSIC CK_APC CK_AUTODL CK_CURSES CK_DNS_SRV CK_ENVIRONMENT
-+ CK_FAST CK_LOGIN CK_MKDIR CK_NAWS CK_PCT_BAR CK_PERMS CK_RECALL CK_RTSCTS
-+ CK_SPEED CK_TIMERS CK_TMPDIR CK_TTGWSIZ CK_TTYFD CK_WREFRESH CKEXEC
-+ CKFLOAT=double CKGHNLHOST ckmaxfiles=64 CKMAXOPEN=64 CKMAXPATH=1023 CKREALPATH
-+ CKREGEX CKSYSLOG CKTUNING CMDBL=32763 CMDDEP=64 CONGSPD DCMDBUF DIRENT DYNAMIC
-+ FNFLOAT FORDEPTH=32 GFTIMER HADDRLIST HDBUUCP IFDEBUG IKS_OPTION IKSDB
-+ IKSDCONF INBUFSIZE=32768 INPBUFSIZ=4096 MAC_MAX=16384 MACLEVEL=128 MAXDDIR=32
-+ MAXDNUMS=4095 MAXGETPATH=128 MAXTAKE=54 MAXWLD=102400 MSENDMAX=1024 NETCMD
-+ NETCONN NETPTY NOKVERBS NOSETBUF OBUFSIZE=32768 PARSENSE PATTERNS PIPESEND
-+ RENAME RLOGCODE SAVEDUID SELECT SIG_V SOL_SOCKET sparc STREAMING sun SUNOS4
-+ SYSTIMEH TCPSOCKET TIMEH TLOG TNCODE TTLEBUF TTSPDLIST UIDBUFLEN=256 UNIX
-+ UNPREFIXZERO USE_LSTAT USE_MEMCPY VNAML=4096 WHATAMI XFRCAN Z_MAXCHAN=46
-+ z_maxchan=46 ZXREWIND
-+
-+ byte order: big endian
-+
-+ sizeofs: int=4 long=4 short=2 char=1 char*=4 float=4 double=8
-+
-+ floating-point: precision=16 rounding=1
-+
-+ Without going into detail about what all the notation means, notice a
-+ couple things:
-+
-+ * The Options section shows symbols ("macros") in effect during
-+ compilation, together with their values (for those that have
-+ values). The options are listed in alphabetical order to make any
-+ particular option easier to find.
-+ * MAXWLD is the maximum number of files that a wildcard can expand
-+ to.
-+ * Anything starting with "NO" is a feature (or something other than a
-+ feature) that has been deliberately "compiled out", or omitted.
-+ * Important items for script writers include: CMDBL=32763 (the size
-+ of the command buffer and therefore the maximum length for a macro
-+ or variable definition; CMDDEP=64 (the limit on recursion depth);
-+ FORDEPTH=32 (the nesting limit on FOR loops); INBUFSIZE=32768 (the
-+ size of the INPUT command circular buffer); MAC_MAX=16384 (the
-+ maximum number of macros), etc.
-+
-+ See the [383]ckccfg.txt file for details.
-+
-+1.22. Generalized File Input and Output
-+
-+ C-Kermit 7.0 adds a new generalized I/O system for stream files,
-+ augmenting (and to some extent, overlapping with) the older OPEN, READ,
-+ WRITE, and CLOSE commands. In the new file i/o system, which can be
-+ used simultaneously with the old one, all commands are grouped together
-+ under the new FILE keyword, and some related functions and variables
-+ are added.
-+
-+1.22.1. Why Another I/O System?
-+
-+ The well-known LOG, OPEN, READ, WRITE, and CLOSE commands have the
-+ following restrictions:
-+
-+ 1. Only one READ file and one WRITE file can be open at a time.
-+ 2. The READ and WRITE commands are strictly line oriented.
-+ 3. These commands can not be used with binary files.
-+ 4. They do not support read/write access or random access.
-+ 5. The syntax is a bit counterintuitive for programmers.
-+
-+ The new file i/o system allows multiple files to be open at once, in
-+ any desired combination of modes (read/write/append) supported by the
-+ operating system, for line, block (record), or character i/o, for
-+ sequential or random access, using consistent syntax and conventions.
-+
-+ The new system, however, does not replace the old one, since the old
-+ system still must be used for:
-+
-+ 1. The session, packet, debug, transaction, and connection logs.
-+ 2. Reading and writing commands rather than files.
-+ 3. Existing scripts.
-+
-+ The new system works only with regular files, not with commands or
-+ pipes or mailboxes or pseudoterminals. No special provisions are made
-+ in the FILE commands for handling devices or network connections, nor
-+ for preventing you from trying to open them; if the underlying
-+ operating system treats them like regular stream disk files, the FILE
-+ commands (except, of course SEEK, REWIND, and COUNT) might work with
-+ them. (In C programming terms, the FILE commands are, at present,
-+ nothing more than a front end to fopen() / fread() / fwrite() /
-+ fclose() and friends, which are a portable API to sequential files, but
-+ this might change in the future for platforms like VMS and VOS that
-+ have more complicated file systems.)
-+
-+ Definitions:
-+
-+ Channel
-+ A number assigned to a file when it is opened, by which it must
-+ be referred to in all input/output operations.
-+
-+ Read/Write Pointer
-+ The current position in an open file, expressed as the 0-based
-+ byte count from the beginning.
-+
-+1.22.2. The FILE Command
-+
-+ FILE keyword [ switches ] channel [ data ]
-+ The keyword specifies the function: FILE OPEN, FILE READ, FILE
-+ WRITE, FILE CLOSE, etc. For convenience (and for familiarity to
-+ C programmers), the two-word FILE commands can be shortened to
-+ the single words FOPEN, FREAD, FWRITE, FCLOSE, and so on.
-+ Switches are optional, and modify or amplify the requested file
-+ function.
-+
-+ As in C, Fortran, and other programming languages, open files are
-+ referred to by "channels", integers such as 0, 1, 2, 3, and so on. A
-+ channel number is assigned when you open a file. The number of
-+ available channels depends on the underlying operating system, and can
-+ be seen in the variable:
-+
-+ \v(f_max)
-+
-+ or by giving the FILE LIST (FLIST) command. Channels are discussed in
-+ greater detail in [384]Section 1.22.4.
-+
-+ FILE command errors can be caught with IF FAIL after the FILE command.
-+ In addition, the \v(f_error) variable is set to the completion code of
-+ the command: 0 if no error, or a negative number if there was an error.
-+ The error codes are listed in [385]Section 1.22.5.
-+
-+ The command to open a file is:
-+
-+ FILE OPEN [ switches ] variable filename
-+ Opens a file for the type of access specified by the switches,
-+ or for read-only access if no switches are given. Upon success,
-+ a channel number is assigned to this file and stored in the
-+ given variable so you can refer to the open file in subsequent
-+ i/o commands. If the file can not be opened, the FILE OPEN
-+ command fails. Synonym: FOPEN.
-+
-+ The FILE OPEN switches are:
-+
-+ /READ
-+ Open the file for read access. If no switches are given, /READ
-+ is assumed. If the file does not exist or can't be opened for
-+ read access, the FILE OPEN command fails.
-+
-+ /WRITE
-+ Allow writing. If a file of the same name already exists, it is
-+ overwritten unless /READ or /APPEND is also included. If a file
-+ of the given name does not exist, it is created.
-+
-+ /APPEND
-+ Equivalent to /WRITE, except that if the file exists, it is not
-+ destroyed. The read/write pointer is set to the end of the file,
-+ so unless you change it with FILE SEEK or REWIND (see below),
-+ the first FILE WRITE command adds to the end of the file,
-+ preserving what was there already. If /WRITE is also given, it
-+ is ignored.
-+
-+ /BINARY
-+ Open the file in "binary" mode, rather than text mode. This
-+ switch is meaningless (but still can be used) in UNIX. In VMS,
-+ Windows, and OS/2, it inhibits end-of-line processing and
-+ conversion, and so should be used for binary files and/or files
-+ that are to be accessed in record or character mode rather than
-+ line by line.
-+
-+ The variable for the channel number can be any kind of variable: the
-+ \%x kind, a macro name, or an array element. But it must be a variable,
-+ not a number -- C-Kermit assigns the channel number; you can't tell it
-+ what number to use.
-+
-+ Example:
-+
-+ FILE OPEN \%c oofa.txt ; Open oofa.txt for reading.
-+ IF FAIL exit 1 Can't open oofa.txt ; Always check to see if it worked.
-+ ECHO oofa.txt: channel = \%c
-+
-+ If the file oofa.txt is opened successfully, a channel number is
-+ assigned to the variable \%c. Here's another example using a macro name
-+ for the channel number:
-+
-+ FILE OPEN channel oofa.txt ; Open oofa.txt for reading.
-+ IF SUCCESS ECHO oofa.txt: channel = \m(channel)
-+
-+ Switches can be combined when it makes sense and the underlying
-+ operating system allows it. For example, to open a file in binary mode
-+ for reading and writing (sometimes called "update"):
-+
-+ FILE OPEN /READ /WRITE /BINARY \%c budget.db
-+
-+ Some combinations might be allowed, others not. For example /READ
-+ /APPEND will usually not be allowed. /WRITE /APPEND is treated as
-+ /APPEND.
-+
-+ A major advantage of the new system over the older one is that you can
-+ have multiple files open at once. Suppose, for example, that you want
-+ to open all the files in a certain directory at once:
-+
-+ .\%n := \ffiles(/usr/olga*,&f) ; Get file list into array.
-+ if ( > \%n \v(f_max) ) { ; Make sure there aren't too many.
-+ exit 1 {\v(dir): \%n = Too many files}
-+ }
-+ declare \&c[\%n] ; Make array for channel numbers.
-+ for \%i 1 \%n 1 { ; Loop to open every file...
-+ file open \&c[\%i] \&f[\%i] ; Try to open this one
-+ if fail exit 1 Open error: \&f[\%i] ; Check for failure
-+ }
-+
-+ If this loop completes successfully, the \&c[] array will contain \%n
-+ channel numbers of open files in elements 1 through \%n.
-+
-+ Any file that you open with FILE OPEN stays open until Kermit exits, or
-+ you close it explicitly. The command to close a file is:
-+
-+ FILE CLOSE { ALL, channel }
-+ If a channel number is given and the channel refers to an open
-+ file, the file is closed and the channel is freed for reuse; if
-+ the channel does not refer to an open file, an error message is
-+ printed and the command fails. If ALL is specified instead of a
-+ specific channel, all files opened with FILE OPEN are closed and
-+ if all open files were closed successfully (even if no files
-+ were open), the command succeeds; if any open file could not be
-+ closed, the command fails; however, all open files that could be
-+ closed are still closed. Synonym: FCLOSE.
-+
-+ FILE CLOSE might fail because, for example, the disk filled up or a
-+ quota was exceeded. Example:
-+
-+ fopen /write \%c new.txt ; Open new.txt for writing.
-+ if fail exit 1 ; Check for error.
-+ fclose \%c ; Close the file we just opened.
-+
-+ This creates a 0-length file called new.txt.
-+
-+ Note that FILE OPEN /WRITE (without /READ or /APPEND) always creates a
-+ new file, and therefore destroys any file with the same name that might
-+ already exist (assuming you have permission to delete it). To avoid
-+ overwriting existing files, simply check first:
-+
-+ if exist new.txt exit 1 {Fatal - new.txt already exists}
-+ fopen /write \%c new.txt
-+ if fail ...
-+
-+ The next two commands give information about open files:
-+
-+ FILE STATUS channel
-+ Tells the name of the file, if any, open on the given channel
-+ and the switches it was opened with. The read/write pointer is
-+ also shown; this is where the next read or write will occur;
-+ "[EOF]" is shown if the current position in the open file is the
-+ end -- i.e. the next read will fail if the file was opened in
-+ /READ mode; the next write will add material to the end. The
-+ current line number (0-based) is also shown if known. The FILE
-+ STATUS command succeeds if the channel is open, and fails if
-+ there is no open file on the given channel, or if the channel
-+ number is invalid or out of range. Synonym: FSTATUS.
-+
-+ FILE LIST
-+ Lists the channel number and name of each open file, along with
-+ its OPEN modes (R, W, A, B, RW, etc) and its current read/write
-+ pointer or "[EOF]" if it is at the end. Also tells the number of
-+ files currently opened with FILE OPEN, plus the maximum number
-+ of open files allowed by the system and the maximum number
-+ allowed for FILE OPEN. Synonym: FLIST.
-+
-+ Next come the commands for reading and writing files:
-+
-+ FILE READ [ switches ] channel [ variable ]
-+ Reads data from the file on the given channel number into the
-+ variable, if one was given; if no variable was given, the result
-+ is printed on the screen. IMPORTANT: The variable should
-+ normally be a macro name rather than a \%x or \&x[] variable if
-+ you want backslash characters in the file to be taken literally
-+ (see pp.408-412 of [386]Using C-Kermit for an explanation; you
-+ can also read into a \%x or \&x[] variable, but then you must
-+ remember to protect future references to by \fcontents() if you
-+ don't want C-Kermit to process any backslashes it might
-+ contain). The desired amount of data (according to the switches)
-+ is read from the file at the current read/write pointer, and
-+ upon completion the read/write position is updated to first byte
-+ after the data that was read, no matter what switches were
-+ given. Synonym: FREAD.
-+
-+ FILE WRITE [ switches ] channel text
-+ Writes the given text to the file on the given channel number.
-+ The text, of course, can be literal text or a variable, or any
-+ combination. If the text might contain leading or trailing
-+ spaces, it must be enclosed in braces if you want to preserve
-+ them. Synonym: FWRITE.
-+
-+ Before proceeding, a caution about the NUL character. C-Kermit is so
-+ named because it is a Kermit program written in the C language. In C,
-+ character strings are represented as a sequence of non-NUL bytes
-+ terminated by a NUL byte (a byte in which all bits are 0). Thus a C
-+ string can not contain NUL bytes; it always ends with the first NUL
-+ byte. C-Kermit variables are implemented as C strings and therefore
-+ can't contain NUL bytes either, so the FILE READ and FILE WRITE
-+ commands do not handle files or strings that contain NUL bytes, except
-+ when the /CHARACTER switch is included with the FILE READ or WRITE
-+ command, or when /LPAD:0 or /RPAD:0 is given with the FILE WRITE
-+ command; these switches are explained below.
-+
-+ Also note that Kermit can not be used read or write binary numbers in
-+ the machine's internal format (integer or floating-point); in general,
-+ numbers can be processed only when represented as numeric or
-+ floating-point strings.
-+
-+ FILE READ switches are:
-+
-+ /LINE
-+ Specifies that a line of text is to be read. A line is defined
-+ according to the underlying operating system's text-file format.
-+ For example, in UNIX a line is a sequence of characters up to
-+ and including a linefeed, or the end of the file, which ever
-+ comes first. The line terminator (if any) is removed before
-+ assigning the text to the variable. If no switches are included
-+ with the FILE READ command, /LINE is assumed. Normally this
-+ switch should not be used with files opened in /BINARY mode (but
-+ nothing prevents it either).
-+
-+ /SIZE:number
-+ Specifies that the given number of bytes (characters) is to be
-+ read. The actual number of bytes returned will be less if the
-+ end of file is reached (or a NUL byte is encountered). For
-+ example, if a file is 514 bytes long, FILE READ /SIZE:512
-+ returns 512 bytes the first time and 2 bytes the second time.
-+ FILE READ /SIZE provides a kind of "record i/o" for files that
-+ do not necessarily contain lines. The resulting block of
-+ characters is assigned to the variable without any editing.
-+ Synonym: /BLOCK.
-+
-+ /CHARACTER
-+ Equivalent to /SIZE:1. If FILE READ /CHAR succeeds but the
-+ variable is empty, this indicates a NUL byte was read. Synonym:
-+ BYTE.
-+
-+ FILE WRITE switches are:
-+
-+ /LINE
-+ Specifies that an appropriate line terminator is to be added to
-+ the end of the text. If no switches are included, /LINE is
-+ assumed.
-+
-+ /SIZE:number
-+ Specifies that the given number of bytes (characters) is to be
-+ written. If the given text is longer than the requested size, it
-+ is truncated; if is shorter, it is padded according /LPAD and
-+ /RPAD switches. Synonym: /BLOCK.
-+
-+ /LPAD[:value]
-+ If /SIZE was given, but the text is shorter than the requested
-+ size, the text is padded on the left with sufficient copies of
-+ the character whose ASCII value is given to write the given
-+ length. If no value is specified, 32 (the code for Space) is
-+ used. The value can also be 0 to write the indicated number of
-+ NUL bytes. If /SIZE was not given, this switch is ignored.
-+
-+ /RPAD[:value]
-+ Like LPAD, but pads on the right.
-+
-+ /CHARACTER
-+ Specifies that one character should be written. If the text is
-+ empty or not given, a NUL character is written; otherwise the
-+ first character of text is given. Synonym: /BYTE.
-+
-+ /STRING
-+ Specifies that the text is to be written as-is, with no
-+ terminator added.
-+
-+ Here's an example in which we copy a text file line by line:
-+
-+ file open /read \%c oofa.txt ; Open input file
-+ if fail exit 1 Can't open input file ; Check that it's open
-+ file open /write \%d new.txt ; Open output file
-+ if fail exit 1 Can't open output file ; Check
-+ while true { ; Loop to copy lines
-+ file read /line \%c line ; Read a line
-+ if fail break ; Assume failure = end of file
-+ file write /line \%d {\m(line)} ; Write the line to output file
-+ if fail exit 1 Write failure ; Failure here is fatal
-+ }
-+ file close \%c ; Close the two files
-+ file close \%d
-+
-+ Note that since /LINE is the default for both FILE READ and FILE WRITE,
-+ it can be omitted as in the following example, where we also use the
-+ short names for the FILE commands.
-+
-+ fopen /read \%c oofa.txt ; Open input file
-+ if fail exit 1 Can't open input file ; Check that it's open
-+ fopen /write \%d new.txt ; Open output file
-+ if fail exit 1 Can't open output file ; Check
-+ while true { ; Loop to copy lines
-+ fread \%c line ; Read a line
-+ if fail break ; Assume failure = end of file
-+ fwrite \%d {\m(line)} ; Write the line to output file
-+ if fail exit 1 Write failure ; Failure here is fatal
-+ }
-+ fclose \%c ; Close the two files
-+ fclose \%d
-+
-+ Here's the same example using "record i/o" (the open and close
-+ sequences are are omitted since they are the same as above). The result
-+ is the same, but execution is much faster:
-+
-+ while true { ; Loop to copy blocks
-+ fread /size:512 \%c block ; Read a block into \%a
-+ if fail break ; Assume failure = end of file
-+ fwrite /string \%d {\m(block)} ; Write the block to output file
-+ if fail exit 1 Write failure ; Failure here is fatal
-+ }
-+
-+ Although record i/o is faster, it should not be used in line-oriented
-+ applications, since it returns arbitrary chunks of the file to your
-+ script, rather than lines. In this example, FWRITE /STRING is used
-+ rather than FWRITE /SIZE:512 to avoid the last output block being
-+ padded beyond the original file's length.
-+
-+ A file can also be copied character by character, but this is much
-+ slower than line i/o and VERY much slower than block i/o:
-+
-+ while true { ; Loop to copy blocks
-+ fread /char \%c c ; Read a character into c
-+ if fail break ; Assume failure = end of file
-+ fwrite /char \%d {\m(c)} ; Write character to output file
-+ if fail exit 1 Write failure ; Failure is fatal
-+ }
-+
-+ Although character i/o is slow, it is the only way to process files
-+ that contain NUL characters (i.e. bytes composed of only zero bits). In
-+ the example above, when "fread /char \%c c" returns a NUL, the c
-+ variable is empty. But since the FREAD /CHAR command did not fail, we
-+ know the result was really a NUL. FWRITE /CHAR, when given an empty
-+ variable (or no variable at all) writes a NUL. Thus the loop above will
-+ copy any file at all (very slowly). In non-copying applications, NULs
-+ are detected like this:
-+
-+ fread /char \%c c
-+ if fail (do something)
-+ if not def c (a NUL byte was read)
-+
-+ Finally some advanced file operations:
-+
-+ FILE FLUSH channel
-+ For output files only: commits all previous writes to disk, in
-+ case the computer was buffering them. Synonym: FFLUSH.
-+
-+ FILE COUNT [ { /BYTES, /LINES, /LIST, /NOLIST } ] channel
-+ By default, or if the /BYTES switch is given, counts the bytes
-+ in the file, if any, open on the given channel. If the /LINES
-+ switch is given, counts lines in the file. If the /LIST switch
-+ is given, the result is printed. If the /NOLIST switch is given,
-+ the result is not printed. /QUIET is a synonym for /NOLIST. If
-+ neither /LIST nor /NOLIST is given, the result is printed if the
-+ command is given at top level, i.e. not from a command file or
-+ macro. In all cases, the result of the most recent FILE COUNT
-+ command is stored in the variable \v(f_count). Note that FILE
-+ COUNT /LINE works (and can only work) by reading the entire
-+ file; expect it to take some time if the file is large. Synonym:
-+ FCOUNT.
-+
-+ FILE REWIND channel
-+ Moves the read/write pointer to the beginning of the file.
-+ Equivalent to FILE SEEK channel 0. Synonym: FREWIND.
-+
-+ FILE SEEK [ switches ] channel { [{+,-}]number, LAST, EOF }
-+ Moves the read/write pointer for the file on this channel to the
-+ given position, which may be a byte (character) number or a line
-+ number, expressed in either absolute or relative terms.
-+ Switches:
-+
-+ /BYTE
-+ The number given is a byte number. Synonym: /CHARACTER.
-+
-+ /LINE
-+ The number given is a line number.
-+
-+ /ABSOLUTE
-+ The number given is absolute.
-+
-+ /RELATIVE
-+ The number given is relative to the current position.
-+
-+ By default, or if the /BYTE switch is given, the number is a
-+ byte number (0 = first byte). If /LINE is given, the number is a
-+ line number (0 = first line). EOF means to move to the end of
-+ the file. LAST means to move to the last line or character of
-+ the file, depending on whether it's a line or character seek.
-+
-+ If neither the /RELATIVE nor the /ABSOLUTE switch is given, then
-+ if a signed number is given, the motion is relative to the
-+ current position. An expression that evaluates to a negative
-+ number is not considered signed for this purpose; that is, a
-+ sign (+ or -) must be included as the first character of the
-+ number in the command itself to force a relative seek (in the
-+ absence of /RELATIVE or /ABSOLUTE).
-+
-+ If the number has no sign, or if the /ABSOLUTE switch is given,
-+ the number represents an absolute position (relative to the
-+ beginning of the file). Subsequent FILE READs or WRITEs will
-+ take place at the new position.
-+
-+ If the read/write pointer is placed after the end of the file, a
-+ subsequent FILE READ will fail, but a FILE WRITE will succeed
-+ (possibly creating a file with "holes"). If a FILE SEEK /BYTE
-+ command is given, the current line becomes unknown (unless the
-+ position is 0) and subsequent FILE SEEK /RELATIVE /LINE commands
-+ will fail until the next non-relative FILE SEEK /LINE command is
-+ given. Synonym: FSEEK.
-+
-+ An absolute FILE SEEK to a negative position fails silently, as does a
-+ relative seek to a position before the beginning of the file.
-+
-+ A caution about relative SEEKs: remember that the number is relative to
-+ the current position. Whenever you read or write, this changes the
-+ position. In each of the following examples, assume the file open on
-+ channel \%c is positioned at line n (the FREAD target variable is
-+ omitted for lack of space):
-+
-+ { FREAD \%c, FSEEK /LINE \%c -1, FREAD \%c } <-- Reads line n twice
-+ { FREAD \%c, FSEEK /LINE \%c +0, FREAD \%c } <-- Reads lines n and n+1
-+ { FREAD \%c, FSEEK /LINE \%c +1, FREAD \%c } <-- Reads lines n and n+2
-+ { FREAD \%c, FSEEK /LINE \%c -2, FREAD \%c } <-- Reads lines n and n-1
-+ { FREAD \%c, FSEEK /LINE \%c -3, FREAD \%c } <-- Reads lines n and n-2
-+
-+ Another caution: Using FSEEK and FREAD /SIZE to repeatedly read the
-+ same disk block (e.g. when sampling a database record that is
-+ frequently updated) might not give you updated disk blocks due to the
-+ internal buffering and caching of the C library (this probably varies
-+ from one platform/compiler combination to another). If necessary you
-+ can force a fresh disk read with a close/open sequence:
-+
-+ FCLOS \%c
-+ FOPEN \%c samefilename
-+ FSEEK \%c samespot
-+ FREAD /SIZE:howmanybytes \%c variable
-+
-+1.22.3. FILE Command Examples
-+
-+ To read the last 10 lines of a text file into an array:
-+
-+ fopen /read \%c oofa.txt ; Open the file
-+ if fail exit 1 Can't open oofa.txt ; Always check for failure
-+ dcl \&a[10] ; Declare a 10-element array
-+ fcount /line \%c ; Count lines in the file
-+ fseek /line \%c \v(f_count)-10 ; Seek to 10 lines from the end
-+ if fail exit 1 Can't seek ; Check for failure
-+ for \%i 1 10 1 { fread \%c \&a[\%i] } ; Read the last 10 lines
-+ fclose \%c ; Close the file
-+
-+ Note that blank lines show up as empty (undefined) array elements, for
-+ example if you give a "show array a" command at this point. This is
-+ normal. You can still use these elements; e.g.:
-+
-+ for \%i 1 10 1 { echo \%i. \&a[\%i] } ; Display the 10 lines
-+
-+ Here is how to read the last line of a file (already open on channel
-+ \%c):
-+
-+ fseek /line \%c last ; Seek directly to last line
-+
-+ Alternatively:
-+
-+ fseek /line \%c eof ; Seek to end of file
-+ fseek /line \%c -1 ; Seek to beginning of last line
-+
-+ Alternatively:
-+
-+ fcount /line \%c ; Count the file's lines
-+ fseek /line \%c \v(f_count)-1 ; Seek to last line
-+ fread \%c ; Read it
-+
-+ To read every other line from the file (using relative SEEK), skipping
-+ the first line:
-+
-+ fopen /read \%c oofa.txt ; Open the file
-+ while ( success ) { ; Loop through lines
-+ fseek /line \%c +1 ; Skip a line
-+ if success fread \%c ; Read & display a line
-+ }
-+ fclose \%c ; Close the file
-+
-+ Here is how to read the lines of a file in reverse order:
-+
-+ fopen /read \%c oofa.txt ; Open
-+ if fail exit 1 ; Check
-+ fseek /line \%c last ; Seek to last line
-+ while success { ; Loop
-+ fread \%c ; Read line
-+ fseek /line \%c -2 ; Seek backwards two lines
-+ }
-+ fclose \%c ; Close the file
-+
-+ The loop works because a relative SEEK outside the file fails.
-+
-+ It is also possible to use block i/o to manage random-access files with
-+ fixed-length records (as long as they don't contain NUL characters).
-+ Suppose, for example, you have a file of "card image" records with
-+ fixed-field information about customers, such as:
-+
-+ Name: Columns 1-32 (column numbers are 1-based)
-+ Address: Columns 33-72
-+ Balance: Columns 73-80
-+
-+ The records are indexed by customer number, starting with 0. There are
-+ no line terminators separating them. Therefore the record for customer
-+ number n starts at position nx 80 (\%n*80).
-+
-+ Now suppose we received a payment from customer number 173 and want to
-+ update the balance:
-+
-+ .\%n = 173 ; Customer (record) number
-+ .\%a = 12.72 ; Amount
-+ fopen /read /write \%c customer.db ; Open the file
-+ if fail stop 1 OPEN FAILED: \f_errmsg() ; Check
-+ fseek /byte \%c 80*\%n ; Seek to record
-+ fread /size:80 \%c r ; Read the record
-+ if fail stop 1 READ FAILED: \f_errmsg() ; Check (IMPORTANT)
-+ .\%b := \fright(\m(r),8) ; Extract the balance
-+ .\%b := \ffpadd(\%b,\%a,2) ; Add the new payment
-+ if fail stop 1 ARITHMETIC ERROR: \%b/\%a ; Catch bad records
-+ .r := {\fleft(\m(r),72)\flpad(\%b,8)} ; Update the record
-+ fseek /byte \%c 80*\%n ; Reposition to same spot
-+ fwrite /size:80 \%c {\m(r)} ; Replace the record
-+ if fail stop 1 WRITE FAILED: \f_errmsg() ; Check
-+ fclose \%c ; Close the file
-+
-+ REMEMBER: Using FILE SEEK to move beyond the end of file can result in
-+ a file with holes when writing; when reading, an end-of-file error will
-+ occur -- be sure to check for it.
-+
-+1.22.4. Channel Numbers
-+
-+ C-Kermit's channel numbers are integers from 0 to some
-+ platform-dependent limit, such as 46 or 1985 (the value of \v(f_max)).
-+ This is the limit placed by the operating system on the number of files
-+ that may be opened by one process or user or job, minus the standard
-+ input, output, and error files, and minus the number of files reserved
-+ by C-Kermit for logs, OPEN READ and WRITE, and file transfer (and maybe
-+ some command files -- the \v(f_max) number can't be exact).
-+
-+ Although you must include a variable in the FILE OPEN command, to which
-+ the channel number is assigned, you don't have to use a variable in the
-+ other FILE commands if you know what the number is -- you can just put
-+ the number. This saves you a few keystrokes when typing commands at the
-+ prompt:
-+
-+ fopen \%c oofa.txt
-+ flist
-+ 0. /usr/olga.oofa.txt (R) 0
-+
-+ This tells the channel number is 0 (the number on the left is the
-+ channel file's channel number). Of course you can also find it by
-+ echoing the variable:
-+
-+ echo \%c
-+ 0
-+
-+ Or with "fstatus \%c". Now you can type commands like:
-+
-+ fread 0
-+
-+ to read a line from the file. Obviously, however, using digits rather
-+ than a variable for the channel number would be poor practice in a
-+ script.
-+
-+ If in commands like:
-+
-+ fread \%c \%a
-+
-+ you have trouble remembering which variable is which, note that the
-+ channel number is, indeed, a number. Anywhere C-Kermit accepts a number
-+ it can also accept an expression, so you can put parentheses around the
-+ channel number to remind you it's the channel number and not the
-+ variable into which data is to be read:
-+
-+ fread (\%c) \%a
-+
-+ Normally channel numbers are assigned sequentially as 0, 1, 2, ... up
-+ to the limit. However, once you start closing files, there can be holes
-+ in the sequence. New channels are assigned to fill in the holes. Thus
-+ you can't depend on channel numbers being in any particular sequence.
-+
-+1.22.5. FILE Command Errors
-+
-+ Each FILE command sets the variable \v(f_error) to one of the following
-+ values:
-+
-+ 0 = No error
-+ -1 = System error
-+ -2 = Attempt to read after end of file
-+ -3 = Channel not open
-+ -4 = Channel number out of range (negative or too large)
-+ -5 = Numeric argument (size, ...) out of range
-+ -6 = File not found
-+ -7 = Bad or missing filename
-+ -8 = Too many files are already open (FILE OPEN only)
-+ -9 = Forbidden operation (e.g. write to a read-only file)
-+ -10 = Access denied
-+ -11 = Illegal combination of OPEN modes (FILE OPEN only)
-+ -12 = Buffer overflow
-+ -13 = Current line number unknown (for relative line seeks)
-+ -14 through -98: Reserved.
-+ -99 = Requested operation not implemented in this version of C-Kermit
-+ -999 = Unknown error
-+
-+ When \v(f_error) is -1, this means the FILE command failed because
-+ because of a system error, in which case you can examine the following
-+ variables:
-+
-+ \v(errno) = System error number.
-+ \v(errstring) = Error message corresponding to \v(errno).
-+
-+ A special function is available for translating the \v(f_error) code to
-+ an error message string:
-+
-+\f_errmsg([code])
-+ If the code is -1, returns error message of the most recent system
-+ error; otherwise if the code is a valid \v(f_error) value, the associated
-+ message is returned. If the code is omitted, the status message
-+ corresponding to the current \v(f_error) value is returned.
-+
-+ A FILE command that fails prints the appropriate error message
-+ automatically, except when the command is READ or SEEK and the error is
-+ -2 (end of file); in that case, the command still fails, but does not
-+ print a message. This allows constructions such as:
-+
-+ fopen \%c oofa.txt
-+ while success { fread \%c }
-+ fclose \%c
-+
-+ to work as expected, i.e. without an annoying message when the end of
-+ file is reached.
-+
-+1.22.6. File I/O Variables
-+
-+ The variables associated with the file i/o package are:
-+
-+ \v(f_count)
-+ Result of the most recent FILE COUNT (FCOUNT) command.
-+
-+ \v(f_error)
-+ Numeric error code of most recent FILE command (0 = no error).
-+
-+ \v(f_max)
-+ Maximum number of files open simultaneously.
-+
-+1.22.7. File I/O Functions
-+
-+ Some of the FILE commands can also be issued as function calls, which
-+ makes script writing a bit more convenient, especially for C
-+ programmers. Also, several functions are provided that do not have
-+ command equivalents. Each of these functions takes a channel number as
-+ the first argument. These functions do not work for OPEN { READ, !READ,
-+ WRITE, !WRITE, and APPEND } files.
-+
-+ \f_status(channel)
-+ Returns 0 if the channel is not open, otherwise a number between
-+ 1 and 15 which is the sum of the OPEN modes:
-+
-+ 1 = /READ
-+ 2 = /WRITE
-+ 4 = /APPEND
-+ 8 = /BINARY
-+
-+ The remaining functions work only for open channels. Each of these
-+ functions can fail for the applicable reasons listed in [387]Section
-+ 1.22.5. For instructions on handling function errors, see [388]Section
-+ 7.12.
-+
-+ \f_pos(channel)
-+ Returns the file's current read/write pointer (0-based). There
-+ is no FILE command equivalent.
-+
-+ \f_line(channel)
-+ Returns the file's current line number (0-based), if known,
-+ otherwise -1. There is no FILE command equivalent. The line
-+ number is known as long as no character or block i/o has been
-+ done on the channel.
-+
-+ \f_handle(channel)
-+ Returns the "file handle" of the file. That is, it translates
-+ the portable C-Kermit channel number into a system-specific file
-+ handle or number that can be passed to other programs on the
-+ same platform. In UNIX this is a file descriptor. There is no
-+ FILE command equivalent.
-+
-+ \f_eof(channel)
-+ Returns 1 if the read/write pointer of the file on the given
-+ channel is at the end of the file, 0 otherwise. Convenient in
-+ WHILE statements, e.g.:
-+
-+ while not \f_eof(\%c) { fread \%c }
-+
-+ \f_getchar(channel)
-+ Equivalent to FREAD /CHAR. Returns the character actually read.
-+ If \f_getchar() does not fail but the return value is empty,
-+ this means a NULL character was read.
-+
-+ \f_getline(channel)
-+ Equivalent to FREAD /LINE. Returns the line actually read, but
-+ with the line terminator stripped. If \f_getline() does not fail
-+ but the return value is empty, this normally means an empty line
-+ was read.
-+
-+ \f_getblock(channel,n)
-+ Equivalent to FREAD /SIZE:n. Returns the block of characters
-+ actually read. If the returned block is smaller than n, it
-+ indicates either that the end of file was reached or a NUL
-+ character is in the block.
-+
-+ \f_putchar(channel,c)
-+ Equivalent to FWRITE /CHARACTER. Writes the character c. If c
-+ contains more than one character, only the first is written. If
-+ c is empty a NUL is written. Returns the number of characters
-+ written on success, or a negative error code upon failure.
-+
-+ \f_putline(channel,string)
-+ Equivalent to FWRITE /LINE. Writes the string and adds the
-+ appropriate line termination character or sequence. If the
-+ string is empty or omitted, an empty line is written. Returns
-+ the number of characters written on success, or a negative error
-+ code upon failure.
-+
-+ \f_putblock(channel,string)
-+ Equivalent to FWRITE /STRING. Writes the string as given. If the
-+ string is empty or omitted, nothing is written. Returns the
-+ number of characters written on success, or a negative error
-+ code upon failure.
-+
-+1.22.8. File I/O Function Examples
-+
-+ fopen /read \%c oofa.txt ; Open our favorite file for reading
-+ if failure exit 1 ; Check that it's open
-+ while not \f_eof(\%c) { ; Loop until EOF
-+ .line := \f_getline(\%c) ; Get a line
-+ if success echo {\m(line)} ; Echo it
-+ }
-+ if not \f_eof(\%c) { ; Check reason for loop exit
-+ exit 1 File Error: \f_errmsg() ; If not EOF say so.
-+ }
-+
-+ frewind \%c ; Rewind the file
-+ while not \f_eof(\%c) { ; Same thing but with block i/o
-+ .block := \f_getblock(\%c,256) ; (much faster than line i/o)
-+ if success xecho {\m(block)}
-+ }
-+
-+ frewind \%c ; Rewind again
-+ while not \f_eof(\%c) { ; Same deal but with character i/o
-+ .c := \f_getchar(\%c) ; (much slower than line i/o)
-+ if success xecho {\m(c)}
-+ }
-+ close \%c
-+
-+ To close all open files (equivalent to FCLOSE ALL):
-+
-+ for \%i 0 \v(f_max)-1 1 {
-+ if \f_status(\%i) fclose \%i
-+ }
-+
-+1.23. The EXEC Command
-+
-+ The EXEC command is available only in UNIX.
-+
-+ EXEC [ /REDIRECT ] command [ arg1 [ arg2 [ ... ] ]
-+ Runs the given command with the arguments in such a way that the
-+ command replaces C-Kermit in memory, and C-Kermit ceases to
-+ execute. EXEC is like RUN, except instead of returning to
-+ C-Kermit when finished, the command returns to whatever process
-+ invoked Kermit.
-+
-+ In the normal case, no files are closed, so the EXEC'd command inherits
-+ the open files, read/write pointers, working directory, process ID,
-+ user ID (unless command is SUID), group ID (unless command is SGID),
-+ groups, etc. (In UNIX, the EXEC command is simply a front end for
-+ execvp().)
-+
-+ If the /REDIRECT switch is included, then if a connection is open (SET
-+ LINE or SET HOST), it becomes the standard input and output of the
-+ EXEC'd program. If no connection is open, the /REDIRECT switch has no
-+ effect. For example to use C-Kermit for PPP dialing in Linux:
-+
-+ set modem type usr ; Specify the kind of modem you have
-+ set line /dev/ttyS1 ; Specify the device it's connected to
-+ set speed 57600 ; and the speed
-+ set flow rts/cts ; and flow control.
-+ set dial retries 100 ; Try the dial sequence up to 100 times.
-+ dial {{9-212-555-1212}{9-212-555-1213}{9-212-555-1214}{9-212-555-1215}}
-+ if fail exit 1
-+ for \%i 1 16 1 { ; Try up to 16 times to get login prompt
-+ input 10 Login: ; Wait 10 sec for it to appear
-+ if success break ; Got it - proceed...
-+ output \13 ; Send a carriage return and try again
-+ }
-+ if ( > \%i 16 ) stop 1 NO LOGIN PROMPT
-+ lineout \(myuserid) ; Send user ID
-+ input 30 assword: ; Wait for Password prompt
-+ if fail stop 1 NO PASSWORD PROMPT
-+ lineout \m(mypassword) ; Send the password.
-+ exec /redirect pppd ; Replace ourselves with pppd.
-+
-+ In this example we assume that the script has already set up the
-+ myuserid and mypassword variables -- normally the password should be
-+ prompted for, rather than stored on disk. Notice the advantages over
-+ the well-known "chat script":
-+ * You don't have to control the modem itself with AT commands;
-+ Kermit's DIAL command does this for you.
-+ * You can have Kermit automatically redial as many times as you want
-+ until it gets a connection (if this is legal in your country).
-+ * You can have Kermit fetch the number or numbers from a dialing
-+ directory.
-+ * You can have Kermit cycle through a list of phone numbers (this is
-+ new in C-Kermit 7.0; see [389]Section 2.1.16) without having to
-+ enter the numbers in a dialing directory.
-+ * Dialing is location-independent; you can use the same script to
-+ dial from different areas or countries.
-+ * Once the connection is made, the full power of Kermit's script
-+ language is available to manage the dialog with the terminal server
-+ or other device that answers the phone call.
-+
-+ NOTE: PPP and SLIP dialing are not available in Windows 95/98/NT/2000,
-+ whose APIs do not provide a method for an application to hand over a
-+ connection to the PPP or SLIP driver.
-+
-+1.24. Getting Keyword Lists with '?'
-+
-+ Suppose you type "te" at the C-Kermit> 6.0 prompt and then Esc or Tab
-+ to request keyword completion. Kermit beeps, indicating that more than
-+ one command starts with "te". But if you type '?' to see what they are,
-+ Kermit shows only "telnet". So why the beep? Because of invisible
-+ keywords like "telopt", "terminal", and "text". Lots of keywords are
-+ invisible because they are either synonyms for other keywords or else
-+ esoteric options to be used only in special circumstances, so we don't
-+ want them cluttering up the menus.
-+
-+ But then there is no way for you to discover them. So in C-Kermit 7.0,
-+ if you type '?' AFTER the beginning of a keyword field, then invisible
-+ keywords are shown too:
-+
-+ C-Kermit> te<Esc><BEEP>
-+ C-Kermit> te? Command, one of the following:
-+ telnet telopt terminal text
-+ C-Kermit>te
-+
-+ But if '?' is typed at the beginning of a field, only visible keywords
-+ are shown, as before (so, in this example, if '?' is typed at the
-+ C-Kermit> prompt, "telnet" is the only command shown that starts with
-+ "te").
-+
-+2. MAKING AND USING CONNECTIONS The SET LINE, SET HOST, and SET PORT (a
-+synonym for SET LINE) commands have new synonyms, in which the word SET is
-+replaced by the word OPEN: OPEN LINE, etc. There is no new functionality
-+here, but OPEN is a better verb, since SET generally takes no action, whereas
-+these commands actually try to open a connection. Furthermore, there is the
-+symmetry with CLOSE. 2.0. SET LINE and SET HOST Command SwitchesThe SET LINE
-+(SET PORT) and SET HOST commands now allow switches before the device or host
-+name, in most cases, and under certain circumstances, also at the end. The
-+new syntax is backwards compatible with the previous syntax; thus SET LINE,
-+SET PORT, and SET HOST commands in command files written for C-Kermit 6.0 or
-+earlier still work. The expanded syntax is:
-+
-+{ OPEN, SET } { LINE, PORT, HOST } [ switches ] device-or-address [ switches
-+]
-+
-+The first group of switches is:
-+
-+ /NETWORK-TYPE:{TCP/IP,X.25,PIPE,PTY...}
-+ When more than one network type is available, this lets you
-+ specify the type of network to use for this connection without
-+ affecting your global SET NETWORK TYPE. See [390]Section 2.7
-+ about pipes and ptys.
-+
-+ /USERID:[string]
-+ This switch is equivalent to SET LOGIN USERID. If a string is
-+ given, it sent to host during Telnet negotiations; if this
-+ switch is given but the string is omitted, no user ID is sent to
-+ the host. If this switch is not given, your current LOGIN USERID
-+ (\v(userid) value), if any, is sent. Unlike most other switches,
-+ this one is "sticky", since the value must persist throughout
-+ the session in case the server requests the ID string at a later
-+ time.
-+
-+ /CONNECT
-+ Enter CONNECT mode immediately and automatically after the
-+ device or connection is open. On serial devices, however, when
-+ CARRIER-WATCH is not OFF, wait up to 1 second for the Carrier
-+ Detect signal to appear before trying to connect, to give the
-+ device time to react DTR, which might have been off prior to
-+ opening the device.
-+
-+ /SERVER
-+ Enter server mode immediately and automatically after the device
-+ or connection is open. Treatment of carrier is the same as for
-+ /CONNECT.
-+
-+ /WAIT
-+ /NOWAIT
-+ For Telnet connections only: Like SET TELNET WAIT { ON, OFF },
-+ but applies only to this connection, and in fact applies only
-+ when OPENing this connection (which is usually the only place it
-+ matters). Typically you would use TELNET /NOWAIT to make a
-+ connection to a misbehaving Telnet server that does not reply to
-+ negotiations as required by the Telnet protocol definition.
-+
-+ Note: /CONNECT and /SERVER switches are not available in the RLOGIN and
-+ TELNET commands, since these commands already include an implicit
-+ /CONNECT and preclude automatic entry into server mode.
-+
-+ The /CONNECT and /SERVER switches are especially useful with "set host
-+ *" connections. For example, suppose you want to start a Kermit server
-+ on socket 3000 of your TCP host. Normally you would have to give the
-+ command:
-+
-+ set host * 3000
-+
-+ and then wait for a connection to come in, and only then could you give
-+ the SERVER command (or else define a macro to do this, and then execute
-+ the macro). Now you can do it in one step:
-+
-+ set host /server * 3000
-+
-+ This tells C-Kermit to wait for the connection and then enter server
-+ mode once it comes in, no matter how long it takes. Similarly, "set
-+ host /conn *" can be used to wait for a "chat" connection to come in.
-+
-+ Another set of switches is available in VMS only, for use only with SET
-+ LINE:
-+
-+ /SHARE
-+ Allows the SET LINE device to be opened in shared mode. Normally
-+ it makes no sense to open a serial device in shared mode, but
-+ it's necessary when C-Kermit is running in an environment such
-+ as DECIntact, that opens your job's controlling terminal in such
-+ a way that C-Kermit can't open it too, unless it enables SHARE
-+ privilege. Note: SHARE privilege is required.
-+
-+ /NOSHARE
-+ Requires that the SET LINE device not be in use by any other
-+ process in order for it to be successfully opened by C-Kermit.
-+ If neither /SHARE nor /NOSHARE is specified, /NOSHARE is used.
-+
-+ The second group of switches is:
-+
-+ /NO-TELNET-INIT
-+ Do not send initial Telnet negotiations even if this is a Telnet
-+ port.
-+
-+ /RAW-SOCKET
-+ This is a connection to a raw TCP socket ([391]Section 2.3.5).
-+
-+ /RLOGIN
-+ Use Rlogin protocol even if this is not an Rlogin port.
-+
-+ /TELNET
-+ Send initial Telnet negotiations even if this is not a Telnet
-+ port.
-+
-+ As of C-Kermit 7.0 and K95 1.1.19, the TELNET command includes an
-+ implicit /TELNET switch. So if you TELNET to a non-TELNET port, Kermit
-+ sends initial Telnet negotiations. This makes sense, since that's what
-+ "telnet" means.
-+
-+ If you want to make a connection to a non-Telnet port without sending
-+ initial Telnet negotiations, use:
-+
-+ set host [ /connect ] name-or-address port
-+
-+ or:
-+
-+ telnet name-or-address port /no-telnet-init
-+
-+ Additional switches might be added in the future; type "set host ?" or
-+ "set line ?" to see a current list.
-+
-+2.1. Dialing
-+
-+ Automatic redialing is illegal or restricted in many countries, so
-+ until C-Kermit 7.0, it was disabled by default, i.e. until a SET DIAL
-+ RETRIES command was given. In C-Kermit 7.0, if no SET DIAL RETRIES
-+ command has been given, a default is picked dynamically at DIAL time
-+ based on the calling country code, if known. At this writing, the only
-+ country code known to have no restrictions on automatic redialing is 1.
-+ So in this case a limit of 10 is chosen; otherwise 1. If you have not
-+ given an explicit SET DIAL RETRIES command, SHOW DIAL shows the value
-+ as "(auto)", and then the value actually used is shown when you give
-+ the DIAL command.
-+
-+ As of C-Kermit 7.0, automatic redialing is automatically canceled if
-+ the call could not be placed because no dialtone was detected.
-+
-+2.1.1. The Dial Result Message
-+
-+ If DIAL DISPLAY is not ON, the "Call complete" message now shows the
-+ modem's call result message, for example:
-+
-+ Dialing: ...
-+ Call complete: "CONNECT 31200/ARQ/V32/LAPM/V42BIS"
-+
-+ The exact format and contents of this message, of course, depends on
-+ the make, model, and configuration of your modem, so use your modem
-+ manual to interpret it. The call result message is also available in
-+ C-Kermit's \v(dialresult) variable.
-+
-+ C-Kermit> echo \v(dialresult)
-+ CONNECT 31200/ARQ/V32/LAPM/V42BIS
-+ C-Kermit> echo Speed = \fword(\v(dialresult),2)
-+ Speed = 31200
-+ C-Kermit>
-+
-+ Suppose your modem reports the modulation speed as shown above and you
-+ want to ensure your call is completed at (say) 24000 bps or more. You
-+ can use a little macro to do the job:
-+
-+define HSDIAL { ; High Speed DIAL
-+ local \%s
-+ if < \v(argc) 1 if not def \v(dialnumber) end 1 Usage: \%0 number
-+ set dial retries 100
-+ set dial interval 1
-+ while true {
-+ dial \%*
-+ if fail end 1 DIAL failed.
-+ asg \%s \fword(\v(dialresult),2)
-+ if def \%s if numeric \%s if not < \%s 24000 break
-+ }
-+}
-+
-+ (See [392]Section 7.5 about the \%* variable.)
-+
-+2.1.2. Long-Distance Dialing Changes
-+
-+ Due to the glut of cell phones, pagers, fax machines, ISPs, etc, area
-+ codes and dialing rules are changing all the time. In the North
-+ American Numbering Plan (NANP) countries (USA, Canada, etc), area codes
-+ are split or overlayed with increasing frequency, and 10- and 11-digit
-+ dialing is gradually becoming the norm for local calls. Changes are
-+ occurring In Europe, too, partly for these reasons and partly because
-+ of some new EC rules.
-+
-+ In France, effective 18 October 1996, all calls, even local ones, must
-+ be dialed with an area code. French area codes are presently 1-digit
-+ numbers, 1-6, and the long-distance dialing prefix is 0. All calls
-+ within France are considered long distance and begin with 01, 02, ...,
-+ 06.
-+
-+ Effective 1 May 1997, all calls within the US state of Maryland, even
-+ local ones, must be dialed with an area code but without the
-+ long-distance prefix -- this is the now widely-known North American
-+ phenomenon of "ten digit dialing". The same is happening elsewhere --
-+ many cities in Florida adopted 10-digit dialing in 1998.
-+
-+ In Italy beginning 19 June 1998, all calls to fixed (as opposed to
-+ mobile) numbers must be prefixed by 0. When calling into Italy from
-+ outside, the 0 must follow the country code (39). Calls to cell phones,
-+ however, must be placed without the 0. Then on 29 December 2000, the 0
-+ will become a 4 (for calling fixed numbers) and a prefix of 3 must used
-+ for calling mobile phones. More info at:
-+ http://www.telecomitalia.it/npnn/.
-+
-+ In Spain, effective 4 April 1998, with hard cutover on 18 July 1998,
-+ all calls within the country must be dialed with 9 digits, and all
-+ calls from outside Spain must also be dialed with 9 digits (after the
-+ country code, 34). The new 9-digit numbers all begin with "9". More
-+ info at: [393]http://www.telefonica.es/cambiodenumeracion/
-+
-+ Several new dialing features and commands have been added in version
-+ 6.1 and 7.0 to address these changes.
-+
-+ C-Kermit 6.0 and Kermit 95 1.1.11 and earlier handle the French
-+ situation via a reasonable subterfuge (setting the local area code to a
-+ nonexistent one), but did not handle "ten-digit dialing" well at all;
-+ the recommended technique was to change the long-distance dialing
-+ prefix to nothing, but this defeated Kermit's "list numbers for one
-+ name" feature when the numbers were in different locations. For
-+ example:
-+
-+ set dial ld-prefix
-+ dial onlineservice
-+
-+ where "onlineservice" is a dialing directory entry name corresponding
-+ to entries that are in (say) Maryland as well as other states, would
-+ not correctly dial the numbers not in Maryland.
-+
-+ A new command lets you specify a list of area codes to be considered
-+ local, except that the area code must be dialed:
-+
-+ SET DIAL LC-AREA-CODES [ areacode [ areacode [ areacode [ ... ] ] ] ]
-+ The list may include up to 32 area codes. If a number is called
-+ whose area code is in this list, it is dialed WITHOUT the
-+ long-distance prefix, but WITH the area code.
-+
-+ So in Maryland, which (last time we looked) has two area codes, 410 and
-+ 301, the setup would be:
-+
-+ SET DIAL LC-AREA-CODES 410 301
-+
-+ Example:
-+
-+ SET DIAL LD-PREFIX 1
-+ SET DIAL AREA-CODE 301
-+ SET DIAL LC-AREA-CODES 410 301 <-- Area codes in 10-digit dialing region
-+ DIAL +1 (301) 765-4321 <-- Dials 3017654321 (local with area code)
-+ DIAL +1 (410) 765-4321 <-- Dials 4107654321 (local with area code)
-+ DIAL +1 (212) 765-4321 <-- Dials 12127654321 (long distance)
-+
-+ The SET DIAL LC-AREA-CODES command does not replace the SET DIAL
-+ AREA-CODE command. The latter specifies the area code you are dialing
-+ from. If the called number is in the same area code, then the area code
-+ is dialed if it is also in the LC-AREA-CODES list, and it is not dialed
-+ otherwise. So if "301" had not appeared in the LC-AREA-CODES list in
-+ the previous example:
-+
-+ SET DIAL LD-PREFIX 1
-+ SET DIAL AREA-CODE 301
-+ SET DIAL LC-AREA-CODES 410 <-- Area codes in 10-digit dialing region
-+ DIAL +1 (301) 765-4321 <-- Dials 7654321 (local)
-+ DIAL +1 (410) 765-4321 <-- Dials 4107654321 (local with area code)
-+ DIAL +1 (212) 765-4321 <-- Dials 12127654321 (long distance)
-+
-+ The new Kermit versions also add a Local Call Prefix and Local Call
-+ Suffix, in case you have any need for it. These are added to the
-+ beginning and of local phone numbers (i.e. numbers that are not
-+ long-distance or international). Examples:
-+
-+ SET DIAL LD-PREFIX 1
-+ SET DIAL LC-PREFIX 9
-+ SET DIAL LC-SUFFIX *
-+ SET DIAL LC-AREA-CODES 410 <-- Area codes in 10-digit dialing region
-+ SET DIAL AREA-CODE 301
-+ DIAL +1 (301) 765-4321 <-- Dials 97654321* (local)
-+ DIAL +1 (410) 765-4321 <-- Dials 94107654321* (local with area code)
-+ DIAL +1 (212) 765-4321 <-- Dials 12127654321 (long distance)
-+
-+2.1.3. Forcing Long-Distance Dialing
-+
-+ Suppose a number is in your country and area, but for some reason you
-+ need to dial it long-distance anyway (as is always the case in France).
-+ There have always been various ways to handle this:
-+
-+ 1. Temporarily set your area code to a different (or nonexistent or
-+ impossible) one (but this required knowledge of which area codes
-+ were nonexistent or impossible in each country).
-+ 2. Dial the number literally instead of using the portable format, but
-+ this defeats the purpose of the portable dialing directory.
-+
-+ Now there is also a new command that, very simply, can force
-+ long-distance dialing:
-+
-+ SET DIAL FORCE-LONG-DISTANCE { ON, OFF }
-+ If a call is placed to a portable phone number within the same
-+ country code as the calling number, it is dialed with the
-+ long-distance prefix and the area code if FORCE-LONG-DISTANCE is
-+ ON. If OFF, the regular rules and procedures apply.
-+
-+ Example (France):
-+
-+ SET DIAL COUNTRY-CODE 33
-+ SET DIAL AREA-CODE 6
-+ SET DIAL FORCE-LONG-DISTANCE ON
-+
-+ (In fact, SET DIAL COUNTRY-CODE 33 automatically sets DIAL
-+ FORCE-LONG-DISTANCE ON...)
-+
-+ Example (USA, for a certain type of reverse-charge calling in which the
-+ called number must always be fully specified):
-+
-+ SET DIAL PREFIX 18002666328$ ; 1-800-COLLECT
-+ SET DIAL COUNTRY-CODE 1
-+ SET DIAL AREA-CODE 212
-+ SET DIAL FORCE-LONG-DISTANCE ON
-+
-+ Example (Toronto, where calls to exchange 976 within area code 416 must
-+ be dialed as long distance, even when you are dialing from area code
-+ 416):
-+
-+ SET DIAL COUNTRY-CODE 1
-+ SET DIAL AREA-CODE 416
-+ SET DIAL FORCE-LONG-DISTANCE ON
-+ DIAL +1 (416) 976-xxxx
-+
-+ If dialing methods were consistent and sensible, of course it would be
-+ possible to always dial every domestic call as if it were long
-+ distance. But in many locations this doesn't work or if it does, it
-+ costs extra. The following macro can be used for dialing any given
-+ number with forced long-distance format:
-+
-+ define LDIAL {
-+ local \%x
-+ set dial force-long-distance on
-+ dial \%*
-+ asg \%x \v(success)
-+ set dial force-long-distance off
-+ end \%x
-+ }
-+
-+ (See [394]Section 7.5 about the \%* variable.)
-+
-+2.1.4. Exchange-Specific Dialing Decisions
-+
-+ This applies mainly to the North American Numbering Plan (NANP). Refer
-+ to the section "Alternative notations" in [395]Using C-Kermit 2nd
-+ Edition, pages 106-107, and the story about Toronto on page 110. Using
-+ the new LC-AREA-CODES list, we can address the problem by treating the
-+ exchange as part of the area code:
-+
-+ SET DIAL LD-PREFIX 1
-+ SET DIAL AREA-CODE 416
-+ SET DIAL LC-AREA-CODES 905276
-+ DIAL +1 416 765 4321 <-- 7654321 (local)
-+ DIAL +1 905 276 4321 <-- 9052764321 (local with area code)
-+ DIAL +1 905 528 4321 <-- 19055284321 (long distance)
-+
-+ The same technique can be used in Massachusetts (story at top of page
-+ 111) and in any other place where dialing to some exchanges within a
-+ particular area code is local, but to others in the same area code is
-+ long distance.
-+
-+2.1.5. Cautions about Cheapest-First Dialing
-+
-+ Kermit does not maintain a knowledge base of telephony information; it
-+ only provides the tools to let you enter a phone number in a standard
-+ format and dial it correctly from any location in most cases.
-+
-+ In particular, Kermit does not differentiate the charging method from
-+ the dialing method. If a call that is DIALED as long-distance (e.g.
-+ from 212 to 718 in country code 1) is not CHARGED as long distance, we
-+ have no way of knowing that without keeping a matrix of charging
-+ information for every area-code combination within every country, and
-+ any such matrix would be obsolete five minutes after it was
-+ constructed. Thus, "cheapest-first" sorting is only as reliable as our
-+ assumption that the charging method follows the dialing method. A good
-+ illustration would be certain online services that have toll-free
-+ dialup numbers which they charge you a premium (in your online service
-+ bill) for using.
-+
-+2.1.6. Blind Dialing (Dialing with No Dialtone)
-+
-+ C-Kermit's init string for Hayes-like modems generally includes an X4
-+ command to enable as many result codes as possible, so that Kermit can
-+ react appropriately to different failure reasons. One of the result
-+ codes that X4 enables is "NO DIALTONE". A perhaps not obvious side
-+ effect of enabling this result code that the modem must hear dialtone
-+ before it will dial.
-+
-+ It is becoming increasingly necessary to force a modem to dial even
-+ though it does not hear a dialtone on the phone line; for example, with
-+ PBXs that have strange dialtones, or with phone systems in different
-+ countries, or with ISDN phones, etc. This is called "blind dialing".
-+
-+ C-Kermit 7.0 has two new commands to cope with this situation:
-+
-+ SET DIAL IGNORE-DIALTONE { ON, OFF }
-+ OFF (the default) means to tell the modem to wait for dialtone
-+ before dialing. ON means to enable "blind dialing", i.e. tell
-+ the modem NOT to wait for dialtone before dialing. Generally
-+ this is accomplished by sending ATX3 to the modem just prior to
-+ dialing. SET MODEM TYPE xxx and then SHOW MODEM displays
-+ Kermit's built-in "ignore dialtone" command.
-+
-+ SET DIAL COMMAND IGNORE-DIALTONE text
-+ This lets you change the built-in ignore-dialtone command (such
-+ as ATX3) to whatever you choose, in case the built-in one does
-+ not work, or another command works better.
-+
-+ Notes:
-+ 1. The ignore-dialtone command is not sent unless SET DIAL
-+ IGNORE-DIALTONE is ON.
-+ 2. The ATX3 command generally disables not only NO DIALTONE, but also
-+ BUSY. So this will prevent Kermit from detecting when the line is
-+ busy. This is a property of the modem, not of Kermit.
-+
-+2.1.7. Trimming the Dialing Dialog
-+
-+ The command:
-+
-+ SET MODEM COMMAND action [ command ]
-+
-+ is used to override Kermit's built-in modem commands for each action,
-+ for each kind of modem in its internal database. If you include a
-+ command, this is used instead of the built-in one. If you omit the
-+ command, this restores the original built-in command.
-+
-+ If you want to omit the command altogether, so Kermit doesn't send the
-+ command at all, or wait for a response, use:
-+
-+ SET MODEM COMMAND action {}
-+
-+ That is, specify a pair of empty braces as the command, for example:
-+
-+ SET MODEM COMMAND ERROR-CORRECTION ON {}
-+
-+2.1.8. Controlling the Dialing Speed
-+
-+ The rate at which characters are sent to the modem during dialing is
-+ normally controlled by the built-in modem database. You might want to
-+ override this if Kermit seems to be dialing too slowly, or it is
-+ sending characters to the modem faster than the modem handle them. A
-+ new command was added for this in C-Kermit 7.0:
-+
-+ SET DIAL PACING number
-+ Specifies the number of milliseconds (thousandths of seconds) to
-+ pause between each character when sending commands to the modem
-+ during DIAL or ANSWER command execution. 0 means no pause at
-+ all, -1 (the default) or any other negative number means to use
-+ the value from the database. Any number greater than 0 is the
-+ number of milliseconds to pause.
-+
-+ HINT: You might also need to control the rate at which the modem
-+ generates Touch Tones during dialing, for example when sending a
-+ numeric page. There are two ways to do this. One way is to insert pause
-+ characters into the dialing string. For modems that use the AT command
-+ set, the pause character is comma (,) and causes a 2-second pause. On
-+ most modems, you can use the S8 register to change the pause interval
-+ caused by comma in the dialing string. The other way is to set your
-+ modem's tone generation interval, if it has a command for that. Most
-+ AT-command-set modems use S11 for this; the value is in milliseconds.
-+ For example on USR modems:
-+
-+ ATS11=200
-+
-+ selects an interval of 200 milliseconds to separate each dialing tone.
-+
-+ Hint: To add S-Register settings or other commands to your dialing
-+ procedure, use the new SET MODEM COMMAND PREDIAL-INIT command
-+ ([396]Section 2.2.2).
-+
-+2.1.9. Pretesting Phone Number Conversions
-+
-+ The LOOKUP command now accepts telephone numbers as well as
-+ directory-entry names, for example:
-+
-+ LOOKUP +1 (212) 7654321
-+
-+ When given a phone number, LOOKUP prints the result of converting the
-+ phone number for dialing under the current dialing rules. For example,
-+ if my country code is 1 and my area code is 212, and I am dialing out
-+ from a PBX whose outside-line prefix is "93,":
-+
-+ C-Kermit> lookup +1 (212) 7654321
-+ +1 (212) 7654321 => 93,7654321
-+ C-Kermit>
-+
-+ You can also use the \fdialconvert(phone-number) function ([397]Section
-+ 2.1.11) to do this programmatically:
-+
-+ C-Kermit> echo "\fdialconvert(+1 (212) 7654321)"
-+ "93,7654321"
-+ C-Kermit>
-+
-+ So the new LOOKUP behaves as follows:
-+
-+ LOOKUP portable-format-phone-number
-+ Displays how the number would actually be dialed Sets FAILURE if
-+ there was a conversion error, otherwise SUCCESS.
-+
-+ LOOKUP literal-format-phone-number
-+ Displays the same literal-format-phone-number Always sets
-+ SUCCESS.
-+
-+ LOOKUP dialing-directory-name
-+ Displays all matching entries and converts portable phone
-+ numbers. Sets SUCCESS if at least one entry was found, otherwise
-+ FAILURE.
-+
-+ LOOKUP =anything
-+ Displays "=anything" and sets SUCCESS.
-+
-+ There is, at present, no programmatic way to fetch numbers from the
-+ dialing directory. This will be considered for a future release.
-+
-+2.1.10. Greater Control over Partial Dialing
-+
-+ The following rules now apply to partial dialing:
-+
-+ * Phone number transformations based on country and area code,
-+ application of prefixes, etc, are performed only on the first
-+ PDIAL.
-+ * Each PDIAL argument is looked up in the dialing directory, so it is
-+ possible have directory entries for pieces of phone numbers or
-+ other information.
-+ * Suffixes are not applied automatically, since there is no way for
-+ C-Kermit to know in which PDIAL segment you want them to be
-+ applied.
-+
-+ However, the suffix that *would* have been applied, based on the
-+ dialing rules that were invoked when processing the first PDIAL
-+ command, is stored in the variable:
-+
-+ \v(dialsuffix)
-+
-+ which you can include in any subsequent PDIAL or DIAL commands.
-+
-+ Example:
-+
-+ pdial {\m(my_long_distance_pager_number_part_1)}
-+ pdial {\m(my_long_distance_pager_number_part_2)}
-+ pdial {\v(dialsuffix)}
-+ pdial {\m(my_long_distance_pager_number_part_3)}
-+ pdial {@\m(numeric_pager_code)#}
-+
-+2.1.11. New DIAL-related Variables and Functions
-+
-+ \fdialconvert(s)
-+ s is a phone number in either literal or portable format (not a
-+ dialing directory entry name). The function returns the dial
-+ string that would actually be used by the DIAL command when
-+ dialing from the current location, after processing country
-+ code, area code, and other SET DIAL values, and should be the
-+ same as the result of LOOKUP when given a telephone number.
-+
-+ \v(dialsuffix)
-+ Contains the suffix, if any, that was applied in the most recent
-+ DIAL command, or the suffix that would have been applied in the
-+ most recent PDIAL command. Use this variable to send the dial
-+ suffix at any desired point in a PDIAL sequence.
-+
-+ \v(dialtype)
-+ A number indicating the type of call that was most recently
-+ placed. Can be used after a normal DIAL command, or after the
-+ first PDIAL command in a PDIAL sequence. Values are:
-+
-+ -2: Unknown because TAPI handled the phone number translation.
-+ -1: Unknown because some kind of error occured.
-+ 0: Internal within PBX.
-+ 1: Toll-free.
-+ 2: Local within calling area.
-+ 3: Unknown (e.g. because a literal-format phone number was given).
-+ 4: Long distance within country.
-+ 5: International
-+
-+ \v(dialcount)
-+ The current value of the DIAL retry counter, for use in a DIAL
-+ macro ([398]Section 2.1.13).
-+
-+ \v(d$px)
-+ PBX Exchange (see [399]Section 2.1.12).
-+
-+ Other dial-related variables, already documented in [400]Using C-Kermit
-+ (or other sections of this document, e.g. [401]Section 2.1.1), include
-+ \v(dialnumber), \v(dialstatus), etc. A convenient way to display all of
-+ them is:
-+
-+ show variable dial ; hint: abbreviate "sho var dial"
-+
-+ This shows the values of all the variables whose names start with
-+ "dial". Also "show variable d$" (to show the \v(d$...) variables).
-+
-+2.1.12. Increased Flexibility of PBX Dialing
-+
-+ Refer to [402]Using C-Kermit, 2nd Edition, pages 107-108. Recall that
-+ three commands are needed to configure C-Kermit for dialing from a PBX:
-+
-+ SET DIAL PBX-EXCHANGE number
-+ SET DIAL PBX-INSIDE-PREFIX number
-+ SET DIAL PBX-OUTSIDE-PREFIX number
-+
-+ Unfortunately, this model does not accommodate PBXs that have more than
-+ one exchange. For example our PBX at Columbia University (which must
-+ handle more than 10,000 phones) has 853-xxxx and 854-xxxx exchanges.
-+
-+ Beginning in C-Kermit 7.0, the SET DIAL PBX-EXCHANGE command accepts a
-+ list of exchanges, e.g.:
-+
-+ SET DIAL PBX-EXCHANGE 853 854
-+
-+ (multiple exchanges are separated by spaces, not commas).
-+
-+ So now when dialing a portable-format number that has the same country
-+ and area codes as those of your dialing location, C-Kermit compares the
-+ exchange of the dialed number with each number in the PBX Exchange list
-+ (rather than with a single PBX Exchange number, as it did formerly) to
-+ determine whether this is an internal PBX number or an external call.
-+ If it is an external call, then the PBX Outside Prefix is applied, and
-+ then the normal dialing rules for local or long-distance calls.
-+
-+ If it is an inside call, the exchange is replaced by the PBX Inside
-+ Prefix. But if the PBX has more than one exchange, a single fixed PBX
-+ Inside Prefix is probably not sufficient. For example, at Columbia
-+ University, we must dial 3-xxxx for an internal call to 853-xxxx, but
-+ 4-xxxx for a call to 854-xxxx. That is, the inside prefix is the final
-+ digit of the exchange we are dialing. For this reason, C-Kermit 7.0
-+ provides a method to determine the inside prefix dynamically at dialing
-+ time, consisting of a new variable and new syntax for the SET DIAL
-+ PBX-INSIDE-PREFIX command:
-+
-+ \v(d$px)
-+ This variable contains the exchange that was matched when a PBX
-+ internal call was detected. For example, if the PBX exchange
-+ list is "853 854" and a call is placed to +1 (212) 854-9999,
-+ \v(d$px) is set to 854.
-+
-+ SET DIAL PBX-INSIDE-PREFIX \fxxx(...)
-+ If the PBX Inside Prefix is defined to be a function, its
-+ evaluation is deferred until dialing time. Normally, this would
-+ be a string function having \v(d$px) as an operand. Of course,
-+ you can still specify a constant string, as before.
-+
-+ So given the following setup:
-+
-+ SET DIAL COUNTRY-CODE 1
-+ SET DIAL AREA-CODE 212
-+ SET DIAL PBX-OUTSIDE-PREFIX 93,
-+ SET DIAL PBX-EXCHANGE 853 854
-+ SET DIAL PBX-INSIDE-PREFIX \fright(\v(d$px),1)
-+
-+ The following numbers give the results indicated:
-+
-+ Number Result
-+ +1 (212) 854-9876 4-9876
-+ +1 (212) 853-1234 3-1234
-+ +1 (212) 765-4321 93,765-4321
-+ +1 (333) 765-4321 93,1333765-4321
-+
-+ Furthermore, the K_PBX_XCH environment variable may now be set to a
-+ list of exchanges to automatically initialize C-Kermit's PBX exchange
-+ list, for example (in UNIX ksh or bash):
-+
-+ export K_PBX_XCH="853 854"
-+
-+ (Quotes required because of the space.) Of course, this variable can
-+ also be set to a single exchange, as before:
-+
-+ export K_PBX_XCH=853
-+
-+2.1.13. The DIAL macro - Last-Minute Phone Number Conversions
-+
-+ After a DIAL or LOOKUP command is given, a list of phone numbers is
-+ assembled from the dialing directory (if any), with all
-+ location-dependent conversion rules applied as described in Chapter 5
-+ of [403]Using C-Kermit.
-+
-+ However, additional conversions might still be required at the last
-+ minute based on local or ephemeral conditions. So that you can have the
-+ final word on the exact format of the dial string, C-Kermit 7.0 lets
-+ you pass the converted string through a macro of your own design for
-+ final processing before dialing. The relevant command is:
-+
-+ SET DIAL MACRO [ name ]
-+ Specifies the name of a macro to be run on each phone number
-+ after all built-in conversions have been applied, just before
-+ the number is dialed. If no name is given, no macro is run. The
-+ phone number, as it would have been dialed if there were no dial
-+ macro, is passed to the macro.
-+
-+ The dial macro can do anything at all (except start a file transfer).
-+ However, the normal use for the macro would be to modify the phone
-+ number. For this reason the phone number is passed to the macro as
-+ argument number 1 (\%1). To cause a modified number to be dialed, the
-+ macro should terminate with a RETURN statement specifying a return
-+ value. To leave the number alone, the macro should simply end. Example:
-+
-+ define xxx return 10108889999$\%1
-+ set dial macro xxx
-+ dial xyzcorp
-+
-+ This defines a DIAL MACRO called xxx, which puts an access code on the
-+ front of the number. Another example might be:
-+
-+ def xxx if equal "\v(modem)" "hayes-1200" return \freplace(\%1,$,{,,,,,})
-+ set dial macro xxx
-+ dial xyzcorp
-+
-+ which replaces any dollar-sign in the dial string by a series of five
-+ commas, e.g. because this particular modem does not support the "wait
-+ for bong" feature (remember that commas that are to be included
-+ literally in function arguments must be enclosed in braces to
-+ distinguish them from the commas that separate the arguments) and when
-+ the IF condition is not satisfied, the macro does not return a value,
-+ and so the number is not modified. Then when a DIAL command is given
-+ referencing a dialing directory entry, "xyzcorp". The macro is
-+ automatically applied to each matching number.
-+
-+ Numerous dial-, modem-, communications-, and time-related variables are
-+ available for decision making your dial macro. Type SHOW VARIABLES for
-+ a list. Of particular interest is the \v(dialcount) variable, which
-+ tells how many times the DIAL command gone through its retry loop: 1 on
-+ the first try, 2 on the second, 3 on the third, and so on, and the
-+ \v(dialresult) and \v(dialstatus) variables.
-+
-+ Here are some other applications for the DIAL MACRO (from users):
-+
-+ * Phone numbers in the dialing directory are formatted with '-' for
-+ readability, but some modems don't like the hyphens, so the DIAL
-+ macro is used to remove them before dialing; e.g 0090-123-456-78-99
-+ becomes 00901234567899: "def xxx return \freplace(\%1,-)".
-+ * To set some specific modem (or other) options depending on the
-+ called customer or telephone number.
-+ * Choosing the most appropriate provider based on (e.g.) time of day,
-+ or cycling through a list of providers in case some providers might
-+ be busy.
-+
-+ To illustrate the final item, suppose you have a choice among many
-+ phone service providers; the provider is chosen by dialing an access
-+ code before the number. Different providers might be better (e.g.
-+ cheaper) for certain times of day or days of the week, or for dialing
-+ certain locations; you can use the DIAL macro to add the access for the
-+ most desirable provider.
-+
-+ Similarly, when the same number might be reached through multiple
-+ providers, it's possible that one provider might not be able to
-+ complete the call, but another one can. In that case, you can use the
-+ DIAL macro to switch providers each time through the DIAL loop --
-+ that's where the \v(dialcount) variable comes in handy.
-+
-+ The following command can be used to debug the DIAL macro:
-+
-+ SET DIAL TEST { ON, OFF }
-+ Normally OFF, so the DIAL command actually dials. When ON, the
-+ DIAL command performs all lookups and number conversions, and
-+ then goes through the number list and retry loop, but instead of
-+ actually dialing, lists the numbers it would have called if none
-+ of the DIAL attempts succeeded (or more precisely, every number
-+ was always busy).
-+
-+2.1.14. Automatic Tone/Pulse Dialing Selection
-+
-+ SET DIAL METHOD { AUTO, DEFAULT, PULSE, TONE }
-+ Chooses the dialing method for subsequent calls.
-+
-+ Prior to version 7.0, C-Kermit's DIAL METHOD was DEFAULT by default,
-+ meaning it does not specify a dialing method to the modem, but relies
-+ on the modem to have an appropriate default dialing method set. So, for
-+ example, when using Hayes compatible modems, the dial string would be
-+ something like ATD7654321, rather than ATDT7654321 or ATDP7654321.
-+
-+ In C-Kermit 7.0 and K95 1.1.19, the dial method can be set from the
-+ environment variable:
-+
-+ K_DIAL_METHOD
-+
-+ when Kermit starts. The values can be TONE, PULSE, or DEFAULT, e.g.
-+ (UNIX):
-+
-+ set K_DIAL_METHOD=TONE; export K_DIAL_METHOD
-+
-+ In the absence of a K_DIAL_METHOD definition, the new default SET DIAL
-+ METHOD is AUTO rather than DEFAULT. When DIAL METHOD is AUTO and the
-+ local country code is known, then if tone dialing is universally
-+ available in the corresponding area, tone dialing is used; if dialing
-+ from a location where pulse dialing is mandatory, pulse dialing is
-+ used.
-+
-+ The "tone country" and "pulse country" lists are preloaded according to
-+ our knowledge at the time of release. You can see their contents in the
-+ SHOW DIAL listing. You can change the lists with:
-+
-+ SET DIAL TONE-COUNTRIES [ cc [ cc [ ... ] ] ]
-+ Replaces the current TONE-COUNTRIES list with the one given.
-+ Each cc is a country code; separate them with spaces (not
-+ commas). Example:
-+
-+ set dial tone-countries 1 358 44 46 49
-+
-+ If no country codes are given, the current list, if any, is
-+ removed, in which case SET DIAL METHOD AUTO is equivalent to SET
-+ DIAL METHOD DEFAULT.
-+
-+ SET DIAL PULSE-COUNTRIES [ cc [ cc [ ... ] ] ]
-+ Replaces the current PULSE-COUNTRIES list with the one give.
-+ Syntax and operation is like SET DIAL TONE-COUNTRIES.
-+
-+ If the same country code appears in both lists, Pulse takes precedence.
-+
-+ The SET DIAL TONE- and PULSE-COUNTRIES commands perform no verification
-+ whatsoever on the cc's, since almost any syntax might be legal in some
-+ settings. Furthermore, there is no facility to edit the lists; you can
-+ only replace the whole list. However, since the only purpose of these
-+ lists is to establish a basis for picking tone or pulse dialing
-+ automatically, all you need to override the effect of the list is to
-+ set a specific dialing method with SET DIAL METHOD TONE or SET DIAL
-+ METHOD PULSE.
-+
-+2.1.15. Dial-Modifier Variables
-+
-+ As of C-Kermit 7.0, dial modifiers are available in the following
-+ variables:
-+
-+ \v(dm_lp) Long pause
-+ \v(dm_sp) Short pause
-+ \v(dm_pd) Pulse dial
-+ \v(dm_td) Tone dial
-+ \v(dm_wa) Wait for answer
-+ \v(dm_wd) Wait for dialtone
-+ \v(dm_rc) Return to command mode
-+
-+ You can use these in your dial strings in place of hardwired modifiers
-+ like "@", ",", etc, for increased portability of scripts. Example:
-+
-+ C-Kermit>set modem type usrobotics
-+ C-Kermit>sho variables dm
-+ \v(dm_lp) = ,
-+ \v(dm_sp) = /
-+ \v(dm_pd) = P
-+ \v(dm_td) = T
-+ \v(dm_wa) = @
-+ \v(dm_wd) = W
-+ \v(dm_rc) = ;
-+ C-Kermit>exit
-+
-+2.1.16. Giving Multiple Numbers to the DIAL Command
-+
-+ Prior to C-Kermit 7.0, the only way to give a DIAL command a list of
-+ phone numbers to try until one answers was to create a dialing
-+ directory that had multiple entries under the same name, and then use
-+ that entry name in the DIAL command. Now a list of numbers can be given
-+ to the DIAL command directly in the following format:
-+
-+ dial {{number1}{number2}{number3}...}
-+
-+ This is the same list format used by SEND /EXCEPT: and other commands
-+ that allow a list where normally a single item is given. Restrictions
-+ on this form of the DIAL command are:
-+
-+ * The first two braces must be adjacent; spacing is optional
-+ thereafter.
-+ * Each number must be an actual number to dial, not a dialing
-+ directory entry.
-+ * Dialing directory entries may not contain number lists in this
-+ format.
-+
-+ In all other respects, the numbers are treated as if they had been
-+ fetched from the dialing directory; they can be in literal or portable
-+ format, etc. Example:
-+
-+ dial {{7654321} {+1 (212) 5551212} { 1-212-5556789 }}
-+
-+ The list can be any length at all, within reason.
-+
-+ This feature is especially handy for use with the K95 Dialer, allowing
-+ a list of phone numbers to be specified in the Telephone Number box
-+ without having to set up or reference a separate dialing directory.
-+
-+ You can also use it to add commonly-dialed sequences as variables in
-+ your C-Kermit customization file, e.g.:
-+
-+ define work {{7654321}{7654322}{7654323}}
-+
-+ and then:
-+
-+ dial {\m(work)}
-+
-+ (the variable name must be enclosed in braces).
-+
-+ Or more simply:
-+
-+ define work dial {{7654321}{7654322}{7654323}}
-+
-+ and then:
-+
-+ work
-+
-+2.2. Modems
-+
-+2.2.1. New Modem Types
-+
-+ Since C-Kermit 6.0:
-+
-+ atlas-newcom-33600ifxC Atlas/Newcom 33600
-+ att-keepintouch AT&T KeepinTouch PCMCIA V.32bis Card Modem
-+ att-1900-stu-iii AT&T Secure Data STU-III Model 1900
-+ att-1910-stu-iii AT&T Secure Data STU-III Model 1910
-+ bestdata Best Data
-+ cardinal Cardinal V.34 MVP288X series.
-+ compaq Compaq Data+Fax (e.g. in Presario)
-+ fujitsu Fujitsu Fax/Modem Adapter
-+ generic-high-speed Any modern error-correcting data-compressing modem
-+ itu-t-v25ter/v250 ITU-T (CCITT) V.25ter (V.250) standard command set
-+ megahertz-att-v34 Megahertz AT&T V.34
-+ megahertz-xjack Megahertz X-Jack
-+ motorola-codex Motorola Codex 326X Series
-+ motorola-montana Motorola Montana
-+ mt5634zpx Multitech MT5634ZPX
-+ rockwell-v90 Rockwell V.90 56K
-+ rolm-244pc Siemens/Rolm 244PC (AT command set)
-+ rolm-600-series Siemens/Rolm 600 Series (AT command set)
-+ spirit-ii QuickComm Spirit II
-+ suprasonic SupraSonic V288+
-+ supra-express-v90 Supra Express V.90
-+
-+ One of the new types, "generic-high-speed" needs a bit of explanation.
-+ This type was added to easily handle other types that are not
-+ explicitly covered, without going through the bother of adding a
-+ complete user-defined modem type. This one works for modern modems that
-+ use the AT command set, on the assumption that all the default
-+ ("factory") settings of the modem (a) are appropriate for Kermit, (b)
-+ include error correction, data compression, and speed buffering; and
-+ (c) are recallable with the command AT&F.
-+
-+ If the command to recall your modem's profile is not AT&F, use the SET
-+ MODEM COMMAND INIT-STRING command to specify the appropriate modem
-+ command. The default init-string is AT&F\13 (that is, AT, ampersand, F,
-+ and then carriage return); a survey of about 20 modern modem types
-+ shows they all support this, but they might mean different things by
-+ it. For example, the USR Sportster or Courier needs AT&F1 (not AT&F,
-+ which is equivalent to AT&F0, which recalls an inappropriate profile),
-+ so for USR modems:
-+
-+ set modem type generic-high-speed
-+ set modem command init AT&F1\13
-+
-+ Of course, USR modems already have their own built-in modem type. But
-+ if you use this one instead, it will dial faster because it has fewer
-+ commands to give to the modem; in that sense "&F1" is like a macro that
-+ bundles numerous commands into a single one. See your modem manual for
-+ details about factory profiles and commands to recall them.
-+
-+ WARNING: Do not use the generic-high-speed modem type in operating
-+ systems like VMS where hardware flow control is not available, at least
-+ not unless you change the init string from AT&F\13 to something else
-+ that enables local Xon/Xoff or other appropriate type of flow control.
-+
-+ Also see [404]Section 2.1.7 for additional hints about making dialing
-+ go faster.
-+
-+2.2.2. New Modem Controls
-+
-+ SET MODEM CAPABILITIES list
-+ In C-Kermit 7.0, this command automatically turns MODEM
-+ SPEED-MATCHING OFF if SB (Speed Buffering) is in the list, and
-+ turns it ON if SB is absent.
-+
-+ SET MODEM COMMAND PREDIAL-INIT [ text ]
-+ Commands to be sent to the modem just prior to dialing. Normally
-+ none.
-+
-+ SET MODEM SPEAKER { ON, OFF }
-+ Determines whether modem speaker is on or off while call is
-+ being placed. ON by default. Note: This command does not provide
-+ fine-grained control over when the speaker is on or off.
-+ Normally, ON means while the call is being placed, until the
-+ point at which carrier is successfully established. If your
-+ modem has a different speaker option that you want to choose,
-+ then use the SET MODEM COMMAND SPEAKER ON text command to
-+ specify this option.
-+
-+ SET MODEM COMMAND SPEAKER { ON, OFF } [ text ]
-+ Specify or override the commands to turn your modem's speaker on
-+ and off.
-+
-+ SET MODEM VOLUME { LOW, MEDIUM, HIGH }
-+ When MODEM SPEAKER is on, select volume. Note: In some modems,
-+ especially internal ones, these commands have no effect; this is
-+ a limitation of the particular modem, not of Kermit.
-+
-+ SET MODEM COMMAND VOLUME { LOW, MEDIUM, HIGH } [ text ]
-+ Specify or override the commands to set your modem's speaker
-+ volume.
-+
-+ SET MODEM COMMAND IGNORE-DIALTONE [ text ]
-+ The command to enable blind dialing ([405]Section 2.1.6).
-+
-+ SET MODEM ESCAPE-CHARACTER code
-+ Has been augmented to allow codes of 0 or less: < 0 means the
-+ escape mechanism is disabled. = 0 means to use (restore) the
-+ default value from the modem database. > 0 and < 128 is a
-+ literal value to be used instead of the default one. > 127 means
-+ the escape mechanism is disabled. This affects "modem hangup".
-+ When the escape mechanism is disabled, but SET MODEM
-+ HANGUP-METHOD is MODEM-COMMAND, it sends the hangup command
-+ immediately, without the <pause>+++<pause> business first. This
-+ is useful (for example) when sending lots of numeric pages, a
-+ process in which never we go online, and so never need to escape
-+ back. Eliminating the unnecessary pauses and escape sequence
-+ allows a lot more pages to be sent per unit time.
-+
-+ Recall that C-Kermit can dial modems to which it is connected via
-+ TCP/IP (Telnet or Rlogin) as described on page 126 of [406]Using
-+ C-Kermit, 2nd Ed. In this case the MODEM HANGUP-METHOD should be
-+ MODEM-COMMAND, since RS-232 signals don't work over TCP/IP connections.
-+ As noted in the manual, such connections are set up by the following
-+ sequence:
-+
-+ set host host [ port ]
-+ set modem type name
-+ dial number
-+
-+ But this can cause complications when you use Kermit to switch between
-+ serial and TCP/IP connections. In the following sequence:
-+
-+ set host name
-+ set modem type name
-+ set port name
-+
-+ the first two commands obey the rules for dialing out over Telnet.
-+ However, the SET PORT command requires that Kermit close its current
-+ (Telnet) connection before it can open the serial port (since Kermit
-+ can only have one connection open at a time). But since a modem type
-+ was set after the "set host" command was given, Kermit assumes it is a
-+ Telnet dialout connection and so sends the modem's hangup sequence is
-+ sent to the Telnet host. To avoid this, close the network connection
-+ explicitly before opening the serial one:
-+
-+ set host name
-+ close
-+ set modem type name
-+ set port name
-+
-+2.3. TELNET and RLOGIN
-+
-+ For additional background, please also read the [407]TELNET.TXT file,
-+ also available on the Web in [408]HTML format.
-+
-+ Cautions:
-+
-+ * If making a Telnet connection with C-Kermit takes a very long time,
-+ like over a minute, whereas the system Telnet program makes the
-+ same connection immediately, try including the /NOWAIT switch:
-+ C-Kermit> telnet /nowait hostname
-+
-+ See [409]TELNET.TXT or [410]TELNET.HTM for details. If it also
-+ takes a very long time to make a Telnet connection with system
-+ Telnet, then the delay is most likely caused by reverse DNS lookups
-+ when your host is not properly registered in DNS.
-+ * When supplying numeric IP addresses to C-Kermit or to any other
-+ application (regular Telnet, Rlogin, etc), do not include leading
-+ 0's in any fields unless you intend for those fields to be
-+ interpreted as octal (or hex) numbers. The description of the
-+ Internet address interpreter (the sockets library inet_addr()
-+ routine) includes these words:
-+
-+ All numbers supplied as "parts" in a "." notation may be decimal,
-+ octal, or hexadecimal, as specified in the C language (that is, a
-+ leading 0x or 0X implies hexadecimal; otherwise, a leading 0 implies
-+ octal; otherwise, the number is interpreted as decimal).
-+ To illustrate, 128.59.39.2 and 128.059.039.002 are not the same
-+ host! Even though most of the fields contain non-octal digits.
-+ Using system Telnet (not Kermit):
-+ $ telnet 128.059.039.002
-+ Trying 128.49.33.2 ...
-+
-+ Of course the same thing happens with Kermit because it uses (as it
-+ must) the same system service for resolving network addresses that
-+ Telnet, FTP, and all other TCP/IP applications use.
-+ * The RLOGIN section on page 123 does not make it clear that you can
-+ use the SET TELNET TERMINAL-TYPE command to govern the terminal
-+ type that is reported by C-Kermit to the RLOGIN server.
-+ * Note that the SET TCP commands described on pages 122-123 might be
-+ absent; some platforms that support TCP/IP do not support these
-+ particular controls.
-+
-+ New commands:
-+
-+ TELOPT { AO, AYT, BREAK, CANCEL, EC, EL, EOF, EOR, GA, IP, DMARK,
-+ DO, DONT, NOP, SB, SE, SUSP, WILL, WONT }
-+ This command was available previously, but supported only DO,
-+ DONT, WILL, and WONT. Now it lets you send all the Telnet
-+ protocol commands. Note that certain commands do not require a
-+ response, and therefore can be used as nondestructive "probes"
-+ to see if the Telnet session is still open; e.g.:
-+
-+ set host xyzcorp.com
-+ ...
-+ telopt nop
-+ if fail stop 1 Connection lost
-+
-+ SET TCP ADDRESS [ ip-address ]
-+ Specifies the IP address of the computer that C-Kermit is
-+ running on. Normally this is not necessary. The exception would
-+ be if your machine has multiple network adapters (physical or
-+ virtual) with a different address for each adapter AND you want
-+ C-Kermit to use a specific address when making outgoing
-+ connections or accepting incoming connections.
-+
-+ SET TCP DNS-SERVICE-RECORDS { ON, OFF }
-+ Tells C-Kermit whether to try to use DNS SRV records to
-+ determine the host and port number upon which to find an
-+ advertised service. For example, if a host wants regular Telnet
-+ connections redirected to some port other than 23, this feature
-+ allows C-Kermit to ask the host which port it should use. Since
-+ not all domain servers are set up to answer such requests, this
-+ feature is OFF by default.
-+
-+ SET TCP REVERSE-DNS-LOOKUP { ON, OFF, AUTO }
-+ Tells Kermit whether to perform a reverse DNS lookup on TCP/IP
-+ connections. This allows Kermit to determine the actual hostname
-+ of the host it is connected to, which is useful for connections
-+ to host pools, and is required for Kerberos connections to host
-+ pools and for incoming connections. If the other host does not
-+ have a DNS entry, the reverse lookup could take a long time
-+ (minutes) to fail, but the connection will still be made. Turn
-+ this option OFF for speedier connections if you do not need to
-+ know exactly which host you are connected to and you are not
-+ using Kerberos. AUTO, the default, means the lookup is done on
-+ hostnames, but not on numeric IP addresses.
-+
-+ SET TELNET WAIT-FOR-NEGOTIATIONS { ON, OFF }
-+ Each Telnet option must be fully negotiated either On or Off
-+ before the session can continue. This is especially true with
-+ options that require sub-negotiations such as Authentication,
-+ Encryption, and Kermit; for proper support of these options
-+ Kermit must wait for the negotiations to complete. Of course,
-+ Kermit has no way of knowing whether a reply is delayed or not
-+ coming at all, and so will wait a minute or more for required
-+ replies before continuing the session. If you know that Kermit's
-+ Telnet partner will not be sending the required replies, you can
-+ set this option of OFF to avoid the long timeouts. Or you can
-+ instruct Kermit to REFUSE specific options with the SET TELOPT
-+ command.
-+
-+ SET TELOPT [ { /CLIENT, /SERVER } ] option
-+ { ACCEPTED, REFUSED, REQUESTED, REQUIRED }
-+ [ { ACCEPTED, REFUSED, REQUESTED, REQUIRED } ]
-+ SET TELOPT lets you specify policy requirements for Kermit's
-+ handling of Telnet option negotiations. Setting an option is
-+ REQUIRED causes Kermit to offer the option to the peer and
-+ disconnect if the option is refused. REQUESTED causes Kermit to
-+ offer an option to the peer. ACCEPTED results in no offer but
-+ Kermit will attempt to negotiate the option if it is requested.
-+ REFUSED instructs Kermit to refuse the option if it is requested
-+ by the peer.
-+
-+ Some options are negotiated in two directions and accept
-+ separate policies for each direction; the first keyword applies
-+ to Kermit itself, the second applies to Kermit's Telnet partner;
-+ if the second keyword is omitted, an appropriate
-+ (option-specific) default is applied. You can also include a
-+ /CLIENT or /SERVER switch to indicate whether the given policies
-+ apply when Kermit is the Telnet client or the Telnet server; if
-+ no switch is given, the command applies to the client.
-+
-+ Note that some of Kermit's Telnet partners fail to refuse
-+ options that they do not recognize and instead do not respond at
-+ all. In this case it is possible to use SET TELOPT to instruct
-+ Kermit to REFUSE the option before connecting to the problem
-+ host, thus skipping the problematic negotiation.
-+
-+ Use SHOW TELOPT to view current Telnet Option negotiation
-+ settings. SHOW TELNET displays current Telnet settings.
-+
-+2.3.0. Bug Fixes
-+
-+ If "set host nonexistent-host" was given (and it properly failed),
-+ followed by certain commands like SEND, the original line and modem
-+ type were not restored and C-Kermit thought that it still had a network
-+ hostname; fixed in 7.0.
-+
-+2.3.1. Telnet Binary Mode Bug Adjustments
-+
-+ SET TELNET BUG BINARY-ME-MEANS-U-TOO { ON, OFF } was added to edit 192
-+ after the book was printed. Also SET TELNET BUG BINARY-U-MEANS-ME-TOO.
-+ The default for both is OFF. ON should be used when communicating with
-+ a Telnet partner (client or server) that mistakenly believes that
-+ telling C-Kermit to enter Telnet binary mode also means that it, too,
-+ is in binary mode, contrary to the Telnet specification, which says
-+ that binary mode must be negotiated in each direction separately.
-+
-+2.3.2. VMS UCX Telnet Port Bug Adjustment
-+
-+ A new command, SET TCP UCX-PORT-BUG, was added for VMS versions with
-+ UCX (DEC TCP/IP), applying only to early versions of UCX, like 2.2 or
-+ earlier. If you try to use VMS C-Kermit to make a Telnet connection
-+ using a port name (like "telnet", which is used by default), the
-+ underlying UCX getservbyname() function might return the service number
-+ with its bytes swapped and the connection will fail. If "telnet
-+ hostname 23" works, then your version of UCX has this bug and you can
-+ put "set tcp ucx-port-bug on" in your CKERMIT.INI file to get around
-+ it.
-+
-+2.3.3. Telnet New Environment Option
-+
-+ The TELNET NEW-ENVIRONMENT option ([411]RFC 1572) is supported as 7.0.
-+ This option allows the C-Kermit Telnet client to send certain
-+ well-known variables to the Telnet server, including USER, PRINTER,
-+ DISPLAY, and several others. This feature is enabled by default in
-+ Windows and OS/2, disabled by default elsewhere. The command to enable
-+ and disable it is:
-+
-+ SET TELNET ENVIRONMENT { ON, OFF }
-+
-+ When ON, and you Telnet to another computer, you might (or might not)
-+ notice that the "login:" or "Username:" prompt does not appear --
-+ that's because your username was sent ahead, in which case the remote
-+ system might prompt you only for your password (similar to Rlogin). Use
-+ "set telnet environment off" to defeat this feature, particularly in
-+ scripts where the dialog must be predictable. You can also use this
-+ command to specify or override specific well-known environment variable
-+ values:
-+
-+ SET TELNET ENVIRONMENT { ACCT,DISPLAY,JOB,PRINTER,SYSTEMTYPE,USER } [ text ]
-+
-+2.3.4. Telnet Location Option
-+
-+ The TELNET LOCATION option ([412]RFC 779) is supported in 7.0. This
-+ option allows the C-Kermit Telnet client to send a location string to
-+ the server if the server indicates its willingness to accept one. If an
-+ environment variable named LOCATION exists at the time C-Kermit starts,
-+ its value is used as the location string. If you want to change it,
-+ use:
-+
-+ SET TELNET LOCATION text
-+
-+ If you omit the text from this command, the Telnet location feature is
-+ disabled.
-+
-+ SET TELNET ENVIRONMENT DISPLAY is used to set the DISPLAY variable that
-+ is sent to the host, as well as the the XDISPLAY location.
-+
-+2.3.5. Connecting to Raw TCP Sockets
-+
-+ The SET HOST and TELNET commands now accept an optional switch,
-+ /RAW-SOCKET, at the end, only if you first give a host and a port.
-+ Example:
-+
-+ set host xyzcorp.com 23 /raw-socket
-+ set host 128.49.39.2:2000 /raw-socket
-+ telnet xyzcorp.com 3000 /raw
-+
-+ Without this switch, C-Kermit behaves as a Telnet client when (a) the
-+ port is 23 or 1649, or (b) the port is not 513 and the server sent what
-+ appeared to be Telnet negotiations -- that is, messages starting with
-+ 0xFF (IAC). With this switch, Kermit should treat all incoming bytes as
-+ raw data, and will not engage in any Telnet negotiations or NVT CRLF
-+ manipulations. This allows transparent operation through (e.g.) raw TCP
-+ ports on Cisco terminal servers, through the 'modemd' modem server,
-+ etc.
-+
-+2.3.6. Incoming TCP Connections
-+
-+ Accomplished via SET HOST * port, were introduced in C-Kermit 6.0, but
-+ for UNIX only. In Version 7.0, they are also available for VMS.
-+
-+2.4. The EIGHTBIT Command
-+
-+ EIGHTBIT is simply a shorthand for: SET PARITY NONE, SET TERMINAL
-+ BYTESIZE 8, SET COMMAND BYTESIZE 8; that is, a way to set up an 8-bit
-+ clean connection in a single command.
-+
-+2.5. The Services Directory
-+
-+ Chapter 7 of [413]Using C-Kermit does not mention the ULOGIN macro,
-+ which is used by our sample services directory, CKERMIT.KND. Unlike
-+ UNIXLOGIN, VMSLOGIN, etc, this one is for use with systems that require
-+ a user ID but no password. Therefore it doesn't prompt for a password
-+ or wait for a password prompt from the remote service.
-+
-+ In version 7.0, the CALL macro was changed to not execute a SET MODEM
-+ TYPE command if the given modem type was the same as the current one;
-+ otherwise the new SET MODEM TYPE command would overwrite any
-+ customizations that the user had made to the modem settings. Ditto for
-+ SET LINE / SET PORT and SET SPEED.
-+
-+2.6. Closing Connections
-+
-+ Until version 7.0, there was never an obvious and general way to close
-+ a connection. If a serial connection was open, it could be closed by
-+ "set line" or "set port" (giving no device name); if a network
-+ connection was open, it could be closed by "set host" (no host name).
-+
-+ In version 7.0, a new command closes the connection in an obvious and
-+ straightforward way, no matter what the connection type:
-+
-+ CLOSE [ CONNECTION ]
-+
-+ The CLOSE command was already present, and required an operand such as
-+ DEBUG-LOG, WRITE-FILE, etc, and so could never be given by itself. The
-+ new CONNECTION operand is now the default operand for CLOSE, so CLOSE
-+ by itself closes the connection, if one is open, just as you would
-+ expect, especially if you are a Telnet or Ftp user.
-+
-+ Also see the description of the new SET CLOSE-ON-DISCONNECT command in
-+ [414]Section 2.10.
-+
-+2.7. Using C-Kermit with External Communication Programs
-+
-+ C-Kermit 7.0 includes a new ability to create and conduct sessions
-+ through other communications programs. Two methods are available:
-+
-+ 1. Pty (pseudoterminal): The external program is run on a
-+ "pseudoterminal", which is controlled by Kermit. This method works
-+ with practically any external program, but it is not portable. At
-+ this writing, it works only on some (not all) UNIX versions, and
-+ not on any non-UNIX platforms.
-+ 2. Pipe: The external program's standard input and output are
-+ redirected through a "pipe" controlled by Kermit. This method is
-+ relatively portable -- it should work across all UNIX versions, and
-+ it also works in Windows and OS/2 -- but it is effective only when
-+ the external program actually uses standard i/o (and many don't).
-+
-+ The two methods are started differently but are used the same way
-+ thereafter.
-+
-+ The purpose of this feature is to let you use C-Kermit services like
-+ file transfer, character-set translation, scripting, automatic dialing,
-+ etc, on connections that Kermit can't otherwise make itself.
-+
-+ This feature is the opposite of the REDIRECT feature, in which C-Kermit
-+ makes the connection, and redirects an external (local) command or
-+ program over this connection. In a pty or pipe connection, C-Kermit
-+ runs and controls a local command or program, which makes the
-+ connection. (The same method can be used to simply to control a local
-+ program without making a connection; see [415]Section 2.8.)
-+
-+ To find out if your version of Kermit includes PTY support, type "show
-+ features" and look for NETPTY in the alphabetical list of options. For
-+ pipes, look for NETCMD.
-+
-+ The commands are:
-+
-+ SET NETWORK TYPE PTY or SET NETWORK TYPE PIPE
-+ SET HOST command
-+ where command is any interactive command. If the command does
-+ not use standard i/o, you must use SET NETWORK TYPE PTY.
-+
-+ Notes:
-+
-+ * COMMAND is an invisible synonym for PIPE.
-+ * The command and its arguments are case-sensitive in UNIX.
-+
-+ The SET NETWORK TYPE, SET HOST sequence sets the given network type for
-+ all subsequent SET HOST commands until another SET NETWORK TYPE command
-+ is given to change it.
-+
-+ You can also use the new /NETWORK-TYPE:PTY or /NETWORK-TYPE:PIPE (or
-+ simply /PIPE or /PTY) switches on the SET HOST command itself:
-+
-+ SET HOST /NETWORK-TYPE:PIPE command ; These two are the same
-+ SET HOST /PIPE command
-+
-+ SET HOST /NETWORK-TYPE:PTY command ; Ditto
-+ SET HOST /PTY command
-+
-+ These are like SET NETWORK TYPE followed by SET HOST, except they apply
-+ only to the connection being made and do not change the global network
-+ type setting (see [416]Section 1.5 about the difference between
-+ switches and SET commands).
-+
-+ Include any command-line options with the command that might be needed,
-+ as in this example where C-Kermit uses another copy of itself as the
-+ communications program:
-+
-+ SET HOST /PIPE /CONNECT kermit -YQJ xyzcorp.com
-+
-+ IMPORTANT: In Unix, wildcards and redirectors are interpreted by the
-+ shell. If you want to run a program with (say) SET HOST /PTY with
-+ its i/o redirected or with wildcard file arguments, you will need to
-+ invoke the shell too. Example:
-+
-+SET HOST /PTY {sh -c "crypt < foo.x"}
-+SET HOST /PTY {sh -c "grep somestring *.txt"}
-+
-+ As usual, if you include the /CONNECT switch, SET HOST enters CONNECT
-+ mode immediately upon successful execution of the given command.
-+ Therefore new commands are available as a shorthand for SET HOST
-+ /CONNECT /PTY and /PIPE:
-+
-+ PTY [ command ]
-+ PIPE [ command ]
-+ The PTY and PIPE commands work like the TELNET and RLOGIN
-+ commands: they set up the connection (in this case, using the
-+ given command) and then enter CONNECT mode automatically (if the
-+ PIPE or PTY command is given without a command, it continues the
-+ current session if one is active; otherwise it gives an error
-+ message).
-+
-+ The PIPE command is named after the mechanism by which C-Kermit
-+ communicates with the command: UNIX pipes. C-Kermit's i/o is "piped"
-+ through the given command. Here is a typical example:
-+
-+ PIPE rlogin -8 xyzcorp.com
-+
-+ This is equivalent to:
-+
-+ SET HOST /PIPE rlogin -8 xyzcorp.com
-+ CONNECT
-+
-+ and to:
-+
-+ SET HOST /PIPE /CONNECT rlogin -8 xyzcorp.com
-+
-+ IMPORTANT:
-+ If you are writing a script, do not use the PIPE, PTY, TELNET,
-+ or RLOGIN command unless you really want C-Kermit to enter
-+ CONNECT mode at that point. Normally SET HOST is used in scripts
-+ to allow the login and other dialogs to be controlled by the
-+ script itself, rather than by an actively participating human at
-+ the keyboard.
-+
-+ Throughput of pty and pipe connections is limited by the performance of
-+ the chosen command or program and by the interprocess communication
-+ (IPC) method used and/or buffering capacity of the pipe or pty, which
-+ in turn depends on the underlying operating system.
-+
-+ In one trial (on SunOS 4.1.3), we observed file transfer rates over an
-+ rlogin connection proceeding at 200Kcps for downloads, but only 10Kcps
-+ for uploads on the same connection with the same settings (similar
-+ disparities were noted in HP-UX). Examination of the logs revealed that
-+ a write to the pipe could take as long as 5 seconds, whereas reads were
-+ practically instantaneous. On the other hand, using Telnet as the
-+ external program rather than rlogin, downloads and uploads were better
-+ matched at about 177K each.
-+
-+ Most external communication programs, like C-Kermit itself, have escape
-+ characters or sequences. Normally these begin with (or consist entirely
-+ of) a control character. You must be sure that this control character
-+ is not "unprefixed" when uploading files, otherwise the external
-+ program will "escape back" to its prompt, or close the connection, or
-+ take some other unwanted action. When in CONNECT mode, observe the
-+ program's normal interaction rules. Of course C-Kermit's own escape
-+ character (normally Ctrl-\) is active too, unless you have taken some
-+ action to disable it.
-+
-+ On PTY connections, the underlying PTY driver is not guaranteed to be
-+ transparent to control characters -- for example, it might expand tabs,
-+ translate carriage returns, generate signals if it sees an interrupt
-+ character, and so on. Similar things might happen on a PIPE connection.
-+ For this reason, if you plan to transfer files over a PTY or PIPE
-+ connection, tell the file sender to:
-+
-+ SET PREFIXING ALL
-+ This causes all control characters to be prefixed and
-+ transmitted as printable ASCII characters.
-+
-+ If the external connection program is not 8-bit clean, you should also:
-+
-+ SET PARITY SPACE
-+ This causes 8-bit data to be encoded in 7 bits using single
-+ and/or locking shifts.
-+
-+ And if it does not make a reliable connection (such as those made by
-+ Telnet, Rlogin, Ssh, etc), you should:
-+
-+ SET STREAMING OFF
-+ This forces C-Kermit to treat the connection as unreliable and
-+ to engage in its normal ACK/NAK protocol for error detection and
-+ correction, rather than "streaming" its packets, as it normally
-+ does on a network connection ([417]Section 4.20).
-+
-+ In some cases, buffer sizes might be restricted, so you might also need
-+ to reduce the Kermit packet length to fit; this is a trial-and-error
-+ affair. For example, if transfers always fail with 4000-byte packets,
-+ try 2000. If that fails too, try 1000, and so on. The commands are:
-+
-+ SET RECEIVE PACKET-LENGTH number
-+ This tells the file receiver to tell the file sender the longest
-+ packet length it can accept.
-+
-+ SET SEND PACKET-LENGTH number
-+ This tells the file sender not to send packets longer than the
-+ given length, even if the receiver says longer ones are OK. Of
-+ course, if the receiver's length is shorter, the shorter length
-+ is used.
-+
-+ If none of this seems to help, try falling back to the bare minimum,
-+ lowest-common-denominator protocol settings:
-+
-+ ROBUST
-+ No sliding windows, no streaming, no control-character
-+ unprefixing, packet length 90.
-+
-+ And then work your way back up by trial and error to get greater
-+ throughput.
-+
-+ Note that when starting a PIPE connection, and the connection program
-+ (such as telnet or rlogin) prints some greeting or information messages
-+ before starting the connection, these are quite likely to be printed
-+ with a stairstep effect (linefeed without carriage return). This is
-+ because the program is not connected with the UNIX terminal driver;
-+ there's not much Kermit can do about it. Once the connection is made,
-+ everything should go back to normal. This shouldn't happen on a PTY
-+ connection because a PTY is, indeed, a terminal.
-+
-+ On a similar note, some connection programs (like Solaris 2.5 rlogin)
-+ might print lots of error messages like "ioctl TIOCGETP: invalid
-+ argument" when used through a pipe. They are annoying but usually
-+ harmless. If you want to avoid these messages, and your shell allows
-+ redirection of stderr, you can redirect stderr in your pipe command, as
-+ in this example where the user's shell is bash:
-+
-+ PIPE rlogin xyzcorp.com 2> /dev/null
-+
-+ Or use PTY rather than PIPE, since PTY is available on Solaris.
-+
-+2.7.0. C-Kermit over tn3270 and tn5250
-+
-+ Now you can make a connection from C-Kermit "directly" to an IBM
-+ mainframe and transfer files with it, assuming it has Kermit-370
-+ installed. Because tn3270 is neither 8-bit clean nor transparent to
-+ control characters, you must give these commands:
-+
-+ SET PREFIXING ALL ; Prefix all control characters
-+ SET PARITY SPACE ; Telnet connections are usually not 8-bit clean
-+
-+ and then:
-+
-+ SET HOST /PTY /CONNECT tn3270 abccorp.com
-+
-+ or simply:
-+
-+ pty tn3270 abccorp.com
-+
-+ SET HOST /PIPE does not work in this case, at least not for file
-+ transfer. File transfer does work, however, with SET HOST /PTY,
-+ provided you use the default packet length of 90 bytes; anything longer
-+ seems to kill the session.
-+
-+ You can also make connections to IBM AS/400 computers if you have a
-+ tn5250 program installed:
-+
-+ pty tn5250 hostname
-+
-+ In this case, however, file transfer is probably not in the cards since
-+ nobody has ever succeeded in writing a Kermit program for the AS/400.
-+ Hint:
-+
-+ define tn3270 {
-+ check pty
-+ if fail end 1 Sorry - no PTY support...
-+ pty tn3270 \%*
-+ }
-+
-+ Similarly for tn5250. Note that CHECK PTY and CHECK PIPE can be used in
-+ macros and scripts to test whether PTY or PIPE support is available.
-+
-+2.7.1. C-Kermit over Telnet
-+
-+ Although C-Kermit includes its own Telnet implementation, you might
-+ need to use an external Telnet program to make certain connections;
-+ perhaps because it has access or security features not available in
-+ C-Kermit itself. As noted above, the only precautions necessary are
-+ usually:
-+
-+ SET PREFIXING ALL ; Prefix all control characters
-+ SET PARITY SPACE ; Telnet connections might not be 8-bit clean
-+
-+ and then:
-+
-+ SET HOST /PTY (or /PIPE) /CONNECT telnet abccorp.com
-+
-+ or, equivalently:
-+
-+ PTY (or PIPE) telnet abccorp.com
-+
-+2.7.2. C-Kermit over Rlogin
-+
-+ C-Kermit includes its own Rlogin client, but this can normally be used
-+ only if you are root, since the rlogin TCP port is privileged. But ptys
-+ and pipes let you make rlogin connections with C-Kermit through your
-+ computer's external rlogin program, which is normally installed as a
-+ privileged program:
-+
-+ SET PREFIXING ALL
-+
-+ and then:
-+
-+ SET HOST /PTY (or /PIPE) /CONNECT rlogin -8 abccorp.com
-+
-+ or, equivalently:
-+
-+ PTY (or PIPE) rlogin -8 abccorp.com
-+
-+ The "-8" option to rlogin enables transmission of 8-bit data. If this
-+ is not available, then include SET PARITY SPACE if you intend to
-+ transfer files.
-+
-+ Note that the normal escape sequence for rlogin is Carriage Return
-+ followed by Tilde (~), but only when the tilde is followed by certain
-+ other characters; the exact behavior depends on your rlogin client, so
-+ read its documentation.
-+
-+2.7.3. C-Kermit over Serial Communication Programs
-+
-+ Ptys and pipes also let you use programs that make serial connections,
-+ such as cu or tip. For example, C-Kermit can be used through cu to make
-+ connections that otherwise might not be allowed, e.g. because C-Kermit
-+ is not installed with the required write permissions to the dialout
-+ device and the UUCP lockfile directory.
-+
-+ Suppose your UUCP Devices file contains an entry for a serial device
-+ tty04 to be used for direct connections, but this device is protected
-+ against you (and Kermit when you run it). In this case you can:
-+
-+ SET CONTROL PREFIX ALL
-+ PTY (or PIPE) cu -l tty04
-+
-+ (Similarly for dialout devices, except then you also need to include
-+ the phone number in the "cu" command.)
-+
-+ As with other communication programs, watch out for cu's escape
-+ sequence, which is the same as the rlogin program's: Carriage Return
-+ followed by Tilde (followed by another character to specify an action,
-+ like "." for closing the connection and exiting from cu).
-+
-+2.7.4. C-Kermit over Secure Network Clients
-+
-+ DISCLAIMER: There are laws in the USA and other countries regarding
-+ use, import, and/or export of encryption and/or decryption or other
-+ forms of security software, algorithms, technology, and intellectual
-+ property. The Kermit Project attempts to follow all known statutes,
-+ and neither intends nor suggests that Kermit software can or should
-+ be used in any way, in any location, that circumvents any
-+ regulations, laws, treaties, covenants, or other legitimate canons
-+ or instruments of law, international relations, trade, ethics, or
-+ propriety.
-+
-+ For secure connections or connections through firewalls, C-Kermit 7.0
-+ can be a Kerberos, SRP, and/or SOCKS client when built with the
-+ appropriate options and libraries. But other application-level security
-+ acronyms and methods -- SSH, SSL, SRP, TLS -- pop up at an alarming
-+ rate and are (a) impossible to keep up with, (b) usually mutually
-+ incompatible, and (c) have restrictions on export or redistribution and
-+ so cannot be included in C-Kermit itself.
-+
-+ However, if you have a secure text-based Telnet (or other) client that
-+ employs one of these security methods, you can use C-Kermit "through"
-+ it via a pty or pipe.
-+
-+2.7.4.1. SSH
-+
-+ C-Kermit does not and can not incorporate SSH due to licensing, patent,
-+ and USA export law restrictions.
-+
-+ The UNIX SSH client does not use standard input/output, and therefore
-+ can be used only by Kermit's PTY interface, if one is present. The
-+ cautions about file transfer, etc, are the same as for Rlogin. Example:
-+
-+ SET PREFIXING ALL
-+ PTY ssh XYZCORP.COM
-+
-+ Or, for a scripted session:
-+
-+ SET PREFIXING ALL
-+ SET HOST /PTY ssh XYZCORP.COM
-+
-+ Hint:
-+
-+ define ssh {
-+ check pty
-+ if fail end 1 Sorry - no PTY support...
-+ pty ssh \%*
-+ }
-+
-+2.7.4.2. SSL
-+
-+ Secure Sockets Layer (SSL) is another TCP/IP security overlay, this one
-+ designed by and for Netscape. An SSL Telnet client is available for
-+ UNIX from the University of Queensland. More info at:
-+
-+ [418]http://www.psy.uq.oz.au/~ftp/Crypto/
-+
-+ Interoperability with C-Kermit is unknown. C-Kermit also includes its
-+ own built-in SSL/TLS support, but it is not exportable; [419]CLICK HERE
-+ file for details.
-+
-+2.7.4.3. SRP
-+
-+ SRP(TM) is Stanford University's Secure Remote Password protocol. An
-+ SRP Telnet client is available from Stanford:
-+
-+ [420]http://srp.stanford.edu/srp/
-+
-+ Stanford's SRP Telnet client for UNIX has been tested on SunOS and
-+ works fine with C-Kermit, as described in [421]Section 2.7.1, e.g.
-+
-+ SET PREFIX ALL
-+ PTY (or PIPE) srp-telnet xenon.stanford.edu
-+
-+ C-Kermit itself can be built as an SRP Telnet client on systems that
-+ have libsrp.a installed; the C-Kermit support code, however, may not be
-+ exported outside the USA or Canada.
-+
-+2.7.4.4. SOCKS
-+
-+ C-Kermit can be built as a SOCKS-aware client on systems that have a
-+ SOCKS library. See section 8.1.1 of the [422]ckccfg.txt file.
-+
-+ C-Kermit 7.0 can also be run over SOCKSified Telnet or rlogin clients
-+ with SET NETWORK TYPE COMMAND. Suppose the Telnet program on your
-+ system is SOCKS enabled but C-Kermit is not. Make Kermit connections
-+ like this:
-+
-+ SET PREFIX ALL
-+ PTY (or PIPE) telnet zzz.com
-+
-+2.7.4.5. Kerberos
-+
-+ UNIX C-Kermit can be built with MIT Kerberos IV or V authentication and
-+ encryption. Instructions are available in a [423]separate document.
-+ Additional modules are required that can not be exported from the USA
-+ to any country except Canada, by US law.
-+
-+ If you have Kerberos installed but you don't have a Kerberized version
-+ of C-Kermit, you can use ktelnet as C-Kermit's external communications
-+ program to make secure connections without giving up C-Kermit's
-+ services:
-+
-+ SET PREFIX ALL
-+ PTY (or PIPE) ktelnet cia.gov
-+
-+2.8. Scripting Local Programs
-+
-+ If your version of Kermit has PTY support built in, then any text-based
-+ program can be invoked with SET HOST /PTY or equivalent command and
-+ controlled using the normal sequence of OUTPUT, INPUT, IF SUCCESS
-+ commands (this is the same service that is provided by the 'expect'
-+ program, but controlled by the Kermit script language rather than Tcl).
-+
-+ When PTY service is not available, then any program that uses standard
-+ input and output can be invoked with SET HOST /PIPE.
-+
-+ Here's an example in which we start an external Kermit program, wait
-+ for its prompt, give it a VERSION command, and then extract the numeric
-+ version number from its response:
-+
-+ set host /pty kermit -Y
-+ if fail stop 1 {Can't start external command}
-+ input 10 C-Kermit>
-+ if fail stop 1 {No C-Kermit> prompt}
-+ output version\13
-+ input 10 {Numeric: }
-+ if fail stop 1 {No match for "Numeric:"}
-+ clear input
-+ input 10 \10
-+ echo VERSION = "\fsubstr(\v(input),1,6)"
-+ output exit\13
-+
-+ This technique could be used to control any other interactive program,
-+ even those that do screen formatting (like Emacs or Vi), if you can
-+ figure out the sequence of events. If your Kermit program doesn't have
-+ PTY support, then the commands are restricted to those using standard
-+ i/o, including certain shells, interactive text-mode "hardcopy" editors
-+ like ex, and so on.
-+
-+ If you are using the PTY interface, you should be aware that it runs
-+ the given program or command directly on the pty, without any
-+ intervening shell to interpret metacharacters, redirectors, etc. If you
-+ need this sort of thing, include the appropriate shell invocation as
-+ part of your command; for example:
-+
-+ pty echo *
-+
-+ just echoes "*"; whereas:
-+
-+ pty ksh -c "echo *"
-+
-+ echoes all the filenames that ksh finds matching "*".
-+
-+ Similarly for redirection:
-+
-+ set host /pty ksh -c "cat > foo" ; Note: use shell quoting rules here
-+ set transmit eof \4
-+ transmit bar
-+
-+ And for that matter, for built-in shell commands:
-+
-+ set host /pty ksh -c "for i in *; do echo $i; done"
-+
-+ The PIPE interface, on the other hand, invokes the shell automatically,
-+ so:
-+
-+ pipe echo *
-+
-+ prints filenames, not "*".
-+
-+2.9. X.25 Networking
-+
-+ X.25 networking is documented in [424]Using C-Kermit, 2nd Edition. When
-+ the book was published, X.25 was available only in SunOS, Solaris, and
-+ Stratus VOS. Unlike TCP/IP, X.25 APIs are not standardized; each
-+ vendor's X.25 libraries and services (if they have them at all) are
-+ unique.
-+
-+ This section describes new additions.
-+
-+2.9.1. IBM AIXLink/X.25 Network Provider Interface for AIX
-+
-+ Support for X.25 was added via IBM's Network Provider Interface (NPI),
-+ AIXLink/X.25 1.1, to the AIX 4.x version of C-Kermit 7.0.
-+ Unfortunately, AIXLink/X.25 is a rather bare-bones facility, lacking in
-+ particular any form of PAD support (X.3, X.28, X.29). Thus, the AIX
-+ version of C-Kermit, when built to include X.25 networking, has neither
-+ a PAD command, nor a SET PAD command. The same is true for the
-+ underlying AIX system: no PAD support. Thus it is not possible to have
-+ an interactive shell session over an X.25 connection into an AIX system
-+ (as far as we know), even from X.25-capable Kermit versions (such as
-+ Solaris or VOS) that do include PAD support.
-+
-+ Thus the X.25 capabilities in AIX C-Kermit are limited to peer-to-peer
-+ connections, e.g. from a C-Kermit client to a C-Kermit server. Unlike
-+ the Solaris, SunOS, and VOS versions, the AIX version can accept
-+ incoming X.25 connections:
-+
-+ set network type x.25
-+ if fail stop 1 Sorry - no X.25 support
-+ ; Put any desired DISABLE or ENABLE or SET commands here.
-+ set host /server *
-+ if fail stop 1 X.25 "set host *" failed
-+
-+ And then access it from the client as follows:
-+
-+ set network type x.25
-+ if fail stop 1 Sorry - no X.25 support
-+ set host xxxxxxx ; Specify the X.25/X.121 address
-+ if fail stop 1 Can't open connection
-+
-+ And at this point the client can use the full range of client commands:
-+ SEND, GET, REMOTE xxx, FINISH, BYE.
-+
-+ The AIX version also adds two new variables:
-+
-+ \v(x25local_nua)
-+ The local X.25 address.
-+
-+ \v(x25remote_nua)
-+ The X.25 address of the host on the other end of the connection.
-+
-+ C-Kermit's AIX X.25 client has not been tested against anything other
-+ than a C-Kermit X.25 server on AIX. It is not known if it will
-+ interoperate with C-Kermit servers on Solaris, SunOS, or VOS.
-+
-+ To make an X.25 connection from AIX C-Kermit, you must:
-+
-+ set x25 call-user-data xxxx
-+
-+ where xxxx can be any even-length string of hexadecimal digits, e.g.
-+ 123ABC.
-+
-+2.9.2. HP-UX X.25
-+
-+ Although C-Kermit presently does not include built-in support for HP-UX
-+ X.25, it can still be used to make X.25 connections as follows: start
-+ Kermit and tell it to:
-+
-+ set prefixing all
-+ set parity space
-+ pty padem address
-+
-+ This should work in HP-UX 9.00 and later (see [425]Section 2.7). If you
-+ have an earlier HP-UX version, or the PTY interface doesn't work or
-+ isn't available, try:
-+
-+ set prefixing all
-+ set parity space
-+ pipe padem address
-+
-+ Failing that, use Kermit to telnet to localhost and then after logging
-+ back in, start padem as you would normally do to connect over X.25.
-+
-+2.10. Additional Serial Port Controls
-+
-+ C-Kermit 7.0 adds the following commands for greater control over
-+ serial ports. These commands are available only in C-Kermit versions
-+ whose underlying operating systems provide the corresponding services
-+ (such as POSIX and UNIX System V), and even then their successful
-+ operation depends on the capabilities of the specific device and
-+ driver.
-+
-+ SET DISCONNECT { ON, OFF }
-+ On a SET LINE or SET PORT connection with SET CARRIER ON or
-+ AUTO, if the carrier signal drops during the connection,
-+ indicating that the connection has been lost, and C-Kermit
-+ notices it, this setting governs what happens next. With SET
-+ DISCONNECT OFF, which is consistent with previous behavior, and
-+ therefore the default, C-Kermit continues to keep the device
-+ open and allocated. With SET DISCONNECT ON, C-Kermit
-+ automatically closes and releases the device when it senses a
-+ carrier on-to-off transition, thus allowing others to use it.
-+ However, it remains the default device for i/o (DIAL, REDIAL,
-+ INPUT, SEND, CONNECT, etc), so if a subsequent i/o command is
-+ given, the device is reopened if it is still available. When it
-+ has been automatically closed in this manner, SHOW
-+ COMMUNICATIONS puts "(closed)" after its name, and in UNIX, the
-+ lockfile disappears -- both from SHOW COMM and from the lockfile
-+ directory itself. Synonym: SET CLOSE-ON-DISCONNECT.
-+
-+ SET EXIT ON-DISCONNECT { ON, OFF }
-+ Like DISCONNECT, but makes the program exit if a connection
-+ drops.
-+
-+ Note that SET CLOSE-ON-DISCONNECT and SET EXIT ON-DISCONNECT apply only
-+ to connections that drop; they do not apply to connections that can't
-+ be made in the first place. For example, they have no effect when a SET
-+ LINE, SET HOST, TELNET, or DIAL command fails.
-+
-+ HANGUP
-+ If [CLOSE-ON-]DISCONNECT is ON, and the HANGUP command is given
-+ on a serial device, and the carrier signal is no longer present
-+ after the HANGUP command, the device is closed and released.
-+
-+ SET PARITY HARDWARE { EVEN, ODD }
-+ Unlike SET PARITY { EVEN, ODD, MARK, SPACE }, which selects 7
-+ data bits plus the indicated kind of parity (to be done in
-+ software by Kermit itself), SET PARITY HARDWARE selects 8 data
-+ bits plus even or odd parity, to be done by the underlying
-+ hardware, operating system, or device driver. This command is
-+ effective only with a SET LINE or SET PORT device. That is, it
-+ has no effect in remote mode, nor on network connections. There
-+ is presently no method for selecting 8 data bits plus mark or
-+ space parity. If hardware parity is in effect, the variable
-+ \v(hwparity) is set to "even" or "odd". Note: some platforms
-+ might also support settings of SPACE, MARK, or NONE.
-+
-+ SET STOP-BITS { 1, 2 }
-+ This tells the number of 1-bits to insert after an outbound
-+ character's data and parity bits, to separate it from the next
-+ character. Normally 1. Choosing 2 stop bits should do no harm,
-+ but will slow down serial transmission by approximately 10
-+ percent. Historically, 2 stop bits were used with Teletypes (at
-+ 110 bps or below) for print-head recovery time. There is
-+ presently no method for choosing any number of stop bits besides
-+ 1 and 2.
-+
-+ SET SERIAL [ dps ]
-+ dps stands for Data-bits, Parity, Stop-bits. This is the
-+ notation familiar to many people for serial port configuration:
-+ 7E1, 8N1, 7O2, etc. The data bits number also becomes the
-+ TERMINAL BYTESIZE setting. The second character is E for Even, O
-+ for Odd, M for Mark, S for Space, or N for None. The list of
-+ available options depends on the capabilities of the specific
-+ platform. If dps is omitted, 8N1 is used. Type "set serial ?"
-+ for a list of available choices. Examples:
-+
-+ SET SERIAL 7E1
-+ Equivalent to SET PARITY EVEN, SET STOP-BITS 1, SET TERM
-+ BYTE 7.
-+
-+ SET SERIAL 8N1
-+ Equivalent to SET PARITY NONE, SET STOP-BITS 1, SET TERM
-+ BYTE 8.
-+
-+ SET SERIAL 7E2
-+ Equivalent to SET PARITY EVEN and SET STOP-BITS 2, SET
-+ TERM BYTE 7.
-+
-+ SET SERIAL 8E2
-+ Same as SET PARITY HARDWARE EVEN, SET STOP-BITS 2, SET
-+ TERM BYTE 8.
-+
-+ SET SERIAL
-+ Same as SET PARITY NONE and SET STOP-BITS 1, SET TERM BYTE
-+ 8.
-+
-+ Notes:
-+
-+ * The SET SERIAL xx2 options are available only in Kermit versions
-+ where the SET PARITY HARDWARE command is also available. (SHOW
-+ FEATURES includes "HWPARITY" in its options list.)
-+ * The SET SERIAL 7xx and 8N1 options affect the software parity
-+ setting, even for network connections.
-+ * As noted in the manual, selecting 8 data bits does not give you
-+ 8-bit terminal sessions in CONNECT mode unless you also SET
-+ TERMINAL BYTESIZE 8. The default terminal bytesize remains 7, to
-+ protect against the situation where the remote host is generating
-+ parity but you don't know about it. If the terminal bytesize was 8
-+ by default and you CONNECTed to such a host, you would see only
-+ garbage on your screen.
-+ * If you do not give a SET STOP-BITS or SET SET SERIAL command,
-+ C-Kermit does not attempt to set the device's stop bits; instead,
-+ it uses whatever setting the device uses when not given explicit
-+ instructions about stop bits.
-+
-+ SHOW COMMUNICATIONS displays the current settings. Stop bits and
-+ hardware parity are shown only for SET PORT / SET LINE (serial)
-+ devices, since they do not apply to network connections or to remote
-+ mode. STOP-BITS is shown as "(default)" if you have not given an
-+ explicit SET STOP-BITS or SET SERIAL command.
-+
-+ The \v(serial) variable shows the SET SERIAL setting (8N1, 7E1, etc).
-+
-+2.11. Getting Access to the Dialout Device
-+
-+ This section is for UNIX only; note the special words about QNX at
-+ the end. Also see [426]Section 2.0 for SET LINE switches,
-+ particularly the /SHARE switch for VMS only.
-+
-+ C-Kermit does its best to obey the UUCP lockfile conventions of each
-+ platform (machine, operating system, OS version) where it runs, if that
-+ platform uses UUCP.
-+
-+ But simply obeying the conventions is often not good enough, due to the
-+ increasing likelihood that a particular serial device might have more
-+ than one name (e.g. /dev/tty00 and /dev/term/00 are the same device in
-+ Unixware 7; /dev/cua and /dev/cufa are the same device in NeXTSTEP),
-+ plus the increasingly widespread use of symlinks for device names, such
-+ as /dev/modem.
-+
-+ C-Kermit 7.0 goes to greater lengths than previous versions to
-+ successfully interlock with other communications program (and other
-+ instances of Kermit itself); for example, by:
-+
-+ * Creation of dual lockfiles whenever a symlink is used; one for the
-+ link name and one for the real name.
-+ * Creation of dual lockfiles in HP-UX according to HP rules.
-+ * Creation of dual uppercase/lowercase lockfile names in SCO
-+ UNIX/ODT/OSR5.
-+ * The use of ttylock() in versions of AIX where it works.
-+ * The use, wherever possible, of lockfile names based on
-+ inode/major/minor device number rather than device name.
-+
-+ See the [427]ckuins.txt and [428]ckubwr.txt files for details.
-+
-+ QNX is almost unique among UNIX varieties in having no UUCP programs
-+ nor UUCP-oriented dialout-device locking conventions. QNX does,
-+ however, allow a program to get the device open count. This can not be
-+ a reliable form of locking unless all applications do it (and they
-+ don't), so by default, Kermit uses this information only for printing a
-+ warning message such as:
-+
-+ C-Kermit>set line /dev/ser1
-+ WARNING - "/dev/ser1" looks busy...
-+
-+ However, if you want to use it as a lock, you can do so with:
-+
-+ SET QNX-PORT-LOCK { ON, OFF }
-+
-+ QNX-PORT-LOCK is OFF by default; if you set in ON, C-Kermit fails to
-+ open any dialout device when its open count indicates that another
-+ process has it open. SHOW COMM (in QNX only) displays the setting, and
-+ if you have a port open, it also shows the current open count (with
-+ C-Kermit's own access always counting as 1).
-+
-+2.12. The Connection Log
-+
-+ C-Kermit 7.0 adds the ability to log connections, so you can see where
-+ you've been and have a record of calls you've made. A connection is
-+ defined as any communications session that is begun by SET LINE, SET
-+ PORT, DIAL, SET HOST, TELNET, or RLOGIN. Connections are not logged
-+ unless you request it; the command is:
-+
-+ LOG CX [ filename [ { NEW, APPEND } ] ]
-+ Enables logging of connections in the given file. If the
-+ trailing { NEW, APPEND } keyword is omitted, the file is opened
-+ for appending; i.e. new records are written to the end. If NEW
-+ is specified, a new file is created; if a file of the same name
-+ already existed, it is overwritten. If the filename is omitted,
-+ CX.LOG in your home (login) directory is used (note: uppercase).
-+ To accept all defaults, just use "log connections" (or "l c" for
-+ short). Synonym: LOG CONNECTIONS.
-+
-+ CLOSE CX-LOG
-+ This closes the connection log if it was open. (Note, the CLOSE
-+ CONNECTION command closes the connection itself).
-+
-+ SHOW CX
-+ This shows your current connection, if any, including the
-+ elapsed time (since you opened it). Synonym: SHOW CONNECTION.
-+
-+ \v(cx_time)
-+ This variable shows the elapsed time of your current connection,
-+ or if there is no current connection, of your most recent
-+ connection, of if there have been no connections, 0.
-+
-+ The connection contains one line per connection, of the form:
-+
-+ yyyymmdd hh:mm:ss username pid p=v [ p=v [ ... ] ]
-+
-+ where the timestamp (in columns 1-18) shows when the connection was
-+ made; username is the login identity of the person who made the
-+ connection; pid is Kermit's process ID when it made the connection. The
-+ p's are parameters that depend on the type of connection, and the v's
-+ are their values:
-+
-+ T = Connection Type (TCP, SERIAL, DIAL, DECNET, etc).
-+ H = The name of the Host from which the connection was made.
-+ N = Destination phone Number or Network host name or address.
-+ D = Serial connections only: Device name.
-+ O = Dialed calls only: Originating country code & area code if known.
-+ E = Elapsed time in hh:mm:ss format (or hhh:mm:ss, etc).
-+
-+ If you always want to keep a connection log, simply add:
-+
-+ log connections
-+
-+ to your C-Kermit customization file. Note, however, that if you make a
-+ lot of connections, your CX.LOG will grow and grow. You can handle this
-+ by adding a "logrotate" procedure like the following to your
-+ customization file, before the "log connections" command:
-+
-+ define LOGROTATE { ; Define LOGROTATE macro
-+ local \%i \%m \%d \%n \%f MAX
-+ def MAX 4 ; How many months to keep
-+ if not def \%1 - ; No argument given
-+ end 1 \%0: No filename given
-+ if not = 1 \ffiles(\%1) - ; Exactly 1 file must match
-+ end 1 \%0: \%1 - File not found
-+ .\%d := \fsubstr(\fdate(\%1),1,6) ; Arg OK - get file year & month
-+ if = \%d - ; Compare file year & month
-+ \fsubstr(\v(ndate),1,6) - ; with current year & month
-+ end 0 ; Same year & month - done
-+ rename \%1 \%1.\%d ; Different - rename file
-+ .\%n := \ffiles(\%1.*) ; How many old files
-+ if < \%n \m(MAX) end 0 ; Not enough to rotate
-+ .\%m := \%1.999999 ; Initial compare string
-+ for \%i 1 \%n 1 { ; Loop thru old logs
-+ .\%f := \fnextfile() ; Get next file name
-+ if llt \%f \%m .\%m := \%f ; If this one older remember it
-+ }
-+ delete \%m ; Delete the oldest one
-+ }
-+ log connections ; Now open the (possibly new) log
-+ logrotate \v(home)CX.LOG ; Run the LOGROTATE macro
-+
-+ As you can see, this compares the yyyymm portion of the modification
-+ date (\fdate()) of the given file (\%1) with the current yyyymm. If
-+ they differ, the current file has the yyyymm suffix (from its most
-+ recent modification date) appended to its name. Then we search through
-+ all other such files, find the oldest one, and delete it. Thus the
-+ current log, plus the logs from the most recent four months, are kept.
-+ This is all done automatically every time you start C-Kermit.
-+
-+ On multiuser systems, it is possible to keep a single, shared,
-+ system-wide connection log, but this is not recommended since (a) it
-+ requires you keep a publicly write-accessible logfile (a glaring target
-+ for mischief), and (b) it would require each user to log to that file
-+ and not disable logging. A better method for logging connections, in
-+ UNIX at least, is syslogging (see [429]ckuins.txt Section 15 and
-+ [430]Section 4.2 of the [431]IKSD Administration Guide for details).
-+
-+2.13. Automatic Connection-Specific Flow Control Selection
-+
-+ Beginning in C-Kermit 7.0, the appropriate flow-control method for each
-+ connection type is kept in a table, for example:
-+
-+ Remote: NONE
-+ Modem: RTS/CTS
-+ Direct-Serial: NONE
-+ TCPIP: NONE
-+
-+ The size of the table and values for each connection type can vary from
-+ platform to platform. Type "set flow ?" for a list of available
-+ flow-control types.
-+
-+ The table is used to automatically select the appropriate kind of flow
-+ control whenever you make a connection. You can display the table with:
-+
-+ SHOW FLOW-CONTROL
-+
-+ The defaults are as follows:
-+
-+ Remote:
-+ NONE or XON/XOFF. This is because C-Kermit is not allowed to
-+ find out what type of connection the incoming user has (*). No
-+ kind of flow control will work on every kind of connection,
-+ including (unexpectedly) KEEP, which we would have liked to use,
-+ but not turning off flow control at the remote end during file
-+ transfer on TCP/IP connections is fatal to the transfer (except
-+ in VMS and HP-UX, where it must be set to Xon/Xoff!) Therefore
-+ if you are dialing in to a serial port on a server (UNIX or VMS)
-+ where C-Kermit is running, you will need to tell C-Kermit to
-+ "set flow keep" before transferring files (assuming the modem
-+ and port are configured correctly by the system administrator;
-+ otherwise you'll need to give a specific kind of flow control,
-+ e.g. "set flow xon/xoff"), so in this case C-Kermit will not
-+ disable flow control, as it must do when you are coming via
-+ Telnet (directly or through a terminal server, except on VMS and
-+ HP-UX).
-+
-+ Modem:
-+ This applies when you dial out with a modem. In this case, the
-+ MODEM FLOW-CONTROL setting takes affect after the SET FLOW
-+ setting, so it can pick the most appropriate flow control for
-+ the combination of the particular modem and the
-+ computer/port/driver that is dialing.
-+
-+ Direct-Serial:
-+ The default here is NONE because C-Kermit has no way of knowing
-+ what kind of flow control, if any, is or can be done by the
-+ device at the other end of the connection. RTS/CTS would be a
-+ bad choice here, because if the CTS signal is not asserted, the
-+ connection will hang. And since direct connections are often
-+ made with 3-wire cables, there is a good chance the CTS signal
-+ will not be received.
-+
-+ TCPIP:
-+ NONE, since TCP and IP provide their own flow control
-+ transparently to the application, except in VMS, where Xon/Xoff
-+ is the default due to the requirements of the VMS TCP/IP
-+ products.
-+
-+ Other networks:
-+ NONE, since networks should provide their flow control
-+ transparently to the application.
-+
-+ (*) This is possibly the worst feature of UNIX, VMS, and other
-+ platforms where C-Kermit runs. If C-Kermit was able to ask the
-+ operating system what kind of connection it had to the user, it could
-+ set up many things for you automatically.
-+
-+ You can modify the default-flow-control table with:
-+
-+ SET FLOW-CONTROL /xxx { NONE, KEEP, RTS/CTS, XON/XOFF, ... }
-+
-+ where "xxx" is the connection type, e.g.
-+
-+ SET FLOW /REMOTE NONE
-+ SET FLOW /DIRECT RTS/CTS
-+
-+ If you leave out the switch, SET FLOW works as before, choosing the
-+ flow control method to be used on the current connection:
-+
-+ SET FLOW XON/XOFF
-+
-+ Thus, whenever you make a connection with SET PORT, SET LINE, DIAL, SET
-+ HOST, TELNET, RLOGIN, etc, an appropriate form of flow control is
-+ selected automatically. You can override the automatic selection with a
-+ subsequent SET FLOW command, such as SET FLOW NONE (no switch
-+ included).
-+
-+ The flow control is changed automatically too when you give a SET MODEM
-+ TYPE command. For example, suppose your operating system (say Linux)
-+ supports hardware flow control (RTS/CTS). Now suppose you give the
-+ following commands:
-+
-+ set line /dev/ttyS2 ; Automatically sets flow to NONE
-+ set modem type usr ; Automatically sets flow to RTS/CTS
-+ set modem type rolm ; Doesn't support RTS/CTS so now flow is XON/XOFF
-+
-+ IMPORTANT: This new feature tends to make the order of SET LINE/HOST
-+ and SET FLOW commands matter, where it didn't before. For example, in
-+ VMS:
-+
-+ SET FLOW KEEP
-+ SET LINE TTA0:
-+
-+ the SET LINE undoes the SET FLOW KEEP command; the sequence now must
-+ be:
-+
-+ SET FLOW /DIRECT KEEP
-+ SET LINE TTA0:
-+
-+ or:
-+
-+ SET LINE TTA0:
-+ SET FLOW KEEP
-+
-+2.14. Trapping Connection Establishment and Loss
-+
-+ If you define a macro called ON_OPEN, it is executed any time that a
-+ SET LINE, SET PORT, SET HOST, TELNET, RLOGIN or similar command
-+ succeeds in opening a connection. The argument is the host or device
-+ name (as shown by SHOW COMMUNICATIONS, and the same as \v(line)). This
-+ macro can be used for all sorts of things, like automatically setting
-+ connection- or host-specific parameters when the connection is opened.
-+ Example:
-+
-+ def ON_OPEN {
-+ switch \%1 {
-+ :abccorp.com, set reliable off, break
-+ :xyzcorp.com, set receive packet-length 1000, break
-+ etc etc...
-+ }
-+ }
-+
-+ If you define a macro called ON_CLOSE, it will be executed any time
-+ that a SET LINE, SET PORT, SET HOST, TELNET, RLOGIN or any other kind
-+ of connection that C-Kermit has made is closed, either by the remote or
-+ by a local CLOSE, HANGUP, or EXIT command or other local action, such
-+ as when a new connection is opened before an old one was explicitly
-+ closed.
-+
-+ As soon as C-Kermit notices the connection has been closed, the
-+ ON_CLOSE macro is invoked at (a) the top of the command parsing loop,
-+ or (b) when a connection is closed implicitly by a command such as SET
-+ LINE that closes any open connection prior to making a new connection,
-+ or (c) when C-Kermit closes an open connection in the act of exiting.
-+
-+ The ON_CLOSE macro was inspired by the neverending quest to unite
-+ Kermit and SSH. In this case using the "tunnel" mechanism:
-+
-+ def TUNNEL { ; \%1 = host to tunnel to
-+ local \%p
-+ if not def \%1 stop 1
-+ assign tunnelhost \%1 ; Make global copy
-+ undef on_close
-+ set macro error off
-+ close connection ; Ignore any error
-+ open !read tunnel start \%1
-+ read \%p ; Get port number
-+ if fail stop 1 Tunnel failure: \%1
-+ close read
-+ if fail stop 1 Tunnel failure: \%1 ; See [432]Section 4.2.8.1
-+ assign on_close { ; Set up close handler
-+ echo Closing tunnel: \m(tunnelhost)
-+ !tunnel stop \m(tunnelhost)
-+ undef on_close
-+ }
-+ set host localhost:\%p /telnet
-+ if success end 0
-+ undef on_close
-+ stop 1 Connection failure: \%1
-+ }
-+
-+ In this case, when the connection stops, we also need to shut down the
-+ tunnel, even if it is at a later time after TUNNEL has finished
-+ executing. This way we can escape back, reconnect, transfer files, and
-+ so on until the connection is broken by logging out from the remote, or
-+ by explicitly closing it, or by EXITing from C-Kermit, at which time
-+ the tunnel is shut down.
-+
-+ When the connection is closed, no matter how, the ON_CLOSE macro
-+ executes and then undefines (destroys) itself, since we don't want to
-+ be closing tunnels in the future when we close subsequent connections.
-+
-+ Other such tricks can be imagined, including ending ON_CLOSE with a
-+ STOP command to force the command stack to be peeled all the way back
-+ to the top, for example in a deeply nested script that depends on the
-+ connection being open:
-+
-+ def on_close { stop 1 CONNECTION LOST }
-+
-+ When C-Kermit invokes the ON_CLOSE macro, it supplies one argument
-+ (\%1): the reason the connection was closed as a number, one of the
-+ following:
-+
-+ 2 - Fatal failure to negotiate a required item on a network connection.
-+ 1 - Closed by C-Kermit command.
-+ 0 - All others (normally closed by remote).
-+
-+ which may be used for any purpose; for example, to add a comment to the
-+ connection log:
-+
-+ def on_close {
-+ local \%m
-+ if not open cx end 0
-+ switch \%1 {
-+ :0, .\%m = Closed by remote, break
-+ :1, .\%m = Closed by me, break
-+ :2, .\%m = Network protocol negotiation failure, break
-+ }
-+ if def \%m writeln cx {# \%m}
-+ }
-+
-+2.15. Contacting Web Servers with the HTTP Command
-+
-+ C-Kermit 7.0 (at this writing, the UNIX version only) supports direct
-+ contact and interaction with Web servers via HTTP 1.0 protocol. To make
-+ a connection, use Kermit's normal method for making a TCP/IP
-+ connection, but specify the HTTP port:
-+
-+ SET HOST host http [ switches ]
-+
-+ where host is the IP hostname or address, and http is the name of the
-+ TCP port for the Web server. Relevant switches include:
-+
-+ /RAW
-+ Treat the connection as a transparent binary pipe. This switch
-+ may be required if a port other than 'http' is used.
-+
-+ /SSL
-+ Make an secure private connection with SSL (only if SSL support
-+ is included in your version of Kermit). In this case the port
-+ name might need to be https rather than http, e.g. "set host
-+ secureserver.xyxcorp.com https /ssl".
-+
-+ /TLS
-+ Make an secure private connection with TLS (only if TLS support
-+ is included in your version of Kermit). In this case the port
-+ name would be https rather than http.
-+
-+ Then you can issue an HTTP command. In most cases, the server closes
-+ the connection when the command is complete. Example:
-+
-+ SET HOST www.columbia.edu http
-+ IF FAIL EXIT 1 Can't contact server
-+ HTTP GET kermit/index.html
-+
-+ At this point the connection is closed, since that's how HTTP 1.0
-+ works. If you want to perform additional operations, you must establish
-+ a new connection with another SET HOST command.
-+
-+ The HTTP command acts as a client to the Web server, except instead of
-+ displaying the results like a Web browser would, it stores them. Any
-+ HTTP command can (but need not) include any or all of the following
-+ switches:
-+
-+ /AGENT:user-agent
-+ Identifies the client to the server; "C-Kermit" or "Kermit-95"
-+ by default.
-+
-+ /HEADER:header-line
-+ Used for specifying any optional headers. A list of headers is
-+ provided using braces for grouping:
-+
-+ /HEADER:{{tag:value}{tag:value}...}
-+
-+ For a listing of valid tag value and value formats see [433]RFC
-+ 1945: Hypertext Transfer Protocol -- HTTP/1.0. A maximum of
-+ eight headers may be specified.
-+
-+ /USER:name
-+ In case a page requires a username for access.
-+
-+ /PASSWORD:password
-+ In case a page requires a password for access.
-+
-+ /ARRAY:arrayname
-+ Tells Kermit to store the response headers in the given array,
-+ one line per element. The array need not be declared in advance.
-+ Example:
-+
-+ C-Kermit? http /array:c get kermit/index.html
-+ C-Kermit? show array c
-+ Dimension = 9
-+ 1. Date: Fri, 26 Nov 1999 23:12:22 GMT
-+ 2. Server: Apache/1.3.4 (Unix)
-+ 3. Last-Modified: Mon, 06 Sep 1999 22:35:58 GMT
-+ 4. ETag: "bc049-f72-37d441ce"
-+ 5. Accept-Ranges: bytes
-+ 6. Content-Length: 3954
-+ 7. Connection: close
-+ 8. Content-Type: text/html
-+
-+ As you can see, the header lines are like MIME e-mail header lines:
-+ identifier, colon, value. The /ARRAY switch is the only method
-+ available to a script to process the server responses for a POST or PUT
-+ command.
-+
-+ The HTTP commands are:
-+
-+ HTTP [ switches ] GET remote-filename [ local-filename ]
-+ Retrieves the named file. If a local-filename is given, the file
-+ is stored locally under that name; otherwise it is stored with
-+ its own name.
-+
-+ HTTP [ switches ] HEAD remote-filename local-filename
-+ Like GET except without actually getting the file; instead it
-+ gets only the headers, storing them into the given file, whose
-+ name must be given, one line per header item, as shown above in
-+ the /ARRAY: switch description.
-+
-+ HTTP [ switches ] INDEX remote-directory [ local-filename ]
-+ Retrieves the file listing for the given server directory. NOTE:
-+ This command is not supported by most Web servers.
-+
-+ HTTP [ switches ] POST [ /MIME-TYPE:type ] local-file remote-file
-+ Used to send a response as if it were sent from a form. The data
-+ to be posted must be read from a file.
-+
-+ HTTP [ switches ] PUT [ /MIME-TYPE:type ] local-file remote-file
-+ Uploads a local file to a server file.
-+
-+ HTTP [ switches ] DELETE remote-filename
-+ Instructs the server to delete the specified filename.
-+
-+3. TERMINAL CONNECTION
-+
-+3.1. CONNECT Command Switches
-+
-+ The following switches (see [434]Section 1.5) were added to the CONNECT
-+ command in 7.0:
-+
-+ /QUIETLY
-+ Don't print the "Connecting to..." or "Back at..." messages. CQ
-+ is an invisible command synonym for CONNECT /QUIETLY.
-+
-+ /TRIGGER:string
-+ Specify a trigger or triggers ([435]Section 3.2) effective for
-+ this CONNECT command only, temporarily overriding any current
-+ SET TERMINAL TRIGGER values ([436]Section 3.2).
-+
-+ Note: Other switches might also be available; type "connect ?" for a
-+ list, "help connect" for a description of each.
-+
-+3.2. Triggers
-+
-+ Triggers were added for UNIX, VMS, AOS/VS, and K95 in C-Kermit 7.0.
-+
-+ SET TERMINAL TRIGGER string
-+ Tells C-Kermit to look for the given string during all
-+ subsequent CONNECT sessions, and if seen, to return to command
-+ mode automatically, as if you had escaped back manually. If the
-+ string includes any spaces, you must enclose it in braces.
-+ Example:
-+
-+ set terminal trigger {NO CARRIER}
-+
-+ Comparisons are made after character-set translation.
-+
-+ If a string is to include a literal brace character, precede it with a
-+ backslash:
-+
-+ ; My modem always makes this noise when the connection is lost:
-+ set terminal trigger |||ppp\{\{\{\{UUUUUUU
-+
-+ If you want Kermit to look for more than one string simultaneously, use
-+ the following syntax:
-+
-+ set terminal trigger {{string1}{string2}...{stringn}}
-+
-+ In this case, C-Kermit will return to command mode automatically if any
-+ of the given strings is encountered. Up to 8 strings may be specified.
-+
-+ If the most recent return to command mode was caused by a trigger, the
-+ new variable, \v(trigger), shows the trigger value; otherwise
-+ \v(trigger) is empty.
-+
-+ The SHOW TRIGGER command displays the SET TERMINAL TRIGGER values as
-+ well as the \v(trigger) value.
-+
-+3.3. Transparent Printing
-+
-+ As noted in the manual, C-Kermit's CONNECT command on UNIX is not a
-+ terminal emulator, but rather a "semitransparent pipe" between the
-+ terminal or emulator you are using to access C-Kermit, and the remote
-+ host to which C-Kermit is connected. The "semitransparent" qualifier is
-+ because of character-set translation as well as several actions taken
-+ by the emulator in response to the characters or strings that pass
-+ through it, such as APCs, Kermit packets (autodownload), triggers, etc.
-+
-+ The UNIX version of C-Kermit 7.0 adds another such action: Transparent
-+ printing, also called Controller printing (as distinct from Autoprint
-+ or line or screen print). It is intended mainly for use on UNIX
-+ workstation consoles (as opposed to remote logins), but with some care
-+ can also be used when accessing C-Kermit remotely.
-+
-+ Transparent printing is related to APC by sharing C-Kermit's built-in
-+ ANSI escape-sequence parser to detect "printer on" and "printer off"
-+ sequences from the host. When the printer-on sequence is received, all
-+ subsequent arriving characters -- including NUL, control characters,
-+ and escape sequences -- are sent to the SET PRINTER device instead of
-+ to your screen until the printer-off sequence is received, or you
-+ escape back, whichever happens first. These bytes are not translated or
-+ modified or filtered in any way by Kermit (except for possibly
-+ stripping of the 8th bit, as noted below), but if filtering or
-+ translation is desired, this can be accomplished by your SET PRINTER
-+ selection (e.g. by choosing a pipeline of filters).
-+
-+ By default, your SET PRINTER device is your default UNIX printer, but
-+ it can also be a file, a command, or the null device (which causes all
-+ printer material to be discarded). See [437]Using C-Kermit, 2nd Ed.,
-+ p.41 for details.
-+
-+ Transparent printing is controlled by the command:
-+
-+ SET TERMINAL PRINT { ON, OFF }
-+ When ON, transparent-print sequences are obeyed, and printing
-+ occurs on the system where C-Kermit is running. When OFF,
-+ transparent print sequences are ignored and passed through to
-+ your actual terminal or emulator, along with the data they
-+ enclose. OFF is the default, for compatibility with earlier
-+ C-Kermit releases. As noted in the manual, when the current SET
-+ PRINTER device is a file, transparent-print material is appended
-+ to it; the file is not overwritten.
-+
-+ SET TERMINAL BYTESIZE { 7, 8 }
-+ SET PARITY { EVEN, ODD, MARK, SPACE, NONE }
-+ If the terminal bytesize is 7, or PARITY is not NONE, the 8th
-+ bit of each byte is stripped prior to printing.
-+
-+ The transparent-print escape sequences are:
-+
-+ <ESC>[5i
-+ Printer On. Send all subsequent incoming bytes to the printer
-+ without any kind of filtering, translation, or alteration. Note:
-+ <ESC> stands for ASCII character number 27 (decimal), Escape.
-+
-+ <ESC>[4i
-+ Printer Off. Resume displaying incoming bytes on the screen.
-+
-+ These are the same sequences used by DEC VT100 and higher terminals and
-+ other ANSI X3.64 and ISO 6429 compatible terminals. There is no
-+ provision for selecting other printer-control sequences.
-+
-+ Restrictions:
-+
-+ 1. You must SET TERM TRANSPARENT-PRINT ON before you can use this
-+ feature.
-+ 2. Only the 7-bit forms of the escape sequences are supported. The
-+ 8-bit CSI C1 control is not recognized.
-+ 3. Autoprint is not supported, since this requires a full-fledged
-+ terminal emulator with direct access to the screen.
-+ 4. The start-print and stop-print sequences pass through to the screen
-+ (there is no way to avoid this without causing unacceptable delays
-+ or deadlocks in CONNECT mode). Thus if your terminal or emulator
-+ also supports transparent printing via these same sequences, an
-+ empty file will be sent to its printer. Normally this has no
-+ effect.
-+
-+ Point (4) is similar to the situation with autodownload and APC -- when
-+ you have several Kermit clients in a chain, you should take care that
-+ these features are enabled in only one of them.
-+
-+ Example 1:
-+
-+ set printer {|lpr -Plaser} ; Specify the printer (if not default).
-+ set term print on ; Enable transparent printing.
-+ set term byte 8 ; Enable 8-bit characters.
-+ connect ; Enter CONNECT mode.
-+
-+ Example 2:
-+
-+ set printer /home/users/olga/printer.log ; Send printer material to a file.
-+
-+ Example 3:
-+
-+ set printer {| grep -v ^Received | lpr} ; Filter out some lines
-+
-+ Then use "pcprint" or "vtprint" commands on the host to initiate
-+ transparent print operations. See [438]Using C-Kermit, 2nd Ed., p.406
-+ for details.
-+
-+ Here is a sample "pcprint" shell script for UNIX:
-+
-+ #!/bin/sh
-+ echo -n '<ESC>[5i'
-+ if [ $# -eq 0 ]; then
-+ cat
-+ else
-+ cat $*
-+ fi
-+ echo -n '<FF><ESC>[4i'
-+ # (end)
-+
-+ (Replace "<ESC>" by the actual ASCII Escape character and "<FF>" by the
-+ ASCII Formfeed character).
-+
-+ If you always want transparent printing enabled, put "set term print
-+ on" in your C-Kermit customization file (~/.mykermrc in UNIX). The "set
-+ term bytesize" selection, however, is a property of each separate
-+ connection.
-+
-+3.4. Binary and Text Session Logs
-+
-+ C-Kermit 7.0 corrects an oversight in earlier releases, in which binary
-+ session logs (SET SESSION-LOG BINARY) translated character sets and
-+ performed various formatting transformations (e.g. "newline mode")
-+ before writing characters to the session log. In C-Kermit 7.0,
-+ binary-mode session logging writes characters as they come in, before
-+ anything (other that parity-bit stripping) is done to them. Text-mode
-+ session logging records the characters after processing.
-+
-+4. FILE TRANSFER
-+
-+ Every file is transferred either in text mode (which implies
-+ record-format and character-set translation) or binary mode (in which
-+ each byte is sent literally without any kind of conversion). The mode
-+ in which a file is transferred is controlled by (a) the default mode,
-+ in the absence of any other indications; (b) the SET FILE TYPE command;
-+ (c) various automatic mechanisms based on client/server negotiations,
-+ directory information or filename patterns, etc.
-+
-+ The default FILE TYPE was changed from TEXT to BINARY in C-Kermit 7.0
-+ because:
-+
-+ * Transferring a text file in binary mode does less damage than
-+ transferring a binary file in text mode.
-+ * Only binary-mode transfers can be recovered from the point of
-+ failure.
-+ * The automatic transfer-mode mechanisms switch to text mode on a
-+ per-file basis anyway, so only those files that are not covered by
-+ the automatic mechanisms are affected.
-+ * All file transfers on the Web are done in binary mode, so people
-+ are accustomed to it and expect it.
-+
-+4.0. BUG FIXES, MINOR CHANGES, AND CLARIFICATIONS
-+
-+4.0.0. Filenames with Spaces
-+
-+ Filenames that contain spaces are a major nuisance to a program like
-+ Kermit, whose command language is line- and word-oriented, in which
-+ words are separated by spaces and a filename is assumed to be a "word".
-+ In general (unless noted otherwise in the description of a particular
-+ command), there is only one way to refer to such files in Kermit
-+ commands, and that is to enclose the name in braces:
-+
-+ send {this file}
-+
-+ Tells Kermit to send the file whose name is "this file" (two words, no
-+ quotes). Of course, various circumlocutions are also possible, such as:
-+
-+ define \%a this file
-+ send \%a
-+
-+ BUT, perhaps contrary to expectation, you can't use "\32" to represent
-+ the space:
-+
-+ send this\32file
-+
-+ does not work. Why? Because the Kermit parser, which must work on many
-+ operating systems including Windows, has no way of knowing what you
-+ mean by "this\32file". Do you mean a file whose name is "this file" in
-+ the current directory? Or do you mean a file whose name is "32file" in
-+ the "this" subdirectory of the current directory? Guessing won't do
-+ here; Kermit must behave consistently and deterministically in all
-+ cases on all platforms.
-+
-+ Note that you can't use Esc or Tab within {...} for filename
-+ completion, or question mark to get a filename list. However, you can
-+ include wildcards; for example:
-+
-+ send {* *}
-+
-+ sends all files whose name contains a space.
-+
-+ All things considered, it is best to avoid spaces in file and directory
-+ names if you can. Also see [439]Section 5.4 on this topic.
-+
-+4.0.1. Packet out of Window
-+
-+ C-Kermit 6.0 could send packets "out of window" if the window size was
-+ greater than 1 and ACKs had arrived out of order. Fixed in 6.1.
-+
-+4.0.2. MOVE after ADD SEND-LIST
-+
-+ ADD SEND-LIST followed by MOVE did not delete original files; fixed in
-+ 6.1. Carrier loss was not detected during transfer; in 7.0 C-Kermit
-+ checks for this (but results can not be guaranteed). In any case, the
-+ protocol will eventually time out if the connection is lost.
-+
-+4.0.3. GET and RECEIVE As-Names
-+
-+ In 5A(190) through 6.0.192, the GET and RECEIVE as-name did not
-+ properly override the RECEIVE PATHNAMES setting. In 7.0 it does.
-+
-+4.0.4. New Brief Statistics Listing
-+
-+ Version 7.0 adds a /BRIEF switch to the STATISTICS command, to display
-+ a short file-transfer statistics report. /BRIEF is now the default. Use
-+ /VERBOSE to see the full display, which is about 25 lines long.
-+
-+4.0.5. Improved FAST Command
-+
-+ The preinstalled definition of the FAST macro did not take enough
-+ factors into account. Now it sets packet lengths and window sizes
-+ appropriate to the configuration. Furthermore, in IRIX only, it might
-+ restrict the SEND packet length to 4000, to work around a bug in the
-+ IRIX Telnet server, depending on the IRIX version (see [440]ckubwr.txt,
-+ IRIX section). To see the built-in definition of the FAST macro, type
-+ "show macro fast". To change it, simply define it to be whatever you
-+ want -- it's just a macro, like any other.
-+
-+4.0.6. The SET SEND BACKUP Command
-+
-+ Version 7.0 adds SET SEND BACKUP { ON, OFF }. This tells whether backup
-+ files should be sent. Backup files are the ones created by Kermit (and
-+ EMACS, and possibly other applications) to preserve old copies of files
-+ when creating new ones with the same name. Kermit does this when
-+ receiving a file and its FILE COLLISION setting is BACKUP (or RENAME,
-+ in which case it the new file gets the backup name). On most platforms,
-+ the backup name is formed by adding:
-+
-+ .~n~
-+
-+ to the end of the filename, where "n" is a number. For example, if the
-+ original file is oofa.txt, a backup file might be called:
-+
-+ oofa.txt.~1~
-+
-+ (or oofa.txt.~2~, etc). If you SET SEND BACKUP OFF, this tells Kermit
-+ not to send files that have backup names. Normally, SET SEND BACKUP is
-+ ON (as shown by SHOW PROTOCOL), and backup files are sent if their
-+ names match the SEND file specification.
-+
-+ Also see PURGE, SET FILE COLLISION, SEND /NOBACKUP, DIRECTORY
-+ /[NO]BACKUP.
-+
-+4.0.7. The SET { SEND, RECEIVE } VERSION-NUMBERS Command
-+
-+ VMS Only. Normally when sending files, VMS C-Kermit strips the version
-+ number. For example, if the file is FOO.BAR;34, the name is sent as
-+ FOO.BAR (without the ";34"). If you want to keep version numbers on
-+ when sending files, use SET SEND VERSION-NUMBERS ON. The effect depends
-+ on the receiver.
-+
-+ Normally when receiving files, and an incoming filename includes a
-+ VMS-style version number (such as FOO.BAR;34) VMS C-Kermit strips it
-+ before trying to create the new file; this way the new file receives
-+ the next highest version number in the customary manner for VMS. If you
-+ want version numbers on incoming filenames to be used in creating the
-+ new files, use SET RECEIVE VERSION-NUMBERS ON.
-+
-+ Normally these commands would be effective only when VMS C-Kermit is
-+ exchanging files with a non-VMS Kermit program, since VMS-to-VMS
-+ transfers use labeled mode unless you have gone out of your way to
-+ defeat it.
-+
-+ Example: You want to send all versions of all files in the current
-+ directory from a VMS C-Kermit client to a UNIX C-Kermit server. Use:
-+
-+ set send version-numbers on
-+ send *.*;*
-+
-+ The resulting Unix files will have VMS-style version numbers as part of
-+ their name, for example "foo.bar;1", "foo.bar;2", etc.
-+
-+ Now suppose you want to send these files from Unix to another VMS
-+ system and preserve the version numbers. Again we have a Unix C-Kermit
-+ server and VMS C-Kermit client. Give these commands to the client:
-+
-+ set receive version-numbers on
-+ get *
-+
-+4.0.8. The SET { SEND, RECEIVE } { MOVE-TO, RENAME-TO } Commands
-+
-+ These commands are persistent global versions of the /MOVE-TO: and
-+ /RENAME-TO: switches of the SEND, GET, and RECEIVE commands. They
-+ should normally be used only when setting up a dedicated
-+ transaction-processing application, in which each file is to be moved
-+ or renamed immediately after, and only if, it is transferred
-+ successfully, so that (for example) an independent, concurrent process
-+ can notice when new files appear and process them immediately without
-+ having to guess whether they are complete.
-+
-+4.0.9. SET FILE INCOMPLETE AUTO
-+
-+ SET FILE INCOMPLETE { KEEP, DISCARD }, which tells whether to keep or
-+ discard incompletely received files, has a new option, AUTO, which is
-+ also the default. It means KEEP the incomplete file if the transfer is
-+ in binary mode, otherwise DISCARD it. This reduces the chances that a
-+ subsequent recovery operation (RESEND, REGET, etc) could produce a
-+ corrupt file, since recovery works only for binary-mode transfers.
-+
-+4.1. FILE-TRANSFER FILENAME TEMPLATES
-+
-+ File-transfer filename templates allow files to be renamed
-+ automatically by the file sender, the receiver, or both, during
-+ transfer of groups of files.
-+
-+4.1.1. Templates in the As-Name
-+
-+ Prior to C-Kermit 6.1 and Kermit 95 1.1.12 the only options that could
-+ be used to affect the names of files being transferred were SET
-+ FILENAMES { LITERAL, CONVERTED } and SET { SEND, RECEIVE } PATHNAMES {
-+ ON, OFF }, plus the "as-name" feature of the SEND (MOVE, etc) and
-+ RECEIVE commands.
-+
-+ Previously, the as-name could be used only for a single file. For
-+ example:
-+
-+ SEND FOO BAR
-+
-+ would send the file FOO under the name BAR, but:
-+
-+ SEND *.TXT anything
-+
-+ was not allowed, since it would give the same name to each file that
-+ was sent. When receiving:
-+
-+ RECEIVE FOO
-+
-+ would rename the first incoming file to FOO before storing it on the
-+ disk, but subsequent files would not be renamed to FOO, since this
-+ would result in overwriting the same file repeatedly. Instead, they
-+ were stored under the names they arrived with.
-+
-+ Beginning in C-Kermit 6.1 and Kermit 95 1.1.12, it is possible to
-+ specify as-names in SEND, RECEIVE, and related commands even for file
-+ groups. This is accomplished by using replacement variables in the
-+ as-name, along with optional material such character-string functions
-+ and/or constant strings. An as-name containing replacement variables is
-+ called a filename template.
-+
-+ The key to filename templates is the new variable:
-+
-+ \v(filename)
-+
-+ During file transfer it is replaced by the name of each file currently
-+ being transferred (after transfer, it is the name of the last file
-+ transferred).
-+
-+ So, for example:
-+
-+ send *.txt \v(filename).new
-+
-+ sends each file with its own name, but with ".new" appended to it. Of
-+ course if the name already contains periods, this could confuse the
-+ file receiver, so you can also achieve fancier effects with
-+ constructions like:
-+
-+ send *.txt \freplace(\v(filename),.,_).new
-+
-+ which replaces all periods in the original filename by underscores, and
-+ then appends ".new" to the result. So, for example, oofa.txt would be
-+ sent as oofa_txt.new.
-+
-+ Another new variable that is useful in this regard is \v(filenumber),
-+ which is the ordinal number of the current file in the file group, so
-+ you can also:
-+
-+ send *.txt FILE\flpad(\v(filenum),2,0)
-+
-+ resulting in a series of files called FILE00, FILE01, FILE02, etc. (At
-+ the end of the transfer, \v(filenum) tells the number of files that
-+ were transferred).
-+
-+ If you specify a constant as-name when sending a file group:
-+
-+ send *.txt thisnameonly
-+
-+ Kermit complains and asks you to include replacement variables in the
-+ as-name. You should generally use \v(filename) or \v(filenumber) for
-+ this purpose, since other variables (with the possible exception of
-+ date/time related variables) do not change from one file to the next.
-+ But Kermit accepts any as-name at all that contains any kind of
-+ variables for file group, even if the variable will not change. So:
-+
-+ send *.txt \%a
-+
-+ is accepted, but all files are sent with the same name (the value of
-+ \%a, if it has one and it is constant). If the variable has no value at
-+ all, the files are sent under their own names.
-+
-+ Of course, the value of \%a in the previous example need not be
-+ constant:
-+
-+ define \%a FILE\flpad(\v(filenum),2,0)_at_\v(time)
-+ send *.txt \%a
-+
-+ The RECEIVE command, when given without an as-name, behaves as always,
-+ storing all incoming files under the names they arrive with, subject to
-+ SET FILE NAME and SET RECEIVE PATHNAMES modifications ([441]Section
-+ 4.10).
-+
-+ However, when an as-name is given in the RECEIVE command, it is applied
-+ to all incoming files rather than to just the first. If it does not
-+ contain replacement variables, then the current FILE COLLISION setting
-+ governs the result. For example:
-+
-+ receive foo
-+
-+ will result in incoming files named foo, foo.~1~, foo.~2~, and so on,
-+ with the default FILE COLLISION setting of BACKUP. If it does contain
-+ replacement variables, of course they are used.
-+
-+ When receiving files, the \v(filename) variable refers to the name that
-+ was received in the incoming file-header packet, BEFORE any processing
-+ by SET FILE NAMES or SET RECEIVE PATHNAMES. Since the filenames in
-+ file-header packets are usually in uppercase, you would need to convert
-+ them explicitly if you want them in lowercase, e.g.:
-+
-+ receive \flower(\v(filename)).new
-+
-+4.1.2. Templates on the Command Line
-+
-+ On the command-line, use templates as shown above as the -a option
-+ argument, bearing in mind the propensity of UNIX and perhaps other
-+ shells to treat backslash as a shell escape character. So in UNIX (for
-+ example):
-+
-+ kermit -s oofa.* -a x.\\v(filenum)
-+
-+ By the way, this represents a change from 6.0 and earlier releases in
-+ which the as-name (-a argument or otherwise) was not evaluated by the
-+ command parser. Thus, for example, in VMS (where the shell does not
-+ care about backslashes), it was possible to:
-+
-+ kermit -s oofa.txt -a c:\tmp\oofa.txt
-+
-+ Now backslashes in the as-name must be quoted not only for the shell
-+ (if necessary) but also for Kermit itself:
-+
-+ kermit -s oofa.txt -a c:\\tmp\\oofa.txt ; Kermit only
-+ kermit -s oofa.txt -a c:\\\\tmp\\\\oofa.txt ; Shell and Kermit
-+
-+ You can also use the \fliteral() function for this:
-+
-+ kermit -s oofa.txt -a \fliteral(c:\tmp\oofa.txt) ; Kermit only
-+ kermit -s oofa.txt -a \\fliteral(c:\\tmp\\oofa.txt) ; Shell and Kermit
-+
-+4.1.3. Post-Transfer Renaming
-+
-+ Filename templates are now also useful in SET { SEND, RECEIVE }
-+ RENAME-TO and in the /RENAME-TO: switch, that can be given to the SEND,
-+ GET, or RECEIVE commands; this is similar to an as-name, but is
-+ effective on a per-file basis if and only if the file was transferred
-+ successfully.
-+
-+ MOVE-TO and RENAME-TO address a requirement commonly stated for
-+ transaction processing and similar systems. Suppose, for example, a
-+ central system "X" accepts connections from multiple clients
-+ simultaneously; a process on X waits for a file to appear and then
-+ processes the file. This process must have a way of knowing when the
-+ file has been completely and successfully transferred before it starts
-+ to process it. This can be accomplished easily using C-Kermit's SET {
-+ SEND, RECEIVE } { MOVE-TO, RENAME-TO } command or /MOVE-TO: or
-+ /RENAME-TO: switches, described in [442]Sections 4.7.1 through
-+ [443]4.7.3.
-+
-+ Here's an example for the client side, in which files to be sent are
-+ placed in a certain directory (/usr/olga/tosend in this example) by
-+ another process when they are ready to go. This might be in a hospital
-+ or big doctor's office, where medical insurance claims are entered at a
-+ number of workstations, and then deposited in the "tosend" directory,
-+ from which they are sent to a claims clearinghouse. We assume the
-+ connection is already made and a Kermit server is on the other end.
-+
-+ local srcdir findir ; Declare local (automatic) variables
-+ assign srcdir /usr/olga/tosend ; Local source directory (files to send)
-+ assign findir /usr/olga/sent ; Where to move files after they are sent
-+ log transactions ; Keep a log of transfers
-+ cd \m(srcdir) ; Change to the source directory
-+ while true { ; Loop forever...
-+ send /move-to:\m(findir) * ; Send all files
-+ sleep 60 ; Sleep a minute
-+ } ; Go back and do it again
-+
-+ Note how simple this is. Once each file is sent, it is moved so it
-+ won't be sent again (you could also use SEND /RENAME-TO: or even SEND
-+ /DELETE). If a transfer fails, the file is not moved and so we try
-+ again to send it next time around. If there are no files to send, the
-+ SEND command does nothing but a message is printed; you can avoid the
-+ message by checking first to see if any files are in the directory:
-+
-+ while true { ; Loop forever...
-+ if > \ffiles(*) 0 - ; If there are any files
-+ send /move-to:\m(findir) * ; send them.
-+ sleep 60 ; Sleep a minute.
-+ } ; Go back and do it again.
-+
-+ It's even simpler on the server side (here again we assume the
-+ connection is already in place):
-+
-+ local rcvdir findir ; Declare local (automatic) variables
-+ assign rcvdir /usr/ivan/tmp ; Temporary receiving directory
-+ assign findir /usr/ivan/new ; Where to move files after reception
-+ log transactions ; Keep a log of transfers
-+ cd \m(rcvdir) ; Change to the source directory
-+ set receive move-to \m(findir) ; Declare move-to directory.
-+ server ; Enter server mode.
-+
-+ A separate process (e.g. the medical claim-form decoder) can look for
-+ files appearing in the /usr/ivan/new directory and process them with
-+ every confidence that they have been completely received.
-+
-+ Note that the use of MOVE-TO can result in moved files overwriting one
-+ another (the application would normally avoid this by assigning each
-+ transaction a unique, e.g. based on customer number and claim number).
-+ But if filename collisions are a possibility in your application,
-+ RENAME-TO might be a better choice; you can use any variables you like
-+ in the template to ensure uniqueness of the RENAME-TO filename; for
-+ example:
-+
-+ SET RECEIVE RENAME-TO \v(filename)_\v(ndate)_\v(ntime)_\v(userid)_\v(pid)
-+
-+4.2. FILE-TRANSFER PIPES AND FILTERS
-+
-+4.2.1. INTRODUCTION
-+
-+ Beginning in C-Kermit 6.1 and Kermit 95 1.1.12, it is possible to send
-+ from a command, or "pipe", as well as from a file, and to receive to a
-+ pipe or command. In a typical example, we might want to transfer an
-+ entire directory tree from one UNIX system to another (but without
-+ using the methods described in [444]Sections 4.3 , [445]4.10,
-+ [446]4.11, and [447]4.15). We could do this in multiple steps as
-+ follows:
-+
-+ 1. Create a tar archive of the desired directory tree
-+ 2. Compress the tar archive
-+ 3. Transfer it in binary mode to the other computer
-+ 4. Decompress it
-+ 5. Extract the directory tree from the tar archive
-+
-+ But this is inconvenient and it requires a temporary file, which might
-+ be larger than we have room for.
-+
-+ The new pipe-transfer feature lets you do such things in a single step,
-+ and without intermediate files.
-+
-+ Additional new features, also discussed here, let you specify pre- and
-+ post- processing filters for outbound and incoming files, and give you
-+ a way to insert the output from shell or system commands into C-Kermit
-+ commands.
-+
-+ The file-transfer related features are available only with Kermit
-+ protocol, not with any external protocols, nor with K95's built-in
-+ XYZMODEM protocols (because XYZMODEM recovers from transmission errors
-+ by rewinding the source file, and you can't rewind a pipe).
-+
-+ This section begins by discussing the simple and straightforward use of
-+ these features in UNIX, in which pipes and input/output redirection are
-+ a fundamental component and therefore "just work", and then goes on to
-+ discuss their operation in Windows and OS/2, where matters are much
-+ more complicated.
-+
-+4.2.1.1. TERMINOLOGY
-+
-+ Standard Input
-+ This is a precise technical term denoting the normal source of
-+ input for a command or program, which is the keyboard of your
-+ terminal by default, but which can be redirected to a file or
-+ pipe.
-+
-+ Stdin
-+ Abbreviation for Standard Input.
-+
-+ Standard Output
-+ A precise technical term denoting the normal destination for
-+ output from a command or program, which is your terminal screen
-+ by default, but which can be redirected to a file.
-+
-+ Stdout
-+ Abbreviation for Standard Output.
-+
-+ Stdio
-+ Abbreviation for Standard Input / Standard Output.
-+
-+ I/O
-+ Abbreviation for Input / Output.
-+
-+ Shell
-+ Text-based system command processor, such as the UNIX shell, DOS
-+ COMMAND.COM, etc.
-+
-+ Pipe
-+ A mechanism by which the standard output of one program is sent
-+ to the standard input of another.
-+
-+ Pipeline
-+ A series of programs connected by pipes.
-+
-+4.2.1.2. NOTATION
-+
-+ In command descriptions, "command" is replaced by a shell or system
-+ command or pipeline. The command names specified in these commands are
-+ interpreted by your shell, just as if you were typing them at the shell
-+ prompt, and so if they are in your PATH, they will be found in the
-+ expected manner. Therefore you don't have to specify complete pathnames
-+ for commands that are programs (but it shouldn't hurt if you do).
-+
-+ The normal notation for I/O redirection is as follows:
-+
-+ < Read Stdin from the given file.
-+ > Send Stdout to the given file.
-+ | Send Stdout from the command on the left to the command on the right.
-+
-+ Examples:
-+
-+ sort < foo > bar
-+ Sorts the lines in file "foo" and writes the results to file
-+ "bar"
-+
-+ grep -c "some text" *.txt | grep -v ":0" | sort | pr -3 | lpr
-+ This is a command pipeline composed of 5 commands:
-+
-+ grep -c "some text" *.txt
-+ Looks in all files whose names end with ".txt" for the string
-+ "some text" and writes to Stdout the names of each file followed
-+ by a colon and the number of occurrences in each.
-+
-+ grep -v ":0"
-+ Prints to Stdout the lines from Stdin that do NOT contain the
-+ string ":0", in this case, it removes the names of files that do
-+ not contain "some text".
-+
-+ sort
-+ Sorts the lines from Stdin alphabetically to Stdout.
-+
-+ pr -3
-+ Arranges the lines from Stdin in three columns.
-+
-+ lpr
-+ Prints its Stdin on the default printer.
-+
-+ Note that the Kermit features described here work only with commands
-+ that use Stdio. If you attempt to use them with commands whose input
-+ and output can not be redirected, Kermit will most likely get stuck.
-+ Kermit has no way of telling how an external command works, nor what
-+ the syntax of the shell is, so it's up to you to make sure you use
-+ these features only with redirectable commands.
-+
-+ The quoting rules of your shell apply to the command. Thus in UNIX,
-+ where C-Kermit tries to use your preferred shell for running commands,
-+ shell "metacharacters" within commands must be escaped if they are to
-+ be taken literally, using the methods normal for your shell. For
-+ example, the UNIX tr (translate) command must have its arguments in
-+ quotes:
-+
-+ tr "[a-z]" "[A-Z]"
-+
-+ otherwise the shell is likely to replace them by all filenames that
-+ match, which is probably not what you want. This is also true when
-+ using your shell directly, and has nothing to do with Kermit.
-+
-+4.2.1.3. SECURITY
-+
-+ Some sites might not wish to allow access to system commands or
-+ external programs from within Kermit. Such access, including all the
-+ features described here, can be disabled in various ways:
-+
-+ 1. When building from source code, include -DNOPUSH among the CFLAGS.
-+ 2. At runtime, give the NOPUSH command.
-+ 3. For server mode, give the DISABLE HOST command.
-+ 4. Implicit use of pipes can be disabled as described in [448]Section
-+ 4.2.4.
-+
-+ Note: 3 and 4 are not necessary if you have done 1 or 2.
-+
-+4.2.2. Commands for Transferring from and to Pipes
-+
-+ SEND /COMMAND sends data from a command or command pipeline, and
-+ RECEIVE /COMMENT writes data to a command or pipeline. The GET /COMMAND
-+ command asks a server to send material, and then writes the incoming
-+ material to a command or pipeline. These features, along with switches
-+ (like "/COMMAND", described in [449]Section 4.7) are new to C-Kermit
-+ 6.1. The following synonyms are also provided:
-+
-+ CSEND = SEND /COMMAND
-+ CRECEIVE = RECEIVE /COMMAND
-+ CGET = GET /COMMAND
-+
-+ None of these commands can be used if a SEND or RECEIVE FILTER
-+ (respectively, [450]Section 4.2.3) is in effect, or if a NOPUSH command
-+ ([451]Section 4.2.1.3) has been given, or if the current protocol is
-+ not Kermit.
-+
-+4.2.2.1. Sending from a Command
-+
-+ SEND /COMMAND command [ as-name ]
-+ SEND /AS-NAME:as-name /COMMAND command
-+ CSEND command [ as-name ]
-+ These three forms are the same. They work like the SEND command,
-+ but instead of sending a file, it sends the standard output of
-+ the given command, either under the command's own name, or else
-+ with the given as-name. If the command contains spaces, it must
-+ be enclosed in braces. Braces should also be used for the
-+ as-name if it contains spaces. If braces are included around
-+ either the command or the as-name, they are removed after
-+ parsing but before use. As with SEND, the transfer is in text or
-+ binary mode according the current FILE TYPE setting, unless you
-+ override the global transfer mode by including a /TEXT or
-+ /BINARY switch. The command must require no input.
-+
-+ When sending from a command or pipeline, C-Kermit has no way of knowing
-+ in advance how much data will be sent, and so it can not send the size
-+ to the other Kermit in the Attribute packet, and so the receiving
-+ Kermit has no way of displaying "percent done" or a progress bar
-+ (thermometer).
-+
-+ Examples that make sense in text mode (illustrated by common UNIX
-+ commands):
-+
-+ SEND /COMMAND finger
-+ CSEND finger
-+ sends the current "finger" listing (who's logged in) under the
-+ name "finger". The two forms "send /command" and "csend" are
-+ equivalent; we won't bother showing them both in the rest of the
-+ examples.
-+
-+ SEND /COMMAND:{finger}
-+ CSEND {finger}
-+ Same as previous example (braces are removed from "{finger}").
-+
-+ SEND /COMMAND:{ finger }
-+ CSEND { finger }
-+ Same as previous example, but note that the spaces are kept.
-+ This does not prevent the shell from running the "finger"
-+ program, but its output is sent under the name " finger " (with
-+ a leading and trailing space).
-+
-+ SEND /COMMAND:finger /AS-NAME:userlist
-+ CSEND finger userlist
-+ sends the current finger listing under the name "userlist".
-+
-+ SEND /COMMAND:{finger | sort -r} /AS-NAME:userlist
-+ CSEND {finger | sort -r} userlist
-+ sends the current finger listing, sorted in reverse order, under
-+ the name "userlist". The braces are needed to distinguish the
-+ command from the as-name.
-+
-+ SEND /COMMAND:{finger | sort -r} /AS-NAME:{userlist}
-+ CSEND {finger | sort -r} {userlist}
-+ Same as previous example (braces are removed from "{userlist}").
-+
-+ SEND /COMMAND:{finger | sort -r}
-+ /AS-NAME:{\freplace(\v(filename),\32,_)}
-+
-+ CSEND {finger | sort -r} {\freplace(\v(filename),\32,_)}
-+ Like the previous example, but sends the output of the command
-+ under the name of the command, but with all spaces (\32)
-+ replaced by underscores, so the as-name is "finger_|_sort_-r".
-+
-+ Examples that make sense in binary mode (three equivalent forms are
-+ shown):
-+
-+ SEND /COMMAND /BINARY {tar cf - . | gzip -c} mydir.tar.gz
-+ SEND /COMMAND /BINARY /AS-NAME:mydir.tar.gz {tar cf - . | gzip -c}
-+ CSEND /BINARY {tar cf - . | gzip -c} mydir.tar.gz
-+ Makes a tar archive of the current directory, compresses it with
-+ the GNU gzip program, and sends it as "mydir.tar.gz". The other
-+ Kermit can, of course, just store it as a file, or it can use
-+ CRECEIVE to uncompress and dearchive it as part of the transfer
-+ process.
-+
-+ When using a "pipeline" of commands in the command field, obviously,
-+ the first command must not require any input, and the last command
-+ should produce some output, and all intermediate commands should get
-+ some input and produce some output.
-+
-+4.2.2.2. Receiving to a Command
-+
-+ RECEIVE /COMMAND command
-+ CRECEIVE command
-+ This is like RECEIVE, except incoming material is written to the
-+ standard input of the given command, in text or binary mode
-+ according to the normal rules for file reception. Be sure to
-+ include a redirector to a file (if the command normally writes
-+ to standard output), or the output of the command won't go
-+ anywhere. The command may contain spaces; braces are not needed,
-+ but they are removed if used.
-+
-+ WARNING: C-Kermit has no way of knowing anything about the command, or
-+ even whether it is a command. Thus this command will always cause
-+ C-Kermit to enter protocol mode, as long as some text is specified in
-+ the command field. However, if the text does not correspond to a
-+ command, the transfer will eventually fail with a message such as
-+ "Error writing data" or "Failure to close file".
-+
-+ Examples for text mode (in UNIX):
-+
-+ RECEIVE /COMMAND sort -r > reverse.txt
-+ CRECEIVE sort -r > reverse.txt
-+ The text that is received is sorted in reverse order and stored
-+ in the file "reverse.txt". The two forms shown are equivalent.
-+
-+ RECEIVE /COMMAND {sort -r > reverse.txt}
-+ CRECEIVE {sort -r > reverse.txt}
-+ The same as the previous example; if braces are included, they
-+ are simply removed.
-+
-+ RECEIVE /COMMAND {sort -r > \flower(\v(filename)).reverse}
-+ CRECEIVE {sort -r > \flower(\v(filename)).reverse}
-+ Same but stores result under the incoming filename, lowercased,
-+ and with ".reverse" appended to it.
-+
-+ RECEIVE /COMMAND sort
-+ CRECEIVE sort
-+ Does nothing useful, since the output of sort has nowhere to go.
-+
-+ RECEIVE /COMMAND sort -r | pr -3 | lpr -Plaserjet
-+ CRECEIVE sort -r | pr -3 | lpr -Plaserjet
-+ The text that is received is sorted in reverse order, arranged
-+ into three columns, and sent to the "laserjet" printer.
-+
-+ Examples for binary mode:
-+
-+ RECEIVE /COMMAND:{gunzip -c | tar xf -}
-+ CRECEIVE {gunzip -c | tar xf -}
-+ Assuming the data that is received is a compressed tar archive,
-+ uncompresses the archive and passes it to tar for extraction. In
-+ this case the braces are needed because otherwise the final "-"
-+ would be taken as a command continuation character (see
-+ [452]Using C-Kermit, 2nd Edition, p.33).
-+
-+ GET /COMMAND remote-file command
-+ GET /COMMAND /AS-NAME:command remote-file
-+ CGET remote-file command
-+ This command tells the Kermit client to send a GET request for
-+ the given remote file to a Kermit server. Unlike GET, however,
-+ the incoming material is written to a command, rather than to a
-+ file. If the remote-file or the command contain spaces, they
-+ must be enclosed in braces. The same cautions about the command
-+ apply as for CRECEIVE.
-+
-+ Examples (for UNIX):
-+
-+ GET /COMMAND oofa.txt sort -r > oofa.new
-+ GET /COMMAND {oofa.txt} {sort -r > oofa.new}
-+ CGET oofa.txt sort -r > oofa.new
-+ CGET {oofa.txt} {sort -r > oofa.new}
-+ These four are equivalent. Each of them requests the server to
-+ send its "oofa.txt" file, and as it arrives, it is sorted in
-+ reverse order and written to "oofa.new".
-+
-+ GET /COMMAND {profile exec a} lpr
-+ GET /COMMAND {profile exec a} {lpr}
-+ GET /COMMAND /AS-NAME:lpr {profile exec a}
-+ GET /COMMAND /AS-NAME:{lpr} {profile exec a}
-+ GET /COMMAND /AS:lpr {profile exec a}
-+ CGET {profile exec a} lpr
-+ CGET {profile exec a} {lpr}
-+ Here the remote filename contains spaces so it MUST be enclosed
-+ in braces. As it arrives it is sent to the lpr program for
-+ printing. Braces are optional around "lpr" since it contains no
-+ spaces.
-+
-+ GET /COMMAND *.txt {cat >> new.txt}
-+ GET /AS-NAME:{cat >> new.txt} /COMMAND *.txt
-+ CGET *.txt {cat >> new.txt}
-+ This gets all the ".txt" files from the server and concatenates
-+ them all into a single "new.txt" file on the client.
-+
-+ GET /COMMAND *.txt {echo \v(filename)>>new.txt;cat>>new.txt}
-+ CGET *.txt {echo \v(filename)>>new.txt;cat>>new.txt}
-+ As above, but inserts each file's name before its contents.
-+
-+4.2.3. Using File-Transfer Filters
-+
-+ The commands described in [453]Section 4.2.2 let you send the output of
-+ a command, or receive data into a command. But what if you want to
-+ specify preprocessing for files that you send, or postprocessing of
-+ files that you receive, even when multiple files are involved? For this
-+ you need a way to specify send and receive filters. The commands are
-+ SET SEND FILTER and SET RECEIVE FILTER; SHOW PROTOCOL displays the
-+ current settings.
-+
-+4.2.3.1. The SEND Filter
-+
-+ SET SEND FILTER [ command ]
-+ This command specifies a command to be run on any file that you
-+ SEND (or MOVE, MSEND, etc). It also applies to files sent when
-+ in server mode, in response to GET commands, but not to the
-+ results of REMOTE commands like REMOTE DIRECTORY, REMOTE TYPE,
-+ REMOTE HOST, etc. The command may be, but need not be, enclosed
-+ in braces; if it is, the braces are stripped before use. The
-+ output of this command is sent, rather than the file itself. The
-+ current FILE TYPE setting (TEXT or BINARY) applies to the output
-+ of the command. The command must contain at least one instance
-+ of \v(filename), for which the name of the actual file is
-+ substituted. If the command is omitted, the send filter is
-+ removed and files are sent in the normal manner.
-+
-+ The SET SEND FILTER sets up a "global" filter -- that is, one that
-+ applies to all subsequent file-sending commands until you change or
-+ remove it. You can also specify a "local" filter to be used in a
-+ specific file-sending command by using the /FILTER switch (see
-+ [454]Section 1.5); for example:
-+
-+ SEND /FILTER:command [ other-switches ] filename
-+
-+ Besides \v(filename), you can include any other script programming
-+ notation in the send filter: variable names, array references, calls to
-+ built-in string or other functions, and so on. These are evaluated
-+ during file transfer, NOT during parsing, and they are evaluated
-+ separately for each file.
-+
-+ When the SEND or MOVE (SEND /DELETE) command is used with a send
-+ filter, the output from the filter is sent under the file's original
-+ name unless you specify an "as-name" or template. The Attribute packet
-+ (if any) contains the original file's attributes (size, creation date,
-+ etc). So (for example) if the filter changes the file's size, the
-+ progress thermometer might be wrong. (We can't send the size of the
-+ output from the filter, because it is not known until the transfer is
-+ finished.) If you prefer that the size not be sent, use "set attributes
-+ size off".
-+
-+ You can not use send filters with RESEND (SEND /RECOVER) or PSEND (SEND
-+ /START).
-+
-+ Examples for text mode:
-+
-+ SET SEND FILTER sort -r \v(filename) ; Braces may be omitted
-+ SET SEND FILTER {sort -r \v(filename)} ; Braces may be included
-+ SEND *.txt
-+ This sends every file in the current directory whose name ends
-+ with ".txt" under its own name, but with its lines sorted in
-+ reverse order.
-+
-+ SEND /FILTER:{sort -r \v(filename)} *.txt
-+ Same as above, but the filter applies only to this SEND command.
-+ Braces are required in this case.
-+
-+ SET SEND FILTER {sort -r \v(filename)}
-+ SEND oofa.txt reverse.txt
-+ Sends the oofa.txt file with its lines sorted in reverse order
-+ under the name "reverse.txt".
-+
-+ SET SEND FILTER {sort -r \v(filename)}
-+ SEND oofa.* \v(filename).reverse
-+ Sends all the oofa.* files with their lines sorted in reverse
-+ order; each file is sent under its own name but with ".reverse"
-+ appended to it.
-+
-+ SET SEND FILTER {tr "[a-z]" "[A-Z]" < \v(filename)}
-+ SEND *.txt
-+ Sends all ".txt" files under their own names, but uppercasing
-+ their contents.
-+
-+ Note that the SEND FILTER applies not only to files that are sent with
-+ SEND, MOVE, MSEND, etc, but also to files sent by the C-Kermit server
-+ in response to GET requests.
-+
-+ Examples for binary mode:
-+
-+ SET SEND FILTER {gzip -c \v(filename)}
-+ SEND /BINARY oofa.txt oofa.txt.gz
-+ Sends the oofa.txt file, compressed by gzip, as oofa.txt.gz.
-+
-+ SEND /BINARY /FILTER:{gzip -c \v(filename)} oofa.txt oofa.txt.gz
-+ As above, but the filter applies only to this SEND command.
-+
-+ SET SEND FILTER {gzip -c \v(filename)}
-+ SEND /BINARY oofa.* \fupper(\replace(\v(filename),.,_)).GZ
-+ Sends all the oofa.* files, compressed by gzip, each under its
-+ own name, but with the name uppercased, all periods within the
-+ name converted to underscores, and ".GZ" appended to it. So, for
-+ example, "oofa.txt" is sent as "OOFA_TXT.GZ".
-+
-+ In the gzip examples, note that the amount of data that is sent is
-+ normally less than the original file size because gzip compresses the
-+ file. But Kermit sends the original file size ahead in the attribute
-+ packet anyway (unless you tell it not too). Thus the transfer will
-+ probably appear to terminate early, e.g. when the receiver's
-+ file-transfer display thermometer is only at 40%. If this annoys you,
-+ tell Kermit to "set attribute length off". On the other hand, you can
-+ use the final position of the thermometer as a measure of the
-+ effectiveness of compression.
-+
-+4.2.3.2. The RECEIVE Filter
-+
-+ SET RECEIVE FILTER [ command ]
-+ This command specifies that the given command will be run on any
-+ file that is received before it is written to disk. The command
-+ may be, but need not be, enclosed in braces; if it is the braces
-+ are stripped before use. The following two commands are
-+ equivalent:
-+
-+ SET RECEIVE FILTER sort -r > \v(filename)
-+ SET RECEIVE FILTER {sort -r > \v(filename)}
-+
-+ The RECEIVE filter command may contain a "\v(filename)" sequence to be
-+ replaced by the incoming filename from the file header packet, but it
-+ is not required. However you must use it whenever your filter would
-+ normally write to Stdout, otherwise its output will be lost.
-+
-+ The RECEIVE filter command may contain one or more "\v(filename)"
-+ sequence to be replaced by the incoming filename from the file header
-+ packet, but it is not required. However you must use it whenever your
-+ filter would normally write to Stdout, otherwise its output will be
-+ lost.
-+
-+ RECEIVE /FILTER:command and GET /FILTER:command can also be used to
-+ specify a filter to be used for only one file-transfer operation.
-+
-+ UNIX examples for text mode:
-+
-+ SET RECEIVE FILTER lpr
-+ RECEIVE
-+ All the files that are received are sent to the default UNIX
-+ print spooler.
-+
-+ RECEIVE /FILTER:lpr
-+ Same as above, except the lpr filter is used only with this
-+ RECEIVE command.
-+
-+ RECEIVE lpr
-+ This is probably not what you want; it creates a file called
-+ lpr.
-+
-+ SET RECEIVE FILTER {sort -r > \v(filename)}
-+ RECEIVE
-+ Stores each incoming file with its lines sorted in reverse
-+ order, under its own name.
-+
-+ RECEIVE /FILTER:{sort -r > \v(filename)}
-+ As above, but the filter is used only for this RECEIVE command.
-+
-+ SET RECEIVE FILTER sort -r > \v(filename)
-+ RECEIVE reverse.txt
-+ Stores each incoming file with its lines sorted in reverse
-+ order, under the name "reverse.txt". The actual result depends
-+ on the FILE COLLISION setting. If it is OVERWRITE and multiple
-+ files arrive, then each incoming file destroys the previous one.
-+ If it is BACKUP (the default), filename conflicts are resolve by
-+ adding "version numbers" to the filenames: reverse.txt,
-+ reverse.txt.~1~, reverse.txt.~2~, etc.
-+
-+ SET RECEIVE FILTER sort -r > \v(filename)
-+ RECEIVE \v(filename).reverse
-+ Stores each incoming file with its lines sorted in reverse
-+ order, under the name it arrived with, but with ".reverse"
-+ appended to it.
-+
-+ SET RECEIVE FILTER sort -r > \v(filename)
-+ RECEIVE \flower(\v(filename)).reverse
-+ Like the previous example, but ensures that the filename is
-+ lowercase.
-+
-+ Examples for binary mode:
-+
-+ SET RECEIVE FILTER gunzip -c > \v(filename)
-+ RECEIVE
-+ This receives one or more presumably compressed file and
-+ uncompresses each one into a file having the same name it was
-+ sent with. For example, if the file is sent with the name
-+ OOFA.TXT.GZ, it is stored with that name, even after
-+ decompression.
-+
-+ SET RECEIVE FILTER gunzip -c > \v(filename)
-+ RECEIVE \flower(\fsubstring(\v(filename),1,\flength(\v(filename))-3))
-+ Like the previous example, but the resulting filename has its
-+ rightmost three characters removed from it and the remainder is
-+ lowercased. So if the incoming filename is OOFA.TXT.GZ, it is
-+ stored as oofa.txt after decompression.
-+
-+ Of course you don't want to type such long hideous commands, so we have
-+ also introduced several new functions:
-+
-+ \fstripx(string[,character])
-+ This function removes the rightmost segment of the string that
-+ starts with the given character. If no character is given,
-+ period (.) is used. Thus it is most conveniently used for
-+ stripping the extension from a filename (or the decimal portion
-+ from a floating-point number written in US/UK style). Examples:
-+
-+ \fstripx(OOFA.TXT.GZ) => OOFA.TXT
-+ \fstripx(OOFA.TXT.GZ,.) => OOFA.TXT
-+ \fstripx(OOFA.TXT.GZ,X) => OOFA.T
-+ \fstripx(\fstripx(OOFA.TXT.GZ)) => OOFA
-+ \fstripx($100.00) => $100
-+
-+ \fstripn(string,number)
-+ Removes the rightmost number characters from the string.
-+ Examples:
-+
-+ \fstripn(OOFA.TXT.GZ) => OOFA.TXT.GZ
-+ \fstripn(OOFA.TXT.GZ,3) => OOFA.TXT
-+ \fstripn(OOFA.TXT.GZ,7) => OOFA
-+
-+ \fstripb(string[,c1[,c2]])
-+ Strips enclosing matching braces, brackets, parentheses, or
-+ quotes from the string. The second argument, c1, specifies which
-+ kind of enclosure to look for; if not specified, any enclosing
-+ (), [], <>, {}, "", '', or `' are removed. If c1 is specified
-+ and c2 is not, then if c1 is an opening brace, bracket, or
-+ parenthesis, the matching closing one is supplied automatically
-+ as c2. If both c1 and c2 are specified, then to be stripped the
-+ string must begin with c1 and end with c2. If the string is not
-+ enclosed in the indicated manner, the result is the original
-+ string. Examples:
-+
-+ \fstripb("abc") => abc
-+ \fstripb([abc]) => abc
-+ \fstripb([abc) => [abc
-+ \fstripb(<abc>) => abc
-+ \fstripb(<abc>,[) => <abc>
-+ \fstripb((abc)) => abc
-+ \fstripb((abc),[) => (abc)
-+ \fstripb((abc),{(}) => abc
-+ \fstripb(+abc+) => +abc+
-+ \fstripb(+abc+,+) => abc
-+ \fstripb(+abc+,+,^) => +abc+
-+ \fstripb(+abc^,+,^) => abc
-+ \fstripb('abc') => abc
-+ \fstripb(`abc') => abc
-+ \fstripb(``abc'') => `abc'
-+ \fstripb(\fstripb(``abc'')) => abc
-+
-+ Notice the special syntax required for including a literal
-+ parenthesis in the argument list. As the last two examples
-+ illustrate, \fstripb() strips only one level at at a time;
-+ nesting can be used to strip a small fixed number of levels;
-+ loops can be used to strip larger or indeterminate numbers of
-+ levels.
-+
-+ \flop(string[,char])
-+ Removes the leftmost segment of the string that ends with the
-+ given character. If no character is given, period (.) is used.
-+ Examples:
-+
-+ \flop(OOFA.TXT.GZ) => TXT.GZ
-+ \flop(OOFA.TXT.GZ,.) => TXT.GZ
-+ \flop(OOFA.TXT.GZ,X) => T.GZ
-+
-+ To remove the leftmost number characters, just use
-+ \fsubstring(s,number+1). To return the rightmost number
-+ characters, use \fright(s,number).
-+
-+ So the hideous example:
-+
-+ receive \flower(\fsubstring(\v(filename),1,\flength(\v(filename))-3))
-+
-+ can now be written as:
-+
-+ receive \flower(\fstripx(\v(filename)))
-+
-+ That is, the filename stripped of its extension and then lowercased.
-+ This is not only shorter and less hideous, but also does not depend on
-+ the length of the extension being 3.
-+
-+ Note that when a receive filter is in effect, this overrides your FILE
-+ COLLISION setting, since Kermit has no way of knowing what the final
-+ destination filename will be (because it does not know, and can not be
-+ expected to know, the syntax of every version of every command shell on
-+ every platform on the planet).
-+
-+4.2.4. Implicit Use of Pipes
-+
-+ If you wish, C-Kermit can also examine incoming filenames to see if
-+ they start with "!", and if so, the subsequent text is treated as a
-+ command to read from or write to. For example, if a Kermit client is
-+ given the following command:
-+
-+ get {!finger | sort}
-+
-+ the server on the other end, if it supports this feature, will run the
-+ "finger" program, pipe its standard output to the "sort" program, and
-+ send sort's standard output back to you. Similarly, if you:
-+
-+ send oofa.txt !sort -r > oofa.new
-+
-+ or, equivalently:
-+
-+ send oofa.txt {!sort -r > oofa.new}
-+
-+ or:
-+
-+ send /as-name:{!sort -r > oofa.new} oofa.txt
-+
-+ this has the receiver send the contents of the incoming oofa.txt file
-+ to the sort program, which sorts the text in reverse order and stores
-+ the result in oofa.new.
-+
-+ This use of the exclamation mark should be familiar to UNIX users as
-+ the "bang" feature that lets you run an external application or command
-+ from within another application.
-+
-+ Kermit's "bang" feature is disabled by default, since it is not unheard
-+ for filenames to actually begin with "!". So if you want to use this
-+ feature, you must enable it with the following command:
-+
-+ SET TRANSFER PIPES { ON, OFF }
-+ ON enables the recognition of "!" notation in incoming filenames
-+ during file transfer as an indicator that the remaining text is
-+ the name of a command. OFF, the default, disables this feature
-+ and uses the text as a filename in the normal fashion. This
-+ command does NOT affect SEND /COMMAND, GET /COMMAND, CSEND, etc.
-+
-+ So using a combination of CSEND (SEND /COMMAND) and the "bang" feature,
-+ you can transfer a directory tree all in one command (assuming the
-+ remote Kermit supports pipe transfers and has them enabled):
-+
-+ CSEND {tar cf - . | gzip -c} {!gunzip -c | tar xf -}
-+
-+ or:
-+
-+ SEND /COMMAND:{tar cf - . | gzip -c} /as:{!gunzip -c | tar xf -}
-+
-+ Pay close attention to the syntax. Braces are needed around the command
-+ because it contains spaces; braces are needed around the as-name
-+ because it ends with "-". The as-name must begin with "!" or receiving
-+ Kermit will not recognize it as a command. The CSEND command must NOT
-+ begin with "!" unless you are running a command whose name really does
-+ start that character.
-+
-+ Similarly, you have a Kermit server send a directory tree to be
-+ unpacked on the client end:
-+
-+ CGET {!tar cf - . | gzip -c} {gunzip -c | tar xf -}
-+
-+ or:
-+
-+ GET /COMMAND {!tar cf - . | gzip -c} /as:{gunzip -c | tar xf -}
-+
-+ Notice how, in this case, the bang is required in the remote command,
-+ to distinguish it from a filename, but not in the local command, since
-+ by definition of CGET (or GET /COMMAND), it is known to be a command.
-+
-+ SEND and RECEIVE FILTERs supersede the bang feature. For example, if a
-+ file arrives under the name "!gunzip -c | tar xf -", but the receiving
-+ Kermit also has been given a command like:
-+
-+ set receive filter sort -r > \v(filename)
-+
-+ then the incoming data will be sorted rather than gunzipped.
-+
-+ Finally, if SET TRANSFER PIPES is ON (and in this case, this must be
-+ done in your C-Kermit initialization file), you can send from a pipe on
-+ the C-Kermit command line:
-+
-+ kermit -s "!finger | sort -r" -a userlist
-+
-+ In this case the "filename" contains spaces and so must be quoting
-+ using your shell's quoting rules.
-+
-+4.2.5. Success and Failure of Piped Commands
-+
-+ Commands or programs started by Kermit as a result of CSEND or CRECEIVE
-+ commands, CGET, SEND /COMMAND, REDIRECT commands (see [455]Section
-+ 4.2.8.2), implicit use of pipes, RUN commands, and so forth, should
-+ return their exit status codes to the Kermit command that caused them
-+ to be run, and therefore IF SUCCESS and IF FAILURE tests after these
-+ commands should work as expected. For example:
-+
-+ CSEND blah < filename
-+
-+ should fail if there is no command called "blah" or if there is no file
-+ called "filename". However, this is not foolproof and sometimes
-+ C-Kermit might think a command succeeded when it failed, or vice versa.
-+ This is most likely to happen when the highly system-dependent methods
-+ that Kermit must use to determine a command's exit status code do not
-+ supply the right information.
-+
-+ It can also happen because some commands might define success and
-+ failure differently from what you expect, or because you are using a
-+ pipeline composed of many commands, and one of them fails to pass
-+ failing exit status codes up the chain. The most likely culprit is the
-+ shell itself, which in most cases must be interposed between Kermit and
-+ any external program to be run.
-+
-+ In any case, you can examine the following variable to find out the
-+ exit status code returned to Kermit by the process most recently run by
-+ any command that runs external commands or programs, including CSEND,
-+ CRECEIVE, REDIRECT, RUN, etc:
-+
-+ \v(pexitstat)
-+
-+ In UNIX, Windows and OS/2, the value should be -2 if no command has
-+ been run yet, 0 if the most recent command succeeded, -1, -3, or -4 if
-+ there was an internal error, and a positive number returned by the
-+ command itself if the command failed. If the number is in the range
-+ 1-127, this is the program's exit status code. If it is 128 or greater,
-+ this is supposed to indicate that the command or program was
-+ interrupted or terminated from outside itself.
-+
-+ In Windows 95 and 98, the return values of the default shell are
-+ unreliable; various third-party shells can be used to work around this
-+ deficiency.
-+
-+ In VMS, it is the actual exit status code of the command that was run.
-+ This is an odd number if the command succeeded, and an even number if
-+ it failed. You can see the associated message as follows:
-+
-+ run write sys$output f$message(\v(pexitstat))
-+
-+ Or, more conveniently, use the new Kermit function:
-+
-+ echo \ferrstring(\v(pexitstat))
-+
-+ which converts a system error code (number) to the corresponding
-+ message.
-+
-+4.2.6. Cautions about Using Pipes to Transfer Directory Trees
-+
-+ Although utilities such as tar and zip/unzip might be available on
-+ different platforms (such as UNIX and Windows), this does not
-+ necessarily mean you can use them successfully to transfer directory
-+ trees between unlike platforms. For example:
-+
-+ CSEND {tar cf - . | gzip -c} {!gunzip -c | tar xf -}
-+
-+ when used from UNIX to Windows will have satisfactory results for
-+ binary files, but not for text files. UNIX text files have lines ending
-+ with Linefeed (LF) only, whereas Windows text files have lines ending
-+ in Carriage Return and Linefeed (CRLF). Thus any text files that were
-+ in the archive formed by the first tar command will be unpacked by the
-+ second tar command in their original form, and will display and print
-+ incorrectly in Windows (except in applications that have been
-+ explicitly coded to handle UNIX-format text files). On the other hand
-+ if you told gzip to use "text mode" to do record format conversion
-+ (assuming there was a way to tell it, as there is with most "zip"
-+ programs), this would destroy any binary files in the archive.
-+
-+ Furthermore, if the archive contains text files that are written in
-+ languages other than English, the "special" (accented and/or non-Roman)
-+ characters are NOT translated, and are therefore likely show up as
-+ gibberish on the target system. For example, West European languages
-+ are usually encoded in ISO Latin Alphabet 1 in UNIX, but in PC code
-+ page 850 on the PC. Capital A with acute accent is code point 193
-+ (decimal) Latin-1, but 181 in CP850. So A-acute in the UNIX file
-+ becomes Middle Box Bottom on the PC, and similarly for all the other
-+ special characters, and for all other languages -- Greek, Russian,
-+ Hebrew, Japanese, etc.
-+
-+ So when transferring text files between unlike platforms, you should
-+ use direct Kermit file transfers so Kermit can apply the needed
-+ record-format and character-set transformations. Use pipelines
-+ containing archivers like tar or zip only if all the files are binary
-+ or the two systems use the same record format and character set for
-+ text files.
-+
-+ Also see [456]Sections 4.3, [457]4.10, [458]4.11, and [459]4.15 for how
-+ to transfer directory trees between both like and unlike systems
-+ directly with Kermit.
-+
-+4.2.7. Pipes and Encryption
-+
-+ Of course pipelines could be used for encrypted file transfers,
-+ assuming proper precautions could be taken concerning the transmission
-+ of the key. But there is rarely a good way to do this. To illustrate
-+ using UNIX crypt:
-+
-+ csend {crypt key < filename} {!crypt key > filename}
-+
-+ Or, more ambitiously:
-+
-+ csend {tar cf - . | gzip -c | crypt key} {!crypt key | gunzip -c | tar xf -}
-+
-+ transmits the key in the file header packet as part of the (clear-text)
-+ remote command, defeating the entire purpose of encrypting the file
-+ data.
-+
-+ But if you are connected in terminal mode to the remote computer and
-+ type:
-+
-+ creceive {crypt key > filename}
-+
-+ at the remote Kermit prompt, you have also transmitted the key in clear
-+ text over the communications link.
-+
-+ At present, the only secure way to use CSEND and CRECEIVE with an
-+ encryption filter is to have a human operator at both ends, so the key
-+ does not have to be transmitted.
-+
-+ Theoretically it would be possible to use PGP software (Pretty Good
-+ Privacy, by Phil Zimmerman, Phil's Pretty Good Software) to avoid key
-+ transmission (since PGP uses separate public and private key and "lets
-+ you communicate securely with people you've never met, with no secure
-+ channels needed for prior exchange of keys"), but the specific method
-+ has yet to be worked out.
-+
-+ HINT: See the PGP User's Guide, e.g. at:
-+ [460]http://www.telstra.com.au/docs/PGP/
-+ Especially the topic "Using PGP as a UNIX-Style Filter":
-+ [461]http://www.telstra.com.au/docs/PGP/pgpdoc2/pgpdoc2_17.html
-+
-+ In any case, better and more convenient security options are now
-+ available: Kerberos authentication and encryption ([462]CLICK HERE for
-+ details) and the new ability to run C-Kermit "though" other
-+ communication programs, described in [463]Section 2.7.
-+
-+4.2.8. Commands and Functions Related to Pipes
-+
-+4.2.8.1. The OPEN !READ and OPEN !WRITE Commands
-+
-+ These are described in [464]Using C-Kermit, and are generally useful
-+ with reading output from commands that produce more than one line on
-+ their standard output, or writing multiple lines into commands that
-+ accept them on their standard input.
-+
-+ In C-Kermit 7.0 CLOSE !READ is accepted as a synonym for CLOSE READ,
-+ and CLOSE !WRITE for CLOSE WRITE.
-+
-+ Testing the success and failure of these commands, however, can be a
-+ bit tricky. Consider:
-+
-+ open !read lalaskjfsldkfjsldkfj
-+
-+ (where "lalaskjfsldkfjsldkfj" is neither a valid command nor the name
-+ of a program or script that can be run). OPEN !READ, in UNIX at least,
-+ translates this into execl(shellpath,shellname,"-c",command). This
-+ means it starts your preferred shell (e.g. from the SHELL environment
-+ variable) and asks it to execute the given command. It must be this
-+ way, because your command can be a either an internal shell command
-+ (which only your shell can execute) or an external command, which only
-+ your shell knows how to find (it knows your PATH and interprets, etc).
-+ Therefore unless OPEN !READ can't start your shell, it always succeeds.
-+
-+ Continuing with the nonexistent-command example:
-+
-+ C-Kermit> open !read lalaskjfsldkfjsldkfj
-+ C-Kermit> status
-+ SUCCESS
-+ C-Kermit> read line
-+ C-Kermit> status
-+ SUCCESS
-+ C-Kermit> echo "\m(line)"
-+ "bash: lalaskjfsldkfjsldkfj: command not found"
-+ C-Kermit> close read
-+ C-Kermit> status
-+ FAILURE
-+ C-Kermit>
-+
-+ In other words, the failure can not be detected on OPEN, since the OPEN
-+ command succeeds if it can start your shell. It can't be detected on
-+ READ, since all this does is read output from the shell, which in this
-+ case happens to be an error message. However, failure IS detected upon
-+ close, since this is the occasion upon which the shell gives Kermit its
-+ exit status code.
-+
-+ For an illustration of this situation, see [465]Section 2.14.
-+
-+4.2.8.2. The REDIRECT Command
-+
-+ A second method of I/O redirection is offered by the REDIRECT command.
-+ This is a rather advanced and tricky feature that is presently
-+ supported only in UNIX C-Kermit, in OS-9 C-Kermit, and in Kermit 95.
-+ Syntax:
-+
-+ REDIRECT command
-+ Runs the given command, sending its standard output to the
-+ current communications channel (SET LINE, SET PORT, or SET HOST
-+ connection), and reading its standard input from the same
-+ connection. Works only in local mode -- i.e. a connection is
-+ required -- and then only if the given command uses Standard
-+ I/O.
-+
-+ Example:
-+
-+ redirect finger
-+
-+ runs the local "finger" command and sends its output over the
-+ connection as plain text, where presumably there is a process set up to
-+ read it. Another example:
-+
-+ redirect finger | sort -r
-+
-+ shows the use of a pipeline.
-+
-+ Note: REDIRECT differs from CSEND/CRECEIVE in two important ways: (1)
-+ it does not use the Kermit protocol, and (2) it uses a bidirectional
-+ pipe rather than a one-way pipe.
-+
-+ The primary use of the REDIRECT command is to run external protocols,
-+ such as sz/rz in UNIX for ZMODEM, when they work over Standard I/O(*).
-+ Example:
-+
-+ set host xyzcorp.com
-+ (login, etc)
-+ redirect sz oofa.zip
-+
-+ lets you make a Telnet connection with C-Kermit and then do a ZMODEM
-+ transfer over it. ZMODEM protocol messages go both ways over the same
-+ connection simultaneously.
-+
-+ It is possible to use C-Kermit on UNIX as your PPP dialer and then to
-+ REDIRECT the connection to the PPP software, but C-Kermit 7.0 offers a
-+ better approach to PPP dialing in its new EXEC command ([466]Section
-+ 1.23).
-+
-+ In theory, you can also redirect an interactive process. For example,
-+ suppose you tell Kermit 95 to wait for an incoming TCP/IP connection:
-+
-+ set host * 3000
-+
-+ and then tell C-Kermit on UNIX to:
-+
-+ set host kermit95hostname 3000
-+ redirect ksh
-+
-+ and then tell Kermit 95 to CONNECT: now you are talking to the UNIX
-+ K-shell; you can give commands (pwd, ls, etc) and see the results. In
-+ practice, the K-shell's terminal modes are messed up because (a) it is
-+ not going through the Unix terminal driver, and (b) it is "smart" and
-+ knows it is being redirected, and so acts in a decidedly inhospitable
-+ manner (other applications like EMACS, vi, etc, simply refuse to run if
-+ their standard i/o has been redirected).
-+
-+ (*) The publicly-distributed sz/rz programs do not work as clients.
-+ However, Omen Technology does offer an up-to-date redirectable
-+ client XYZMODEM program called crzsz.
-+
-+4.2.8.3. Receiving Mail and Print Jobs
-+
-+ As of 7.0, and in UNIX only, files that are sent to C-Kermit as mail
-+ (when the other Kermit uses a MAIL or SEND /MAIL command) or to be
-+ printed (via REMOTE PRINT or SEND /PRINT) are now piped directly to the
-+ mail or print program, rather than written to temporary files and then
-+ mailed or printed and then deleted. This has the advantages of (a) not
-+ requiring a temporary file, and (b) allowing mail to have a proper
-+ subject in place of the filename. Temporary files were bad not only
-+ because they required (a) space, and (b) writeability of the current
-+ directory, but also because using them could result in wiping out an
-+ existing file. See [467]Section 4.7 for more about SEND /MAIL and SEND
-+ /PRINT.
-+
-+4.2.8.4. Pipe-Related Functions
-+
-+ The \fcommand(command) function runs the given shell or system command
-+ and returns the command's standard output as its value (with any
-+ newline characters stripped from the end), unless the result is too
-+ long, in which case it returns the empty string. The maximum length for
-+ the result is at least 1022 bytes, and it might be longer on some
-+ platforms. Examples (UNIX):
-+
-+ C-Kermit> echo "\fcommand(date)"
-+ "Fri Apr 18 13:31:42 1997"
-+ C-Kermit> echo "\fcommand(finger | wc -l)" ; how many users logged in?
-+ " 83"
-+ C-Kermit> evaluate \fcommand(finger | wc -l) * 2
-+ 166
-+ C-Kermit> echo Welcome to \fcommand(tty) on \fcommand(date)
-+ Welcome to /dev/ttyre on Fri Apr 18 13:31:42 1997
-+ C-Kermit> echo "\fcommand(ls oofa.*)"
-+ "oofa.c
-+ oofa.h
-+ oofa.o"
-+ C-Kermit> cd /directory-with-thousands-of-files
-+ C-Kermit> echo "\fcommand(ls -l)" ; This would be too long
-+ ""
-+ C-Kermit>
-+
-+ If a command's output would be too long, you can use the other, more
-+ laborious method of reading from a command: OPEN !READ command, READ
-+ each line, CLOSE !READ.
-+
-+ The \frawcommand(command) function is identical to \fcommand(command),
-+ except it does not remove trailing newline characters:
-+
-+ C-Kermit> echo "\frawcommand(date)"
-+ "Fri Apr 18 13:31:42 1997
-+ "
-+ C-Kermit> echo "\frawcommand(ls oofa.*)"
-+ "oofa.c
-+ oofa.h
-+ oofa.o
-+ "
-+ C-Kermit>
-+
-+ Use \frawcommand() if you want to retain the final line terminators, or
-+ if the command's output is "binary". But remember that if the result of
-+ this (or any other) function contains any NUL (ASCII code 0)
-+ characters, the first NUL will terminate the result string because this
-+ is how C strings work (it's "C-Kermit", remember?).
-+
-+ These functions are useful not only locally, but also in the
-+ client/server arena. If you need to get the results from a system
-+ command on the server end into a variable on the client end, just do:
-+
-+ [ remote ] query kermit command(date)
-+
-+ The result is in the local \v(query) variable; see [468]Using C-Kermit,
-+ 2nd Ed., pp.359-360 for details.
-+
-+4.3. Automatic Per-File Text/Binary Mode Switching
-+
-+ When transferring files between like systems (e.g. UNIX-to-UNIX),
-+ binary mode can be used for all files unless character-set translation
-+ is needed, and in fact Kermit programs of recent vintage recognize each
-+ others' platforms and switch to binary mode automatically when it is
-+ appropriate (e.g. DOS to OS/2, or UNIX to UNIX). (Exception: LABELED
-+ mode is chosen for VMS-to-VMS and OS/2-to-OS/2 transfers so complex
-+ file formats can be preserved.)
-+
-+ On a client/server connection between like systems, the transfer mode
-+ is currently determined by the file sender, rather than always by the
-+ client. If the client is sending, it controls the transfer mode. If a
-+ GET command is sent to the server, the server sends all files in binary
-+ mode if its TRANSFER CHARACTER-SET is TRANSPARENT; otherwise it uses
-+ text mode for text files (according to its text-pattern list) and
-+ binary mode for binary files. Of course, the client can control the
-+ server's transfer character-set with the REMOTE SET TRANSFER
-+ CHARACTER-SET command.
-+
-+ When transferring files between unlike systems, however, (e.g.
-+ UNIX-to-DOS), some files (such as executable program images) must be
-+ transferred in binary mode but others (such as plain-text files) must
-+ be transferred in text mode so their record format and character sets
-+ can be appropriately converted. If a binary file is transferred in text
-+ mode, it is ruined. If a text file is transferred in binary mode, then
-+ at the very least, its format can be incorrect; at worst it is also
-+ corrupted because its character set was not converted (in extreme cases
-+ the corruption is total, e.g. because one system is ASCII-based and the
-+ other EBCDIC).
-+
-+4.3.1. Exceptions
-+
-+ VMS C-Kermit, when sending files to a non-VMS system, switches to text
-+ or binary mode automatically for each file, based on the record format
-+ in the file's directory entry; thus the mechanisms described in this
-+ section do not apply to VMS C-Kermit, yet the effect is the same:
-+ automatic text/binary mode switching when VMS C-Kermit is sending
-+ files. See the VMS Appendix of [469]Using C-Kermit for details.
-+
-+ Kermit versions that support LABELED or IMAGE transfer mode are
-+ likewise not affected by this feature when one of those modes is
-+ selected (normally used only when transferring between like systems).
-+
-+ Kermit versions that support file-transfer pipes and filters are not
-+ affected by this feature when pipes or filters are used, since the
-+ output of a pipe or filter (such as gzip) is likely to require transfer
-+ in a different mode than the original file.
-+
-+ Finally, SEND /TEXT or SEND /BINARY will force files to be sent in the
-+ indicated mode, overriding all automatic transfer-mode-choosing
-+ mechanisms.
-+
-+4.3.2. Overview
-+
-+ Suppose you give C-Kermit a command like:
-+
-+ SEND *.*
-+
-+ And suppose the pattern *.* matches a mixture of text files (such as
-+ program source code) and binary files (such os object modules or
-+ executable programs).
-+
-+ C-Kermit 6.0 and earlier (except on VMS) send all files in the same
-+ mode: whatever you said in your most recent SET FILE TYPE command, or
-+ else whatever mode was chosen automatically according to the rules on
-+ page 236 of Using C-Kermit, 2nd Ed.
-+
-+ But when text and binary files are mixed in the same group, and the
-+ files are being transferred to an unlike system (e.g. UNIX to IBM
-+ Mainframe), this results in corruption of either all the text files or
-+ all the binary files.
-+
-+ Stream-oriented file systems such as in UNIX and DOS do not record any
-+ information about the file to tell us whether the file should be
-+ transferred in binary or text mode, making it impossible to select the
-+ transfer mode for each file in a group automatically with any
-+ certainty.
-+
-+ However, we can use some fairly-well established file naming
-+ conventions for this purpose. C-Kermit 7.0 lets you provide lists of
-+ filename patterns that are used to separately determine the file type
-+ for each individual file being transfered. A pattern is a string,
-+ possibly containing the special characters "*" (asterisk, which matches
-+ any string of zero of more characters) and/or "?" (question mark, which
-+ matches any single character). For example "a*b" matches all files
-+ whose names start with "a" and end with "b", such as "ab", "arb",
-+ "ababababab", etc, but not "abba". And "a?b" matches any file whose
-+ name starts with "a", ends with "b", and is exactly 3 characters long.
-+
-+ NOTE: When typing commands at the C-Kermit prompt, you must prefix
-+ "?" with \ to override its normal function of giving help.
-+
-+ (Also see [470]Section 4.9 for additional pattern-matching notations
-+ that might be available in your version of C-Kermit.)
-+
-+ When you have specified filename recognition patterns, C-Kermit can
-+ transfer the ones whose names match any of the binary-mode patterns in
-+ binary mode, and those with names that match any of the text-mode
-+ patterns in text mode, and those whose names match neither in the
-+ prevailing mode you have chosen, or that was chosen automatically via
-+ peer recognition.
-+
-+4.3.3. Commands
-+
-+ SET FILE PATTERNS { ON, OFF, AUTO }
-+ This tells Kermit whether to do per-file filename
-+ pattern-matching to determine text or binary mode. The normal
-+ and default setting is AUTO, which means to use pattern lists to
-+ switch transfer mode only when it is certain that the other
-+ Kermit program supports automatic notification of transfer mode
-+ (via Attribute packets) on a per-file basis (this information is
-+ obtained automatically during protocol startup negotiation). ON
-+ means to always determine the transfer mode from the filename
-+ and pattern list when sending files. Use OFF to disable this
-+ feature (without resetting your pattern lists). Also note that
-+ if you have selected LABELED file transfer (SET FILE TYPE
-+ LABELED), this takes precedence over filename-matching patterns
-+ and all files are sent in labeled mode.
-+
-+ SET TRANSFER MODE MANUAL
-+ Disables the use of filename patterns, no matter what the FILE
-+ PATTERNS setting.
-+
-+ REMOTE SET TRANSFER MODE MANUAL
-+ Client command to disable automatic transfer mode, and therefore
-+ also filename patterns, in the server. Synonym: REMOTE SET XFER
-+ MODE MANUAL.
-+
-+ { GET, SEND, etc } { /BINARY, /TEXT }
-+ Including a /BINARY or /TEXT (or, where supported, /IMAGE or
-+ /LABELED) switch with a file-transfer command changes the
-+ transfer mode to manual for that command only, and therefore
-+ disables patterns that that command.
-+
-+ SET FILE BINARY-PATTERNS [ pattern [ pattern [ pattern ... ] ] ]
-+ A list of zero or more patterns, separated by spaces (not
-+ commas). Letters in a pattern are case-sensitive if the
-+ underlying filenames are case sensitive (as in UNIX), and
-+ case-insensitive otherwise (as in Windows). If a file's name is
-+ matched by any pattern in the list and SET FILE PATTERNS is ON,
-+ the file is sent in binary mode. Examples:
-+
-+ SET FILE BINARY-PATTERNS *.gz *.Z *.tar *.zip *.o *.so *.a *.out ; UNIX
-+ SET FILE BINARY-PATTERNS *.EXE *.ZIP *.OBJ *.COM ; DOS or OS/2 or Windows
-+
-+ If a pattern contains spaces, enclose it in braces.
-+
-+ SET FILE TEXT-PATTERNS [ pattern [ pattern [ pattern ... ] ] ]
-+ Like SET FILE BINARY-PATTERNS, but the patterns choose text
-+ files rather than binary ones. Examples:
-+
-+ SET FILE TEXT-PATTERNS *.TXT *.KSC *.HTM* *.BAT ; DOS, Windows, OS/2
-+
-+ ADD BINARY-PATTERNS [ pattern [ pattern [ pattern ... ] ] ]
-+ Adds one or more patterns to the BINARY-PATTERN list.
-+
-+ ADD TEXT-PATTERNS [ pattern [ pattern [ pattern ... ] ] ]
-+ Adds one or more patterns to the TEXT-PATTERN list.
-+
-+ REMOVE BINARY-PATTERNS [ pattern [ pattern [ pattern ... ] ] ]
-+ Removes one or more patterns from the BINARY-PATTERN list. The
-+ given patterns are matched with the ones in the BINARY-PATTERNS
-+ list with case sensitivity if the underlying file system has
-+ case-sensitive names (as do UNIX and OS-9), otherwise with case
-+ independence.
-+
-+ REMOVE TEXT-PATTERNS [ pattern [ pattern [ pattern ... ] ] ]
-+ Removes one or more patterns from the TEXT-PATTERN list.
-+
-+ SHOW PATTERNS
-+ Displays the current pattern selections.
-+
-+ Whenever you give a SET FILE BINARY-PATTERNS or SET FILE TEXT-PATTERNS
-+ command, the previous list is replaced. If you give one of these
-+ commands without a pattern list, the previous list is removed.
-+
-+ When patterns are active and files are being sent, text patterns (if
-+ any) are applied first (but only if not RESENDing and not sending in
-+ LABELED mode), then binary patterns, so if the same pattern appears in
-+ both lists, binary mode is chosen.
-+
-+4.3.4. Examples
-+
-+ Here's an example that might be used when sending files from UNIX:
-+
-+ set file type binary
-+ set file text-patterns *.c *.h *.w *.txt makefile
-+ set file binary-patterns *.o
-+ msend makefile wermit wart ck*.[cwho] ck*.txt
-+
-+ Note that "wermit" and "wart" do not match any patterns so they are
-+ sent in the prevailing mode, which is binary. Also note the use of
-+ "makefile" as a pattern that does not contain any wildcard characters
-+ (there is no other convention to distinguish among "wermit" and "wart",
-+ which are binary executables, and "makefile", which is a text file,
-+ purely by their names).
-+
-+ Most C-Kermit implementations have a default pattern list built in,
-+ which includes patterns that are almost certain to succeed in picking
-+ the right transfer mode. Others are omitted due to ambiguity. For
-+ example ".hlp", and ".ini" are generally binary types in Windows but
-+ text types everywhere else.
-+
-+ NOTE: ".doc", used for decades to denote plain-text documentation
-+ files, now more often than not denotes a Microsoft Word Document, so
-+ ".doc" is now considered a binary type since it does less harm to
-+ transfer a plain-text document in binary mode than it does to
-+ transfer an MS Word file in text mode (except when IBM mainframes
-+ are involved!)
-+
-+ ANOTHER NOTE: ".com" files are binary in DOS-like operating systems,
-+ but they are text (DCL command procedures) in VMS. VMS C-Kermit
-+ sends .COM files in text mode; K95 sends them in binary mode. If you
-+ download a .COM file from VMS to DOS or Windows, and then upload it
-+ to another VMS system, be sure to use SEND /TEXT to preserve its
-+ textness.
-+
-+ You can see the default pattern list by starting C-Kermit without its
-+ initialization file (e.g. "kermit -Y") and using the SHOW PATTERNS
-+ command. If you will be depending on this feature, be sure to examine
-+ the list carefully in conjunction with the applications that you use.
-+
-+ The default pattern list does not take "backup files" into account
-+ because (a) people usually don't want to transfer them; and (b) it
-+ would make the pattern lists more than twice as long. For example, we
-+ would need to include both *.txt and *.txt.~[0-9]*~ for ".txt" files,
-+ and similarly for all the others. Instead, you can use SEND /NOBACKUP
-+ (or SET SEND BACKUP OFF) to skip over all backup files.
-+
-+ Put your most commonly-used safe pattern declarations in your C-Kermit
-+ customization file (ckermod.ini, .mykermrc, k95custom.ini, etc).
-+
-+ As noted, SET FILE PATTERNS is ON by default. Sometimes, however, it is
-+ desirable, or necessary, to force files to be sent in a particular
-+ mode, and often this must be done from the command line (e.g. when
-+ using Kermit as a download helper in a Web browser like Lynx). The -V
-+ command-line options is equivalent to SET FILE PATTERNS OFF and SET
-+ TRANSFER MODE MANUAL. Example:
-+
-+ kermit -Vis oofa.txt
-+
-+ forces oofa.txt to be sent in binary mode, even though ".txt" might
-+ match a text pattern.
-+
-+4.4. File Permissions
-+
-+ "Permissions" refers to a code associated with a file that specifies
-+ who is allowed to access it, and in what manner. For example, the
-+ owner, the members of one or more groups, the system administrator, and
-+ everybody else, might be allowed various combinations of Read, Write,
-+ Append, Execute, or Listing access.
-+
-+ The permission code goes by different names on different platforms. In
-+ UNIX, it might be called the filemode. In VMS, it is called the file
-+ protection (or protection mask).
-+
-+ The comments in this section presently apply only to the UNIX and VMS
-+ versions of C-Kermit, to which these features were added in version
-+ 7.0; the DOS, Windows, and OS/2 file systems embody no notions of
-+ protection, and so MS-DOS Kermit and Kermit 95 do not send file
-+ permissions, and ignore them when received.
-+
-+ The permissions for a received file are determined by a combination of
-+ the file transfer mode (VMS-to-VMS transfers only), whether a file of
-+ the same name exists already, whether permissions of the file are
-+ received in the file attribute packet, and the setting of ATTRIBUTES
-+ PROTECTION.
-+
-+ The default for ATTRIBUTES PROTECTION is ON. If no attributes are
-+ received, the effect is the same as if attributes PROTECTION were OFF.
-+
-+ For VMS-to-VMS transfers, the default LABELED mode simply copies the
-+ protection code from source to destination.
-+
-+4.4.1. When ATTRIBUTES PROTECTION is OFF
-+
-+ If no file of the same name exists, system defaults determine the
-+ permissions of the new file. Otherwise, the actions taken depend on the
-+ current FILE COLLISION setting: BACKUP, OVERWRITE, RENAME, etc, as
-+ documented in [471]Using C-Kermit. But now the new file (if it is
-+ created at all) automatically inherits the permissions (mode bits) of
-+ the existing file in a way that is appropriate for the platform.
-+
-+4.4.1.1. Unix
-+
-+ All mode bits are inherited except the directory bit, since the
-+ incoming file can not possibly be a directory. (In any case, it is not
-+ possible to receive a file that has the same name as an existing
-+ directory unless FILE COLLISION is set to RENAME).
-+
-+4.4.1.2. VMS
-+
-+ Files with the same name as an existing file, transferred in modes
-+ other than LABELED between VMS systems, inherit the protection of the
-+ prior version.
-+
-+4.4.2 When ATTRIBUTES PROTECTION is ON
-+
-+ File permissions can be conveyed as part of the file transfer process,
-+ in accordance with the Kermit protocol definition. If the file sender
-+ puts system-dependent and/or system-independent versions of the file
-+ protection (permissions) into the Attribute (A) packet, the file
-+ receiver can set the new file's permissions from them. Otherwise, the
-+ permissions are set the same as for ATTRIBUTES PROTECTION OFF.
-+
-+ When the incoming A packet contains system-dependent permissions, the
-+ file receiver checks to see if the sender has the same system ID (e.g.
-+ both the sending and receiving systems are UNIX, or both are VMS); if
-+ so, it decodes and uses the system-dependent permissions; otherwise it
-+ uses the generic ones (if any) and applies them to the owner field,
-+ setting the other fields appropriately as described in the following
-+ sections.
-+
-+ Setting the incoming file's protection from the A packet is controlled
-+ by SET ATTRIBUTES PROTECTION (or PERMISSION), which is ON by default,
-+ and its status is displayed by SHOW ATTRIBUTES.
-+
-+ The main benefit of this feature is to not have to "chmod +x" an
-+ executable file after transfer from UNIX to UNIX. Its cross-platform
-+ benefits are less evident, perhaps to retain the status of the Unix 'x'
-+ bit on a VMS system, for subsequent transfer back to a Unix system.
-+
-+4.4.2.1. System-Specific Permissions
-+
-+ System-specific file permissions are used when the two Kermit programs
-+ recognize each other as running on the same type of system. For
-+ example, both are running under some form of UNIX (it doesn't matter
-+ which UNIX variation -- HP-UX, Solaris, AIX, etc -- all use the same
-+ scheme for file permissions); or both are running under VMS (even if
-+ one is on an Alpha and the other on a VAX, and/or one is old and the
-+ other is new).
-+
-+4.4.2.1.1. UNIX
-+
-+ UNIX supports three categories of users, File Owner, Group, and World,
-+ and three types of file access permission: Read, Write, and Execute.
-+ Thus, a UNIX file's permissions are expressed in 9 bits.
-+
-+ The system-dependent permission string for UNIX is a 3-digit octal
-+ string, the low-order 9 bits of the st_mode member of the stat struct;
-+ we deliberately chop off the "file format" bits because they are not
-+ permissions, nor do we convey the setuid/setgid bits, lock bit, sticky
-+ bit, etc.
-+
-+4.4.2.1.2. VMS
-+
-+ VMS supports four categories of users, System, File Owner, Group, and
-+ World, and four types of file access permission: Read, Write, Execute,
-+ and Delete. Thus, a VMS file's permissions are expressed in 16 bits.
-+
-+ The system-dependent protection string for VMS is a 4-digit hexadecimal
-+ string, corresponding to the internal-format protection word of the
-+ file (RWED for each of World,Group,Owner,System). A new file normally
-+ gets all 16 protection bits from the original file of the same name.
-+
-+ Note: VMS-to-VMS transfers take place in LABELED mode when the two
-+ C-Kermits recognize each other's platform as VMS (unless you have
-+ disabled LABELED-mode transfers). In this case, all of a file's
-+ attributes are preserved in the transfer and the protection mask (and
-+ other information) is taken from the file's internal information, and
-+ this takes precedence over any information in the Attribute packets.
-+ You can defeat the automatic switching into LABELED mode (if you want
-+ to) with SET TRANSFER MODE MANUAL.
-+
-+4.4.2.2. System-Independent Permissions
-+
-+ The system-independent ("generic") protection is used when the system
-+ IDs of the two Kermit programs do not agree (e.g. one is UNIX, the
-+ other is VMS). The generic protection attribute includes the following
-+ permissions (not all are applicable to every file system): Read, Write,
-+ Append, Execute, Delete, Search. The generic permissions are derived
-+ from the owner permissions of the source file, thus, a Unix 'w'
-+ permission becomes VMS Write,Delete.
-+
-+ The Owner field of the new file's permissions is set from the incoming
-+ generic protection attribute.
-+
-+ In UNIX, the Group and World permissions are set according to your
-+ umask, except that execute permission is NOT set in these fields if it
-+ was not also set in the generic protection (and consequently, is set in
-+ the Owner field).
-+
-+ In VMS, the System, Group, and World permissions are set according to
-+ the process default file permission (as shown in VMS by SHOW
-+ PROTECTION), except that no permissions are allowed in these fields
-+ that are not included in the generic permissions.
-+
-+ Note that the VMS and UNIX interpretations of Execute permission are
-+ not identical. In UNIX, a file (binary executable, shell script, etc)
-+ may not be executed unless it has Execute permission, and normally
-+ files that are not intended for execution do not have Execute
-+ permission. In VMS, Read permission implicitly supplies Execute
-+ capability. Generally files that have Read permission also have
-+ explicit Execute permission, but files (binary executables, DCL command
-+ procedures) that have Read permission and not Execute permission can
-+ still be executed.
-+
-+4.5. File Management Commands
-+
-+4.5.1. The DIRECTORY Command
-+
-+ Prior to C-Kermit 7.0, the DIRECTORY command always ran an external
-+ system command (such as "ls" on UNIX) or program to product the
-+ directory listing. This had certain advantages, mostly that you could
-+ include system-dependent options for customized listings, e.g. on UNIX:
-+
-+ dir -lt c* | more
-+
-+ or in VMS:
-+
-+ directory /size/date/protection/except=*.obj oofa.*;0
-+
-+ This approach, however, carries some disadvantages: C-Kermit can't
-+ return SUCCESS or FAILURE status for (e.g.) "dir foo" according to
-+ whether the file "foo" exists; and it runs an inferior process, which
-+ might be a problem in some environments for resource and/or security
-+ reasons, and won't work at all in a "nopush" environment (e.g. one in
-+ which C-Kermit is configured to forbid access to exterior commands and
-+ programs, e.g. in a VMS "captive account").
-+
-+ In C-Kermit 7.0 on VMS and UNIX, and in K95 1.1.19 and later, the
-+ DIRECTORY command is internal to Kermit. It can be run in a "nopush"
-+ environment and returns SUCCESS or FAILURE status appropriately. In
-+ UNIX it prints all dates and times in a consistent way (unlike ls). In
-+ VMS it prints precise file sizes, rather than "blocks". It offers
-+ several formatting and other options, but it is not necessarily more
-+ flexible than the corresponding external commands or programs (the UNIX
-+ "ls" program, the VMS "directory" command). The syntax is:
-+
-+ DIRECTORY [ switch [ switch [ ... ] ] ] [ filespec ]
-+
-+ If no filespec is given, all files in the current directory are listed.
-+
-+ Optional switches include all the standard file-selection switches
-+ presented in [472]Section 1.5.4, plus:
-+
-+ /ALL
-+ Show both regular files and directories; this is the default.
-+
-+ /ARRAY:x
-+ Instead of displaying a directory listing, put the files that
-+ would have been shown (based on the filespec and other selection
-+ switches) in the given array. The array need not (and should
-+ not) be predeclared; if the array already exists, it is
-+ destroyed and reused. The array name can be a single letter,
-+ like "a", or any fuller form, such as "&a", "\&a", "\&a[]", etc.
-+ If the /ARRAY switch is included, the following other switches
-+ are ignored: /BRIEF, /VERBOSE, /HEADING, /PAGE, /ENGLISHDATE,
-+ /ISODATE, /XFERMODE, /MESSAGE, /SORT, /REVERSE, /ASCENDING. In
-+ other words, only file selection switches are meaningful with
-+ /ARRAY: /FILES, /DIRECTORIES, /ALL, /DOTFILES, /NOBACKUP,
-+ /RECURSIVE, /SMALLER, /LARGER, /AFTER, /BEFORE, /EXCEPT, etc.
-+ The resulting array has the number of files (n) as its 0th
-+ element, and the filenames in elements 1 through n Example:
-+
-+ dir /array:&a /files /nobackup /after:19990101 /larger:10000 [ab]*
-+ show array &a
-+
-+ /FILES
-+ Only show regular files.
-+
-+ /DIRECTORIES
-+ Only show directories.
-+
-+ /BACKUP
-+ In UNIX, OS-9, K-95, and other versions that support SET FILE
-+ COLLISION BACKUP and create backup files by appending .~n~ to
-+ the filename (where "n" is a number), /BACKUP means to include
-+ these files in directory listings. This is the default.
-+
-+ /NOBACKUP
-+ This is the opposite of /BACKUP: that is, do not include backup
-+ files in the listing.
-+
-+ /BRIEF
-+ List filenames only; use a compact format, as many filenames as
-+ will fit across the screen (based on the longest name). A brief
-+ listing is always sorted alphabetically.
-+
-+ /VERBOSE
-+ List one file per line, and include date, size, and (in UNIX
-+ only) permissions of each file. This is the opposite of /BRIEF,
-+ and is the default.
-+
-+ /PAGE
-+ Pause at the end of each screenful and give a "more?" prompt,
-+ even if SET COMMAND MORE-PROMPTING is OFF.
-+
-+ /NOPAGE
-+ Don't pause at the end of each screenful and give a "more?"
-+ prompt, even if SET COMMAND MORE-PROMPTING is ON. If neither
-+ /PAGE or /NOPAGE is given, paging is according to the prevailing
-+ COMMAND MORE-PROMPTING setting (which can be displayed with SHOW
-+ COMMAND).
-+
-+ /ENGLISHDATE
-+ Show dates in dd-mmm-yyyy format; mmm is the first three letters
-+ of the English month name.
-+
-+ /ISODATE
-+ Show dates in yyyy-mm-dd format; mm is the month number, 1-12.
-+ This is the opposite of /ENGLISHDATE, and is the default.
-+
-+ /HEADINGS
-+ Print a heading before the listing and a summary at the end.
-+
-+ /NOHEADINGS
-+ Don't print a heading before the listing or a summary at the
-+ end. This is the opposite of /HEADINGS, and is the default.
-+
-+ /XFERMODE
-+ Only in Kermit programs that support SET FILE PATTERNS. If this
-+ switch is included, and the filename matches any FILE
-+ BINARY-PATTERN ([473]Section 4.3), "(B)" is printed after the
-+ filename; otherwise, if it matches a FILE TEXT-PATTERN, "(T)" is
-+ printed.
-+
-+ /NOXFERMODE
-+ Don't display transfer-mode indicators. This is the opposite of
-+ /XFERMODE and is the default.
-+
-+ /RECURSIVE
-+ Show files not only in the given directory, but also in its
-+ subdirectories (if any), their subdirectories, etc.
-+
-+ /NORECURSIVE
-+ Don't show files in subdirectories. This is the opposite of
-+ /RECURSIVE, and is the default.
-+
-+ /MESSAGE:text
-+ This lets you specify a short text string to be appended to the
-+ end of each directory listing line (a space is supplied
-+ automatically). If the text contains any spaces, enclose it in
-+ braces, e.g. /MESSAGE:{two words}.
-+
-+ /NOMESSAGE
-+ Don't append any message to the end of each directory listing
-+ line (default).
-+
-+ /SORT:[{NAME,SIZE,DATE}]
-+ Sort the listing by name, size, or date. If the /SORT switch is
-+ given but the "sort-by" keyword is omitted, the listing is
-+ sorted by name. /SORT:NAME /ASCENDING (alphabetic sort by name)
-+ is the default.
-+
-+ /NOSORT
-+ Don't sort the listing. Files are listed in whatever order they
-+ are supplied by the operating system, e.g. inode order in UNIX.
-+
-+ /REVERSE
-+ If the /SORT switch is given, reverse the order of the sort.
-+ Synonym: /DESCENDING.
-+
-+ /ASCENDING
-+ If the /SORT switch is given, sort the listing in normal order.
-+ This is the opposite of /REVERSE and is the default.
-+
-+ Note that most of the DIRECTORY-specific switches come in pairs, in
-+ which one member of a pair (e.g. /NOHEADINGS) is the opposite of the
-+ other (e.g. /HEADINGS).
-+
-+ If you always want to use certain options, you can set them with the
-+ SET OPTIONS DIRECTORY command ([474]Section 1.5.5). Use SHOW OPTIONS to
-+ list the options currently in effect. To make the desired options apply
-+ every time you run C-Kermit, put a SET OPTIONS DIRECTORY command in
-+ your C-Kermit customization file, specifying the desired options.
-+ Options set in this manner apply to every subsequent DIRECTORY command.
-+ Of course, if you include switches in a DIRECTORY command, these
-+ override any defaults, built-in or custom. Example:
-+
-+ DIRECTORY ; Use "factory defaults"
-+ SET OPTIONS DIRECTORY /SORT:SIZE /REVERSE /HEADINGS ; Customize defaults
-+ DIRECTORY ; Use customized defaults
-+ DIR /SORT:NAME ; Override customized default SORT key
-+ SET OPT DIR /RECURS ; Add /RECURSIVE to customized defaults
-+ DIR /ASCEND ; Override customized default SORT order
-+
-+ Notes:
-+
-+ * Only a single sort key is supported; there is presently no way to
-+ have multiple sort keys.
-+ * If the /BRIEF switch is given, all other switches (except
-+ /[NO]RECURSIVE, /[NO]DOTFILES, /DIRECTORIES, /FILES, and /ALL) are
-+ ignored.
-+ * /SORT:anything gives incorrect results if any files have lengths
-+ greater than 10 digits (i.e. that are more than 9999999999 bytes
-+ long, i.e. if they are 10GB or more in size) because the overlong
-+ length field causes the date and name fields to be misaligned.
-+ * /SORT:NAME is redundant in VMS since VMS returns filenames in
-+ alphabetic order anyway.
-+ * /SORT:NAME ignores alphabetic case on platforms where case does not
-+ matter in filenames, but this works only for unaccented Roman
-+ letters A-Z.
-+ * /SORT:NAME is currently based on code values, and so works fine for
-+ ASCII, but will probably produce unexpected results for files with
-+ non-ASCII or 8-bit characters in their names. (Locale-based sorting
-+ raises rather significant issues of portability, size, performance,
-+ etc.)
-+ * /SORT:DATE works right only for ISO-format dates, not English ones.
-+ * /SORT:SIZE sorts the size field lexically. On some platforms (e.g.
-+ Windows), the size of a directory file is listed as "<DIR>" rather
-+ than as a number; in this case, the "<DIR>" files are gathered at
-+ the end (or beginning, depending on the sort order) of the listing.
-+ * /RECURSIVE is accepted but ignored in AOS/VS. Use the normal
-+ system-specific filespec notation, e.g. "dir #.txt".
-+ * /RECURSIVE has no affect when a full, absolute pathname is given;
-+ e.g. "dir /recursive /tmp/foo" (where "foo" is a regular file) only
-+ shows the "/tmp/foo" file. If you want to see all "foo" files in
-+ the /tmp tree, do "cd /tmp" and then "dir /recursive foo".
-+ * If a file size of -1 is shown, or date-time of 0000-00-00 00:00:00,
-+ this means the file was located, but access to information about
-+ the file was denied to C-Kermit.
-+ * In VMS, if FOO.DIR;1 is a directory within your current directory,
-+ "directory foo" and "directory [.foo]" list the files in the [.FOO]
-+ subdirectory, but "directory foo.dir" lists the directory file
-+ itself; similarly for "*.dir" versus "[.*]", etc.
-+ * In UNIX, if "foo" is a directory within your current directory,
-+ "directory foo" lists the files in the foo directory. If you want
-+ to list the foo directory file itself, put an asterisk at the end:
-+ "dir foo*".
-+
-+ Hint: How to find the biggest files in a directory tree:
-+
-+ cd xxx ; (root of tree)
-+ directory /sort:size /recursive /reverse /dotfiles /page
-+
-+ Another hint: If you often use several different directory-listing
-+ formats, define macro shortcuts for them:
-+
-+ DEFINE WD DIRECTORY /SORT:DATE /REVERSE \%* ; Reverse chronological order
-+ DEFINE SD DIRECTORY /SORT:SIZE /REVERSE \%* ; Reverse order of size
-+ DEFINE ND DIRECTORY /SORT:NAME /ASCEND \%* ; Alphabetical by name
-+ DEFINE DL DIR /DIR /SORT:NAME /ASCEND \%* ; Alphabetical directory list
-+
-+ Put these definitions in your C-Kermit customization file. Note that
-+ "\%*" ([475]Section 7.5) in these definitions lets you include other
-+ switches in your macro invocations, e.g.:
-+
-+ wd /headings *.txt
-+
-+ Of course you can still access your external directory listing program
-+ by using RUN or "!", e.g. in VMS:
-+
-+ run directory /size/date/protection/except=*.obj oofa.*;0
-+
-+ or:
-+
-+ !dir /size/date/prot/exc=*.obj oofa.*;0
-+
-+ In UNIX, use "!ls" or just "ls" (which is a special synonym for "!ls").
-+
-+4.5.2. The CD and BACK Commands
-+
-+ In C-Kermit 7.0, the CD command has a new friend, the BACK command.
-+ BACK means "CD to my previous current directory". A second BACK brings
-+ you back to where you were before the first one; thus successive BACK
-+ commands switch back and forth between two directories.
-+
-+4.5.2.1. Parsing Improvements
-+
-+ The CD command, as well as other commands that parse a directory name,
-+ were changed in 7.0 to provide all the expected functions: completion
-+ on Tab or Esc, directory-name lists on ?, etc. Other affected commands
-+ include SET SERVER GET-PATH, SET TEMP-DIRECTORY, SET FILE
-+ DOWNLOAD-DIRECTORY, and SPACE. CD and REMOTE CD also now work with
-+ logical names.
-+
-+ In VMS, the situation is a bit complicated since a directory name can
-+ look like "DEV:", "[FOO.BAR]", "DEV:[FOO.BAR]", "[FOO]BAR.DIR;1", etc.
-+ Completion and ?-help might not always work, but they do in many cases.
-+ Examples:
-+
-+ cd ? Lists all subdirectories of the current directory
-+ cd []? Ditto
-+ cd k? Ditto, but only those starting with K
-+ cd [foo]? Lists all subdirectories of the [FOO] directory
-+ cd [-]? Lists all subdirectories of the superior directory
-+ cd [--]? Lists all subdirectories of the directory 2 levels up
-+ cd [...]? Lists all directories below the current one
-+ cd [foo.? Does not work.
-+
-+ C-Kermit allows all of the following in VMS:
-+
-+ cd bar CD to subdirectory BAR of the current directory
-+ cd .bar Ditto
-+ cd [.bar] Ditto
-+ cd bar.dir etc...
-+ cd bar.dir;
-+ cd bar.dir;1
-+ cd [foo.bar]
-+ cd <foo.bar>
-+ cd bar.baz This can go more than 1 level deep...
-+ cd dir: (where logical name DIR is defined as [FOO.BAR])
-+
-+ As well as the following:
-+
-+ cd .. Go up one level as in UNIX
-+ cd . The current directory
-+ cd My login directory
-+
-+ Note that "cd -" (go up one level) does not work as expected, because
-+ "-" is Kermit's command continuation character. However, "cd [-]", and
-+ "
-+ cd {-}" have the desired effect (and so does "cd ..", which is easier
-+ to type).
-+
-+4.5.2.2. The CDPATH
-+
-+ The CD command in the UNIX, Windows, OS/2, and VMS versions of
-+ C-Kermit, as of version 6.1 / 1.1.12, searches the CDPATH for the given
-+ directory, if it is not absolute and if a CDPATH environment variable
-+ is defined. Example (in UNIX ksh or bash):
-+
-+ $ export CDPATH=$HOME:$HOME/kermit:/tmp
-+
-+ Now if you give a "cd xxx" command, no matter what your current
-+ directory is, if the "xxx" directory is not a subdirectory of your
-+ current directory, then the xxx subdirectory of your home directory is
-+ used or if that does not exist, then the xxx subdirectory of the kermit
-+ subdirectory of your home directory is used or if that does not exist,
-+ then /tmp/xxx is used. This is how the ksh "cd" command works, and now
-+ the C-Kermit CD command works the same way.
-+
-+ In VMS, you can define CDPATH to be a list of directories that contain
-+ actual directory delimiters, and/or logical names representing
-+ directories, using commas to separate them, e.g.:
-+
-+ $ define cdpath [HOME],[SOMEOTHERDIR],[HOME.MISC]
-+ $ define cdpath SYS$LOGIN:,DISK1:[HOME],DISK2:[SCRATCH.IVAN]
-+
-+ Example:
-+
-+ $ define cdpath SYS$LOGIN:,[IVAN],[OLAF],[OLGA.MISC]
-+ $ kermit
-+ DISK1:[OLGA] C-Kermit> cd blah
-+
-+ tries the BLAH subdirectory of the user's login directory, then
-+ [OLGA.BLAH], [IVAN.BLAH], [OLAF.BLAH], and [OLGA.MISC.BLAH], in that
-+ order, using the first one it finds, failing if it finds none.
-+
-+ In C-Kermit 7.0, you may also set the CDPATH from the Kermit prompt:
-+
-+ SET CD PATH path
-+ Allows the CD PATH to be set from within C-Kermit.
-+
-+ SHOW CD shows the CD path and all other information relevant to the CD
-+ command.
-+
-+4.5.2.3. CD Messages
-+
-+ Whenever you change directory, you can have C-Kermit display a "Read
-+ Me" file from the new directory automatically. The commands are:
-+
-+ SET CD MESSAGE { ON, OFF, FILE list }
-+ ON enables this feature; OFF (the default) disables it. File
-+ lets you specify the name of the "Read Me" file. A list of names
-+ to look for can be given in the following format:
-+
-+ {{name1}{name2}{name3}{...}}
-+
-+ e.g.:
-+
-+ SET SERVER CD-MESSAGE FILE {{./.readme}{README.TXT}{READ.ME}}
-+
-+ The default list of CD-message files is system dependent.
-+
-+ SHOW CD shows your current directory, previous directory, CD path, and
-+ CD message info.
-+
-+4.5.3. Creating and Removing Directories
-+
-+ The MKDIR command now allows you to create multiple directories at
-+ once:
-+
-+ C-Kermit> mkdir a/b/c/d
-+
-+ creates the directory a in the current directory (if it doesn't exist
-+ already), and then creates subdirectory b in the a directory (if it
-+ didn't exist already), and so on.
-+
-+ If you use MKDIR to try to create a directory that already exists,
-+ C-Kermit will print a warning ("?Directory already exists"), but the
-+ MKDIR command will still succeed. If you want to avoid the warning
-+ message, use IF DIRECTORY first to check if the directory already
-+ exists.
-+
-+ The RMDIR command, however, will not remove more than one directory,
-+ nor will it remove a directory that contains any files. (There is, as
-+ yet, no RMDIR /RECURSIVE command, although one might be added later.)
-+
-+ In VMS, these commands (like CD) are more forgiving of your syntax than
-+ is the DCL command shell; "mkdir oofa" is equivalent to "mkdir [.oofa]"
-+ and so on. Also in VMS, you'll find that C-Kermit's RMDIR command is
-+ easier than deleting a directory in DCL, since it automatically first
-+ gives it owner delete permission if you are the owner.
-+
-+4.5.4. The DELETE and PURGE Commands
-+
-+ The DELETE command now offers a selection of switches, and has a new
-+ companion, the PURGE command. First, DELETE:
-+
-+ DELETE [ switches... ] filespec
-+ Deletes the file or files that match the filespec, which may
-+ contain wildcards ([476]Section 4.9).
-+
-+ Optional switches include the standard file-selection switches
-+ presented in [477]Section 1.5.4, plus:
-+
-+ /ASK
-+ Before deleting each file, ask permission interactively. Answers
-+ are Yes or OK (delete the file), No (don't delete it), or Quit
-+ (stop executing the DELETE command).
-+
-+ /NOASK
-+ Don't ask permission to delete each file.
-+
-+ /LIST
-+ List each file and show whether it was deleted. Synonyms: /LOG,
-+ /VERBOSE.
-+
-+ /NOLIST
-+ Don't list files while deleting them. Synonyms: /NOLOG, /QUIET.
-+
-+ /HEADING
-+ Print a heading and summary line.
-+
-+ /NOHEADING
-+ Don't print a heading and summary line.
-+
-+ /PAGE
-+ When listing, pause at the end of each screenful and give the
-+ "More?" prompt. If you reply "n" (no), the DELETE command
-+ terminates.
-+
-+ /SIMULATE
-+ Do everything implied by the given switches and filespec, except
-+ do not actually delete any files. This lets you preview which
-+ files would be deleted; implies /LIST.
-+
-+ Now the PURGE command:
-+
-+ PURGE [ switches... ] [ filespec ]
-+ (VMS only) Runs the DCL PURGE command. Switches and filespec, if
-+ any, are passed directly to DCL without parsing or verification.
-+ Deletes excess versions of the given (or all) files. The rest of
-+ this section does not apply to VMS.
-+
-+ PURGE [ switches... ] [ filespec ]
-+ (UNIX only) Deletes "backup files" that match the filespec,
-+ which may contain wildcards ([478]Section 4.9). If no filespec
-+ is given, all backup files in the current directory are selected
-+ (subject to modification by any switches). Do not include backup
-+ notation in the filespec.
-+
-+ Explanation:
-+
-+ To avoid destroying preexisting files when a new file arrives that has
-+ the same name, C-Kermit backs up the old file by appending a "backup
-+ number" to its name. In UNIX, the backup suffix consists of a period, a
-+ tilde, a number, and another tilde. For example, if a file called
-+ oofa.txt exists and a new oofa.txt file arrives, the original is
-+ renamed to oofa.txt.~1~. If another oofa.txt file arrives, the existing
-+ one is renamed to oofa.txt.~2~. And so on. This system is compatible
-+ with the one used by EMACS. Thus over time, if you receive a lot of
-+ files with C-Kermit or edit them with EMACS, backup files can build up.
-+ The new PURGE command lets you clean out accumulated backup files:
-+
-+ Optional switches include the standard file-selection switches
-+ presented in [479]Section 1.5.4, plus all the switches listed above for
-+ the DELETE command, plus:
-+
-+ /KEEP:n
-+ Retains the n most recent (highest-numbered) backup files for
-+ each file. For example, if oofa.txt, oofa.txt.~1~, oofa.txt.~2~,
-+ oofa.txt.~10~, oofa.txt.~12~, and oofa.txt.~100~ exist, "purge
-+ /keep:2 oofa.txt" deletes oofa.txt.~1~, oofa.txt.~2~, and
-+ oofa.txt.~10~, and keeps oofa.txt, oofa.txt.~12~, and
-+ oofa.txt.~100~. If /KEEP is given without a number, one (the
-+ highest numbered) backup file is kept.
-+
-+ CAUTION: The PURGE command should be used only when *.~*~ files truly
-+ are backup files. This is the case for EMACS, and it is the DEFAULT for
-+ C-Kermit. However, if C-Kermit's FILE COLLISION has been set to RENAME,
-+ newly received files will look like backup files. In that case, don't
-+ use the PURGE command or you'll be removing new files rather than old
-+ ones. (Use SHOW FILE to find the FILE COLLISION setting.)
-+
-+ The PURGE command is presently available only in UNIX. The command
-+ succeeds if it deleted any files, or if it deleted no files but there
-+ were no errors. It fails if it deleted no files and there were errors
-+ (i.e. deletion was attempted but failed). In VMS, backup file versions
-+ are handled automatically by the OS, and a PURGE command can be used at
-+ the VMS prompt to clean them up.
-+
-+ If you want certain switches to be supplied automatically with each
-+ DELETE or PURGE command, you can set them with SET OPTIONS
-+ ([480]Section 1.5.5) and you can display any such settings with SHOW
-+ OPTIONS. Of course you can override them on a per-command basis by
-+ including switches in your PURGE or DELETE command.
-+
-+ Also see SET FILE COLLISION, SHOW FILE, SEND /NOBACKUP, SET SEND
-+ BACKUP, and DIRECTORY /[NO]BACKUP.
-+
-+4.6. Starting the Remote Kermit Server Automatically
-+
-+ As noted on pages 275-276 of [481]Using C-Kermit 2nd edition, you can
-+ have Kermit send "kermit receive" commands automatically when it is in
-+ local mode and you give a SEND or similar command, to start the remote
-+ Kermit receiver in case it is not already started. The "kermit receive"
-+ commands are specified by:
-+
-+ SET PROTOCOL KERMIT binary-receive-command text-receive-command
-+
-+ As of version 7.0, a Kermit protocol option has been added to send a
-+ string to the host in advance of any Kermit packets when you give a
-+ GET-class or REMOTE command. This will switch the remote C-Kermit into
-+ the appropriate mode or, if the remote system is at a system command
-+ (shell) prompt, execute the string on the remote system. The new syntax
-+ of the SET PROTOCOL KERMIT command is:
-+
-+ SET PROTOCOL KERMIT [ s1 [ s2 [ s3 ] ] ]
-+
-+ where:
-+
-+ Default Meaning
-+ s1 {kermit -ir} Remote "kermit receive in binary mode" command.
-+ s2 {kermit -r} Remote "kermit receive in text mode" command.
-+ s3 {kermit -x} Remote "start kermit server" command.
-+
-+ NOTE: If the remote Kermit is 6.0, the following are recommended for
-+ fast startup and high-performance file transfer (see Appendix I in
-+ [482]Using C-Kermit, second Edition, for command-line options):
-+
-+ s1 kermit -YQir (Kermit receive binary, skip init file, fast.)
-+ s2 kermit -YQTr (Kermit receive text, skip init file, fast.)
-+ s3 kermit -YQx (Kermit server, skip init file, fast.)
-+
-+ If the remote is C-Kermit 7.0 or later, change the -x option (enter
-+ server mode) to -O (uppercase letter O), which means "enter server mode
-+ for One transaction only); this way, it is not stuck in server after
-+ the transfer. Also note that the Q is redundant in version 7.0, since
-+ fast Kermit protocol settings are now the default.
-+
-+ Note that in case the C-Kermit executable is called "wermit" or
-+ "ckermit" you can change "kermit" in the strings above to "wermit" or
-+ "ckermit" and C-Kermit 7.0 or later will recognize these as synonyms
-+ for "kermit", in case it is at its command prompt when one of these
-+ strings is sent to it.
-+
-+4.7. File-Transfer Command Switches
-+
-+ Over the years, various new methods of transferring a file have
-+ accumulated, until we had, in addition to the SEND command, also MOVE
-+ (send and then delete), MAIL (send as email), REMOTE PRINT (send to be
-+ printed), CSEND (send the output of a command), PSEND (send a part of a
-+ file), BSEND (send in binary mode), RESEND (resume an interrupted
-+ SEND), etc etc. Similarly: GET, REGET, CGET, RETRIEVE, and so on.
-+
-+ Not only is it confusing to have different names for these commands,
-+ many of which are not real words, but this also does not allow all
-+ combinations, like "send a file as mail, then delete it".
-+
-+ In C-Kermit 7.0, the SEND, GET, and RECEIVE commands were restructured
-+ to accept modifier switches (switches are explained in [483]Section
-+ 1.5).
-+
-+4.7.1. SEND Command Switches
-+
-+ Without switches, the SEND command still works exactly as before:
-+
-+ send oofa.txt ; send a single file
-+ send oofa.* ; send multiple files
-+ send oofa.txt x.x ; send oofa.txt as x.x (tell receiver its name is x.x)
-+ send ; send from SEND-LIST
-+
-+ But now the following modifier switches may be included between "send"
-+ and the filename. Zero, one, two, or more switches may be included in
-+ any combination that makes sense. Switch names (such as /BINARY) can be
-+ abbreviated, just like any other keywords. Most of these switches work
-+ only when using Kermit protocol (/TEXT and /BINARY are the exceptions).
-+
-+ /AFTER:date-time
-+ Specifies that only those files modified (or, in VMS, created)
-+ after the given date-time (see [484]Section 1.6) are to be sent.
-+ Examples:
-+
-+ send /text /after:{2-Feb-1997 10:28:30} *.txt
-+ send /text /after:\fdate(oofa.txt) *.txt
-+
-+ Synonym: /SINCE.
-+
-+ /ARRAY:arrayname
-+ Specifies that instead of sending a file, C-Kermit is to send
-+ the contents of the given array. Since an array does not have a
-+ filename, you should include an /AS-NAME switch to specify the
-+ name under which the array is to be sent (if you do not, the
-+ name "_array_x_" is used, where 'x' is replaced by the array
-+ designator). See [485]section 7.10 for array-name syntax. As
-+ noted in that section, you can also include a range to have a
-+ segment of the array sent, rather than the whole thing; for
-+ example: "send /array:&a[100:199]". It is strongly recommended
-+ that you accompany the /ARRAY switch with a /TEXT or /BINARY
-+ switch to force the desired transfer mode, since otherwise the
-+ various automatic mechanisms might switch to binary mode when
-+ you really wanted text, or vice versa. In text mode a line
-+ terminator is added to the end of each array element, but not in
-+ binary mode. For details and examples see [486]Section 7.10.11.
-+
-+ /AS-NAME:text
-+ Specifies "text" as the name to send the file under. You can
-+ also still specify the as-name as the second filename on the
-+ SEND command line. The following two commands are equivalent:
-+
-+ send oofa.txt oofa.new
-+ send /as:oofa.new oofa.txt
-+
-+ /BEFORE:date-time
-+ Specifies that only those files modified (or, in VMS, created)
-+ before the given date-time ([487]Section 1.6) are to be sent.
-+
-+ /BINARY
-+ Performs this transfer in binary mode without affecting the
-+ global transfer mode, overriding not only the FILE TYPE and
-+ TRANSFER MODE settings, but also the FILE PATTERN setting, but
-+ for this SEND command only. In other words, SEND /BINARY means
-+ what it says: send the file in binary mode, regardless of any
-+ other settings. Example:
-+
-+ set file type text ; Set global transfer mode to text
-+ send /binary oofa.zip ; Send a file in binary
-+ send oofa.txt ; This one is sent in text mode
-+
-+ /COMMAND
-+ SEND /COMMAND is equivalent to CSEND ([488]Section 4.2.2) -- it
-+ says to send the output from a command, rather than the contents
-+ of a file. The first "filename" on the SEND command line is
-+ interpreted as the name of a command; the second (if any) is the
-+ as-name. Examples:
-+
-+ send /command {grep Sunday oofa.txt} sunday.txt
-+ send /as-name:sunday.txt /command {grep Sunday oofa.txt}
-+ send /bin /command {tar cf - . | gzip -c} {!gunzip -c | tar xf -}
-+
-+ /DELETE
-+ Deletes the file (or each file in the group) after it has been
-+ sent successfully (but does not delete it if it was not sent
-+ successfully). SEND /DELETE is equivalent to MOVE. Has no effect
-+ when used with /COMMAND. Example:
-+
-+ send /delete *.log
-+
-+ /DOTFILES
-+ (UNIX and OS-9 only) Normally files whose names begin with "."
-+ are skipped when matching wildcards that do not also beging with
-+ ".". Include /DOTFILES to force these files to be included too.
-+
-+ /RECURSIVE
-+ Descend the through the directory tree when locating files to
-+ send. Automatically sets /PATHNAMES:RELATIVE. Explained in
-+ [489]Section 4.11 .
-+
-+ /EXCEPT:pattern
-+ See [490]Section 1.5.4.
-+
-+ /NOBACKUP
-+ This means to skip backup files when sending, even if they match
-+ the SEND file specification. This is equivalent to using SEND
-+ /EXCEPT and including *.~[0-9]*~ in the exception list (or *.~*~
-+ if Kermit was built without pattern-matching support; see
-+ [491]Section 4.9.1). Including this switch is equivalent to
-+ giving SET SEND BACKUP OFF ([492]Section 4.0.6) prior to SEND,
-+ except its effect is local to the SEND command with which it was
-+ given.
-+
-+ /NODOTFILES
-+ The opposite of /DOTFILES (q.v.)
-+
-+ /FILENAMES:{CONVERTED,LITERAL}
-+ Use this switch to override the current global SET FILE NAMES
-+ setting for this transfer only.
-+
-+ /FILTER:command
-+ This specifies a filter to pass the file through before sending
-+ it. See the [493]section on file-transfer pipes and filters. The
-+ /FILTER switch applies only to the file-transfer command it is
-+ given with; it does not affect the global SEND FILTER setting,
-+ if any.
-+
-+ /IMAGE
-+ VMS: Sends in image mode. Non-VMS: same as /BINARY.
-+
-+ /LABELED
-+ VMS and OS/2 only: Sends in labeled mode.
-+
-+ /LARGER-THAN:number
-+ Specifies that only those files that are longer than the given
-+ number of bytes are to be sent.
-+
-+ /LISTFILE:filename
-+ Specifies that the files to be sent are listed in a file with
-+ the given filename. The file contains one filename per line.
-+ These filenames are not checked in any way; each filename is
-+ taken and does not use or depend on any Kermit-specific syntax.
-+ In particular, backslashes are not treated specially, leading
-+ and trailing spaces are not stripped, etc. However, if a
-+ filename contains wildcards, they are expanded. Example: If a
-+ file named files.txt contains the following lines:
-+
-+ blah.txt
-+ oofa*
-+ x.x
-+
-+ (but without leading or trailing spaces), then the C-Kermit
-+ command "send /listfile:files.txt" will send the files blah.txt,
-+ x.x, and all files whose names start with "oofa", assuming the
-+ files exist and are readable. The /LISTFILE switch, can, of
-+ course, be used with other switches when it makes sense, for
-+ example, /EXCEPT, /BINARY, /AFTER, /SMALLER, /MOVE-TO, /DELETE,
-+ /AS-NAME with a template, etc.
-+
-+ /MAIL:address
-+ Sends the file as e-mail to the given address or addresses.
-+ "send /mail:address filename" is equivalent to "mail filename
-+ address". You can include multiple addresses separated by
-+ commas. Examples:
-+
-+ send /mail:kermit-support@columbia.edu packet.log
-+ send /mail:cmg,fdc,jrd oofa.txt
-+
-+ As with any switch argument, if the address or address list
-+ contains any spaces, you must enclose it in braces. The format
-+ of the addresses must agree with that understood by the
-+ mail-sending program on the receiver's computer.
-+
-+ /MOVE-TO:directory-name
-+ Specifies that after each (or the only) source file is sent
-+ successfully, and ONLY if it is sent successfully, it should be
-+ moved to the named directory. If the directory name contains
-+ spaces, enclose it in braces. If the directory does not exist,
-+ it is created if possible; if it can't be created, the command
-+ fails and an error message is printed. Example:
-+
-+ send /text /move-to:/users/olga/backup/ *.txt
-+
-+ /NOT-AFTER:date-time
-+ Specifies that only those files modified at or before the given
-+ date and time are to be sent.
-+
-+ /NOT-BEFORE:date-time
-+ Specifies that only those files modified at or after the given
-+ date and time are to be sent.
-+
-+ /PATHNAMES:{OFF,ABSOLUTE,RELATIVE}
-+ Use this switch to override the current global SET SEND
-+ PATHNAMES setting for this transfer only. /PATHNAMES:ABSOLUTE or
-+ RELATIVE also sets /FILENAMES:LITERAL (also for this transfer
-+ only) since pathnames are not sent otherwise.
-+
-+ /RENAME-TO:text
-+ Specifies that after the (or each) source file is sent
-+ successfully, and ONLY if it is sent successfully, it should be
-+ renamed to the name given. If the name contains spaces, enclose
-+ it in braces. If a file group is being sent, then the "text"
-+ must contain a variable reference such as \v(filename) (see
-+ [494]Section 4.1). Example:
-+
-+ send /rename-to:ok_\v(filename) *.*
-+
-+ This sends each file in the current directory and if it was sent
-+ successfully, changes its name to begin with "ok_".
-+
-+ /SMALLER-THAN:number
-+ Specifies that only those files that are smaller than the given
-+ number of bytes are to be sent.
-+
-+ /SUBJECT:text
-+ Subject for email. Actually, this is just a synonym for
-+ /AS-NAME. If the text includes spaces, you must enclose it in
-+ braces. If you don't specify a subject (or as-name), the name of
-+ the file is used as the subject. Example:
-+
-+ send /mail:kermit-support@columbia.edu /subj:{As requested} packet.log
-+
-+ /PRINT:options
-+ Sends the file to be printed, optionally specifying options for
-+ the printer. Equivalent to REMOTE PRINT filename options.
-+ Examples:
-+
-+ send /print oofa.txt ; No options.
-+ send /print:/copies=3 oofa.txt ; "/copies=3" is a VMS PRINT switch.
-+ send /print:-#3 oofa.txt ; "-#3" is a UNIX lpr switch.
-+
-+ /PROTOCOL:name
-+ Uses the given protocol to send the file (Kermit, Zmodem, etc)
-+ for this transfer without changing global protocol. Only
-+ available in Kermit 95, UNIX, and OS-9. Example:
-+
-+ set protocol kermit ; Set global protocol
-+ send /proto:zmodem /bin oofa.zip ; Send just this file with Zmodem
-+ send oofa.txt ; This file is sent with Kermit
-+
-+ /QUIET
-+ When sending in local mode, this suppresses the file-transfer
-+ display.
-+
-+ /RECOVER
-+ Used to recover from a previously interrupted transfer; SEND
-+ /RECOVER is equivalent to RESEND. Recovery only works in binary
-+ mode; SEND /RECOVER and RESEND include an implied /BINARY
-+ switch. Even then, recovery will successful only if (a) the
-+ original (interrupted) transfer was also in binary mode, or (b)
-+ if it was in text mode, the two Kermit programs run on platforms
-+ where text-mode transfers are not length-changing.
-+
-+ /STARTING:number
-+ Starts sending the file from the given byte position. SEND
-+ /STARTING:n filename is equivalent to PSEND filename n.
-+
-+ /TEXT
-+ Performs this transfer in text mode without affecting the global
-+ transfer mode, overriding not only the FILE TYPE and TRANSFER
-+ MODE settings, but also the FILE PATTERN setting, for this SEND
-+ command only. In other words, SEND /TEXT really send the file in
-+ text mode, regardless of any other settings or negotiations.
-+
-+ About mail... Refer to [495]Section 4.7.1. The same rules apply as for
-+ file transfer. If you are mailing multiple files, you can't use an
-+ as-name (in this case, a subject) unless it contains replacement
-+ variables like \v(filenum). For example, if you:
-+
-+ send /mail:somebody@xyz.com *.txt
-+
-+ Then each file will arrive as a separate email message with its name as
-+ the subject. But if you:
-+
-+ send /mail:somebody@xyz.com /subject:{Here is a file} *.txt
-+
-+ Then each file message will have the same subject, which is probably
-+ not what you want. You can get around this with constructions like:
-+
-+ send /mail:somebody@xyz.com /subject:{Here is \v(filename)} *.txt
-+
-+ which embed the filename in the subject.
-+
-+ The MOVE, CSEND, MAIL, and RESEND commands now also accept the same
-+ switches. And the switches are also operative when sending from a
-+ SEND-LIST (see [496]Using C-Kermit, 2nd Ed, pp.191-192), so, for
-+ example, it is now possible to SEND /PRINT or SEND /MAIL from a
-+ SEND-LIST.
-+
-+ The MSEND and MMOVE commands also take switches, but not all of them.
-+ With these commands, which take an arbitrary list of filespecs, you can
-+ use /BINARY, /DELETE, /MAIL, /PRINT, /PROTOCOL, /QUIET, /RECOVER, and
-+ /TEXT (and /IMAGE or /LABELED, depending on the platform). MMOVE is
-+ equivalent to MSEND /DELETE. (If you want to send a group of files, but
-+ in mixed transfer modes with per-file as-names, use ADD SEND-LIST and
-+ then SEND.)
-+
-+ The MSEND/MMOVE switches come before the filenames, and apply to all of
-+ them:
-+
-+ msend /print /text *.log oofa.txt /etc/motd
-+
-+ If you type any of these commands (SEND, CSEND, MSEND, etc) followed by
-+ a question mark (?), you will see a list of the switches you can use.
-+ If you want to see a list of filenames, you'll need to type something
-+ like "send ./?" (UNIX, OS/2, Windows, etc), or "send []?" (VMS), etc.
-+ Of course, you can also type pieces of a filename (anything that does
-+ not start with "/") and then "?" to get a list of filenames that start
-+ that way; e.g. "send x.?" still works as before.
-+
-+ In UNIX, where "/" is also the directory separator, there is usually no
-+ ambiguity between a fully-specified pathname and a switch, except when
-+ a file in the root directory has the same name as a switch (as noted in
-+ [497]Section 1.5):
-+
-+ send /etc/motd ; Works as expected
-+ send /command ; ???
-+
-+ The second example interprets "/command" as a switch, not a filename.
-+ To send a file actually called "command" in the root directory, use:
-+
-+ send {/command}
-+
-+ or other system-dependent forms such as //command, /./command,
-+ c:/command, etc, or cd to / and then "send command".
-+
-+4.7.2. GET Command Switches
-+
-+ Without switches, the GET command still works about the same as before:
-+
-+ get oofa.txt ; GET a single file
-+ get oofa.* ; GET multiple files
-+
-+ However, the mechanism for including an "as-name" has changed.
-+ Previously, in order to include an as-name, you were required to use
-+ the "multiline" form of GET:
-+
-+ get
-+ remote-filespec
-+ local-name
-+
-+ This was because the remote filespec might contain spaces, and so there
-+ would be no good way of telling where it ended and where the local name
-+ began, e.g:
-+
-+ get profile exec a foo
-+
-+ But now since we can use {braces} for grouping, we don't need the
-+ multiline GET form any more, and in fact, support for it has been
-+ removed. If you give a GET command by itself on a line, it fails and an
-+ error message is printed. The new form is:
-+
-+ GET [ switches... ] remote-name [ local-name ]
-+ Ask the server to send the file whose name is remote-name. If
-+ the optional local-name is given, store it locally under this
-+ name. If the remote-name or local-name contains spaces, they
-+ must be enclosed in braces:
-+
-+ get {profile exec a} foo
-+ get oofa.txt {~/My Files/Oofa text}
-+
-+ If you want to give a list of remote file specifications, use the MGET
-+ command:
-+
-+ MGET [ switches... ] remote-name [ remote-name [ remote-name ... ] ]
-+ Ask the server to send the files whose names are given.
-+
-+ Now you can also include modifier switches between GET or MGET and the
-+ remote-name; most of the same switches as SEND:
-+
-+ /AS-NAME:text
-+ Specifies "text" as the name to store the incoming file under.
-+ (This switch is not available for MGET.) You can also still
-+ specify the as-name as the second filename on the GET command
-+ line. The following two commands are equivalent:
-+
-+ get oofa.txt oofa.new
-+ get /as:oofa.new oofa.txt
-+
-+ /BINARY
-+ Tells the server to send the given file(s) in binary mode
-+ without affecting the global transfer mode. Example:
-+
-+ set file type text ; Set global transfer mode to text
-+ get /binary oofa.zip ; get a file in binary mode
-+ get oofa.txt ; This one is transferred in text mode
-+
-+ Or, perhaps more to the point:
-+
-+ get /binary foo.txt ; where "*.txt" is a text-pattern
-+
-+ This has the expected effect only if the server is C-Kermit 7.0
-+ or later or K95 1.1.19 or later.
-+
-+ /COMMAND
-+ GET /COMMAND is equivalent to CGET ([498]Section 4.2.2) -- it
-+ says to receive the file into the standard input of a command,
-+ rather than saving it on disk. The /AS-NAME or the second
-+ "filename" on the GET command line is interpreted as the name of
-+ a command. Examples:
-+
-+ get /command sunday.txt {grep Sunday oofa.txt}
-+ get /command /as-name:{grep Sunday oofa.txt} sunday.txt
-+ get /bin /command {!gunzip -c | tar xf -} {tar cf - . | gzip -c}
-+
-+ /DELETE
-+ Asks the Kermit server to delete the file (or each file in the
-+ group) after it has been transferred successfully (but not to
-+ delete it if it was not sent successfully). GET /DELETE is
-+ equivalent to RETRIEVE. Example:
-+
-+ get /delete *.log
-+
-+ /EXCEPT:pattern
-+ Specifies that any files whose names match the pattern, which
-+ can be a regular filename, or may contain "*" and/or "?"
-+ metacharacters, are to be refused upon arrival. To specify
-+ multiple patterns (up to 8), use outer braces around the group,
-+ and inner braces around each pattern:
-+
-+ /EXCEPT:{{pattern1}{pattern2}...}
-+
-+ See the description of SEND /EXCEPT in [499]Section 4.7.1 for
-+ examples, etc. Refusal is accomplished using the Attribute
-+ Rejection mechanism (reason "name"), which works only when
-+ Attribute packets have been successfully negotiated.
-+
-+ /FILENAMES:{CONVERTED,LITERAL}
-+ Use this switch to override the current global SET FILE NAMES
-+ setting for this transfer only.
-+
-+ /FILTER:command
-+ This specifies a filter to pass the incoming file through before
-+ writing to disk. See the [500]section on file-transfer pipes and
-+ filters. The /FILTER switch applies only to the file-transfer
-+ command it is given with; it does not affect the global RECEIVE
-+ FILTER setting, if any.
-+
-+ /IMAGE
-+ VMS: Transfer in image mode. Non-VMS: same as /BINARY.
-+
-+ /LABELED
-+ VMS and OS/2 only: Specifies labeled transfer mode.
-+
-+ /MOVE-TO:directory
-+ This tells C-Kermit to move each file that is successfully
-+ received to the given directory. Files that are not successfully
-+ received are not moved. By default, files are not moved.
-+
-+ /PATHNAMES:{OFF,ABSOLUTE,RELATIVE,AUTO}
-+ Use this switch to override the current global SET RECEIVE
-+ PATHNAMES setting for this transfer only. /PATHNAMES:ABSOLUTE or
-+ RELATIVE also sets /FILENAMES:LITERAL (also for this transfer
-+ only) since incoming pathnames would not be treated as pathnames
-+ otherwise. See [501]Section 4.10.
-+
-+ /QUIET
-+ When sending in local mode, this suppresses the file-transfer
-+ display.
-+
-+ /RECOVER
-+ Used to recover from a previously interrupted transfer; GET
-+ /RECOVER is equivalent to REGET. Recovery only works in binary
-+ mode; SEND /RECOVER and RESEND include an implied /BINARY
-+ switch. Even then, recovery will successful only if (a) the
-+ original (interrupted) transfer was also in binary mode, or (b)
-+ if it was in text mode, the two Kermit programs run on platforms
-+ where text-mode transfers are not length-changing.
-+
-+ /RECURSIVE
-+ Tells the server that the GET file specification applies
-+ recursively. This switch also automatically sets
-+ /PATHNAMES:RELATIVE in both the server AND the client. When used
-+ in conjunction with /DELETE, this "moves" a directory tree from
-+ the server's computer to the client's computer (except that only
-+ regular files are deleted from the server's computer, not
-+ directories; thus the original directories will be left, but
-+ will contain no files). Note that all servers that support
-+ /RECURSIVE do not necessarily do so in combination with other
-+ switches, such as /RECOVER. (Servers that do include C-Kermit
-+ 7.0 and later, K95 1.1.19 and later.)
-+
-+ /RENAME-TO:string
-+ This tells C-Kermit to rename each file that is successfully
-+ received to the given string. Files that are not successfully
-+ received are not renamed. By default, files are not renamed. The
-+ string can be a literal string, which is appropriate when only
-+ one file is being received, or it can contain one or more
-+ variables that are to be evaluated at the time each file is
-+ received, such as \v(filename), \v(filenumber), \v(ntime),
-+ \v(pid), \v(user), etc. WARNING: if you give a literal string
-+ and more than one file arrives, each incoming file will be given
-+ the same name (but SET FILE COLLISION BACKUP or RENAME can be
-+ used to keep the incoming files from overwriting each other).
-+
-+ /TEXT
-+ Tells the server to perform this transfer in text mode without
-+ affecting its global transfer mode. See /BINARY for additional
-+ info.
-+
-+ The /MAIL and /PRINT options are not available (as they are for SEND),
-+ but you can use /COMMAND to achieve the same effect, as in these UNIX
-+ examples:
-+
-+ get /command oofa.txt {mail kermit@columbia.edu}
-+ get /command oofa.txt lpr
-+
-+ In OS/2 or Windows, you can GET and print like this:
-+
-+ get oofa.txt prn
-+
-+ The CGET, REGET, RETRIEVE commands also accept the same switches as
-+ GET. CGET automatically sets /COMMAND; REGET automatically sets
-+ /RECOVER and /BINARY, and RETRIEVE automatically sets /DELETE.
-+
-+4.7.3. RECEIVE Command Switches
-+
-+ Without switches, the RECEIVE command still works as before:
-+
-+ receive ; Receives files under their own names
-+ receive /tmp ; Ditto, but into the /tmp directory
-+ r ; Same as "receive"
-+ receive foo.txt ; Receives a file and renames to foo.txt
-+
-+ Now you can also include modifier switches may be included between
-+ "receive" and the as-name; most of the same switches as GET:
-+
-+ /AS-NAME:text
-+ Specifies "text" as the name to store the incoming file under.
-+ You can also still specify the as-name as a filename on the
-+ command line. The following two commands are equivalent:
-+
-+ r oofa.new
-+ r /as:oofa.new
-+
-+ /BINARY
-+ Performs this transfer in binary mode without affecting the
-+ global transfer mode. NOTE: This does not override the incoming
-+ filetype (as it does with GET), so this switch is useful only if
-+ ATTRIBUTE TYPE is OFF, or if the other Kermit does not send a
-+ TYPE (text or binary) attribute. In any case, it has no affect
-+ whatsoever on the file sender.
-+
-+ /COMMAND
-+ RECEIVE /COMMAND is equivalent to CRECEIVE ([502]Section 4.2.2)
-+ -- it says to receive the file into the standard input of a
-+ command, rather than saving it on disk. The /AS-NAME or the
-+ "filename" on the RECEIVE command line is interpreted as the
-+ name of a command.
-+
-+ r /command {grep Sunday oofa.txt}
-+ r /command /as-name:{grep Sunday oofa.txt}
-+ r /bin /command {tar cf - . | gzip -c}
-+
-+ /EXCEPT:pattern
-+ Specifies that any files whose names match the pattern, which
-+ can be a regular filename, or may contain "*" and/or "?"
-+ metacharacters, are to be refused upon arrival. To specify
-+ multiple patterns (up to 8), use outer braces around the group,
-+ and inner braces around each pattern:
-+
-+ /EXCEPT:{{pattern1}{pattern2}...}
-+
-+ See the description of SEND /EXCEPT in [503]Section 4.7.1 for
-+ examples, etc. Refusal is accomplished using the Attribute
-+ Rejection mechanism (reason "name"), which works only when
-+ Attribute packets have been successfully negotiated.
-+
-+ /FILENAMES:{CONVERTED,LITERAL}
-+ Use this switch to override the current global SET FILE NAMES
-+ setting for this transfer only.
-+
-+ /FILTER:command
-+ This specifies a filter to pass the incoming file through before
-+ writing to disk. See the [504]section on file-transfer pipes and
-+ filters. The /FILTER switch applies only to the file-transfer
-+ command it is given with; it does not affect the global RECEIVE
-+ FILTER setting, if any.
-+
-+ /IMAGE
-+ VMS: Transfer in image mode. Non-VMS: same as /BINARY. See
-+ comments under RECEIVE /BINARY.
-+
-+ /LABELED
-+ VMS and OS/2 only: Specifies labeled transfer mode. See comments
-+ under RECEIVE /BINARY.
-+
-+ /MOVE-TO:directory
-+ This tells C-Kermit to move each file that is successfully
-+ received to the given directory. Files that are not successfully
-+ received are not moved. By default, files are not moved.
-+
-+ /PATHNAMES:{ABSOLUTE,RELATIVE,OFF,AUTO}
-+ Use this switch to override the current global SET RECEIVE
-+ PATHNAMES setting for this transfer only. See [505]Section 4.10.
-+
-+ /RECURSIVE
-+ When used with the RECEIVE command, /RECURSIVE is simply a
-+ synonym for /PATHNAMES:RELATIVE.
-+
-+ /RENAME-TO:string
-+ This tells C-Kermit to rename each file that is successfully
-+ received to the given string. Files that are not successfully
-+ received are not renamed. By default, files are not renamed. The
-+ string can be a literal string, which is appropriate when only
-+ one file is being received, or it can contain one or more
-+ variables that are to be evaluated at the time each file is
-+ received, such as \v(filename), \v(filenumber), \v(ntime),
-+ \v(pid), \v(user), etc. WARNING: if you give a literal string
-+ and more than one file arrives, each incoming file will be given
-+ the same name (but SET FILE COLLISION BACKUP or RENAME can be
-+ used to keep the incoming files from overwriting each other).
-+
-+ /QUIET
-+ When receiving in local mode, this suppresses the file-transfer
-+ display.
-+
-+ /TEXT
-+ Receives in text mode without affecting the global transfer
-+ mode. See comments under RECEIVE /BINARY.
-+
-+ The /MAIL and /PRINT options are not available, but you can use
-+ /COMMAND to achieve the same effect, as in these UNIX examples:
-+
-+ r /command {mail kermit@columbia.edu}
-+ r /command lpr
-+
-+ In OS/2 or Windows, you can RECEIVE and print like this:
-+
-+ receive prn
-+
-+ The CRECEIVE command now also accepts the same switches.
-+
-+4.8. Minor Kermit Protocol Improvements
-+
-+4.8.1. Multiple Attribute Packets
-+
-+ C-Kermit 7.0 now sends more than one Attribute packet if a file's
-+ attributes do not fit into a single packet of the negotiated length. If
-+ a particular attribute (such as file creation date-time) does not fit
-+ within the negotiated length (which will only happen when the
-+ negotiated length is around 20 or less), that attribute is not sent at
-+ all.
-+
-+4.8.2. Very Short Packets
-+
-+ There are certain situations where extremely short packets must be
-+ used; 20 or 30 bytes at most. This can happen when one or more devices
-+ along the communication path have very small buffers and lack an
-+ effective means of flow control. Examples are sometimes cited involving
-+ radio modems.
-+
-+ When the maximum packet length is shorter than certain packets that
-+ would be sent, those packets are either truncated or else broken up
-+ into multiple packets. Specifically:
-+
-+ 1. Parameter negotiation packets (I, S, and their ACKs) are truncated
-+ to the negotiated length. Any parameters that do not fit are reset
-+ to their default values. There is no provision in the Kermit
-+ protocol for fragmentation and reassembly of parameter strings.
-+ 2. File header packets (containing the filename) are simply truncated.
-+ There is no provision in the Kermit protocol for fragmentation and
-+ reassembly of filenames.
-+ 3. Attribute packets are fragmented and reassembled as described in
-+ 4.8.1 without loss of data, except in case a field will not fit at
-+ all in the negotiated length (the longest attribute is usually the
-+ date and time of file creation/modification) because of the rule
-+ that attributes may not be broken across packets.
-+ 4. Data packets and other packets are unaffected -- they can be as
-+ short as they need to be, within reason.
-+
-+4.9. Wildcard / File Group Expansion
-+
-+ "Wildcard" refers to the notation used in filenames to specify a group
-+ of files by pattern matching.
-+
-+4.9.1. In UNIX C-Kermit
-+
-+ Prior to C-Kermit 7.0, C-Kermit was capable of expanding wildcard
-+ strings containing only the "metacharacters" '*' and '?':
-+
-+ *
-+ Matches any sequence of zero or more characters. For example:
-+ "ck*.c" matches all files whose names start with "ck" and end
-+ with ".c", including "ck.c".
-+
-+ ?
-+ Matches any single character. For example, "ck?.c" matches all
-+ files whose names are exactly 5 characters long and start with
-+ "ck" and end with ".c". When typing commands at the prompt, you
-+ must precede any question mark to be used for matching by a
-+ backslash (\) to override the normal function of question mark,
-+ which is providing menus and file lists.
-+
-+ C-Kermit 7.0 adds the additional features that users of ksh, csh, and
-+ bash are accustomed to:
-+
-+ [abc]
-+ Square brackets enclosing a list of characters matches any
-+ single character in the list. Example: ckuusr.[ch] matches
-+ ckuusr.c and ckuusr.h.
-+
-+ [a-z]
-+ Square brackets enclosing a range of characters; the hyphen
-+ separates the low and high elements of the range. For example,
-+ [a-z] matches any character from a to z.
-+
-+ [acdm-z]
-+ Lists and ranges may be combined. This example matches a, c, d,
-+ or m through z.
-+
-+ {string1,string2,...}
-+ Braces enclose a list of strings to be matched. For example:
-+ ck{ufio,vcon,cmai}.c matches ckufio.c, ckvcon.c, or ckcmai.c.
-+ The strings may themselves contain metacharacters, bracket
-+ lists, or indeed, other lists of strings, but (when matching
-+ filenames) they may not contain directory separators.
-+
-+ Thus, the metacharacters in filenames (and in any other field
-+ that can be a pattern, such as the IF MATCH pattern, SEND or GET
-+ exception lists, etc) are:
-+
-+ * ? [ {
-+
-+ And within braces only, comma (,) is a metacharacter.
-+
-+ To include a metacharacter in a pattern literally, precede it with a
-+ backslash '\' (or two if you are passing the pattern to a macro).
-+ Examples:
-+
-+ send a*b ; Send all files whose names start with 'a' and end with 'b'.
-+ send a?b ; Ditto, but the name must be exactly three characters long.
-+ send a[a-z]b ; Ditto, but the second character must be a lowercase letter.
-+ send a[x\-z]b ; Ditto, except the second character must be 'x', '-', or 'y'.
-+ send a[ghi]b ; Ditto, except the second character must be 'g', 'h', or 'i'.
-+ send a[?*]b ; Ditto, except the second character must be '?' or '*'.
-+ send a[\?\*]b ; Same as previous.
-+ send *?[a-z]* ; All files with names containing at least one character
-+ ; that is followed by a lowercase letter.
-+
-+ Or, more practically:
-+
-+ send ck[cuw]*.[cwh] ; Send the UNIX C-Kermit source files.
-+
-+ To refer to the C-Kermit sources files and makefile all in one
-+ filespec:
-+
-+ {{makefile,ck[cuw]*.[cwh]}}
-+
-+ (NOTE: if the entire pattern is a {stringlist}, you must enclose it it
-+ TWO pairs of braces, since the SEND command strips the outer brace
-+ pair, because of the "enclose in braces if the filename contains
-+ spaces" rule).
-+
-+ If the makefile is called ckuker.mak:
-+
-+ ck[cuw]*.{[cwh],mak}
-+
-+ (NOTE: double braces are not needed here since the pattern does not
-+ both begin and end with a brace.)
-+
-+ To add in all the C-Kermit text files:
-+
-+ ck[cuw]*.{[cwh],mak,txt}
-+
-+ All of these features can be used anywhere you would type a filename
-+ that is allowed to contain wildcards.
-+
-+ When you are typing at the command prompt, an extra level of quoting is
-+ required for the '?' character to defeat its regular function of
-+ producing a list of files that match what you have typed so far, for
-+ example:
-+
-+ send ck[cu]?
-+
-+ lists all the files whose names start with ckc and cku. If you quote
-+ the question mark, it is used as a pattern-matching character, for
-+ example:
-+
-+ send ck\?[ft]io.c
-+
-+ sends all the file and communications i/o modules for all the
-+ platforms: ckufio.c, ckutio.c, ckvfio.c, ckvtio.c, etc.
-+
-+ If, however, a filename actually contains a question mark and you need
-+ to refer to it on the command line, you must use three (3) backslashes.
-+ For example, if the file is actually called ck?fio.c, you would use:
-+
-+ send ck\\\?fio.c
-+
-+ Further notes on quoting:
-+
-+ * A single backslash is sufficient for quoting a special character at
-+ the command prompt or in a command file. However, when passing
-+ patterns to macros you'll need double backslashes, and when
-+ referring to these patterns within the macro, you'll need to use
-+ \fcontents(\%1) (see [506]Section 1.11.5). You should enclose macro
-+ argument references in braces in case grouped arguments were
-+ passed. Example:
-+ define ismatch {
-+ if match {\fcont(\%1)} {\fcont(\%2)} {
-+ end 0 MATCH
-+ } else {
-+ end 1 NO MATCH
-+ }
-+ }
-+ ismatch ab*yz a*\\**z ; Backslash must be doubled
-+ ismatch {abc def xyz} *b*e*y* ; Braces must be used for grouping
-+
-+ * Watch out for possible conflicts between {} in filename patterns
-+ and {} used for grouping multiple words into a single field, when
-+ the pattern has outer braces. For example, in:
-+ if match {abc xyz} {a* *z} echo THEY MATCH
-+
-+ braces must be used to group "abc xyz" into a single string. Kermit
-+ strips off the braces before comparing the string with the pattern.
-+ Therefore:
-+ if match makefile {makefile,Makefile} echo THEY MATCH
-+
-+ does not work, but:
-+ if match makefile {{makefile,Makefile}} echo THEY MATCH
-+
-+ does.
-+ * If you use a pattern that has outer braces, like {*.txt,*.doc}, in
-+ a field that accepts a pattern list (like SEND /EXCEPT:xxx), you'll
-+ need to add two extra sets of outer braces:
-+ send /except:{{{*.txt,*.doc}}} *.*
-+
-+ C-Kermit's new pattern matching capabilities are also used when
-+ C-Kermit is in server mode, so now you can send requests such as:
-+
-+ get ck[cuw]*.[cwh]
-+
-+ to a C-Kermit server without having to tell it to SET WILD SHELL first.
-+ Previously this would have required:
-+
-+ mget ckc*.c ckc*.w ckc*.h cku*.c cku*.w cku*.h ckw*.c ckw*.w ckw*.h
-+
-+ The new pattern matching features make SET WILD SHELL redundant, and
-+ barring any objections, it will eventually be phased out. (One possible
-+ reason for retaining it would be as an escape mechanism when Kermit
-+ does not understand the underlying file system.)
-+
-+ By the way, patterns such as these are sometimes referred to as
-+ "regular expressions", but they are not quite the same. In a true
-+ regular expression (for example), "*" means "zero or more repetitions
-+ of the previous item", so (for example), "([0-9]*)" would match zero or
-+ more digits in parentheses. In Kermit (and in most shells), this
-+ matches one digit followed by zero or more characters, within
-+ parentheses. Here are some hints:
-+
-+ * Although you can't match any sequence of digits (or letters, etc),
-+ you can match (say) 1, 2, or 3 of them in row. For example, the
-+ following pattern matches Kermit backup files (with backup numbers
-+ from 1 to 999):
-+ *.~{[1-9],[1-9][0-9],[1-9][0-9][0-9]}~
-+
-+ * There is presently no NOT operator, so no way to match any
-+ character or string EXCEPT the one(s) shown.
-+
-+ In other wildcarding news...
-+
-+ * You may now "send xxx" where "xxx" is a directory name, and this
-+ will send all the files from the directory xxx, as if you had typed
-+ "send xxx/*". You can also use the special shorthand "send ." to
-+ send all the files from the current directory.
-+ * To easily skip over backup files (the ones whose names end like
-+ .~22~) when sending, you can use SEND /NOBACKUP (see [507]Section
-+ 4.0.6 for details).
-+ * When choosing Kermit to expand wildcards, rather than the shell,
-+ you can choose whether "dot files" -- files whose names begin with
-+ ".", which are normally "invisible" -- should be matched:
-+ SET WILD KERMIT /NO-MATCH-DOT-FILES (this is the default)
-+ SET WILD KERMIT /MATCH-DOT-FILES (this allows matching of "." files)
-+
-+ or include the /DOTFILES or /NODOTFILES switch on the command you
-+ are using, such as SEND or DIRECTORY.
-+ * Commands such as DIRECTORY and SEND allow recursive directory
-+ traversal. There are also new functions for this to use in scripts.
-+ See [508]Section 4.11 for details.
-+
-+ When building file lists in UNIX, C-Kermit follows symbolic links.
-+ Because of this, you might encounter any or all of the following
-+ phenomena:
-+
-+ * Multiple copies of the same file; e.g. one from its real directory
-+ and others from links to its real directory, if both the real
-+ directory and the links to it are in the wildcard expansion list.
-+ * A command might unexpectedly "hang" for a long time because an NFS
-+ link might not be responding, or the directory you are looking at
-+ contains a link to a huge directory tree (example: "directory
-+ /recursive /etc" when /etc/spool is a symlink to /var/spool, which
-+ is a large organization's incoming email directory, containing tens
-+ of thousands of subdirectories).
-+
-+ The size of the file list that Kermit can build is limited in most
-+ C-Kermit implementations. The limit, if any, depends on the
-+ implementation. Use the SHOW FEATURES command and look in the
-+ alphabetized options list for MAXWLD to see the value.
-+
-+4.9.2. In Kermit 95
-+
-+ Kermit 95 1.1.19 and later uses the same pattern matching syntax as in
-+ UNIX, but (as always) you will encounter numerous difficulties if you
-+ use backslash (\) as the directory separator. In any command where K95
-+ parses filenames itself (that is, practically any file-oriented command
-+ except RUN), you can use forward slash (/) as the directory separator
-+ to avoid all the nasty conflicts.
-+
-+4.9.3. In VMS, AOS/VS, OS-9, VOS, etc.
-+
-+ Platforms other than UNIX, Windows 95/98/NT, and OS/2 have their own
-+ filename matching capabilities that are, in general, different from
-+ Kermit's built-in ones and in any case might conflict with them. For
-+ example, [] encloses directory names in VMS.
-+
-+ Nevertheless you can still use all the pattern-matching capabilities
-+ described in [509]Section 4.9.1 by loading a file list into an array
-+ (e.g. with \ffiles(*,&a), see [510]Section 4.11.3) and then using IF
-+ MATCH on the members.
-+
-+4.10. Additional Pathname Controls
-+
-+ In version 6.0 and earlier, C-Kermit's SET { SEND, RECEIVE } PATHNAMES
-+ command had only ON and OFF as options. In version 7.0, there are more
-+ choices:
-+
-+ SET SEND PATHNAMES OFF
-+ When sending a file, strip all disk/directory information from
-+ the name. Example: "send /usr/olga/letters/oofa.txt" sends the
-+ file as "oofa.txt". This applies to actual filenames, not to any
-+ as-name you might specify.
-+
-+ SET SEND PATHNAMES RELATIVE
-+ When sending a file, leave the pathname on as given. For
-+ example, if your current directory is /usr/olga, "send
-+ letters/oofa.txt" sends the file as "letters/oofa.txt", not
-+ "/usr/olga/letters/oofa.txt" or "letters.txt".
-+
-+ SET SEND PATHNAMES ABSOLUTE
-+ When sending a file, convert its name to the full, absolute
-+ local pathname. For example, if your current directory is
-+ /usr/olga, "send letters/oofa.txt" sends the file as
-+ "/usr/olga/letters/oofa.txt". NOTE: Even with this setting,
-+ device and/or node names are not included. For example, in VMS,
-+ any node or device name is stripped; in Windows or OS/2, any
-+ disk letter is stripped.
-+
-+ SET RECEIVE PATHNAMES OFF
-+ When receiving a file, strip all disk/directory information from
-+ the name before attempting to store it. This applies to incoming
-+ filename, not to any as-name you might specify. Example: If a
-+ file arrives under the name "/usr/olga/letters/oofa.txt" it is
-+ stored simply as "oofa.txt" in your download directory or, if no
-+ download directory has been specified, in your current
-+ directory.
-+
-+ SET RECEIVE PATHNAMES RELATIVE
-+ When receiving a file, leave the pathname on as it appears in
-+ the incoming name, but if the incoming name appears to be
-+ absolute, make it relative to your current or download
-+ directory. Examples:
-+
-+ + "oofa.txt" is stored as "oofa.txt".
-+ + "letters/oofa.txt" is stored as "letters/oofa.txt"; the
-+ "letters" subdirectory is created if it does not already
-+ exist.
-+ + "/usr/olga/letters/oofa.txt" is stored as
-+ "usr/olga/letters/oofa.txt" in your current or download
-+ directory, and the "usr", "usr/olga", etc, directories are
-+ created if they do not exist.
-+
-+ SET RECEIVE PATHNAMES ABSOLUTE
-+ The incoming filename is used as given. Thus it cannot be stored
-+ unless the given path (if any) already exists or can be created.
-+ In this case, node, device, or disk designations are NOT
-+ stripped, since they most likely were given explicitly by the
-+ user as an as-name, meant to be used as given.
-+
-+ SET RECEIVE PATHNAMES AUTO
-+ This is the default, and means RELATIVE if the sender tells me
-+ it is a recursive transfer, OFF otherwise.
-+
-+ Set FILE NAMES CONVERTED now also affects pathnames too. When PATHNAMES
-+ are RELATIVE or ABSOLUTE and FILE NAMES are CONVERTED, the file sender
-+ converts its native directory-name format to UNIX format, and the file
-+ receiver converts from UNIX format to its native one; thus UNIX format
-+ is the common intermediate representation for directory hierarchies, as
-+ it is in the ZIP/UNZIP programs (which is why ZIP archives are
-+ transportable among, UNIX, DOS, and VMS).
-+
-+ Here's an example in which a file is sent from Windows to UNIX with
-+ relative pathnames and FILE NAMES CONVERTED:
-+
-+ Source name Intermediate name Destination Name
-+ C:\K95\TMP\OOFA.TXT K95/TMP/OOFA.TXT k95/tmp/oofa.txt
-+
-+ In a more complicated example, we send the same file from Windows to
-+ VMS:
-+
-+ Source name Intermediate name Destination Name
-+ C:\K95\TMP\OOFA.TXT K95/TMP/OOFA.TXT [.K95.TMP]OOFA.TXT
-+
-+ (Note that disk letters and device designations are always stripped
-+ when pathnames are relative).
-+
-+ As you can imagine, as more and more directory formats are considered,
-+ this approach keeps matters simple: on each platform, Kermit must know
-+ only its own local format and the common intermediate one. In most
-+ cases, the receiver can detect which format is used automatically.
-+
-+4.11. Recursive SEND and GET: Transferring Directory Trees
-+
-+ C-Kermit 7.0 in selected versions (UNIX, VMS, VOS, AOS/VS, Windows, and
-+ OS/2 at this writing) now permits the SEND command to traverse
-+ directories "recursively" if you ask it to; that is, to send files from
-+ the current or specified directory and all of its subdirectories too,
-+ and their subdirectories, etc. (Some other commands can do this too,
-+ including DIRECTORY.)
-+
-+ This feature is new to UNIX, Windows, VOS, and OS/2. VMS and AOS/VS
-+ have always included "wildcard" or "template" characters that allow
-+ this, and in this case, recursive directory traversal could happen
-+ behind Kermit's back, i.e. Kermit does not have to do it itself (in
-+ VMS, the notation is "[...]" or "[directory...]"; in AOS/VS is "#"). In
-+ C-Kermit 7.0, however, SEND /RECURSIVE is supported by C-Kermit itself
-+ for VMS.
-+
-+4.11.1. Command-Line Options
-+
-+ To descend a directory tree when sending files, use the -L command-line
-+ option to indicate that the send operation is to be recursive, and
-+ include a name or pattern to be sent. When giving a pattern, you should
-+ enclose it in quotes to prevent the shell from expanding it. Examples:
-+
-+ $ kermit -Ls "/usr/olga/*" # send all of Olga's files in all her directories
-+ $ kermit -Ls foo.txt # send all foo.txt files in this directory tree
-+ $ kermit -Ls "*.txt" # send all .txt files in this directory tree
-+ $ kermit -Ls "letters/*" # send all files in the letters directory tree
-+ $ kermit -Ls letters # send all files in the letters directory tree
-+ $ kermit -Ls "*" # send all files in this directory tree
-+ $ kermit -Ls . # UNIX only: send all files in this directory tree
-+ $ kermit -s . # UNIX only: a filename of . implies -L
-+
-+ If you let the shell expand wildcards, Kermit only sends files whose
-+ names match files in the current or given directory, because the shell
-+ replaces an unquoted wildcard expression with the list of matching
-+ files -- and the shell does not build recursive lists. Note that the
-+ "." notation for the tree rooted at the current directory is allowed
-+ only in UNIX, since in Windows and OS/2, it means "*.*" (nonrecursive).
-+
-+4.11.2. The SEND /RECURSIVE Command
-+
-+ If you include the /RECURSIVE switch in a SEND (or MOVE, or similar)
-+ command, it means to descend the current or specified directory tree
-+ searching for files whose names match the given name or pattern. Since
-+ this is not terribly useful unless you also include pathnames with the
-+ outbound files, the /RECURSIVE switch also includes an implicit
-+ /PATHNAMES:RELATIVE switch (which you can undo by including an explicit
-+ /PATHNAMES switch after the /RECURSIVE switch).
-+
-+ Examples:
-+
-+ SEND /RECURSIVE *
-+ Sends all of the files in the current directory and all the
-+ files in all of its subdirectories, and all of their
-+ subdirectories, etc, including their relative pathnames. Empty
-+ directories are not sent.
-+
-+ SEND /RECURSIVE /PATHNAMES:ABSOLUTE *
-+ Sends all of the files in the current directory and all the
-+ files in all of its subdirectories, and all of their
-+ subdirectories, etc, including their absolute pathnames.
-+
-+ SEND /RECURSIVE /PATHNAMES:OFF *
-+ Sends all of the files in the current directory and all the
-+ files in all of its subdirectories, and all of their
-+ subdirectories, etc, without pathnames.
-+
-+ SEND /RECURSIVE /usr/olga/*
-+ Sends all of the files in the /usr/olga directory and all the
-+ files in all of its subdirectories, and all of their
-+ subdirectories, etc.
-+
-+ SEND /RECURSIVE /usr/olga (or /usr/olga/)
-+ Same as above. If the name is a directory name (with or without
-+ a trailing slash), its files are sent, and those of its
-+ subdirectories, and their subdirectories, etc (see [511]Section
-+ 4.9).
-+
-+ SEND /RECURSIVE /TEXT /usr/olga/*.txt
-+ As above, but only files whose names end with ".txt" are sent,
-+ and they are sent in text mode (as they would be by default
-+ anyway if SET FILE PATTERNS is ON or AUTO).
-+
-+ SEND .
-+ UNIX only: Send all the files in the current directory.
-+
-+ SEND /RECURSIVE .
-+ UNIX only: Sends all of the files in the current directory and
-+ all of its subdirectories, etc ([512]Section 4.9).
-+
-+ The /RECURSIVE switch is different from most other switches in that its
-+ effect is immediate (but still local to the command in which it is
-+ given), because it determines how filenames are to be parsed. For
-+ example, "send *.txt" fails with a parse error ("No files match") if
-+ there are no *.txt files in the current directory, but "send /recursive
-+ *.txt" succeeds if there are ".txt" files anywhere in the tree rooted
-+ at the current directory.
-+
-+ The /RECURSIVE switch also affects the file lists displayed if you type
-+ "?" in a filename field. "send ./?" lists the regular files in the
-+ current directory, but "send /recursive ./?" lists the entire directory
-+ tree rooted at the current directory.
-+
-+4.11.3. The GET /RECURSIVE Command
-+
-+ In a client/server setting, the client can also request a recursive
-+ transfer with:
-+
-+ GET /RECURSIVE [ other switches ] remote-filespec [ local-spec ]
-+
-+ In which remote file specification can be a directory name, a filename,
-+ a wildcard, or any combination. If the local-spec is not given (and
-+ PATHNAMES are RELATIVE), incoming files and directories go into the
-+ current local directory. If local-spec is given and is a directory, it
-+ becomes the root of the tree into which the incoming files and
-+ directories are placed. If local-spec has the syntax of a directory
-+ name (e.g. in UNIX it ends with /), C-Kermit creates the directory and
-+ then places the incoming files into it. If local-spec is a filename
-+ (not recommended), then all incoming files are stored with that name
-+ with collisions handled according to the FILE COLLISION setting.
-+
-+ Again, the normal method for transferring directory trees uses relative
-+ pathnames, and this is the default when the sender has been given the
-+ /RECURSIVE switch. The action at the receiver depends on its RECEIVE
-+ PATHNAMES setting. The default is AUTO, meaning that if the sender
-+ tells it to expect a recursive transfer, then it should automatically
-+ switch to relative pathnames for this transfer only; otherwise it obeys
-+ the RECEIVE PATHNAMES setting of OFF, ABSOLUTE, or RELATIVE.
-+
-+ What happens if a file arrives that has an absolute pathname, when the
-+ receiver has been told to use only relative pathnames? As a security
-+ precaution, in this case the receiver treats the name as if it was
-+ relative. For example, if a file arrives as:
-+
-+ /usr/olga/oofa.txt
-+
-+ The receiver creates a "usr" subdirectory in its current directory, and
-+ then an "olga" subdirectory under the "usr" subdirectory in which to
-+ store the incoming file.
-+
-+ Suppose, however there is a sequence of directories:
-+
-+ /usr/olga/a/b/c/d/
-+
-+ in which "a" contains nothing but a subdirectory "b", which in turn
-+ contains nothing but a subdirectory "c", which in turn contains nothing
-+ but a subdirectory "d", which contains nothing at all. Thus there are
-+ no files in the "/usr/olga/a/" tree, and so it is not sent, and
-+ therefore it is not reproduced on the target computer.
-+
-+4.11.4. New and Changed File Functions
-+
-+ C-Kermit 7.0 adds the following functions:
-+
-+ \ffiles(pattern[,&a])
-+ This function has been changed to match only regular files in
-+ the current or given directory, and to take an optional array
-+ name as a second argument (explained below).
-+
-+ \fdirectories(pattern[,&a])
-+ Returns the number of directories that match the given pattern.
-+ If the pattern does not include a directory, then the search is
-+ performed in the current directory.
-+
-+ \frfiles(pattern[,&a])
-+ Returns the number of files in the current or given directory
-+ and all of its subdirectories, and their subdirectories, etc,
-+ that match the given pattern. Warning -- this one can take quite
-+ some time if performed at the root of a large directory tree.
-+
-+ \frdirectories(pattern[,&a])
-+ Returns the number of directories in the current or given
-+ directory and all of its subdirectories, and their
-+ subdirectories, etc, that match the given pattern.
-+
-+ Each of these functions builds up a list of files to be returned by the
-+ \fnextfile() function, just as \ffiles() always has done. (This can
-+ also be done with the /ARRAY switch of the DIRECTORY command; see
-+ [513]Sections 4.5.1 and [514]7.10).
-+
-+ Each of these functions can be given an array name as an optional
-+ second argument. If an array name is supplied, the array will contain
-+ the number of files as its 0th element, and the filenames in elements 1
-+ through last. If the array already existed, its previous contents are
-+ lost. For example, if the current directory contains two files,
-+ oofa.txt and foo.bar, then "\ffiles(*,&a)" creates an array \&a[] with
-+ a dimension of 2, containing the following elements:
-+
-+ \&a[0] = 2
-+ \&a[1] = oofa.txt
-+ \&a[2] = foo.bar
-+
-+ If no files match the specification given in the first argument, the
-+ array gets a dimension of 0, which is the same as undeclaring the
-+ array.
-+
-+ Note that the order in which the array is filled (and in which
-+ \fnextfile() returns filenames) is indeterminate (but see [515]Section
-+ 7.10.5).
-+
-+ Here's an example that builds and prints a list of all the file whose
-+ names end in .txt in the current directory and all its descendents:
-+
-+ asg \%n \frfiles(*.txt)
-+ declare \&a[\%n]
-+ for \%i 1 \%n 1 {
-+ asg \&a[\%i] \fnextfile()
-+ echo \flpad(\%i,4). "\&a[\%i]"
-+ }
-+
-+ Alternatively, using the array method, and then printing the filenames
-+ in alphabetic order (see [516]Section 7.10.3 and [517]7.10.5):
-+
-+ asg \%n \frfiles(*.txt,&a)
-+ sort &a
-+ for \%i 1 \%n 1 {
-+ echo \flpad(\%i,4). "\&a[\%i]"
-+ }
-+
-+ Or even more simply:
-+
-+ asg \%n \frfiles(*.txt,&a)
-+ sort &a
-+ show array &a
-+
-+ As noted elsewhere, the file lists built by \ffiles(), \frfiles(), etc,
-+ are now "safe" in the sense that SEND and other file-related commands
-+ can reference \fnextfile() without resetting the list:
-+
-+ set send pathnames relative
-+ for \%i 1 \frfiles(*.txt) 1 {
-+ asg \%a \fnextfile()
-+ echo Sending \%a...
-+ send \%a
-+ if fail break
-+ }
-+
-+ Copying to an array (as shown on p.398 of [518]Using C-Kermit 2nd Ed)
-+ is no longer necessary.
-+
-+4.11.5. Moving Directory Trees Between Like Systems
-+
-+4.11.5.1. UNIX to UNIX
-+
-+ Transferring a directory tree from one computer to another replicates
-+ the file sender's arrangement of files and directories on the file
-+ receiver's computer. Normally this is done using relative pathnames,
-+ since the user IDs might not be identical on the two computers. Let's
-+ say both computers are UNIX based, running C-Kermit 7.0 or later. On
-+ the sending computer (leaving out the connection details, etc):
-+
-+ C-Kermit> cd /usr/olga
-+ C-Kermit> send /recursive .
-+
-+ The /RECURSIVE switch tells C-Kermit to descend through the directory
-+ tree and to include relative pathnames on outbound filenames.
-+
-+ On the receiving computer:
-+
-+ C-Kermit> mkdir olgas-files ; Make a new directory.
-+ C-Kermit> cd olgas-files ; CD to it.
-+ C-Kermit> receive /recursive ; = /PATHNAMES:RELATIVE
-+
-+ Each Kermit program recognizes that the other is running under UNIX and
-+ switches to binary mode and literal filenames automatically.
-+ Directories are automatically created on the receiving system as
-+ needed. File dates and permissions are automatically reproduced from
-+ source to destination.
-+
-+4.11.5.2. VMS to VMS
-+
-+ To send recursively from VMS, simply include the /RECURSIVE switch, for
-+ example at the sender:
-+
-+ $ kermit
-+ C-Kermit> cd [olga]
-+ C-Kermit> send /recursive *.*;0
-+
-+ And at the receiver:
-+
-+ C-Kermit> cd [.olga]
-+ C-Kermit> receive /recursive
-+
-+ The notation "..." within directory brackets in VMS means "this
-+ directory and all directories below it"; the /RECURSIVE switch, when
-+ given to the sender, implies the use of "..." in the file specification
-+ so you don't have to include "..."; but it makes no difference if you
-+ do:
-+
-+ $ kermit
-+ C-Kermit> send /recursive [olga...]*.*;0
-+
-+ And at the receiver:
-+
-+ C-Kermit> cd [.olga]
-+ C-Kermit> receive /recursive
-+
-+ In either case, since both systems recognize each other as VMS, they
-+ switch into LABELED transfer mode automatically.
-+
-+4.11.6. Moving Directory Trees Between Unlike Systems
-+
-+ There are several difficulties with recursive transfers between unlike
-+ systems:
-+
-+ * File formats can be different, especially text files character sets
-+ and record formats. This can now be handled by using SET FILE
-+ PATTERN, SET FILE TEXT-PATTERNS, and SET FILE BINARY-PATTERNS
-+ ([519]Section 4.3).
-+ * File naming conventions are different. For example, one system
-+ might allow (and use) longer filenames than the other. You can tell
-+ Kermit how to handle file names with the normal "set file names"
-+ and "set file collision" mechanisms. Most modern Kermits are fairly
-+ tolerant of illegal filenames and should not fail simply because of
-+ an incoming filename; rather, it will do its best to convert it to
-+ a recognizable and unique legal filename.
-+ * Directory notations can be different, e.g. backslashes instead of
-+ slashes, brackets, parentheses, spaces, etc. But this is now
-+ handled by converting pathnames to a standard format during
-+ transfer ([520]Section 4.10).
-+
-+ So now, for the first time, it is possible to send directory trees
-+ among any combination of UNIX, DOS, Windows, OS/2, VMS, AOS/VS, etc.
-+ Here's an example sending files from an HP-UX system (where text files
-+ are encoded in the HP Roman8 character set) to a PC with K95 (where
-+ text files are encoded in CP850):
-+
-+ Sender:
-+ cd xxx ; CD to root of source tree
-+ set file type binary ; Default transfer mode
-+ set file character-set hp-roman8 ; Local character set for text files
-+ set xfer character-set latin1 ; Transfer character set
-+ set file patterns on ; Enable automatic file-type switching...
-+ set file binary-patterns *.Z *.gz *.o ; based on these patterns...
-+ set file text-patterns *.txt *.c *.h ; for binary and text files.
-+ send /recursive * ; Send all the file in this directory tree
-+
-+ Receiver:
-+ cd yyy ; CD to root of destination tree
-+ set file character-set cp850 ; Local character set for text files
-+ receive /pathnames:relative ; Receive with pathnames
-+
-+ Notes:
-+ * Replace "xxx" and "yyy" with the desired directories.
-+ * Replace the file character sets appropriately.
-+ * Change the patterns as needed (or just use the built-in default
-+ lists).
-+ * SEND /RECURSIVE also implies /PATHNAMES:RELATIVE.
-+ * The file sender tells the file receiver the transfer mode of each
-+ file.
-+ * The file sender tells the file receiver the transfer character set.
-+ * By default, destination file dates will be the same as on the
-+ source.
-+ * Many of the settings shown might already be set by default.
-+ * See [521]Sections 4.3, [522]4.10, and [523]4.15 for additional
-+ explanation.
-+
-+ If you are refreshing an existing directory on the destination
-+ computer, use "set file collision update" or other appropriate file
-+ collision option to handle filename collisions.
-+
-+4.12. Where Did My File Go?
-+
-+ Now that Kermit can be started by clicking on desktop icons (thus
-+ obscuring the concept of "current directory"), and can have a download
-+ directory, and can create directories for incoming files on the fly,
-+ etc, sometimes it is easy to lose a file after transfer. Of course, if
-+ you keep a transaction log:
-+
-+ LOG TRANSACTIONS
-+
-+ it will record the fate and final resting place of each file. But in
-+ case you did not keep a log, the new command:
-+
-+ WHERE
-+
-+ added in C-Kermit 7.0, gives you as much information as it has about
-+ the location of the last files transferred, including the pathname
-+ reported by the receiving Kermit, if any, when C-Kermit is the sender.
-+ This information was also added to SHOW FILE in somewhat less detail.
-+
-+4.13. File Output Buffer Control
-+
-+ (UNIX only). The new command SET FILE OUTPUT lets you control how
-+ incoming files are written to disk:
-+
-+ SET FILE OUTPUT BUFFERED [ size ]
-+ Chooses buffered file output; this is the default. UNIX does its
-+ normal sort of disk buffering. The optional size specifies
-+ Kermit's own file output buffer size, and therefore the
-+ frequency of disk accesses (write() system calls) -- the bigger
-+ the size, the fewer the disk accesses.
-+
-+ SET FILE OUTPUT UNBUFFERED [ size ]
-+ This forces each file output write() call to actually commit the
-+ data to disk immediately. Choosing this option will usually slow
-+ file reception down.
-+
-+ SET FILE OUTPUT BLOCKING
-+ Write() calls should not return until they are complete. This is
-+ the normal setting, and it lets Kermit detect disk-write errors
-+ immediately.
-+
-+ SET FILE OUTPUT NONBLOCKING
-+ Write() calls should return immediately. This can speed up file
-+ reception, but also delay the detection of disk-write errors.
-+
-+ Experimentation with these parameters should be harmless, and might (or
-+ might not) have a perceptible, even dramatic, effect on performance.
-+
-+4.14. Improved Responsiveness
-+
-+ In version 7.0, C-Kermit's file-transfer protocol engine has been tuned
-+ for additional speed and responsiveness.
-+
-+ * Binary-mode transfers over 8-bit connections, a very common case,
-+ are now handled in a special way that minimizes overhead.
-+ * SET TRANSFER CRC-CALCULATION is now OFF by default, rather than ON.
-+ (This affects only the overall per-transfer CRC, \v(crc16), not the
-+ per-packet CRCs)
-+ * Connection loss during file transfer is now detected immediately in
-+ most cases on Internet connections and on serial connections when
-+ CARRIER-WATCH is not set to OFF.
-+
-+4.15. Doubling and Ignoring Characters for Transparency
-+
-+ The following commands were added in 7.0, primarily to allow successful
-+ file transfer through ARPAnet TACs and with Honeywell DPS6 systems, but
-+ can be used in any setting where they might be needed:
-+
-+ SET SEND DOUBLE-CHAR { [ char [ char [ ... ] ] ], NONE }
-+ Tells C-Kermit to double the specified characters (use decimal
-+ notation) in packets that it sends. For example, if you are
-+ sending files through a device that uses @ as an escape
-+ character, but allows you to send a single copy of @ through by
-+ doubling it, use "set send double 64".
-+
-+ SET RECEIVE IGNORE-CHAR [ char [ char [ ... ] ] ]
-+ Tells C-Kermit to ignore the specified character(s) in incoming
-+ packets. Use this, for example, when something between the
-+ sender and receiver is inserting linefeeds for wrapping, NULs
-+ for padding, etc.
-+
-+4.16. New File-Transfer Display Formats
-+
-+ SET TRANSFER DISPLAY { BRIEF, CRT, FULLSCREEN, NONE, SERIAL }
-+ Selects the file-transfer display format.
-+
-+ BRIEF is the new one. This writes one line to the screen per file,
-+ showing the file's name, transfer mode, size, the status of the
-+ transfer, and when the transfer is successful, the effective data rate
-+ in characters per second (CPS). Example:
-+
-+ SEND ckcfn3.o (binary) (59216 bytes): OK (0.104 sec, 570206 cps)
-+ SEND ckcfns.o (binary) (114436 bytes): OK (0.148 sec, 772006 cps)
-+ SEND ckcmai.c (text) (79147 bytes): OK (0.180 sec, 438543 cps)
-+ SEND ckcmai.o (binary) (35396 bytes): OK (0.060 sec, 587494 cps)
-+ SEND ckcnet.o (binary) (62772 bytes): REFUSED
-+ SEND ckcpro.o (binary) (121448 bytes): OK (0.173 sec, 703928 cps)
-+ SEND ckcpro.w (text) (63687 bytes): OK (0.141 sec, 453059 cps)
-+ SEND makefile (text) (186636 bytes): OK (0.444 sec, 420471 cps)
-+ SEND wermit (binary) (1064960 bytes): OK (2.207 sec, 482477 cps)
-+
-+ Note that transfer times are now obtained in fractional seconds, rather
-+ than whole seconds, so the CPS figures are more accurate (the display
-+ shows 3 decimal places, but internally the figure is generally precise
-+ to the microsecond).
-+
-+4.17. New Transaction Log Formats
-+
-+ The new command:
-+
-+ SET TRANSACTION-LOG { VERBOSE, FTP, BRIEF [ separator ] }
-+
-+ lets you choose the format of the transaction log. VERBOSE (the
-+ default) indicates the traditional format described in the book. BRIEF
-+ and FTP are new. This command must be given prior to the LOG
-+ TRANSACTION command if a non-VERBOSE type is desired.
-+
-+4.17.1. The BRIEF Format
-+
-+ BRIEF chooses a one-line per file format suitable for direct
-+ importation into databases like Informix, Oracle, or Sybase, in which:
-+
-+ * Each record has 8 fields.
-+ * Fields are separated by a non-alphanumeric separator character.
-+ * The default separator character is comma (,).
-+ * Any field containing the separator character is enclosed in
-+ doublequotes.
-+ * The final field is enclosed in doublequotes.
-+
-+ The fields are:
-+
-+ 1. Date in yyyymmdd format
-+ 2. Time in hh:mm:ss format
-+ 3. Action: SEND or RECV
-+ 4. The local filename
-+ 5. The size of the file
-+ 6. The transfer mode (text, binary, image, labeled)
-+ 7. The status of the transfer: OK or FAILED
-+ 8. Additional status-dependent info, in doublequotes.
-+
-+ Examples:
-+
-+ 20000208,12:08:52,RECV,/u/olga/oofa.txt,5246,text,OK,"0.284sec 18443cps"
-+ 20000208,12:09:31,SEND,/u/olga/oofa.exe,32768,binary,OK,"1.243sec 26362cps"
-+ 20000208,12:10:02,SEND,"/u/olga/a,b",10130,text,FAILED,"Refused: date"
-+
-+ Note how the filename is enclosed in doublequotes in the final example,
-+ because it contains a comma.
-+
-+ To obtain BRIEF format, you must give the SET TRANSACTION-LOG BRIEF
-+ command before the LOG TRANSACTIONS command. (If you give them in the
-+ opposite order, a heading is written to the log by the LOG command.)
-+
-+4.17.2. The FTP Format
-+
-+ SET TRANSACTION-LOG FTP (available only in UNIX) chooses a format that
-+ is compatible with the WU-FTPD (Washington University FTP daemon) log,
-+ and so can be processed by any software that processes the WU-FTPD log.
-+ It logs only transfers in and out, both successful and failed (but
-+ success or failure is not indicated, due to lack of a field in the
-+ WU-FTPD log format for this purpose). Non-transfer events are not
-+ recorded.
-+
-+ Unlike other logs, the FTP-format transaction log is opened in append
-+ mode by default. This allows you to easily keep a record of all your
-+ kermit transfers, and it also allows the same log to be shared by
-+ multiple simultaneous Kermit processes or (permissions permitting)
-+ users. You can, of course, force creation of a new logfile by
-+ specifying the NEW keyword after the filename, e.g.
-+
-+ log transactions oofa.log new
-+
-+ All records in the FTP-style log are in a consistent format. The first
-+ field is fixed-length and contains spaces; subsequent fields are
-+ variable length, contain no spaces, and are separated by one or more
-+ spaces. The fields are:
-+
-+ Timestamp
-+ This is an asctime-style timestamp, example: "Wed Sep 16
-+ 20:19:05 1999" It is always exactly 24 characters long, and the
-+ subfields are always in fixed positions.
-+
-+ Elapsed time
-+ The whole number of seconds required to transfer the file, as a
-+ string of decimal digits, e.g. "24".
-+
-+ Connection
-+ The name of the network host to which C-Kermit is connected, or
-+ the name of the serial device through which it has dialed (or
-+ has a direct connection), or "/dev/tty" for transfers in remote
-+ mode.
-+
-+ Bytes transferred
-+ The number of bytes transferred, decimal digits, e.g. "1537904".
-+
-+ Filename
-+ The name of the file that was transferred, e.g.
-+ "/pub/ftp/kermit/a/README.TXT". If the filename contains any
-+ spaces or control characters, each such character is replaced by
-+ an underscore ('_') character.
-+
-+ Mode
-+ The letter 'b' if the file was transferred in binary mode, or
-+ 'a' if it was transferred in text (ASCII) mode.
-+
-+ Options
-+ This field always contains an underscore ('_') character.
-+
-+ Direction
-+ The letter 'o' if the file was transferred Out, and 'i' if the
-+ file was transferred In.
-+
-+ User class
-+ The letter 'r' indicates the file was transferred by a Real
-+ user.
-+
-+ User identification
-+ The ID of the user who transferred the file.
-+
-+ Server identification
-+ The string "kermit". This distinguishes a Kermit transfer log
-+ record from a WU-FTPD record, which contains "ftp" in this
-+ field.
-+
-+ Authentication class
-+ The digit '1' if we know the user's ID on the client system,
-+ otherwise '0'. Currently, always '0'.
-+
-+ Authenticated user
-+ If the authentication class is '1', this is the user's ID on the
-+ client system. Otherwise it is an asterisk ('*'). Currently it
-+ is always an asterisk.
-+
-+ Examples:
-+
-+ Thu Oct 22 17:42:48 1998 0 * 94 /usr/olga/new.x a _ i r olga kermit 0 *
-+ Thu Oct 22 17:51:29 1998 1 * 147899 /usr/olga/test.c a _ o r olga kermit 0 *
-+ Thu Oct 22 17:51:44 1998 1 * 235 /usr/olga/test.o b _ i r olga kermit 0 *
-+ Fri Oct 23 12:10:25 1998 0 * 235 /usr/olga/x.ksc a _ o r olga kermit 0 *
-+
-+ Note that an ftp-format transaction log can also be selected on the
-+ Kermit command line as follows:
-+
-+ kermit --xferfile:filespec
-+
-+ This is equivalent to:
-+
-+ SET TRANSACTION-LOG FTP
-+ LOG TRANSACTIONS filespec APPEND
-+
-+ Conceivably it could be possible to have a system-wide shared Kermit
-+ log, except that UNIX lacks any notion of an append-only file; thus any
-+ user who could append to the log could also delete it (or alter it).
-+ This problem could be worked around using setuid/setgid tricks, but
-+ these would most likely interfere with the other setuid/setgid tricks
-+ C-Kermit must use for getting at dialout devices and UUCP logfiles.
-+
-+4.18. Unprefixing NUL
-+
-+ As of 6.1.193 Alpha.10, C-Kermit can finally send and receive
-+ file-transfer packets in which NUL (ASCII 0) is unprefixed (no more
-+ NUL-terminated packets!). NUL is, of course, extremely prevalent in
-+ binary files such as executables, and this has been a significant
-+ source of packet overhead. For example, when transferring itself (the
-+ SunOS C-Kermit executable) with minimal prefixing and 9000-byte
-+ packets, we see:
-+
-+ File size: 1064960
-+ Packet chars with 0 prefixed: 1199629 overhead = 12.65%
-+ Packet chars with 0 unprefixed: 1062393 overhead = -0.03%
-+
-+ Transfer rates go up accordingly, not only because of the reduced
-+ amount of i/o, but also because less computation is required on each
-+ end.
-+
-+4.19. Clear-Channel Protocol
-+
-+ Now that C-Kermit itself is capable of sending and receiving any byte
-+ at all on a clear channel ([524]Section 4.18), it is, for the first
-+ time, in a position to negotiate a clear channel with the other Kermit,
-+ giving it permission (but not requiring it) to unprefix any and all
-+ characters that it knows are safe. In general this means all but the
-+ Kermit start-of-packet character (normally Ctrl-A), Carriage Return
-+ (not only Kermit's end-of-packet character, but also treated specially
-+ on Telnet NVT links), and IAC (255, also special to Telnet).
-+
-+ By default, C-Kermit will say it has a clear channel only if it has
-+ opened a TCP socket. Since the Kermit program on the far end of a
-+ TCP/IP connection generally does not know it has a TCP/IP connection,
-+ it will not announce a clear channel unless it has been told to do so.
-+ The command is:
-+
-+ SET CLEAR-CHANNEL { ON, OFF, AUTO }
-+
-+ AUTO is the default, meaning that the clear-channel status is
-+ determined automatically from the type of connection. ON means to
-+ announce a clear channel, OFF means not to announce it. Use SHOW
-+ STREAMING ([525]Section 4.20) to see the current CLEAR-CHANNEL status.
-+ Synonym: SET CLEARCHANNEL.
-+
-+ CLEAR-CHANNEL is also set if you start C-Kermit with the -I switch (see
-+ [526]Section 4.20).
-+
-+ Whenever a clear channel is negotiated, the resulting control-character
-+ unprefixing is "sticky"; that is, it remains in effect after the
-+ transfer so you can use SHOW CONTROL to see what was negotiated.
-+
-+ You can also see whether a clear channel was negotiated in the
-+ STATISTICS /VERBOSE Display.
-+
-+ The advantage of the clear channel feature is that it can make file
-+ transfers go faster automatically. The disadvantage would be
-+ file-transfer failures if the channel is not truly clear, for example
-+ if C-Kermit made a Telnet connection to a terminal server, and then
-+ dialed out from there; or if C-Kermit made an Rlogin connection to host
-+ and then made a Telnet connection from there to another host. If a file
-+ transfer fails on a TCP/IP connection, use SHOW CONTROL to check
-+ whether control characters became unprefixed as a result of protocol
-+ negotiations, and/or SHOW STREAMING ([527]Section 4.20) to see if
-+ "clear-channel" was negotiated. If this happened, use SET CLEAR-CHANNEL
-+ OFF and SET PREFIXING CAUTIOUS (or whatever) to prevent it from
-+ happening again.
-+
-+4.20. Streaming Protocol
-+
-+ A new Kermit protocol option called "streaming" was added in C-Kermit
-+ 7.0. The idea is that if the two Kermit partners have a reliable
-+ transport (such as TCP/IP or X.25) between them, then there is no need
-+ to send ACKs for Data packets, or NAKs, since a reliable transport
-+ will, by definition, deliver all packets in order and undamaged. On
-+ such a connection, streaming cuts down not only on Kermit program
-+ overhead (switching back and forth between reading and sending
-+ packets), but also tends to make the underlying transport use itself
-+ more efficiently (e.g. by defeating the Nagle algorithm and/or Delayed
-+ ACK stratagem of the TCP layer). Furthermore, it allows transfers to
-+ work smoothly on extremely slow network congestions that would
-+ otherwise cause timeouts and retransmissions, and even failure when the
-+ retry limit was exceeded.
-+
-+ The trick is knowing when we can stream:
-+
-+ 1. If C-Kermit has opened a TCP socket or X.25 connection, it offers
-+ stream.
-+ 2. If C-Kermit has been started with the -I (uppercase) option, or if
-+ it has been told to SET RELIABLE ON, it offers to stream.
-+ 3. If C-Kermit is in remote mode, and has been told to SET RELIABLE
-+ AUTO (or ON), it always offers to stream, and also always agrees to
-+ stream, if the other Kermit offers. Unless you take explicit
-+ actions to override the defaults, this allows the local Kermit (the
-+ one that made the connection, and so knows whether it's reliable)
-+ to control streaming.
-+
-+ (Note that an offer to stream also results in a Clear-Channel
-+ announcement if CLEAR-CHANNEL is set to AUTO; see [528]Section 4.19.)
-+
-+ When BOTH Kermits offer to stream, then they stream; otherwise they
-+ don't. Thus streaming-capable Kermit programs interoperate
-+ automatically and transparently with nonstreaming ones. If the two
-+ Kermits do agree to stream, you'll see the word "STREAMING" on the
-+ fullscreen file-transfer display in the Window Slots field. You can
-+ also find out afterwards with the STATISTICS or SHOW STREAMING
-+ commands.
-+
-+ WARNING: Automatic choice of streaming is based on the assumption of
-+ a "direct" end-to-end network connection; for example, a Telnet or
-+ Rlogin connection from host A to host B, and transferring files
-+ between A and B. However, if your connection has additional
-+ components -- something "in the middle" (B) that you have made a
-+ network connection to, which makes a separate connection to the
-+ destination host (C), then you don't really have a reliable
-+ connection, but C-Kermit has no way of knowing this; transferring
-+ files between A and C will probably fail. In such cases, you'll need
-+ to tell the *local* C-Kermit to "set reliable off" before
-+ transferring files (it does no good to give this command to the
-+ remote Kermit since the local one controls the RELIABLE setting).
-+
-+ Streaming is like using an infinite window size, with no timeouts and
-+ no tolerance for transmission errors (since there shouldn't be any). It
-+ relies on the underlying transport for flow control, error correction,
-+ timeouts, and retransmission. Thus it is very suitable for use on
-+ TCP/IP connections, especially slow or bursty ones, since Kermit's
-+ packet timeouts won't interfere with the transfer -- each packet takes
-+ as long to reach its destination as it takes TCP to deliver it. If TCP
-+ can't deliver the packet within its own timeout period (over which
-+ Kermit has no control), it signals a fatal error. Just like FTP.
-+
-+ Streaming goes much faster than non-streaming when a relatively small
-+ packet length is used, and it tends to go faster than non-streaming
-+ with even the longest packet lengths. The Kermit window size is
-+ irrelevant to streaming protocol, but still might affect performance in
-+ small ways since it can result in different paths through the code.
-+
-+ The definition of "reliable transport" does not necessarily demand
-+ 8-bit and control-character transparency. Streaming can work with
-+ parity and/or control-character prefixing just as well (but not as
-+ fast) as without them; in such cases you can leave RELIABLE set to ON,
-+ but set CLEARCHANNEL and/or PARITY appropriately.
-+
-+ Maximum performance -- comparable to and often exceeding FTP -- is
-+ achieved on socket-to-socket connections (in which the considerable
-+ overhead of the terminal driver and Telnet or Rlogin server is
-+ eliminated) with long packets and the new "brief" file-transfer display
-+ ([529]Section 4.16).
-+
-+4.20.1. Commands for Streaming
-+
-+ SET RELIABLE { ON, OFF, AUTO }
-+ SET RELIABLE ON tells Kermit that it has a reliable transport.
-+ SET RELIABLE OFF tells Kermit the transport is not reliable.
-+ SET RELIABLE AUTO tells Kermit that it should SET RELIABLE ON
-+ whenever it makes a reliable connection (e.g. TELNET or SET HOST
-+ on a TCP/IP or X.25 network), and when in remote mode it should
-+ believe the transport is reliable if the other Kermit says it is
-+ during Kermit protocol negotiation.
-+
-+ AUTO is the default; the Kermit program that makes the connection knows
-+ whether it is reliable, and tells the remote Kermit.
-+
-+ The RELIABLE setting has several effects, including:
-+
-+ * It can affect the timeouts used during normal ACK/NAK protocol.
-+ * It can affect the clear-channel announcement.
-+ * It can affect streaming.
-+
-+ If you TELNET or SET HOST somewhere, this includes an implicit SET
-+ RELIABLE ON command. The -I command-line option is equivalent to SET
-+ RELIABLE ON.
-+
-+ Since SET RELIABLE ON (and -I) also implies SET CLEAR CHANNEL ON, you
-+ might find that in certain cases you need to tell Kermit that even
-+ though the connection is reliable, it doesn't have a clear channel
-+ after all:
-+
-+ SET CLEAR-CHANNEL OFF
-+ SET PREFIXING CAUTIOUS ; or whatever...
-+
-+ You can control streaming without affecting the other items with:
-+
-+ SET STREAMING { ON, OFF, AUTO }
-+
-+ AUTO is the default, meaning streaming will occur if Kermit has made a
-+ TCP/IP connection or if RELIABLE is ON (or it was started with the -I
-+ command line option). OFF means don't stream; ON means offer to stream
-+ no matter what.
-+
-+4.20.2. Examples of Streaming
-+
-+ Here we look at the use and behavior of streaming on several different
-+ kinds of connections, and compare its performance with non-streaming
-+ transfers.
-+
-+4.20.2.1. Streaming on Socket-to-Socket Connections
-+
-+ Here we get streaming automatically when both Kermit programs are
-+ capable of it, since they both make socket connections. For example, on
-+ the far end:
-+
-+ C-Kermit> set host * 3000
-+ C-Kermit> server
-+
-+ and on the near end:
-+
-+ C-Kermit> set host foo.bar.xyz.com 3000
-+ (now give SEND and GET command)
-+
-+ All subsequent file transfers use streaming automatically.
-+
-+ Here are the results from 84 trials, run on a production network,
-+ disk-to-disk, in which a 1-MB binary file (the SunOS C-Kermit Sparc
-+ executable) was sent from a Sun Sparc-10 with SunOS 4.1.3 to an IBM
-+ Power Server 850 with AIX 4.1, socket-to-socket, over a 10Mbps 10BaseT
-+ Ethernet, using minimal control-character unprefixing, window sizes
-+ from 10 to 32, and packet sizes from 1450 to 9010:
-+
-+ Streaming Nonstreaming
-+ Max CPS 748955 683354
-+ Min CPS 221522 172491
-+ Mean CPS 646134 558680
-+ Median CPS 678043 595874
-+ Std Dev 101424 111493
-+
-+ Correlations:
-+
-+ CPS and window size: -0.036
-+ CPS and packet length: 0.254
-+ CPS and streaming: 0.382
-+
-+ Note that the relationship between streaming and throughput is
-+ significantly stronger than that between CPS and window size or packet
-+ length.
-+
-+ Also note that this and all other performance measurements in this
-+ section are snapshots in time; the results could be much different at
-+ other times when the load on the systems and/or the network is higher
-+ or lower.
-+
-+ In a similar socket-to-socket trial, but this time over a wide-area
-+ TCP/IP connection (from New York City to Logan, Utah, about 2000
-+ miles), the following results were obtained:
-+
-+ Streaming Nonstreaming
-+ Max CPS 338226 318203
-+ Min CPS 191659 132314
-+ Mean CPS 293744 259240
-+ Median CPS 300845 273271
-+ Std Dev 41914 52351
-+
-+ Correlations:
-+
-+ CPS and window size: 0.164
-+ CPS and packet length: 0.123
-+ CPS and streaming: 0.346
-+
-+4.20.2.2. Streaming on Telnet Connections
-+
-+ In this case the local copy of Kermit is told to TELNET or SET HOST,
-+ and so it knows it has a reliable connection and -- unless it has been
-+ told not to -- will offer to stream, and the other Kermit program,
-+ since it has STREAMING set to AUTO, agrees.
-+
-+ Since we have a reliable connection, we'll also get control-character
-+ unprefixing automatically because of the new clear-channel protocol
-+ ([530]Section 4.19).
-+
-+ Any errors that occur during streaming are fatal to the transfer. The
-+ message is "Transmission error on reliable link". Should this happen:
-+
-+ 1. Check the remote Kermit's flow control setting (SHOW
-+ COMMUNICATIONS). If it is NONE, change it to XON/XOFF, or vice
-+ versa. If it is XON/XOFF (or you just changed it to XOFF/XOFF),
-+ make sure the file sender is prefixing the XON and XOFF characters.
-+ In the most drastic case, use "set prefix all" to force prefixing
-+ of all control characters.
-+ 2. The remote Telnet server might chop off the 8th bit. In that case,
-+ tell C-Kermit to "set parity space". Or, you might be able to force
-+ the Telnet to allow eight-bit data by telling C-Kermit to "set
-+ telopt binary request accept" -- that is, request the Telnet server
-+ to enter binary mode, and accept binary-mode bids from the server.
-+ 3. The remote Telnet server might have a buffering limitation. If a
-+ and b don't cure the problem, tell the file receiver to "set
-+ receive packet-length 1000" (or other number -- use the largest one
-+ that works). This too, is no different from the non-streaming case
-+ (more about this in [531]Section 4.20.2.3).
-+
-+ And remember you can continue interrupted binary-mode transfers where
-+ they left off with the RESEND (= SEND /RECOVER) command.
-+
-+ Here are the figures for the same 84 trials between the same Sun and
-+ IBM hosts as in 4.20.2.1, on the same network, but over a Telnet
-+ connection rather than socket-to-socket:
-+
-+ Streaming Nonstreaming
-+ Max CPS 350088 322523
-+ Min CPS 95547 173152
-+ Mean CPS 321372 281830
-+ Median CPS 342604 291469
-+ Std Dev 40503 29948
-+
-+ Correlations:
-+
-+ CPS and window size: 0.001
-+ CPS and packet length: 0.152
-+ CPS and streaming: 0.128
-+
-+ Here the effect is not as emphatic as in the socket-to-socket case, yet
-+ on the whole streaming tends to be beneficial.
-+
-+ Additional measurements on HP-UX using C-Kermit 7.0 Beta.06:
-+
-+ Windowing Streaming
-+ HP-UX 8->8 not tested 14Kcps
-+ HP-UX 8->9 not tested 76Kcps
-+ HP-UX 8->10 36Kcps 66Kcps
-+ HP-UX 9->9 not tested 190Kcps
-+ HP-UX 9->10 160Kcps 378Kcps
-+
-+4.20.2.3. Streaming with Limited Packet Length
-+
-+ The IRIX telnet server (at least the ones observed in IRIX 5.3 and 6.2)
-+ does not allow Kermit to send packets longer than 4096 bytes. Thus when
-+ sending from IRIX C-Kermit when it is on the remote end of a Telnet
-+ connection, the packet length must be 4K or less. Trials in this case
-+ (in which packet lengths range from 1450 to 4000) show a strong
-+ advantage for streaming, which would be evident in any other case where
-+ the packet length is restricted, and stronger the shorter the maximum
-+ packet length.
-+
-+ Streaming Nonstreaming
-+ Max CPS 426187 366870
-+ Min CPS 407500 276517
-+ Mean CPS 415226 339168
-+ Median CPS 414139 343803
-+ Std Dev 6094 25851
-+
-+ Correlations:
-+
-+ CPS and window size: 0.116
-+ CPS and packet length: 0.241
-+ CPS and streaming: 0.901
-+
-+4.20.2.4. Streaming on Dialup Connections
-+
-+ Here "dialup" refers to a "direct" dialup connection, not a SLIP or PPP
-+ connection, which is only a particular kind of TCP/IP connection.
-+
-+ Attempt this at your own risk, and then only if (a) you have
-+ error-correcting modems, and (b) the connections between the modems and
-+ computers are also error-free, perfectly flow-controlled, and free of
-+ interrupt conflicts. Streaming can be used effectively and to fairly
-+ good advantage on such connections, but remember that the transfer is
-+ fatal if even one error is detected (also remember that should a
-+ binary-mode transfer fail, it can be recovered from the point of
-+ failure with RESEND).
-+
-+ To use streaming on an unreliable connection, you must tell both
-+ Kermits that the connection is reliable:
-+
-+ kermit -I
-+
-+ or:
-+
-+ C-Kermit> set reliable on
-+
-+ In this case, it will probably be necessary to prefix some control
-+ characters, for example if your connection is through a terminal server
-+ that has an escape character. Most Cisco terminal servers, for example,
-+ require Ctrl-^ (30, as well as its high-bit equivalent, 158) to be
-+ prefixed. To unprefix these, you'll need to defeat the "clear channel"
-+ feature:
-+
-+ C-Kermit> set reliable on
-+ C-Kermit> set clear-channel off
-+ C-Kermit> set prefixing none
-+ C-Kermit> set control prefix 1 13 30 158 ; and whatever else is necessary
-+
-+ Dialup trials were done using fixed large window and packet sizes. They
-+ compare uploading and downloading of two common types of files, with
-+ and without streaming. Configuration:
-+
-+ HP-9000/715/33 -- 57600bps, RTS/CTS -- USR Courier V.34 --
-+ V.34+V.42, 31200bps -- USR V.34+ Rackmount -- 57600bps, RTS/CTS --
-+ Cisco terminal server -- Solaris 2.5.1. Packet size = 8000, Window
-+ Size = 30, Control Character Unprefixing Minimal (but including the
-+ Cisco escape character).
-+
-+ Since this is not a truly reliable connection, a few trials failed when
-+ a bad packet was received (most likely due to UART overruns); the
-+ failure was graceful and immediate, and the message was informative.
-+ The results of ten successful trials uploading and downloading the two
-+ files with and without streaming are:
-+
-+ Streaming..
-+ Off On
-+ Upload 5194 5565 txt (= C source code, 78K)
-+ 3135 3406 gz (= gzip file, compressed, 85K)
-+ Download 5194 5565 txt
-+ 3041 3406 gz
-+
-+ Each CPS figure is the mean of 10 results.
-+
-+ A brief test was also performed on a LAT-based dialout connection from
-+ a VAX 3100 with VMS 5.5 to a USR Courier V.34 connected to a DECserver
-+ 700 at 19200 bps. The 1-MB Sparc executable downloaded from a Sun to
-+ the VAX at 1100cps without streaming and 1900cps with streaming, using
-+ 8000-byte packets, 30 window slots, and minimal prefixing in both
-+ cases.
-+
-+4.20.2.5. Streaming on X.25 Connections
-+
-+ We have only limited access to X.25 networks. One trial was performed
-+ in which the 1MB Solaris 2.4 Sparc executable was transferred over a
-+ SunLink X.25 connection; nothing is known about the actual physical
-+ connection. With a packet length of 8000 and a window size of 30, the
-+ file transferred at 6400 cps (using a maximum of 6 window slots). With
-+ the same packet length, but with streaming, it transferred without
-+ mishap at 6710 cps, about 5% faster.
-+
-+4.20.3. Streaming - Preliminary Conclusions
-+
-+ The results vary with the particular connection, but are good overall.
-+ Although numerous lower-level tricks can be used to improve performance
-+ on specific platforms or connection methods, streaming occurs at a
-+ high, system-independent level of the Kermit protocol and therefore can
-+ apply to all types of platforms and (reliable) connections
-+ transparently.
-+
-+4.21. The TRANSMIT Command
-+
-+ Prior to C-Kermit 7.0, the TRANSMIT command transmitted in text or
-+ binary mode according to SET FILE TYPE { TEXT, BINARY }. But now that
-+ binary mode is likely to be the default for protocol transfers, it is
-+ evident that this not also an appropriate default for TRANSMIT, since
-+ binary-mode TRANSMIT is a rather specialized and tricky operation.
-+ Therefore, TRANSMIT defaults to text mode always, regardless of the
-+ FILE TYPE setting.
-+
-+ C-Kermit 7.0 expands the capabilities of the TRANSMIT command by adding
-+ the following switches (see [532]Section 1.5). The new syntax is:
-+
-+ TRANSMIT [ switches... ] filename
-+
-+ Zero or more switches may be included:
-+
-+ /PIPE
-+ When /PIPE is included, "filename" is interpreted as a system
-+ command or program whose output is to be sent. Synonym:
-+ /COMMAND. Example:
-+
-+ transmit /pipe finger
-+
-+ You may enclose the command in braces, but you don't have to:
-+
-+ xmit /pipe {ls -l | sort -r +0.22 -0.32 | head}
-+
-+ /BINARY
-+ Transmits the file (or pipe output) in binary mode.
-+
-+ /TEXT
-+ Transmits the file (or pipe output) in line-oriented text mode.
-+ Current FILE CHARACTER-SET and TERMINAL CHARACTER-SET selections
-+ govern translation. Default.
-+
-+ /TRANSPARENT
-+ Specifies text mode without character-set translation, no matter
-+ what the FILE and TERMINAL CHARACTER-SET selections are.
-+
-+ /NOWAIT
-+ This is equivalent to SET TRANSMIT PROMPT 0, but for this
-+ TRANSMIT command only. Applies only to text mode; it means to
-+ not wait for any kind of echo or turnaround character after
-+ sending a line before sending the next line. (Normally Kermit
-+ waits for a linefeed.)
-+
-+ When TRANSMIT ECHO is ON, C-Kermit tries to read back the echo of each
-+ character that is sent. Prior to C-Kermit 7.0, 1 second was allowed for
-+ each echo to appear; if it didn't show up in a second, the TRANSMIT
-+ command would fail. Similarly for the TRANSMIT PROMPT character.
-+ However, with today's congested Internet connections, etc, more time is
-+ often needed:
-+
-+ SET TRANSMIT TIMEOUT number
-+
-+ Specifies the number of seconds to wait for an echo or the prompt
-+ character when TRANSMIT PROMPT is nonzero; the default wait is 1
-+ second. If you specify 0, the wait is indefinite. When a timeout
-+ interval of 0 is specified, and a desired echo or prompt does not show
-+ up, the TRANSMIT command will not terminate until or unless you
-+ interrupt it with Ctrl-C; use SET TRANSMIT TIMEOUT 0 with caution.
-+
-+ Note: to blast a file out the communications connection without any
-+ kind of synchronization or timeouts or other manner of checking, use:
-+
-+ SET TRANSMIT ECHO OFF
-+ SET TRANSMIT PROMPT 0 (or include the /NOWAIT switch)
-+ SET TRANSMIT PAUSE 0
-+ TRANSMIT [ switches ] filename
-+
-+ In this case, text-file transmission is not-line oriented and large
-+ blocks can be sent, resulting in a significant performance improvement
-+ over line-at-at-time transmission. Successful operation depends (even
-+ more than usual for the TRANSMIT command!) on a clean connection with
-+ effective flow control.
-+
-+ For details on TRANSMIT and character sets, see [533]Section 6.6.5.4.
-+
-+ 4.22. Coping with Faulty Kermit Implementations
-+
-+ Kermit protocol has been implemented in quite a few third-party
-+ commercial, shareware, and freeware software packages, with varying
-+ degrees of success. In most cases operation is satisfactory but slow --
-+ only the bare minimum subset of the protocol is available -- short
-+ packets, no sliding windows, no attributes, etc. In other cases, the
-+ implementation is incorrect, resulting in failures at the initial
-+ negotiation stage or corrupted files.
-+
-+ C-Kermit 7.0 and Kermit 95 1.1.19 include some new defense mechanisms
-+ to help cope with the most common situations. However, bear in mind
-+ there is only so much we can do in such cases -- the responsibility for
-+ fixing the problem lies with the maker of the faulty software.
-+
-+ 4.22.1. Failure to Accept Modern Negotiation Strings
-+
-+ The published Kermit protocol specification states that new fields can
-+ be added to the parameter negotiation string. These are to be ignored
-+ by any Kermit implementation that does not understand them; this is
-+ what makes the Kermit protocol extensible. Unfortunately, some Kermit
-+ implementations become confused (or worse) when receiving a negotiation
-+ string longer than the one they expect. You can try working around such
-+ problems by telling Kermit to shorten its negotiation string (and thus
-+ disable the corresponding new features):
-+
-+ SET SEND NEGOTIATION-STRING-MAX-LENGTH number
-+
-+ Try a number like 10. If that doesn't work, try 9, 8, 7, 6, and so on.
-+
-+ 4.22.2. Failure to Negotiate 8th-bit Prefixing
-+
-+ The published Kermit protocol specification states that 8th-bit
-+ prefixing (which allows transfer of 8-bit data over a 7-bit connection)
-+ occurs if the file sender puts a valid prefix character (normally "&")
-+ in the 8th-bit-prefix field of the negotiation string, and the receiver
-+ puts either a letter "Y" or the same prefix character. At least one
-+ faulty Kermit implementation exists that does not accept the letter
-+ "Y". To force C-Kermit / K-95 to reply with the other Kermit's prefix
-+ character rather than a "Y", give the following (invisible) command:
-+
-+ SET Q8FLAG ON
-+
-+ Use SET Q8FLAG OFF to restore the normal behavior.
-+
-+ 4.22.3. Corrupt Files
-+
-+ Refer to [534]Section 4.22.2. Some Kermit implementations mistakenly
-+ interpret the "Y" as a prefix character. Then, whenever a letter Y
-+ appears in the data, the Y and the character that follows it are
-+ replaced by a garbage character. At this writing, we are not sure if
-+ there is any solution, but try "set send negotiation-string-max-length
-+ 6" and/or "set q8flag on".
-+
-+ File corruption can also occur when control characters within the file
-+ data are sent without prefixing, as at least some are by default in
-+ C-Kermit 7.0 and K-95. Some Kermit implementations do not handle
-+ incoming "bare" control characters. To work around, "set prefixing
-+ all".
-+
-+ 4.22.4. Spurious Cancellations
-+
-+ The Kermit protocol specification states that if an ACK to a Data
-+ packet contains X in its data field, the transfer of the current file
-+ is canceled, and if it contains a Z, the entire transfer is canceled.
-+ At least one overzealous Kermit implementation applies this rule to
-+ non-Data packets as well, the typical symptom being that any attempt to
-+ transfer a file whose name begins with X or Z results in cancellation.
-+ This is because the file receiver typically sends back the name under
-+ which it stored the file (which might not be the same as the name it
-+ was sent with) in the ACK to the File Header packet. This is
-+ information only and should not cause cancellation. To work around the
-+ problem, use:
-+
-+ SET F-ACK-BUG { ON, OFF }
-+
-+ ON tells Kermit not to send back the filename in the ACK to the file
-+ header packet as it normally would do (OFF puts Kermit back to normal
-+ after using ON).
-+
-+ A variation on the this bug occurs in an obscure Kermit program for
-+ MUMPS: When this Kermit program sends a file called (say) FOO.BAR, it
-+ requires that the ACK to its F packet contain exactly the same name,
-+ FOO.BAR. However, C-Kermit likes to send back the full pathname,
-+ causing the MUMPS Kermit to fail. SET F-ACK-BUG ON doesn't help here.
-+ So a separate command has been added to handle this situation:
-+
-+ SET F-ACK-PATH { ON, OFF }
-+
-+ Normally it is ON (regardless of the SET SEND PATHNAMES setting). Use
-+ SET F-ACK-PATH OFF to instruct Kermit to send back only the filename
-+ without the path in the ACK to the F packet.
-+
-+ 4.22.5. Spurious Refusals
-+
-+ Some Kermit implementations, notably PDP-11 Kermit 3.60 and earlier,
-+ have bugs in their handling of Attribute packets that can cause
-+ unwarranted refusal of incoming files, e.g. based on date or size. This
-+ can be worked around by telling one or both of the Kermit partners to:
-+
-+ SET ATTRIBUTES OFF
-+
-+ 4.22.6. Failures during the Data Transfer Phase
-+
-+ This can be caused by control-character unprefixing ([535]Section
-+ 4.22.3 ), and fixed by:
-+
-+ SET PREFIXING ALL
-+
-+ It can also have numerous other causes, explained in Chapter 10 of
-+ [536]Using C-Kermit: the connection is not 8-bit transparent (so use
-+ "set parity space" or somesuch), inadequate flow control, etc. Consult
-+ the manual.
-+
-+ 4.22.7. Fractured Filenames
-+
-+ At least one well-known PC-based communications package negotiates data
-+ compression, which (according to the protocol specification) applies to
-+ both the filename and the file data, but then fails to decompress the
-+ filename. Example: C-Kermit sends a file called R000101.DAT (where
-+ 000101 might be non-Y2K-wise YYMMDD notation), and the package in
-+ question stores the files as R~#0101.DAT. Workaround: Tell C-Kermit to
-+ SET REPEAT COUNTS OFF.
-+
-+ 4.22.8. Bad File Dates
-+
-+ At least one well-known PC-based communications package negotiates the
-+ passing of file timestamps from sender to receiver, but when it is
-+ sending files, it always gives them a timestamp of 1 February 1970.
-+ Workaround: tell C-Kermit to SET ATTRIBUTE DATE OFF. You don't get the
-+ file's real date, but you also don't get 1 Feb 1970; instead the file
-+ gets the current date and time.
-+
-+ 4.23. File Transfer Recovery
-+
-+ Prior to C-Kermit 7.0, RESEND (SEND /RECOVER) and REGET (GET /RECOVER)
-+ refused to work if FILE TYPE was not BINARY or the /BINARY switch was
-+ not included. Now these commands include an implied /BINARY switch,
-+ meaning they set the file type to binary for the duration of the
-+ command automatically.
-+
-+ In the client/server arrangement, this also forces the server into
-+ binary mode (if it is C-Kermit 7.0 or greater, or K95 1.1.19 or
-+ greater) so the recovery operation proceeds, just as you asked and
-+ expected.
-+
-+ BUT... Just as before, the results are correct only under the following
-+ conditions:
-+
-+ * If the prior interrupted transfer was also in binary mode; or:
-+ * If the prior transfer was in text mode and the other computer was a
-+ "like platform" (e.g. UNIX-to-UNIX, Windows-to-Windows,
-+ DOS-to-Windows) AND there was no character-set translation (i.e.
-+ TRANSFER CHARACTER-SET was TRANSPARENT).
-+
-+ Note that these circumstances are more likely to obtain in C-Kermit
-+ 7.0, in which:
-+
-+ * The default FILE TYPE in C-Kermit 7.0 is BINARY.
-+ * The default FILE INCOMPLETE setting is AUTO, which means KEEP if
-+ the transfer is in binary mode, DISCARD otherwise.
-+ * C-Kermit 7.0, Kermit 95 1.1.17, and MS-DOS Kermit 3.15 and later
-+ can recognize "like platforms" and switch into binary mode
-+ automatically. Transfers between like platforms are always binary
-+ unless character-set translation has been requested, and then is
-+ still binary for all files whose names match a binary pattern,
-+ unless the automatic mechanisms have been disabled (with a /TEXT
-+ switch, or with SET TRANSFER MODE MANUAL).
-+ * SEND /BINARY and GET /BINARY always force binary-mode transfers,
-+ even when FILE TYPE is TEXT, even when TRANSFER MODE is AUTOMATIC,
-+ even when PATTERNS are ON and the file's name matches a text
-+ pattern.
-+
-+ But also note that the automatic client/server transfer-mode
-+ adjustments do not work with versions of C-Kermit prior to 7.0 or K95
-+ prior to 1.1.16.
-+
-+ If the prior transfer was in text mode:
-+
-+ * If text-mode transfers between the two platforms are
-+ "length-changing" (as they are between UNIX -- which terminates
-+ text lines with LF -- and DOS or Windows -- which terminates text
-+ lines with CRLF), the recovered file will be corrupt.
-+ * If text-mode transfers between the two platforms are not
-+ length-changing, but character-set translation was active in the
-+ prior transfer, the result will be a file in which the first part
-+ has translated characters and the second part does not.
-+
-+ But in C-Kermit 7.0 and K95 1.1.19 and later, incompletely transferred
-+ text files are not kept unless you change the default. But if you have
-+ done this, and you have an incompletely transferred text file, you'll
-+ need to:
-+
-+ * Transfer the whole file again in text mode, or:
-+ * Use SEND /STARTING-AT: to recover the transfer at the correct
-+ point; but you have to find out what that point is, as described in
-+ the manual.
-+
-+ Kermit has no way of knowing whether the previous transfer was in text
-+ or binary mode so it is your responsibility to choose the appropriate
-+ recovery method.
-+
-+ If you use C-Kermit to maintain parallel directories on different
-+ computers, using SET FILE COLLISION to transfer only those files that
-+ changed since last time, and the files are big enough (or the
-+ connection slow enough) to require SEND /RECOVER to resume interrupted
-+ transfers, you should remember that SEND /RECOVER (RESEND) overrides
-+ all FILE COLLISION settings. Therefore you should use SEND /RECOVER
-+ (RESEND) only on the file that was interrupted, not the file group. For
-+ example, if the original transfer was initiated with:
-+
-+ SEND *
-+
-+ and was interrupted, then after reestablishing your connection and
-+ starting the Kermit receiver with SET FILE COLLISION UPDATE on the
-+ remote end, use the following sequence at the sender to resume the
-+ transfer:
-+
-+ SEND /RECOVER name-of-interrupted-file
-+
-+ and then:
-+
-+ SEND *
-+
-+ (In C-Kermit 7.0 and later, \v(filename) contains the name of the file
-+ most recently transferred, as long you have not EXITed from Kermit or
-+ changed directory, etc.
-+
-+ 4.24. FILE COLLISION UPDATE Clarification
-+
-+ In UNIX, file modification dates are used when comparing the file date
-+ with the date in the attribute packet. In VMS, however, the file
-+ creation date is used. These two policies reflect the preferences of
-+ the two user communities.
-+
-+ Also, remember that the file date/time given in the attribute packet is
-+ the local time at the file sender. At present, no timezone conversions
-+ are defined in or performed by the Kermit protocol. This is primarily
-+ because this feature was designed at a time when many of the systems
-+ where Kermit runs had no concept of timezone, and therefore would be
-+ unable to convert (say, to/from GMT or UTC or Zulu time).
-+
-+ As a consequence, some unexpected results might occur when transferring
-+ files across timezones; e.g. commands on the target system that are
-+ sensitive to file dates might not work (UNIX "make", backups, etc).
-+
-+ Timezone handling is deferred for a future release.
-+
-+ 4.25. Autodownload Improvements
-+
-+ Refer to pages 164-165 of [537]Using C-Kermit about the hazards of
-+ autodownload when C-Kermit is "in the middle". As of C-Kermit 7.0, no
-+ more hazards. If C-Kermit has TERMINAL AUTODOWNLOAD ON and it detects a
-+ packet of the current protocol type (Kermit or Zmodem), it "erases" the
-+ visual aspect of the packet that would be seen by the terminal (or,
-+ more to the point, the emulator, such as K95). This way, only C-Kermit
-+ goes into RECEIVE mode, and not also the terminal emulator through
-+ which C-Kermit is accessed. And therefore, it is no longer necessary to
-+ SET TERMINAL AUTODOWNLOAD OFF to prevent multiple Kermits from going
-+ into receive mode at once, but of course it is still necessary to
-+ ensure that, when you have multiple Kermits in a chain, that the
-+ desired one receives the autodownload.
-+
-+ The defaults have not been changed; Kermit 95 still has autodownload ON
-+ by default, and C-Kermit has it OFF by default.
-+
-+ 5. CLIENT/SERVER
-+
-+ 5.0. Hints
-+
-+ If you use SET SERVER GET-PATH to set up your server, and the GET-PATH
-+ does not include the server's current directory, clients can become
-+ quite confused. For example, "remote dir oofa.txt" shows a file named
-+ oofa.txt, but "get oofa.txt" fails. In this situation, you should
-+ either DISABLE DIR or make your GET-PATH include the current directory.
-+
-+ 5.1. New Command-Line Options
-+
-+ The -G command-line option is like -g (GET), except the incoming file
-+ is sent to standard output rather than written to disk.
-+
-+ The -I option ("Internet") is used to tell a remote C-Kermit program
-+ that you are coming in via Internet Telnet or Rlogin and therefore have
-+ a reliable connection. The -I option is equivalent to SET RELIABLE ON
-+ and SET FLOW NONE.
-+
-+ The -O option ("Only One") tells C-Kermit to enter server mode but then
-+ exit after the first client operation.
-+
-+ See [538]Section 9.3 for details.
-+
-+ 5.2. New Client Commands
-+
-+ BYE and FINISH no longer try to do anything if a connection is not
-+ active. Thus a sequence like "hangup" followed by "bye" or "finish"
-+ will no longer get stuck in a long timeout-and-retransmission cycle,
-+ nor will it try to open a new connection.
-+
-+ REMOTE EXIT
-+ Similar to FINISH, except it ensures that the Kermit server
-+ program exits back to the operating system or shell prompt.
-+ (FINISH would return it to its interactive prompt if it was
-+ started in interactive mode, and would cause it to exit if it
-+ entered server mode via command-line option.) When C-Kermit is
-+ to be the server, you can use { ENABLE, DISABLE } EXIT to
-+ control the client's access to this feature.
-+
-+ REMOTE MKDIR directory-name
-+ Tells the client to ask the server to create a directory with
-+ the given name, which can be absolute or relative. The syntax of
-+ the directory name depends on the Kermit server (see [539]next
-+ section); in all cases, it can be in the syntax of the system
-+ where the server is running (UNIX, VMS, DOS, etc) but newer
-+ servers also accept UNIX syntax, no matter what the underlying
-+ platform. The server will not execute this command if (a) it
-+ does not understand it, (b) a DISABLE MKDIR command has been
-+ given, or (c) a DISABLE CWD command has been given; otherwise,
-+ the command is executed, but will fail if the directory can not
-+ be created, in which cases most servers will attempt to return a
-+ message giving the reason for failure. The REMOTE MKDIR command
-+ succeeds if the remote directory is created, or if it already
-+ exists and therefore does not need to be created, and fails
-+ otherwise.
-+
-+ REMOTE RMDIR directory-name
-+ Tells the client to ask the server to remove (delete) a
-+ directory with the given name. The same considerations apply as
-+ for REMOTE MKDIR.
-+
-+ REMOTE SET FILE INCOMPLETE { DISCARD, KEEP, AUTO }
-+ Previously this was only available in its earlier form, REMOTE
-+ SET INCOMPLETE (no FILE). The earlier form is still available,
-+ but invisible. Also, AUTO was added, meaning KEEP if in binary
-+ mode, DISCARD otherwise.
-+
-+ REMOTE SET TRANSFER MODE { AUTOMATIC, MANUAL }
-+ Tells the client to ask the server to set the given
-+ file-transfer mode. Automatic means (roughly): if the client and
-+ the server are running on the same kind of computer (e.g. both
-+ are on UNIX), then use binary mode automatically; if the system
-+ types are different, use some other method to automatically
-+ determine text or binary mode, such as filename pattern
-+ matching. MANUAL means, in this context, obey the client's FILE
-+ TYPE setting (TEXT or BINARY). Synonym: REMOTE SET XFER MODE.
-+
-+ [ REMOTE ] QUERY KERMIT function(args...)
-+ Prior to C-Kermit 7.0, the arguments were not evaluated locally.
-+ Thus it was not possible to have the server run the function
-+ with client-side variables as arguments. Now:
-+
-+ define \%a oofa.*
-+ remote query kermit files(\%a) ; Client's \%a
-+ remote query kermit files(\\%a) ; Server's \%a
-+
-+ [ REMOTE ] LOGIN [ user [ password ] ]
-+ LOGIN is now a synonym for REMOTE LOGIN.
-+
-+ LOGOUT
-+ This command, when given in local mode, is equivalent to REMOTE
-+ LOGOUT. When given at the IKSD prompt, it logs out the IKSD.
-+ When given at the C-Kermit prompt when it has no connection, it
-+ does nothing.
-+
-+ Note that in C-Kermit 7.0, the REMOTE (or R) prefix is not required for
-+ QUERY, since there is no local QUERY command. The new top-level QUERY
-+ command does exactly what REMOTE QUERY (RQUERY) does.
-+
-+ All REMOTE commands now have single-word shortcuts:
-+
-+ Shortcut Full Form
-+ RASG REMOTE ASSIGN
-+ RCD REMOTE CD
-+ RCOPY REMOTE COPY
-+ RDEL REMOTE DELETE
-+ RDIR REMOTE DIRECTORY
-+ REXIT REMOTE EXIT
-+ RHELP REMOTE HELP
-+ RHOST REMOTE HOST
-+ RPWD REMOTE PWD
-+ RSET REMOTE SET
-+ etc.
-+
-+ The R prefix is not applied to LOGIN because there is already an RLOGIN
-+ command with a different meaning. It is not applied to LOGOUT either,
-+ since LOGOUT knows what to do in each case, and for symmetry with
-+ LOGIN.
-+
-+ 5.2.1. Remote Procedure Definitions and Calls
-+
-+ This is nothing new, but it might not be obvious... REMOTE ASSIGN and
-+ REMOTE QUERY may be used to achieve remote procedure execution. The
-+ remote procedure can be defined locally or remotely.
-+
-+ A remote procedure call is accomplished as noted in the previous
-+ section:
-+
-+ [ remote ] query kermit function-name(args...)
-+
-+ This invokes any function that is built in to the Kermit server, e.g.:
-+
-+ [ remote ] query kermit size(foo.bar)
-+
-+ returns the size of the remote file, foo.bar.
-+
-+ Now note that C-Kermit includes an \fexecute() function, allowing it to
-+ execute any macro as if it were a built-in function. So suppose MYMACRO
-+ is the name of a macro defined in the server. You can execute it from
-+ the client as follows (the redundant "remote" prefix is omitted in the
-+ remaining examples):
-+
-+ query kermit execute(mymacro arg1 arg2...)
-+
-+ The return value, if any, is the value of the RETURN command that
-+ terminated execution of the macro, for example:
-+
-+ define addtwonumbers return \feval(\%1+\%2)
-+
-+ The client invocation would be:
-+
-+ query kermit execute(addtwonumbers 3 4)
-+ 7
-+
-+ The result ("7" in this case) is also assigned to the client's
-+ \v(query) variable.
-+
-+ To execute a remote system command or command procedure (shell script,
-+ etc) use:
-+
-+ query kermit command(name args...)
-+
-+ Finally, suppose you want the client to send a macro to the server to
-+ be executed on the server end. This is done as follows:
-+
-+ remote assign macroname definition
-+ query kermit execute(macroname arg1 arg2...)
-+
-+ Quoting is required if the definition contains formal parameters.
-+
-+ 5.3. New Server Capabilities
-+
-+ 5.3.1. Creating and Removing Directories
-+
-+ The C-Kermit 7.0 server responds to REMOTE MKDIR and REMOTE RMDIR
-+ commands. The directory name may be in either the native format of the
-+ server's computer, or in UNIX format. For example, a server running on
-+ VMS with a current directory of [IVAN] can accept commands from the
-+ client like:
-+
-+ remote mkdir olga ; Makes [IVAN.OLGA] (nonspecific format)
-+ remote mkdir .olga ; Makes [IVAN.OLGA] (VMS format without brackets)
-+ remote mkdir olga/ ; Makes [IVAN.OLGA] (UNIX relative format)
-+ remote mkdir /ivan/olga ; Makes [IVAN.OLGA] (UNIX absolute format)
-+ remote mkdir [ivan.olga] ; Makes [IVAN.OLGA] (VMS absolute format)
-+ remote mkdir [.olga] ; Makes [IVAN.OLGA] (VMS relative format)
-+
-+ 5.3.1.1. Creating Directories
-+
-+ If a directory name is given that contains more than one segment that
-+ does not exist, the server attempts to create all the segments. For
-+ example, if the client says:
-+
-+ REMOTE MKDIR letters/angry
-+
-+ a "letters" subdirectory is created in the server's current directory
-+ if it does not already exist, and then an "angry" subdirectory is
-+ created beneath it, if it does not already have one. This can repeated
-+ to any reasonable depth:
-+
-+ REMOTE MKDIR a/b/c/d/e/f/g/h/i/j/k/l/m/n/o/p/q/r/s/t/u/v/w/z/y/z
-+
-+ 5.3.1.2. Removing Directories
-+
-+ When attempting to execute a REMOTE RMDIR, the server can remove only a
-+ single directory, not an entire sequence or tree. The system service
-+ that is called to remove the directory generally requires not only that
-+ the server process has write delete access, but also that the directory
-+ contain no files.
-+
-+ In the future, a REMOTE RMDIR /RECURSIVE command (and the accompanying
-+ protocol) might be added. For now, use the equivalent REMOTE HOST
-+ command(s), if any.
-+
-+ 5.3.2. Directory Listings
-+
-+ Directory listings are generated by C-Kermit itself, rather than by
-+ running the underlying system's directory command. Some control over
-+ the listing format can be obtained with the SET OPTIONS DIRECTORY
-+ command ([540]Section 4.5.1). The following options affect listings
-+ sent by the server: /[NO]HEADING, /[NO]DOTFILES, and /[NO]BACKUP. In
-+ UNIX and VMS, the listing is always sorted by filename. There is, at
-+ present, no protocol defined for the client to request listing options
-+ of the server; this might be added in the future.
-+
-+ The server's directory listings are in the following format:
-+
-+ Protection or permissions:
-+ In UNIX and OS-9, this is a 10-character field, left adjusted.
-+ In VMS it is a 22-character field, left-adjusted. In each case,
-+ the protection / permission codes are shown in the server
-+ platform's native format. In other operating systems, this field
-+ is not shown.
-+
-+ Size in bytes:
-+ This is always a 10-character field. The file's size is shown as
-+ a decimal number, right adjusted in the field. If the file is a
-+ directory and its size can not be obtained, the size is shown as
-+ "<DIR>". Two blanks follow this field.
-+
-+ Date:
-+ Always in yyyy-mm-dd hh:mm:ss numeric format, and therefore 19
-+ characters long. If the file's date/time can't be obtained,
-+ zeros (0) are shown for all the digits. This field is followed
-+ by two blanks.
-+
-+ Filename:
-+ This field extends to the end of the line. Filenames are shown
-+ relative to the server's current directory. In UNIX, symbolic
-+ links are shown as they are in an "ls -l" listing as "linkname
-+ -> filename".
-+
-+ In UNIX and VMS, listings are returned by the server in alphabetical
-+ order of filename. There are presently no other sort or selection
-+ options.
-+
-+ However, since these are fixed-field listings, all fields can be used
-+ as sort keys by external sort programs. Note, in particular, that the
-+ format used for the date allows a normal lexical on that field to
-+ achieve the date ordering. For example, let's assume we have a UNIX
-+ client and a UNIX server. In this case, the server's listing has the
-+ date in columns 22-40, and thus could be sorted by the UNIX sort
-+ program using "sort +0.22 -0.40" or in reverse order by "sort +0.22
-+ -0.40r".
-+
-+ Since the UNIX client can pipe responses to REMOTE commands through
-+ filters, any desired sorting can be accomplished this way, for example:
-+
-+C-Kermit> remote directory | sort +0.22 -0.40
-+
-+ You can also sort by size:
-+
-+ C-Kermit> remote directory | sort +0.11 -0.19
-+
-+ You can use sort options to select reverse or ascending order. "man
-+ sort" (in UNIX) for more information. And of course, you can pipe these
-+ listings through any other filter of your choice, such as grep to skip
-+ unwanted lines.
-+
-+ 5.4. Syntax for Remote Filenames with Embedded Spaces
-+
-+ C-Kermit and K95, when in server mode, assume that any spaces in the
-+ file specification in an incoming GET command are filename separators.
-+ Thus if the client gives a command like:
-+
-+ get {oofa.txt oofa.bin}
-+
-+ or, equivalently:
-+
-+ mget oofa.txt oofa.bin
-+
-+ the server tries to send the two files, oofa.txt and oofa.bin. But what
-+ if you want the server to send you a file named, say:
-+
-+ D:\HP OfficeJet 500\Images\My Pretty Picture Dot PCL
-+
-+ How does the server know this is supposed to be one file and not seven?
-+ In this case, you need to the send file name to the server enclosed in
-+ either curly braces:
-+
-+ {D:\HP OfficeJet 500\Images\My Pretty Picture Dot PCL}
-+
-+ or ASCII doublequotes:
-+
-+ "D:\HP OfficeJet 500\Images\My Pretty Picture Dot PCL"
-+
-+ The method for doing this depends on your client. If your client is
-+ C-Kermit 7.0, any recent version of Kermit 95, or MS-DOS Kermit 3.16,
-+ then you have to enclose the name in braces just so the client can
-+ parse it, so to send braces or doublequotes to the server, you must put
-+ them inside the first, outside pair of braces. And you also need to
-+ double the backslashes to prevent them from being interpreted:
-+
-+ get {{D:\\HP OfficeJet 500\\Images\\My Pretty Picture Dot PCL}}
-+ get {"D:\\HP OfficeJet 500\\Images\\My Pretty Picture Dot PCL"}
-+
-+ To get around the requirement to double backslashes in literal
-+ filenames, of course you can also use:
-+
-+ set command quoting off
-+ get {{D:\HP OfficeJet 500\Images\My Pretty Picture Dot PCL}}
-+ get {"D:\HP OfficeJet 500\Images\My Pretty Picture Dot PCL"}
-+ set command quoting on
-+
-+ If you are giving a "kermit" command to the UNIX shell, you have to
-+ observe the shell's quoting rules, something like this:
-+
-+ kermit -ig "{D:\HP OfficeJet 500\Images\My Pretty Picture Dot PCL}"
-+
-+ Here, the quotes go on the outside so UNIX will pass the entire
-+ filename, spaces, braces, and all, as a single argument to Kermit, and
-+ the backslashes are not doubled because (a) the UNIX shell ignores them
-+ since they are in a quoted string, and (b) Kermit ignores them since
-+ the interactive command parser is not activated in this case.
-+
-+ 5.5. Automatic Orientation Messages upon Directory Change
-+
-+ C-Kermit 7.0, when acting as a server, can send an orientation message
-+ to the client whenever the server directory changes. For example, when
-+ the client gives a REMOTE CD command, the server sends the contents of
-+ the new directory's "Read Me" file to the client's screen. The
-+ following commands govern this feature:
-+
-+ SET SERVER CD-MESSAGE FILE name
-+ Given to the servr, allows the message-file name to be specified
-+ at runtime. A list of names to look for can be given in the
-+ following format:
-+
-+ {{name1}{name2}{name3}{...}}
-+
-+ e.g. SET SERVER CD-MESSAGE FILE
-+ {{./.readme}{README.TXT}{READ.ME}}
-+
-+ REMOTE SET SERVER CD-MESSAGE { ON, OFF }
-+ Given to the client, lets the client control whether the server
-+ sends automatic CD messages.
-+
-+ SHOW SERVER
-+ Given to server, includes CD-Message status.
-+
-+ The default CD message file name is system dependent. SHOW CD or SHOW
-+ SERVER displays the list. Also see [541]Section 4.5.2.
-+
-+ 5.6. New Server Controls
-+
-+ DISABLE ENABLE
-+ Allows the server to configured such that DISABLEd features can
-+ not be re-enabled by any means -- e.g. if the client is somehow
-+ able to get the server into command mode. Once DISABLEd, ENABLE
-+ can not be re-ENABLEd.
-+
-+ SET SERVER IDLE-TIMEOUT seconds
-+ This was available previously in Kermit 95 only. Now it can be
-+ used in C-Kermit also to specify a maximum number of seconds the
-+ server is allowed to be idle before exiting server mode. 0
-+ seconds means no idle timeout. In C-Kermit (but not K-95), SET
-+ SERVER TIMEOUT and SET SERVER IDLE-TIMEOUT are mutually
-+ exclusive -- you can have one or the other (or neither), but not
-+ both. (Server timeouts are for the benefit of primitive Kermit
-+ clients that are not capable of timing out on their own; to our
-+ knowledge, no such clients are still in circulation.)
-+
-+ SET SERVER KEEPALIVE { ON, OFF }
-+ (See next section).
-+
-+ 5.7. Timeouts during REMOTE HOST Command Execution
-+
-+ Prior to C-Kermit 7.0, the C-Kermit server would block waiting for
-+ output from a system command invoked via REMOTE HOST from the client.
-+ If the system command took a long time to execute, the client would
-+ time out and send NAK packets. If the command took too long, the client
-+ would reach its retry limit and give up. Even if it didn't, the NAKs
-+ would cause unnecessary retransmissions.
-+
-+ In version 7.0, the C-Kermit server (VMS and select()-capable UNIX
-+ versions only), sends "keepalive packets" (empty data packets) once per
-+ second while waiting for the system command to complete. This procedure
-+ should be entirely transparent to the Kermit client, and should prevent
-+ the unwanted timeouts and NAKs. When C-Kermit 7.0 itself (or K95
-+ 1.1.19) is the client, it prints dots to show the keepalive packets.
-+
-+ The keepalive feature can be turned off and on with:
-+
-+ SET SERVER KEEPALIVE { ON, OFF }
-+
-+ Normally it should be on. Turn it off it if causes trouble with the
-+ client, or if it seems to slow down the server (as it might on some
-+ platforms under certain circumstances).
-+
-+ 6. INTERNATIONAL CHARACTER SETS
-+
-+ Support for several new single-byte character sets was added in
-+ C-Kermit 7.0. Unicode / ISO 10646 is not yet supported, but is a high
-+ priority for forthcoming releases.
-+
-+ 6.0. ISO 8859-15 Latin Alphabet 9
-+
-+ To accommodate the Euro currency symbol, and to correct several other
-+ longstanding problems with ISO Latin Alphabet 1, ISO 8859-15 Latin
-+ Alphabet 9 was issued in May 1998. It is supported by C-Kermit 7.0 as a
-+ transfer character set, a file character set, and a terminal character
-+ set. Translations that preserve the new characters are available
-+ between Latin-9 and several other sets including:
-+
-+ PC Code Page 858 (Western European languages, similar to CP850)
-+ Windows Code Page 1252 (Western European languages, similar to Latin-1)
-+ Windows Code Page 1250 (Eastern European languages, similar to Latin-2)
-+
-+ The Latin-9 transfer character set also allows for the OE digraph
-+ character, used primarily in French, to be preserved in transfers
-+ involving the DEC MCS or NeXT character sets.
-+
-+ The Euro character is also present in the Universal Character Set,
-+ described in [542]Section 6.6.
-+
-+ 6.1. The HP-Roman8 Character Set
-+
-+ The HP-Roman8 character set is supported in C-Kermit 6.0 and later but
-+ was omitted from Table VII-4 in the 2nd Edition of Using C-Kermit due
-+ to lack of space. It is listed in [543]Appendix III.
-+
-+ 6.2. Greek Character Sets
-+
-+ Greek character sets were added in 6.1:
-+
-+ SET FILE CHARACTER-SET { CP869, ELOT927, GREEK-ISO }
-+ SET TRANSFER CHARACTER-SET { GREEK-ISO }
-+
-+ GREEK-ISO is ISO 8859-7, which the same as ELOT 928.
-+
-+ The new Greek character sets are listed in [544]Appendix III.
-+
-+ 6.3. Additional Latin-2 Character Sets
-+
-+ The following have been added as FILE and TERMINAL CHARACTER-SETs:
-+
-+ MAZOVIA-PC
-+ A PC code page used in Poland, equivalent to CP437, but with 18
-+ substitutions needed for Polish.
-+
-+ CP1250
-+ The Windows Latin 2 Code Page. Equivalent to ISO 8859-2, but
-+ with different encoding.
-+
-+ 6.4. Additional Cyrillic Character Sets
-+
-+ The following have been added as FILE and TERMINAL CHARACTER-SETs:
-+
-+ BULGARIA-PC
-+ This is the Cyrillic PC code page used in Bulgaria, where it is
-+ called Code Page 856. It is attributed to a company called
-+ DATEC, Inc, but CP856 is not a proper designation, since it
-+ refers to a Hebrew Code Page (see the IBM Registry).
-+
-+ CP855
-+ This PC Code Page contains all the Cyrillic letters that are
-+ also in ISO 8859-5, and is therefore useful for non-Russian
-+ Cyrillic text (Ukrainian, Belorussian, etc), unlike CP866, which
-+ has a smaller repertoire of Cyrillic letters.
-+
-+ CP1251
-+ The Windows Cyrillic Code Page. Equivalent to CP855, but with
-+ different encoding.
-+
-+ KOI8R
-+ An extension to "Old KOI-8" that adds upper and lower case
-+ Cyrillic letter Io (looks like Roman E with diaeresis) plus a
-+ selection of box-drawing characters to columns 8 through 11,
-+ which are vacant in original Old KOI-8. KOI8-R is used for the
-+ Russian language. It is specified in [545]RFC 1489.
-+
-+ KOI8U
-+ A similar extension of Old KOI-8, but for Ukrainian. It is
-+ specified in [546]RFC 2319.
-+
-+ 6.5. Automatic Character-Set Switching
-+
-+ Prior to version 7.0, C-Kermit's file character-set always had to be
-+ set explicitly. In 7.0 and later, it is set automatically when:
-+
-+ 1. This feature is enabled (as it is unless you disable it).
-+ 2. An incoming text-mode transfer includes a transfer-character-set
-+ announcer and you have not previously given a SET FILE
-+ CHARACTER-SET command. In this case, C-Kermit switches to an
-+ appropriate file character set. For example, on an HP-UX
-+ workstation, an incoming Latin-1 file automatically selects
-+ HP-Roman8 for the local copy of the file; in Data General AOS/VS,
-+ it would select DG International.
-+ 3. You give a SET TRANSFER CHARACTER-SET command without having
-+ previously specified a FILE CHARACTER-SET. An appropriate file
-+ character-set is chosen automatically.
-+
-+ In addition, when you give a SET FILE CHARACTER-SET command, the
-+ appropriate transfer character-set is automatically chosen, to be used
-+ when you are sending files (but this does not override the one
-+ announced by the sender when you are receiving files).
-+
-+ You might not agree about what is "appropriate", so of course you can
-+ disable or change all of the above actions.
-+
-+ You can disable (or re-enable) the new automatic character-set
-+ switching feature in each direction separately:
-+
-+ SET RECEIVE CHARACTER-SET-SELECTION { AUTOMATIC, MANUAL }
-+ AUTOMATIC is the default, causing the behavior described above
-+ when an incoming file arrives. Choose MANUAL to defeat this
-+ behavior and force your current FILE CHARACTER-SET setting to be
-+ used, no matter what it is. Note that SET RECEIVE CHARACTER-SET
-+ MANUAL does not disable recognition of the incoming transfer
-+ character-set announcer, and translation from the corresponding
-+ character-set to your current file character-set. To disable
-+ that, use SET ATTRIBUTE CHARACTER-SET OFF.
-+
-+ SET SEND CHARACTER-SET-SELECTION { AUTOMATIC, MANUAL }
-+ Again AUTOMATIC is the default, causing the behavior described
-+ above when you give a SET { FILE, TRANSFER } CHARACTER-SET
-+ command. Use MANUAL to allow you to specify the transfer and
-+ file character-sets independently.
-+
-+ SHOW CHARACTER-SETS
-+ Tells settings of { SEND, RECEIVE } CHARACTER-SET-SELECTION.
-+
-+ Normally, however, it is more convenient to leave automatic switching
-+ active, and change any associations that are not appropriate for your
-+ application, area, or country. The commands are:
-+
-+ SHOW ASSOCIATIONS
-+ This command lists all the associations in each direction: for
-+ each possible transfer character-set, it lists the associated
-+ file character-set, and vice versa. These are two separate and
-+ independent lists.
-+
-+ ASSOCIATE TRANSFER-CHARACTER-SET name1 [ name2 ]
-+ Changes the association for the transfer character-set name1 to
-+ be the file character-set name2. If name2 is omitted, automatic
-+ switching is disabled for this transfer character-set only.
-+
-+ ASSOCIATE FILE-CHARACTER-SET name1 [ name2 ]
-+ Changes the association for the file character-set name1 to be
-+ the transfer character-set name2. If name2 is omitted, automatic
-+ switching is disabled for this file character-set only.
-+
-+ 6.6. UNICODE
-+
-+ C-Kermit 7.0 adds support for Unicode, the Universal Character Set,
-+ for:
-+
-+ * File Transfer (SEND, RECEIVE, GET, etc)
-+ * Terminal connection (CONNECT)
-+ * Unguarded file capture (LOG SESSION)
-+ * Unguarded file transmission (TRANSMIT)
-+ * Local file character-set conversion (TRANSLATE)
-+
-+ C-Kermit is not, however, a "Unicode application" in the sense that its
-+ commands, messages, or user interface are Unicode. Rather, it is
-+ "Unicode aware" in its ability to handle and convert Unicode text in
-+ the course of file transfer and terminal connection, and you can also
-+ use Kermit to convert local files between Unicode and other character
-+ sets. TLA's:
-+
-+ BMP - Base Multilingual Plane
-+ BOM - Byte Order Mark
-+ CJK - Chinese, Japanese, and Korean
-+ ISO - International Standards Organization
-+ TLA - Three-Letter Acronym
-+ UCS - Universal Character Set
-+ UTF - UCS Transformation Format
-+
-+ Unicode and ISO 10646 are the coordinated and compatible corporate and
-+ international standards for the Universal Character Set (UCS). Unlike
-+ single-byte and even most multibyte character sets, the UCS can
-+ represent all characters in every existing writing system. A flat
-+ plain-text file encoded in some form of UCS can contain any mixture of
-+ English, Spanish, Italian, German, Hebrew, Arabic, Greek, Russian,
-+ Armenian, Georgian, Japanese, Chinese, Korean, Vietnamese, Tibetan,
-+ Hindi, Bengali, Tamil, Thai, Ethiopic, and so on, plus scientific and
-+ mathematical notation, as well as texts in Runes, Ogham, Glagolitic,
-+ and other historic scripts.
-+
-+ The UCS already covers these scripts and many more, but it's an
-+ evolving standard with efforts underway to accommodate even more
-+ languages and writing systems. Support is growing for native UCS use on
-+ many platforms and in many applications. The goal of the framers of the
-+ UCS is for it to replace ASCII, the ISO Latin Alphabets, ISCII, VISCII,
-+ the Chinese, Japanese, and Korean (CJK) multibyte sets, etc, as well as
-+ the many private character sets in use today, in other words to become
-+ *the* Universal Character Set.
-+
-+ Until that time, however, conversions between existing sets and the UCS
-+ will be necessary when moving text between platforms and applications.
-+ Now Kermit can help.
-+
-+ 6.6.1. Overview of Unicode
-+
-+ For a more complete picture, please visit:
-+
-+ [547]http://www.unicode.org/
-+
-+ and access the various online introductions, FAQs, technical reports,
-+ and other information. For greater depth, order the latest version of
-+ the published Unicode Standard. The following overview contains a great
-+ many oversimplifications and perhaps an opinion or two.
-+
-+ At present, the UCS is a 16-bit (2-byte) character set, but with
-+ provisions to grow to a 4-byte set. UCS-2 refers to the two-byte set,
-+ also called the Base Multilingual Plane (BMP), in which each character
-+ has 16 bits, and therefore there are 2^16 = 65536 possible characters.
-+ The first 128 characters are the same as US ASCII (C0 control
-+ characters and DEL included), the next 32 are the C1 control characters
-+ of ISO 6429, and the next 96 are the Right Half of ISO 8859-1 Latin
-+ Alphabet 1. The remaining tens of thousands of characters are arranged
-+ newly for the UCS, usually (but not always) in sections corresponding
-+ to existing standards, such as ISO Latin/Cyrillic, often plus
-+ additional characters not appearing in the existing standards due to
-+ lack of space (or other reasons).
-+
-+ ISO 10646 allows for additional planes, e.g. for Egyptian hieroglyphics
-+ or ancient (or other esoteric) CJK characters, but these planes are not
-+ yet defined and so we will say nothing more about them here, except
-+ that their use will require the 4-byte form of UCS, called UCS-4, in
-+ some form (more about "forms" in [548]Section 6.6.2).
-+
-+ Unicode and ISO 10646 are constantly under revision, mainly to add new
-+ characters. The Unicode revision is denoted by a version number, such
-+ as 1.0, 1.1, 2.0, 3.0. The ISO 10646 standard revision is identified by
-+ Edition (such as ISO 10646-1 1993), plus reference to any amendments.
-+ The first versions of these standards included encodings for Korean
-+ Hangul syllables (Jamos); these encodings were changed in version 1.1
-+ of Unicode and by Amendment 5 to ISO 10646-1. The Unicode Technical
-+ Committee and the ISO acknowledge that this was a bad thing to do, and
-+ promise never change encodings or character names again, since this
-+ poses serious problems for conformance and data interchange.
-+
-+ A UCS-2 value is customarily written like this:
-+
-+ U+xxxx
-+
-+ where "xxxx" represents four hexadecimal digits, 0-9 and A-F. For
-+ example, U+0041 is "A", U+00C1 is A-acute, U+042F is uppercase Cyrillic
-+ "Ya", U+FB4F is Hebrew Ligature Alef Lamed, and U+FFFD is the special
-+ character that means "not a character".
-+
-+ Most characters from widely-used alphabetic writing systems such as the
-+ West European ones, Cyrillic, Greek, Hebrew, Vietnamese, etc, are
-+ available in "precomposed" form; for example Uppercase Latin Letter A
-+ with Acute Accent is a single character (as it is in Latin-1). However,
-+ the UCS also permits composition of a base character with one or more
-+ nonspacing diacritics. This means the same character can be represented
-+ in more than one way, which can present problems in many application
-+ areas, including transfer and character-set conversion of text.
-+
-+ Conversion from ASCII or Latin-1 to UCS-2 text is "trivial": simply
-+ insert a NUL (0) byte before each ASCII or Latin-1 byte. Converting in
-+ the reverse direction (provided the UCS-2 file contains only U+0000 to
-+ U+00FF) is equally simple (if we ignore the issue of composition):
-+ remove every second (NUL) byte. Conversion of other character sets to
-+ and from UCS, however, requires tables or algorithms specific to each
-+ set. Nevertheless, the relatively transparent upwards compatibility
-+ from ASCII and Latin-1, in which a very large share of the world's
-+ textual data is encoded, gives the UCS an entree onto existing
-+ platforms.
-+
-+ But the 2-byte format and the preponderance of NUL and other control
-+ bytes in UCS-2 text pose problems for current applications and
-+ transmission methods. And to make matters worse, different hardware
-+ platforms store UCS-2 characters in different byte order. Thus a UCS-2
-+ file transferred by FTP (or accessed via NFS, etc) between two
-+ computers with different architecture might have its bytes in the wrong
-+ order (or worse; see [549]Section 6.6.5.1 ).
-+
-+ 6.6.2. UCS Byte Order
-+
-+ Consider the number 1. In an 8-bit byte, this would be represented by
-+ the following series of 0- and 1-bits:
-+
-+ +-----------------+
-+ | 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 |
-+ +-----------------+
-+
-+ Therefore in a 16-bit "word" the representation might be:
-+
-+ +-----------------+-----------------+
-+ | 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 | 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 |
-+ +-----------------+-----------------+
-+
-+ Now consider the number 256, which is 2 to the 8th power. The binary
-+ representation is 100000000 (1 followed by 8 zeros). 256 would go into
-+ a 16-bit word like this:
-+
-+ +-----------------+-----------------+
-+ | 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 | 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 |
-+ +-----------------+-----------------+
-+
-+ When a computer works this way, it is said to be Big Endian, meaning it
-+ puts the most significant (biggest) byte first (on the "left") in a
-+ 16-bit word, and the least significant byte second (on the right).
-+
-+ However, some other computers have the opposite arrangement, called
-+ Little Endian, in which 1 is:
-+
-+ +-----------------+-----------------+
-+ | 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 | 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 |
-+ +-----------------+-----------------+
-+
-+ and 256 is:
-+
-+ +-----------------+-----------------+
-+ | 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 | 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 |
-+ +-----------------+-----------------+
-+
-+ Computers such as Sparc, MIPS, PA-RISC, and PowerPC are Big Endian,
-+ whereas the PC and the Alpha are Little Endian. Endianness has never
-+ been an issue with 7- or 8-bit characters, but it is with UCS
-+ characters. It can be a tricky business to share or transfer a UCS-2
-+ file between two different kinds of computers.
-+
-+ To alleviate (but not entirely solve) the problem, UCS-2 files are
-+ supposed to begin with the Unicode character U+FEFF, Zero-Width
-+ No-Break Space (ZWNBS). This is a kind of "no-op" (note: any such
-+ assertion must normally be qualified with many "but ifs" and "excepts"
-+ which are omitted here in the interest of brevity). If the bytes are
-+ reversed the ZWNBS becomes U+FFFE, which is not (and never will be) a
-+ defined UCS character. U+FEFF at the beginning of a UCS file is
-+ therefore called a Byte Order Mark, or BOM.
-+
-+ Any application that creates a UCS-2 (or UTF-16, or UCS-4) file should
-+ include a BOM, and any application that reads one should test for a
-+ BOM, and if one is found, infer the byte order from it. This is a
-+ convention, however -- not a standard or a requirement -- and
-+ applications vary in their ability to handle BOMs and "backwards" UCS-2
-+ files.
-+
-+ Note that a BOM is useful only at the beginning of a file. If you
-+ append one UCS-2 file to another, and both have BOMs, the internal BOM
-+ is no longer a BOM. And if the byte orders of the two files differ,
-+ then either the first part or the second will be backwards. (Various
-+ other undesirable effects might also occur, not discussed here.)
-+
-+ 6.6.2. UCS Transformation Formats
-+
-+ UCS textual data can be modified in various ways for transmission or
-+ storage. Any officially sanctioned method of doing this is called a UCS
-+ Transformation Format, or UTF. One such method, called UTF-16, is
-+ essentially identical with UCS-2 except that it designates certain code
-+ values as "escape sequences" (called surrogate pairs) to access
-+ characters in other planes without having to use full UCS-4. We won't
-+ discuss UTF-16 further here, since at the moment there are no other
-+ planes. Several other UTF's (such as UTF-1, UTF-2, and UTF-7) have
-+ fallen into disuse and are not discussed here. The most important
-+ transformation format today is UTF-8.
-+
-+ UTF-8, so called because it "serializes" UCS-2 data into a stream of
-+ 8-bit bytes, is designed to allow the UCS to work with present-day
-+ communications gear, computers, and software. The most important
-+ properties of UTF-8 are that byte order is constant (no byte swapping)
-+ and all (7-bit) ASCII characters represent themselves. Therefore
-+ conversion between ASCII and UTF-8 is no conversion at all, and
-+ applications or platforms (such as Plan 9 from Bell Labs) that use
-+ UTF-8 "for everything" can still run traditional ASCII-only
-+ applications and be accessed from them. In particular, unlike UCS-2,
-+ ASCII characters are not padded with NUL bytes. But also unlike UCS-2,
-+ there is no transparency for Latin-1 or any other non-ASCII character
-+ set. Every non-ASCII UCS-2 character is represented by a sequence of 2
-+ or 3 UTF-8 bytes. Thus UTF-8 is more compact than UCS-2 for text
-+ containing a preponderance of ABC's (or other ASCII characters), about
-+ the same as UCS-2 for other alphabetic scripts (Cyrillic, Roman, Greek,
-+ etc), and larger than UCS-2 for Chinese, Japanese, and Korean.
-+
-+ The UTF-8 uncoding of the UCS has been adopted by the Internet as the
-+ preferred character set for new applications, and is gradually being
-+ retrofitted into traditional applications like FTP ([550]RFC 2640).
-+
-+ 6.6.3. Conformance Levels
-+
-+ Although the Unicode and ISO 10646 standards both describe the same
-+ character set, these standards differ in many ways, including their
-+ stated requirements for conformance and their classification of
-+ conformance levels.
-+
-+ Kermit has always abided by ISO character-set standards, including ISO
-+ character-set designation and invocation methods. In adapting Unicode,
-+ therefore, we had to choose from among the available ISO designations
-+ which, in turn, correspond with ISO 10646 conformance levels. At
-+ present, Kermit claims the lowest conformance level, 1, meaning
-+ (roughly) that it does not handle combining forms and it does not
-+ handle Korean Hangul Jamos (just as, at present, it does not handle
-+ Korean in general). Note that ISO 10646 Conformance Levels 1 and 2
-+ sidestep the issue of the code changes for Korean Hangul by announcing
-+ non-support for Hangul regardless of encoding.
-+
-+ ISO 10646 Conformance Level 1 is approximately equivalent to Unicode
-+ Normalization Form C (described in Unicode Technical Report 15,
-+ incorporated into Unicode 3.0).
-+
-+ As noted in [551]Section 6.6.2, Kermit does not claim to support UTF-16
-+ at the present time, hence the UCS-2 nomenclature. Kermit treats
-+ surrogates just as if they were any other UCS-2 characters, rather than
-+ as escapes to other planes, which means that (except when converting
-+ between UCS-2 and UTF-8) they are translated to "error" characters,
-+ since (a) no other planes are defined yet (and if they were, no other
-+ character sets supported by Kermit would encode their characters), and
-+ (b) no valid surrogate character corresponds to any other UCS-2
-+ character.
-+
-+ A minor yet significant aspect of Unicode 3.0 and some recent
-+ perturbation of ISO 10646-1 (probably Amendment 18, "Symbols and Other
-+ Characters") is the addition of the Euro Sign at U+20AC. As noted in
-+ [552]Section 6.0, Kermit's "Euro compliance" includes conversion
-+ between Latin Alphabet 9 and various PC code pages. Text can also be
-+ converted between UCS-2 or UTF-8 and any other Euro-compliant character
-+ set (Latin-9, CP858, CP1250, CP1252) without loss of the Euro Sign.
-+
-+ 6.6.4. Relationship of Unicode with Kermit's Other Character Sets
-+
-+ Kermit's character sets are divided into two groups: single-byte sets
-+ (such as Roman, Hebrew, Cyrillic, Greek) and multibyte (various
-+ Japanese sets). The two groups are distinct since one normally would
-+ not expect to convert Kanji ideograms to Roman (or other) letters, or
-+ vice versa.
-+
-+ Unicode character-set conversion works with both groups, but obviously
-+ the result depends on the repertoires of the source and destination
-+ character-sets both including the characters in the file. For example,
-+ you can translate a Hungarian text file between Latin-2 and Unicode,
-+ but not between (say) Unicode and Latin/Greek. By the same token you
-+ can convert Japanese text from Shift-JIS or EUC or JIS-7 to Unicode and
-+ back, but you can't convert the same file to (say) Latin-1 if it
-+ contains Japanese characters.
-+
-+ JIS-7 is equivalent to DEC Kanji and ISO-2022-JP except that the
-+ latter two do not support halfwidth Katakana. Kermit treats all
-+ three of these sets the same way, i.e. as JIS-7.
-+
-+ As noted, Kermit presently does not handle combining diacritics, and so
-+ will not correctly convert UCS files that use them into a single-byte
-+ character set. For example, if a UCS file contains Latin Capital Letter
-+ A (U+0041) followed by Combining Acute Accent (U+0301), the result will
-+ be a two-character sequence, A followed by another character. This is
-+ what is meant by Conformance Level 1. (The situation grows worse with
-+ multiple diacritics, since they can occur in any order.)
-+
-+ A higher level of conformance is possible, in which "canonical
-+ equivalences" are handled via algorithms and databases, at some
-+ (perhaps considerable) cost in performance, since a fair amount of
-+ additional code must be executed for every character during data
-+ transfer (database lookup, sorting of combining sequences into
-+ canonical order, etc). This can be added in future releases if there is
-+ a need (but in many cases, pre- and postpostprocessing might be a
-+ better option).
-+
-+ Within these constraints, Kermit converts between the UCS and its other
-+ character sets. For example, a mixture of Russian and English (and/or
-+ Dutch, or Latin) text can bet converted between the UCS and ISO
-+ Latin/Cyrillic or KOI-8. But since Kermit does not presently support
-+ Arabic character-set conversion, the new availability of UCS conversion
-+ does not mean that Kermit can convert from Arabic UCS text to some
-+ other character set, because Kermit does not support any other
-+ character set that includes Arabic. Ditto for Thai, Armenian, Georgian,
-+ Tibetan, Chinese, Korean, etc. However, Kermit CAN convert Arabic (or
-+ any other script) between UCS-2 and UTF-8.
-+
-+ Considering Cyrillic more carefully, note that the UCS also contains
-+ numerous Cyrillic characters not found in any of the Cyrillic sets (ISO
-+ Latin/Cyrillic, KOI8, CP866, etc) that Kermit supports; characters
-+ needed for Abkhasian, Yakut, Tatar, Bashkir, Altaic, Old Church
-+ Slavonic, etc; UCS text containing any of these historic or "extended"
-+ Cyrillic characters can not be converted to any of Kermit's current
-+ single-byte Cyrillic sets without loss. The situation is similar for
-+ Greek, Hebrew, etc, and even worse for Japanese since Unicode contains
-+ thousands of Kanjis that are lacking from the Japanese character sets
-+ based on JIS X 0208, such as EUC-JP, JIS-7, and Shift-JIS.
-+
-+ In general, when converting from UCS to a single-byte set, there is
-+ always the possibility of data loss, just as there is when converting
-+ from any larger set to a smaller one. For example, if a UCS file
-+ contains Devanagari characters, these characters will be lost when
-+ converting to (say) Latin-1, just as Roman vowels with acute accents
-+ are lost when converting from Latin-1 (an 8-bit set) to German ISO 646
-+ (a 7-bit set).
-+
-+ 6.6.5. Kermit's Unicode Features
-+
-+ C-Kermit can convert between UCS-2 or UTF-8 and any of its other
-+ character sets, and also between UCS-2 and UTF-8. When converting
-+ between UCS-2 or UTF-8 and a non-Unicode character set (such as
-+ Latin-1), the UCS Line Separator (LS, U+2028) and Paragraph Separator
-+ (PS, U+2029) characters are converted to the appropriate line
-+ terminator (CR, LF, or CRLF). When converting from a non-Unicode set to
-+ UCS-2 or UTF-8, however, line terminators are not converted to LS or
-+ PS. This is in accordance with the recommendations of Unicode Technical
-+ Report #13.
-+
-+ When C-Kermit starts, it tests the native byte order of the computer.
-+ You can see the result in the SHOW FEATURES or SHOW FILE display. It's
-+ also available in the variable \v(byteorder): 0 means Big Endian, 1
-+ means Little Endian.
-+
-+ When UCS-2 is involved in file transfer or translation, the following
-+ commands tell C-Kermit what to do about byte order:
-+
-+ SET FILE UCS BYTE-ORDER { BIG-ENDIAN, LITTLE-ENDIAN }
-+ This is for reading UCS-2 files that don't have a BOM, and also
-+ for writing UCS-2 files. If this command is not given, the
-+ machine's native byte order is used when writing UCS-2 files,
-+ and also when reading UCS-2 files that don't have a BOM.
-+
-+ SET FILE UCS BOM { ON, OFF }
-+ This setting is used when creating UCS-2 files. A BOM is added
-+ at the beginning by default. Use OFF to not add the BOM. This
-+ command has no affect when writing files.
-+
-+ COPY /SWAP-BYTES sourcefile destinationfile
-+ Use this for fixing a UCS-2 file whose bytes are in the wrong
-+ order.
-+
-+ Use SHOW FILE to display the FILE UCS settings.
-+
-+ Please note, again, that C-Kermit's user interface, including its
-+ script language, is not internationalized in any way. String
-+ comparisons, case conversion, and so on, work only for US ASCII
-+ (comparisons for equality work with other sets, but not
-+ lexically-greater-or-less-than or caseless comparisons; even
-+ comparisons for equality can fail when composed characters or byte
-+ order are involved). String functions such as \findex() and
-+ \fsubstring() that reference byte positions do just that; they won't
-+ work with UTF-8 text that contains any non-ASCII characters, and they
-+ will not work with UCS-2 text at all since they use C strings
-+ internally, which are NUL-terminated. These are just a few examples to
-+ illustrate that neither Unicode nor any other character-set beyond
-+ ASCII is supported at the user-interface, command, or scripting level
-+ in this version of C-Kermit.
-+
-+ 6.6.5.1. File Transfer
-+
-+ Kermit supports both UCS-2 and UTF-8 as file and transfer character
-+ sets in text-mode file transfer.
-+
-+ To select UCS-2 or UTF-8 as a file character-set, use:
-+
-+ SET FILE CHARACTER-SET { UCS2, UTF8 }
-+
-+ If you want to send a UCS-2 text file (or save an incoming file in
-+ UCS-2 format), tell Kermit to:
-+
-+ SET FILE CHARACTER-SET UCS2
-+
-+ and if you want to send a UTF-8 text file (or store an incoming file in
-+ UTF-8 format), tell Kermit to:
-+
-+ SET FILE CHARACTER-SET UTF8
-+
-+ When sending UCS-2 files, Kermit determines the byte order from the
-+ BOM, if there is one (and if there is a BOM, it is stripped, i.e. not
-+ sent). If there is no BOM, the byte order is the one specified in the
-+ most recent SET FILE UCS BYTE-ORDER command, if any, otherwise the
-+ computer's native byte order is assumed. When storing incoming files as
-+ UCS-2, the byte order is according SET FILE UCS BYTE-ORDER, if given,
-+ otherwise the native one; a BOM is written according to SET FILE UCS
-+ BOM.
-+
-+ A transfer character-set should be chosen that includes all of the
-+ characters in the source file. So, for example, if you are sending a
-+ UCS-2 file containing only German-language text, your transfer
-+ character-set can be Latin-1, Latin-2, Latin-9, UCS-2, or UTF-8. But if
-+ you are sending a file that contains a combination of Hebrew and Greek,
-+ your transfer character-set must be UCS-2 or UTF-8 if you don't want to
-+ lose one script or the other. Furthermore, the transfer character-set
-+ must be one that is supported by the receiving Kermit program. Since
-+ UCS support is new, it is possible that the other Kermit program (if it
-+ supports character sets at all) does not support it, but does support
-+ single-byte sets such as Latin-1, Latin/Cyrillic, etc.
-+
-+ To select UCS-2 or UTF-8 as a transfer character-set, use:
-+
-+ SET TRANSFER CHARACTER-SET { UCS2, UTF8 }
-+
-+ It is up to the receiving Kermit program to convert the transfer format
-+ to its own local format, if necessary. If it does not understand the
-+ UTF-8 or UCS-2 transfer character-set, and your file can not be
-+ adequately represented by any single-byte transfer character-set (such
-+ as Latin-1 or Latin/Cyrillic) then, if UTF-8 format is acceptable on
-+ the receiving computer, use UTF-8 as the transfer character-set, with
-+ the receiver told to "set unknown-char keep", or with the sender told
-+ to "set attribute char off". If you want the file to be stored in UCS-2
-+ format at the receiver, send it it binary mode if the source file is
-+ also UCS-2, or else use the TRANSLATE command (next section) to convert
-+ it to UCS-2 first, then send it in binary mode. You should not use
-+ UCS-2 as a transfer character-set in text-mode transfers to Kermit
-+ programs that don't support it, because they are likely to corrupt the
-+ result the same way FTP would (see the final paragraph of this
-+ section).
-+
-+ When UCS-2 is the transfer character set, it always goes into Kermit
-+ packets in Big Endian format, with no BOM. As always, the transfer
-+ character-set is announced by the sender to the receiver. The
-+ announcement for UCS-2 is "I162" (ISO Registration 162 = UCS-2 Level 1)
-+ and by definition it is Big Endian (the standards say that when UCS-2
-+ is serialized into bytes, the order must be Big Endian). The
-+ announcement for UTF-8 is "I190" (UTF-8 Level 1).
-+
-+ When receiving a file whose transfer character-set is UCS-2 or UTF-8,
-+ you must choose the appropriate file character set for the result.
-+ There is no way Kermit can do this for you automatically, since UCS
-+ data can be in any script at all, or any combination.
-+
-+ In general, UTF-8 or UCS-2 should be chosen as a transfer character-set
-+ if the source file is also encoded in some form of UCS and it contains
-+ more than one script. But there are other situations where where UTF-8
-+ or UCS-2 offer advantages. For example, suppose the source file is on a
-+ NeXTstation and the destination file is on VMS. Both the NeXT and the
-+ DEC Multinational character sets include the French OE digraph, but
-+ Latin-1 does not. Therefore French words containing this character
-+ might not arrive intact when Latin-1 is the transfer character-set, but
-+ will with UTF-8 or UCS-2, since the UCS includes the OE digraph (but so
-+ does Latin-9).
-+
-+ UCS-2 should be chosen as a transfer character-set only for Japanese
-+ text files that contain a large preponderance of Kanji, since in this
-+ case (and only this case) UCS-2 (two bytes per Kanji) is more efficient
-+ than UTF-8 (three bytes per Kanji). The same will be true for Chinese
-+ and Korean when they are supported by Kermit. UCS-2 should never be
-+ used as a transfer character-set with a transfer partner that does not
-+ support UCS-2 since this can cause file corruption (see last paragraph
-+ in this section).
-+
-+ Note that Kermit's repeat-count compression is 100% ineffective for
-+ UCS-2, and is also ineffective for multibyte characters in UTF-8 and
-+ EUC-JP; this is because repeat-compression is a transport-level
-+ mechanism that operates on a per-byte basis; it has no knowledge of the
-+ distinction between a byte and a character.
-+
-+ When C-Kermit starts, it sets up associations ([553]Section 6.5) for
-+ incoming files whose transfer character sets are UCS-2 or UTF-8
-+ appropriately for the platform so that the file character-set for the
-+ incoming file is UCS-2 in Windows and UTF-8 elsewhere. Otherwise,
-+ C-Kermit does not make any default associations for UCS-2 or UTF-8, but
-+ of course you may add or change associations to suit your needs and
-+ preferences by including the appropriate ASSOCIATE commands in your
-+ Kermit startup file. For example, if you are a PC user and deal only
-+ with text written in Greek and English, you can:
-+
-+ ASSOCIATE TRANSFER-CHARACTER-SET UTF8 CP869
-+ ASSOCIATE TRANSFER-CHARACTER-SET UCS2 CP869
-+ ASSOCIATE FILE-CHARACTER-SET CP869 UTF8
-+
-+ Note that when file transfer involves conversion between a single-byte
-+ character set and UCS-2 or UTF-8, the file-transfer thermometer and
-+ estimated time left might be inaccurate, since they are based on the
-+ source file size, not the transfer encoding. This is purely a cosmetic
-+ issue and does not effect the final result. (And is not, strictly
-+ speaking, a bug; Kermit protocol presently includes no method for the
-+ sender to furnish an "estimated transfer size" to the receiver, and in
-+ any case any such guess could be as far off as the file size, given the
-+ many other factors that come into play, such as compression and
-+ prefixing).
-+
-+ A caution about FTP and UCS-2. As noted previously, if you transfer a
-+ UCS-2 file with FTP in binary mode between two computers with opposite
-+ Endianness, the result will have its bytes in the wrong order. However,
-+ if you use FTP to transfer a UCS-2 file in "ascii" (text) mode to ANY
-+ computer, even if it is identical to yours, the result will be
-+ corrupted because FTP's line-terminator conversions do not account for
-+ UCS-2. The same holds when sending from a UCS-aware Kermit program to
-+ an older Kermit program in text mode with a transfer character-set of
-+ UCS-2. So use UCS-2 as a transfer character-set ONLY with a UCS-2-aware
-+ Kermit partner.
-+
-+ 6.6.5.2. The TRANSLATE Command
-+
-+ In Kermit versions that have Unicode support included, TRANSLATE now
-+ always goes through Unicode; that is, the source set is converted to
-+ UCS-2 and thence to the target set. This is a major improvement, since
-+ in prior releases, C-Kermit had to pick the "most appropriate" transfer
-+ character-set as the intermediate set, and this would result in the
-+ loss of any characters that the source and target sets had in common
-+ but were lacking from the intermediate set (for example the OE digraph
-+ when translating from NeXT to DEC MCS through Latin-1). This never
-+ happens when Unicode is the intermediate set because Unicode is a
-+ superset of all other character sets supported by Kermit. A more
-+ dramatic example would be translation between Cyrillic PC code page 866
-+ and KOI8-R ([554]Section 6.4); formerly all the line- and box-drawing
-+ characters would be lost (since ISO 8859-5 does not have any); now the
-+ ones that these two sets have in common are preserved.
-+
-+ UCS-2 and UTF-8 are now both supported as source-file and
-+ destination-file character sets by C-Kermit's TRANSLATE command, for
-+ example:
-+
-+ translate oofa.txt ucs2 latin1 oofa-l1.txt
-+
-+ translates oofa.txt from UCS-2 to Latin-1, storing the result as
-+ oofa-l1.txt. Similarly:
-+
-+ translate oofa.txt utf8 latin1 oofa-l1.txt
-+ translate oofa.txt latin1 ucs2 oofa-ucs2.txt
-+ translate oofa.txt latin1 utf8 oofa-utf8.txt
-+ translate oofa.txt ucs2 utf8 oofa-utf8.txt
-+ translate oofa.txt utf8 ucs2 oofa-ucs2.txt
-+
-+ Treatment of the UCS-2 BOM is exactly the same as for file transfer.
-+ Note that if a UCS-2 source file is in the "wrong" byte order and lacks
-+ a BOM, and you don't tell Kermit about it with SET FILE UCS BYTE-ORDER,
-+ the result of the translation is total gibberish. Recall that you can
-+ use COPY /SWAP-BYTES to switch the byte order of an errant UCS-2 file
-+ (or any other file for that matter, if you can think of a reason to).
-+ Also note that:
-+
-+ translate oofa.txt ucs2 ucs2 new.txt
-+
-+ Produces a result in the native (or SET FILE UCS) byte-order as long as
-+ oofa.txt has a BOM.
-+
-+ As a side benefit of the Unicode work, the TRANSLATE command now works
-+ for the first time also for all Japanese character sets that Kermit
-+ supports. In other words, if you have a Japanese text file in any of
-+ the following encodings:
-+
-+ EUC-JP
-+ Shift-JIS
-+ JIS-7
-+ UCS-2
-+ UTF-8
-+
-+ You can use the TRANSLATE command to convert to any other encoding from
-+ the same list.
-+
-+ 6.6.5.3. Terminal Connection
-+
-+ The CONNECT command now allows UTF-8 as a local or remote terminal
-+ character-set:
-+
-+ SET TERMINAL CHARACTER-SET { ..., UTF8 } { ..., UTF8 }
-+ SET TERMINAL REMOTE-CHARACTER-SET { ..., UTF8 }
-+ SET TERMINAL LOCAL-CHARACTER-SET { ..., UTF8 }
-+
-+ (Recall that Kermit's terminal character-set has two "ends" -- the set
-+ used on the host to which Kermit is connected, and the set used on the
-+ local keyboard and screen.)
-+
-+ UCS-2 is not supported as a terminal character-set (either end) since
-+ (a) it is not used that way anywhere to our knowledge, and (b) the
-+ problems of Endianness and the high likelihood of loss of
-+ synchronization make it impractical. (Telecommunications is
-+ byte-oriented; if one byte, or any odd number of bytes, is lost because
-+ of buffer overruns, circuit resets, etc (or likewise if a burst of
-+ noise appears that takes the guise of an odd number of bytes), the byte
-+ order of the subsequent data stream will be backwards; unlike UTF-8 and
-+ traditional byte-based character sets, UCS-2 is not "self
-+ synchronizing".)
-+
-+ UTF-8 does not have byte-order or synchronization problems and is
-+ growing in popularity as a terminal character set as well as in other
-+ application areas. It allows a single terminal session to use multiple
-+ scripts (Roman, Cyrillic, Greek, etc) without ISO 2022 character-set
-+ switching (which terminal emulators like Kermit 95 can handle but few
-+ host applications understand or use), and meshes nicely with the
-+ Unicode screen fonts that are beginning to appear.
-+
-+ UTF-8 was first used in Plan 9 and soon will be available in Linux. It
-+ will probably spread from there (Unicode in some form is, of course,
-+ also used in Windows NT, but only internally -- not for access from
-+ outside).
-+
-+ To use UTF-8 or any other character set that uses 8-bit bytes in your
-+ terminal session, be sure to tell C-Kermit to:
-+
-+ SET TERMINAL BYTESIZE 8
-+ SET COMMAND BYTESIZE 8
-+ SET PARITY NONE
-+
-+ (or use the shortcut command, EIGHTBIT, which does all three at once).
-+
-+ In a setup where your local Kermit program uses a single-byte character
-+ set such as PC Code Page 850 and the remote host uses UTF-8:
-+
-+ SET TERM CHAR UTF8 CP850
-+
-+ or:
-+
-+ SET TERM REMOTE CHAR UTF8
-+ SET TERM LOCAL CHAR CP850
-+
-+ all works as expected. UTF-8 text on the remote displays correctly on
-+ your screen, and when you type CP850 characters, they are translated to
-+ UTF-8 sequences for transmission, and the echo from the host is
-+ translated from UTF-8 back to CP850. Telnet negotiations and
-+ autodownload take place before any character-set translation and work
-+ as before. The session log (if text mode was selected for it) contains
-+ only the local terminal character-set. And so on.
-+
-+ Kermit merely supplies translations from UTF-8 to your local terminal
-+ character-set (this includes treating UTF-8 Line Separator and
-+ Paragraph separator as CRLF). However, Kermit does does not, at
-+ present, perform "canonicalization" of composed sequences, nor does it
-+ automatically execute bidirectionality algorithms for display of
-+ mixed-direction text (e.g. Hebrew and English). Such presentation
-+ issues, like all others in the terminal-host regime, are left to the
-+ host.
-+
-+ By the way, C-Kermit also allows UTF-8 to be the local end of the
-+ terminal character-set, but so far this code is not tested, since we
-+ don't have a UTF-8 console or terminal to work with. However, it can be
-+ stated without doubt that C-Kermit's key mapping will not work for
-+ UTF-8 values, since (a) the key map is indexed by 8-bit byte values and
-+ (b) C-Kermit reads keystrokes a byte at a time (these comments do not
-+ apply to K95, which has direct access to the keyboard and can read
-+ "wide" keycodes and uses them to index a "wide" keymap).
-+
-+ Restrictions: As noted, the CONNECT command does not support UCS-2 as a
-+ REMOTE TERMINAL character-set. Neither does it support the Japanese
-+ sets EUC-JP, JIS-7, and Shift-JIS. Support for the Japanese sets (and
-+ possibly Chinese and Korean too) might be added in a future release.
-+ Since the TRANSMIT command (next section) uses the same REMOTE TERMINAL
-+ character-sets as the CONNECT command, it has the same restrictions.
-+
-+ 6.6.5.4. The TRANSMIT Command
-+
-+ As described in Chapter 15 of [555]Using C-Kermit and [556]Section 4.21
-+ of this document, the TRANSMIT command can be used to upload a file
-+ without protocol, more or less as if you were typing it on your
-+ keyboard while connected to the host. When TRANSMITting in text mode,
-+ the file's character set is converted to the host's unless you have SET
-+ TERMINAL CHARACTER-SET TRANSPARENT, or you include the new TRANSMIT
-+ switch, /TRANSPARENT.
-+
-+ Before C-Kermit 7.0, the file character-set was assumed to be the same
-+ as the local end of the terminal character-set, and the TRANSMIT
-+ command used the same translations as the CONNECT command, ignoring the
-+ file character-set.
-+
-+ In C-Kermit 7.0, that assumption (a poor one to begin with) can no
-+ longer be made, since UCS-2 can be a file character-set but not a
-+ terminal character-set. So now the file's character-set is given by
-+ your most recent SET FILE CHARACTER-SET command. The host's character
-+ set is the remote end of your most recent SET TERMINAL CHARACTER-SET
-+ command:
-+
-+ SET TERMINAL CHARACTER-SET remote-set [ local-set ]
-+
-+ or:
-+
-+ SET TERMINAL REMOTE-CHARACTER-SET remote-set
-+
-+ The TRANSMIT command converts each source-file character from the FILE
-+ character-set to the REMOTE TERMINAL character-set, and then transmits
-+ the translated characters according to your SET TRANSMIT preferences
-+ (Chapter 15).
-+
-+ If you have SET TRANSMIT ECHO ON, and the host is echoing the
-+ transmitted characters, the echos are converted from the remote
-+ terminal character-set to the local terminal character-set.
-+
-+ [ A picture would help... ]
-+
-+ Confused? Let's work through an example. Suppose your local computer is
-+ a NeXTstation, on which text files are encoded in the NeXT character
-+ set, and that the remote computer is a Data General AViiON, which uses
-+ the Data General International character set. Further suppose that you
-+ are logged in to the NeXT from a VT220 terminal which uses the DEC
-+ Multinational character set.
-+
-+ You need to convert the file from NeXT encoding to DG encoding and
-+ convert the echoes from DG encoding to DEC encoding. So on the NeXT,
-+ tell C-Kermit to:
-+
-+ eightbit
-+ set file character-set next
-+ set term character-set dg-international dec-mcs
-+ transmit /text nextdata.txt
-+
-+ (This assumes you have some sort of collection process already set up
-+ on the Data General, such as a text editor or the venerable "cat >
-+ foo". The EIGHTBIT command is equivalent to SET TERMINAL BYTESIZE 8,
-+ SET COMMAND BYTESIZE 8, SET PARITY NONE.)
-+
-+ To further complicate matters, suppose your local terminal character
-+ set is the same as the remote one, so you don't need terminal
-+ character-set translation, but you need to TRANSMIT a file that is in a
-+ different character set and you want it translated to the host set. In
-+ this case, use SET TERM CHARACTER-SET to actually specify the character
-+ set used on each end, rather than specifying TRANSPARENT:
-+
-+ eightbit
-+ set file character-set ucs2
-+ set term character-set latin1 latin1
-+ transmit /text ucs2data.txt
-+
-+ The distinction between:
-+
-+ SET TERMINAL CHARACTER-SET xxx yyy
-+
-+ (where xxx and yyy are the same set) and:
-+
-+ SET TERMINAL CHARACTER-SET TRANSPARENT
-+
-+ is new to C-Kermit 7.0, but affects only the TRANSMIT command.
-+
-+ The TRANSMIT command currently does nothing special with UCS-2/UTF-8
-+ Line and Paragraph Separator characters; more experience is required to
-+ find out how these behave in a genuine Unicode terminal-host setting.
-+
-+ Restrictions: As noted, the TRANSMIT command translates from the FILE
-+ character-set to the REMOTE TERMINAL character-set. This rules out
-+ translations to any character set that is not supported as a REMOTE
-+ TERMINAL character-set, such as UCS-2, EUC-JP, JIS-7, and Shift-JIS.
-+
-+ 6.6.5.5. Summary of Kermit Unicode Commands
-+
-+ Specifying file character-set and byte order:
-+ SET FILE CHARACTER-SET { ..., UCS2, UTF8 }
-+ REMOTE SET FILE CHARACTER-SET { ..., UCS2, UTF8 } (See next
-+ section)
-+ SET FILE UCS BOM { ON, OFF }
-+ SET FILE UCS BYTE-ORDER { BIG-ENDIAN, LITTLE-ENDIAN }
-+
-+ Specifying the transfer character-set:
-+ SET TRANSFER CHARACTER-SET { ..., UCS-2, UTF-8 }
-+ REMOTE SET TRANSFER CHARACTER-SET { ..., UCS-2, UTF-8 }
-+
-+ Specifying the terminal character-set:
-+ SET TERMINAL CHARACTER-SET { ..., UTF8 } { ..., UTF8 }
-+ SET TERMINAL REMOTE-CHARACTER-SET { ..., UTF8 }
-+ SET TERMINAL LOCAL-CHARACTER-SET { ..., UTF8 }
-+
-+ Displaying settings:
-+ SHOW FILE
-+ SHOW TRANSFER
-+ SHOW TERMINAL
-+ SHOW CHARACTER-SETS
-+
-+ Commands that use these settings include:
-+ SEND, RECEIVE, GET, etc.
-+ CONNECT
-+ TRANSMIT
-+ LOG SESSION
-+
-+ Converting files:
-+ TRANSLATE infile { ..., UCS-2, UTF-8 } { ..., UCS-2, UTF-8 }
-+ outfile
-+ COPY /SWAP-BYTES infile outfile
-+
-+ 6.7. Client/Server Character-Set Switching
-+
-+ A simple mechanism has been added to allow the client to change the
-+ server's FILE CHARACTER-SET:
-+
-+ REMOTE SET FILE CHARACTER-SET name
-+ The client asks the server to change its file character-set to
-+ the one given. The name must match one of the server's file
-+ character-set names. For convenience, C-Kermit uses its own file
-+ character-set keyword list for parsing this command so you can
-+ use ? for help and Tab or Esc for completion. However, since the
-+ server might have a different repertoire (or even use different
-+ names for the same sets), C-Kermit accepts any string you supply
-+ and sends it to the server. The server, if it supports this
-+ command (C-Kermit 7.0 and K95 1.1.19 do), sets its file
-+ character-set as requested, and also disables automatic
-+ character-set switching ([557]Section 6.5). If the server does
-+ not support this command or if it does not support the given
-+ character set, the REMOTE SET FILE CHARACTER-SET command fails.
-+
-+ Here's an example that sends a Japanese text file encoded in Shift-JIS
-+ to a server using every combination of Kermit's Japanese-capable file
-+ and transfer character sets:
-+
-+ dcl \&x[] = euc ucs2 utf8 ; transfer character-sets
-+ dcl \&y[] = eu uc ut ; 2-letter abbreviations for them
-+ dcl \&f[] = shift euc jis7 ucs2 utf8 ; file character-sets
-+ dcl \&g[] = sj eu j7 uc ut ; 2-letter abbreviations
-+
-+ set file char shift-jis ; local file character-set is Shift-JIS
-+ for \%i 1 \fdim(&x) 1 { ; for each transfer character-set...
-+ set xfer char \&x[\%i] ; set it
-+ for \%j 1 \fdim(&f) 1 { ; for each remote file character-set...
-+ remote set file char \&f[\%j] ; set it
-+ if fail exit 1 SERVER REJECTED CHARSET
-+ send /text meibo-sj.html meibo-sj-\&y[\%i]-\&g[\%j].txt ; send the fil
-+e
-+ if fail exit 1 TRANSFER FAILED
-+ }
-+ }
-+
-+ The Kermit-370 server does not support REMOTE SET FILE CHARACTER-SET,
-+ but since it supports REMOTE KERMIT commands, you can get the same
-+ effect with REMOTE KERMIT SET FILE CHARACTER-SET name.
-+
-+ 7. SCRIPT PROGRAMMING
-+
-+ (Also see [558]Section 2.8, Scripting Local Programs.)
-+
-+ 7.0. Bug Fixes
-+
-+ The following script programming bugs were fixed in C-Kermit 7.0:
-+
-+ * IF EXIST and IF DIRECTORY were fixed to properly strip braces from
-+ around their arguments, so "if directory {C:\Program Files}", etc,
-+ would work as expected. However, this means that if the file or
-+ directory name is actually enclosed in braces, the braces must be
-+ doubled.
-+ * The READ command did not fail if the READ file wasn't open; now it
-+ does.
-+ * The READ command refused to read the last or only line of a file if
-+ it did not end with a proper line terminator; now it does.
-+ * The END command, when given from within a SWITCH statement, did not
-+ exit from the current macro or command file; instead it just
-+ terminated the SWITCH.
-+
-+ 7.1. The INPUT Command
-+
-+ 7.1.1. INPUT Timeouts
-+
-+ The description of the INPUT command on page 422 fails to mention the
-+ following two points about the timeout (which apply to C-Kermit 6.0 and
-+ later):
-+
-+ 1. "INPUT -1 text" (or "INPUT \%x text", where \%x is any variable
-+ whose value is -1 or less) means "wait forever". This form of the
-+ INPUT command fails only if it is interrupted, since it will never
-+ time out.
-+ 2. INPUT 0 performs a nonblocking read of material that has already
-+ arrived but has not yet been read, and succeeds immediately if the
-+ target string is found, or fails immediately if it is not found.
-+
-+ The same points apply to MINPUT. REINPUT ignores its timeout parameter.
-+
-+ 7.1.2. New INPUT Controls
-+
-+ The following new INPUT controls were added in version 7.0:
-+
-+ SET INPUT AUTODOWNLOAD { ON, OFF }
-+ Explained in [559]Section 7.7.
-+
-+ SET INPUT CANCELLATION { ON, OFF }
-+ This governs whether an INPUT command can be canceled by
-+ "pressing any key" on the keyboard. Normally it can be, in which
-+ case the INPUT command fails immediately and \v(instatus) is set
-+ to 2, indicating interruption. SET INPUT CANCELLATION OFF
-+ disables keyboard cancellations; thus if the search text is not
-+ encountered, the INPUT command will run for its entire timeout
-+ interval. SET INPUT CANCELLATION OFF does not disable
-+ interruption by Ctrl-C, however; every command needs an
-+ emergency exit. (If you really want to disable interruption by
-+ Ctrl-C, use SET COMMAND INTERRUPTION OFF.)
-+
-+ Also see [560]Section 7.2 for any new variables related to INPUT.
-+
-+ 7.1.3. INPUT with Pattern Matching
-+
-+ C-Kermit 7.0 allows INPUT, MINPUT, and REINPUT targets to be a pattern
-+ (explained in [561]Sections 1.19 and [562]4.9). This solves a
-+ long-standing problem illustrated by the following scenario: a certain
-+ company has a bank of TCP/IP modem servers, with hostnames server1,
-+ server2, server3, and so on. Each server's prompt is its name, followed
-+ by a colon (:), for example "Server72:". Without INPUT patterns, it
-+ would be rather difficult to wait for the prompt. The brute force
-+ approach:
-+
-+ minput 20 Server1: Server2: Server3: ... (enumerating each one)
-+
-+ is subject to failure whenever a new server is added. A more subtle
-+ approach:
-+
-+ input 20 Server
-+ if fail ...
-+ input 2 :
-+
-+ is liable to false positives, e.g. "Welcome to the XYZ Corp Modem
-+ Server. Please read the following message:"...
-+
-+ With patterns, you can match the prompt with "Server*:" (which doesn't
-+ solve the "false positives" problem, but certainly is more compact than
-+ the brute force method), or with more specific patterns such as
-+ "Server[1-9]:" and "Server[1-9][0-9]:", or equivalently:
-+
-+ Server{[1-9],[1-9][0-9]}:
-+
-+ meaning the word "Server" followed by a single digit (1-9) or by two
-+ digits representing a number from 1 to 99, followed by a colon.
-+
-+ INPUT pattern matching has been added in a way that does not interfere
-+ with existing scripts. No new commands or switches are used. The simple
-+ rule is: if an INPUT search target is the argument of the (new)
-+ \fpattern() function, it is a pattern. Otherwise it is taken literally,
-+ as before. For example:
-+
-+ input 5 a*b
-+
-+ searches for an 'a' followed by an asterisk ('*'), followed by a 'b'.
-+ But:
-+
-+ input 5 \fpattern(a*b)
-+
-+ searches for an 'a' followed by anything at all up to and including the
-+ first 'b'. This means that any search target to INPUT, MINPUT, or
-+ REINPUT can be a pattern or a literal string, and in particular that
-+ MINPUT can accommodate any mixture of patterns and literal strings.
-+
-+ In selecting patterns, note that:
-+
-+ * A leading '*' is always implied so there is no need to include one.
-+ * A trailing '*' is meaningless and ignored.
-+ * A '*' by itself matches the first character that arrives.
-+
-+ A syntax note: If your pattern is a selection list, meaning a list of
-+ alternatives separated by commas and enclosed in braces, then the outer
-+ braces will be stripped by various levels of parsers, so you must
-+ include three of each:
-+
-+ input 10 \fpattern({{{abc,mno,xyz}}})
-+
-+ Note that this is equivalent to:
-+
-+ minput 10 abc mno xyz
-+
-+ except for the setting of the \v(minput) variable.
-+
-+ And a caution: INPUT pattern matching has a limitation that you
-+ probably never noticed with literal-string matching, namely that there
-+ is a limit on the size of the match. For example, if the pattern is
-+ "a*b", the match will succeed if the 'a' and 'b' are not separated by
-+ more than (say) 8K bytes, but will fail if they are farther apart than
-+ that. In such cases, it better to use two INPUTs (e.g. "input 10 a" and
-+ then "input 100 b").
-+
-+ 7.1.4. The INPUT Match Result
-+
-+ The result of any INPUT, MINPUT, or REINPUT command, no matter whether
-+ the search targets are patterns or literal strings, is available in the
-+ new \v(inmatch) variable. For example:
-+
-+ minput 10 cat \fpattern([dh]og)
-+ if success echo MINPUT matched "\v(inmatch)"
-+
-+ This is especially useful when a pattern was matched, since it makes
-+ the string that matched the pattern available to Kermit; there would be
-+ no way to get it otherwise.
-+
-+ After an INPUT command, you can view all the INPUT-related variables by
-+ typing "show variables in" (abbreviate as "sho var in"), which shows
-+ the values of all built-in variables whose names start with "in".
-+
-+ 7.2. New or Improved Built-In Variables
-+
-+ \v(blockcheck)
-+ Current BLOCK-CHECK setting, 1, 2, 3, or 4. 4 is the code for
-+ BLANK-FREE-2.
-+
-+ \v(byteorder)
-+ The machine's byte order: 0 = Big Endian, 1 = Little Endian.
-+
-+ \v(cmdbufsize)
-+ The length of the command buffer, which is the maximum size for
-+ a macro, a command, a variable, or anything else in C-Kermit's
-+ script language.
-+
-+ \v(ctty)
-+ The device name of C-Kermit's controlling (login) terminal.
-+
-+ \v(filename)
-+ Described in [563]Sections 4.1 and [564]4.2.
-+
-+ \v(filenumber)
-+ Described in [565]Sections 4.1 and [566]4.2.
-+
-+ \v(filespec)
-+ As of C-Kermit 7.0, contains fully qualified filenames rather
-+ than (usually) relative ones.
-+
-+ \v(return)
-+ Now holds the END n value of the macro that most recently
-+ returned, in case END was used rather than RETURN.
-+
-+ \v(editor)
-+ Pathname of preferred text editor
-+
-+ \v(editopts)
-+ Command-line options for editor
-+
-+ \v(editfile)
-+ File most recently edited
-+
-+ \v(browser)
-+ Pathname of preferred Web browser
-+
-+ \v(browsopts)
-+ Command-line options for Web browser
-+
-+ \v(browsurl)
-+ URL most recently given to Web browser
-+
-+ \v(dialtype)
-+ Type of call most recently placed (see [567]Section 2.1.11).
-+
-+ \v(kbchar)
-+ The character, if any, that was typed at the keyboard to to
-+ interrupt the most recent PAUSE, SLEEP, WAIT, MSLEEP, or INPUT
-+ command; empty if the most recent such command was not
-+ interrupted from the keyboard.
-+
-+ \v(lockdir)
-+ UNIX only - The name of the UUCP lockfile directory, if known,
-+ otherwise "(unknown)".
-+
-+ \v(lockpid)
-+ UNIX only - PID of process that owns the communication port that
-+ you tried to open with a SET LINE command that failed because
-+ the port was in use, otherwise empty. This variable is set with
-+ every SET LINE command.
-+
-+ \v(cx_time)
-+ If no connection (SET HOST, SET LINE, DIAL, TELNET, etc) is
-+ active, this is 0. If a connection is active, this is the number
-+ of seconds since the connection was made.
-+
-+ \v(hwparity)
-+ If hardware parity is in effect, this variable gives its value,
-+ such as "even" or "odd" (in which case, the \v(parity) variable
-+ will be "none"). Otherwise this variable is empty.
-+
-+ \v(serial)
-+ Current serial port settings in 8N1 format ([568]Section 2.10).
-+
-+ \v(errno)
-+ In UNIX, the current value of the C runtime errno variable,
-+ which is quite volatile (meaning that often an "interesting"
-+ error code can be overwritten by some other library call or
-+ system service that sets errno before you have a chance to look
-+ at it). In VMS, the error code returned by the system or library
-+ call that most recently failed (success codes are not saved).
-+ Not available in other operating systems.
-+
-+ \v(errstring)
-+ The UNIX or VMS system error message that corresponds to
-+ \v(errno). Not available in all OS's. Also see
-+ [569]\ferrstring().
-+
-+ \v(setlinemsg)
-+ The error message, if any, from the most recent SET LINE, SET
-+ PORT, SET HOST, TELNET, or other connection-making command. This
-+ is not necessarily the same as \v(errstring) since these
-+ commands might fail without generating a system error code, for
-+ example (in UNIX) because a lockfile existed indicating the
-+ device was assigned by another user.
-+
-+ \v(exitstatus)
-+ The exit status C-Kermit would return if it exited now.
-+
-+ \v(pexitstat)
-+ The exit status of the inferior process most recently invoked by
-+ C-Kermit (by RUN, !, REDIRECT, SEND /COMMAND, etc). In VMS, this
-+ code can be given to \ferrstring() to get the corresponding
-+ error message (in UNIX, program/command return codes are not the
-+ same as system error codes). Not available in operating systems
-+ other than UNIX and VMS. See [570]Section 4.2.5 for details.
-+
-+ \v(inmatch)
-+ The incoming string of characters, if any, that matched the most
-+ recent INPUT, REINPUT, or MINPUT command.
-+
-+ \v(intime)
-+ The number of milliseconds (thousandths of seconds) it took for
-+ the most recent INPUT command to find its match, or -1 if no
-+ INPUT command has been given yet. If the INPUT command timed
-+ out, the value is approximately equal to 1000 times the INPUT
-+ timeout. If INPUT failed for some other reason, the value is
-+ undefined (\v(instatus) gives INPUT completion status). If your
-+ version of C-Kermit is built without high-precision
-+ floating-point timers, this number will always be a multiple of
-+ 1000.
-+
-+ \v(inwait)
-+ The number of seconds specified as the timeout in the most
-+ recent INPUT command.
-+
-+ \v(dialsuffix)
-+ Dialing suffix for use during PDIAL sequence; see [571]Section
-+ 2.1.10.
-+
-+ \v(pid)
-+ UNIX, VMS, and K95 only. C-Kermit's primary process ID, numeric,
-+ decimal. If you want to show it in hex, use \fn2hex(\v(pid)) If
-+ you want to show it in octal, use \fn2octal(\v(pid)).
-+
-+ \v(printer)
-+ Current printer name or SET PRINTER value.
-+
-+ \v(p_ctl)
-+ Control prefix char \v(p_8bit) 8-bit prefix char (if parity not
-+ none)
-+
-+ \v(p_rpt)
-+ Repeat prefix char (if repeat compression enabled)
-+
-+ \v(herald)
-+ Kermit's version herald
-+
-+ \v(test)
-+ Kermit's test version, if any, or 0 if this is not a test
-+ version. Typical values for test versions are "Alpha.03" or
-+ "Beta.14".
-+
-+ \v(sendlist)
-+ The number of entries in the SEND-LIST, 0 if none. Note: entries
-+ do not necessarily correspond to files, since an entry might
-+ contain wildcards. Also note that the value does not go back to
-+ 0 after the files in the list are sent. To reset this variable,
-+ use CLEAR SEND-LIST. The purpose of this variable is to
-+ determine if a SEND command, when given without any filenames,
-+ will be legal. Example:
-+
-+ xif \v(sendlist) { send } else { send oofa.txt }
-+
-+ \v(trigger)
-+ If the most recent CONNECT session was terminated automatically
-+ by a trigger, this variable contains the trigger value.
-+
-+ \v(ty_ln)
-+ TYPE line number (during TYPE)
-+
-+ \v(ty_lc)
-+ TYPE line count (after TYPE)
-+
-+ \v(ty_mc)
-+ TYPE match count (after TYPE)
-+
-+ \v(xferstat)
-+ Status of most recent file transfer:
-+
-+-1: No transfer yet
-+ 0: Succeeded
-+ 1: Failed
-+
-+ \v(xfermsg)
-+ If the most recent file transfer failed, this is the reason. If
-+ it succeeded, \v(xfermsg) is an empty string.
-+
-+ \v(tftime)
-+ Total elapsed time of most recent file transfer operation, in
-+ seconds.
-+
-+ \v(textdir)
-+ Directory that holds (or is supposed to hold) Kermit text files
-+ such as installation instructions, release notes, update notes,
-+ read-me files, "beware" files, etc.
-+
-+ \v(name)
-+ The name with which the Kermit program was invoked, e.g.
-+ "kermit", "wermit", "k95", "k2", etc (see [572]Section 9.1).
-+
-+ \v(osname)
-+ Name of operating system on computer where C-Kermit is running,
-+ obtained at runtime (from uname or equivalent).
-+
-+ \v(osversion)
-+ Version of operating system on computer where C-Kermit is
-+ running, obtained at runtime (from uname or equivalent).
-+
-+ \v(osrelease)
-+ Release of operating system on computer where C-Kermit is
-+ running, obtained at runtime (from uname or equivalent).
-+
-+ \v(model)
-+ The specific hardware model of the computer where C-Kermit is
-+ running, if known.
-+
-+ \v(math_pi)
-+ The value of Pi (see [573]Section 7.23)
-+
-+ \v(math_e)
-+ The value of e (see [574]Section 7.23)
-+
-+ \v(math_precision)
-+ How many significant digits in a floating-point number.
-+
-+ \v(f_count)
-+ Result of the most recent FILE COUNT (FCOUNT) command.
-+
-+ \v(f_error)
-+ Numeric error code of most recent FILE command.
-+
-+ \v(f_max)
-+ Maximum number of files open simultaneously.
-+
-+ The math constants are given in the precision of underlying computer's
-+ floating-point arithmetic.
-+
-+ Note the distinction between \v(osname), \v(osversion), and
-+ \v(platform); the latter refers to the platform for which and/or upon
-+ which C-Kermit was built, as opposed to the one on which it is actually
-+ running. Also note that each operating system can, and probably will,
-+ interpret and fill in the os* variables differently, or not at all.
-+
-+ The SHOW VARIABLES command now accepts a variable name, prefix, or
-+ pattern:
-+
-+ show variables Shows all variables.
-+ show variables t Shows all variables that start with "t".
-+ show variables *ver* Shows all variables whose names contain "ver".
-+ show variables *ver Ditto (an implied "*" is appended).
-+
-+ 7.3. New or Improved Built-In Functions
-+
-+ The following new file-i/o functions are explained in [575]Section
-+ 1.22.
-+
-+ \f_status(channel) Status of file open on channel
-+ \f_pos(channel) Read/write (byte) pointer of given file
-+ \f_line(channel) Current line of file
-+ \f_handle(channel) Handle of file
-+ \f_eof(channel) Whether given file is at EOF
-+ \f_getchar(channel) Read a char from given file
-+ \f_getline(channel) Read a line from given file
-+ \f_getblock(channel,n) Read a block from given file
-+ \f_putchar(channel,c) Write a char to given file
-+ \f_putline(channel,string) Write a line to given file
-+ \f_putblock(channel,string) Write a block to given file
-+
-+ The following new date-time-related functions are explained in
-+ [576]Section 1.6:
-+
-+ \fday() Returns day of week of given date
-+ \fnday() Returns numeric day of week of given date
-+ \ftime() Returns time portion of given date-time
-+ \fntime() Converts time to seconds since midnight
-+ \fn2time() Converts seconds since midnight to hh:mm:ss
-+ \fcvtdate(date-time) Converts free-format date to yyyymmdd hh:mm:ss
-+ \fdayofyear(date-time) Converts date to yyyyddd (day-of-year) format
-+ \fdoy(date-time) Synonym for \fdayofyear()
-+ \fdoy2date(dayofyear) Converts yyyyddd to yyyymmdd
-+ \fmjd(date-time) Converts free-format date to Modified Julian Date
-+ \fmjd2date(mjd) Converts modified Julian date to yyyymmdd
-+
-+ The new floating-point arithmetic functions are explained in
-+ [577]Section 7.23. f1 and f2 are floating-point (real) numbers; d is
-+ the number of decimal places to show:
-+
-+ \ffpabsolute(f1,d) Absolute value of f1
-+ \ffpadd(f1,f2,d) f1 + f1
-+ \ffpcosine(f1,d) Cosine of f1
-+ \ffpdivide(f1,f2,d) f1 divided by f2
-+ \ffpexp(f1,d) e to the f1 power
-+ \ffpint(f1) Integer part of f1
-+ \ffplog10(f1,d) Log base 10 of f1
-+ \ffplogn(f1,d) Natural log of f1
-+ \ffpmaximum(f1,f2,d) Maximum of f1 and f2
-+ \ffpminimum(f1,f2,d) Minimum of f1 and f2
-+ \ffpmodulus(f1,f2,d) Modulus of f1 and f2
-+ \ffpmultiply(f1,f2,d) Product of f1 and f2
-+ \ffpraise(f1,f2,d) Raise f1 to power f2
-+ \ffpround(f1,d) Round f1 to d places
-+ \ffpsine(f1,d) Sine of f1
-+ \ffpsqrt(f1,d) Square root of f1
-+ \ffpsubtract(f1,f2,d) f2 - f1
-+ \ffptangent(f1,d) Tangent of f1
-+
-+ Integer number functions:
-+
-+ \fabsolute(n)
-+ Absolute value of integer n.
-+
-+ \frandom(n)
-+ Returns a random integer between 0 and n-1.
-+
-+ \fradix(s,n1,n2)
-+ If the string s is an integer in radix n1, the result is the
-+ same number expressed in radix n2, where n1 and n2 may be any
-+ number from 2 through 36, expressed as decimal numbers, or
-+ variables (etc) that evaluate to decimal numbers. For the source
-+ and result, the digits of any radix, r, are the first r
-+ characters in the sequence 0-9,a-z (case doesn't matter for the
-+ letters). The string s may have a sign, + or -; if it starts
-+ with a minus (-) sign, the result also has a minus sign.
-+
-+ The \fradix() function does not work with floating-point numbers. It
-+ does not reveal the internal storage format of a number; for example,
-+ \fradix(-1,10,16) is -1, not something like FFFFFFFFFF. If all three
-+ arguments are not given, or if n1 or n2 are not numbers between 2 and
-+ 36 inclusive, or s is not a number in radix n1, an error occurs and the
-+ empty string is returned. \fradix() also does not offer
-+ extended-precision arithmetic; number values are limited to those
-+ expressed as a long integer in the architecture of the underlying
-+ computer, usually 32 or 64 bits. If you give it an argument whose
-+ absolute value is larger than can be held in an unsigned long, the
-+ result is -1.
-+
-+ The next four are shorthand functions for decimal/hexadecimal and
-+ decimal/octal number conversion:
-+
-+ \fn2hex(n)
-+ Returns the hexadecimal (base 16) representation of the integer
-+ n. This is different from \fhexify(s), which treats its argument
-+ as a string rather than a number. The result is always
-+ left-padded with 0's to make its length even. Examples:
-+
-+ \n2hex(0) = "00" \fhexify(0) = "30"
-+ \n2hex(255) = "ff" \fhexify(255) = "323535"
-+ \n2hex(256) = "0100" \fhexify(256) = "323536"
-+
-+ \fhex2n(x)
-+ Converts hexadecimal number x to decimal equivalent decimal
-+ number. This is the inverse of \fn2hex(). Equivalent to
-+ \fradix(s,16,10).
-+
-+ \fn2octal(n)
-+ Returns the octal (base 8) representation of the number n.
-+ Examples:
-+
-+ \n2octal(0) = "0"
-+ \n2oct(255) = "377"
-+ \n2oct(256) = "400"
-+ Equivalent to \fradix(n,10,8).
-+
-+ \foct2n(n)
-+ Returns the decimal representation of the given octal number, n.
-+ The inverse of \fn2octal(). Equivalent to \fradix(n,8,10).
-+
-+ String functions:
-+
-+ \s(name[n:m])
-+ Equivalent to \fsubstring(\m(name),n,m) ([578]Section 7.24).
-+
-+ \:(name[n:m])
-+ Equivalent to \fsubstring(name,n,m) (where "name" is any
-+ \-quantity) ([579]Section 7.24).
-+
-+ \fleft(s,n)
-+ The leftmost ncharacters of string s; equivalent to
-+ \fsubstring(s,1,n).
-+
-+ \fstripx(string,char)
-+ Returns the part of the string up to the rightmost occurrence,
-+ if any, of the given character. The default character is period
-+ (.) Examples:
-+
-+ \fstripx(foo/bar,/) = "foo"
-+ \fstripx(foo/bar/baz,/) = "foo/bar"
-+ \fstripx(autoexec.bat,.) = "autoexec"
-+ \fstripx(autoexec.bat) = "autoexec"
-+ \fstripx(fstripx(foo/bar/baz,/),/) = "foo"
-+
-+ \flop(string,character)
-+ Returns the portion of the string starting after the first
-+ occurrence of the given character. The default character is
-+ period (.) Examples:
-+
-+ \flop(autoexec.bat) = "bat"
-+ \flop(baz.foo/bar) = "foo/bar"
-+ \flop(baz.foo/bar,/) = "bar
-+
-+ \fstripn(string,n)
-+ Returns the string with ncharacters removed from the end.
-+ Example:
-+
-+ \fstripn(12345678,3) = "12345"
-+
-+ (For more discussion of \fstripx(), \fstripn(), and \flop() see
-+ [580]Section 4.2.3).
-+
-+ \fb64encode(s)
-+ Returns the Base-64 encoding of the string s.
-+
-+ \fb64decode(s)
-+ Returns the decoding of the Base-64 string s. Fails if s is not
-+ a Base-64 string, or if its length is not a multiple of 4. Note
-+ that if any of the result bytes are null (0), the result string
-+ stops there. There is no way to represent strings that contain
-+ null bytes in C-Kermit (the same is true for \funhexify()).
-+
-+ \fword(s1,n,s2,s3)
-+ Extracts word number nfrom string s1. By default, a "word" is
-+ any sequence of ASCII letters or digits; nis 1-based. If n is
-+ omitted, "1" is used. Examples:
-+
-+ \fword(one two three) = "one"
-+ \fword(one two three,1) = "one"
-+ \fword(one two three,2) = "two"
-+ \fword(one two three,3) = "three"
-+
-+ and:
-+
-+ \fword(\v(dialresult),2) = "31200"
-+
-+ is "31200" if \v(dialresult) is (e.g.) "CONNECT
-+ 31200/ARQ/V32/LAPM/V42BIS".
-+
-+ If you include s2, this replaces the default break set. For
-+ example, suppose you have a string \%a whose value is:
-+
-+ $150.00 $300.00 $39.95
-+
-+ and you want each dollar amount to be a word; use:
-+
-+ \fword(\%a,\%n,{ })
-+
-+ This returns dollar amount number \%n, e.g. "$300.00" for \%n =
-+ 2. "{ }" denotes a space (you must enclose it in braces,
-+ otherwise it is squeezed out). Note that ASCII control
-+ characters are always included in the break set; you don't have
-+ to specify them (and you can't not specify them).
-+
-+ The optional s3 argument lists characters (even control
-+ characters) that normally would be considered separators that
-+ you want included in words. So the dollars-and-cents example
-+ could also be handled this way:
-+
-+ \fword(\%a,\%n,,$.)
-+
-+ in other words, use the default separator list, but remove "$"
-+ and "." from it so they will be considered part of a word.
-+
-+ Note that since 8-bit characters are not ASCII, they act as
-+ break characters unless you put them in the include list.
-+ Suppose, for example, you have a file in which each line is a
-+ Tab-separated list of words, numbers, or phrases that might
-+ contain puncuation, special characters like $ and @, 8-bit bit
-+ characters, etc (like something that might have been exported
-+ from a spreadsheet or database), and you want to split only on
-+ Tab; here is a way (\m(line) is a line read from the file):
-+
-+undef keep
-+for \%i 1 255 1 {
-+ if == \%i 9 continue
-+ .keep := \m(keep)\fchar(\%i)
-+}
-+while true {
-+ fread /line \%c line
-+ if fail break
-+ .\%n := \fsplit(\m(line),&a,\9,\m(keep))
-+ ...
-+}
-+
-+ This problem is addressed in [581]C-Kermit 9.0.
-+
-+ \fsplit(s1,&a,s2,s3)
-+ This is like \fword(), except instead of extracting and
-+ returning a particular word from string s1, it counts the words
-+ and optionally assigns them to the array whose identifying
-+ letter, a-z, is given after the "&" in the second argument, with
-+ the first word going into element 1, the second into element 2,
-+ and so on. The rules regarding break and include lists (s2 and
-+ s3) are exactly the same as for \fword(). \fsplit() returns the
-+ number of words that were assigned, which is either the number
-+ of words in the string, or the dimension of the array, whichever
-+ is less. If the array is not declared, \fsplit() creates it and
-+ returns a number which is both the number of words in s1 and the
-+ dimension of the new array. Examples:
-+
-+ declare \&w[20] ; (Optional.)
-+ ...
-+ read \%s ; \%s is "This is a sentence with seven words."
-+ ...
-+ echo "\fsplit(\%s)" ; This would print "7".
-+ echo "\fsplit(\%s,&w)" ; Ditto, and also assigns them to array \&w[].
-+
-+ echo "\&w[7]" ; This would print "words".
-+
-+ If the line contained fields that were delimited by colon (:),
-+ you would use \fsplit(\%s,&w,:). If the fields were delimited by
-+ comma, then you would use \fsplit(\%s,&w,{,}); in this case the
-+ literal comma must be enclosed in braces to distinguish it from
-+ the comma that separates function arguments. To get a word count
-+ without loading an array, but still specify break and/or include
-+ lists, leave the array argument empty:
-+
-+ echo "\fsplit(\%s,,:)" ; Use colon as the separator.
-+
-+ WARNINGS:
-+
-+ 1. If you use the same array repeatedly, \fsplit() leaves any
-+ trailing members undisturbed. For example:
-+ dcl \&w[10]
-+ \fsplit(1 2 3 4 5,&w) ; Sets \&w[1] thru \&w[5].
-+ \fsplit(a b c,&w) ; Sets \&w[1]-[3] leaving [4]-[5] as they were.
-+
-+ 2. If you allow \fsplit to create the array (by not declaring it
-+ first), it is dimensioned to the number of elements it was
-+ created with:
-+ \fsplit(1 2 3,&x) ; Creates an array \&x[] with 3 elements.
-+ \fsplit(a b c d e,&x) ; This overflows the array.
-+
-+ Thus if you want to use \fsplit() repeatedly on the same array,
-+ either dimension it in advance to the maximum expected size (and
-+ then some -- more efficient), or else destroy it after each use
-+ (to allow for unexpectedly large arguments). Example using a
-+ dynamic array:
-+
-+ fopen /read \%c some-file
-+ if fail ...
-+ set function error on ; See [582]Section 7.12
-+ while true {
-+ dcl \&w[] ; Destroy \&[w] each time thru the loop
-+ fread /line \%c \%a
-+ if fail break
-+ asg \%x \fsplit(\%a,&w)
-+ if fail ...
-+ ; (do what you want with \&w[] here...)
-+ }
-+ fclose \%c
-+
-+ \frindex(s1,s2,n)
-+ The "n" argument to \frindex() now works consistently (in mirror
-+ image) with the corresponding \findex() argument. In each case,
-+ the (n-1)-most characters of s2 are ignored in the search; for
-+ findex, this means the starting position of the search is n (the
-+ default n is 1, and 0 is treated like 1). For \frindex() it
-+ means the default starting point is:
-+
-+ length(s2) - length(s1) - n (with the same defaults for n).
-+
-+ \fsearch(pattern,string[,position])
-+ Exactly like \findex(), except with a pattern (see [583]Section
-+ 7.9) rather than a literal string.
-+
-+ \frsearch(pattern,string[,position])
-+ Exactly like \frindex(), except with a pattern rather than a
-+ literal string.
-+
-+ File Functions:
-+
-+ \ffiles(), \fnextfile()
-+ It is no longer necessary to copy the file list to an array
-+ before use, as shown on p.398 of [584]Using C-Kermit 2nd
-+ Edition. \ffiles() and friends now make their own safe copies of
-+ the file list. Thus constructions like the following are now
-+ possible:
-+
-+ for \%i 1 \ffiles(*.txt) 1 { send \fnextfile() }
-+
-+ The same is true for the new function \frfiles(),
-+ \fdirectories(), and \frdirectories(), described in [585]Section
-+ 4.11.3.
-+
-+ But note that each reference to \fnextfile() still gets you the
-+ next file. So "if newer \fnextfile() foo.txt send \fnextfile()"
-+ compares one file's age with that of foo.txt, and then sends an
-+ entirely different file. If you're going to refer to the same
-+ file more than once, assign it to a variable:
-+
-+ asg \%f \fnextfile()
-+ if newer \%f foo.txt send \%f
-+
-+ (note: assign, not define).
-+
-+ Also note that \ffiles(), \frfiles(), \fdirectories(), and
-+ \frdirectories() all now accept on optional 2nd argument: the
-+ name of an array to load with the resulting file or directory
-+ list, explained in [586]Section 4.11.3. So you can also load an
-+ array with the filelist when you need to refer to the same file
-+ more than once:
-+
-+ for \%i 1 \ffiles(*,&a) 1 { if newer \&a[\%i] foo.txt send \&a[\%i] }
-+
-+ \fpermissions(file)
-+ Returns the platform-specific permissions string for the file,
-+ such as "-rw-rw-r--" in UNIX or "(RWE,RWE,RE,E)" in VMS.
-+
-+ \fdirname(f)
-+ Given a file specification f, this function returns the complete
-+ pathname of directory the file is in.
-+
-+ Array Functions:
-+
-+ \fdimension(&a)
-+ Returns the dimension declared for the array whose identifying
-+ letter, a-z, or special character "_" or "@", is given after the
-+ "&" in the argument. If the array is not declared, 0 is
-+ returned. Note that when used with the macro argument vector
-+ array, \&_[] (see [587]Section 7.5), the value of this function
-+ is one less than \v(argc), and when used with the C-Kermit
-+ command-line argument vector array, \&@[], it is equal to the
-+ \v(args) variable. Examples:
-+
-+ echo \fdimension(&a) ; Not declared.
-+ 0
-+ declare \&a[12] ; Now it's declared.
-+ echo \fdim(&a)
-+ 12
-+
-+ \farraylook(pattern,arrayname)
-+ Looks in the given array for the pattern and returns the index
-+ of the first element that matches, if any, or -1 if none match.
-+ The arrayname can include a range specifier to restrict to
-+ search to a segment of the array, e.g.
-+ \farraylook(*xyz*,&a[32:63]). For greater detail see
-+ [588]Section 7.10.7.
-+
-+ \ftablelook(keyword,arrayname[,delimiter])
-+ Looks in the given "table", which must be sorted, for the given
-+ keyword. Returns the index of the table element that uniquely
-+ matches the given keyword, or -1 if none match, or -2 if more
-+ than 1 match. For greater detail see [589]Section 7.10.7.
-+
-+ Other new functions:
-+
-+ \fip2hex(s)
-+ Converts a dotted decimal IP address to an 8-digit hexadecimal
-+ number. \fip2hex(128.59.39.2) = 803b2702.
-+
-+ \fhex2ip(x)
-+ Converts an 8-digit hexadecimal IP address to dotted decimal
-+ form, e.g. \fhex2ip(803b2702) = 128.59.39.2. The inverse of
-+ \fip2hex().
-+
-+ \fcommand()
-+ \frawcommand()
-+ These run an external command and return its output; see
-+ [590]Section 4.2.8.4.
-+
-+ \fdialconvert(s)
-+ s is a phone number in either literal or portable format (not a
-+ dialing directory entry name). The function returns the dial
-+ string that would actually be used when dialing from the current
-+ location (after processing country code, area code, and other
-+ SET DIAL values).
-+
-+ \ferrstring(n)
-+ Returns the system error message associated with the (numeric)
-+ error code n. UNIX and VMS only. Use in conjunction with
-+ \v(errno) or \v(pexitstat). See [591]Section 4.2.5 for a usage
-+ example. Note: This function doesn't work in Windows because
-+ there is not a consistent error-code-to-message mapping; error
-+ code "x" means something completely different depending on
-+ whether it comes from the C runtime library, Winsock, a
-+ Windows-32 API, TAPI, etc,
-+
-+ \fpattern(s)
-+ Used in INPUT, REINPUT, and MINPUT commands to denote search
-+ strings that are to be treated as patterns rather than
-+ literally.
-+
-+ Also see [592]Section 7.8 on built-in help for functions.
-+
-+ 7.4. New IF Conditions
-+
-+ IF AVAILABLE feature command
-+ Executes the command if the given feature is available.
-+ Presently used only to determine if specific authentication and
-+ encryption options are available. Type "if available ?" to see
-+ which features may be tested.
-+
-+ IF FLOAT f1 command
-+ Executes command if f1 is a legal floating point number (which
-+ includes integers). Use this to preverify arguments for the
-+ \ffp...() floating-point arithmetic functions, e.g. "if float
-+ \%1 echo \ffpint(\%1)".
-+
-+ IF == n1 n2 command
-+ Synonym for "if =" (numeric equality). Note that as of C-Kermit
-+ 7.0, this and all other numeric comparison operators also work
-+ for floating-point numbers.
-+
-+ IF != n1 n2 command
-+ Executes the command if n1 and n2 are both numbers or variables
-+ containing numbers and the value of n1 is not equal to the value
-+ of n2. This is equivalent to "if not = n1 n2".
-+
-+ IF <= n1 n2 command
-+ Executes the command if n1 and n2 are both numbers or variables
-+ containing numbers and the value of n1 is less than or equal to
-+ the value of n2. This is equivalent to "if not > n1 n2".
-+
-+ IF >= n1 n2 command
-+ Executes the command if n1 and n2 are both numbers or variables
-+ containing numbers and the value of n1 is greater than or equal
-+ to the value of n2. Equivalent to "if not < n1 n2".
-+
-+ IF COMMAND word command
-+ Executes the command if word is a built-in C-Kermit command.
-+ Example:
-+
-+ if not command copy define { copy run copy \%1 \%2 }".
-+
-+ This defines a COPY macro that runs an external COPY command if
-+ COPY is not already a built-in command.
-+
-+ IF LOCAL command
-+ Executes the command if Kermit is in local mode, i.e. if it has
-+ a SET LINE, SET PORT, or SET HOST (TELNET, RLOGIN, etc) device
-+ or connection open. Does not execute the command if in remote
-+ mode.
-+
-+ IF MATCH string pattern command
-+ Executes the command if the string matches the pattern. For a
-+ description of the syntax for the pattern, see [593]Section
-+ 4.9.1. If you want to test if the string contains pattern, use
-+ IF \fsearch(pattern,string).
-+
-+ IF OPEN { DEBUG-LOG, SESSION-LOG, TRANSACTION-LOG, ... } command
-+ Executes the command if the given file is open, fails if it is
-+ not open. Type IF OPEN ? for a complete list of files that can
-+ be checked (all the files that can be opened with the OPEN or
-+ LOG commands).
-+
-+ IF QUIET command
-+ Executes the command if SET QUIET is ON, and does not execute it
-+ if SET QUIET is OFF. Example: IF NOT QUIET ECHO { This is a
-+ message.}.
-+
-+ IF READABLE name
-+ Succeeds if name is the name of an existing file or directory
-+ that is readable.
-+
-+ IF WRITEABLE name
-+ Succeeds if name is the name of an existing file or directory
-+ that is writeable, e.g.:
-+
-+ if not writeable \v(lockdir) echo Please read installation instructions!
-+
-+ IF FLAG command
-+ This tests a user-settable condition, which can mean anything
-+ you like. SET FLAG ON causes subsequent IF FLAG commands to
-+ succeed; SET FLAG OFF causes them to fail. One way to use it
-+ would be for debugging your scripts; precede any debugging
-+ statements with IF FLAG. Then SET FLAG on to debug your script,
-+ SET FLAG OFF to run it without debugging. Another common use is
-+ for causing an inner loop to cause an outer loop to exit.
-+
-+ IF C-KERMIT command
-+ C-Kermit, but not Kermit 95 or MS-DOS Kermit, executes the
-+ command.
-+
-+ IF K-95 command
-+ Kermit 95, but not C-Kermit or MS-DOS Kermit, executes the
-+ command.
-+
-+ IF MS-KERMIT command
-+ MS-DOS Kermit, but not C-Kermit or Kermit 95, executes the
-+ command.
-+
-+ 7.5. Using More than Ten Macro Arguments
-+
-+ The \v(argc) variable now gives the actual number of arguments, even if
-+ the number is greater than 9:
-+
-+ C-Kermit> define xx echo \v(argc)
-+ C-Kermit> xx a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z
-+ 27
-+
-+ Remember that \v(argc) includes the name of the macro itself, so it is
-+ always at least 1, and is always 1 greater than the actual number of
-+ arguments. As in versions 6.0 and earlier, if more than 9 arguments are
-+ given, only the first nine are assigned to the variables \%1..\%9.
-+
-+ The \&_[] array, discussed on page 353 of [594]Using C-Kermit, 2nd ed,
-+ now holds all the arguments, up to some implementation-dependent limit
-+ (64 or greater), rather than only the first 9. To illustrate: the
-+ following macro tells the number of arguments it was called with and
-+ then prints them:
-+
-+ define show_all_args {
-+ local \%i
-+ echo \&_[0] - Number of arguments: \feval(\v(argc)-1)
-+ for \%i 1 \v(argc)-1 1 { echo \flpad(\%i,3). "\&_[\%i]" }
-+ }
-+
-+ Within a macro \&_[0], like \%0, contains the name of the macro.
-+
-+ At top level, the \&_[] array is filled as follows:
-+
-+ * If the first argument on the C-Kermit command line was a filename,
-+ or C-Kermit was invoked from a "Kerbang" script ([595]Section
-+ 7.19), element 0 contains the filename, and elements 1 through
-+ \v(argc)-1 hold the remaining command-line arguments.
-+ * Otherwise the program name goes in element 0, and elements 1
-+ through \v(argc)-1 hold any arguments that were included after "--"
-+ or "="
-+
-+ The new \%* variable, when used within a macro, is replaced by the text
-+ that followed the macro name in the macro invocation. If no arguments
-+ were given, \%* is replaced by the empty string. Examples:
-+
-+ C-Kermit> define xx echo [\%*]
-+ C-Kermit> define \%a oofa
-+ C-Kermit> xx
-+ []
-+ C-Kermit> xx \%a
-+ [oofa]
-+ C-Kermit> xx a
-+ [a]
-+ C-Kermit> xx a b
-+ [a b]
-+ C-Kermit> xx a b c
-+ [a b c]
-+ C-Kermit> xx a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z
-+ [a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z]
-+
-+ Note that \%* can not be used at top level, since Kermit does not have
-+ access to the raw command line (only to its elements separately, after
-+ they have been processed by the shell and the C library).
-+
-+ C-Kermit 7.0 also adds a SHIFT command:
-+
-+ SHIFT [ number ]
-+ Shifts the macro arguments (except argument 0) the given number
-+ of places to the left and adjusts \v(argc) accordingly. The
-+ default number is 1.
-+
-+ To illustrate, suppose macro XXX is invoked as follows:
-+
-+ xxx arg1 arg2 arg3
-+
-+ Then inside XXX, \%1 is "arg1", \%2 is "arg2", and \%3 is "arg3". After
-+ a SHIFT command is given inside XXX, then \%1 is "arg2", \%2 is "arg3",
-+ and \%3 is empty. \%0 (the name of the macro) remains unchanged.
-+
-+ If more than 9 arguments were given, then arguments are shifted into
-+ the \%1..9 variables from the argument vector array.
-+
-+ At top level, the SHIFT command operates on the \&_[] array and \%1..9
-+ variables; the \&@[] array is not affected. See [596]Section 7.16 for
-+ details.
-+
-+ The \%* variable is not affected by the SHIFT command.
-+
-+ 7.6. Clarification of Function Call Syntax
-+
-+ Spaces are normally stripped from the front and back of each function
-+ argument; to prevent this enclose the argument in braces:
-+
-+ \fsplit(\%a,&a,{ })
-+
-+ However, function calls that contain spaces can make trouble when the
-+ function is to be used in a "word" field, since space separates words.
-+ For example:
-+
-+ for \%i 1 \fsplit(\%a,&a,{ }) 1 {
-+ echo \%i. "\&a[\%i]"
-+ }
-+
-+ In most cases, the trouble can be averted by enclosing the function
-+ reference in braces:
-+
-+ for \%i 1 {\fsplit(\%a,&a,{ })} 1 {
-+ echo \%i. "\&a[\%i]"
-+ }
-+
-+ or by replacing spaces with \32 (the ASCII code for space):
-+
-+ for \%i 1 \fsplit(\%a,&a,\32) 1 {
-+ echo \%i. "\&a[\%i]"
-+ }
-+
-+ Braces are also used in function calls to indicate grouping. For
-+ example:
-+
-+ \fsubstring(abcd,2,2) = "bc"
-+
-+ But suppose "abcd" needed to contain a comma:
-+
-+ \fsubstring(ab,cd,2,2)
-+
-+ This would cause an error, since "cd" appears to be the second
-+ argument, when really you want the first "2" to be the second argument.
-+ Braces to the rescue:
-+
-+ \fsubstring({ab,cd},2,2) = "b,"
-+
-+ Similarly, leading and trailing spaces are stripped from each argument,
-+ so:
-+
-+ \fsubstring( abcd ,2,2) = "bc"
-+
-+ but braces preserve them:
-+
-+ \fsubstring({ abcd },2,2) = "ab"
-+
-+ Given these special uses for braces, there is no way to pass literal
-+ braces to the function itself. For example:
-+
-+ \fsubstring(ab{cd,2,2)
-+
-+ causes an error.
-+
-+ So if you need a function to include braces, define a variable
-+ containing the string that has braces. Example:
-+
-+ define \%a ab{cd
-+ \fsubstring(\%a,2,2) = "b{"
-+
-+ If the string is to start with a leading brace and end with a closing
-+ brace, then double braces must appear around the string (which itself
-+ is enclosed in braces):
-+
-+ define \%a {{{foo}}}
-+ \fsubstring(\%a) = "{foo}"
-+
-+ This also works for any other kind of string:
-+
-+ define \%a {{ab{cd}}
-+ echo \fsubstring(\%a) = "ab{cd"
-+
-+ 7.7. Autodownload during INPUT Command Execution
-+
-+ As of 6.1 / 1.1.12, C-Kermit can be told to look for incoming Kermit
-+ (or Zmodem) packets during execution of an INPUT command. By default
-+ (for consistency with earlier releases), this is not done. You can
-+ enable this feature with:
-+
-+ SET INPUT AUTODOWNLOAD ON
-+
-+ (and disable it again with OFF.)
-+
-+ One possible use for this feature is as a server mode with a time
-+ limit:
-+
-+ INPUT 3600 secret-string-to-end-the-INPUT-command
-+
-+ In this example, any GET, SEND, or REMOTE commands received within one
-+ hour (3600 seconds) of when the INPUT command was issued will be
-+ executed. Here's another example, in which we want to stay open until
-+ 11:30pm, or until interrupted by seven consecutive Ctrl-C (\3)
-+ characters:
-+
-+ INPUT 23:30:00 \3\3\3\3\3\3\3
-+
-+ The INPUT AUTODOWNLOAD setting is displayed by SHOW SCRIPTS or SHOW
-+ INPUT.
-+
-+ 7.8. Built-in Help for Functions.
-+
-+ Beginning in C-Kermit 7.0, you may obtain a description of the calling
-+ conventions and return values of any built-in function, such as
-+ \fsubstring(), with the new HELP FUNCTION command; give the function's
-+ name without the leading "\f", e.g. "help func substring". You can use
-+ ?, completion, and abbreviation in the normal manner.
-+
-+ 7.9. Variable Assignments
-+
-+ 7.9.1. Assignment Operators
-+
-+ Programmers accustomed to languages such as C or Fortran might find
-+ Kermit's method of assigning values to variables unnatural or awkward.
-+ Beginning in C-Kermit 7.0, you can use the following alternative
-+ notation:
-+
-+ .name = value is equivalent to DEFINE name value
-+ .name := value is equivalent to ASSIGN name value
-+ .name ::= value is equivalent to ASSIGN name \feval(value)
-+
-+ When the command begins with a period (.), this indicates an
-+ assignment. The name can be a macro name, a \%{digit,letter} variable,
-+ or an array element. There can be space(s) between "." and the name.
-+ Examples:
-+
-+ .\%a = This is a string ; Same as "define \%a This is a string"
-+ echo \%a
-+ This is a string
-+
-+ .xxx = \%a ; Same as "define xxx \%a"
-+ echo \m(xxx)
-+ \%a
-+
-+ .xxx := \%a ; Same as "assign xxx \%a"
-+ echo \m(xxx)
-+ This is a string
-+
-+ declare \&a[2] ; Use with arrays...
-+ define \%i 2
-+ .\&a[1] = first
-+ .\&a[\%i] = second
-+
-+ The following sequence illustrates the differences among three levels
-+ of evaluation:
-+
-+ .\%x = 2 ; Define a variable to have a numeric value
-+ .\%y = (3 + \%x) ; Define another variable as an arithmetic expression
-+
-+ .xxx = 4 * \%y ; "=" simply copies the right-hand side.
-+ echo \m(xxx)
-+ 4 * \%y
-+
-+ .xxx := 4 * \%y ; ":=" evaluates the variables first, then copies.
-+ echo \m(xxx)
-+ 4 * (3 + 2)
-+
-+ .xxx ::= 4 * \%y ; "::=" evaluates the expression, then copies.
-+ echo \m(xxx)
-+ 20
-+
-+ You can also use this syntax to clear (undefine) a variable:
-+
-+ .\%a = oofa ; Define the variable
-+ echo "\%a"
-+ "oofa"
-+ .\%a ; Clear the variable
-+ echo "\%a"
-+ ""
-+
-+ Extra credit: Can you guess what happens below when the file "abc" does
-+ not exist?
-+
-+ fopen /read \%c abc
-+ if fail ...
-+
-+ 7.9.2. New Assignment Commands
-+
-+ Recall the DEFINE and ASSIGN commands, and their hidden counterparts,
-+ _DEFINE and _ASSIGN. The former take the variable name literally, the
-+ latter evaluate the variable-name field to form the variable name
-+ dynamically. Examples:
-+
-+ DEFINE \%x foo ; Sets the value of the variable \%x to "foo".
-+ DEFINE \%a \%x ; Sets the value of the variable \%a to "\%x".
-+ _DEFINE x_\%a \%x ; Sets the value of the variable x_foo to "\%x".
-+ ASSIGN \%a \%x ; Sets the value of the variable \%a to the "foo".
-+ _ASSIGN x_\%a \%x ; Sets the value of the variable x_foo to "foo".
-+
-+ This concept has been carried over to the remaining variable-assignment
-+ commands: EVALUATE, INCREMENT, and DECREMENT:
-+
-+ EVALUATE variablename expression
-+ Evaluates the arithmetic expression and assigns its value to the
-+ variable whose name is given. Example: "eval \%a 1+1" assigns
-+ "2" to \%a.
-+
-+ _EVALUATE metaname expression
-+ Evaluates the arithmetic expression and assigns its value to the
-+ variable whose name is computed from the given metaname.
-+ Example: "eval foo<\%a>::\%1 \%2 * (\%3 + \%4)" assigns the
-+ value of "\%2 * (\%3 + \%4)" to the variable whose name is
-+ computed from "foo<\%a>::\%1".
-+
-+ INCREMENT variablename [ expression ]
-+ Evaluates the arithmetic expression and adds its value to the
-+ value of the variable whose name is given. Example: "increment
-+ \%a".
-+
-+ _INCREMENT metaname [ expression ]
-+ Evaluates the arithmetic expression and adds its value to the
-+ value of the variable whose name is computed from the given
-+ metaname. Example: "_increment Words::\%1.count[\%2]".
-+
-+ DECREMENT variablename [ expression ]
-+ Evaluates the arithmetic expression and subtracts its value from
-+ the value of the variable whose name is given.
-+
-+ _DECREMENT metaname [ expression ]
-+ Evaluates the arithmetic expression and subtracts its value from
-+ the value of the variable whose name is computed from the given
-+ metaname.
-+
-+ WARNING: The syntax of the EVALUATE command has changed since C-Kermit
-+ 6.0 and K95 1.1.17. Previously, it did not include a variable name,
-+ only an expression. To restore the old behavior, use SET EVALUATE OLD.
-+ To return to the new behavior after restoring the old behavior, use SET
-+ EVALUATE NEW.
-+
-+ NOTE: There are no analogs to the "_" commands for the operators
-+ described in [597]Section 7.9.1; those operators can not be used to
-+ assign values to variables whose names must be computed.
-+
-+ 7.10. Arrays
-+
-+ C-Kermit 7.0 adds lots of new array-related features, and groups them
-+ together under the NEW ARRAY command:
-+
-+ ARRAY { CLEAR, COPY, DECLARE, DESTROY, RESIZE, SHOW, SORT }
-+
-+ In each of the ARRAY commands, wherever an array name is expected,
-+ "short forms" may be used. For example, all of the following are
-+ acceptable:
-+
-+ array show \&a[] (or SHOW ARRAY...)
-+ array show &a[]
-+ array show a[]
-+ array show &a
-+ array show a
-+
-+ In addition, ranges are accepted in the ARRAY COPY, ARRAY CLEAR, ARRAY
-+ SET, ARRAY SHOW, and ARRAY SORT commands:
-+
-+ array clear \&a[16] ; Clears 16 thru end
-+ array clear &a[16] ; Ditto
-+ array clear a[16] ; Ditto
-+
-+ array clear \&a[16:32] ; Clears 16 thru 32
-+ array clear &a[16:32] ; Ditto
-+ array clear a[16:32] ; Ditto
-+
-+ When using array names as function arguments, you must omit the "\" and
-+ you must include the "&". You may optionally include empty brackets.
-+ Examples:
-+
-+ \fsplit(\%a,a) ; Bad
-+ \fsplit(\%a,\&a) ; Bad
-+ \fsplit(\%a,&a[3]) ; Bad
-+
-+ \fsplit(\%a,&a) ; Good
-+ \fsplit(\%a,&a[]) ; Good
-+
-+ 7.10.1. Array Initializers
-+
-+ Beginning in C-Kermit 7.0, you may initialize an array -- in whole or
-+ in part -- in its declaration:
-+
-+ [ ARRAY ] DECLARE array-name[size] [ = ] [ value1 [ value2 [...] ] ]
-+
-+ For compatibility with versions 5A and 6.0, the ARRAY keyword is
-+ optional. DECLARE can also be spelled DCL.
-+
-+ Initializers are (a) optional, (b) start with element 1, (c) must be
-+ enclosed in braces if they contain spaces, and (d) are evaluated
-+ according to normal rules by the DECLARE command prior to assignment.
-+ Thus the assignments made here are the same as those made by the ASSIGN
-+ command. This allows you to initialize array elements from the values
-+ of other variables. If you actually want to initialize an array element
-+ to variable's name, as opposed to its value, use double backslashes (as
-+ in "\\&a", "\\v(time)", etc).
-+
-+ The size (dimension) of the array is optional. If the size is omitted,
-+ as in "\&a[]", then the array sizes itself to the number of
-+ initializers; if there are no initializers the array is not declared
-+ or, if it was declared previously, it is destroyed. If a size is given,
-+ any extra elements in the initialization list are discarded and
-+ ignored.
-+
-+ NOTE: Unlike in C, the list of initializers is NOT enclosed in braces.
-+ Instead, braces are used to group multiple words together. So:
-+
-+ ARRAY DECLARE \&a[] = { one two three }
-+
-+ would create an array with two elements (0 and 1), with element 1
-+ having the value " one two three ".
-+
-+ Examples:
-+
-+ ARRAY DECLARE \&a[16]
-+ Declares the array \&a with 17 elements (0 through 16), in which
-+ all elements are initially empty. If the array \&a[] existed
-+ before, the earlier copy is destroyed.
-+
-+ ARRAY DECLARE &a[16]
-+ ARRAY DECLARE a[16]
-+ ARRAY DCL \&a[16]
-+ ARRAY DCL &a[16]
-+ ARRAY DCL a[16]
-+ DECLARE \&a[16]
-+ DECLARE &a[16]
-+ DECLARE a[16]
-+ DCL \&a[16]
-+ DCL &a[16]
-+ DCL a[16]
-+ All of the above are the same as the first example.
-+
-+ ARRAY DECLARE \&a[16] = alpha beta {gamma delta}
-+ Declares the array \&a with 17 elements (0 through 16),
-+ initializing \&a[1] to "alpha", \&a[2] to "beta", and \&a[3] to
-+ "gamma delta". The remaining elements are empty.
-+
-+ ARRAY DECLARE \&a[] = alpha beta {gamma delta}
-+ Same as the previous example, but the array is automatically
-+ dimensioned to 3.
-+
-+ ARRAY DECLARE \&a[3] = alpha beta {gamma delta} epsilon zeta
-+ Too many initializers; only the first three are kept.
-+
-+ ARRAY DECLARE \&a[0]
-+ ARRAY DECLARE \&a[]
-+ ARRAY DECLARE &a[]
-+ ARRAY DECLARE &a
-+ ARRAY DECLARE a
-+ DECLARE \&[0]
-+ DECLARE a
-+ DCL a
-+ All of these are equivalent. Each destroys \&a[] if it exists.
-+ Declaring an array with a dimension of 0 is the same as ARRAY
-+ DESTROY arrayname.
-+
-+ ARRAY DECLARE \&a[] = \%1 \%2 \%3
-+ Declares the array \&a with 3 elements (0 through 3),
-+ initializing \&a[1] to the value of \%1, \&a[2] to the value of
-+ \%2, and \&a[3] to the value of \%3. In this case, any reference
-+ to one of these array elements is replaced by the value of the
-+ corresponding \%n variable at the time the declaration was
-+ executed (immediate evaluation; the array element's value does
-+ not change if the initializer variable's value changes).
-+
-+ ARRAY DECLARE \&a[] = \\%1 \\%2 \\%3
-+ Declares the array \&a with 3 elements (0 through 3),
-+ initializing \&a[1] to the string "\%1", \&a[2] to "\%2", and
-+ \&a[3] to "\%3". In this case any reference to one of these
-+ array elements is replaced by the CURRENT value of the
-+ corresponding \%n variable (deferred evaluation -- the array
-+ element's value follows the value of the initializer variable).
-+
-+ The equal sign (=) preceding the initializer list is optional, but is
-+ recommended for clarity. If you need to initialize element 1 to a
-+ literal equal sign, use two of them, separated by a space, as in this
-+ example:
-+
-+ ARRAY DECLARE \&a[] = = + - * /
-+
-+ Remember, element 0 is not initialized by the DECLARE command. To
-+ initialize element 0, use a regular DEFINE or ASSIGN command:
-+
-+ ARRAY DECLARE \&a[] one two three four five six seven eight nine
-+ DEFINE \&a[0] zero
-+
-+ Finally, remember that every command level has its own local array,
-+ \&_[], containing all the macro arguments (\%0, \%1, ...) for that
-+ level. See [598]Section 7.5 for details.
-+
-+ 7.10.2. Turning a String into an Array of Words
-+
-+ The \fsplit(s1,&a,s2,s3) function assigns the words of string s1 to
-+ successive elements of the array (beginning with element 1) whose
-+ identifying letter, a-z, is given after the "&" in the second argument,
-+ using break and include characters given in s2 and s3. See [599]Section
-+ 7.3 for details.
-+
-+ 7.10.3. Arrays of Filenames
-+
-+ See [600]Section 4.11.3 for news about how \ffiles() and related
-+ functions can assign a list of filenames to an array. To recapitulate
-+ briefly here:
-+
-+ \ffiles(*,&a)
-+
-+ assigns all files that match the first argument to the array denoted by
-+ the second argument. If the array has not been declared, it is declared
-+ automatically, with exactly the number of elements needed to hold the
-+ file list; if it was previously declared, it is destroyed and reused.
-+ The filenames are assigned starting at array element 1. Element 0 holds
-+ the number of files in the list.
-+
-+ The DIRECTORY command ([601]Section 4.5.1) can also create filename
-+ arrays if you give it the /ARRAY: switch; this allows selection
-+ criteria beyond whether the filename matches the given pattern.
-+
-+ All functions and commands that create filename arrays store the number
-+ of filenames, n, as element 0 of the array, and the filenames as
-+ elements 1 through n.
-+
-+ 7.10.4. Automatic Arrays
-+
-+ In a command file or macro, you can now have local (automatic) arrays.
-+ Just give the name followed by empty subscript brackets (no spaces
-+ inside the brackets please) in a LOCAL command, and then declare the
-+ array:
-+
-+ LOCAL \%a \&a[] oofa
-+ ARRAY DECLARE \&a[32] = value1 value2 value3 ...
-+
-+ This declares the scalar variable \%a, the array \&a[], and the macro
-+ name "oofa" to be local, and then declares the new local copy of \&a[]
-+ with 32 elements, perhaps assigning some initial values. When C-Kermit
-+ exits from the command file or macro containing these command, the
-+ previous \&a[] array is restored (and if there was no \&a[] at any
-+ higher level, this will still be true). The process can be repeated to
-+ any level. Thus it is now safe to write scripts or macros containing
-+ arrays without danger of interfering with global arrays of the same
-+ name.
-+
-+ Just as scalars are inherited by lower command levels, so are arrays.
-+ So, for example, if \&a[] is declared at top level, all lower levels
-+ will see it unless they include a "local \&a[]" statement, in which
-+ case all levels at and beneath the level where the LOCAL statement was
-+ executed will see the local copy. This too can be repeated to any
-+ level.
-+
-+ On the other hand, if you DECLARE an array at a lower command level
-+ without also making it LOCAL, this replaces the copy that was declared
-+ at the lowest command level above this one.
-+
-+ 7.10.5. Sorting Arrays
-+
-+ Although arrays can be sorted using FOR loops as shown on page 383 of
-+ Using C-Kermit, 2nd Ed., this involves quite a bit of repetitive
-+ interpretation by the command parser, and so can be slow for large
-+ arrays. For this reason, C-Kermit 7.0 adds a built-in SORT command:
-+
-+ ARRAY SORT [ switches ] array [ array2 ]
-+ Sorts the given array in place. Sorting is strictly lexical
-+ (string based). The array name can be given fully, e.g. "\&a[]",
-+ or the "\" and/or "&" and/or brackets can be omitted, e.g.
-+ "array sort \&a[]", "sort &a", "sort a". Also, a range can be
-+ indicated in the brackets as noted in [602]Section 7.10, to
-+ restrict the sort to a range of elements (equivalent to the
-+ /RANGE switch, described just below), e.g. "array sort
-+ &a[20:30]".
-+
-+ A second array may be specified. If it is, and if it is at least as big
-+ as the first array, it is sorted according to the first array. For a
-+ sample application, see [603]Section 7.10.10.
-+
-+ See [604]Section 1.5 for an explanation of switches. The optional
-+ switches are:
-+
-+ /CASE:{ON,OFF}
-+ /CASE:ON means that alphabetic case is significant in
-+ comparisons; uppercase letters are sorted before lowercase ones.
-+ /CASE:OFF means case is ignored, e.g. "A" is the same as "a". If
-+ this switch is not given, sorting is according the current SET
-+ CASE setting.
-+
-+ /KEY:n
-+ Comparison begins at position n(1-based) in each string. If no
-+ key is given, the entire strings are compared. Only one key can
-+ be given. If an array element is shorter than the key value, n,
-+ that element is considered empty for comparison purposes, and
-+ therefore lexically less than any element at least ncharacters
-+ long.
-+
-+ /NUMERIC
-+ If this switch is included, it means sorting should be numeric,
-+ rather than lexical. The sort key is the string starting at the
-+ key position, skipping any leading blanks or tabs, and then as
-+ much of the string from that point on that fits the definition
-+ of "numeric", terminating at the first character that does not
-+ qualify. A numeric string has an optional sign (+ or -) followed
-+ by one or more digits, and (if your version of Kermit was built
-+ with floating-point support; see [605]Section 7.23 ) zero or one
-+ decimal point (period). If both /CASE and /NUMERIC are given,
-+ /NUMERIC takes precedence.
-+
-+ /RANGE:n[:m]
-+ Sort elements nthrough m of the array. By default, the entire
-+ array from element 1 to its dimensioned size is sorted, which
-+ might produce surprising results if the array is not full; see
-+ example in [606]Section 7.10.7. If ":m" is omitted from the
-+ range, the dimensioned size is used. Thus, to sort an entire
-+ array, \&a[], including its 0th element, use "sort /range:0 &a".
-+ You can also sort any desired section of an array, e.g. "sort
-+ /range:10:20 &a" or "sort /range:\%i:\%j-1 &b". As noted above,
-+ you can also specify a range in the array-name brackets. If you
-+ specify a range in the array-name brackets AND with a /RANGE
-+ switch, the ones in the brackets take precedence.
-+
-+ /REVERSE
-+ Sort in reverse order. If this switch is not given, the array is
-+ sorted in ascending order.
-+
-+ Remember that numeric switch arguments can be numbers, arithmetic
-+ expressions, or variables whose values are numbers or expressions, as
-+ illustrated in the /RANGE examples above.
-+
-+ A typical sorting application might be to list students' test scores in
-+ descending order. Suppose you had the following records:
-+
-+ olaf 65
-+ olga 98
-+ ivan 83
-+ xena 100
-+
-+ (and so on) stored in array \&s[] (e.g. by reading them from a file as
-+ illustrated in [607]section 7.10.7). In these records, the student's
-+ name is in columns 1-9 and the score in 10-12. So to rearrange the list
-+ in descending order of score:
-+
-+ sort /key:10 /reverse &s
-+
-+ Then to list your top five students:
-+
-+ for \%i 1 5 1 { echo \&s[\%i] }
-+
-+ Or more simply (see next section):
-+
-+ show array a[1:5]
-+
-+ To illustrate the difference between a lexical and a numeric sort,
-+ suppose you have the following records (the lines that are numbered,
-+ starting at column 1) in array \&a[]:
-+
-+ Column 1 2
-+ 12345678901234567890
-+
-+ 1. Ivan 10.0 2. Olaf 9.95 3. Olga 101.5
-+
-+ ARRAY SORT /KEY:10 &a[] would order them 3,1,2, but ARRAY SORT /KEY:10
-+ /NUMERIC &a[] would order them 2,1,3.
-+
-+ 7.10.6. Displaying Arrays
-+
-+ The SHOW ARRAY command (or ARRAY SHOW) now accepts an optional
-+ array-name argument:
-+
-+ SHOW ARRAY \&a[]
-+
-+ (you can leave off the \, the \&, and/or the []'s if you like; "show
-+ array a" is equivalent to "show array \&a[]"). When an array is
-+ specified, its dimension is shown and all defined (non-empty) elements
-+ are listed.
-+
-+ Example:
-+
-+ assign \%n \ffiles(*,&a) ; Fill an array with filenames ([608]Section 4.11.3)
-+ show array \&a[] ; Show the array we just read
-+ array show \&a[] ; Same as previous
-+ array sort \&a[] ; Sort the array
-+ array show \&a[] ; Show it after sorting
-+ array show \&a ; Show it again
-+ array show &a ; Show it again
-+ array show a ; Show it again
-+
-+ (The final four commands demonstrate the alternative forms that are
-+ accepted for the array name.)
-+
-+ If you SHOW ARRAY without giving an array name, all defined arrays are
-+ listed by name and dimension, but their contents are not shown.
-+
-+ You can also show a piece of an array by including a subscript or range
-+ within the array brackets:
-+
-+ array show \&a[5] ; Shows \&a[5]
-+ array show &a[3:8] ; Shows \&a[3] through \&a[8]
-+ array show a[:\%n-1] ; Shows \&a[0] through \&a[\%n-1]
-+
-+ 7.10.7. Other Array Operations
-+
-+ ARRAY DESTROY arrayname
-+ Destroys and undeclares the named array. Subscripts or ranges
-+ are not accepted in this command.
-+
-+ ARRAY COPY array1 array2
-+ Copies the first array to the second array. If the target array
-+ has not been declared, it is created automatically with the same
-+ size as the first. If it has been declared, it will be used as
-+ declared; if the source array is larger, only as much of it as
-+ will fit is copied to the target array. Syntax for array1 and
-+ array2 is as in ARRAY SHOW (SHOW ARRAY). Example:
-+
-+ .\%n := \ffiles(*,&a) ; Create and load array A with a file list.
-+ array copy &a &b ; Copy array A to array B.
-+
-+ The ARRAY COPY command also lets you copy pieces of arrays by
-+ including range specifiers, as in these examples:
-+
-+ ARRAY COPY \&a[4:27] \&b
-+ This copies \&a[] elements 4-27 to \&b[] elements 1-23,
-+ creating \&b[] if necessary or, if \&b[] is already
-+ declared, stopping early if its size is less than 23.
-+
-+ ARRAY COPY \&a[4:27] \&b[12]
-+ This copies \&a[] elements 4-27 to \&b[] elements 12-35,
-+ creating \&b[] if necessary or, if \&b[] is already
-+ declared, stopping early if its size is less than 35.
-+
-+ ARRAY COPY \&a[4:27] \&b[12:14]
-+ This copies \&a[] elements 4-6 to \&b[] elements 12-14,
-+ creating \&b[] if necessary or, if \&b[] is already
-+ declared, stopping early if its size is less than 14.
-+
-+ ARRAY COPY \&a[17] \&b
-+ This copies all the elements of \&a[] starting with 17
-+ until the last to \&b[], creating \&b[] if necessary or,
-+ if \&b[] is already declared, stopping early if \&b[] is
-+ not big enough.
-+
-+ ARRAY CLEAR arrayname
-+ Sets all the elements of the array to the empty value. You may
-+ also include a range specifier to clear only a selected portion
-+ of the array; for example "array clear \&a[37:214]". If the
-+ range is out of bounds, only the part of the array that is in
-+ bounds is cleared.
-+
-+ ARRAY SET arrayname [ value ]
-+ Sets all the elements of the array to the given value. If no
-+ value is given, the array is cleared. You may also include a
-+ range specifier to set only a selected portion of the array; for
-+ example "array set \&a[1:9] -1". If the range is out of bounds,
-+ only the part of the array that is in bounds is set.
-+
-+ ARRAY RESIZE arrayname size
-+ Resizes the given array. If the size is greater than the array's
-+ current dimension, new empty elements are added to the end. If
-+ the size is less than the current dimension, the extra elements
-+ are discarded. Note: If you have stored the array size in
-+ element 0, ARRAY RESIZE does not change this value. Alternative
-+ notation: ARRAY RESIZE arrayname[size]. For a practical example,
-+ see [609]Section 7.10.11.
-+
-+ \farraylook(pattern,arrayname)
-+ This function returns the index of the first element of the
-+ given array that matches the given pattern (for details about
-+ pattern syntax, see [610]section 4.9). The array name can
-+ include a range specification to restrict the search to a given
-+ segment of the array. If no elements match the pattern, -1 is
-+ returned.
-+
-+ \ftablelook(keyword,arrayname[,delimiter])
-+ Looks in the given "table", which must be sorted, for the given
-+ keyword. The keyword need not be spelled out in full.
-+ Pattern-matching characters should not be included as part of
-+ the keyword. The function returns the index of the table element
-+ that uniquely matches the given keyword, or -1 if none match, or
-+ -2 if more than 1 match.
-+
-+ A "table" is an array that is sorted in lexical order; each of its
-+ elements may contain multiple fields, delimited by the given delimiter
-+ character or, if no delimiter is specified, a colon (:).
-+
-+ The \farraylook() function does exactly what you tell it. If you give
-+ it a pattern that does not include wildcard characters (such as *, ?,
-+ etc), it requires an exact match. For example:
-+
-+ \farraylook(oofa,&a)
-+
-+ searches for the first element of \&a[] whose value is "oofa". But:
-+
-+ \farraylook(oofa*,&a)
-+
-+ finds the first element whose value starts with "oofa", and;
-+
-+ \farraylook(*oofa,&a)
-+
-+ finds the first element whose value ends with "oofa", and;
-+
-+ \farraylook(*oofa*,&a)
-+
-+ finds the first element whose value contains "oofa".
-+
-+ Here's a simple demonstration of looking up patterns in arrays:
-+
-+ local \&a[] \%x \%n
-+ declare \&a[] = zero one two three four five six seven eight nine ten
-+ while true {
-+ .\%x = 1
-+ .\%n = 0
-+ ask \%a { Pattern? }
-+ if not def \%a exit 0 Done.
-+ while <= \%x \fdim(&a) {
-+ .\%x := \farraylook(\%a,&a[\%x])
-+ if ( < \%x 0 ) break
-+ echo \flpad(\%x,3). \&a[\%x]
-+ increment \%x
-+ increment \%n
-+ }
-+ if ( < \%n 1 ) echo Pattern not found - "\%a"
-+ }
-+
-+ The array need not be sorted. When a pattern is given, a search is
-+ performed; if there is a match, the matching element's index and the
-+ element itself are printed, and the search begins again at the next
-+ element. Thus each matching element is printed. If none match, the
-+ "Pattern not found" message is printed. The process repeats for as many
-+ patterns as the user wants to type, and terminates when the user types
-+ an empty pattern.
-+
-+ Now let's build a little command parser, consisting of a keyword table,
-+ and a loop to look up the user's commands in it with \ftablelook(). In
-+ this case the array elements have "fields" separated by colon (:) -- a
-+ keyword and a value. Keyword tables must be sorted if \tablelook() is
-+ to work right, so after declaring and initializing the table array, we
-+ sort it.
-+
-+ local \&k[] \%a \%i \%n
-+
-+ array declare \&k[] = drive:9 do:8 discuss:7 live:6 spend:5 help:4 quit:0
-+
-+ array sort &k ; Make sure array is sorted
-+ echo Type "help" for help. ; Print greeting & instructions
-+
-+ while true { ; Loop to get commands
-+ undefine \%a
-+ while not defined \%a { ; Get a command
-+ ask \%a { Command? }
-+ }
-+ .\%n := \ftablelook(\%a,&k) ; Look up the command
-+ switch \%n { ; Handle errors
-+ :-1, echo Not found - "\%a" ; Doesn't match
-+ continue
-+ :-2, echo Ambiguous - "\%a" ; Matches too many
-+ continue
-+ }
-+ switch \fword(\&k[\%n],2) { ; Dispatch according to value
-+ :9, echo Driving..., break
-+ :8, echo Doing..., break
-+ :7, echo Discussing..., break
-+ :6, echo Living..., break
-+ :5, echo Spending..., break
-+ :4, echo { Commands (may be abbreviated):}
-+ for \%i 1 \fdim(&k) 1 {
-+ echo { \%i. \fword(\&k[\%i],1) }
-+ }
-+ break
-+ :0, exit 0 Bye!
-+ :default, stop 1 Internal error
-+ }
-+ }
-+
-+ In this example, keywords are "drive", "do", "discuss", etc, and their
-+ values are unique numbers (values need not be numbers, and there need
-+ not be only one value -- there can be 0, 1, 2, or more of them). The
-+ user types a command, which can be the whole word (like "help") or any
-+ abbreviation (like "hel", "he", or just "h"). If this does not match
-+ any keywords, \ftablelook() returns -1; if it matches more than one (as
-+ would "d"), it returns -2. Otherwise the array index is returned, 1 or
-+ higher.
-+
-+ Given the array index \%n, we can get the table values as follows:
-+
-+ \fword(\&k[\%n],1) is the keyword (first field)
-+ \fword(\&k[\%n],2) is the value (second field, in this case a number)
-+
-+ In our example, we use the value (number) as the SWITCH variable. As
-+ noted, \fablelook() expects the array elements to contain multiple
-+ fields separated by colon (:) (or other character that you specify,
-+ e.g. \ftablelook(\%a,&a,^)) and when matching the keyword, ignores the
-+ first delimiter and everything after it.
-+
-+ 7.10.8. Hints for Using Arrays
-+
-+ C programmers are accustomed to out-of-bounds array references causing
-+ core dumps or worse. In C-Kermit:
-+
-+ * A reference to an an out-of-bounds array element returns the empty
-+ string.
-+ * An attempt to set the value of an array element that is out of
-+ bounds or that has not been declared simply fails.
-+
-+ C programmers expect an array of size nto have elements 0 through n-1.
-+ Fortran programmers expect the same array to have elements 1 through n.
-+ C-Kermit accommodates both styles; when you declare an array of size n,
-+ it has n=1 elements, 0 through n, and you can use the array in your
-+ accustomed manner, 0-based or 1-based.
-+
-+ However, note that C-Kermit has certain biases towards 1-based arrays:
-+
-+ * Assignment of file lists starts with element 1 ([611]Section
-+ 7.10.3).
-+ * Assignment by \fsplit() starts with element 1 ([612]Section 7.3).
-+ * Array initialization skips the 0th element. To initialize a 0-based
-+ array, use something like this:
-+ declare \&a[3] = one two three
-+ .\&a[0] = zero
-+
-+ * The ARRAY SORT command skips the 0th element unless you include
-+ /RANGE:0
-+ * The SHIFT command ignores element 0 of the \&_[] array.
-+
-+ The distinction between an array's dimensioned size and the number of
-+ elements in the array is important when sorting. To illustrate:
-+
-+ declare \&a[100] ; Declare array &a with 100 elements
-+ fopen /read \%c oofa.txt ; Open a file
-+ if fail...
-+ for \%i 1 \fdim(&a) 1 { ; Read the file into the array
-+ fread \%c \&a[\%i]
-+ if fail break
-+ }
-+ fclose \%c
-+ if > \%i \fdim(&a) end 1 File has too many lines for array.
-+ .\%n ::= \%i - 1
-+ echo File has \%n line(s).
-+
-+ Let's say the file had 95 lines. This leaves elements 96-100 of the
-+ array empty. Now suppose you sort the array and write out the result:
-+
-+ sort &a ; Sort the whole array
-+ fopen /write \%o oofa.txt.sorted ; Open an output file
-+ if fail ...
-+ for \%i 1 \%n 1 { ; Write out 95 records
-+ fwrite /line \%o \&a[\%i]
-+ if fail end 1 Write error
-+ }
-+ close write
-+
-+ You might be surprised at the contents of "oofa.txt.sorted" -- five
-+ empty elements, 96-100, floated to the top of the array in the sort,
-+ and since your write loop only had 95 iterations, the final 5 lines of
-+ the sorted file are lost.
-+
-+ Therefore, when dealing with partially filled arrays -- especially when
-+ sorting them -- remember to specify the number of elements. A handy way
-+ of recording an array's "true" size is to put it in the 0th element.
-+ That way, it "travels with the array". To illustrate (continuing the
-+ previous example at the "close read" statement):
-+
-+ close read
-+ if > \%i \fdim(&a) end 1 File has too many lines for array.
-+ .\&a[0] ::= \%i - 1 ; Assign number of lines to \&a[0].
-+ echo File has \&a[0] line(s).
-+ sort /range:1:\&a[0] &a
-+ open write oofa.txt.sorted
-+ if fail ...
-+ for \%i 1 \&a[0] 1 {
-+ writeln file \&a[\%j]
-+ if fail end 1 Write error
-+ }
-+ close write
-+
-+ Note the SORT switch, /RANGE:1:\&a[0]. This keeps the sort 1-based, and
-+ uses element 0 of the array as its size indicator.
-+
-+ Finally, note that even though some commands or functions might put a
-+ size in array element 0, no built-in functions or commands depend on a
-+ size actually being there. Thus you are perfectly free to replace the
-+ size with something else and treat the array as 0-based.
-+
-+ 7.10.9. Do-It-Yourself Arrays
-+
-+ Kermit's \&x[] arrays are nice because of the accompanying built-in
-+ functionality -- ARRAY commands, built-in functions that load and
-+ search arrays, automatic evaluation of arithmetic expressions within
-+ the subscript brackets, and so on. Yet they also have certain
-+ limitations:
-+
-+ 1. Except when created by dynamic loading (e.g. by \ffiles()) they
-+ must be declared and dimensioned in advance.
-+ 2. Indices must be numeric, positive, and in range.
-+ 3. There can be only one dimension. Matrices or other
-+ higher-dimensioned arrays are not available.
-+
-+ But none of this is to say you can't invent any kind of data structure
-+ you like. In [613]Section 7.9.2 you can see some examples. Here's
-+ another (courtesy of Dat Thuc Nguyen), in which a pair of matrices is
-+ created and then added: no dimensioning necessary.
-+
-+ .row = 4
-+ .col = 9
-+
-+ ; MACRO TO PRINT A MATRIX
-+ define PMATRIX {
-+ echo Matrix \%1:
-+ for \%r 1 \m(row) 1 {
-+ for \%c 1 \m(col) 1 {
-+ xecho \flpad(\m(\%1[\%r][\%c]),4)
-+ }
-+ echo
-+ }
-+ echo
-+ }
-+ ; CREATE MATRICES A AND B
-+ for \%r 1 \m(row) 1 {
-+ for \%c 1 \m(col) 1 {
-+ _eval A[\%r][\%c] \%r + \%c
-+ _eval B[\%r][\%c] \%r * \%c
-+ }
-+ }
-+ ; CREATE MATRIX C = SUM OF MATRIX A AND MATRIX B
-+ for \%r 1 \m(row) 1 {
-+ for \%c 1 \m(col) 1 {
-+ _eval C[\%r][\%c] \m(A[\%r][\%c]) + \m(B[\%r][\%c])
-+ }
-+ }
-+ pmatrix A ; Print Matrix A
-+ pmatrix B ; Print Matrix B
-+ pmatrix C ; Print Matrix C
-+
-+ In the example, we use matrix-like notation to create macros with names
-+ like "A[1][1]", "B[3][7]", and so on.
-+
-+ 7.10.10. Associative Arrays
-+
-+ An associative array is a special kind of Do-It-Yourself array. It
-+ differs from a regular array in that its indices need not be numbers --
-+ they can be anything at all -- words, filenames, names of months, any
-+ character string at all, and that it doesn't have to be (and in fact
-+ can't be) declared. An associative array element is simply a macro
-+ whose name ends with an index enclosed in angle brackets, for example:
-+
-+ file<oofa.txt>
-+
-+ More formally:
-+
-+ basename<index>
-+
-+ An associative array is a collection of all associative array elements
-+ that have the same basename. Any number of associative arrays, each
-+ with any number of elements, can exist at the same time.
-+
-+ An associative array element can be assigned a value, such as "1", just
-+ like any other macro:
-+
-+ define file<oofa.txt> 1 ; Give "file<oofa.txt>" the value "1".
-+
-+ or:
-+
-+ assign file<oofa.txt> \%a ; Give it the value of the variable \%a.
-+
-+ However, since an associative array element is a macro, it may not have
-+ an empty (null) value, since assigning an empty value to a macro
-+ undefines the macro.
-+
-+ You can refer to the value of an associative array element using the
-+ familiar notation for macro values:
-+
-+ echo \m(file<oofa.txt>) ; Echo the value of "file<oofa.txt>".
-+
-+ Associative arrays are most useful, however, when the value of the
-+ index is a variable. In that case, you must use the "hidden" forms of
-+ the DEFINE or ASSIGN commands that evaluate the macro name before
-+ making the assignment (see [614]Using C-Kermit, page 457). Example:
-+
-+ define \%f oofa.txt
-+ _define file<\%f> 1
-+ echo file<\%f> = \m(file<\%f>)
-+
-+ prints:
-+
-+ file<oofa.txt> = 1
-+
-+ and then:
-+
-+ _increment file<\%f>
-+ echo file<\%f> = \m(file<\%f>)
-+
-+ prints:
-+
-+ file<oofa.txt> = 2
-+
-+ What are associative arrays good for? The classic example is "word
-+ counts": finding the number of times each word is used in a text
-+ without knowing in advance what the words are. Without associative
-+ arrays, your program would have to build a table of some kind, and
-+ every time a word was encountered, look it up in the table to find its
-+ position and counter, or add it to the table if it wasn't found -- a
-+ time-consuming and laborious process. Associative arrays, however, let
-+ you use the word itself as the table index and therefore sidestep all
-+ the table building and lookups.
-+
-+ Let's work through a practical example. Suppose you have a
-+ file-transfer log in which each line is composed of a number of
-+ blank-separated fields, and the 9th field is a filename (which happens
-+ to be the format of certain FTP server logs, as well as of C-Kermit's
-+ new FTP-format transaction log, described in [615]Section 4.17.2), for
-+ example:
-+
-+ Wed Jul 14 09:35:31 1999 22 xx.mit.edu 13412 /pub/ftp/mm/intro.txt ....
-+
-+ and you want to find out how many times each file was transferred. The
-+ following code builds an associative array, file<>, containing the
-+ counts for each file:
-+
-+ local name line max \%c \%n ; Declare local variables
-+ fopen /read \%c /var/log/ftpd.log ; Open the log file ([616]Section 1.22)
-+ if fail exit 1 Can't open log ; Check
-+ while true { ; Loop for each record
-+ fread /line \%c line ; Read a line
-+ if fail break ; Check for end of file
-+ .name := \fword(\m(line),9,{ }) ; Get 9th field = filename (Sec 7.3)
-+ _increment file<\m(name)> ; Increment its counter (Sec 7.9.2)
-+ }
-+ fclose \%c ; Close file when done.
-+
-+ Note that _INCREMENT (and INCREMENT, and [_]DECREMENT) treat an empty
-+ (i.e. nonexistent) variable as having a value of 0, and therefore
-+ creates the variable with a value of 1.
-+
-+ At this point, if you told Kermit to "show macro file<", it would list
-+ the associative array. But since you don't necessarily know the names
-+ of the files in the array, or even how many elements are in the array,
-+ how can you use it in a script program?
-+
-+ The idea of creating macro names that include character-string indices
-+ enclosed in angle brackets is perfectly arbitrary and doesn't depend on
-+ any Kermit features that weren't already there -- we could just as
-+ easily have used some other notation, such as "file[index]",
-+ "file:index", or "file.index", and the code above would have worked
-+ just as well (with the corresponding syntax adjustments). But to be
-+ able to use an associative array in a program after the array is built,
-+ we need a method of accessing all its elements without knowing in
-+ advance what they are. That's where the chosen notation comes in.
-+
-+ First of all, any macro name that ends with "<xxx>" (where "xxx" is any
-+ string) is case sensitive, unlike all other macro names, which are case
-+ independent. To illustrate, "file<oofa.txt>" and "file<OOFA.TXT>" are
-+ two distinct macros, whereas "OOFA", "Oofa", and "oofa", when used as
-+ macro names, are all the same.
-+
-+ Second, the new \faaconvert() function converts an associative array
-+ (that is, all macros with names of the form "base<index>" that have the
-+ same "base" part) into a pair of regular arrays and returns the number
-+ of elements:
-+
-+ \faaconvert(name,&a[,&b])
-+
-+ "name" is the name of the associative array, without the angle brackets
-+ or index ("file" in our example).
-+
-+ The second argument is the name of a regular array in which to store
-+ the indices of the associative array (filenames in our example); if an
-+ array of this name already exists, it is destroyed unless the array is
-+ LOCAL. The third argument is the name of another regular array in which
-+ to store the values (the counts in our example), with the same rules
-+ about array name collisions. If you care only about the indices and not
-+ the values, you can omit the third argument to \faaconvert(). In any
-+ case, the associative array is converted, not copied: its elements are
-+ moved to the specified regular arrays, so after conversion the original
-+ associative array is gone.
-+
-+ As with other array-loading functions, \faaconvert() sets element 0 of
-+ each array to the number of elements in the array.
-+
-+ To continue our example:
-+
-+ .max := 0 ; Maximum count
-+ .\%n := \faaconvert(file,&a,&b) ; Convert
-+ for \%i 1 \%n 1 { ; Loop through values
-+ echo \flpad(\%i,3). \&a[\%i]: \&b[\%i] ; Echo this pair
-+ if ( > \&b[\%i] \m(max) ) { ; Check for new maximum
-+ .name := \&a[\%i]
-+ .max := \&b[\%i]
-+ }
-+ }
-+ echo Most popular file: \m(name), accesses: \m(max)
-+
-+ This lists the files and counts and then announces which file has the
-+ highest count.
-+
-+ Now suppose you want to sort the array pair created from an associative
-+ array. In our example, \&a[] contains filenames, and \&b[] contains the
-+ associated counts. Here we take advantage of the ARRAY SORT command's
-+ ability to sort a second array according to the first one:
-+
-+ array sort /reverse /numeric &b &a ; Descending sort by count
-+
-+ Now to see the top five files and their counts:
-+
-+ echo The top 5 files are:
-+ for \%i 1 5 1 { ; Loop through top 5 values
-+ echo \flpad(\%i,3). \&a[\%i]: \&b[\%i] ; Echo this pair
-+ }
-+
-+ 7.10.11. Transferring Array Contents to Other Computers
-+
-+ The SEND /ARRAY:arrayname command ([617]Section 4.7.1) allows you to
-+ send the contents of any array, or any contiguous segment of it, in
-+ either text or binary mode to another computer, using Kermit protocol.
-+ When used in conjunction with C-Kermit's other features (the array
-+ features described in this section; the file i/o package from
-+ [618]Section 1.22; its decision-making, pattern-matching, and string
-+ manipulation capabilities, and so on) the possibilities are endless:
-+ extracts of large files, remote database queries, ..., all without
-+ recourse to system-dependent mechanisms such UNIX pipes and filters,
-+ thus ensuring cross-platform portability of scripts that use these
-+ features.
-+
-+ When sending an array in text mode, Kermit appends a line terminator to
-+ each array element, even empty ones, and it also converts the character
-+ set from your current FILE character-set to your current TRANSFER
-+ character-set, if any. No conversions are made or line terminations
-+ added in binary mode. For example, the following array:
-+
-+ dcl \&a[] = One Two Three Four Five Six
-+
-+ is sent as six lines, one word per line, in text mode, and as the bare
-+ unterminated string "OneTwoThreeFourFiveSix" in binary mode.
-+
-+ You should always include a /TEXT or /BINARY switch in any SEND /ARRAY
-+ command to force the desired transfer mode, otherwise you're likely to
-+ be surprised by the effects described in [619]Section 4.3.
-+
-+ Here are some examples:
-+
-+ send /text /array:\&a[]
-+ Sends the entire contents of the array \&a[] in text mode. Since
-+ an as-name is not included, the receiver is told the filename is
-+ _array_a_.
-+
-+ send /text /array:&a[]
-+ send /text /array:a[]
-+ send /text /array:&a
-+ send /text /array:a
-+ These are all equivalent to the previous example.
-+
-+ send /text /array:&a /as-name:foo.bar
-+ As above, but the array is sent under the name foo.bar.
-+
-+ send /text /array:&a[100:199] /as:foo.bar
-+ As above, but only the elements from 100 through 199 are sent.
-+
-+ In text-mode transfers, character sets are translated according to your
-+ current settings, just as for text files. In binary mode, of course,
-+ there is no character-set translation or other conversion of any kind.
-+ But remember that array elements can not contain the NUL (ASCII 0)
-+ character, since they are implemented as NUL-terminated strings.
-+
-+ Here's an example that shows how to send all the lines (up to 1000 of
-+ them) from a file animals.txt that contain the words "cat", "dog", or
-+ "hog" (see [620]Section 4.9 about pattern matching):
-+
-+ declare \&a[1000]
-+ fopen /read \%c animals.txt
-+ if fail exit 1
-+ .\%i = 0
-+ while true {
-+ fread \%c line
-+ if fail break
-+ if match {\m(line)} {*{cat,[dh]og}*} {
-+ increment \%i
-+ if ( > \%i \fdim(&a) ) break
-+ .\&a[\%i] := \m(line)
-+ }
-+ }
-+ fclose \%c
-+ send /array:a[1:\%i] /text
-+
-+ Note that we are careful to send only the part of the array that was
-+ filled, not the entire array, because there are likely to be lots of
-+ unused elements at the end, and these would be sent as blank lines
-+ otherwise.
-+
-+ This example raises an interesting question: what if we want to send
-+ ALL the matching lines, even if there are more than 1000 of them, but
-+ we don't know the number in advance? Clearly the problem is limited by
-+ Kermit's (and the computer's) memory. If there are a thousand trillion
-+ matching lines, they most likely will not fit in memory, and in this
-+ case the only solution is to write them first to a temporary file on
-+ mass storage and then send the temporary file and delete it afterwards.
-+
-+ However, when the selection is likely to fit in memory, the
-+ once-familiar technique of initial allocation with extents can be used:
-+
-+ if match {\m(line)} {*{cat,[dh]og}*} {
-+ increment \%i
-+ if ( > \%i \fdim(&a) ) {
-+ array resize a \fdim(&a)+100
-+ if fail stop 1 MEMORY FULL
-+ echo NEW DIMENSION: \fdim(&a)
-+ }
-+ .\&a[\%i] := \m(line)
-+ }
-+
-+ This grows the array in chunks of 100 as needed.
-+
-+ 7.11. OUTPUT Command Improvements
-+
-+ LINEOUT [ text ]
-+ This command is exactly like OUTPUT, except it supplies a
-+ carriage return at the end of the text. "lineout exit" is
-+ exactly the same as "output exit\13".
-+
-+ SET OUTPUT SPECIAL-ESCAPES { ON, OFF }
-+ This command lets you tell C-Kermit whether to process \N, \L,
-+ and \B specially in an OUTPUT command, as distinct from other \
-+ sequences (such as \%a, \13, \v(time), etc). Normally the
-+ special escapes are handled. Use SET OUTPUT SPECIAL-ESCAPES OFF
-+ to disable them.
-+
-+ Disabling special escapes is necessary in situations when you need to
-+ transmit lines of data and you have no control over what is in the
-+ lines. For example, a file oofa.txt that contains:
-+
-+ This is a file
-+ It has \%a variables in it
-+ And it has \B in it.
-+ And it has \L in it.
-+ And it has \N in it.
-+ And this is the last line.
-+
-+ can be sent like this:
-+
-+ local line
-+ set output special-escapes off
-+ fopen /read \%c oofa.txt
-+ if fail stop 1 Can't open oofa.txt
-+ while success {
-+ fread \%c line
-+ if fail break
-+ ; Add filtering or processing commands here...
-+ output \m(line)\13
-+ }
-+
-+ 7.12. Function and Variable Diagnostics
-+
-+ In C-Kermit 6.0 and earlier, the only diagnostic returned by a failing
-+ function call was an empty value, which (a) could not be distinguished
-+ from an empty value returned by a successful function call; (b) did not
-+ give any indication of the cause of failure; and (c) did not cause the
-+ enclosing statement to fail. C-Kermit 7.0 corrects these deficiencies.
-+
-+ SET FUNCTION DIAGNOSTICS { ON, OFF }
-+ when ON, allows built-in functions to return diagnostic messages
-+ when improperly referenced, instead of an empty string. FUNCTION
-+ DIAGNOSTICS are ON by default. When OFF, improperly referenced
-+ functions continue to return an empty string. This command also
-+ affects built-in variables; in this case, an error message is
-+ returned only if the variable does not exist. When FUNCTION
-+ DIAGNOSTICS are ON, the error message is also printed.
-+
-+ For variables, the only message is:
-+
-+ <ERROR:NO_SUCH_VARIABLE:\v(name)>
-+
-+ where "name" is the name of the nonexistent variable.
-+
-+ For functions, the diagnostic message is:
-+
-+ <ERROR:message:\fname()>
-+
-+ where "message" is replaced by a message, and "name" is replaced by the
-+ function name, e.g. <ERROR:ARG_NOT_NUMERIC:\fmod()>. Messages include:
-+
-+ ARG_BAD_ARRAY An argument contains a malformed array reference.
-+ ARG_BAD_DATE An argument contains a malformed date and/or time.
-+ ARG_BAD_PHONENUM An argument contains a malformed telephone number.
-+ ARG_BAD_VARIABLE An argument contains a malformed \%x variable.
-+ ARG_INCOMPLETE An argument is incomplete (e.g. a broken Base64 string).
-+ ARG_EVAL_FAILURE An argument could not be evaluated (internal error).
-+ ARG_NOT_ARRAY An argument references an array that is not declared.
-+ ARG_NOT_NUMERIC An argument that must be integer contains non-digits.
-+ ARG_NOT_FLOAT An argument has bad floating-point number format.
-+ ARG_NOT_VARIABLE An argument that must be a variable is not a variable.
-+ ARG_OUT_OF_RANGE An argument's numeric value is too big or too small,
-+ or an argument contains illegal characters (e.g. a hex
-+ or Base-64 string).
-+ ARG_TOO_LONG An argument's value is too long.
-+ ARRAY_FAILURE Failure to create an array.
-+ DIVIDE_BY_ZERO Execution of the function would cause division by zero.
-+ FLOATING_POINT_OP Execution error in a floating-point operation.
-+ FILE_NOT_FOUND Filename argument names a file that can't be found.
-+ FILE_NOT_READABLE Filename argument is not a regular file.
-+ FILE_NOT_ACCESSIBLE Filename argument names a file that is read-protected.
-+ FILE_ERROR Other error with filename argument.
-+ FILE_NOT_OPEN A file function was given a channel that is not open.
-+ FILE_ERROR_-n A file function got error -n ([621]Section 1.22).
-+ LOOKUP_FAILURE Error looking up function (shouldn't happen).
-+ MALLOC_FAILURE Failure to allocate needed memory (shouldn't happen).
-+ NAME_AMBIGUOUS The function is not uniquely identified.
-+ MISSING_ARG A required argument is missing.
-+ NO_SUCH_FUNCTION An argument references a function that is not defined.
-+ NO_SUCH_MACRO An argument references a macro that is not defined.
-+ RESULT_TOO_LONG The result of a function is too long.
-+ UNKNOWN_FUNCTION Internal error locating function (shouldn't happen).
-+
-+ Examples:
-+
-+ assign \%m \fmod()
-+ ?<ERROR:MISSING_ARG:\fmod()>
-+ echo "\fcontents(\%m)"
-+ "<ERROR:MISSING_ARG:\fmod()>"
-+ echo \fmod(3,x)
-+ ?<ERROR:ARG_NOT_NUMERIC:\fmod()>
-+ echo \fmod(3,4-2*2)
-+ ?<ERROR:DIVIDE_BY_ZERO:\fmod()>
-+
-+ Notice the use of \fcontents() in echoing the value of a variable that
-+ contains a returned error message. That's because the error message
-+ includes the name of the variable or function that failed, so you must
-+ use \fcontents() to prevent it from being evaluated again -- otherwise
-+ the same error will occur.
-+
-+ The handling of function and variable errors is controlled by:
-+
-+ SET FUNCTION ERROR { ON, OFF }
-+ Tells whether invalid function calls or variable references
-+ should cause command errors. FUNCTION ERROR is ON by default.
-+ When ON, and an error is diagnosed in a built-in function or
-+ variable, the command that includes the function call or
-+ variable reference fails. The failing command can be handled in
-+ the normal way with IF FAILURE / IF SUCCESS, SET TAKE ERROR, or
-+ SET MACRO ERROR.
-+
-+ When FUNCTION DIAGNOSTICS is OFF, there is no error message.
-+
-+ SHOW SCRIPTS displays the current FUNCTION DIAGNOSTICS and ERROR
-+ settings.
-+
-+ 7.13. Return Value of Macros
-+
-+ In C-Kermit 5A and 6.0, there are two ways to return one level from a
-+ macro: RETURN value and END number text. When RETURN is used, the
-+ value, which can be a number or a text string, is assigned to
-+ \v(return). When END was used, however, \v(return) was not set.
-+ SUCCESS/FAILURE was set according to whether the number was zero, and
-+ the text was printed, but the actual value of the number was lost.
-+
-+ In C-Kermit 7.0, the END number is available in the \v(return)
-+ variable.
-+
-+ 7.14. The ASSERT, FAIL, and SUCCEED Commands.
-+
-+ The ASSERT command is just like the IF command, but without a command
-+ to execute. It simply succeeds or fails, and this can be tested by a
-+ subsequent IF SUCCESS or IF FAILURE command. Example:
-+
-+ ASSERT = 1 1
-+ IF SUCCESS echo 1 = 1.
-+
-+ The FAIL command does nothing, but always fails. The SUCCEED command
-+ does nothing, but always succeeds.
-+
-+ These commands are handy in debugging scripts when you want to induce a
-+ failure (or success) that normally would not occur, e.g. for testing
-+ blocks of code that normally are not executed.
-+
-+ 7.15. Using Alarms
-+
-+ Alarms may be set in two ways:
-+
-+ SET ALARM number
-+ Sets an alarm for the given number of seconds "from now", i.e.
-+ in the future, relative to when the SET ALARM command was given.
-+ Examples:
-+
-+ set alarm 60 ; 60 seconds from now
-+ set alarm +60 ; The same as "60"
-+ set alarm -60 ; Not legal - you can't set an alarm in the past.
-+ set alarm 60*60 ; 60 minutes from now.
-+ set alarm \%a+10 ; You can use variables, etc.
-+
-+ SET ALARM hh:mm:ss
-+ Sets an alarm for the specified time. If the given time is
-+ earlier than the current time, the alarm is set for the given
-+ time in the next day. You may give the time in various formats:
-+
-+ set alarm 15:00:00 ; 3:00:00pm
-+ set alarm 3:00:00pm ; 3:00:00pm
-+ set alarm 3:00pm ; 3:00:00pm
-+ set alarm 3pm ; 3:00:00pm
-+
-+ SHOW ALARM
-+ Displays the current alarm, if any, in standard date-time format
-+ (see [622]Section 1.6): yyyymmdd hh:mm:ss.
-+
-+ IF ALARM command
-+ Executes the command if an alarm has been set and the alarm time
-+ has passed.
-+
-+ IF ALARM { command-list } [ ELSE { command-list } ]
-+ Executes the command-list if an alarm has been set and the alarm
-+ time has passed. Otherwise, if an ELSE part is given, its
-+ command-list is executed.
-+
-+ CLEAR ALARM
-+ Clears the alarm.
-+
-+ Only one alarm may be set at a time.
-+
-+ Example: Suppose you have a script that is always running, and that
-+ transfers files periodically, and that keeps a transaction log. Suppose
-+ you want to start a new transaction log each day:
-+
-+ log transactions \v(date).log
-+ set alarm 00:00:00 ; Set an alarm for midnight
-+ while true { ; Main script loop
-+ xif alarm { ; If the alarm time is past...
-+ close transactions ; Close current log
-+ log transactions \v(date).log ; Start new one
-+ pause 1 ; To make sure 00:00:00 is past
-+ set alarm 00:00:00 ; Set a new alarm
-+ }
-+ ; put the rest of the script here...
-+ }
-+
-+ Note that IF ALARM -- no matter whether it succeeds or fails -- does
-+ NOT clear an expired alarm. Thus, once an alarm has expired, every IF
-+ ALARM will succeed until the alarm is cleared (with the CLEAR ALARM
-+ command) or reset with a new SET ALARM command.
-+
-+ 7.16. Passing Arguments to Command Files
-+
-+ Beginning in version 7.0, C-Kermit accepts arguments on the TAKE
-+ command line, for example:
-+
-+ C-Kermit> take oofa.ksc one two {this is three} four
-+
-+ This automatically sets the variables \%1 through \%9 to the arguments,
-+ and \%0 to the name of the file, in this case:
-+
-+ \%0 = /usr/olga/oofa.ksc
-+ \%1 = one
-+ \%2 = two
-+ \%3 = this is three
-+ \%4 = four
-+
-+ and \%5..\%9 are undefined (empty). Arguments past the ninth are
-+ available in the \&_[] argument-vector array ( [623]Section 7.5).
-+
-+ The variables are those at the current macro level. Thus, if the TAKE
-+ command is executed from within a macro, the macro's arguments are
-+ replaced by those given on the TAKE command line (but only if at least
-+ one argument is given). The command shown above is exactly equivalent
-+ to:
-+
-+ assign \%0 /usr/olga/oofa.ksc
-+ assign \%1 one
-+ assign \%2 two
-+ assign \%3 this is three
-+ assign \%4 four
-+ assign \%5
-+ assign \%6
-+ assign \%7
-+ assign \%8
-+ assign \%9
-+ take oofa.ksc
-+
-+ Remember, the variables \%0..\%9 are on the macro call stack, and
-+ command files are independent of the macro stack. Thus, if a command
-+ file TAKEs another command file and passes arguments to it, the
-+ variables are changed from that point on for both files, and so forth
-+ for all levels of nested command files without intervening macro
-+ invocations.
-+
-+ It would have been possible to change C-Kermit to use the overall
-+ command stack, rather than the macro stack, for arguments -- this would
-+ have made TAKE work exactly like DO, which is "nicer", but it would
-+ also have broken countless existing scripts. However, the new SHIFT
-+ command ([624]Section 7.5) makes it possible to create an alternative
-+ TAKE command that does indeed save and restore the argument variables
-+ at its own level around execution of a command file:
-+
-+ define mtake {
-+ local \%f
-+ assign \%f \fcontents(\%1)
-+ shift
-+ take \%f
-+ }
-+
-+ C-Kermit 7.0 also supports a new, easier way to pass arguments to
-+ scripts from the system command line:
-+
-+ kermit filename arg1 arg2 arg3 ...
-+
-+ in which arg1, arg2, arg3 (etc) are arguments for the script (whose
-+ filename is given), and are assigned to \%1, \%2, ... \%9. The filename
-+ is assigned to \%0. This applies equally to "Kerbang" scripts in UNIX
-+ ([625]Section 7.19). For example, suppose you have a file called
-+ "showargs" containing the following lines:
-+
-+ #!/usr/local/bin/kermit +
-+ echo Hello from \%0
-+ show args
-+ exit
-+
-+ (except not indented, since the "#!" line must be on the left margin).
-+ If you give this file execute permission:
-+
-+ chmod +x showargs
-+
-+ then you can run it exactly as you would run a UNIX shell script, e.g.:
-+
-+ $ showargs one two three
-+ Hello from /usr/olga/showargs
-+ Top-level arguments (\v(argc) = 4):
-+ \&_[0] = /usr/olga/showargs
-+ \&_[1] = one
-+ \&_[2] = two
-+ \&_[3] = three
-+
-+ Furthermore, the \&_[] array now contains the filename, if one was
-+ given as the first command line argument, or it is a "Kerbang" script,
-+ in element 0.
-+
-+ Otherwise element 0 is program name, and elements 1 through \v(argc)-1
-+ contain the command-line arguments, if any, that appear after "--" or
-+ "=", if any. This array is saved and restored around macro calls;
-+ recall that inside macros it contains the macro argument vector
-+ (allowing you to access arguments programmatically, and to have more
-+ than 9 of them).
-+
-+ At top level, notice the difference between the \&@[] and \&_[] arrays.
-+ The former includes C-Kermit options; the latter omits them.
-+
-+ 7.17. Dialogs with Timed Responses
-+
-+ The ASK, ASKQ, GETOK, and GETC commands (let's call them the "ASK-class
-+ commands") let you write scripts that carry on dialogs with the user,
-+ asking them for text, a Yes/No answer, or a character, respectively.
-+ Prior to C-Kermit 7.0, these questions would always wait forever for an
-+ answer. In C-Kermit 7.0, you may specify a time limit for them with the
-+ new command:
-+
-+ SET ASK-TIMER number
-+ Sets a time-limit on ASK-CLASS commands to the given number of
-+ seconds. If the number is 0 or less, there is no time limit and
-+ these commands wait forever for a response. Any timer that is
-+ established by this command remains in effect for all future
-+ ASK-class commands until another SET ASK-TIMER command is given
-+ (e.g. with a value of 0 to disable ASK timeouts).
-+
-+ IF ASKTIMEOUT command
-+ An ASK-class command that times out returns a failure status.
-+ You can test explicitly for a timeout with:
-+
-+ 7.18. Increased Flexibility of SWITCH Case Labels
-+
-+ Prior to C-Kermit 7.0 / K95 1.1.19, the case labels in SWITCH
-+ statements were string constants.
-+
-+ Now case labels can be variables, function calls, or any mixture of
-+ these with each other and/or with regular characters.
-+
-+ Furthermore, after the case label is evaluated, it is treated not as a
-+ string constant, but as a pattern against which the SWITCH variable is
-+ matched ([626]Section 4.9.1).
-+
-+ This introduces a possible incompatibility with previous releases,
-+ since the following characters in case labels are no longer taken
-+ literally:
-+
-+ \ * ? [ {
-+
-+ Any scripts that previously included any of these characters in case
-+ labels must now quote them with backslash (\).
-+
-+ 7.19. "Kerbang" Scripts
-+
-+ In UNIX only, Kermit scripts can be stored in files and run "directly",
-+ without starting Kermit first (as noted on page 467 of the manual),
-+ just as a shell script can be "run" as if it were a program. This
-+ section amplifies on that idea a bit, and presents some new aspects of
-+ version 7.0 that make it easier to write and run Kermit scripts
-+ directly.
-+
-+ NOTE: On non-UNIX platforms, such as VMS or Windows, Kerbang scripts
-+ can be run as "kermit + scriptfilename arg1 arg2 arg3 ...". Windows
-+ 95/98/NT file associations do not allow for the passing of
-+ parameters. In VMS, however, you can achieve the Kerbang effect by
-+ defining a symbol, as in this example:
-+
-+ $ autotelnet :== "$SYS$TOOLS:KERMIT.EXE + AUTOTELNET.KSC"
-+
-+ and then running the script like any other command:
-+
-+ $ autotelnet xyzcorp.com myuserid
-+
-+ See [627]Section 9.3 for an explanation of the "+" symbol.
-+
-+ UNIX shell scripts can specify which shell should run them by including
-+ a "shebang" line at the top, e.g.:
-+
-+ #!/bin/sh
-+
-+ (but not indented; the shebang line must be on the left margin). The
-+ term "shebang" is a contraction of "shell" and "bang". "Bang" is a
-+ slang word for the exclamation mark ("!"); "shebang" itself is an
-+ American slang word used in in the phrase "the whole shebang".
-+
-+ We can run Kermit scripts directly too, by including a "shebang" line
-+ that names Kermit as the "shell"; thus we call these "Kerbang" scripts.
-+ This mechanism has been considerably simplified in C-Kermit 7.0 to
-+ facilitate C-Kermit's use a scripting tool just like any of the UNIX
-+ shells or scripting languages. The rules are the same as for shell
-+ scripts:
-+
-+ 1. The first line of the Kermit script must begin with "#!"
-+ immediately followed by the full pathname of the program that will
-+ execute the script (in this case, C-Kermit rather than a UNIX
-+ shell), followed by any Kermit command-line options. To suppress
-+ execution of the C-Kermit initialization file and to make command
-+ line arguments available to the script, the final option should be
-+ "+":
-+ #!/usr/local/bin/kermit +
-+
-+ Some users have reported that in some circumstances a space might
-+ be necessary after the plus sign; this depends on your shell -- it
-+ has nothing to do with Kermit. In most cases, no space is needed.
-+ 2. The file must have execute permission (granted via "chmod +x
-+ filename").
-+
-+ When C-Kermit is invoked from a Kerbang script (or from the system
-+ prompt with a "+" command-line argument, which amounts to the same
-+ thing), the following special rules apply:
-+
-+ 1. The C-Kermit initialization file is NOT executed automatically. If
-+ you want it to be executed, include a TAKE command for it in the
-+ script, e.g. "take \v(home).kermrc". (In previous releases, the
-+ initialization file was always executed, with no way to prevent it
-+ except for the user to include Kermit-specific command line options
-+ which had nothing to do with the script). Many scripts have no need
-+ for the standard Kermit initialization file, which is quite lengthy
-+ and not only delays startup of the script, but also spews forth
-+ numerous messages that are most likely unrelated to the script.
-+ 2. If the initialization file is not executed, neither is your
-+ customization file, since the initialization file is the command
-+ file from which the customization file is TAKEn. Again, you can
-+ include a TAKE command for the initialization file if desired, or
-+ for the customization file by itself, or for any other file.
-+ 3. C-Kermit does not process command-line arguments at all. Instead,
-+ it passes all words on the command line after the "+" to the script
-+ as \%0 (the script name), \%1..\%9 (the first nine arguments), as
-+ well as in the argument vector array \&_[]. The variable \v(argc)
-+ is set to the total number of "words" (as passed by the shell to
-+ Kermit) including the script name. Quoting and grouping rules are
-+ those of the shell.
-+ 4. At any point where the script terminates, it must include an EXIT
-+ command if you want it to exit back to the shell; otherwise
-+ C-Kermit enters interactive prompting mode when the script
-+ terminates. The EXIT command can include a numeric status to be
-+ returned to the shell (0, 1, etc), plus an optional message.
-+
-+ Here is a simple Kerbang script that prints its arguments:
-+
-+ #/usr/local/bin/kermit +
-+ echo Hello from \%0
-+ for \%i 0 \v(argc)-1 1 {
-+ echo \%i. "\&_[\%i]"
-+ }
-+ exit 0
-+
-+ Save this file as (say) "showargs", then give it execute permission and
-+ run it (the \&_[] array is the same as \%0..\%9, but allows you to
-+ refer to argument variables programmatically; see [628]Section 7.5).
-+ (Yes, you could substitute SHOW ARGUMENTS for the loop.)
-+
-+ $ chmod +x showargs
-+ $ ./showargs one "this is two" three
-+
-+ The script displays its arguments:
-+
-+ Hello from /usr/olga/showargs
-+ 0. "/usr/olga/showargs"
-+ 1. "one"
-+ 2. "this is two"
-+ 3. "three"
-+ $
-+
-+ Notice that no banners or greetings are printed and that startup is
-+ instantaneous, just like a shell script. Also notice that grouping of
-+ arguments is determined by *shell* quoting rules, not Kermit ones,
-+ since the command line is parsed by the shell before Kermit ever sees
-+ it.
-+
-+ Of course you can put any commands at all into a Kerbang script. It can
-+ read and write files, make connections, transfer files, anything that
-+ Kermit can do -- because it *is* Kermit. And of course, Kerbang scripts
-+ can also be executed from the Kermit prompt (or from another script)
-+ with a TAKE command; the Kerbang line is ignored since it starts with
-+ "#", which is a comment introducer to Kermit just as it is to the UNIX
-+ shell. In VMS and other non-UNIX platforms, the Kerbang line has no
-+ effect and can be omitted.
-+
-+ It might be desireable for a script to know whether it has been invoked
-+ directly from the shell (as a Kerbang script) or by a TAKE command
-+ given to the Kermit prompt or in a Kermit command file or macro. This
-+ can be done as in this example:
-+
-+ #!/usr/local/bin/kermit +
-+ assign \%m \fbasename(\%0)
-+ define usage { exit 1 {usage: \%m phonenumber message} }
-+ define apage { (definition of APAGE...) } ; (See [629]book pp.454-456)
-+ xif equal "\%0" "\v(cmdfil)" {
-+ if not def \%1 usage
-+ if not def \%2 usage
-+ apage {\%1} {\%2}
-+ exit \v(status)
-+ }
-+
-+ In a Kerbang script, \%0 and \v(cmdfile) are the same; both of them are
-+ the name of the script. When a script is invoked by a Kermit TAKE
-+ command, \%0 is the name of the Kermit program, but \v(cmdfile) is the
-+ name of the script. In the example above, a macro called APAGE is
-+ defined. If the script was invoked directly, the APAGE macro is also
-+ executed. Otherwise, it is available for subsequent and perhaps
-+ repeated use later in the Kermit session.
-+
-+ An especially handy use for Kerbang scripts is to have the
-+ initialization file itself be one. Since the standard initialization
-+ file is rather long and time-consuming to execute, it is often overkill
-+ if you want to start Kermit just to transfer a file. Of course there
-+ are command-line switches to suppress initialization-file execution,
-+ etc, but another approach is to "run" the initialization file when you
-+ want its features (notably the services directory), and run C-Kermit
-+ directly when you don't. A setup like this requires that (a) the
-+ C-Kermit initialization file is configured as a Kerbang script (has
-+ #!/path.../kermit as first line), has execute permission, and is in
-+ your PATH; and (b) that you don't have a .kermrc file in your login
-+ directory.
-+
-+ 7.20. IF and XIF Statement Syntax
-+
-+ The IF command has been improved in two significant ways in C-Kermit
-+ 7.0, described in the following subsections. All changes are backwards
-+ compatible.
-+
-+ 7.20.1. The IF/XIF Distinction
-+
-+ The distinction between IF and XIF is no longer important as of
-+ C-Kermit 7.0. You should be able to use IF in all cases (and of course,
-+ also XIF for backwards compatibility). In the past, IF was used for
-+ single-command THEN parts, followed optionally by a separate ELSE
-+ command:
-+
-+ IF condition command1 ; THEN part
-+ ELSE command2 ; ELSE part
-+
-+ whereas XIF was required if either part had multiple commands:
-+
-+ XIF condition { command, command, ... } ELSE { command, command, ... }
-+
-+ The syntactic differences were primarily that IF / ELSE was two
-+ commands on two separate lines, whereas XIF was one command on one
-+ line, and that XIF allowed (and in fact required) braces around its
-+ command lists, whereas IF did not allow them.
-+
-+ Furthermore, the chaining or nesting of parts and conditions was
-+ inconsistent. For example, the IF command could be used like this:
-+
-+ IF condition command
-+ ELSE IF condition command
-+ ELSE IF condition command
-+ ELSE IF condition command
-+ ...
-+
-+ but XIF could not. C-Kermit 7.0 accepts the old syntax and executes it
-+ the same as previous versions, but also accepts a new unified and more
-+ convenient syntax:
-+
-+ IF condition command-list [ ELSE command-list ]
-+
-+ or:
-+
-+IF condition command-list
-+ELSE command-list
-+
-+ in which the ELSE part is optional, and where command-list can be a
-+ single command (with or without braces around it) or a list of commands
-+ enclosed in braces. Examples:
-+
-+ Example 1:
-+
-+ IF condition { command1, command2 } ELSE { command3, command4 }
-+
-+ Example 2 (same as Example 1):
-+
-+ IF condition {
-+ command1
-+ command2
-+ } ELSE {
-+ command3
-+ command4
-+ }
-+
-+ Example 3 (same as 1 and 2):
-+
-+ IF condition {
-+ command1
-+ command2
-+ }
-+ ELSE { command3, command4 }
-+
-+ Example 4 (same as 1-3):
-+
-+ IF condition {
-+ command1
-+ command2
-+ }
-+ ELSE {
-+ command3
-+ command4
-+ }
-+
-+ Example 5 (ELSE can be followed by another command):
-+
-+ IF condition1 {
-+ command1
-+ command2
-+ } ELSE IF condition2 {
-+ command3
-+ command4
-+ } ELSE {
-+ command5
-+ command6
-+ }
-+
-+ Example 5 suggests other possibilities:
-+
-+ IF condition {
-+ command1
-+ command2
-+ } ELSE FOR variable initial final increment {
-+ command3
-+ command4
-+ }
-+
-+ And this too is possible, except for some non-obvious quoting
-+ considerations:
-+
-+ dcl \&a[6] = one two three four five six
-+
-+ IF < \%n 3 {
-+ echo \\%n is too small: \%n
-+ } ELSE FOR \\%i 1 \\%n 1 {
-+ echo \\%i. \\&a[\\%i]
-+ }
-+
-+ (The loop variable must be quoted in this context to prevent premature
-+ evaluation.)
-+
-+ Many C programmers prefer to code IF-ELSE, WHILE, FOR, and SWITCH with
-+ the block-open bracket on its own line. This does not work in Kermit:
-+
-+ IF condition ; THIS FORMAT DOES NOT NOT WORK
-+ {
-+ command1
-+ command2
-+ }
-+ ELSE
-+ {
-+ command3
-+ command4
-+ }
-+
-+ Explanation: the Kermit command language is line oriented; each line is
-+ a command, each command is a line. The first line above, having no hint
-+ of continuation, is an incomplete command, yet syntactically correct --
-+ an IF statement with an empty THEN part. Interestingly enough, since
-+ the next line begins with "{" it is a block that (in [630]C-Kermit 8.0
-+ and later) is a block that is executed unconditionally. Thus the
-+ commands in the THEN part are executed regardless of whether the
-+ condition is true -- not what you wanted!
-+
-+ The new block syntax used in the IF, WHILE, FOR, and SWITCH commands
-+ employs certain tricks to allow multiple lines to be treated as a
-+ single line:
-+
-+ * Any line ending with "{" (ignoring whitespace and comments) marks
-+ the beginning of a block;
-+ * Any line beginning with "}" (ignoring whitespace) marks the end of
-+ a block;
-+ * Line breaks within a block separate commands; the comma is implied
-+ by the line end.
-+
-+ Thus:
-+
-+ IF condition {
-+ command1
-+ command2
-+ } ELSE {
-+ command3
-+ command4
-+ }
-+
-+ is "assembled" into:
-+
-+ IF condition { command1, command2 } ELSE { command3, command4 }
-+
-+ Note the addition of commas to separate commands within blocks. As
-+ always, if you need continue a command onto additional lines, you can
-+ end the continued lines with the continuation character, "-". You can
-+ also do this if you want to put opening brackets on their own line:
-+
-+ IF condition -
-+ {
-+ command1
-+ command2
-+ }
-+ ELSE -
-+ {
-+ command3
-+ command4
-+ }
-+
-+ 7.20.2. Boolean Expressions (The IF/WHILE Condition)
-+
-+ Prior to C-Kermit 7.0, the IF and WHILE commands accepted only a single
-+ Boolean ("true or false") assertion, e.g. "if > \%m 0 command" or "if
-+ exist filename command". There was no way to form Boolean expressions
-+ and, in particular, nothing that approached a Boolean OR function (AND
-+ could be simulated by concatenating IF statements: "if condition1 if
-+ condition2..").
-+
-+ C-Kermit 7.0 (and K95 1.1.19) allow grouping of Boolean assertions
-+ using parentheses and combining them using AND (or &&) and OR (or ||).
-+ Each of these operators -- including the parentheses -- is a field and
-+ must be set off by spaces. AND has higher precedence than OR, NOT has
-+ higher precedence than AND, but parentheses can be used to force any
-+ desired order of evaluation. The old syntax is still accepted.
-+
-+ Here are some examples:
-+
-+ define \%z 0 ; Define some variables
-+ define \%n 1 ; for use in the examples.
-+
-+ if > \%n \%z echo \%n is greater. ; Original format - still accepted.
-+ if ( > \%n \%z ) echo \%n is greater. ; Parentheses may be used in 7.0.
-+ if ( > \%n \%z && not = \%z 0 ) ... ; Two assertions combined with AND.
-+ if ( > \%n \%z and not = \%z 0 ) ... ; Same as previous ("and" = "&&").
-+ if ( > \%n \%z || not = \%z 0 ) ... ; Two assertions combined with OR.
-+ if ( > \%n \%z or not = \%z 0 ) ... ; Same as previous ("or" = "||").
-+ if ( > \%n \%z || != \%z 0 ) ... ; Ditto ("!=" = "not =").
-+ while ( 1 ) { ... } ; Just like C.
-+
-+ Notice the spaces around all operators including the parentheses --
-+ these are required. The following examples show how parentheses can be
-+ used to alter the precedence of the AND and OR operators:
-+
-+ if ( false || false && false || true ) ,.. ; True
-+ if ( false || ( false && false ) || true ) ... ; Same as previous
-+ if ( ( false || false ) && ( false || true ) ) ... ; False
-+
-+ Similarly for NOT:
-+
-+ if ( not true && false ) ... ; False (NOT binds to TRUE only)
-+ if ( ( not true ) && false ) ... ; Same as previous
-+ if ( not ( true && false ) ) ... ; True (NOT binds to (TRUE && FALSE))
-+
-+ Notes:
-+
-+ 1. The syntax of the Boolean expression itself has not changed; each
-+ expression begins with a keyword or token such as "EXIST", ">", or
-+ "=", etc; operators such as "<", "=", and ">" do not go between
-+ their operands but precede them as before; this might be called
-+ "reverse reverse Polish notation"; it allows deterministic
-+ on-the-fly parsing of these expressions at the C-Kermit> prompt as
-+ well as in scripts, and allows ?-help to be given for each item
-+ when IF or WHILE commands are typed at the prompt.
-+ 2. Parentheses are required when there is more than one Boolean
-+ assertion.
-+ 3. Parentheses are not required, but are allowed, when there is only
-+ one Boolean assertion.
-+ 4. Evaluation of Boolean assertions occurs left to right, but the
-+ resulting Boolean expression is evaluated afterwards according to
-+ the rules of precedence. All Boolean assertions are always
-+ evaluated; there is no "early stopping" property and therefore no
-+ question about when or if side effects will occur -- if any Boolean
-+ assertion has side effects, they will always occur.
-+
-+ Constructions of arbitrary complexity are possible, within reason.
-+
-+ Also see [631]Section 7.4 for new IF / WHILE conditions.
-+
-+ 7.21. Screen Formatting and Cursor Control
-+
-+ C-Kermit 7.0 adds a simple way to create formatted screens, the SCREEN
-+ command:
-+
-+ SCREEN { CLEAR, CLEOL, MOVE-TO row [ column ] }
-+ Performs screen-formatting actions. Correct operation of these
-+ commands depends on proper terminal setup on both ends of the
-+ connection -- mainly that the host terminal type is set to agree
-+ with the kind of terminal or the emulation you are viewing
-+ C-Kermit through. The UNIX version uses terminfo or termcap (not
-+ curses); the VMS version uses SMG; K-95 uses its built in screen
-+ manager.
-+
-+ SCREEN CLEAR
-+ Moves the cursor to home position and clears the entire screen.
-+ Synonyms: CLEAR COMMAND-SCREEN ALL (K-95 only), CLS, CLEAR
-+ SCREEN.
-+
-+ SCREEN CLEOL
-+ Clears from the current cursor position to the end of the line.
-+ Synonym: CLEAR COMMAND-SCREEN EOL (K-95 only)
-+
-+ SCREEN MOVE-TO row column
-+ Moves the cursor to the indicated row and column. The row and
-+ column numbers are 1-based, so on a 24x80 screen the home
-+ position is 1 1 and the lower right corner is 24 80. If a row or
-+ column number is given that too large for what Kermit or the
-+ operating system thinks is your screen size, the appropriate
-+ number is substituted.
-+
-+ These escape sequences used by these commands depends on the platform.
-+ In UNIX, your TERM environment variable is used to query the
-+ terminfo/termcap database; if the query fails, ANSI/VT100 sequences are
-+ used. In VMS, the SMG library is used, which sends sequences based on
-+ your VMS terminal type. K95 does its own screen control. On other
-+ platforms (such as AOS/VS, VOS, etc), screen formatting is not
-+ supported, and the SCREEN command does nothing.
-+
-+ The three SCREEN actions can be used in scripts to produce menus,
-+ formatted screens, dynamic displays, etc. Related variables include:
-+
-+ \v(terminal) The type terminal C-Kermit thinks you have.
-+ \v(rows) The number of rows C-Kermit thinks your terminal has.
-+ \v(columns) The number of columns C-Kermit thinks your terminal has.
-+
-+ And functions:
-+
-+ \fscrncurx() The current X coordinate of the cursor (K-95 only).
-+ \fscrncury() The current Y coordinate of the cursor (K-95 only).
-+ \fscrnstr(x,y,n) The string of length nat position (x,y) (K-95 only).
-+
-+ And commands:
-+
-+ ECHO string Writes string + CRLF at the current cursor position.
-+ XECHO string Writes string at current cursor position; CRLF not supplied.
-+ GETC v prompt Issues prompt, reads one character into variable v, no echo.
-+
-+ And special characters:
-+
-+ Ctrl-L At the C-Kermit> command prompt, or in a C-Kermit command,
-+ works like Return or Enter, but also clears the screen
-+
-+ Example 1: A macro that prints a message \%1 at cursor position
-+ (\%2,\%3):
-+
-+ define MSG {
-+ if not def \%3 def \%3 0 ; Default column to 0
-+ if > \v(argc) 2 screen move \%2 \%3 ; Move to given row/col (if any)
-+ screen cleol ; Clear to end of line
-+ if def \%1 xecho \fcontents(\%1) ; Print message (if any)
-+ }
-+
-+ Example 2: A macro put the cursor on the bottom screen line, left
-+ margin:
-+
-+ define BOT {
-+ screen move \v(rows) 0
-+ }
-+
-+ Example 3: A macro to center message \%1 on line \%2.
-+
-+ define CENTER {
-+ if not def \%2 def \%2 1
-+ .\%x ::= (\v(cols)-\flen(\%1))/2
-+ msg {\%1} {\%2} {\%x}
-+ }
-+
-+ Example 4: A simple menu (building on Examples 1-3):
-+
-+ def \%c 0 ; Menu choice variable
-+ screen clear ; Clear the screen
-+ center {Welcome to This Menu} 2 ; Display the menu
-+ msg {Choices:} 4
-+ msg { 1. File} 6
-+ msg { 2. Edit} 7
-+ msg { 3. Exit} 8
-+ while ( != \%c 3 ) { ; Read and verify choice
-+ while true { ; Keep trying till we get a good one
-+ screen move 10 ; Move to line 10
-+ screen cleol ; Clear this line
-+ getc \%c {Your choice: } ; Prompt and get and echo 1 character
-+ xecho \%c
-+ if ( not numeric \%c ) { msg {Not numeric - "\%c"} 12, continue }
-+ if ( >= \%c 1 && <= \%c 3 ) break
-+ msg {Out of range - "\%c"} 12
-+ }
-+ switch \%c { ; Valid choice - execute it.
-+ :1, msg {Filing... } 12, break
-+ :2, msg {Editing...} 12, break
-+ :3, msg {Exiting...} 12, break
-+ }
-+ }
-+ echo Bye ; Exit chosen - say goodbye.
-+ bot ; Leave cursor at screen bottom.
-+ exit ; And exit.
-+
-+ Similar scripts can work over the communication connection; substitute
-+ INPUT and OUTPUT for GETC and ECHO/XECHO.
-+
-+ 7.22. Evaluating Arithmetic Expressions
-+
-+ A new arithmetic operator was added to the list recognized by the
-+ EVALUATE command, the \feval() function, and which can also be used
-+ anywhere else arithmetic expressions are accepted (numeric command
-+ fields, array subscripts, etc):
-+
-+ Prefix "!"
-+ This operator inverts the "truth value" of the number or
-+ arithmetic expression that follows. If the value of the operand
-+ is 0, the result is 1. If the value is nonzero, the result is 0.
-+
-+ Examples:
-+
-+ set eval old
-+ evaluate 0
-+ 0
-+
-+ evaluate !0
-+ 1
-+
-+ evaluate !3
-+ 0
-+
-+ evaluate !(-3)
-+ 0
-+
-+ .\%a = 1
-+ .\%b = 0
-+ evaluate !(\%a|\%b)
-+ 0
-+
-+ evaluate !(\%a&\%b)
-+ 1
-+
-+ evaluate !(!(\%a&\%b))
-+ 0
-+
-+ Note the distinction between Prefix ! (invert truth value) and Suffix !
-+ (factorial). Also the distinction between Prefix ! and Prefix ~ (which
-+ inverts all the bits in its operand). Also note that prefix operators
-+ (!, -, and ~) can not be adjacent unless you use parentheses to
-+ separate them, as shown in the final example above.
-+
-+ 7.23. Floating-Point Arithmetic
-+
-+ C-Kermit 7.0 adds limited support for floating-point numbers (numbers
-+ that have fractional parts, like 3.141592653). This support is provided
-+ through a small repertoire of functions and in Boolean expressions that
-+ compare numbers, but does not apply to number parsing in general, or to
-+ expression evaluation, array subscripts, the INCREMENT and DECREMENT
-+ commands, or in any context other than those listed in this section.
-+
-+ A floating point number has an optional sign (+ or -), followed by a
-+ series of decimal digits containing either zero or one period (.)
-+ character, which is the decimal point. The use of comma or any other
-+ character besides period as a decimal point is not supported.
-+ Scientific notation is not supported either. Examples of legal
-+ floating-point numbers:
-+
-+ 0 Integers can be used
-+ 1 Ditto
-+ 2. A decimal point without decimal digits
-+ 3.0 A decimal point with decimal digits
-+ 3.141592653 Ditto
-+ -4.0 A negative sign can be included
-+ +5.0 A positive sign can be included
-+
-+ Examples of notations that are not accepted:
-+
-+ 1,000,000 Separators can not be used
-+ 1.000.000 Ditto (or multiple decimal points)
-+ 6.022137E23 No scientific notation
-+ 6.62606868e-34 Ditto
-+ 12.5+6.25 No "bare" expressions
-+
-+ You can use IF FLOAT test a string or variable to see if it's in
-+ acceptable floating-point format. Example:
-+
-+ ask \%f { Type a number: }
-+ if not def \%f .\%f = 0.0
-+ if not float \%f stop 1 Invalid floating-point number: "\%f"
-+
-+ C-Kermit's floating-point support, like its support for whole numbers
-+ (integers), relies on the capabilities of the underlying computer. Your
-+ computer has only a limited amount of precision for numbers, depending
-+ on its architecture. Thus floating-point numbers that have too many
-+ digits will not be accurate; adding a very small number to a very large
-+ one might have no effect at all; and so on. For details, read a text on
-+ numerical analysis. Example:
-+
-+ .\%a = 11111111111111111111 ; A long number
-+ .\%b = 22222222222222222222 ; Another one
-+ echo \ffpadd(\%a,\%b) ; Add them - the result should be all 3's
-+ 33333333333333330000.0 ; See the result
-+
-+ In this example, the computer has 16 digits of precision; after that,
-+ the (low-order) digits are set to 0, since the computer doesn't know
-+ what they really are. In fact, the computer returns random digits, but
-+ Kermit sets all digits beyond the computer's precision to 0.
-+
-+ C-Kermit's floating-point functions have names of the form
-+ "\ffpxxx(args)" ("\f" for function, "fp" for floating-point), where
-+ "xxx" is replaced by the name of the function, such as "sqrt", and
-+ "args" is the argument list, consisting of one or two floating-point
-+ numbers (depending on the function), and an optional "d" argument that
-+ says now many decimal places should be shown in the result. Example:
-+
-+ \ffpdiv(10,3,1) returns "3.3"
-+ \ffpdiv(10,3,2) returns "3.33"
-+ \ffpdiv(10,3,3) returns "3.333"
-+
-+ and so on, up to the precision of the computer. If the decimal-places
-+ argument is less than zero, the fractional part of the result is
-+ truncated:
-+
-+ \ffpdiv(10,3,-1) returns "3".
-+
-+ If the decimal-places argument is 0, or is omitted, C-Kermit returns as
-+ many decimal places as are meaningful in the computer's floating-point
-+ precision, truncating any extraneous trailing 0's:
-+
-+ \ffpdiv(10,8) returns "1.25".
-+ \ffpdiv(10,4) returns "2.5".
-+ \ffpdiv(10,2) returns "5.0".
-+ \ffpdiv(10,3) returns "3.333333333333333" (for 16-digit precision).
-+
-+ There is no way to request that a floating-point function return a
-+ decimal point but no decimal places. However, this is easy enough to
-+ accomplish in other ways, for example by supplying it outside the
-+ function call:
-+
-+ echo \ffpadd(\%a,\%b,-1).
-+
-+ Kermit's floating-point functions always round the result for the
-+ requested number of decimal places when the "d" argument is given and
-+ has a value greater than 0 (see the description of \ffpround() just
-+ below).
-+
-+ Floating-point arguments can be constants in floating-point format or
-+ variables whose values are floating-point numbers. If a floating-point
-+ argument is omitted, or is a variable with no value, 0.0 is supplied
-+ automatically. Example:
-+
-+ def \%x 999.999
-+ undef \%y
-+ echo \ffpmin(\%x,\%y)
-+ 0.0
-+
-+ Or equivalently:
-+
-+ echo \ffpmin(999.999)
-+ 0.0
-+
-+ The floating-point functions are:
-+
-+ \ffpround(f1,d)
-+ Returns f1 rounded to d decimal places. For this function only,
-+ d = 0 (or d omitted) has a special meaning: return the integer
-+ part of f1 rounded according to the fractional part. Examples:
-+
-+ \ffpround(2.74653,-1) returns "2" (fraction truncated, no rounding).
-+ \ffpround(2.74653,0) returns "3" (integer part is rounded).
-+ \ffpround(2.74653) returns "3" (d omitted same as d = 0).
-+ \ffpround(2.74653,1) returns "2.7".
-+ \ffpround(2.74653,2) returns "2.75".
-+ \ffpround(2.74653,3) returns "2.747".
-+ \ffpround(2.74653,4) returns "2.7465", etc.
-+
-+ \ffpadd(f1,f2,d)
-+ Returns the sum of f1 and f2.
-+
-+ \ffpsubtract(f1,f2,d)
-+ Subtracts f2 from f1 and returns the result.
-+
-+ \ffpmultiply(f1,f2,d)
-+ Returns the product of f1 and f2.
-+
-+ \ffpdivide(f1,f2,d)
-+ If f2 is not 0, divides f1 by f2 and returns the quotient.
-+ If f2 is 0, a DIVIDE_BY_ZERO error occurs.
-+
-+ \ffpraise(f1,f2,d)
-+ If f1 = 0 and f2 <= 0, or if f1 < 0 and f2 has a fractional
-+ part, an ARG_OUT_OF_RANGE error occurs; otherwise f1 raised to
-+ the f2 power is returned.
-+
-+ \ffpsqrt(f1,d)
-+ If f1 >= 0, returns the square root of f1; otherwise
-+ ARG_OUT_OF_RANGE.
-+
-+ \ffpabsolute(f1,d)
-+ Returns the absolute value of f1 (i.e. f1 without a sign). This
-+ is the floating-point analog of \fabsolute(n1).
-+
-+ \ffpint(f1)
-+ Returns the integer part of f1. Equivalent to \ffpround(f1,-1).
-+
-+ \ffpexp(f1,d)
-+ The base of natural logarithms, e (2.718282...), raised to the
-+ f1 power.
-+
-+ \ffplogn(f1,d)
-+ The natural logarithm of f1 (the power to which e must be raised
-+ to obtain f1).
-+
-+ \ffplog10(f1,d)
-+ The base-10 logarithm of f1 (the power to which 10 must be
-+ raised to obtain f1).
-+
-+ \ffpmodulus(f1,f2,d)
-+ If f2 is not 0, the remainder after dividing f1 by f2.
-+ If f2 is 0, a DIVIDE_BY_ZERO error occurs.
-+ This is the floating-point analog of \fmod(n1,n2).
-+
-+ \ffpmaximum(f1,f2,d)
-+ Returns the maximum of f1 and f2. This is the floating-point
-+ analog of \fmax(n1,n2).
-+
-+ \ffpminimum(f1,f2,d)
-+ Returns the minimum of f1 and f2. This is the floating-point
-+ analog of \fmin(n1,n2).
-+
-+ \ffpsine(f1,d)
-+ Returns the sine of f1 radians.
-+
-+ \ffpcosine(f1,d)
-+ Returns the cosine of f1 radians.
-+
-+ \ffptangent(f1,d)
-+ Returns the tangent of f1 radians.
-+
-+ Note that all of these functions can be used with integer arguments. If
-+ you want an integer result, specify d = -1 (to truncate) or feed the
-+ result to \ffpround(xxx,0) (to round).
-+
-+ Floating-point numbers (or variables or functions that return them) can
-+ be used in Boolean expressions (see [632]Section 7.20.2) that compare
-+ numbers:
-+
-+ = x y
-+ != x y
-+ < x y
-+ > x y
-+ <= x y
-+ >= x y
-+
-+ In these examples, x and y can be either integers or floating-point
-+ numbers in any combination. In an arithmetic comparison of an integer
-+ and a floating-point number, the integer is converted to floating-point
-+ before the comparison is made. Examples:
-+
-+ .\%t = 3.000000000
-+ .\%f = 3.141592653
-+ .\%i = 3
-+
-+ if > \%f \%i echo Pi is greater.
-+ if = \%t \%i echo "\%i" = "\%t".
-+
-+ A floating-point number can also be used in:
-+
-+ IF number command
-+
-+ where the command is executed if the number is nonzero. If the number
-+ is floating-point, the command is not executed if the number is 0.0,
-+ and is executed otherwise.
-+
-+ Floating-point numbers can be sorted using ARRAY SORT /NUMERIC (see
-+ [633]Section 7.10.5 ).
-+
-+ Two floating-point constants are provided:
-+
-+ \v(math_pi) = Pi (3.141592653...)
-+ \v(math_e) = e, the base of natural logarithms (2.71828...)
-+
-+ These are given to the computer's precision, e.g. 16 digits. This
-+ number itself is available in a variable:
-+
-+ \v(math_precision)
-+ How many significant digits in a floating-point number.
-+
-+ 7.24. Tracing Script Execution
-+
-+ The TRACE command is handy for debugging scripts.
-+
-+ TRACE [ { /ON, /OFF } ] [ { ASSIGNMENTS, COMMAND-LEVEL, ALL } ]
-+ Selects tracing of the given object.
-+
-+ Optional switches are /ON and /OFF. If no switch is given, /ON is
-+ implied. The trace objects are ASSIGNMENTS, COMMAND-LEVEL, and ALL. The
-+ default object is ALL, meaning to select all trace objects (besides
-+ ALL). Thus TRACE by itself selects tracing of everything, as does TRACE
-+ /ON, and TRACE /OFF turns off all tracing.
-+
-+ When tracing of ASSIGNMENTS is on, every time the value of any
-+ user-defined variable or macro changes, C-Kermit prints one of the
-+ following:
-+
-+ >>> name: "value"
-+ The name of the variable or macro followed by the new value in
-+ quotes. This includes implicit macro-parameter assignments
-+ during macro invocation.
-+
-+ >>> name: (undef)
-+ This indicates that the variable or macro has been undefined.
-+
-+ <<< name: "value"
-+ For RETURN statements: the name of the macro and the return
-+ value.
-+
-+ <<< name: (null)
-+ For RETURN statements that include no value or an empty value.
-+
-+ When tracing of COMMAND-LEVEL is on, C-Kermit prints:
-+
-+ [n] +F: "name"
-+ Whenever a command file is entered, where "n" is the command
-+ level (0 = top); the name of the command file is shown in
-+ quotes.
-+
-+ [n] +M: "name"
-+ Whenever a macro is entered; "n" is the command level. The name
-+ of the macro is shown in quotes.
-+
-+ [n] -F: "name"
-+ Whenever a command file is reentered from below, when a macro or
-+ command file that it has invoked has returned.
-+
-+ [n] -M: "name"
-+ Whenever a macro is reentered from below.
-+
-+ For other debugging tools, see SHOW ARGS, SHOW STACK, SET TAKE, SET
-+ MACRO, and of course, ECHO.
-+
-+ 7.25. Compact Substring Notation
-+
-+ It is often desirable to extract a substring from a string which is
-+ stored in a variable, and for this we have the \fsubstring() function,
-+ which is used like this:
-+
-+ define \%a 1234567890
-+ echo \fsubstring(\%a,3,4) ; substring from 3rd character length 4
-+ 3456
-+
-+ or like this with macro-named variables:
-+
-+ define string 1234567890
-+ echo \fsubstring(\m(string),3,4)
-+ 3456
-+
-+ C-Kermit 7.0 adds a pair of alternative compact notations:
-+
-+\:(variablename[start:length]) <-- Substring of variable's value
-+\s(macroname[start:length]) <-- Substring of macro's definition
-+
-+ These are exactly equivalent to using \fsubstring(), except more
-+ compact to write and also faster since evaluation is in one step
-+ instead of two.
-+
-+ The "\:()" notation can be used with any Kermit variable, that is,
-+ almost anything that starts with a backslash:
-+
-+ \:(\%a[2:6]) <-- equivalent to \fsubstring(\%a,2,6)
-+ \:(\&x[1][2:6]) <-- equivalent to \fsubstring(\&x[1],2,6)
-+ \:(\m(foo)[2:6]) <-- equivalent to \fsubstring(\m(foo),2,6)
-+ \:(\v(time)[2:6]) <-- equivalent to \fsubstring(\v(time),2,6)
-+ \:(\$(TERM)[2:6]) <-- equivalent to \fsubstring(\$(TERM),2,6)
-+ \:(ABCDEFGH[2:6]) <-- equivalent to \fsubstring(ABCDEFGH,2,6)
-+
-+ Whatever appears between the left parenthesis and the left bracket is
-+ evaluated and then the indicated substring of the result is returned.
-+
-+ The "\s()" notation is the same, except after evaluating the variable,
-+ the result is treated as a macro name and is looked up in the macro
-+ table. Then the indicated substring of the macro definition is
-+ returned. Example:
-+
-+ define testing abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz
-+ define \%a testing
-+
-+ \s(testing[2:6]) --> bcdefg
-+ \:(testing[2:6]) --> esting
-+ \:(\%a[2:6]) --> esting
-+ \s(\%a[2:6]) --> bcdefg
-+
-+ Note that the following two examples are equivalent:
-+
-+ \:(\m(foo)[2:6])
-+ \s(foo[2:6])
-+
-+ The first number in the brackets is the 1-based starting position. If
-+ it is omitted, or less than 1, it is treated as 1. If it is greater
-+ than the length of the string, an empty string is returned.
-+
-+ The second number is the length of the desired substring. If the second
-+ number is omitted, is less than 0, or would be past the end of the
-+ string, then "through the end of the string" is assumed. If it is 0,
-+ the empty string is returned.
-+
-+ If the brackets are empty or omitted, the original string is returned.
-+
-+ The starting position and length need not be literal numbers; they can
-+ also be variables, functions, arithmetic expressions, or even other
-+ \s() or \:() quantities; anything that evaluates to a number, for
-+ example:
-+
-+ \s(block[1025:\fhex2n(\s(block[\%b:\%n+4]))/2])
-+
-+ Syntactically, \m(name) and \s(name) differ only in that the sequence
-+ [*] at the end of the name (where * is any sequence of 0 or more
-+ characters) is treated as substring notation in \s(name), but is
-+ considered part of the name in \m(name) (to see why, see [634]Section
-+ 7.10.9).
-+
-+ 7.26. New WAIT Command Options
-+
-+ The WAIT command has been extended to allow waiting for different kinds
-+ of things (formerly it only waited for modem signals). Now it also can
-+ wait for file events.
-+
-+ 7.26.1. Waiting for Modem Signals
-+
-+ The previous syntax:
-+
-+ WAIT time { CD, DSR, RTS, RI, ... }
-+
-+ has changed to:
-+
-+ WAIT time MODEM-SIGNALS { CD, DSR, RTS, RI, ... }
-+
-+ However, the previous syntax is still accepted. The behavior is the
-+ same in either case.
-+
-+ 7.26.2. Waiting for File Events
-+
-+ The new WAIT option:
-+
-+ WAIT time FILE { CREATION, DELETION, MODIFICATION } filename
-+
-+ lets you tell Kermit to wait the given amount of time (or until the
-+ given time of day) for a file whose name is filename to be created,
-+ deleted, or modified, respectively. The filename may not contain
-+ wildcards. If the specified event does not occur within the time limit,
-+ or if WAIT CANCELLATION is ON and you interrupt from the keyboard
-+ before the time is up, the WAIT command fails. If the event is
-+ MODIFICATION and the file does not exist, the command fails. Otherwise,
-+ if the given event occurs within the time limit, the command succeeds.
-+ Examples:
-+
-+ WAIT 600 FILE DELETION oofa.tmp
-+ Wait up to 10 minutes for file oofa.tmp to disappear.
-+
-+ WAIT 23:59:59 FILE MOD orders.db
-+ Wait until just before midnight for the orders.db file to be
-+ changed.
-+
-+ Example: Suppose you want to have the current copy of /etc/motd on your
-+ screen at all times, and you want to hear a bell whenever it changes:
-+
-+ def \%f /etc/motd ; The file of interest.
-+ while 1 { ; Loop forever...
-+ cls ; Clear the screen.
-+ echo \%f: \v(date) \v(time)... ; Print 2-line heading...
-+ echo
-+ if ( not exist \%f ) { ; If file doesn't exist,
-+ echo \%f does not exist... ; print message,
-+ wait 600 file creat \%f ; and wait for it to appear.
-+ continue
-+ }
-+ beep ; Something new - beep.
-+ type /head:\v(rows-2) \%f ; Display the file
-+ if fail exit 1 \%f: \ferrstring() ; (checking for errors).
-+ wait 999 file mod \%f ; Wait for it to change.
-+ }
-+
-+ This notices when the file is created, deleted, or modified, and acts
-+ only then (or when you interrupt it with); the time shown in the
-+ heading is the time of the most recent event (including when the
-+ program started).
-+
-+ See [635]Section 1.10, where the \v(kbchar) variable is explained. This
-+ lets you modify a loop like the one above to also accept
-+ single-character commands, which interrupt the WAIT, and dispatch
-+ accordingly. For example:
-+
-+ wait 999 file mod \%f ; Wait for the file to change.
-+ if defined \v(kbchar) { ; Interrupted from keyboard?
-+ switch \v(kbchar) { ; Handle the keystroke...
-+ :q, exit ; Q to Quit
-+ :h, echo blah blah, break ; H for Help
-+ :default, beep, continue ; Anything else beep and ignore
-+ }
-+ }
-+
-+ This lets you write event-driven applications that wait for up to three
-+ events at once: a file or modem event, a timeout, and a keystroke.
-+
-+ 7.27. Relaxed FOR and SWITCH Syntax
-+
-+ For consistency with the extended IF and WHILE syntax, the FOR and
-+ SWITCH control lists may (but need not be) enclosed in parentheses:
-+
-+ FOR ( \%i 1 \%n 1 ) { command-list... }
-+ SWITCH ( \%c ) { command-list... }
-+
-+ In the FOR command, the increment item can be omitted if the control
-+ list is enclosed in parentheses, in which case the increment defaults
-+ appropriately to 1 or -1, depending on the values of the first two
-+ variables.
-+
-+ As with IF, the parentheses around the FOR-command control list must be
-+ set off by spaces (in the SWITCH command, the spaces are not required
-+ since the SWITCH expression is a single arithmetic expression).
-+
-+ Also, outer braces around the command list are supplied automatically
-+ if you omit them, e.g.:
-+
-+ FOR ( \%i 1 %n 1 ) echo \%i
-+
-+ 8. USING OTHER FILE TRANSFER PROTOCOLS
-+
-+ In C-Kermit 7.0, alternative protocols can be selected using switches.
-+ Switches are described in [636]Section 1.5; the use of
-+ protocol-selection switches is described in [637]Section 4.7.1.
-+ Example:
-+
-+ send /binary /protocol:zmodem x.tar.gz
-+
-+ Note that file transfer recovery works only with Kermit and Zmodem
-+ protocols. With Zmodem, recovery can be initiated only by the sender.
-+
-+ Only pre-1988 versions of the publicly-distributed sz/rz programs use
-+ Standard I/O; those released later than that do not use Standard I/O
-+ and therefore do not work with REDIRECT. However, Omen Technology does
-+ offer an up-to-date redirectable version called crzsz, which must be
-+ licensed for use:
-+
-+ "Unix Crz and Csz support XMODEM, YMODEM, and ZMODEM transfers when
-+ called by dial-out programs such as Kermit and certain versions of
-+ cu(1). They are clients designed for this use.
-+
-+ "Crz and Csz are Copyrighted shareware programs. Use of these
-+ programs beyond a brief evaluation period requires registration.
-+ Please print the "mailer.rz" file, fill out the form and return same
-+ with your registration."
-+
-+ To use the crzsz programs as your external XYZMODEM programs in
-+ C-Kermit, follow the instructions in the book, but put a "c" before
-+ each command, e.g.:
-+
-+ set protocol zmodem {csz %s} {csz -a %s} crz crz crz crz
-+
-+ To use Zmodem protocol over Telnet or other non-transparent
-+ connections, you might need to add the -e (Escape) option:
-+
-+ set protocol zmodem {csz -e %s} {csz -e -a %s} crz crz crz crz
-+
-+ 9. COMMAND-LINE OPTIONS
-+
-+ 9.0. Extended-Format Command-Line Options
-+
-+ Standard UNIX command line options are a single letter. C-Kermit has
-+ run out of letters, so new options are in a new extended format:
-+
-+ --word[:arg]
-+
-+ where a keyword (rather than a single letter) specifies the function,
-+ and if an argument is to be included, it is separated by a colon (or
-+ equal sign). Most of the new extended-format command-line options are
-+ only for use with the Internet Kermit Service Daemon; see the [638]IKSD
-+ Administration Guide for details. However, several of them are also
-+ general in nature:
-+
-+ --nointerrupts
-+ Disables keyboard interrupts that are normally enabled, which
-+ are usually Ctrl-C (to interrupt a command) and Ctrl-Z (UNIX
-+ only, to suspend C-Kermit).
-+
-+ --help
-+ Lists the extended command-line options that are available in
-+ your version of C-Kermit. If any options seem to be missing,
-+ that is because your copy of C-Kermit was built with
-+ compile-time options to deselect them.
-+
-+ --helpfile:filename
-+ Specifies the name of a file to be displayed if the user types
-+ HELP (not followed by a specific command or topic), in place of
-+ the built-in top-level help text. The file need not fit on one
-+ screen; more-prompting is used if the file is more than one
-+ screen long if COMMAND MORE-PROMPTING is ON, as it is by
-+ default.
-+
-+ --bannerfile:filename
-+ The name of a file containing a message to be printed after the
-+ user logs in, in place of the normal message (Copyright notice,
-+ "Type HELP or ? for help", "Default transfer mode is...", etc).
-+
-+ --cdmessage:{on,off,0,1,2}
-+ For use in the Server-Side Server configuration; whenever the
-+ client tells the server to change directory, the server sends
-+ the contents of a "read me" file to the client's screen. This
-+ feature is On by default, and operates only in client/server
-+ mode when ON or 1. If set to 2 or higher, it also operates when
-+ the CD command is given at the IKSD> prompt. Synonym: --cdmsg.
-+
-+ --cdfile:filename
-+ When cdmessage is on, this is the name of the "read me" file to
-+ be sent. Normally you would specify a relative (not absolute)
-+ name, since the file is opened using the literal name you
-+ specified, after changing to the new directory. Example:
-+
-+ --cdfile:READ.ME
-+
-+ You can also give a list of up to 8 filenames by (a) enclosing
-+ each filename in braces, and (b) enclosing the entire list in
-+ braces. Example:
-+ --cdfile:{{./.readme}{READ.ME}{aaareadme.txt}{README}{read-this-
-+ first}} When a list is given, it is searched from left to right
-+ and the first file found is displayed. The default list for UNIX
-+ is:
-+
-+ {{./.readme}{README.TXT}{READ.ME}}
-+
-+ 9.1. Command Line Personalities
-+
-+ Beginning in version 7.0, if the C-Kermit binary is renamed to "telnet"
-+ (or TELNET.EXE, telnet.pr, etc, depending on the platform), it accepts
-+ the Telnet command line:
-+
-+ telnet [ host [ port ] ]
-+
-+ In Unix, you can achieve the same effect with a symlink:
-+
-+ cd /usr/bin
-+ mv telnet oldtelnet
-+ ln -ls /usr/local/bin/kermit telnet
-+
-+ When installed in this manner, C-Kermit always reads its initialization
-+ file. If no host (and therefore no port) is given, C-Kermit starts in
-+ interactive prompting mode. If a host is given as the first
-+ command-line argument, C-Kermit makes a connection to it. The host
-+ argument can be an IP host name or address, or the name of a TCP/IP
-+ entry in your C-Kermit network directory.
-+
-+ If a port is given, it is used. If a port is not given, then if the
-+ hostname was found in your network directory and port was also listed
-+ there, then that port is used. Otherwise port 23 (the Telnet port) is
-+ used.
-+
-+ When C-Kermit is called "telnet" and it is invoked with a hostname on
-+ the command line, it exits automatically when the connection is closed.
-+ While the connection is open, however, you may escape back and forth as
-+ many times as you like, transfer files, etc.
-+
-+ An rlogin personality is also available, but it is less useful, at
-+ least in UNIX and VMS, where the Rlogin TCP port is privileged.
-+
-+ The new variable \v(name) indicates the name with which C-Kermit was
-+ invoked ("kermit", "wermit", "k95", "telnet", etc).
-+
-+ 9.2. Built-in Help for Command Line Options
-+
-+ "kermit -h", given from the system prompt, lists as many command-line
-+ options as will fit on a standard 24x80 screen. For more comprehensive
-+ help, use the interactive HELP OPTIONS command that was added in
-+ C-Kermit 7.0:
-+
-+ HELP OPTIONS
-+ Explains how command-line options work, their syntax, etc.
-+
-+ HELP OPTIONS ALL
-+ Lists all command-line options and gives brief help about each one.
-+
-+ HELP OPTION x
-+ Gives brief help about option "x".
-+
-+ HELP EXTENDED-OPTIONS
-+ Lists the available extended-format command-line options.
-+
-+ HELP EXTENDED-OPTION xxx
-+ Gives help for the specified extended option.
-+
-+ 9.3. New Command-Line Options
-+
-+ Command-line options added since C-Kermit 6.0 are:
-+
-+ +
-+ (plus sign by itself): The next argument is the name of a script
-+ to execute; all subsequent arguments are ignored by C-Kermit
-+ itself, but passed to the script as top-level copies of \%1,
-+ \%2, etc; the \&_[] is also set accordingly. \%0 and \&_[0]
-+ become the name of the script file, rather than the pathname of
-+ the C-Kermit program, which is its normal value. Primarily for
-+ use in the top line of "Kerbang" scripts in UNIX (see
-+ [639]Section 7.19). Example from UNIX command line:
-+
-+ $ kermit [ regular kermit args ] + filename
-+
-+ Sample first line of Kerbang script:
-+
-+ #!/usr/local/bin/kermit +
-+
-+ --
-+ (two hyphens surrounded by whitespace) Equivalent to "=", for
-+ compatibility with UNIX getopt(1,3).
-+
-+ -G
-+ GET (like -g), but send the incoming file to standard output.
-+ Example: "kermit -G oofa.txt | lpr" retrieves a file from your
-+ local computer (providing it is running a Kermit program that
-+ supports the autodownload feature and has it enabled) and prints
-+ it.
-+
-+ -O
-+ equivalent to -x (start up in server mode), but exits after the
-+ first client command has been executed (mnemonic: O = Only One).
-+ This one is handy replacing "kermit -x" in the "automatically
-+ start Kermit on the other end" string:
-+
-+ set protocol kermit {kermit -ir} {kermit -r} {kermit -x}
-+
-+ since -x leaves the remote Kermit in server mode after the
-+ transfer, which can be confusing, whereas -O makes it go away
-+ automatically after the transfer.
-+
-+ -L
-+ Recursive, when used in combination with -s (mnemonic: L =
-+ Levels). In UNIX or other environments where the shell expands
-+ wildcards itself, the -s argument, if it contains wildcards,
-+ must be quoted to prevent this, e.g.:
-+
-+ kermit -L -s "*.c"
-+
-+ In UNIX only, "kermit -L -s ." means to send the current
-+ directory tree. See [640]Sections 4.10 and [641]4.11 about
-+ recursive file transfer.
-+
-+ -V
-+ Equivalent to SET FILE PATTERNS OFF ([642]Section 4.3) and SET
-+ TRANSFER MODE MANUAL. In other words, take the FILE TYPE setting
-+ literally. For example, "kermit -VT oofa.bin" means send the
-+ file in Text mode, no matter what its name is and no matter
-+ whether a kindred spirit is recognized at the other end of the
-+ connection.
-+
-+ -0
-+ (digit zero) means "be 100% transparent in CONNECT mode". This
-+ is equivalent to the following series of commands: SET PARITY
-+ NONE, SET COMMAND BYTESIZE 8, SET TERMINAL BYTESIZE 8, SET FLOW
-+ NONE, SET TERM ESCAPE DISABLED, SET TERM CHAR TRANSPARENT, SET
-+ TERM AUTODOWNLOAD OFF, SET TERM APC OFF, SET TELOPT KERMIT
-+ REFUSE REFUSE.
-+
-+ 10. C-KERMIT AND G-KERMIT
-+
-+ Every multifunctioned and long-lived software program grows in
-+ complexity and size over time to meet the needs and requests of its
-+ users and the demands of the underlying technology as it changes.
-+
-+ Eventually users begin to notice how big the application has grown, how
-+ much disk space it occupies, how long it takes to load, and they start
-+ to long for the good old days when it was lean and mean. Not long after
-+ that they begin asking for a "light" version that only does the basics
-+ with no frills.
-+
-+ And so it is with C-Kermit. A "light" version of Kermit was released
-+ (for UNIX only) in December 1999 under the GNU General Public License;
-+ thus it is called G-Kermit (for GNU Kermit). All it does is send and
-+ receive files, period. You can find it at:
-+
-+ [643]http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/gkermit.html
-+
-+ Where the C-Kermit 7.0 binary might be anywhere from 1 to 3 million
-+ bytes in size, the G-Kermit binary ranges from 30K to 100K, depending
-+ on the underlying architecture (RISC vs CISC, etc).
-+
-+ G-Kermit and C-Kermit may reside side-by-side on the same computer.
-+ G-Kermit does not make connections; it does not have a script language;
-+ it does not translate character sets. G-Kermit may be used instead of
-+ C-Kermit when:
-+
-+ * It is on the remote end.
-+ * Files are to be transferred in binary mode or in text mode without
-+ character-set translation.
-+ * File timestamps don't need to be preserved.
-+
-+ In such cases G-Kermit might be preferred since it generally starts up
-+ faster, and yet transfers files just as fast on most (but not
-+ necessarily all) kinds of connections; for example, it supports
-+ streaming ([644]Section 4.20).
-+
-+ G-Kermit is also handy for bootstrapping. It is easier to load on a new
-+ computer than C-Kermit -- it fits on a floppy diskette with plenty of
-+ room to spare. Thus if you have (say) an old PC running (say) SCO Xenix
-+ and no network connection, you can download the Xenix version of
-+ G-Kermit to (say) a DOS or Windows PC, copy it to diskette, read the
-+ diskette on Xenix with "dosread", and then use G-Kermit to receive
-+ C-Kermit (which does not fit on a diskette). If diskettes aren't an
-+ option, other bootstrapping methods are possible too -- see the
-+ [645]G-Kermit web page for details.
-+
-+III. APPENDICES
-+
-+ III.1. Character Set Tables
-+
-+ III.1.1. The Hewlett Packard Roman8 Character Set
-+
-+dec col/row oct hex description
-+160 10/00 240 A0 (Undefined)
-+161 10/01 241 A1 A grave
-+162 10/02 242 A2 A circumflex
-+163 10/03 243 A3 E grave
-+164 10/04 244 A4 E circumflex
-+165 10/05 245 A5 E diaeresis
-+166 10/06 246 A6 I circumflex
-+167 10/07 247 A7 I diaeresis
-+168 10/08 250 A8 Acute accent
-+169 10/09 251 A9 Grave accent
-+170 10/10 252 AA Circumflex accent
-+171 10/11 253 AB Diaeresis
-+172 10/12 254 AC Tilde accent
-+173 10/13 255 AD U grave
-+174 10/14 256 AE U circumflex
-+175 10/15 257 AF Lira symbol
-+176 11/00 260 B0 Top bar (macron)
-+177 11/01 261 B1 Y acute
-+178 11/02 262 B2 y acute
-+179 11/03 263 B3 Degree Sign
-+180 11/04 264 B4 C cedilla
-+181 11/05 265 B5 c cedilla
-+182 11/06 266 B6 N tilde
-+183 11/07 267 B7 n tilde
-+184 11/08 270 B8 Inverted exclamation mark
-+185 11/09 271 B9 Inverted question mark
-+186 11/10 272 BA Currency symbol
-+187 11/11 273 BB Pound sterling symbol
-+188 11/12 274 BC Yen symbol
-+189 11/13 275 BD Paragraph
-+190 11/14 276 BE Florin (Guilder) symbol
-+191 11/15 277 BF Cent symbol
-+192 12/00 300 C0 a circumflex
-+193 12/01 301 C1 e circumflex
-+194 12/02 302 C2 o circumflex
-+195 12/03 303 C3 u circumflex
-+196 12/04 304 C4 a acute
-+197 12/05 305 C5 e acute
-+198 12/06 306 C6 o acute
-+199 12/07 307 C7 u acute
-+200 12/08 310 C8 a grave
-+201 12/09 311 C9 e grave
-+202 12/10 312 CA o grave
-+203 12/11 313 CB u grave
-+204 12/12 314 CC a diaeresis
-+205 12/13 315 CD e diaeresis
-+206 12/14 316 CE o diaeresis
-+207 12/15 317 CF u diaeresis
-+208 13/00 320 D0 A ring
-+209 13/01 321 D1 i circumflex
-+210 13/02 322 D2 O with stroke
-+211 13/03 323 D3 AE digraph
-+212 13/04 324 D4 a ring
-+213 13/05 325 D5 i acute
-+214 13/06 326 D6 o with stroke
-+215 13/07 327 D7 ae digraph
-+216 13/08 330 D8 A diaeresis
-+217 13/09 331 D9 i grave
-+218 13/10 332 DA O diaeresis
-+219 13/11 333 DB U diaeresis
-+220 13/12 334 DC E acute
-+221 13/13 335 DD i diaeresis
-+222 13/14 336 DE German sharp s
-+223 13/15 337 DF O circumflex
-+224 14/00 340 E0 A acute
-+225 14/01 341 E1 A tilde
-+226 14/02 342 E2 a tilde
-+227 14/03 343 E3 Icelandic Eth
-+228 14/04 344 E4 Icelandic eth
-+229 14/05 345 E5 I acute
-+230 14/06 346 E6 I grave
-+231 14/07 347 E7 O acute
-+232 14/08 350 E8 O grave
-+233 14/09 351 E9 O tilde
-+234 14/10 352 EA o tilde
-+235 14/11 353 EB S caron
-+236 14/12 354 EC s caron
-+237 14/13 355 ED U acute
-+238 14/14 356 EE Y diaeresis
-+239 14/15 357 EF y diaeresis
-+240 15/00 360 F0 Icelandic Thorn
-+241 15/01 361 F1 Icelandic thorn
-+242 15/02 362 F2 Middle dot
-+243 15/03 363 F3 Greek mu
-+244 15/04 364 F4 Pilcrow sign
-+245 15/05 365 F5 Fraction 3/4
-+246 15/06 366 F6 Long dash, horizontal bar
-+247 15/07 367 F7 Fraction 1/4
-+248 15/08 370 F8 Fraction 1/2
-+249 15/09 371 F9 Feminine ordinal
-+250 15/10 372 FA Masculine ordinal
-+251 15/11 373 FB Left guillemot
-+252 15/12 374 FC Solid box
-+253 15/13 375 FD Right guillemot
-+254 15/14 376 FE Plus or minus sign
-+255 15/15 377 FF (Undefined)
-+
-+ III.1.2. Greek Character Sets
-+
-+ III.1.2.1. The ISO 8859-7 Latin / Greek Alphabet = ELOT 928
-+
-+dec col/row oct hex description
-+160 10/00 240 A0 No-break space
-+161 10/01 241 A1 Left single quotation mark
-+162 10/02 242 A2 right single quotation mark
-+163 10/03 243 A3 Pound sign
-+164 10/04 244 A4 (UNUSED)
-+165 10/05 245 A5 (UNUSED)
-+166 10/06 246 A6 Broken bar
-+167 10/07 247 A7 Paragraph sign
-+168 10/08 250 A8 Diaeresis (Dialytika)
-+169 10/09 251 A9 Copyright sign
-+170 10/10 252 AA (UNUSED)
-+171 10/11 253 AB Left angle quotation
-+172 10/12 254 AC Not sign
-+173 10/13 255 AD Soft hyphen
-+174 10/14 256 AE (UNUSED)
-+175 10/15 257 AF Horizontal bar (Parenthetiki pavla)
-+176 11/00 260 B0 Degree sign
-+177 11/01 261 B1 Plus-minus sign
-+178 11/02 262 B2 Superscript two
-+179 11/03 263 B3 Superscript three
-+180 11/04 264 B4 Accent (tonos)
-+181 11/05 265 B5 Diaeresis and accent (Dialytika and Tonos)
-+182 11/06 266 B6 Alpha with accent
-+183 11/07 267 B7 Middle dot (Ano Teleia)
-+184 11/08 270 B8 Epsilon with accent
-+185 11/09 271 B9 Eta with accent
-+186 11/10 272 BA Iota with accent
-+187 11/11 273 BB Right angle quotation
-+188 11/12 274 BC Omicron with accent
-+189 11/13 275 BD One half
-+190 11/14 276 BE Upsilon with accent
-+191 11/15 277 BF Omega with accent
-+192 12/00 300 C0 iota with diaeresis and accent
-+193 12/01 301 C1 Alpha
-+194 12/02 302 C2 Beta
-+195 12/03 303 C3 Gamma
-+196 12/04 304 C4 Delta
-+197 12/05 305 C5 Epsilon
-+198 12/06 306 C6 Zeta
-+199 12/07 307 C7 Eta
-+200 12/08 310 C8 Theta
-+201 12/09 311 C9 Iota
-+202 12/10 312 CA Kappa
-+203 12/11 313 CB Lamda
-+204 12/12 314 CC Mu
-+205 12/13 315 CD Nu
-+206 12/14 316 CE Ksi
-+207 12/15 317 CF Omicron
-+208 13/00 320 D0 Pi
-+209 13/01 321 D1 Rho
-+210 13/02 322 D2 (UNUSED)
-+211 13/03 323 D3 Sigma
-+212 13/04 324 D4 Tau
-+213 13/05 325 D5 Upsilon
-+214 13/06 326 D6 Phi
-+215 13/07 327 D7 Khi
-+216 13/08 330 D8 Psi
-+217 13/09 331 D9 Omega
-+218 13/10 332 DA Iota with diaeresis
-+219 13/11 333 DB Upsilon with diaeresis
-+220 13/12 334 DC alpha with accent
-+221 13/13 335 DD epsilon with accent
-+222 13/14 336 DE eta with accent
-+223 13/15 337 DF iota with accent
-+224 14/00 340 E0 upsilon with diaeresis and accent
-+225 14/01 341 E1 alpha
-+226 14/02 342 E2 beta
-+227 14/03 343 E3 gamma
-+228 14/04 344 E4 delta
-+229 14/05 345 E5 epsilon
-+230 14/06 346 E6 zeta
-+231 14/07 347 E7 eta
-+232 14/08 350 E8 theta
-+233 14/09 351 E9 iota
-+234 14/10 352 EA kappa
-+235 14/11 353 EB lamda
-+236 14/12 354 EC mu
-+237 14/13 355 ED nu
-+238 14/14 356 EE ksi
-+239 14/15 357 EF omicron
-+240 15/00 360 F0 pi
-+241 15/01 361 F1 rho
-+242 15/02 362 F2 terminal sigma
-+243 15/03 363 F3 sigma
-+244 15/04 364 F4 tau
-+245 15/05 365 F5 upsilon
-+246 15/06 366 F6 phi
-+247 15/07 367 F7 khi
-+248 15/08 370 F8 psi
-+249 15/09 371 F9 omega
-+250 15/10 372 FA iota with diaeresis
-+251 15/11 373 FB upsilon with diaeresis
-+252 15/12 374 FC omicron with diaeresis
-+253 15/13 375 FD upsilon with accent
-+254 15/14 376 FE omega with accent
-+255 15/15 377 FF (UNUSED)
-+
-+ III.1.2.2. The ELOT 927 Character Set
-+
-+dec col/row oct hex description
-+ 32 02/00 40 20 SPACE
-+ 33 02/01 41 21 EXCLAMATION MARK
-+ 34 02/02 42 22 QUOTATION MARK
-+ 35 02/03 43 23 NUMBER SIGN
-+ 36 02/04 44 24 DOLLAR SIGN
-+ 37 02/05 45 25 PERCENT SIGN
-+ 38 02/06 46 26 AMPERSAND
-+ 39 02/07 47 27 APOSTROPHE
-+ 40 02/08 50 28 LEFT PARENTHESIS
-+ 41 02/09 51 29 RIGHT PARENTHESIS
-+ 42 02/10 52 2A ASTERISK
-+ 43 02/11 53 2B PLUS SIGN
-+ 44 02/12 54 2C COMMA
-+ 45 02/13 55 2D HYPHEN, MINUS SIGN
-+ 46 02/14 56 2E PERIOD, FULL STOP
-+ 47 02/15 57 2F SOLIDUS, SLASH
-+ 48 03/00 60 30 DIGIT ZERO
-+ 49 03/01 61 31 DIGIT ONE
-+ 50 03/02 62 32 DIGIT TWO
-+ 51 03/03 63 33 DIGIT THREE
-+ 52 03/04 64 34 DIGIT FOUR
-+ 53 03/05 65 35 DIGIT FIVE
-+ 54 03/06 66 36 DIGIT SIX
-+ 55 03/07 67 37 DIGIT SEVEN
-+ 56 03/08 70 38 DIGIT EIGHT
-+ 57 03/09 71 39 DIGIT NINE
-+ 58 03/10 72 3A COLON
-+ 59 03/11 73 3B SEMICOLON
-+ 60 03/12 74 3C LESS-THAN SIGN, LEFT ANGLE BRACKET
-+ 61 03/13 75 3D EQUALS SIGN
-+ 62 03/14 76 3E GREATER-THAN SIGN, RIGHT ANGLE BRACKET
-+ 63 03/15 77 3F QUESTION MARK
-+ 64 04/00 100 40 COMMERCIAL AT SIGN
-+ 65 04/01 101 41 CAPITAL LETTER A
-+ 66 04/02 102 42 CAPITAL LETTER B
-+ 67 04/03 103 43 CAPITAL LETTER C
-+ 68 04/04 104 44 CAPITAL LETTER D
-+ 69 04/05 105 45 CAPITAL LETTER E
-+ 70 04/06 106 46 CAPITAL LETTER F
-+ 71 04/07 107 47 CAPITAL LETTER G
-+ 72 04/08 110 48 CAPITAL LETTER H
-+ 73 04/09 111 49 CAPITAL LETTER I
-+ 74 04/10 112 4A CAPITAL LETTER J
-+ 75 04/11 113 4B CAPITAL LETTER K
-+ 76 04/12 114 4C CAPITAL LETTER L
-+ 77 04/13 115 4D CAPITAL LETTER M
-+ 78 04/14 116 4E CAPITAL LETTER N
-+ 79 04/15 117 4F CAPITAL LETTER O
-+ 80 05/00 120 50 CAPITAL LETTER P
-+ 81 05/01 121 51 CAPITAL LETTER Q
-+ 82 05/02 122 52 CAPITAL LETTER R
-+ 83 05/03 123 53 CAPITAL LETTER S
-+ 84 05/04 124 54 CAPITAL LETTER T
-+ 85 05/05 125 55 CAPITAL LETTER U
-+ 86 05/06 126 56 CAPITAL LETTER V
-+ 87 05/07 127 57 CAPITAL LETTER W
-+ 88 05/08 130 58 CAPITAL LETTER X
-+ 89 05/09 131 59 CAPITAL LETTER Y
-+ 90 05/10 132 5A CAPITAL LETTER Z
-+ 91 05/11 133 5B LEFT SQUARE BRACKET
-+ 92 05/12 134 5C REVERSE SOLIDUS, BACKSLASH
-+ 93 05/13 135 5D RIGHT SQUARE BRACKET
-+ 94 05/14 136 5E CIRCUMFLEX ACCENT
-+ 95 05/15 137 5F UNDERSCORE
-+ 96 06/00 140 60 ACCENT GRAVE
-+ 97 06/01 141 61 GREEK LETTER ALPHA
-+ 98 06/02 142 62 GREEK LETTER BETA
-+ 99 06/03 143 63 GREEK LETTER GAMMA
-+100 06/04 144 64 GREEK LETTER DELTA
-+101 06/05 145 65 GREEK LETTER EPSILON
-+102 06/06 146 66 GREEK LETTER ZETA
-+103 06/07 147 67 GREEK LETTER ETA
-+104 06/08 150 68 GREEK LETTER THETA
-+105 06/09 151 69 GREEK LETTER IOTA
-+106 06/10 152 6A GREEK LETTER KAPPA
-+107 06/11 153 6B GREEK LETTER LAMDA
-+108 06/12 154 6C GREEK LETTER MU
-+109 06/13 155 6D GREEK LETTER NU
-+110 06/14 156 6E GREEK LETTER KSI
-+111 06/15 157 6F GREEK LETTER OMICRON
-+112 07/00 160 70 GREEK LETTER PI
-+113 07/01 161 71 GREEK LETTER RHO
-+114 07/02 162 72 GREEK LETTER SIGMA
-+115 07/03 163 73 GREEK LETTER TAU
-+116 07/04 164 74 GREEK LETTER UPSILON
-+117 07/05 165 75 GREEK LETTER FI
-+118 07/06 166 76 GREEK LETTER XI
-+119 07/07 167 77 GREEK LETTER PSI
-+120 07/08 170 78 GREEK LETTER OMEGA
-+121 07/09 171 79 SPACE
-+122 07/10 172 7A SPACE
-+123 07/11 173 7B LEFT CURLY BRACKET, LEFT BRACE
-+124 07/12 174 7C VERTICAL LINE, VERTICAL BAR
-+125 07/13 175 7D RIGHT CURLY BRACKET, RIGHT BRACE
-+126 07/14 176 7E TILDE
-+127 07/15 177 7F RUBOUT, DELETE
-+
-+ III.1.2.3. PC Code Page 869
-+
-+ (to be filled in...)
-+
-+ III.2. Updated Country Codes
-+
-+ Date: Mon, 7 Apr 1997 23:23:49 EDT
-+ From: Dave Leibold <dleibold@else.net>
-+ Newsgroups: comp.dcom.telecom
-+ Subject: Ex-USSR Country Codes Profile
-+ Organization: TELECOM Digest
-+
-+ Ex-USSR Country Codes Profile
-+ 4 April 1997
-+
-+ Below is a summary of the country codes that have formed in the wake of
-+ the USSR dissolution, along with some updated findings and reports.
-+ Additional or corrected information on any of these nations would be
-+ welcome (c/o dleibold@else.net).
-+ * Kyrgyz Republic country code 996 will take effect, at least in
-+ Canada, effective 1 May 1997, according to CRTC Telecom Order
-+ 97-464, based on Stentor Tariff Notice 433. There is no indication
-+ whether there will be a permissive dialing period involved or for
-+ how long such a permissive operation would remain.
-+ * Country code 992 was reported as a recent assignment for
-+ Tajikistan, which will be moving from country code 7 at some
-+ unknown time.
-+ * Uzbekistan has its own country code assignment, but I have no
-+ information if this is in service yet or what implementation dates
-+ have been set.
-+ * Kazakstan does not have a known separate country code assignment at
-+ present. It remains in country code 7 for the time being.
-+ * Russia seems destined to keep country code 7.
-+ * Recent news reports speak of some agreements forming between Russia
-+ and Belarus. While there is no outright reunification yet, there is
-+ expected to be much closer ties between the two nations. Whether
-+ this will lead to a reunification of telephone codes remains to be
-+ seen.
-+
-+ In the table, "Effective" means the date at which the country code
-+ began service (which could vary according to the nation). "Mandatory"
-+ means the date at which the country code 7 is invalid for calls to that
-+ nation. There are a number of question marks since exact dates have not
-+ been collected in all cases.
-+
-+CC Nation Effective Mandatory Notes
-+
-+370 Lithuania 1993? ??? Announced Jan 1993
-+371 Latvia 1993? ???
-+372 Estonia 1 Feb 1993? March 1993?
-+373 Moldova 1993? ??? Announced Jan 1993
-+374 Armenia 1 May 1995 1 July 1995 Announced Jan 1995 (ITU)
-+375 Belarus 16 Apr 1995 1997?
-+380 Ukraine 16 Apr 1995 Oct 1995?
-+7 Kazakstan (no known changes)
-+7 Russia (presumably not changing)
-+992 Tajikistan ??? ??? Announced 1996-7?
-+993 Turkmenistan 3 Jan 1997 3 Apr 1997 Canada as of 29 Nov 1996
-+994 Azerbaijan Sept 1994? ??? Announced 1992
-+995 Georgia 1994? ??? ref: Telecom Digest Oct 1994
-+996 Kyrgyz Republic 1 May 1997 ??? ref: Stentor Canada/CRTC
-+998 Uzbekistan ??? ??? Announced 1996? (ITU)
-+
-+ Details courtesy Toby Nixon, ITU, Stentor (Canada), CRTC (Canada),
-+ TELECOM Digest (including information collected for the country code
-+ listings).
-+
-+IV. ERRATA & CORRIGENDA
-+
-+ The following errors in [646]Using C-Kermit, Second Edition, first
-+ printing, have been noted.
-+
-+ First, some missing acknowledgements for C-Kermit 6.0: JE Jones of
-+ Microware for help with OS-9, Nigel Roles for his help with Plan 9,
-+ Lucas Hart for help with VMS and Digital UNIX, Igor Kovalenko for his
-+ help with QNX. And later, to Susan Kleinmann for her help with Debian
-+ Linux packaging; Patrick Volkerding for his help with Slackware Linux
-+ packaging; Jim Knoble for his help with Red Hat Linux packaging; and to
-+ dozens of others for sending individual C-Kermit binaries for varied
-+ and diverse platforms.
-+
-+ Thanks to James Spath for both binaries and reporting many of the typos
-+ noted below. Also to Dat Thuc Nguyen for spotting several typos.
-+
-+PAGE REMARKS
-+COVER "COS" is a misprint. There is no COS. Pretend it says "SCO" or "VOS".
-+ (This is fixed in the second printing.)
-+ xxi Second line: Fred Smith's affiliation should be Computrition.
-+ 83 Change "commands other" to "commands as other" (1st paragraph)
-+ 87 Change "The the" to "The" (2nd paragraph)
-+ 92 "set modem-type user-defined supra" should be "set modem type ..."
-+ 95 Change "VI" to "vi" (1st paragraph)
-+ 96 Change "it it" to "it is" (1st paragraph)
-+ 97 Change "advantage a literal" to "advantage of a literal" (2nd
-+ paragraph)
-+102 The call-waiting example would be better as SET DIAL PREFIX *70W
-+ (rather than "*70,") because the former will not cause an incorrect
-+ call to be placed with pulse dialing.
-+123 Third paragraph from bottom: "..otherwise if a your local username.."
-+ should be "..otherwise your local username..".
-+160 Delete the "it" between "and" and "to" (2nd paragraph)
-+185 In "When TRANSFER DISPLAY is OFF, C-Kermit skips the display...",
-+ "OFF" should be "NONE".
-+187 The last paragraph says the "A command" is ignored, should be "S".
-+194 Change "it known" to "it is known" (4th paragraph).
-+235 In C-Kermit 7.0, the syntax of the GET command changed. MGET now
-+ must be used to get a list of files and there is no more multiline
-+ GET command.
-+268 Last paragraph: "effect" should be "affect".
-+275 In the SET PROTOCOL KERMIT description, the following sentence is
-+ incorrect and should be removed: 'If you omit the commands, the
-+ default ones are restored: "kermit -ir" and "kermit -r" respectively".
-+ The correct information is given at the bottom of page 281.
-+279 9th line. The decimal value of ST is 156, not 155.
-+295 In the stepping stones, skip ahead to Chapter 17 on p. 327.
-+298 Table 16-2, Portuguese entry. Column 4/00 should show section sign,
-+ not acute accent.
-+316 Other languages written in the Hebrew alphabet include Karaim (a Turkic
-+ language spoken in Lithuania and Poland), Judeo-Kurdish, and Judeo-
-+ Georgian.
-+332 UNDEFINE definition, change "This just" to "This is just".
-+344 It might be necessary to set the modem's pulse generation rate when
-+ sending numeric pages; most Hayes compatible modems use the S11
-+ register for this.
-+350 Delete "is" from between "It" and "ceases" (4th paragraph)
-+351 Top - both occurrences of "print \%a" should be "echo \%a".
-+364 \v(input) and \v(query) out of alphabetical order.
-+378 In the MYSEND macro, "if not \m(rc) goto bad" should be:
-+ "if \m(rc) goto bad" (remove the "not").
-+382-383 It should be stated that the loop control variable must be of the \%a
-+ type, or else an array element; macro names can not be used for this.
-+383 In line 3, "\%f[\%i]" should be "\&f[\%i]".
-+383 In the sort example, it should be stated that the array is 1-based.
-+387 Change "You can list" to "You can get a list" (5th paragraph)
-+393 \Fverify() description. The 3rd sentence could be stated more clearly
-+ as "If all characters in string2 are also in string1, 0 is returned."
-+398 Copying \ffiles() results to an array before is not required as of
-+ C-Kermit 7.0 (see [647]Section 7.3).
-+403 In "(\%a + 3) * (\%b 5)", a minus sign is missing between b and 5.
-+407 C-Kermit 7.0 no longer supports multiline GET. Change
-+ "get, \%1, \%2" to "get {\%1} {\%2}" or "get /as:{\%2} {\%1}".
-+409 READ example while loop should be:
-+ while success { echo \m(line), read line }
-+409 "WRITE file" should be "WRITE keyword" (you can't put a filename there)
-+ (The same applies to WRITE-LINE / WRITELN).
-+414 \Funhexify() missing from Table 18-3.
-+425 MINPUT definition, change 2nd "text2" to "text3".
-+436 Several lines are missing from the UNIXLOGIN macro listing.
-+ After the "xif fail" block, insert:
-+
-+ out \%1\13 ; Send username, carriage return
-+ inp 5 Password: ; Wait 5 sec for this prompt
-+ if fail end 1 No password prompt
-+ pause ; Wait a sec
-+ out \%2\13 ; Send password
-+
-+440 Change "set terminal byteszie" to "set terminal bytesize".
-+ Change "input Password:" to "input 10 Password".
-+448 Franchise script: "access line" should be "access \m(line)".
-+453 There are two incorrectly coded IF statements in the DELIVER macro
-+ definition. Replace both occurrences of "if > \%1 \%3 {" with
-+ "xif > \%i \%3 {" (replace "if" by "xif" and "\%1" with "\%i").
-+453 "the the" (last paragraph) should be "the".
-+454 EOT (last paragraph) is End of Transmission, not End of Text.
-+457 _DEFINE definition: "name constructed" should be "name is constructed".
-+457 "macro for and" (last paragraph) should be "macro and".
-+459 Should explain that \v(user) is a legal abbreviation of \v(userid).
-+480 Figure II-2 is backwards; the least-significant bit is transmitted
-+ first, then up to the highest, and the parity bit last.
-+534 The VMS Appendix section on Odd Record Lengths no longer applies;
-+ C-Kermit 7.0 handles odd record lengths as well as even ones.
-+559 Table VIII-3, Portuguese entry. Column 4/00 should show section sign,
-+ not acute accent.
-+560-563 HP-Roman8 missing from Table VII-4; there wasn't room to squeeze it in.
-+ It is listed in section II(6).
-+565 "d stroke" in Table VII-5 has the wrong appearance; the stem should
-+ be upright. The letter shown in the table is actually a lowercase
-+ Icelandic eth, which has a curved stem.
-+601-604 BeBox, BeOS, Plan 9, and probably others not listed in trademarks.
-+604 The words "SCRIBE TEXT FORMATTER" appear at the end of the last
-+ sentence of the first paragraph of the Colophon. They should have
-+ been in the Index.
-+Index: Missing entries: SET { SEND, RECEIVE } PATHNAMES, Call waiting, ...
-+ \F() Page 605, add also 413-414
-+ \Fbreak 389
-+ \Fcapitalize 390
-+ \Fchecksum 414
-+ \Fcrc16 414
-+ \Fexecute 414
-+ \Fhexify 390
-+ \Fltrim 391
-+ \Frepeat 392
-+ \Fspawn 392
-+ \Ftod2secs 399
-+ \v() built_in Page 606, add also 361-364
-+ \v(_line) 354, 361
-+ \v(apcactive) 361
-+ \v(charset) 362
-+ \v(cpu) 362
-+ \v(crc16) 357, 362
-+ \v(d$xxx) add page 362
-+ \v(dialnumber) 362
-+ \v(dialresult) 362
-+ \v(errno) 362
-+ \v(errstring) 362
-+ \v(exedir) 362
-+ \v(inidir) 363
-+ \v(ipaddress) 363
-+ \v(keyboard) 363
-+ \v(macro) 363
-+ \v(minput) 363
-+ \v(m_xxx) 94, 363
-+ \v(password) 364
-+ \v(query) 364
-+ \v(prompt) 364
-+ \v(speed) 356, 364
-+ \v(startup) 364
-+ \v(status) 364
-+ \v(sysid) 364
-+ \v(system) 364
-+ \v(fsize) at lower half page 606 should read \v(tfsize)
-+ \v(xversion) 364
-+ BEEP Command 40
-+ SET FLOW 62, 212
-+
-+ Figure II-5 on page 493. The pin assignments of the Mini Din-8
-+ connector are not described anywhere. As noted in the text, these tend
-+ to vary from vendor to vendor. One common arrangement is:
-+
-+ 1. HSKout (Handshake out -- definition depends on software)
-+ 2. HSKin (Handshake in or external clock)
-+ 3. TxD-
-+ 4. Not used
-+ 5. RxD-
-+ 6. TxD+
-+ 7. Not used
-+ 8. RxD+
-+
-+ Note the "balanced pairs" for Receive Data (RxD) and Transmit Data
-+ (TxD), and the utter lack of modem signals. These connectors follow the
-+ RS-423 standard, rather than RS-232. In some arrangements, Pin 1 is
-+ used for DTR and Pin 2 for CD; in others Pin 1 is RTS and Pin 2 is CTS.
-+
-+ Please send reports of other errors to the authors, as well as
-+ suggestions for improvements, additional index entries, and any other
-+ comments:
-+
-+ [648]kermit@columbia.edu
-+
-+APPENDIX V. ADDITIONAL COPYRIGHT NOTICES
-+
-+ The following copyrights cover some of the source code used in the
-+ development of C-Kermit, Kermit 95, or Kermit 95 support libraries.
-+
-+/*****************************************************************************/
-+/* */
-+/* Copyright (c) 1995 by Oy Online Solutions Ltd. */
-+/* */
-+/* Distribution of this source code is strictly forbbidden. Use of this */
-+/* source code is granted to the University of Columbia C-Kermit project */
-+/* to be distributed in binary format only. Please familiarize yourself */
-+/* with the accompanying LICENSE.P file. */
-+/* */
-+/*****************************************************************************/
-+
-+ used for Xmodem, Ymodem, and Zmodem protocol in Kermit 95 (p95.dll,
-+ p2.dll)
-+
-+ Copyright (c) 1997 Stanford University
-+
-+ The use of this software for revenue-generating purposes may require a
-+ license from the owners of the underlying intellectual property.
-+ Specifically, the SRP-3 protocol may not be used for revenue-generating
-+ purposes without a license.
-+
-+ Within that constraint, permission to use, copy, modify, and distribute
-+ this software and its documentation for any purpose is hereby granted
-+ without fee, provided that the above copyright notices and this
-+ permission notice appear in all copies of the software and related
-+ documentation.
-+
-+ THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS-IS" AND WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND,
-+ EXPRESS, IMPLIED OR OTHERWISE, INCLUDING WITHOUT LIMITATION, ANY
-+ WARRANTY OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
-+
-+ IN NO EVENT SHALL STANFORD BE LIABLE FOR ANY SPECIAL, INCIDENTAL,
-+ INDIRECT OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES OF ANY KIND, OR ANY DAMAGES
-+ WHATSOEVER RESULTING FROM LOSS OF USE, DATA OR PROFITS, WHETHER OR NOT
-+ ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF DAMAGE, AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY,
-+ ARISING OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE USE OR PERFORMANCE OF THIS
-+ SOFTWARE.
-+
-+ Used for Secure Remote Password (TM) protocol (SRP) in C-Kermit, Kermit
-+ 95 (k95.exe, k2.exe, k95crypt.dll, k2crypt.dll)
-+
-+ Copyright 1990 by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. All Rights
-+ Reserved.
-+
-+ Export of this software from the United States of America may require a
-+ specific license from the United States Government. It is the
-+ responsibility of any person or organization contemplating export to
-+ obtain such a license before exporting.
-+
-+ WITHIN THAT CONSTRAINT, permission to use, copy, modify, and distribute
-+ this software and its documentation for any purpose and without fee is
-+ hereby granted, provided that the above copyright notice appear in all
-+ copies and that both that copyright notice and this permission notice
-+ appear in supporting documentation, and that the name of M.I.T. not be
-+ used in advertising or publicity pertaining to distribution of the
-+ software without specific, written prior permission. M.I.T. makes no
-+ representations about the suitability of this software for any purpose.
-+ It is provided "as is" without express or implied warranty.
-+
-+ Used for Telnet Authentication Option, Telnet Encryption Option, and
-+ Kerberos (TM) authentication in C-Kermit, Kermit 95 (k95.exe, k2.exe,
-+ k95crypt.dll, k2crypt.dll)
-+
-+ Copyright (c) 1991, 1993 The Regents of the University of California.
-+ All rights reserved.
-+
-+ Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
-+ modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are
-+ met:
-+ 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
-+ notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
-+ 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
-+ notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
-+ documentation and/or other materials provided with the
-+ distribution.
-+ 3. All advertising materials mentioning features or use of this
-+ software must display the following acknowledgement:
-+
-+ This product includes software developed by the University of
-+ California, Berkeley and its contributors.
-+ 4. Neither the name of the University nor the names of its
-+ contributors may be used to endorse or promote products derived
-+ from this software without specific prior written permission.
-+
-+ THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE REGENTS AND CONTRIBUTORS ``AS IS'' AND
-+ ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE
-+ IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR
-+ PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE REGENTS OR CONTRIBUTORS
-+ BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR
-+ CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF
-+ SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR
-+ BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY,
-+ WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR
-+ OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF
-+ ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
-+
-+ Used for Telnet Authentication Option, Telnet Encryption Option, and
-+ Kerberos (TM) authentication in C-Kermit, Kermit 95 (k95.exe, k2.exe,
-+ k95crypt.dll, k2crypt.dll)
-+
-+ Copyright (C) 1995-1997 Eric Young (eay@cryptsoft.com) All rights
-+ reserved.
-+
-+ This package is an DES implementation written by Eric Young
-+ (eay@cryptsoft.com). The implementation was written so as to conform
-+ with MIT's libdes.
-+
-+ This library is free for commercial and non-commercial use as long as
-+ the following conditions are aheared to. The following conditions apply
-+ to all code found in this distribution.
-+
-+ Copyright remains Eric Young's, and as such any Copyright notices in
-+ the code are not to be removed. If this package is used in a product,
-+ Eric Young should be given attribution as the author of that the SSL
-+ library. This can be in the form of a textual message at program
-+ startup or in documentation (online or textual) provided with the
-+ package.
-+
-+ Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
-+ modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are
-+ met:
-+ 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the copyright notice,
-+ this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
-+ 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
-+ notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
-+ documentation and/or other materials provided with the
-+ distribution.
-+ 3. All advertising materials mentioning features or use of this
-+ software must display the following acknowledgement: This product
-+ includes software developed by Eric Young (eay@cryptsoft.com)
-+
-+ THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY ERIC YOUNG ``AS IS'' AND ANY EXPRESS OR
-+ IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED
-+ WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE
-+ DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR
-+ ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL
-+ DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS
-+ OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION)
-+ HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT,
-+ STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING
-+ IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE
-+ POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
-+
-+ The license and distribution terms for any publically available version
-+ or derivative of this code cannot be changed. i.e. this code cannot
-+ simply be copied and put under another distrubution license [including
-+ the GNU Public License.]
-+
-+ The reason behind this being stated in this direct manner is past
-+ experience in code simply being copied and the attribution removed from
-+ it and then being distributed as part of other packages. This
-+ implementation was a non-trivial and unpaid effort.
-+
-+ Used DES encryption in Kermit 95 (k95crypt.dll, k2crypt.dll)
-+ __________________________________________________________________
-+
-+ * This is version 1.1 of CryptoLib
-+ *
-+ * The authors of this software are Jack Lacy, Don Mitchell and Matt Blaze
-+ * Copyright (c) 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995 by AT&T.
-+ * Permission to use, copy, and modify this software without fee
-+ * is hereby granted, provided that this entire notice is included in
-+ * all copies of any software which is or includes a copy or
-+ * modification of this software and in all copies of the supporting
-+ * documentation for such software.
-+ *
-+ * NOTE:
-+ * Some of the algorithms in cryptolib may be covered by patents.
-+ * It is the responsibility of the user to ensure that any required
-+ * licenses are obtained.
-+ *
-+ *
-+ * SOME PARTS OF CRYPTOLIB MAY BE RESTRICTED UNDER UNITED STATES EXPORT
-+ * REGULATIONS.
-+ *
-+ *
-+ * THIS SOFTWARE IS BEING PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED
-+ * WARRANTY. IN PARTICULAR, NEITHER THE AUTHORS NOR AT&T MAKE ANY
-+ * REPRESENTATION OR WARRANTY OF ANY KIND CONCERNING THE MERCHANTABILITY
-+ * OF THIS SOFTWARE OR ITS FITNESS FOR ANY PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
-+
-+ Used for Big Number library in Kermit 95 (k95crypt.dll, k2crypt.dll).
-+
-+ [ [649]Top ] [ [650]C-Kermit ] [ [651]Kermit Home ]
-+ __________________________________________________________________
-+ __________________________________________________________________
-+
-+ CKERMIT70.HTM / The Kermit Project / Columbia University / 8 Feb 2000
-+
-+References
-+
-+ 1. http://www.columbia.edu/
-+ 2. mailto:kermit@columbia.edu
-+ 3. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 4. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/k95.html
-+ 5. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 6. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckscripts.html
-+ 7. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/current.html
-+ 8. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/whatsnew.html
-+ 9. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/faq.html
-+ 10. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/support.html
-+ 11. http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1555581641?ie=UTF8&tag=aleidmoreldom-20&linkCode=as2&camp=1789&creative=9325&creativeASIN=1555581641
-+ 12. mailto:kermit-support@columbia.edu
-+ 13. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/
-+ 14. http://www.kermit-project.org/
-+ 15. http://www.columbia.nyc.ny.us/kermit/
-+ 16. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/f/COPYING.TXT
-+ 17. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/f/ckcmai.c
-+ 18. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#xv
-+ 19. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckb2.htm
-+ 20. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/f/ckcbwr.txt
-+ 21. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/f/ckubwr.txt
-+ 22. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/f/ckvbwr.txt
-+ 23. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/f/ckubwr.txt
-+ 24. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/f/ckermit70.txt
-+ 25. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/f/security.txt
-+ 26. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/security.htm
-+ 27. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/f/iksd.txt
-+ 28. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/iksd.htm
-+ 29. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/cuiksd.htm
-+ 30. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/f/telnet.txt
-+ 31. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/telnet.htm
-+ 32. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/f/COPYING.TXT
-+ 33. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/k95.html
-+ 34. http://www.opensource.org/
-+ 35. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckb2.htm
-+ 36. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#xi
-+ 37. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#xii
-+ 38. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x0
-+ 39. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x1
-+ 40. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x1.0
-+ 41. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x1.1
-+ 42. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x1.2
-+ 43. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x1.3
-+ 44. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x1.4
-+ 45. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x1.5
-+ 46. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x1.5.1
-+ 47. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x1.5.2
-+ 48. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x1.5.3
-+ 49. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x1.5.4
-+ 50. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x1.5.5
-+ 51. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x1.6
-+ 52. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x1.7
-+ 53. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x1.8
-+ 54. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x1.9
-+ 55. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x1.10
-+ 56. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x1.11
-+ 57. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x1.11.1
-+ 58. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x1.11.2
-+ 59. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x1.11.3
-+ 60. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x1.11.4
-+ 61. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x1.11.5
-+ 62. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x1.11.6
-+ 63. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x1.11.7
-+ 64. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x1.12
-+ 65. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x1.13
-+ 66. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x1.14
-+ 67. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x1.15
-+ 68. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x1.16
-+ 69. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x1.17
-+ 70. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x1.18
-+ 71. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x1.19
-+ 72. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x1.20
-+ 73. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x1.21
-+ 74. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x1.22
-+ 75. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x1.22.1
-+ 76. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x1.22.2
-+ 77. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x1.22.3
-+ 78. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x1.22.4
-+ 79. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x1.22.5
-+ 80. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x1.22.6
-+ 81. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x1.22.7
-+ 82. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x1.22.8
-+ 83. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x1.23
-+ 84. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x1.24
-+ 85. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x2
-+ 86. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x2.0
-+ 87. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x2.1
-+ 88. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x2.1.1
-+ 89. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x2.1.2
-+ 90. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x2.1.3
-+ 91. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x2.1.4
-+ 92. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x2.1.5
-+ 93. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x2.1.6
-+ 94. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x2.1.7
-+ 95. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x2.1.8
-+ 96. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x2.1.9
-+ 97. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x2.1.10
-+ 98. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x2.1.11
-+ 99. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x2.1.12
-+ 100. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x2.1.13
-+ 101. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x2.1.14
-+ 102. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x2.1.15
-+ 103. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x2.1.16
-+ 104. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x2.2
-+ 105. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x2.2.1
-+ 106. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x2.2.2
-+ 107. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x2.3
-+ 108. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x2.3.0
-+ 109. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x2.3.1
-+ 110. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x2.3.2
-+ 111. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x2.3.3
-+ 112. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x2.3.4
-+ 113. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x2.3.5
-+ 114. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x2.3.6
-+ 115. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x2.4
-+ 116. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x2.5
-+ 117. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x2.6
-+ 118. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x2.7
-+ 119. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x2.7.0
-+ 120. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x2.7.1
-+ 121. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x2.7.2
-+ 122. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x2.7.3
-+ 123. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x2.7.4
-+ 124. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x2.7.4.1
-+ 125. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x2.7.4.2
-+ 126. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x2.7.4.3
-+ 127. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x2.7.4.4
-+ 128. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x2.7.4.5
-+ 129. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x2.8
-+ 130. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x2.9
-+ 131. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x2.9.1
-+ 132. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x2.9.2
-+ 133. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x2.10
-+ 134. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x2.11
-+ 135. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x2.12
-+ 136. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x2.13
-+ 137. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x2.14
-+ 138. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x2.15
-+ 139. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x3
-+ 140. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x3.1
-+ 141. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x3.2
-+ 142. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x3.3
-+ 143. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x3.4
-+ 144. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4
-+ 145. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.0
-+ 146. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.1
-+ 147. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.1.1
-+ 148. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.1.2
-+ 149. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.1.3
-+ 150. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.2
-+ 151. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.2.1
-+ 152. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.2.1.1
-+ 153. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.2.1.2
-+ 154. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.2.1.3
-+ 155. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.2.2
-+ 156. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.2.2.1
-+ 157. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.2.2.2
-+ 158. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.2.3
-+ 159. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.2.3.1
-+ 160. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.2.3.2
-+ 161. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.2.4
-+ 162. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.2.5
-+ 163. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.2.6
-+ 164. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.2.7
-+ 165. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.2.8
-+ 166. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.2.8.1
-+ 167. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.2.8.2
-+ 168. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.2.8.3
-+ 169. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.2.8.4
-+ 170. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.3
-+ 171. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.3.1
-+ 172. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.3.2
-+ 173. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.3.3
-+ 174. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.3.4
-+ 175. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.4
-+ 176. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.4.1
-+ 177. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.4.1.1
-+ 178. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.4.1.2
-+ 179. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.4.2
-+ 180. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.4.2.1
-+ 181. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.4.2.1.1
-+ 182. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.4.2.1.2
-+ 183. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.4.2.2
-+ 184. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.5
-+ 185. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.5.1
-+ 186. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.5.2
-+ 187. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.5.2.1
-+ 188. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.5.2.2
-+ 189. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.5.3
-+ 190. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.5.4
-+ 191. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.6
-+ 192. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.7
-+ 193. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.7.1
-+ 194. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.7.2
-+ 195. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.7.3
-+ 196. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.8
-+ 197. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.8.1
-+ 198. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.8.2
-+ 199. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.9
-+ 200. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.9.1
-+ 201. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.9.2
-+ 202. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.9.3
-+ 203. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.10
-+ 204. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.11
-+ 205. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.11.1
-+ 206. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.11.2
-+ 207. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.11.3
-+ 208. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.11.4
-+ 209. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.11.5
-+ 210. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.11.6
-+ 211. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.12
-+ 212. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.13
-+ 213. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.14
-+ 214. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.15
-+ 215. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.16
-+ 216. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.17
-+ 217. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.17.1
-+ 218. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.17.2
-+ 219. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.18
-+ 220. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.19
-+ 221. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.20
-+ 222. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.20.1
-+ 223. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.20.2
-+ 224. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.20.2.1
-+ 225. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.20.2.2
-+ 226. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.20.2.3
-+ 227. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.20.2.4
-+ 228. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.20.2.5
-+ 229. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.20.3
-+ 230. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.21
-+ 231. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.22
-+ 232. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.22.1
-+ 233. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.22.2
-+ 234. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.22.3
-+ 235. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.22.4
-+ 236. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.22.5
-+ 237. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.22.6
-+ 238. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.22.7
-+ 239. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.22.8
-+ 240. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.23
-+ 241. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.24
-+ 242. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.25
-+ 243. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x5
-+ 244. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x5.0
-+ 245. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x5.1
-+ 246. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x5.2
-+ 247. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x5.3
-+ 248. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x5.3.1
-+ 249. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x5.3.2
-+ 250. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x5.4
-+ 251. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x5.5
-+ 252. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x5.6
-+ 253. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x5.7
-+ 254. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x6
-+ 255. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x6.0
-+ 256. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x6.1
-+ 257. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x6.2
-+ 258. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x6.3
-+ 259. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x6.4
-+ 260. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x6.5
-+ 261. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x6.6
-+ 262. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x6.6.1
-+ 263. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x6.6.2
-+ 264. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x6.6.2
-+ 265. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x6.6.3
-+ 266. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x6.6.4
-+ 267. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x6.6.5
-+ 268. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x6.6.5.1
-+ 269. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x6.6.5.2
-+ 270. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x6.6.5.3
-+ 271. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x6.6.5.4
-+ 272. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x6.6.5.5
-+ 273. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x6.7
-+ 274. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7
-+ 275. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.0
-+ 276. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.1
-+ 277. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.1.1
-+ 278. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.1.2
-+ 279. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.1.3
-+ 280. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.1.4
-+ 281. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.2
-+ 282. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.3
-+ 283. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.4
-+ 284. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.5
-+ 285. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.6
-+ 286. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.7
-+ 287. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.8
-+ 288. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.9
-+ 289. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.9.1
-+ 290. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.9.2
-+ 291. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.10
-+ 292. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.10.1
-+ 293. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.10.2
-+ 294. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.10.3
-+ 295. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.10.4
-+ 296. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.10.5
-+ 297. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.10.6
-+ 298. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.10.7
-+ 299. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.10.8
-+ 300. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.10.9
-+ 301. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.10.10
-+ 302. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.11
-+ 303. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.12
-+ 304. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.13
-+ 305. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.14
-+ 306. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.15
-+ 307. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.16
-+ 308. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.17
-+ 309. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.18
-+ 310. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.19
-+ 311. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.20
-+ 312. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.20.1
-+ 313. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.20.2
-+ 314. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.21
-+ 315. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.22
-+ 316. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.23
-+ 317. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.24
-+ 318. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.25
-+ 319. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.26
-+ 320. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.26.1
-+ 321. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.26.2
-+ 322. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.27
-+ 323. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x8
-+ 324. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x9
-+ 325. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x9.0
-+ 326. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x9.1
-+ 327. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x9.2
-+ 328. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x9.3
-+ 329. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x10
-+ 330. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#xiii
-+ 331. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#xiii.1
-+ 332. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#xiii.1.1
-+ 333. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#xiii.1.2
-+ 334. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#xiii.1.2.1
-+ 335. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#xiii.1.2.2
-+ 336. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#xiii.1.2.3
-+ 337. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#xiii.2
-+ 338. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#xiv
-+ 339. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#xv
-+ 340. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckb2.htm
-+ 341. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckbreviews.html
-+ 342. http://www.bhusa.com/
-+ 343. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/manuals.html#ckde
-+ 344. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/manuals.html#ktb
-+ 345. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/news.html
-+ 346. news:comp.protocols.kermit.announce
-+ 347. news:comp.protocols.kermit.misc
-+ 348. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckb2.htm
-+ 349. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4
-+ 350. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.3
-+ 351. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.23
-+ 352. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.5.1
-+ 353. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x1.5
-+ 354. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.7.1
-+ 355. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.9.
-+ 356. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckb2.htm
-+ 357. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.9.2
-+ 358. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x2.15
-+ 359. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x9.1
-+ 360. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x1.6
-+ 361. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.4
-+ 362. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.9.1
-+ 363. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#mjd
-+ 364. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#mjd
-+ 365. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.9
-+ 366. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckb2.htm
-+ 367. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckb2.htm
-+ 368. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.5
-+ 369. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x2.12
-+ 370. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x1.5
-+ 371. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.9.1
-+ 372. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x6.6.5
-+ 373. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.9
-+ 374. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.18
-+ 375. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.4
-+ 376. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x1.15
-+ 377. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.3
-+ 378. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.3
-+ 379. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.10.7
-+ 380. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.1
-+ 381. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.9.1
-+ 382. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/f/ckccfg.txt
-+ 383. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/f/ckccfg.txt
-+ 384. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x1.22.4
-+ 385. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x1.22.5
-+ 386. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckb2.htm
-+ 387. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x1.22.5
-+ 388. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.12
-+ 389. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x2.1.16
-+ 390. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x2.7
-+ 391. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x2.3.5
-+ 392. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.5
-+ 393. http://www.telefonica.es/cambiodenumeracion/
-+ 394. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.5
-+ 395. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckb2.htm
-+ 396. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x2.2.2
-+ 397. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x2.1.11
-+ 398. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x2.1.13
-+ 399. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x2.1.12
-+ 400. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckb2.htm
-+ 401. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x2.1.1
-+ 402. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckb2.htm
-+ 403. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckb2.htm
-+ 404. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x2.1.7
-+ 405. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x2.1.6
-+ 406. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckb2.htm
-+ 407. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/f/telnet.txt
-+ 408. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/telnet.htm
-+ 409. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/f/telnet.txt
-+ 410. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/telnet.htm
-+ 411. ftp://ftp.isi.edu/in-notes/rfc1572.txt
-+ 412. ftp://ftp.isi.edu/in-notes/rfc779.txt
-+ 413. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckb2.htm
-+ 414. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x2.10
-+ 415. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x2.8
-+ 416. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x1.5
-+ 417. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.20
-+ 418. http://www.psy.uq.oz.au/~ftp/Crypto/
-+ 419. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/security.htm
-+ 420. http://srp.stanford.edu/srp/
-+ 421. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x2.7.1,
-+ 422. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/f/ckccfg.txt
-+ 423. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/security.htm
-+ 424. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckb2.htm
-+ 425. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x2.7
-+ 426. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x2.0
-+ 427. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/f/ckuins.txt
-+ 428. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/f/ckubwr.txt
-+ 429. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/f/ckuins.txt
-+ 430. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/iksd.html#x4.2
-+ 431. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/iksd.html
-+ 432. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.2.8.1
-+ 433. ftp://ftp.isi.edu/in-notes/rfc1945.txt
-+ 434. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x1.5
-+ 435. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x3.2
-+ 436. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x3.2
-+ 437. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckb2.htm
-+ 438. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckb2.htm
-+ 439. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x5.4
-+ 440. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/f/ckubwr.txt
-+ 441. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.10
-+ 442. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.7.1
-+ 443. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.7.3
-+ 444. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.3
-+ 445. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.10
-+ 446. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.11
-+ 447. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.15
-+ 448. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.2.4
-+ 449. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.7
-+ 450. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.2.3
-+ 451. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.2.1.3
-+ 452. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckb2.htm
-+ 453. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.2.2
-+ 454. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x1.5
-+ 455. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.2.8.2
-+ 456. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.3
-+ 457. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.10
-+ 458. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.11
-+ 459. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.15
-+ 460. http://www.telstra.com.au/docs/PGP/
-+ 461. http://www.telstra.com.au/docs/PGP/pgpdoc2/pgpdoc2_17.html
-+ 462. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/security.htm
-+ 463. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x2.7
-+ 464. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckb2.htm
-+ 465. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x2.14
-+ 466. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x1.23
-+ 467. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.7
-+ 468. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckb2.htm
-+ 469. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckb2.htm
-+ 470. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.9
-+ 471. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckb2.htm
-+ 472. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x1.5.4
-+ 473. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.3
-+ 474. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x1.5.5
-+ 475. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.5
-+ 476. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.9
-+ 477. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x1.5.4
-+ 478. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.9
-+ 479. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x1.5.4
-+ 480. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x1.5.5
-+ 481. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckb2.htm
-+ 482. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckb2.htm
-+ 483. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x1.5
-+ 484. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x1.6
-+ 485. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.10
-+ 486. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.10.11
-+ 487. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x1.6
-+ 488. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.2.2
-+ 489. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.11
-+ 490. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x1.5.4
-+ 491. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.9.1
-+ 492. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.0.6
-+ 493. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.2
-+ 494. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.1
-+ 495. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.7.1
-+ 496. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckb2.htm
-+ 497. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x1.5
-+ 498. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.2.2
-+ 499. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.7.1
-+ 500. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.2
-+ 501. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.10
-+ 502. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.2.2
-+ 503. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.7.1
-+ 504. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.2
-+ 505. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.10
-+ 506. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x1.11.5
-+ 507. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.0.6
-+ 508. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.11
-+ 509. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.9.1
-+ 510. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.11.3
-+ 511. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.9
-+ 512. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.9
-+ 513. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.5.1
-+ 514. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.10
-+ 515. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.10.5
-+ 516. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.10.3
-+ 517. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.10.5
-+ 518. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckb2.htm
-+ 519. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.3
-+ 520. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.10
-+ 521. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.3
-+ 522. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.10
-+ 523. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.15
-+ 524. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.18
-+ 525. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.20
-+ 526. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.20
-+ 527. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.20
-+ 528. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.19
-+ 529. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.16
-+ 530. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.19
-+ 531. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.20.2.3
-+ 532. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x1.5
-+ 533. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x6.6.5.4
-+ 534. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.22.2
-+ 535. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.22.3
-+ 536. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckb2.htm
-+ 537. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckb2.htm
-+ 538. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x9.3
-+ 539. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x5.2.1
-+ 540. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.5.1
-+ 541. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.5.2
-+ 542. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x6.6
-+ 543. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#xiii
-+ 544. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#xiii
-+ 545. ftp://ftp.isi.edu/in-notes/rfc1489.txt
-+ 546. ftp://ftp.isi.edu/in-notes/rfc2319.txt
-+ 547. http://www.unicode.org/
-+ 548. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x6.6.2
-+ 549. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x6.6.5.1
-+ 550. ftp://ftp.isi.edu/in-notes/rfc2640.txt
-+ 551. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x6.6.2
-+ 552. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x6.0
-+ 553. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x6.5
-+ 554. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x6.4
-+ 555. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckb2.htm
-+ 556. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.21
-+ 557. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x6.5
-+ 558. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x2.8
-+ 559. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.7
-+ 560. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.2
-+ 561. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x1.19
-+ 562. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.9
-+ 563. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.1
-+ 564. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.2
-+ 565. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.1
-+ 566. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.2
-+ 567. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x2.1.11
-+ 568. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x2.10
-+ 569. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#ferrstring
-+ 570. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.2.5
-+ 571. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x2.1.10
-+ 572. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x9.1
-+ 573. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.23
-+ 574. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.23
-+ 575. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x1.22
-+ 576. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x1.6
-+ 577. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.23
-+ 578. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.24
-+ 579. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.24
-+ 580. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.2.3
-+ 581. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ck90.html
-+ 582. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.12
-+ 583. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.9
-+ 584. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckb2.htm
-+ 585. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.11.3
-+ 586. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.11.3
-+ 587. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.5
-+ 588. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.10.7
-+ 589. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.10.7
-+ 590. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.2.8.4
-+ 591. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.2.5
-+ 592. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.8
-+ 593. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.9.1
-+ 594. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckb2.htm
-+ 595. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.19
-+ 596. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.16
-+ 597. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.9.1
-+ 598. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.5
-+ 599. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.3
-+ 600. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.11.3
-+ 601. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.5.1
-+ 602. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.10
-+ 603. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.10.10
-+ 604. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x1.5
-+ 605. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.23
-+ 606. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.10.7
-+ 607. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.10.7
-+ 608. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.11.3
-+ 609. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.10.11
-+ 610. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.9
-+ 611. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.10.3
-+ 612. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.3
-+ 613. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.9.2
-+ 614. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckb2.htm
-+ 615. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.17.2
-+ 616. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x1.22
-+ 617. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.7.1
-+ 618. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x1.22
-+ 619. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.3
-+ 620. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.9
-+ 621. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x1.22
-+ 622. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x1.6
-+ 623. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.5
-+ 624. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.5
-+ 625. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.19
-+ 626. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.9.1
-+ 627. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x9.3
-+ 628. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.5
-+ 629. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckb2.htm
-+ 630. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html
-+ 631. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.4
-+ 632. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.20.2
-+ 633. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.10.5
-+ 634. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.10.9
-+ 635. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x1.10
-+ 636. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x1.5
-+ 637. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.7.1
-+ 638. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/iksd.html
-+ 639. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.19
-+ 640. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.10
-+ 641. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.11
-+ 642. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.3
-+ 643. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/gkermit.html
-+ 644. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.20
-+ 645. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/gkermit.html
-+ 646. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckb2.htm
-+ 647. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.3
-+ 648. mailto:kermit@columbia.edu
-+ 649. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#top
-+ 650. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 651. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
---- /dev/null
-+++ ckermit-301/ckccfg.txt
-@@ -0,0 +1,1738 @@
-+
-+ [1]The Columbia Crown The Kermit Project | Columbia University
-+ 612 West 115th Street, New York NY 10025 USA o [2]kermit@columbia.edu
-+ ...since 1981
-+ [3]Home [4]Kermit 95 [5]C-Kermit [6]Scripts [7]Current [8]New [9]FAQ
-+ [10]Support
-+
-+C-Kermit Configuration Options
-+
-+ As of: C-Kermit 9.0.300, 30 June 2011
-+ This page last updated: Tue Jun 28 08:48:49 2011 (New York USA Time)
-+
-+ IF YOU ARE READING A PLAIN-TEXT version of this document, note that
-+ this file is a plain-text dump of a Web page. You can visit the
-+ original (and possibly more up-to-date) Web page here:
-+
-+ [11]http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html
-+
-+ [ [12]C-Kermit Home ] [ [13]Kermit Home ]
-+
-+ CONTENTS
-+
-+ 1. [14]FILE TRANSFER
-+ 2. [15]SERIAL COMMUNICATION SPEEDS
-+ 3. [16]FULLSCREEN FILE TRANSFER DISPLAY
-+ 4. [17]CHARACTER SETS
-+ 5. [18]APC EXECUTION
-+ 6. [19]PROGRAM SIZE
-+ 7. [20]MODEM DIALING
-+ 8. [21]NETWORK SUPPORT
-+ 9. [22]EXCEPTION HANDLING
-+ 10. [23]SECURITY FEATURES
-+ 11. [24]ENABLING SELECT()
-+ 12. [25]I/O REDIRECTION
-+ 13. [26]FLOATING-POINT NUMBERS, TIMERS, AND ARITHMETIC
-+ 14. [27]SPECIAL CONFIGURATIONS
-+ I. [28]SUMMARY OF COMPILE-TIME OPTIONS
-+
-+ OVERVIEW
-+
-+ This document describes configuration options for C-Kermit (5A and
-+ later). The major topics covered include program size (and how to
-+ reduce it), how to include or exclude particular features, notes on
-+ serial-port, modem, and network support, and a list of C-Kermit's
-+ compile-time options.
-+
-+ For details about your particular operating system, also see the
-+ system-specific installation instructions file, such as the
-+ [29]C-Kermit Installation Instructions for Unix.
-+
-+ [ [30]C-Kermit Home ] [ [31]Kermit Home ]
-+
-+ 1. FILE TRANSFER
-+
-+ [ [32]Top ] [ [33]Contents ] [ [34]Next ] [ [35]Previous ]
-+
-+ Prior to version 7.0, C-Kermit was always built with the most
-+ conservative Kermit file-transfer protocol defaults on every platform:
-+ no control-character prefixing, 94-byte packets, and a window size of
-+ 1.
-+
-+ Starting in version 7.0, fast settings are the default. To override
-+ these at compile time, include:
-+
-+ -DNOFAST
-+
-+ in the C compiler CFLAGS. Even with the fast defaults, C-Kermit
-+ automatically drops down to whatever window and packet sizes requested
-+ by the other Kermit, if these are smaller, when sending files (except
-+ for control-character unprefixing, which is not negotiated, and which
-+ is now set to CAUTIOUS rather than NONE at startup). C-Kermit's
-+ settings prevail when it is receiving.
-+
-+ [ [36]C-Kermit Home ] [ [37]Kermit Home ]
-+
-+ 2. SERIAL COMMUNICATION SPEEDS
-+
-+ [ [38]Top ] [ [39]Contents ] [ [40]Next ] [ [41]Previous ]
-+
-+ As of 6 September 1997, a new simplified mechanism for obtaining the
-+ list of legal serial interface speeds is in place:
-+
-+ * If the symbol TTSPDLIST is defined, the system-dependent routine
-+ ttspdlist() is called at program initialization to obtain the list.
-+ * This symbol should be defined only for C-Kermit implementations
-+ that have implemented the ttspdlist() function, typically in the
-+ ck?tio.c module. See [42]ckutio.c for an example.
-+ * TTSPDLIST is automatically defined in [43]ckcdeb.h for UNIX. Add
-+ the appropriate #ifdefs for other platforms when the corresponding
-+ ttspdlist() functions are filled in.
-+ * If TTSPDLIST is (or normally would be) defined, the old code
-+ (described below) can still be selected by defining NOTTSPDLIST.
-+
-+ The ttspdlist() function can obtain the speeds in any way that works.
-+ For example, based simply on #ifdef Bnnnn..#endif (in UNIX). Although
-+ it might be better to actually check each speed against the currently
-+ selected hardware interface before allowing it in the array, there is
-+ usually no passive and/or reliable and safe way to do this, and so it's
-+ better to let some speeds into the array that might not work, than it
-+ is to erroneously exclude others. Speeds that don't work are caught
-+ when the SET SPEED command is actually given.
-+
-+ Note that this scheme does not necessarily rule out split speed
-+ operation, but effectively it does in C-Kermit as presently constituted
-+ since there are no commands to set input and output speed separately
-+ (except the special case "set speed 75/1200").
-+
-+ Note that some platforms, notably AIX 4.2 and 4.3, implement high
-+ serial speeds transparently to the application, e.g. by mapping 50 bps
-+ to 57600 bps, and so on.
-+
-+ That's the whole deal. When TTSPDLIST is not defined, the following
-+ applies:
-+
-+ Speeds are defined in two places: the SET SPEED keyword list in the
-+ command parser (as of this writing, in the [44]ckuus3.c source file),
-+ and in the system- dependent communications i/o module, ck?tio.c,
-+ functions ttsspd() (set speed) and ttgspd() (get speed). The following
-+ speeds are assumed to be available in all versions:
-+
-+ 0, 110, 300, 600, 1200, 2400, 4800, 9600
-+
-+ If one or more of these speeds is not supported by your system, you'll
-+ need to change the source code (this has never happened so far). Other
-+ speeds that are not common to all systems have Kermit-specific symbols:
-+
-+ Symbol Symbol
-+ Speed (bps) to enable to disable
-+ 50 BPS_50 NOB_50
-+ 75 BPS_75 NOB_75
-+ 75/1200 BPS_7512 NOB_7512
-+ 134.5 BPS_134 NOB_134
-+ 150 BPS_150 NOB_150
-+ 200 BPS_200 NOB_200
-+ 1800 BPS_1800 NOB_1800
-+ 3600 BPS_3600 NOB_3600
-+ 7200 BPS_7200 NOB_7200
-+ 14400 BPS_14K NOB_14K
-+ 19200 BPS_19K NOB_19K
-+ 28800 BPS_28K NOB_28K
-+ 38400 BPS_38K NOB_38K
-+ 57600 BPS_57K NOB_57K
-+ 76800 BPS_76K NOB_76K
-+ 115200 BPS_115K NOB_155K
-+ 230400 BPS_230K NOB_230K
-+ 460800 BPS_460K NOB_460K
-+ 921600 BPS_921K NOB_921K
-+
-+ The [45]ckcdeb.h header file contains default speed configurations for
-+ the many systems that C-Kermit supports. You can override these
-+ defaults by (a) editing ckcdeb.h, or (b) defining the appropriate
-+ enabling and/or disabling symbols on the CC command line, for example:
-+
-+ -DBPS_14400 -DNOB_115200
-+
-+ or the "make" command line, e.g.:
-+
-+ make blah "KFLAGS=-DBPS_14400 -DNOB_115200"
-+
-+ Note: some speeds have no symbols defined for them, because they have
-+ never been needed: 12.5bps, 45.5bps, 20000bps, etc. These can easily be
-+ added if required (but they will work only if the OS supports them).
-+
-+ IMPORTANT: Adding one of these flags at compile time does not
-+ necessarily mean that you will be able to use that speed. A particular
-+ speed is usable only if your underlying operating system supports it.
-+ In particular, it needs to be defined in the appropriate system header
-+ file (e.g. in UNIX, cd to /usr/include and grep for B9600 in *.h and
-+ sys/*.h to find the header file that contains the definitions for the
-+ supported speeds), and supported by the serial device driver, and of
-+ course by the physical device itself.
-+
-+ ALSO IMPORTANT: The list of available speeds is independent of how they
-+ are set. The many UNIXes, for example, offer a wide variety of APIs
-+ that are BSD-based, SYSV-based, POSIX-based, and purely made up. See
-+ the ttsspd(), ttgspd(), and ttspdlist() routines in [46]ckutio.c for
-+ illustrations.
-+
-+ The latest entries in this horserace are the tcgetspeed() and
-+ ttsetspeed() routines found in UnixWare 7. Unlike other methods, they
-+ accept the entire range of integers (longs really) as speed values,
-+ rather than certain codes, and return an error if the number is not, in
-+ fact, a legal speed for the device/driver in question. In this case,
-+ there is no way to build a list of legal speeds at compile time, since
-+ no Bnnnn symbols are defined (except for "depracated, legacy"
-+ interfaces like ioctl()) and so the legal speed list must be enumerated
-+ in the code -- see ttspdlist() in [47]ckutio.c.
-+
-+ [ [48]C-Kermit Home ] [ [49]Kermit Home ]
-+
-+ 3. FULLSCREEN FILE TRANSFER DISPLAY
-+
-+ [ [50]Top ] [ [51]Contents ] [ [52]Next ] [ [53]Previous ]
-+
-+ New to edit 180 is support for an MS-DOS-Kermit-like local-mode full
-+ screen file transfer display, accomplished using the curses library, or
-+ something equivalent (for example, the Screen Manager on DEC VMS). To
-+ enable this feature, include the following in your CFLAGS:
-+
-+ -DCK_CURSES
-+
-+ and then change your build procedure (if necessary) to include the
-+ necessary libraries. For example, in Unix these are usually "curses" or
-+ "ncurses" (and more recenlty, "ncursesw" and "slang"), perhaps also
-+ "termcap", "termlib", or "tinfo":
-+
-+ "LIBS= -lcurses -ltermcap"
-+ "LIBS= -lcurses -ltermlib"
-+ "LIBS= -lncurses"
-+ "LIBS= -ltermlib"
-+ "LIBS= -ltinfo"
-+
-+ "man curses" for further information, and search through the Unix
-+ [54]makefile for "CK_CURSES" to see many examples, and also see the
-+ relevant sections of the [55]Unix C-Kermit Installation Instructions,
-+ particularly Sections [56]4 and [57]9.2.
-+
-+ There might still be a complication. Some implementations of curses
-+ reserve the right to alter the buffering on the output file without
-+ restoring it afterwards, which can leave Kermit's command processing in
-+ a mess when the prompt comes back after a fullscreen file transfer
-+ display. The typical symptom is that characters you type at the prompt
-+ after a local-mode file transfer (i.e. after seeing the curses
-+ file-transfer display) do not echo until you press the Return (Enter)
-+ key. If this happens to you, try adding
-+
-+ -DCK_NEWTERM
-+
-+ to your makefile target (see comments in screenc() in [58]ckuusx.c for
-+ an explanation).
-+
-+ If that doesn't fix the problem, then use a bigger hammer and replace
-+ -DCK_NEWTERM with:
-+
-+ -DNONOSETBUF
-+
-+ which tells Kermit to force stdout to be unbuffered so CBREAK mode can
-+ work.
-+
-+ In SCO Xenix and SCO UNIX, there are two separate curses libraries, one
-+ based on termcap and the other based on terminfo. The default library,
-+ usually terminfo, is established when the development system is
-+ installed. To manually select terminfo (at compile time):
-+
-+ compile -DM_TERMINFO and link -ltinfo
-+
-+ and to manually select termcap:
-+
-+ compile -DM_TERMCAP and link -ltcap -ltermlib
-+
-+ <curses.h> looks at M_TERMINFO and M_TERMCAP to decide which header
-+ files to use. /usr/lib/libcurses.a is a link to either libtinfo.a or
-+ libtcap.a. The C-Kermit compilation options must agree with the version
-+ of the curses library that is actually installed.
-+
-+ NOTE: If you are doing an ANSI-C compilation and you get compile time
-+ warnings like the following:
-+
-+ Warning: function not declared in ckuusx.c: wmove, printw, wclrtoeol,
-+ wclear, wrefresh, endwin, etc...
-+
-+ it means that your <curses.h> file does not contain prototypes for
-+ these functions. The warnings should be harmless.
-+
-+ New to edit 190 is the ability to refresh a messed-up full-screen
-+ display, e.g. after receiving a broadcast message. This depends on the
-+ curses package including the wrefresh() and clearok() functions and the
-+ curscr variable. If your version has these, or has code to simulate
-+ them, then add:
-+
-+ -DCK_WREFRESH
-+
-+ The curses and termcap libraries add considerable size to the program
-+ image (e.g. about 20K on a SUN-4, 40K on a 386). On some small systems,
-+ such as the AT&T 6300 PLUS, curses can push Kermit over the edge...
-+ even though it compiles, loads, and runs correctly, its increased size
-+ apparently makes it swap constantly, slowing it down to a crawl, even
-+ when the curses display is not in use. Some new makefile targets have
-+ been added to take care of this (e.g. sys3upcshcc), but similar tricks
-+ might be necessary in other cases too.
-+
-+ On the curses file-transfer display, just below the "thermometer", is a
-+ running display of the transfer rate, as a flat quotient of file
-+ characters per elapsed seconds so far. You can change this to an
-+ average that gives greater weight to recent history (0.25 *
-+ instantaneous cps + 0.75 * historical cps) by adding -DCPS_WEIGHTED to
-+ your CFLAGS (sorry folks, this one is not worth a SET command). You can
-+ choose a second type of weighted average in which the weighting smooths
-+ out progressively as the transfer progresses by adding -DCPS_VINCE to
-+ -DCPS_WEIGHTED.
-+
-+ An alternative to curses is also available at compile time, but should
-+ be selected if your version of Kermit is to be run in local mode only
-+ in an ANSI terminal environment, for example on a desktop workstation
-+ that has an ANSI console driver. To select this option in place of
-+ curses, define the symbol MYCURSES:
-+
-+ -DMYCURSES
-+
-+ instead of CK_CURSES. The MYCURSES option uses built-in ANSI (VT100)
-+ escape sequences, and depends upon your terminal or console driver to
-+ interpret them correctly.
-+
-+ In some C-Kermit builds, we replace printf() via #define printf...
-+ However, this can cause conflicts with the [n]curses header files.
-+ Various hacks are required to get around this -- see [59]ckutio.c,
-+ [60]ckufio.c, [61]ckuusx.c, [62]ckucmd.c, etc.
-+
-+ [ [63]C-Kermit Home ] [ [64]Kermit Home ]
-+
-+ 4. CHARACTER SETS
-+
-+ [ [65]Top ] [ [66]Contents ] [ [67]Next ] [ [68]Previous ]
-+
-+ Since version 5A, C-Kermit has included support for conversion of
-+ character sets for Western European languages (i.e. languages that
-+ originated in Western Europe, but are now also spoken in the Western
-+ Hemisphere and other parts of the world), via ISO 8859-1 Latin Alphabet
-+ 1, for Eastern European languages (ISO Latin-2), Hebrew (and Yiddish),
-+ Greek, and Cyrillic-alphabet languages (ISO Latin/Cyrillic). Many file
-+ (local) character sets are supported: ISO 646 7-bit national sets, IBM
-+ code pages, Apple, DEC, DG, NeXT, etc.
-+
-+ To build Kermit with no character-set translation at all, include
-+ -DNOCSETS in the CFLAGS. To build with no Latin-2, add -DNOLATIN2. To
-+ build with no Cyrillic, add -DNOCYRIL. To omit Hebrew, add -DNOHEBREW.
-+ If -DNOCSETS is *not* included, you'll always get LATIN1. To build with
-+ no KANJI include -DNOKANJI. There is presently no way to include
-+ Latin-2, Cyrillic, Hebrew, or Kanji without also including Latin-1.
-+
-+ [69]Unicode support was added in C-Kermit 7.0, and it adds a fair
-+ amount of tables and code (and this is only a "Level 1" implementation
-+ -- a higher level would also require building in the entire Unicode
-+ database). On a PC with RH 5.2 Linux, building C-Kermit 7.0, we get the
-+ following sizes:
-+
-+ NOCSETS NOUNICODE NOKANJI Before After
-+ [ ] [ ] [ ] 1329014 (Full)
-+ [ ] [ ] [ X ] 1325686 (Unicode but no Kanji)
-+ [ ] [ X ] [ ] 1158837 (All charsets except Unicode)
-+ [ X ] [ x ] [ x ] 1090845 (NOCSETS implies the other two)
-+
-+ Note, by the way, that NOKANJI without NOUNICODE only removes the
-+ non-Unicode Kanji sets (Shift-JIS, EUC-JP, JIS-7, etc). Kanji is still
-+ representable in UCS-2 and UTF-8.
-+
-+ [ [70]C-Kermit Home ] [ [71]Kermit Home ]
-+
-+ 5. APC EXECUTION
-+
-+ [ [72]Top ] [ [73]Contents ] [ [74]Next ] [ [75]Previous ]
-+
-+ The Kermit CONNECT and INPUT commands are coded to execute Application
-+ Program Command escape sequences from the host:
-+
-+ <ESC>_<text><ESC>\
-+
-+ where <text> is a C-Kermit command, or a list of C-Kermit commands
-+ separated by commas, up to about 1K in length.
-+
-+ To date, this feature has been included in the OS/2, Windows, VMS,
-+ OS-9, and Unix versions, for which the symbol:
-+
-+ CK_APC
-+
-+ is defined automatically in [76]ckuusr.h. For OS/2, APC is enabled at
-+ runtime by default, for UNIX it is disabled. It is controlled by the
-+ SET TERMINAL APC command. Configuring APC capability into a version
-+ that gets it by default (because CK_APC is defined in [77]ckuusr.h) can
-+ be overridden by including:
-+
-+ -DNOAPC
-+
-+ on the CC command line.
-+
-+ C-Kermit's autodownload feature depends on the APC feature, so
-+ deconfiguring APC also disables autodownload (it doesn't use APC escape
-+ sequences, but uses the APC switching mechanism internally).
-+
-+ [ [78]C-Kermit Home ] [ [79]Kermit Home ]
-+
-+ 6. PROGRAM SIZE
-+
-+ [ [80]Top ] [ [81]Contents ] [ [82]Next ] [ [83]Previous ]
-+
-+ SECTION CONTENTS
-+
-+ 6.1. [84]Feature Selection
-+ 6.2. [85]Changing Buffer Sizes
-+ 6.3. [86]Other Size-Related Items
-+ 6.4. [87]Space/Time Tradeoffs
-+
-+ (Also see [88]Section 4)
-+
-+ Each release of C-Kermit is larger than the last. On some computers
-+ (usually old ones) the size of the program prevents it from being
-+ successfully linked and loaded. On some others (also usually old ones),
-+ it occupies so much memory that it is constantly swapping or paging. In
-+ such cases, you can reduce C-Kermit's size in various ways, outlined in
-+ this section. The following options can cut down on the program's size
-+ at compile time by removing features or changing the size of storage
-+ areas.
-+
-+ If you are reading this section because all you want is a small, fast,
-+ quick-to-load Kermit file-transfer application for the remote end of
-+ your connection, and the remote end is Unix based, take a look at
-+ G-Kermit:
-+
-+ [89]http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/gkermit.html
-+
-+ 6.1. Feature Selection
-+
-+ Features can be added or removed by defining symbols on the CC (C
-+ compiler) command line. "-D" is the normal CC directive to define a
-+ symbol so, for example, "-DNODEBUG" defines the symbol NODEBUG. Some C
-+ compilers might use different syntax, e.g. "-d NODEBUG" or
-+ "/DEFINE=NODEBUG". For C compilers that do not accept command-line
-+ definitions, you can put the corresponding #define statements in the
-+ file ckcsym.h, for example:
-+
-+ #define NODEBUG
-+
-+ The following table shows the savings achieved when building C-Kermit
-+ 8.0 (Beta.04) with selected feature-deselection switches on an
-+ Intel-based PC with Red Hat Linux 7.0 and gcc 2.96. The sizes are for
-+ non-security builds. The fully configured non-security build is 2127408
-+ bytes.
-+
-+ Option Size Savings Effect
-+ NOICP 545330 74.4% No Interactive Command Parser (command-line only)
-+ NOLOCAL 1539994 27.6% No making connections.
-+ NOXFER 1551108 27.1% No file transfer.
-+ IKSDONLY 1566608 26.4% Internet Kermit Server only.
-+ NOCSETS 1750097 17.7% No character-set conversion.
-+ NOSPL 1800293 15.4% No Script Programming Language.
-+ NONET 1808575 15.0% No making network connections.
-+ NOUNICODE 1834426 13.8% No Unicode character-set conversion.
-+ NOHELP 1837877 13.6% No built-in help text.
-+ NODEBUG 1891669 11.1% No debug log.
-+ NOFRILLS 1918966 9.8% No "frills".
-+ NOFTP 1972496 7.3% No FTP client.
-+ NODIAL 1984488 6.7% No automatic modem dialing.
-+ NOPUSH 2070184 2.7% No shell access, running external programs, etc.
-+ NOIKSD 2074129 2.5% No Internet Kermit Server capability.
-+ NOHTTP 2082610 2.1% No HTTP client.
-+ NOFLOAT 2091332 1.7% No floating-point arithmetic.
-+ NOCHANNELIO 2095978 1.5% No FOPEN/FREAD/FWRITE/FCLOSE, etc.
-+ MINIDIAL 2098035 1.4% No built-in support for many kinds of modems.
-+ NOSERVER 2098987 1.3% No server mode.
-+ NOSEXP 2105898 1.0% No S-Expressions.
-+ NOPTY 2117743 0.5% No pseudoterminal support.
-+ NORLOGIN 2121089 0.3% No RLOGIN connections.
-+ NOOLDMODEMS 2124038 0.2% No built-in support for old kinds of modems.
-+ NOSSH 2125696 0.1% No SSH command.
-+
-+ And here are a few combinations
-+
-+ Options Size Savings Effect
-+ NODEBUG NOICP NOCSETS NOLOCAL 281641 86.7% No debug log, parser,
-+ character sets, or making connections.
-+ NOICP NOCSETS NOLOCAL 376468 82.3% No parser, character sets, or making
-+ connections.
-+ NOICP NOCSETS NONET 427510 79.9% No parser, character sets, or network
-+ connections.
-+ NOSPL NOCSETS 1423784 33.1% No script language, or character sets.
-+
-+ -DNOFRILLS removes various command synonyms; the following top-level
-+ commands: CLEAR, DELETE, DISABLE, ENABLE, GETOK, MAIL, RENAME, TYPE,
-+ WHO; and the following REMOTE commands: KERMIT, LOGIN, LOGOUT, PRINT,
-+ TYPE, WHO.
-+
-+ 6.2. Changing Buffer Sizes
-+
-+ Most modern computers have so much memory that (a) there is no need to
-+ scrimp and save, and (b) C-Kermit, even when fully configured, is
-+ relatively small by today's standards.
-+
-+ Two major factors affect Kermit's size: feature selection and buffer
-+ sizes. Buffer sizes affect such things as the maximum length for a
-+ Kermit packet, the maximum length for a command, for a macro, for the
-+ name of a macro, etc. Big buffer sizes are used when the following
-+ symbol is defined:
-+
-+ BIGBUFOK
-+
-+ as it is by default for most modern platforms (Linux, AIX 4 and 5,
-+ HP-UX 10 and 11, Solaris, etc) in [90]ckuusr.h. If your build does not
-+ get big buffers automatically (SHOW FEATURES tells you), you can
-+ include them by rebuilding with BIGBUFOK defined; e.g. in Unix:
-+
-+ make xxxx KFLAGS=-DBIGBUFOK
-+
-+ where xxxx is the makefile target. On the other hand, if you want to
-+ build without big buffers when they normally would be selected, use:
-+
-+ make xxxx KFLAGS=-DNOBIGBUF
-+
-+ There are options to control Kermit's packet buffer allocations. The
-+ following symbols are defined in [91]ckcker.h in such a way that you
-+ can override them by redefining them in CFLAGS:
-+
-+ -DMAXSP=xxxx - Maximum send-packet length.
-+ -DMAXRP=xxxx - Maximum receive-packet length.
-+ -DSBSIZ=xxxx - Total allocation for send-packet buffers.
-+ -DRBSIZ=xxxx - Total allocation for receive-packet buffers.
-+
-+ The defaults depend on the platform.
-+
-+ Using dynamic allocation (-DDYNAMIC) reduces storage requirements for
-+ the executable program on disk, and allows more and bigger packets at
-+ runtime. This has proven safe over the years, and now most builds (e.g.
-+ all Unix, VMS, Windows, and OS/2 ones) use dynamic memory allocation by
-+ default. If it causes trouble, however, then omit the -DDYNAMIC option
-+ from CFLAGS, or add -DNODYNAMIC.
-+
-+ 6.3. Other Size-Related Items
-+
-+ To make Kermit compile and load successfully, you might have to change
-+ your build procedure to:
-+
-+ a. Request a larger ("large" or "huge") compilation / code-generation
-+ model. This is needed for 16-bit PC-based UNIX versions (most or
-+ all of which fail to build C-Kermit 7.0 and later anyway). This is
-+ typically done with a -M and/or -F switch (see your cc manual or
-+ man page for details).
-+ b. Some development systems support overlays. If the program is too
-+ big to be built as is, check your loader manual ("man ld") to see
-+ if an overlay feature is available. See the 2.10/2.11 BSD example
-+ in the UNIX makefile. (Actually, as of version 7.0, C-Kermit is too
-+ big to build, period, even with overlays, on 2.xx BSD).
-+ c. Similarly, some small and/or segment-based architectures support
-+ "code mapping", which is similar to overlays (PDP11-based VENIX
-+ 1.0, circa 1984, was an example). See the linker documentation on
-+ the affected platform.
-+
-+ It is also possible to reduce the size of the executable program file
-+ in several other ways:
-+
-+ a. Include the -O (optimize) compiler switch if it isn't already
-+ included in your "make" entry (and if it works!). If your compiler
-+ supports higher levels of optimization (e.g. -O2 or higher number,
-+ -Onolimit (HP-UX), etc), try them; the greater the level of
-+ optimization, the longer the compilation and more likely the
-+ compiler will run out of memory. The the latter eventuality, some
-+ compilers also provide command-line options to allocate more memory
-+ for the optimizer, like "-Olimit number" in Ultrix.
-+ b. If your platofrm supports shared libraries, change the make entry
-+ to take advantage of this feature. The way to do this is, of
-+ course, platform dependent; see the NeXT makefile target for an
-+ example. some platforms (like Solaris) do it automatically and give
-+ you no choice. But watch out: executables linked with shared
-+ libraries are less portable than statically linked executables.
-+ c. Strip the program image after building ("man strip" for further
-+ info), or add -s to the LNKFLAGS (UNIX only). This strips the
-+ program of its symbol table and relocation information.
-+ d. Move character strings into a separate file. See the 2.11 BSD
-+ target for an example.
-+
-+ 6.4. Space/Time Tradeoffs
-+
-+ There are more than 6000 debug() statements in the program. If you want
-+ to save both space (program size) and time (program execution time),
-+ include -DNODEBUG in the compilation. If you want to include debugging
-+ for tracking down problems, omit -DNODEBUG from the make entry. But
-+ when you include debugging, you have two choices for how it's done. One
-+ definition defines debug() to be a function call; this is cheap in
-+ space but expensive in execution. The other defines debug as "if
-+ (deblog)" and then the function call, to omit the function call
-+ overhead when the debug log is not active. But this adds a lot of space
-+ to the program. Both methods work, take your choice; IFDEBUG is
-+ preferred if memory is not a constraint but the computer is likely to
-+ be slow. The first method is the default, i.e. if nothing is done to
-+ the CFLAGS or in [92]ckcdeb.h (but in some cases, e.g. VMS, it is). To
-+ select the second method, include -DIFDEBUG in the compilation (and
-+ don't include -DNODEBUG).
-+
-+ [ [93]C-Kermit Home ] [ [94]Kermit Home ]
-+
-+ 7. MODEM DIALING
-+
-+ [ [95]Top ] [ [96]Contents ] [ [97]Next ] [ [98]Previous ]
-+
-+ -DNODIAL removes automatic modem dialing completely, including the
-+ entire [99]ckudia.c module, plus all commands that refer to dialing in
-+ the various ckuus*.c modules.
-+
-+ -DMINIDIAL leaves the DIAL and related commands (SET/SHOW MODEM,
-+ SET/SHOW DIAL) intact, but removes support for all types of modems
-+ except CCITT, Hayes, Unknown, User-defined, Generic-high-speed, and
-+ None (= Direct). The MINIDIAL option cuts the size of the dial module
-+ approximately in half. Use this option if you have only Hayes or CCITT
-+ modems and don't want to carry the baggage for the other types.
-+
-+ A compromise between full dialer support and MINIDIAL is obtained by
-+ removing support for "old" modems -- all the strange non-Hayes
-+ compatible 1200 and 2400 bps modems that C-Kermit has been carrying
-+ around since 1985 or so. To remove support for these modems, add
-+ -DNOOLDMODEMS to CFLAGS at compilation time.
-+
-+ Finally, if you keep support for old modems, you will notice that their
-+ names appear on the "set modem ?" menu. That's because their names are,
-+ by default, "visible". But the list is confusing to the younger
-+ generation, who have only heard of modems from the V.32bis-and-later
-+ era. If you want to be able to use old modems, but don't want their
-+ names cluttering up menus, add this to CFLAGS:
-+
-+ -DM_OLD=1
-+
-+ [ [100]C-Kermit Home ] [ [101]Kermit Home ]
-+
-+ 8. NETWORK SUPPORT
-+
-+ [ [102]Top ] [ [103]Contents ] [ [104]Next ] [ [105]Previous ]
-+
-+ SECTION CONTENTS
-+
-+ 8.1. [106]TCP/IP
-+ 8.2. [107]X.25
-+ 8.3. [108]Other Networks
-+
-+ C-Kermit supports not only serial-port and modem connections, but also
-+ TCP/IP and X.25 network connections. Some versions support other
-+ network types too like DECnet, LAT, NETBIOS, etc. If you define the
-+ following symbol:
-+
-+ NONET
-+
-+ then all network support is compiled away.
-+
-+ 8.1. TCP/IP
-+
-+ SUBSECTION CONTENTS
-+
-+ 8.1.1. [109]Firewalls
-+ 8.1.2. [110]Compilation and Linking Problems
-+ 8.1.3. [111]Enabling Host Address Lists
-+ 8.1.4. [112]Enabling Telnet NAWS
-+ 8.1.5. [113]Enabling Incoming TCP/IP Connections
-+ 8.1.6. [114]Disabling SET TCP Options
-+
-+ C-Kermit's TCP/IP features require the Berkeley sockets library or
-+ equivalent, generally available on any Unix system, as well as in
-+ Windows 9x/NT, OS/2, VMS, AOS/VS, VOS, etc. The TCP/IP support includes
-+ built-in TELNET, FTP, and HTTP protocol. To select TCP/IP support,
-+ include -DTCPSOCKET in your makefile target's CFLAGS, or (in VMS) the
-+ appropriate variant (e.g. -DWOLLONGONG, -DMULTINET, -DEXCELAN,
-+ -DWINTCP, etc).
-+
-+ The VMS and/or early Unix third-party TCP/IP products are often
-+ incompatible with each other, and sometimes with different versions of
-+ themselves. For example, Wollongong reportedly put header files in
-+ different directories for different UNIX versions:
-+
-+ * in.h can be in either /usr/include/sys or /user/include/netinet.
-+ * telnet.h can be in either /usr/include/arpa or
-+ /user/include/netinet.
-+ * inet.h can be in either /usr/include/arpa or /user/include/sys.
-+
-+ In cases like this, use the -I cc command-line option when possible;
-+ otherwise it's better to make links in the file system than it is to
-+ hack up the C-Kermit source code. Suppose, for example, Kermit is
-+ looking for telnet.h in /usr/include/arpa, but on your computer it is
-+ in /usr/include/netinet. Do this (as root, or get the system
-+ administrator to do it):
-+
-+ cd /usr/include/arpa
-+ ln /usr/include/netinet/telnet.h telnet.h
-+
-+ ("man ln" for details about links.)
-+
-+ The network support for TCP/IP and X.25 is in the source files
-+ [115]ckcnet.h, [116]ckctel.c, [117]ckctel.c, [118]ckctel.h,
-+ [119]ckcftp.c, with miscellaneous SHOW commands, etc, in the various
-+ ckuus*.c modules, plus code in the ck*con.c or ckucns.c (CONNECT
-+ command) and several other modules to detect TELNET negotiations, etc.
-+
-+ Within the TCPSOCKET code, some socket-level controls are included if
-+ TCPSOCKET is defined in the C-Kermit CFLAGS and SOL_SOCKET is defined
-+ in in the system's TCP-related header files, such as <sys/socket.h>.
-+ These are:
-+
-+ SET TCP KEEPALIVE
-+ SET TCP LINGER
-+ SET TCP RECVBUF
-+ SET TCP SENDBUF
-+
-+ In addition, if TCP_NODELAY is defined, the following command is also
-+ enabled:
-+
-+ SET TCP NODELAY (Nagle algorithm)
-+
-+ See the [120]C-Kermit user documentation for descriptions of these
-+ commands.
-+
-+ 8.1.1. Firewalls
-+
-+ There exist various types of firewalls, set up to separate users of an
-+ internal TCP/IP network ("Intranet") from the great wide Internet, but
-+ then to let selected users or services get through after all.
-+
-+ One firewall method is called SOCKS, in which a proxy server allows
-+ users inside a firewall to access the outside world, based on a
-+ permission list generally stored in a file. SOCKS is enabled in one of
-+ two ways. First, the standard sockets library is modified to handle the
-+ firewall, and then all the client applications are relinked (if
-+ necessary, i.e. if the libraries are not dynamically loaded) with the
-+ modified sockets library. The APIs are all the same, so the
-+ applications do not need to be recoded or recompiled.
-+
-+ In the other method, the applications must be modified to call
-+ replacement routines, such as Raccept() instead of accept(), Rbind()
-+ instead of bind(), etc, and then linked with a separate SOCKS library.
-+ This second method is accomplished (for SOCKS4) in C-Kermit by
-+ including -DCK_SOCKS in your CFLAGS, and also adding:
-+
-+ -lsocks
-+
-+ to LIBS, or replacing -lsockets with -lsocks (depending on whether the
-+ socks library also includes all the sockets entry points).
-+
-+ For SOCKS5, use -DCK_SOCKS5.
-+
-+ Explicit firewall support can, in general, not be a standard feature or
-+ a feature that is selected at runtime, because the SOCKS library tends
-+ to be different at each site -- local modifications abound.
-+
-+ The ideal situation occurs when firewalls are supported by the first
-+ method, using dynamically linked sockets-replacement libraries; in this
-+ case, all your TCP/IP client applications negotiate the firewall
-+ transparently.
-+
-+ 8.1.2. Compilation and Linking Problems
-+
-+ If you get a compilation error in [121]ckcnet.c, with a complaint like
-+ "incompatible types in assignment", it probably has something to do
-+ with the data type your system uses for the inet_addr() function, which
-+ is declared (usually) in <arpa/inet.h>. Kermit uses "unsigned long"
-+ unless the symbol INADDRX is defined, in which case "struct inaddr" is
-+ used instead. Try adding -DINADDRX to CFLAGS in your make entry, and if
-+ that fixes the problem, please send a report to kermit@columbia.edu.
-+
-+ Compilation errors might also have to do with the data type used for
-+ getsockopt() and setsockopt() option-length field. This is normally an
-+ int, but sometimes it's a short, a long, or an unsigned any of those,
-+ or a size_t. To fix the compilation problem, add -DSOCKOPT_T=xxx to the
-+ CFLAGS in your makefile target, where xxx is the appropriate type (use
-+ "man getsockopt" or grep through your system/network header files to
-+ find the needed type).
-+
-+ 8.1.3. Enabling Host Address Lists
-+
-+ When you give Kermit an IP host name, it calls the socket routine
-+ gethostbyname() to resolve it. gethostbyname() returns a hostent
-+ struct, which might or might not not include a list of addresses; if it
-+ does, then if the first one fails, Kermit can try the second one, and
-+ so on. However, this will only work if the symbol "h_addr" is a macro
-+ defined as "h_addr_list[0]", usually in netdb.h. If it is, then you can
-+ activate this feature by defining the following symbol in CFLAGS:
-+
-+ HADDRLIST
-+
-+ 8.1.4. Enabling Telnet NAWS
-+
-+ The Telnet Negotiation About Window Size (NAWS) option requires the
-+ ability to find out the terminal screen's dimensions. E.g. in Unix, we
-+ need something like ioctl(0, TIOCGWINSZ, ...). If your version of
-+ Kermit was built with NAWS capability, SHOW VERSIONS includes CK_NAWS
-+ among the compiler options. If it doesn't, you can add it by defining
-+ CK_NAWS at compile time. Then, if the compiler or linker complain about
-+ undefined or missing symbols, or there is no complaint but SHOW
-+ TERMINAL fails to show reasonable "Rows =, Columns =" values, then take
-+ a look at (or write) the appropriate ttgwsiz() routine. On the other
-+ hand, if CK_NAWS is defined by default for your system (in
-+ [122]ckcnet.h), but causes trouble, you can override this definition by
-+ including the -DNONAWS switch on your CC command line, thus disabling
-+ the NAWS feature.
-+
-+ This appears to be needed at least on the AT&T 3B2, where in
-+ [123]ckutio.c, the routine ttgwsiz() finds that the TIOCGWINSZ symbol
-+ is defined but lacks definitions for the corresponding winsize struct
-+ and its members ws_col and ws_row.
-+
-+ The UNIX version of C-Kermit also traps SIGWINCH, so it can send a NAWS
-+ to the Telnet server any time the local console terminal window size
-+ changes, e.g. when you stretch it with a mouse. The SIGWINCH-trapping
-+ code is enabled if SIGWINCH is defined (i.e. in signal.h). If this code
-+ should cause problems, you can disable it without disabling the NAWS
-+ feature altogether, by defining NOSIGWINCH at compile time.
-+
-+ 8.1.5. Enabling Incoming TCP/IP Connections
-+
-+ This feature lets you "set host * port" and wait for an incoming
-+ connection on the given port. This feature is enabled automatically at
-+ compile if TCPSOCKET is defined and SELECT is also defined. But watch
-+ out, simply defining SELECT on the cc command line does not guarantee
-+ successful compilation or linking (see [124]Section 11).
-+
-+ If you want to disable incoming TCP/IP connections, then build C-Kermit
-+ with:
-+
-+ -DNOLISTEN
-+
-+ 8.1.6. Disabling SET TCP Options
-+
-+ The main reason for this is because of header file / prototype
-+ conflicts at compile time regardting get- / setsockopt(). If you can't
-+ fix them (without breaking other builds), add the following in CFLAGS:
-+
-+ -DNOTCPOPTS
-+
-+ 8.2. X.25
-+
-+ X.25 support requires (a) a Sun, (b) the SunLink product (libraries and
-+ header files), and (c) an X.25 connection into your Sun. Similarly (in
-+ C-Kermit 7.0 or later) Stratus VOS and IBM AIX.
-+
-+ In UNIX, special makefile targets sunos4x25 and sunos41x25 (for SUNOS
-+ 4.0 and 4.1, respectively), or aix41x25, are provided to build in this
-+ feature, but they only work if conditions (a)-(c) are met. To request
-+ this feature, include -DSUNX25 (or -DIBMX25) in CFLAGS.
-+
-+ SUNX25 (or -DIBMX25) and TCPSOCKET can be freely mixed and matched, and
-+ selected by the user at runtime with the SET NETWORK TYPE command or
-+ SET HOST switches.
-+
-+ 8.3. Other Networks
-+
-+ Support for other networking methods -- NETBIOS, LAT, Named Pipes, etc
-+ -- is included in ck*net.h and ck*net.c for implementations (such as
-+ Windows or OS/2) where these methods are supported.
-+
-+ Provision is made in the organization of the modules, header files,
-+ commands, etc, for addition of new network types such as DECnet, X.25
-+ for other systems (HP-UX, VMS, etc), and so on. Send email to
-+ [125]kermit@columbia.edu if you are willing and able to work on such a
-+ project.
-+
-+ [ [126]C-Kermit Home ] [ [127]Kermit Home ]
-+
-+ 9. EXCEPTION HANDLING
-+
-+ [ [128]Top ] [ [129]Contents ] [ [130]Next ] [ [131]Previous ]
-+
-+ The C language setjmp/longjmp mechanism is used for handling
-+ exceptions. The jump buffer is of type jmp_buf, which almost everywhere
-+ is typedef'd as an array, in which case you should have no trouble
-+ compiling the exception-handling code. However, if you are building
-+ C-Kermit in/for an environment where jmp_buf is something other than an
-+ array (e.g. a struct), then you'll have to define the following symbol:
-+
-+ JBNOTARRAY
-+
-+ [ [132]C-Kermit Home ] [ [133]Kermit Home ]
-+
-+ 10. SECURITY FEATURES
-+
-+ [ [134]Top ] [ [135]Contents ] [ [136]Next ] [ [137]Previous ]
-+
-+ Security, in the sense of secure authentication and strong encryption,
-+ can be built into versionf of C-Kermit for which the appropriate
-+ libraries and header files are available (Kerberos IV, Kerberos V,
-+ OpenSSL, SRP), as explained in great detail in the Kermit Security
-+ Reference
-+ . The following symbols govern C-Kermit's security features at build
-+ time:
-+
-+ NO_AUTHENTICATION
-+ Means do not configure any TELNET AUTHENTICATION support. It
-+ implies NO_ENCRYPTION and undefines any of the auth and encrypt
-+ types. It does not undefine CK_SSL even though builds with
-+ CK_SSL cannot succeed without CK_AUTHENTICATION. (This will be
-+ supported in a future release. It will be needed to allow
-+ C-Kermit to be built only as an FTP client.)
-+
-+ NO_KERBEROS
-+ Means do not compile in any KERBEROS support when
-+ CK_AUTHENTICATION has been defined.
-+
-+ NO_SRP
-+ Do not compile in any SRP support when CK_AUTHENTICATION has
-+ been defined.
-+
-+ NO_SSL
-+ Do not compile in any SSL/TLS support
-+
-+ NO_ENCRYPTION
-+ Do not compile in any Telnet encryption support. It does not
-+ affect the use of SSL/TLS
-+
-+ NOSSH
-+ Do not compile in any SSH support whether internal or external
-+
-+ CK_AUTHENTICATION
-+ Telnet AUTHENTICATION support. (Also, required if SSL/TLS
-+ support is desired.) On most platforms this does not autodefine
-+ any authentication mechanisms such as Kerberos V, Kerberos IV,
-+ SRP, ... Those need to be defined separately.
-+
-+ CK_KERBEROS
-+ Defined automatically when KRB4, KRB5, or KRB524 are defined.
-+ Implies that some version of Kerberos is in use.
-+
-+ KRB4
-+ Should be defined when Kerberos IV support is desired.
-+
-+ KRB5
-+ Should be defined when Kerberos V support is desired.
-+
-+ KRB524
-+ Should be defined if both Kerberos V and Kerberos IV are used
-+ and the Kerberos IV support is provided by the MIT Kerberos IV
-+ compatibility library in the current Kerberos 5 distribution.
-+
-+ KRB5_U2U
-+ Should be defined if KRB5 is defined and Kerberos 5 User to User
-+ mode is desired.
-+
-+ HEIMDAL
-+ Should be defined if Kerberos V support is provided by HEIMDAL.
-+ Support for this option is not complete in C-Kermit 8.0. Anyone
-+ interested in working on this should contact kermit-support.
-+
-+ CK_SRP
-+ Should be defined if SRP support is desired.
-+
-+ CK_ENCRYPTION
-+ Should be defined if TELNET ENCRYPTION option support is
-+ desired. This option does not define any particular encryption
-+ types. That should be done by defining CK_DES or CK_CAST.
-+
-+ CK_DES
-+ Should be defined if either DES or 3DES Telnet Encryption option
-+ support is desired.
-+
-+ LIBDES
-+ If CK_DES is defined and DES support is being provided by either
-+ Eric Young's libdes.a or OpenSSL 0.9.6x or earlier, this option
-+ must be defined. If it is not defined, it will be assumed that
-+ DES support is provided by the MIT Kerberos IV libraries.
-+
-+ CK_CAST
-+ Should be defined if CAST Telnet Encryption option support is
-+ desired
-+
-+ CK_SSL
-+ Should be defined if SSL/TLS support (OpenSSL) is desired.
-+
-+ SSL_KRB5
-+ If KRB5 is defined, and OpenSSL is built to support the Kerberos
-+ 5 ciphers, then you should define SSL_KRB5
-+
-+ NOSSLKRB5
-+ If you are using OpenSSL 0.9.7 or higher and do not wish to
-+ build with support for Kerberos 5 TLS ciphers, this option must
-+ be defined.
-+
-+ ZLIB
-+ If you are using OpenSSL 0.9.6 or higher and it has been
-+ compiled with support for ZLIB compression, this option should
-+ be defined to enable Kermit to properly enable the use of
-+ compression.
-+
-+ SSHCMD
-+ Defined for C-Kermit to enable the use of external SSH clients
-+ from the Kermit command language
-+
-+ SSHBUILTIN
-+ Defined for Kermit implementations that have integrated SSH
-+ support. Currently only Windows.
-+
-+ ANYSSH
-+ Defined if either SSHCMD or SSHBUILTIN are defined.
-+
-+ CK_SNDLOC
-+ Telnet Send Location support.
-+
-+ NOSNDLOC
-+ Do not include Telnet Send Location support.
-+
-+ CK_XDISPLOC
-+ Telnet X-Display Location support. Determines if the X-Display
-+ location information is sent to the Telnet server either via
-+ Telnet XDISPLOC or NEW-ENV options.
-+
-+ NOXDISPLOC
-+ Do not include Telnet X-Display Location support.
-+
-+ CK_FORWARD_X
-+ Telnet Forward X Windows Session Data option. Used to protect
-+ the privacy and integrity of X Windows Sessions when secure
-+ telnet sessions are in use.
-+
-+ NOFORWARDX
-+ Do not include Telnet Forward X Windows Session Data option.
-+
-+ Besides the strong forms of security listed above, C-Kermit also
-+ embodies various internal security features, including:
-+
-+ NOPUSH
-+ Compiling with the NOPUSH symbol defined removes all the "shell
-+ escape" features from the program, including the PUSH, RUN, and
-+ SPAWN commands, the "!" and "@" command prefixes, OPEN !READ,
-+ OPEN !WRITE, job control (including the SUSPEND command), the
-+ REDIRECT command, shell/DCL escape from CONNECT mode, as well as
-+ the server's execution of REMOTE HOST commands (and, of course,
-+ the ENABLE HOST command). Add NODISPO to also prevent acceptance
-+ of incoming MAIL or REMOTE PRINT files. For UNIX, also be sure
-+ to read [138]Section 11 of the [139]Unix C-Kermit Installation
-+ Instructions. about set[ug]id configuration. Additional
-+ restrictions can be enforced when in server mode; read about the
-+ DISABLE command in the user manual.
-+
-+ NOCCTRAP
-+ Compiling with NOCCTRAP prevents the trapping of SIGINT by
-+ Kermit. Thus if the user generates a SIGINT signal (e.g. by
-+ typing the system's interrupt character), Kermit will exit
-+ immediately, rather than returning to its prompt.
-+
-+ NOPUSH and NOCCTRAP together allow Kermit to be run from restricted
-+ shells, preventing access to system functions.
-+
-+ [ [140]C-Kermit Home ] [ [141]Kermit Home ]
-+
-+ 11. ENABLING SELECT()
-+
-+ [ [142]Top ] [ [143]Contents ] [ [144]Next ] [ [145]Previous ]
-+
-+ Kermit works best if it can do nonblocking reads, nondestructive input
-+ buffer checking, and millisecond sleeps. All of these functions can be
-+ accomplished by the select() function, which, unfortunately, is not
-+ universally available. Furthermore, select() is required if incoming
-+ TCP/IP connections are to be supported.
-+
-+ select() was introduced with Berkeley UNIX, rejected by AT&T for System
-+ V, but is gradually creeping in to all UNIX versions (and other
-+ operating systems too) by virtue of its presence in the sockets
-+ library, which is needed for TCP/IP. AT&T SVID for System V R4 includes
-+ select(), but that does not mean that all SVR4 implementations have it.
-+
-+ Furthermore, even when select() is available, it might work only on
-+ socket file descriptors, but not on others like serial ports, pipes,
-+ etc. For example, in AOS/VS and BeOS, it works only with file
-+ descriptors that were created by socket() and opened by connect() or
-+ accept().
-+
-+ Other alternatives include poll() and rdchk(). Only one of these three
-+ functions should be included. The following symbols govern this:
-+
-+ SELECT Use select() (BSD, or systems with sockets libraries)
-+ CK_POLL Use poll() (System V)
-+ RDCHK Use rdchk() (SCO XENIX and UNIX)
-+
-+ If your system supports the select() function, but your version of
-+ C-Kermit does not, try adding:
-+
-+ -DSELECT
-+
-+ to the CFLAGS, and removing -DRDCHK or -DCK_POLL if it is there. If you
-+ get compilation errors, some adjustments to ck*tio.c and/or ck*net.c
-+ might be needed; search for SELECT (uppercase) in these files (note
-+ that there are several variations on the calling conventions for
-+ select()).
-+
-+ Various macros and data types need to be defined in order to use
-+ select(). Usually these are picked up from <types.h> or <sys/types.h>.
-+ But on some systems, they are in <sys/select.h>. In that case, add the
-+ following:
-+
-+ -DSELECT_H
-+
-+ to the CFLAGS to tell C-Kermit to #include <sys/select.h>. A good
-+ indication that you need to do this would be if you get compile-time
-+ complaints about "fd_set" or "FD_SET" not being declared or defined.
-+
-+ In UNIX, the use of select() vs fork() in the CONNECT command is
-+ independent of the above considerations, and is governed by choosing a
-+ particular makefile target.
-+
-+ As of C-Kermit 7.0, select() is also the preferred control mechanism
-+ for the CONNECT command. Unfortunately, the structures used by the
-+ original UNIX CONNECT command, based on fork(), and those used by
-+ select(), are so different, it was not practical to implement them both
-+ in one module. So the select()-based CONNECT command module for UNIX is
-+ [146]ckucns.c, and the fork-based one remains [147]ckucon.c. To choose
-+ the fork-based one, which is more portable (but slower and more
-+ fragile), use "wermit" as the make target. To choose the select-based
-+ one, use "xermit". Only do this if you can verify that the CONNECT
-+ command works on serial connections and PIPE connections as well as TCP
-+ connections.
-+
-+ The select()-based Unix CONNECT module, ckucns.c, must be used if
-+ encryption is to be done, since the fork() version (ckucon.c) loses
-+ its ability to share vital state information between the two forks.
-+ Also note that the select() version is superior in many other ways
-+ too. For example, it recovers better from exterior killing, forced
-+ disconnections, etc, plus it goes faster.
-+
-+ SHOW VERSIONS tells whether the CONNECT module uses fork() or select().
-+
-+ C-Kermit 8.0 adds learned script capability, which depends on select().
-+ All the "wermit" based targets (as opposed to "xermit") had NOLEARN
-+ added to them. Whenever changing a target over from wermit to xermit,
-+ also remember to remove NOLEARN.
-+
-+ [ [148]C-Kermit Home ] [ [149]Kermit Home ]
-+
-+ 12. I/O REDIRECTION
-+
-+ [ [150]Top ] [ [151]Contents ] [ [152]Next ] [ [153]Previous ]
-+
-+ The REDIRECT command allows a local program to be run with its i/o
-+ redirected over the communications connection. Your version of C-Kermit
-+ has a REDIRECT command if it was built with the following CFLAG:
-+
-+ -DCK_REDIR
-+
-+ This, in turn, is possible only if the underlying API is there. In the
-+ case of UNIX this is just the wait() system call, so all UNIX versions
-+ get this feature as of 6.0.192 (earlier versions needed a <sys/wait.h>
-+ header file defining the symbols WIFEXITED and WEXITSTATUS).
-+
-+ As of version 7.0, file transfer can be done using pipes and filters.
-+ To enable this feature, #define PIPESEND (and fill in the code). To
-+ disable on systems where it is normally enabled, define NOPIPESEND.
-+ This feature is, of course, also disabled by building with NOPUSH (or
-+ giving the "nopush" command at runtime).
-+
-+ C-Kermit 7.0 also adds the PIPE and SET HOST /COMMAND commands, which
-+ provide another form of redirection. This feature is selected with
-+ -DNETCMD. CK_RDIR must also be defined, since the same mechanisms are
-+ used internally.
-+
-+ [ [154]C-Kermit Home ] [ [155]Kermit Home ]
-+
-+ 13. FLOATING-POINT NUMBERS, TIMERS, AND ARITHMETIC
-+
-+ [ [156]Top ] [ [157]Contents ] [ [158]Next ] [ [159]Previous ]
-+
-+ Floating-point support was added in C-Kermit 7.0.
-+
-+ Floating-point numbers are enabled internally, at least for use in
-+ high-precision file-transfer timers and statistics, unless the
-+ following symbol is defined at compile time:
-+
-+ -DNOFLOAT
-+
-+ This might be necessary on old PCs that do not have built-in
-+ floating-point hardware.
-+
-+ When NOFLOAT is not defined, the following symbol tells which
-+ floating-point type to use:
-+
-+ -DCKFLOAT=xxxx
-+
-+ The value is either "double" (normal for 32- and 16-bit architectures)
-+ or "float" (normal for 64-bit architectures).
-+
-+ C-Kermit can be configured to use high-precision file-transfer timers
-+ for more accurate statistics. This feature is enabled with:
-+
-+ -DGFTIMER
-+
-+ and disabled with:
-+
-+ -DNOGFTIMER
-+
-+ If you try to build with -DGFTIMER but you get compilation errors,
-+ either fix them (and send email to kermit@columbia.edu telling what you
-+ did), or else give up and use -DNOGFTIMER (or -DNOFLOAT) instead. Hint:
-+ depending on your machine architecture, you might have better luck
-+ using double than float as the data type for floating-point numbers, or
-+ vice versa. Look in [160]ckcdeb.h for the CKFLOAT definition.
-+
-+ Floating-point arithmetic is also supported in the script programming
-+ language. First via the \fpp...() functions, such as \fppadd(), which
-+ adds two floating-point numbers, second in S-Expressions. Addition,
-+ subtraction, multiplication, and division are always available. But
-+ other functions such as logs, raising to powers, sines and cosines,
-+ etc, require the C Math library. To include user-level floating-point
-+ math you must put:
-+
-+ -DFNFLOAT
-+
-+ and in Unix you must link with the Math library:
-+
-+ LIBS=".... -lm"
-+
-+ In K95 and VMS, FNFLOAT is defined automatically if CKFLOAT is defined.
-+ In Unix, however, FNFLOAT must be added to each makefile target
-+ individually, because of the special linking instructions that must
-+ also be added to each target.
-+
-+ Note: S-Expressions require FNFLOAT.
-+
-+ [ [161]C-Kermit Home ] [ [162]Kermit Home ]
-+
-+ 14. SPECIAL CONFIGURATIONS
-+
-+ [ [163]Top ] [ [164]Contents ] [ [165]Previous ]
-+
-+ As of C-Kermit 7.0, if you build C-Kermit normally, but with -DNOICP
-+ (No Interactive Command Parser), you get a program capable of making
-+ serial connections (but not dialing) and network connections (if
-+ TCPSOCKET or other network option included), and can also transfer
-+ files using Kermit protocol, but only via autodownload/upload.
-+ Furthermore, if you call the executable "telnet", it will act like
-+ Telnet -- using the command-line options. However, in this case there
-+ is nothing to escape back to, so if you type Ctrl-\c, it just prints a
-+ message to this effect.
-+
-+ You can also build C-Kermit with -DNOXFER, meaning omit all the
-+ file-transfer features. This leaves you with a scriptable
-+ communications program that is considerably smaller than the full
-+ C-Kermit.
-+
-+ [ [166]C-Kermit Home ] [ [167]Kermit Home ]
-+
-+ APPENDIX I: SUMMARY OF COMPILE-TIME OPTIONS
-+
-+ [ [168]Top ] [ [169]Contents ]
-+
-+ These are the symbols that can be specified on the cc command line,
-+ listed alphabetically. Others are used internally, including those
-+ taken from header files, those defined by the compiler itself, and
-+ those inferred from the ones given below. Kermit's SHOW VERSIONS
-+ command attempts to display most of these. See [170]ckcdeb.h and
-+ [171]ckcnet.h for inference rules. For example SVR3 implies ATTSV,
-+ MULTINET implies TCPSOCKET, and so on.
-+
-+ Here is the complete list of the Kermit-specific compile-time switches:
-+
-+ ACUCNTRL Select BSD 4.3-style acucntrl() bidirectional tty control.
-+ aegis Build for Apollo Aegis (predefined on Apollo systems).
-+ AIX370 Build for IBM AIX/370 for IBM mainframes.
-+ AIXESA Build for IBM AIX/ESA for IBM mainframes.
-+ AIXPS2 Build for IBM AIX 3.0 for PS/2 series (never formally released).
-+ AIXRS Build for IBM AIX 3.x on RS/6000.
-+ AIX41 Build for IBM AIX 4.x on RS/6000.
-+ AMIGA Build for Commodore Amiga with Intuition OS.
-+ ATT6300 Build for AT&T 6300 PLUS.
-+ ATT7300 Build for AT&T 7300 UNIX PC (3B1).
-+ ATTSV Build for AT&T System III or V UNIX.
-+ AUX Build for Apple A/UX for the Macintosh.
-+ BIGBUFOK OK to use big buffers - "memory is not a problem"
-+ BPS_xxxx Enable SET SPEED xxxx
-+ BSD29 Build for BSD 2.9 or 2.10.
-+ BSD4 Build for BSD 4.2.
-+ BSD41 Build for BSD 4.1.
-+ BSD43 Build for BSD 4.3.
-+ BSD44 Build for BSD 4.4.
-+ C70 Build for BBN C/70.
-+ CIE Build for CIE Systems 680/20.
-+ CKCONINTB4CB Work around prompt-disappears after escape back from
-+ CONNECT.
-+ CKLEARN Build with support for learned scripts.
-+ CKLOGDIAL Enable connection log.
-+ CKMAXPATH Maximum length for a fully qualified filename.
-+ CKREGEX (misnomer) Include [...] or {xxx,xxx,xxx} matching in
-+ ckmatch().
-+ CKSYSLOG Enable syslogging.
-+ CK_ANSIC Enable ANSI C constructs - prototypes, etc.
-+ CK_ANSILIBS Use header files for ANSI C libraries.
-+ CK_APC Enable APC execution by CONNECT module.
-+ CK_CURSES Enable fullscreen file transfer display.
-+ CK_DSYSINI Use system-wide init file, with name supplied by Kermit.
-+ CK_DTRCD DTR/CD flow control is available.
-+ CK_FAST Build with fast Kermit protocol defaults.
-+ CK_FORK_SIG UNIX only: signal() number for CONNECT module forks.
-+ CK_IFRO IF REMOTE command is available (and can run in remote mode).
-+ CK_INI_A System-wide init file takes precedence over user's.
-+ CK_INI_B User's init file takes precedence over the system-wide one.
-+ CK_LABELED Include support for SET FILE TYPE LABELED.
-+ CK_LBRK This version can send Long BREAK.
-+ CK_LINGER Add code to turn of TCP socket "linger" parameter.
-+ CK_MKDIR This version has a zmkdir() command to create directories.
-+ CK_NAWS Include TELNET Negotiate About Window Size support.
-+ CK_NEWTERM Use newterm() rather than initscr() to initialize curses.
-+ CK_PAM Include PAM authentication (might also require -lpam).
-+ CK_PCT_BAR Fullscreen file transfer display should include
-+ "thermometer".
-+ CK_POLL System-V or POSIX based UNIX has poll() function.
-+ CK_POSIX_SIG Use POSIX signal handing: sigjmp_buf, sigsetjmp,
-+ siglongjmp.
-+ CK_READ0 read(fd,&x,0) can be used to test TCP/IP connections.
-+ CK_REDIR Enable the REDIRECT command.
-+ CK_RESEND Include the RESEND command (needs zfseek() + append).
-+ CK_RTSCTS RTS/CTS flow control is available.
-+ CK_SHADOW Include support for shadow passwords (e.g. for IKSD
-+ authentication).
-+ CK_SOCKBUF Enable TCP socket-buffer-size-increasing code.
-+ CK_SOCKS UNIX only: Build with socks library rather than regular
-+ sockets
-+ CK_SOCKS5 UNIX only: Build with socks 5 lib rather than regular sockets
-+ CK_SPEED Enable control-character unprefixing.
-+ CK_SYSINI="xxxxx" Quoted string to be used as system-wide init file
-+ name.
-+ CK_TIMERS Build with support for dynamically calculated packet
-+ timeouts.
-+ CK_TMPDIR This version of Kermit has an isdir() function.
-+ CK_TTYFD Defined on systems where the communications connection file
-+ descriptor (ttyfd) can be passed to other processes as a command-line
-+ argument via \v(ttyfd).
-+ CK_URL Parse URLs as well as hostnames, etc.
-+ CK_XONXOFF Xon/Xoff flow control available.
-+ CK_XYZ Include support for XYZMODEM protocols.
-+ CK_WREFRESH Curses package includes wrefresh(),clearok() for screen
-+ refresh.
-+ CKFLOAT=type Floating-point data type, "double" or "float".
-+ CKTYP_H=xxx Force include of xxx as <types.h> file.
-+ CLSOPN When hanging up a tty device, also close and reopen it.
-+ CMDDEP Maximum recursion depth for self-referential user-defined fn's.
-+ COHERENT Build for Mark Williams Coherent UNIX
-+ CONGSPD Define if this version has congspd() routine in ck?tio.c
-+ datageneral Build for Data General AOS/VS or AOS/VS II
-+ DCLPOPEN popen() is available but needs to be declared
-+ DEC_TCPIP Build with support for DEC TCP/IP (UCX) for (Open)VMS
-+ DGUX430 Build for DG/UX 4.30
-+ DGUX540 Build for DG/UX 5.40
-+ DEFPAR=x Default parity, 0, 'e', 'o', 'm', or 's'.
-+ DFTTY=xxx Default communications device name.
-+ DIRENT UNIX directory structure to be taken from <dirent.h>.
-+ DIRPWDRP Prompt for password in REMOTE CWD command.
-+ DTILDE Include UNIX ~ notation for username/home-directory
-+ DYNAMIC Allocate file transfer packet buffers dynamically with malloc.
-+ ENCORE Build for Encore Multimax computers.
-+ EXCELAN Build with excelan TCP/IP.
-+ FNFLOAT Include floating-point math functions (logs, sin, cos, exp,
-+ etc)
-+ FT18 Build for Fortune For:Pro 1.8.
-+ FT21 Build for Fortune For:Pro 2.1.
-+ GEMDOS Build for Atari ST GEMDOS.
-+ GFTIMER Use high-precision floating-point file-transfer timers.
-+ GID_T=xxx Group IDs are of type xxx (usually int, short, or gid_t).
-+ HADDRLIST If gethostbyname() hostent struct contains a list of
-+ addresses.
-+ HDBUUCP Build with support for Honey DanBer UUCP.
-+ HPUX Build for Hewlett Packard HP-UX.
-+ HPUX9 Build for Hewlett Packard HP-UX 9.x.
-+ HPUX10 Build for Hewlett Packard HP-UX 10.x.
-+ HWPARITY Define if this version can SET PARITY HARDWARE { EVEN, ODD...}
-+ I386IX Build for Interactive System V R3.
-+ IFDEBUG Add IF stmts "if (deblog)" before "debug()" calls.
-+ INADDRX TCP/IP inet_addr() type is struct inaddr, not unsigned long.
-+ INTERLAN Build with support for Racal/Interlan TCP/IP.
-+ ISDIRBUG System defs of S_ISDIR and S_ISREG have bug, define ourselves.
-+ ISIII Build for Interactive System III.
-+ IX370 Build for IBM IX/370.
-+ KANJI Build with Kanji character-set translation support.
-+ LCKDIR UUCP lock directory is /usr/spool/uucp/LCK/.
-+ LFDEVNO UUCP lockfile name uses device numbers, as in SVR4.
-+ LINUXFSSTND For Linux, use FSSTND UUCP lockfile conventions (default).
-+ LOCK_DIR=xxx UUCP lock directory is xxx (quoted string).
-+ LOCKF Use lockf() (in addition to lockfiles) on serial lines
-+ LONGFN BSD long filenames supported using <dir.h> and opendir().
-+ LYNXOS Build for Lynx OS 2.2 or later (POSIX-based).
-+ MAC Build for Apple Macintosh with Mac OS.
-+ MATCHDOT Make wildcards match filenames that start with period (.)
-+ MAXRP=number Maximum receive-packet length.
-+ MAXSP=number Maximum send-packet length.
-+ MDEBUG Malloc-debugging requested.
-+ MINIDIAL Minimum modem dialer support: CCITT, Hayes, Unkown, and None.
-+ MINIX Build for MINIX.
-+ MIPS Build for MIPS workstation.
-+ MULTINET Build with support for TGV MultiNet TCP/IP (VAX/VMS).
-+ M_UNIX Defined by SCO.
-+ NAP The nap() is available (conflicts with SELECT and USLEEP)
-+ NAPHACK The nap() call is available but only as syscall(3112,...)
-+ NDIR BSD long filenames supported using <ndir.h> and opendir().
-+ NDGPWNAM Don't declare getpwnam().
-+ NDSYSERRLIST Don't declare sys_errlist[].
-+ NEEDSELECTDEFS select() is avaible but we need to define FD_blah
-+ ourselves.
-+ NETCMD Build with support for SET HOST /COMMAND and PIPE commands.
-+ NEXT Build for NeXT Mach 1.x or 2.x or 3.0, 3.1, or 3.2.
-+ NEXT33 Build for NeXT Mach 3.3.
-+ NOANSI Disable ANSI C function prototyping.
-+ NOAPC Do not include CK_APC code.
-+ NOARROWKEYS Exclude code to parse ANSI arrow-key sequences.
-+ NOB_xxxx Disable SET SPEED xxxx
-+ NOBIGBUF Override BIGBUFOK when it is the default
-+ NOBRKC Don't try to refer to t_brkc or t_eof tchars structure members.
-+ NOCKFQHOSTNAME Exclude code to get fully qualified hostname in case it
-+ causes core dumps.
-+ NOCCTRAP Disable Control-C (SIGINT) trapping.
-+ NOCKSPEED Disable control-prefix removal feature (SET CONTROL).
-+ NOCKTIMERS Build without support for dynamic timers.
-+ NOCKXYZ Overrides CK_XYZ.
-+ NOCKREGEX Do not include [...] or {xxx,xxx,xxx} matching in ckmatch().
-+ NOCMDL Build with no command-line option processing.
-+ NOCOTFMC No Close(Open()) To Force Mode Change (UNIX version).
-+ NOCSETS Build with no support for character set translation.
-+ NOCYRIL Build with no support for Cyrillic character set translation.
-+ NOCYRILLIC Ditto.
-+ NODEBUG Build with no debug logging capability.
-+ NODIAL Build with no DIAL or SET DIAL commands.
-+ NODISPO Build to always refuse incoming MAIL or REMOTE PRINT files.
-+ DNODISPLAY Build with no file-transfer display.
-+ NOESCSEQ Build with no support for ANSI escape sequence recognition.
-+ NOFAST Do not make FAST Kermit protocol settings the default.
-+ NOFDZERO Do not use file descriptor 0 for remote-mode file transfer.
-+ NOFILEH Do not #include <sys/file.h>.
-+ NOFLOAT Don't include any floating-point data types or operations.
-+ NOFRILLS Build with "no frills" (this should be phased out...)
-+ NOFTRUNCATE Include this on UNIXes that don't have ftruncate().
-+ NOGETUSERSHELL Include this on UNIXes that don't have getusershell().
-+ NOGFTIMER Don't use high-precision floating-point file-transfer timers.
-+ NOHEBREW Build with no support for Hebrew character sets.
-+ NOHELP Build with no built-in help.
-+ NOIKSD Build with IKSD support excluded.
-+ NOINITGROUPS Include this on UNIXes that don't have initgroups().
-+ NOICP Build with no interactive command parser.
-+ NOJC Build with no support for job control (suspend).
-+ NOKANJI Build with no support for Japanese Kanji character sets.
-+ NOKVERBS Build with no support for keyboard verbs (\Kverbs).
-+ NOLATIN2 Build with no ISO Latin-2 character-set translation support.
-+ NOLEARN Build with no support for learned scripts.
-+ NOLINKBITS Use of S_ISLNK and _IFLNK untrustworthy; use readlink()
-+ instead.
-+ NOLOCAL Build without any local-mode features: No Making Connections.
-+ NOLOGDIAL Disable connection log.
-+ NOLOGIN Build without IKSD (network login) support.
-+ NOLSTAT Not OK to use lstat().
-+ NOMDMHUP Build without "modem-specific hangup" (e.g. ATH0) feature.
-+ NOMHHOST Exclude the multihomed-host TCP/IP code (if compilcation
-+ errors)
-+ NOMINPUT Build without MINPUT command.
-+ NOMSEND Build with no MSEND command.
-+ NONAWS Do not include TELNET Negotiate About Window Size support.
-+ NONET Do not include any network support.
-+ NONOSETBUF (See NOSETBUF)
-+ NOPARSEN Build without automatic parity detection.
-+ NOPIPESEND Disable file transfer using pipes and filters.
-+ NOPOLL Override CK_POLL definition.
-+ NOPOPEN The popen() library call is not available.
-+ NOPURGE Build with no PURGE command.
-+ NOPUSH Build with no escapes to operating system.
-+ NOREALPATH In UNIX, realpath() function is not available.
-+ NORECALL Disable the command-recall feature.
-+ NOREDIRECT Disable REDIRECT command.
-+ NORENAME Don't use rename() system call, use link()/unlink() (UNIX).
-+ NORESEND Build with no RESEND command.
-+ NORETRY Build with no command-retry feature.
-+ NOSCRIPT Build with no SCRIPT command.
-+ NOSELECT Don't try to use select().
-+ NOSERVER Build with no SERVER mode and no server-related commands.
-+ NOSETBUF Don't make console writes unbuffered.
-+ NONOSETBUF DO make console writes unbuffered.
-+ NOSETREU setreuid() and/or setregid() not available.
-+ NOSHOW Build with no SHOW command (not recommended!).
-+ NOSIGWINCH Disable SIGWINCH signal trapping.
-+ NOSPL Build with no script programming language.
-+ NOSTAT Don't call stat() from mainline code.
-+ NOSYMLINK Include this for UNIXes that don't have readlink().
-+ NOSYSIOCTLH Do not #include <sys/ioctl.h>.
-+ NOSYSTIMEH Co not include <sys/time.h>.
-+ NOSYSLOG Disable syslogging code.
-+ NOTCPOPTS Build with no SET TCP options or underlying support.
-+ NOTLOG Build with no support for transaction logging.
-+ NOTM_ISDST Struct tm has no tm_isdst member.
-+ NOUNICODE Build with no support for Unicode character-set translation.
-+ NOURL Don't parse URLs
-+ NOUUCP Build with no UUCP lockfile support (dangerous!).
-+ NOWARN Make EXIT WARNING be OFF by default (otherwise it's ON).
-+ NOWREFRESH Override built-in definition of CK_WREFRESH (q.v.).
-+ NOXFER Build with no Kermit or other file-transfer protocols.
-+ NOXMIT Build with no TRANSMIT command.
-+ NOXPRINT Disables transparent print code.
-+ OLDMSG Use old "entering server mode" message (see [172]ckcmai.c).
-+ OLINUXHISPEED Build in old Linux hi-serial-speed code (for Linux <=
-+ 1.0).
-+ OPENBSD Build for OpenBSD.
-+ OS2 Build for OS/2.
-+ OSF Build for OSF/1.
-+ OSFPC Build for OSF/1 on a PC.
-+ OSF32 Digital UNIX 3.2 or later.
-+ OSF40 Build for Digital UNIX 4.0.
-+ OSF50 Build for Digital UNIX 5.0.
-+ OSK Build for OS-9.
-+ OXOS Build for Olivetti X/OS 2.3.
-+ PCIX Build for PC/IX
-+ PID_T=xxx Type for pids is xxx (normally int or pid_t).
-+ POSIX Build for POSIX: use POSIX header files, functions, etc.
-+ _POSIX_SOURCE Disable non-POSIX features.
-+ PROVX1 Build for Venix 1.0 on DEC Professional 3xx.
-+ PTX Build for Dynix/PTX
-+ PWID_T=xxx getpwid() type is xxx.
-+ RBSIZ=xxx Define overall size of receive-packet buffer (with DYNAMIC).
-+ RDCHK rdchk() system call is available.
-+ RENAME rename() system call is available (UNIX).
-+ RTAIX Build for AIX 2.2.1 on IBM RT PC.
-+ RTU Build for Masscomp / Concurrent RTU.
-+ SAVEDUID BSD or other non-AT&T UNIX has saved-setuid feature.
-+ SBSIZ=xxx Define overall size of send-packet buffer (use with DYNAMIC).
-+ SDIRENT Directory structure specified in <sys/dirent.h>.
-+ SELECT select() function available (conflicts with RDCHK and CK_POLL)
-+ SELECT_H Include <sys/select.h> for select()-releated definitions.
-+ SETEUID BSD 4.4-style seteXid() functions available.
-+ SIG_V Type for signal() is void. Used to override normal assumption.
-+ SIG_I Type for signal() is int. Used to override normal assumption.
-+ SOCKOPT_T Override default data type for get/setsockopt() option
-+ length.
-+ SOLARIS Build for Solaris.
-+ SOLARIS25 Build for Solaris 2.5 or later.
-+ SONYNEWS Build for Sony NEWS-OS.
-+ STERMIOX <sys/termiox.h> is available.
-+ STRATUS Build for Stratus VOS.
-+ STRATUSX25 Include Stratus VOS X.25 support.
-+ SUN4S5 Build for SUNOS 4.x in the System V R3 environment.
-+ SUNOS4 Build for SUNOS 4.0 in the BSD environment.
-+ SUNOS41 Build for SUNOS 4.1 in the BSD environment.
-+ SUNX25 Build with support for SunLink X.25.
-+ SVR3 Build for AT&T System V Release 3.
-+ SVR3JC Allow job control support on System V Release 3 UNIX versions.
-+ SVR4 Build for AT&T System V Release 4.
-+ SW_ACC_ID UNIX only -- swap real & effective ids around access() calls.
-+ sxaE50 Build for PFU Compact A Series SX/A TISP.
-+ SYSLOGLEVEL=n Force syslogging at given level.
-+ SYSTIMEH Include <sys/time.h>.
-+ SYSUTIMEH Include <sys/utime.h> for setting file dates (88OPEN)
-+ TCPSOCKET Build with support for TCP/IP via Berkeley sockets library.
-+ TERMIOX <termiox.h> header file is available (mostly SVR4).
-+ TNCODE Include TELNET-specific code.
-+ TOWER1 Build for NCR Tower 1632 with OS 1.02.
-+ TRS16 Build for Tandy 16/6000.
-+ UID_T=xxx Type for uids is xxx (normally int or uid_t).
-+ UNIX Must be defined for all UNIX versions.
-+ UNIX351M AT&T UNIX 3.51m on the AT&T 7300 UNIX PC.
-+ USE_ARROWKEYS Include code to parse ANSI arrow-key sequences.
-+ USE_LSTAT OK to use lstat().
-+ USE_MEMCPY Define this if memcpy()/memset()/memmove() available.
-+ USE_STRERROR Define this if strerror() is available.
-+ USLEEP usleep() system call available (conflicts with NAP & SELECT).
-+ UTEK Build for Tektronix workstations with UTEK OS.
-+ UTIMEH Include <utime.h> for setting file dates (SVR4, POSIX)
-+ UTS24 Build for Amdahl UTS 2.4.
-+ V7 Build for Version 7 UNIX.
-+ VMS Build for VAX/VMS.
-+ VOID=xxx VOID type for functions (int or void).
-+ VXVE Build for CDC VX/VE 5.2.1.
-+ WAIT_T=xxx Type of argument passed to wait().
-+ WINTCP Build with Wollongong VAX/VMS TCP/IP (implies TCPSOCKET)
-+ WOLLONGONG Build with Wollongong UNIX TCP/IP (implies TCPSOCKET)
-+ XENIX Build for Xenix (SCO, Tandy, others).
-+ XNDIR Support for BSD long filenames via <sys/ndir.h>.
-+ XYZ_INTERNAL Support for XYZMODEM protocols is internal, not external.
-+ ZFCDAT Define this if zfcdat() function is available in Kermit.
-+ ZILOG Build for Zilog ZEUS.
-+ ZJDATE Has zjdate() function that converts date to Julian format.
-+ XPRINT Transparent print code included in CONNECT module.
-+
-+ [ [173]Top ] [ [174]Contents ] [ [175]C-Kermit Home ] [ [176]Kermit
-+ Home ]
-+ __________________________________________________________________
-+
-+
-+ C-Kermit Configuration Options / [177]The Kermit Project /
-+ [178]kermit@columbia.edu / 30 June 2011
-+
-+References
-+
-+ 1. http://www.columbia.edu/
-+ 2. mailto:kermit@columbia.edu
-+ 3. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 4. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/k95.html
-+ 5. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 6. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckscripts.html
-+ 7. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/current.html
-+ 8. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/whatsnew.html
-+ 9. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/faq.html
-+ 10. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/support.html
-+ 11. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html
-+ 12. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 13. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 14. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html#x1
-+ 15. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html#x2
-+ 16. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html#x3
-+ 17. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html#x4
-+ 18. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html#x5
-+ 19. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html#x6
-+ 20. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html#x7
-+ 21. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html#x8
-+ 22. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html#x9
-+ 23. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html#x10
-+ 24. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html#x11
-+ 25. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html#x12
-+ 26. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html#x13
-+ 27. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html#x14
-+ 28. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html#xa1
-+ 29. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html
-+ 30. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 31. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 32. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html#top
-+ 33. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html#contents
-+ 34. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html#x2
-+ 35. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html#x0
-+ 36. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 37. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 38. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html#top
-+ 39. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html#contents
-+ 40. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html#x3
-+ 41. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html#x1
-+ 42. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckutio.c
-+ 43. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckcdeb.h
-+ 44. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckuus3.c
-+ 45. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckcdeb.h
-+ 46. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckutio.c
-+ 47. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckutio.c
-+ 48. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 49. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 50. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html#top
-+ 51. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html#contents
-+ 52. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html#x4
-+ 53. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html#x2
-+ 54. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/makefile
-+ 55. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html
-+ 56. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x4
-+ 57. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x9.2
-+ 58. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckuusx.c
-+ 59. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckutio.c
-+ 60. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckufio.c
-+ 61. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckuusx.c
-+ 62. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckucmd.c
-+ 63. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 64. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 65. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html#top
-+ 66. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html#contents
-+ 67. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html#x5
-+ 68. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html#x3
-+ 69. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/unicode.html
-+ 70. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 71. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 72. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html#top
-+ 73. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html#contents
-+ 74. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html#x6
-+ 75. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html#x4
-+ 76. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckuusr.h
-+ 77. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckuusr.h
-+ 78. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 79. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 80. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html#top
-+ 81. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html#contents
-+ 82. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html#x7
-+ 83. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html#x5
-+ 84. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html#x6.1
-+ 85. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html#x6.2
-+ 86. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html#x6.3
-+ 87. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html#x6.4
-+ 88. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html#x4
-+ 89. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/gkermit.html
-+ 90. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckuusr.h
-+ 91. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckcker.h
-+ 92. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckcdeb.h
-+ 93. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 94. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 95. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html#top
-+ 96. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html#contents
-+ 97. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html#x8
-+ 98. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html#x6
-+ 99. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckudia.c
-+ 100. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 101. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 102. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html#top
-+ 103. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html#contents
-+ 104. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html#x9
-+ 105. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html#x7
-+ 106. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html#x8.1
-+ 107. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html#x8.2
-+ 108. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html#x8.3
-+ 109. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html#x8.1.1
-+ 110. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html#x8.1.2
-+ 111. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html#x8.1.3
-+ 112. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html#x8.1.4
-+ 113. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html#x8.1.5
-+ 114. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html#x8.1.6
-+ 115. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckcnet.h
-+ 116. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckctel.c
-+ 117. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckctel.c
-+ 118. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckctel.h
-+ 119. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckcftp.c
-+ 120. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 121. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckcnet.c
-+ 122. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckcnet.h
-+ 123. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckutio.c
-+ 124. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html#x11
-+ 125. mailto:kermit@columbia.edu
-+ 126. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 127. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 128. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html#top
-+ 129. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html#contents
-+ 130. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html#x10
-+ 131. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html#x8
-+ 132. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 133. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 134. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html#top
-+ 135. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html#contents
-+ 136. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html#x11
-+ 137. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html#x9
-+ 138. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x11
-+ 139. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html
-+ 140. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 141. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 142. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html#top
-+ 143. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html#contents
-+ 144. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html#x12
-+ 145. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html#x10
-+ 146. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckucns.c
-+ 147. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckucon.c
-+ 148. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 149. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 150. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html#top
-+ 151. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html#contents
-+ 152. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html#x13
-+ 153. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html#x11
-+ 154. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 155. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 156. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html#top
-+ 157. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html#contents
-+ 158. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html#x14
-+ 159. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html#x12
-+ 160. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckcdeb.h
-+ 161. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 162. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 163. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html#top
-+ 164. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html#contents
-+ 165. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html#x13
-+ 166. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 167. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 168. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html#top
-+ 169. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html#contents
-+ 170. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckcdeb.h
-+ 171. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckcnet.h
-+ 172. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckcmai.c
-+ 173. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html#top
-+ 174. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html#contents
-+ 175. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 176. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 177. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 178. mailto:kermit@columbia.edu
---- /dev/null
-+++ ckermit-301/ockermit.ini
-@@ -0,0 +1,618 @@
-+COMMENT - Standard C-Kermit initialization file
-+;
-+; For C-Kermit Version: 8.0
-+;
-+; Filename:
-+; .kermrc (UNIX, OS-9, Aegis)
-+; CKERMIT.INI (OS/2, VMS, OpenVMS, AOS/VS, Atari ST, Commodore Amiga)
-+; ckermit.ini (Stratus VOS)
-+; K95.INI (Kermit 95 -- but this big version is not used there)
-+; K2.INI (Kermit/2 -- but ditto)
-+;
-+; Authors:
-+; Frank da Cruz, Christine M. Gianone, Jeffrey Altman
-+; Columbia University, New York, NY 10025-7799, USA
-+;
-+; This is the standard and recommended C-Kermit 8.0 initialization file. To
-+; override settings or definitions made in this file, to add new settings or
-+; definitions, or to make any other desired customizations, create a separate,
-+; personal customization file called:
-+;
-+; .mykermrc (UNIX, OS-9, Aegis, BeBox, Plan 9)
-+; CKERMOD.INI (OS/2, VMS, OpenVMS, AOS/VS, Atari ST, Commodore Amiga)
-+; ckermod.ini (VOS)
-+;
-+; You can also define the customization filename in an environment
-+; variable (logical name in VMS), CKERMOD, which takes precedence over
-+; the names shown above.
-+;
-+; WHAT THIS FILE DOES:
-+;
-+; . Defines your default dialing directory name:
-+; .kdd for UNIX, OS-9 and Aegis; CKERMIT.KDD for other operating systems.
-+; You can override this with the environment variable K_DIAL_DIRECTORY
-+; . Defines your default network directory name:
-+; .knd for UNIX, OS-9 and Aegis; CKERMIT.KND for other operating systems.
-+; You can override this with the environment variable K_NET_DIRECTORY
-+; . Defines your default services directory name:
-+; .ksd for UNIX, OS-9 and Aegis; CKERMIT.KSD for other operating systems.
-+; You can override this with environment variable K_SERVICE_DIRECTORY.
-+; . Defines your customization file name (name given above)
-+; . Performs system-dependent setups for UNIX, VMS, OS/2, etc.
-+; . Defines VTPRINT macros for use with K95, MS-DOS Kermit, etc.
-+; . If you have a services directory, all the macros needed to use it are
-+; defined. If you don't have a services directory, the macros are not
-+; defined and Kermit starts faster.
-+; . Executes your personal customization file, if you have one.
-+; NOTE: Your customization file is NOT executed by Kermit itself; it is
-+; executed by this file.
-+;
-+; In UNIX, with C-Kermit 7.0 and later, you can store this file with a name
-+; other than .kermrc, and it will not be executed automatically, but, if you
-+; give this file execute permission, you can execute directly because of the
-+; "kerbang line" at the top, whenever you want all of the above actions to
-+; occur. The kerbang line must reflect the actual full path of the Kermit
-+; 7.0-or-later executable.
-+;
-+; C-Kermit 6.0 is documented in the book "Using C-Kermit", 2nd Edition,
-+; by Frank da Cruz and Christine M. Gianone, 1997, Digital Press /
-+; Butterworth-Heinemann, ISBN 1-55558-164-1. New features of subsequent
-+; versions are documented at the Kermit website:
-+; http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/
-+;
-+; Everything after this point depends on the script programming language.
-+; The CHECK command terminates this command file immediately if the script
-+; programming language (IF command) is not configured.
-+;
-+set take error on ; This makes CHECK quit if no script language.
-+check if ; Do we have an IF command? If not, quit now.
-+set take error off ; Back to normal.
-+
-+local _sd _servicedir _xp ; Declare local variables.
-+
-+COMMENT - C-Kermit version 6.0 or later required.
-+;
-+
-+asg _xp \v(xprogram)
-+if not def _xp asg _xp \v(program)
-+if not equal "\m(_xp)" "C-Kermit" -
-+ stop 1 \v(cmdfile): This initialization file is only for C-Kermit.
-+echo Executing \v(cmdfile) for \v(system)...
-+if < \v(version) 60000 -
-+ stop 1 \v(cmdfile): C-Kermit 6.0 or later required.
-+
-+forward \v(system) ; First do system-dependent items...
-+
-+:unknown ; Should not happen
-+Stop 1 Error: System type unknown!
-+
-+:Aegis ; Apollo Aegis and
-+:UNIX ; UNIX, all versions
-+asg _myinit -
-+ \v(home).mykermrc ; Customization filename
-+if remote forward COMMON ; Skip local-mode items if "-R"
-+asg _dialdir -
-+ \v(home).kdd ; C-Kermit dialing directory
-+asg _netdir -
-+ \v(home).knd ; C-Kermit network directory
-+asg _servicedir -
-+ \v(home).ksd ; C-Kermit services directory
-+forward COMMON ; End of UNIX section
-+
-+:OS9/68K ; OS-9
-+asg _myinit -
-+ \v(home).mykermrc ; Customization filename
-+if remote forward COMMON
-+asg _dialdir -
-+ \v(home).kdd ; C-Kermit dialing directory
-+asg _netdir -
-+ \v(home).knd ; C-Kermit network directory
-+asg _servicedir -
-+ \v(home).ksd ; C-Kermit services directory
-+else set file display crt
-+forward COMMON ; End of OS-9 section
-+
-+:VMS ; VMS and OpenVMS
-+forward COMMON
-+
-+:OS/2 ; Kermit 95
-+:WIN32
-+echo This initialization file is not for use with K95.
-+forward COMMON ; End of OS/2 section
-+
-+:AOS/VS ; Data General AOS/VS
-+set window 1 ; Sliding windows don't work
-+set file char dg-international ; File character-set
-+set xfer char latin1 ; Transfer character-set
-+set file display crt ; File transfer fisplay
-+def cli push ; Escape to CLI
-+def reset - ; Macro to reset DG DASHER terminal
-+ run write [!ascii 236 306 301]
-+forward COMMON ; End of AOS/VS section
-+
-+:Amiga ; Commodore Amiga
-+def cls echo \27[H\27[2J ; CLS command to clear the screen
-+set file char latin1 ; Use Latin Alphabet 1 for file transfer
-+set xfer char latin1 ; ...
-+forward COMMON ; End of Amiga section
-+
-+:Atari_ST ; Atari ST
-+def cls echo \27H\27J ; Clear screen a`la VT52
-+set server display on ; Show file xfer display in server mode too
-+set server timeout 15 ; Nonzero required for ^C interruption!
-+forward COMMON ; End of Atari ST section
-+
-+:Macintosh ; Apple Macintosh
-+set server display on ; Show file xfer display in server mode too.
-+forward COMMON
-+
-+:Stratus_VOS ; Stratus VOS
-+asg _myinit \v(home)ckermod.ini
-+if remote forward COMMON
-+asg _dialdir \v(home)ckermit.kdd
-+asg _netdir \v(home)ckermit.knd
-+asg _servicedir \v(home)ckermit.ksd
-+forward COMMON ; End of Stratus VOS section
-+
-+:COMMON ; For all systems
-+
-+; Define macros that are useful when running C-Kermit in remote mode.
-+; These macros serve no purpose on local-mode-only versions such as
-+; OS/2, Macintosh, Amiga, and Atari ST Kermit, so we skip defining them
-+; for those systems.
-+;
-+if not = 0 \findex(\v(system),WIN32:OS/2:Macintosh:Amiga:Atari_ST) -
-+ forward files
-+
-+; VTPRINT macro. Print a file on your PC's local printer.
-+
-+def VTPRINT echo \27[5i, type \%1, echo \27[4i
-+; or if your printer needs a formfeed to force the page out:
-+; def VTPRINT def echo \27[5i, type \%1, echo \12\27[4i
-+
-+; Macros for host-initiated file transfer using APC:
-+; NOT NEEDED ANY MORE because of autodownload/autoupload.
-+; Remove the following FORWARD command to reinstate these definitions:
-+
-+:FILES
-+
-+; Get customization and directory file names. Environment variables take
-+; precedence, so you do not have to edit this file to change these filenames.
-+;
-+if def \$(CKERMOD) assign _myinit \$(CKERMOD)
-+if not def _myinit assign _myinit \v(home)CKERMOD.INI
-+
-+if remote forward CUSTOM ; Skip all this if -R given on command line
-+
-+if def \$(K_NET_DIRECTORY) assign _netdir \$(K_NET_DIRECTORY)
-+if not def _netdir assign _netdir \v(home)CKERMIT.KND
-+
-+if def \$(K_DIAL_DIRECTORY) assign _dialdir \$(K_DIAL_DIRECTORY)
-+if not def _dialdir assign _dialdir \v(home)CKERMIT.KDD
-+
-+CHECK DIAL ; Is there a DIAL command?
-+xif fail { ; No.
-+ echo DIAL disabled
-+ forward CUSTOM
-+}
-+
-+CHECK NETWORK
-+xif success {
-+ xif exist \m(_netdir) {
-+ set net directory \m(_netdir)
-+ echo { Network directory is \m(_netdir) }
-+ }
-+}
-+
-+if eq "\v(name)" "telnet" forward CUSTOM
-+
-+xif exist \m(_dialdir) {
-+ set dial directory \m(_dialdir)
-+ echo { Dial directory is \m(_dialdir) }
-+}
-+
-+COMMENT - Services directory
-+
-+if def \$(K_SERVICE_DIRECTORY) assign _servicedir \$(K_SERVICE_DIRECTORY)
-+if not def _servicedir assign _servicedir \v(home)CKERMIT.KSD
-+
-+; If no services directory is found skip all the big macro definitions and
-+; go straight to the bottom, where we execute the customization file.
-+
-+if not exist \m(_servicedir) forward custom
-+
-+echo { Services directory is \m(_servicedir)}
-+
-+def MAX_SVCS 200 ; Adjust this if you have more entries
-+define _sd 0 ; Assume no services directory
-+open read \m(_servicedir) ; Try to open services directory file
-+xif success {
-+ declare \&d[\m(MAX_SVCS)] ; It's open, declare directory array
-+ for \%i 1 \m(MAX_SVCS) 1 { ; Read the lines into the array
-+ read \&d[\%i]
-+ if fail break
-+ }
-+ close read
-+ xif > \%i \m(MAX_SVCS) {
-+ echo Too many entries in services directory
-+ echo { Maximum is \m(MAX_SVCS).}
-+ echo { Change definition of MAX_SVCS in \v(cmdfile) to allow more. }
-+ echo { Services directory disabled.}
-+ } else {
-+ asg \&d[0] \feval(\%i - 1)
-+ define _sd 1
-+ }
-+}
-+
-+xif not \m(_sd) {
-+ def access echo { Services directory not available.}
-+ asg list \m(access)
-+} else {
-+ def FIND {
-+ set case off
-+ for \%i 1 \&d[0] 1 {
-+ if eq {\%1} {\fsubstr(\&d[\%i],1,\flen(\%1))} break
-+ }
-+ if not > \%i \&d[0] return \&d[\%i]
-+ }
-+ def LIST {
-+ xif > \v(argc) 1 {
-+ do find \%1
-+ if def \v(return) echo \v(return)
-+ else echo \%1: Not found
-+ } else {
-+ echo \&d[0] items in services directory:
-+ for \%i 1 \&d[0] 1 { echo \fcont(\&d[\%i]) }
-+ }
-+ }
-+ def SPLIT { asg _word1 \%1, asg _word2 \%2 }
-+ def DOACCESS { ; (Used internally by ACCESS macro)
-+ do \%5 \%6 \%7 \%8 \%9 ; Do the connection macro
-+ if fail end 1
-+ split \%3 ; Get words from \%3
-+ asg \%3 \m(_word1)
-+ asg \%2 \m(_word2)
-+ do \%3 \%4 {\%1} \%2 ; Login macro, userid, password, prompt
-+ }
-+ def ACCESS {
-+ if not defined \%1 end 1 access what? ; Check service
-+ do find \%1 ; Look it up
-+ if success doaccess {\%2} \v(return) ; OK, try it
-+ else end 1 "\%1" not in services directory ; Not found
-+ if fail end 1 ; DOACCESS failed?
-+ xif eq \v(cmdlevel) 1 {
-+ echo
-+ echo ACCESS: Login succeeded - CONNECTing...
-+ show escape
-+ output \13
-+ connect /quietly
-+ }
-+ }
-+}
-+
-+:CONNECTION ; Macros for making connections
-+
-+COMMENT - SERIAL macro. Arguments:
-+; \%1 = device name
-+; \%2 = speed
-+;
-+def SERIAL {
-+ if < \v(argc) 3 ; All arguments given?
-+ end 1 Usage: SERIAL device speed ; No.
-+ set line \%1 ; OK, try to SET LINE.
-+ if failure - ; If this failed,
-+ end 1 Can't open device: \%1 ; print message and quit.
-+ set speed \%2 ; Try to set the speed.
-+ if fail end 1 Unsupported speed: \%2 ; Failed.
-+ echo Connection successful. ; Succeeded.
-+}
-+
-+COMMENT - NET macro. Arguments:
-+; \%1 = network type
-+; \%2 = host name or address
-+;
-+def NET {
-+ if < \v(argc) 3 end 1 Usage: NET network host
-+ set network type \%1
-+ if fail end 1 unsupported network: \%1
-+ set login user ; Don't send user ID.
-+ set host \%2
-+ if fail end 1 Can't reach host: \%2
-+ echo Connection successful.
-+}
-+
-+COMMENT - CALL macro. Arguments:
-+;
-+; \%1 = modem type
-+; \%2 = device name
-+; \%3 = speed
-+; \%4 = phone number
-+;
-+def CALL {
-+ if < \v(argc) 5 - ; All arguments present?
-+ end 1 Usage: CALL modem device speed number
-+ xif not equal {\v(modem)} {\%1} { ; Set modem type
-+ set modem \%1
-+ if fail end 1 unknown modem type: \%1
-+ }
-+ xif not equal {\v(line)} {\%2} { ; Communication device
-+ set line \%2
-+ if fail end 1 can't open device: \%2
-+ }
-+ xif not equal {\v(speed)} {\%3} { ; Communication speed
-+ set speed \%3
-+ if fail end 1 unsupported speed: \%3
-+ }
-+ dial \%4 ; Dial the number
-+ if fail end 1 Can't place call: \%4
-+ end 0 Connection successful.
-+}
-+
-+COMMENT - TCPCALL macro. Arguments:
-+;
-+; \%1 = server name:port
-+; \%2 = modem type
-+; \%3 = phone number
-+;
-+def TCPCALL {
-+ if < \v(argc) 4 - ; All arguments present?
-+ end 1 Usage: TCPCALL server[:port] modem number
-+ set net type tcp/ip ; Which network to use
-+ if fail end 1 unsupported network: tcp/ip
-+ set host \%1 ; Access server and port
-+ if fail end 1 can't access server \%1
-+ set modem \%2 ; Set modem type
-+ if fail end 1 unknown modem type: \%2
-+ dial \%3 ; Dial the number
-+ if fail end 1 Can't place call: \%3
-+ end 0 Connection successful.
-+}
-+
-+COMMENT - SPRINT macro. Arguments:
-+; \%1 = Service name or address
-+;
-+def SPRINT {
-+ if < \v(argc) 2 end 1 Usage: \%0 service
-+ set input timeout proceed
-+ output @D\13
-+ input 10 TERMINAL=
-+ if fail end 1 No terminal prompt
-+ out D1\13
-+ inp 10 @
-+ if fail end 1 No atsign prompt
-+ output c \%1\13
-+ input 10 CONNECTED
-+ if fail end 1 Can't access \%1 from SprintNet
-+}
-+
-+COMMENT - ULOGIN macro. For logging into systems where user ID is required
-+; but there is no password. Arguments:
-+; \%1 = UNIX user ID
-+;
-+define ULOGIN {
-+ if < \v(argc) 2 end 1 Usage: \%0 userid
-+ set input timeout proceed ; Handle timeouts ourselves
-+ set case on ; Case is important in UNIX
-+ minput 5 login: Username: {User ID:} {User Name:}
-+ out \%1\13 ; Send username, carriage return
-+ end 0
-+}
-+
-+COMMENT - VMSLOGIN macro. Arguments:
-+; \%1 = VMS user ID
-+; \%2 = Password. If password not supplied, it is prompted for.
-+; \%3 = System prompt. If omitted a default is supplied.
-+;
-+define VMSLOGIN {
-+ if < \v(argc) 2 end 1 Usage: \%0 userid [ password [ prompt ] ]
-+ while not defined \%2 {
-+ askq \%2 { \%1's password: }
-+ }
-+ set parity none ; Set communication parameters
-+ set duplex full
-+ set handshake none
-+ set input timeout proceed ; Handle timeouts ourselves
-+ in 5 Username: ; Is prompt already there?
-+ xif fail { ; No.
-+ for \%i 1 3 1 { ; Try 3 times to get it.
-+ out \13 ; Send carriage return
-+ in 5 Username: ; Look for prompt
-+ if success break ; Success, go log in
-+ }
-+ if > \%i 3 end 1 No Username prompt
-+ }
-+ out \%1\13 ; Send username, carriage return
-+ inp 5 Password: ; Wait 5 sec for this prompt
-+ if fail end 1 No password prompt
-+ pause ; Wait a sec
-+ out \%2\13 ; Send password
-+ xif not emulation { ; No emulator built in?
-+ set input echo off ; Protect terminal from this
-+ minput 10 {\27Z} {\27[c} {\27[0c} ; Get terminal ID query
-+ xif success { ; Got one
-+ output \27[\?1c ; Send VT100 terminal ID
-+ in 2 \27[6n ; Screen dimension query?
-+ if succ out \27[\v(rows);\v(cols)R ; Send dimensions
-+ }
-+ set input echo on ; Echo input again
-+ }
-+ if not def \%3 - ; If we were not given a prompt
-+ asg \%3 {\v(prompt)} ; use the SET LOGIN PROMPT value
-+ if not def \%3 - ; If we still don't have a prompt
-+ asg \%3 {\13$\32} ; use this one as the default
-+ reinp 0 \%3 ; Did we INPUT the prompt already?
-+ if fail inp 60 \%3 ; No, look now.
-+ if fail end 1
-+}
-+
-+COMMENT - UNIXLOGIN macro. Arguments:
-+; \%1 = UNIX user ID
-+; \%2 = Password. If password not supplied, it is prompted for.
-+; \%3 = System prompt. If omitted a default is supplied.
-+;
-+define UNIXLOGIN {
-+ local \%m \%i
-+ if < \v(argc) 2 -
-+ end 1 Usage: \%0 userid [ password [ prompt ] ]
-+ while not defined \%2 {
-+ askq \%2 { \%1's password: }
-+ }
-+ set input echo on
-+ set parity none ; Set communication parameters.
-+ set duplex full
-+ set handshake none
-+ set input timeout proceed ; Handle timeouts ourselves
-+ set case on ; Case is important in UNIX
-+ def \%m 10 ; Waiting time for INPUT
-+ for \%i 1 5 1 {
-+ minput \%m login: {ssword:} {Password for \%1:}
-+ if success break
-+ output \B\13
-+ \%m ::= 6-\%1
-+ }
-+ if > \%i 5 end 1 {No response from host}
-+ xif = \v(minput) 1 { ; Have username prompt
-+ output \%1\13 ; Send username
-+ minput 5 {ssword:} {ssword for \%1:} ; Wait for password prompt
-+ if fail end 1 {No password prompt}
-+ }
-+ pause ; Wait a sec
-+ out \%2\13 ; Send password
-+ if not def \%3 - ; If we were not given a prompt
-+ asg \%3 {\v(prompt)} ; use the SET LOGIN PROMPT value
-+ if not def \%3 - ; If we still don't have a prompt
-+ asg \%3 {\10$ } ; use this one as the default
-+ reinp 0 \%3 ; Did we INPUT the prompt already?
-+ if fail inp 60 \%3 ; No, look now.
-+ if fail end 1
-+}
-+
-+COMMENT - VMLINELOGIN macro. Arguments:
-+; \%1 = User ID
-+; \%2 = Password
-+;
-+define VMLINELOGIN {
-+ if < \v(argc) 2 -
-+ end 1 Usage: \%0 userid [ password ]
-+ while not defined \%2 {
-+ askq \%2 { \%1's password: }
-+ }
-+ set parity mark ; Set communication parameters
-+ set flow none
-+ set handshake xon
-+ set duplex half
-+ set input timeout quit ; Don't bother with IF FAILURE
-+ input 10 BREAK KEY ; Look for BREAK KEY prompt
-+ pause 1 ; Wait a second
-+ output \B ; Send BREAK
-+ input 10 .\17, output logon \%1\13 ; Now log in
-+ input 10 .\17, output \%2\13 ; Send password
-+ input 10 .\17, output \13 ; Send carriage return
-+ input 10 .\17, output \13 ; Send another one
-+ end 0
-+}
-+
-+COMMENT - VMFULLOGIN macro. Arguments:
-+; \%1 = User ID
-+; \%2 = Password
-+;
-+define VMFULLOGIN {
-+ if < \v(argc) 2 -
-+ end 1 Usage: \%0 userid [ password ]
-+ while not defined \%2 {
-+ askq \%2 { \%1's password: }
-+ }
-+ set input timeout quit ; Quit if INPUT fails
-+ set parity even ; Set communication parameters
-+ set duplex full
-+ set handshake none
-+ set flow xon/xoff
-+ out \13 ; Send carriage return
-+ inp 5 TERMINAL TYPE: ; Get terminal-type prompt
-+ out vt-100\13 ; Just send "vt-100"
-+ inp 20 RUNNING ; Get RUNNING message
-+ pau 1 ; Wait one second
-+ out \%1\9\%2\13 ; Send user ID, tab, password
-+ out \13\13 ; Two more carriage returns
-+ end 0
-+}
-+
-+COMMENT - CISLOGIN macro. Arguments:
-+; \%1 = CompuServe User ID
-+; \%2 = Password
-+; \%3 = Prompt
-+;
-+define CISLOGIN {
-+ if < \v(argc) 2 -
-+ end 1 Usage: \%0 userid [ password [ prompt ] ]
-+ while not defined \%2 {
-+ askq \%2 { \%1's password: }
-+ }
-+ set terminal bytesize 7 ; No 8-bit characters
-+ set input timeout quit ; Skip the IF FAILURE's
-+ output \13 ; Send initial carriage return
-+ input 5 Host Name: ; Look for Host Name prompt
-+ output cis\13 ; Send "cis" and carriage return
-+ input 5 User ID: ; Look for User ID prompt
-+ output \%1\13 ; Send ID and carriage return
-+ input Password: ; Look for Password prompt
-+ output \%2\13 ; Send password and CR
-+ if not def \%3 asg \%3 \v(prompt)
-+ if not def \%3 asg \%3 {CompuServe Information Service}
-+ input 30 \%3
-+ end 0
-+}
-+
-+COMMENT - DOWLOGIN macro. Arguments:
-+; \%1 = Dow Jones Password
-+;
-+define DOWLOGIN {
-+ while not defined \%1 { ; Get password
-+ askq \%1 { Dow Jones password: }
-+ }
-+ set input timeout proceed
-+ input 20 SERVICE PLEASE\?\?\?\? ; Look for Dow prompt
-+ if fail end 1 No service prompt
-+ out djnr\13 ; Select DJNR
-+ input 10 @@@@@@@@ ; Get password prompt
-+ if fail end 1 No password prompt
-+ pause 1 ; Wait a second, then...
-+ output \%1\13 ; send password and CR
-+ input 30 ENTER QUERY ; Get DJNR query prompt
-+ if fail end 1 No main query prompt
-+ pause 1
-+}
-+
-+COMMENT - DJNRSPRINT macro: Log in to Dow Jones via SprintNet.
-+;
-+def djnrsprint sprint dow, if success dowlogin
-+
-+COMMENT - NOLOGIN macro. Does nothing. Use when login not required.
-+;
-+def nologin comment
-+
-+:CUSTOM ; Customization file
-+
-+; In VMS and OpenVMS, allow for system-wide site customizations
-+
-+xif equal "\v(system)" "VMS" {
-+ xif exist CKERMIT_INI:CKERMIT.SYS {
-+ echo Executing CKERMIT_INI:CKERMIT.SYS
-+ take CKERMIT_INI:CKERMIT.SYS
-+ }
-+}
-+
-+; Execute user's personal customization file
-+
-+xif exist \m(_myinit) { ; If it exists,
-+ echo Executing \m(_myinit)... ; print message,
-+ take \m(_myinit) ; and TAKE the file.
-+}
-+
-+; Finish up with traditional greeting.
-+
-+if < \v(ntime) 43200 echo Good Morning!
-+ else if < \v(ntime) 61200 echo Good Afternoon!
-+ else echo Good Evening.
-+
-+End ; of C-Kermit 8.0 initialization file.
---- /dev/null
-+++ ckermit-301/ckermit90.txt
-@@ -0,0 +1,2125 @@
-+
-+ [1]The Columbia Crown The Kermit Project | Columbia University
-+ 612 West 115th Street, New York NY 10025 USA o [2]kermit@columbia.edu
-+ ...since 1981
-+ [3]Home [4]Kermit 95 [5]C-Kermit [6]Scripts [7]Current [8]New [9]FAQ
-+ [10]Support
-+
-+ [11]Table of platforms [12]Book: Using C-Kermit [13]Download
-+ C-Kermit 9.0
-+
-+C-Kermit 9.0 Update Notes
-+
-+ * [14]Large Files
-+ * [15]How to Test Large-File Transfer
-+ * [16]Arithmetic with Large Integers
-+ * [17]FORCE-3 Packet Protocol
-+ * [18]Variable Evaluation
-+
-+ * [19]The RENAME Command You Always Wanted
-+ * [20]Other New Features
-+ * [21]Incompatibilities
-+ * [22]What's Not In C-Kermit 9.0
-+ * [23]And a Loose End
-+
-+ * [24]Demonstration: Secure POP mail fetcher
-+ * [25]Demonstration: HP Switch Configuration Backup
-+ * [26]Demonstration: HP iLO Blade Configuration
-+ * [27]Demonstration: IBM/Rolm/Siemens CBX Management
-+ * [28]Demonstration: CSV and TSV Files
-+ * [29]Demonstration Scripts for Webmasters
-+
-+ This is the third supplement to [30]Using C-Kermit, Second Edition. I
-+ apologize for the scattered nature of the information and I hope I can
-+ organize it and gather it all into one place for easy and definitive
-+ reference some day. It's a big job and it depends on the demand. For
-+ the time being the definitive reference and introduction is the book
-+ (which is now available also in a [31]Kindle Edition), plus the
-+ [32]C-Kermit 7.0 update, [33]C-Kermit 8.0 update, and now this one.
-+ Plus tons of other web pages on this site, sample script programs, and
-+ so on.
-+
-+ In version 6.0, C-Kermit was a pretty powerful and flexible
-+ communication program with scripting capabilities. By version 9.0, I'd
-+ like to think of it more as a scripting language with built-in
-+ communications. You can get an idea of the kinds of programs you can
-+ write in Kermit language [34]here. You can develop programs quickly
-+ because it's an interactive program, not a compiler. The scripting
-+ language is the command language. Kind of like the Unix shell but
-+ "somewhat" less cryptic, including concepts not only from C but from
-+ PL/I, Snobol, LISP, and Smalltalk. The language itself is built upon
-+ the command language of the much-loved [35]DECSYSTEM-20 from the 1970s
-+ and 80s, the Clipper Ship of the Text Era. (Text is not a bad word.
-+ Those of us who can touch-type and who are proficient in text-based
-+ computing environments like Unix shell or VMS DCL are likely to be
-+ orders of magnitude more productive than users of GUIs.)
-+
-+ - Frank da Cruz [36]fdc@columbia.edu
-+
-+What's New in General
-+
-+ Very briefly, the major items:
-+ * [37]Open Source license.
-+ * [38]64-bit file access and transfer and 64-bit integer arithmetic
-+ on most common platforms.
-+ * Support for recent releases of Linux, Mac OS X, *BSD, etc ([39]see
-+ table).
-+ * Support for newer OpenSSL releases up to and including 1.0.0d
-+ ([40]see table).
-+ * [41]Strengthened error checking for file transfer under extremely
-+ harsh conditions.
-+ * [42]Simplified semantics for variables used in scripts.
-+ * Super-handy and useful [43]extensions to the RENAME command.
-+ * Many other scripting improvements including support for reading and
-+ writing [44]CSV and TSV files.
-+ * [45]MIME character-set names are now recognized.
-+ * Improved logging and debugging (see demo [46]here).
-+ * Lots more described or listed below, and [47]here.
-+
-+Open Source License
-+
-+ C-Kermit 9.0 has the [48]Revised 3-Clause BSD License, an open source
-+ license approved by OSI, the [49]Open Source Initiative.
-+
-+Large Files
-+
-+ Kermit is, first and foremost, a file-transfer program. One might
-+ expect it to be able to transfer any kind of file, but that has been
-+ decreasingly the case as file sizes began to cross the 2 gigabyte
-+ threshold.
-+
-+ The biggest change since C-Kermit 8.0.211 is support for large files on
-+ platforms that support them. A "large file" is one whose size is
-+ greater than 2^31-1 (2,147,483,647) bytes (2GB-1); that is, one whose
-+ size requires more than 31 bits to represent. Before now, Kermit was
-+ able to access such files only on 100% 64-bit platforms such as Digital
-+ Unix, later known as Tru64 Unix. In the new release, Kermit takes
-+ advantage of the X/Open Single UNIX Specification Version 2 (UNIX 98)
-+ Large File Support (LFS) specification, which allows 32-bit platforms
-+ to create, access, and manage files larger than 2GB.
-+
-+ Accommodating large files required code changes in many modules,
-+ affecting not only file transfer, but also file management functions
-+ from directory listings to local file manipulation, plus the user
-+ interface itself to allow entry and display of large numbers. All this
-+ had to be done in a way that would not affect pure 32-bit builds on
-+ platforms that do not support large files. Large file support is
-+ summarized in the [50]Table of Platforms; entries in Yellow (32-bit
-+ builds that support 64-bit integers) and Green (64-bit builds) support
-+ large files.
-+
-+ Note that VMS C-Kermit and Kermit 95 for Windows have always been able
-+ to transfer large files. However their user interface used 32-bit
-+ integers for statistics and the file transfer display. In C-Kermit 9.0
-+ Alpha.03, VMS C-Kermit on 64-bit platforms (Alpha and Itanium) should
-+ now give correct statistics and progress displays. (We'll see about
-+ Kermit 95 later.)
-+
-+How to Test Large-File Transfer
-+
-+ Several methods are available for testing large-file transfers:
-+ * By transferring a real file that is more than 2147483648 bytes long
-+ (a file whose length requires more than 31 bits to express); or to
-+ be totally sure, that is longer than 4294967296 bytes (32 bits or
-+ more). Or to be double super sure, longer than 8589934592 (33
-+ bits).
-+ * If you don't have such a file or there is not sufficient disk space
-+ for such a file, you can create a special kind of file that takes
-+ up one block on the disk but appears to be 4.3GB long by compiling
-+ and running [51]THIS C PROGRAM on Linux, Solaris, HP-UX, or other
-+ Unix platform that supports large files. Kermit or FTP or any other
-+ file transfer program will transfer the result (BIGFILE) in such a
-+ way as to actually put 4.3GB (or other desired size; see source) on
-+ the wire.
-+ * You can use Kermit's CALIBRATE feature to transfer a large file
-+ that doesn't exist. At the receiver, use RECEIVE /CALIBRATE. At the
-+ sender, use SEND /CALIBRATE:length, e.g.:
-+
-+ (At remote kermit...)
-+ $ kermit -Y
-+ C-Kermit> receive /calibrate
-+ (Return to local kermit...)
-+ Ctrl-\c
-+ C-Kermit> send /calibrate:4300000000
-+ This sends a simulated file 4.3GB in length, that does not exist on
-+ the sender and will not take up any disk space on the receiver.
-+ SEND /CALIBRATE: accepts big numbers only in Kermit versions that
-+ support them (this does not include Kermit 95 on Windows). This
-+ method tests only Kermit's ability to express and understand large
-+ file sizes, but does not test Kermit's file-system interface, since
-+ no files are involved.
-+
-+Arithmetic with Large Integers
-+
-+ Because large file support requires the availability of a 64-bit signed
-+ integer data type, other aspects of C-Kermit were adapted to use it
-+ too, most notably Kermit's algebraic expression evaluator and its
-+ [52]S-Expression interpreter, on all platforms that support large files
-+ (those listed as 64 or 32/64 in the Word column of the [53]table). In
-+ fact, every Kermit command that parses a number in any field can now
-+ parse a large number on those platforms.
-+
-+ S-Expressions can now be forced to operate with integers only, without
-+ floating-point conversion or having to explicitly truncate each result;
-+ as an example. see the revised [54]Easter date calculation script.
-+
-+FORCE-3 Packet Protocol
-+
-+ The Kermit protocol has proven itself over the past 30 years to be
-+ robust in terms of surviving harsh transmission environments and
-+ delivering the data correctly and completely. In these times of
-+ Internet everywhere and error-correcting modems in the few places where
-+ the Internet isn't, few people even recall the kinds of difficult
-+ conditions that were common when the Kermit protocol was first
-+ developed: noisy telephone lines, serial interfaces that drop
-+ characters, lack of transparency to control or 8-bit characters,
-+ absence of flow control, "bare" modems without error correction.
-+
-+ But the Internet is not everywhere, and not all modems are
-+ error-correcting. Perhaps the most difficult trial so far for Kermit or
-+ any other protocol is the [55]EM-APEX project, in which floats are
-+ dropped into the ocean from an aircraft into the path of a hurricane;
-+ these floats dive into the water measuring current, temperature, and
-+ salinity at different depths and then surfacing to phone home, sending
-+ the data to land stations using Kermit protocol over
-+ non-error-correcting 300bps [56]Iridium satellite modems, with high
-+ seas and winds battering the floats and heavy ([57]sometimes
-+ electrical) storms between the modem and the satellite.
-+
-+ Because of the transmission speed and long distances involved, the
-+ transfers were very slow. The Kermit software in the floats is
-+ [58]Embedded Kermit, which did not implement sliding windows, which
-+ would have sped up the flow considerably. John Dunlap, engineer at the
-+ University of Washington's Applied Physics Laboratory, undertook the
-+ task of adding sliding windows to E-Kermit. For testing, he rigged up a
-+ [59]simulator in which Kermit transfers take place over a connection
-+ with different amounts of noise and delay. He found that occasionally,
-+ a transfer would appear to succeed, but the received file would be
-+ corrupt.
-+
-+ According to the Kermit protocol definition, the first packet always
-+ has block-check type 1, a 6-bit checksum, which is the only block check
-+ type that all Kermit implementations are required to support; thus any
-+ Kermit partner can process this packet. This packet itself can
-+ negotiate a higher level of checking, such that subsequent packets have
-+ (say) block-check type 3, a 16-bit cyclic redundancy check (CRC)
-+ encoded as three printable 7-bit ASCII characters. The 16-bit CRC can
-+ catch all errors of certain kinds (single-bit, double-bit, bursts of 16
-+ bits or less), and more than 99.9984741210937% of all other possible
-+ errors.
-+
-+ John's simulations revealed that file corruption could occur undetected
-+ when the initial packet was corrupted in such a way that a parameter or
-+ capability byte was changed and the checksum also changed to make the
-+ packet appear to be correct, thus allowing the transfer to proceed with
-+ the two Kermit partners out of sync as to packet encoding and
-+ interpretation (the chances of two such errors producing a seemingly
-+ valid packet are about 1 in 6000 when using the 6-bit checksum). For
-+ example the compression technique might be misnegotiated and then the
-+ receiver might store incoming data without decompressing it.
-+
-+ The solution is a new option, selected by:
-+
-+ BLOCK-CHECK TYPE 5
-+
-+ to require a type 3 block check (16-bit CRC) on every packet, including
-+ the initial ones, thus reducing the probability of a misnegotiation by
-+ many orders of magnitude. THIS PARAMETER CAN NOT BE NEGOTIATED. Each
-+ Kermit program must be given the "set block 5" command prior to
-+ transfer. That's because normally every Kermit program expects the
-+ first packet to have a 6-bit checksum, and if the first packet has a
-+ 3-byte, 16-bit CRC, the packet receiver will think it is corrupted.
-+
-+ In practice, however, it is possible to code the packet receiver
-+ "cheat" by reading the packet data before verifying the block check.
-+ Thus when the receiver is C-Kermit 9.0 Beta.01 or later or E-Kermit 1.7
-+ or later, it is only necessary to give the "set block 5" command to the
-+ file sender, and the receiver will check for a FORCE-3 first packet. If
-+ the receiver does not support this feature, however, the the initial
-+ packet will be be rejected (after several retries) and the file
-+ transfer will not take place. There is no attempt to "back off" to
-+ normal behavior.
-+
-+ CAPTION: Table 4. Kermit Protocol Packet Block Check Types
-+
-+ Type Command Bytes Status Explanation
-+ 1 SET BLOCK 1 1 Required in all Kermit implementations. Negotiated.
-+ 6-bit checksum, suitable for good connections.
-+ 2 SET BLOCK 2 2 Optional, negotiated. 12-bit checksum. 64 times
-+ stronger than type 1.
-+ 3 SET BLOCK 3 3 Optional, negotiated. 16-bit CRC.
-+ BLANK-FREE-2 SET BLOCK 4 2 Optional, negotiated. 12-bit checksum, two
-+ nonblank bytes.
-+ FORCE-3 SET BLOCK 5 3 Optional, not negotiated. 16-bit CRC forced all
-+ packets.
-+
-+ [60]E-Kermit 1.7
-+
-+Variable Evaluation
-+
-+ Does the strange behavior of Kermit's \%x variables puzzle or annoy
-+ you?
-+
-+ Kermit software development has been a collaborative project over the
-+ years, with contributions coming in from almost every country and every
-+ sector of the economy - academic, corporate, government. Thus not all
-+ versions, and not all features of a given version, are a product of
-+ systematic design.
-+
-+ One example was the introduction of variables for text substitution,
-+ first in a version of MS-DOS Kermit that was sent in by someone
-+ somewhere (I could look it up, but no time...) Although the design of
-+ the notation for variable names (table below) is mine, the underlying
-+ code was contributed. In that code there was only one kind of variable,
-+ and if I recall correctly the variable name was a backslash followed by
-+ a single letter, for example \a, \b, etc. The contributed code
-+ evaluated these variables recursively, meaning if the definition of a
-+ variable contained variable references, then these were resolved when
-+ dererencing the variable, and the process would continue as deep down
-+ as necessary to resolve the thing fully.
-+
-+ This was sometimes handy, but it had one severe drawback: There was no
-+ way to use variables in a straightforward way to represent strings that
-+ contained literal backslashes; for example, DOS or Windows pathnames.
-+ This gave rise to all kinds of quoting rules and conventions (e.g.
-+ doubling backslashes or forcing single-level evaluation with
-+ \\fcontents()), and also to the introduction of other kinds of
-+ variables that were evaluated one level deep, rather than recursively.
-+
-+ To accommodate coexistence of different kinds of variables as well as
-+ "escape sequences" for representing control and 8-bit characters, the
-+ syntax for variable names was extended to include three elements: the
-+ leading backslash, then a single character indicating the type of
-+ variable, and then the name of the variable in a format corresponding
-+ to the type designator, as shown in this somewhat simplified table:
-+
-+ CAPTION: Table 1. Variable-name Syntax in Kermit
-+
-+ Notation Meaning
-+ \000 - \255 8-bit character constant (decimal)
-+ \d000 - \d255 Alternative notation for 8-bit character (byte) constant
-+ (decimal)
-+ \o000 - \o377 8-bit character constant (octal)
-+ \x00 - \xff 8-bit character constant (hexadecimal)
-+ \%a - \%z Scalar variable, evaluated recursively.
-+ \%0 - \%9 Macro argument, scalar, evaluated recursively.
-+ \&a - \%& Array name
-+ \&a[x] Array reference, evaluated recursively (x is any constant or
-+ variable)
-+ \v(name) Built-in scalar variable, evaluated one level deep.
-+ \m(name) User-defined scalar variable, evaluated one level deep.
-+ \$(name) An environment variable, evaluated one level deep.
-+ \s(name[n:m]) Compact substring notation, evaluated one level deep.
-+ \fname(args...)) Built-in function with zero or more arguments.
-+ \\ Literal backslash
-+ \N OUTPUT comand only: NUL, ASCII 0
-+ \B OUTPUT comand only: BREAK
-+ \L OUTPUT comand only: Long BREAK
-+
-+ Variable names in Kermit are case-independent. The simplifications in
-+ the table are that the notation for decimal and octal bytes can have
-+ from one to three digits, and can include braces to separate them from
-+ text digits, e.g. \7, \{123}, \o{50}. Hex bytes too, except they must
-+ always have exactly two hex digits, 0-9a-f. Array indices must be, or
-+ must evaluate to, numbers (floating point numbers are truncated).
-+ Associative arrays are also available (dynamic arrays with arbitrary
-+ text as subscript), but they are really just a variation on \m()
-+ variables (read about associative arrays [61]here). Also, there are
-+ some alternative notations for compact substring notation.
-+
-+ We didn't want to have lots of "distinguished" characters, as the UNIX
-+ shell does; one is enough, clarity over brevity. Although the notation
-+ can be a bit cumbersome, we can use the \m(name) form to circumvent the
-+ overevaluation in most contexts. But macro arguments are always
-+ assigned to the \%0-9 variables, and thus always evaluated recursively,
-+ making it difficult and confusing to pass (e.g.) Windows pathnames as
-+ arguments to macros. The same is true for array elements, especially in
-+ contexts where they are used to return results from built-in functions
-+ (for example, \fsplit() used to return the elements of a
-+ [62]comma-separated value list if any of the values contained
-+ backslashes). An even worse scenario is when macro arguments are passed
-+ from one macro to another; for some graphic illustrations see
-+ [63]Taming the Wild Backslash - Part Deux from the [64]C-Kermit 7.0
-+ Update Notes.
-+
-+ We can't just change how variables are evaluated because that would
-+ break existing scripts. But we can always add Yet Another SET Command:
-+
-+ SET COMMAND VARIABLE-EVALUATION { RECURSIVE, SIMPLE }
-+
-+ This applies only to \%a-z and \%0-9 variables and to \&a-z[] arrays
-+ (since all other kinds of variables are evaluated only one level deep).
-+ The default, of course, for backwards compatibility, is RECURSIVE.
-+ SIMPLE forces the evaluation of these variables to return their literal
-+ contents, without further evaluation:
-+
-+ * An exception is made in the case of array subscripts, because
-+ changing how they are evaluated could break a lot of scripts, and
-+ anyway there should never be any harm in evaluating them
-+ recursively because their final value is always (or should be)
-+ numeric, not some string that might contain backslashes.
-+ * The VARIABLE-EVALUTION setting is on the command stack. Thus you
-+ can give this command in a macro, command file, or user-defined
-+ function without affecting the calling environment.
-+ * The new \frecurse() function forces recursive evaluation of its
-+ argument regardless of the VARIABLE-EVALUATION setting. The
-+ argument can be any string (or nothing at all); all the variables
-+ in the string, even \m() ones, are evaluated recursively:
-+
-+def \%a 1 \%b 3
-+def \%b 2
-+def xx easy as \%a
-+show mac xx
-+echo \frecurse(\m(xx))
-+easy as 1 2 3
-+echo \frecurse(it's as easy as \m(xx))
-+it's as easy as easy as 1 2 3
-+
-+ * The new \v(vareval) built-in variable contains the current setting
-+ (recursive or simple) at the current command-stack level.
-+
-+ Here's a short script for illustration:
-+
-+define path c:\users\fdc\somefile.txt
-+define test1 { # Normal recursive argument evaluation
-+ echo \%0: arg=\%1
-+}
-+define test2 { # Simple argument evaluation
-+ set var simple
-+ echo \%0: arg=\%1
-+}
-+test1 \m(path)
-+test2 \m(path)
-+exit
-+
-+ And here's the result:
-+
-+?<ERROR:NO_SUCH_FUNCTION:\fdc\somefile.txt()>
-+test2: arg=c:\users\fdc\somefile.txt
-+
-+ The first line might seem surprising, but under the normal rules (see
-+ table above) \f indicates a function call, with the letters following
-+ the 'f' being the name of the function. But there is no function by
-+ that name... and if there were, you probably didn't intend to call it!
-+
-+ SET COMMAND VARIABLE-EVALUATION SIMPLE has no effect on constants, only
-+ on variables. Note how \m(path) is defined. The DEFINE command assigns
-+ the literal value of its argument to the named variable (see Table 3
-+ below), thus in this case no special syntax is needed. But in other
-+ contexts, you must double the backslashes or use the \fliteral()
-+ function to use literal backslashes in data:
-+
-+test2 c:\\users\\fdc\\somefile.txt
-+test2 \fliteral(c:\users\fdc\somefile.txt)
-+
-+ C-Kermit 9.0 adds a new notation for \fliteral() which also has certain
-+ advantages over it: \q(string)
-+ :
-+
-+test2 \q(c:\users\fdc\somefile.txt)
-+
-+ Since \fliteral() is a function, its argument list (the text within
-+ parantheses) has special syntax of its own, in which commas and braces
-+ are treated specially and introduce another set of quoting problems.
-+ \q(string) doesn't have these problems. The only consideration is that
-+ parentheses must be balanced or else quoted (preceded by backslash), or
-+ represented as numeric character entities (left paren = \40, (right
-+ paren = \41).
-+
-+ Or else hold the value in a simple variable as we did with \\m(path)
-+ above.
-+
-+ SET COMMAND VARIABLE-EVALUATION SIMPLE is a big change and might have
-+ repurcussions that didn't show up in the initial tests; a lot more
-+ testing is needed.
-+
-+ On the topic of variables, let's summarize in one place the ways in
-+ which values can be explicitly assigned to variables. There is nothing
-+ new here except the table itself:
-+
-+ CAPTION: Table 2. Variable Assignment in Kermit
-+
-+ Command Shorthand Explanation
-+ DEFINE name value .name = value The literal value becomes the contents
-+ of the named variable; variables names in the value are copied without
-+ evaluation. This command is for defining macros that take parameters,
-+ as well as for defining simple variables, especially if the values
-+ contain backslashes.
-+ _DEFINE name value Like DEFINE but the name is evaluated before use.
-+ ASSIGN name value .name := value The value is evaluated and the result
-+ becomes the contents of the named variable.
-+ _ASSIGN name value Like ASSIGN but the name is evaluated before use.
-+ EVALUATE name expression .name ::= value The expression (in regular
-+ algebraic notation) is evaluated arithmetically and the result becomes
-+ the contents of the named variable. If the expression contains any
-+ variables they are evaluated first.
-+ _EVALUATE name expression Like EVALUATE but the name is evaluated
-+ before use.
-+ INCREMENT name expression Evaluates the variables in the expression,
-+ then evaluates the expression arithmetically, and then adds the value
-+ to the contents of the named variable, which must be a number or an
-+ algebraic expression. If the expression is empty, a value of 1 is used.
-+ _INCREMENT name expression Like INCREMENT but the name is evaluated
-+ before use.
-+ DECREMENT name expression Evaluates the variables in the expression,
-+ then evaluates the expression arithmetically, and then subtracts the
-+ value from the contents of the named variable, which must be a number
-+ or an algebraic expression. If the expression is empty, a value of 1 is
-+ used.
-+ _DECREMENT name expression Like DECREMENT but the name is evaluated
-+ before use.
-+ DECLARE name = list An array declaration can include an initializer
-+ list; items in the list are evaluated before assignment. This can be
-+ defeated by doubling any backslashes or enclosing individual arguments
-+ in \fliteral().
-+ DO name arguments name arguments When invoking a macro with a DO
-+ command (or an implied one), the arguments are evaluated, then assigned
-+ to \%1, \%2, etc, and the macro's name to \%0.
-+ (SETQ name value) Kermit also includes a mini-[65]LISP intpreter
-+
-+ Variables are evaluated automatically in Kermit commands simply by
-+ referencing them, according to rules given in Table 1. The following
-+ functions can be used to change how a a particular variable is
-+ evaluated:
-+
-+ CAPTION: Table 3. Kermit Functions for Evaluating Variables
-+
-+ Function Argument Description
-+ \fcontents() \%x or \&x[y] Evaluates the variable or array element
-+ (which normally would be evaluated recursively) one level deep.
-+ \fdefinition() name If the argument is a \%x variable or an array
-+ element, it is evaluated to get the name; otherwise the argument is the
-+ name. Its definition is returned with no recursion.
-+ \m() name Equivalent to \fdefinition().
-+ \recurse() \m(name) Forces recursive evaluation of a macro definition
-+ (a.k.a. long variable name). NOTE: \frecurse() can operate on any kind
-+ of variable as well as on any string containing any mixture of
-+ variables.
-+
-+C-Kermit's RENAME Command
-+
-+ C-Kermit's RENAME command, which is used for changing the names of
-+ local files or for moving files locally, has two basic forms:
-+
-+ RENAME [ optional-switches ] oldfilename newfilename
-+ This form lets you change the name of a single file from
-+ oldfilename to newfilename. Example:
-+ rename thismonth.log lastmonth.log
-+
-+ RENAME [ optional-switches ] filespec directoryname
-+ This form lets you move (without renaming) one or more files
-+ (all the files that match the filespec, which may contain
-+ wildcard characters such as "*") to the given directory.
-+ Example:
-+ rename *.txt ~/textfiles/
-+
-+ Traditionally, the optional switches have been:
-+
-+ RENAME /LIST oldname newname
-+ Display the old and new name for each file while renaming.
-+ Synonyms: /LOG, /VERBOSE. Example:
-+ rename /list *.txt ~/textfiles/
-+
-+ RENAME /NOLIST oldname newname
-+ Don't display the old and new name for each file while renaming.
-+ This is the default behavior. Synonyms: /NOLOG, /QUIET. Example:
-+ rename /nolist *.txt ~/textfiles/
-+
-+ Reminder: Every switch starts with a slash (/) and must be preceded by
-+ a space.
-+
-+New RENAME Features for C-Kermit 9.0
-+
-+ A series of new options (switches) have been added to let you change
-+ the names of multiple files at once by case conversion, string
-+ substitution, or character-set conversion, and optionally also move
-+ them to a different directory:
-+
-+ /LOWER: Convert the filename to lowercase
-+ /UPPER: Convert the filename to uppercase
-+ /CONVERT: Change the filename's character encoding
-+ /REPLACE: Do string substitutions on the filename
-+
-+ If the source-file specification includes a path or directory, any
-+ changes are applied to the filenames only, not to the directory or path
-+ specification.
-+
-+ Since name changes, when applied to many files at once, can have
-+ consequences that are not easily undone, there are also some new
-+ controls, safeguards, and conveniences:
-+
-+ RENAME /SIMULATE
-+ This switch tells Kermit to show you what the RENAME command
-+ would do without actually doing it. /SIMULATE implies /LIST.
-+
-+ RENAME /COLLISION:{FAIL,SKIP,OVERWRITE}
-+ This switch governs Kermit's behavior when renaming multiple
-+ files, and any of the names would collide with the name of a
-+ file that already exists. The default, for compatibility with
-+ earlier releases of C-Kermit, is OVERWRITE, i.e. write over the
-+ existing file. The other two protect existing files. SKIP means
-+ to skip (not rename) the file that would cause the collision,
-+ and proceed to the next file, if any. FAIL means that no files
-+ will be renamed if there would be any collisions; for this
-+ Kermit makes two passes, checking each new name it constructs
-+ for existence before starting the second pass (however, there is
-+ no guarantee that in the second pass, it won't create the same
-+ new name for more than one file; in that case, it will stop
-+ before executing the second rename). Example:
-+ rename /simulate /collision:proceed * ~/tmp/
-+
-+ Reminder: In switches such as /COLLISION that take arguments
-+ (operands), the switch name and its argument(s) are separated by a
-+ colon (:) with no intevening spaces. Also remember that Kermit keywords
-+ can always be abbreviated by leaving off characters from the right, as
-+ long as the result is still unique in its context. Thus "ren /col:f"
-+ would be equivalent to "rename /collision:fail".
-+
-+ You can change the following preferences for the RENAME command with
-+ the new SET RENAME command:
-+
-+ SET RENAME LIST { ON, OFF }
-+ Tells the RENAME command whether to list its actions if you
-+ don't include a /LIST or /NOLIST or equivalent switch.
-+
-+ SET RENAME COLLISION { FAIL, OVERWRITE, SKIP }
-+ Tells the RENAME command how to handle filename collisions in
-+ the absence of a /COLLISION switch. That is, it replaces the
-+ default action of OVERWRITE with action of your choosing, which
-+ is then used in any RENAME command that does not include an
-+ explicit /COLLISION switch.
-+
-+ SHOW RENAME
-+ Displays the current SET RENAME settings.
-+
-+Changing the Case of Filenames
-+
-+ RENAME /UPPER:{ALL,LOWER} filespec [ directory ]
-+ RENAME /LOWER:{ALL,UPPER} filespec [ directory ]
-+ These switches let you change the alphabetic case of letters in
-+ all the files whose names match the filespec. If a directory
-+ name is given after the filespec, then the files are also moved
-+ to the given directory.
-+
-+ By default, all files that match the given filespec have their names
-+ changed (if necessary). This is what the ALL argument means, e.g.:
-+
-+ RENAME /LOWER:ALL *
-+ RENAME /LOWER *
-+
-+ You can use either form: RENAME /LOWER is equivalent to RENAME
-+ /LOWER:ALL. The other argument (/LOWER:UPPER or /UPPER:LOWER) means to
-+ leave mixed-case filenames alone, and rename only those files whose
-+ names contain letters of only the given case. Examples:
-+
-+ RENAME /UPPER:ALL foo.bar
-+ Changes the filename to FOO.BAR.
-+
-+ RENAME /UPPER foo.bar
-+ Same as "rename /upper:all foo.bar".
-+
-+ RENAME /UPPER foo.bar ~/old/
-+ Renames foo.bar to FOO.BAR and moves it to the user's old
-+ directory (Unix).
-+
-+ RENAME /LOWER *
-+ Changes the names of all files to have only lowercase letters.
-+
-+ RENAME /LOWER:UPPER *
-+ Changes the names of only those files whose names contain no
-+ lowercase letters to have only lowercase letters. For example,
-+ FOO.BAR would be changed, Foo.Bar would not be changed. foo.bar
-+ would not be changed either because it's already all lowercase.
-+
-+ RENAME /LOWER:UPPER * ~/new/
-+ Same as the previous example, but also moves each file to the
-+ user's new directory (whether it was renamed or not).
-+
-+ Case conversion works reliably for ASCII characters only. Kermit uses
-+ the C library for this, which on any given platform might or might not
-+ handle non-ASCII letters, and if it does, then how it works would
-+ normally depend on your locale definitions (the LC_CTYPE and/or LANG
-+ environment variable in Unix). When non-ASCII letters are not handled
-+ by the C library, the RENAME command does change their case. For
-+ example, Olga_Tañón.txt might become OLGA_TAñóN.TXT.
-+
-+String Replacement in Filenames
-+
-+ The RENAME command also lets you change filenames by string
-+ substitution.
-+
-+ RENAME /FIXSPACES[:String] filespec [ directory ]
-+ Replaces all spaces in each matching filename by the given
-+ string, if any, or if none is given, by underscore. Examples:
-+
-+ RENAME /FIX *
-+ RENAME /FIXSPACES:_ *
-+ RENAME /FIXSPACES:"" *
-+ RENAME /FIXSPACES:<040> *
-+
-+ The first two are equivalent, replacing each space with
-+ underscore; a file called "My Favorite Photo.jpg" becomes
-+ "My_Favorite_Photo.jpg". The third example removes all spaces
-+ ("MyFavoritePhoto.jpg"). The fourth replaces each space with the
-+ string "<040>" ("My<040>Favorite<040>Photo.jpg").
-+
-+ RENAME /REPLACE:{{String1}{String2}} filespec [ directory ]
-+ Renames each matching file by changing occurrences of String1 in
-+ its name to String2. If a directory specification is included,
-+ the file is also moved to the given directory (even if the name
-+ was not changed). Note that in this case, the curly braces are
-+ part of the command. Example:
-+
-+ RENAME /REPLACE:{{.jpeg}{.jpg}} *
-+
-+ changes all *.jpeg files to *.jpg.
-+
-+ By default, RENAME /REPLACE changes all occurrences of String1 in each
-+ filename to String2 so, for example, if you had a file called
-+ abcjpegxyz.jpeg, the command just shown would change its name to
-+ abcjpgxyz.jpg.
-+
-+ For greater control and flexibility, the /REPLACE: switch argument can
-+ take several distinct forms:
-+
-+ RENAME /REPLACE:String1 filespec [ directory ]
-+ This means to remove all occurrences of String1 from the given
-+ filenames name. It is equivalent to /REPLACE:{{String1}{}}. A
-+ handy use for this option is to remove spaces from filenames.
-+
-+ RENAME /REPLACE:{{String1}{String2}} filespec [ directory ]
-+ As already noted, this replaces every occurrence of String1 with
-+ String2 in each filename. Alphabetic case in string matching is
-+ done according to the current SET CASE setting.
-+
-+ RENAME /REPLACE:{{ }{_}} filespec [ directory ]
-+ This replaces all spaces in the given filenames with underscore,
-+ equivalent to RENAME /FIXSPACES.
-+
-+ RENAME /REPLACE:{{String1}{String2}{Options}} filespec [ directory ]
-+ Options can be included that add more control to the process.
-+ The option string is a sequence of characters; each character in
-+ the string is an option. The choices are:
-+
-+ A String matching is to be case-sensitive, regardless of SET CASE.
-+ a String matching is to be case-independent, regardless of SET CASE.
-+ ^ String replacement will occur only at the beginning of the filename.
-+ $ String replacement will occur only at the end of the filename.
-+ 1 Only the first occurrence of the string will be replaced.
-+ 2 Only the second occurrence of the string will be replaced.
-+ 3 4 5 6 7 8 ...
-+ 9 Only the ninth occurrence of the string will be replaced.
-+ - (hyphen, minus sign) Before a digit: occurrences will be counted from
-+ the right.
-+ ~ (tilde) Before digit or minus sign: all occurrences but the given one
-+ will be replaced.
-+
-+ The tilde modifier works only with single-byte character sets such as
-+ ASCII, CP437, ISO 8859-1, etc, but not with multibyte character sets
-+ such as UCS2, UTF8, or any of the Japanese Kanji sets.
-+
-+ Here are some examples showing how to use the /REPLACE options:
-+
-+ RENAME /REPLACE:{{foo}{bar}{^}} *
-+ For all files whose names start with "foo", replaces the "foo"
-+ at the beginning with "bar".
-+
-+ RENAME /REPLACE:{{}{New-}{^}} *
-+ Prepends "New-" to the name of each file.
-+
-+ RENAME /REPLACE:{{.jpeg}{.jpg}{$}} *
-+ Replaces ".jpeg" at the end of each filename with ".jpg".
-+
-+ RENAME /REPLACE:{{}{-Old}{$}} *
-+ Appends "-Old" to the name of each file.
-+
-+ RENAME /REPLACE:{{foo}{bar}{a}} *
-+ Replaces "foo", "FOO", "Foo", "fOO", etc, with "bar" in each
-+ filename.
-+
-+ RENAME /REPLACE:{{foo}{bar}{A}} *
-+ Replaces only (lowercase) "foo" in filenames with "bar".
-+
-+ RENAME /REPLACE:{{a}{XX}} *
-+ Changes every "a" to "XX". For example a file called "a.a.a.a"
-+ would become "XX.XX.XX.XX".
-+
-+ RENAME /REPLACE:{{a}{X}{2}}
-+ Changes only the second "a" to "X". For example a file called
-+ "a.a.a.a" would become "a.X.a.a".
-+
-+ RENAME /REPLACE:{{a}{X}{-1}}
-+ Changes only the final "a" in the filename (it doesn't have to
-+ be at the end) to "X". For example a file called "a.b.a.c.a.d"
-+ would become "a.b.a.c.X.d".
-+
-+ RENAME /REPLACE:{{foo}{NOTFOO}{-2}}
-+ Changes the second-to-last "foo" (if any) in the filename to
-+ "NOTFOO".
-+
-+ RENAME /REPLACE:{{foo}{}{-2}}
-+ Deletes the second-to-last "foo" (if any) from the filename.
-+
-+ RENAME /REPLACE:{{.}{_}{~1}}
-+ Changes all but the first period to an underscore; for example,
-+ "a.b.c.d.e" would become "a.b_c_d_e".
-+
-+ RENAME /REPLACE:{{.}{_}{~-1}}
-+ Changes all but the final period to an underscore; for example,
-+ "a.b.c.d.e" would become "a_b_c_d.e".
-+
-+ In the Options field, digits (and their modifiers), ^, and $ are
-+ mutually exclusive. If you include more than one of these in the option
-+ string, only the last one is used. Similarly for 'a' and 'A':
-+
-+ RENAME /REPLACE:{{foo}{bar}{Aa2$^}} *
-+ This replaces "foo" with "bar" no matter what combination of
-+ upper and lower case letters are used in "foo" ('a' overrides
-+ 'A' in the option string), but only if "foo" is at the beginning
-+ of the filename ('^' overrides '$' and '2').
-+
-+ If you give an /UPPER or /LOWER switch and a /REPLACE switch in the
-+ same RENAME command, the /REPLACE action occurs first, then the case
-+ conversion:
-+
-+ RENAME /REPLACE:{{foo}{bar}} /UPPER * /tmp
-+ For each file: changes all occurrences of "foo" in the name to
-+ "bar", then converts the result to uppercase, and then moves the
-+ file to the /tmp directory. So (for example) "foot.txt" would
-+ become "/tmp/BART.TXT".
-+
-+Changing the Character Encoding of Filenames
-+
-+ As you know, text is represented on the computer as a series of
-+ numbers, with a given number corresponding to a given character
-+ according to some convention or standard. Filenames are represented the
-+ same way. The trouble is, different computers, or even different
-+ applications on the same computer, might use different standards or
-+ conventions ("character sets") for representing the same characters.
-+ Usually ASCII is safe, but anything beyond that -- non-ASCII characters
-+ such as accented or non-Roman letters -- is likely to vary. Sometimes
-+ you have text that's in the "wrong" character set and you need to
-+ convert it to something you can can use. Kermit has always been able to
-+ handle this as part of file transfer and terminal emulation, as well as
-+ being able to convert text files locally with its TRANSLATE command.
-+ Now there's a way to convert filenames too, for example after copying
-+ files from a CD that uses a different encoding:
-+
-+ RENAME /CONVERT:charset1:charset2 filespec [ directory ]
-+ Converts filenames from the first character set to the second
-+ one. The two character sets can be chosen from the SET FILE
-+ CHARACTER-SET list; for complete details see [66]this page. For
-+ example suppose you have a file called "Olga_Tañón.txt" on a
-+ computer where ISO 8859-1 Latin Alphabet 1 is used, and you have
-+ transported it (e.g. on CDROM) to another computer where the
-+ text encoding is UTF8. Maybe you also have a lot of other files
-+ with similar names in the same directory. You can convert the
-+ filenames to UTF8 like this:
-+
-+ RENAME /CONVERT:latin1:utf8 *
-+
-+ /CONVERT can not be combined with /UPPER, /LOWER, or /REPLACE.
-+
-+ You should NOT use UCS2 for filenames since this encoding is not
-+ compatible with C strings used in Unix and elsewhere.
-+
-+ RENAME /CONVERT affects only the filename, not the file's contents. You
-+ can use the TRANSLATE command to convert the encoding of the contents
-+ of a text file.
-+
-+Other New Features
-+
-+ See the [67]C-Kermit Daily Builds page for details. Very briefly:
-+
-+ * Perhaps most important, modernized makefile targets for the major
-+ Unix platforms: Linux, Mac OS X, AIX, Solaris, etc. These are
-+ somewhat automated; not autoconf exactly, but they cut down
-+ significantly on redundant targets. For example, one single "linux"
-+ target works on many (hopefully all) different Linux
-+ configurations, where before different targets were required for
-+ different combinations of (e.g.) curses / ncurses / no curses;
-+ 32-bit / 64-bit; different feature sets and library locations.
-+ (Separate targets are still required for Kerberos and/or SSL
-+ builds, but they are "subroutinized".)
-+ * Bigger buffers, more storage for commands, macros, scripts,
-+ strings, and filename expansion in 64-bit versions and in 32-bit
-+ versions that support large files.
-+ * New options for the RENAME command, allowing you to rename groups
-+ of files at once, changing case of letters in the name or changing
-+ its character set, removing spaces or changing them to something
-+ else, and/or doing anchored or floating or occurrence-based string
-+ replacement, described [68]HERE.
-+ * Built-in FTP client for VMS. This is the [69]same FTP client Unix
-+ C-Kermit has had since version 8.0, minimally adapted to VMS by
-+ SMS, supporting binary and Stream_LF file transfer only (in other
-+ words, nothing to handle RMS files), but otherwise fully functional
-+ (and scriptable) and theoretically capable of making connections
-+ secured by SSL (at least it compiles and links OK with SSL - HP SSL
-+ 1.3 in this case). In the present Alpha release, this is an
-+ optional feature requested by including the "i" option in P1 (and
-+ by including "CK_SSL" in P3 if you also want SSL, and then also
-+ "OPENSSL_DISABLE_OLD_DES_SUPPORT" if necessary). Much testing is
-+ needed to determine if it should be included in the final C-Kermit
-+ 9.0 release.
-+ * Large file support in VMS, also by SMS. Alpha and Itanium only (not
-+ VAX). VMS C-Kermit was already able to transfer large files, but
-+ the file-transfer display (numbers and progress bar) and statistics
-+ were wrong because they used ints. In the present Alpha test
-+ release, this is an optional feature requested by including the "f"
-+ option in P1.
-+ * User-settable FTP timeout, works on both the data and control
-+ connection.
-+ * FTP access to ports higher than 16383.
-+ * New PUTENV command that allows Kermit to pass environment variables
-+ to subprocesses (Unix only).
-+ * Unix C-Kermit SET TERMINAL TYPE now passes its arguments to
-+ subprocesses as an environment variable.
-+ * New TOUCH command, many file selection options.
-+ * New DIRECTORY command options and switches (/TOP, /COUNT;
-+ HDIRECTORY, WDIRECTORY...). To see the ten biggest files in the
-+ current directory: "dir /top:10 /sort:size /reverse *" or
-+ equivalently, "hdir /top:10 *". WDIR lists files in reverse
-+ chronological order, shorthand for "dir /sort:date /reverse".
-+ * New command FSEEK /FIND:string-or-pattern, seeks to the first line
-+ in an FOPEN'd file that contains the given string or matching the
-+ given pattern. Example: Suppose you have a file of lines like this:
-+
-+ quantity description...
-+ in which the first "word" is a number, and a description (for
-+ example, the name of an item). Here is how to use FSEEK to quickly
-+ get the total quantity of any given item, which is passed as a
-+ parameter (either a literal string or a pattern) on the command
-+ line:
-+
-+#!/usr/local/bin/kermit +
-+if not def \%1 exit 1 Usage: \fbasename(\%0) string-or-pattern
-+
-+.filename = /usr/local/data/items.log # Substitute the actual filename
-+set case off # Searches are case-independent
-+fopen /read \%c \m(filename) # Open the file
-+if fail exit 1 "\m(filename): \v(errstring)" # Fail: exit with error message
-+.total = 0 # OK: Initialize the total
-+echo Searching "\%1"...
-+
-+while true {
-+ fseek /line /relative /find:\%1 \%c 0 # Get next line that has target
-+ if fail break # Failure indicates EOF
-+ fread /line \%c line # Read it
-+ if fail break # (shouldn't happen)
-+ increment total \fword(\m(line),1) # Increment the total
-+}
-+fclose \%c # Close the file
-+echo Total for "\%1" : \m(total) # Print the result
-+exit 0
-+
-+ The syntax of the FSEEK command in this example indicates that each
-+ search should start relative to the current file line. Since Kermit
-+ is an interpretive language, FSEEK is a lot faster than FREAD'ing
-+ each line and checking it for the target, especially for big files.
-+ An especially handy use for FSEEK is for use with potentially huge
-+ sequentially timestamped logs, to seek directly to the date-time
-+ where you want to start processing. Some other improvements for the
-+ FOPEN/FREAD/FWRITE/FCLOSE family of commands are included also
-+ (perfomance, bug fixes, convenience features), listed in the
-+ [70]change log. (Prior to 9.0.299 Alpha.02, the FSEEK /FIND:
-+ command always started from the top.)
-+ * SET SESSION-LOG TEXT now strips out ANSI escape sequences from the
-+ session log.
-+ * For interacting with POP servers over clear-text or SSL-secured
-+ connections:
-+ + New SSL and TLS "raw" connections (no Telnet protocol).
-+ + New INPUT command options for reading and capturing (perhaps
-+ while scanning) continuous incoming text, such as INPUT
-+ /NOWRAP (explained [71]HERE).
-+ + New \femailaddress() command to extract the e-mail address
-+ from an Internet mail message To: or From: line, used in
-+ fetching mail from POP servers.
-+ + Improved date parsing commands and functions for parsing the
-+ different date formats that can appear in e-mail.
-+ + Production scripts for fetching mail from a secure POP server,
-+ available [72]HERE.
-+ * Various features added to make Kermit more useful for writing CGI
-+ scripts such as INPUT /COUNT:n to INPUT exactly n characters
-+ (useful for reading form data).
-+ * New \fpictureinfo() function for getting orientation and dimensions
-+ of JPG and GIF images, described [73]HERE.
-+ * New \fgetpidinfo() function for testing whether a given process
-+ exists.
-+ * \fkwdvalue() function fixed to allow multiword values.
-+ * New function \fcount(s1,s2) to tell the number of occurrences of s1
-+ in s2.
-+ * New \flopx() function returns rightmost field from string (such as
-+ a file's extension).
-+ * New function \ffunction(s1) to tell whether a built-in s1 function
-+ exists.
-+ * New \fsqueeze(s1) function removes leading and trailing whitespace
-+ from string s1, changes tabs to spaces, squeezing each run of
-+ repeated whitespace characters to a single space (Alpha.02).
-+ * Compact substring notation: \s(somestring[12:18]) is the same as
-+ \fsubstring(\m(somestring),12,18), i.e. the substring starting at
-+ position 12, 18 charcters long. \s(somestring[12_18]) means
-+ characters 12 through 18 of the string (7 characters).
-+ * The string indexing functions now accept an optional trailing
-+ argument specifying the occurrence number of the target string.
-+ Likewise, \fword() can fetch words from the right as well as the
-+ left.
-+ * The COPY command in Unix C-Kermit has a new /PRESERVE switch,
-+ equivalent to Unix "cp -p".
-+ * ASKQ /ECHO:c can be used to make the characters the user types echo
-+ as the character c, e.g. asterisk when typing a password.
-+ * IF LINK filename to test if the filename is a symlink.
-+ * Ctrl-K, when typed at the command parser, replaces itself with most
-+ recently entered file specification.
-+ * In Unix, the ability to log a terminal session to a serial port,
-+ for use with speaking devices or serial printers; described
-+ [74]HERE. Also for the same purpose, SET SESSION-LOG
-+ NULL-PADDED-LINES for a speech synthesizer than needed this.
-+ * Adaptation to OpenSSL 0.9.8 and 1.0.0.
-+ * Lifted the restriction on having a remote Kermit program send
-+ REMOTE commands to the local. A very big ex-client needed to be
-+ able to do this (branches would connect to headquarters and upload
-+ files; HQ would then download patches, a REMOTE HOST command was
-+ necessary to allow the remote headquarters machines to install the
-+ patches on the local client; of course the client first has to
-+ ENABLE HOST because this is a risky scenario). The reason for the
-+ restriction was that the server, upon receiving any REMOTE command
-+ would send the results (output) back to the client as a file
-+ transfer with "destination screen", but of course the remote has no
-+ screen.
-+ * [75]MIME synonyms for character-set names were introduced in
-+ Alpha.05. Nobody seemed to notice that after that, character-set
-+ selection didn't work at all. Anyway, now it's fixed.
-+ * Added XMESSAGE, which is to MESSAGE (Alpha.03) as XECHO is ECHO: it
-+ outputs a string with no line terminator DEBUG MESSAGE is ON.
-+ * Fixed \recurse() to not dump core when invoked with no arguments.
-+ * Improved text for HELP FUNCTION SPLIT and HELP FUNCTION WORD.
-+ * Patches for Debian 6.0 "Squeeze" from Ian Beckwith.
-+ * \fcontents(\&a[3]) got an error if the array was declared but its
-+ dimension was less than 3. Now it simply returns and empty string.
-+ * \fsplit(), when parsing lines from CSV and TSV files, was treating
-+ backslash in the data the same way it treats backslash in Kermit
-+ commands. This was fixed to treat backslash like any other
-+ character.
-+ * Builds for Solaris 9 and later now use streams ptys rather then the
-+ old BSD-style ptys. Thanks to Gary Mills for this one, who noticed
-+ that he couldn't have more than 48 C-Kermit SSH sessions going at
-+ once and figured out why.
-+ * As noted [76]below DES encryption is being retired from many
-+ platforms and libraries that once used it. I changed the Solaris
-+ and Linux OpenSSL builds to account for this by testing for it. I
-+ probably should also add a OMITDES option to omit DES even if it is
-+ installed, but "KFLAGS=-UCK_DES" seems to do the job for now.
-+ * I changed the Linux build to test for the OpenSSL version (like the
-+ Solaris version already did), rather than assuming OpenSSL 0.9.7.
-+ * A couple minor changes for Tru64 Unix 5.1B from Steven Schweda but
-+ we still have some trouble on that platform. As a workaround "make
-+ osf1" can be used there.
-+ * Unix makefile and man page are now included in the Zip
-+ distribution.
-+ * \fjoin(), which is the inverse function of fsplit() now accepts CSV
-+ and TSV as a second argument, to transform an array into a
-+ comma-separated or tab-separated value list, as described [77]HERE.
-+ * Even in 2010, Unix distributions continue to change their UUCP
-+ lockfile conventions. Alpha.08 contains support from Joop Boonen
-+ for OpenSuse >= 11.3 and recent Debian, which no longer have
-+ baudboy.h, which first appeared in Red Hat 7.2 in 2003.
-+ * From Lewis McCarthy:
-+
-+ Based on code inspection, C-Kermit appears to have an SSL-related
-+ security vulnerability analogous to that identified as CVE-2009-3767
-+ (see e.g.
-+ [78]http://cve.mitre.org/cgi-bin/cvename.cgi?name=CVE-2009-3767).
-+
-+ I'm attaching a patch for this issue relative to the revision of
-+ ck_ssl.c obtained from a copy of
-+ [79]http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ftp/test/tar/x.zip downloaded on
-+ 2010/07/30, which I believe is the latest.
-+ When this flaw was first widely publicized at last year's Black Hat
-+ conference, it was claimed that some public certificate authorities
-+ had indeed issued certificates that could be used to exploit this
-+ class of vulnerability. As far as I know they have not revealed
-+ specifically which public CA(s) had been found issuing such
-+ certificates. Some references:
-+ + [80]http://www.mseclab.com/?p=180
-+ + [81]http://www.theregister.co.uk/2009/07/30/universal_ssl_cert
-+ ificate/
-+
-+ * Peter Eichhorn reported that "RENAME ../x ." didn't work; fixed
-+ now.
-+ * If only one file is FOPEN'd, FCLOSE given with no arguments would
-+ close it; this was a "convenience feature" that turned out to be
-+ dangerous. For safety FCLOSE has to require a specific channel
-+ number or the word ALL.
-+ * Added \fstrcmp(s1,s2,case,start,length), which has the advantage
-+ over IF EQU,LGT,LLT that case senstivity can be specified as a
-+ function arg, and also substrings can be specified.
-+ * Fixed a subtle flaw in the [82]CSV feature that was added in
-+ Alpha.06, namely that if the last item in a comma separated list
-+ was enclosed within doublequotes with a trailing space after the
-+ closing doublequote, a spurious empty final element would be
-+ created in the result array.
-+ * New built-in functions:
-+
-+ \fcvtcsets(string,cs1,cs2)
-+ Function to convert a string from one character set to
-+ another.
-+
-+ \fdecodehex(string[,prefix])
-+ Function to decode a string containing hex escapes.
-+
-+ \fstringtype(string)
-+ Function to tell whether a string is 7-bit, 8-bit, or
-+ UTF-8.
-+
-+ For the motivation for these features and an application that uses
-+ them to analyze web logs, see the Weblog script below.
-+ * MIME Character-Set Names: A new equivalence between MIME names and
-+ Kermit names for character sets, with a new table showing the
-+ supported sets [83]HERE (this feature is also illustrated in the
-+ Weblog script).
-+ *
-+
-+ Lazy IF Conditions: Third, now you can do this:
-+ define foo some number
-+ if foo command
-+
-+ instead of this:
-+ define foo some number
-+ if \m(foo) command
-+
-+ Of course the old way still works too. But watch out because if the
-+ variable name is the same as a symbolic IF condition (for example
-+ COUNT), it won't do what you expected. (IF COUNT was used for loop
-+ control in early versions of MS-DOS Kermit, before it got true FOR
-+ and WHILE loops; it was added to C-Kermit for compatibility, and it
-+ can't be removed because it could break existing scripts).
-+ * Escape sequences are now stripped from text-mode session logs not
-+ only in CONNECT sessions but also in whatever is logged by the
-+ INPUT command; described in the [84]next section.
-+ * New commands for selectively issuing progress or debugging messages
-+ from scripts, also described in the next section.
-+ * Fix from [85]John Dunlap to prevent the fixed packet-timeout
-+ interval from going to an unexpected value.
-+ * Alpha.04 fixes a problem with FTP connections made from 64-bit Unix
-+ platforms. All the other changes in this section were to Alpha.03.
-+ * Relaunching a closed SSH connection with the CONNECT command is now
-+ possible, as it always has been with Telnet and other connection
-+ types; suggested by Peter Eichhorn (needs testing).
-+ * A symbol conflict fixed that prevented successful build on
-+ [86]FreeBSD 8.0.
-+ * Fixes from Christian Corti for building on SunOS 4.1.
-+ * New aixg target for building on AIX with gcc.
-+ * New aix+ibmssl target. This is nice because the IBM-supplied SSL
-+ libraries and header files are in a known location; no need to
-+ [87]set environment variables giving their locations.
-+ * "Large File Support" is now included by default on Alpha and IA64
-+ hardware on VMS 7.3 and later, and it should work much better than
-+ before.
-+ * Kermit's internal FTP client is now included by default in any
-+ build that also includes TCP/IP networking. At present, the FTP
-+ client seems to work well for binary-mode transfers; text (ASCII)
-+ mode transfers still need some work. In builds that also include
-+ Secure Sockets Layer (SSL) security (next item) the FTP client
-+ should be able to make securely authenticated and encrypted
-+ connections.
-+ * In network builds that request OpenSSL support, e.g.:
-+
-+ $ @ckvker "" "" "CK_SSL"
-+ the OpenSSL version is detected automatically and the appropriate
-+ compile-time options are emitted (such as
-+ OPENSSL_DISABLE_OLD_DES_SUPPORT).
-+ * Preliminary / limited support for the ODS-5 file system on VMS 7.2
-+ and later, Alpha and Itanium only (needs testing): Filenames can be
-+ mixed case and can be longer.
-+ * Support for older and older VMS versions.
-+ * In the VMS build procedure, CKVKER.COM, the "i" option in P1 now
-+ means don't include the internal FTP client, and the "f" option
-+ means do not include "Large File" support. Large File support in
-+ VMS really only applies to the file-transfer display and
-+ statistics, which would go out of whack as soon as the byte count
-+ overflowed 31 bits because this is C-Kermit, built with the C
-+ compiler and the C library (runtime system), which did not support
-+ long integers until VMS 7.3.
-+ * The [88]LISP Operator ROUND now takes an optional second argument
-+ that specifies the number of places to round to, e.g.
-+ (ROUND dollars 2) rounds dollars to 2 decimal places.
-+ * Improved pattern matching in many commands for both strings and
-+ filenames.
-+ * Various minor new features, plus numerous bug fixes and speedups.
-+
-+Incompatibilities
-+
-+ A top priority for new Kermit software releases has always been
-+ backwards compatibility. A script written for a previous Kermit release
-+ should run the same way in the new release.
-+
-+ There's one exception this time. The [89]\fsplit() function is
-+ incredibly handy, it can do almost anything, up to and including
-+ parsing a LISP program (the underlying code is the basis of the
-+ [90]S-Expression interpreter). But did you ever try to use it to parse
-+ (say) a Tab-Separated-List (TSV file) or Comma-Separated-List (CSV)? It
-+ works as expected as long as the data contains only 7-bit characters.
-+ But if your data contains (say) Spanish or German or Russian text
-+ written in an 8-bit character set such as ISO 8859-1, every 8-bit
-+ character (any value 128-255) is treated as a break character. This is
-+ fixed in C-Kermit 9.0 by treating all 8-bit bytes as "include"
-+ characters rather than break characters, a total reversal of past
-+ behavior. I don't think it will affect anyone though, because if this
-+ had happened to anyone, I would have heard about it!
-+
-+ Since most standard 8-bit character sets have control characters in
-+ positions 128-160, it might have made sense to keep 128-160 in the
-+ break set, but with the proliferation of Microsoft Windows code pages,
-+ there is no telling which 8-bit character is likely to be some kind of
-+ text, e.g. "smart quotes" or East European or Turkish accented letters.
-+
-+What's Not In C-Kermit 9.0
-+
-+ Some large projects that were contemplated have not been done,
-+ including:
-+ * IPv6. Honestly, there has been zero demand for this, and it would
-+ be a lot of work and disruption to the code base. Volunteers
-+ welcome, I guess. It could be a CS project.
-+ * A database interface - MySQL or ODBC. For this one, there is some
-+ demand but I haven't had a chance to even look into it.
-+ * There's a looming issue with DES encryption; major vendors are
-+ removing it from their platforms, starting with Apple in Mac OS X
-+ 10.6, with Microsoft to follow suit. A secure version of Kermit can
-+ be built without DES, but in limited testing successful connections
-+ were spotty (e.g. with Kerberos 5).
-+ * Cleaning up the Unix makefile. It has 25 years' worth of targets in
-+ it. It is very likely safe to remove most of them, since (a) most
-+ old platforms have gone away by now, or have been upgraded, due to
-+ hacking vulnerabilities; (b) the market has consolidated
-+ considerably; and (c) most of the new features of C-Kermit 9.0,
-+ such as large files, won't be of any use on older platforms and
-+ previous C-Kermit versions will remain available.
-+ * Packages. Everybody wants an install package custom made for their
-+ own computer, Linux RPMs being the prime example but far from the
-+ only one. These will come, I suppose (especially with some Linux
-+ sites having a policy against installing any application that does
-+ not come as an RPM). In the meantime, here's a page that describes
-+ some Kermit-specific issues in package construction:
-+ [91]ckpackages.html.
-+
-+And a Loose End...
-+Using External File-Transfer Protocols on Secure Connections
-+
-+ After C-Kermit 8.0.212 Dev.27 (2006/12/22), I spent a big chunk of time
-+ trying to solve a particular problem that some of you have complained
-+ about and others might be familiar with: If you use C-Kermit to make a
-+ secure Telnet connection to another host (e.g. with Telnet SSL/TLS,
-+ Kerberos, or SRP) and then attempt to transfer a file using an external
-+ protocol such as Zmodem, it doesn't work.
-+
-+ That's because as coded (through 8.0.211), C-Kermit simply starts the
-+ external protocol in a fork with its standard i/o redirected to the
-+ connection. This completely bypasses the encryption and decryption that
-+ is done by C-Kermit itself, and of course it doesn't work. The same
-+ thing occurs if you use the REDIRECT command. The routine that handles
-+ this is ttruncmd() in ckutio.c.
-+
-+ In order to allow (say) Zmodem transfers on secure connections, it is
-+ necessary for C-Kermit to interpose itself between the external Zmodem
-+ program and the connection, decrypting the incoming stream before
-+ feeding it to Zmodem and encrypting Zmodem's output before sending out
-+ the connection.
-+
-+ In principal, this is simple enough. We open a pseudoterminal pair
-+ ("master" and "slave") for Zmodem's i/o and we create a fork and start
-+ Zmodem in it; we read from the fork pty's standard output, encrypt, and
-+ send to the net; we read from the net, decrypt, and write to the fork
-+ pty's standard input.
-+
-+ In practice, it's not so simple. First of all, pseudoterminals (ptys)
-+ don't seem to interface correctly with certain crucial APIs, at least
-+ not in the OS's I have tried (Mac OS X, Linux, NetBSD, etc), such as
-+ select(). And i/o with the pty often - perhaps always - fails to
-+ indicate errors when they occur; for example, when the fork has exited.
-+
-+ But, even after coding around the apparent uselessness of select() for
-+ multiplexing pty and net, and using various tricks to detect when the
-+ external protocol exits and what its exit status is, I'm still left
-+ with a show-stopping problem: I just simply can not download (receive)
-+ a file with Zmodem, which is the main thing that people would probably
-+ want to do. I can send files just fine, but not receive. The incoming
-+ stream is delivered to Zmodem (to the pty slave) but upon arrival at
-+ the Zmodem process itself, pieces are always missing and/or corrupt.
-+ Yet I can receive files just fine if I use Kermit itself (C-Kermit or
-+ G-Kermit) as the external protocol, rather than Zmodem.
-+
-+ I can think of two reasons why this might be the case:
-+
-+ 1. Zmodem sends all 8-bit bytes and control codes in the clear, and
-+ maybe the pty is choking on them because it thinks it is a real
-+ terminal.
-+
-+ But Zmodem puts its controlling terminal into raw mode. And C-Kermit
-+ puts the pty into raw mode too, just for good measure. If any 0xFF
-+ codes are in the Zmodem data stream, and it's a Telnet session, Kermit
-+ does any needed byte stuffing/unstuffing automatically. Anyway, if I
-+ tell Zmodem to prefix everything, it makes no difference.
-+
-+ 2. Zmodem is a streaming protocol and perhaps the pty driver can't
-+ keep up with a sustained stream of input at network speeds. What
-+ would be the method of flow control?
-+
-+ I can vary the size of the i/o buffers used for writing to the pty, and
-+ get different effects, but I am not able to get a clean download, no
-+ matter what buffer size I use. write()'ing to the pty does not return
-+ an error, and I can't see the errors because they happen on the master
-+ side. It's as if the path between the pty slave and master lacks flow
-+ control; I deliver a valid data stream to the pty slave and the master
-+ gets bits and pieces. This impression is bolstered somewhat by the
-+ "[92]man 7 pty" page in HP-UX, which talks about some special modes for
-+ ptys that turn off all termio processing and guarantee a
-+ flow-controlled reliable stream of bytes in both directions - a feature
-+ that seems to be specific to HP-UX, and exactly the one we need
-+ everywhere.
-+
-+ Well, in Pass One I used C-Kermit's existing pty routines from
-+ ckupty.[ch], which are well-proven in terms of portability and of
-+ actually working. They are currently used by SET HOST /PTY for making
-+ terminal connections to external processes. But these routines are
-+ written on the assumption that the pty is to be accessed interactively,
-+ and maybe they are setting the fork/pty arrangement up in such a way
-+ that that's not suitable for file transfer. The Pass One routine is
-+ called xttptycmd() in ckutio.c.
-+
-+ So in Pass Two I made a second copy of the routine, yttptycmd(), that
-+ manages the pty and fork itself, so all the code is in one place and
-+ it's simple and understandable. But it still doesn't work for Zmodem
-+ downloads. In this routine, I use openpty() to get the pty pair, which
-+ is not portable, so I can have access to both the master and slave pty
-+ file descriptors. This version can be used only a platforms that have
-+ openpty(): Linux, Mac OS X, NetBSD, etc.
-+
-+ In Pass Three, zttptycmd(), I tried using pipes instead of ptys, in
-+ case ptys are simply not up to this task (but that can't be true
-+ because if I make a Telnet or SSH connection into a host, I can send
-+ files to it with Zmodem, and the remote Zmodem receiver is, indeed,
-+ running on a pty). But pipes didn't work either.
-+
-+ In Pass Four, I extracted the relevant routines into a standalone
-+ program based on yttptycmd() (the openpty() version, for simplicity),
-+ which I tested on Mac OS X, the idea being to rule out any
-+ "environmental" effects of running inside the C-Kermit process. There
-+ was no difference -- Kermit transfers (with C-Kermit itself as the
-+ external protocol) worked; Zmodem transfers (neither sz or lsz) did
-+ not.
-+
-+ Well, it's a much longer story. As the external protocol, I've tried
-+ rzsz, crzsz, and lrzsz. We know that some of these have quirks
-+ regarding standard i/o, etc, which is one of the reasons for using ptys
-+ in the first place, and i/o does work - just not reliably. Anyway, the
-+ 1100 lines or so of [93]ckc299.txt, starting just below where it says
-+ "--- Dev.27 ---" tell the full story. At this point I have to give up
-+ and move on; it might be more productive to let somebody else who has
-+ more experience with ptys take a look at it - if indeed anyone still
-+ cares about being able to do Zmodem transfers over secure Telnet
-+ connections.
-+
-+ C-Kermit 9.0 contains the three new routines (and some auxiliary ones),
-+ but they are not compiled or called unless you build it specially:
-+
-+ make targetname KFLAGS=-DXTTPTYCMD (builds with xttptycmd())
-+ make targetname KFLAGS=-DYTTPTYCMD (builds with yttptycmd())
-+ make targetname KFLAGS=-DZTTPTYCMD (builds with zttptycmd())
-+
-+ These are all in [94]ckutio.c. As noted, the second one works only for
-+ Linux, FreeBSD, NetBSD, and Mac OS X, because it uses non-POSIX,
-+ non-portable openpty(). If you want to try it on some other platform
-+ that has openpty(), you can build it like this:
-+
-+ make targetname "KFLAGS=-DYTTPTYCMD -DHAVE_OPENPTY"
-+
-+ (and let me know, so I can have HAVE_OPENPTY predefined for that
-+ platform too). The best strategy to get this working, I think, would be
-+ to concentrate on yttptycmd(), which is the simpler of the two
-+ pty-based routines. If it can be made to work, then we'll see if we can
-+ retrofit it to use the ckupty.c routines so it will be portable to
-+ non-BSD platforms.
-+
-+ By the way, if you build with any of [XYZ]TTPTYCMD defined, then the
-+ selected routine will always be used in place of ttruncmd(). This is to
-+ allow testing on all kinds of connections, not just secure ones, in
-+ both local and remote mode. Once the thing works, if it ever does, I'll
-+ add the appropriate tests and/or commands.
-+
-+ By default, in the initial test release, C-Kermit 9.0 uses ttruncmd()
-+ on serial connections and ttyptycmd() on network connections. Even when
-+ a network connection is not encrypted, Kermit still needs to handle the
-+ network protocol, e.g. the quoting of 0xff bytes on Telnet connections.
-+
-+Demonstration: Fetch Mail from POP Server Secured by SSL
-+
-+ [95]pop.ksc is a fully elaborated production script for fetching one's
-+ mail from a POP3 server over a connection secured by SSL. For
-+ explanation and documentation, [96]CLICK HERE. [97]mailcheck is a
-+ wrapper for the pop.ksc script, which collects your password one time,
-+ and then checks for new mail every 5 minutes (or other selected
-+ interval) and calls pop.ksc to fetch it if there is any.
-+
-+Demonstration: HP Switch Configuration Backup
-+
-+ A common use for Kermit software is to make automated backups of the
-+ configuration of network switches and routers, such as those made by
-+ Cisco or Hewlett-Packard (although [98]tftp can be used for this, it is
-+ not available in all such devices; Kermit, however, works with those
-+ that have tftp as well as those that don't).
-+
-+ Typically a backup can be done by making a Telnet, SSH, or serial
-+ connection to the device with Kermit and giving a command such as "show
-+ config" at the command-line prompt of the device with Kermit's session
-+ log activated. The result is a list of the commands that were used to
-+ establish the current configuration, suitable for feeding back to the
-+ device's console (e.g. with C-Kermit's TRANSMIT command) to reestablish
-+ the same configuration or to duplicate it on another device.
-+
-+ At an HP installation it was noted, however, that while the HP switches
-+ (various ProCurve models) produced the desired list of commands, they
-+ were interspersed with escape sequences for special effects, thus
-+ rendering the recorded sessions unsuitable for feeding back into the
-+ switches.
-+
-+ C-Kermit 9.0 introduces a new feature to strip the offending sequences
-+ out of a session log, leaving just the text. The command SET
-+ SESSION-LOG TEXT activates this feature. In C-Kermit 9.0 Alpha.02 and
-+ earlier, escape sequence stripping occurred only while logging
-+ interactive (CONNECT) sessions; beginning with Alpha.03 it is done also
-+ for data that is read by INPUT commands and therefore works for scripts
-+ too.
-+
-+ A sample HP Switch Configuration Backup script is [99]HERE, and its
-+ data file is [100]HERE. This script also illustrates some other new
-+ features of Alpha.03:
-+
-+ MESSAGE text
-+ This lets you put debugging messages in your script that can be
-+ displayed or not, according to SET DEBUG MESSAGE (below). This
-+ way you don't have to change your script for debugging. Hint:
-+ In Unix, invoke the script like this:
-+
-+ $ DEBUG=1 scriptname arg1 arg2...
-+
-+ and then include the following command in your script:
-+
-+ if defined \$(DEBUG) set debug message on
-+
-+ XMESSAGE text
-+ Like MESSAGE but prints the text with no line terminator, so it
-+ can be continued by subsequent messages.
-+
-+ SET DEBUG MESSAGE { ON, OFF, STDERR }
-+ ON means MESSAGE commands should print to standard output; OFF
-+ means they shouldn't print anything; STDERR means the messages
-+ should be printed to [101]stderr. DEBUG MESSAGE is OFF by
-+ default, i.e. unless you SET it to ON or STDERR.
-+
-+ IF DEBUG command
-+ Executes the command if SET DEBUG MESSAGE is not OFF.
-+
-+ The \v(lastcommand) variable
-+ This variable contains the previous command. You can use it in
-+ debugging and error message to show (for example) exactly what
-+ the command was that just failed, without having to make a copy
-+ of the command:
-+
-+set host somehost.somecompany.com
-+if fail exit 1 "FATAL - \v(lastcommand)"
-+
-+ which, if the SET HOST command fails, prints "FATAL - set host
-+ somehost.somecompany.com" and then exits with status 1 (which
-+ normally indicates failure).
-+
-+Demonstration: HP iLO Blade Configuration
-+
-+ [102]THIS DOCUMENT describes a script in production use at Columbia
-+ University for configuring and deploying racks full of HP blade servers
-+ through their "integrated Lights Out" (iLO) management interface,
-+ bypassing the tedious and error-prone process of configuring the
-+ servers one by one through the vendor-provided point-and-click Web
-+ interface, which is ill-suited to configuring large numbers of blades.
-+ The script illustrates some of C-Kermit 9.0's new features; source code
-+ is available through the link. The code is apt to change from time to
-+ time as new requirements surface.
-+
-+Demonstration: IBM/Rolm/Siemens CBX Management
-+
-+ [103]THIS DOCUMENT describes a suite of scripts (some in production,
-+ some in development) used to manage the Columbia campus 20,000-line
-+ main telephone switch, along with about 10 satellite switches at
-+ off-campus locations. These switches are 1980s technology*, their
-+ management consoles are serial ports. Access is via Telnet to reverse
-+ terminal servers. The scripts allow for interactive sessions as well as
-+ automatic production (and in some cases formatting) of different
-+ reports required by different groups at different intervals. These
-+ scripts replace a whole assortment of ad-hoc ProComm ASPECT scripts
-+ that were scattered all over the place, with passwords embedded. The
-+ new scripts are intended to be run from a centralized server where
-+ there is a single well-secured configuration file, and where they can
-+ be used on demand, or in cron jobs. They are modular so code
-+ duplication is minimal.
-+ __________________________
-+ * Of course the University is deploying new technology but the but the
-+ old system will be used in parallel for some time to come.
-+
-+Demonstration: CSV and TSV Files
-+
-+ Contents
-+
-+ * [104]Reading a CSV or TSV Record and Converting it to an Array
-+ * [105]Using \fjoin() to create a Comma- or Tab-Separated Value List
-+ from an Array
-+ * [106]Using CSV or TSV Files
-+
-+ Comma-Separated Value (CSV) format is commonly output by spreadsheets
-+ and databases when exporting data into plain-text files for import into
-+ other applications. Here are the details:
-+
-+ Comma-Separated List Syntax
-+
-+ 1. Each record is a series of fields.
-+ 2. Records are in whatever format is used by the underlying file
-+ system for lines of text.
-+ 3. Fields within records are separated by commas, with zero or more
-+ whitespace characters (space or tab) before and/or after the comma;
-+ such whitespace is considered part of the separator.
-+ 4. Fields with imbedded commas must be enclosed in ASCII doublequote
-+ characters.
-+ 5. Fields with leading or trailing spaces must be enclosed in ASCII
-+ doublequotes.
-+ 6. Any field may be enclosed in ASCII doublequotes.
-+ 7. Fields with embedded doublequotes must be enclosed in doublequotes
-+ and each interior doublequote is doubled.
-+
-+ Here is an example:
-+
-+aaa, bbb, has spaces,,"ddd,eee,fff", " has spaces ","Muhammad ""The Greatest"" A
-+li"
-+
-+ The first two are regular fields. The second is a field that has an
-+ embedded space but in which any leading or trailing spaces are to be
-+ ignored. The fourth is an empty field, but still a field. The fifth is
-+ a field that contains embedded commas. The sixth has leading and
-+ trailing spaces. The last field has embedded quotation marks.
-+
-+ Prior to C-Kermit 9.0 Alpha.06, C-Kermit did not handle CSV files
-+ according to the specification above. Most seriously, there was no
-+ provision for a separator to be surrounded by whitespace that was to be
-+ considered part of the separator. Also there was no provision for
-+ quoting doublequotes inside of a quoted string.
-+
-+Reading a CSV record
-+
-+ Now the \fsplit() function can handle any CSV-format string if you
-+ include the symbolic include set "CSV" as the 4th parameter. To
-+ illustrate, this program:
-+
-+def xx {
-+ echo [\fcontents(\%1)]
-+ .\%9 := \fsplit(\fcontents(\%1), &a, \44, CSV)
-+ for \%i 1 \%9 1 { echo "\flpad(\%i,3). [\&a[\%i]]" }
-+ echo "-----------"
-+}
-+xx {a,b,c}
-+xx { a , b , c }
-+xx { aaa,,ccc," with spaces ",zzz }
-+xx { "1","2","3","","5" }
-+xx { this is a single field }
-+xx { this is one field, " and this is another " }
-+xx { name,"Mohammad ""The Greatest"" Ali", age, 67 }
-+xx { """field enclosed in doublequotes""" }
-+exit
-+
-+ gives the following results:
-+
-+[a,b,c]
-+ 1. [a]
-+ 2. [b]
-+ 3. [c]
-+-----------
-+[ a , b , c ]
-+ 1. [a]
-+ 2. [b]
-+ 3. [c]
-+-----------
-+[ aaa,,ccc," with spaces ",zzz ]
-+ 1. [aaa]
-+ 2. []
-+ 3. [ccc]
-+ 4. [ with spaces ]
-+ 5. [zzz]
-+-----------
-+[ "1","2","3","","5" ]
-+ 1. [1]
-+ 2. [2]
-+ 3. [3]
-+ 4. []
-+ 5. [5]
-+-----------
-+[ this is a single field ]
-+ 1. [this is a single field]
-+-----------
-+[ this is one field, " and this is another " ]
-+ 1. [this is one field]
-+ 2. [ and this is another ]
-+-----------
-+[ name,"Mohammad ""The Greatest"" Ali", age, 67 ]
-+ 1. [name]
-+ 2. [Mohammad "The Greatest" Ali]
-+ 3. [age]
-+ 4. [67]
-+-----------
-+[ """field enclosed in doublequotes""" ]
-+ 1. ["field enclosed in doublequotes"]
-+-----------
-+
-+ The separator \44 (comma) must still be specified as the break set (3rd
-+ \fsplit() parameter). When "CSV" is specified as the include set:
-+ * The Grouping Mask is automatically set to 1 (which specifies that
-+ the ASCII doublequote character (") is used for grouping;
-+ * The Separator Flag is automatically set to 1 so that adjacent field
-+ separators will not be collapsed;
-+ * All bytes (values 0 through 255) other than the break character are
-+ added to the include set;
-+ * Any leading whitespace is stripped from the first element unless it
-+ is enclosed in doublequotes;
-+ * Any trailing whitespace is trimmed from the end of the last element
-+ unless it is enclosed in doublequotes;
-+ * If the separator character has any spaces or tabs preceding it or
-+ following it, they are ignored and discarded;
-+ * The separator character is treated as an ordinary data character if
-+ it appears in a quoted field;
-+ * A sequence of two doublequote characters ("") within a quoted field
-+ is converted to a single doublequote.
-+
-+ There is also a new TSV symbolic include set, which is like CSV except
-+ without the quoting rules or the stripping of whitespace around the
-+ separator because, by definition, TSV fields do not contain tabs.
-+
-+ Of course you can specify any separator(s) you want with either the
-+ CSV, TSV, or ALL symbolic include sets. For example, if you have a TSV
-+ file in which you want the spaces around each Tab to be discarded, you
-+ can use:
-+
-+\fsplit(variable, &a, \9, CSV)
-+
-+ \9 is Tab.
-+
-+ The new symbolic include sets can also be used with \fword(), which is
-+ just like \fsplit() except that it retrieves the nth word from the
-+ argument string, rather than an array of all the words. In C-Kermit you
-+ can get information about these or any other functions with the HELP
-+ FUNCTION command, e.g.:
-+
-+C-Kermit> help func word
-+
-+Function \fword(s1,n1,s2,s3,n2,n3) - Extracts a word from a string.
-+ s1 = source string.
-+ n1 = word number (1-based) counting from left; if negative, from right.
-+ s2 = optional break set.
-+ s3 = optional include set (or ALL, CSV, or TSV).
-+ n2 = optional grouping mask.
-+ n3 = optional separator flag:
-+ 0 = collapse adjacent separators;
-+ 1 = don't collapse adjacent separators.
-+
-+ \fword() returns the n1th "word" of the string s1, according to the
-+ criteria specified by the other parameters.
-+
-+ The BREAK SET is the set of all characters that separate words. The
-+ default break set is all characters except ASCII letters and digits.
-+ ASCII (C0) control characters are treated as break characters by default,
-+ as are spacing and punctuation characters, brackets, and so on, and
-+ all 8-bit characters.
-+
-+ The INCLUDE SET is the set of characters that are to be treated as
-+ parts of words even though they normally would be separators. The
-+ default include set is empty. Three special symbolic include sets are
-+ also allowed:
-+
-+ ALL (meaning include all bytes that are not in the break set)
-+ CSV (special treatment for Comma-Separated-Value records)
-+ TSV (special treatment for Tab-Separated-Value records)
-+
-+ For operating on 8-bit character sets, the include set should be ALL.
-+
-+ If the GROUPING MASK is given and is nonzero, words can be grouped by
-+ quotes or brackets selected by the sum of the following:
-+
-+ 1 = doublequotes: "a b c"
-+ 2 = braces: {a b c}
-+ 4 = apostrophes: 'a b c'
-+ 8 = parentheses: (a b c)
-+ 16 = square brackets: [a b c]
-+ 32 = angle brackets: <a b c>
-+
-+ Nesting is possible with {}()[]<> but not with quotes or apostrophes.
-+
-+Returns string:
-+ Word number n1, if there is one, otherwise an empty string.
-+
-+Also see:
-+ HELP FUNCTION SPLIT
-+
-+C-Kermit>
-+
-+Using \fjoin() to create Comma- or Tab-Separated Value Lists from Arrays
-+
-+ In C-Kermit 9.0, \fsplit()'s inverse function, [107]\fjoin() received
-+ the capability of converting an array into a comma-separated or a
-+ tab-separated value list. Thus, given a CSV, if you split it into an
-+ array with \fsplit() and then join the array with \fjoin(), giving each
-+ function the new CSV parameter in the appropriate argument position,
-+ the result will be will be equivalent to the original, according to the
-+ CSV definition. It might not be identical, because if the result had
-+ extraneous spaces before or after the separating commas, these are
-+ discarded, but that does not affect the elements themselves. The new
-+ syntax for \fjoin() is:
-+
-+ \fjoin(&a,CSV)
-+ Given the array \&a[] or any other valid array designator, joins
-+ its elements into a comma-separated list according to the
-+ [108]rules listed above.
-+
-+ \fjoin(&a,TSV)
-+ Joins the elements of the given array into a tab-separated list,
-+ also described above.
-+
-+ [109]Previous calling conventions for \fjoin() are undisturbed,
-+ including the ability to specify a portion of an array, rather than the
-+ whole array:
-+
-+declare \&a[] = 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
-+echo \fjoin(&a[3:7],CSV)
-+3,4,5,6,7
-+
-+ Using \fsplit() and \fjoin() it is now possible to convert a
-+ comma-separated value list into a tab-separated value list, and vice
-+ versa (which is not a simple matter of changing commas to tabs or vice
-+ versa).
-+
-+Applications for CSV Files
-+
-+ Databases such as MS Access or MySQL can export tables or reports in
-+ CSV format, and then Kermit can read the resulting CSV file and do
-+ whatever you like with it; typically something that could not be done
-+ with the database query language itself (or that you didn't know how to
-+ do that way): create reports or datasets based on complex criteria or
-+ procedures, edit or modify some fields, etc, and then use \fjoin() to
-+ put each record back in CSV form so it can be reimported into a
-+ spreadsheet or database.
-+
-+ Here is a simple example in which we purge all records of customers who
-+ have two or more unpaid bills. The file is sorted so that each license
-+ purchase record is followed by its annual maintenance payment records
-+ in chronological order.
-+
-+#!/usr/local/bin/kermit
-+.filename = somefile.csv # Input file in CSV format
-+fopen /read \%c \m(filename) # Open it
-+if fail exit # Don't go on if open failed
-+copy \m(filename) ./new # Make a copy of the file
-+
-+.oldserial = 00000000000 # Multiple records for each serial number
-+.zeros = 0 # Unpaid bill counter
-+
-+while true { # Loop
-+ fread /line \%c line # Get a record
-+ if fail exit # End of file
-+ .n := \fsplit(\m(line),&a,\44,CSV) # Split the fields into an array
-+ if not equ "\m(oldserial)" "\&a[6]" { # Have new serial number?
-+ # Remove all records for previous serial number
-+ # if two or more bills were not paid...
-+ if > \m(zeros) 1 {
-+ grep /nomatch \m(oldserial) /output:./new2 ./new
-+ rename ./new2 ./new
-+ }
-+ .oldserial := \&a[6] # To detect next time serial number changes
-+ .zeros = 0 # Reset unpaid bill counter
-+ }
-+ if equ "\&a[5]" "$0.00" { # Element 5 is amount paid
-+ increment zeros # If it's zero, count it.
-+ }
-+}
-+fclose \%c
-+
-+ Rewriting the file multiple times is inelegant, but this is a quick and
-+ dirty use-once-and-discard script, so elegance doesn't count. The
-+ example is interesting in that it purges certain records based on the
-+ contents of other records. Maybe there is a way to do this directly
-+ with SQL, but why use SQL when you can use Kermit?
-+
-+ Here is the same task but this time no shelling out, and this time we
-+ do change and add some fields and then join the result back into a CSV
-+ record and write it out to a new file. The object is to create a record
-+ for each license that shows not only the date and purchase price of the
-+ license but also the date and amount of the last maintenance payment,
-+ and to add new fields for sorting by anniversary (month and day):
-+
-+#!usr/local/bin/kermit +
-+cd ~/somedirectory # CD to appropriate directory
-+if fail exit 1 # Make sure we did
-+.filename := \%1 # Filename from command line
-+if not def filename { # If none give usage message
-+ exit 1 "Usage: \%0: infile [ outfile ]"
-+}
-+fopen /read \%c \m(filename) # Open the input CSV file
-+if fail exit # Make sure we did
-+
-+.output := \%2 # Output filename from command line
-+if not def output { # Supply one if not given
-+ .output := New_\m(filename)
-+}
-+fopen /write \%o \m(output) # Open output file
-+if fail exit # Check that we did
-+
-+.serial = 00000000000 # Initialize serial number
-+.licenses = 0 # and license counter
-+
-+fread /line \%c line # First line is column labels
-+if fail exit # Check
-+fwrite /line \%o "\m(line),AMM_DD,AYYYY" # Write new labels line
-+
-+# Remaining lines are license purchases (K95B) followed by zero or more
-+# maintenance invoices (K95BM) for each license.
-+
-+.datepaid = 00/00/0000 # Initialize last maint payment date
-+.amtpaid = $0.00 # Initialize last maint payment amount
-+set flag off # For remembering we're at end of file
-+while not flag { # Loop to read all records
-+ fread /line \%c line # Read a record
-+ if fail set flag on # If EOF set flag for later
-+ .n := \fsplit(\m(line),&a,\44,CSV) # Break record into array
-+ if ( flag || equ "\&a[3]" "K95B" ) { # License or EOF
-+ if fail exit 1 "FAILED: \v(lastcommand)"
-+ if licenses { # If this is not the first license
-+ .\&x[5] := \m(amtpaid) # Substitute most recent amount paid
-+ .\&x[21] := \m(datepaid) # Substitute most recent date paid
-+ void \fsplit(\&x[18],&d,/) # Break up original (anniversary) date
-+ # and put mm_dd and yyyy in separate fields for sorting...
-+ fwrite /line \%o "\fjoin(&x,CSV),\flpad(\&d[1],2,0)_\flpad(\&d[2],2,
-+0),\&d[3]"
-+ if fail exit 1 WRITE # Check for error
-+ xecho . # Show progress as one dot per record
-+ }
-+ if flag break # We're at EOF so we're finished
-+ increment licenses # New license - count it
-+ array copy &a &x # Keep this record while reading next
-+ .serial := \&a[6] # Remember serial number
-+ .datepaid = 00/00/0000 # Initial maintenance payment date
-+ .amtpaid = $0.00 # and amount
-+ continue # and go back to read next record
-+ }
-+ if not eq "\m(serial)" "\&a[6]" { # Catch out-of-sequence record
-+ echo
-+ echo "SEQUENCE: \m(serial)..\&a[6]: \&a[7] [\&a[1]]"
-+ continue
-+ }
-+ if equ "\&a[5]" "" .\&a[5] = $0.00 # If amount is empty make it $0.00
-+ if not equ "\&a[5]" "$0.00" { # If amount is not $0.00
-+ .datepaid := \&a[21] # remember date paid
-+ .amtpaid := \&a[5] # and amount paid
-+ }
-+}
-+fclose ALL # Done - close all files and exit
-+exit 0 Done.
-+
-+
-+ The result imports back into Excel, where it can be sorted, formatted,
-+ or otherwise manipulated as desired.
-+
-+Using CSV Files: Extending Kermit's Data Structures
-+
-+ Now that we can parse a CSV record, what would we do with a CSV file -
-+ that is, a sequence of records? If we needed all the data available at
-+ once, we would want to load it into a matrix of (row,column) values.
-+ But Kermit doesn't have matrices. Or does it?
-+
-+ Kermit has several built-in data types, but you can invent your own
-+ data types as needed using Kermit's macro feature:
-+
-+define variablename value
-+
-+ For example:
-+
-+define alphabet abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz
-+
-+ This defines a macro named alphabet and gives it the value
-+ abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz. A more convenient notation (added in
-+ C-Kermit 7.0, see [110]Table 2) for this is:
-+
-+.alphabet = abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz
-+
-+ The two are exactly equivalent: they make a literal copy the "right
-+ hand side" as the value of the macro. Then you can refer to the macro
-+ anywhere in a Kermit command as "\m(macroname)":
-+
-+echo "Alphabet = \m(alphabet)"
-+
-+ There is a second way to define a macro, which is like the first except
-+ that the right-hand side is evaluated first; that is, any variable
-+ references or function calls in the right-hand side are replaced by
-+ their values before the result is assigned to the macro. The command
-+ for this is ASSIGN rather than DEFINE:
-+
-+define alphabet abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz
-+assign backwards \freverse(\m(alphabet))
-+echo "Alphabet backwards = \m(backwards)"
-+
-+ which prints:
-+
-+Alphabet backwards = zyxwvutsrqponmlkjihgfedcba
-+
-+ This kind of assignment can also be done like this:
-+
-+.alphabet = abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz
-+.backwards := \freverse(\m(alphabet))
-+
-+ [111]Any command starting with a period is an assignment, and the
-+ operator (= or :=) tells what to do with the right-hand side before
-+ making the assignment.
-+
-+ In both the DEFINE and ASSIGN commands, the variable name itself is
-+ taken literally. It is also possible, however, to have Kermit compute
-+ the variable name. This is done (as described in [112]Using C-Kermit,
-+ 2nd Ed., p.457), using parallel commands that start with underscore:
-+ _DEFINE and _ASSIGN (alias _DEF and _ASG). These are just like DEFINE
-+ and ASSIGN except they evaluate the variable name before making the
-+ assigment. For example:
-+
-+define \%a one
-+_define \%a\%a\%a 111
-+
-+ would create a macro named ONEONEONE with a value of 111, and:
-+
-+define \%a one
-+define number 111
-+_assign \%a\%a\%a \m(number)
-+
-+ would create the same macro with the same value, but:
-+
-+define \%a one
-+define number 111
-+_define \%a\%a\%a \m(number)
-+
-+ would give the macro a value of "\m(number)".
-+
-+ You can use the _ASSIGN command to create any kind of data structure
-+ you want; you can find some examples in the [113]Object-Oriented
-+ Programming section of the [114]Kermit Script Library. In the following
-+ program we use this capability to create a two-dimensional array, or
-+ matrix, to hold the all the elements of the CSV file, and then to
-+ display the matrix:
-+
-+fopen /read \%c data.csv # Open CSV file
-+if fail exit 1
-+
-+.\%r = 0 # Row
-+.\%m = 0 # Maximum columns
-+while true {
-+ fread /line \%c line # Read a record
-+ if fail break # End of file
-+ .\%n := \fsplit(\m(line),&a,\44,CSV) # Split record into items
-+ incr \%r # Count this row
-+ for \%i 1 \%n 1 { # Assign items to this row of matrix
-+ _asg a[\%r][\%i] \&a[\%i]
-+ }
-+ if > \%i \%m { .\%m := \%i } # Remember width of widest row
-+}
-+fclose \%c # Close CSV file
-+decrement \%m # (because of how FOR loop works)
-+echo MATRIX A ROWS: \%r COLUMNS: \%m # Show the matrix
-+
-+for \%i 1 \%r 1 { # Loop through rows
-+ for \%j 1 \%m 1 { # Loop through columns of each row
-+ xecho "\flpad(\m(a[\%i][\%j]),6)"
-+ }
-+ echo
-+}
-+exit 0
-+
-+ The matrix is called a and its elements are a[1][1], a[1][2], a[1][3],
-+ ... a[2][1], etc, and you can treat this data structure exactly like a
-+ two-dimensional array, in which you can refer to any element by its "X
-+ and Y coordinates". For example, if the CSV file contained numeric data
-+ you could compute row and column sums using simple FOR loops and
-+ Kermit's built-in one-dimensional array data type:
-+
-+declare \&r[\%r] # Make an array for the row sums
-+declare \&c[\%m] # Make an array for the column sums
-+for \%i 1 \%r 1 { # Loop through rows
-+ for \%j 1 \%m 1 { # Loop through columns of each row
-+ increment \&r[\%i] \m(a[\%i][\%j]) # Accumulate row sum
-+ increment \&c[\%j] \m(a[\%i][\%j]) # Accumulate column sum
-+ }
-+}
-+
-+ Note that the sum arrays don't have to be initialized to zero because
-+ Kermit's INCREMENT command treats empty definitions as zero.
-+
-+Demonstration Scripts for Webmasters
-+
-+ [115]ksitemap
-+ A C-Kermit 9.0 script to build sitemap.xml for a website,
-+ complete with Google image extensions (this is the file used by
-+ webmasters to get their sites crawled and indexed optimally).
-+
-+ [116]The Weblog Script
-+ Reads a web log, extracts the Google searches, normalizes the
-+ search strings, and prints the top 20 searches, along with their
-+ counts. Documented [117]HERE.
-+
-+ [118]The Amazon Script
-+ Reads an Amazon Associate orders report and lists the products
-+ according to the number of orders for each, or the number of
-+ clicks on each.
-+
-+ [119]Photoalbum
-+ Makes a website from a collecion of JPG images. For explanation
-+ and documentation, [120]CLICK HERE. Requires [121]C-Kermit 9.0
-+ or later.
-+
-+ [122]Home [123]Kermit 95 [124]C-Kermit [125]Scripts [126]Current
-+ [127]New [128]FAQ [129]Support
-+
-+
-+ C-Kermit 9.0 / [130]The Kermit Project / [131]Columbia University /
-+ [132]kermit@columbia.edu / [133]validate
-+
-+References
-+
-+ 1. http://www.columbia.edu/
-+ 2. mailto:kermit@columbia.edu
-+ 3. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 4. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/k95.html
-+ 5. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 6. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckscripts.html
-+ 7. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/current.html
-+ 8. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/whatsnew.html
-+ 9. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/faq.html
-+ 10. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/support.html
-+ 11. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ck90tables.html
-+ 12. http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1555581641?ie=UTF8&tag=aleidmoreldom-20&linkCode=as2&camp=1789&creative=9325&creativeASIN=1555581641
-+ 13. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html#download
-+ 14. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit90.html#LargeFiles
-+ 15. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit90.html#TestLargeFiles
-+ 16. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit90.html#Bignums
-+ 17. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit90.html#force3
-+ 18. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit90.html#Vareval
-+ 19. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit90.html#rename
-+ 20. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit90.html#Other
-+ 21. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit90.html#Incompatibilities
-+ 22. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit90.html#NotIn9.0
-+ 23. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit90.html#LooseEnd
-+ 24. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit90.html#pop
-+ 25. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit90.html#HPswitch
-+ 26. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit90.html#iLO
-+ 27. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit90.html#Rolm
-+ 28. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit90.html#CSV
-+ 29. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit90.html#Otherdemos
-+ 30. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ck60manual.html
-+ 31. http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B002ACPF9M?ie=UTF8&tag=aleidmoreldom-20&linkCode=as2&camp=1789&creative=390957&creativeASIN=B002ACPF9M
-+ 32. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html
-+ 33. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html
-+ 34. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckscripts.html
-+ 35. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/dec20.html
-+ 36. mailto:fdc@columbia.edu
-+ 37. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/cu-bsd-license.html
-+ 38. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit90.html#LargeFiles
-+ 39. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ck90tables.html
-+ 40. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ck90tables.html
-+ 41. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit90.html#force3
-+ 42. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit90.html#Vareval
-+ 43. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckrename.html
-+ 44. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/csv.html
-+ 45. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/csetnames.html
-+ 46. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit90.html#HPswitch
-+ 47. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckdaily.html
-+ 48. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/cu-bsd-license.html
-+ 49. http://www.opensource.org/
-+ 50. http://kermit.columbia.edu/ck90tables.html#LF
-+ 51. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/utils/bigfile.c
-+ 52. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x9
-+ 53. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ck90tables.html#LF
-+ 54. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/scripts/ckermit/easter2
-+ 55. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/em-apex.html
-+ 56. http://www.iridium.com/
-+ 57. http://science1.nasa.gov/science-news/science-at-nasa/2006/09jan_electrichurricanes/
-+ 58. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ek.html
-+ 59. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/ek/simirid/
-+ 60. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ek.html
-+ 61. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.10.10
-+ 62. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/csv.html
-+ 63. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x1.11
-+ 64. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html
-+ 65. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x9
-+ 66. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/csetnames.html
-+ 67. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckdaily.html
-+ 68. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckrename.html
-+ 69. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ftpclient.html
-+ 70. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckdaily.html
-+ 71. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/input_nowrap.html
-+ 72. http://www.columbia.edu/~fdc/mm/index.html
-+ 73. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/photoalbum.html
-+ 74. http://www.columbia.edu/~fdc/kermit/logserial.html
-+ 75. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/csetnames.html
-+ 76. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit90.html#NotIn9.0
-+ 77. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/csv.html#join
-+ 78. http://cve.mitre.org/cgi-bin/cvename.cgi?name=CVE-2009-3767
-+ 79. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ftp/test/tar/x.zip
-+ 80. http://www.mseclab.com/?p=180
-+ 81. http://www.theregister.co.uk/2009/07/30/universal_ssl_certificate/
-+ 82. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/csv.html
-+ 83. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/csetnames.html
-+ 84. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit90.html#HPswitch
-+ 85. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/em-apex.html
-+ 86. http://www.freebsd.org/releases/8.0R/announce.html
-+ 87. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/security81.html#x4.2.3
-+ 88. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x9
-+ 89. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x8.7.2
-+ 90. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x9
-+ 91. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckpackages.html
-+ 92. http://docs.hp.com/en/B9106-90013/pty.7.html
-+ 93. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/test/text/ckc299.txt
-+ 94. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/test/text/ckutio.c
-+ 95. http://www.columbia.edu/~fdc/mm/pop
-+ 96. http://www.columbia.edu/~fdc/mm/
-+ 97. http://www.columbia.edu/~fdc/mm/mailcheck
-+ 98. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trivial_File_Transfer_Protocol
-+ 99. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ftp/scripts/ckermit/gethpconfig
-+ 100. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ftp/scripts/ckermit/TestSwitches.txt
-+ 101. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Standard_streams
-+ 102. http://kermit.columbia.edu/cudocs/ilosetup.html
-+ 103. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/cudocs/cbx.html
-+ 104. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit90.html#record
-+ 105. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit90.html#join
-+ 106. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit90.html#file
-+ 107. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#fjoin
-+ 108. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit90.html#rules
-+ 109. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#fjoin
-+ 110. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit90.html#varasg
-+ 111. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x7.9
-+ 112. http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1555581641?ie=UTF8&tag=aleidmoreldom-20&linkCode=as2&camp=1789&creative=9325&creativeASIN=1555581641
-+ 113. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckscripts.html#oops
-+ 114. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckscripts.html
-+ 115. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ksitemap.html
-+ 116. http://kermit.columbia.edu/ftp/scripts/ckermit/weblog
-+ 117. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/weblog.html
-+ 118. http://kermit.columbia.edu/ftp/scripts/ckermit/amazon
-+ 119. http://kermit.columbia.edu/ftp/scripts/ckermit/photoalbum
-+ 120. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/photoalbum.html
-+ 121. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ck90.html
-+ 122. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 123. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/k95.html
-+ 124. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 125. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckscripts.html
-+ 126. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/current.html
-+ 127. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/whatsnew.html
-+ 128. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/faq.html
-+ 129. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/support.html
-+ 130. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 131. http://www.columbia.edu/
-+ 132. mailto:kermit@columbia.edu
-+ 133. http://validator.w3.org/check?uri=http%3A%2F%2Fkermit.columbia.edu%2Fck90.html
---- /dev/null
-+++ ckermit-301/ckcbwr.txt
-@@ -0,0 +1,1503 @@
-+
-+ [1]The Columbia Crown The Kermit Project | Columbia University
-+ 612 West 115th Street, New York NY 10025 USA o [2]kermit@columbia.edu
-+ ...since 1981
-+ [3]Home [4]Kermit 95 [5]C-Kermit [6]Scripts [7]Current [8]New [9]FAQ
-+ [10]Support
-+
-+ As of: C-Kermit 9.0.300, 30 June 2011
-+ This page last updated: Tue Jun 28 08:54:30 2011 (New York USA Time)
-+
-+ IF YOU ARE READING A PLAIN-TEXT version of this document, it is a
-+ plain-text dump of a Web page. You can visit the original (and
-+ possibly more up-to-date) Web page here:
-+
-+ [11]http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcbwr.html
-+
-+ This document contains platform-independent C-Kermit hints and tips.
-+ Also see the platform-specific C-Kermit hints and tips document for
-+ your platform, for example:
-+
-+ [12]http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html
-+
-+ for Unix. This document also applies to [13]Kermit 95 for Windows,
-+ which is based on C-Kermit.
-+
-+ [ [14]C-Kermit ] [ [15]TUTORIAL ]
-+
-+CONTENTS
-+
-+ 0. [16]PATCHES
-+ 1. [17]INCOMPATIBLE CHANGES
-+ 2. [18]THE C-KERMIT COMMAND PARSER
-+ 3. [19]MULTIPLE SESSIONS
-+ 4. [20]NETWORK CONNECTIONS
-+ 5. [21]MODEMS AND DIALING
-+ 6. [22]DIALING HINTS AND TIPS
-+ 7. [23]TERMINAL SERVERS
-+ 8. [24]TERMINAL EMULATION
-+ 9. [25]KEY MAPPING
-+ 10. [26]FILE TRANSFER
-+ 11. [27]SCRIPT PROGRAMMING
-+
-+0. PATCHES
-+
-+ [ [28]Top ] [ [29]Contents ] [ [30]Next ]
-+
-+ Source-level patches for C-Kermit 8.0.211:
-+
-+ (None)
-+
-+1. INCOMPATIBLE CHANGES
-+
-+ [ [31]Top ] [ [32]Contents ] [ [33]Next ]
-+
-+ These are not necessarily exhaustive lists.
-+
-+1.1. C-Kermit 6.0
-+
-+ C-Kermit 6.0 was released 6 September 1996 and is completely documented
-+ in [34]Using C-Kermit, 2nd Edition. The following incompatible changes
-+ were made in C-Kermit 6.0:
-+
-+ * Unless you tell C-Kermit otherwise, if a serial or network
-+ connection seems to be open, and you attempt to EXIT or to open a
-+ new connection, C-Kermit warns you that an active connection
-+ appears to be open and asks you if you really want to close it. If
-+ you do not want these warnings, add SET EXIT WARNING OFF to your
-+ customization file or script, or give this command at the prompt.
-+ * The default for SET { SEND, RECEIVE } PATHNAMES was changed from ON
-+ to OFF, to prevent unexpected creation of directories and
-+ depositing of incoming files in places you might not know to look.
-+ * The default for SET FILE INCOMPLETE was changed from DISCARD to
-+ KEEP to allow for file transfer recovery.
-+ * The default file-transfer block-check is now 3, rather than 1. If
-+ the other Kermit does not support this, the two will drop back to
-+ type 1 automatically unless the other Kermit fails to follow the
-+ protocol specification.
-+ * The default flow-control is now "auto" ("do the right thing for
-+ each type of connection"), not Xon/Xoff.
-+ * Backslash (\) is no longer a command continuation character. Only -
-+ (hyphen, dash) may be used for this in C-Kermit 6.0 and later.
-+ * Negative INPUT timeout now results in infinite wait, rather than 1
-+ second.
-+
-+1.2. C-Kermit 7.0
-+
-+ C-Kermit 7.0 was released 1 January 2000. Its new features are
-+ documented in the C-Kermit 7.0 Supplement,
-+ [35]http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit2.html. The following
-+ incompatible changes were made in C-Kermit 7.0:
-+ * The "multiline GET" command is gone. Now use either of the
-+ following forms instead:
-+ get remote-name local-name
-+ get /as-name:local-name remote-name
-+
-+ If either name contains spaces, enclose it in braces (or, in
-+ C-Kermit 8.0, doublequotes).
-+ * To include multiple file specifications in a GET command, you must
-+ now use MGET rather than GET:
-+ mget file1 file2 file3 ...
-+
-+ * C-Kermit 7.0 and later use FAST Kermit protocol settings by
-+ default. This includes "unprefixing" of certain control characters.
-+ Because of this, file transfers that worked with previous releases
-+ might not work in the new release especially against a
-+ non-Kermit-Project Kermit protocol implementation (but it is more
-+ likely that they will work, and much faster). If a transfer fails,
-+ you'll get a context-sensitive hint suggesting possible causes and
-+ cures. Usually SET PREFIXING ALL does the trick.
-+ * By default C-Kermit 7.0 and later send files in text or binary mode
-+ by looking at each file to see which is the appropriate mode. To
-+ restore the previous behavior, put SET TRANSFER MODE MANUAL and the
-+ desired SET FILE TYPE (TEXT or BINARY) in your C-Kermit
-+ initialization file.
-+ * The RESEND and REGET commands automatically switch to binary mode;
-+ previously if RESEND or REGET were attempted when FILE TYPE was
-+ TEXT, these commands would fail immediately, with a message telling
-+ you they work only when the FILE TYPE is BINARY. Now they simply do
-+ this for you.
-+ * SET PREFIXING CAUTIOUS and MINIMAL now both prefix linefeed (10 and
-+ 138) in case rlogin, ssh, or cu are "in the middle", since
-+ otherwise <LF>~ might appear in Kermit packets, and this would
-+ cause rlogin, ssh, or cu to disconnect, suspend,escape back, or
-+ otherwise wreck the file transfer. Xon and Xoff are now always
-+ prefixed too, even when Xon/Xoff flow control is not in effect,
-+ since unprefixing them has proven dangerous on TCP/IP connections.
-+ * In UNIX, VMS, Windows, and OS/2, the DIRECTORY command is built
-+ into C-Kermit itself rather than implemented by running an external
-+ command or program. The built-in command might not behave the way
-+ the platform-specific external one did, but many options are
-+ available for customization. Of course the underlying
-+ platform-specific command can still be accessed with "!", "@", or
-+ "RUN" wherever the installation does not forbid. In UNIX, the "ls"
-+ command can be accessed directly as "ls" in C-Kermit.
-+ * SEND ? prints a list of switches rather than a list of filenames.
-+ If you want to see a list of filenames, use a (system-dependent)
-+ construction such as SEND ./? (for UNIX, Windows, or OS/2), SEND
-+ []? (VMS), etc.
-+ * In UNIX, OS-9, and Kermit 95, the wildcard characters in previous
-+ versions were * and ?. In C-Kermit 7.0 they are *, ?, [, ], {, and
-+ }, with dash used inside []'s to denote ranges and comma used
-+ inside {} to separate list elements. If you need to include any of
-+ these characters literally in a filename, precede each one with
-+ backslash (\).
-+ * SET QUIET { ON, OFF } is now on the command stack, just like SET
-+ INPUT CASE, SET COUNT, SET MACRO ERROR, etc, as described on p.458
-+ of [36]Using C-Kermit, 2nd Edition. This allows any macro or
-+ command file to SET QUIET ON or OFF without worrying about saving
-+ and restoring the global QUIET value. For example, this lets you
-+ write a script that tries SET LINE on lots of devices until it
-+ finds one free without spewing out loads of error messages, and
-+ also without disturbing the global QUIET setting, whatever it was.
-+ * Because of the new "." operator (which introduces assignments),
-+ macros whose names begin with "." can not be invoked "by name".
-+ However, they still can be invoked with DO or \fexecute().
-+ * The syntax of the EVALUATE command has changed. To restore the
-+ previous syntax, use SET EVALUATE OLD.
-+ * The \v(directory) variable now includes the trailing directory
-+ separator; in previous releases it did not. This is to allow
-+ constructions such as:
-+ cd \v(dir)data.tmp
-+
-+ to work across platforms that might have different directory
-+ notation, such as UNIX, Windows, and VMS.
-+ * Prior to C-Kermit 7.0, the FLOW-CONTROL setting was global and
-+ sticky. In C-Kermit 7.0, there is an array of default flow-control
-+ values for each kind of connection, that are applied automatically
-+ at SET LINE/PORT/HOST time. Thus a SET FLOW command given before
-+ SET LINE/PORT/HOST is likely to be undone. Therefore SET FLOW can
-+ be guaranteed to have the desired effect only if given after the
-+ SET LINE/PORT/HOST command.
-+ * Character-set translation works differently in the TRANSMIT command
-+ when (a) the file character-set is not the same as the local end of
-+ the terminal character-set, or (b) when the terminal character-set
-+ is TRANSPARENT.
-+
-+1.3. C-Kermit 8.0
-+
-+ The following incompatible changes were made in C-Kermit 8.0:
-+ * C-Kermit now accepts doublequotes in most contexts where you
-+ previously had to use braces to group multiple words into a single
-+ field, or to force inclusion of leading or trailing blanks. This
-+ might cause problems in contexts where you wanted the doublequote
-+ characters to be taken literally. Consult [37]Section 5 of the
-+ [38]C-Kermit 8.0 Update Notes for further information.
-+ * Using the SET HOST command to make HTTP connections is no longer
-+ supported. Instead, use the new [39]HTTP OPEN command.
-+
-+1.4. C-Kermit 9.0
-+
-+ The [40]\fsplit() function is incredibly handy, it can do almost
-+ anything, up to and including parsing a LISP program (the underlying
-+ code is the basis of the [41]S-Expression interpreter). But did you
-+ ever try to use it to parse (say) a Tab-Separated-List (TSV file) or
-+ Comma-Separated-List (CSV)? It works as expected as long as the data
-+ contains only 7-bit characters. But if your data contains (say) Spanish
-+ or German or Russian text written in an 8-bit character set such as ISO
-+ 8859-1, every 8-bit character (any value 128-255) is treated as a break
-+ character. This is fixed in C-Kermit 9.0 by treating all 8-bit bytes as
-+ "include" characters rather than break characters, a total reversal of
-+ past behavior. I don't think it will affect anyone though, because if
-+ this had happened to anyone, I would have heard about it!
-+
-+ Since most standard 8-bit character sets have control characters in
-+ positions 128-160, it might have made sense to keep 128-160 in the
-+ break set, but with the proliferation of Microsoft Windows code pages,
-+ there is no telling which 8-bit character is likely to be some kind of
-+ text, e.g. "smart quotes" or East European or Turkish accented letters.
-+
-+2. THE C-KERMIT COMMAND PARSER
-+
-+ [ [42]Top ] [ [43]Contents ] [ [44]Next ] [ [45]Previous ]
-+
-+ Various command-related limits are shown in the following table, in
-+ which the sample values are for a "large memory model" build of
-+ C-Kermit, typical for modern platforms (Linux, Solaris, AIX, VMS, etc).
-+ You can see the values for your version of Kermit by giving the SHOW
-+ FEATURES command. The maximum length for a Kermit command (CMDBL) also
-+ determines the maximum length for a macro definition, since DEFINE is
-+ itself a command. The maximum length for a variable name is between 256
-+ and 4096 characters, depending on the platform; for array declarations
-+ and references, that includes the subscript.
-+
-+ Item Symbol Sample
-+ Value Definition
-+ Number of characters in a command CMDBL 32763 ckucmd.h
-+ Number of chars in a field of a command ATMBL 10238 ckucmd.h
-+ Nesting level for command files MAXTAKE 54 ckuusr.h
-+ Nesting level for macros MACLEVEL 128 ckuusr.h
-+ Nesting level for FOR / WHILE loops FORDEPTH 32 ckuusr.h
-+ Number of macros MAC_MAX 16384 ckuusr.h
-+ Size of INPUT buffer INPBUFSIZ 4096 ckuusr.h
-+ Maximum files to match a wildcard MAXWLD 102400 ckcdeb.h
-+ Filespecs in MSEND command MSENDMAX 1024 ckuusr.h
-+ Length for GOTO target label LBLSIZ 50 ckuusr.h
-+ \fexecute() recursion depth limit CMDDEP 64 ckucmd.h
-+
-+ If you need to define a macro that is longer than CMDBL, you can break
-+ the macro up into sub-macros or rewrite the macro as a command file. In
-+ a pinch you can also redefine CMDBL and recompile C-Kermit. All of
-+ these numbers represent tradeoffs: the bigger the number, the more
-+ "powerful" Kermit in the corresponding area, but also the bigger the
-+ program image and possibly disk footprint, and the longer it takes to
-+ load and initialize.
-+
-+ In the interactive command parser:
-+
-+ * EMACS- or VI-style command line editing is not supported.
-+ * Editing keys are hardwired (Ctrl-U, Ctrl-W, etc).
-+
-+ If you interrupt C-Kermit before it has issued its first prompt, it
-+ will exit. This means that you cannot interrupt execution of the
-+ initialization file, or of an "application file" (file whose name is
-+ given as the first command-line argument), or of an alternative
-+ initialization file ("-y filename"), and get to the prompt. There is,
-+ however, one exception to this rule: you *can* interrupt commands --
-+ including TAKE commands -- given in the '-C "command list"'
-+ command-line argument and -- if there were no action commands among the
-+ command-line arguments -- you will be returned to the C-Kermit prompt.
-+ So, for example, if you want to start C-Kermit in such a way that it
-+ executes a command file before issuing its first prompt, and you also
-+ want to be able to interrupt the command file and get to the prompt,
-+ include a TAKE command for the desired command in the -C argument, for
-+ example:
-+
-+ kermit -C "take dial.scr"
-+
-+ At the command prompt, if you use the backslash (\) prefix to enter a
-+ control character, space, or question mark into a command literally,
-+ the backslash disappears and is replaced by the quoted character. If it
-+ was a control character, it is shown as a circumflex (^). This allows
-+ editing (backspace, delete, Ctrl-W) to work correctly even for control
-+ characters.
-+
-+ Priot to C-Kermit 8.0, the only way to include a comma literally in a
-+ macro definition -- as opposed to having it separate commands within
-+ the definition -- is to enter its ASCII value (44) in backslash
-+ notation, e.g.:
-+
-+ DEFINE ROWS RUN MODE CO80\{44}\%1
-+
-+ In C-Kermit 8.0 you can use constructions like this:
-+
-+ DEFINE ROWS RUN MODE "CO80,\%1"
-+
-+ If you quote special characters in a filename (e.g. in the SEND
-+ command), filename completion may seem to work incorrectly. For
-+ example, if you have a file whose name is a*b (the name really contains
-+ an asterisk), and you type "send a\\*<ESC>", the "b" does not appear,
-+ nor will Ctrl-R redisplay the completed name correctly. But internally
-+ the file name is recognized anyway.
-+
-+ Question-mark help does not work during execution of an ASKQ command.
-+ The question marks are simply accepted as text.
-+
-+ In OUTPUT commands only, \B sends a BREAK signal, \L sends a Long BREAK
-+ signal, and \N sends a NUL (ASCII 0). BREAK and Long BREAK are special
-+ signals, not characters, and NUL is a character that normally cannot be
-+ included in a C string, since it is the C string terminator. If you
-+ really want to output a backslash followed by a B, an L, or an N (as is
-+ needed to configure certain modems, etc), double the backslash, e.g.
-+ "output \\B". In C-Kermit 7.0 or later, you can disarm and re-arm the
-+ special OUTPUT-command escapes (\B, \L, and \N) with SET OUTPUT
-+ SPECIAL-ESCAPES { OFF, ON }.
-+
-+ When using the command-line processor ("kermit -l /dev/tty00 -b 19200",
-+ etc), note that in some cases the order of the command-line options
-+ makes a difference, contrary to the expectation that order of
-+ command-line options should not matter. For example, the -b option must
-+ be given after the -l option if it is to affect the device specified in
-+ the -l option.
-+
-+3. MULTIPLE SESSIONS
-+
-+ [ [46]Top ] [ [47]Contents ] [ [48]Next ] [ [49]Previous ]
-+
-+ C-Kermit 7.0 and earlier do not support multiple sessions. When you SET
-+ LINE (or SET PORT, same thing) to a new device, or SET HOST to a new
-+ host, the previous SET LINE device or network host connection is
-+ closed, resulting in hangup of the modem or termination of the network
-+ connection. In windowing environments like HP-VUE, NeXTSTEP, Windows,
-+ OS/2, etc, you can run separate copies of Kermit in different windows
-+ to achieve multiple sessions.
-+
-+ To achieve multiple sessions through a single serial port (e.g. when
-+ dialing up), you can install SLIP or PPP on your computer and then use
-+ C-Kermit's TCP/IP support over the SLIP or PPP connection, assuming you
-+ also have TCP/IP networking installed on your computer.
-+
-+ C-Kermit 8.0 has the same restriction on SET LINE and SET HOST
-+ sessions: only one regular session (dialout, Telnet, etc) can be open
-+ at a time. However, version 8.0 adds two new kinds of sessions: FTP and
-+ HTTP; one or both of these can be open at the same as a regular
-+ session.
-+
-+4. NETWORK CONNECTIONS
-+
-+ [ [50]Top ] [ [51]Contents ] [ [52]Next ] [ [53]Previous ]
-+
-+FTP Client Bugs
-+
-+ The Unix C-Kermit 8.0.206 FTP client had the following bugs at the time
-+ most of the 8.0.206 binaries were built for the C-Kermit 8.0 CDROM:
-+
-+ 1. FTP MGET fails when directory segments contain wildcards, as in
-+ "ftp mget */data/*.dat". Work around by doing a separate MGET for
-+ each source directory.
-+ 2. FTP MGET can fail or produce random side effects if you have a
-+ TMPDIR or CK_TMP environment variable definition in effect, or a
-+ SET TEMP-DIRECTORY value, longer than 7 characters. Work around by
-+ giving a SET TEMP-DIRECTORY command with a short value, such as
-+ "/tmp".
-+
-+ These two bugs are fixed in the source code that is included on the
-+ CDROM, and also in Kermit 95 2.1.1. You can tell if a C-Kermit 8.0.206
-+ binary has these fixes by typing SHOW VERSION; if it says "FTP Client,
-+ 8.0.200, 24 Oct 2002" it has the fixes; if the edit number is less that
-+ 200, it doesn't, in which case can build a new binary from the source
-+ code (or contact us and we'll try to get get one for you).
-+
-+Making TCP/IP Connections Can Take a Long Time
-+
-+ The most frequently asked question in many newsgroups is "Why does it
-+ take such a long time to make a Telnet connection to (or from) my
-+ (e.g.) Linux PC?" (this applies to Kermit as well as to regular Telnet
-+ clients):
-+
-+ 1. Most Telnet servers perform reverse DNS lookups on the client for
-+ security and/or logging reasons. If the Telnet client's host cannot
-+ be found by the server's local DNS server, the DNS request goes out
-+ to the Internet at large, and this can take quite some time. The
-+ solution to this problem is to make sure that both client and host
-+ are registered in DNS.
-+ 2. C-Kermit itself performs reverse DNS lookups unless you tell it not
-+ to. This is to allow C-Kermit to let you know which host it is
-+ actually connected to in case you have made a connection to a "host
-+ pool" (multihomed host). You can disable C-Kermit's reverse DNS
-+ lookup with SET TCP REVERSE-DNS-LOOKUP OFF.
-+ 3. C-Kermit 7.0 and later strictly enforce Telnet protocol rules. One
-+ such rule is that certain negotiations must be responded to. If
-+ C-Kermit sends a such a negotiation and the host does not respond,
-+ C-Kermit waits a long time for the reply (in case the network is
-+ congested or the host is slow), but eventually will time out. To
-+ eliminate the waits (and therefore risk possible protocol
-+ mismatches -- or worse -- between Telnet client and server), tell
-+ C-Kermit to SET TELNET WAIT OFF (or include the /NOWAIT switch with
-+ the TELNET command).
-+
-+The Rlogin Client
-+
-+ In multiuser operating systems such as UNIX and VMS, TCP/IP Rlogin
-+ connections are available only to privileged users, since "login" is a
-+ privileged socket. Assuming you are allowed to use it in the first
-+ place, it is likely to behave differently depending on what type of
-+ host you are rlogging in to, due to technical reasons having to do with
-+ conflicting interpretations of RFC793 (Out-Of-Band Data) and Rlogin
-+ (RFC1122)... "Specifically, the TCP urgent pointer in BSD points to the
-+ byte after the urgent data byte, and an RFC-compliant TCP urgent
-+ pointer points to the urgent data byte. As a result, if an application
-+ sends urgent data from a BSD-compatible implementation to an
-+ [54]RFC-1122 compatible implementation then the receiver will read the
-+ wrong urgent data byte (it will read the byte located after the correct
-+ byte in the data stream as the urgent data byte)." Rlogin requires the
-+ use of OOB data while Telnet does not. Therefore, it is possible for
-+ Telnet to work between all systems while BSD and System V TCP/IP
-+ implementations are almost always a bad mix.
-+
-+The Telnet Client
-+
-+ On a TCP/IP TELNET connection, you should normally have PARITY set to
-+ NONE and (except in VMS C-Kermit) FLOW-CONTROL also set to NONE. If
-+ file transfer does not work with these settings (for example, because
-+ the remote TELNET server only gives a 7-bit data path), use SET PARITY
-+ SPACE. Do not use SET PARITY MARK, EVEN, or ODD on a TELNET connection
-+ -- it interferes with TELNET protocol.
-+
-+ If echoing does not work right after connecting to a network host or
-+ after dialing through a TCP/IP modem server, it probably means that the
-+ TELNET server on the far end of the connection is executing the TELNET
-+ protocol incorrectly. After initially connecting and discovering
-+ incorrect echoing (characters are echoed twice, or not at all), escape
-+ back, give the appropriate SET DUPLEX command (FULL or HALF), and then
-+ CONNECT again. For a consistently misbehaving connection, you can
-+ automate this process in a macro or TAKE file.
-+
-+ TELNET sessions are treated just like serial communications sessions as
-+ far as "terminal bytesize" and "command bytesize" are concerned. If you
-+ need to view and/or enter 8-bit characters during a TELNET session, you
-+ must tell C-Kermit to SET TERMINAL BYTESIZE 8, SET COMMAND BYTESIZE 8,
-+ and SET PARITY NONE.
-+
-+ If you SET TELNET DEBUG ON prior to making a connection, protocol
-+ negotiations will be displayed on your screen. You can also capture
-+ them in the debug log (along with everything else) and then extract
-+ them easily, since all Telnet negotiations lines begin with (uppercase)
-+ "TELNET".
-+
-+5. MODEMS AND DIALING
-+
-+ [ [55]Top ] [ [56]Contents ] [ [57]Next ] [ [58]Previous ]
-+
-+ External modems are recommended because:
-+
-+ * They don't need any special drivers.
-+ * They are less likely to interfere with normal operation of your
-+ computer.
-+ * You can use the lights and speaker to troubleshoot dialing.
-+ * You can share them among all types of computers.
-+ * You can easily turn them off and on when power-cycling seems
-+ warranted.
-+ * They are more likely to have manuals.
-+
-+ Modems can be used by C-Kermit only when they are visible as or through
-+ a regular serial port device. Certain modems can not be used in this
-+ normal way on many kinds of computers: Winmodems, RPI modems,
-+ Controllerless modems, the IBM Mwave, etc; all of these require special
-+ drivers that perform some, most, or all of the modem's functions in
-+ software. Such drivers are generally NOT available in UNIX or other
-+ non-Windows (or non-OS/2, in the case of the Mwave) platforms.
-+
-+ In order to dial a modem, C-Kermit must know its repertoire of commands
-+ and responses. Each modem make and model is likely to have a different
-+ repertoire. Since Kermit has no way of knowhing which kind of modem
-+ will be dialed, normally you have to tell it with a SET MODEM TYPE
-+ command, e.g.:
-+
-+ set modem type usrobotics
-+ set line /dev/cua0
-+ set speed 57600
-+ dial 7654321
-+
-+ In the early days, there was a wide variety of modems and command
-+ languages. Nowadays, almost every modem uses the Hayes AT command set
-+ (but with some differences in the details) and its startup
-+ configuration includes error correction, data compression, and hardware
-+ (RTS/CTS) flow control. As long as C-Kermit is capable of hardware flow
-+ control (as it is on many, but not all, the platforms where it runs,
-+ since some operating systems don't support it), the modem can be dailed
-+ immediately, without lengthy configuration dialogs, and in fact this is
-+ what SET MODEM TYPE GENERIC-HIGH-SPEED does. In C-Kermit 8.0,
-+ GENERIC-HIGH-SPEED has become the default modem type, so now it is
-+ usually possible to SET LINE, SET SPEED, and DIAL without having to
-+ identify your modem. If this doesn't work, of course, then you might
-+ have to fall back to the tradiational method: Give a SET MODEM TYPE for
-+ a specific modem first, then SET LINE, SET SPEED, and DIAL.
-+
-+ An important change in C-Kermit 6.0 is that when you give a SET MODEM
-+ TYPE command to tell Kermit what kind of modem you have, Kermit also
-+ sets a number of other modem-related parameters automatically from its
-+ internal modem database. Thus, the order in which you give
-+ modem-related commands is significant, whereas in prior releases they
-+ could be given in any order.
-+
-+ In particular, MODEM SPEED-MATCHING is set according to whether the
-+ modem is known to be capable of speed buffering. SET MODEM TYPE
-+ HAYES-2400 automatically turns SPEED-MATCHING ON, because when the
-+ Hayes 2400 reports a particular speed in its CONNECT message, that
-+ means its interface speed has changed to that speed, and C-Kermit's
-+ must change accordingly if it is to continue communicating. This might
-+ cause some confusion if you use "set modem type hayes" for dialing a
-+ more advanced type of modem.
-+
-+ The new default for flow control is "auto", meaning "do the right thing
-+ for each type of connection". So (for example) if your version of
-+ C-Kermit supports SET FLOW RTS/CTS and your modem also supports
-+ RTS/CTS, then Kermit automatically sets its flow control to RTS/CTS and
-+ set modem's flow control to RTS/CTS too before attempting to use the
-+ modem.
-+
-+ For these reasons, don't assume that "set modem type hayes" should be
-+ used for all modems that uses the Hayes AT command set. "set modem type
-+ hayes" really does mean Hayes 1200 or 2400, which in turn means no
-+ hardware flow control, and no speed buffering. This choice will rarely
-+ work with a modern high-speed modem.
-+
-+6. DIALING HINTS AND TIPS
-+
-+ [ [59]Top ] [ [60]Contents ] [ [61]Next ] [ [62]Previous ]
-+
-+ If you have a high-speed, error-correcting, data-compressing,
-+ speed-buffering modem, you should fix the modem's interface speed as
-+ high as possible, preferably (at least) four times higher than its
-+ maximum connection (modulation) speed to allow compression to work at
-+ full advantage. In this type of setup, you must also have an effective
-+ means of flow control enabled between C-Kermit and the modem,
-+ preferably hardware (RTS/CTS) flow control. On platforms that do not
-+ support hardware flow control, it is usually possible to select
-+ software flow control (Xon/Xoff), and C-Kermit will do its best to set
-+ the modem for local Xon/Xoff flow control too (but then, of course,
-+ Ctrl-S and Ctrl-Q characters can not be transmitted on the connection).
-+
-+ If you are having trouble dialing your modem, SET DIAL DISPLAY ON to
-+ watch the dialing interactions between C-Kermit and your modem. Consult
-+ Chapters 3-4 of [63]Using C-Kermit (2nd Ed) for modem-dialing
-+ troubleshooting instructions. The following sections offer some
-+ addtional hints and tips.
-+
-+6.1. Syntax
-+
-+ If you want to dial a number that starts with #, you'll need to quote
-+ the "#" character (as \# or \{35}), since it is also a comment
-+ introducer:
-+
-+ C-Kermit>dial #98765421-1-212-5551212 ; Looks like a comment
-+ ?You must specify a number to dial
-+ C-Kermit>dial \#98765421-1-212-5551212 ; Works OK
-+ C-Kermit>dial =#98765421-1-212-5551212 ; This works too
-+
-+ When using a dialing directory, remember what happens if a name is not
-+ found:
-+
-+ C-Kermit>dial xyzcorp
-+ Lookup: "xyzcorp" - not found - dialing as given
-+
-+ This normally does no harm, but some modems might behave strangely when
-+ given dial strings that contain certain letters. For example, a certain
-+ German modem treats any dial string that contains the letter "s" as a
-+ command to fetch a number from its internal list, and replies OK to the
-+ ATD command, which is normally not a valid response except for partial
-+ dialing. To avoid this situation, use:
-+
-+ lookup xyzcorp
-+ if success dial
-+
-+6.2. The Carrier Signal
-+
-+ Remember: In many C-Kermit implementations (depending on the underlying
-+ operating system -- mostly Windows, OS/2, and System-V-based UNIX
-+ versions, and in C-Kermit 7.0, also VMS), you can't CONNECT to a modem
-+ and type the modem's dialing command (like "ATDT7654321") manually,
-+ unless you first tell C-Kermit to:
-+
-+ SET CARRIER-WATCH OFF
-+
-+ This is because (in these implementations), the CONNECT command
-+ requires the modem's Carrier Detect (CD) signal to be on, but the CD
-+ signal doesn't come on until after dialing is complete. This
-+ requirement is what allows C-Kermit to pop back to its prompt
-+ automatically when the connection is hung up. See the description of
-+ SET CARRIER-WATCH in "Using C-Kermit".
-+
-+ Similarly, if your dialed connection drops when CARRIER-WATCH is set to
-+ AUTO or ON, you can't CONNECT back to the (now disconnected) screen to
-+ see what might have happened unless you first SET CARRIER-WATCH OFF.
-+ But sometimes not even SET CARRIER-WATCH OFF will help in this
-+ situation: certain platforms (for example Unixware 2.1), once carrier
-+ drops, won't let the application do i/o with the device any more. In
-+ that case, if you want to use the device again, you have to CLOSE it
-+ and OPEN it again. Or you can have Kermit do this for you automatically
-+ by telling it to SET CLOSE-ON-DISCONNECT ON.
-+
-+6.3. Dialing and Flow Control
-+
-+ Don't SET FLOW RTS/CTS if your modem is turned off, or if it is not
-+ presenting the CTS signal. Otherwise, the serial device driver can get
-+ stuck waiting for this signal to appear.
-+
-+ Most modern modems support RTS/CTS (if they support any hardware flow
-+ control at all), but some computers use different RS-232 circuits for
-+ the same purposes, e.g. DTR and CD, or DTR and CTS. In such cases, you
-+ might be able to make your computer work with your modem by
-+ appropriately cross-wiring the circuits in the cable connector, for
-+ example the computer's DTR to the modem's RTS, and modem's CD to the
-+ computer's CTS. HOWEVER, C-Kermit does not know you have done this. So
-+ if you have (say) SET FLOW DTR/CD, C-Kermit will make no attempt to
-+ tell the modem to use RTS/CTS. You probably did this yourself when you
-+ configured the modem.
-+
-+6.4. The Dial Timeout
-+
-+ If it takes your call longer to be completed than the timeout interval
-+ that C-Kermit calculates, you can use the SET DIAL TIMEOUT command to
-+ override C-Kermit's value. But beware: the modem has its own timeout
-+ for completing the call. If it is a Hayes-like modem, C-Kermit adjusts
-+ the modem's value too by setting register S7. But the maximum value for
-+ S7 might be smaller than the time you need! In that case, C-Kermit sets
-+ S7 to 0, 255, or other (modem-specific) value to signify "no timeout".
-+ If Kermit attempts to set register S7 to a value higher than your
-+ modem's maximum, the modem will say "ERROR" and you will get a "Failure
-+ to initialize modem" error. In that case, use SET DIAL TIMEOUT to
-+ override C-Kermit's calculation of the timeout value with the highest
-+ value that is legal for your modem, e.g. 60.
-+
-+6.5. Escape Sequence Guard Time
-+
-+ A "TIES" (Time-Independent Escape Sequence) modem does not require any
-+ guard time around its escape sequence. The following text:
-+
-+ +++ATH0
-+
-+ if sent through a TIES modem, for example because you were uploading
-+ this file through it, could pop the modem back into command mode and
-+ make it hang up the connection. Later versions of the Telebit T1600 and
-+ T3000 (version LA3.01E firmware and later), and all WorldBlazers, use
-+ TIES.
-+
-+ Although the probability of "+++" appearing in a Kermit packet is
-+ markedly lower than with most other protocols (see the [64]File
-+ Transfer section below), it can still happen under certain
-+ circumstances. It can also happen when using C-Kermit's TRANSMIT
-+ command. If you are using a Telebit TIES modem, you can change the
-+ modem's escape sequence to an otherwise little-used control character
-+ such as Ctrl-_ (Control-Underscore):
-+
-+ AT S2=31
-+
-+ A sequence of three consecutive Ctrl-_ characters will not appear in a
-+ Kermit packet unless you go to extraordinary lengths to defeat more
-+ than a few of Kermit's built-in safety mechanisms. And if you do this,
-+ then you should also turn off the modem's escape-sequence recognition
-+ altogether:
-+
-+ AT S48=0 S2=255
-+
-+ But when escape sequence recognition is turned off, "modem hangup"
-+ (<pause>+++<pause>ATH0<CR>) will not work, so you should also SET MODEM
-+ HANGUP RS232-SIGNAL (rather then MODEM-COMMAND).
-+
-+6.6. Adaptive Dialing
-+
-+ Some modems have a feature called adaptive dialing. When they are told
-+ to dial a number using Tone dialing, they check to make sure that
-+ dialtone has gone away after dialing the first digit. If it has not,
-+ the modem assumes the phone line does not accept Tone dialing and so
-+ switches to Pulse. When dialing out from a PBX, there is almost always
-+ a secondary dialtone. Typically you take the phone off-hook, get the
-+ PBX dialtone, dial "9" to get an outside line, and then get the phone
-+ company's dialtone. In a situation like this, you need to tell the
-+ modem to expect the secondary dialtone. On Hayes and compatible modems,
-+ this is done by putting a "W" in the dial string at the appropriate
-+ place. For example, to dial 9 for an outside line, and then 7654321,
-+ use ATDT9W7654321:
-+
-+ SET PBX-OUTSIDE-PREFIX 9W
-+
-+ (replace "9" with whatever your PBX's outside-line prefix is).
-+
-+6.7. The Busy Signal
-+
-+ Some phone companies are eliminating the busy signal. Instead, they
-+ issue a voice message such as "press 1 to automatically redial until
-+ the number answers, or...". Obviously this is a disaster for modem
-+ calls. If your service has this feature, there's nothing Kermit can do
-+ about it. Your modem will respond with NO CARRIER (after a long time)
-+ rather than BUSY (immediately), and Kermit will declare the call a
-+ failure, rather than trying to redial the same number.
-+
-+6.8. Hanging Up
-+
-+ There are two ways to hang up a modem: by turning off the serial port's
-+ DTR signal (SET MODEM HANGUP-METHOD RS232-SIGNAL) or sending the modem
-+ its escape sequence followed by its hangup command (SET MODEM
-+ HANGUP-METHOD MODEM-COMMAND). If one doesn't work, try the other. If
-+ the automatic hangup performed at the beginning of a DIAL command
-+ causes trouble, then SET DIAL HANGUP OFF.
-+
-+ The HANGUP command has no effect when C-Kermit is in remote mode. This
-+ is on purpose. If C-Kermit could hang up its own controlling terminal,
-+ this would (a) most likely leave behind zombie processes, and (b) pose
-+ a security risk.
-+
-+ If you DIAL a modem, disconnect, then SET HOST or TELNET, and then
-+ HANGUP, Kermit sends the modem's hangup command, such as "+++ATHO".
-+ There is no good way to avoid this, because this case can't reliably be
-+ distinguished from the case in which the user does SET HOST
-+ terminal-server, SET MODEM TYPE name, DIAL. In both cases we have a
-+ valid modem type selected and we have a network connection. If you want
-+ to DIAL and then later make a regular network connection, you will have
-+ to SET MODEM TYPE NONE or SET DIAL HANGUP OFF to avoid this phenomenon.
-+
-+7. TERMINAL SERVERS
-+
-+ [ [65]Top ] [ [66]Contents ] [ [67]Next ] [ [68]Previous ]
-+
-+ Watch out for terminal server's escape character -- usually a control
-+ character such as Ctrl-Circumflex (Ctrl-^). Don't unprefix it in
-+ Kermit!
-+
-+ Ciscos -- must often be told to "terminal download"... Cisco ASM models
-+ don't have hardware flow control in both directions.
-+
-+ Many terminal servers only give you a 7-bit connection, so if you can't
-+ make it 8-bit, tell Kermit to "set parity space".
-+
-+ The following story, regarding trouble transferring 8-bit files through
-+ a reverse terminal server, was contributed by an Annex terminal server
-+ user:
-+
-+ Using C-Kermit on an HP 9000 712/80 running the HP-UX 10.0 operating
-+ system. The HP was connected to a Xylogics Annex MICRO-ELS-UX R7.1 8
-+ port terminal server via ethernet. On the second port of the
-+ terminal server is an AT&T Paradyne 3810 modem, which is connected
-+ to a telephone line. There is a program which runs on the HP to
-+ establish a Telnet connection between a serial line on the Annex and
-+ a character special file on the HP (/dev file). This is an Annex
-+ specific program called rtelnet (reverse telnet) and is provided
-+ with the terminal server software. The rtelnet utility runs on top
-+ of the pseudo-terminal facility provided by UNIX. It creates
-+ host-originiated connections to devices attached ot Annex serial
-+ ports. There are several command line arguments to be specified with
-+ this program: the IP address of the terminal server, the number of
-+ the port to attach to, and the name of the pseudo-device to create.
-+ In addition to these there are options to tell rtelnet how to
-+ operate on the connect: -b requests negotiation for Telnet binary
-+ mode, -d turns on socket-leve debugging, -f enables "connect on the
-+ fly" mode, -r removes the device-name if it already exists, etc. The
-+ most important of these to be specified when using 8 data bits and
-+ no parity, as we found out, was the -t option. This creates a
-+ transparent TCP connection to the terminal server. Again, what we
-+ assumed to be happening was that the rtelnet program encountered a
-+ character sequence special to itself and then "eating" those kermit
-+ packets. I think this is all of the information I can give you on
-+ the configuration, short of the values associated with the port on
-+ the terminal server.
-+
-+ How to DIAL from a TCP/IP reverse terminal server (modem server):
-+
-+ 1. (only if necessary) SET TELNET ECHO REMOTE
-+ 2. SET HOST terminal-server-ip-name-or-address [ port ]
-+ 3. SET MODEM TYPE modem-type
-+ 4. (only if necessary) SET DIAL HANGUP OFF
-+ 5. (for troubleshooting) SET DIAL DISPLAY ON
-+ 6. DIAL phone-number
-+
-+ The order is important: SET HOST before SET MODEM TYPE. Since this is a
-+ Telnet connection, serial-port related commands such as SET SPEED, SET
-+ STOP-BITS, HANGUP (when MODEM HANGUP-METHOD is RS232), etc, have no
-+ effect. However, in C-Kermit 8.0, if the modem server supports
-+ [69]RFC-2217 Telnet Com-Port Control protocol, these commands do indeed
-+ take effect at the server's serial port.
-+
-+8. TERMINAL EMULATION
-+
-+ [ [70]Top ] [ [71]Contents ] [ [72]Next ] [ [73]Previous ]
-+
-+ Except for the Windows, OS/2, and Macintosh versions, C-Kermit does not
-+ emulate any kind of terminal. Rather, it acts as a "semitransparent
-+ pipe", passing the characters you type during a CONNECT session to the
-+ remote host, and sending the characters received from the remote host
-+ to your screen. Whatever is controlling your keyboard and screen
-+ provides the specific terminal emulation: a real terminal, a PC running
-+ a terminal emulator, etc, or (in the case of a self-contained
-+ workstation) your console driver, a terminal window, xterm, etc.
-+
-+ Kermit is semitrantsparent rather than fully transparent in the
-+ following ways:
-+
-+ * During a TELNET ("set host") session, C-Kermit itself executes the
-+ TELNET protocol and performs TELNET negotiations. (But it does not
-+ perform TN3270 protocol or any other type of 3270 terminal
-+ emulation.)
-+ * If you have changed your keyboard mapping using SET KEY, C-Kermit
-+ replaces the characters you type with the characters or strings
-+ they are mapped to.
-+ * If you SET your TERMINAL CHARACTER-SET to anything but TRANSPARENT,
-+ C-Kermit translates your keystrokes (after applying any SET KEY
-+ definitions) before transmitting them, and translates received
-+ characters before showing them on your screen.
-+ * If your remote and/or local TERMINAL CHARACTER-SET is an ISO 646
-+ 7-bit national character set, such as German, French, Italian,
-+ Swedish, etc, or Short KOI used for Cyrillic, C-Kermit's CONNECT
-+ command automatically skips over ANSI escape sequences to avoid
-+ translating their characters. Only ANSI/ISO standard
-+ (VT100/200/300-like) 7-bit escape sequence formats are supported
-+ for this purpose, no proprietary schemes like H-P, Televideo,
-+ Tektronix, etc.
-+ * If your version of C-Kermit includes SET TERMINAL APC command, then
-+ C-Kermit's CONNECT command will handle APC escape sequences if
-+ TERMINAL APC is not set to OFF (which is the default).
-+
-+ You can make C-Kermit fully transparent by starting it with the -0
-+ (dash zero) command-line option.
-+
-+ If you are running C-Kermit under a console driver, or in a terminal
-+ window, that emulates the VT100, and use C-Kermit to log in to a VMS
-+ system, the console driver or terminal window (not Kermit) is supposed
-+ to reply to the "what are you?" query (ESC Z) from the VAX. If it
-+ doesn't, and you can't make it do so, then you can (a) live with the
-+ "unknown terminal" problem; (b) tell VMS to SET TERMINAL/DEVICE=VT100;
-+ (c) program a key using SET KEY to send the appropriate sequence and
-+ then punch the key at the right time; or (d) use the VMSLOGIN macro
-+ that is defined in CKERMIT.INI to do this for you automatically.
-+
-+ SET SESSION-LOG { TEXT, BINARY }, which is effective in UNIX and AOS/VS
-+ but not other C-Kermit versions, removes CR, DEL, NUL, XON, and XOFF
-+ characters (Using C-Kermit neglects to mention that XON and XOFF are
-+ removed). The TEXT-mode setting is ineffective during SCRIPT command
-+ execution, as well as on X.25 connections.
-+
-+9. KEY MAPPING
-+
-+ [ [74]Top ] [ [75]Contents ] [ [76]Next ] [ [77]Previous ]
-+
-+ Except in the terminal-emulating versions, C-Kermit's key mapping
-+ facilities are limited to normal "ASCII" keys, and cannot be used with
-+ function keys, arrow keys, arcane key combinations, etc. Since C-Kermit
-+ runs on such a wide variety of hardware platforms (including, for
-+ example, more than 360 different UNIX platforms), it is not possible
-+ for C-Kermit to support every conceivable keyboard under every release
-+ of every UNIX (or VMS, or ...) product on every different kind of
-+ computer possibly under all manner of different console drivers, even
-+ if it had the means to do so.
-+
-+ In technical terms, C-Kermit uses the read() function to read
-+ keystrokes, and read() returns a single byte (value 0 through 255).
-+ C-Kermit's SET KEY function applies to these single-byte codes.
-+ "Extended function" keys, such as F-keys, arrow keys, etc, usually
-+ return either a 2-byte "scan code" or else a character string (such as
-+ an escape sequence like "<ESC> O p"). In both cases, C-Kermit has no
-+ way to tell the difference between such multibyte key values, and the
-+ corresponding series of single-byte key values. This could only be done
-+ by accessing the keyboard at a much lower level in a highly
-+ platform-dependent manner, probably requiring tens of thousands of
-+ lines of code to support even a sampling of the most popular
-+ workstation / OS combinations.
-+
-+ However, most workstation console drivers (terminal emulation windows,
-+ etc) include their own key-mapping facility. For example in AIX, the
-+ AIXterm program (in whose window you would run C-Kermit) allows
-+ rebinding of the F1-F12 keys to arbitrary strings. The same is true of
-+ Xterm and DECterm windows, etc. Consult the technical documentation for
-+ your workstation or emulator. See sample Xterm (Xmodmap) mappings in
-+ the [78]Unix C-Kermit Hints and Tips document.
-+
-+ The SET KEY command (except in Kermit 95) does not allow a key
-+ definition to be (or contain) the NUL (\0) character.
-+
-+10. FILE TRANSFER
-+
-+ [ [79]Top ] [ [80]Contents ] [ [81]Next ] [ [82]Previous ]
-+
-+ C-Kermit 7.0 is the first release of C-Kermit to use fast (rather than
-+ robust and therefore slow) protocol defaults: long packets, sliding
-+ windows, control-character unprefixing, and streaming where possible.
-+ This makes most transfers (partner willing) dramatically faster "out of
-+ the box" but might break some combinations that worked before. If
-+ transfers with C-Kermit 7.0 or later fail where transfers worked with
-+ earlier C-Kermit versions, try the following (one at a time, in this
-+ order):
-+
-+ 1. SET PREFIXING ALL: Disables control-character unprefixing.
-+ 2. SET STREAMING OFF: Disables streaming.
-+ 3. CAUTIOUS: Selects medium but cautious protocol settings.
-+ 4. ROBUST: this command reverts to the most conservative protocol
-+ settings.
-+
-+ Execution of multiple file transfers by C-Kermit from a command file
-+ when in remote mode might exhibit long delays between each transfer. To
-+ avoid this, just include the command "SET DELAY 0" in your command file
-+ before any of the file-transfer commands.
-+
-+ File transfer failures can occur for all sorts of reasons, most of them
-+ listed in Chapter 10 of [83]Using C-Kermit. The following sections
-+ touch on some that aren't.
-+
-+ The [84]C-Kermit 7.0 Release Notes document SEND /COMMAND as taking an
-+ argument, but it doesn't. Instead of SEND /COMMAND:{some command}, use:
-+
-+SEND /COMMAND [ other switches such as /AS-NAME: ] command [ arguments... ]
-+
-+10.1. Laptops
-+
-+ Watch out for laptops and their assorted power-saver features; for
-+ example, a built-in modem's "auto timeout delay" hanging up the
-+ connection in the middle of a file transfer. Most modems, even if they
-+ have this feature, do not have it enabled by default. But if you
-+ experience otherwise inexplicable disconnections in the midst of your
-+ Kermit sessions, check the modem manual for such things as "idle
-+ timeout", "auto timeout", etc, and add the command to disable this
-+ feature to Kermit's init string for this modem.
-+
-+10.2. NFS
-+
-+ If uploading a large file to an NFS-mounted disk fails (or is painfully
-+ slow), try uploading it to a local disk (e.g. /tmp on Unix) and then
-+ copying to the NFS disk later.
-+
-+10.3. Modems
-+
-+ If you are dialing out and find that downloads work but uploads don't,
-+ try again with a lower serial-port speed. Case in point: dialing out on
-+ a certain PC from Linux at 115200 bps using a USR Courier 56K
-+ "V.Everything" external modem and RTS/CTS flow control. Downloads
-+ worked flawlessly, uploads stopped dead after the first few packets
-+ were sent. The modem lights showed constant retraining (ARQ light
-+ blinks slowly), and the CTS light was off 95% of the time, allowing
-+ nothing to get through. Reducing the serial port speed to 57600 bps
-+ made the problems go away. Evidently the PC in question has a very fast
-+ serial port, since dialing the same modem with a different PC at 115200
-+ bps works without incident.
-+
-+10.4. TCP/IP Connections
-+
-+ If you have trouble transferring files over a TCP/IP connection, tell
-+ Kermit to SET PARITY SPACE and try again. If that doesn't work, also
-+ try a shorter packet length or smaller window size (to compensate for
-+ certain well-known broken Telnet servers), and/or SET RELIABLE OFF.
-+
-+10.5. Multihop Connections
-+
-+ If you have a multihop connection, with the interior nodes in CONNECT
-+ mode (Kermit, Telnet, Rlogin, or any other), you can expect (a) file
-+ transfer to be slower, and (b) the connection to be less transparent
-+ (to control characters, perhaps to the 8th bit) than a more direct
-+ connection. C-Kermit 7.0 and later have a "-0" (dash-zero) command-line
-+ option to make it 100% transparent in cases where it is to be used in
-+ the middle.
-+
-+10.6. Recovery
-+
-+ The recovery feature (RESEND command) that was added in version 5A(190)
-+ works only for binary-mode transfers. In order for this feature to be
-+ useful at all, the default for SET FILE INCOMPLETE was changed from
-+ DISCARD to KEEP. Otherwise an interrupted transfer would leave no
-+ partial file behind unless you had remembered to change the default.
-+ But now you have to pay closer attention to Kermit's messages to know
-+ whether a transfer succeeded or failed -- previously, if it failed, the
-+ file would not show up on the receiving end at all; in 5A(190) and
-+ later, you'll get a partial file which could easily be mistaken for the
-+ complete file unless you change the default back to DISCARD or read the
-+ screen messages, or keep a transaction log.
-+
-+10.7. Filename Collisions
-+
-+ SET FILE COLLISION BACKUP is the default. This means:
-+
-+ * If you send the same file lots of times, there will be many backup
-+ files. There is no automatic mechanism within Kermit to delete
-+ them, no notion of a "version retention count", etc, but you can
-+ use the PURGE command to clean them up.
-+ * If a file arrives that has the same name as a directory, the file
-+ transfer fails because Kermit will not rename a directory. Send the
-+ file with another name, or use SET FILE COLLISION RENAME.
-+ * If the directory lacks write permission, the file transfer fails
-+ even if you have write access to the file that is being backed up;
-+ in that case, switch to SET FILE COLLISION OVERWRITE or APPEND, or
-+ send to a different directory.
-+
-+ SET FILE COLLISION UPDATE depends on the date/time stamp in the
-+ attribute packet. However, this is recorded in local time, not
-+ Universal Time (GMT), and there is no indication of time zone. The time
-+ is expressed to the precision of 1 second, but some file systems do not
-+ record with this precision -- for example, MS-DOS records the file
-+ date/time only to the nearest 2 seconds. This might cause update
-+ operations to send more files than necessary.
-+
-+ (This paragraph does NOT apply to UNIX, where, as of C-Kermit 7.0,
-+ C-Kermit pipes incoming mail and print material directly the mail or
-+ print program): When C-Kermit is receiving files from another Kermit
-+ program that has been given the MAIL or REMOTE PRINT command, C-Kermit
-+ follows the current filename collision action. This can be
-+ disconcerting if the action was (for example) BACKUP, because the
-+ existing file will be renamed, and the new file will be mailed (or
-+ printed) and then deleted. Kermit cannot temporarily change to RENAME
-+ because the file collision action occurs when the filename packet is
-+ received, and the PRINT or MAIL disposition only comes later, in the
-+ Attribute packet.
-+
-+ Watch out for SET FILE COLLISION RENAME, especially when used in
-+ conjunction with recovery. Recall that this option (which is NOT the
-+ default) renames the incoming file if a file already exists with the
-+ same name (the default is to rename the previously existing file, and
-+ store the incoming file with its own name). It is strongly recommended
-+ that you do not use SET FILE COLLISION RENAME if you ever intend to use
-+ the recovery feature:
-+
-+ * When the file is first received by C-Kermit, its name is changed if
-+ another file already has the same name. When you RESEND the same
-+ file after a failure, C-Kermit will probably try to append the
-+ re-sent portion to the wrong file.
-+ * Assuming that you get RESEND to work with FILE COLLISION RENAME,
-+ C-Kermit, when receiving the remainder of the file during a RESEND
-+ operation, will report back the wrong name. Nothing can be done
-+ about this because the name is reported back before the receiving
-+ Kermit program finds out that it is a recovery operation.
-+
-+ Also watch out for DISABLE DELETE, since this implicitly sets FILE
-+ COLLISION to RENAME. And note tht DELETE is DISABLEd automatically any
-+ time you Kermit is in local mode (i.e. it makes a connection). Also
-+ note that for purposes of DISABLE and ENABLE, "set host *" connections
-+ do not count as local mode even though, strictly speaking, they are.
-+
-+10.8. DOS Pathnames
-+
-+ When referring to foreign MS-DOS, Windows, Atari ST, OS/2, or other
-+ file specifications that contain backslash characters in a C-Kermit
-+ command, you might have to double each backslash, for example:
-+
-+ C-Kermit>get c:\\directory\\foo.txt
-+
-+ This is because backslash is used in C-Kermit commands for introducing
-+ special character codes, variables, functions, etc.
-+
-+10.9. Cancellation
-+
-+ If attempting to cancel local-mode file reception at a very early stage
-+ (i.e. before data packets are exchanged) with X or Z does not work, use
-+ E or Ctrl-C instead, or wait until the first data packets are sent.
-+
-+ If you cancel a transfer that is underway using X or Z, and a lot of
-+ window slots are in use, it might take a while for the cancellation to
-+ take effect, especially if you do this on the receiving end; that's
-+ because a lot of packets might already be on their way to you. In that
-+ case, just be patient and let Kermit "drain" them.
-+
-+ If C-Kermit is sending a file, remote-mode packet-mode breakout (three
-+ consecutive Ctrl-C's by default) is not effective until after C-Kermit
-+ sends its first packet. If C-Kermit is receiving a file or is in server
-+ mode, it is effective right away. In the former case, the SET DELAY
-+ value determines the earliest time at which you can break out of packet
-+ mode.
-+
-+10.10. Partner Peculiarities
-+
-+ When one or both partners is on an SCO operating system such as OSR5,
-+ you might issue the command:
-+
-+mapchan -n
-+
-+ to disable character-set conversion by the terminal driver. Similarly
-+ for AIX:
-+
-+setmaps -t NOMAP
-+
-+ When using C-Kermit to transfer files with the HP48SX calculator, you
-+ must SET FLOW NONE. The HP48SX does not support flow control, and
-+ evidently also becomes confused if you attempt to use it. You might
-+ also need to use SET SEND PAUSE 100 (or other number). For greater
-+ detail about transferring files the the HP-48, see:
-+
-+ [85]http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/hp48.html
-+
-+ Some communication programs have errors in their implementation of
-+ Kermit attribute packets. If you get an error message from your
-+ communication program like "Attribute error", tell C-Kermit to SET
-+ ATTRIBUTES OFF. Better yet, switch to a real Kermit program.
-+
-+ Some communication software claims to implement Kermit sliding windows,
-+ but does so incorrectly. If sliding window transfers fail, set
-+ C-Kermit's window size to the smallest one that works, for example, SET
-+ WINDOW 1.
-+
-+ For lots more detail about how to cope with defective Kermit partners,
-+ see:
-+
-+ * [86]Coping with Faulty Kermit Implementations (C-Kermit 7.0 and
-+ later).
-+ * [87]Coping with Broken Kermit Partners (C-Kermit 8.0 and later).
-+
-+ The UNIX version of C-Kermit discards carriage returns when receiving
-+ files in text mode. Thus, "bare" carriage returns (sometimes used to
-+ achieve overstriking) are lost.
-+
-+11. SCRIPT PROGRAMMING
-+
-+ [ [88]Top ] [ [89]Contents ] [ [90]Previous ]
-+
-+11.1. Comments Versus the SCRIPT Command
-+
-+ Remember that ";" and "#" introduce comments when (a) they are the
-+ first character on the line, or (b) they are preceded by at least one
-+ blank or tab within a line. Thus constructions like:
-+
-+ INPUT 5 ;
-+ SCRIPT ~0 #--#--#
-+
-+ must be coded using backslash notation to keep the data from being
-+ ignored:
-+
-+ INPUT 5 \59 ; 59 is the decimal ASCII code for ";"
-+ SCRIPT ~0 \35--#--# ; 43 is the decimal ASCII code for "#"
-+
-+ or, more simply:
-+
-+ INPUT 5 \; ; Just quote the semicolon
-+ SCRIPT ~0 \#--#--# ; Just quote the "#"
-+
-+11.2. Alphabetic Case and the INPUT Command
-+
-+ INPUT and MINPUT caseless string comparisons do not work for non-ASCII
-+ (international) characters. Workaround: SET INPUT CASE OBSERVE. Even
-+ then, the "lexically less than" and "lexically greater than" operations
-+ (IF LLT, IF LGT) probably won't work as expected. The same is true for
-+ the case-conversion functions \Flower() and \Fupper(). C-Kermit does
-+ not know the collating sequence for different character sets and
-+ languages. (On the other hand, it might work depending on such items as
-+ how Kermit was linked, whether your operating supports "locales", etc)
-+
-+11.3. NUL (0) Characters in C-Kermit Commands
-+
-+ You can't include a NUL character (\0) in C-Kermit command text without
-+ terminating the character string in which it appears. For example:
-+
-+ echo In these brackets [\0] is a NUL
-+
-+ will echo "In these brackets [". This applies to ECHO, INPUT, OUTPUT,
-+ and all other commands (but you can represent NUL by "\N" in an OUTPUT
-+ string). This is because C-language strings are terminated internally
-+ by the NUL character, and it allows all of C-Kermit's string comparison
-+ and manipulation functions to work in the normal "C" way.
-+
-+ To illustrate:
-+
-+ INPUT 5 \0
-+
-+ is equivalent to:
-+
-+ INPUT 5
-+
-+ and:
-+
-+ INPUT 5 ABC\0DEF
-+
-+ is equivalent to:
-+
-+ INPUT 5 ABC
-+
-+ INPUT operations discard and ignore NUL characters that arrive from the
-+ communication device, meaning that they do not figure into matching
-+ operations (e.g. A<NUL>B matches AB); they are not deposited in the
-+ INPUT buffer (\v(input)); and they are not counted in \v(incount), with
-+ two exceptions:
-+
-+ 1. An arriving NUL character restarts the INPUT SILENCE timer.
-+ 2. An arriving NUL character terminates the INPUT command with the
-+ SUCCESS condition if the INPUT command was given an empty search
-+ string. In this case \v(incount) is set to 1.
-+
-+ Also, the \v(inchar) variable is null (completely empty) if the last
-+ INPUT character was NUL. That is, there is no way to tell only by
-+ looking at \v(inchar) the difference between a NUL that was INPUT and
-+ no INPUT at all. If the INPUT command succeeded but \v(inchar) is
-+ empty, then a NUL character was input. Also, \v(incount) will be set to
-+ 1.
-+
-+ Here's a sample script fragment to read characters, possibly including
-+ NUL, from the communication connection and write them to a file:
-+
-+ while true {
-+ input 1 ; read one byte
-+ if fail break ; timed out or connection closed
-+ fwrite /char \%c \v(inchar) ; record the byte
-+ }
-+
-+ This works because when \v(inchar) is NUL, that's equivalent to FWRITE
-+ /CHAR having no text argument at all, in which case it writes a NUL
-+ character.
-+
-+ \v(incount) and \v(inchar) are NOT affected by the CLEAR command.
-+
-+11.4. \ffiles() and \fnextfile() Peculiarities
-+
-+ The following script program:
-+
-+ for \%i 1 \ffiles(oofa.*) 1 {
-+ send \fnextfile()
-+ }
-+
-+ did not work as expected in C-Kermit 6.0 and earlier but does work in
-+ C-Kermit 7.0 and later.
-+
-+11.5. Commands That Have Only Local Effect
-+
-+ Certain settings are local to each command level, meaning that
-+ subordinate command levels (macros or command files) can change them
-+ without affecting their values at higher command levels. When a new
-+ command level is invoked, the value is inherited from the previous
-+ level. These settings are:
-+
-+ CASE
-+ COUNT and \v(count)
-+ INPUT CASE
-+ INPUT TIMEOUT
-+ MACRO ERROR
-+ QUIET
-+ TAKE ERROR
-+
-+ This arrangement allows CASE, TIMEOUT, and ERROR settings, which are
-+ used to control automatic exit from a command file or macro upon error,
-+ to be automatically restored when the command file or macro exits.
-+
-+ The COUNT variable follows this rule too, which permits nested SET
-+ COUNT / IF COUNT loops, as in this example in which the inner loop
-+ counts down from the current COUNT value of the outer loop (try it):
-+
-+ DEFINE INNER WHILE COUNT { WRITE SCREEN { Inner:}, SHOW COUNT }
-+ SET COUNT 5
-+ WHILE COUNT { WRITE SCREEN Outer:, SHOW COUNT, DO INNER }
-+
-+ Keep in mind that an inferior command level cannot manipulate the COUNT
-+ value held by a higher level. For example:
-+
-+ DEFINE OOFA SHOW COUNT, IF COUNT GOTO LOOP
-+ SET COUNT 5
-+ :LOOP
-+ OOFA
-+ ECHO Done
-+
-+ results in an infinite loop; the COUNT value remains at 5 because it is
-+ never decremented at the same level at which it was set.
-+
-+11.6. Literal Braces in Function Calls
-+
-+ Since braces are used in function calls to indicate grouping, there is
-+ no way to pass literal braces to the function itself. Solution: Define
-+ a variable containing the string that has braces. Example:
-+
-+ define \%a ab{cd
-+ echo \fsubstring(\%a)
-+ ab{cd
-+
-+ If the string is to start with a leading brace and end with a closing
-+ brace, then double braces must appear around the string (which itself
-+ is enclosed in braces):
-+
-+ define \%a {{{foo}}}
-+ echo \fsubstring(\%a)
-+ {foo}
-+
-+ This also works for any other kind of string:
-+
-+ define \%a {{ab{cd}}
-+ echo \fsubstring(\%a)
-+ ab{cd
-+
-+11.7. Defining Variables on the C-Kermit Command Line
-+
-+ To define variables on the C-Kermit command line, use the -C
-+ command-line option with one or more DEFINE or ASSIGN commands. Note
-+ that the C-Kermit command line must cope with the quoting rules of your
-+ shell. Examples:
-+
-+ kermit -C "define \\%a foo, define phonenumber 7654321"
-+
-+ In this case we follow UNIX quoting rules by doubling the backslash.
-+ Once C-Kermit starts, the \%a and \m(phonenumber) variables are defined
-+ as indicated and can be used in the normal way.
-+
-+ In DOS or Windows or OS/2 the command would be:
-+
-+ kermit -C "define \%%a foo, define phonenumber 7654321"
-+
-+ Here we need to double the percent sign rather than the backslash
-+ because of DOS shell quoting rules.
-+
-+11.8. Per-Character Echo Check with the OUTPUT Command
-+
-+ Sometimes the OUTPUT command must be used to send commands or data to a
-+ device in "echoplex" mode, meaning that characters must be sent one at
-+ a time, and the next character can not be sent until the echo from the
-+ previous one has been received. For example, a certain PBX might have
-+ this characteristic. Let's say a Kermit script is used to program the
-+ PBX. If characters are sent too fast, they can be lost. It would seem
-+ that the command:
-+
-+ SET OUTPUT PACING milliseconds
-+
-+ could be used to take care of this, but the pacing interval is constant
-+ and must be set large enough to allow even the slowest echo to finish.
-+ If the script is large (an actual example is 14,000 lines long), this
-+ can cause it to take hours longer than it needs to.
-+
-+ Here is a macro you can use to OUTPUT a string in an Echoplex
-+ environment:
-+
-+ define XOUTPUT {
-+ local \%c \%i
-+ set output pacing 0
-+ for \%i 1 \flen(\%*) 1 {
-+ asg \%c \fsubstr(\%*,\%i,1)
-+ output \%c
-+ input 2 \%c
-+ }
-+ }
-+
-+ C-Kermit 7.0 or later is required.
-+
-+ It sends one character at a time and then waits up to 2 seconds for the
-+ character to be echoed back, but continues to the next character as
-+ soon as the echo appears, so no time is wasted. You can add an IF FAIL
-+ clause after the INPUT in case you want to do something special about
-+ failure to detect an echo within the timeout period. Obviously you can
-+ also change the 2-second limit, and adjust the script in any other
-+ desired way.
-+
-+11.9. Scripted File Transfer
-+
-+ Sometimes a user complains that when she makes a connection by hand,
-+ logs in, and transfers a file, there are no problems, but when she
-+ scripts the the exact same sequence, the file transfer always fails
-+ after a few packets. Here's a scenario where this can happen:
-+
-+ 1. Upon logging in to the remote computer, it sends a "What Are You?"
-+ escape sequence.
-+ 2. When you log in interactively, your terminal emulator sends the
-+ response. This is invisible to you; you don't know it's happening.
-+ 3. When you script the login, and begin a file transfer immediately
-+ upon logging in, the host still sends the "What Are You?" sequence.
-+ Kermit's INPUT ECHO setting is ON by default, so the escape
-+ sequence passes through to the terminal, and the terminal sends its
-+ response. But by this time Kermit has already started the file
-+ transfer.
-+ 4. By default, the local Kermit program examines the keyboard for
-+ interruption characters between every packet. The "What Are You"
-+ response is sitting in the keyboard buffer. Eventually Kermit will
-+ read a character such as "c" that is a valid interruption
-+ character, and the file transfer stops with "User cancelled".
-+
-+ The right way to handle this situation is to have your look for the
-+ "What Are You?" sequence and send the response itself, as described in
-+ Using C-Kermit, pp.429-431. Or you can work around it by telling the
-+ local Kermit to "set input echo off" and/or "set transfer interruption
-+ off".
-+
-+11.10. Hexadecimal arithmetic...
-+
-+ C-Kermit can do both integer and floating-point arithmetic, in both
-+ ordinary algebraic notation and in Lisp S-Expression notation. All
-+ arithmetic operators and functions operate only on decimal numbers. It
-+ is possible, however, to write scripts that operate on hexadecimal
-+ numbers. This is done by converting them to decimal prior to any
-+ arithmetic operations, and then converting them back to hexadecimal for
-+ display. Example:
-+
-+; EVALUATE is a command that evaluates an arithmetic expression.
-+; See HELP EVALUATE for details. This is just for demonstration.
-+; Arithmetic expressions can be used in any context where a number
-+; can be used. Also, the special notation:
-+;
-+; .\%a ::= expression
-+;
-+; evaluations the expression and assigns the result to the variable.
-+;
-+.\%a := fffe ; Set variable to hex value
-+set eval old ; See HELP EVAL
-+eval \fhex2n(\%a) ; Show value of variable
-+eval \fhex2n(\%a) + 1 ; Show value of expression
-+eval \fhex2n(\%a) + 2 ; Show value of expression
-+.\%x ::= \fhex2n(\%a) + 1 ; Assign value of expression to variable
-+echo \fn2hex(\%x) ; Display variable's value in hex
-+.\%x ::= \fhex2n(\%a) + 2 : Ditto
-+echo \fn2hex(\%x)
-+.\%x ::= \fhex2n(\%a) | \fhex2n(ffff) ; Similarly for logical OR
-+echo \fn2hex(\%x)
-+.\%x ::= \fhex2n(\%a) & \fhex2n(ffff) ; and logical AND
-+echo \fn2hex(\%x)
-+
-+ By the way, you might be tempted to use Kermit's \xnn notation to plug
-+ hex numbers into arithmetic expressions but this doesn't work. That
-+ notation is stricly for bytes (hex representation of character values),
-+ not for numbers.
-+
-+11.11. Other...
-+
-+ Escape sequences (or any strings that contain control characters) can't
-+ be used as labels, GOTO targets, or SWITCH cases.
-+
-+ [ [91]Top ] [ [92]Contents ] [ [93]C-Kermit Home ] [ [94]C-Kermit 8.0
-+ Overview ] [ [95]Kermit Home ]
-+ __________________________________________________________________
-+
-+ C-Kermit 8.0 Unix Hints and Tips / [96]The Kermit Project /
-+ [97]kermit@columbia.edu / 30 June 2011
-+
-+References
-+
-+ 1. http://www.columbia.edu/
-+ 2. mailto:kermit@columbia.edu
-+ 3. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 4. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/k95.html
-+ 5. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 6. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckscripts.html
-+ 7. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/current.html
-+ 8. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/whatsnew.html
-+ 9. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/faq.html
-+ 10. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/support.html
-+ 11. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcbwr.html
-+ 12. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html
-+ 13. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/k95.html
-+ 14. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 15. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html
-+ 16. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcbwr.html#x0
-+ 17. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcbwr.html#x1
-+ 18. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcbwr.html#x2
-+ 19. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcbwr.html#x3
-+ 20. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcbwr.html#x4
-+ 21. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcbwr.html#x5
-+ 22. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcbwr.html#x6
-+ 23. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcbwr.html#x7
-+ 24. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcbwr.html#x8
-+ 25. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcbwr.html#x9
-+ 26. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcbwr.html#x10
-+ 27. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcbwr.html#x11
-+ 28. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcbwr.html#top
-+ 29. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcbwr.html#contents
-+ 30. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcbwr.html#x2
-+ 31. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcbwr.html#top
-+ 32. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcbwr.html#contents
-+ 33. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcbwr.html#x2
-+ 34. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ck60manual.html
-+ 35. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit2.html
-+ 36. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ck60manual.html
-+ 37. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x5
-+ 38. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html
-+ 39. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x2.2
-+ 40. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x8.7.2
-+ 41. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x9
-+ 42. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcbwr.html#top
-+ 43. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcbwr.html#contents
-+ 44. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcbwr.html#x3
-+ 45. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcbwr.html#x1
-+ 46. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcbwr.html#top
-+ 47. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcbwr.html#contents
-+ 48. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcbwr.html#x4
-+ 49. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcbwr.html#x2
-+ 50. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcbwr.html#top
-+ 51. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcbwr.html#contents
-+ 52. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcbwr.html#x5
-+ 53. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcbwr.html#x3
-+ 54. ftp://ftp.isi.edu/in-notes/rfc1122.txt
-+ 55. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcbwr.html#top
-+ 56. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcbwr.html#contents
-+ 57. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcbwr.html#x6
-+ 58. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcbwr.html#x4
-+ 59. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcbwr.html#top
-+ 60. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcbwr.html#contents
-+ 61. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcbwr.html#x7
-+ 62. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcbwr.html#x5
-+ 63. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ck60manual.html
-+ 64. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcbwr.html#x10
-+ 65. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcbwr.html#top
-+ 66. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcbwr.html#contents
-+ 67. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcbwr.html#x8
-+ 68. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcbwr.html#x6
-+ 69. ftp://ftp.isi.edu/in-notes/rfc2217.txt
-+ 70. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcbwr.html#top
-+ 71. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcbwr.html#contents
-+ 72. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcbwr.html#x9
-+ 73. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcbwr.html#x7
-+ 74. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcbwr.html#top
-+ 75. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcbwr.html#contents
-+ 76. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcbwr.html#x10
-+ 77. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcbwr.html#x8
-+ 78. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html
-+ 79. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcbwr.html#top
-+ 80. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcbwr.html#contents
-+ 81. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcbwr.html#x11
-+ 82. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcbwr.html#x9
-+ 83. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ck60manual.html
-+ 84. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermi70.htm
-+ 85. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/hp48.html
-+ 86. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.22
-+ 87. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x15
-+ 88. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcbwr.html#top
-+ 89. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcbwr.html#contents
-+ 90. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcbwr.html#x10
-+ 91. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcbwr.html#top
-+ 92. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcbwr.html#contents
-+ 93. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 94. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ck80.html
-+ 95. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 96. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 97. mailto:kermit@columbia.edu
---- /dev/null
-+++ ckermit-301/ckermod.ini
-@@ -0,0 +1,8 @@
-+; File CKERMOD.INI, Sample C-Kermit 7.0 customization file.
-+;
-+echo
-+echo The very long standard initialization file that was distributed
-+echo with C-Kermit 6, 7, and 8 is no longer recommended as "standard",
-+echo since its features were little used. It is still available in
-+echo the C-Kermit distribution as ockermod.ini.
-+echo
---- /dev/null
-+++ ckermit-301/ckermit80.txt
-@@ -0,0 +1,10258 @@
-+
-+ [1]The Columbia Crown The Kermit Project | Columbia University
-+ 612 West 115th Street, New York NY 10025 USA o [2]kermit@columbia.edu
-+ ...since 1981
-+ [3]Home [4]Kermit 95 [5]C-Kermit [6]Scripts [7]Current [8]New [9]FAQ
-+ [10]Support
-+
-+C-Kermit 8.0 Update Notes
-+
-+ [ [11]Contents ] [ [12]C-Kermit ] [ [13]Kermit Home ]
-+
-+Second Supplement to [14]Using C-Kermit, 2nd Edition
-+
-+For C-Kermit 8.0
-+
-+ As of C-Kermit version: 8.0.211
-+ Date of C-Kermit release: 10 April 2003
-+ This file last updated: Mon Sep 13 08:52:36 2010
-+
-+ * IF YOU ARE READING A PLAIN-TEXT version of this document, note that
-+ it is a plain-text dump of a Web page. You can visit the original
-+ (and possibly more up-to-date) Web page here:
-+ [15]http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html
-+
-+ * If you are reading the HTML version of this file with a GUI Web
-+ browser, the features added since C-Kermit 8.0.201 are shown in red
-+ if your browser and monitor permit. Features that were new to
-+ versions 8.0.200 and 201 are in black.
-+
-+Authors: Frank da Cruz and Christine M. Gianone
-+Address: The Kermit Project
-+ Columbia University
-+ 612 West 115th Street
-+ New York NY 10025-7799
-+ USA
-+Fax: +1 (212) 662-6442
-+E-Mail: [16]kermit-support@columbia.edu
-+Web: [17]http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/
-+Or: [18]http://www.kermit-project.org/
-+Or: [19]http://www.columbia.nyc.ny.us/kermit/
-+
-+NOTICES
-+
-+ This document:
-+ Copyright © 1997, 2002, Frank da Cruz and Christine M. Gianone.
-+ All rights reserved.
-+
-+ Kermit 95:
-+ Copyright © 1995, 2002, Trustees of Columbia University in the
-+ City of New York. All rights reserved.
-+
-+ C-Kermit:
-+ Copyright © 1985, 2002,
-+ Trustees of Columbia University in the City of New York. All
-+ rights reserved. See the C-Kermit [20]COPYING.TXT file or the
-+ copyright text in the [21]ckcmai.c module for disclaimer and
-+ permissions.
-+
-+ When Kerberos(TM) and/or SRP(TM) (Secure Remote Password) and/or
-+ SSL/TLS protocol are included:
-+ Portions Copyright © 1990, Massachusetts Institute of
-+ Technology.
-+ Portions Copyright © 1991, 1993 Regents of the University of
-+ California.
-+ Portions Copyright © 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995 by AT&T.
-+ Portions Copyright © 1997, Stanford University.
-+ Portions Copyright © 1995-1997, Eric Young <eay@cryptosoft.com>.
-+
-+ For the full text of the third-party copyright notices, see
-+ [22]Appendix V.
-+
-+WHAT IS IN THIS FILE
-+
-+ This file lists changes made to C-Kermit since version 7.0 was released
-+ in January 2000. Use this file as a supplement to:
-+
-+ * The second edition of [23]Using C-Kermit; and:
-+ * The [24]C-Kermit 7.0 Update Notes. Also available in plain-text
-+ form as [25]ckermit70.txt.
-+
-+ until the third edition of Using C-Kermit is published. We apologize
-+ for the scattered documentation and will consolidate it when we are
-+ able.
-+
-+ADDITIONAL FILES
-+
-+ Several other files accompany this new Kermit release:
-+
-+ [26]ckututor.html
-+ C-Kermit Tutorial (for Unix). Also distributed in Nroff form as
-+ [27]ckuker.nr, the Unix C-Kermit manual page.
-+
-+ [28]security.htm
-+ Discussion of Kermit's new authentication and encryption
-+ features, updated for C-Kermit 8.0.
-+
-+ [29]telnet.htm
-+ Detailed documentation of Kermit's Telnet client, updated for
-+ C-Kermit 8.0.
-+
-+ [30]ftpscripts.html
-+ Tutorial: Writing FTP automation scripts
-+
-+ [31]ckcbwr.html
-+ Platform-independent C-Kermit hints and tips. Also distributed
-+ in plain text form as [32]ckcbwr.txt
-+
-+ [33]ckubwr.html
-+ Unix-specific C-Kermit hints and tips. Also distributed in plain
-+ text form as [34]ckubwr.txt.
-+
-+ [35]ckvbwr.html
-+ VMS-specific C-Kermit hints and tips. Also distributed in plain
-+ text form as [36]ckvbwr.txt.
-+
-+ [37]ckuins.html
-+ Unix C-Kermit installation instructions. Also distributed in
-+ plain text form as [38]ckuins.txt.
-+
-+ [39]ckvins.html
-+ VMS C-Kermit installation instructions. Also distributed in
-+ plain text form as [40]ckvins.txt.
-+
-+ [41]ckccfg.html
-+ Compile-time configuration options. Also distributed in plain
-+ text form as [42]ckccfg.txt.
-+
-+ [43]ckcplm.html
-+ C-Kermit Program Logic Manual. Also distributed in plain text
-+ form as [44]ckcplm.txt.
-+
-+ [45]iksd.html
-+ Internet Kermit Service Aministrators Guide for Unix.
-+
-+ [46]skermit.html
-+ C-Kermit as an SSH Subsystem (SFTP server replacement).
-+
-+ [ [47]Top ] [ [48]C-Kermit ] [ [49]Kermit Home ]
-+
-+CONTENTS
-+
-+ [50]0. WHAT'S NEW
-+ [51]1. FIXES SINCE VERSION 7.0.196
-+ [52]2. SSH AND HTTP
-+ [53]2.1. SSH Connections
-+ [54]2.2. HTTP Connections
-+ [55]2.2.1. HTTP Command Switches
-+ [56]2.2.2. HTTP Action Commands
-+ [57]2.2.3. HTTP Headers
-+ [58]2.2.4. Secure HTTP Connections
-+ [59]2.2.5. HTTP Variables
-+ [60]2.2.6. The HTTP Command-Line Personality
-+ [61]3. THE BUILT-IN FTP CLIENT
-+ [62]3.1. Making and Managing FTP Connections
-+ [63]3.1.1. Kermit Command-Line Options for FTP
-+ [64]3.1.2. The FTP Command-Line Personality
-+ [65]3.1.3. The FTP URL Interpreter
-+ [66]3.1.4. Interactive FTP Session Establishment
-+ [67]3.2. Making Secure FTP Connections
-+ [68]3.3. Setting FTP Preferences
-+ [69]3.4. Managing Directories and Files
-+ [70]3.5. Uploading Files With FTP
-+ [71]3.5.1. FTP PUT Switches
-+ [72]3.5.2. Update Mode
-+ [73]3.5.3. Recovery
-+ [74]3.6. Downloading Files With FTP
-+ [75]3.6.1. FTP GET Switches
-+ [76]3.6.2. Filename Collisions
-+ [77]3.6.3. Recovery
-+ [78]3.7. Translating Character Sets
-+ [79]3.7.1. Character Sets and Uploading
-+ [80]3.7.2. Character Sets and Downloading
-+ [81]3.8. FTP Command Shortcuts
-+ [82]3.9. Dual Sessions
-+ [83]3.10. Automating FTP Sessions
-+ [84]3.10.1. FTP-Specific Variables and Functions
-+ [85]3.10.2. Examples
-+ [86]3.10.3. Automating Secure FTP Connections
-+ [87]3.11. Advanced FTP Protocol Features [88]4. FILE SCANNING
-+ [89]5. FILE AND DIRECTORY NAMES CONTAINING SPACES
-+ [90]6. OTHER COMMAND PARSING IMPROVEMENTS
-+ [91]6.1. Grouping Macro Arguments
-+ [92]6.2. Directory and File Name Completion
-+ [93]6.3. Passing Arguments to Command Files
-+ [94]6.4. More-Prompting
-+ [95]6.5. Commas in Macro Definitions
-+ [96]6.6. Arrow Keys
-+ [97]7. NEW COMMANDS AND SWITCHES
-+ [98]8. SCRIPTING IMPROVEMENTS
-+ [99]8.1. Performance and Debugging
-+ [100]8.2. Using Macros as Numeric Variables
-+ [101]8.3. New IF Conditions
-+ [102]8.4. The ON_UNKNOWN_COMMAND and ON_CD Macros
-+ [103]8.5. The SHOW MACRO Command
-+ [104]8.6. Arrays
-+ [105]8.7. New or Improved Built-in Variables and Functions
-+ [106]8.8. The RETURN and END Commands
-+ [107]8.9. UNDEFINing Groups of Variables
-+ [108]8.10. The INPUT and MINPUT Commands
-+ [109]8.11. Learned Scripts
-+ [110]8.12. Pattern Matching
-+ [111]8.13. Dates and Times
-+ [112]8.14. Trapping Keyboard Interruption
-+ [113]9. S-EXPRESSIONS
-+ [114]9.1. What is an S-Expression?
-+ [115]9.2. Integer and Floating-Point-Arithmetic
-+ [116]9.3. How to Use S-Expressions
-+ [117]9.4. Summary of Built-in Constants and Operators
-+ [118]9.5. Variables
-+ [119]9.6. Assignments and Scope
-+ [120]9.7. Conditional Expressions
-+ [121]9.8. Extensibility
-+ [122]9.9. Examples
-+ [123]9.10. Differences from Algebraic Notation
-+ [124]9.11.Differences from Lisp
-+ [125]10. FILE TRANSFER
-+ [126]11. MODEMS AND DIALING
-+ [127]12. TERMINAL CONNECTION
-+ [128]13. CHARACTER SETS
-+ [129]14. DIALOUT FROM TELNET TERMINAL SERVERS
-+ [130]15. COPING WITH BROKEN KERMIT PARTNERS
-+ [131]16. NEW COMMAND-LINE OPTIONS
-+ [132]17. LOGS
-+
-+ [ [133]Top ] [ [134]C-Kermit ] [ [135]Kermit Home ]
-+
-+0. WHAT'S NEW
-+
-+ The Initialization and Customization Files
-+ C-Kermit 8.0 now supports specification of the initialization
-+ file name (path) in an environment variable, CKERMIT_INI. It
-+ also relies far less than before on the initialization for
-+ functioning. See [136]Section 5 of the Unix C-Kermit
-+ [137]installation instructions for details. As of version
-+ 8.0.201, C-Kermit also executes your customization file (if you
-+ have one) even if the initialization file was not found.
-+ Previously, the customization file was executed by a TAKE
-+ command in the initialization file (and it still is, if an
-+ initialization is found).
-+
-+ Incompatible Changes
-+ As always, we do our best to avoid changes that break existing
-+ scripts. However, C-Kermit 8.0 does include a rather pervasive
-+ syntax change that might alter the behavior of scripts that
-+ depend on the previous behavior. As described in [138]Section 5,
-+ C-Kermit now accepts doublequotes in most contexts where you
-+ previously had to use braces to group multiple words into a
-+ single field, or to force inclusion of leading or trailing
-+ blanks. Most noticeably, in C-Kermit 7.0 and earlier:
-+
-+ echo {this is a string}
-+
-+ would print:
-+
-+ this is a string
-+
-+ whereas:
-+
-+ echo "this is a string"
-+
-+ printed:
-+
-+ "this is a string"
-+
-+ In C-Kermit 8.0, both print:
-+
-+ this is a string
-+
-+ To force the doublequotes to be treated as part of the string,
-+ use either of the following forms:
-+
-+ echo {"this is a string"}
-+ echo ""this is a string""
-+
-+ Similarly, to force braces to be treated as part of the string:
-+
-+ echo "{this is a string}"
-+ echo {{this is a string}}
-+
-+ Other incompatibilities:
-+
-+ 1. Using the SET HOST command to make HTTP connections is no
-+ longer supported. Instead, use the new HTTP OPEN command,
-+ described in [139]Section 2.2.
-+
-+ C-Kermit 7.1 Alpha.01 (8 December 2000)
-+
-+ Its major new features are those listed in the [140]Table of
-+ Contents: the FTP client, file scanning, command parsing and
-+ scripting improvements, S-Expressions, and support for the
-+ Telnet Com Port Option, plus wider availability of the Kerberos,
-+ SSL/TLS, and SRP security options for secure Internet
-+ connections.
-+
-+ C-Kermit 7.1.199 Alpha.02 (4 January 2001)
-+
-+ + C-Kermit now accepts [141]FTP, TELNET, and IKSD URLs as its
-+ first command-line argument.
-+ + Character-set translation added to the FTP client for
-+ [142]filenames.
-+ + Optional [143]setting of date of incoming files by FTP [M]GET
-+ from the server date.
-+ + [144]FTP CHECK filename added to let FTP client check the
-+ existence of a file on the server.
-+ + [145]FTP GET /NAMELIST:filename added to get list of server
-+ filenames into a local file.
-+ + [146]FTP [M]PUT /SERVER-RENAME:template added to make server
-+ rename a file as indicated by the template after it has
-+ arrived completely.
-+ + FTP [M]GET /SERVER-RENAME:template added to make server rename
-+ a file as indicated by the template after it has been sent
-+ completely.
-+ + FTP [147]VDIRECTORY added for getting verbose directory
-+ listings from TOPS-20.
-+ + [148]FTP TYPE TENEX added for transferring 8-bit binary files
-+ with PDP-10s.
-+ + Added [149]automatic text/binary mode switching for FTP
-+ [M]GET, based on filename patterns (e.g. *.zip, *.gz, *.exe
-+ are binary; *.txt, *.c are text).
-+ + [150]SET SEND I-PACKETS OFF added for coping with Kermit
-+ servers that do not support I packets.
-+ + A new option was added to [151]\fword() and \fsplit() for
-+ parsing comma-separated lists that might contain empty
-+ elements.
-+ + Bug fixes including:
-+ o {} or "" could not be used as expected to represent the
-+ empty string.
-+ o ,- on a line by itself in a macro definition caused
-+ subsequent statements to be skipped.
-+ o FTP [M]GET didn't work right if path segments were
-+ included in the filespec.
-+ o FTP MGET, if interrupted, did not clear its file list.
-+ o Various problems with FTP PUT /AS-NAME that nobody
-+ noticed.
-+ o Some FTP messages and displays interfered with each
-+ other.
-+ o Parsing of YESTERDAY, TODAY, and TOMORROW in date-time
-+ fields was broken.
-+ o Automatic old-to-new dialing directory format conversion
-+ was broken on VMS.
-+ o Various source-code portability problems fixed.
-+ + Improvement of various HELP and SHOW messages.
-+
-+ C-Kermit 7.1.199 Alpha.04 (1 April 2001)
-+
-+ + Big changes:
-+ o Changed default modem type from NONE to GENERIC.
-+ o Generic dialing now sends no init string at all.
-+ o Changed default terminal bytesize from 7 to 8.
-+ + New features:
-+ o SET SESSION-LOG TIMESTAMPED-TEXT for timestamped session
-+ log.
-+ + New modem types:
-+ o Conexant modem family
-+ o Lucent VENUS chipset
-+ o PCTel V.90 chipset
-+ o Zoom V.90
-+ o Zoom V.92
-+ + FTP client:
-+ o FTP OPEN /PASSIVE and /ACTIVE switches added.
-+ o Now works with servers that that don't include path in
-+ NLST response.
-+ o Fixed SEND /RECURSIVE not to follow symlinks (UNIX).
-+ o SET FTP VERBOSE-MODE default is now OFF instead of ON.
-+ + Kermit protocol:
-+ o Fixed what I hope is the last "Receive window full"
-+ error.
-+ o SET PREFIXING or SET CONTROL PREFIX now automatically
-+ sets CLEARCHANNEL OFF.
-+ o Fixed incorrect report of number of files transferred at
-+ end of transfer.
-+ o Fixed SEND /RECURSIVE not to follow symlinks (UNIX).
-+ + UNIX:
-+ o HTTP and shadow passwords enabled for SCO 5.0.6.
-+ o Even with SET FILENAMES CONVERTED, spaces were still
-+ accepted in incoming filenames; now they are converted to
-+ underscores.
-+ o Added support for compile-time mktemp()/mkstemp()
-+ selection.
-+ + VMS:
-+ o Session-log format for scripted sessions fixed.
-+ + Scripting:
-+ o Fixed \frdir() not to follow symlinks (UNIX).
-+ o Fixed \fday() not to dump core for dates prior to 17 Mar
-+ 1858.
-+ + General:
-+ o "Closing blah..." message upon exit could not be
-+ surpressed.
-+ o Added /PAGE and /NOPAGE to DELETE switches.
-+ o Added GO response for DELETE /ASK (delete all the rest
-+ without asking).
-+ o Added GO response to "more?" prompt (for multi-page
-+ screen output).
-+ o Updated HELP texts.
-+
-+ C-Kermit 7.1.199 Beta.01 (10 May 2001)
-+
-+ + FTP client verbosity adjustments.
-+ + Bug with generic modem dialing pausing several secs fixed.
-+ + SET HOST /USER:, SET LOGIN USERID, etc, fixed when given no
-+ user ID.
-+ + A couple \v(dm_blah) dial modifier variables added.
-+ + "--version" command-line switch added.
-+ + Fixed NetBSD serial-port DTR handling.
-+ + Lots of syntax cleanups for Flexelint and gcc -Wall.
-+ + Fixed modem-type aliases to not take precedence over real
-+ names.
-+ + Fixed funny treatment of doublequotes by ECHO command.
-+ + Enabled SET SESSION-LOG for VMS and other non-UNIX platorms.
-+ + Fixed changing direction in command history buffer.
-+ + Fixed handling of IKSD URLs.
-+ + Made sure DELETE prints a message if it got any errors.
-+
-+ C-Kermit 8.0.200 Beta.02 (28 June 2001)
-+
-+ + Major version number increased from 7 to 8.
-+ + [152]SSH command.
-+ + More-consistent Kermit protocol defaults.
-+ + CONNECT idle timeout and action selection.
-+ + CONNECT status variable.
-+ + A way to allocate more space for filename lists.
-+ + Pseudoterminal handler fixed for late-model Linuxes.
-+ + Command-line option -dd for timestamped debug log.
-+ + Download directory now works for external protocols too.
-+ + GREP /COUNT:variable.
-+ + SET ATTRIBUTE RECORD-FORMAT { OFF, ON }.
-+ + Bug fixes.
-+
-+ C-Kermit 8.0.200 Beta.03 (9 Sep 2001)
-+
-+ + [153]HTTP 1.1 connections and scripting
-+ + [154]ON_CTRLC macro for trapping Ctrl-C in scripts
-+ + [155]Date-time parsing improvements, timezones, comparison,
-+ arithmetic
-+ + [156]Pattern-matching improvements
-+ + FTP improvements
-+ + SET EXIT HANGUP { ON, OFF }
-+ + SET FILE EOF { CTRL-Z, LENGTH }
-+ + ASK[Q] /TIMEOUT
-+ + Bug fixes
-+ + New platforms
-+
-+ C-Kermit 8.0.200 Beta.04 (16 Nov 2001)
-+
-+ + [157]New Unix man page
-+ + [158]New Unix installation instructions
-+ + SET TELOPT policies are now enforced on non-Telnet ports if
-+ the server begins Telnet negotiations.
-+ + SET TERMINAL IDLE-ACTION { TELNET-NOP, TELNET-AYT }.
-+ + UUCP lockfile creation race condition fixed.
-+ + Dialout, modem signals, hangup, hardware flow control, etc,
-+ tested extensively on many platforms, numerous problems fixed.
-+ + Improved hints when dialing fails.
-+ + SET STOP-BITS 2 can now be given without SET FLOW HARDWARE.
-+ + Major improvements in RFC 2217 Telnet Com-Port Control.
-+ + Improved ability to REDIAL a modem server port.
-+ + kermit -h now shows the command name in the usage usage
-+ string.
-+ + kermit -h now shows ALL command-line options.
-+ + kermit -s blah, where blah is a symlink, now works.
-+ + --noperms command-line option = SET ATTRIBUTE PERMISSIONS OFF.
-+ + HTTP and HTTPS URLs now supported on the command line.
-+ + An http command-line personality is now available.
-+ + Initialization file streamlined to load faster, anachronisms
-+ removed.
-+ + Updated NEWS, INTRO, HELP text, SHOW commands. In particular,
-+ see SHOW COMM, HELP SET LINE, HELP WAIT.
-+ + Date/time arithmetic routines converted from floating-point to
-+ integer arithmetic (internally) for greater accuracy and
-+ portability.
-+ + Quoted strings containing commas no longer break macro
-+ execution.
-+ + Dynamic Kermit file-transfer timeouts are now much more
-+ aggressive.
-+ + New "hot keys" to turn debug.log on/off during file transfer.
-+ + Improved hints when file transfer fails.
-+ + FTP CD orientation messages are now printed.
-+ + -R now accepted on the FTP command line to request Recursion.
-+ + -m allows Active or Passive mode to be chosen on the FTP
-+ command line.
-+ + -dd on the FTP command line creates a timestamped debug.log.
-+ + FTP command-line security options filled in.
-+ + Improved automatic text/binary mode switching for MGET.
-+ + Removed spurious error messages that sometimes occur during
-+ MGET.
-+ + DIRECTORY, GREP, TYPE, HEAD, and TAIL now have a /OUTPUT:file
-+ option.
-+ + TYPE /NUMBER adds line numbers.
-+ + CAT = TYPE /NOPAGE; MORE = TYPE /PAGE.
-+ + GETOK ?-help fixed.
-+ + \v(timestamp) (= "\v(ndate) \v(time)")
-+ + \v(hour) (hour of the day, 0-23)
-+ + \funix2dospath() converts a UNIX path (/) to a DOS one (\).
-+ + \fdos2unixpath() converts a DOS (Windows, OS/2) path to a UNIX
-+ one.
-+ + \fkeywordval() parses name=value pair, allows macro keyword
-+ parameters.
-+ + We now make every attempt to not write passwords to the
-+ debug.log.
-+ + New Certficate Authority certificates file, includes the
-+ Kermit Project at Columbia University so you can access our
-+ IKSD securely.
-+ + Secure targets improved and better documented in Unix
-+ makefile.
-+ + All Linux (libc and glibc) builds consolidated under "make
-+ linux".
-+ + HP-UX makefile targets now have consistent names.
-+ + New aix50 and aix51 targets added.
-+
-+ C-Kermit 8.0.200 Final (12 Dec 2001)
-+
-+ + Remote/local-mode confusion on some platforms introduced in
-+ Beta.04, fixed.
-+ + Many of the makefile targets adjusted, new ones added.
-+ + New "make install" target should please most people.
-+ + New command: SHOW IKSD.
-+ + FTP over TLS.
-+ + Last-minute touchups to text messages, HELP text, etc.
-+ + Enable modem-signal reading for SCO OSR5 and Unixware 7.
-+ + Special superfast TRANSMIT /BINARY /NOECHO /NOWAIT mode added.
-+ + Fixed PBX dialing in unmarked-area-code case.
-+ + Improved SHOW COMMUNICATIONS tells lockfile directory, typical
-+ dialout device name.
-+ + Some FTP OPEN command parsing problems fixed.
-+ + Some errors in date arithmetic fixed.
-+ + New command: SET TERMINAL AUTODOWNLOAD { ..., ERROR { STOP,
-+ CONTINUE } }
-+ + New command: HELP FIREWALL.
-+ + SET MODEM HANGUP-METHOD DTR added as synomym for RS232-SIGNAL
-+ + Support for secure URL protocols added: telnets:, ftps:,
-+ https:.
-+
-+ C-Kermit 8.0.201 (8 Feb 2002)
-+
-+ + Installability as an [159]SSH v2 Subsystem.
-+ + [160]SET LOCUS command.
-+ + [161]L-versions of CD, DIR, DELETE, MKDIR, etc, to force local
-+ execution.
-+ + [162]USER and ACCOUNT added as synonyms for FTP USER and FTP
-+ ACCOUNT.
-+ + [163]SHOW VARIABLES now accepts a list of variables.
-+ + Rudimentary support for [164]Caller ID when receiving phone
-+ calls.
-+ + Up/Down [165]Arrow-key navigation of command history buffer.
-+ + [166]Automatic execution of customization file if init file is
-+ missing.
-+
-+ C-Kermit 8.0.206 Beta.01 (11 Oct 2002)
-+
-+ New commands:
-+
-+ o ORIENTATION lists location-related variables and their
-+ values.
-+ o KCD changes to special directories by their symbolic
-+ names ("kcd ?" for a list).
-+ o SET CD HOME path to specify home directory for CD and KCD
-+ commands.
-+ o CONTINUE given at top level is equivalent to END -- handy
-+ when PROMPT'ed out of a script, to continue the script.
-+
-+ New switches or operands for existing commands:
-+
-+ o GETOK /TIMEOUT
-+ o ASK, ASKQ, GETOK /QUIET (suppresses error message on
-+ timeout)
-+ o COPY /APPEND now allows concatenating multiple source
-+ files into one dest file.
-+ o SET TCP { HTTP-PROXY, SOCKS-SERVER } /USER, /PASSWORD.
-+ o DIRECTORY command now accepts multiple filespecs, e.g.
-+ "dir a b c".
-+
-+ SET QUIET ON now also applies to:
-+
-+ o SET HOST connection progress messages.
-+ o "Press the X or E key to cancel" file-transfer message.
-+ o REMOTE CD response.
-+ o REMOTE LOGIN response.
-+
-+ Improvements and new features:
-+
-+ o Numerous FTP client fixes and new features, listed below.
-+ o C-Kermit, when in remote mode at the end of a file
-+ transfer, now prints a one-line "where" message. Control
-+ with SET TRANSFER REPORT.
-+ o Unix makefile "install" target now creates an UNINSTALL
-+ script.
-+ o Improved operation and performance on RFC 2217 Telnet
-+ connections.
-+ o Improved CONNECT (interactive terminal connection)
-+ performance.
-+ o HELP text updated for many commands.
-+
-+ New or fixed makefile targets:
-+
-+ o Solaris 9 (several variations)
-+ o Concurrent PowerMAX
-+ o Mac OS X 10.2
-+ o FreeBSD 1.0
-+ o FreeBSD 4.6, 5.0
-+ o AIX 5.2, 5.3
-+
-+ Bugs fixed (general):
-+
-+ o Failure to run in VMS Batch fixed.
-+ o LDIRECTORY fixed to run Kermit's built-in DIRECTORY
-+ command rather than an external one.
-+ o Fixed Solaris and other SVORPOSIX builds to find out
-+ their full hostnames rather than just the "uname -n"
-+ name.
-+ o Fixed some problems matching strings that start with ".".
-+ o Fixed some problems matching pattern that contain {a,b,c}
-+ lists.
-+ o Fixed erroneous reporting of text-mode reception as
-+ binary when sender did not report the file size (cosmetic
-+ only).
-+ o Many problems with SWITCH statements fixed.
-+ o Fixed SET OPTIONS DIRECTORY /DOTFILES to work for server
-+ too.
-+ o Fixed DELETE to print an error message if the file was
-+ not found.
-+ o Fixed SET CONTROL UNPREFIX ALL and SET PREFIXING NONE to
-+ do the same thing.
-+ o Fixed bugs executing macros from within the ON_EXIT
-+ macro.
-+ o \fday() and \fnday() fixed for dates prior to 17 Nov
-+ 1858.
-+ o Serial speed-changing bug in Linux fixed.
-+ o "Unbalanced braces" script parsing errors when using
-+ \{number} fixed.
-+ o "if defined \v(name)" fixed to behave as described in the
-+ book.
-+ o Fixed Problems caused by LOCAL variables whose names are
-+ left substrings of macro names.
-+ o The INPUT command was fixed to honor the PARITY setting.
-+ o Fixed bug with COPY to existing file that is longer than
-+ source file.
-+ o REINPUT command failed to strip braces/quotes around its
-+ target string.
-+ o Network directory lookups didn't work for SSH
-+ connections.
-+ o REMOTE SET { FILE, TRANSFER } CHARACTER-SET fixed.
-+ o Closed some holes whereby an incompletely received file
-+ was not deleted when SET FILE INCOMPLETE is DISCARD, e.g.
-+ when the Kermit is hung up upon.
-+ o SET XFER CHARACTER-SET TRANSPARENT fixed to do the same
-+ as SET XFER TRANSLATION OFF.
-+ o SET HOST PTY (e.g. SSH) connection fixed to pass along
-+ window-size changes.
-+ o C-Kermit search path for TAKE files was accidentally
-+ disabled.
-+
-+ FTP client bugs fixed:
-+
-+ o Character set translation was broken on little-endian
-+ (e.g. PC) architectures.
-+ o FTP PUT /SERVER-RENAME:, /RENAME-TO:, /MOVE-TO: switches
-+ were sticky.
-+ o Make SET TRANSFER MODE MANUAL apply to FTP.
-+ o Make SET FILE INCOMPLETE { KEEP, DISCARD } apply to FTP.
-+ o FTP MGET /UPDATE handled equal times incorrectly.
-+ o FTP MGET /RECOVER fixed to ignore file dates, use only
-+ size.
-+ o FTP MGET /RECOVER sometimes downloaded files it didn't
-+ need to.
-+ o FTP downloads with TRANSFER DISPLAY BRIEF could give
-+ misleading error messages.
-+ o FTP MGET temp file not deleted if FTP DEBUG set to OFF
-+ after it was ON.
-+ o LOCUS not switched back when FTP connection is lost.
-+ o Set incoming file date even if it was not completely
-+ received.
-+ o FTP MGET sent SIZE and MDTM commands even when it didn't
-+ have to.
-+ o FTP MGET sent SIZE and MDTM commands even when it knew
-+ they wouldn't work.
-+ o FTP MGET failed if no files were selected for download.
-+ o FTP MGET a* b* c* would fail to get any c*'s if no b*'s
-+ existed.
-+ o Big problems canceling MGET with Ctrl-C.
-+ o Some extraneous LOCUS dialogs squelched.
-+ o Some inconsistencies in SET FTP FILENAMES AUTO fixed.
-+ o Fixed file-descriptor pileup after multiple MGETs when
-+ using mkstemp().
-+ o Fixed "mget foo", where foo is a directory name.
-+
-+ FTP improvements:
-+
-+ o New [167]FTP protocol features added (FEAT, MLSD).
-+ o FTP MGET /RECURSIVE now works as expected if server
-+ supports MLSD.
-+ o FTP MGET /DATES-DIFFER to download if local and remote
-+ file dates differ.
-+ o FTP DATES default changed to ON.
-+ o FTP MPUT, MGET /EXCEPT now allows up to 64 patterns (up
-+ from 8).
-+ o Top-level SITE and PASSIVE commands added for
-+ convenience.
-+ o MGET /COLLISION:APPEND /AS-NAME:newfile *.* puts all
-+ remote files into one local file.
-+ o SET FTP SERVER-TIME-OFFSET for when server has wrong
-+ timezone set.
-+ o Allow for alternative server interpretations of [M]MPUT
-+ /UNIQUE.
-+ o SET FTP ANONOMOUS-PASSWORD lets you specify the default
-+ anonymous password.
-+ o Allow "GET /RECURSIVE path/file" to force local
-+ subdirectory creation.
-+ o SET FTP DISPLAY is like SET TRANSFER DISPLAY but applies
-+ only to FTP.
-+ o FTP { ENABLE, DISABLE } new-protocol-feature-name.
-+ o FTP MGET /NODOTFILES.
-+ o Debug log now records FTP commands and responses in
-+ grep-able format.
-+
-+ [ [168]Top ] [ [169]Contents ] [ [170]C-Kermit ] [ [171]Kermit Home ]
-+
-+1. FIXES SINCE VERSION 7.0.196 First, the changes from 7.0.196 to 7.0.197...
-+Source and makefile tweaks to get successful builds on platforms that were
-+not available in time for the 7.0 release:
-+
-+ * 4.2BSD
-+ * 4.3BSD
-+ * AIX 4.3
-+ * AT&T 3B2 and 3B20
-+ * BeOS 4.5
-+ * CLIX
-+ * Interactive UNIX System V/386 R3.2 V4.1.1
-+ * OS-9/68000
-+ * OSF/1 1.3.
-+ * PS/2 AIX 1.2.1
-+ * SCO OSR5.0.x
-+ * SCO Xenix 2.3.4
-+ * SINIX 5.41/Intel
-+ * Stratus FTX
-+ * Stratus VOS
-+ * SunOS 4.1 with X.25
-+ * Ultrix 4.2
-+ * Unixware 2.0
-+
-+ There were no functional changes from 196 to 197.
-+
-+ Fixes applied after C-Kermit 7.0.197 was released:
-+
-+ Source code: Big flexelint and "gcc -Wall" audit and cleanup.
-+
-+ Configuration:
-+ * Solaris RTS/CTS (hardware flow control) didn't work.
-+ * BSDI RTS/CTS worked only in one direction.
-+ * FreeBSD 4.0 with ncurses 5.0 broke interactive command parsing.
-+ * QNX-32 build lacked -DBIGBUFOK so couldn't execute big macros.
-+
-+ Connections:
-+ * SET HOST /PTY didn't work on some platforms.
-+ * Broken SET HOST /USER:xxx /PASSWORD:yyy /ACCOUNT:zzz switches
-+ fixed.
-+ * Transparent printing was broken in Unix.
-+ * ANSWER 0 (wait forever) didn't work.
-+ * Some problems in Multitech modem command strings.
-+ * Spurious "?Sorry, can't condition console terminal" errors.
-+ * Disabling modem command strings by setting them to nothing broke
-+ dialing.
-+ * SET DIAL TIMEOUT value was usually ignored.
-+ * SET DIAL METHOD PULSE didn't work.
-+ * Certain modem commands, if changed, not refreshed if modem type
-+ changed.
-+ * SET SESSION-LOG command was missing from VMS.
-+ * VMS session log format fixed for scripts.
-+ * HANGUP by dropping DTR didn't work in NetBSD.
-+ * SET FLOW /AUTO versus SET FLOW confusion fixed.
-+ * Spurious secondary Solaris lockfile removed.
-+ * SCO OSR5 DTR On/Off hangup.
-+ * UUCP lockfile race condition.
-+
-+ Commands and scripts:
-+ * Missing CAUTIOUS and FAST commands restored.
-+ * Broken PTY command in late-model Linuxes fixed (API changed).
-+ * Fixed off-by-one error in command recall when switching direction.
-+ * Fixed recall of commands that contain '?'.
-+ * COPY /SWAP-BYTES didn't work on some architectures.
-+ * Various combinations of COPY switches didn't work.
-+ * Various problems with COPY or RENAME with a directory name as
-+ target.
-+ * SHIFT didn't decrement \v(argc) if used within IF, ELSE, or SWITCH
-+ block.
-+ * SHIFT didn't affect the \%* variable.
-+ * Divide by zero improperly handled in some \function()s.
-+ * Problems with RETURN from right-recursive functions.
-+ * FSEEK /LINE \%c LAST didn't work if already at end.
-+ * Some buffer vulnerabilities and potential memory leaks were
-+ discovered and fixed.
-+ * \frdirectory() fixed not to follow symbolic links.
-+ * SET EXIT WARNING OFF fixed to work when EXIT given in a script.
-+ * Missing DELETE and MKDIR error message fixed.
-+ * \fday() core dump for ancient dates fixed.
-+
-+ File transfer:
-+ * SEND /COMMAND was broken.
-+ * CRECEIVE was broken (but RECEIVE /COMMAND was OK).
-+ * Quoting wildcard chars in filenames didn't work.
-+ * Problems canceling streaming file transfers with X or Z.
-+ * Problems shifting between streaming and windowing file transfer.
-+ * Non-FULL file-transfer displays erroneously said STREAMING when
-+ not.
-+ * An active SEND-LIST prevented GET from working.
-+ * SET SERVER GET-PATH interpretation of relative names like "." was
-+ wrong.
-+ * The MAIL command was broken.
-+ * "kermit -s *" might have skipped some files.
-+ * Transaction log entries were not made for external protocol
-+ transfers.
-+ * File count report fixed to show number of files actually
-+ transferred.
-+ * Fixed filename conversion to convert spaces to underscores.
-+ * Made SET PREFIXING / SET CONTROL PREFIX also adjust CLEARCHANNEL.
-+ * More "Receive window full" errors fixed.
-+ * Broken terminal buffering after curses display in Solaris fixed.
-+ * SET FILE INCOMPLETE DISCARD did not work in all cases.
-+ * Packet log changed to reformat the start-of-packet character
-+ printably.
-+ * Dynamic timeouts could grow ridiculously large.
-+
-+ Character sets:
-+ * Hebrew-7 translations missed the letter Tav.
-+ * C1 area of CP1252 was ignored.
-+ * SET TRANSFER CHARACTER-SET TRANSPARENT could give garbage
-+ translations.
-+ * TRANSLATE might not work on Little Endian architectures.
-+ * Insufficient range checking in certain TRANSLATE operations.
-+
-+ The following bugs in C-Kermit 8.0.200 were fixed in 8.0.201:
-+
-+ * An obscure path through the code could cause the Unix version of
-+ C-Kermit to dump core during its startup sequence. This happened to
-+ only one person, but now it's fixed.
-+ * When C-Kermit 8.0 is in Kermit server mode and the client says "get
-+ blah", where blah (on the server) is a symlink rather than a real
-+ file, the server unreasonably refused to send the linked-to file.
-+ * When C-Kermit is an FTP client and says "get foo/bar" (i.e. a
-+ filename that includes one or more path segments), it failed to
-+ accept the incoming file (this happened only with GET, not MGET).
-+ * Array references should be case insensitive but only lowercase
-+ array letters were accepted.
-+ * SHOW VARIABLES dumped core on \v(sexpression) and \v(svalue).
-+ * Spurious refusals of remote directory listings if the remote
-+ server's date was set in the past.
-+ * In AIX, and maybe elsewhere too, Kermit's COPY command always
-+ failed with "Source and destination are the same file" when the
-+ destination file didn't exist.
-+ * The VMS version of C-Kermit did not work in Batch or when SPAWN'd.
-+ To compound the problem, it also pretty much ignored the -B and -z
-+ command-line options, whose purpose is to work around such
-+ problems.
-+ * C-Kermit 8.0 could not be built on IRIX 5.x.
-+ * The C-Kermit 8.0 build for QNX6 said it was an "(unknown version)".
-+
-+ Other fixes are listed in the [172]previous section.
-+
-+ [ [173]Top ] [ [174]Contents ] [ [175]C-Kermit ] [ [176]Kermit Home ]
-+
-+2. SSH AND HTTP
-+
-+2.1. SSH Connections
-+
-+ This section does not apply to [177]Kermit 95 2.0, which has its own
-+ built-in SSH client, which is documented [178]SEPARATELY.
-+
-+ On most UNIX platforms, C-Kermit can make SSH (Secure SHell) connection
-+ by running the external SSH command or program through its
-+ pseudoterminal interface. The command is:
-+
-+ SSH text
-+ Tells Kermit to start the external SSH client, passing the given
-+ text to it on the command line. Normally the text is just the
-+ hostname, but it can be anything else that is acceptable to the
-+ ssh client. If the command succeeds, the connection is made and
-+ Kermit automatically enters CONNECT (terminal) mode. You can use
-+ the SSH command to make a connection to any host that has an SSH
-+ server.
-+
-+ Kermit's SSH command gives you all the features of Kermit on an SSH
-+ connection: command language, file transfer, character-set translation,
-+ scripting, and all the rest. By default, C-Kermit invokes SSH with "-e
-+ none", which disables the ssh escape character and makes the connection
-+ transparent for purposes of file transfer. You can, however, change the
-+ SSH invocation to whatever else you might need (an explicit path,
-+ additional command-line arguments, etc) with:
-+
-+ SET SSH COMMAND text
-+ Specifies the system command that Kermit's SSH command should
-+ use to invoke the external SSH client. Use this command to
-+ supply a specific path or alternative name, or to include
-+ different or more command-line options.
-+
-+ In most cases, these connections work quite well. They can be scripted
-+ like any other connection, and file transfer goes as fast as, or faster
-+ than, on a regular Telnet connection. In some cases, however, the
-+ underlying pseudoterminal driver is a limiting factor, resulting in
-+ slow or failed file transfers. Sometimes you can work around such
-+ problems by reducing the Kermit packet length. Note that Kermit does
-+ not consider SSH connections to be reliable, so it does not offer to
-+ use streaming in Kermit protocol transfers (but you can force it with
-+ SET RELIABLE or SET STREAMING if you wish).
-+
-+ The SSH command is like the TELNET command: it enters CONNECT mode
-+ automatically when the connection is made. Therefore, to script an SSH
-+ connection, use:
-+
-+ set host /pty ssh -e none [ other-options ] host
-+ if fail ...
-+
-+ to make the connection.
-+
-+ Here's a sequence that can be used to make a connection to a given host
-+ using Telnet if the host accepts it, otherwise SSH:
-+
-+ if not defined \%1 exit 1 Usage: \%0 host
-+ set quiet on
-+ set host \%1 23 /telnet
-+ if fail {
-+ set host /pty ssh -l \m(user) -e none \%1
-+ if fail exit 1 \%1: Telnet and SSH both fail
-+ echo SSH connection to \%1 successful
-+ } else {
-+ echo Telnet connection to \%1 successful
-+ }
-+
-+ In SSH v2, it is possible to make an SSH connection direct to a Kermit
-+ server system if the host administrator has configured the SSH server
-+ to allow this; [179]CLICK HERE for details.
-+
-+ Since Kermit uses external ssh client software, and since there are
-+ different ssh clients (and different releases of each one), the exact
-+ command to be used to make an SSH/Kermit connection can vary. Here is
-+ the command for the OpenSSH 3.0.2p1 client:
-+
-+set host /pipe ssh -e none [ -l username ] -T -s hostname kermit
-+
-+ Example:
-+
-+set host /pipe ssh -e none -l olga -T -s hq.xyzcorp.com kermit
-+
-+ The SSH client might or might not prompt you for a password or other
-+ information before it makes the connection; this depends on your SSH
-+ configuration (your public and private keys, your authorized hosts
-+ file, etc). Here's a brief synopsis of the OpenSSH client command
-+ syntax ("man ssh" for details):
-+
-+ -e none
-+ This tells the SSH client to use no escape character. Since we
-+ will be transferring files across the connection, we don't want
-+ the connection to suddenly block because some character in the
-+ data.
-+
-+ -l username
-+ This is the username on the remote host. You can omit the -l
-+ option and its argument if your local and remote usernames are
-+ the same. If they are different, you must supply the remote
-+ username.
-+
-+ -T
-+ This tells the SSH client to tell the SSH server not to allocate
-+ a pseudoterminal. We are not making a terminal connection, we
-+ don't need a terminal, and in fact if a terminal were allocated
-+ on the remote end, the connection would not work.
-+
-+ -s ... kermit
-+ This tells the SSH client to tell the SSH server to start the
-+ specified subsystem ("kermit") once the connection is made. The
-+ subsystem name comes after the hostname.
-+
-+ hostname
-+ The IP host name or address of the desired host.
-+
-+ You might want to include other or additional ssh command-line options;
-+ "man ssh" explains what they are. Here are some examples for the
-+ OpenSSH 3.0.2p1 client:
-+
-+ -oClearAllForwardings yes
-+ -oForwardAgent no
-+ -oForwardX11 no
-+ -oFallbackToRsh no
-+ These ensure that a secure connection is used and that the
-+ connection used for file transfer is not also used for
-+ forwarding other things that might be specified in the
-+ ssh_config file.
-+
-+ -oProtocol 2
-+ (i.e. SSH v2) Ensures that the negotiated protocol supports
-+ subsystems.
-+
-+ Once you have an SSH connection to a Kermit server, it's just like any
-+ other connection to a Kermit server (and very similar to a connection
-+ to an FTP server). You give the client file transfer and management
-+ commands for the server, and the server executes them. Of course you
-+ can also give the client any other commands you wish.
-+
-+ [ [180]SSH Kermit Server Subsystem ] [ [181]Kermit 95 Built-in SSH
-+ Client ]
-+
-+2.2. HTTP Connections
-+
-+ Hypertext Transfer Protocol, or HTTP, is the application protocol of
-+ the World Wide Web (WWW), used between Web browsers (clients) and Web
-+ servers. It allows a client to get files from websites, upload files to
-+ websites, delete files from websites, get information about website
-+ directories and files, and interact with server-side CGI scripts.
-+ C-Kermit includes an HTTP client capable of both clear-text and secure
-+ HTTP connections, that can do all these tasks and can be automated
-+ through the Kermit scripting language.
-+
-+ Although C-Kermit 7.0 could make HTTP connections to Web servers, it
-+ could do so only when no other connection was open, and the procedure
-+ was somewhat awkward. C-Kermit 8.0 improves matters by:
-+
-+ * Allowing an HTTP connection to be open at the same time as a
-+ regular SET LINE or SET HOST connection, and also at the same time
-+ as an FTP connection ([182]Section 3);
-+ * Upgrading the HTTP protocol level from 1.0 to 1.1, thus allowing
-+ for persistent connections, in which a series of commands can be
-+ sent on the same connection, rather than only one as in HTTP 1.0
-+ (and C-Kermit 7.0);
-+ * Providing for "one-shot" URL-driven HTTP operations such as GET or
-+ PUT.
-+ * Providing a distinct HTTP command-line personality.
-+
-+ Persistent HTTP connections are managed with the following commands:
-+
-+ HTTP [ switches ] OPEN [ security-options ] host-or-url [ port ]
-+ Opens a persistent connection to the specified host (IP host
-+ name or address) on the specified port. If any switches
-+ (options, listed in the next section) are included, their values
-+ are saved and used for all subsequent HTTP action commands on
-+ the same connection. If no port is specified, HTTP (80) is used.
-+ A Uniform Resource Locator (URL, [183]RFC 1738) can be given
-+ instead of a hostname (or address) and port (but the URL can not
-+ include a directory/file path). The security options are
-+ explained [184]below. The HTTP OPEN command replaces the
-+ C-Kermit 7.0 SET HOST hostname HTTP command, which no longer
-+ works with HTTP GET and related commands.
-+
-+ HTTP CLOSE
-+ Closes any open HTTP connection and clears any saved switch
-+ values.
-+
-+ A URL starts with a protocol name, which must be http or https in this
-+ case; optionally includes a username and password; and must contain a
-+ host name or address:
-+
-+ protocol://[user[.password]]@host[:port][URI]
-+
-+ HTTP is Hypertext Transfer Protocol. HTTPS is the secure (SSL/TLS)
-+ version of HTTP. The TCP service port is derived from the protocol
-+ prefix (so normally the ":port" field is omitted). Thus the URL
-+ protocol name specifies a default TCP service port and the URL user and
-+ password fields can take the place of the /USER and /PASSWORD switches
-+ ([185]Section 2.2.1). The optional URI is a "compact string of
-+ characters for identifying an abstract or physical resource" ([186]RFC
-+ 2396), such as a file. It must begin with a slash (/); if the URI is
-+ omitted, "/" is supplied. Examples:
-+
-+ http open http://www.columbia.edu/
-+ Equivalent to http open www.columbia.edu or http open
-+ www.columbia.edu http.
-+
-+ http open https://olga.secret@www1.xyzcorp.com/
-+ Equivalent to http /user:olga /pass:secret open www1.xyzcorp.com
-+ https.
-+
-+ Persistence is accomplished unilaterally by C-Kermit 8.0. An HTTP 1.0
-+ server closes the connection after each action. Although HTTP 1.1
-+ allows multiple actions on the same connection, an HTTP 1.1 server
-+ tends to close the connection if it is idle for more than a few
-+ seconds, to defend itself against denial-of-service attacks. But when
-+ you use Kermit's HTTP OPEN command to create a connection, Kermit
-+ reopens it automatically (if necessary) for each HTTP action until you
-+ close it with HTTP CLOSE, regardless of the server's HTTP protocol
-+ version, or how many times it closes the connection.
-+
-+ Firewalls can be negotiated through proxies with the following
-+ commands:
-+
-+ SET TCP HTTP-PROXY [ host[:port] ]
-+ If a host (by hostname or IP address) is specified, Kermit uses
-+ it as a proxy server when attempting outgoing TCP connections --
-+ not only HTTP connections, but all TCP/IP connections, Telnet
-+ and FTP included. This allows Kermit to adapt to the HTTP
-+ firewall penetration method (as opposed to other methods such as
-+ SOCKS4). If no hostname or ip-address is specified, any
-+ previously specified Proxy server is removed. If no port number
-+ is specified, the "http" service is used. This command must be
-+ given before the HTTP OPEN command if a proxy is to be used or
-+ canceled.
-+
-+ HTTP [ switches ] CONNECT host[:port]
-+ Instructs the HTTP server to act as a proxy, establishing a
-+ connection to the specified host (IP hostname or address) on the
-+ given port (80 = HTTP by default) and to redirect all data
-+ transmitted between Kermit and itself to the given host for the
-+ life of the connection. This command is to be used only for
-+ debugging HTTP proxy connections. If a proxy connection is
-+ required, instruct Kermit to use the proxy with the SET TCP
-+ HTTP-PROXY command.
-+
-+2.2.1. HTTP Command Switches
-+
-+ HTTP switches, like all other switches, are optional. When HTTP
-+ switches are included with the HTTP OPEN command, they apply
-+ automatically to this and all subsequent HTTP actions (GET, PUT, ...)
-+ on the same connection until an HTTP CLOSE command is given. So if you
-+ include switches (or the equivalent URL fields, such as user and
-+ password) in the HTTP OPEN command, you can omit them from subsequent
-+ commands on the same connection. If the connection has closed since
-+ your last command, it is automatically reopened with the same options.
-+
-+ If you include switches with an HTTP action command (such as GET or
-+ PUT), they apply only to that command.
-+
-+ /USER:name
-+ To be used in case a page requires a username for access. The
-+ username is sent with page requests. If it is given with the
-+ OPEN command it is saved until needed. If a username is included
-+ in a URL, it overrides the username given in the switch.
-+ CAUTION: Username and password (and all other information,
-+ including credit card numbers and other material that you might
-+ prefer to protect from public view) are sent across the network
-+ in clear text on regular HTTP connections, but authentication is
-+ performed securely on HTTPS connections.
-+
-+ /PASSWORD:text
-+ To be used in case a web page requires a password for access.
-+ The password is sent with page requests. If it is given with the
-+ OPEN command it is saved until needed. If a password is given in
-+ a URL, it overrides the one given here. CAUTION: (same as for
-+ /USER:).
-+
-+ /AGENT:user-agent
-+ Identifies the client to the server. Overrides the default agent
-+ string, which is "C-Kermit" (for C-Kermit) or "Kermit-95" (for
-+ Kermit 95).
-+
-+ /ARRAY:array-designator
-+ Tells Kermit to store the response headers in the given array,
-+ one line per element. The array need not be declared in advance.
-+ Example: /array:&a.
-+
-+ /TOSCREEN
-+ Tells Kermit to display any response text on the screen. It
-+ applies independently of the output file specification; thus it
-+ is possible to have the server response go to the screen, a
-+ file, both, or neither.
-+
-+ /HEADER:header-item(s)
-+ Used for specifying any optional headers to be sent with HTTP
-+ requests.
-+
-+ /HEADER:tag:value
-+
-+ To send more than one header, use braces for grouping:
-+
-+ /HEADER:{{tag:value}{tag:value}...}
-+
-+ For a list of valid tags and value formats see [187]RFC 2616,
-+ "Hypertext Transfer Protocol -- HTTP/1.1". A maximum of eight
-+ headers may be specified.
-+
-+2.2.2. HTTP Action Commands
-+
-+ HTTP actions can occur within a persistent connection, or they can be
-+ self-contained ("connectionless"). A persistent HTTP connection begins
-+ with an HTTP OPEN command, followed by zero or more HTTP action
-+ commands, and is terminated with an HTTP CLOSE command:
-+
-+ http open www.columbia.edu
-+ if failure stop 1 HTTP OPEN failed: \v(http_message)
-+ http get kermit/index.html
-+ if failure stop 1 HTTP GET failed: \v(http_message)
-+ (more actions possible here...)
-+ http close
-+
-+ A self-contained HTTP action occurs when a URL is given instead of a
-+ remote file name to an HTTP action command. In this case, Kermit makes
-+ the HTTP connection, takes the action, and then closes the connection.
-+ If an HTTP connection was already open, it is closed silently and
-+ automatically.
-+
-+ http get http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+
-+ Kermit's HTTP action commands are as follows. Switches may be included
-+ with any of these to override switch (or default) values given in the
-+ HTTP OPEN command.
-+
-+ HTTP [ switches ] GET remote-filename [ local-filename ]
-+ Retrieves the named file from the server specified in the most
-+ recent HTTP OPEN command for which a corresponding HTTP CLOSE
-+ command has not been given. The filename may not include
-+ wildcards (HTTP protocol does not support them). If no HTTP OPEN
-+ command is in effect, this form of the HTTP GET command fails.
-+ The default local filename is the same as the remote name, but
-+ with any pathname stripped. For example, the command http get
-+ kermit/index.html stores the file in the current local directory
-+ as index.html. If the /HEADERS: switch is included, information
-+ about the file is also stored in the specified array (explained
-+ in [188]Section 2.2.3). All files are transferred in binary
-+ mode. HTTP does not provide for record-format or character-set
-+ conversion.
-+
-+ HTTP [ switches ] GET url [ local-filename ]
-+ When HTTP GET is given a URL rather than a filename, Kermit
-+ opens a connection to the designated server (closing any
-+ previously open HTTP connection), gets the file, and then closes
-+ the connection. If the URL does not include a filename,
-+ index.html is supplied. This is the self-contained one-step
-+ "connectionless" method for getting a file from a Web server.
-+ The data is not interpreted; HTTP GET is like "lynx -source"
-+ rather than "lynx -dump".
-+
-+ In the remaining HTTP action commands, the distinction between a remote
-+ filename and a URL are the same as in the HTTP GET command.
-+
-+ HTTP [ switches ] HEAD remote-filename-or-url [ local-filename ]
-+ Like GET except without actually getting the file; instead it
-+ retrieves only the headers. If the /ARRAY: or /TOSCREEN switch
-+ is included, there is no default local output filename but you
-+ can still specify one. If neither of these switches is included,
-+ the default local filename is the same as the remote filename,
-+ but with any path stripped and with ".head" appended. The HEAD
-+ command can be used in a script with the /ARRAY: switch to
-+ retrieve information about the requested resource to determine
-+ whether the resource should actually be retrieved with a
-+ subsequent GET request.
-+
-+ HTTP [ switches ] INDEX remote-directory-or-url [ local-filename ]
-+ Asks the server to send a listing of the files in the given
-+ server directory. This command is not supported by most Web
-+ servers. Even when it is supported, there is no standard format
-+ for the listing.
-+
-+ HTTP [ switches ] POST [ /MIME-TYPE:type ] source-file
-+ remote-path-or-url [ result-file ]
-+ Sends data to a process running on the remote host; the result
-+ is usually an HTML file but could be anything. The data to be
-+ posted must be read from a local file (the source-file). If a
-+ result file is specified, Kermit stores the server's response in
-+ it.
-+
-+ HTTP [ switches ] PUT [ MIME-TYPE:type ] local-file [
-+ remote-file-or-url [ result-file ] ]
-+ Uploads a local file to the server. Only the name of a single
-+ file can be given; wildcards (and group transfers) are not
-+ supported by HTTP protocol. If no remote filename is given, the
-+ file is sent with the same name as the local file, but with any
-+ pathname stripped.
-+
-+ HTTP [ switches ] DELETE remote-file-or-url [ local-result-file ]
-+ Asks the server to delete the specified single file. If a result
-+ file is specified, it will contain any response data returned by
-+ the server.
-+
-+ Note the limitations of HTTP protocol compared to (say) FTP or Kermit.
-+ There is no command for changing directories, no standard way to get
-+ file or directory lists, no way to transfer file groups by using
-+ wildcard notation, etc, and therefore no good way to (say) fetch all
-+ pages, descend through subdirectories, perform automatic updates, etc.
-+ There is no assurrance a connection will stay open and, as noted, there
-+ is no provision for data conversion between unlike platforms. The
-+ data's MIME headers can be used for postprocessing.
-+
-+2.2.3. HTTP Headers
-+
-+ Each HTTP request and response contains a set of name/value pairs
-+ called headers. HTTP headers are specified in [189]RFC 2616. For
-+ example, an HTTP GET request for /index.html on www.columbia.edu
-+ contains the following headers:
-+
-+ GET /index.html HTTP/1.1
-+ Host: www.columbia.edu:80
-+ User-agent: C-Kermit 8.0
-+ Authorization: Basic base64-encoded-username-password
-+
-+ These might be followed by any others specified with a /HEADERS:
-+ switch:
-+
-+ Accept: image/gif, image/x-xbitmap, image/jpeg, *.*
-+ Accept-Encoding: gzip
-+ Accept-Language: en
-+ Accept-Charset: iso-8859-1,utf-8
-+ Cookie: cookie-data
-+
-+ The server sends back a short report about the file prior to sending
-+ the file contents. Example:
-+
-+ HTTP/1.1 200 OK
-+ Date: Fri, 24 Aug 2001 21:09:39 GMT
-+ Server: Apache/1.3.4 (Unix)
-+ Last-Modified: Mon, 06 Aug 2001 21:16:13 GMT
-+ ETag: "1fa137-10d7-3b6f091d"
-+ Accept-Ranges: bytes
-+ Content-Length: 4311
-+ Content-Type: text/html
-+
-+ If you want to have this information available to a Kermit script you
-+ can use the /ARRAY switch to have Kermit put it in array, one line per
-+ array element. Example:
-+
-+ set exit warning off
-+ http open www.columbia.edu
-+ if fail exit 1 Can't reach server
-+ http /array:&a get /index.html
-+ if fail exit 1 Can't get file
-+ echo Header lines: \fdim(&a)
-+ for \%i 1 \fdim(&a) 1 {
-+ echo \%i. \&a[\%i]
-+ }
-+
-+ Note that the "Date:" item is the current date and time; the
-+ "Last-Modifed:" item is the file's modification date and time. An
-+ example showing how to use this information is presented in
-+ [190]Section 8.13.7.
-+
-+2.2.4. Secure HTTP Connections
-+
-+ SSL/TLS (Secure Sockets Layer / Transport Layer Security) is the
-+ protocol used to secure HTTP, SMTP, and other Internet applications.
-+ See the [191]C-Kermit Reference Section 5.4 for an introduction to
-+ SSL/TLS. To make a secure HTTP connection, you need:
-+
-+ 1. A secure client (a version of C-Kermit or Kermit 95 with SSL/TLS
-+ security built in). Type "check ssl" at the Kermit prompt to make
-+ sure you have it.
-+ 2. A secure server to connect to.
-+ 3. The CA Root Certificate used to authenticate the server to the
-+ client. (see [192]Section 15 of the security reference for an
-+ introduction to certificates).
-+
-+ And you must make a connection to the secure HTTP port: service name
-+ HTTPS, port number 443 (as opposed to service HTTP, port 80). You can
-+ also make secure connections to other ports by including the /TLS or
-+ /SSL switch with the HTTP OPEN command, if the host supports SSL/TLS on
-+ the given port:
-+
-+ The quality of the SSL/TLS connection depends on the cipher suite.
-+ There are several possibilities:
-+
-+ Anonymous cipher suite:
-+ If an anonymous cipher suite is negotiated, the connection is
-+ encrypted but there is no authentication. This connection is
-+ subject to a Man-In-The-Middle (MITM) attack.
-+
-+ X.509 certificate on the server:
-+ When you connect to certain secure servers, an X.509 certificate
-+ is returned. This certificate is issued to a special hostname,
-+ something like www1.xyzcorp.com or wwws.xyzcorp.com (rather than
-+ the normal www.xyzcorp.com). It is signed by the host's
-+ Certificate Authority (CA). If the host certificate is
-+ configured on the client, it can be used to verify the
-+ certificate received from the server. If the certificate it
-+ verified as authentic, a check is made to ensure it has not
-+ expired and it was issued to the host you were attempting to
-+ connect to. If you had asked to connect to (say) www.xyzcorp.com
-+ but were given a certificate for www1.xyzcorp.com, you would be
-+ prompted for permission to continue.
-+
-+ If the verification succeeded, the connection would be encrypted
-+ with one-way (server-to-client) authentication. This connection
-+ is not subject to a MITM attack.
-+
-+ If a username and password are transmitted over this connection,
-+ they are not subject to interception. However, the standard
-+ risks associated with passing the password to the host for
-+ verification apply; for example, if the host has been
-+ compromised, the password will be compromised.
-+
-+ X.509 client certificate:
-+ If a connection has been established with an X.509 server
-+ certificate, the server can ask the client to send a certificate
-+ of its own. This certificate must be verified against a CA Root
-+ certificate. The certificate itself (or subject info from the
-+ certificate) is used to determine the authorization for the
-+ client, and if successful, the username and password need not be
-+ sent to the server.
-+
-+ Kerberos 5:
-+ Instead of using X.509 certifcates, Kerberos 5 can be used to
-+ perform the authentication and key exchange. In this situation,
-+ there is mutual authentication between the client and server.
-+ The Kerberos 5 principal is used by the server to look up the
-+ appropriate authorization data. There is no need to send
-+ username and password.
-+
-+ An HTTP connection is made with the HTTP OPEN command:
-+
-+ HTTP [ switches ] OPEN [ { /SSL, /TLS } ] host [ port ]
-+ If /SSL or /TLS switches are included (these are synonyms), or
-+ if the service is HTTPS or the port is 443, a secure connection
-+ is attempted using the current authentication settings; see HELP
-+ SET AUTHENTICATION for details ([193]Section 6.2 of the security
-+ reference). If the no /SSL or /TLS switch is included but the
-+ port is 443 or the service is HTTPS, a secure connection is
-+ attempted. If an /SSL or /TLS switch is included but a port is
-+ not specified, an SSL/TLS connection is attempted on the default
-+ port (80).
-+
-+ Certificates are covered in the separate [194]Kermit Security Reference
-+ for C-Kermit 8.0. You should let Kermit know to verify certificates
-+ with the SET AUTHENTICATION TLS command. For example:
-+
-+ SET AUTHENTICATION TLS CRL-DIR directory
-+ Specifies a directory that contains certificate revocation files
-+ where each file is named by the hash of the certificate that has
-+ been revoked.
-+
-+ SET AUTHENTICATION TLS CRL-FILE filename
-+ Specifies a file that contains a list of certificate
-+ revocations.
-+
-+ SET AUTHENTICATION TLS VERIFY-DIR directory
-+ Specifies a directory that contains root CA certificate files
-+ used to verify the certificate chains presented by the peer.
-+ Each file is named by a hash of the certificate.
-+
-+ SET AUTHENTICATION TLS VERIFY-FILE filename
-+ Specifies a file that contains root CA certificates to be used
-+ for verifying certificate chains.
-+
-+ SET AUTHENTICATION TLS VERIFY OFF
-+ Tells Kermit not to require a certificate and accept any
-+ certificate that is presented regardless of whether it is valid.
-+
-+ There are many other options; see the security document for details.
-+
-+ Now suppose you need need to fetch the file denoted by the following
-+ URL:
-+
-+ https://myuserid:mypassword@wwws.xyzcorp.com/clients/info/secret.html
-+
-+ Once you have set up the handling of certificates as desired, you can
-+ use the following Kermit commands:
-+
-+ http /user:myuserid /password:mypassword open www1.xyzcorp.com https
-+ if success {
-+ http get /clients/info/secret.html
-+ http close
-+ }
-+
-+ As another example, let's say that you have a web form you need to
-+ populate with three fields: red,white and blue.
-+
-+ <FORM ACTION="http://www.xyzcorp.com/cgi-bin/form.cgi" METHOD="POST">
-+ <INPUT NAME="Red">
-+ <INPUT NAME="White">
-+ <INPUT NAME="Blue">
-+ </FORM>
-+
-+ You can handle this with the HTTP POST command. The data to be posted
-+ is stored in the local file data.txt.
-+
-+ Red=seven stripes&White=six stripes&Blue=fifty stars
-+
-+ and the response from the server will be stored into response.txt.
-+
-+ http open www.xyzcorp.com http
-+ if success {
-+ http /array:c post data.txt /cgi-bin/form.cgi response.txt
-+ http close
-+ }
-+
-+ In this scenario, the Common Gateway Interface (CGI) sends a response
-+ whether it succeeds or fails in a script-dependent manner. The script
-+ can either report success and enclose the response data; or it might
-+ send a 302 Found error which indicates that the "Location:" header
-+ should be used to determine the URL at which the data can be found.
-+
-+2.2.5. HTTP Variables
-+
-+ \v(http_code)
-+ The HTTP protocol code number of the most recent server reply,
-+ e.g. 404 for "not found".
-+
-+ \v(http_connected)
-+ 1 when an HTTP connection is open, 0 when there is no HTTP
-+ connection.
-+
-+ \v(http_host)
-+ If an HTTP connection is open, the hostname:port, e.g.
-+ www.columbia.edu:80; otherwise, empty.
-+
-+ \v(http_message)
-+ Server error message, if any, from most recent HTTP command.
-+
-+ \v(http_security)
-+ A list of the security parameters and values for the current
-+ connection, if any. Empty if the connection is not to a secure
-+ server, or there is no connection.
-+
-+ To display all the HTTP variables at once, type SHOW VAR HTTP:
-+
-+ C-Kermit> http open www.columbia.edu
-+ C-Kermit> http get lkjlkjlkjlkj
-+ C-Kermit> sho var http
-+ \v(http_code) = 404
-+ \v(http_connected) = 1
-+ \v(http_host) = www.columbia.edu:80
-+ \v(http_message) = Not Found
-+ \v(http_security) = NULL
-+ C-Kermit>
-+
-+2.2.6. The HTTP Command-Line Personality
-+
-+ If you invoke C-Kermit with the name "http" or "https", you can use a
-+ special set of HTTP-specific command-line options. You can do this by
-+ creating a symbolic linke "http" or "https" to the C-Kermit 8.0
-+ executable, or by having a separate copy of it called "http" or
-+ "https". Here's the usage message ("http -h"):
-+
-+ Usage: ./http host [ options... ]
-+ -h This message.
-+ -d Debug to debug.log.
-+ -S Stay (issue command prompt when done).
-+ -Y Do not execute Kermit initialization file.
-+ -q Quiet (suppress most messages).
-+ -u name Username.
-+ -P password Password.
-+ -g pathname Get remote pathname.
-+ -p pathname Put remote pathname.
-+ -H pathname Head remote pathname.
-+ -l pathname Local path for -g, -p, and -H.
-+ -z opt[=value] Security options...
-+ cert=file Client certificate file
-+ certsok Accept all certificates
-+ key=file Client private key file
-+ secure Use SSL
-+ verify=n 0 = none, 1 = peer , 2 = certificate required
-+
-+ The "host" argument is the name of a Web host, e.g. www.columbia.edu.
-+ The action options are -p, -g, and -H. If you give an action option,
-+ Kermit does the action and then exits. If you give a host without an
-+ action option, Kermit makes an HTTP connection to the host and then
-+ gives you the C-Kermit prompt. Here's a simple example that fetches a
-+ publicly readable Web page:
-+
-+ http www.columbia.edu -g kermit/index.html
-+
-+ If you need to access a website for which a username and password are
-+ required, you can supply them on the command line with -u and -P. If
-+ you include a username but omit the password, Kermit prompts you for
-+ it:
-+
-+ http www.columbia.edu -u olga -p kermit/index.html -l index.html
-+ Password:
-+
-+ Note that when PUT'ing files to websites, you have to supply both the
-+ -p (remote pathname) and -l (local path) options.
-+
-+ If your version of Kermit is built with SSL/TLS security, you can also
-+ use the -z option to make secure HTTP (https) connections.
-+
-+ Finally, as noted in [195]Section 16, you can also give a URL instead
-+ of a host name and options.
-+
-+ [ [196]Top ] [ [197]Contents ] [ [198]C-Kermit Home ] [ [199]Kermit
-+ Home ]
-+
-+3. KERMIT'S BUILT-IN FTP CLIENT
-+
-+ 3.1. [200]Making and Managing FTP Connections
-+ 3.2. [201]Making Secure FTP Connections
-+ 3.3. [202]Setting FTP Preferences
-+ 3.4. [203]Managing Directories and Files
-+ 3.5. [204]Uploading Files With FTP
-+ 3.6. [205]Downloading Files With FTP
-+ 3.7. [206]Translating Character Sets
-+ 3.8. [207]FTP Command Shortcuts
-+ 3.9. [208]Dual Sessions
-+ 3.10. [209]Automating FTP Sessions
-+ 3.11. [210]Advanced FTP Protocol Features
-+
-+ Earlier versions of C-Kermit and K95 included an FTP command, but it
-+ simply invoked an external FTP client. Now, by popular demand, Kermit
-+ includes its own built-in FTP client that offers the following
-+ advantages over traditional FTP clients (and its previous interface to
-+ them):
-+
-+ * Any of Kermit's built-in [211]security methods can be used to
-+ establish and conduct secure FTP sessions with [212]FTP servers
-+ that support these methods. (Security modules can be subject to
-+ export restrictions.)
-+ * Kermit's FTP client uses "passive mode" by default to avoid
-+ blockage by firewalls and network address translators. Of course
-+ active mode can be chosen too when needed.
-+ * [213]Character sets can be translated as part of the transfer
-+ process even when the FTP server does not support character-set
-+ translation, including to/from the new Internet standard
-+ international character set, [214]Unicode UTF-8. This includes both
-+ the file's name and (for text files only) its contents.
-+ * All of C-Kermit's [215]file-selection mechanisms are available:
-+ size, date, name patterns and lists, exception lists, etc.
-+ * [216]Atomic file movement capabilities are provided (delete, move,
-+ or rename files automatically after successful transfer).
-+ * The correct file type, "ascii" (i.e. text) or binary, is chosen
-+ automatically for each file (explained in [217]Section 4), and any
-+ mixture of text and binary files can be sent in a single operation,
-+ even across platforms.
-+ * Update mode ("don't bother transferring files that didn't change
-+ since last time") and recovery (resumption of an interrupted
-+ transfer from the point of failure) are available in both
-+ directions.
-+ * When uploading files from UNIX to UNIX, the file's permissions can
-+ be preserved if desired.
-+ * Recursive directory-tree PUTs are supported between any two
-+ platforms that have tree-structured file systems. Recursive GETs
-+ are supported between like platforms if the server cooperates and
-+ between like or unlike platforms if the server supports MLSD
-+ ([218]Section 3.11).
-+ * When receiving files, all of Kermit's file collision actions are
-+ available: backup, update, refuse, rename, etc.
-+ * Multi-file transfers can be interrupted on a per-file basis,
-+ automatically skipping to the next file.
-+ * FTP sessions are [219]fully scriptable.
-+ * An entire FTP session (connect, login, CD, upload or download,
-+ logout) can be specified on the command line without using a
-+ script.
-+ * All of Kermit's logging options and formats are available to keep
-+ an accurate and complete record of each connection and file
-+ transfer, and to aid in troubleshooting.
-+ * All of Kermit's file-transfer display options are available
-+ (fullscreen, brief, CRT, serial, none).
-+
-+ And best of all:
-+ * Kermit doesn't give you those annoying per-file prompts every time
-+ you start a multi-file transfer without remembering to give a
-+ "prompt" command first :-).
-+
-+ [ [220]Top ] [ [221]FTP Top ] [ [222]FTP Client Overview ] [ [223]FTP
-+ Script Tutorial ] [ [224]C-Kermit Home ] [ [225]Kermit Home ]
-+
-+3.1. Making and Managing FTP Connections
-+
-+ Each copy of Kermit can have one FTP connection open at a time. FTP
-+ connections are independent of regular terminal connections; a terminal
-+ connection (serial or network via SET LINE, DIAL, SET HOST, TELNET,
-+ etc) may be, but need not be, open at the same time as an FTP
-+ connection, and terminal connections can also be closed, and new
-+ connections opened, without interfering with the FTP connection (and
-+ vice versa). Thus, for example, Kermit can have an FTP connection and a
-+ TELNET connection open to the same host simultaneously, using the
-+ TELNET connection (e.g.) to send mail or take other desired actions as
-+ various FTP actions complete. Of course, each copy of Kermit can do
-+ only one thing at a time, so it can't (for example) transfer a file
-+ with FTP and another file with Kermit protocol simultaneously.
-+
-+ A Kermit FTP session can be established by [226]command-line options,
-+ by [227]URL, or by [228]interactive commands.
-+
-+3.1.1. Kermit Command-Line Options for FTP
-+
-+ The new command-line option '-9' (sorry, we're out of letters) can be
-+ used when starting C-Kermit, telling it to make an FTP connection:
-+
-+ kermit -9 hostname
-+
-+ or if a non-default FTP port is needed:
-+
-+ kermit -9 hostname:port
-+
-+ You can also specify the username on the command line with the -M ("My
-+ User ID") option that was already there for other connection types:
-+
-+ kermit -9 hostname -M olga
-+
-+ If you specify the username on the command line, Kermit uses it when
-+ making the connection and does not prompt you for it (but it does
-+ prompt you for the password if one is required).
-+
-+ Once the connection is made, you get the regular Kermit prompt, and can
-+ give interactive commands such as the ones described below. When you
-+ give a BYE command, Kermit closes the session and exits, just as a
-+ regular FTP client would do. If you don't want Kermit to exit when you
-+ give a BYE command, include the -S ("Stay") option on the command line.
-+
-+ Other Kermit command-line options that are not specific to non-FTP
-+ connections should affect the FTP session in the expected ways; for
-+ example, -i and -T force binary and text mode transfers, respectively.
-+
-+ File transfers can not be initiated on the "kermit -9" command line;
-+ for that you need to use Kermit's FTP personality (next section) or you
-+ can use URLs ([229]Section 3.1.3).
-+
-+3.1.2. The FTP Command-Line Personality
-+
-+ If you want to replace your regular FTP client with C-Kermit, you can
-+ make a link called "ftp" to the C-Kermit binary (or you can store a
-+ copy of the C-Kermit binary under the name "ftp"). When C-Kermit is
-+ invoked with a program name of "ftp" (or "FTP", case doesn't matter),
-+ it assumes the command-line personality of the regular FTP client:
-+
-+ ftp [ options ] hostname [ port ]
-+
-+ In this case the options are like those of a regular FTP client:
-+
-+ -d Debug: enables debug messages and creates a debug.log file.
-+ -n No autologin: Kermit should not send your user ID automatically.
-+ -t Packet trace: accepted but is treated the same as -d.
-+ -v Verbose: accepted but ignored (operation is verbose by default).
-+ -i Not interactive: accepted but ignored.
-+
-+ and the hostname can also be a URL (explained in [230]Section 3.1.3).
-+ To specify a non-default TCP port for the FTP server, include the port
-+ number or name after the hostname.
-+
-+ There are also some bonus options that allow you to execute an entire
-+ FTP session from the shell command line, as long as you don't include
-+ the -n option. These are not available with regular FTP clients, and at
-+ least one of these options (-g) conflicts with UNIX ftp (where -g means
-+ "no globbing", which does not apply to Kermit), and some of them (like
-+ the options above) also conflict with regular Kermit command-line
-+ options:
-+
-+ -m mode = "passive" (default) or "active"
-+ -Y Don't execute the Kermit initialization file [1]
-+ -q Quiet, suppresses all but error messages [1]
-+ -S Stay, don't exit automatically [1]
-+ -A Autologin anonymously [2]
-+ -u name Username for autologin [2] (synonym: -M [1])
-+ -P password Password for autologin (see cautions below) [2]
-+ -D directory cd after autologin [2]
-+ -b Binary mode [2]
-+ -a Text ("ascii") mode [2] (synonym: -T [1])
-+ -R Recursive (works with -p) [4]
-+ -p files Files to put (upload) after autologin [2] (synonym: -s [1])
-+ -g files Files to get (download) after autologin [3]
-+
-+ [1] Same as Kermit, not available in regular FTP clients.
-+ [2] Conflicts with Kermit, not available in regular FTP clients.
-+ [3] Same as Kermit, conflicts with regular FTP clients.
-+ [4] Conflicts with Kermit, available in some FTP clients.
-+
-+ Fancier options such as restart, character-set translation, filename
-+ collision selection, automatic move/rename/delete, etc, are not
-+ available from the command line; for these you can use the commands
-+ described in the following sections. The -R option might also work with
-+ -g (GET) but that depends on the server.
-+
-+ The following security options are also available, explained in
-+ [231]Section 3.2:
-+
-+ -k realm Kerberos 4 realm [4]
-+ -f Kerberos 5 credentials forwarding [4]
-+ -x autoencryption mode [4]
-+ -c cipher SRP cipher type [4]
-+ -H hash SRP encryption hash [4]
-+ -z option Security options [4]
-+
-+ If you include -A or specify a name of "anonymous" or "ftp", you are
-+ logged in anonymously and, in the absence of -P, Kermit automatically
-+ supplies a password of "user@host", where "user" is your local user ID,
-+ and "host" is the hostname of the computer where Kermit is running. If
-+ you do not include -p or -g, Kermit enters command mode so you can type
-+ commands or execute them from a script.
-+
-+ If you include -p or -g, Kermit attempts to transfer the specified
-+ files and then exits automatically at the end of the transfer unless
-+ you also included -S (Stay). It uses the "brief" file transfer display
-+ (one line per file) unless you include the -q option to suppress it.
-+
-+ When uploading files with -p, Kermit switches automatically between
-+ text and binary mode for each file.
-+
-+ When downloading, you can either specify a particular mode (text or
-+ binary) to be used for all the files, or you can let Kermit select the
-+ type for each file automatically, based on its name (see [232]Sections
-+ 3.5 and [233]3.6 for greater detail). In UNIX be sure to quote any
-+ wildcard characters to prevent the shell from expanding them, as shown
-+ in the examples just below. Filename collisions are handled according
-+ Kermit's FILE COLLISION setting (if specified in your Kermit
-+ customization file; otherwise the default, which is BACKUP).
-+
-+ It should go without saying that the -P option should be used with
-+ caution. In addition to the well-known risks of transmitting plaintext
-+ passwords over the Internet, in this case the password also echos to
-+ the screen if you type it, and can be seen in ps and w listings that
-+ show the user's currently active command and command-line arguments.
-+ Thus command-line FTP sessions are most appropriate for secure or
-+ anonymous connections (those that do not require passwords).
-+
-+ Here's an example in which you download the latest C-Kermit "tarball"
-+ from the Columbia University FTP archive:
-+
-+ ftp -A kermit.columbia.edu -bg kermit/archives/ckermit.tar.gz
-+
-+ This assumes that "ftp" is a symbolic link to C-Kermit. It logs you in
-+ anonymously and gets the ckermit.tar.gz file in binary mode from the
-+ kermit/archives directory.
-+
-+ Here's a slightly more ambitious example that illustrates CD'ing to the
-+ desired server directory to get a group of files in text mode (in this
-+ case the C-Kermit source files):
-+
-+ ftp -A kermit.columbia.edu -D kermit/f -ag "ck[cuw]*.[cwh]" makefile
-+
-+ In this case we CD to the kermit/f directory so we don't have to
-+ include it in each file specification, and we quote the ck[cuw]*.[cwh]
-+ specification so the shell doesn't expand it, since we have to pass it
-+ as-is to the server. Note also that the quotes don't go around the
-+ entire file list; only around each file specification that needs to be
-+ quoted.
-+
-+ Here's one more example, that uploads a debug log file in binary mode
-+ to the Kermit incoming directory (as we might ask you to do when
-+ following up on a problem report):
-+
-+ ftp -A kermit.columbia.edu -D kermit/incoming -bp debug.log
-+
-+ In this case the -D option is required to tell the server where to put
-+ the incoming file.
-+
-+ Unless the -Y option is included, your Kermit initialization file
-+ (.mykermrc in UNIX, K95.INI in Windows) is executed before the command
-+ line options, so you can set any FTP-related preferences there, as
-+ described in the subsequent sections.
-+
-+3.1.3. The FTP URL Interpreter
-+
-+ If Kermit is invoked with either its regular personality (as "kermit")
-+ or its FTP personality (as "ftp"), you can also give a URL
-+ (Universal Resource Locator) instead of a hostname and options,
-+ with or without a username and password:
-+ ftp ftp://user:password@host/path
-+ ftp ftp://user@host/path
-+ ftp ftp://@host/path (or ftp://:@host/path)
-+ ftp ftp://host/path
-+ kermit ftp://host/path
-+
-+ If the FTP personality is used, the service must be "ftp". In all
-+ cases, a hostname or address must be included. If a user is included
-+ but no password, you are prompted for the password. If a path
-+ (filename) is included:
-+ * If "@" is included without a user, Kermit prompts for the username
-+ and password.
-+ * If no user and no "@" are included, "anonymous" is used.
-+ * GET is assumed.
-+
-+ If no path (and no action options) are included, an interactive FTP
-+ session is started, as in this example:
-+ ftp ftp://kermit.columbia.edu
-+
-+ If a path is included, but a username is not included, "anonymous" is
-+ used and an appropriate user@host password is supplied automatically.
-+ If authentication is successful, Kermit attempts to GET the file
-+ indicated by the path or, if the path is the name of a directory, it
-+ asks the server for a directory listing. In both cases, Kermit
-+ disconnects from the server and exits after the operation is complete
-+ (unless you have included the -S option on the command line).
-+
-+ Here's an example that gets a listing of the Kermit directory at the
-+ Kermit ftp site:
-+ ftp ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/
-+
-+ This example gets the top-level READ.ME file from the same directory:
-+ ftp ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/READ.ME
-+
-+ Here's the same example, but requesting a text-mode transfer:
-+ ftp -T ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/READ.ME
-+ This illustrates that you can mix command-line options and URLs
-+ if you desire.
-+
-+ Here's an example that logs in as a (fictitious) real user to get a
-+ file:
-+ ftp ftp://olga@ftp.xyzcorp.com/resume.txt
-+ The password is not included, so Kermit prompts for it.
-+
-+ This scheme allows Kermit to be used as the FTP helper of other
-+ applications, such as Web browsers, with all its advantages over other
-+ FTP clients (especially the ones that are built in to most Web
-+ browsers), e.g. that it can be given wildcards, and it can pick text
-+ and binary mode automatically for each file.
-+
-+ HINT: suppose somebody sends you an FTP URL in email, or you see it in
-+ some text. If your terminal screen supports copy/paste, copy the url,
-+ and then at the shell prompt type "kermit", a space, and then paste the
-+ URL, e.g.:
-+
-+ $ kermit ftp://alpha.greenie.net/pub/mgetty/source/1.1/mgetty1.1.27-O
-+
-+ "$ is the shell prompt; the part you type is underlined, the rest is
-+ pasted in. Kermit does the rest.
-+
-+3.1.4. Interactive FTP Session Establishment
-+
-+ As you read this and the following sections, bear in mind that any
-+ command that can be given at the prompt can also be used in a script
-+ program. Kermit's script programming language is the same as its
-+ interactive command language. [234]CLICK HERE if you would like to
-+ learn a bit more about script writing.
-+
-+ An FTP session is established with the FTP OPEN command:
-+
-+ FTP [ OPEN ] [ { /SSL, /TLS } ] hostname [ switches ] [ port ]
-+ Opens an FTP connection to the given host on the given port and,
-+ if FTP AUTOLOGIN is ON, also logs you in to the server,
-+ prompting for username and password if necessary. If no port is
-+ specified, the regular FTP protocol port (21) is used. The OPEN
-+ keyword is optional (unless the hostname conflicts with one of
-+ the FTP command keywords, which you can list by typing "ftp ?").
-+
-+ The hostname can be an IP host name, numeric IP address, or if you have
-+ a network directory active (SET NETWORK DIRECTORY; see Chapter 6 of
-+ [235]Using C-Kermit), an entry name in the directory. In the latter
-+ case, if the given hostname matches exactly one entry, the associated
-+ name or address is used; if it matches more than one, Kermit cycles
-+ through them until one is found that can be opened; if it matches none,
-+ then the hostname is used as-is. If a directory is active but you want
-+ to bypass directory lookup, include an "=" sign at the beginning of the
-+ hostname, and/or use a numeric IP address.
-+
-+ When an FTP connection is opened, the default file-transfer mode is set
-+ to binary if the client and server platforms are alike (e.g. both of
-+ them are some kind of UNIX), and to text ("ascii") if they are not
-+ alike. This has no particular effect for uploading since Kermit
-+ automatically switches between text and binary mode for each file, but
-+ might be important for downloading. The connection is also set to
-+ Stream mode and File structure. Record- or page-oriented file transfers
-+ are not supported by C-Kermit's FTP client.
-+
-+ The optional FTP OPEN switches are:
-+
-+ /ANONYMOUS
-+ Logs you in anonymously, automatically supplying username
-+ "anonymous" and user@host as the password, based on your local
-+ user and host names.
-+
-+ /NOLOGIN
-+
-+ Overrides SET FTP AUTOLOGIN ON for this connection only.
-+
-+ /USER:name
-+ Uses the given username to log you in, thus avoiding the Name:
-+ prompt.
-+ Overrides SET FTP AUTOLOGIN OFF for this connection only.
-+
-+ /PASSWORD:text
-+ Uses the given text as your password, thus avoiding the
-+ Password: prompt. This switch is not recommended for use in
-+ script files, which would be a security risk.
-+
-+ /ACCOUNT:text
-+ Uses the given text as your account (or secondary password,
-+ depending on the requirements of the server; most servers do not
-+ require or accept an account name). If an account is not
-+ supplied, you are not prompted for one.
-+
-+ /PASSIVE
-+ Opens the connection in passive mode. Passive mode is the
-+ default in Kermit's FTP client, unlike in most others, since it
-+ works better through firewalls. The /PASSIVE and /ACTIVE
-+ switches apply only to the connection that is being opened, and
-+ do not affect the global FTP PASSIVE-MODE setting.
-+
-+ /ACTIVE
-+ Opens the connection in active mode. Use this switch if the
-+ server does not support passive mode, or use the command SET FTP
-+ PASSIVE-MODE OFF.
-+
-+ /NOINIT
-+ Added in C-Kermit 8.0.201. Tells C-Kermit not to send REST,
-+ STRU, FEAT, and MODE commands to the server when the connection
-+ is opened, since these have been reported to cause confusion in
-+ certain servers.
-+
-+ When a username or password is missing, a prompt is issued at the
-+ controlling terminal and you must type the response; the response can
-+ not be scripted. Use the switches to avoid prompts, or one of the
-+ secure authentication methods described in the next section, or see
-+ [236]SET FTP AUTOLOGIN and the [237]FTP USER and similar commands
-+ described later in this section.
-+
-+ Examples:
-+
-+ ftp open kermit.columbia.edu /anonymous ; Open and log in anonymously
-+ ftp kermit.columbia.edu /anonymous ; The OPEN keyword can be omitted
-+ ftp xyzcorp.com ; Open and maybe prompt for username
-+ ftp xyzcorp.com /user:olga ; Open and log in as olga
-+ ftp testing.abccorp.com 449 ; Specify a special TCP port number
-+ ftp testing.abccorp.com /user:olaf /password:secret 449
-+
-+ The FTP OPEN command succeeds if a connection was opened to the server
-+ (even if the given username and password were not valid) and fails
-+ otherwise (see [238]Section 3.8 for details).
-+
-+ When your FTP session is complete, you can terminate it as follows:
-+
-+ FTP BYE
-+ Closes the FTP connection if one was open. The FTP prefix can be
-+ omitted if no other connection is open at the same time (see
-+ [239]Section 3.8 for details). If a connection log is active, an
-+ FTP record is written to it. If Kermit was started with the -9
-+ command-line option or with its FTP command-line personality,
-+ and the -S (Stay) option was not given, AND there is no other
-+ active connection, the FTP BYE command also exits, just as it
-+ does on a regular FTP client. Synonyms: FTP CLOSE, FTP QUIT (but
-+ if the FTP prefix is omitted from QUIT, this becomes the regular
-+ Kermit QUIT command, which is equivalent to EXIT; i.e. it closes
-+ the connection and exits from Kermit).
-+
-+ The following commands can be used to achieve greater control over the
-+ connection and login process:
-+
-+ SET FTP ANONYMOUS-PASSWORD text
-+ Allows you to choose the password text to be sent automatically
-+ by Kermit when you open an FTP connection with the /ANONYMOUS
-+ switch.
-+
-+ SET FTP AUTOLOGIN { ON, OFF }
-+ If you give this command prior to opening an FTP connection, it
-+ controls whether Kermit tries to log you in automatically as
-+ part of the connection process. Normally ON, which means the
-+ username and password are sent automatically (and prompted for
-+ if they are not yet known). When OFF, FTP OPEN connects to the
-+ server without logging in. OFF is equivalent to the -n
-+ command-line option when using Kermit's FTP command-line
-+ personality.
-+
-+ FTP USER name [ password [ account ] ]
-+ Used to log in to an FTP server to which a connection has been
-+ made without autologin, or when autologin failed. If the
-+ password is furnished on the command line, it is used; otherwise
-+ you are prompted for a password. An account may also be
-+ furnished if required by the server; it is not required by
-+ Kermit and is not prompted for if omitted. Synonyms: USER, FTP
-+ LOGIN.
-+
-+ FTP ACCOUNT text
-+ Sends an account name to a server that supports accounts. If the
-+ server does not support accounts, an error response occurs. If
-+ the server does support accounts, the account is accepted if it
-+ is valid and rejected if it is not. The account might be used
-+ for charging purposes or it might be a secondary password, or it
-+ might be used for any other purpose, such as an access password
-+ for a particular disk. Servers that support accounts might or
-+ might not allow or require the account to be sent prior to
-+ login; usually it is sent after login, if at all. Synonym:
-+ ACCOUNT.
-+
-+ Example:
-+
-+set ftp autologin off ; One thing at a time please
-+ftp xyzcorp.com ; Try to make the connection
-+if fail exit 1 FTP connection failed ; Check that it was made
-+ftp user olga secret ; Now log in to the server
-+if fail exit 1 FTP login failed ; Check that it worked
-+ftp account 103896854 ; Login OK - send account
-+if fail echo WARNING - FTP ACCT failed ; Warn if problem
-+... ; (have session here)
-+bye ; Log out and disconnect
-+
-+ The following commands are used to control or get information about the
-+ FTP connection. Any particular FTP server does not necessarily support
-+ all of them.
-+
-+ FTP RESET
-+ Terminates a user session but leaves the connection open,
-+ allowing a new login via FTP USER.
-+
-+ FTP IDLE [ number ]
-+ Most FTP servers automatically log you out and and disconnect
-+ your session if there has been no activity for a certain amount
-+ of time. Use this command to ask the server to set its idle
-+ limit to the given number of seconds. Omit the number to ask the
-+ server to inform you of its current idle limit.
-+
-+ FTP STATUS [ filename ]
-+ Asks the FTP server to send information about the current
-+ session. The result is a free-format report that might include
-+ server identification, username and login time, FTP protocol
-+ settings, and file-transfer statistics. If a filename is given,
-+ the server is supposed to send detailed information about the
-+ file.
-+
-+ FTP SYSTEM
-+ Asks the FTP server to identify its operating system (Listed in
-+ Internet Assigned Numbers, Operating System Names). Examples:
-+ UNIX, VMS, VM/CMS, WINDOWS-NT. Unfortunately many variations are
-+ allowed (e.g. LINUX-2.0, LINUX-2.2, FREEBSD, ULTRIX, etc,
-+ instead of UNIX; WINDOWS-NT-3, WINDOWS-NT-3.5, WINDOWS-NT-3.51,
-+ WINDOWS-NT-4, etc). The report might also include other
-+ information like "Type L8", "Type I", or "Type A", indicating
-+ the file-transfer mode.
-+
-+ FTP HELP [ keyword [ keyword [ ... ] ]
-+ Asks the server to list the commands it supports. The response
-+ is usually cryptic, listing FTP command mnemonics, not the
-+ commands used by the client (since the server has no way of
-+ knowing anything about the client's user interface). For
-+ example, the PUT command is STOR in FTP protocol. If a keyword
-+ is given, which should be an FTP protocol command,
-+ slightly-more- detailed help is given about the corresponding
-+ command (if the FTP server supports this feature). Examples:
-+ "ftp help", "ftp help stor".
-+
-+ FTP SITE text
-+ (Advanced) Sends an FTP SITE (site-specific) command. Usually
-+ this means that the FTP server is asked to run an external
-+ command with the given arguments. You might be able to find out
-+ what SITE commands are available by sending "ftp help site" to
-+ the server, but in general the availability of and response to
-+ SITE commands is (not surprisingly) site specific.
-+
-+ FTP QUOTE text
-+ (Advanced) Sends an FTP command in FTP protocol format. Use this
-+ command to send commands to the server that the FTP client might
-+ not know about.
-+
-+ SHOW FTP
-+ Lists client (Kermit) FTP settings and information. Also SHOW
-+ CONNECTION, SHOW COMMUNICATIONS.
-+
-+ HELP FTP [ keyword ]
-+ Asks Kermit to list and describe its built-in FTP commands.
-+
-+ HELP SET FTP [ keyword ]
-+ Asks Kermit to list and describe its built-in SET FTP commands.
-+
-+ [ [240]Top ] [ [241]FTP Top ] [ [242]C-Kermit Home ] [ [243]Kermit Home
-+ ]
-+
-+3.2. Making Secure FTP Connections
-+
-+ Also see: [244]Accessing IBM Information Exchange with Kermit.
-+
-+ In the previous section, you can see several examples of traditional
-+ insecure authentication: username and password sent across the network
-+ in clear text. Of course this is bad practice on at least two counts:
-+ (1) storing passwords in files (such as script files) gives access to
-+ the target systems to anybody who can obtain read access to your
-+ scripts; and (2) sending this information over the network leaves it
-+ open to interception by network sniffers or compromised hosts.
-+
-+ Because of the increasing need for security on the Internet, FTP
-+ servers are beginning to appear that offer secure forms of
-+ authentication, in which no information is sent over the network that
-+ would allow anyone who intercepts it to usurp your identity and gain
-+ your access rights.
-+
-+ Kermit provides an equivalent form of FTP security for each type of
-+ IETF standard security implemented in Telnet. These include
-+ GSSAPI-KERBEROS5, KERBEROS4, Secure Remote Password (SRP), and
-+ Transport Layer Security (SSL and TLS). It does not presently include
-+ SSL tunneling nor any form of SSH v1 or v2. When Kermit is built with
-+ the necessary libraries, secure FTP connections are attempted by
-+ default, in which all connections are authenticated and the command and
-+ data channels are private.
-+
-+ The use of authentication and encryption for FTP connections can be
-+ adjusted with the commands listed below, which are available only if
-+ your version of Kermit was built with the corresponding security
-+ options and libraries:
-+
-+ SET FTP AUTHTYPE { AUTOMATIC, GSSAPI-KRB5, KERBEROS4, SRP, SSL, TLS }
-+ Specifies an ordered list of authentication methods to be
-+ attempted when AUTOAUTHENTICATION is ON. The default list is:
-+ GSSAPI-KRB5, SRP, KERBEROS_V4, TLS, SSL. If none of the selected
-+ methods are supported by the server, an insecure login is used
-+ as a fallback. Note, by the way, that SSL or TLS can be used to
-+ secure an anonymous connection.
-+
-+ SET FTP AUTOAUTHENTICATION { ON, OFF }
-+ Tells whether authentication should be negotiated by the FTP
-+ OPEN command. Default is ON. Use SET FTP AUTOAUTHENTICATION OFF
-+ to force a clear-text, unencrypted connection to FTP servers
-+ (such as the one at the Kermit FTP site) that normally would try
-+ to negotiate secure authentication and encryption.
-+
-+ SET FTP AUTOENCRYPTION { ON, OFF }
-+ Tells whether encryption (privacy) should be negotiated by the
-+ FTP OPEN command, which can happen only if secure authentication
-+ is also negotiated. Default is ON.
-+
-+ SET FTP AUTOLOGIN { ON, OFF }
-+ Tells Kermit whether to try logging in automatically when you
-+ make an FTP connection, as opposed to letting you do it "by
-+ hand" with the FTP USER command.
-+
-+ SET FTP COMMAND-PROTECTION-LEVEL { CLEAR, CONFIDENTIAL, PRIVATE, SAFE }
-+ Determines the level of protection applied to the command
-+ channel:
-+
-+ CLEAR Data is sent in plaintext and not protected against tampering.
-+ CONFIDENTIAL Data is encrypted but not protected against tampering.
-+ PRIVATE Data is encrypted and is protected against tampering.
-+ SAFE Data is sent in plaintext but protected against tampering.
-+
-+ The default is PRIVATE.
-+
-+ SET FTP CREDENTIAL-FORWARDING { ON, OFF }
-+ Tells whether end-user credentials are to be forwarded to the
-+ server if supported by the authentication method (GSSAPI-KRB5
-+ only). This is often required to allow access to distributed
-+ file systems (e.g. AFS.)
-+
-+ SET FTP DATA-PROTECTION-LEVEL { CLEAR, CONFIDENTIAL, PRIVATE, SAFE }
-+ Tells what level of protection is applied to subsequent data
-+ channels. The meanings of the protection-level keywords are the
-+ same as for SET FTP COMMAND-PROTECTION-LEVEL. The default is
-+ PRIVATE.
-+
-+ SET FTP SRP CIPHER name
-+ Specifies the cipher to be used for encryption when SRP
-+ authentication is in use. The list of possible choices is
-+ computed based on the capabilities of the local SRP library and
-+ includes NONE plus zero or more of the following:
-+
-+ BLOWFISH_ECB CAST5_ECB DES_ECB DES3_ECB
-+ BLOWFISH_CBC CAST5_CBC DES_CBC DES3_CBC
-+ BLOWFISH_CFB64 CAST5_CFB64 DES_CFB64 DES3_CFB64
-+ BLOWFISH_OFB64 CAST5_OFB64 DES_OFB64 DES3_OFB64
-+
-+ The default is DES3_ECB.
-+
-+ SET FTP SRP HASH name
-+ Specifies the hash to be used for data protection when SRP
-+ authentication is in use. The choices are MD5 and SHA. The
-+ default is SHA.
-+
-+ Command-line options:
-+
-+ -k name
-+ Specifies the realm to be used with Kerberos 4 authentication (=
-+ SET AUTH K4 REALM name).
-+
-+ -f
-+ Enables forwarding of Kerberos 5 credentials to the host when
-+ using GSSAPI authentication (= SET AUTH K5 FORWARDABLE ON).
-+
-+ -x
-+ Enables autoencryption (= SET FTP AUTOENCRYPTION ON).
-+
-+ -c cipher
-+ Specifies the kind of cipher to be used for encryption with SRP
-+ authentication. Equivalent to SET FTP SRP CIPHER, with the same
-+ choices. If this option is not given, CAST5_CBC is used.
-+
-+ -H hash
-+ Specifies the hash to be used for encryption with SRP
-+ authentication. Equivalent to SET FTP SRP HASH, with the same
-+ choices. If this option is not given, SHA is used.
-+
-+ -z debug
-+ Turns on SSL/TLS debugging.
-+
-+ -z secure
-+ Requires secure connection.
-+
-+ -z certsok
-+ Says to accept all certificates without checking validity.
-+
-+ -z verify=n
-+ Sets certificate verification mode to the given number, n:
-+ 0 = no verification
-+ 1 = verify certificate if presented
-+ 2 = require verification of certificate
-+
-+ -z cert=filename
-+ Specifies a file containing a client certificate to be presented
-+ to the FTP server.
-+
-+ -z key=filename
-+ Specifies a file containing a private key matching the client
-+ certificate.
-+
-+ -z !krb4
-+ (nokrb4) Disables the use of Kerberos 4.
-+
-+ -z !gss
-+ -z nogss
-+ Disables the use of GSSAPI - Kerberos 5.
-+
-+ -z !srp
-+ -z nosrp
-+ Disables use of SRP.
-+
-+ -z !ssl
-+ -z nossl
-+ Disables the use of SSL.
-+
-+ -z !tls
-+ -z notls
-+ Disables the use of TLS.
-+
-+ Caution: If your FTP connection is secured via AUTH TLS, it is not
-+ possible to interrupt a file transfer. This is a limitation of all
-+ known FTP servers that support AUTH TLS.
-+
-+ Note that when using certain security methods, such as SSL or TLS, you
-+ may be prompted to confirm or verify certain actions or conditions, for
-+ example, whether to accept self-signed certificates. This can interfere
-+ with unattended operation of scripts; see [245]Section 3.10.
-+
-+ [ [246]Top ] [ [247]FTP Top ] [ [248]C-Kermit Home ] [ [249]Kermit Home
-+ ]
-+
-+3.3. Setting FTP Preferences
-+
-+ FTP preferences can be set globally and persistently with the commands
-+ in the following sections; many of these can also be overridden on a
-+ per-command basis with switches that have the same name.
-+
-+3.3.1. Logs, Messages, and Other Feedback
-+
-+ You can control the amount of feedback received from your FTP session
-+ with the commands in this section. First, you can create a log of your
-+ FTP transfers with the following commands:
-+
-+ SET TRANSACTION-LOG { VERBOSE, FTP, BRIEF }
-+ Selects the log format. VERBOSE is the default, and is described
-+ in [250]the manual. FTP chooses a WU-FTPD format, the same as is
-+ used by the popular FTP server. BRIEF creates per-file records
-+ in comma-separated-list format. For greater detail, see
-+ [251]Section 4.17 of the [252]C-Kermit 7.0 Update Notes.
-+
-+ LOG TRANSACTIONS filename
-+ Records FTP (or Kermit, or any other protocol) uploads and
-+ downloads in the given file using the format selected by the
-+ most recent SET TRANSACTION-LOG command, if any, or else the
-+ default format.
-+
-+ FTP screen messages and displays are controlled by the following
-+ commands:
-+
-+ SET TRANSFER DISPLAY { FULLSCREEN, CRT, SERIAL, BRIEF, NONE, OFF }
-+ FTP transfers use Kermit's normal file-transfer display styles.
-+ Use this command to choose the desired format; the default on
-+ most platforms is FULLSCREEN. The display is automatically
-+ disabled if Kermit is running in the background or in batch.
-+ BRIEF is always used for command-line initiated transfers
-+ (unless suppressed by -q). While a file-transfer is in progress,
-+ you can interrupt it in the normal Kermit way by typing one of
-+ the following keys or key combinations:
-+ X - Cancel current file but go on to the next one (if any).
-+ Z - Cancel the entire transfer. Ctrl-L or Ctrl-W - Refresh
-+ the file-transfer display (if any).
-+
-+ SET FTP DISPLAY { FULLSCREEN, CRT, SERIAL, BRIEF, NONE, OFF }
-+ Like SET TRANSFER DISPLAY, but applies only to FTP connections,
-+ and does not affect Kermit- or other protocol file transfers.
-+
-+ SET QUIET { ON, OFF }
-+ This command applies to Kermit in general, not just FTP. OFF by
-+ default; when ON, it surpresses most messages from most commands
-+ as well as the file-transfer display.
-+
-+ SET FTP PROGRESS-MESSAGES { ON, OFF }
-+ Tells whether Kermit should print locally-generated feedback
-+ messages for each non-file-transfer command. ON by default.
-+
-+ SET FTP VERBOSE-MODE { ON, OFF }
-+ Tells whether to display all responses from the FTP server. OFF
-+ by default. This shows all responses to all commands, except
-+ when the file-transfer display is active, and unless you have
-+ SET QUIET ON. When OFF, responses are shown only for commands
-+ such as FTP PWD whose purpose is to display a response.
-+
-+ SET FTP DEBUG { ON, OFF }
-+ Tells whether local client debugging information should be
-+ displayed. OFF by default. When ON, the commands that are sent
-+ to the server are shown, as well as its responses (even if
-+ VERBOSE-MODE is OFF), plus additional informational messages are
-+ printed regarding the progress of secure operations. Also, the
-+ temporary file created by the [253]MGET command is not deleted
-+ so you can see what's in it.
-+
-+ Set all of these to OFF when silent running is desired.
-+
-+3.3.2. Operational Preferences
-+
-+ FTP DISABLE new-protocol-feature-name
-+ FTP ENABLE new-protocol-feature-name
-+ Explained in [254]Section 3.11.
-+
-+ SET FTP AUTOLOGIN { ON, OFF }
-+ If you give this command prior to opening an FTP connection, it
-+ controls whether Kermit tries to log you in automatically as
-+ part of the connection process. Normally ON, which means the
-+ username and password are sent automatically (and prompted for
-+ if they are not yet known). When OFF, FTP OPEN connects to the
-+ server without logging in. OFF is equivalent to the -n
-+ command-line option when using Kermit's FTP command-line
-+ personality. See [255]Section 3.1.4 for usage.
-+
-+ SET FTP PASSIVE-MODE { ON, OFF }
-+ ON by default, to avoid random TCP port assignment for data
-+ connections, which can prevent FTP protocol from working through
-+ firewalls and network address translators (for more on these
-+ topics, see the [256]Kermit security reference. Set to OFF in
-+ case the FTP server does not support passive mode, or in case
-+ the client has problems with it (it has been observed, for
-+ example, that when using passive mode, the SCO XENIX 2.3.4
-+ TCP/IP stack hangs in the connect() call forever). Synonyms:
-+ PASSIVE [ ON ], PASSIVE OFF, PASV [ ON ], PASV OFF.
-+
-+ SET FTP SEND-PORT-COMMANDS { ON, OFF }
-+ This command determines whether the FTP client sends a new PORT
-+ command to the server when accepting incoming data connections
-+ (as when not using passive mode.) When PASSIVE-MODE is OFF and
-+ SET SEND-PORT is OFF, the port that was originally specified is
-+ reused. This is the default behavior for normal FTP clients but
-+ it is not compatible with many firewalls.
-+
-+ SET FTP CHARACTER-SET-TRANSLATION { ON, OFF }
-+ Whether to translate character sets when transferring files with
-+ FTP (explained in [257]Section 3.7). OFF by default.
-+
-+ SET FTP SERVER-CHARACTER-SET name
-+ Tells Kermit the character set used by the FTP server, UTF-8 by
-+ default ([258]Section 3.7).
-+
-+ SET FTP SERVER-TIME-OFFSET delta-time
-+ Tells Kermit to apply the given [259]delta time to file
-+ timestamps provided by the server for its files; for use when
-+ (for example) the server does not have its timezone set
-+ correctly.
-+
-+ SET FTP ERROR-ACTION { PROCEED, QUIT }
-+ When transferring a group of files with FTP, and an error occurs
-+ with one of the files, Kermit normally goes on the next file.
-+ Use SET FTP ERROR-ACTION to QUIT to make Kermit stop the
-+ transfer immediately and fail if an error occurs with any single
-+ file in the group. Example: you have given Kermit a list of
-+ files to send, and one of the files can not be found, or read
-+ permission is denied. Note that cancelling a file by typing 'X'
-+ during transfer is not considered an error (if you want to
-+ cancel the entire transfer, type 'Z' or Ctrl-C).
-+
-+ SET FTP PERMISSIONS { AUTO, ON, OFF }
-+ When uploading files with PUT or MPUT, this tells whether Kermit
-+ should send each file's permissions. The default is OFF, which
-+ means not to send permissions, in which case the uploaded file's
-+ permissions are set by the FTP server according to its own
-+ criteria. ON means to send them, AUTO means to send them only if
-+ the client (Kermit) and server are on like platforms (e.g. both
-+ UNIX). This command has no effect when downloading, since the
-+ FTP protocol does not include a way for the server to inform the
-+ client of a file's permissions. Also see [260]FTP PUT
-+ /PERMISSIONS. Note that setting permissions after uploading is
-+ likely to work (correctly or at all) only when the client and
-+ server platforms are alike (e.g. both of them are some form of
-+ UNIX). Also note that Windows files don't have permissions. Also
-+ see [261]FTP CHMOD.
-+
-+ SET FTP DATES { ON, OFF }
-+ When downloading files with GET or MGET, this tells whether
-+ Kermit should try to set the received file's date from the
-+ server's date. FTP DATES is ON by default. Note, however, that
-+ FTP protocol does not allow date preservation when uploading. So
-+ at best, SET FTP DATES ON can work only when downloading, and
-+ then only when the server agrees to furnish file dates.
-+
-+ SET FTP FILENAMES { AUTO, CONVERTED, LITERAL }
-+ When uploading (sending) files, this tells whether to convert
-+ outbound filenames to "common form". This means allowing only
-+ one period in a name, uppercasing any lowercase letters,
-+ replacing spaces by underscores, etc. AUTOMATIC is the default,
-+ meaning LITERAL when client and server are the same type of
-+ system (e.g. UNIX) and CONVERTED otherwise. Special case: if the
-+ setting is AUTOMATIC and the client is not UNIX and the server
-+ identifies itself as UNIX, Kermit uses a less-strict form of
-+ conversion, in which lowercase letters are not uppercased and
-+ the filename can contain any number of periods, but spaces are
-+ still converted to underscore. When receiving, conversion
-+ generally means to change all-uppercase names to lowercase and
-+ spaces to underscore.
-+
-+ SET FTP UNIQUE-SERVER-NAMES { ON, OFF }
-+ Applies only to uploads. Tells the server to create new, unique
-+ names for incoming files that have the same names as existing
-+ files. OFF by default, in which case the server overwrites
-+ existing files with new files of the same name. When ON, the
-+ server uses its own built-in method for creating new names for
-+ incoming files; for example, appending a period (.) and a number
-+ to the name. CAUTION: Use this option only if you do not need to
-+ refer to the file after it is uploaded, since FTP protocol
-+ provides no mechanism for the client to find out what name was
-+ assigned by the server.
-+
-+ SET FTP COLLISION { ... }
-+ When downloading, what to do if an incoming file has the same
-+ name as an existing file. Options are the same as for SET FILE
-+ COLLISION. If this command is not given, Kermit's regular FILE
-+ COLLISION setting is used. If this command is given, it
-+ overrides the FILE COLLISION setting for FTP transfers only. See
-+ [262]Section 3.6.2 for details.
-+
-+ SET FTP TYPE { TEXT, BINARY, TENEX }
-+ Changes the default transfer mode. When sending (uploading)
-+ files, this command has no effect unless you disable automatic
-+ text/binary mode switching ([263]Section 4) with SET FILE SCAN
-+ OFF or SET TRANSFER MODE MANUAL. When receiving (downloading)
-+ files, this command establishes the transfer mode to be used
-+ when a filename does not match any of Kermit's text or binary
-+ filename patterns, unless you use SET FTP GET-FILETYPE-SWITCHING
-+ or SET TRANSFER MODE MANUAL to disable automatic switching, in
-+ which case, this command establishes the transfer mode for all
-+ downloaded files. In all cases, however, the FTP TYPE can be
-+ overridden in any GET or PUT command by including a /TEXT
-+ (/ASCII), /BINARY, or /TENEX switch. The FTP TYPE is independent
-+ of the Kermit FILE TYPE setting. TENEX is used for sending 8-bit
-+ binary files to 36-bit platforms such as TOPS-10, TOPS-20, and
-+ TENEX, and getting them back again. Synonym: ASCII = TEXT. Note:
-+ there is also an FTP TYPE command, which does what SET FTP TYPE
-+ does but also sends a TYPE command to the server immediately if
-+ the given type is different from the current one.
-+
-+ If you want want specific FTP preference settings to be in effect for
-+ all your Kermit FTP sessions, put the desired SET FTP commands in your
-+ Kermit customization file (~/.mykermrc in UNIX, K95CUSTOM.INI in
-+ Windows).
-+
-+ [ [264]Top ] [ [265]FTP Top ] [ [266]C-Kermit Home ] [ [267]Kermit Home
-+ ]
-+
-+3.4. Managing Directories and Files
-+
-+ In Kermit, commands for directory and file management can refer to:
-+
-+ * The local computer
-+ * A remote computer when you have a connection to a Kermit server or
-+ IKSD.
-+ * A remote computer when you have a connection to an FTP server.
-+
-+ (There can also be an HTTP connection, but the commands in this section
-+ don't apply to HTTP connections.)
-+
-+ Thus in general, each such command comes in three forms:
-+
-+ 1. With no prefix in C-Kermit 8.0.200, it refers to the local computer
-+ (CD, DIR, etc). In C-Kermit 8.0.201 and later, however, the "locus"
-+ switches to automatically to the remote FTP server when you make an
-+ FTP connection (see the SET LOCUS description [268]Section 7); thus
-+ C-Kermit 8.0.201 acts almost exactly like a regular FTP client when
-+ it has an FTP connection, yet still acts like itself on other kinds
-+ of connections.
-+ 2. With the REMOTE prefix, it is for a Kermit server (REMOTE CD,
-+ REMOTE DIR).
-+ 3. With the FTP prefix, it's for an FTP server (FTP CD, FTP DIR).
-+ 4. Also see [269]Section 3.8, which explains "R-commands" and
-+ "L-commands".
-+
-+ Kermit's FTP file and directory management commands are as follows.
-+ When an R-command is included in the Synonyms list, be sure to read
-+ [270]Section 3.8 about rules for use of R-commands.
-+
-+ FTP CD [ directory ]
-+ Tells the FTP server to change its default (working) directory
-+ to the one given, which usually must be expressed in the syntax
-+ of the server platform (UNIX, VMS, etc). If the directory is not
-+ specified, the result depends on the FTP server -- it might
-+ complain that the command is illegal, or it might change to your
-+ original login directory. Synonyms: FTP CWD (Change Wording
-+ Directory); RCD.
-+
-+ FTP CDUP
-+ Tells the FTP server to change its default (working) directory
-+ to the parent directory of its current one (equivalent to
-+ "cd .." in UNIX, or "cd [-]" in VMS). Synonyms: RCDUP, FTP UP.
-+
-+ FTP PWD
-+ Asks the FTP server to report ("print") its current working
-+ directory. Synonym: RPWD.
-+
-+ FTP MKDIR directory
-+ Asks the FTP server to create the directory whose name is given.
-+ In general, the name must be in the syntax of the server's file
-+ system, and it must be either absolute (a full pathname) or
-+ relative to the server's current (working) directory. This
-+ command fails if the directory can't be created for any reason,
-+ including that it exists already. Synonym: RMKDIR.
-+
-+ FTP RMDIR directory
-+ Asks the FTP server to remove the directory whose name is given.
-+ The rules are the same as for MKDIR, plus in most cases, the
-+ server will not remove any directory unless it is empty.
-+ Synonym: RRMDIR.
-+
-+ FTP DIRECTORY [ filespec ] [ redirectors ]
-+ Tells the FTP server to send a directory listing of the
-+ specified files. If no filespec is given, the server lists all
-+ files in its current working directory. The results are in
-+ whatever format the server chooses to send them. You can use
-+ UNIX-like redirectors to send the listing to a file or a
-+ pipeline, exactly as with the regular Kermit client/server
-+ REMOTE DIRECTORY command ([271]Using C-Kermit, Chapter 11).
-+ Synonym: RDIRECTORY. Examples:
-+
-+ ftp dir ; Show listing of all files on screen
-+ ftp dir *.txt ; List *.txt files on screen
-+ ftp dir *.txt > somefile ; Put listing in somefile
-+ ftp dir *.txt >> somefile ; Append listing to somefile
-+ ftp dir *.txt | sort > somefile ; Put sorted listing in somefile
-+ ftp dir | more ; Runs list through "more"
-+ ftp dir | sort | more ; Runs list through "sort" and "more"
-+
-+ FTP VDIRECTORY [ filespec ] [ redirectors ]
-+ "Verbose" directory. This is an alternative FTP DIRECTORY
-+ command primarily for use with DECSYSTEM-20 (TOPS-20) FTP
-+ servers, which send only filenames when given a DIRECTORY
-+ command; the VDIRECTORY command makes them also send file sizes,
-+ dates, and attributes.
-+
-+ FTP CHECK filespec
-+ Asks the FTP server whether the given file exists or, if the
-+ filespec contains wildcards, if any files match, and this
-+ command succeeds or fails accordingly.
-+
-+ FTP MODTIME filename
-+ Asks the FTP server, via the not-yet-standard FTP MDTM command,
-+ to send the modification date and time of the given file. The
-+ response should be a numeric string in the format:
-+ yyyymmddhhmmssxxxxx... where yyyy is the year, mm is the month,
-+ dd is the day, hh is the hour (0-23), mm is the minute, ss is
-+ the second, and xxx... is the optional fraction of the second (0
-+ or more digits). The date and time is expressed in UTC (GMT,
-+ Zulu, Zero-Meridian). The result is available programmatically
-+ in the [272]\v(ftp_message) variable, and is understandable by
-+ Kermit's date-time switches and functions. For example, suppose
-+ we want to upload all local files that are newer than a
-+ particular file on the server:
-+
-+ C-Kermit> ftp modtime signpost
-+ C-Kermit> echo \v(ftp_message)
-+ 20010807113542.014
-+ C-Kermit> ftp mput /after:\v(ftp_message)GMT *
-+
-+ Note that we must append "GMT" to the date-time string to let
-+ the /AFTER switch know the time is GMT rather than local.
-+
-+ FTP SIZE filename
-+ Asks the FTP server to send the size (in bytes) of the given
-+ file. The result might vary depending on whether the current FTP
-+ TYPE is binary or text ("ascii"). For a reliable byte count, do
-+ FTP TYPE BINARY first. The result is available programmatically
-+ in the [273]\v(ftp_message) variable.
-+
-+ FTP CHMOD permissions filename
-+ Tells the FTP server to set the permissions (protection) of the
-+ given file to the ones given. The permissions and filename must
-+ be given in whatever syntax is required by the server. Example
-+ (for a UNIX-based FTP server):
-+
-+ ftp chmod 664 oofa.txt
-+
-+ Not all servers support this command. For non-UNIX-based
-+ servers, you might need to use FTP QUOTE or FTP SITE and the
-+ appropriate platform-specific FTP server command.
-+
-+ FTP UMASK [ number ]
-+ This command is probably specific to UNIX-based servers; it sets
-+ the UNIX "umask", which is the default permissions mask for new
-+ (in this case, incoming) files. Crudely put, the UNIX umask is
-+ an octal representation of a binary number in in which a 1 bit
-+ stands for a permission bit that must be 0, and a 0 bit stands
-+ for a permission bit that can be 0 or 1 depending on other
-+ factors, such as the permissions of the parent directory.
-+ Example: "umask 007" requires that new files are created without
-+ read/write/execute world permission. If the number is not
-+ specified, the server's current umask is reported.
-+
-+ FTP RENAME filename newname
-+ Asks the FTP server to rename the file whose name is "filename"
-+ to "newname". Works only for one file; can not be used with
-+ wildcards. The server's interpretation of "newname" can vary (in
-+ some cases it must be a filename, in others perhaps it can also
-+ be a directory name, in which case if the filename denote a
-+ regular file, the file might be moved to the given directory).
-+ Some servers might allow files to be renamed ("moved") between
-+ physical disks or partitions, others might not. Synonym:
-+ RRENAME.
-+
-+ FTP DELETE [ switches ] filespec [ filespec [ ... ] ]
-+ Tells the FTP server to delete the file or files listed. Each
-+ file specification may, but need not, contain wildcard
-+ characters to match multiple files. File specifications and
-+ wildcard syntax must be those of the server. Any file
-+ specifications that contain spaces must be enclosed in braces or
-+ doublequotes. FTP DELETE switches are:
-+
-+ /ERROR-ACTION: /FILENAMES: /NOBACKUPFILES /QUIET
-+ /EXCEPT: /LARGER-THAN: /NODOTFILES /NOPAGE
-+ /PAGE /RECURSIVE /SMALLER-THAN:
-+
-+ When used with FTP DELETE, the /RECURSIVE switch deletes files
-+ but not directories, and furthermore depends on the server
-+ providing recursive file lists, which is not the normal
-+ behavior. For further details, see the decriptions of these
-+ switches in [274]Section 3.6. Synonyms: FTP MDELETE (Kermit
-+ makes no distinction between DELETE and MDELETE); RDELETE.
-+
-+ FTP TYPE { TEXT, BINARY, TENEX }
-+ Tells the FTP server to change its file-transfer type to the one
-+ given, immediately. See [275]SET FTP TYPE for details.
-+
-+ [ [276]Top ] [ [277]FTP Top ] [ [278]C-Kermit Home ] [ [279]Kermit Home
-+ ]
-+
-+3.5. Uploading Files With FTP
-+
-+ Uploading means sending files from the client (Kermit) to the FTP
-+ server. The basic command for uploading files with FTP is PUT:
-+
-+ FTP PUT [ switches ] [ filespec [ as-name ] ]
-+ Uploads (sends) the file or files that match the file
-+ specification, which may include wildcards, to the server. If no
-+ filespec is given, the names of files to send are taken from the
-+ /LISTFILE: file, if any, otherwise from the SEND-LIST, if any.
-+ Unless you go out of your way to prevent it, Kermit determines
-+ the transfer mode (text or binary) for each file automatically,
-+ and switches automatically on a per-file basis. If an as-name is
-+ given, the file is sent under that name instead of its own (if
-+ an as-name is given with a wildcard filespec, the result is a
-+ bit more complicated, and is explained later in this section).
-+
-+ Unlike normal FTP clients, Kermit does not prompt you by default (or at
-+ all) for each file; it just sends them, just as it does with Kermit
-+ protocol. The filespec can be a literal filename or a Kermit pattern,
-+ described in:
-+
-+ [280]http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.9
-+
-+ Kermit patterns are equivalent to C-Shell patterns and provide a fair
-+ amount of flexibility in selecting which files to send, which is
-+ augmented by the file-selection switches presented in [281]Section
-+ 3.5.1.
-+
-+ FTP MPUT [ switches ] filespec [ filespec [ ... ] ]
-+ FTP MPUT is just like FTP PUT except it allows you to give more
-+ than one file specification, and it does not allow an as-name in
-+ the file list. However, as-names can be given to either PUT or
-+ MPUT with the /AS-NAME: switch.
-+
-+ If a PUT or MPUT command results in one file being uploaded, it
-+ succeeds if the file is uploaded completely and fails otherwise. If
-+ more than one file is selected for upload, success or failure depends
-+ on the [282]FTP ERROR-ACTION setting; if it is PROCEED (the default
-+ setting), then the [M]PUT command succeeds if at least one of the files
-+ was completely uploaded, and fails otherwise, If FTP ERROR-ACTION is
-+ QUIT, the [M]PUT command succeeds if all selected files were uploaded
-+ successfully, and fails if any file failed.
-+
-+ FTP uploads may be interrupted just like Kermit uploads. While the
-+ transfer is in progress, type:
-+
-+ X to interrupt the current file and go on to the next file.
-+ Z to cancel the current file and all remaining files.
-+ ^C (Control-C): Like Z, but might act more quickly.
-+
-+ MPUT may be used as in regular FTP clients, but it is not required to
-+ send multiple files; in Kermit it is required only if you want to give
-+ multiple file specifications. Examples:
-+
-+ ftp put oofa.txt ; Send a single file oofa.txt
-+ ftp put oofa.txt budget.txt ; Send single file oofa.txt as budget.txt
-+ ftp put *.txt ; Send all *.txt files
-+ ftp mput *.txt ; Send all *.txt files (same as "put *.txt")
-+ ftp mput *.txt foo.bar ; Send all *.txt files plus foo.bar
-+
-+ The distinction between PUT and MPUT is important only when more than
-+ one filespec is given, just like the distinction between Kermit SEND
-+ and MSEND:
-+
-+ ftp put oofa.txt budget.txt ; Send oofa.txt AS budget.txt
-+ ftp mput oofa.txt budget.txt ; Send oofa.txt AND budget.txt
-+
-+ If the source file specification includes any path segments, for
-+ example:
-+
-+ put /tmp/oofa.txt
-+ put subdir/another/andanother/oofa.txt
-+
-+ the path portion is stripped from the filename that is sent to the
-+ server. However, if an as-name contains a path, it is retained.
-+ Examples:
-+
-+ ftp put /usr/doc/oofa.txt ; Send as "oofa.txt".
-+ ftp put oofa.txt /tmp/oofa.txt ; Send as "/tmp/oofa.txt"
-+
-+ The latter example sends the file oofa.txt from your current local
-+ directory to the server's /tmp directory. This works only if the server
-+ uses the same directory notation that you used in the as-name AND the
-+ given directory already exists on the server AND if you have write
-+ access to it.
-+
-+ Use caution when uploading from a case-sensitive file system, such as
-+ UNIX, to a file system that is not case sensitive, such as Windows or
-+ VMS. If you have two files in UNIX, AA and aa and upload both of them,
-+ the second one will overwrite the first. The only way around this
-+ provided by FTP protocol is its "unique server names" feature (SET FTP
-+ UNIQUE-SERVER-NAMES or the /UNIQUE switch described below).
-+
-+3.5.1. FTP PUT Switches
-+
-+ FTP PUT and MPUT are similar in format and behavior to the regular
-+ Kermit SEND and MSEND commands, and they allow most of the same
-+ optional switches:
-+
-+C-Kermit>ftp put ? Filename, or switch, one of the following:
-+ /after: /larger-than: /rename-to:
-+ /array: /listfile: /server-character-set:
-+ /as-name: /local-character-set: /server-rename-to:
-+ /before: /move-to: /simulate
-+ /binary /nobackupfiles /smaller-than:
-+ /command /nodotfiles /tenex
-+ /delete /nofollowlinks /text
-+ /dotfiles /not-after: /transparent
-+ /error-action: /not-before: /type:
-+ /except: /permissions: /update
-+ /filenames: /quiet /unique-server-names
-+ /filter: /recover
-+ /followlinks /recursive
-+
-+ Since most of these switches are common to Kermit's SEND and MSEND
-+ commands, they described only briefly here. For greater detail see:
-+
-+ [283]http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x1.5 (explanation
-+ of switches)
-+ [284]http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.7
-+ (file-transfer switches)
-+
-+ First the file-selection switches:
-+
-+ /AFTER:date-time
-+ /BEFORE:date-time
-+ /NOT-AFTER:date-time
-+ /NOT-BEFORE:date-time
-+ Only send those files modified on or after or before the given
-+ date and time. These switches can be combined to select files
-+ modified between two date/times. Various date-time formats are
-+ accepted; if the date-time contains spaces, it must be enclosed
-+ in braces or doublequotes. See
-+ [285]http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x1.6 and
-+ [286]Section 8.13 of this document for details about date-time
-+ formats. Examples:
-+
-+ ftp put /after:{1 jan 2000 0:00:00} *
-+ ftp put /after:-5days *
-+
-+ /LARGER-THAN:number
-+ /SMALLER-THAN:number
-+ Only send files larger (smaller) than the given number of bytes
-+ (octets). These switches can be combined to select files in a
-+ certain size range.
-+
-+ /TYPE:{TEXT,BINARY}
-+ Only send files that are the given type, which is determined for
-+ each file just before sending it by file scanning. BINARY
-+ includes TENEX; if you have included a /TENEX switch, or
-+ previously given a [SET] FTP TYPE TENEX command, binary files
-+ are sent in TENEX, rather than BINARY mode.
-+
-+ /[NO]DOTFILES
-+ [Don't] include files whose names begin with dot (.). By
-+ default, such files are not included unless your filespec
-+ explicitly mentions them.
-+
-+ /NOBACKUPFILES
-+ Don't include files whose names end with .~nnn~, where nnn is a
-+ number, e.g. oofa.txt.~27~. These are backup files created by
-+ Kermit, EMACS, and other applications. By default, backup files
-+ are included.
-+
-+ /NOFOLLOWLINKS
-+ (UNIX only) Skip over symbolic links rather than following them
-+ (default). This applies to wildcard and/or recursive [M]PUTs; if
-+ a single filename is given, and it happens to be a symbolic
-+ link, the file it points to is sent.
-+
-+ /FOLLOWLINKS
-+ (UNIX only) Always follow (resolve) symbolic links, even in
-+ wildcard or recursive [M]PUTs. Use with caution. Watch out for
-+ circular links, endless loops, etc.
-+
-+ /EXCEPT:pattern
-+ Exception list -- don't send files whose names match the given
-+ pattern. See [287]Section 1.5.4 of the [288]C-Kermit 7.0 Update
-+ Notes for details. If you want to exclude a directory from a
-+ recursive [M]PUT, use /EXCEPT:{dirname/*}.
-+
-+ /RECURSIVE
-+ Sends the desired files from the current (or given) directory,
-+ plus all directories beneath it, including empty directories,
-+ replicating the directory structure on the server. No special
-+ capabilities are required in the server, but of course your
-+ login ID on the server must have the appropriate access and
-+ permission to create directories. Recursive PUTs work not only
-+ between like platforms (e.g. UNIX to UNIX) but also between
-+ unlike ones (e.g. UNIX to VMS or Windows), in which case
-+ text-file format differences are handled by Kermit's automatic
-+ text/binary mode switching ([289]Section 4) and character-set
-+ translation ([290]Section 3.7). Synonym: /SUBDIRECTORIES.
-+
-+ /UPDATE
-+ Send only files that have changed since last time ([291]Section
-+ 3.5.2).
-+
-+ /ARRAY:arrayname
-+ The "file" to be sent is an array, or a segment of one, rather
-+ than a real file. In this case the other selection switches
-+ don't apply. The array contents are sent in text mode, and each
-+ array element is treated as a line. Example:
-+
-+ ftp put /as-name:array.txt /array:&a
-+
-+ (or, to send a segment of the array, /array:&a[100:199]). If you
-+ don't include an /AS-NAME, a name of "_array_x_" is used (where
-+ x is the array letter). If you include this switch, most other
-+ switches are meaningless and ignored.
-+
-+ /COMMAND
-+ The "file" to be sent is the standard output of a command,
-+ rather than a real file. It is sent in text or binary mode
-+ according to the prevailing FTP TYPE, which can be overridden
-+ with a /TEXT or /BINARY switch. Example: Example:
-+
-+ ftp put /command /as-name:{userlist} {finger | sort -r}
-+
-+ /LISTFILE:filename
-+ Tells Kermit to obtain the list of files to be sent from the
-+ file whose name is given. This file must contain one file
-+ specification (which may be wild) per line. If the list includes
-+ files from different directories, such as a recursive listing of
-+ a directory tree, the paths are recreated on the server (if
-+ possible) if you include the /RECURSIVE switch; otherwise all
-+ the files are sent to the current directory on the server.
-+
-+ Now the other switches:
-+
-+ /AS-NAME:text
-+ If a single file is being sent, send it with the given text as
-+ its name. If multiple files are being sent, the text must be a
-+ template that includes variables such as \v(filename),
-+ \v(filenumber), \v(ntime), to allow dynamic creation of each
-+ name. The same applies to the as-name field of the FTP PUT
-+ command. If this switch is not included (and an as-name is not
-+ included as the second filename to PUT), each file is sent with
-+ its own name.
-+
-+ /BINARY
-+ /TEXT
-+ /TENEX
-+ Forces this upload to take place in the given mode, regardless
-+ of the current FTP TYPE setting, and without automatic
-+ text/binary switching. /ASCII is a synonym for /TEXT.
-+
-+ /FILTER:command
-+ Specifies that the file(s) is/are to be passed through the given
-+ command or pipeline on their way to the server. Example:
-+
-+ ftp put /binary /filter:{gzip -c \v(filename)} /as-name:\v(filename).gz *
-+
-+ /TRANSPARENT
-+ /LOCAL-CHARACTER-SET:name
-+ /SERVER-CHARACTER-SET:name
-+ Character-set translation for text files, explained in
-+ [292]Section 3.7.
-+
-+ /ERROR-ACTION:{PROCEED,QUIT}
-+ Overrides the prevailing [293]FTP ERROR-ACTION for the duration
-+ of this PUT or MPUT command only.
-+
-+ /RECOVER
-+ Resume an interrupted transfer where from the point of
-+ interruption (explained in [294]Section 3.5.2). Synonym:
-+ /RESTART.
-+
-+ /DELETE
-+ Tells Kermit to delete each source file immediately after, and
-+ only if, it has been uploaded completely and successfully. This,
-+ in effect, moves the file from the client to the server.
-+
-+ /MOVE-TO:directory
-+ Tells Kermit to move each source file to the named local
-+ directory after, and only if, it has been uploaded completely
-+ and successfully.
-+
-+ /RENAME-TO:template
-+ Tells Kermit to rename each (local) source file according to the
-+ given template after, and only if, it has been uploaded
-+ completely and successfully. The template works as in /AS-NAME.
-+
-+ /SERVER-RENAME-TO:template
-+ Tells Kermit to ask the server to rename each file according to
-+ the given template as soon as, and only if, it has been received
-+ completely and successfully. The template works as in /AS-NAME.
-+ Requires write and rename access on the server, so doesn't
-+ usually work with (e.g.) anonymous uploads to public incoming
-+ areas where the permissions don't allow renaming. Examples:
-+
-+ ftp mput /server-rename:\v(filename).ok *
-+ Appends ".ok" to each filename on the server when it's
-+ finished uploading.
-+
-+ ftp mput /as-name:\v(filename).tmp /server-rename:\v(filename) *
-+ This is the reverse of the previous example; it uses a
-+ temporary name while uploading is in progress and reverts
-+ the file to its real name when uploading is complete.
-+
-+ ftp mput /as-name:\v(filename)
-+ /server-rename:../final/\v(filename) *
-+ Moves the file from the working directory to a final
-+ directory when the upload is complete, but in this case
-+ you have to know the pathname syntax of the server. If the
-+ rename fails, the [M]PUT command fails according to the
-+ [295]FTP ERROR-ACTION selection.
-+
-+ /FILENAMES:{AUTOMATIC,CONVERTED,LITERAL}
-+ Overrides the [296]FTP FILENAMES setting for this upload only.
-+
-+ /PERMISSIONS:{ON,OFF}
-+ Overrides the [297]FTP PERMISSIONS setting for this upload only.
-+
-+ /UNIQUE
-+ Tells Kermit to tell the server to give [298]unique names to
-+ incoming files that would otherwise overwrite existing files
-+ that have the same name. This switch conflicts with /UPDATE,
-+ /RECOVER, /PERMISSIONS, and /SERVER-RENAME since the client has
-+ no way of knowing the name assigned by the server.
-+
-+ /QUIET
-+ Don't display file-transfer progress or statistics.
-+
-+ /SIMULATE
-+ Shows which files would be sent without actually sending them.
-+ Useful (for example) with /UPDATE (next section). The results
-+ are shown in the file-transfer display (if it is not disabled)
-+ and in the transaction log (if one is active). Hint: use SET
-+ TRANSFER DISPLAY BRIEF.
-+
-+3.5.2. Update Mode
-+
-+ When you include the /UPDATE switch, this means to skip sending any
-+ file that already exists on the server if the local file's modification
-+ date/time is not later than that of the corresponding file on the
-+ server. Here is a typical application for update mode: Suppose that on
-+ Computer A, you maintain a large set of files (say, a collection of Web
-+ pages and graphics images, or the source files for a software
-+ application), and you need to keep a parallel copy on another Computer,
-+ B. Of course you could upload the entire collection every day:
-+
-+ cd source-directory
-+ ftp computerb.xyzcorp.com
-+ ( authentication details... )
-+ ftp cd target-directory
-+ ftp put [ switches ] *
-+
-+ But if the total size is large or the network slow, this would be
-+ unnecessarily time-consuming. Worse, if other users or sites had to
-+ update whenever new files appeared in B's directory, this would cause
-+ them unnecessary work. By including the /UPDATE switch:
-+
-+ ftp put /update [ other-switches ] *
-+
-+ only those files that changed since last time are uploaded. Here's how
-+ it works. For each local file that is selected for uploading:
-+
-+ * The remote filename is determined in the normal way, according to
-+ the [299]FTP FILENAMES setting, /FILENAMES switch, or the as-name,
-+ if any.
-+ * Kermit sends an MDTM (modification time) command for the
-+ corresponding remote filename to the server.
-+ * If the server does not understand the MDTM command, the file is
-+ sent.
-+ * If the server can't find a file with the given name, the file is
-+ sent.
-+ * If the local file's modification time is later than that of the
-+ remote file, the file is sent.
-+ * Otherwise -- the remote file exists but its modification time is
-+ equal to or earlier than that of the local file -- the file is
-+ skipped.
-+
-+ All time comparisons take place in Coordinated Universal Time
-+ (UTC)([300]1), also known as GMT or Zulu time: Timezone 0; standard
-+ time, without daylight savings.
-+
-+ WARNING: Some FTP servers, such as Novell NWFTPD.NLM, ignore or
-+ misimplement the FTP specification and send local time rather than
-+ UTC.
-+
-+ Update mode is useful only when always used in the same direction. When
-+ you upload (PUT) a file with FTP, the destination file receives the
-+ current timestamp on the server's computer, not the original file's
-+ timestamp ([301]2). If you try to FTP PUT /UPDATE the same file again,
-+ it will be skipped (as expected) since the remote copy is newer.
-+ However, if you try to FTP GET /UPDATE the same file ([302]Section
-+ 3.6), it will be transferred for the same reason.
-+
-+ To check the availability of PUT /UPDATE on a particular connection,
-+ issue an FTP MODTIME command for a file that is known to exist on the
-+ server. If it succeeds, PUT /UPDATE should work and in that case, you
-+ can run a procedure like the one above every day: the first time, it
-+ sends all the files; after that, it sends only the ones that changed.
-+ If a transaction log is active, a notation is included for any files
-+ that are skipped.
-+
-+ Notes:
-+ 1. Why is Coordinated Universal Time abbreviated UTC? From the
-+ [303]National Institute of Standards and Technology FAQ: "In 1970
-+ the Coordinated Universal Time system was devised by an
-+ international advisory group of technical experts within the
-+ International Telecommunication Union (ITU). The ITU felt it was
-+ best to designate a single abbreviation for use in all languages in
-+ order to minimize confusion. Since unanimous agreement could not be
-+ achieved on using either the English word order, CUT, or the French
-+ word order, TUC, the acronym UTC was chosen as a compromise."
-+ 2. The Kermit FTP client is unusual in that, when downloading only, it
-+ can set the received file's date from the file's date on the
-+ server, but this should not affect the update feature. When
-+ uploading to an FTP server, however, there is no mechanism for the
-+ client to set the date of the uploaded file on the server.
-+
-+3.5.3 Recovery
-+
-+ Suppose that while you are uploading a large file over a slow
-+ connection, the connection is lost before the entire file is
-+ transferred. With most FTP clients, you would have to start over, thus
-+ resending the portion of the file that was sent already, and that is
-+ already on the server. But Kermit's /RECOVER switch (Synonym: /RESTART)
-+ lets you continue an interrupted transfer from the point of failure,
-+ thus transferring only the part that wasn't sent already. The
-+ prerequisites for recovery are:
-+
-+ * The transfer must be in BINARY mode, or else the client and server
-+ must reside on like systems (e.g. both on some form of UNIX).
-+ * The FTP server must support the SIZE command.
-+
-+ Here's how it works. When you include the /RECOVER switch:
-+
-+ * Kermit checks for conflicting switches, such as /UPDATE and
-+ /UNIQUE; if /RECOVER is given with these switches an error occurs.
-+ If /RECOVER is given in other circumstances where it could serve no
-+ useful purpose (e.g. with arrays, pipes, or filters), it is
-+ ignored.
-+
-+ If the switch is accepted, then for each selected file:
-+
-+ * If it is not binary (determined by scanning) and the client and
-+ server are not on like platforms, recovery is canceled (the entire
-+ file is sent). Otherwise:
-+ * A SIZE command is sent for the file (using its remote name). If the
-+ reply indicates the file was not found, or the SIZE command was not
-+ understood, or any other kind of error, recovery is canceled.
-+ Otherwise:
-+ * A MDTM (modification time) command is sent for the file. If a valid
-+ reply is received, and the modification time of the local file is
-+ later than that of the remote file, recovery is canceled.
-+ Otherwise:
-+ * If the sizes of the two files are identical, the file is not sent.
-+ Otherwise:
-+ * Kermit seeks to the recovery spot in the local file, tells the
-+ server to APPEND the data which is about to arrive to the remote
-+ file, and then sends the data starting at the recovery point.
-+
-+ To safeguard file integrity, recovery is not attempted unless all the
-+ preconditions are met. For the widest possible usefulness, APPEND is
-+ used rather than RESTART. For stream transfers (the only kind that
-+ Kermit supports) the results are the same.
-+
-+ By design, the /RECOVER switch can be included with any FTP PUT or MPUT
-+ command, even if it specifies a group of files. This allows you to
-+ resume an interrupted batch transfer from where it left off. The files
-+ that were already completely sent are skipped, the file that was
-+ interrupted is recovered, and the remaining files are uploaded.
-+
-+ By the way, it doesn't matter how the original partial file was
-+ uploaded -- FTP, Kermit, Zmodem, etc: as long as the preconditions are
-+ met, it can be recovered with FTP PUT /RECOVER, or for that matter also
-+ using Kermit protocol and SEND /RECOVER.
-+
-+ A word of caution, however, when the original upload was in text mode
-+ with character-set translation ([304]Section 3.7):
-+
-+ * If the original upload involved a translation from one single-byte
-+ character set to another (e.g. Code Page 850 to Latin-1), recovery
-+ is safe if you specify the same translations for the recovery. If
-+ you don't, the resulting file will contain a mixture of character
-+ sets.
-+ * If the original upload involved a translation that changed the size
-+ of the file (e.g. from an alphabetic Code Page or Latin Alphabet to
-+ Unicode, or vice versa), recovery is NOT safe, even if you specify
-+ the same translations.
-+
-+ Kermit has no way of knowing anything about the previous upload. As a
-+ safeguard, an error occurs if you include /RECOVER and also specify a
-+ character-set of UCS2 or UTF8, since recovery can't possibly work in
-+ that situation. Otherwise, it's up to you to avoid unsafe recovery
-+ operations.
-+
-+ [ [305]Top ] [ [306]FTP Top ] [ [307]C-Kermit Home ] [ [308]Kermit Home
-+ ]
-+
-+3.6. Downloading Files With FTP
-+
-+ Although uploading files with Kermit's FTP client is just as easy and
-+ flexible as sending files with Kermit protocol, the same is not always
-+ true for downloading because FTP servers lack some of the capabilities
-+ of a Kermit server:
-+
-+ * If you want to get more than one file, you have to use MGET, not
-+ GET, since the underlying FTP protocol is different in the two
-+ cases. Kermit can't "autodetect" which one you mean, as it can with
-+ PUT and MPUT, since it can't be expected to know the wildcard
-+ syntax of the remote platform and/or FTP server (the same is true
-+ for all other FTP clients). To complicate matters, FTP protocol now
-+ includes two underlying mechanisms (NLST and MLSD) for
-+ accomplishing MGET operations and, as explained in [309]Section
-+ 3.11, the two behave differently.
-+ * Automatic text-binary mode switching is not done by the server. It
-+ can be done by the client (Kermit), but in this case it is not
-+ based on a file scan (since there is no way for Kermit prescan a
-+ server file), but rather on the filename, using C-Kermit 7.0
-+ [310]filename patterns.
-+ * Some options that are available with FTP PUT can not be used with
-+ FTP [M]GET or don't work the same way:
-+ /PERMISSIONS (FTP protocol has no mechanism for this).
-+ /[NOT-]BEFORE, /[NOT-]AFTER (because of the timezone problem).
-+ /RECOVER works only in binary mode. /RECURSIVE has limited
-+ utility.
-+
-+ The commands for downloading are:
-+
-+ SET FILE DOWNLOAD-DIRECTORY [ directory ]
-+ As with Kermit transfers, this command, if given, tells C-Kermit
-+ where to store incoming files in the absence of a specific
-+ as-name. If not given, incoming files are stored as indicated by
-+ the as-name, if any, otherwise in the current directory, just as
-+ with Kermit transfers. The more verbose transfer display formats
-+ give the full pathname of each received file, and, in case you
-+ have trouble finding a downloaded file afterwards, its full path
-+ is also listed in the transaction log (if you kept one), and you
-+ can also ask Kermit where it went with the [311]WHERE command.
-+
-+ SET FTP GET-FILETYPE-SWITCHING { ON, OFF }
-+ ON by default, causing Kermit to switch automatically into text
-+ or binary mode for each file based on whether its name matches a
-+ text pattern or binary pattern. Set this OFF, or use a /TEXT,
-+ /BINARY, or /TENEX switch to defeat this feature. Use SHOW
-+ PATTERNS to see the current pattern list.
-+
-+ [ FTP ] GET [ switches ] filename [ as-name ]
-+ Asks the server to send the given file, and if it comes, stores
-+ it locally under the given as-name, if any, otherwise under its
-+ original name (modified according to the selected filename
-+ conversion option), in your download directory, if you have
-+ specified one, otherwise in the directory indicated in the
-+ as-name, if any, otherwise in your current directory. If you
-+ accidentally use a wildcard in the filename ("get *.txt") the
-+ server will reply with a message like "File not found" (unless
-+ there is a file whose name actually is "*.txt"). If FTP
-+ GET-FILETYPE-SWITCHING is ON, and in the absence of any GET
-+ switches to override it, the file is transferred in binary mode
-+ if it matches any of Kermit's binary name patterns, and in text
-+ mode if it matches any of Kermit's text name patterns, and in
-+ the prevailing FTP TYPE if it matches none of these patterns.
-+
-+ [ FTP ] MGET [ switches ] filespec [ filespec [ filespec [ ... ] ] ]
-+ Like GET, but for multiple files. One or more file
-+ specifications can be given, and any or all (or none) of them
-+ can contain wildcards or can be directory names. The file list
-+ may not include an as-name, but you can still give one with the
-+ /AS-NAME: switch.
-+
-+ In both the FTP GET and MGET commands, any filenames that contain
-+ spaces must be enclosed in braces or doublequotes (see [312]Section 5
-+ for details).
-+
-+ FTP downloads may be interrupted just like Kermit transfers. While the
-+ transfer is in progress, type:
-+
-+ * X to interrupt the current file and go on to the next file.
-+ * Z (or Control-C) to cancel the current file and all remaining
-+ files.
-+
-+ Before proceeding, a brief word about temporary files. In FTP protocol,
-+ the MGET command works by requesting a file list from the server, and
-+ then (internally) issuing a GET command (FTP RETR protocol directive)
-+ for each file. The file list returned by the server can be any size at
-+ all, so in case it is huge, we don't store it in memory; instead we put
-+ it in a temporary file. For troubleshooting purposes, you should be
-+ aware of two points:
-+
-+ 1. The location of the temporary file is chosen according the TMP or
-+ TEMP environment variables. If neither of these variables is
-+ defined, you might need to define it. In case there is not enough
-+ space on the indicated disk or partition for the server's file
-+ list, you might need to either clean up the temporary area, or
-+ redefine the environment variable to indicate a different area that
-+ has sufficient space.
-+ 2. If you want to look at the list yourself, use SET FTP DEBUG ON.
-+ This tells Kermit to (a) give you the full pathname of the
-+ temporary file at the end of each MGET command, and (b) not to
-+ delete it, as it normally does.
-+
-+3.6.1. FTP GET Switches
-+
-+ The following switches are available with FTP GET and MGET:
-+
-+ /TEXT
-+ Specifies a text-mode transfer. Overrides the global FTP TYPE
-+ setting and filename pattern-matching for the duration of the
-+ current command only, All files are downloaded in text mode.
-+ Synonym: /ASCII.
-+
-+ /BINARY
-+ Specifies a binary-mode transfer. Overrides the global FTP TYPE
-+ setting and filename pattern-matching for the duration of the
-+ current command only. All files are downloaded in binary mode.
-+
-+ /TENEX
-+ Like /BINARY but specifies a special binary transfer mode to be
-+ used when getting 8-bit binary files from a 36-bit platform such
-+ as TOPS-10, TOPS-20, or TENEX. All files are downloaded in the
-+ special binary mode.
-+
-+ /RECOVER
-+ This instructs Kermit to try to recover an incomplete download
-+ from the point of failure. Works only in binary mode, and only
-+ if the server supports the (not-yet-standard) FTP "REST"
-+ directive. See [313]Section 3.6.3 for details. Synonym:
-+ /RESTART.
-+
-+ /FILENAMES:{CONVERTED,LITERAL}
-+ Overrides the [314]FTP FILENAMES (filename conversion) setting
-+ for this download only, forcing incoming filenames to be either
-+ converted or taken literally.
-+
-+ /AS-NAME:text
-+ For GET, this is equivalent to giving an as-name after the
-+ filename. For MGET, this is the only way to specify alternative
-+ names for the incoming files. With MGET, the /AS-NAME text
-+ should (must) contain a Kermit variable, usually \v(filename) or
-+ \v(filenumber). Example:
-+
-+ mget /text /as-name:\v(filename).new *.c
-+
-+ This gets all ".c" files and stores them with "
-+
-+ .new" appended to their names. See the [315]C-Kermit 7.0 Update
-+ Notes for details.
-+
-+ /COMMAND
-+ This specifies that the incoming file is to be written to the
-+ standard input of a command, rather than to a file. The command
-+ name is the as-name from the GET command or the /AS-NAME
-+ argument. If you need to refer to the incoming file's name in
-+ the command, use \v(filename). See the description of the
-+ regular Kermit [316]GET /COMMAND command for details and
-+ examples.
-+
-+ /QUIET
-+ Transfers the files quietly; don't put up a file-transfer
-+ display.
-+
-+ /ERROR-ACTION:{QUIT,PROCEED}
-+ This switch affects only MGET. If an error occurs with a
-+ particular file, this tells whether to go on to the next file
-+ (PROCEED) or to stop right away and fail (QUIT). The default is
-+ PROCEED.
-+
-+ The file selection switches are:
-+
-+ /EXCEPT:{pattern} or /EXCEPT:{{pattern}{pattern}{...}}
-+ Exception list for MGET; skip downloading any file whose name
-+ matches any of the given patterns (when using the second format,
-+ up to 64 patterns may be specified). [317]CLICK HERE for syntax
-+ details.
-+
-+ /SMALLER-THAN:number
-+ Download only files whose size is smaller than the given number
-+ of bytes (octets). Requires that the FTP server support the SIZE
-+ or MLSD directive.
-+
-+ /LARGER-THAN:number
-+ Download only files whose size is greater than the given number
-+ of bytes. Requires that the FTP server support the SIZE or MLSD
-+ directive.
-+
-+ /NOBACKUPFILES
-+ During MGET, don't download any files whose names end with
-+ backup suffixes (.~n~ where n is a number).
-+
-+ /NODOTFILES
-+ During MGET, don't download any files whose names begin with
-+ period (.). Equivalent to /EXCEPT:{.*}.
-+
-+ /LISTFILE:local-filename
-+ The given file contains a list of files to GET, one per line.
-+ Filenames in the listfile can contain wildcard characters in the
-+ syntax of the server. There is no limit on the number of lines
-+ in the listfile.
-+
-+ /NAMELIST:local-filename
-+ If this switch is given, then instead of actually retrieving the
-+ selected files, the GET command retrieves a list of the names of
-+ the files that would be retrieved, and places it in the
-+ specified file. The resulting file is an ordinary text file,
-+ with one filename per line, suitable for reading by a person, or
-+ processing by a computer program, including Kermit itself (FOPEN
-+ / FREAD / FWRITE / FCLOSE), and as /FILELIST: file. If the
-+ filename is omitted or given as "-" (dash, hyphen), the list
-+ goes to the screen. NOTE: if you want a copy of the complete
-+ list sent by the server, use SET FTP DEBUG ON, perform an MGET,
-+ and the temporary file containing the list will be kept rather
-+ than deleted (and Kermit tells you its name).
-+
-+ /UPDATE, /COLLISION:keyword
-+ Explained in [318]Section 3.6.2.
-+
-+ /RECURSIVE
-+ This means to try to download an entire directory tree, rather
-+ than just files from a particular directory. In fact, FTP
-+ protocol does not provide a method to request a recursive
-+ download (unless the server supports MLSD; see [319]Section
-+ 3.11), so this works only if the FTP server does it anyway,
-+ without being asked, as some do. In this case, Kermit detects
-+ that names in the returned file list contain directory
-+ separators, and therefore attempts to create the needed
-+ directories as the files arrive. But this can work only if the
-+ server is on the same kind of platform as the client, so the
-+ pathname syntax can be recognized, and also because the server
-+ does not switch between text and binary mode, which would be
-+ vital for cross-platform transfers. Use with caution. Synonym:
-+ /SUBDIRECTORIES.
-+
-+ Even when the server does not provide recursive file lists,
-+ [M]GET /RECURSIVE forces Kermit to replicate any directory
-+ structure implied or expressed by the server's file list. For
-+ example:
-+
-+ get somepath/somefile
-+
-+ Gets the file named somefile from the server's somepath
-+ directory and puts it Kermit's current (or download) directory,
-+ whereas:
-+
-+ get /recursive somepath/somefile
-+
-+ creates the path locally and then puts the file in it. Similarly
-+ for MGET:
-+
-+ mget */data/*
-+
-+ downloads all the files in all the data subdirectories of all
-+ the subdirectories of the server's current directory and stores
-+ them locally in Kermit's current (or download) directory,
-+ whereas:
-+
-+ mget /recursive */data/*
-+
-+ re-creates the server's directory structure locally.
-+
-+ The FTP protocol does not include explicit mechanisms for recursion, so
-+ Kermit builds upon what is available. Although an Internet draft
-+ describes a mechanism ("MLSD") that would allow protocol-driven
-+ recursion, similar to Kermit's File Attribute packets (circa 1984), it
-+ has not yet attained RFC or standard status, and servers are not yet
-+ widely available that offer this feature. In the meantime, the
-+ effectiveness of MGET /RECURSIVE depends on the FTP server
-+ implementation. If the server returns a recursive list in response to
-+ the standard NLST command (whose behavior is ill-defined), Kermit's FTP
-+ MGET /RECURSIVE command uses it to re-create the remote directory tree
-+ locally. If the server supports MLSD, C-Kermit 8.0.206 and Kermit 95
-+ 2.1 and later are able to sense it automatically and use it, as
-+ described below in [320]Section 3.11.
-+
-+ The /BEFORE:, /AFTER:, /NOT-BEFORE:, and /NOT-AFTER: switches are not
-+ available for downloading because of the confusion with timezones.
-+ Would the given times be in the local timezone, the server's timezone,
-+ or GMT? The FTP server's directory listings show its own local times
-+ but since we don't know what timezone the server is in, there's no way
-+ to reconcile our local times with the server's. Similarly, /PERMISSIONS
-+ can't be preserved in downloads because FTP protocol provides no means
-+ of querying the server for a file's permission.
-+
-+ Source-file disposition switches:
-+
-+ /DELETE
-+ Each file that is downloaded successfully is to be deleted from
-+ the server. Requires the appropriate file access rights on the
-+ server.
-+
-+ /SERVER-RENAME-TO:template
-+ Asks the server to rename each (remote) source file immediately
-+ after, and only if, it is sent correctly. See [321]PUT
-+ /SERVER-RENAME-TO: for details.
-+
-+ Destination-file disposition switches:
-+
-+ /TO-SCREEN
-+ Displays the incoming file on the screen rather than storing it
-+ on disk. If this switch is given, the /RENAME-TO and /MOVE-TO
-+ switches are ignored, the file-transfer display is suppressed,
-+ and the given file(s) is/are shown on the screen. Can be used
-+ with /FILTER, e.g.
-+
-+ get /text /to-screen /filter:more oofa.txt
-+
-+ In fact, you should always use /TO-SCREEN with /FILTER or
-+ /COMMAND when the command would result in displaying the
-+ incoming file on the screen; otherwise C-Kermit would have no
-+ way of knowing to suppress its file transfer display (since it
-+ can't be expected to know what the command or filter does).
-+
-+ /RENAME-TO:template
-+ Each file that is downloaded is to be renamed as indicated if
-+ and only if it was received completely and without error. The
-+ template can be literal text or can contain variables that are
-+ evaluated for each file. For MGET, the text must contain
-+ variables; for GET it can be a literal string. The \v(filename)
-+ variable contains the name of the current file, so:
-+
-+ ftp mget /rename-to:\v(filename).ok *
-+
-+ causes each file that is successfully downloaded to have ".ok"
-+ appended to its name. For details see [322]Section 4.1 of the
-+ [323]C-Kermit 7.0 Update Notes.
-+
-+ /MOVE-TO:text
-+ Just like /RENAME-TO:, except the text denotes the name of a
-+ directory to which successfully downloaded files are to be
-+ moved. If the directory does not exist, it is created.
-+
-+ The file transfer display does not show the /MOVE-TO or /RENAME-TO
-+ value, since the incoming file has not yet been moved or renamed.
-+
-+3.6.2. Filename Collisions
-+
-+ What should happen if an incoming file has the same name as an existing
-+ file in the same directory? By default, Kermit's FILE COLLISION setting
-+ applies: BACKUP, RENAME, UPDATE, DISCARD, etc, as described in
-+ [324]Using C-Kermit. Kermit's default FILE COLLISION setting is BACKUP
-+ (rename the existing file and store the incoming file under its own
-+ name) and therefore this is also the default FTP collision action.
-+
-+ The name under which an incoming file is to be stored is determined as
-+ follows:
-+
-+ * If an as-name was given, the as-name is used. Otherwise:
-+ * If the client and server platforms are alike or [325]FTP FILENAMES
-+ is set to LITERAL (or the /FILENAMES:LITERAL switch was given for
-+ this download), the incoming filename is used literally. Otherwise:
-+ * The incoming filename is converted to a form that is friendly to
-+ the local platform. For UNIX, for example, incoming filenames that
-+ are all uppercase (as they might be from, say, VMS or an IBM
-+ mainframe) are converted to lowercase.
-+
-+ If the resulting name coincides with the name of a local file that
-+ already exists, we have a filename collision. Collisions are handled
-+ according to the currently selected collision action:
-+
-+ SET FTP COLLISION { BACKUP, RENAME, UPDATE, DISCARD, APPEND, OVERWRITE
-+ }
-+ This establishes a filename collision for FTP, separate from the
-+ Kermit one. The initial FTP collision setting is inherited from
-+ Kermit's FILE COLLISION setting when the first FTP command is
-+ given, but subsequent changes to Kermit's FILE COLLISION setting
-+ do not affect the FTP COLLISION setting. SHOW FTP tells the
-+ current FTP COLLISION setting.
-+
-+ FTP GET /COLLISION:{BACKUP,RENAME,UPDATE,DISCARD,APPEND,OVERWRITE}
-+ Overrides the current FTP COLLISION action for this download
-+ only.
-+
-+ FTP GET /UPDATE
-+ This is equivalent to GET /COLLISION:UPDATE, and is included for
-+ symmetry with PUT /UPDATE
-+
-+ FTP GET /UPDATE and /COLLISION:UPDATE mean to download only those files
-+ whose modification dates on the server are later than those on the
-+ client. Date-time comparisons are done in Coordinated Universal Time
-+ (UTC, GMT, ZULU). The command:
-+
-+ FTP MGET /COLLISION:APPEND /AS-NAME:newfilename *.*
-+
-+ Downloads all matching remote files into a single local file (in
-+ whatever order the server sends them).
-+
-+3.6.3. Recovery
-+
-+ Recovery is available for downloads too, but there are some differences
-+ from the uploading case described in [326]Section 3.5.3:
-+
-+ * The transfer must be in BINARY mode. It can not be in text mode,
-+ even if the FTP server is on the same kind of platform as Kermit,
-+ and even if there is no character-set translation. The original
-+ download must also have been in binary mode.
-+ * The FTP server must support the REST ("restart") directive.
-+ Unfortunately, this is not a standard command; at this writing, it
-+ is described only in an Internet Draft, not an RFC or Internet
-+ Standard, but nevertheless it is found in several popular FTP
-+ servers, such as [327]ProFTPD.
-+
-+ Here's how download recovery works:
-+
-+ * Kermit checks for conflicting switches, such as /UPDATE, /COMMAND,
-+ or /FILTER. If /RECOVER is given with these switches an error
-+ occurs.
-+ * The prevailing transfer mode (SET FTP TYPE) must be BINARY. If it
-+ is not, the /BINARY switch must have been included with the FTP
-+ [M]GET command.
-+
-+ If the /RECOVER switch is accepted, then for each selected file:
-+
-+ * A SIZE command is sent for the file (using its remote name). If the
-+ reply indicates the file was not found, or the SIZE command was not
-+ understood, or any other kind of error, recovery is canceled (i.e.
-+ the entire file is downloaded).
-+ * If the sizes of the two files are identical, the file is not sent.
-+ Otherwise:
-+ * Kermit sends the REST directive to the server, indicating the size
-+ of the local file. If the server responds affirmatively, Kermit
-+ opens the local file in append mode and appends the incoming data
-+ to it. Otherwise, recovery is canceled and the entire file is
-+ downloaded.
-+
-+ The /RECOVER switch can be included with any FTP GET or MGET command,
-+ even if it specifies a group of files. This lets you resume an
-+ interrupted batch transfer from where it left off. The files that were
-+ already completely sent are skipped, the file that was interrupted is
-+ recovered, and the remaining files are uploaded. BUT... unlike with
-+ uploading, where this can be done with any mixture of text and binary
-+ files, when downloading, it can only be done if all the files are
-+ binary.
-+
-+ It doesn't matter how the original partial file was downloaded -- FTP,
-+ Kermit, HTTP, Zmodem, etc: as long as the preconditions are met, it can
-+ be recovered with FTP [M]GET /RECOVER, or for that matter also with GET
-+ /RECOVER (using Kermit protocol).
-+
-+ [ [328]Top ] [ [329]FTP Top ] [ [330]C-Kermit Home ] [ [331]Kermit Home
-+ ]
-+
-+3.7. Translating Character Sets
-+
-+ A possibly unique feature of Kermit's FTP client is its ability to
-+ convert character sets when transferring files in text mode,
-+ independent of the capabilites of the FTP server, as well as to
-+ translate the character sets of filenames regardless of transfer mode.
-+ For compatibility with existing FTP clients, and because there is a
-+ certain performance penalty, Kermit won't do this unless you ask for
-+ it. If you enable this feature, you need to inform Kermit of the
-+ character set (to be) used on the server and in some cases (explained
-+ below) also the local file character set. This discussion assumes you
-+ know a bit about character sets (as you must if you have to use them);
-+ see Chapter 16 of [332]Using C-Kermit for a detailed treatment. The
-+ Kermit commands for FTP character-set conversion are:
-+
-+ SET FTP CHARACTER-SET-TRANSLATION { ON, OFF }
-+ Whether to translate character sets when transferring text files
-+ with FTP. OFF by default. Set this to ON to enable character-set
-+ translation for subsequent FTP uploads and downloads.
-+
-+ SET FTP SERVER-CHARACTER-SET [333]name
-+ Text character set (to be) used by the server. Most FTP servers
-+ are ignorant of character sets, so all translations are done
-+ unilaterally by Kermit's FTP client. This means that when
-+ downloading files, you must know in advance the character-set
-+ used in the files you are downloading (and in their names). When
-+ uploading, you must specify the character-set to which local
-+ filenames and text-file contents are to be translated for
-+ transmission to the server. If you SET FTP
-+ CHARACTER-SET-TRANSLATION ON but do not specify an FTP
-+ SERVER-CHARACTER-SET, [334]UTF8 is used, since this is the new
-+ Internet standard international character set; it is upwards
-+ compatible with ASCII and it encompasses most written languages
-+ and therefore does not favor any particular group of people, as
-+ any other default would do. If you SET FTP SERVER-CHARACTER-SET
-+ to something (anything) when FTP CHARACTER-SET TRANSLATION is
-+ OFF, this also sets the latter ON.
-+
-+ SET FILE CHARACTER-SET [335]name
-+ This is the regular Kermit (non-FTP-specific) command for
-+ identifying the character set (to be) used in local text files
-+ and filenames.
-+
-+ TO REITERATE: If you SET FTP CHARACTER-SET TRANSLATION ON but do not
-+ specify an FTP SERVER-CHARACTER-SET, outbound text files are converted
-+ to UTF-8 and inbound text files are assumed to be UTF-8. If this is not
-+ appropriate, be sure to also specify the desired FTP
-+ SERVER-CHARACTER-SET.
-+
-+ You can use "special" (non-ASCII) characters in filenames in all the
-+ client / server file management commands (FTP MKDIR, RMDIR, DIRECTORY,
-+ VDIRECTORY, DELETE, etc), and also in file-transfer commands. When
-+ giving commands such as FTP DIR (RDIR) and FTP PWD (RPWD), the reply is
-+ translated too, so you can read it. In this example, the client and
-+ server use entirely different codes to represent the special characters
-+ of German:
-+
-+ C-Kermit> ftp xyzcorp.de /anonymous
-+ C-Kermit> set ftp server-character-set latin1
-+ C-Kermit> set file character-set german
-+ C-Kermit> rcd Städte
-+ C-Kermit> rpwd
-+ "/pub/ftp/Städte is current directory"
-+ C-Kermit> rdir
-+ -rw-rw---- 1 olaf 54018 Jan 6 17:58 Adenbüttel.txt
-+ -rw-rw---- 1 ursula 373 Jan 5 15:19 Aßlar.txt
-+ -rw-rw---- 1 gisbert 482 Jan 5 15:20 Blowatz.txt
-+ -rw-rw---- 1 gudrun 124 Jan 5 15:19 Böblingen.txt
-+ -rw-rw---- 1 olga 14348 Jan 7 14:23 Köln.txt
-+
-+ When the client and server file systems use different character sets,
-+ you should take care to use only those characters that the two sets
-+ share in common when creating filenames or text-file contents. For
-+ example, PC code pages contain a lot line- and box-drawing characters,
-+ and sometimes "smart quotes", etc, that are not found in ISO standard
-+ 8-bit character sets. You should be especially careful to avoid using
-+ such characters in filenames.
-+
-+ [ [336]C-Kermit Character Sets ]
-+
-+3.7.1. Character Sets and Uploading
-+
-+ Kermit's PUT and MPUT commands include full file-scanning capabilities,
-+ as described in [337]Section 4. Thus if FTP CHARACTER-SET-TRANSLATION
-+ is ON and your character-set associations are set up appropriately,
-+ Kermit automatically switches on a per-file basis between text and
-+ binary mode, and for each text file between your chosen 7-bit text
-+ character set (e.g. ASCII or ISO 646 German), 8-bit text (e.g. Latin-1
-+ or Japanese EUC), UCS-2, and UTF-8, and converts each of these
-+ automatically to the server character-set, and furthermore
-+ automatically differentiates between the Little and Big Endian forms of
-+ UCS-2, always sending in Big Endian form.
-+
-+ WARNING: It is not advisable to use UCS-2 (or any Unicode
-+ transformation other than UTF-8) "on the wire", i.e. as a server
-+ character set. Most FTP servers are not able to cope with it, since
-+ it contains lots of 0 (NUL) characters. If you do use it, Kermit
-+ does not translate filenames to or from UCS-2, for reasons well
-+ known to C programmers (for example, UNIX APIs assume filename
-+ strings are NUL-terminated). [338]UTF-8 is the preferred (and
-+ standard) Unicode format for the Internet.
-+
-+ FTP character-set translations differ from the regular Kermit ones by
-+ not restricting translations to a file-character-set /
-+ transfer-character-set pair. You can have Kermit's FTP client translate
-+ between any pair of character sets it knows about. You can see the list
-+ of supported character sets by typing either of the following:
-+
-+ set ftp server-character-set ?
-+ set file character-set ?
-+
-+ A typical list looks like this ([339]CLICK HERE for an explanation of
-+ the names):
-+
-+ C-Kermit>set file char ? One of the following:
-+ ascii cp869-greek hebrew-7 mazovia-pc
-+ british cyrillic-iso hebrew-iso next-multinational
-+ bulgaria-pc danish hp-roman8 norwegian
-+ canadian-french dec-kanji hungarian portuguese
-+ cp1250 dec-multinational iso2022jp-kanji shift-jis-kanji
-+ cp1251-cyrillic dg-international italian short-koi
-+ cp1252 dutch jis7-kanji spanish
-+ cp437 elot927-greek koi8 swedish
-+ cp850 elot928-greek koi8r swiss
-+ cp852 euc-jp koi8u ucs2
-+ cp855-cyrillic finnish latin1-iso utf8
-+ cp858 french latin2-iso
-+ cp862-hebrew german latin9-iso
-+ cp866-cyrillic greek-iso macintosh-latin
-+ C-Kermit>
-+
-+ Thus you can translate not only between private sets (like PC code
-+ pages) and standard ones (like Latin-1) as in Kermit protocol, but also
-+ between any given pair of private sets (e.g. CP852 and Mazovia). All
-+ conversions go through Unicode as the intermediate character set,
-+ resulting in a minimum of character loss, since Unicode is a superset
-+ of all other character sets known to Kermit.
-+
-+ In addition to the SET commands listed above, the FTP PUT and MPUT
-+ commands include switches that apply only to the current command:
-+
-+ /LOCAL-CHARACTER-SET:name
-+ /SERVER-CHARACTER-SET:name
-+ Use these switches to force a particular translation. These
-+ switches override the global FTP CHARACTER-SET-TRANSLATION and
-+ SERVER-CHARACTER-SET settings and also character-set
-+ differentiation by file scanning for the duration of the PUT or
-+ MPUT command. The file scan is still performed, however, to
-+ determine whether the file is text or binary; thus these
-+ switches do not affect binary files unless you also include the
-+ /TEXT switch to force all files to be treated as text.
-+
-+ In other words, if you include one or both of these switches with a PUT
-+ or MPUT command, they are used. Similarly, the /TRANSPARENT switch
-+ disables character-set translation for the PUT or MPUT command despite
-+ the prevailing FTP CHARACTER-SET-TRANSLATION and SERVER-CHARACTER-SET
-+ settings.
-+
-+ When uploading, the FILE CHARACTER-SET setting is ignored unless you
-+ have forced Kermit not to [340]scan local files by including a /TEXT or
-+ /BINARY switch with your [M]PUT command, or by disabling automatic
-+ text/binary switching in some other way.
-+
-+ Examples:
-+
-+ 1. Suppose you have a CP852 (East European) text file that you want to
-+ upload and store in ISO Latin Alphabet 2 encoding:
-+ ftp put /local-char:cp852 /server-char:latin2 magyar.txt
-+
-+ 2. Suppose you always want your text files converted to Latin-2 when
-+ uploading with FTP. Then put:
-+ set ftp server-character-set latin2
-+
-+ in your Kermit customization file, and then you can omit the
-+ /SERVER-CHARACTER-SET: switch from your FTP PUT commands:
-+ ftp put /local-char:cp852 magyar.txt
-+
-+ 3. Now suppose that all the text files on your PC are written in
-+ Hungarian, but they have a variety of encodings, and you don't want
-+ to have to include the /LOCAL-CHARACTER-SET: switch on every FTP
-+ PUT command, or (more to the point) you want to be able to send a
-+ mixture of these files all at once. Put these commands in your
-+ Kermit customization file:
-+ set ftp server-character-set latin2 ; ISO 8859-2
-+ set file default 7-bit-character-set hungarian ; ISO 646 Hungarian
-+ set file default 8-bit-character-set cp852 ; PC East European Code Page
-+
-+ and now PUT and MPUT will automatically detect and switch among ISO
-+ 646 Hungarian, Code Page 852, UTF-8, and UCS-2 encodings,
-+ translating each one to Latin-2 for uploading:
-+ ftp put *.txt
-+
-+ And since binary files are also detected automatically, the latter can
-+ be simplified to:
-+
-+ ftp put *
-+
-+ even when "*" matches a diverse collection of binary and text files,
-+ because translations are skipped automatically for binary files.
-+
-+3.7.2. Character Sets and Downloading
-+
-+ The commands and switches are the same as for uploading, but automatic
-+ character-set switching works differently, since Kermit can't scan the
-+ server files in advance. Instead, the transfer mode (text or binary) is
-+ based on the filenames; each name is compared with Kermit's list of
-+ text name patterns and binary name patterns. If the name matches a
-+ binary pattern (for example, if the filename is oofa.tar.gz and one of
-+ the filename patterns is "*.gz"), the file is downloaded in binary
-+ mode; otherwise if it matches a text pattern (e.g. oofa.txt matches
-+ "*.txt"), it is transferred in text ("ascii") mode. Otherwise, it is
-+ transferred in the prevailing FTP TYPE.
-+
-+ In C-Kermit 8.0, the pattern lists used with FTP GET are not the same
-+ lists used with Kermit transfers, and can not be viewed with SHOW
-+ PATTERNS, nor adjusted with ADD and REMOVE TEXT-PATTERNS and
-+ BINARY-PATTERNS, or SET FILE TEXT-PATTERNS and BINARY-PATTERNS.
-+ Configuration of the FTP patterns list will be added in a future
-+ release.
-+
-+ Examples:
-+
-+ get /server-char:latin1 /local-char:cp850 Grüße.txt
-+ In this command, the filename contains special characters, which
-+ you enter using whatever character set your local computer uses,
-+ in this case PC Code Page 850 (cp850). The command tells Kermit
-+ (in case it didn't know already from its FILE CHARACTER-SET
-+ setting) that the local character set is cp850 and the server's
-+ character-set is ISO 8859-1 Latin Alphabet 1 (latin1). Kermit
-+ translates the filename from cp850 to latin1 and sends the
-+ latin1 name to the server. Since it's a text file (matches
-+ "*.txt"), its contents are translated to cp850 on arrival, and
-+ it is saved with a cp850 name.
-+
-+ mget /text /server:latin1 /local:utf8 *.txt
-+ This command:
-+
-+ + Tells C-Kermit that the server's files are encoded in ISO
-+ 8859-1 Latin Alphabet 1.
-+ + Tells C-Kermit to translate the incoming files into Unicode
-+ UTF-8 for storage.
-+ + Asks the server to send all ".txt" files in text mode.
-+
-+ mget /server:latin1 /local:utf8 *
-+ Tells Kermit to get all files from the server's directory,
-+ switching between text and binary mode based on the filename.
-+ The names of all the files are translated (to UTF-8 in this
-+ case), but contents are translated (also to UTF-8) only for text
-+ files.
-+
-+ Note that any pair of 8-bit character sets is likely to have some
-+ incompatibilities. Any characters in the source file that do not have
-+ equivalents in the destination file's character set are converted to
-+ question marks. This applies to both filenames and to text file
-+ contents.
-+
-+ Also note that the server's ability to accept special characters in
-+ filenames depends on the particular server. For example:
-+
-+ get Grüße.txt
-+
-+ works with WU-FTPD, but:
-+
-+ mget Grüß*.txt
-+
-+ does not.
-+
-+3.7.3. RFC2640
-+
-+ [341]RFC2640, July 1999, specifies a method by which the FTP client and
-+ server can negotiate the use of UTF8. However, RFC2640-capable servers
-+ are rare to nonexistent at this writing, and in any case you don't need
-+ them to be able to transfer text in UTF8. C-Kermit lets you upload and
-+ download text files in any character set it knows about, converting to
-+ or from any other character set it knows about, without the knowledge,
-+ permission, or cooperation of the server, and regardless of its
-+ capabilities.
-+
-+ [ [342]Top ] [ [343]FTP Top ] [ [344]C-Kermit Home ] [ [345]Kermit Home
-+ ]
-+
-+3.8. FTP Command Shortcuts
-+
-+ C-Kermit's FTP client coexists with other C-Kermit functions by
-+ requiring the "ftp" prefix for each FTP-related command: FTP OPEN, FTP
-+ GET, FTP BYE, and so on. For interactive use, however, this can be
-+ rather awkward and sometimes surprising, for example when a GET command
-+ starts a Kermit GET rather than an FTP GET. In fact, many Kermit
-+ commands might just as easily apply to an FTP connection: GET, PUT
-+ (SEND), BYE, and CLOSE. The following command lets you choose how these
-+ commands are interpreted:
-+
-+ SET GET-PUT-REMOTE { AUTO, KERMIT, FTP }
-+ Controls the orientation of GET, PUT, REMOTE and other
-+ file-transfer and client/server commands that might apply to
-+ either Kermit or FTP. The default setting is AUTO, meaning that
-+ these commands apply to FTP if an FTP connection is open, and to
-+ Kermit otherwise. KERMIT means they always apply to Kermit, FTP
-+ means they always apply to FTP.
-+
-+ Here is a complete list of affected commands:
-+
-+ Kermit Command FTP Equivalent
-+ (none) FTP [ OPEN ]
-+ LOGIN FTP USER
-+ LOGOUT FTP RESET
-+ BYE FTP BYE
-+ FINISH FTP BYE
-+ CLOSE FTP BYE
-+ HANGUP FTP BYE
-+ BINARY FTP TYPE BINARY
-+ TEXT (or ASCII) FTP TYPE ASCII
-+ SEND (or PUT) FTP PUT
-+ MSEND (or MPUT) FTP MPUT
-+ RESEND FTP PUT /RECOVER
-+ CSEND FTP PUT /COMMAND
-+ GET FTP GET
-+ MGET FTP MGET
-+ REGET FTP GET /RECOVER
-+ REMOTE HELP (RHELP) FTP HELP
-+ REMOTE CD (RCD) FTP CD (CWD)
-+ REMOTE PWD (RPWD) FTP PWD
-+ REMOTE DIRECTORY (RDIR) FTP DIRECTORY
-+ REMOTE DELETE (RDEL) FTP DELETE
-+ REMOTE MKDIR (RMKDIR) FTP MKDIR
-+ REMOTE RMDIR (RRMDIR) FTP RMDIR
-+ REMOTE RENAME (RRENAME) FTP RENAME
-+ REMOTE TYPE (RTYPE) FTP TYPE
-+ REMOTE EXIT (REXIT) FTP BYE
-+
-+ The commands in the right-hand column always access FTP. The commands
-+ in the left column can access either Kermit protocol or FTP:
-+
-+ * When GET-PUT-REMOTE is set to KERMIT, or to AUTO when there is no
-+ FTP connection, the commands in the left-hand column access Kermit
-+ protocol, and those right-hand column are required for FTP.
-+ * When GET-PUT-REMOTE is set to FTP, or to AUTO when there is an
-+ active FTP connection, the commands in the left-hand column access
-+ the FTP connection and can not be used to access Kermit protocol.
-+ In this case, if you want to be able to use both Kermit protocol
-+ and the FTP connection, you must SET GET-PUT-REMOTE KERMIT, and
-+ then use the FTP commands in the right-hand column to access the
-+ FTP connection.
-+
-+ Note that file-management commands such as DIRECTORY, DELETE, CD, PWD,
-+ MKDIR, RMDIR, HELP, RENAME, COPY, TYPE, and so on, always apply
-+ locally, no matter what kind of connection you have. This is the
-+ opposite of most FTP clients, where these commands are intended for the
-+ server, and require an "L" prefix for local execution (e.g. "dir" gets
-+ a directory listing from the server, "ldir" gets a local directory
-+ listing). To illustrate with the CD command and a typical UNIX FTP
-+ client:
-+
-+ Client Server Change Local Directory Change Remote Directory
-+ FTP FTP lcd cd (cwd)
-+ Kermit Kermit cd rcd, remote cd
-+ Kermit FTP cd ftp cd, rcd, remote cd
-+
-+ Also note that not all REMOTE commands are useful with FTP, since FTP
-+ servers do not offer the corresponding functions. These include:
-+
-+ * REMOTE ASSIGN - FTP servers don't have variables
-+ * REMOTE COPY - FTP servers don't copy files
-+ * REMOTE HOST - FTP servers don't execute host (shell) commands
-+ * REMOTE KERMIT - FTP servers don't execute Kermit commands
-+ * REMOTE PRINT - FTP servers don't print files
-+ * REMOTE QUERY - FTP servers don't have variables
-+ * REMOTE SET - FTP servers don't have Kermit settings
-+ * REMOTE WHO - FTP servers don't send user lists
-+
-+ Finally note that command shortcuts do not apply to the HELP command.
-+ For help about an FTP command, use (for example) "help ftp delete", not
-+ "help delete" or "help rdelete".
-+
-+ [ [346]Top ] [ [347]FTP Top ] [ [348]C-Kermit Home ] [ [349]Kermit Home
-+ ]
-+
-+3.9. Dual Sessions
-+
-+ You can have an FTP session open at the same time as a regular Kermit
-+ SET LINE or SET HOST (terminal) session. In this case, the default SET
-+ GET-PUT-REMOTE AUTO setting should ensure that all "two-faced" commands
-+ like GET, PUT, REMOTE, HANGUP, BYE, etc, apply to the Kermit session,
-+ and all commands for the FTP session must include the FTP prefix. To be
-+ absolutely certain, you can use SET GET-PUT-REMOTE KERMIT.
-+
-+ ftp foo.bar.baz.com
-+ if fail ...
-+ (log in)
-+ set host foo.bar.baz.com
-+ if fail ...
-+ (log in)
-+
-+ Now you have both an FTP and Telnet connection to the same host (of
-+ course they could also be to different hosts, and you could also have a
-+ direct or dialed serial connection instead of a Telnet connection). Now
-+ assuming you have a Kermit server on the far end of the Kermit
-+ connection:
-+
-+ rcd incoming ; Changes Kermit server's directory (= REMOTE CD)
-+ ftp cd incoming ; Changes FTP server's directory
-+ put oofa.txt ; Sends a file on the Kermit connection
-+ ftp put oofa.txt ; Sends a file on the FTP connection
-+ bye ; Shuts down the Kermit connection
-+ ftp bye ; Shuts down the FTP connection
-+
-+ Note that PUT and SEND are synonyms for both FTP and Kermit
-+ connections.
-+
-+ You can also establish dual sessions on the Kermit command line:
-+
-+ kermit -j host1 -9 host2
-+
-+ This makes a Telnet connection to host1 and an FTP connection to host2.
-+
-+ [ [350]Top ] [ [351]FTP Top ] [ [352]C-Kermit Home ] [ [353]Kermit Home
-+ ]
-+
-+3.10. Automating FTP Sessions
-+
-+ Most of Kermit's scripting features can be used to make and control FTP
-+ sessions: FOR and WHILE loops, IF-ELSE and SWITCH constructions,
-+ variables, arrays, built-in functions, and all the rest. You can't use
-+ INPUT, MINPUT, OUTPUT, CLEAR, or SCRIPT on an FTP session, but these
-+ are not needed since the FTP protocol is well defined.
-+
-+ [354]CLICK HERE for an FTP scripting tutorial.
-+
-+3.10.1. FTP-Specific Variables and Functions
-+
-+ The following variable tells whether an FTP connection is open:
-+
-+ \v(ftp_connected)
-+ 1 if there is an active FTP connection, 0 if there isn't.
-+
-+ The FTP OPEN command sets:
-+
-+ \v(ftp_host)
-+ The host to which the most recent FTP connection was made.
-+
-+ \v(ftp_security)
-+ The security method negotiated for the current FTP session. The
-+ value is "NULL" when no security is used. Other possibilities
-+ are GSSAPI, KERBEROS_V4, SSL, TLS, and SRP. Also see
-+ \v(authname), \v(authstate), and \v(authtype). See [355]3.2.
-+ Making Secure FTP Connections.
-+
-+ \v(ftp_server)
-+ The OS type (UNIX, VMS, etc) of the FTP server host.
-+
-+ The FTP USER command (or FTP OPEN /USER:, or FTP with automatic login)
-+ sets:
-+
-+ \v(ftp_loggedin)
-+ 1 if you are logged in to an FTP server, 0 if you are not.
-+
-+ The current COMMAND-PROTECTION-LEVEL and DATA-PROTECTION-LEVEL values
-+ are reflected in:
-+
-+ \v(ftp_cpl)
-+ \v(ftp_dpl)
-+ The values are "clear", "confidential", "safe" or "private". See
-+ [356]3.2. Making Secure FTP Connections.
-+
-+ The FTP GET-PUT-REMOTE setting is reflected in:
-+
-+ \v(ftp_getputremote)
-+ The values are "auto", "ftp", or "kermit".
-+
-+ Every FTP command sets the \v(success) variable, as well as the
-+ following two FTP-specific variables:
-+
-+ \v(ftp_code)
-+ The standardized numeric FTP protocol code from the server's
-+ response to the last client command, a 3-digit decimal number
-+ defined in [357]RFC959. Briefly:
-+
-+ 1xx = Positive Preliminary Reply
-+ 2xx = Positive Completion Reply
-+ 3xx = Positive Intermediate Reply
-+ 4xx = Transient Negative Completion Reply
-+ 5xx = Permanent Negative Completion Reply
-+
-+ \v(ftp_message)
-+ The text message, if any, from the server's response to the last
-+ client command. If the most recent response had multiple lines,
-+ this variable has only the final line. These messages are not
-+ standardized and vary in format and content from server to
-+ server. Synonym: \v(ftp_msg).
-+
-+ FTP file transfers set the regular Kermit transfer status variables:
-+
-+ \v(cps) Characters per second of most recent transfer.
-+ \v(filespec) File specification used in most recent transfer.
-+ \v(fsize) Size of file most recently transferred.
-+ \v(tfsize) Total size of file group most recently transferred.
-+ \v(xferstatus) Status of most recent transfer (0 = success, 1 = failure).
-+ \v(tftime) Elapsed time of most recent transfer, in seconds.
-+
-+ During an FTP transfer, the per-file variables are:
-+
-+ \v(filename) Name of current file.
-+ \v(filenumber) Ordinal file number in group (1, 2, 3, ...)
-+
-+3.10.2. Examples
-+
-+ Let's begin with a simple example showing how to log in, send some
-+ files, and log out:
-+
-+ define error if fail { ftp bye, stop 1 Error: \%1 }
-+ set transact brief
-+ log t
-+ ftp ftp.xyzcorp.com /anonymous
-+ if fail stop 1 Connection failed
-+ if not \v(ftp_loggedin) stop 1 Login failed
-+ ftp cd incoming
-+ error {ftp cd}
-+ cd upload
-+ error {local cd}
-+ ftp put /delete *
-+ error {put}
-+ ftp bye
-+
-+ First we define an error handling macro to be used after the connection
-+ is made. Then we set up a brief-format transaction log to keep a record
-+ of our file transfers. Then we make a connection to the host and log in
-+ anonymously. The "if fail" command checks whether the connection was
-+ made. The "if not" command checks whether login was successful.
-+ Obviously the script should not continue unless both tests succeed.
-+
-+ Next we change to the server's 'incoming' directory and to our own
-+ 'upload' directory, and send all the files that are in it (they can be
-+ any mixture of text and binary files), deleting each source file
-+ automatically after it is successfully uploaded. Each of these
-+ operations is checked with the ERROR macro, which prevents the script
-+ from continuing past a failure.
-+
-+ Finally we close the FTP session with the "bye" command.
-+
-+ Just like any other Kermit script, this one can be used in many ways:
-+
-+ * It can be stored in a file, and Kermit can be told to TAKE the
-+ file.
-+ * In UNIX, it can be a "[358]kerbang" script and therefore run
-+ directly from the shell prompt or as a cron job.
-+
-+ We could have used command shortcuts like "rcd", "put", and "bye", but
-+ since they can be ambiguous under certain circumstances, it is better
-+ to avoid them in scripts; they are intended mainly for convenience
-+ during interactive use. However, if you wish to use the shortcuts in a
-+ script, you can do it this way (error handling omitted for brevity):
-+
-+ local \%t ; Declare a local temporary veriable
-+ assign \%t \v(ftp_getputremote) ; Save current FTP GET-PUT-REMOTE setting
-+ set ftp get-put-remote ftp ; Choose FTP orientation
-+ ftp xyzcorp.com /anonymous ; Open an FTP connection
-+ get oofa.txt ; GET a file
-+ put foo.bar ; PUT a file
-+ rdel yesterday.log ; Delete a file on the server
-+ bye ; Log out and disconnect from server.
-+ set ftp get-put-remote \%t ; Restore previous GET-PUT-REMOTE setting
-+
-+ Of course, FTP scripts can also be written as macros. This lets you
-+ pass parameters such as hostnames, usernames, and filenames to them:
-+
-+ define doftpget {
-+ if < \v(argc) 4 end 1 Usage: \%0 host user remotefile [ localfile ]
-+ ftp \%1 /user:\%2
-+ if fail end 1 FTP OPEN \%1 failed
-+ if not \v(ftp_loggedin) end 1 FTP LOGIN failed
-+ ftp get {\%3} {\%4}
-+ if fail end 1 FTP GET \%3 failed
-+ ftp bye
-+ }
-+
-+ Add this definition to your Kermit customization file, and it will
-+ always be available when you start Kermit. This macro lets you download
-+ a file with FTP by giving a single command, e.g.:
-+
-+ doftpget xyzcorp.com anonymous oofa.txt
-+
-+3.10.3. Automating Secure FTP Sessions
-+
-+ Often when making secure connections, you are prompted interactively
-+ for certain information or permission to proceed. These prompts can
-+ stop an automated procedure. To avoid them, you must give the
-+ appropriate commands to disable them, and/or supply the prompted-for
-+ information beforehand. Here are a few hints:
-+
-+ * Make sure that SET TAKE ERROR and SET MACRO ERROR are both OFF.
-+ This is the default, but in case you have set either one of these
-+ ON in your script or initialization file, this makes the script
-+ halt on any kind of error. Normally you would want to check each
-+ operation for success or failure and take appropriate action.
-+ * On SSL and TLS connections, you may be asked whether it is OK to
-+ proceed with a connection to server that presents a self-signed
-+ certificate. You can use the SET AUTHENTICATION SSL (or TLS) VERIFY
-+ or SET AUTH SSL (or TLS) CERTS-OK commands to avoid this prompt by
-+ not requesting a certificate from the peer.
-+ * (More to be added...)
-+
-+ [ [359]Top ] [ [360]FTP Top ] [ [361]FTP Script Tutorial ] [
-+ [362]C-Kermit Home ] [ [363]Kermit Home ]
-+
-+3.11. Advanced FTP Protocol Features
-+
-+ The remainder of the FTP documention (through the end of Section 3) is
-+ new to C-Kermit 8.0.206, but we leave it in black to prevent headaches.
-+ Except for titles.
-+ * [364]TERMINOLOGY
-+ * [365]FEATURE NEGOTIATION
-+ * [366]USING MGET: NLST VERSUS MLSD
-+ * [367]EXAMPLES
-+ * [368]REFERENCES
-+
-+ The new releases of [369]C-Kermit (8.0.206) and [370]Kermit 95 (2.1)
-+ support new FTP protocol features from RFC 2389 as well as most of
-+ what's in the Elz and Hethmon Extensions to FTP Internet Draft (see
-+ [371]References). Some of these features, such as SIZE (request a
-+ file's size), MDTM (request file's modification time), and REST
-+ (restart interrupted transfer) have been widely implemented in FTP
-+ clients and servers for years (as well as in the initial release of the
-+ Kermit FTP clients). Others such as FEAT and MLSD are rarely seen and
-+ are new to the upcoming Kermit releases. TVFS (Trivial Virtual File
-+ Store) is supported implicitly, and the UTF-8 character-set is already
-+ fully supported at the protocol and data-interchange level.
-+
-+ For Kermit users, the main benefit of the new FTP protocol extensions
-+ is the ability to do recursive downloads. But the extensions also
-+ introduce complications and tradeoffs that you should be aware of. Of
-+ course Kermit tries to "do the right thing" automatically in every case
-+ for backwards compatibility. But (as noted later) some cases are
-+ inherently ambiguous and/or can result in nasty surprises, and for
-+ those situations new commands and switches are available to give you
-+ precise control over Kermit's behavior, in case the defaults don't
-+ produce the desired results.
-+
-+3.11.1. Terminology
-+
-+ Command-line FTP clients such as Kermit (as well as the traditional FTP
-+ programs found on Unix, VMS, ..., even Windows) have commands like PUT,
-+ MPUT, GET, MGET, and BYE, which they convert into zero or more FTP
-+ protocol commands, such as NLST, RETR, QUIT. For clarity, we'll use
-+ "command" to refer to commands given by the user to the FTP client, and
-+ "directive" for FTP protocol commands sent by the FTP client to the FTP
-+ server.
-+
-+3.11.2. Feature Negotiation
-+
-+ New FTP protocol features are negotiated by the client sending a FEAT
-+ directive and the server responding with a list of (new) features it
-+ supports, or else with an error indication if it does not support the
-+ FEAT directive at all, in which case the client has to guess which new
-+ features it supports (Kermit guesses that it supports SIZE and MDTM but
-+ not MLST). Note that the MLST feature includes MLSD, which is not
-+ listed separately as a feature.
-+
-+ Guessing is nice when it works, but sometimes it doesn't, and some FTP
-+ servers become confused when you send them a directive they don't
-+ understand, or they do something you didn't want, sometimes to the
-+ point of closing the connection. For this reason, Kermit lets you
-+ override default or negotiated features with the following new
-+ commands:
-+
-+ FTP { ENABLE, DISABLE } FEAT
-+ Enables or disables the automatic sending of a FEAT directive
-+ upon connection to an FTP server. Note that FTP [ OPEN ] /NOINIT
-+ also inhibits sending the FEAT directive (and several others)
-+ for the connection being OPEN'd, but without necessarily
-+ disabling FEAT for subsequent connections in the same Kermit
-+ instance. FEAT is ENABLED by default, in which case many FTP
-+ servers are likely to reply:
-+
-+500 'FEAT': command not understood
-+
-+ which is normally harmless (but you never know). (In C-Kermit
-+ 8.0.208, this error message is suppressed unless you SET FTP
-+ DEBUG ON.)
-+
-+ FTP ENABLE { MDTM, MLST, SIZE }
-+ Enables the given directive for implicit use by the FTP GET and
-+ MGET commands in case it has been disabled or erroneously
-+ omitted by the server in its FEAT response. Note: MLSD can be
-+ used in the FTP ENABLE and DISABLE commands as a synonym for
-+ MLST. YOU MUST GIVE THIS COMMAND AFTER MAKING THE FTP
-+ CONNECTION.
-+
-+ FTP DISABLE { MDTM, MLST, SIZE }
-+ Disables implicit use of the given directive by GET or MGET in
-+ case it causes problems; for example, because it makes multifile
-+ downloads take too long or the server announces it erroneously
-+ or misimplements it. Use DISABLE FEAT before making a connection
-+ to prevent Kermit from sending the FEAT directive as part of its
-+ initial sequence. Note that disabling FEAT, SIZE, or MDTM does
-+ not prevent you from executing explicit FTP FEATURES, FTP SIZE,
-+ or FTP MODTIME commands. Also note that disabling SIZE prevents
-+ PUT /RESTART (recovery of interrupted uploads) from working. YOU
-+ MUST GIVE THIS COMMAND AFTER MAKING THE FTP CONNECTION.
-+
-+ To enable or disable more than one feature, use multiple FTP ENABLE or
-+ FTP DISABLE commands. The SHOW FTP command shows which features are
-+ currently enabled and disabled.
-+
-+ FTP FEATURES
-+ This command sends a FEAT directive to the server. In case you
-+ have been disabling and enabling different features, this
-+ resynchronizes Kermit's feature list with the server's. If the
-+ server does not support the FEAT directive, Kermit's feature
-+ list is not changed.
-+
-+ FTP OPTIONS directive
-+ Informational only: the server tells what options, if any, it
-+ supports for the given directive, e.g. MLST. Fails if the server
-+ does not support the OPTS directive or if the directive for
-+ which options are requested is not valid. The directive is
-+ case-insensitive.
-+
-+ FTP SIZE filename
-+ Sends a SIZE directive to the server for the given file. The
-+ filename must not contain wildcards. The server responds with an
-+ error if the file can't be found, is not accessible, or the SIZE
-+ directive is not supported, otherwise with the length of the
-+ file in bytes, which Kermit displays and also makes available to
-+ you in its \v(ftp_message) variable. If the directive is
-+ successful, Kermit (re-)enables it for internal use by the GET
-+ and MGET directives on this connection.
-+
-+ FTP MODTIME filename
-+ Works just like the SIZE directive except it sends an MDTM
-+ directive. Upon success, the server sends modification date-time
-+ string, which Kermit interprets for you and also makes available
-+ in its \v(ftp_message) variable.
-+
-+ Whenever a SIZE or MDTM directive is sent implicitly and rejected by
-+ the server because it is unknown, Kermit automatically disables it.
-+
-+3.11.3. Using MGET: NLST versus MLSD
-+
-+ When you give an MGET command to an FTP client, it sends a request to
-+ the FTP server for a list of files, and then upon successful receipt of
-+ the list, goes through it and issues a RETR (retrieve) directive for
-+ each file on the list (or possibly only for selected files).
-+
-+ With the new FTP protocol extensions, now there are two ways to get the
-+ list of files: the NLST directive, which has been part of FTP protocol
-+ since the beginning, and the new MLSD directive, which is new and not
-+ yet widely implemented. When NLST is used and you give a command like
-+ "mget *.txt", the FTP client sends:
-+
-+NLST *.txt
-+
-+ and the server sends back a list of the files whose names match, e.g.
-+
-+foo.txt
-+bar.txt
-+baz.txt
-+
-+ Then when downloading each file, the client sends SIZE (if it wants
-+ have a percent-done display) and MDTM (if it wants to set the
-+ downloaded file's timestamp to match that of the original), as well as
-+ RETR (to retrieve the file).
-+
-+ But when MLSD is used, the client is not supposed to send the filename
-+ or wildcard to the server; instead it sends an MLSD directive with no
-+ argument (or the name of a directory), and the server sends back a list
-+ of all the files in the current or given directory; then the client
-+ goes through the list and checks each file to see if it matches the
-+ given pattern, the rationale being that the user knows only the local
-+ conventions for wildcards and not necessarily the server's conventions.
-+ So with NLST the server interprets wildcards; with MLSD the client
-+ does.
-+
-+ The interpretation of NLST wildcards by the server is not
-+ necessarily required or even envisioned by the FTP protocol
-+ definition (RFC 959), but in practice most clients and servers work
-+ this way.
-+
-+ The principal advantage of MLSD is that instead of sending back a
-+ simple list of filenames, it sends back a kind of database in which
-+ each entry contains a filename together with information about the
-+ file: type, size, timestamp, and so on; for example:
-+
-+size=0;type=dir;perm=el;modify=20020409191530; bin
-+size=3919312;type=file;perm=r;modify=20000310140400; bar.txt
-+size=6686176;type=file;perm=r;modify=20001215181000; baz.txt
-+size=3820092;type=file;perm=r;modify=20000310140300; foo.txt
-+size=27439;type=file;perm=r;modify=20020923151312; foo.zip
-+(etc etc...)
-+
-+ (If the format of the file list were the only difference between NLST
-+ and MLSD, the discussion would be finished: it would always be better
-+ to use MLSD when available, and the MGET user interface would need no
-+ changes. But there's a lot more to MLSD than the file-list format; read
-+ on...)
-+
-+ The client learns whether the server supports MLSD in FEAT exchange.
-+ But the fact that the server supports MLSD doesn't mean the client
-+ should always use it. It is better to use MLSD:
-+
-+ * On connections where the server imposes a time penalty for every
-+ command, e.g. the Red Hat Rawhide server. With MLSD, the client
-+ needs to send only one command (RETR) per file, whereas NLST
-+ requires three (SIZE, RETR, and MDTM). Suppose there is a 30-second
-+ delay for each command and 1000 files are to be fetched; in that
-+ case, MLSD saves 60,000 seconds = 1000 minutes = 16 hours and 40
-+ minutes.
-+ * For recursive downloads since there is no dependable way to
-+ download directory trees with NLST.
-+
-+ But it is better to use NLST:
-+
-+ * If you want only a couple short files out of a large directory. In
-+ this case, NLST is the better choice since the server sends a list
-+ of only the files you want, not a list of (say) a million files,
-+ which can make a big difference on slow connections. For example,
-+ suppose your wildcard matches three files of 1K each, but the
-+ million-file listing is 80MB long, and your connection is through a
-+ modem. The overhead of using MLSD is practically infinite.
-+ * If the server supports wildcarding features not known to the
-+ client, but that can be used to achieve desirable effects otherwise
-+ unobtainable, such as "[dir...]*.txt" in VMS or AOS/VS "except"
-+ clauses.
-+ * If you have been given a wildcard string by an FTP site
-+ administrator for fetching a specific group of files out of a
-+ larger directory, e.g. "mget ck[cuw]*.[cwh] makefile", that is
-+ expected to work with any client (an FTP site administrator can't
-+ be expected to know the wildcard syntax of every FTP client).
-+
-+ But when using MLSD there are complications:
-+
-+ * MLSD wants either a blank argument (meaning the current directory)
-+ or else the name of a specific directory. The client must not send
-+ it a wildcard or a filename.
-+ * But if the user's command is "mget xxx", how does the client know
-+ whether to send "xxx" in the MLSD directive? It might be the name
-+ of a directory on on the server, in which case it should be sent,
-+ or it might be the name of a file on the server (or a wildcard), in
-+ which case it must not be sent. Since the client knows its own
-+ wildcard syntax, then in most cases it would be right to send
-+ "MLSD" with no argument if xxx is wild, and to send "MLSD xxx" if
-+ it is not.
-+ * But suppose the server's file system allows filename characters
-+ that correspond with the client's wildcard syntax? For example:
-+ "[abc]" could be either a valid VMS directory name or a wildcard
-+ pattern used by the FTP client. What should the client do with
-+ "mget [abc]"? In this case there must be a way for the user to
-+ force sending the MGET argument as the MLSD argument.
-+ * If "xxx" is a regular file in the server's current directory, "mget
-+ xxx" works with NLST but not with MLSD.
-+
-+ To further complicate matters, NLST can (in theory) work just like
-+ MLSD: if sent with a blank argument or a directory name, it is supposed
-+ to return a complete list of files in the current or given directory,
-+ which the client can match locally against some pattern. It is not
-+ known if any FTP server or client does this but nevertheless, it should
-+ be possible since this behavior can be inferred from RFC 959.
-+
-+ In view of these considerations, and given the need to preserve the
-+ traditional FTP client command structure and behavior so the software
-+ will be usable by most people:
-+
-+ 1. The MGET command should produce the expected result in the common
-+ cases, regardless of whether NLST or MLSD is used underneath.
-+ 2. For anomalous cases, the user needs a way to control whether the
-+ MGET argument is sent to the server or kept for local use.
-+ 3. At the same time, the user might need a way to send a directory
-+ name to the server, independent of any wildcard pattern.
-+ 4. The user needs a way to force NLST or MLSD for a given MGET
-+ command.
-+
-+ By default, Kermit's MGET command uses MLSD if MLST is reported by the
-+ server in its FEAT list. When MLSD is used, the filespec is sent to the
-+ server if it is not wild (according to Kermit's own definition of
-+ "wild" since it can't possibly know the server's definition). If the
-+ filespec is wild it is held for local use to select files from the list
-+ returned by the server. If MLST is not reported by the server or is
-+ disabled, Kermit sends the MGET filespec with the NLST directive.
-+
-+ The default behavior can be overridden globally with FTP DISABLE MLST,
-+ which forces Kermit to use NLST to get file lists. And then for
-+ situations in which MLSD is enabled, the following MGET switches can be
-+ used to override the defaults for a specific MGET operation:
-+
-+ /NLST
-+ Forces the client to send NLST. Example:
-+
-+mget /nlst foo.*
-+
-+ /MLSD
-+ Forces the client to send MLSD (even if MLST is disabled).
-+ Example:
-+
-+mget /mlsd foo.*
-+
-+ /MATCH:pattern
-+ When this switch is given, it forces the client to hold the
-+ pattern for local use against the returned file list. If a
-+ remote filespec is also given (e.g. the "blah" in "mget
-+ /match:*.txt blah"), then it is sent as the NLST or MLSD
-+ argument, presumably to specify the directory whose files are to
-+ be listed. When the /MATCH switch is not given, the MGET
-+ filespec is sent to the server if the directive is NLST or if
-+ the filespec is not wild. Examples:
-+
-+ Command: With NLST: With MLSD:
-+ mget NLST MLSD
-+ mget *.txt NLST *.txt MLSD
-+ mget foo NLST foo MLSD foo
-+ mget /match:*.txt NLST MLSD
-+ mget /match:*.txt foo NLST foo MLSD foo
-+
-+ In other words, the pattern is always intepreted locally unless MGET
-+ uses NLST and no /MATCH switch was given.
-+
-+3.11.4. Examples
-+
-+3.11.4.1. Downloading a Single File
-+
-+ There are no choices here, just use the FTP GET command. Kermit always
-+ sends the RETR directive, and possibly SIZE and/or MDTM. The small
-+ advantage of using MLST in this case is outweighed by the risk and
-+ effort of coding a special case.
-+
-+3.11.4.2. Downloading a Group of Files from a Single Directory
-+
-+ This case presents tradeoffs, especially on slow connections:
-+
-+ * For downloading all or most of the files in a directory, MLSD is
-+ better because it eliminates the need to send SIZE and MDTM for
-+ each file. No special actions are required in this case; Kermit
-+ uses MLSD automatically if the server supports it (unless you have
-+ disabled it).
-+ * For a small number of files from a large directory, NLST is better
-+ because it bypasses downloading of a potentially huge file list
-+ prior to the files themselves. If you have a connection to a server
-+ that supports MLSD, use the /NLST switch to force NLST:
-+
-+mget /nlst t[1234].h
-+
-+ * If the server supports MLSD but does not support separate SIZE or
-+ MDTM directives, and you need the size and/or timestamp
-+ information, MLSD is better; no special actions required.
-+ * If the server supports MLSD but does not support the "size" and
-+ "modify" facts, but it does support the SIZE or MDTM directives,
-+ and you need the size and/or timestamp information, NLST is better.
-+
-+3.11.4.3. Downloading a Directory Tree
-+
-+ MLSD is the only choice for recursive downloads; they rarely, if ever,
-+ work with NLST (the few cases where they do work rely on extra-protocol
-+ "secret" notations for the NLST argument). No special actions are
-+ required to force MLSD when the server supports it, unless you have
-+ disabled it. Examples:
-+
-+ MGET /RECURSIVE
-+ This tells the server to send all files and directories in the
-+ tree rooted at its current directory.
-+
-+ MGET /RECURSIVE *.txt
-+ This tells the server to send all *.txt files in the tree rooted
-+ at its current directory.
-+
-+ MGET /MLSD /RECURSIVE *.txt
-+ Same as the previous example but forces Kermit to send MLSD in
-+ case it was disabled, or in case the server is known to support
-+ it even though it did not announce it in its FEAT listing.
-+
-+ MGET /RECURSIVE /MATCH:*.zip archives
-+ Tells the server to send all ZIP files in the tree rooted at its
-+ "archives" directory.
-+
-+ MGET /RECURSIVE /MATCH:* [abc]
-+ The server is running on VMS and you want it to send all the
-+ files in the directory tree rooted at [ABC]. But since "[abc]"
-+ looks just like a wildcard, you have to include a /MATCH: switch
-+ to force Kermit to send "[abc]" as the MLSD argument.
-+
-+ In all cases in which the /RECURSIVE switch is included, the server's
-+ tree is duplicated locally.
-+
-+ Although MLSD allows recursion and NLST does not, the MLSD
-+ specification places a heavy burden on the client; the obvious,
-+ straightforward, and elegant implementation (depth-first, the one
-+ that Kermit currently uses) requires as many open temporary files as
-+ the server's directory tree is deep, and therefore client resource
-+ exhaustion -- e.g. exceeding the maximum number of open files -- is
-+ a danger. Unfortunately MLSD was not designed with recursion in
-+ mind. (Breadth-first traversal could be problematic due to lack of
-+ sufficient navigation information.)
-+
-+ Of course all of Kermit's other MGET switches can be used too, e.g. for
-+ finer-grained file selection (by date, size, etc), for moving or
-+ renaming files as they arrive, to override Kermit's automatic per-file
-+ text/binary mode switching, to pass the incoming files through a
-+ filter, to convert text-file character sets, and so on.
-+
-+3.11.4.4. NLST/MLSD Summary Table
-+
-+ Here's a table summarizing MGET behavior when the server supports both
-+ NLST and MLSD. /NLST and /MLSD switches are included for clarity to
-+ indicate which protocol is being used, and the expected effects. In
-+ practice you can omit the /NLST and /MLSD switches and the Kermit
-+ client chooses the appropriate or desired protocol as described above.
-+ Sample commands presume a Unix file system on the server, but of course
-+ the server can have any file system or syntax at all.
-+
-+ User's Command FTP Sends Remarks
-+ mget /nlst NLST Gets a list of all the files in the server's current
-+ and downloads each file. The list includes names only, so Kermit also
-+ must send SIZE and MDTM directives if size and timestamp information is
-+ required (this is always true of NLST). Sending NLST without an
-+ argument is allowed by the RFC959 NLST definition and by the Kermit FTP
-+ client, but might not work with other clients, and also might not work
-+ with every server.
-+ mget /nlst foo NLST foo If "foo" is a directory, this gets a list of
-+ all the files from the server's "foo" directory and downloads each
-+ file; otherwise this downloads the file named "foo" (if any) from the
-+ server's current directory.
-+ mget /nlst *.txt NLST *.txt Gets a list of the files in the server's
-+ current directory whose names match the pattern *.txt, and then
-+ downloads each file from the list. Because we are using NLST, we send
-+ the filespec (*.txt) to the server and the server interprets any
-+ wildcards.
-+ mget /nlst foo/*.txt NLST foo/*.txt Gets a list of the files in the
-+ server's "foo" directory whose names match the pattern *.txt, and then
-+ downloads each file from the list (server interprets wildcards).
-+ mget /nlst /match:*.txt NLST Gets a list of all the files in the
-+ server's current directory and then downloads each one whose name
-+ matches the pattern *.txt (client interprets wildcards).
-+ mget /nlst /match:*.txt foo NLST foo Gets a list of all the files in
-+ the server's "foo" directory and then downloads each one whose name
-+ matches the pattern *.txt (client interprets wildcards).
-+ mget /mlsd MLSD Gets a list of all the files from the server's current
-+ directory and then downloads each one. The list might include size and
-+ timestamp information, in which case Kermit does not need to send SIZE
-+ and MDTM directives for each file (this is always true of MLSD).
-+ mget /mlsd foo MLSD foo Gets a list of all the files from the server's
-+ "foo" directory (where the string "foo" does not contain wildcards) and
-+ then downloads each one. If "foo" is a regular file and not a
-+ directory, this command is supposed to fail, but some servers have been
-+ observed that send the file.
-+ mget /mlsd *.txt MLSD Gets a list of all the files from the server's
-+ current directory and then downloads only the ones whose names match
-+ the pattern "*.txt". Because we are using MLSD and the MGET filespec is
-+ wild, we do not send the filespec to the server, but treat it as though
-+ it had been given in a /MATCH: switch and use it locally to match the
-+ names in the list.
-+ mget /mlsd foo/*.txt MLSD This one won't work because MLSD requires
-+ that the notions of server directory and filename-matching pattern be
-+ separated. However, the client, which can't be expected to know the
-+ server's file-system syntax, winds up sending a request that the server
-+ will (or should) reject.
-+ mget /mlsd /match:*.txt MLSD Gets a list of all the files from the
-+ server's current directory and then downloads only the ones whose names
-+ match the pattern "*.txt" (client interprets wildcards).
-+ mget /mlsd /match:*.txt foo MLSD foo If "foo" is a directory on the
-+ server, this gets a list of all the files from the server's "foo"
-+ directory and then downloads only the ones whose names match the
-+ pattern "*.txt" (client interprets wildcards). This leaves the server
-+ CD'd to the "foo" directory; there's no way the client can restore the
-+ server's original directory because MLSD doesn't give that information,
-+ and since the client can not be expected to know the server's
-+ file-system syntax, it would not be safe to guess. If "foo" is a
-+ regular file, MLSD fails.
-+ mget /mlsd foo bar MLSD This one is problematic. You're supposed to be
-+ able to give MGET a list a filespecs; in this case we name two
-+ directories. The client must change the server's directory to "foo" to
-+ get the list of files, and then the files themselves. But then it has
-+ no way to return to the server's previous directory in order to do the
-+ same for "bar", as explained in the previous example.
-+ mget /mlsd /match:* [abc] MLSD [abc] Including a /MATCH: switch forces
-+ [abc] to be sent to the server even though the client would normally
-+ think it was a wildcard and hold it for local interpretation. In this
-+ example, [abc] might be a VMS directory name.
-+ mget /mlsd /match:* t*.h MLSD t*.h Contrary to the MLSD specification,
-+ some MLSD-capable FTP servers do interpret wildcards. This form of the
-+ MGET command can be used to force a wildcard to be sent to the server
-+ for interpretation.
-+
-+ When MLSD is used implicitly (that is, without an /MLSD switch given to
-+ force the use of MLSD) and an MGET command such as "mget foo/*.txt"
-+ fails, Kermit automatically falls back to NLST and tries again.
-+
-+3.11.5. References
-+
-+ 1. Postel, J., and J. Reynolds, File Transfer Protocol (FTP), RFC 959,
-+ October 1985: [372]ftp://ftp.isi.edu/in-notes/rfc959.txt.
-+ 2. Hethmon, P, and R. Elz, Feature negotiation mechanism for the File
-+ Transfer Protocol, RFC 2389, August 1998:
-+ [373]ftp://ftp.isi.edu/in-notes/rfc2389.txt.
-+ 3. Elz, R, and P. Hethmon, Extensions to FTP, Internet Draft
-+ draft-ietf-ftpext-mlst-16.txt, September 2002:
-+ [374]http://www.ietf.org/internet-drafts/draft-ietf-ftpext-mlst-16.
-+ txt.
-+ 4. [375]The Kermit FTP Client (overview).
-+
-+ [ [376]Top ] [ [377]FTP Top ] [ [378]C-Kermit Home ] [ [379]Kermit Home
-+ ]
-+
-+4. FILE SCANNING
-+
-+ A new feature called file scanning is used in various contexts to
-+ determine if a file is text or binary, and if it is text, what kind of
-+ text. The overhead of file scanning is surprisingly tolerable, usually
-+ about a quarter second per file. File scanning is now used instead of
-+ filename patterns unless you SET FILE SCAN OFF, which restores the
-+ previous behavior.
-+
-+ The primary benefit of file scanning is in file transfer. For all
-+ practical purposes, now you can stop worrying about whether a file
-+ should be sent in binary or text mode, or about sending mixtures of
-+ text and binary files in a single operation, or configuring and
-+ fine-tuning your lists of binary-file and text-file name patterns: now
-+ it all just works.
-+
-+ File scanning is done by the file sender, which determines the type of
-+ each file before it sends it and informs the receiver (Kermit or FTP
-+ server) of the type. File scanning is NOT done by the receiver, because
-+ it is the sender's responsibility to determine each file's type, send
-+ the file in the right mode, and inform the receiver of the mode. If
-+ both transfer partners are capable of this (or any other) form of
-+ automatic text/binary mode switching, then files can be sent in both
-+ directions with no worries about corruption due to inappropriate
-+ transfer mode. (As noted in [380]Section 3, FTP servers don't do this,
-+ so this discussion does not apply when using Kermit to download from an
-+ FTP server.)
-+
-+ The rest of this section is mainly for the curious. If you don't read
-+ it and simply accept all defaults, every file you send should go in the
-+ appropriate mode automatically. As always, however, for character-set
-+ translation to work for 7- and 8-bit character-set files, the
-+ appropriate SET FILE CHARACTER-SET command(s) must have been executed
-+ to identify their encoding (Kermit's default file character-set is
-+ neutral ASCII except on platforms like HP-UX or DG/UX, where the
-+ default file character-set is known). And of course, receiving is
-+ another matter -- obviously the other Kermit must also send each file
-+ in the appropriate mode.
-+
-+ Scanning is more reliable than filename patterns simply because
-+ filenames are not reliable indicators of the file's contents. Classic
-+ examples include ".doc" files, which are binary if Microsoft Word
-+ documents but text on most other platforms, and ".com" files, which are
-+ binary on DOS and Windows but text on VMS. Anyway, nobody knows the
-+ naming conventions (if any) of all the applications (and persons!) on
-+ your computer. Scanning, on the other hand, determines each file's type
-+ by inspecting its contents rather than just looking at its name.
-+
-+ Also, file patterns -- even when they work as intended -- categorize
-+ each file only as text or binary, whereas file scanning can make finer
-+ distinctions:
-+
-+ BINARY
-+ Binary data, not to be converted in any way. Examples include
-+ binary machine code (executable programs), graphics images (GIF,
-+ JPG, etc), compressed files (Z, GZ, etc), archives and packages
-+ (ZIP, TAR, RPM, etc), object files and libraries (OBJ, DLL,
-+ etc).
-+
-+ 7-BIT TEXT
-+ Text encoded in a 7-bit character set such as ASCII or one of
-+ the ISO 646 national versions. Kermit has no way to tell which
-+ character is used, only that it's 7-bit text. Typical examples
-+ include program source code, README files, Perl or Kermit
-+ scripts, plain-text email, HTML, TeX, and various textual
-+ encodings of binary files: Hex, Base64, etc. When sending such
-+ files, the FILE DEFAULT 7BIT-CHARACTER-SET is used as the file
-+ character-set, and then the appropriate transfer character set
-+ is chosen from the associations list (ASSOCIATE, SHOW
-+ ASSOCIATIONS).
-+
-+ 8-BIT TEXT
-+ Text encoded in an 8-bit character set such as Latin-1, Latin-2,
-+ Latin/Hebrew, Latin/Cyrillic, KOI8, HP-Roman8, JIS X 0208, Code
-+ Page 437, or Code Page 1252. Again, Kermit has no way of knowing
-+ which particular set is in use, only that it's 8-bit text. When
-+ sending such files, the FILE DEFAULT 8BIT-CHARACTER-SET is used
-+ as the file character-set, and then the appropriate transfer
-+ character set is chosen from the associations list.
-+
-+ UCS2 TEXT
-+ Unicode in its basic form, 16 bits (2 octets) per character.
-+ When sending such files, UCS2 is the file character-set and the
-+ byte order is identified automatically; the appropriate transfer
-+ character set is chosen from the associations list. Normally
-+ this would be UTF8. UTF-16 is not supported yet; Kermit's
-+ Unicode translations are restricted to Plane 0, the Base
-+ Multilingual Plane (BMP).
-+
-+ UTF8 TEXT
-+ Unicode in its 8-bit transformation format. When sending such
-+ files, UTF8 is the file character-set; the appropriate transfer
-+ character set is chosen from the associations list, normally
-+ UCS2 or UTF8.
-+
-+ File scanning is available in UNIX C-Kermit, in K-95, and to a limited
-+ extent, in VMS C-Kermit (full scanning is problematic in VMS because
-+ even plain-text files might contain binary record-format information).
-+ The relevant commands are:
-+
-+ SET TRANSFER MODE { AUTOMATIC, MANUAL }
-+ Tells whether the file-transfer mode (text or binary) should be
-+ set by automatic or "manual" means. AUTOMATIC is the default,
-+ which allows any of the automatic methods that are enabled to do
-+ their jobs: FILE SCAN, FILE PATTERNS, peer recognition, etc.
-+ MANUAL lets you control the transfer mode with the SET FILE TYPE
-+ commands. As always, /TEXT and /BINARY switches on your
-+ file-transfer commands override all other methods; if you give
-+ one of these switches, scanning is not done. SHOW TRANSFER
-+ displays the current TRANSFER MODE setting.
-+
-+ SET FILE SCAN { ON [ number ], OFF }
-+ Turns this feature on and off. It's ON by default. When OFF, the
-+ previous rules apply (SET FILE PATTERNS, etc). When ON is given,
-+ you can also specify a number of bytes to be scanned. The
-+ default is 49152 (= 48K). If a negative number is given, the
-+ entire file is scanned, no matter how big, for maximum certainty
-+ (for example, a PostScript file that appears to be plain text
-+ might include an embedded graphic past the normal scanning
-+ limit). SHOW FILE displays the current FILE SCAN setting.
-+
-+ SET FILE DEFAULT 7BIT-CHARACTER-SET name
-+ Tells the 7-bit character-set to use if scanning identifies a
-+ 7-bit text file, e.g. GERMAN. SHOW FILE displays the current SET
-+ FILE DEFAULT settings. So does SHOW CHARACTER-SETS.
-+
-+ SET FILE DEFAULT 8BIT-CHARACTER-SET name
-+ Tells the 8-bit character-set to use if scanning identifies an
-+ 8-bit text file, e.g. LATIN1. SHOW FILE and SHOW CHARACTER-SET
-+ display this.
-+
-+ ASSOCIATE FILE-CHARACTER-SET fcs tcs
-+ When sending files and a file character-set (fcs) is identified
-+ by scanning, this tells C-Kermit which transfer character-set
-+ (tcs) to translate it to. It also allows C-Kermit to set the
-+ appropriate transfer character-set automatically whenever you
-+ give a SET FILE CHARACTER-SET command.
-+
-+ ASSOCIATE TRANSFER-CHARACTER-SET tcs fcs
-+ When receiving files and a file arrives whose transfer
-+ character-set (tcs) is announced by the sender, this command
-+ tells C-Kermit which file character-set (fcs) to translate it
-+ to. It also allows C-Kermit to set the appropriate file
-+ character-set whenever you give a SET TRANSFER CHARACTER-SET
-+ command.
-+
-+ SET FILE CHARACTER-SET name
-+ When given for a 7-bit set, also sets FILE DEFAULT
-+ 7BIT-CHARACTER-SET to the same set. When given for an 8-bit set,
-+ also sets FILE DEFAULT 8BIT-CHARACTER-SET to the same set. If an
-+ ASSOCIATE FILE-CHARACTER-SET command has been given for this
-+ set, also sets the corresponding transfer character-set.
-+
-+ DIRECTORY /XFERMODE [ filespec ]
-+ Performs a file scan of the given files, listing the result for
-+ each file. If FILE SCAN is OFF but PATTERNS are ON, the result
-+ shown according to the current FILE TEXT-PATTERNS and
-+ BINARY-PATTERNS, and are restricted to (B) and (T). When FILE
-+ SCAN is ON, the results are:
-+
-+ (B) Binary
-+ (T)(7BIT) Text: 7-bit
-+ (T)(8BIT) Text: 8-bit
-+ (T)(UTF8) Text: Unicode UTF8
-+ (T)(UCS2BE) Text: Unicode UCS2 Big Endian
-+ (T)(UCS2LE) Text: Unicode UCS2 Little Endian
-+
-+ So you can use DIR /XFER to get a preview of how each file in a
-+ selected group will be transferred. Everything to the right of
-+ the (B) or (T) is new. If FILE SCAN is OFF, you only get the (B)
-+ or (T) as before.
-+
-+ Note: Big and Little Endian refer to the ordering of bytes
-+ within a computer word. Big Endian architecture is standard and
-+ is used on most non-PC computers. Little Endian architecture is
-+ used on PCs.
-+
-+ To illustrate file-transfer with scanning, suppose you have a directory
-+ containing a mixture of text and binary files, and each text file can
-+ be 7-bit German ISO 646, 8-bit Latin-1, or Unicode in any of the
-+ following forms: UCS2 Little Endian, UCS2 Big Endian, or UTF8
-+ ([381]UTF-16 is not supported yet). Assuming all the built-in defaults
-+ are in effect, the following three commands do the job:
-+
-+ set file char german ; This sets the default for 7-bit text files
-+ set file char latin1 ; This sets the default for 8-bit text files
-+ send *
-+
-+ Each file is sent in the appropriate mode (text or binary), with text
-+ files converted to the appropriate transfer character-set and labeled
-+ so the receiver can convert them according to its own local
-+ conventions.
-+
-+ By the way, what if you want to inhibit character-set translation but
-+ still allow automatic text/binary mode switching? Previously, you could
-+ simply SET TRANSFER CHARACTER-SET TRANSPARENT. But now with file
-+ scanning, the file and transfer character-sets are set automatically
-+ per file. A new command was added for this purpose:
-+
-+ SET TRANSFER TRANSLATION { ON, OFF }
-+ Enables and disables file-transfer character-set translation. It
-+ is enabled by default.
-+
-+ When TRANSFER TRANSLATION is OFF but FILE SCAN is ON, files are still
-+ scanned to see if they are text or binary, but no character-set
-+ translation is done when they text: only the normal record-format
-+ conversion.
-+
-+ Like all SET commands, SET TRANSFER TRANSLATION is global and
-+ persistent. You can also force a particular file-transfer command
-+ (SEND, MSEND, GET, RECEIVE, TRANSMIT, etc) to not translate without
-+ affecting the global translation settings by including the new
-+ /TRANSPARENT switch, e.g.
-+
-+ send /transparent oofa.txt
-+
-+ As of C-Kermit 8.0.206, SET TRANSFER CHARACTER-SET TRANSPARENT implies
-+ SET TRANSFER TRANSLATION OFF.
-+
-+ File scanning is also used in the TYPE command. The source file type
-+ and character set are determined as above, and then the file is
-+ automatically converted to your display character-set, line by line. In
-+ Kermit 95, the display character-set is Unicode, perhaps converted to
-+ your current console code page; in other versions of C-Kermit, it is
-+ your current file character-set. Thus if you have the following set
-+ appriately:
-+
-+ SET FILE CHARACTER-SET (necessary in Unix but not K95)
-+ SET FILE DEFAULT 7BIT CHARACTER-SET
-+ SET FILE DEFAULT 8BIT CHARACTER-SET
-+
-+ then you should be able to TYPE any text file and see something
-+ reasonable. For example, in Unix, if your DEFAULT 7BIT-CHARACTER-SET is
-+ ITALIAN and your DEFAULT 8BIT-CHARACTER-SET is LATIN1, and your FILE
-+ CHARACTER-SET is LATIN1, you can TYPE an Italian ISO 646 file, a
-+ Latin-1 file, or any kind of Unicode file, and have it translated
-+ automatically to Latin-1 for your display.
-+
-+ In the GUI version of Kermit 95, you can see mixtures of many different
-+ scripts if the file is UTF8 or UCS2: Roman, Cyrillic, Hebrew, Greek,
-+ Armenian, Georgian, etc, all on the same screen at once.
-+
-+ File scanning also adds a new criterion for file selection, i.e. to
-+ select only text (or binary) files. Several commands now include a new
-+ switch, /TYPE:{BINARY,TEXT,ALL}. BINARY means select only binary
-+ regular files (not directories). TEXT means select only text files. ALL
-+ means don't scan; select all files. Examples:
-+
-+ SEND /TYPE:BINARY *.*
-+ Sends only binary files, skipping over text files.
-+
-+ NOTE: File scanning is NOT done when using external protocols (because
-+ the external protocol programs, such as sz, are processing each file,
-+ not Kermit).
-+
-+ DIRECTORY /TYPE:TEXT
-+ Lists only text files but not binary files.
-+
-+ DELETE /TYPE:BINARY foo.*
-+ Deletes all foo.* files that are regular binary files but does
-+ not delete any text files.
-+
-+ CHMOD /TYPE:BINARY 775 *
-+ (UNIX) Changes the permissions of all binary files to 775.
-+
-+ When FILE SCAN is OFF and FILE PATTERNS are ON, behavior is as before
-+ with PATTERNS ON, but with some improvements:
-+
-+ * Pathnames are now stripped prior to pattern matching.
-+ * Backup suffixes (like .~3~) are stripped prior to pattern matching.
-+
-+ [ [382]Top ] [ [383]Contents ] [ [384]C-Kermit Home ] [ [385]Kermit
-+ Home ]
-+
-+5. FILE AND DIRECTORY NAMES CONTAINING SPACES
-+
-+ Prior to the introduction of the graphical user interface (GUI), it was
-+ inconceivable that file or directory names could contain spaces,
-+ because space is a field delimiter in all command languages. GUIs,
-+ however, use dialog boxes for filenames, so there is never any question
-+ of distinguishing a filename from adjacent fields -- because there are
-+ no adjacent fields -- and therefore it has become quite common on
-+ computers that have GUIs to have file and directory names composed of
-+ multiple words. Of course this poses problems for command shells and
-+ other text-oriented programs.
-+
-+ Most command shells address these problems by allowing such names to be
-+ enclosed in doublequotes, e.g.:
-+
-+ cd "c:\Program Files"
-+
-+ C-Kermit previously used braces for this:
-+
-+ cd {c:\Program Files}
-+
-+ which was not what most people expected. And even when braces were
-+ used, Kermit had difficulties with completion, file menus, and so
-+ forth, within braced fields.
-+
-+ C-Kermit 8.0 allows either doublequotes or braces to be used for
-+ grouping:
-+
-+ send "this file"
-+ send {this file}
-+ rename "this file" "that file"
-+ rename {this file} "that file"
-+ rename "this file" {that file}
-+ cd {Program Files}
-+ cd "Program Files"
-+
-+ Note that the doublequotes or brackets must enclose the whole file or
-+ directory specification:
-+
-+ "c:\My Directory"
-+
-+ not:
-+
-+ c:\"My Directory"
-+
-+ In C-Kermit 8.0, you can also use completion on these filenames, in
-+ which case Kermit supplies the quotes (or braces) automatically.
-+ Example (in which the current directory contains only one file whose
-+ name starts with "th" and its full name is "this file" (without the
-+ quotes, but with the space)):
-+
-+ cat th<Tab>
-+
-+ Kermit repaints the filename field like this:
-+
-+ cat "this file"
-+
-+ That is, it backspaces over the original "th" and then writes the
-+ filename in doublequotes.
-+
-+ If completion is only partial, Kermit still supplies the quotes, but in
-+ this case also beeps. To continue the filename, you must first
-+ backspace over the closing quote. The closing quote is supplied in this
-+ case to make sure that you can see the spaces, especially if they are
-+ trailing. For example, if the current directory contains two files
-+ whose names start with "th", and their fill names are "this file" and
-+ "this other file":
-+
-+ cat th<Tab>
-+
-+ Kermit prints:
-+
-+ cat "this "<Beep>
-+
-+ If it didn't print the closing quote, you would probably wonder why it
-+ was beeping.
-+
-+ Also, if you begin a filename field with a doublequote or opening
-+ brace, now you can use completion or get ?-help; this was never
-+ possible before.
-+
-+ C-Kermit>type "thi? Input file specification, one of the following:
-+ this file this other file
-+ C-Kermit>type "thi_
-+
-+ [ [386]Top ] [ [387]Contents ] [ [388]C-Kermit Home ] [ [389]Kermit
-+ Home ]
-+
-+6. OTHER COMMAND PARSING IMPROVEMENTS
-+
-+6.1. Grouping Macro Arguments
-+
-+ Doublequotes now can be used in macro invocations to group arguments
-+ containing spaces, where previously only braces could be used:
-+
-+ define xx show args
-+ xx one "this is two" three
-+
-+ Result:
-+
-+ Macro arguments at level 0 (\v(argc) = 4):
-+ \%0 = xx
-+ \%1 = one
-+ \%2 = this is two
-+ \%3 = three
-+
-+ Also, you can now quote braces and quotes in macro args (this didn't
-+ work before). Examples:
-+
-+ xx "{" ; The argument is a single left brace
-+ xx {"} ; The argument is a doublequote character
-+
-+ In case this new behavior interferes with your scripts, you can restore
-+ the previous behavior with:
-+
-+ SET COMMAND DOUBLEQUOTING OFF
-+
-+6.2. Directory and File Name Completion
-+
-+ C-Kermit 8.0 also includes better completion for directory names, e.g.
-+ in the CD command. If the name typed so far uniquely matches a
-+ directory name, it is completed (as before), but now if the directory
-+ contains any subdirectories, completion is partial (allowing you to
-+ supply additional path segments without backspacing); otherwise it is
-+ complete.
-+
-+ Completion has also been improved for file and directory names that
-+ contain not only spaces (as described above) but also "metacharacters"
-+ such as asterisk (*) and tilde (~): now the field is repainted if
-+ necessary. For example, if the current directory contains only one file
-+ whose name contains "blah", then in:
-+
-+ type *blah<Tab>
-+
-+ "*blah" is replaced by the filename. In earlier releases, the part
-+ typed so far was left on the command line (and in the history buffer),
-+ so even when the original command worked, the recalled version would
-+ not. Similarly for ~ (the nearly-universal Unix notation for username):
-+
-+ type ~olga/x<Tab>
-+
-+ is repainted as (e.g.):
-+
-+ type /users/home/olga/x(Beep)
-+
-+ Speaking of command history, the new SHOW HISTORY command shows your
-+ command history and recall buffer. SAVE COMMAND HISTORY saves it into a
-+ file of your choice.
-+
-+6.3. Passing Arguments to Command Files
-+
-+ The method for passing arguments to command files has been improved.
-+ Prior to C-Kermit 7.0 there was no provision for doing this. In
-+ C-Kermit 7.0, the TAKE command was changed to allow arguments to be
-+ given after the filename:
-+
-+ take commandfile arg1 arg2 ...
-+
-+ This was accomplished by replacing the current \%1, \%2, etc, with the
-+ given arguments, since a new set of macro argument variables is created
-+ only when a macro is executed, not a command file. It is much more
-+ intuitive, however, if arguments to command files worked like those to
-+ macros: the command file sees the arguments as its own \%1, \%2, etc,
-+ but the caller's variables are not disturbed. C-Kermit 8.0 accomplishes
-+ this by automatically creating an intermediate temporary macro to start
-+ the command file (if any arguments were given), thus creating a new
-+ level of arguments as expected.
-+
-+6.4. More-Prompting
-+
-+ The familiar --more?-- prompt that appears at the end of each screenful
-+ of command-response output now accepts a new answer: G (Go) meaning
-+ "show all the rest without pausing and asking me any more questions". P
-+ (Proceed) is a synonym for G.
-+
-+6.5. Commas in Macro Definitions
-+
-+ As noted in the [390]C-Kermit manual, comma is used to separate
-+ commands in a macro definition. Even when the macro is defined on
-+ multiple lines using curly-brace block-structure notation without
-+ commas, the definition is still stored internally as a comma-separated
-+ list of commands. Therefore special tricks are needed to include a
-+ comma in a command. The classic example is:
-+
-+ define foo {
-+ (some command)
-+ if fail echo Sorry, blah failed...
-+ }
-+
-+ This would result in Kermit trying to execute a "blah" command. This
-+ could always be handled by enclosing the text in braces:
-+
-+ define foo {
-+ (some command)
-+ if fail echo {Sorry, blah failed...}
-+ }
-+
-+ but doublequotes (more intuitive) should have worked too. Now they do:
-+
-+ define foo {
-+ (some command)
-+ if fail echo "Sorry, blah failed..."
-+ }
-+
-+6.6. Arrow Keys
-+
-+ As of version 8.0.201, C-Kermit on most platforms lets you access the
-+ command history buffer with arrow keys, just as you always could with
-+ control characters. The restrictions are:
-+
-+ 1. Only Up and Down arrow keys are accepted.
-+ 2. Only 7-bit ANSI arrow-key sequences are understood (ESC followed by
-+ [ or uppercase letter O, followed by uppercase letter A or (up) B
-+ (down).
-+
-+ This change was made to facilitate command recall in Linux-based PDAs
-+ that don't have a Control key, or at least not one that's easily (or
-+ always) accessible, such as the Sharp Zaurus SL5500.
-+
-+ [ [391]Top ] [ [392]Contents ] [ [393]C-Kermit Home ] [ [394]Kermit
-+ Home ]
-+
-+7. NEW COMMANDS AND SWITCHES
-+
-+ See [395]Section 4 for more about file scanning and the /TYPE: switch.
-+
-+ ASK[Q] [ /TIMEOUT:number /QUIET /DEFAULT:text ] variable [ prompt ]
-+ The new optional /TIMEOUT: switch for ASK and ASKQ causes the
-+ command to time out and and fail if no response is given within
-+ the specified number of seconds, 1 or greater (0 or less means
-+ no timeout, wait forever). This works just like SET ASK-TIMER,
-+ except its effect is local to the ASK command with which it is
-+ given and it does not disturb the global ask timer setting. The
-+ new /QUIET switch tells Kermit not to print an error message if
-+ the ASK or ASKQ command times out waiting for a response.
-+
-+ Version 8.0.211 adds the /DEFAULT:text switch for ASK-Class
-+ commands (ASK, ASKQ, and GETOK). This lets you supply a default
-+ answer in case the user supplies an empty answer or the
-+ /TIMEOUT: switch was included and the time limit expired without
-+ an answer. In both these cases, the command succeeds.
-+
-+ CAT filename
-+ Equivalent to TYPE /NOPAGE.
-+
-+ CDUP
-+ Changes Kermit's local working directory to the parent of the
-+ current one. Equivalent to "cd .." in UNIX or Windows, "cd [-]"
-+ in VMS, "cd ^" in AOS/VS, etc; in other words, it's a
-+ platform-independent way of moving one level up in a directory
-+ tree.
-+
-+ CHMOD [ switches ] permission files
-+ UNIX only. Sets file permissions for one or more files or
-+ directories. The permission must be given as an octal number,
-+ e.g. 664, 755. Switches: /DIRECTORIES, /FILES, /NOLIST, /PAGE,
-+ /DOTFILES, /LIST, /NOPAGE, /RECURSIVE, /TYPE:{TEXT,BINARY,ALL},
-+ /SIMULATE. The /TYPE: switch allows selection of only text or
-+ binary files. For example, if you have a mixture of source files
-+ and executables, you can use "chmod /files /type:text 664" to
-+ give owner/group read/write and world read permission to the
-+ text files, and "chmod /files /type:binary 775" to give the same
-+ plus execute permission to the executables. Use /SIMULATE to see
-+ which files would be affected, without actually changing their
-+ permissions.
-+
-+ CLEAR KEYBOARD-BUFFER
-+ Flushes any as-yet unread characters from the keyboard input
-+ buffer. Useful for flushing typeahead in scripts.
-+
-+ CONTINUE
-+ When given at an interactive command prompt that was reached by
-+ issuing a PROMPT command (described in this section) from a
-+ script, this command returns to the script, continuing its
-+ execution at the command after the PROMPT command. In this
-+ context, CONTINUE is simply a more-intuitive synonym for END.
-+
-+ COPY, RENAME, and TRANSLATE
-+ These commands now work on file groups if the target filename is
-+ a directory, e.g. "copy oofa.* ..", "rename * ~olga/tmp/"
-+
-+ COPY /APPEND source destination
-+ The source file specification can now include wildcards, in
-+ which case all of the source files that match will go into the
-+ destination file in alphabetical order by name.
-+
-+ DELETE /ASK
-+ Asks permission to delete each file before deleting it. In
-+ C-Kermit 7.0, the answers were "yes" (or "ok") and "no".
-+ C-Kermit 8.0 adds "go" (meaning, delete all the rest without
-+ asking) and "quit" (cancel the DELETE command and return to the
-+ prompt).
-+
-+ DELETE /DIRECTORIES
-+ Deletes not only files but also directories.
-+
-+ DELETE /RECURSIVE
-+ Deletes all files that match the given file specification in the
-+ current (or given) directory and all directories beneath it.
-+
-+ DELETE /SUMMARY
-+ Prints only the number of files deleted and total size freed,
-+ without listing each file.
-+
-+ DELETE /TREE
-+ Shorthand for DELETE /RECURSIVE /DIRECTORIES /DOTFILES/.
-+ Equivalent to Windows DELTREE or Unix "rm -Rf". If no file
-+ specification is given, the contents of the current directory,
-+ plus all of its subdirectories and their contents, are deleted.
-+
-+ DELETE /TYPE:BINARY
-+ Delete only regular binary files (requires FILE SCAN ON).
-+
-+ DELETE /TYPE:TEXT
-+ Delete only regular text files (requires FILE SCAN ON).
-+
-+ DIRECTORY [ switches ] [ filespec [ filespec [ filespec ... ] ] ]
-+ The DIRECTORY command now accepts more than one file
-+ specification; e.g. "directory moon.txt sun.doc stars.*".
-+
-+ DIRECTORY /NORECURSIVE xxx
-+ If xxx is a directory name, forces listing of the directory
-+ itself rather than its contents.
-+
-+ DIRECTORY /FOLLOWLINKS xxx
-+ (UNIX only) Tells the DIRECTORY command to follow symbolic
-+ links. This not the default because it can cause endless loops.
-+
-+ DIRECTORY /NOFOLLOWLINKS xxx
-+ (UNIX only) Tells the DIRECTORY command not to follow symbolic
-+ links, but rather, merely to list them. This is the default.
-+
-+ DIRECTORY /OUTPUT:filename
-+ Sends the results of the DIRECTORY command to the given file.
-+
-+ DIRECTORY /SUMMARY
-+ Prints only the number of directories and files and the total
-+ size, without listing each file.
-+
-+ DIRECTORY /TYPE:{TEXT,BINARY}
-+ Shows only files of the selected type, based on file scan.
-+
-+ DIRECTORY /XFERMODE
-+ Now shows results of file scan (see [396]Section 4).
-+
-+ FOPEN [ switches ] channel filename
-+
-+ As of version 8.0.211, FOPEN allows /dev/tty as a filename in
-+ Unix-based operating systems.
-+
-+ FREAD /TRIM
-+ (8.0.211) Trims any trailing blanks or tabs from the item (such
-+ as a line of text) that it has read.
-+
-+ FREAD /UNTABIFY
-+ (8.0.211) Converts Horizontal Tab characters to the appropriate
-+ number of spaces, based on VT100-like tab stops (1,9,17,25,...).
-+
-+ GREP [ switches ] pattern files
-+ Similar to Unix grep command: displays file lines that match the
-+ given [397]pattern. Switches:
-+
-+ /COUNT[:variable]
-+ Don't show the matching lines, just tell how many lines
-+ match. If a variable name is specified, the count is
-+ stored in the given variable.
-+
-+ /DOTFILES
-+ Include files whose names begin with dot.
-+
-+ /LINENUMBERS
-+ Show line numbers of matching lines.
-+
-+ /NAMEONLY
-+ only list the names of files that contain matching lines,
-+ but not the lines themselves.
-+
-+ /NOBACKUP
-+ Skip backup files.
-+
-+ /NOCASE
-+ Ignore alphabetic case while pattern matching.
-+
-+ /NODOTFILES
-+ skip files whose names start with dot (period).
-+
-+ /NOLIST
-+ Suppress output but set SUCCESS or FAILURE according to
-+ search result.
-+
-+ /NOMATCH
-+ Look for lines that do not match the pattern.
-+
-+ /NOPAGE
-+ Don't pause between screens of output.
-+
-+ /OUTPUT:filename
-+ Write results into the given file.
-+
-+ /PAGE
-+ Pause between screens of output.
-+
-+ /RECURSIVE
-+ Search files in subdirectories too.
-+
-+ /TYPE:{TEXT,BINARY}
-+ Search only files of the specified type.
-+
-+ Synonyms: FIND, SEARCH.
-+
-+ GETOK /TIMEOUT:n /QUIET /DEFAULT:text
-+ The new /QUIET switch instructs GETOK, when given a timeout, not
-+ to print an error message if it times out. As of 8.0.211, a
-+ default answer can be supplied (see ASK).
-+
-+ HEAD [ switches ] filename
-+ Equivalent to TYPE /HEAD [ other-switches ] filename.
-+
-+ HELP DATE
-+ Explains date-time formats, including timezone notation and
-+ delta times.
-+
-+ HELP FIREWALLS
-+ Explains the firewall negotiation capabilities of your version
-+ of Kermit.
-+
-+ KCD [ symbolic-directory-name ]
-+ Changes Kermit's working directory to the named symbolic
-+ directory, such as such as exedir, inidir, startup, download, or
-+ and home. Type "kcd ?" for a list of symbolic directory names
-+ known to your copy of Kermit, or give the new ORIENTATION
-+ command for a more detailed explanation. If you give a KCD
-+ command without a directory name, Kermit returns to its "home"
-+ directory, which is determined in some way that depends on the
-+ underlying operating system, but which you can redefine with the
-+ (new) SET CD HOME command. Your home directory is shown by SHOW
-+ CD and it's also the value of the \v(home) variable.
-+
-+ LICENSE
-+ Displays the C-Kermit license.
-+
-+ L-commands
-+ When Kermit has a connection to a Kermit or FTP server, file
-+ managment commands such as CD, DIRECTORY, and DELETE might be
-+ intended for the local computer or the remote server. C-Kermit
-+ 8.0.200 and earlier always executes these commands on the local
-+ computer. If you want them executed by the remote server, you
-+ have to prefix them with REMOTE (e.g. REMOTE CD) or use special
-+ R-command aliases (e.g. RCD = REMOTE CD, RDIR = REMOTE DIR,
-+ etc). But this feels unnatural to FTP users, who expect
-+ unprefixed file management commands to be executed by the remote
-+ server, rather than locally. C-Kermit 8.0.201 adds automatic
-+ locus switching to present an FTP-like interface for FTP
-+ connections and the normal Kermit interface for Kermit
-+ connections, and a SET LOCUS command (described below) to
-+ control whether or how this is done. For when LOCUS is REMOTE, a
-+ new set of commands was added for local management: LCD (Local
-+ CD), LDIR (Local DIR), etc. These are described below under SET
-+ LOCUS.
-+
-+ MORE filename
-+ Equivalent to TYPE /PAGE.
-+
-+ ORIENTATION
-+ Displays symbolic directory names and the corresponding variable
-+ names and values. The symbolic names, such as exedir, inidir,
-+ startup, download, and home, can be used as arguments to the new
-+ KCD command.
-+
-+ PROMPT [ text ]
-+ For use in a macro or command file: enters interactive command
-+ mode within the current context ([398]Section 8.1). If the
-+ optional text is included, the prompt is set to it. The text can
-+ include variables, functions, etc, as in the SET PROMPT command.
-+ They are evaluated each time the prompt is printed. Unlike the
-+ SET PROMPT command, the text argument applies only to the
-+ current command level. Thus you can have different prompts at
-+ different levels.
-+
-+ REMOTE SET MATCH { DOTFILE, FIFO } { ON, OFF }
-+ Allows the client to tell the server whether wildcards sent to
-+ the server should match dot files (files whose names begin with
-+ period) or FIFOs (named pipes). See SET MATCH.
-+
-+ SET ATTRIBUTE RECORD-FORMAT { ON, OFF }
-+ Allows control of the Kermit's Record-Format attribute. Set this
-+ to OFF in case incoming file are refused due to unknown or
-+ invalid record formats if you want to accept the file anyway
-+ (and, perhaps, postprocess it to fix its record format).
-+
-+ SET CD HOME [ directory ]
-+ Specifies the target directory for the CD and KCD commands, when
-+ they are given without an argument, and also sets the value of
-+ the \v(home) variable.
-+
-+ SET EXIT HANGUP { OFF, ON }
-+ Normally ON, meaning that when Kermit exits, it also explicitly
-+ hangs up the current SET LINE / SET PORT serial port according
-+ to the current SET MODEM TYPE and SET MODEM HANGUP METHOD, and
-+ closes the port device if it was opened by Kermit in the first
-+ place (as opposed to inherited). SET EXIT HANGUP OFF tells
-+ Kermit not to do this. This can't prevent the operating system
-+ from closing the device when Kermit exits (and it's a "last
-+ close") but if the port or modem have been conditioned to
-+ somehow ignore the close and keep the connection open, at least
-+ Kermit itself won't do anything explicit to hang it up or close
-+ it.
-+
-+ SET FILE EOF { CTRL-Z, LENGTH }
-+ Specifies the end-of-file detection method to be used by
-+ C-Kermit when sending and receiving text files, and in the TYPE
-+ and similar text-file oriented commands. The normal and default
-+ method is LENGTH. You can specify CTRL-Z when handling CP/M or
-+ MS-DOS format text files, in which a Ctrl-Z (ASCII 26) character
-+ within the file marks the end of the file.
-+
-+ SET FILE LISTSIZE number
-+ Allocates space for the given number of filenames to be filled
-+ in by the wildcard expander. The current number is shown by SHOW
-+ FILE. If you give a command that includes a filename containing
-+ a wildcard (such as "*") that matches more files that Kermit's
-+ list has room for, you can adjust the list size with this
-+ command.
-+
-+ SET FILE STRINGSPACE number
-+ Allocates space for the given amount of filename strings for use
-+ by the wildcard expander. The current number is shown by SHOW
-+ FILE. The number is the total number of bytes of all the file
-+ specifications that match the given wildcard.
-+
-+ If you need to process a bigger list of files than your computer has
-+ memory for, you might be able use an external file list. The Kermit
-+ SEND and the FTP PUT and GET commands accept a /LISTFILE: switch,
-+ which gives the name of a file that contains the list of files to be
-+ transferred. Example for UNIX:
-+
-+ !find . -print | grep / > /tmp/names
-+ ftp put /update /recursive /listfile:/tmp/names
-+
-+ SET LOCUS { AUTO, LOCAL, REMOTE }
-+ Added in C-Kermit 8.0.201. Sets the locus for unprefixed file
-+ management commands such as CD, DIRECTORY, MKDIR, etc. When
-+ LOCUS is LOCAL these commands act locally and a REMOTE (or R)
-+ prefix (e.g. REMOTE CD, RCD, RDIR) is required to send file
-+ management commands to a remote server. When LOCUS is REMOTE, an
-+ L prefix is required to issue local file management commands
-+ (e.g. LCD, LDIR). The word LOCAL can't be used as a prefix since
-+ it is already used for declaring local variables. LOCUS applies
-+ to all types of connections, and thus is orthogonal to SET
-+ GET-PUT-REMOTE, which selects between Kermit and FTP for remote
-+ file-transfer and management commands. The default LOCUS is
-+ AUTO, which means we switch to REMOTE whenever an FTP connection
-+ is made, and to LOCAL whenever a non-FTP connection is made, and
-+ switch back accordingly whenever a connnection is closed. So by
-+ default, Kermit behaves in its traditional manner unless you
-+ make an FTP connection, in which case it acts like a regular FTP
-+ client (but better :-) LOCUS applies to the following
-+ commands:
-+
-+ Unprefixed Remote Local Description
-+ CD (CWD) RCD LCD Change (Working) Directory
-+ CDUP RCDUP LCDUP CD Up
-+ PWD RPWD LPWD Print Working Directory
-+ DIRECTORY RDIR LDIR Request a directory listinga
-+ DELETE RDEL LDEL Delete (a) file(s)
-+ RENEME RREN LREN Rename a file
-+ MKDIR RMKDIR LMKDIR Create a directory
-+ RMDIR RRMDIR LRMDIR Remove a directory
-+
-+ SET MATCH { DOTFILE, FIFO } { ON, OFF }
-+ Whether C-Kermit filename patterns (wildcards) should match
-+ filenames that start with dot (period), or (Unix only) FIFOs
-+ (named pipes). The defaults are to skip dotfiles in Unix but
-+ match them elsewhere, and to skip FIFOs. Applies to both
-+ interactive use and to server mode, when the server receives
-+ wildcards, e.g. in a GET command. Also see REMOTE SET MATCH.
-+
-+ SET OPTIONS DIRECTORY /DOTFILES
-+ Now works for server listings too (UNIX only). Give this command
-+ prior to having Kermit enter server mode, and then it will show
-+ files whose names begin with dot (period) when sent a REMOTE
-+ DIRECTORY command.
-+
-+ SET QUIET ON
-+ (as well as the -q command-line option) Now applies also to:
-+
-+ + SET HOST connection progress messages.
-+ + "Press the X or E key to cancel" file-transfer message.
-+ + REMOTE CD response.
-+ + REMOTE LOGIN response.
-+
-+ SET RECEIVE PERMISSIONS { ON, OFF }
-+ Tells C-Kermit whether to set the permissions of incoming files
-+ (received with Kermit protocol) from the permissions supplied in
-+ the file's Attribute packet (if any). Normally ON. Also see SET
-+ SEND PERMISSIONS.
-+
-+ SET ROOT directory
-+ Like UNIX chroot, without requiring privilege. Sets the root for
-+ file access, does not allow reference to or creation of files
-+ outside the root, and can't be undone.
-+
-+ SET SEND PERMISSIONS { ON, OFF }
-+ Tells C-Kermit whether to include file permissions in the
-+ attributes it includes with each file when sending with Kermit
-+ protocol. Also see SET RECEIVE PERMISSIONS.
-+
-+ SET TCP { HTTP-PROXY, SOCKS-SERVER } /USER:name /PASSWORD:text
-+ These commands now allow specification of username and password.
-+
-+ SET TERMINAL . . .
-+ (See [399]Section 12.)
-+
-+ SET TRANSFER MESSAGE [ text ]
-+ Sets an initial text message to be displayed in the
-+ file-transfer display. The transfer message is automatically
-+ deleted once used, so must be set each time a message a desired.
-+ Any variables in the message are evaluated at the time the SET
-+ command is given. If the optional text is omitted, any transfer
-+ message that is currently set is removed. Synonym: SET XFER MSG.
-+ SHOW TRANSFER displays it if it has been set but not yet used.
-+
-+ SHOW COMMUNICATIONS
-+ In C-Kermit 8.0, SHOW COMMUNICATIONS, when given in remote mode
-+ (i.e. before any connection has been established), tells the
-+ typical dialout device name for the particular platform on which
-+ it's running (e.g. TXA0: for VMS, or /dev/cua0p0 for HP-UX). On
-+ Unix platforms, it also tells the name of the lockfile
-+ directory. This way, you have an idea of what the SET LINE
-+ device name should look like, and if the SET LINE command fails,
-+ you know the name of the directory or device that is protected
-+ against you.
-+
-+ SHOW VARIABLES [ name [ name [ ... ] ] ]
-+ In C-Kermit 8.0.201 you can request values of a list of built-in
-+ (\v(xxx)) variables. Each name is a pattern, as before, but now
-+ it a free pattern rather than an anchored one (explained in
-+ [400]Section 8.12) so now "show var date time" shows the values
-+ of all variables whose names include the strings "date" or
-+ "time".
-+
-+ TAIL [ switches ] filename
-+ Equivalent to TYPE /TAIL [ other-switches ] filename.
-+
-+ TRANSMIT /NOECHO [ other switches ] filename
-+ The /NOECHO switch is equivalent to giving the command SET
-+ TRANSMIT ECHO OFF prior to the TRANSMIT command, except the
-+ switch affects only the command with which it was given and does
-+ not affect the prevailing global setting.
-+
-+ TRANSMIT /NOWAIT [ other switches ] filename
-+ The /NOWAIT switch is equivalent to giving the command SET
-+ TRANSMIT PROMPT 0 prior to the TRANSMIT command, except the
-+ switch affects only the command with which it was given and does
-+ not affect the prevailing global setting.
-+
-+ TRANSMIT /NOWAIT /NOECHO /BINARY [ other switches ] filename
-+ When the TRANSMIT command is given with the /NOWAIT, /NOECHO,
-+ and /BINARY switches, this activates a special "blast the whole
-+ file out the communications connection all at once" mode that
-+ Kermit didn't have prior to version 8.0. There has been
-+ increasing demand for this type of transmission with the advent
-+ of devices that expect image (e.g. .JPG) or sound (e.g. .MP3)
-+ files as raw input. The obvious question is: how does the
-+ receiving device know when it has the whole file? This depends
-+ on the device, of course; usually after a certain amount of time
-+ elapses with nothing arriving, or else when Kermit hangs up or
-+ closes the connection.
-+
-+ TYPE /CHARACTER-SET:name
-+ Allows you to specify the character set in which the file to be
-+ typed is encoded.
-+
-+ TYPE /NUMBER
-+ Adds line numbers.
-+
-+ TYPE /OUTPUT:filename
-+ Sends the results of the TYPE command to the given file.
-+
-+ TYPE /TRANSLATE-TO:name
-+ Used in conjunction with TYPE /CHARACTER-SET:xxx; allows you to
-+ specify the character set in which the file is to be displayed.
-+
-+ TYPE /TRANSPARENT
-+ Used to disable character-set translation in the TYPE command,
-+ which otherwise can take place automatically based on file
-+ scanning, even when /CHARACTER-SET and /TRANSLATE-TO switches
-+ are not given.
-+
-+ VOID text
-+ Parses the text, evaluating any backslash items in it (such as
-+ function calls) but doesn't do anything further, except possibly
-+ printing error messages. Useful for invoking functions that have
-+ side effects without using or printing their direct results,
-+ e.g. "void \fsplit(\%a,&a)".
-+
-+Symbolic Links in UNIX
-+
-+ The UNIX versions of C-Kermit have had /FOLLOWLINKS and /NOFOLLOWLINKS
-+ switches added to several commands to control the treatment of symbolic
-+ links. Different commands deal differently with symbolic links:
-+
-+ Kermit SEND, FTP MPUT
-+ /NOFOLLOWLINKS is the default, which means symbolic links are
-+ skipped entirely. The alternative, /FOLLOWLINKS, should be used
-+ with caution, since an innocent link might point to a whole file
-+ system, or it might cause a loop. There is no way in Kermit or
-+ FTP protocol to send the link itself. We either skip them or
-+ follow them; we can't duplicate them.
-+
-+ DIRECTORY
-+ /NOFOLLOWLINKS is the default, which means the DIRECTORY command
-+ lists symbolic links in a way that shows they are links, but it
-+ does not follow them. The alternative, /FOLLOWLINKS, follows
-+ links and gives information about the linked-to directories and
-+ files.
-+
-+ DELETE, RMDIR
-+ The DELETE command does not have link-specific switches. DELETE
-+ never follows links. If you tell Kermit to delete a symbolic
-+ link, it deletes the link itself, not the linked-to file. Ditto
-+ for RMDIR.
-+
-+ COPY
-+ The COPY command behaves just like the UNIX cp command; it
-+ always follows links.
-+
-+ RENAME
-+ The RENAME command behaves just like the UNIX mv command; it
-+ operates on links directly rather than following.
-+
-+ [ [401]Top ] [ [402]Contents ] [ [403]C-Kermit Home ] [ [404]Kermit
-+ Home ]
-+
-+8. OTHER SCRIPTING IMPROVEMENTS
-+
-+8.1. Performance and Debugging
-+
-+ A command cache for frequently used commands plus some related
-+ optimizations increases the speed of compute-bound scripts by anywhere
-+ from 50% to 1000%.
-+
-+ The new PROMPT command can be used to set breakpoints for debugging
-+ scripts. If executed in a command file or macro, it gives you an
-+ interactive command prompt in the current context of the script, with
-+ all its variables, arguments, command stack, etc, available for
-+ examination or change, and the ability to resume the script at any
-+ point (END resumes it, Ctrl-C or STOP cancels it and returns to top
-+ level).
-+
-+ The new Ctrl-C trapping feature ([405]Section 8.14) lets you intercept
-+ interruption of scripts. This can be used in combination with the
-+ PROMPT command to debug scripts. Example:
-+
-+define ON_CTRLC {
-+ echo INTERRUPTED BY CTRL-C...
-+ echo The command stack has not yet been rolled back:
-+ show stack
-+ echo Type Ctrl-C again or use the END command to return to top level.
-+ prompt Debug>
-+}
-+
-+ Adding this ON_CTRL definition to your script lets you interrupt it at
-+ any point and get prompt that is issued at the current command level,
-+ so you can query local variables, etc.
-+
-+ [ [406]Top ] [ [407]Contents ] [ [408]C-Kermit Home ] [ [409]Kermit
-+ Home ]
-+
-+8.2. Using Macros as Numeric Variables
-+
-+ A macro is a way to assign a value to a name, and then use the name to
-+ refer to the value. Macros are used in two ways in Kermit: as
-+ "subroutines" or functions composed of Kermit commands, which are
-+ executed, or as variables to hold arbitrary values -- text, numbers,
-+ filenames, etc.
-+
-+ When a macro is to be executed, its name is given as if it were a
-+ C-Kermit command, optionally preceded by the word "do". When a macro is
-+ used as a variable, it must be "escaped" with \m(xxx) (or equivalent
-+ function, e.g. \s(xxx), \:(xxx), \fdefinition(xxx)), where xxx is the
-+ macro name, for example:
-+
-+ define filename /usr/olga/oofa.txt
-+ send \m(filename)
-+
-+ Of course variables can also hold numbers:
-+
-+ define size 17
-+ declare \&a[\m(size)]
-+ ...
-+ define index 3
-+ if ( == \m(index) 3 ) echo The third value is: \&a[\m(index)]
-+ evaluate index (\m(index) * 4)
-+ if ( > \m(index) \m(size) ) echo Out of range!
-+
-+ But these are contexts in which only numbers are valid. C-Kermit 8.0
-+ has been changed to treat non-escaped non-numeric items in strictly
-+ numeric contexts as macro names. So it is now possible (but not
-+ required) to omit the \m(...) notation and just use the macro name in
-+ these contexts:
-+
-+ define size 17
-+ declare \&a[size]
-+ ...
-+ define index 3
-+ if ( == index 3 ) echo The third value is: \&a[index]
-+ evaluate index (index * 4)
-+ if ( > index size ) echo Out of range!
-+
-+ This is especially nice for loops that deal with arrays. Here, for
-+ example, is a loop that reverses the order of the elements in an array.
-+ Whereas formerly it was necessary to write:
-+
-+ .\%n ::= \fdim(&a)
-+ for \%i 1 \%n/2 1 {
-+ .tmp := \&a[\%n-\%i+1]
-+ .\&a[\%n-\%i+1] := \&a[\%i]
-+ .\&a[\%i] := \m(tmp)
-+ }
-+
-+ Recoding this to use macro names "i" and "n" instead of the backslash
-+ variables \%i and \%n, we have:
-+
-+ .n ::= \fdim(&a)
-+ for i 1 n/2 1 {
-+ .tmp := \&a[n-i+1]
-+ .\&a[n-i+1] := \&a[i]
-+ .\&a[i] := \m(tmp)
-+ }
-+
-+ which reduces the backslash count to less than half. The final
-+ statement in the loop could be written ".\&a[i] ::= tmp" if the array
-+ contained only numbers (since ::= indicates arithmetic expression
-+ evaluation).
-+
-+ Also, now you can use floating-point numbers in integer contexts (such
-+ as array subscripts), in which case they are truncated to an integer
-+ value (i.e. the fractional part is discarded).
-+
-+ Examples of numeric contexts include:
-+
-+ * Array subscripts.
-+ * Any numeric function argument.
-+ * Right-hand side of ::= assignments.
-+ * EVALUATE command or \fevaluate() function expression.
-+ * The INCREMENT or DECREMENT by-value.
-+ * IF =, >, <, !=, >=, and <= comparands.
-+ * The IF number construct.
-+ * FOR-loop variables.
-+ * STOP, END, and EXIT status codes.
-+ * The INPUT timeout value.
-+ * PAUSE, WAIT, SLEEP, MSLEEP intervals.
-+ * The SHIFT argument.
-+ * Numeric switch arguments, e.g. TYPE /WIDTH:number, SEND
-+ /LARGER:number.
-+ * SCREEN MOVE-TO row and column number.
-+ * Various SET DIAL parameters (timeout, retry limit, etc).
-+ * Various SET SEND or RECEIVE parameters (packet length, window size,
-+ etc).
-+ * Various other SET parameters.
-+
-+ and:
-+
-+ * S-Expressions (explained in [410]Section 9).
-+
-+ Macro names used in numeric contexts must not include mathematical
-+ operators. Although it is legal to create a macro called "foo+bar", in
-+ a numeric context this would be taken as the sum of the values of "foo"
-+ and "bar". Any such conflict can be avoided, of course, by enclosing
-+ the macro name in \m(...).
-+
-+ [ [411]Top ] [ [412]Contents ] [ [413]C-Kermit Home ] [ [414]Kermit
-+ Home ]
-+
-+8.3. New IF Conditions
-+
-+ Several new IF conditions are available:
-+
-+ IF DECLARED arrayname
-+ Explained in [415]Section 8.6.
-+
-+ IF KBHIT
-+ Allows a script to test whether a key was pressed without
-+ actually trying to read it.
-+
-+ IF KERBANG (Unix only)
-+ True if Kermit was started from a Kerbang script. This is useful
-+ for knowing how to interpret the \&@[] and \&_[] argument vector
-+ arrays, and under what conditions to exit.
-+
-+ IF INTEGER n
-+ This is just a synonym for IF NUMERIC, which is true if n
-+ contains only digits (or, if n is a variable, its value contains
-+ only digits).
-+
-+ By contrast, IF FLOAT n succeeds if n is a floating-point number OR an
-+ integer (or a variable with floating-point or integer value).
-+ Therefore, IF FLOAT should be used whenever any kind of number is
-+ acceptable, whereas IF INTEGER (or IF NUMERIC) when only an integer can
-+ be used.
-+
-+ [ [416]Top ] [ [417]Contents ] [ [418]C-Kermit Home ] [ [419]Kermit
-+ Home ]
-+
-+8.4. The ON_UNKNOWN_COMMAND Macro
-+
-+ The new ON_UNKNOWN_COMMAND macro, if defined, is executed whenever you
-+ give a command that is not known to C-Kermit; any operands are passed
-+ as arguments. Here are some sample definitions:
-+
-+ DEF ON_UNKNOWN_COMMAND telnet \%1 ; Treat unknown commands as hostnames
-+ DEF ON_UNKNOWN_COMMAND dial \%1 ; Treat unknown commands phone numbers
-+ DEF ON_UNKNOWN_COMMAND take \%1 ; Treat unknown commands as filenames
-+ DEF ON_UNKNOWN_COMMAND !\%* ; Treat unknown commands as shell commands
-+
-+ The ON_CD macro, if defined, is executed whenever Kermit is given a CD
-+ (change directory) command (8.0.211). Upon entry to this macro, the
-+ directory has already changed and the new directory string is available
-+ in the \v(directory) variable, and also as the first argument (\%1).
-+
-+ [ [420]Top ] [ [421]Contents ] [ [422]C-Kermit Home ] [ [423]Kermit
-+ Home ]
-+
-+8.5. The SHOW MACRO Command
-+
-+ The SHOW MACRO command has been changed to accept more than one macro
-+ name:
-+
-+ (setq a 1 b 2 c 3)
-+ show mac a b c
-+ a = 1
-+ b = 2
-+ c = 3
-+
-+ An exact match is required for each name (except that case doesn't
-+ matter). If you include wildcard characters, however, a pattern match
-+ is performed:
-+
-+ show mac [a-c]*x
-+
-+ shows all macros whose names start with a, b, or c, and end with x.
-+
-+ [ [424]Top ] [ [425]Contents ] [ [426]C-Kermit Home ] [ [427]Kermit
-+ Home ]
-+
-+8.6. Arrays
-+
-+ A clarification regarding references to array names (as opposed to
-+ array elements): You can use array-name "abbreviations" like &a only in
-+ contexts that expect array names, like ARRAY commands or array-name
-+ function arguments such as the second argument of \fsplit(). In a LOCAL
-+ statement, however, you have to write \&a[], since "local &a" might
-+ refer to a macro named "&a".
-+
-+ In function arguments, however, you MUST use the abbreviated form:
-+ \fsplit(\%a,&a) or \fsplit(\%a,&a[]). If you include the backslash (as
-+ in "\fsplit(\%a,\&a[])") a parse error occurs.
-+
-+ Here are the new array-related commands:
-+
-+ IF DECLARED arrayname
-+ Allows a script to test whether an array has been declared. The
-+ arrayname can be a non-array backslash variable such as \%1 or
-+ \m(name), in which case it is evaluated first, and the result is
-+ treated as the array name. Otherwise, arrayname is treated as in
-+ the ARRAY commands: it can be a, &a, &a[], \&a, \&a[], \&a[3],
-+ \&a[3:9], etc, with the appropriate results in each case.
-+ Synonym: IF DCL.
-+
-+ UNDECLARE arrayname
-+ UNDECLARE is a new top-level command to undeclare an array.
-+ Previously this could only be done with "declare \&a[0]" (i.e.
-+ re-declare the array with a dimension of 0).
-+
-+ ARRAY LINK linkname arrayname
-+ Creates a symbolic link from the array named by linkname (which
-+ must be the name of an array that is not yet declared in the
-+ current context) to the array named by arrayname (which must the
-+ name of a currently declared array that is not itself a link, or
-+ a variable containing the name of such an array). The two names
-+ indicate the same array: if you change an array element, the
-+ change is reflected in the link too, and vice versa. If you
-+ undeclare the link, the real array is unaffected. If you
-+ undeclare the real array, all links to it disappear. If you
-+ resize an array (directly or through a link), all links to it
-+ are updated automatically.
-+
-+ Array links let you pass array names as arguments to macros. For
-+ example, suppose you had a program that needed to uppercase all the
-+ elements of different arrays at different times. You could write a
-+ macro to do this, with the array name as an argument. But without array
-+ links, there would be no way to refer to the argument array within the
-+ macro. Array links make it easy:
-+
-+ define arrayupper {
-+ local \&e[] \%i
-+ array link \&e[] \%1
-+ for i 1 \fdim(&e) 1 { .\&e[i] := \fupper(\&e[i]) }
-+ }
-+ declare \&a[] = these are some words
-+ arrayupper &a
-+ show array &a
-+
-+ The macro declares the array link LOCAL, which means it doesn't
-+ conflict with any array of the same name that might exist outside the
-+ macro, and that the link is destroyed automatically when the macro
-+ exits. This works, by the way, even if the link name and the macro
-+ argument name are the same, as long as the link is declared LOCAL.
-+
-+ As noted, you can't make a link to a nonexistent array. So when writing
-+ a macro whose job is to create an array whose name is passed as an
-+ argument, you must declare the array first (the size doesn't matter as
-+ long as it's greater than 0). Example:
-+
-+ define tryme { ; Demonstration macro
-+ local \&e[] ; We only need this inside the macro
-+ array link \&e[] \%1 ; Make local link
-+ shift ; Shift argument list
-+ void \fsplit(\%*,&e) ; Split remainder of arg list into array
-+ }
-+ declare \&a[1] ; Declare target array in advance
-+ tryme &a here are some words ; Invoke the macro with array name and words
-+ show array a ; See the results
-+
-+ One final improvement allows the macro itself to declare the array
-+ (this was not possible in earlier Kermit releases): if the array name
-+ in the DECLARE command is a variable (and not an array name), or
-+ includes variables, the resulting value is used as the array name. So:
-+
-+ define tryme { ; Demonstration macro
-+ declare \%1[1] ; Preliminary declaration for target array
-+ local \&e[] ; We only need this inside the macro
-+ array link \&e[] \%1 ; Make local link
-+ shift ; Shift argument list
-+ void \fsplit(\%*,&e) ; Split remainder of arg list into array
-+ }
-+ tryme &a here are some words ; Invoke the macro with array name and words
-+ show array a ; See the results
-+
-+ The SHOW ARRAY command now indicates whether an array name is a link.
-+
-+ Also see the descriptions of [428]\fjoin() and [429]\fsplit(), plus
-+ [430]Section 8.10 on the MINPUT command, which shows how an entire
-+ array (or segment of it) can be used as the MINPUT target list.
-+
-+ [ [431]Top ] [ [432]Contents ] [ [433]C-Kermit Home ] [ [434]Kermit
-+ Home ]
-+
-+8.7. New or Improved Built-in Variables and Functions
-+
-+ The following new built-in variables are available:
-+
-+ \v(buildid) A date string like "20000808" indicating when C-Kermit was b
-+uilt.
-+ \v(ftime) Current time, secs since midnight, including fraction of sec
-+ond.
-+ \v(iprompt) The current SET PROMPT value
-+ \v(sexp) The most recent S-Expression (see [435]Section 9)
-+ \v(sdepth) The current S-Expression invocation depth ([436]Section 9)
-+ \v(svalue) The value of the most recent S-Expression ([437]Section 9)
-+
-+ \v(ftp_code) Most recent FTP response code ([438]Section 3)
-+ \v(ftp_connected) FTP connection status ([439]Section 3)
-+ \v(ftp_cpl) FTP Command Protection Level ([440]Section 3.2)
-+ \v(ftp_dpl) FTP Data Protection Level ([441]Section 3.2)
-+ \v(ftp_getputremote) The current SET GET-PUT-REMOTE setting ([442]Section 3.8)
-+
-+ \v(ftp_host) Name or IP address of FTP server ([443]Section 3)
-+ \v(ftp_loggedin) FTP login status ([444]Section 3)
-+ \v(ftp_message) Most recent FTP response message ([445]Section 3)
-+ \v(ftp_security) FTP Security method ([446]Section 3.2)
-+ \v(ftp_server) OS type of FTP server ([447]Section 3)
-+
-+ \v(http_code) Most recent HTTP response code
-+ \v(http_connected) HTTP connection status
-+ \v(http_host) Name or IP address of HTTP server
-+ \v(http_message) Most recent HTTP response message
-+ \v(http_security) TLS cipher used to secure the HTTP session
-+
-+ \v(hour) Hour of the day, 0 to 23.
-+ \v(timestamp) Equivalent to "\v(ndate) \v(time)".
-+
-+ \v(log_debug) Current debug log file, if any.
-+ \v(log_packet) Current packet log file, if any.
-+ \v(log_session) Current session log file, if any.
-+ \v(log_transaction) Current transaction log file, if any.
-+ \v(log_connection) Current connection log file, if any.
-+
-+ The following new or improved built-in functions are available:
-+
-+ \fcmdstack() Allows programmatic access to the command stack.
-+ \fcvtdate() [448]Section 8.13, format options added
-+ \fdelta2secs() [449]Section 8.13
-+ \fdostounixpath(s1) Converts a DOS filename to Unix format.
-+ \fsplit() Now allows grouping/nesting in source string.
-+ \fword() Allows the same grouping and nesting.
-+ \fjoin(&a,s1,n1,n2) Copies an array into a single string.
-+ \fsubstitute(s1,s2,s3) Substitutes characters within a string.
-+ \freplace() Has new 4th "occurrence" argument.
-+ \fsexpression() Evaluates an S-Expression (explained in [450]Section 9
-+).
-+ \ftrim(), \fltrim() Now trim CR and LF by default, as well as SP and Tab.
-+ \funixtodospath(s1) Converts a Unix filename to DOS format.
-+ \fkeywordval(s1,c1) Assigns values to keywords (macros) (explained below).
-+
-+ Most functions that have "2" in their names to stand for the word "to"
-+ can now also be written with "to", e.g. "\fdelta2secs(),"
-+ \fdeltatosecs()."
-+
-+ \funtabify(string)
-+ (New to 8.0.211) Replaces Horizontal Tab characters in the given
-+ string with spaces based on VT100-like tab stops.
-+
-+ \fverify(s1,s2,n)
-+ As of version 8.0.211, returns -1 if s2 is an empty string.
-+ Previously it returned 0, making \fverify(abc,\%a) look as if
-+ \%a was a string combosed of a's, b's, and/or c's when in fact
-+ it contained nothing.
-+
-+ \fcode(string)
-+ As of version 8.0.211, returns 0 if string is empty or missing.
-+ Previously it returned the empty string, which made it unsafe to
-+ use in arithmetic or boolean expressions.
-+
-+ \v(inscale)
-+ New to version 8.0.211, its value is the INPUT SCALE-FACTOR
-+ ([451]Section 8.10), default 1.0.
-+
-+8.7.1. The \fkeywordval() Function
-+
-+ \fkeywordval(s1,c1) is new to C-Kermit 8.0. Given a string s1 of the
-+ form "name=value", it creates a macro with the given name and assigns
-+ it the given value. If no value appears after the equal sign, any
-+ existing macro of the given name is undefined. Blanks are automatically
-+ trimmed from around the name and value. The optional c1 parameter is
-+ the assignment operator character, equal sign (=) by default. This
-+ function is handy for processing keyword parameters or any other form
-+ of parameter-value pair. Suppose, for example, you want to write a
-+ macro that accepts keyword parameters rather than positional ones:
-+
-+ define MYDIAL {
-+ local \%i modem hangup method device speed number
-+ def number 5551234 ; Assign default parameter values
-+ def speed 57600
-+ def modem usrobotics
-+ def hangup rs232
-+ def method tone
-+ def country 1
-+ for \%i 1 \v(argc)-1 1 { ; Parse any keyword parameters...
-+ if not \fkeywordval(\&_[\%i]) end 1 Bad parameter: "\&_[\%i]"
-+ }
-+ set dial country \m(country)
-+ set modem type \m(modem)
-+ set modem hang \m(hangup)
-+ set dial method \m(tone)
-+ set line \m(device)
-+ if fail stop 1
-+ set speed \m(speed)
-+ if fail stop 1
-+ show comm
-+ set dial display on
-+ dial \m(number)
-+ if success connect
-+ }
-+
-+ In this example, all the defaults are set up inside the macro, and
-+ therefore it can be invoked with no parameters at all. But if you want
-+ to have the macro dial a different number, you can supply it as
-+ follows:
-+
-+ mydial number=7654321
-+
-+ You can supply any number of keyword parameters, and you can give them
-+ in any order:
-+
-+ mydial number=7654321 hangup=modem speed=115200
-+
-+8.7.2. The \fsplit(), \fjoin(), and \fword() Functions
-+
-+ \fjoin(&a,s1,n1,n2) is also new; it creates a string from an array (or
-+ a piece of one). &a is the name of the array (a range specifier can be
-+ included); s1 is a character or string to separate each element in the
-+ result string (can be omitted, in which case the elements are not
-+ separated at all), and n1 is a grouping mask, explained below. If s1 is
-+ empty or not specified, the array elements are separated with spaces.
-+ If you want the elements concatenated with no separator, include a
-+ nonzero n2 argument. Given the array:
-+
-+ declare \&a[] = 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
-+
-+ you can get effects like this:
-+
-+ \fjoin(&a) 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
-+ \fjoin(&a,:) 0:1:2:3:4:5:6:7:8:9
-+ \fjoin(&a,{,}) 0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9
-+ \fjoin(&a,...) 0...1...2...3...4...5...6...7...8...9
-+ \fjoin(&a,,,1) 0123456789
-+
-+ \fsplit(), \fword(), \fstripb(), and \fjoin() accept a "grouping mask"
-+ argument, n1, which is a number from 0 to 63, in which:
-+
-+ 1 = "" doublequotes
-+ 2 = {} braces
-+ 4 = '' singlequotes
-+ 8 = () parentheses
-+ 16 = [] square brackets
-+ 32 = <> angle brackets
-+
-+ These can be OR'd (added) together to make any number 0-63 (-1 is
-+ treated the same as 63, 0 means no grouping). If a bit is on, the
-+ corresponding kind of grouping is selected. (If more than 1 bit is set
-+ for \fjoin(), only the lowest-order one is used.)
-+
-+ If you include the same character in the grouping mask and the include
-+ list, the grouping mask takes precedence. Example:
-+
-+ def \%a a "b c d" e
-+ \fsplit(\%a,&a[],,,-1) = 3 <-- doublequote used for grouping
-+ \fsplit(\%a,&a[],,",-1) = 3 <-- doublequote still used for grouping
-+
-+ Nesting of matched left and right grouping characters (parentheses,
-+ braces, and brackets, but not quotes) is recognized. Example:
-+
-+ def \%a a (b c <d e [f g {h i} j k] l m> n o) p
-+ \fsplit(\%a,&a,,,0) = 16 (no grouping)
-+ \fsplit(\%a,&a,,,2) = 15 (braces only)
-+ \fsplit(\%a,&a,,,16) = 11 (square brackets only)
-+ \fsplit(\%a,&a,,,32) = 7 (angle brackets only)
-+ \fsplit(\%a,&a,,,63) = 3 (all)
-+ \fsplit(\%a,&a,,,-1) = 3 (all)
-+
-+ \fsplit() and \fjoin() are "reciprocal" functions. You can split a
-+ string up into an array and join it back into a new string that is
-+ equivalent, as long as \fsplit() and \fjoin() are given equivalent
-+ grouping masks, except that the type of braces might change. Example:
-+
-+ def \%a a {b c [d e] f g} "h i" j <k l> m
-+ echo STRING=[\%a]
-+ echo WORDS=\fsplit(\%a,&a,,,-1)
-+ show array a
-+ asg \%b \fjoin(&a,{ },2)
-+ echo JOIN =[\%b]
-+ echo WORDS=\fsplit(\%b,&b,,,-1)
-+ show array b
-+
-+ The arrays a and b are identical. The strings a and b are as follows:
-+
-+ \%a: a {b c [d e] f g} "h i" j <k l> m
-+ \%b: a {b c [d e] f g} {h i} j {k l} m
-+
-+ It is possible to quote separator grouping characters with backslash to
-+ override their grouping function. And of course to include backslash
-+ itself in the string, it must be quoted too. Furthermore, each
-+ backslash must be doubled, so the command parser will still pass one
-+ backslash to \fsplit() for each two that it sees. Here are some
-+ examples using \fsplit() with a grouping mask of 8 (treat parentheses
-+ as grouping characters).
-+
-+ String Result
-+ a b c d e f 6
-+ a b\\ c d e f 5
-+ a b (c d e) f 4
-+ a b \\(c d e\\) f 6
-+ a b \\\\(c d e\\\\) f 7
-+
-+ \fsplit() has also been changed to create its array (if one is given)
-+ each time it is called, so now it can be conveniently called in a loop
-+ without having to redeclare the array each time.
-+
-+ Incidentally... Sometimes you might want to invoke \fsplit() in a
-+ situation where you don't care about its return value, e.g. when you
-+ just want to fill the array. Now you can "call" \fsplit() or any other
-+ function with the new [452]VOID command:
-+
-+ void \fsplit(\%a,&a)
-+
-+ \fsplit() and \fjoin() also accept a new, optional 6th argument, an
-+ options flag, a number that can specify a number of options. So far
-+ there is just one option, whose value is 1:
-+
-+ separator-flag
-+ Normally separators are collapsed. So, for example,
-+
-+ \fword(Three little words,2)
-+
-+ returns "little" (the second word). Space is a separator, but
-+ there are multiple spaces between each word. If the value 1 is
-+ included in the option flag, however, each separator counts. If
-+ two separators are adjacent, an empty word is produced between
-+ them. This is useful for parsing (e.g.) comma-separated lists
-+ exported from databases or spreadsheets.
-+
-+8.7.3. The \fcmdstack() Function
-+
-+ The new \fcmdstack() function gives access to the command stack:
-+
-+ \fcmdstack(n1,n2)
-+ Arguments: n1 is the command stack level. If omitted, the
-+ current level, \v(cmdlevel), is used. n2 is a function code
-+ specifying the desired type of information:
-+
-+ 0 (default) = name of object at level n1.
-+ 1 (nonzero) = object type (0 = prompt; 1 = command file; 2 = macro).
-+
-+ The default for n2 is 0.
-+
-+ The name associated with prompt is "(prompt)". Here's a loop that can
-+ be included in a macro or command file to show the stack (similar to
-+ what the SHOW STACK command does):
-+
-+ for \%i \v(cmdlevel) 0 -1 {
-+ echo \%i. [\fcmdstack(\%i,1)] \fcmdstack(\%i,0)
-+ }
-+
-+ In this connection, note that \v(cmdfile) always indicates the most
-+ recently invoked active command file (if any), even if that file is
-+ executing a macro. Similarly, \v(macro) indicates the most recently
-+ invoked macro (if any), even if the current command source is not a
-+ macro. The name of the "caller" of the currently executing object
-+ (command file or macro) is:
-+
-+ \fcmdstack(\v(cmdlevel)-1)
-+
-+ and its type is:
-+
-+ \fcmdstack(\v(cmdlevel)-1,1)
-+
-+ To find the name of the macro that invoked the currently executing
-+ object, even if one or more intermediate command files (or prompting
-+ levels) are involved, use a loop like this:
-+
-+ for \%i \v(cmdlevel)-1 0 -1 {
-+ if = \fcmdstack(\%i,1) 2 echo CALLER = \fcmdstack(\%i,0)
-+ }
-+
-+ Of course if you make a macro to do this, the macro must account for
-+ its own additional level:
-+
-+ define CALLER {
-+ for \%i \v(cmdlevel)-2 0 -1 {
-+ if = \fcmdstack(\%i,1) 2 return \fcmdstack(\%i,0)
-+ }
-+ return "(none)"
-+ }
-+
-+ The built-in variable \v(cmdsource) gives the current command source as
-+ a word ("prompt", "file", or "macro").
-+
-+8.7.4. The VOID Command
-+
-+ VOID is like ECHO in that all functions and variables in its argument
-+ text are evaluated. but it doesn't print anything (except possibly an
-+ error message if a function was invocation contained or resulted in any
-+ errors). VOID sets FAILURE if it encounters any errors, SUCCESS
-+ otherwise.
-+
-+ [ [453]Top ] [ [454]Contents ] [ [455]C-Kermit Home ] [ [456]Kermit
-+ Home ]
-+
-+8.8. The RETURN and END Commands
-+
-+ The execution of a macro is terminated in any of the following ways:
-+
-+ * With an END [ number [ message ] ] command. If a number is given,
-+ the macro succeeds if the number is 0, and fails if it is not zero;
-+ if a number is not given, the macro succeeds.
-+ * With a STOP command, which works just like END except it peels back
-+ the command stack all the way to top level.
-+ * With a RETURN [ text ] command, in which case the macro always
-+ succeeds.
-+ * By running out of commands to execute, in which case the macro
-+ succeeds or fails according the most recently executed command that
-+ sets success or failure.
-+
-+ The same considerations apply to command files invoked by the TAKE
-+ command.
-+
-+ If a macro does not execute any commands that set success or failure,
-+ then invoking the macro does not change the current SUCCESS/FAILURE
-+ status. It follows, then, that the mere invocation of a macro does not
-+ change the SUCCESS/FAILURE status either. This makes it possible to
-+ write macros to react to the status of other commands (or macros), for
-+ example:
-+
-+ define CHKLINE {
-+ if success end 0
-+ stop 1 SET LINE failed - please try another device.
-+ }
-+ set modem type usrobotics
-+ set line /dev/cua0
-+ chkline
-+ set speed 57600
-+ dial 7654321
-+
-+ By the way, none of this is news. But it was not explicitly documented
-+ before, and C-Kermit 7.0 and earlier did not always handle the RETURN
-+ statement as it should have.
-+
-+ [ [457]Top ] [ [458]Contents ] [ [459]C-Kermit Home ] [ [460]Kermit
-+ Home ]
-+
-+8.9. UNDEFINing Groups of Variables
-+
-+ The UNDEFINE command, which previously accepted one variable name, now
-+ accepts a list of them, and also accepts wildcard notation to allow
-+ deletion of variables that match a given pattern.
-+
-+ UNDEFINE [ switches ] name [ name [ name [ ... ] ] ]
-+ Undefines the variables whose names are given. Up to 64 names
-+ may be given in one UNDEFINE command.
-+
-+ If you omit the switches and include only one name, the UNDEFINE
-+ command works as before.
-+
-+ Switches include:
-+
-+ /MATCHING
-+ Specifies that the names given are to treated as patterns rather
-+ than literal variable names. Note: pattern matching can't be
-+ used with array references; use the ARRAY command to manipulate
-+ arrays and subarrays.
-+
-+ /LIST
-+ List the name of each variable to be undefined, and whether it
-+ was undefined successfully ("ok" or "error"), plus a summary
-+ count at the end.
-+
-+ /SIMULATE
-+ List the names of the variables that would be deleted without
-+ actually deleting them. Implies /LIST.
-+
-+ The UNDEFINE command fails if there were any errors and succeeds
-+ otherwise.
-+
-+ The new _UNDEFINE command is like UNDEFINE, except the names are
-+ assumed to be variable names themselves, which contain the names (or
-+ parts of them) of the variables to be undefined. For example, if you
-+ have the following definitions:
-+
-+ define \%a foo
-+ define foo This is some text
-+
-+ then:
-+
-+ undef \%a
-+
-+ undefines the variable \%a, but:
-+
-+ _undef \%a
-+
-+ undefines the macro foo.
-+
-+ Normal Kermit patterns are used for matching; metacharacters include
-+ asterisk, question mark, braces, and square brackets. Thus, when using
-+ the /MATCHING switch, if the names of the macros you want to undefine
-+ contain any of these characters, you must quote them with backslash to
-+ force them to be taken literally. Also note that \%* is not the name of
-+ a variable; it is a special notation used within a macro for "all my
-+ arguments". The command "undef /match \%*" deletes all \%x variables,
-+ where x is 0..9 and a..z. Use "undef /match \%[0-9]" to delete macro
-+ argument variables or "undef /match \%[i-n]" to delete a range of \%x
-+ variables.
-+
-+ [ [461]Top ] [ [462]Contents ] [ [463]C-Kermit Home ] [ [464]Kermit
-+ Home ]
-+
-+8.10. The INPUT and MINPUT Commands
-+
-+ As of C-Kermit 8.0.211, the INPUT and MINPUT commands accept a switch:
-+
-+ [M]INPUT /NOMATCH timeout
-+ The /NOMATCH switch allows INPUT or MINPUT to read incoming
-+ material for the specified amount of time, without attempting to
-+ match it with any text or patterns. When this switch is
-+ included, the [M]INPUT command succeeds when the timeout
-+ interval expires, with \v(instatus) set to 1, meaning "timed
-+ out", or fails upon interruption or i/o error.
-+
-+ Also in version 8.0.211, there is a new way to apply a scale factor to
-+ [M]INPUT timeouts:
-+
-+ SET INPUT SCALE-FACTOR floating-point-number
-+ This scales all [M]INPUT timeouts by the given factor, allowing
-+ time-sensitive scripts to be adjusted to changing conditions
-+ such as congested networks or different-speed modems without
-+ having to change each INPUT-class command. This affects only
-+ those timeouts that are given in seconds, not as wall-clock
-+ times. Although the scale factor can have a fractional part, the
-+ INPUT timeout is still an integer. The new built-in variable
-+ \v(inscale) tells the current INPUT SCALE-FACTOR.
-+
-+ The MINPUT command can be used to search the incoming data stream for
-+ several targets simultaneously. For example:
-+
-+ MINPUT 8 one two three
-+
-+ waits up to 8 seconds for one of the words "one", "two", or "three" to
-+ arrive. Words can be grouped to indicate targets that contain spaces:
-+
-+ MINPUT 8 nineteeen twenty "twenty one"
-+
-+ And of course you can also use variables in place of (or as part of)
-+ the target names:
-+
-+ MINPUT 8 \%a \&x[3] \m(foo)
-+
-+ Until now you had to know the number of targets in advance when writing
-+ the MINPUT statement. Each of the examples above has exactly three
-+ targets.
-+
-+ But suppose your script needs to look for a variable number of targets.
-+ For this you can use arrays and \fjoin(), described in [465]Section
-+ 8.7. Any number of \fjoin() invocations can be included in the MINPUT
-+ target list, and each one is expanded into the appropriate number of
-+ separate targets each time the MINPUT command is executed. Example:
-+
-+ declare \&a[10] = one two three
-+ minput 10 foo \fjoin(&a) bar
-+
-+ This declares an array of ten elements, and assigns values to the first
-+ three of them. The MINPUT command looks for these three (as well as the
-+ words "foo" and "bar"). Later, if you assign additional elements to the
-+ array, the same MINPUT command also looks for the new elements.
-+
-+ If an array element contains spaces, each word becomes a separate
-+ target. To create one target per array element, use \fjoin()'s grouping
-+ feature:
-+
-+ dcl \&a[] = {aaa bbb} {ccc ddd} {xxx yyy zzz}
-+
-+ minput 10 \fjoin(&a) <-- 7 targets
-+ minput 10 \fjoin(&a,,2) <-- 3 targets
-+
-+ [ [466]Top ] [ [467]Contents ] [ [468]C-Kermit Home ] [ [469]Kermit
-+ Home ]
-+
-+8.11. Learned Scripts
-+
-+ C-Kermit now includes a simple script recorder that monitors your
-+ commands, plus your actions during CONNECT mode, and automatically
-+ generates a script program that mimics what it observed. You should
-+ think of this feature as a script-writing ASSISTANT since, as you will
-+ see [470]later in this section, the result generally needs some editing
-+ to make it both secure and flexible. The script recorder is controlled
-+ by the new LEARN command:
-+
-+ LEARN [ /ON /OFF /CLOSE ] [ filename ]
-+ If you give a filename, the file is opened for subsequent
-+ recording. The /ON switch enables recording to the current file
-+ (if any); /OFF disables recording. /CLOSE closes the current
-+ script recording file (if any). If you give a filename without
-+ any switches, /ON is assumed.
-+
-+ The /OFF and /ON switches let you turn recording off and on during a
-+ session without closing the file.
-+
-+ When recording:
-+
-+ * All commands that you type (or recall) at the prompt are recorded
-+ in the file except:
-+ + LEARN commands are not recorded.
-+ + The CONNECT command is not recorded.
-+ + The TELNET command is converted to SET HOST /NETWORK:TCP.
-+ * Commands obtained from macros or command files are not recorded.
-+ * During CONNECT:
-+ + Every line you type is converted to an OUTPUT command.
-+ + The last prompt before any line you type becomes an INPUT
-+ command.
-+ + Timeouts are calculated automatically for each INPUT command.
-+ + A PAUSE command is inserted before each OUTPUT command just to
-+ be safe.
-+
-+ Thus the script recorder is inherently line-oriented. It can't be used
-+ to script character-oriented interactions like typing Space to a
-+ "More?" prompt or editing a text file with VI or EMACS.
-+
-+ But it has advantages too; for example it takes control characters into
-+ account that might not be visible to you otherwise, and it
-+ automatically converts control characters in both the input and output
-+ streams to the appropriate notation. It can tell, for example that the
-+ "$ " prompt on the left margin in UNIX is really {\{13}\{10}$ },
-+ whereas in VMS it might be {\{13}\{10}\{13}$ }. These sequences are
-+ detected and recorded automatically.
-+
-+ A learned script should execute correctly when you give a TAKE command
-+ for it. However, it is usually appropriate to edit the script a bit.
-+ The most important change would be to remove any passwords from it. For
-+ example, if the script contains:
-+
-+ INPUT 9 {\{13}\{10}Password: }
-+ IF FAIL STOP 1 INPUT timeout
-+ PAUSE 1
-+ OUTPUT bigsecret\{13}
-+
-+ you should replace this by something like:
-+
-+ INPUT 9 {\{13}\{10}Password: }
-+ IF FAIL STOP 1 INPUT timeout
-+ ASKQ pswd Please type your password:
-+ PAUSE 1
-+ OUTPUT \m(pswd)\{13}
-+
-+ The LEARN command can't do this for you since it knows nothing about
-+ "content"; it only knows about lines and can't be expected to parse or
-+ understand them -- after all, the Password prompt might be in some
-+ other language. So remember: if you use the LEARN command to record a
-+ login script, be sure edit the resulting file to remove any passwords.
-+ Also be sure to delete any backup copies your editor or OS might have
-+ made of the file.
-+
-+ Other manual adjustments might also be appropriate:
-+
-+ * If the target of an INPUT command can vary, you can replace the
-+ INPUT command with MINPUT and the appropriate target list, and/or
-+ the target with a \fpattern(). For example, suppose you are dialing
-+ a number that can be answered by any one of 100 terminal servers,
-+ whose prompts are ts-00>, ts-01>, ts-02>, ... ts-99>. The script
-+ records a particular one of these, but you want it to work for all
-+ of them, so change (e.g.):
-+ INPUT 10 ts-23> ; or whatever
-+
-+ to:
-+ INPUT 10 \fpattern(ts-[0-9][0-9]>)
-+
-+ * The INPUT timeout values are conservative, but they are based only
-+ on a single observation; you might need to tune them.
-+ * The PAUSE commands might not be necessary, or the PAUSE interval
-+ might need adjustment.
-+ * In case you made typographical errors during recording, they are
-+ incorporated in your script; you can edit them out if you want to.
-+
-+ Here is a sample script generated by Kermit ("learn vms.ksc") in which
-+ a Telnet connection is made to a VMS computer, the user logs in, starts
-+ Kermit on VMS, sends it a file, and then logs out:
-+
-+ ; Scriptfile: vms.ksc
-+ ; Directory: /usr/olga
-+ ; Recorded: 20001124 15:21:23
-+
-+ SET HOST /NETWORK:TCP vms.xyzcorp.com
-+ IF FAIL STOP 1 Connection failed
-+
-+ INPUT 7 {\{13}\{10}\{13}Username: }
-+ IF FAIL STOP 1 INPUT timeout
-+ PAUSE 1
-+ OUTPUT olga\{13}
-+ INPUT 3 {\{13}\{10}\{13}Password: }
-+ IF FAIL STOP 1 INPUT timeout
-+ PAUSE 1
-+ OUTPUT secret\{13}
-+ INPUT 18 {\{13}\{10}\{13}$ }
-+ IF FAIL STOP 1 INPUT timeout
-+ PAUSE 1
-+ OUTPUT set default [.incoming]\{13}
-+ INPUT 12 {\{13}\{10}\{13}$ }
-+ IF FAIL STOP 1 INPUT timeout
-+ PAUSE 1
-+ OUTPUT kermit\{13}
-+ INPUT 15 {\{13}\{10}\{13}ALTO:[OLGA.INCOMING] C-Kermit>}
-+ IF FAIL STOP 1 INPUT timeout
-+ PAUSE 1
-+ OUTPUT receive\{13}
-+ send myfile.txt
-+
-+ INPUT 18 {\{13}\{10}\{13}ALTO:[OLGA.INCOMING] C-Kermit>}
-+ IF FAIL STOP 1 INPUT timeout
-+ PAUSE 1
-+ OUTPUT exit\{13}
-+ INPUT 6 {\{13}\{10}\{13}$ }
-+ IF FAIL STOP 1 INPUT timeout
-+ PAUSE 1
-+ OUTPUT logout\{13}
-+ close
-+ exit
-+
-+ The commands generated by Kermit during CONNECT (INPUT, IF FAIL, PAUSE,
-+ and OUTPUT) have uppercase keywords; the commands typed by the user are
-+ in whatever form the user typed them (in this case, lowercase).
-+
-+ [ [471]Top ] [ [472]Contents ] [ [473]C-Kermit Home ] [ [474]Kermit
-+ Home ]
-+
-+8.12. Pattern Matching
-+
-+ A pattern is a character string that is used to match other strings.
-+ Patterns can contain metacharacters that represent special actions like
-+ "match any single character", "match zero or more characters", "match
-+ any single character from a list", and so on. The best known
-+ application of patterns is in file specifications that contain
-+ wildcards, as in "send *.txt", meaning "send all files whose names end
-+ with .txt".
-+
-+ Patterns are also used in increasingly many other ways, to the extent
-+ it is useful to point out certain important distinctions in the ways in
-+ which they are used:
-+
-+ Anchored Patterns
-+ If an anchored pattern does not begin with "*", it must match
-+ the beginning of the string, and if it does not end with "*", it
-+ must match the end of the string. For example, the anchored
-+ pattern "abc" matches only the string "abc", not "abcde" or
-+ "xyzabc" or "abcabc". The anchored pattern "abc*" matches any
-+ string that starts with "abc"; the anchored pattern "*abc"
-+ matches any string that ends with "abc"; the anchored pattern
-+ "*abc*" matches any string that contains "abc" (including any
-+ that start and/or end with it).
-+
-+ Floating Patterns
-+ A floating pattern matches any string that contains a substring
-+ that matches the pattern. In other words, a floating pattern has
-+ an implied "*" at the beginning and end. You can anchor a
-+ floating pattern to the beginning by starting it with "^", and
-+ you can anchor it to the end by ending it with "$" (see examples
-+ below).
-+
-+ Wildcards
-+ A wildcard is an anchored pattern that has the additional
-+ property that "*" does not match directory separators.
-+
-+ This terminology lets us describe Kermit's commands with a bit more
-+ precision. When a pattern is used for matching filenames, it is a
-+ wildcard, except in the TEXT-PATTERNS and BINARY-PATTERNS lists and
-+ /EXCEPT: clauses, in which case directory separators are not
-+ significant (for example, a BINARY-PATTERN of "*.exe" matches any file
-+ whose name ends in .exe, no matter how deeply it might be buried in
-+ subdirectories). When Kermit parses a file specification directly,
-+ however, it uses the strict wildcard definition. For example, "send
-+ a*b" sends all files whose names start with "a" and end with "b" in the
-+ current directory, and not any files whose names end with "b" that
-+ happen to be in subdirectories whose names start with "a". And as
-+ noted, wildcards are anchored, so "delete foo" deletes the file named
-+ "foo", and not all files whose names happen to contain "foo".
-+
-+ Most other patterns are anchored. For example:
-+
-+ if match abc bc ...
-+
-+ does not succeed (and you would be surprised if it did!). In fact, the
-+ only floating patterns are the ones used by commands or functions that
-+ search for patterns in files, arrays, or strings. These include:
-+
-+ * The GREP and TYPE /MATCH commands.
-+ * The \fsearch(), \frsearch(), and \farraylook() functions.
-+
-+ Thus these are the only contexts in which explicit anchors ("^" and
-+ "$") may be used:
-+
-+ grep abc *.txt
-+ Prints all lines containing "abc" in all files whose names end
-+ with ".txt".
-+
-+ grep ^abc *.txt
-+ Prints all lines that start with "abc" in all ".txt" files.
-+
-+ grep abc$ *.txt
-+ Prints all lines that end with "abc" in all ".txt" files.
-+
-+ grep ^a*z$ *.txt
-+ Prints all lines that start with "a" and end with "z" in all
-+ ".txt" files.
-+
-+ Similarly for TYPE /PAGE, /fsearch(), /frsearch(), and \farraylook().
-+
-+ Here is a brief summary of anchored and floating pattern equivalences:
-+
-+ Anchored Floating
-+ abc ^abc$
-+ *abc abc$
-+ abc* ^abc
-+ *abc* abc
-+
-+ [ [475]Top ] [ [476]Contents ] [ [477]C-Kermit Home ] [ [478]Kermit
-+ Home ]
-+
-+8.13. Dates and Times
-+
-+ C-Kermit's comprehension of date-time formats is considerably expanded
-+ in version 8.0. Any command that reads dates, including the DATE
-+ command itself, or any switch, such as the /BEFORE: and /AFTER:
-+ switches, or any function such as \fcvtdate(), now can understand dates
-+ and times expressed in any ISO 8601 format, in Unix "asctime" format,
-+ in FTP MDTM format, and in practically any format used in RFC 822 or
-+ RFC 2822 electronic mail, with or without timezones, and in a great
-+ many other formats as well. HELP DATE briefly summarizes the acceptable
-+ date-time formats.
-+
-+ Furthermore, C-Kermit 8.0 includes a new and easy-to-use form of
-+ date-time arithmetic, in which any date or time can be combined with a
-+ "delta time", to add or subtract the desired time interval (years,
-+ months, weeks, days, hours, minutes, seconds) to/from the given date.
-+ And new functions are available to compare dates and to compute their
-+ differences.
-+
-+ As you can imagine, all this requires quite a bit of "syntax". The
-+ basic format is:
-+
-+ [ date ] [ time ] [ delta ]
-+
-+ Each field is optional, but in most cases (depending on the context)
-+ there must be at least one field. If a date is given, it must come
-+ first. If no date is given, the current date is assumed. If no time is
-+ given, an appropriate time is supplied depending on whether a date was
-+ supplied. If no delta is given, no arithmetic is done. If a delta is
-+ given without a date or time, the current date and time are used as the
-+ base.
-+
-+ Date-time-delta fields are likely to contain spaces (although they need
-+ not; space-free forms are always available). Therefore, in most
-+ contexts -- and notably as switch arguments -- date-time information
-+ must be enclosed in braces or doublequotes, for example:
-+
-+ send /after:"8-Aug-2001 12:00 UTC" *.txt
-+
-+ Kermit's standard internal format for dates and times is:
-+
-+ yyyymmdd hh:mm:ss
-+
-+ for example:
-+
-+ 20010208 10:28:01
-+
-+ Date-times can always be given in this format. yyyy is the 4-digit
-+ year, mm is the two-digit month (1-12; supply leading zero for
-+ Jan-Sep), dd is the 2-digit day (leading zero for 1-9), hh is the hour
-+ (0-23), mm the minute (0-59), ss the second (0-59), each with leading
-+ zero if less than the field width. The date and time can be separated
-+ by a space, an underscore, a colon, or the letter T. The time is in
-+ 24-hour format. Thus the various quantites are at the following fixed
-+ positions:
-+
-+Position Contents
-+ 1-4 Year (4 digits, 0000-9999)
-+ 5-6 Month (2 digits, 1-12)
-+ 7-8 Day (2 digits, 1-31)
-+ 9 Date-Time Separator (space, :, _, or the letter T)
-+ 10-11 Hour (2 digits, 0-23)
-+ 12 Hour-Minute Separator (colon)
-+ 13-14 Minute (2 digits, 0-59)
-+ 15 Minute-Second Separator (colon)
-+ 16-17 Second (2 digits, 0-59)
-+
-+ Example:
-+
-+ 19800526 13:07:12 26 May 1980, 13:07:12 (1:07:12PM)
-+
-+ This is the format produced by the DATE command and by any function
-+ that returns a date-time. It is suitable for lexical comparison and
-+ sorting, and for use as a date-time in any Kermit command. When this
-+ format is given as input to a command or function, various date-time
-+ separators (as noted) are accepted:
-+
-+ 19800526 13:07:12 26 May 1980, 13:07:12 (1:07:12PM)
-+ 20010208_10:28:35 2 February 2001, 10:28:35 AM
-+ 18580101:12:00:00 1 January 1858, noon
-+ 20110208T00:00:00 2 February 2011, midnight
-+
-+ Certain other special date-time formats that are encountered on
-+ computer networks are recognized:
-+
-+ Asctime Format
-+ This is a fixed format used by Unix, named after Unix's
-+ asctime() ("ASCII time") function. It is always exactly 24
-+ characters long. Example: Fri Aug 10 16:38:01 2001
-+
-+ Asctime with Timezone
-+ This is like Asctime format, but includes a 3-character timezone
-+ between the time and year. It is exactly 28 characters long.
-+ Example: Fri Aug 10 16:38:01 GMT 2001
-+
-+ E-Mail Format
-+ E-mail date-time formats are defined in [479]RFC 2822 with a
-+ fair amount of flexibility and options. The following examples
-+ are typical of e-mails and HTTP (web-page) headers:
-+
-+ Sat, 14 Jul 2001 11:49:29 (No timezone)
-+ Fri, 24 Mar 2000 14:19:59 EST (Symbolic timezone)
-+ Tue, 26 Jun 2001 10:19:45 -0400 (EDT) (GMT Offset + comment)
-+
-+ FTP MDTM Format
-+ This is the date-time format supplied by FTP servers that
-+ support the (not yet standard but widely used nevertheless) MDTM
-+ command, by which the FTP client asks for a file's modification
-+ time:
-+
-+ yyyymmddhhmmss[.ffff]
-+
-+ where yyyy is the 4-digit year, mm is the 2-digit month, and so
-+ on, exactly 14 digits long. An optional fractional part
-+ (fraction of second) may also be included, separated by a
-+ decimal point (period). Kermit rounds to the nearest second.
-+ Example:
-+
-+ 20020208102835.515 (8 February 2002 10:28:36 AM)
-+
-+8.13.1. The Date
-+
-+ The date, if given, must precede the time and/or delta, and can be in
-+ many, many formats. For starters, you can use several symbolic date
-+ names in place of actual dates:
-+
-+ NOW
-+ This is replaced by the current date and time. The time can not
-+ be overriden (if you want to supply a specific time, use TODAY
-+ rather than NOW).
-+
-+ TODAY
-+ This is replaced by the current date and a default time of
-+ 00:00:00 is supplied, but can be overridden by a specific time;
-+ for example, if today is 8 February 2002, then "TODAY" is
-+ "20020802 00:00:00" but "TODAY 10:28" is "20020802 10:28:00".
-+
-+ TOMORROW
-+ Like TODAY, but one day later (if today is 8 February 2002, then
-+ "TOMORROW" is "20020803 00:00:00" but "TOMORROW 16:30" is
-+ "20020803 16:30:00").
-+
-+ YESTERDAY
-+ Like TODAY, but one day earlier.
-+
-+ MONDAY, TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY, ..., SUNDAY
-+ The date on the given day of the week, today or later. A default
-+ time of 00:00:00 is supplied but can be overridden. Example:
-+ "SATURDAY 12:00" means next Saturday (or today, if today is
-+ Saturday) at noon.
-+
-+ You can give an explicit date in almost any conceivable format, but
-+ there are some rules:
-+
-+ * If a date is given, it must have three fields: day, month, and
-+ year; the order can vary (except that the month can not be last).
-+ * If names are used for days, months, etc, they must be English.
-+ * The year must lie between 0000 and 9999, inclusive.
-+ * All calendar calculations use Gregorian dating, so calculated dates
-+ for years prior to 1582 (or later, depending on the country) will
-+ not agree with historical dates. Other forms of dating (e.g.
-+ Hebrew, Chinese) are not supported.
-+
-+ Various date-field separators are accepted: hyphen, slash, space,
-+ underscore, period. The same field separator (if any) must be used in
-+ both places; for example 18-Sep-2001 but not 18-Sep/2001. Months can be
-+ numeric (1-12) or English names or abbreviations. Month name
-+ abbreviations are normally three letters, e.g. Apr, May, Jun, Jul.
-+ Capitalization doesn't matter.
-+
-+ Here are a few examples:
-+
-+ 18 Sep 2001 (English month, abbreviated)
-+ 18 September 2001 (English month, spelled out)
-+ 2001 Sept 18 (Year, month, day)
-+ 18-Sep-2001 (With hyphens)
-+ 18/09/2001 (All numeric with slashes)
-+ 18.09.2001 (Ditto, with periods)
-+ 18_09_2001 (Ditto, with underscores)
-+ 09/18/2001 (See below)
-+ 2001/09/18 (See below)
-+ September 18, 2001 (Correspondence style)
-+ Sep-18-2001 (Month-day-year)
-+ 20010918 (Numeric, no separators)
-+
-+ You can also include the day of the week with a specific date, in which
-+ case it is accepted (if it is a valid day name), but not verified to
-+ agree with the given date:
-+
-+ Tue, 18 Sep 2001 (Abbreviated, with comma)
-+ Tue,18 Sep 2001 (Comma but no space)
-+ Tue 18 Sep 2001 (Abbreviated, no comma)
-+ Tuesday 18 Sep 2001 (Spelled out)
-+ Tuesday, 18 Sep 2001 (etc)
-+ Friday, 18 Sep 2001 (Accepted even if not Friday)
-+
-+ In all-numeric dates with the year last, such as 18/09/2001, Kermit
-+ identifies the year because it's 4 digits, then decides which of the
-+ other two numbers is the month or day based on its value. If both are
-+ 12 or less and are unequal, the date is ambiguous and is rejected. In
-+ all-numeric dates with the year first, the second field is always the
-+ month and the third is the day. The month never comes last. A date with
-+ no separators is accepted only if it is all numeric and has exactly
-+ eight digits, and is assumed to be in yyyymmdd format.
-+
-+ 20010918 (18-Sep-2001 00:00:00)
-+
-+ or 14 digits (as in FTP MDTM format):
-+
-+ 20010918123456 (18-Sep-2001 12:34:56)
-+
-+ You can always avoid ambiguity by putting the year first, or by using
-+ an English, rather than numeric, month. A date such as 09/08/2001 would
-+ be ambiguous but 2001/09/08 is not, nor is 09-Aug-2001.
-+
-+ Until the late 1990s, it was common to encounter 2-digit years, and
-+ these are found to this day in old e-mails and other documents. Kermit
-+ accepts these dates if they have English months, and interprets them
-+ according to the windowing rules of [480]RFC 2822: "If a two digit year
-+ is encountered whose value is between 00 and 49, the year is
-+ interpreted by adding 2000, ending up with a value between 2000 and
-+ 2049. If a two digit year is encountered with a value between 50 and
-+ 99, or any three digit year is encountered, the year is interpreted by
-+ adding 1900."
-+
-+ If you need to specify a year prior to 1000, use leading zeros to
-+ ensure it is not misinterpreted as a "non-Y2K-compliant" modern year:
-+
-+ 7-Oct-77 (19771007 00:00:00)
-+ 7-Oct-0077 (00771007 00:00:00)
-+
-+8.13.2. The Time
-+
-+ The basic time format is hh:mm:dd; that is hours, minutes, seconds,
-+ separated by colons, perhaps with an optional fractional second
-+ separated by a decimal point (period). The hours are in 24-hour format;
-+ 12 is noon, 13 is 1pm, and so on. Fields omitted from the right default
-+ to zero. Fields can be omitted from the left or middle by including the
-+ field's terminating colon. Examples:
-+
-+ 11:59:59 (11:59:59 AM)
-+ 11:59 (11:59:00 AM)
-+ 11 (11:00:00 AM)
-+ 11:59:59.33 (11:59:59 AM)
-+ 11:59:59.66 (Noon)
-+ 03:21:00 (3:21:00 AM)
-+ 3:21:00 (3:21:00 AM)
-+ 15:21:00 (3:21:00 PM)
-+ :21:00 (00:21:00 AM)
-+ ::01 (00:00:01 AM)
-+ 11::59 (11:00:59 AM)
-+
-+ Leading zeros can be omitted, but it is customary and more readable to
-+ keep them in the minute and second fields:
-+
-+ 03:02:01 (03:02:01 AM)
-+ 3:02:01 (03:02:01 AM)
-+ 3:2:1 (03:02:01 AM)
-+
-+ AM/PM notation is accepted if you wish to use it:
-+
-+ 11:59:59 (11:59:59 AM)
-+ 11:59:59AM (11:59:59 AM)
-+ 11:59:59A.M. (11:59:59 AM)
-+ 11:59:59am (11:59:59 AM)
-+ 11:59:59a.m. (11:59:59 AM)
-+ 11:59:59PM (11:59:59 PM = 23:59:59)
-+ 11:59:59P.M. (11:59:59 PM = 23:59:59)
-+ 11:59:59pm (11:59:59 PM = 23:59:59)
-+ 11:59:59p.m. (11:59:59 PM = 23:59:59)
-+
-+ You can omit the colons if you wish, in which case Kermit uses the
-+ following rules to interpret the time:
-+
-+ 1. 6 digits is hh:mm:ss, e.g. 123456 is 12:34:56.
-+ 2. 5 digits is h:mm:ss, e.g. 12345 is 1:23:45.
-+ 3. 4 digits is hh:mm, e.g. 1234 is 12:34.
-+ 4. 3 digits is h:mm, e.g. 123 is 1:23.
-+ 5. 2 digits is hh, e.g. 12 is 12:00.
-+ 6. 1 digit is h (the hour), e.g. 1 is 1:00.
-+
-+ Examples:
-+
-+ 1 (01:00:00 AM)
-+ 10 (10:00:00 AM)
-+ 230 (02:30:00 AM)
-+ 230pm (02:30:00 PM = 14:30:00)
-+ 1115 (11:15:00 AM)
-+ 2315 (11:15:00 PM = 23:15:00 PM)
-+ 23150 (02:31:50 AM)
-+ 231500 (23:15:00 PM)
-+
-+8.13.3. Time Zones
-+
-+ If a time is given, it can (but need not) be followed by a time zone
-+ designator. If no time zone is included, the time is treated as local
-+ time and no timezone conversions are performed.
-+
-+ The preferred time zone designator is the UTC Offset, as specified in
-+ [481]RFC 2822: a plus sign or minus sign immediately followed by
-+ exactly four decimal digits, signifying the difference in hh (hours)
-+ and mm (minutes) from Universal Coordinated Time (UTC, also known as
-+ Greenwich Mean Time, or GMT), with negative numbers to the West and
-+ positive numbers to the East. For example:
-+
-+ Fri, 13 Jul 2001 12:54:29 -0700
-+
-+ indicates a local time of 12:54:29 that is 07 hours and 00 minutes
-+ behind (less than, East of) Universal Time. The space is optional, so
-+ the example could also be written as:
-+
-+ Fri, 13 Jul 2001 12:54:29-0700
-+
-+ The following symbolic time zones are also accepted, as specified by
-+ [482]RFC 2822 and/or in ISO 8601:
-+
-+ GMT = +0000 Greenwich Mean Time
-+ Z = +0000 Zulu (Zero Meridian) Time
-+ UTC = +0000 Universal Coordinated Time
-+ UT = +0000 Universal Time
-+ EDT = -0400 Eastern (USA) Daylight Time
-+ EST = -0500 Eastern (USA) Standard Time
-+ CDT = -0500 Central (USA) Daylight Time
-+ CST = -0600 Central (USA) Standard Time
-+ MDT = -0600 Mountain (USA) Daylight Time
-+ MST = -0700 Mountain (USA) Standard Time
-+ PDT = -0700 Pacific (USA) Daylight Time
-+ PST = -0800 Pacific (USA) Standard Time
-+
-+ Note that GMT, Z, UTC, and UT all express the same concept: standard
-+ (not daylight) time at the Zero Meridian. UTC, by the way, is an
-+ international standard symbol and does not correspond to the order of
-+ the English words, Universal Coordinated Time, but it happens to have
-+ the same initial letters as these words. Of course hundreds of other
-+ symbolic timezones and variations exist, but they are not standardized,
-+ and are therefore not supported by Kermit.
-+
-+ When a time zone is included with a time, the time is converted to
-+ local time. In case the conversion crosses a midnight boundary, the
-+ date is adjusted accordingly. Examples converting to EST (Eastern USA
-+ Standard Time = -0500):
-+
-+ 11:30:00 = 11:30:00
-+ 11:30:00 EST = 11:30:00
-+ 11:30:00 GMT = 06:30:00
-+ 11:30:00 PST = 14:30:00
-+ 11:30:00Z = 06:30:00
-+ 11:30PM GMT = 18:30:00
-+ 11:30 -0500 = 11:30:00
-+ 11:30 -0800 = 08:30:00
-+ 11:30 +0200 = 04:30:00
-+
-+ Unlike most of Kermit's other date-time conversions, timezone knowledge
-+ (specifically, the offset of local time from UTC) is embodied in the
-+ underlying operating system, not in Kermit itself, and any conversion
-+ errors in this department are the fault of the OS. For example, most
-+ UNIX platforms do not perform conversions for years prior to 1970.
-+
-+8.13.4. Delta Time
-+
-+ Date/time expressions can be composed of a date and/or time and a delta
-+ time, or a delta time by itself. When a delta time is given by itself,
-+ it is relative to the current local date and time. Delta times have the
-+ following general format:
-+
-+ {+,-}[number units][hh[:mm[:ss]]]
-+
-+ In other words, a delta time always starts with a plus or minus sign,
-+ which is followed by a "part1", a "part2", or both. The "part1", if
-+ given, specifies a number of days, weeks, months, or years; "part2"
-+ specifies a time in hh:mm:ss notation. In arithmetic terms, these
-+ represents some number of days or other big time units, and then a
-+ fraction of a day expressed as hours, minutes, and seconds; these are
-+ to be added to or subtracted from the given (or implied) date and time.
-+ The syntax is somewhat flexible, as shown by the following examples:
-+
-+ +1 day (Plus one day)
-+ +1day (Ditto)
-+ +1d (Ditto)
-+ + 1 day (Ditto)
-+ + 1 day 3:00 (Plus one day and 3 hours)
-+ +1d3:00 (Ditto)
-+ +1d3 (Ditto)
-+ +3:00:00 (Plus 3 hours)
-+ +3:00 (Ditto)
-+ +3 (Ditto)
-+ +2 days (Plus 2 days)
-+ -12 days 7:14:22 (Minus 12 days, 7 hours, 14 minutes, and 22 seconds)
-+
-+ The words "week", "month", and "year" can be used like "day" in the
-+ examples above. A week is exactly equivalent to 7 days. When months are
-+ specified, the numeric month number of the date is incremented or
-+ decremented by the given number, and the year and day adjusted
-+ accordingly if necessary (for example, 31-Jan-2001 +1month =
-+ 03-Mar-2001 because February does not have 31 days). When years are
-+ specified, they are added or subtracted to the base year. Examples
-+ (assuming the current date is 10-Aug-2001 and the current time is
-+ 19:21:11):
-+
-+ 18-Sep-2001 +1day (20010918 00:00:00)
-+ today +1day (20010811 00:00:00)
-+ now+1d (20010811 19:21:11)
-+ + 1 day (20010811 19:21:11)
-+ + 1 day 3:14:42 (20010811 22:35:54)
-+ + 7 weeks (20010928 19:21:11)
-+ +1d3:14:42 (20010811 22:35:54)
-+ +1w3:14:42 (20010817 22:35:54)
-+ +1m3:14:42 (20010910 22:35:54)
-+ +1y3:14:42 (20020810 22:35:54)
-+ 2 feb 2001 + 10 years (20110208 00:00:00)
-+ 2001-02-08 +10y12 (20110208 12:00:00)
-+ 31-dec-1999 23:59:59+00:00:01 (20000101 00:00:00)
-+ 28-feb-1996 +1day (19960229 00:00:00) (leap year)
-+ 28-feb-1997 +1day (19970301 00:00:00) (nonleap year)
-+ 28-feb-1997 +1month (19970328 00:00:00)
-+ 28-feb-1997 +1month 11:59:59 (19970328 11:59:59)
-+ 28-feb-1997 +20years (20170228 00:00:00)
-+ 28-feb-1997 +8000years (99970228 00:00:00)
-+
-+ For compatibility with VMS, the following special delta-time format is
-+ also accepted:
-+
-+ +number-hh:mm:ss
-+ -number-hh:mm:ss
-+
-+ (no spaces). The hyphen after the number indicates days. It corresponds
-+ exactly to the Kermit notation:
-+
-+ +numberdhh:mm:ss
-+ -numberdhh:mm:ss
-+
-+ The following forms all indicate exactly the same date and time:
-+
-+ 18-Sep-2001 12:34:56 +1-3:23:01
-+ 18-Sep-2001 12:34:56 +1d3:23:01
-+ 18-Sep-2001 12:34:56 +1 day 3:23:01
-+
-+ and mean "add a day plus 3 hours, 23 minutes, and 1 second" to the
-+ given date.
-+
-+ Note that delta times are not at all the same as UTC offsets; the
-+ former specifies an adjustment to the given date/time and the latter
-+ specifies that the local time is a particular distance from Universal
-+ Time, for example:
-+
-+ 11-Aug-2001 12:34:56 -0800 (20010811 16:34:56 -- UTC Offset)
-+ 11-Aug-2001 12:34:56 -08:00 (20010811 04:34:56 -- Delta time)
-+
-+ If you give a time followed by a modifer that starts with a + or -
-+ sign, how does Kermit know whether it's a UTC offset or a delta time?
-+ It is treated as a UTC offset if the sign is followed by exactly four
-+ decimal digits; otherwise it is a delta time. Examples (for USA Eastern
-+ Daylight Time):
-+
-+ 11-Aug-2001 12:34:56 -0800 (20010811 16:34:56 -- UTC Offset)
-+ 11-Aug-2001 12:34:56 -08:00 (20010811 04:34:56 -- Delta time)
-+ 11-Aug-2001 12:34:56 -800 (20010811 04:34:56 -- Delta time)
-+ 11-Aug-2001 12:34:56 -8 (20010811 04:34:56 -- Delta time)
-+
-+ The first example says that at some unknown place which is 8 hours
-+ ahead of Universal Time, the time is 12:34:56, and this corresponds to
-+ 16:34:56 in Eastern Daylight time. The second example says to subtract
-+ 8 hours from the local time. The third and fourth are delta times
-+ because, even though a colon is not included, the time does not consist
-+ of exactly 4 digits.
-+
-+ When a delta time is written after a timezone, however, there is no
-+ ambiguity and no syntax distinction is required:
-+
-+ 11-Aug-2001 12:34:56 -0800 -0800 (20010811 08:34:56)
-+ 11-Aug-2001 12:34:56 -0800 -08:00 (Ditto)
-+ 11-Aug-2001 12:34:56 -08:00 -08:00 (Illegal)
-+
-+8.13.5. The DATE Command
-+
-+ Obviously a great many combinations of date, time, time zone, and delta
-+ time are possible, as well as many formatting options. The purpose of
-+ all this flexibility is to comply with as many standards as possible --
-+ Internet RFCs, ISO standards, and proven corporate standards -- as well
-+ as with notations commonly used by real people, in order that dates and
-+ times from the widest variety of sources can be assigned to a variable
-+ and used in any date-time field in any Kermit command.
-+
-+ You can test any date-and/or-time format with the DATE command, which
-+ converts it to standard yyyymmdd hh:mm:ss format if it is understood,
-+ or else gives an explicit error message (rather than just "BAD DATE" as
-+ in previous C-Kermit releases) to indicate what is wrong with it.
-+ Examples (on Tuesday, 31 July 2001 in New York City, Eastern Daylight
-+ Time, UTC -0400):
-+
-+ DATE command argument Result
-+ 12:30 20010731 12:30:00
-+ 12:30:01 20010731 12:30:01
-+ 12:30:01.5 20010731 12:30:02
-+ 1230 20010731 12:30:00
-+ 230 20010731 02:30:00
-+ 230+1d 20010801 02:30:00
-+ 230+1d3:00 20010801 05:30:00
-+ 20010718 19:21:15 20010718 19:21:15
-+ 20010718_192115 20010718 19:21:15
-+ 20010718T192115 20010718 19:21:15
-+ 18 Jul 2001 +0400 20010717 23:59:59
-+ 18 Jul 2001 192115 20010718 19:21:15
-+ 18 Jul 2001 192115.8 20010718 19:21:16
-+ 18-Jul-2001T1921 20010718 19:21:00
-+ 18-Jul-2001 1921Z 20010718 15:21:00
-+ 18-Jul-2001 1921 GMT 20010718 15:21:00
-+ 18-Jul-2001 1921 UTC 20010718 15:21:00
-+ 18-Jul-2001 1921 Z 20010718 15:21:00
-+ 18-Jul-2001 1921Z 20010718 15:21:00
-+ 18-Jul-2001 1921 -04:00:00 20010718 19:21:00
-+ 21-Jul-2001_08:20:00am 20010721 08:20:00
-+ 21-Jul-2001_8:20:00P.M. 20010721 20:20:00
-+ Fri Jul 20 11:26:25 2001 20010720 11:26:25
-+ Fri Jul 20 11:26:25 GMT 2001 20010720 07:26:25
-+ Sun, 9 Apr 2000 06:46:46 +0100 20000409 01:46:46
-+ Sunday, 9 Apr 2000 06:46:46 +0100 20000409 01:46:46
-+ now 20010731 19:41:12
-+ today 20010731 00:00:00
-+ today 09:00 20010731 09:00:00
-+ tomorrow 20010801 00:00:00
-+ tomorrow 09:00 20010801 09:00:00
-+ tomorrow 09:00 GMT 20010801 05:00:00
-+ yesterday 20010730 00:00:00
-+ yesterday 09:00 20010730 09:00:00
-+ + 3 days 20010803 00:00:00
-+ +3 days 20010803 00:00:00
-+ +3days 20010803 00:00:00
-+ + 3days 20010803 00:00:00
-+ + 3 days 09:00 20010803 09:00:00
-+ + 2 weeks 20010814 00:00:00
-+ + 1 month 20010831 00:00:00
-+ - 7 months 20001231 00:00:00
-+ + 10 years 20110731 00:00:00
-+ friday 20010803 00:00:00
-+ saturday 20010804 00:00:00
-+ sunday 20010805 00:00:00
-+ monday 20010806 00:00:00
-+ tuesday 20010731 00:00:00
-+ wednesday 20010801 00:00:00
-+ thursday 20010802 00:00:00
-+ friday 07:00 20010803 07:00:00
-+ thursday 1:00pm 20010802 13:00:00
-+ thursday 1:00pm GMT 20010802 09:00:00
-+ Thu, 10 Nov 94 10:50:47 EST 19941110 10:50:47
-+ Fri, 20 Oct 1995 18:35:15 -0400 (EDT) 19951020 18:35:15
-+ 31/12/2001 20011231 00:00:00
-+ 12/31/2001 20011231 00:00:00
-+ 2001-July-20 20010720 00:00:00
-+ 2001-September-30 20010930 00:00:00
-+ 30-September-2001 20010930 00:00:00
-+ Sep 30, 2001 12:34:56 20010930 12:34:56
-+ September 30, 2001 20010930 00:00:00
-+ September 30, 2001 630 20010930 06:30:00
-+ September 30 2001 630 20010930 06:30:00
-+ Sep-30-2001 12:34:59 20010930 12:34:59
-+ 20010807113542.014 20010807 11:35.42
-+ 20010807113542.014Z 20010807 07:35:42
-+
-+8.13.6. New Date-Time Functions
-+
-+ In the following descriptions, date-time function arguments are the
-+ same free-format date-time strings discussed above, with the same
-+ defaults for missing fields. They are automatically converted to
-+ standard format internally prior to processing.
-+
-+ \fcvtdate(d1)
-+ Converts the date-time d1 to standard format and local time.
-+ This function is not new, but now it accepts a wider range of
-+ argument formats that can include timezones and/or delta times.
-+ If the first argument is omitted, the current date and time are
-+ assumed. The optional second argument is a format code for the
-+ result:
-+
-+ n1 = 1: yyyy-mmm-dd hh:mm:ss (mmm = English 3-letter month
-+ abbreviation)
-+ n1 = 2: dd-mmm-yyyy hh:mm:ss (ditto)
-+ n1 = 3: yyyymmddhhmmss (all numeric)
-+
-+ \futcdate(d1)
-+ Converts the date-time d1 to Universal Coordinated Time (UTC),
-+ also known as GMT or Zulu or Zero-Meridian time. The default d1
-+ is NOW. If d1 is a valid date-time, the UTC result is returned
-+ in standard format, yyyymmdd hh:ss:mm.
-+
-+ \fcmpdates(d1,d2)
-+ Compares two free-format date-times, d1 and d2, and, if both
-+ arguments are valid, returns a number: -1 if d1 is earlier than
-+ (before) d2; 0 if d1 is the same as d2; 1 if d1 is later than
-+ (after) d2.
-+
-+ \fdiffdates(d1,d2)
-+ Computes the difference between two free-format date-times, d1
-+ and d2. If both arguments are valid, returns a delta time which
-+ is negative if d1 is earlier than (before) d2 and positive
-+ otherwise. If d1 and d2 are equal, the result is "+0:00".
-+ Otherwise, the result consists of the number of days, hours,
-+ minutes, and seconds that separate the two date-times. If the
-+ number of days is zero, it is omitted. If the number of days is
-+ nonzero but the hours, minutes, and seconds are all zero, the
-+ time is omitted. if the seconds are zero, they are omitted.
-+
-+ \fdelta2secs(dt)
-+ Converts a delta time to seconds. For example, "+1d00:00:01" to
-+ 86401. Valid delta times must start with a + or - sign. Days are
-+ accepted as time units, but not years, months, or weeks. If the
-+ result would overflow a computer long word (as would happen with
-+ 32-bit long words when the number of days is greater than
-+ 24854), the function fails.
-+
-+ HINT: Although Kermit has a number of built-in date and time variables,
-+ it doesn't have a single one suitable for writing a timestamp. For this
-+ you would normally use something like "\v(ndate) \v(time)". But
-+ \fcvtdate() (with no arguments) is equivalent: it returns the current
-+ date and time in yyyymmdd hh:mm:ss format, suitable for time stamping.
-+
-+8.13.7. Date-Time Programming Examples
-+
-+ Here's a macro that converts any date-time to UTC, which you might use
-+ if C-Kermit didn't already have a \futcdate() function:
-+
-+ define utcdate {
-+ .local := \fcvtdate(\%*) ; 1.
-+ .tmp := \fcvtdate(\m(local)UTC) ; 2.
-+ .offset := \fdiffdate(\m(local),\m(tmp)) ; 3.
-+ .utc := \fcvtdate(\m(local)\m(offset)) ; 4.
-+ sho mac utc ; 5.
-+ }
-+
-+ Brief explanation: Line 1 converts the macro argument, a free-format
-+ date-time, to standard-format local time. Line 2 appends the "UTC"
-+ timezone to the local time and converts the result to local time. In
-+ other words, we take the same time as the local time, but pretend it's
-+ UTC time, and convert it to local time. For example, if New York time
-+ is 4 hours ahead of UTC, then 6:00pm New York time is 2:00pm UTC. Line
-+ 3 gets the difference of the two results (e.g. "+04:00"). Line 4
-+ appends the difference (delta time) to the local time, and converts it
-+ again, which adds (or subtracts) the UTC offset to the given time. Line
-+ 5 displays the result.
-+
-+ Here's a script that opens a web page, gets its headers into an array,
-+ scans the array for the "Last-Modified:" header, and inteprets it:
-+ http open www.columbia.edu
-+ if fail stop 1 HTTP OPEN failed
-+ http /array:a head index.html /dev/null
-+ if fail stop 1 HTTP GET failed
-+ show array a
-+ for \%i 1 \fdim(&a) 1 {
-+ .\%x := \findex(:,\&a[\%i])
-+ if not \%x continue
-+ .tag := \fleft(\&a[\%i],\%x-1)
-+ .val := \fltrim(\fsubstr(\&a[\%i],\%x+1))
-+ if ( eq "\m(tag)" "Last-Modified" ) {
-+ echo HTTP Date: \m(val)
-+ .rdate := \fcvtdate(\m(val))
-+ echo {Standard Date (local): \m(rdate)}
-+ echo {Standard Date (UTC): \futcdate(\m(rdate))}
-+ break
-+ }
-+ }
-+ http close
-+
-+ The result:
-+
-+ HTTP Date: Mon, 13 Aug 2001 20:05:42 GMT
-+ Standard Date (local): 20010813 16:05:42
-+ Standard Date (UTC): 20010813 20:05:42
-+
-+ As you can see, Kermit had no trouble decoding the date-time-string
-+ from the website, converting to local time, and converting back to UTC
-+ with no conflicts or loss of information. If it had been in any other
-+ known format, the result would have been the same.
-+
-+ Now suppose we want to download the web page only if it is newer than
-+ our local copy. The \fdate(filename) function (which returns the
-+ modification date-time of the given file) and the new \fcmpdates()
-+ function make it easy. Insert the following just before the BREAK
-+ statement:
-+
-+ if ( < 0 \fcmpdates(\m(rdate),\fdate(index.html)) ) {
-+ echo GETTING index.html...
-+ http get index.html index.html
-+ if success echo HTTP GET OK
-+ } else {
-+ echo index.html: no update needed
-+ }
-+ http close
-+ exit
-+
-+ This says, "if 0 is less than the comparison of the remote file date
-+ and the local file date, get the remote file, otherwise skip it." And
-+ it automatically reconciles the time-zone difference (if any).
-+
-+ It would be nice to be able to extend this script into a
-+ general-purpose website updater, but unfortunately HTTP protocol
-+ doesn't provide any mechanism for the client to ask the server for a
-+ list of files, recursive or otherwise.
-+
-+ [ [483]Top ] [ [484]Contents ] [ [485]C-Kermit Home ] [ [486]Kermit
-+ Home ]
-+
-+8.14. Trapping Keyboard Interruption
-+
-+ Normally when you type Ctrl-C and Kermit is in command mode (as opposed
-+ to CONNECT mode) with COMMAND INTERRUPTION ON (as it is unless you have
-+ set it OFF), Kermit interrupts any command that is currently in
-+ progress, and if a command file or macro is executing, rolls the
-+ command stack back to top level, closing all open command files,
-+ deactivating all macros, deallocating all local variables and arrays,
-+ and leaving you at the command prompt.
-+
-+ Suppose, however, you want certain actions to occur when a script is
-+ interrupted; for example, closing open files, writing log entries, or
-+ displaying summary results. You can do this by defining a macro named
-+ ON_CTRLC. When Ctrl-C is detected, and a macro with this name is
-+ defined, Kermit executes it from the current command level, thus giving
-+ it full access to the environment in which the interruption occurred,
-+ including local variables and open files. Only when the ON_CTRLC macro
-+ completes execution is the command stack rolled back to top level.
-+
-+ Once the ON_CTRLC macro is defined, it can be executed only once. This
-+ is to prevent recursion if the user types Ctrl-C while the ON_CTRLC
-+ macro is executing. If you type Ctrl-C while the Ctrl-C macro is
-+ active, this does not start a new copy of ON_CTRLC; rather, it returns
-+ to the top-level command prompt. After the ON_CTRLC macro returns, it
-+ has been removed from the macro table so if you want to use it again or
-+ install a different Ctrl-C trap, you must execute a new DEFINE ON_CTRLC
-+ command. In any case, as always when you interrupt a script with
-+ Ctrl-C, its completion status is FAILURE.
-+
-+ Normally the ON_CTRLC macro would be defined in the command file or
-+ macro to which it applies, and should be declared LOCAL. This way, if
-+ the command file or macro completes successfully without being
-+ interrupted, the ON_CTRLC definition disappears automatically.
-+ Otherwise the definition would still be valid and the macro would be
-+ executed, probably out of context, the next time you typed Ctrl-C.
-+
-+ Here's a simple example of a command file that sets a Ctrl-C trap for
-+ itself:
-+
-+ local on_ctrlc ; Make Ctrl-C trap local to this command file.
-+ define on_ctrlc { ; Define the ON_CTRLC macro.
-+ echo Interrupted at \v(time).
-+ echo Iterations: \%n
-+ }
-+ xecho Type Ctrl-C to quit
-+ for \%n 1 999 1 { ; Prints a dot every second until interrupted.
-+ sleep 1
-+ xecho .
-+ }
-+ echo Finished normally at \v(time) ; Get here only if not interrupted.
-+ decrement \%n
-+ echo Iterations: \%n
-+
-+ This prints a summary no matter whether it completes normally or is
-+ interrupted from the keyboard. In both cases the trap is automatically
-+ removed afterwards.
-+
-+ For an example of how to use ON_CTRLC to debug scripts, see
-+ [487]Section 8.1.
-+
-+ [ [488]Top ] [ [489]Contents ] [ [490]C-Kermit Home ] [ [491]Kermit
-+ Home ]
-+
-+9. S-EXPRESSIONS
-+
-+ This section is primarily for those who want to write
-+ calculation-intensive scripts, especially if they require
-+ floating-point arithmetic, and/or for those who are familiar with the
-+ LISP programming language.
-+
-+ Ever since C-Kermit version 5 was released in 1988, scripting has been
-+ one of its major attractions, and arithmetic is a key part of it.
-+ Versions 5 and 6 included integer arithmetic only, using traditional
-+ algebraic notation, e.g.:
-+
-+ echo \fevaluate(3*(2+7)/2)
-+ 13
-+
-+ C-Kermit 7.0 added support for floating-point arithmetic, but only
-+ through function calls:
-+
-+ echo \ffpdivide(\ffpmultiply(3.0,\ffpadd(2.0,7.0)),2.0)
-+ 13.5
-+
-+ C-Kermit 8.0 introduces a third form of arithmetic that treats integers
-+ and floating-point numbers uniformly, is easier to read and write, and
-+ executes very quickly:
-+
-+ (/ (* 3 (+ 2 7)) 2)
-+ 13.5
-+
-+ But first some background.
-+
-+ The Kermit command and scripting language differs from true programming
-+ languages (such as C or Fortran) in many ways; one of the most
-+ prominent differences is the way in which variables are distinguished
-+ from constants. In a command language, words are taken literally; for
-+ example, the Unix shell:
-+
-+ cat foo.bar
-+
-+ displays the file named foo.bar. Whereas in a programming language like
-+ C, words are assumed to be variables:
-+
-+ s = foo.bar; /* Assigns the value of foo.bar to the variable s */
-+
-+ To make a programming language take words literally, you have to quote
-+ or "escape" them:
-+
-+ s = "foo.bar"; /* Assigns a pointer to the string "foo.bar" to the variable s
-+ */
-+
-+ The opposite holds for command languages: to get them to treat a word
-+ as a variable rather than a constant, you have to escape them. For
-+ example, in the Unix shell:
-+
-+ foo=123 ; Assign value 123 to variable foo.
-+ echo foo ; Prints "foo"
-+ echo $foo ; Prints "123"
-+
-+ And in Kermit:
-+
-+ define foo 123 ; Assign value 123 to variable foo.
-+ echo 123 ; This prints "123".
-+ echo foo ; This prints "foo".
-+ echo \m(foo) ; This prints "123".
-+
-+ In other words, character strings (such as "foo" above) are interpreted
-+ as literal strings, rather than variable names, except in special
-+ commands like DEFINE that deal specifically with variable names (or in
-+ numeric contexts as explained in [492]Section 8.2). The special
-+ "escape" character (dollar sign ($) for the shell, backslash (\) for
-+ Kermit) indicates that a variable is to be replaced by its value.
-+
-+ The requirement to escape variable names in command languages normally
-+ does not impose any special hardship, but can add a considerable
-+ notational burden to arithmetic expressions, which are typically full
-+ of variables. Especially in Kermit when floating point numbers are
-+ involved, where you must use special \ffpxxx() functions, e.g.
-+ "\ffpadd(\m(a),\m(b))" rather than the simple "+" operator to add two
-+ floating-point numbers together, because the original arithmetic
-+ handler doesn't support floating point (this might change in the
-+ future). To illustrate, the general formula for the area of a triangle
-+ is:
-+
-+ sqrt(s * (s - a) * (s - b) * (s - c))
-+
-+ where a, b, and c are the lengths of the triangle's three sides and:
-+
-+ s = (a + b + c) / 2
-+
-+ Except in special cases (e.g. a = 3, b = 4, c = 5), the result has a
-+ fractional part so the computation must be done using floating-point
-+ arithmetic. We can create a Kermit 7.0 function for this as follows:
-+
-+ def area {
-+ local s t1 t2 t3
-+ assign s \ffpdiv(\ffpadd(\ffpadd(\%1,\%2),\%3),2.0)
-+ assign t1 \ffpsub(\m(s),\%1)
-+ assign t2 \ffpsub(\m(s),\%2)
-+ assign t3 \ffpsub(\m(s),\%3)
-+ return \ffpsqrt(\ffpmul(\m(s),\ffpmul(\m(t1),\ffpmul(\m(t2),\m(t3)))))
-+ }
-+
-+ But as you can see, this is rather cumbersome. Note, in particular,
-+ that arithmetic functions like \ffpadd(), \ffpmul(), etc, take exactly
-+ two operands (like their symbolic counterparts + and *), so obtaining
-+ the product of three or more numbers (as we do in this case) is
-+ awkward.
-+
-+ Using the alternative S-Expression notation, we can reduce this to a
-+ form that is both easier to read and executes faster (the details are
-+ explained later):
-+
-+ def newarea {
-+ (let s (/ (+ \%1 \%2 \%3) 2.0))
-+ (sqrt (* s (- s \%1) (- s \%2) (- s \%3)))
-+ }
-+
-+ In both examples, the \%1..3 variables are the normal Kermit macro
-+ arguments, referenced by the normal escaping mechanism. For increased
-+ readability, we can also assign the macro arguments \%1, \%2, and \%3
-+ to the letters a, b, and c corresponding to our formula:
-+
-+def newarea {
-+ (let a \%1 b \%2 c \%3)
-+ (let s (/ (+ a b c) 2.0))
-+ (sqrt (* s (- s a) (- s b) (- s c)))
-+}
-+
-+ And now the Kermit function reads almost like the original formula.
-+ Here Kermit behaves more like a regular programming language. In an
-+ S-Expression, macro names need not be escaped when they are used as the
-+ names of numeric variables.
-+
-+ [ [493]Top ] [ [494]Contents ] [ [495]C-Kermit Home ] [ [496]Kermit
-+ Home ]
-+
-+9.1. What is an S-Expression?
-+
-+ The S-Expression concept is borrowed from the Lisp programming
-+ language. "S-Expression" is short for Symbolic Expression (itself
-+ sometimes shortened to SEXP). S-Expressions provide a kind of
-+ Alternative Mini-Universe within the Kermit command language when the
-+ regular rules don't apply, a universe enclosed in parentheses.
-+
-+ C-Kermit does not pretend to be a full Lisp interpreter; only the
-+ arithmetic parts of Lisp have been incorporated: S-Expressions that
-+ operate on numbers and return numeric values (plus extensibility
-+ features described in [497]Section 9.8, which allow some degree of
-+ string processing).
-+
-+ An S-Expression is a list of zero or more items, separated by spaces,
-+ within parentheses. Examples:
-+
-+ ()
-+ (1)
-+ (a)
-+ (+ a 1)
-+ (* 2 a b)
-+
-+ If the S-Expression is empty, it has the NIL (empty) value. If it is
-+ not empty and the first item is an operator (such as + or *), there can
-+ be zero or more subsequent items, called the operands:
-+
-+ (+ 1 2)
-+
-+ Here the operator is "+" and the operands are "1" and "2", and the
-+ value of the S-Expression is the value of the operation (in this case
-+ 3). The operator always comes first, which is different from the
-+ familiar algebraic notation; this because S-Expression operators can
-+ have different numbers of operands:
-+
-+ (+ 1)
-+ (+ 1 2)
-+ (+ 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9)
-+
-+ If the first item in the S-Expression is not an operator, then it must
-+ be a variable or a number (or a macro; see [498]Section 9.8), and the
-+ S-Expression can only contain one item; in this case, the
-+ S-Expression's value is the value of the variable or number:
-+
-+ (a)
-+ (3)
-+
-+ Operands can be numbers, variables that have numeric values, functions
-+ that return numbers, or other S-Expressions. To illustrate an
-+ S-Expression within an S-Expression, observe that:
-+
-+ (+ 1 2)
-+
-+ is equivalent to any of the following (plus an infinite number of
-+ others):
-+
-+ (+ 1 (+ 1 1))
-+ (+ (- 3 2) (/ 14 (+ 3 4)))
-+
-+ S-Expressions can be nested to any reasonable level; for example, the
-+ value of the following S-Expression is 64:
-+
-+ (- (* (+ 2 (* 3 4)) (- 9 (* 2 2))) 6)
-+
-+ Operators have no precedence, implied or otherwise, since they can't be
-+ mixed. The only exceptions are unary + and -, which simply indicate the
-+ sign of a number:
-+
-+ (* 3 -1)
-+
-+ Order of evaluation is specified entirely by parentheses, which are
-+ required around each operator and its operands: (+ a (* b c)) instead
-+ of (a + b * c).
-+
-+ S-Expressions provide a simple and isolated environment in which
-+ Kermit's macro names can be used without the \m(...) escaping that is
-+ normally required. Given:
-+
-+ define a 1
-+ define b 2
-+ define c 3
-+
-+ Then:
-+
-+ (+ \m(a) \m(b) \m(c))
-+
-+ is equivalent to:
-+
-+ (+ a b c)
-+
-+ Within an S-Expression, as in other strictly numeric contexts
-+ ([499]Section 8.2), any operand that starts with a letter is treated as
-+ a Kermit macro name. In this context, abbreviations are not accepted;
-+ variable names must be spelled out in full. Alphabetic case is not
-+ significant; "a" and "A" are the same variable, but both are different
-+ from "area".
-+
-+ Of course, regular Kermit variables and functions can be used in
-+ S-Expressions in the normal ways:
-+
-+ (* \v(math_pi) (^ \%r 2)) ; Area of a circle with radius \%r
-+ (+ \fjoin(&a)) ; Sum of all elements of array \&a[]
-+
-+ [ [500]Top ] [ [501]Contents ] [ [502]C-Kermit Home ] [ [503]Kermit
-+ Home ]
-+
-+9.2. Integer and Floating-Point-Arithmetic
-+
-+ Normally, if all numbers in an S-Expression are integers, the result is
-+ an integer:
-+
-+ (+ 1 1) ; Result is 2
-+ (/ 9 3) ; Result is 3
-+
-+ If any of the operands is floating point, however, the result is also
-+ floating point:
-+
-+ (+ 1 1.0) ; Result is 2.0
-+ (/ 9.0 3) ; Result is 3.0
-+
-+ If all the operands are integers but the result has a fractional part,
-+ the result is floating point:
-+
-+ (/ 10 3) ; Result is 3.333333333333333
-+
-+ To force an integer result in such cases, use the TRUNCATE operator:
-+
-+ (truncate (/ 10 3)) ; Result is 3
-+
-+ Similarly, to force a computation to occur in floating point, you can
-+ coerce one of its operands to FLOAT:
-+
-+ (+ 1 (float 1)) ; Result is 2.0
-+
-+ The result is also floating point if the magnitude of any integer
-+ operand, intermediate result, or the result itself, is larger than the
-+ maximum for the underlying machine architecture:
-+
-+ (^ 100 100)
-+
-+ If the result is too large even for floating-point representation,
-+ "Infinity" is printed; if it is too small to be distinguished from 0,
-+ 0.0 is returned.
-+
-+ Large numbers can be used and large results generated, but they are
-+ accurate only to the precision of the underlying machine. For example,
-+ the result of:
-+
-+ (+ 111111111111111111111 222222222222222222222)
-+
-+ should be 333333333333333333333, but 333333333333333300000.0 is
-+ produced instead if the machine is accurate to only about 16 decimal
-+ digits, even with coercion to floating-point. The order of magnitude is
-+ correct but the least significant digits are wrong. The imprecise
-+ nature of the result is indicated by the ".0" at the end. Contrast
-+ with:
-+
-+ (+ 111111111 222222222)
-+
-+ which produces an exact integer result.
-+
-+ [ [504]Top ] [ [505]Contents ] [ [506]C-Kermit Home ] [ [507]Kermit
-+ Home ]
-+
-+9.3. How to Use S-Expressions
-+
-+ S-Expressions may be given as commands to C-Kermit. Any command whose
-+ first character is "(" (left parenthesis) is interpreted as an
-+ S-Expression.
-+
-+ If you enter an S-Expression at the C-Kermit> prompt, its result is
-+ printed:
-+
-+ C-Kermit>(/ 10.0 3)
-+ 3.333333333333333
-+ C-Kermit>
-+
-+ If an S-Expression is executed within a macro or command file, its
-+ value is not printed. However, you can control the printing action
-+ with:
-+
-+ SET SEXPRESSION ECHO { AUTO, ON, OFF }
-+ AUTO is the default, meaning print the value at top level only;
-+ ON means always print the value; OFF means never print it.
-+
-+ In any case, the value of the most recent S-Expression (and the
-+ S-Expression itself) may be accessed programmatically through the
-+ following variables:
-+
-+ \v(sexpression)
-+ The S-Expression most recently executed.
-+
-+ \v(svalue)
-+ The value of the S-Expression most recently executed.
-+
-+ Besides issuing S-Expressions as commands in themselves, you can also
-+ execute them anywhere within a Kermit command, but in this case they
-+ must be enclosed in a function call (otherwise they are taken
-+ literally):
-+
-+ \fsexpression(s)
-+ The argument "s" is an S-Expression; the outer parentheses may
-+ be omitted. The value of the S-Expression is returned. Note that
-+ since S-Expressions usually contain spaces, some form of
-+ grouping or quoting might be needed in some contexts:
-+
-+ echo \fsexpression((+ 1 1)) ; Outer parentheses may be included
-+ echo \fsexpr(+ 1 1) ; Outer parentheses may be omitted
-+ echo Value = "\fsexp(+ 1 a)" ; Can be embedded in strings
-+ echo Value = \&a[\fsexp(/ b 2)] ; Can be used in array subscripts
-+ if = {\fsexp(+ 1 1)} 2 { ; Braces needed here for grouping
-+ echo One plus one still equals two
-+ }
-+
-+ The IF statement illustrates how to use S-Expressions as (or in) IF or
-+ WHILE conditions:
-+
-+ * Although S-Expressions and IF conditions are similar in appearance,
-+ they are not interchangeable. Therefore you must use \fsexpr() to
-+ let Kermit know it's an S-Expression rather than a regular IF
-+ condition, or a boolean or algebraic expression within an IF
-+ condition.
-+ * In contexts where a single "word" is expected, you must enclose the
-+ \fsexp() invocation in braces if the S-Expression contains spaces
-+ (and most of them do).
-+
-+ If an S-Expression is the last command executed in a macro, its value
-+ becomes the return value of the macro; no RETURN command is needed.
-+ Example:
-+
-+ def newarea {
-+ (let s (/ (+ \%1 \%2 \%3) 2.0))
-+ (sqrt (* s (- s \%1) (- s \%2) (- s \%3)))
-+ }
-+
-+ This is equivalent to (but more efficient than):
-+
-+ def newarea {
-+ (let s (/ (+ \%1 \%2 \%3) 2.0))
-+ return \fsexp(sqrt (* s (- s \%1) (- s \%2) (- s \%3)))
-+ }
-+
-+ When an S-Expression is entered as a command -- that is, the first
-+ nonblank character of the command is a left parenthesis -- then it is
-+ allowed to span multiple lines, as many as you like, until the first
-+ left parenthesis is matched:
-+
-+ (let s (/
-+ (+
-+ \%1
-+ \%2
-+ \%3
-+ )
-+ 2.0
-+ )
-+ )
-+ (sqrt (*
-+ s
-+ (- s \%1)
-+ (- s \%2)
-+ (- s \%3)
-+ )
-+ )
-+
-+ The S-Expression concept lends itself easily to embedding and
-+ recursion, but the depth to which recursion can occur is limited by the
-+ resources of the computer (memory size, address space, swap space on
-+ disk) and other factors. There is no way that C-Kermit can know what
-+ this limit is, since it varies not only from computer to computer, but
-+ also from moment to moment. If resources are exhausted by recursion,
-+ C-Kermit simply crashes; there's no way to trap this error. However,
-+ you can set a depth limit on S-Expressions:
-+
-+ SET SEXPRESSION DEPTH-LIMIT number
-+ Limits the number of times the S-Expression reader can invoke
-+ itself without returning to the given number. The default limit
-+ is 1000. This limit applies to S-Expressions embedded within
-+ other S-Expressions as well as to S-Expressions that invoke
-+ recursive macros. If the limit is exceeded, Kermit prints
-+ "?S-Expression depth limit exceeded" and returns to its prompt.
-+ More about recursion in [508]Section 9.8.
-+
-+ You can also test the depth programmatically:
-+
-+ \v(sdepth)
-+ The current S-Expression invocation depth. The depth includes
-+ both nesting level and recursion. For example, in:
-+ (foo (foo (foo (foo (foo))))), the innermost (foo) is at depth
-+ 5.
-+
-+ Help, completion, and syntax checking are not available within an
-+ S-Expression. If you type ? within an S-Expression, it says:
-+
-+ C-Kermit>(? S-Expression ("help sexp" for details)
-+
-+ As it says, typing "help sexp" will display a brief help text.
-+
-+ The SHOW SEXPRESSION command displays current SET SEXPRESSION settings
-+ and related information.
-+
-+ [ [509]Top ] [ [510]Contents ] [ [511]C-Kermit Home ] [ [512]Kermit
-+ Home ]
-+
-+9.4. Summary of Built-in Constants and Operators
-+
-+ Three constants are built in:
-+
-+ * PI, whose value is the value of pi (the quotient of circumference
-+ of any circle and its diameter, 3.141592653...) to the underlying
-+ machine's precision;
-+ * T, which always has the value 1, which signifies truth in Kermit
-+ logical expressions or S-Expressions;
-+ * NIL, which always has the empty value, and can serve as a False
-+ truth value.
-+
-+ These constants are specific to S-Expressions and are not visible
-+ outside them. They may not be used as the target of an assignment. So,
-+ for example:
-+
-+ (setq t 0) Fails
-+ assign t 0 Succeeds but this is not the same T!
-+
-+ E (the base of natural logarithms, 2.7182818184...) is not built in
-+ since it is not intrinsic in most Lisp dialects. If you want E to be
-+ the base of natural logarithms you can:
-+
-+ (setq e (exp 1))
-+
-+ Operators are either symbols (such as "+") or words. Words must be
-+ spelled out in full, not abbreviated. Differences of alphabetic case
-+ are ignored.
-+
-+ The most basic operation in S-Expressions is evaluation:
-+
-+ EVAL [ s-expression or variable or number [ another [ another ... ] ] ]
-+ Evaluates its operands and returns the value of the last one
-+ evaluated. Examples:
-+
-+ (eval) 0
-+ (eval 1) 1
-+ (eval a) value of a
-+ (eval (+ 1 a)) value of a+1
-+ (eval (setq a 1) (setq b (+ a 0.5))) value of b (= a+0.5)
-+
-+ You can use "." as a shorthand for EVAL:
-+
-+ (.)
-+ (. 1)
-+ (. a)
-+ (. (+ 1 a))
-+ (. (setq a 1) (setq b (+ a 0.5)))
-+
-+ Opposite of EVAL is the operator that suppresses evaluation of its
-+ operand:
-+
-+ QUOTE item
-+ The value (quote item) is "item". If the item is itself an
-+ S-Expression, the result is the S-Expression with the outer
-+ parentheses stripped. Examples:
-+
-+ (quote) (illegal)
-+ (quote a) a
-+ (quote hello) hello
-+ (quote (this is a string)) this is a string
-+ (quote this is a string) (illegal)
-+
-+ A shorthand notation is also accepted for quoting:
-+ 'a is equivalent to (quote a). And therefore:
-+ '(a b c) is equivalent to (quote (a b c)).
-+ More about quoting in [513]Section 9.8.
-+
-+ STRING item
-+ Is a combination of EVAL and QUOTE. It evaluates the item as an
-+ S-Expression, and then puts quotes around the result (more about
-+ this in [514]Section 9.8).
-+
-+ The following operators assign values to variables:
-+
-+ SETQ [ variable [ value [ variable [ value [ ... ] ] ] ] ]
-+ Applies to global variables. For each variable given: if a value
-+ is not given, the variable is undefined. If a value is given,
-+ assigns the value to the variable. The value may be a number, a
-+ variable, or anything that resolves to a number including an
-+ S-Expression. Returns the value of the last assignment.
-+ Examples:
-+
-+ (setq) Does nothing, returns NIL.
-+ (setq a) Undefines a, returns NIL.
-+ (setq a 1) Assigns 1 to a, returns 1.
-+ (setq a 1 b 2) Assigns 1 to a, 2 to b, returns 2.
-+ (setq a 1 b 2 c) Assigns 1 to a, 2 to b, undefines c, returns NIL.
-+
-+ To undefine a variable that is not the final one in the list, give it a
-+ value of "()" or NIL:
-+
-+ (setq a () b 2) Undefines a, assigns 2 to b, returns 2.
-+ (setq a nil b 2) Ditto.
-+
-+ Note that a variable can be used right away once it has a value:
-+
-+ (setq a 1 b a) Assigns 1 to a, the value of a (1) to b, returns 1.
-+
-+ The results of SETQ (when used with macro names) can be checked
-+ conveniently with SHOW MACRO, e.g:
-+
-+ show mac a b c
-+
-+ LET [ variable [ value [ variable [ value [ ... ] ] ] ] ]
-+ Like SETQ, but applies to local variables. Note that "local" is
-+ used in the Kermit sense, not the Lisp sense; it applies to the
-+ current Kermit command level, not to the current S-Expression.
-+
-+ If you want to use SETQ or LET to assign a value to a backslash
-+ variable such as \%a or \&a[2], you must double the backslash:
-+
-+ (setq \\%a 3)
-+ (setq \\%b (+ \%a 1))
-+ (setq \\&a[2] (setq (\\%c (+ \%a \%b))))
-+
-+ In other words:
-+
-+ * Double the backslash when you want to indicate the variable's NAME;
-+ * Don't double the backslash when you want its VALUE.
-+
-+ See [515]Section 9.6 for a fuller explanation of variable syntax and
-+ scope.
-+
-+ Here's a summary table of arithmetic operators; in the examples, a is 2
-+ and b is -1.3:
-+
-+ Operator Description Example Result
-+ + Adds all operands (0 or more) (+ a b) 0.7
-+ - Subtracts all operands (0 or more) (- 9 5 2 1) 1
-+ * Multiplies all operands (0 or more) (* a (+ b 1) 3) -1.80
-+ / Divides all operands (2 or more) (/ b a 2) -0.325
-+ ^ Raise given number to given power (^ 3 2) 9
-+ ++ Increments variables (++ a 1.2) 3.2
-+ -- Decrements variables (-- a) 1
-+ ABS Absolute value of 1 operand (abs (* a b 3)) 7.8
-+ MAX Maximum of all operands (1 or more) (max 1 2 3 4) 4
-+ MIN Minimum of all operands (1 or more) (min 1 2 3 4) 1
-+ MOD (%) Modulus of all operands (1 or more) (mod 7 4 2) 1
-+ FLOAT Convert an integer to floating-point (float 1) 1.0
-+ TRUNCATE Integer part of floating-point operand (truncate 3.333) 3
-+ CEILING Ceiling of floating-point operand (ceiling 1.25) 2
-+ FLOOR Floor of floating-point operand (floor 1.25) 1
-+ ROUND Operand rounded to nearest integer (round 1.75) 2
-+ SQRT Square root of 1 operand (sqrt 2) 1.414..
-+ EXP e (2.71828..) to the given power (exp -1) 0.367..
-+ SIN Sine of angle-in-radians (sin (/ pi 2)) 1.0
-+ COS Cosine of angle-in-radians (cos pi) -1.0
-+ TAN Tangent of angle-in-radians (tan pi) 0.0
-+ LOG Natural log (base e) of given number (log 2.7183) 1.000..
-+ LOG10 Log base 10 of given number (log10 1000) 3.0
-+
-+ The ++ and -- operators are also assignment operators and work just
-+ like SETQ and LET in their interpretations of operators and operands,
-+ but:
-+
-+ * Each target variable must already be defined and have a numeric
-+ value;
-+ * The assignment value is the amount by which to increment or
-+ decrement the variable.
-+ * If an assignment value is not given, 1 is used.
-+
-+ If you include more than one variable-value pair in a ++ or --
-+ expression, every variable (except, optionally, the last) must be
-+ followed by a value. Examples:
-+
-+ (++ a) Equivalent to (setq a (+ a 1)) and to (++ a 1)
-+ (++ a 2) Equivalent to (setq a (+ a 2))
-+ (-- a (* 2 pi)) Equivalent to (setq a (- a (* 2 pi)))
-+ (++ a 1 b 1 c 1 d) Equivalent to four SETQs incrementing a,b,c,d by 1.
-+
-+ Another group of operators forms the predicates. These return a "truth
-+ value", in which 0 (or NIL) is false, and 1 or any other nonzero number
-+ is true.
-+
-+ Operator Description Example Result
-+ = (or ==) Operands are equal (= 1 1.0) 1
-+ != Operands are not equal (!= 1 1.0) 0
-+ < Operands in strictly ascending order (< 1 2 3) 1
-+ <= Operands in ascending order (<= 1 1 2 3) 1
-+ > Operands in strictly descending order (> 3 2 1) 1
-+ >= Operands in descending order (<= 3 3 2 1) 1
-+ AND (&&) Operands are all true (and 1 1 1 1 0) 0
-+ OR (||) At least one operand is true (or 1 1 1 1 0) 1
-+ XOR Logical Exclusive OR (xor 3 1) 0
-+ NOT (!) Reverses truth value of operand (not 3) 0
-+
-+ The Exclusive OR of two values is true if one value is true and the
-+ other value is false.
-+
-+ And another group operates on bits within an integer word:
-+
-+ Operator Description Example Result
-+ & Bitwise AND (& 7 2) 2
-+ | Bitwise OR (| 1 2 3 4) 7
-+ # Bitwise Exclusive OR (# 3 1) 2
-+ ~ Reverses all bits (~ 3) -4
-+
-+ These operators coerce their operands to integer by truncation if
-+ necessary. The result of bit reversal is hardware dependent.
-+
-+ The final category of operator works on truth values:
-+
-+ Operator Description Example Result
-+ IF Conditional evaluation (if (1) 2 3) 2
-+
-+ IF (predicate) (s1) [ (s2) ]
-+ The IF operator is similar to Kermit's IF command. If the
-+ predicate is true (i.e. evaluates to a nonzero number), the
-+ first S-Expression (s1) is evaluated and its value is returned.
-+ Otherwise, if (s2) is given, it is evaluated and its value
-+ returned; if (s2) is not given, nothing happens and the NIL
-+ (empty) value is returned.
-+
-+ You can group multiple expressions in the s1 and s2 expressions using
-+ EVAL (or "."):
-+
-+ (if (< a 0) (eval (setq x 0) (setq y 0)) (eval (setq x a) (setq y b)))
-+
-+ or equivalently:
-+
-+ (if (< a 0) (. (setq x 0) (setq y 0)) (. (setq x a) (setq y b)))
-+
-+ Each operator has its own requirement as to number and type of
-+ operands. In the following table, "number" means any kind of number --
-+ integer or floating-point -- or a variable, function, macro, or
-+ S-Expression that returns a number; "vname" means variable name,
-+ "fpnumber" means a floating-point number (or anything that resolves to
-+ one), and "integer" means integer (or anything that resolves to one).
-+ "truthvalue" means anything that resolves to a value of zero or an
-+ empty value (which indicates false) or a nonzero value (which indicates
-+ true). "any" means any kind of value, including none at all.
-+
-+ Operator Number of operands Type of operands Returns
-+ EVAL (.) 0 or more S-Expression Last value (default NIL)
-+ STRING 1 S-Expression string
-+ QUOTE (') 1 word string
-+ SETQ 0 or more vname value pairs Last value (default NIL)
-+ LET 0 or more vname value pairs Last value (default NIL)
-+ + 0 or more number number (default 0)
-+ - 0 or more number number (default 0)
-+ * 0 or more number number (see note (1))
-+ / 2 or more number number
-+ ^ 2 or more number number
-+ ++ 1 or more vname value pairs Result of last increment
-+ -- 1 or more vname value pairs Result of last decrement
-+ ABS 1 number number
-+ MAX 1 or more number number
-+ MIN 1 or more number number
-+ MOD (%) 2 number number
-+ FLOAT 1 number fpnumber
-+ TRUNCATE 1 number integer
-+ CEILING 1 number integer
-+ FLOOR 1 number integer
-+ ROUND 1 number integer
-+ SQRT 1 number fpnumber
-+ EXP 1 number fpnumber
-+ SIN 1 number fpnumber
-+ COS 1 number fpnumber
-+ TAN 1 number fpnumber
-+ LOG 1 number fpnumber
-+ LOG10 1 number fpnumber
-+ = (==) 1 or more number truthvalue
-+ != 1 or more number truthvalue
-+ < 1 or more number truthvalue
-+ <= 1 or more number truthvalue
-+ > 1 or more number truthvalue
-+ >= 1 or more number truthvalue
-+ AND (&&) 1 or more truthvalue truthvalue
-+ OR (||) 1 or more truthvalue truthvalue
-+ XOR 2 truthvalue truthvalue
-+ NOT (!) 1 truthvalue truthvalue
-+ & 1 or more number (see note 2) integer
-+ | 1 or more number (see note 2) integer
-+ # 2 number (see note 2) integer
-+ ~ 1 number (see note 2) integer
-+ IF 2 or 3 truthvalue,any,any any
-+
-+ Operators that don't require any arguments return the default values
-+ shown.
-+
-+ 1. The value of "*", when used as an operand, is initially "1" and the
-+ value of the most recent S-Expression thereafter, as in Franz Lisp.
-+ This is handy when doing a series of calculations by hand:
-+ C-Kermit>(* 13272.42 0.40)
-+ 5308.968
-+ C-Kermit>(/ * 2)
-+ 2654.4840
-+ C-Kermit>
-+
-+ 2. The bitwise operators coerce their operands to integer by
-+ truncation.
-+
-+ [ [516]Top ] [ [517]Contents ] [ [518]C-Kermit Home ] [ [519]Kermit
-+ Home ]
-+
-+9.5. Variables
-+
-+ As noted elsewhere in this discussion, all backslash items (variables
-+ such as \%a, macro parameters such as \%1, array elements such as
-+ \&a[\%i], built-in variables such as \v(ndate), built-in functions such
-+ as \fjoin(), macro names enclosed in \m(), \s(), or \:(), etc) are
-+ evaluated at "top level" before the S-Expression is sent to the
-+ S-Expression reader. To use a backslash variable as the target of an
-+ assignment (e.g. by SETQ, LET, ++, or --), you must double the
-+ backslash, e.g. (setq \\%r 1234). This is discussed at greater length
-+ in the next section.
-+
-+ Thus S-Expression reader generally deals only with macro names (not
-+ backslash items) as variables. It is important to understand how the
-+ reader handles macro names. There are fundamentally two kinds of
-+ S-Expressions: those that contain a single element, such as:
-+
-+ (foo)
-+
-+ and those that contain more than one element:
-+
-+ (foo a b c)
-+
-+ If an S-Expression contains only one element, and it is the name of a
-+ macro, the macro's definition is examined. If the definition is a
-+ number (integer or floating-point, positive or negative), then this
-+ becomes the value of the expression. If the definition starts with '
-+ (apostrophe), then the quoted word or string is the value of the
-+ expression (explained in [520]Section 9.8). Otherwise, the macro is
-+ assumed to be composed of Kermit commands (possibly including
-+ S-Expressions), which are executed. If the macro has a RETURN value, or
-+ it executes an S-Expression as its last command, the result becomes the
-+ value of the S-Expression; otherwise the result is empty.
-+
-+ For S-Expressions that contain more than one element, and the first
-+ element is the name of a macro, then this macro is executed with the
-+ arguments that are given, after the arguments are evaluated by the
-+ S-Expression reader. Likewise, If the first element is a built-in
-+ operator, then it is applied to the operands after they are evaluated.
-+ In both cases, each operand is fed to the S-Expression reader
-+ recursively for evaluation. If an operand is a number or a quoted
-+ string, it is used as-is. But if it's a macro name, this degenerates
-+ into the first case, and the previous paragraph applies.
-+
-+ Examples:
-+
-+ define foo 123
-+ (foo) Result: 123
-+ define foo 'abc
-+ (foo) Result: abc
-+ define foo '(one two three)
-+ (foo) Result: one two three
-+ define foo return \frandom(1000)
-+ (foo) Result: 713 (or other number)
-+ define foo (+ a b)
-+ (foo) Result: The sum of a and b
-+
-+ A more difficult example:
-+
-+ define foo abc
-+ (foo) Result: ???
-+
-+ The result in the last example depends on the definition of abc:
-+
-+ * If it has no definition, an error occurs; otherwise:
-+ * If the definition is an S-Expression, the result is the
-+ S-Expression's value; otherwise:
-+ * If the definition consists of Kermit commands, they are executed.
-+ But in this case "(foo)" produces the empty result, because it
-+ doesn't RETURN anything.
-+
-+ The use of macros as S-Expression operators is described in
-+ [521]Section 9.8.
-+
-+ [ [522]Top ] [ [523]Contents ] [ [524]C-Kermit Home ] [ [525]Kermit
-+ Home ]
-+
-+9.6. Assignments and Scope
-+
-+ The assignment operators SETQ and LET apply to global and local
-+ variables, respectively. SETQ and LET are standard Lisp operators
-+ adapted to Kermit scoping rules. When the operands are numeric or
-+ arithmetic, SETQ is equivalent to Kermit's EVALUATE command:
-+
-+ (setq a (+ 1 2))
-+ evaluate a 1 + 2
-+
-+ When the operand is a string, SETQ is equivalent to DEFINE:
-+
-+ (setq a '(this is a string))
-+ define a this is a string
-+
-+ In the first case, both statements create a macro named "a" with a
-+ value of 3. But in neither case is the macro "a" necessarily global. If
-+ either of these commands executes in an environment (i.e. macro
-+ invocation level) where a "local a" command has been given, the "a"
-+ macro is global to that environment, but is not visible outside it.
-+
-+ LET is equivalent to the Kermit LOCAL command, followed by the
-+ corresponding EVALUATE:
-+
-+ (let a (+ 1 2))
-+
-+ is equivalent to:
-+
-+ local a
-+ evaluate a 1 + 2
-+
-+ Again, "local" in this context applies to the Kermit macro invocation
-+ stack, not to the S-Expression nesting level. To illustrate, recall our
-+ "newarea" macro:
-+
-+def newarea {
-+ (let a \%1 b \%2 c \%3)
-+ (let s (/ (+ a b c) 2.0))
-+ (sqrt (* s (- s a) (- s b) (- s c)))
-+}
-+
-+ Because SETQ and LET expressions return a value, they can be placed
-+ within a larger S-Expression. In this case we can replace the first
-+ reference to the "s" variable by its defining expression:
-+
-+def newarea {
-+ (let a \%1 b \%2 c \%3)
-+ (sqrt (* (let s (/ (+ a b c) 2.0)) (- s a) (- s b) (- s c)))
-+}
-+
-+ This would not work if LET were local to the S-Expression, but it works
-+ nicely in the context of Kermit macros. The previous definition is
-+ equivalent to:
-+
-+def newarea {
-+ local a b c s
-+ (setq a \%1 b \%2 c \%3)
-+ (sqrt (* (setq s (/ (+ a b c) 2.0)) (- s a) (- s b) (- s c)))
-+}
-+
-+ In both cases, the variables a, b, c, and s are local to the "newarea"
-+ macro, and global within it.
-+
-+ Multiple assignments can be handled in several ways. Here is the
-+ obvious way to initialize a series of variables to the same value:
-+
-+ (setq a 0)
-+ (setq b 0)
-+ (setq c 0)
-+ (setq s 0)
-+
-+ Here is a more compact and efficient way of doing the same thing:
-+
-+ (setq a 0 b 0 c 0 s 0)
-+
-+ However, in case the value was more complex, it's better to put only
-+ one copy of it in the S-Expression; in this case we rely on the fact
-+ that SETQ returns the value of its last assignment:
-+
-+ (setq a (setq b (setq c (setq s (* x (^ y 2))))))
-+
-+ Similarly, to set a series of variables to x, x+1, x+2, ...
-+
-+ (setq c (+ (setq b (+ (setq a (+ (setq s x) 1)) 1)) 1))
-+
-+ In the last example, you can see why "last" does not always correspond
-+ to "rightmost" (the leftmost variable "c" is assigned last).
-+
-+ If you are working with backslash variables like \%a or array elements
-+ like \&a[1], remember two rules:
-+ 1. Don't put spaces inside array brackets.
-+ 2. You must double the backslash when using SETQ, LET, ++, or -- to
-+ assign a value to a backslash variable.
-+
-+ Examples of assigning to a backslash variable:
-+
-+ (setq x 1)
-+ (setq \\%a 0)
-+ (setq \\&a[x+1] 1)
-+ (++ \\%x)
-+ (-- \\&a[x+2])
-+
-+ Examples of referring to a backslash variable's value:
-+
-+ (setq a (+ \%a 1))
-+ (setq b (+ \%a \&a[1]))
-+ (++ a \%x)
-+ (-- b \&a[1])
-+
-+ The special notation is required because all backslashed items (\%x
-+ variables, array elements, built-in \v(xxx) variables, and \fxxx()
-+ function invocations) are evaluated in a single pass BEFORE the
-+ S-Expression is executed; any other approach would result in
-+ unacceptable performance. So, for example, in:
-+
-+ declare \&a[] = 1 2 3
-+ define \%x 4
-+ define \%y 0
-+ (setq \\%y (+ \%x \&a[1]))
-+
-+ the S-Expression becomes:
-+
-+ (setq \%y (+ 4 1))
-+
-+ before it is sent to the S-Expression evaluator. If the backslash had
-+ not been doubled on the assignment target, the result would have been:
-+
-+ (setq 0 (+ 4 1))
-+
-+ which is illegal because you can't assign a value to a number.
-+ Conversely, if backslashes were doubled on right-hand-side values:
-+
-+ (setq \\%y (+ \\%x \\&a[1])
-+
-+ this too, would give an error (not numeric - "\%x").
-+
-+ If you omit the double backslash in the assignment target, the result
-+ depends on whether the variable already has a value:
-+
-+ (setq \%a (* 3 3))
-+
-+ If \%a has a non-numeric single-word value, then this becomes the name
-+ of the variable that is assigned by SETQ. To illustrate:
-+
-+ define \%a foo
-+ echo \%a
-+ foo
-+ (setq \%a (* 3 3))
-+ echo \%a
-+ foo
-+ show macro foo
-+ foo = 9
-+
-+ If \%a has no value, a numeric value, or a multiword value, an "invalid
-+ assignment" error occurs.
-+
-+ [ [526]Top ] [ [527]Contents ] [ [528]C-Kermit Home ] [ [529]Kermit
-+ Home ]
-+
-+9.7. Conditional Expressions
-+
-+ The IF operator provides a compact form of decision-making within
-+ S-Expressions. An IF expression can stand wherever a number might
-+ stand, as long is it returns a number. Here's a quick way to obtain the
-+ average value of all the elements in an array that contains only
-+ numbers:
-+
-+ (/ (+ \fjoin(&a)) (float \fdim(&a)))
-+
-+ This results in a "Divide by zero" error if the array is empty. If you
-+ want to define the average value of an empty array to be 0 instead of
-+ getting an error, you can use IF to check the array size:
-+
-+ (if \fdim(&a) (/ (+ \fjoin(&a)) (float \fdim(&a))) 0)
-+
-+ or equivalently:
-+
-+ (if (not \fdim(&a)) 0 (/ (+ \fjoin(&a)) (float \fdim(&a))))
-+
-+ Of course, IF can fit anywhere else into an S-Expression:
-+
-+ (setq a (+ b (if (< c 0) 0 c)))
-+
-+ and the IF expression can be as complex as you like:
-+
-+ (setq a (+ b (if (and (or (> x 0) (> y 0)) (< c 0) (> d 1) (!= e 0)) 1 0)))
-+
-+ and the "then" and "else" parts can contain multiple S-Expressions
-+ enclosed within (EVAL ...):
-+
-+ (if x (eval (...) (...) (...)) (eval (...) (...) (...)))
-+
-+ AND and OR operators are guaranteed to "short circuit". If any operand
-+ of AND is false, none of the subsequent operands is evaluated;
-+ likewise, if an OR operand is true, no further operands are evaluated.
-+
-+ Bear in mind that the S-Expression IF is not the same as Kermit IF; the
-+ condition is only allowed to be an S-Expression or a variable or
-+ number, not the whole list of possibilities you see when you type "if
-+ ?" at the C-Kermit> prompt. But keep reading...
-+
-+ [ [530]Top ] [ [531]Contents ] [ [532]C-Kermit Home ] [ [533]Kermit
-+ Home ]
-+
-+9.8. Extensibility
-+
-+ To extend the capabilities of S-Expressions, you can use Kermit macro
-+ names as operators, with the following limitations:
-+
-+ * The macro must not have the same name as a built-in operator.
-+ * You must use the full macro name, not an abbreviation.
-+
-+ And with the following enhancement:
-+
-+ * If the last statement executed by the macro is an S-Expression, its
-+ value is returned automatically. In other words:
-+
-+ define bump (++ \%1)
-+
-+ is equivalent to:
-+
-+ define bump return \fsexpression(++ \%1)
-+
-+ Here's an example in which we define a FIBONACCI operator that returns
-+ the nth element, n >= 0, of the Fibonacci series, 0 1 1 2 3 5 8 13 21
-+ 34 55, . . ., in which the first element is 0, the second is 1, and
-+ each subsequent element is the sum of the two before it. This series
-+ was devised by Leonardo Pisano, Filius Bonacci (Fibonacci for short) in
-+ 1202 to describe how fast rabbits can breed, and also forms the basis
-+ for the Golden Mean, the branching behavior of plants, the spiral of a
-+ nautilus shell, etc. (Thanks to [534]Dat Thuc Nguyen for December 2003
-+ corrections to this section!)
-+
-+ We can write a FIBONACCI function as a macro easily with S-Expressions:
-+
-+ define FIBONACCI {
-+ (if (== \%1 0) 0
-+ (if (== \%1 1) 1 (+ (fibonacci (- \%1 2)) (fibonacci (- \%1 1)))))
-+ }
-+
-+ You can read this as:
-+
-+ If the argument (\%1) is 0, return a result of 0; if it is 1,
-+ return 1; otherwise:
-+ return the sum of fibonacci(argument - 2) and fibonacci(argument -
-+ 1)
-+
-+ Note that a RETURN statement is not needed, since S-Expressions
-+ automatically set the return value of their containing macros.
-+
-+ For comparison, here's how it would be coded without S-Expressions:
-+
-+ define FIBONACCI {
-+ if == \%1 0 {
-+ return 0
-+ } else if == \%1 1 {
-+ return 1
-+ } else {
-+ return \feval(\fexec(fibonacci \feval(\%1-2)) -
-+ + \fexec(fibonacci \feval(\%1-1)))
-+ }
-+ }
-+
-+ Now we can use the FIBONACCI function (whichever way you write it) just
-+ as if it were a built-in operator:
-+
-+ (fibonacci 6)
-+
-+ Or:
-+
-+ (setq a 10)
-+ (fibonacci a)
-+
-+ Within S-Expressions only (not outside them), S-Expressions themselves
-+ can be used as macro arguments:
-+
-+ (setq a 2 b 4)
-+ (setq x (fibonacci (* a b )))
-+
-+ The value of the S-Expression (in this case "8"), and not the
-+ S-Expression itself, is sent to the macro.
-+
-+ Your macro is responsible for argument validation and error handling. A
-+ robust Fibonacci macro would be more like this:
-+
-+ define FIBONACCI {
-+ if < \v(argc) 2 end 1 ?\%0: Missing argument
-+ if > \v(argc) 2 end 1 ?\%0: Too many arguments
-+ if not integer \%1 end 1 ?\%0: Integers only
-+ if < \%1 1 end 1 ?\%0: Argument out of range
-+ (if (== \%1 0) 0
-+ (if (== \%1 1) 1 (+ (fibonacci (- \%1 2)) (fibonacci (- \%1 1)))))
-+ }
-+
-+ Recall that "END nonzero-number [ message ]" causes a macro invocation
-+ to fail. When the macro is the operator in an S-Expression, this makes
-+ the S-Expression fail too. Also note that our Fibonacci macro is just
-+ an illustration, not a practical example. Since it is recursive (calls
-+ itself), it won't work for large arguments because the call stack can
-+ exceed available memory. See [535]Section 9.9.2 for a practical
-+ alternative.
-+
-+ Kermit macros, when used as S-Expression operators, can do anything at
-+ all except initiate file transfers: they can print messages on the
-+ screen, read and write files, interact with the user, and so on. For
-+ example, here's a macro ASKME that asks you to enter a number, makes
-+ sure that you did, and then returns its value for use in the
-+ S-Expression:
-+
-+ define ASKME {
-+ local \%n
-+ while true {
-+ ask \%n { Number: }
-+ if not def \%n continue
-+ if not numeric \%n {
-+ echo Not numeric - "\%n"
-+ continue
-+ }
-+ break
-+ }
-+ return \%n
-+ }
-+ (setq a (* 2 (askme))) ; Get number from user, double it, assign result to a.
-+
-+ Here's a macro you can use to validate that a number is in a given
-+ range:
-+
-+ define inrange {
-+ if != \v(argc) 4 end 1 ?\%0: Wrong number of arguments
-+ if ( < \%1 \%2 || > \%1 \%3 ) return 0
-+ return 1
-+ }
-+
-+ The first argument is the number to be checked, the second is the
-+ minimum acceptable value, the third is the maximum. You can use this
-+ (for example) in IF conditions:
-+
-+ define yes echo \%1 IS OK
-+ define no echo \%1 IS NOT OK
-+
-+ (setq a -1 b 999)
-+ (if (inrange a 0 100) (yes a) (no a))
-+ (if (inrange b -1000 +1000) (yes b) (no b))
-+
-+ This is just an illustration, of course; there's already a built-in
-+ operator to let you do range checking without help from macros:
-+
-+ (if (<= 0 a 100) (yes a) (no a))
-+ (if (<= -1000 b +1000) (yes b) (no b))
-+
-+ To send string parameters to a macro, some kind of quoting is required
-+ to tell the S-Expression parser to take a given "word" literally rather
-+ than replacing it by its value. For this we use the Lisp QUOTE
-+ operator:
-+
-+ define length return \flength(\%1)
-+ (length (quote abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz))
-+ 26
-+
-+ This causes the string "abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz" to be sent
-+ literally to the LENGTH macro. Kermit, like Lisp, also offers a
-+ shortcut for QUOTE, that lets us quote a word by prefixing it with a
-+ single quote (') character, also called apostophe (ASCII 39):
-+
-+ (length 'abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz)
-+ 26
-+
-+ The two forms are equivalent.
-+
-+ How the macro treats its arguments is up to the macro. In the example
-+ above, the argument is treated as a literal string. However, it can
-+ also be treated as a variable name:
-+
-+ define string This is a string
-+ define length return \flength(\m(\%1))
-+ (length 'string)
-+ 16
-+
-+ Note the construct \m(\%1). This means "the value of the macro whose
-+ name is the value of
-+ \%1". The value of \%1 in this case is the word "string", and the value
-+ of the macro whose name is "string" is "This is a string".
-+
-+ What if the macro takes multiple arguments, or a variable number of
-+ them? Here's a simple macro that prints a phrase that includes its
-+ arguments:
-+
-+ define complain echo It's too \%*!
-+
-+ (Recall that \%* means "all arguments".)
-+
-+ It can be called in the traditional way:
-+
-+ complain hot Result: "It's too hot!"
-+ complain cold and wet Result: "It's too cold and wet!"
-+
-+ Or from an S-Expression if you quote the arguments:
-+
-+ (complain 'hot) Result: "It's too hot!"
-+ (complain 'cold 'and 'wet) Result: "It's too cold and wet!"
-+
-+ To group multiple words into a single argument, use parentheses:
-+
-+ (complain (quote (cold and wet))) Result: "It's too cold and wet!"
-+ (complain '(cold and wet)) Result: "It's too cold and wet!"
-+
-+ Note the difference:
-+
-+ (complain 'cold 'and 'wet) Three arguments
-+ (complain '(cold and wet)) One argument
-+
-+ Since the COMPLAIN macro uses \%* to refer to all its arguments, no
-+ matter how many, it doesn't care which form you use. But it makes a
-+ difference in cases where the macro refers to its arguments
-+ individually.
-+
-+ To illustrate, let's consider a macro that receives the name of a macro
-+ and its argument list and executes it with its arguments, without
-+ knowing how many arguments there are. The following LOOP macro is used
-+ to execute the given macro with the given argument list the requested
-+ number of times:
-+
-+ def loop { local i, for i 1 \%1 1 do \%2 \%3 }
-+
-+ Within the LOOP macro, the first argument (\%1) is the loop count, \%2
-+ is the macro name, and \%3 is the argument list. When the LOOP macro is
-+ invoked traditionally like this:
-+
-+ loop 3 complain hot
-+
-+ it prints "It's too hot!" three times. To invoke it from an
-+ S-Expression, you must quote both the macro name as well as the
-+ argument, since in this case the macro name itself is an argument:
-+
-+ (loop 3 'complain 'hot)
-+
-+ Now what if you need to send different or variable numbers of arguments
-+ to the LOOP macro? The LOOP macro can handle it already, provided you
-+ group the arguments into LOOP's third argument (\%3). In Kermit syntax,
-+ without grouping:
-+
-+ loop 3 complain cold and wet
-+
-+ prints "It's too cold!" three times ("and wet" is lost); but with
-+ grouping (either of the following two forms):
-+
-+ loop 3 complain {cold and wet}
-+ loop 3 complain "cold and wet"
-+
-+ the LOOP macro prints "It's too cold and wet!" three times as desired.
-+
-+ To do the same thing in an S-Expression, just use the Lisp forms of
-+ quoting instead of the Kermit forms; the following two are equivalent:
-+
-+ (loop 3 'complain (quote (cold and wet)))
-+ (loop 3 'complain '(cold and wet))
-+
-+ Here's a similar example in which we write a macro that shows both the
-+ name and the value of one or more other macros, whose names are given
-+ as arguments (similar to "show macro"):
-+
-+ define display {
-+ local \%i
-+ for \%i 1 \v(argc)-1 1 {
-+ echo \&_[\%i] = \m(\&_[\%i])
-+ }
-+ }
-+
-+ (Recall that \&_[] is the macro's argument vector array, equivalent to
-+ \%1, \%2, ...) The DISPLAY macro can be used in S-Expressions like
-+ this:
-+
-+ (setq a 1 b 2 c 3)
-+ (display 'a 'b 'c 'd)
-+
-+ which prints:
-+
-+ a = 1
-+ b = 2
-+ c = 3
-+ d =
-+
-+ The names must be quoted to prevent their evaluation before they are
-+ sent to the macro. This ability to pass variables "by name" to macros,
-+ rather than by value, lets you write macros that change the values of
-+ argument variables. For example, here's a macro that doubles the value
-+ of its argument variable:
-+
-+ define double (++ \%1 \%1)
-+
-+ which you can call like this:
-+
-+ (setq a 12)
-+ (double 'a)
-+
-+ In the macro, \%1 is replace by the variable name "a"; "(++ a a)" adds
-+ "a" to itself, and sets the value of "a" to the result.
-+
-+ There are no built-in operators other than QUOTE, ', and STRING for
-+ handling strings in S-Expressions, but using just these, plus macros
-+ that use Kermit's regular string-handling features, you can easily
-+ extend S-Expressions to do string manipulation:
-+
-+ define len return \flen(\%1) Returns length of argument string
-+ define cap return \fupper(\%1) Uppercase argument string
-+ define rev return \freverse(\%1) Reverses argument string
-+ define sub return \fsubstr(\%1,\%2,\%3) Returns substring of arg string
-+
-+ (len '(this is a string)) Result: 16
-+ (rev '(this is a string)) Result: gnirts a si siht
-+ (rev (cap '(this is a string))) Result: GNIRTS A SI SIHT
-+ (sub (rev (cap '(this is a string))) 5 9) Result: TS A SI S
-+
-+ You can assign a string to a macro name as follows:
-+
-+ (setq foo '(this is a string))
-+ (setq foo (quote (this is a string)))
-+
-+ The two are exactly equivalent. In both cases, the macro "foo" has the
-+ value:
-+
-+ '(this is a string)
-+
-+ so when it is retrieved it can be identified as a string rather than a
-+ number or commands to be executed. Thus:
-+
-+ (setq foo (quote (this is a string)))
-+ show macro foo
-+ foo = '(this is a string)
-+ (foo)
-+ this is a string
-+
-+ Note the different results for "show macro foo" and "(foo)". The former
-+ shows the internal definition; the latter evaluates the variable, which
-+ removes the quoting. And perhaps more important, note that if the
-+ apostrophe and surrounding parentheses were not stored as part of the
-+ definition, (foo) would try to execute "this is a string" as a command.
-+
-+ Given the assignment above, the following work as expected:
-+
-+ (len foo) Result: 16
-+ (rev foo) Result: gnirts a si siht
-+ (rev (cap foo)) Result: GNIRTS A SI SIHT
-+ (sub (rev (cap foo)) 5 8) Result: TS A SI S
-+
-+ Note that, unlike built-in S-Expression operators that return numbers
-+ or truth values, these operators return strings. If you want to assign
-+ their return values to other variables, you can do so:
-+
-+ (setq bar (rev (cap foo))) Result: GNIRTS A SI SIHT
-+
-+ But now the S-Expression processor doesn't know the value of "bar" is
-+ supposed to be a string, rather than a macro to execute. For this you
-+ need one final special operator, STRING. The STRING operator takes an
-+ S-Expression as an operand, evaluates it, and then returns its value
-+ enclosed in '(), so you can use the value as a string is subsequent
-+ S-Expressions. Use STRING for referencing macros that return strings:
-+
-+ (setq bar (string (rev (cap foo)))) Result: '(GNIRTS A SI SIHT)
-+
-+ STRING is like QUOTE, except that it evaluates its operand before
-+ applying the quoting, rather than taking the operand literally.
-+
-+ To reference backslash variables or functions that return string
-+ values, you must use the regular quoting mechanisms:
-+
-+ (setq time '(\v(time)))
-+ (setq date '(\v(date)))
-+ assign \%r this is a string
-+ (setq s1 '(\%r))
-+
-+ That's because backslash items are evaluated BEFORE the S-Expression
-+ parser ever sees them, and the values of \v(time) and so on are not
-+ valid S-Expressions, so STRING won't like them.
-+
-+ Finally a brief word on the touchy topic of quoting. Suppose you want
-+ to include (say) literal parentheses in a string that will later be
-+ processed by the S-Expression reader (or \fsplit() or \fword()).
-+ Normally, you can't do this because parentheses are meaningful in these
-+ contexts. To defeat the normal parsing rules, you can quote the
-+ parentheses with backslash. However, due to the many levels of string
-+ processing involved, a surprisingly large amount of backslashes might
-+ be required, for example:
-+
-+ (setq s '(a b (c d) \\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\(e f (g h) x\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\) j k))
-+
-+ This is nearly impossible to explain(*). Instead, just remember two
-+ points:
-+
-+ * In situations like this, it's better to use DEFINE to create the
-+ string, rather than SETQ. The example above requires only double
-+ backslashes when DEFINE is used:
-+ define s '(a b (c d) \\(e f (g h) x\\) j k)
-+
-+ * The level of quoting depends on how many levels of evaluation the
-+ string must pass through, which is not always obvious. However, the
-+ number of backslashes required in any given situation is always a
-+ power of 2. So if 1 doesn't work, try 2; if 2 doesn't work, try 4;
-+ if 4 doesn't work, try 8, 16, 32, and so on.
-+
-+ Considerations like this apply in any scripting language (shell, Tcl,
-+ Perl, Python, etc). The situation is known as "Quoting Hell".
-+
-+ (*) If you really want an explanation, here it is:
-+
-+ * Every SEXP has its backslash items evaluated in a single pass at
-+ top level before being passed to the SEXP reader, so \%1,
-+ \v(ftime), etc, can be evaluated up front, freeing the SEXP reader
-+ of having to know about such things, which in turn makes it much
-+ more efficient. Therefore one level of quoting is lost right away,
-+ and therefore you must double each backslash that is to be used as
-+ a quote.
-+ * When the SEXP reader sees '\', it treats it as a quote; discards it
-+ and keeps the next character. Thus '\\' becomes '\'. This would be
-+ the end of it, except that:
-+ * The SEXP reader must call itself recursively on its operands, so we
-+ must double any quotes in the operands: 2^2 = 4.
-+ * If the result is to be passed as an argument to a macro, the
-+ backslashes must again be doubled, because the macro processor
-+ evaluates the arguments before sending them to the macro: 2^3 = 8.
-+ * If the macro itself is to see the quotes, rather than just the
-+ result of the quoting, the quotes must be doubled again: 2^4 = 16.
-+
-+ Moral: To create string constants in which grouping characters must be
-+ quoted, use DEFINE rather than SETQ.
-+
-+ [ [536]Top ] [ [537]Contents ] [ [538]C-Kermit Home ] [ [539]Kermit
-+ Home ]
-+
-+9.9. Examples
-+
-+9.9.1. Statistics
-+
-+ The following program computes statistics -- means, maxima, mimima,
-+ variance, standard deviation, and correlation -- from data stored in
-+ parallel arrays, \&x[] and \&y[], which can contain any mixture of
-+ integer and floating-point numbers: positive, negative, or zero. Array
-+ setup and validation are not shown. Except for the traditional FOR loop
-+ and printing the results at the end, the entire computation is done
-+ with S-Expressions:
-+
-+; Initialize sums, maxima, minima, and number of elements
-+
-+ (setq xsum 0 ysum 0 xsum2 0 ysum2 0 xysum 0)
-+ (setq xmin (setq xmax \&x[1]) ymin (setq ymax \&y[1]))
-+ (setq n \fdim(&x))
-+
-+; Loop through elements and accumulate sums, maxima, and minima
-+
-+ for i 1 n 1 {
-+ (setq x \&x[i] y \&y[i]) ; Notational convenience
-+ (setq xmax (max xmax x) ymax (max ymax y)) ; X and Y maxima
-+ (setq xmin (min xmin x) ymin (min ymin y)) ; X and Y minima
-+ (++ xsum x ysum y) ; X and Y sums
-+ (++ xsum2 (^ x 2) ysum2 (^ y 2)) ; Sum of X and Y squares
-+ (++ xysum (* x y)) ; Sum of XY products
-+ }
-+
-+; Calculate results
-+
-+ (setq xmean (/ xsum n) ymean (/ ysum n)) ; Mean X and Y
-+ (setq xss (- xsum2 (/ (^ xsum 2) n))) ; Intermediate values
-+ (setq yss (- ysum2 (/ (^ ysum 2) n)))
-+ (setq xyss (- xysum (/ (* xsum ysum) n)))
-+ (setq xvar (/ xss n) yvar (/ yss n)) ; X and Y variance
-+ (setq sdx (sqrt xvar) sdy (sqrt yvar)) ; Std deviation in X and Y
-+ (setq tmp (* xss yss))
-+ (setq cc (if tmp (/ xyss (sqrt tmp)) 1.0)) ; Correlation coefficient
-+ show macro xmean ymean xvar yvar sdx sdy cc ; Print the results
-+
-+ The final "if tmp" check accounts for the possibility that both arrays
-+ contain all 0's. Results can also be printed with "echo CC = \m(cc)",
-+ or any other desired way. Interestingly, if we had not needed the sum
-+ of the squares and products, we could have obtained the sums, maxima,
-+ and minima of the X's and Y's without a loop like this:
-+
-+ (setq xsum (+ \fjoin(&x)) ysum (+ \fjoin(&y)))
-+ (setq xmax (max \fjoin(&x)) ymax (max \fjoin(&y)))
-+ (setq xmin (min \fjoin(&x)) ymin (min \fjoin(&y)))
-+
-+ Any Kermit function that returns numbers or lists of numbers can be
-+ included in an S-Expression as an operand.
-+
-+9.9.2. Practical Fibonacci Series
-+
-+ The recursive Fibonacci example given previously is simple and elegant,
-+ but not very useful since it causes memory occupation to grow each time
-+ it calls itself, until eventually both physical memory and disk swap
-+ space are filled and the program crashes. Even for small arguments,
-+ like 17, execution time can be prohibitive:
-+
-+ (setq t1 \v(ftime))
-+ (setq result (fibonacci 17))
-+ (setq t2 (- \v(ftime) t1))
-+ echo FIBONACCI(17) = \m(result): TIME = \ffpround(t2,3)
-+
-+ prints (on a certain rather slow computer):
-+
-+ FIBONACCI(17) = 1597: TIME = 5.861
-+
-+ Any recursive function can be recoded iteratively. The result is not as
-+ pretty, but execution is far less expensive:
-+
-+ define FIBITER {
-+ (if (== \%3 0) (\%2) (fibiter (+ \%1 \%2) \%1 (- \%3 1)))
-+ }
-+ define FIBONACCI {
-+ (fibiter 1 0 \%1)
-+ }
-+
-+ Here's the result on the same computer for the same argument of 17:
-+
-+ FIBONACCI(17) = 1597: TIME = 0.015
-+
-+ (47 times faster.) Execution time increases proportionally to the size
-+ of the argument in the iterative case, whereas in the recursive case it
-+ goes up geometrically, quickly reaching infinity.
-+
-+ [ [540]Top ] [ [541]Contents ] [ [542]C-Kermit Home ] [ [543]Kermit
-+ Home ]
-+
-+9.10. Differences from Algebraic Notation
-+
-+ In C-Kermit:
-+
-+ * Algebraic notation uses infix operators and normal rules of
-+ operator precedence, with parentheses used to force exceptions to
-+ the rules; many operations can be included in an expression.
-+ S-Expressions use prefix operators with no intrinsic precedence;
-+ each operation is enclosed in parentheses, and the arrangement of
-+ parentheses determines precedence.
-+ * Algebraic infix operators require two operands; S-Expression prefix
-+ operators can accept a variable number of operands.
-+ * You can use algebraic notation anywhere that C-Kermit accepts a
-+ number, e.g. "echo \&a[((1+1)*2-1]", but you can use S-Expressions
-+ only as top-level commands. You can, however, use either algebraic
-+ or S-Expressions anywhere at all by enclosing them in \fevaluate()
-+ or \fsexpression(), respectively.
-+ * You can use any mixture of integer and floating-point numbers in
-+ S-Expressions, but only integers are permitted in algebraic
-+ expressions. Outside of S-Expressions, floating point arithmetic is
-+ supported only by \ffp...() function calls.
-+ * Operators and operands in S-Expressions must be separated by
-+ spaces, e.g. "(+ a b)". Spaces are not required in algebraic
-+ expressions: "((a+b)*c)".
-+ * When assigning values to backslash variables (such as \%x or
-+ \&a[2]) using SETQ or LET, you must double the backslash.
-+
-+ [ [544]Top ] [ [545]Contents ] [ [546]C-Kermit Home ] [ [547]Kermit
-+ Home ]
-+
-+9.11. Differences from Lisp
-+
-+ * Kermit has a lot of built-in operators not found in Lisp: ++, ^,
-+ etc.
-+ * Most dialects of real Lisp do not allow S-Expressions that don't
-+ start with an operator, for example:
-+ (a)
-+
-+ This expression can cause an error in Lisp (even if "a" has a
-+ value), but is acceptable in Kermit, where it returns the value of
-+ the variable "a". Similarly, (1) returns the value "1".
-+ * In real Lisp, EVAL requires exactly one operand. In Kermit, it can
-+ have 0, 1, 2, or more operands. It returns the value of the last
-+ operand evaluated.
-+ * Real Lisp SETQ and LET usually require an even number of operands.
-+ Kermit allows an odd number, in which case the last (or only)
-+ variable is undefined (i.e. deleted, destroyed).
-+ * Kermit does not support ratios such as "7/8". Some Lisp dialects
-+ accept ratios as numbers, and generate ratios when told to divide
-+ two integers whose quotient is not a whole number; e.g. in Common
-+ Lisp:
-+ [13] USER(37): (/ (+ 1 2 3 4) 3)
-+ 10/3
-+ [13] USER(38):
-+
-+ * The result of (/ 10 3) is 3.333.... Some Lisp dialects truncate the
-+ result to 3 since both operands are integers, some don't; some give
-+ the result as a ratio. C-Kermit always gives a floating point
-+ result when there is a fractional part. If you want an integer
-+ result, you can use TRUNCATE, FLOOR, or CEILING, e.g. (truncate (/
-+ 10 3)).
-+ * There is currently no "bignum" support. Large numbers can be used
-+ and large results generated, but (as noted in [548]Section 9.2)
-+ they are accurate only to the precision of the underlying machine.
-+ \v(math_precision) gives the machine precision as a number of
-+ decimal digits, e.g. 16.
-+ * Scientific notation for floating-point numbers is not supported. If
-+ the magnitude of a number is greater than the precision of the
-+ underlying hardware, the less-significant digits are shown but
-+ their values are meaningless. If it the number is too small to be
-+ represented internally, it is shown as "0.0".
-+ * Many Lisp features are omitted: List processing (CAR, CDR, etc),
-+ DEFUN, Lisp-specific control structures, and so on.
-+
-+ [ [549]Top ] [ [550]Contents ] [ [551]C-Kermit Home ] [ [552]Kermit
-+ Home ]
-+
-+10. FILE TRANSFER
-+
-+ New commands and switches:
-+
-+ SET TRANSFER REPORT { OFF, ON }
-+ Enables or disables the (new) one-line message printed by Kermit
-+ after a remote-mode file transfer to indicate the source and
-+ destination file, complete with path, to let you know where the
-+ file went.
-+
-+ SEND /TYPE:{TEXT,BINARY}
-+ Sends only files of the given type (see [553]Section 4).
-+
-+ SEND /NOFOLLOWLINKS:
-+ (UNIX only) Skip over symbolic links rather than following them
-+ (default). This applies to wildcard and/or recursive SENDs; if a
-+ single filename is given, and it happens to be a symbolic link,
-+ the file it points to is sent.
-+
-+ SEND /FOLLOWLINKS:
-+ (UNIX only) Follow (resolve) symbolic links. Watch out for
-+ circular links, endless loops, etc.
-+
-+ SET SEND I-PACKETS { OFF, ON }
-+ When sending commands to a Kermit server, this tells whether
-+ command packets should be preceded by an I (information) packet,
-+ which is used to synchronize parameters prior to executing the
-+ command. Normally ON. The only reason to set this OFF is for
-+ communicating with buggy Kermit servers that misbehave when an I
-+ packet is sent to them. There is also a SET RECEIVE I-PACKETS
-+ command, but presently it has no effect.
-+
-+ SET TRANSFER MESSAGE [ text ]
-+ Sets an initial message to be shown in the Last Message field of
-+ the fullscreen file-transfer display.
-+
-+ SET TRANSFER TRANSLATION { ON, OFF }
-+ Inhibits or re-enables text-file transfer character-set
-+ translation globally.
-+
-+ { SEND, MSEND, GET, RECEIVE } /TRANSPARENT
-+ Inhibits character-set translation for this transfer only.
-+
-+ { GET, RECEIVE } /PIPES:{ON,OFF}
-+ Overrides global TRANSFER PIPES setting for this transfer only;
-+ ON allows incoming files with names like "!tar xf -" to be
-+ opened as pipelines rather than regular files.
-+
-+ The following new "hot keys" are available when Kermit's file-transfer
-+ display is visible:
-+
-+ D: Turn on debugging, open "debug.log" if not already open.
-+ d: Turn off debugging but leave log open (if it was open).
-+ T: Turn on debug-log timestamps.
-+ t: Turn off debug-log timestamps.
-+
-+ Other improvements:
-+ * SET FILE DOWNLOAD-DIRECTORY now works for external protocols (e.g.
-+ sz/rz) too.
-+ * Improved automatic per-file text/binary switching, described in
-+ [554]Section 4.
-+ * When sending a file group (e.g. "send *.*"), failure to open a file
-+ is no longer fatal; now C-Kermit simply goes ahead to the next
-+ file.
-+ * Transaction log entries are now made for external protocols too.
-+
-+ [ [555]Top ] [ [556]Contents ] [ [557]C-Kermit Home ] [ [558]Kermit
-+ Home ]
-+
-+11. MODEMS AND DIALING
-+
-+ In C-Kermit 8.0, the default modem type for dialing has changed from
-+ NONE (= DIRECT, meaning no modem) to GENERIC. This change should have
-+ no impact on direct connections. For dialing, it means that, unless you
-+ SET MODEM TYPE to a specific type, such as USROBOTICS or CONEXANT,
-+ Kermit assumes:
-+
-+ 1. The modem uses the Hayes AT command set.
-+ 2. The modem supports error correction, data compression, and hardware
-+ flow control and is already configured to use them.
-+
-+ In fact, Kermit assumes the modem is completely configured, and
-+ therefore does not send it an initialization string or any
-+ configuration commands. Instead, it sends only the simplest and most
-+ portable commands:
-+
-+ ATQ0V1 Give dial result codes.
-+ ATDTnumber Dial the number.
-+
-+ (or ATD or ATDP, as appropriate).
-+
-+ The new defaults work for direct connections and for most modern modems
-+ on most platforms, and they work much faster than "full-treatment"
-+ dialing. If the new defaults don't work for you, or if you need to
-+ perform explicit modem configuations or interactions, then set a
-+ specific modem type and use the SET MODEM and SET DIAL commands as
-+ documented in Using C-Kermit.
-+
-+ WARNING: Don't use the generic modem on hosts that do not support
-+ RTS/CTS flow control. If Xon/Xoff is in use on the serial port,
-+ you'll need to select a particular modem type so Kermit knows what
-+ command to give it to enable Xon/Xoff flow control between itself
-+ and your serial port.
-+
-+ The following new modem types were added in C-Kermit 8.0:
-+
-+ lucent: Lucent Venus chipset
-+ pctel: PCTel V.90 chipset
-+ conexant: Conexant (ex-Rockwell) modem family
-+ zoom-v32bis: New name for "Zoom"
-+ zoom-v34 Zoom V.34
-+ zoom-v90 Zoom V.90 56K
-+ zoom-v92: Zoom V.92 with V.44 data compression
-+ zoltrix-v34: New name for "zoltrix"
-+ zoltrix-hsp-v90: Synonym for PCTel
-+ zoltrix-hcf-v90: Synonym for ITU-T-V250
-+ smartlink-v90: Synonym for usrobotics (same chipset)
-+ acer-v90: Synonym for Rockwell-v90
-+
-+ New DIAL-related variables:
-+
-+ \v(dm_hf): Dial modifier: Wait for Hook-Flash.
-+ \v(dm_wb): Dial modifier: Wait for Bong.
-+
-+ Finally, if dialing fails, Kermit now prints a context-sensitive hint
-+ suggesting possible reasons and remedies.
-+
-+ Added in C-Kermit 8.0.201: Rudimentary support for Caller ID, for use
-+ with the ANSWER command. If the modem reports Caller ID information,
-+ Kermit stores it in variables that you can access after the call is
-+ answered:
-+
-+ \v(callid_date) The date of the call
-+ \v(callid_time) The time of the call
-+ \v(callid_name) The name of the caller
-+ \v(callid_nmbr) The telephone number of the caller
-+ \v(callid_mesg) A message
-+
-+ The format of these items depends on the originating and answering
-+ phone companies and the modems and their configuration.
-+
-+ Not very many modems support Caller ID, and those that do (a) tend to
-+ have it disabled by default, and (b) use different commands to enable
-+ it. A quick survey shows of some current models shows:
-+
-+ - USR V.90: No
-+ - ITU-T V.250: No
-+ - Lucent Venus: No
-+ - Diamond Supra: #CID=1
-+ - Rockwell 56K: #CID=1
-+ - PCTEL: #CID=1
-+ - Zoltrix: +VCID=1
-+ - Conexant: +VCID=1
-+
-+ To use Kermit's Caller ID feature, you have to set the modem to wait
-+ for at least two rings before answering, and you have to give the
-+ command to enable Caller ID; for example (after choosing a modem with
-+ SET MODEM TYPE):
-+
-+ set modem command autoanswer on ATS0=2#CID=1\{13}
-+ set modem command autoanswer on ATS0=2+VCID=1\{13}
-+
-+ These commands can be undone with:
-+
-+ set modem command autoanswer on ATS0=1#CID=0\{13}
-+ set modem command autoanswer on ATS0=1+VCID=0\{13}
-+
-+ Kermit presently has no built-in knowledge of the Caller ID
-+ capabilities or commands of the modems in its database.
-+
-+ Since the variables can be accessed only after the call is answered,
-+ the only way to refuse a call is to answer it, inspect the variables,
-+ and then hang it up if desired.
-+
-+ [ [559]Top ] [ [560]Contents ] [ [561]C-Kermit Home ] [ [562]Kermit
-+ Home ]
-+
-+12. TERMINAL CONNECTION
-+
-+ Now that 7-bit connections are no longer the norm, the default terminal
-+ bytesize (also called "data size" or "word size") in C-Kermit 8.0 is 8
-+ bits, rather than 7 bits as it was in C-Kermit 7.0 and earlier:
-+
-+ SET ESCAPE character
-+ This command, which specifies your CONNECT-mode escape
-+ character, allows you to specify any ASCII control character in
-+ a variety of formats. C-Kermit 8.0.201 now also lets you specify
-+ any 8-bit value, 128-255, as the escape character. In the SET
-+ ESCAPE command, you can type the 8-bit character literally or
-+ you can enter its numeric code. Here are examples that you can
-+ enter from a terminal or console that uses the ISO Latin-1
-+ character set:
-+
-+ C-Kermit> set escape Ã
-+ C-Kermit> set escape 195
-+ C-Kermit> show escape
-+ Escape character: Code 195 (Ã): enabled
-+ C-Kermit>
-+
-+ Both of these commands set the escape character value to 195
-+ (decimal), which happens to be uppercase letter A with Tilde in
-+ Latin-1. SHOW ESCAPE and SHOW TERMINAL show the value, as does
-+ the CONNECT message.
-+
-+ SET TERMINAL AUTODOWNLOAD ERROR { STOP, CONTINUE }
-+ When Kermit has a terminal connection to another computer, and a
-+ file transfer is initiated automatically because a Kermit packet
-+ was received in CONNECT mode (i.e. in the terminal screen), this
-+ command tells what Kermit should do if the transfer fails. The
-+ default is to STOP, which leaves Kermit in command mode with its
-+ file-transfer display showing, so you can see that the transfer
-+ failed and why. If you SET TERMINAL AUTODOWNLOAD ERROR CONTINUE,
-+ this causes Kermit to return automatically to its terminal
-+ screen (i.e. resume its CONNECT session) as if the transfer had
-+ succeeded; this can be desirable if the entire session is under
-+ control of a host-based script.
-+
-+ SET TERMINAL BYTESIZE { 7, 8 }
-+ The byte size to use during CONNECT and INPUT command execution,
-+ which can be more restrictive than the bytesize implied by the
-+ current PARITY setting, but not less restrictive. In C-Kermit
-+ 7.0 and earlier, the terminal bytesize was 7 by default to
-+ protect against the likelihood that parity was in use on the
-+ connection without the user's knowledge. When the terminal
-+ bytesize is 8 (as it is in C-Kermit 8.0 and later), the user
-+ will see garbage in this (increasingly unlikely) situation. Note
-+ that 8 data bits are required for most character sets other than
-+ ASCII: Latin-1, UTF-8, and so on.
-+
-+ A new command has been added to produce timestamped session logs:
-+
-+ SET TERMINAL SESSION-LOG TIMESTAMPED-TEXT
-+ Records the terminal session in text mode (like SET TERMINAL
-+ SESSION-LOG TEXT) but adds a timestamp at the beginning of each
-+ line. The timestamp format is hh:mm:ss.nnn, and indicates the
-+ time at which the first character of the line appeared.
-+
-+ In most UNIX versions (those built with the select()-capable CONNECT
-+ module -- pretty much all the ones that have or could have TELNET
-+ included), an idle timeout feature has been added:
-+
-+ SET TERMINAL IDLE-TIMEOUT number
-+ If the number is not 0, then Kermit is to take an action when
-+ the given amount of time passes with no activity during CONNECT
-+ mode. If the number is positive it is the maximum number of idle
-+ seconds; if number is negative it represents milliseconds
-+ (thousandths of seconds). If 0 is given as the number, there are
-+ no idle timeouts. Synonym: SET TERMINAL IDLE-LIMIT.
-+
-+ SET TERMINAL IDLE-ACTION { RETURN, HANGUP, EXIT, OUTPUT [ string ] }
-+ The action to be taken upon an idle timeout in CONNECT mode.
-+ RETURN to the prompt, HANGUP the connection, EXIT from Kermit,
-+ or OUTPUT the given string (if no string is given, a NUL (ASCII
-+ 0) character is sent).
-+
-+ SET TERMINAL IDLE-ACTION { TELNET-NOP, TELNET-AYT }
-+ Actions that can be selected on Telnet connections only, that
-+ might be useful if idle limits are enforced by the Telnet server
-+ or in the TCP/IP protocol: TELNET-NOP sends a "NO Operation"
-+ (do-nothing) command, which causes no response from the server;
-+ TELNET-AYT sends an "Are You There" message to the server, which
-+ should make the server send back a message. Neither of these
-+ actions interferes with your remote session.
-+
-+ SET TERMINAL IDLE-ACTION is useful for connections to hosts or services
-+ that automatically log you out after a certain amount of idle time,
-+ e.g.:
-+
-+ set term idle-timeout 300
-+ set term idle-action output \32
-+
-+ sends a space (as if you had pressed the space bar) every 300 seconds
-+ (five minutes) while there is no activity (32 is the ASCII code for
-+ space).
-+
-+ When C-Kermit returns from CONNECT to command mode, the reason for the
-+ transition is given in a new variable, \v(cx_status):
-+
-+ 0 No CONNECT command given yet.
-+ 1 User escaped back manually.
-+ 2 A trigger string was encountered.
-+ 3 IKSD entered server mode.
-+ 4 Application Program Command received from host.
-+ 5 Idle timeout.
-+ 6 Telnet protocol error.
-+ 7 Keystroke macro.
-+ 8 Time limit exceeded.
-+ 100 Internal error.
-+ 101 Carrier required by not detected.
-+ 102 I/O error on connection.
-+ 103 Disconnected by host.
-+ 104 Disconnected by user.
-+ 105 Session limit exceeded.
-+ 106 Rejected due to Telnet policy.
-+ 107 Received kill signal.
-+
-+ Values 100 and above indicate there is no connection.
-+
-+ [ [563]Top ] [ [564]Contents ] [ [565]C-Kermit Home ] [ [566]Kermit
-+ Home ]
-+
-+13. CHARACTER SETS
-+
-+ See the section on [567]file scanning above, and the section on
-+ character-set conversion in [568]FTP. Also:
-+
-+ * True support for CP1252 (rather than treating it as Latin-1).
-+ * Proper handling of C1 values when converting ISO 8-bit text to
-+ UTF-8.
-+ * TYPE /CHARACTER-SET: /TRANSLATE-TO: allows specific translations.
-+ * The TRANSLATE command now works on multiple files.
-+ * K_CHARSET environment variable to set the file character-set.
-+ * SET TRANSFER TRANSLATION OFF.
-+ * FTP client character-set translation ([569]Section 3.7).
-+
-+ [ [570]Top ] [ [571]Contents ] [ [572]C-Kermit Home ] [ [573]Kermit
-+ Home ]
-+
-+14. DIALOUT FROM TELNET TERMINAL SERVERS
-+
-+ For years, C-Kermit has supported dialing out from Telnet modem servers
-+ (also called reverse terminal servers or access servers), but until now
-+ there was no way for Kermit to control the communication parameters
-+ (speed, parity, etc) on the serial port of the terminal server; it had
-+ to use whatever was there.
-+
-+ But now, if you make a connection to a server that supports the Telnet
-+ Com Port Control Option, [574]RFC 2217, you have the same degree of
-+ control as you would have over a serial port on the computer where
-+ Kermit is running: SET SPEED, SET FLOW, SET PARITY, SET STOP-BITS, SHOW
-+ COMM, WAIT, SET CARRIER-WATCH, the modem-signal variables, sending
-+ Break, and so on, apply to the connection between the terminal server
-+ and the modem.
-+
-+ For example, using a Cisco Access Server 2509, where specifying a TCP
-+ port in the 6000's selects a serial port that can be used for dialing
-+ out:
-+
-+ set host xxx 6001 ; xxx is the IP hostname or address of the server
-+ (log in if necessary) ; With a script or by hand
-+ set modem type usr ; Tell Kermit what kind of modem it has
-+ set speed 57600 ; This affects the server's port
-+ set flow rts/cts ; Ditto
-+ dial 7654321
-+
-+ The modem server might or might not require a login sequence. It might
-+ also allow for automatic authentication, e.g. via Kerberos tickets.
-+ NOTE: If the modem server requires a login sequence, then REDIAL might
-+ not work as expected.
-+
-+ When you have a Telnet Com Port connection, your SET SPEED and SET FLOW
-+ options change automatically to reflect the capabilities of the server,
-+ rather than those of your local computer.
-+
-+ See the configuration manual for your server for additional
-+ information. For example, how to set up the server to drop the Telnet
-+ connection automatically when the telephone call is hung up (e.g.
-+ "autohangup" on Cisco models).
-+
-+ For a Linux-based Telnet Com-Port server, click the Srdird link:
-+
-+ [ [575]Top ] [ [576]Contents ] [ [577]Sredird ] [ [578]C-Kermit Home ]
-+ [ [579]Kermit Home ]
-+
-+15. COPING WITH BROKEN KERMIT PARTNERS
-+
-+ There are lots of faulty Kermit protocol implementations out there,
-+ found mainly in 3rd-party products ranging from communications software
-+ packages to file-transfer functions imbedded within devices. This topic
-+ is covered [580]HERE for C-Kermit 7.0, but C-Kermit 8.0 adds some
-+ additional tricks.
-+
-+ SET ATTRIBUTE RECORD-FORMAT { ON, OFF }
-+ Allows control of the Kermit's Record-Format attribute. Set this
-+ to OFF in case incoming file are refused due to unknown or
-+ invalid record formats if you want to accept the file anyway.
-+
-+ SET ATTRIBUTES OFF
-+ This is not a new trick, but it was recently discovered that the
-+ Kermit implementation embedded within a certain kind of
-+ punching/bending machine (Salvagnini if you must know) hangs
-+ upon reception of standard format Kermit attributes when
-+ receiving files. When sending files, it sends attributes of its
-+ own, one per A-packet, which is slightly unusual but legal. When
-+ receiving files from C-Kermit, K95, MS-DOS Kermit, Kermit-370,
-+ etc, it simply exits upon reception of the first A-packet;
-+ apparently it was not coded according to the protocol
-+ specification, which allows multiple attributes per A-packet.
-+ Solution: tell the file sender to SET ATTRIBUTES OFF.
-+
-+ SET SEND I-PACKETS { ON, OFF }
-+ A Kermit server is supposed to accept I-packets; this is how the
-+ client lets the server know its capabilities and preferences
-+ before sending a command. Apparently there is at least one
-+ Kermit server implementation that does not accept I-packets, and
-+ does not properly respond with an Error packet if it gets one.
-+ To get around such situations in C-Kermit 8.0, you can use SET
-+ SEND I-PACKETS OFF to inhibit the sending of I packets. In this
-+ case, the client must be able to adjust to the server's
-+ configuration, rather than the other way around as we are used
-+ to.
-+
-+ SET PROTOCOL KERMIT {} {} {}
-+ C-Kermit 6.0 and later automatically send "autoupload" and
-+ "autodownload" commands when in local mode and you give a file
-+ transfer command. For example, if you tell kermit to "send
-+ oofa.txt", Kermit sends "kermit -r" and a carriage return, in
-+ case you had forgotten to start Kermit on the far end and told
-+ it to receive a file. If a Kermit program had already been
-+ started on the far end, it should harmlessly absorb this string.
-+ However, some Kermit programs violate the Kermit protocol
-+ definition and treat such strings as Kermit packets even though
-+ they are not. In such cases, give this command to set the Kermit
-+ protocol autoupload and download strings to nothing, which tells
-+ Kermit not to send them. (This is not a new feature, but it was
-+ not previously included in the "Coping" section of the
-+ documentation.)
-+
-+ [ [581]Top ] [ [582]Contents ] [ [583]C-Kermit Home ] [ [584]Kermit
-+ Home ]
-+
-+16. NEW COMMAND-LINE OPTIONS
-+
-+ kermit -h Now prints a complete listing of its command-line options,
-+ rather than an abbreviated list squeezed into a 24x80 space.
-+
-+ -dd Debug, like -d but adds timestamps
-+ --version Shows C-Kermit version number.
-+ --noperms Equivalent to SET ATTRIBUTE PROTECTION OFF.
-+
-+ Kermit now accepts a selection of URLs (Universal Resource Locators) as
-+ its first command-line argument. These are:
-+
-+ telnet:hostname
-+ Makes a Telnet connection to the given host (IP hostname or
-+ address).
-+
-+ ftp://[user[:password]@]hostname[/path...]
-+ Makes an FTP connection to the given host (IP hostname or
-+ address). If a username is given, Kermit tries to log you in; if
-+ a password is given, it is used; if not, you are prompted for
-+ one. If no username is given, an anonymous login is performed.
-+ If a pathname is included, Kermit tries to GET the given file.
-+ See [585]Section 3.1.3 for details.
-+
-+ ftps://[user[:password]@]hostname[/path...]
-+ Makes a secure FTP connection over SSL.
-+
-+ telnets://[user[:password]@]hostname
-+ Makes a secure Telnet connection over SSL.
-+
-+ kermit://[user[:password]@]hostname[/path...]
-+ Makes a connection to an [586]Internet Kermit Server.
-+
-+ http://[user[:password]@]hostname[/path...]
-+ Makes a connection to Web server.
-+
-+ https://[user[:password]@]hostname[/path...]
-+ Makes a connection to secure Web server.
-+
-+ [ [587]Top ] [ [588]Contents ] [ [589]C-Kermit Home ] [ [590]Kermit
-+ Home ]
-+
-+17. LOGS
-+
-+ In C-Kermit 8.0, we make an effort to keep passwords out of the debug
-+ log. This can never be 100% effective, but it's better than before,
-+ when there were no precautions at all. Whenever Kermit knows it's
-+ prompting for, parsing, or transmitting a password, it temporarily
-+ turns off logging and then turns it back on afterwards. This keeps the
-+ debug log password-free in most common cases, but there can be no
-+ guarantees.
-+
-+ As noted elsewhere, the new "-dd" command-line option selects a
-+ timestamped debug log (equivalent to "set debug timestamps on", "log
-+ debug debug.log").
-+
-+ C-Kermit 8.0 also supports a new timestamped session log via "set
-+ session-log timestamped-text", "log session".
-+
-+ There have been requests for other kinds of logs, for example a command
-+ log. These might be added at some point. One person wanted to be able
-+ to log commands with timestamps, but only commands issued at the
-+ prompt, not commands from files or macros, and also wanted a header
-+ line at the beginning showing the date, user, and host. This can be
-+ done as follows:
-+
-+ .filename := \v(home)commands.log ; (for example)
-+ fopen /write \%c \m(filename)
-+ if success {
-+ fwrite /line \%c \v(date): User=\v(user) Host=\v(host)
-+ fclose \%c
-+ set debug timestamps on
-+ log debug {| grep "CMD(P)" >> \m(filename)} append
-+ }
-+
-+ [ [591]Top ] [ [592]Contents ] [ [593]C-Kermit Home ] [ [594]Kermit
-+ Home ]
-+ __________________________________________________________________
-+
-+
-+ C-Kermit 8.0 Update Notes / [595]The Kermit Project / Columbia
-+ University / 15 Dec 2003 - 13 Sep 2010
-+
-+References
-+
-+ 1. http://www.columbia.edu/
-+ 2. mailto:kermit@columbia.edu
-+ 3. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 4. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/k95.html
-+ 5. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 6. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckscripts.html
-+ 7. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/current.html
-+ 8. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/whatsnew.html
-+ 9. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/faq.html
-+ 10. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/support.html
-+ 11. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#contents
-+ 12. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 13. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 14. http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1555581641?ie=UTF8&tag=aleidmoreldom-20&linkCode=as2&camp=1789&creative=9325&creativeASIN=1555581641
-+ 15. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html
-+ 16. mailto:kermit-support@columbia.edu
-+ 17. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/
-+ 18. http://www.kermit-project.org/
-+ 19. http://www.columbia.nyc.ny.us/kermit/
-+ 20. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/f/COPYING.TXT
-+ 21. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/f/ckcmai.c
-+ 22. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#xv
-+ 23. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ck60manual.html
-+ 24. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermi70.html
-+ 25. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/f/ckermit70.txt
-+ 26. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html
-+ 27. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/f/ckuker.nr
-+ 28. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/security.htm
-+ 29. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/telnet.htm
-+ 30. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ftpscripts.html
-+ 31. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcbwr.html
-+ 32. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/f/ckcbwr.txt
-+ 33. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckubwr.html
-+ 34. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/f/ckubwr.txt
-+ 35. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckvbwr.html
-+ 36. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/f/ckvbwr.txt
-+ 37. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html
-+ 38. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/f/ckuins.txt
-+ 39. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckvins.html
-+ 40. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/f/ckvins.txt
-+ 41. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckccfg.html
-+ 42. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/f/ckccfg.txt
-+ 43. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcplm.html
-+ 44. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/f/ckcplm.txt
-+ 45. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/iksd.html
-+ 46. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/skermit.html
-+ 47. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#top
-+ 48. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 49. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 50. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x0
-+ 51. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x1
-+ 52. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x2
-+ 53. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x2.1
-+ 54. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x2.2
-+ 55. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x2.2.1
-+ 56. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x2.2.2
-+ 57. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x2.2.3
-+ 58. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x2.2.4
-+ 59. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x2.2.5
-+ 60. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x2.2.6
-+ 61. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x3
-+ 62. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x3.1
-+ 63. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x3.1.1
-+ 64. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x3.1.2
-+ 65. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x3.1.3
-+ 66. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x3.1.4
-+ 67. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x3.2
-+ 68. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x3.3
-+ 69. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x3.4
-+ 70. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x3.5
-+ 71. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x3.5.1
-+ 72. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x3.5.2
-+ 73. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x3.5.3
-+ 74. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x3.6
-+ 75. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x3.6.1
-+ 76. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x3.6.2
-+ 77. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x3.6.3
-+ 78. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x3.7
-+ 79. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x3.7.1
-+ 80. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x3.7.2
-+ 81. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x3.8
-+ 82. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x3.9
-+ 83. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x3.10
-+ 84. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x3.10.1
-+ 85. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x3.10.2
-+ 86. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x3.10.3
-+ 87. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x3.11
-+ 88. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x4
-+ 89. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x5
-+ 90. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x6
-+ 91. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x6.1
-+ 92. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x6.2
-+ 93. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x6.3
-+ 94. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x6.4
-+ 95. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x6.5
-+ 96. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x6.6
-+ 97. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x7
-+ 98. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x8
-+ 99. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x8.1
-+ 100. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x8.2
-+ 101. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x8.3
-+ 102. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x8.4
-+ 103. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x8.5
-+ 104. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x8.6
-+ 105. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x8.7
-+ 106. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x8.8
-+ 107. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x8.9
-+ 108. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x8.10
-+ 109. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x8.11
-+ 110. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x8.12
-+ 111. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x8.13
-+ 112. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x8.14
-+ 113. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x9
-+ 114. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x9.1
-+ 115. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x9.2
-+ 116. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x9.3
-+ 117. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x9.4
-+ 118. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x9.5
-+ 119. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x9.6
-+ 120. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x9.7
-+ 121. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x9.8
-+ 122. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x9.9
-+ 123. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x9.10
-+ 124. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x9.11
-+ 125. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x10
-+ 126. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x11
-+ 127. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x12
-+ 128. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x13
-+ 129. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x14
-+ 130. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x15
-+ 131. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x16
-+ 132. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x17
-+ 133. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#top
-+ 134. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 135. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 136. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html#x5
-+ 137. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html
-+ 138. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x5
-+ 139. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x2.2
-+ 140. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#contents
-+ 141. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x15
-+ 142. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x3.7
-+ 143. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#ftpdates
-+ 144. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#ftpcheck
-+ 145. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#ftpnamelist
-+ 146. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#srvrename
-+ 147. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#ftpvdir
-+ 148. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#setftptype
-+ 149. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x3.6
-+ 150. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x15
-+ 151. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x8.7
-+ 152. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x2.1
-+ 153. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x2.2
-+ 154. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x8.14
-+ 155. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x8.13
-+ 156. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x8.13
-+ 157. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckututor.html
-+ 158. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html
-+ 159. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/skermit.html
-+ 160. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#setlocus
-+ 161. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#lcommands
-+ 162. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#ftpuser
-+ 163. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#showvar
-+ 164. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#callerid
-+ 165. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x6.6
-+ 166. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x0
-+ 167. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x3.11
-+ 168. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#top
-+ 169. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#contents
-+ 170. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 171. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 172. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x0
-+ 173. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#top
-+ 174. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#contents
-+ 175. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 176. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 177. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/k95.html
-+ 178. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/sshclient.html
-+ 179. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/skermit.html
-+ 180. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/skermit.html
-+ 181. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/sshclien.htm
-+ 182. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x3
-+ 183. ftp://ftp.isi.edu/in-notes/rfc1738.txt
-+ 184. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x2.2.2
-+ 185. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x2.2.1
-+ 186. ftp://ftp.isi.edu/in-notes/rfc2396.txt
-+ 187. ftp://ftp.isi.edu/in-notes/rfc2616.txt
-+ 188. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x2.2.3
-+ 189. ftp://ftp.isi.edu/in-notes/rfc2616.txt
-+ 190. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x8.13.7
-+ 191. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/security.htm#x5.4
-+ 192. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/security.htm#x15
-+ 193. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/security.htm#x6.2
-+ 194. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/security.html
-+ 195. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x16
-+ 196. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#top
-+ 197. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#contents
-+ 198. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 199. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 200. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x3.1
-+ 201. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x3.2
-+ 202. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x3.3
-+ 203. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x3.4
-+ 204. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x3.5
-+ 205. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x3.6
-+ 206. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x3.7
-+ 207. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x3.8
-+ 208. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x3.9
-+ 209. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x3.10
-+ 210. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x3.11
-+ 211. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/security.htm
-+ 212. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/security.htm#servers
-+ 213. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcsets.html
-+ 214. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/unicode.html
-+ 215. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermi70.htm#x1.5.4
-+ 216. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/case10.html
-+ 217. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x4
-+ 218. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x3.11
-+ 219. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ftpscripts.html
-+ 220. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#top
-+ 221. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#ftp
-+ 222. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ftpclient.html
-+ 223. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ftpscripts.html
-+ 224. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 225. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 226. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x3.1.1
-+ 227. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x3.1.3
-+ 228. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x3.1.4
-+ 229. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x3.1.3
-+ 230. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x3.1.3
-+ 231. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x3.2
-+ 232. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x3.5
-+ 233. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x3.6
-+ 234. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ftpscripts.html
-+ 235. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckb2.htm
-+ 236. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#ftpautolog
-+ 237. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#ftpuser
-+ 238. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x3.8
-+ 239. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x3.8
-+ 240. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#top
-+ 241. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#ftp
-+ 242. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 243. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 244. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ibm_ie.html
-+ 245. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x3.10
-+ 246. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#top
-+ 247. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#ftp
-+ 248. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 249. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 250. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ck60manual.html
-+ 251. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.17
-+ 252. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html
-+ 253. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x3.6
-+ 254. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x3.11
-+ 255. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x3.1.4
-+ 256. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/security.html
-+ 257. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x3.7
-+ 258. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x3.7
-+ 259. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x8.13.4
-+ 260. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#permswitch
-+ 261. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#ftpchmod
-+ 262. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x3.6.2
-+ 263. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x4
-+ 264. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#top
-+ 265. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#ftp
-+ 266. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 267. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 268. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x7
-+ 269. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x3.8
-+ 270. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x3.8
-+ 271. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckb2.htm
-+ 272. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x3.10
-+ 273. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x3.10
-+ 274. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x3.6
-+ 275. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#setftptype
-+ 276. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#top
-+ 277. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#ftp
-+ 278. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 279. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 280. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.9
-+ 281. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x3.5.1
-+ 282. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#erroraction
-+ 283. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x1.5
-+ 284. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x4.7
-+ 285. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html#x1.6
-+ 286. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x8.13
-+ 287. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermi70.htm#x1.5.4
-+ 288. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermi70.htm
-+ 289. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x4
-+ 290. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x3.7
-+ 291. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x3.5.2
-+ 292. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x3.7
-+ 293. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#erroraction
-+ 294. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x3.5.2
-+ 295. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#erroraction
-+ 296. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#ftpfilenames
-+ 297. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#ftpperms
-+ 298. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#ftpunique
-+ 299. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#ftpfilenames
-+ 300. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#note_utc
-+ 301. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#note_date
-+ 302. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x3.6
-+ 303. http://www.boulder.nist.gov/timefreq/faq/faq.htm#10:
-+ 304. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x3.7
-+ 305. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#top
-+ 306. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#ftp
-+ 307. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 308. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 309. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x3.11
-+ 310. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermi70.htm#x4.3
-+ 311. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit70.html
-+ 312. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x5
-+ 313. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x3.6.3
-+ 314. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#ftpfilenames
-+ 315. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermi70.htm#x4.1
-+ 316. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermi70.htm#x4.2.2
-+ 317. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermi70.htm#x1.5.4
-+ 318. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x3.6.2
-+ 319. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x3.11
-+ 320. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x3.11
-+ 321. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#srvrename
-+ 322. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermi70.htm#x4.1
-+ 323. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermi70.htm
-+ 324. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckb2.htm
-+ 325. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#ftpfilenames
-+ 326. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x3.5.3
-+ 327. http://www.proftpd.net/
-+ 328. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#top
-+ 329. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#ftp
-+ 330. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 331. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 332. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckb2.htm
-+ 333. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcsets.html
-+ 334. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/unicode.html
-+ 335. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcsets.html
-+ 336. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcsets.html
-+ 337. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x4
-+ 338. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/utf8.html
-+ 339. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcsets.html
-+ 340. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x4
-+ 341. ftp://ftp.isi.edu/in-notes/rfc2640.txt
-+ 342. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#top
-+ 343. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#ftp
-+ 344. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 345. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 346. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#top
-+ 347. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#ftp
-+ 348. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 349. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 350. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#top
-+ 351. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#ftp
-+ 352. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 353. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 354. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ftpscripts.html
-+ 355. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x3.2
-+ 356. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x3.2
-+ 357. ftp://ftp.isi.edu/in-notes/rfc959.txt
-+ 358. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckscripts.html
-+ 359. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#top
-+ 360. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#ftp
-+ 361. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ftpscript.html
-+ 362. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 363. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 364. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x3.11.1
-+ 365. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x3.11.2
-+ 366. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x3.11.3
-+ 367. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x3.11.4
-+ 368. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x3.11.5
-+ 369. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 370. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/k95.html
-+ 371. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x3.11.5
-+ 372. ftp://ftp.isi.edu/in-notes/rfc959.txt
-+ 373. ftp://ftp.isi.edu/in-notes/rfc2389.txt
-+ 374. http://www.ietf.org/internet-drafts/draft-ietf-ftpext-mlst-16.txt
-+ 375. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ftpclient.html
-+ 376. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#top
-+ 377. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#ftp
-+ 378. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 379. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 380. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x3
-+ 381. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#ucs2
-+ 382. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#top
-+ 383. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#contents
-+ 384. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 385. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 386. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#top
-+ 387. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#contents
-+ 388. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 389. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 390. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckb2.htm
-+ 391. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#top
-+ 392. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#contents
-+ 393. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 394. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 395. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x4
-+ 396. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x4
-+ 397. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x8.12
-+ 398. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x8.1
-+ 399. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x12
-+ 400. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x8.12
-+ 401. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#top
-+ 402. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#contents
-+ 403. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 404. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 405. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x8.14
-+ 406. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#top
-+ 407. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#contents
-+ 408. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 409. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 410. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x9
-+ 411. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#top
-+ 412. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#contents
-+ 413. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 414. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 415. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x8.6
-+ 416. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#top
-+ 417. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#contents
-+ 418. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 419. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 420. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#top
-+ 421. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#contents
-+ 422. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 423. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 424. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#top
-+ 425. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#contents
-+ 426. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 427. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 428. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#fjoin
-+ 429. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#fsplit
-+ 430. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x8.10
-+ 431. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#top
-+ 432. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#contents
-+ 433. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 434. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 435. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x9
-+ 436. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x9
-+ 437. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x9
-+ 438. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x3
-+ 439. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x3
-+ 440. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x3.2
-+ 441. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x3.2
-+ 442. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x3.8
-+ 443. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x3
-+ 444. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x3
-+ 445. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x3
-+ 446. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x3.2
-+ 447. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x3
-+ 448. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x8.13
-+ 449. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x8.13
-+ 450. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x9
-+ 451. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x8.10
-+ 452. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x8.7.4
-+ 453. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#top
-+ 454. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#contents
-+ 455. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 456. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 457. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#top
-+ 458. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#contents
-+ 459. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 460. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 461. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#top
-+ 462. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#contents
-+ 463. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 464. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 465. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x8.7
-+ 466. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#top
-+ 467. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#contents
-+ 468. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 469. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 470. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#scriptedit
-+ 471. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#top
-+ 472. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#contents
-+ 473. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 474. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 475. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#top
-+ 476. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#contents
-+ 477. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 478. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 479. ftp://ftp.isi.edu/in-notes/rfc2822.txt
-+ 480. ftp://ftp.isi.edu/in-notes/rfc2822.txt
-+ 481. ftp://ftp.isi.edu/in-notes/rfc2822.txt
-+ 482. ftp://ftp.isi.edu/in-notes/rfc2822.txt
-+ 483. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#top
-+ 484. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#contents
-+ 485. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 486. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 487. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x8.1
-+ 488. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#top
-+ 489. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#contents
-+ 490. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 491. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 492. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x8.2
-+ 493. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#top
-+ 494. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#contents
-+ 495. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 496. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 497. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x9.8
-+ 498. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x9.8
-+ 499. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x8.2
-+ 500. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#top
-+ 501. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#contents
-+ 502. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 503. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 504. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#top
-+ 505. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#contents
-+ 506. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 507. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 508. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x9.8
-+ 509. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#top
-+ 510. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#contents
-+ 511. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 512. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 513. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x9.8
-+ 514. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x9.8
-+ 515. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x9.6
-+ 516. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#top
-+ 517. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#contents
-+ 518. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 519. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 520. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x9.8
-+ 521. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x9.8
-+ 522. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#top
-+ 523. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#contents
-+ 524. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 525. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 526. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#top
-+ 527. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#contents
-+ 528. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 529. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 530. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#top
-+ 531. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#contents
-+ 532. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 533. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 534. mailto:thucdat@hotmail.com
-+ 535. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x9.9.2
-+ 536. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#top
-+ 537. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#contents
-+ 538. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 539. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 540. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#top
-+ 541. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#contents
-+ 542. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 543. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 544. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#top
-+ 545. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#contents
-+ 546. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 547. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 548. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x9.2
-+ 549. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#top
-+ 550. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#contents
-+ 551. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 552. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 553. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x4
-+ 554. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x4
-+ 555. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#top
-+ 556. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#contents
-+ 557. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 558. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 559. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#top
-+ 560. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#contents
-+ 561. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 562. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 563. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#top
-+ 564. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#contents
-+ 565. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 566. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 567. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x4
-+ 568. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x3.7
-+ 569. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x3.7
-+ 570. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#top
-+ 571. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#contents
-+ 572. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 573. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 574. ftp://ftp.isi.edu/in-notes/rfc2217.txt
-+ 575. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#top
-+ 576. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#contents
-+ 577. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/sredird/
-+ 578. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 579. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 580. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermi70.htm#x4.22
-+ 581. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#top
-+ 582. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#contents
-+ 583. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 584. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 585. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#x3.1.3
-+ 586. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/cuiksd.html
-+ 587. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#top
-+ 588. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#contents
-+ 589. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 590. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 591. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#top
-+ 592. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit80.html#contents
-+ 593. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 594. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 595. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
---- /dev/null
-+++ ckermit-301/ckcplm.txt
-@@ -0,0 +1,3046 @@
-+
-+ [1]The Columbia Crown The Kermit Project | Columbia University
-+ 612 West 115th Street, New York NY 10025 USA o [2]kermit@columbia.edu
-+ ...since 1981
-+ [3]Home [4]Kermit 95 [5]C-Kermit [6]Scripts [7]Current [8]New [9]FAQ
-+ [10]Support
-+
-+C-Kermit Program Logic Manual
-+
-+ Frank da Cruz
-+ [11]The Kermit Project
-+ [12]Columbia University
-+
-+ As of: C-Kermit 9.0.300, 30 June 2011
-+ Last update: Tue Jun 28 08:59:18 2011
-+
-+ IF YOU ARE READING A PLAIN-TEXT version of this document, note that
-+ this file is a plain-text dump of a Web page. You can visit the
-+ original (and possibly more up-to-date) Web page here:
-+
-+ [13]http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcplm.html
-+
-+ [ [14]C-Kermit Home ] [ [15]Kermit Home ]
-+
-+CONTENTS
-+
-+ 1. [16]INTRODUCTION
-+ 2. [17]FILES
-+ 3. [18]SOURCE CODE PORTABILITY AND STYLE
-+ 4. [19]MODULES
-+ 4.A. [20]Group A: Library Routines
-+ 4.B. [21]Group B: Kermit File Transfer
-+ 4.C. [22]Group C: Character-Set Conversion
-+ 4.D. [23]Group D: User Interface
-+ 4.E. [24]Group E: Platform-Dependent I/O
-+ 4.F. [25]Group F: Network Support
-+ 4.G. [26]Group G: Formatted Screen Support
-+ 4.H. [27]Group H: Pseudoterminal Support
-+ 4.I. [28]Group I: Security
-+ I. [29]APPENDIX I: FILE PERMISSIONS
-+
-+1. INTRODUCTION
-+
-+ The Kermit Protocol is specified in the book Kermit, A File Transfer
-+ Protocol by Frank da Cruz, Digital Press / Butterworth Heinemann,
-+ Newton, MA, USA (1987), 379 pages, ISBN 0-932376-88-6. It is assumed
-+ the reader is familiar with the Kermit protocol specification.
-+
-+ This file describes the relationship among the modules and functions of
-+ C-Kermit 5A and later, and other programming considerations. C-Kermit
-+ is designed to be portable to any kind of computer that has a C
-+ compiler. The source code is broken into many files that are grouped
-+ according to their function, as shown in the [30]Contents.
-+
-+ C-Kermit has seen constant development since 1985. Throughout its
-+ history, there has been a neverending tug-of-war among:
-+
-+ a. Functionality: adding new features, fixing bugs, improving
-+ performance.
-+ b. Adding support for new platforms.
-+ c. "Buzzword 1.0 compliance".
-+
-+ The latter category is the most frustrating, since it generally
-+ involves massive changes just to keep the software doing what it did
-+ before in some new setting: e.g. the K&R-to-ANSIC conversion (which had
-+ to be done, of course, without breaking K&R); Y2K (not a big deal in
-+ our case); the many and varied UNIX and other API "standards"; IPv6.
-+
-+ [ [31]Contents ] [ [32]C-Kermit ] [ [33]Kermit Home ]
-+
-+2. FILES
-+
-+ C-Kermit source files begin with the two letters "ck", for example
-+ ckutio.c. Filenames are kept short (6.3) for maximum portability and
-+ (obviously I hope) do not contain spaces or more than one period. The
-+ third character in the name denotes something about the function group
-+ and the expected level of portability:
-+
-+ a General descriptive material and documentation (text)
-+ b BOO file encoders and decoders (obsolete)
-+ c All platforms with C compilers (*)
-+ d Data General AOS/VS
-+ e Reserved for "ckermit" files, like ckermit.ini, ckermit2.txt
-+ f (reserved)
-+ g (reserved)
-+ h (reserved)
-+ i Commodore Amiga (Intuition)
-+ j (unused)
-+ k (unused)
-+ l Stratus VOS
-+ m Macintosh with Mac OS 1-9
-+ n Microsoft Windows NT/2000/XP
-+ o OS/2 and/or Microsoft Windows 9x/ME/NT/2000/XP
-+ p Plan 9 from Bell Labs
-+ q (reserved)
-+ r DEC PDP-11 with RSTS/E (never used, open for reassigment)
-+ s Atari ST GEMDOS (last supported in version 5A(189))
-+ t DEC PDP-11 with RT-11 (never used, open for reassigment)
-+ u Unix-based operating systems (*)
-+ v VMS and OpenVMS
-+ w Wart (Lex-like preprocessor, platform independent)
-+ x (reserved)
-+ y (reserved)
-+ z (reserved)
-+ 0-3 (reserved)
-+ 4 IBM AS/400
-+ 5-8 (reserved)
-+ 9 Microware OS-9
-+ _ Encryption modules
-+
-+ (*) In fact there is little distinction between the ckc*.* and cku*.*
-+ categories. It would make more sense for all cku*.* modules to be
-+ ckc*.* ones, except ckufio.c, ckutio.c, ckucon.c, ckucns.c, and
-+ ckupty.c, which truly are specific to Unix. The rest (ckuus*.c,
-+ ckucmd.c, etc) are quite portable.
-+
-+ One hint before proceeding: functions are scattered all over the ckc*.c
-+ and cku*.c modules, where function size has begun to take precedence
-+ over the desirability of grouping related functions together, the aim
-+ being to keep any particular module from growing disproportionately
-+ large. The easiest way (in UNIX) to find out in what source file a
-+ given function is defined is like this (where the desired function is
-+ foo()...):
-+
-+ grep ^foo\( ck*.c
-+
-+ This works because the coding convention has been to make function
-+ names always start on the left margin with their contents indented, for
-+ example:
-+
-+static char *
-+foo(x,y) int x, y; {
-+ ...
-+}
-+
-+ Also note the style for bracket placement. This allows bracket-matching
-+ text editors (such as EMACS) to help you make sure you know which
-+ opening bracket a closing bracket matches, particularly when the
-+ opening bracket is above the visible screen, and it also makes it easy
-+ to find the end of a function (search for '}' on the left margin).
-+
-+ Of course EMACS tags work nicely with this format too:
-+
-+ $ cd kermit-source-directory
-+ $ etags ck[cu]*.c
-+ $ emacs
-+ Esc-X Visit-Tags-Table<CR><CR>
-+
-+ (but remember that the source file for ckcpro.c is [34]ckcpro.w!)
-+
-+ Also:
-+
-+ * Tabs should be set every 8 spaces, as on a VT100.
-+ * All lines must no more than 79 characters wide after tab expansion.
-+ * Note the distinction between physical tabs (ASCII 9) and the
-+ indentation conventions, which are: 4 for block contents, 2 for
-+ most other stuff (obviously this is not a portability issue, just
-+ style).
-+
-+ [ [35]Contents ] [ [36]C-Kermit ] [ [37]Kermit Home ]
-+
-+3. SOURCE CODE PORTABILITY AND STYLE
-+
-+ C-Kermit was designed in 1985 as a platform-independent replacement for
-+ the earlier Unix Kermit. c-Kermit's design was expected to promote
-+ portability, and judging from the number of platforms to which it has
-+ been adapted since then, the model is effective, if not ideal
-+ (obviously if we had it all to do over, we'd change a few things). To
-+ answer the oft-repeated question: "Why are there so many #ifdefs?",
-+ it's because:
-+
-+ * Many of them are related to feature selection and program size, and
-+ so need to be there anyway.
-+ * Those that treat compiler, library, platform, header-file, and
-+ similar differences have built up over time as hundreds of people
-+ all over the world adapted C-Kermit to their particular
-+ environments and sent back their changes. There might be more
-+ politically-correct ways to achieve portability, but this one is
-+ natural and proven. The basic idea is to introduce changes that can
-+ be selected by defining a symbol, which, if not defined, leaves the
-+ program exactly as it was before the changes.
-+ * Although it might be possible to "clean up" the "#ifdef mess",
-+ nobody has access to all the hundreds of platforms served by the
-+ #ifdefs to check the results.
-+
-+ And to answer the second-most-oft-repeated question: "Why don't you
-+ just use GNU autoconfig / automake / autowhatever instead of
-+ hard-coding all those #ifdefs?" Answers:
-+
-+ * The GNU tools are not available on all the platforms where C-Kermit
-+ must be built and I wouldn't necessarily trust them if they were.
-+ * Each platform is a moving target, so the tools themselves would
-+ need to updated before Kermit could be updated.
-+ * It would only add another layer of complexity to an already complex
-+ process.
-+ * Conversion at this point would not be practical unless there was a
-+ way to test the results on all the hundreds of platforms where
-+ C-Kermit is supposed to build.
-+
-+ When writing code for the system-indendent C-Kermit modules, please
-+ stick to the following coding conventions to ensure portability to the
-+ widest possible variety of C preprocessors, compilers, and linkers, as
-+ well as certain network and/or email transports. The same holds true
-+ for many of the "system dependent" modules too; particularly the Unix
-+ ones, since they must be buildable by a wide variety of compilers and
-+ linkers, new and old.
-+
-+ This list does not purport to be comprehensive, and although some items
-+ on it might seem far-fetched, they would not be listed unless I had
-+ encountered them somewhere, some time. I wish I had kept better records
-+ so I could cite specific platforms and compilers.
-+
-+ * Try to keep variable and function names unique within 6 characters,
-+ especially if they are used across modules, since 6 is the maximum
-+ for some old linkers (actually, this goes back to TOPS-10 and -20
-+ and other old DEC OS's where C-Kermit never ran anyway; a more
-+ realistic maximum is probably somewhere between 8 and 16). We know
-+ for certain that VAX C has a 31-character max because it complains
-+ -- others might not complain, but just silently truncate, thus
-+ folding two or more routines/variables into one.
-+ * Keep preprocessor symbols unique within 8 characters; that's the
-+ max for some preprocessors (sorry, I can't give a specific example,
-+ but in 1988 or thereabouts, I had to change character-set symbols
-+ like TC_LATIN1 and TC_LATIN2 to TC_1LATIN and TC_2LATIN because the
-+ digits were being truncated and ignored on a platform where I
-+ actually had to build C-Kermit 5A; unfortunately I didn't note
-+ which platform -- maybe some early Ultrix version?)
-+ * Don't create preprocessor symbols, or variable or function names,
-+ that start with underscore (_). These are usually reserved for
-+ internal use by the compiler and header files.
-+ * Don't put #include directives inside functions or { blocks }.
-+ * Don't use the #if or #elif preprocessor constructions, only use
-+ #ifdef, #ifndef, #define, #undef, and #endif.
-+ * Put tokens after #endif in comment brackets, e.g. #endif /* FOO */.
-+ * Don't indent preprocessor statements - # must always be first char
-+ on line.
-+ * Don't put whitespace after # in preprocessor statements.
-+ * Don't use #pragma, even within #ifdefs -- it makes some
-+ preprocessors give up.
-+ * Same goes for #module, #if, etc - #ifdefs do NOT protect them.
-+ * Don't use logical operators in preprocessor constructions.
-+ * Avoid #ifdefs inside argument list to function calls (I can't
-+ remember why this one is here, but probably needn't be; we do this
-+ all the time).
-+ * Always cast strlen() in expressions to int:
-+ if ((int)strlen(foo) < x)...
-+ * Any variable whose value might exceed 16383 should be declared as
-+ long, or if that is not possible, then as unsigned.
-+ * Avoid typedefs; they might be portable but they are very confusing
-+ and there's no way to test for their presence or absence at compile
-+ time. Use preprocessor symbols instead if possible; at least you
-+ can test their definitions.
-+ * Unsigned long is not portable; use a preprocessor symbol (Kermit
-+ uses ULONG for this).
-+ * Long long is not portable. If you really need it, be creative.
-+ * Similarly 1234LL is not portable, nor almost any other constant
-+ modifier other than L.
-+ * Unsigned char is not portable, use CHAR (a preprocessor symbol
-+ defined in the Kermit header files) and always take precautions
-+ against character signage (more about this [38]below).
-+ * Don't use initializers with automatic arrays or structs: it's not
-+ portable.
-+ * Don't use big automatic arrays or structs in functions that might
-+ be called recursively; some platforms have fixed-size stacks (e.g.
-+ Windows 9x: 256K) and recursive functions crash with stack
-+ overflow. Even when there is not a compiler limitation, this causes
-+ memory to be consumed without bound, and can end up filling swap
-+ space.
-+ * Don't assume that struct assignment performs a copy, or that it
-+ even exists.
-+ * Don't use sizeof to get the size of an array; someone might come
-+ along later and and change it from static to malloc'd. Always use a
-+ symbol to refer to the array's size.
-+ * Don't put prototypes for static functions into header files that
-+ are used by modules that don't contain that function; the link step
-+ can fail with unresolved references (e.g. on AOS/VS).
-+ * Avoid the construction *++p (the order of evaluation varies; it
-+ shouldn't but at least one compiler had a bug that made me include
-+ this item).
-+ * Don't use triple assignments, like a = b = c = 0; (or quadruple,
-+ etc). Some compilers generate bad code for these, or crash, etc
-+ (some version of DEC C as I recall).
-+ * Some compilers don't allow structure members to have the same names
-+ as other identifiers. Try to give structure members unique names.
-+ * Don't assume anything about order of evaluation in boolean
-+ expressions, or that they will stop early if a required condition
-+ is not true, e.g.:
-+ if (i > 0 && p[i-1] == blah)
-+
-+ can still dump core if i == 0 (hopefully this is not true of any
-+ modern compiler, but I would not have said this if it did not
-+ actually happen somewhere).
-+ * Don't have a switch() statement with no cases (e.g. because of
-+ #ifdefs); this is a fatal error in some compilers.
-+ * Don't put lots of code in a switch case; move it out to a separate
-+ function; some compilers run out of memory when presented with a
-+ huge switch() statement -- it's not the number of cases that
-+ matters; it's the overall amount of code.
-+ * Some compilers might also limit the number of switch() cases, e.g.
-+ to 254.
-+ * Don't put anything between "switch() {" and "case:" -- switch
-+ blocks are not like other blocks.
-+ * Don't jump into or out of switches.
-+ * Don't make character-string constants longer than about 250 bytes.
-+ Longer strings should be broken up into arrays of strings.
-+ * Don't write into character-string constants (obviously). Even when
-+ you know you are not writing past the end; the compiler or linker
-+ might have put them into read-only and/or shared memory, and/or
-+ coalesced multiple equal constants so if you change one you change
-+ them all.
-+ * Don't depend on '\r' being carriage return.
-+ * Don't depend on '\n' being linefeed or for that matter any SINGLE
-+ character.
-+ * Don't depend on '\r' and '\n' being different (e.g. as separate
-+ switch() cases).
-+ * In other words, don't use \n or \r to stand for specific
-+ characters; use \012 and \015 instead.
-+ * Don't code for "buzzword 1.0 compliance", unless "buzzword" is K&R
-+ and "1.0" is the first edition.
-+ * Don't use or depend on anything_t (size_t, pid_t, etc), except
-+ time_t, without #ifdef protection (time_t is the only one I've
-+ found that is accepted everywhere). This is a tough one because the
-+ same function might require (say) a size_t arg on one platform,
-+ whereas size_t is unheard of on another; or worse, it might require
-+ a totally different data type, like int or long or some other
-+ typedef'd thing. It has often proved necessary to define a symbol
-+ to stand for the type of a particular argument to a particular
-+ library or system function to get around this problem.
-+ * Don't use or depend on internationalization ("i18n") features,
-+ wchar_t, locales, etc, in portable code; they are not portable.
-+ Anyway, locales are not the right model for Kermit's
-+ multi-character-set support. Kermit does all character-set
-+ conversion itself and does not use any external libraries or
-+ functions.
-+ * In particular, don't use any library functions that deal with wide
-+ characters or Unicode in any form. These are not only nonportable,
-+ but a constantly shifting target (e.g. the ones in glibc).
-+ * Don't make any assumption about signal handler type. It can be
-+ void, int, long, or anything else. Always declare signal handlers
-+ as SIGTYP (see definition in ckcdeb.h and augment it if necessary)
-+ and always use SIGRETURN at exit points from signal handlers.
-+ * Signals should always be re-armed to be used again (this barely
-+ scratches the surface -- the differences between BSD/V7 and System
-+ V and POSIX signal handling are numerous, and some platforms do not
-+ even support signals, alarms, or longjmps correctly or at all --
-+ avoid all of this if you can).
-+ * On the other hand, don't assume that signals are disarmed after
-+ being raised. In some platforms you have to re-arm them, in others
-+ they stay armed.
-+ * Don't call malloc() and friends from a signal handler; don't do
-+ anything but setting integer global variables in a signal handler.
-+ * malloc() does not initialize allocated memory -- it never said it
-+ did. Don't expect it to be all 0's.
-+ * Did You Know: malloc() can succeed and the program can still dump
-+ core later when it attempts to use the malloc'd memory? (This
-+ happens when allocation is deferred until use and swap space is
-+ full.)
-+ * memset(), memmove(), and memcpy() are not portable, don't use them
-+ without protecting them in ifdefs (we have USE_MEMCPY for this).
-+ bzero()/bcopy() too, except we're guaranteed to have
-+ bzero()/bcopy() when using the sockets library (not really). See
-+ examples in the source.
-+ * Don't assume that strncpy() stops on the first null byte -- most
-+ versions always copy the number of bytes given in arg 3, padding
-+ out with 0's and overwriting whatever was there before. Use
-+ C-Kermit ckstrncpy() if you want predictable non-padding behavior,
-+ guaranteed NUL-termination, and a useful return code.
-+ * DID YOU KNOW.. that some versions of inet_blah() routines return IP
-+ addresses in network byte order, while others return them local
-+ machine byte order? So passing them to ntohs() or whatever is not
-+ always the right thing to do.
-+ * Don't use ANSI-format function declarations without #ifdef
-+ CK_ANSIC, and always provide an #else for the non-ANSI case.
-+ * Use the Kermit _PROTOTYP() macro for declaring function prototypes;
-+ it works in both the ANSI and non-ANSI cases.
-+ * Don't depend on any other ANSI preprocessor features like "pasting"
-+ -- they are often missing or nonoperational.
-+ * Don't assume any C++ syntax or semantics.
-+ * Don't use // as a comment introducer. C is not C++.
-+ * Don't declare a string as "char foo[]" in one module and "extern
-+ char * foo" in another, or vice-versa: this causes core dumps.
-+ * With compiler makers falling all over themselves trying to outdo
-+ each other in ANSI strictness, it has become increasingly necessary
-+ to cast EVERYTHING. This is increasingly true for char vs unsigned
-+ char. We need to use unsigned chars if we want to deal with 8-bit
-+ character sets, but most character- and string-oriented APIs want
-+ (signed) char arguments, so explicit casts are necessary. It would
-+ be nice if every compiler had a -funsigned-char option (as gcc
-+ does), but they don't.
-+ * a[x], where x is an unsigned char, can produce a wild memory
-+ reference if x, when promoted to an int, becomes negative. Cast it
-+ to (unsigned), even though it ALREADY IS unsigned.
-+ * Be careful how you declare functions that have char or long
-+ arguments; for ANSI compilers you MUST use ANSI declarations to
-+ avoid promotion problems, but you can't use ANSI declarations with
-+ non-ANSI compilers. Thus declarations of such functions must be
-+ hideously entwined in #ifdefs. Example: latter:
-+ int /* Put character in server command buffer */
-+ #ifdef CK_ANSIC
-+ putsrv(char c)
-+ #else
-+ putsrv(c) char c;
-+ #endif /* CK_ANSIC */
-+ /* putsrv */ {
-+ *srvptr++ = c;
-+ *srvptr = '\0'; /* Make sure buffer is null-terminated */
-+ return(0);
-+ }
-+
-+ * Be careful how you return characters from functions that return int
-+ values -- "getc-like functions" -- in the ANSI world. Unless you
-+ explicitly cast the return value to (unsigned), it is likely to be
-+ "promoted" to an int and have its sign extended.
-+ * At least one compiler (the one on DEC OSF/1 1.3) treats "/*" and
-+ "*/" within string constants as comment begin and end. No amount of
-+ #ifdefs will get around this one. You simply can't put these
-+ sequences in a string constant, e.g. "/usr/local/doc/*.*".
-+ * Avoid putting multiple macro references on a single line, e.g.:
-+ putchar(BS); putchar(SP); putchar(BS)
-+
-+ This overflows the CPP output buffer of more than a few C preprocessors
-+ (this happened, for example, with SunOS 4.1 cc, which evidently has a
-+ 1K macro expansion buffer).
-+
-+ C-Kermit needs constant adjustment to new OS and compiler releases.
-+ Every new OS release shuffles header files or their contents, or
-+ prototypes, or data types, or levels of ANSI strictness, etc. Every
-+ time you make an adjustment to remove a new compilation error, BE VERY
-+ CAREFUL to #ifdef it on a symbol unique to the new configuration so
-+ that the previous configuration (and all other configurations on all
-+ other platforms) remain as before.
-+
-+ Assume nothing. Don't assume header files are where they are supposed
-+ to be, that they contain what you think they contain, that they define
-+ specific symbols to have certain values -- or define them at all! Don't
-+ assume system header files protect themselves against multiple
-+ inclusion. Don't assume that particular system or library calls are
-+ available, or that the arguments are what you think they are -- order,
-+ data type, passed by reference vs value, etc. Be conservative when
-+ attempting to write portable code. Avoid all advanced features.
-+
-+ If you see something that does not make sense, don't assume it's a
-+ mistake -- it might be there for a reason, and changing it or removing
-+ is likely to cause compilation, linking, or runtime failures sometime,
-+ somewhere. Some huge percentage of the code, especially in the
-+ platform-dependent modules, is workarounds for compiler, linker, or API
-+ bugs.
-+
-+ But finally... feel free to violate any or all of these rules in
-+ platform-specific modules for environments in which the rules are
-+ certain not to apply. For example, in VMS-specific code, it is OK to
-+ use #if, because VAX C, DEC C, and VMS GCC all support it.
-+
-+ [ [39]Contents ] [ [40]C-Kermit ] [ [41]Kermit Home ]
-+
-+3.1. Memory Leaks
-+
-+ The C language and standard C library are notoriously inadequate and
-+ unsafe. Strings are arrays of characters, usually referenced through
-+ pointers. There is no native string datatype. Buffers are fixed size,
-+ and C provides no runtime bounds checking, thus allowing overwriting of
-+ other data or even program code. With the popularization of the
-+ Internet, the "buffer exploit" has become a preferred method for
-+ hackers to hijack privileged programs; long data strings are fed to a
-+ program in hopes that it uses unsafe C library calls such as strcpy()
-+ or sprintf() to copy strings into automatic arrays, thus overwriting
-+ the call stack, and therefore the routine's return address. When such a
-+ hole is discovered, a "string" can be constructed that contains machine
-+ code to hijack the program's privileges and penetrate the system.
-+
-+ This problem is partially addressed by the strn...() routines, which
-+ should always be used in preference to their str...() equivalents
-+ (except when the copy operation has already been prechecked, or there
-+ is a good reason for not using them, e.g. the sometimes undesirable
-+ side effect of strncpy() zeroing the remainder of the buffer). The most
-+ gaping whole, however, is sprintf(), which performs no length checking
-+ on its destination buffer, and is not easy to replace. Although
-+ snprintf() routines are starting to appear, they are not yet
-+ widespread, and certainly not universal, nor are they especially
-+ portable, or even full-featured.
-+
-+ For these reasons, we have started to build up our own little library
-+ of C Library replacements, ckclib.[ch]. These are safe and highly
-+ portable primitives for memory management and string manipulation, such
-+ as:
-+
-+ ckstrncpy()
-+ Like strncpy but returns a useful value, doesn't zero buffer.
-+
-+ ckitoa()
-+ Opposite of atoi()
-+
-+ ckltoa()
-+ Opposite of atol()
-+
-+ ckctoa()
-+ Returns character as string
-+
-+ ckmakmsg()
-+ Used with ck?to?() as a safe sprintf() replacement for up to 4
-+ items
-+
-+ ckmakxmsg()
-+ Like ckmakmsg() but accepts up to 12 items
-+
-+ More about library functions in [42]Section 4.A.
-+
-+ [ [43]Contents ] [ [44]C-Kermit ] [ [45]Kermit Home ]
-+
-+3.2. The "char" vs "unsigned char" Dilemma
-+
-+ This is one of the most aggravating and vexing characteristics of the C
-+ language. By design, chars (and char *'s) are SIGNED. But in the modern
-+ era, however, we need to process characters that can have (or include)
-+ 8-bit values, as in the ISO Latin-1, IBM CP 850, or UTF-8 character
-+ sets, so this data must be treated as unsigned. But some C compilers
-+ (such as those based on the Bell UNIX V7 compiler) do not support
-+ "unsigned char" as a data type. Therefore we have the macro or typedef
-+ CHAR, which we use when we need chars to be unsigned, but which,
-+ unfortunately, resolves itself to "char" on those compilers that don't
-+ support "unsigned char". AND SO... We have to do a lot of fiddling at
-+ runtime to avoid sign extension and so forth.
-+
-+ Some modern compilers (e.g. IBM, DEC, Microsoft) have options that say
-+ "make all chars be unsigned" (e.g. GCC "-funsigned-char") and we use
-+ them when they are available. Other compilers don't have this option,
-+ and at the same time, are becoming increasingly strict about type
-+ mismatches, and spew out torrents of warnings when we use a CHAR where
-+ a char is expected, or vice versa. We fix these one by one using casts,
-+ and the code becomes increasingly ugly. But there remains a serious
-+ problem, namely that certain library and kernel functions have
-+ arguments that are declared as signed chars (or pointers to them),
-+ whereas our character data is unsigned. Fine, we can can use casts here
-+ too -- but who knows what happens inside these routines.
-+
-+ [ [46]Contents ] [ [47]C-Kermit ] [ [48]Kermit Home ]
-+
-+4. MODULES
-+
-+ When C-Kermit is on the far end of a connection, it is said to be in
-+ remote mode. When C-Kermit has made a connection to another computer,
-+ it is in local mode. (If C-Kermit is "in the middle" of a multihop
-+ connection, it is still in local mode.)
-+
-+ On another axis, C-Kermit can be in any of several major states:
-+
-+ Command State
-+ Reading and writing from the job's controlling terminal or
-+ "console". In this mode, all i/o is handled by the Group E
-+ conxxx() (console i/o) routines.
-+
-+ Protocol State
-+ Reading and writing from the communicatons device. In this mode,
-+ all i/o is handled by the Group E ttxxx() (terminal i/o)
-+ routines.
-+
-+ Terminal State
-+ Reading from the keyboard with conxxx() routines and writing to
-+ the communications device with ttxxx() routines AND vice-versa.
-+
-+ When in local mode, the console and communications device are distinct.
-+ During file transfer, Kermit may put up a file-transfer display on the
-+ console and sample the console for interruption signals.
-+
-+ When in remote mode, the console and communications device are the
-+ same, and therefore there can be no file-transfer display on the
-+ console or interruptions from it (except for "in-band" interruptions
-+ such as ^C^C^C).
-+
-+ [ [49]Contents ] [ [50]C-Kermit ] [ [51]Kermit Home ]
-+
-+4.A. Group A: Library Functions
-+
-+ Library functions, strictly portable, can be used by all modules on all
-+ platforms: [52]ckclib.h, [53]ckclib.c.
-+
-+ (To be filled in... For now, see [54]Section 3.1 and the comments in
-+ ckclib.c.)
-+
-+ [ [55]Contents ] [ [56]C-Kermit ] [ [57]Kermit Home ]
-+
-+4.B. Group B: Kermit File Transfer
-+
-+ The Kermit protocol kernel. These files, whose names start with "ckc
-+ are supposed to be totally portable C, and are expected to compile
-+ correctly on any platform with any C compiler. "Portable" does not mean
-+ the same as as "ANSI" -- these modules must compile on 10- and 20-year
-+ old computers, with C preprocessors, compilers, and/or linkers that
-+ have all sorts of restrictions. The Group B modules do not include any
-+ header files other than those that come with Kermit itself. They do not
-+ contain any library calls except from the standard C library (e.g.
-+ printf()). They most certainly do not contain any system calls. Files:
-+
-+ [58]ckcsym.h
-+ For use by C compilers that don't allow -D on the command line.
-+
-+ [59]ckcasc.h
-+ ASCII character symbol definitions.
-+
-+ [60]ckcsig.h
-+ System-independent signal-handling definitions and prototypes.
-+
-+ [61]ckcdeb.h
-+ Originally, debugging definitions. Now this file also contains
-+ all definitions and prototypes that are shared by all modules in
-+ all groups.
-+
-+ [62]ckcker.h
-+ Kermit protocol symbol definitions.
-+
-+ [63]ckcxla.h
-+ Character-set-related symbol definitions (see next section).
-+
-+ [64]ckcmai.c
-+ The main program. This module contains the declarations of all
-+ the protocol-related global variables that are shared among the
-+ other modules.
-+
-+ [65]ckcpro.w
-+ The protocol module itself, written in "wart", a lex-like
-+ preprocessor that is distributed with Kermit under the name
-+ CKWART.C.
-+
-+ [66]ckcfns.c, [67]ckcfn2.c, [68]ckcfn3.c
-+ The protocol support functions used by the protocol module.
-+
-+ [69]Group B modules may call upon functions from [70]Group E, but not
-+ from [71]Group D modules (with the single exception that the main
-+ program invokes the user interface, which is in Group D). (This last
-+ assertion is really only a conjecture.)
-+
-+ [ [72]Contents ] [ [73]C-Kermit ] [ [74]Kermit Home ]
-+
-+4.C. Group C: Character-Set Conversion
-+
-+ Character set translation tables and functions. Used by the [75]Group
-+ B, protocol modules, but may be specific to different computers. (So
-+ far, all character character sets supported by C-Kermit are supported
-+ in [76]ckuxla.c and [77]ckuxla.h, including Macintosh and IBM character
-+ sets). These modules should be completely portable, and not rely on any
-+ kind of system or library services.
-+
-+ [78]ckcxla.h
-+ Character-set definitions usable by all versions of C-Kermit.
-+
-+ ck?xla.h
-+ Character-set definitions for computer "?", e.g. [79]ckuxla.h
-+ for UNIX, [80]ckmxla.h for Macintosh.
-+
-+ [81]ck?xla
-+ Character-set translation tables and functions for computer "?",
-+ For example, CKUXLA.C for UNIX, CKMXLA.C for Macintosh. So far,
-+ these are the only two such modules. The UNIX module is used for
-+ all versions of C-Kermit except the Macintosh version.
-+
-+ [82]ckcuni.h
-+ Unicode definitions
-+
-+ [83]ckcuni.c
-+ Unicode module
-+
-+ Here's how to add a new file character set in the original (non-Unicode
-+ modules). Assuming it is based on the Roman (Latin) alphabet. Let's
-+ call it "Barbarian". First, in ck?xla.h, add a definition for FC_BARBA
-+ (8 chars maximum length) and increase MAXFCSETS by 1. Then, in
-+ ck?xla.c:
-+
-+ * Add a barbarian entry into the fcsinfo array.
-+ * Add a "barbarian" entry to file character set keyword table,
-+ fcstab.
-+ * Add a "barbarian" entry to terminal character set keyword table,
-+ ttcstab.
-+ * Add a translation table from Latin-1 to barbarian: yl1ba[].
-+ * Add a translation table from barbarian to Latin-1: ybal1[].
-+ * Add a translation function from Barbarian to ASCII: xbaas().
-+ * Add a translation function from Barbarian to Latin-1: xbal1().
-+ * Add a translation function from Latin-1 to Barbarian: xl1ba().
-+ * etc etc for each transfer character set...
-+ * Add translation function pointers to the xls and xlr tables.
-+
-+ Other translations involving Barbarian (e.g. from Barbarian to
-+ Latin-Cyrillic) are performed through these tables and functions. See
-+ ckuxla.h and ckuxla.c for extensive examples.
-+
-+ To add a new Transfer Character Set, e.g. Latin Alphabet 9 (for the
-+ Euro symbol), again in the "old" character-set modules:
-+
-+ In ckcxla.h:
-+
-+ + Add a TC_xxxx definition and increase MAXTCSETS accordingly.
-+
-+ In ck?xla.h (since any transfer charset is also a file charset):
-+
-+ + Add an FC_xxxx definition and increase MAXFCSETS accordingly.
-+
-+ In ck?xla.c:
-+
-+ + Add a tcsinfo[] entry.
-+ + Make a tcstab[] keyword table entry.
-+ + Make an fcsinfo[] table entry.
-+ + Make an fcstab[] keyword table entry.
-+ + Make a tcstab[] keyword table entry.
-+ + If necessary, make a langinfo[] table entry.
-+ + Make entries in the function pointer arrays.
-+ + Provide any needed functions.
-+
-+ As of C-Kermit 7.0, character sets are also handled in parallel by the
-+ new (and very large) Unicode module, ckcuni.[ch]. Eventually we should
-+ phase out the old way, described just above, and operate entirely in
-+ (and through) Unicode. The advantages are many. The disadvantages are
-+ size and performance. To add a character to the Unicode modules:
-+
-+ In ckcuni.h:
-+
-+ + (To be filled in...)
-+
-+ In ckcuni.c:
-+
-+ + (To be filled in...)
-+
-+ [ [84]Contents ] [ [85]C-Kermit ] [ [86]Kermit Home ]
-+
-+4.D. Group D: User Interface
-+
-+ This is the code that communicates with the user, gets her commands,
-+ informs her of the results. It may be command-line oriented,
-+ interactive prompting dialog, menus and arrow keys, windows and mice,
-+ speech recognition, telepathy, etc. The one provided is command-and
-+ prompt, with the ability to read commands from various sources: the
-+ console keyboard, a file, or a macro definition. The user interface has
-+ three major functions:
-+
-+ 1. Sets the parameters for the file transfer and then starts it. This
-+ is done by setting certain (many) global variables, such as the
-+ protocol machine start state, the file specification, file type,
-+ communication parameters, packet length, window size, character
-+ set, etc.
-+ 2. Displays messages on the user's screen during the file transfer,
-+ using the screen() function, which is called by the group-1
-+ modules.
-+ 3. Executes any commands directly that do not require Kermit protocol,
-+ such as the CONNECT command, local file management commands,
-+ parameter-setting commands, FTP client commands, etc.
-+
-+ If you plan to imbed the [87]Group B, files into a program with a
-+ different user interface, your interface must supply an appropriate
-+ screen() function, plus a couple related ones like chkint() and
-+ intmsg() for handling keyboard (or mouse, etc) interruptions during
-+ file transfer. The best way to find out about this is to link all the
-+ C-Kermit modules together except the ckuu*.o and ckucon.o modules, and
-+ see which missing symbols turn up.
-+
-+ C-Kermit's character-oriented user interface (as opposed to the
-+ Macintosh version's graphical user interface) consists of the following
-+ modules. C-Kermit can be built with an interactive command parser, a
-+ command-line-option-only parser, a graphical user interface, or any
-+ combination, and it can even be built with no user interface at all (in
-+ which case it runs as a remote-mode Kermit server).
-+
-+ [88]ckucmd.h
-+ [89]ckucmd.c
-+ The command parsing primitives used by the interactive command
-+ parser to parse keywords, numbers, filenames, etc, and to give
-+ help, complete fields, supply defaults, allow abbreviations and
-+ editing, etc. This package is totally independent of Kermit, but
-+ does depend on the [90]Group E functions.
-+
-+ [91]ckuusr.h
-+ Definitions of symbols used in Kermit's commands.
-+
-+ ckuus*.c
-+ Kermit's interactive command parser, including the script
-+ programming language: [92]ckuusr.c (includes top-level keyword
-+ tables); [93]ckuus2.c (HELP command text); [94]ckuus3.c (most of
-+ the SET command); [95]ckuus4.c (includes variables and
-+ functions); ckuus[567].c (miscellaneous);
-+
-+ [96]ckuusy.c
-+ The command-line-option parser.
-+
-+ [97]ckuusx.c
-+ User interface functions common to both the interactive and
-+ command-line parsers.
-+
-+ [98]ckuver.h
-+ Version heralds for different implementations.
-+
-+ [99]ckuscr.c
-+ The (old, uucp-like) SCRIPT command
-+
-+ [100]ckudia.c
-+ The DIAL command. Includes specific knowledge of many types of
-+ modems.
-+
-+ Note that none of the above files is actually Unix-specific. Over time
-+ they have proven to be portable among all platforms where C-Kermit is
-+ built: Unix, VMS, AOS/VS, Amiga, OS-9, VOS, etc etc. Thus the third
-+ letter should more properly be "c", but changing it would be too
-+ confusing.
-+
-+ ck?con.c, ckucns.c
-+ The CONNECT command. Terminal connection, and in some cases
-+ (Macintosh, Windows) also terminal emulation. NOTE: As of
-+ C-Kermit 7.0, there are two different CONNECT modules for UNIX:
-+ [101]ckucon.c -- the traditional, portable, fork()-based version
-+ -- and [102]ckucns.c, a new version that uses select() rather
-+ than forks so it can handle encryption. ckucns.c is the
-+ preferred version for Unix; ckucon.c is not likely to keep pace
-+ with it in terms of upgrades, etc. However, since select() is
-+ not portable to every platform, ckucon.c will be kept
-+ indefinitely for those platforms that can't use ckucns.c. NOTE:
-+ SunLink X.25 support is available only in ckucon.c.
-+
-+ ck_*.*, ckuat*.*
-+ Modules having to do with authentication and encryption. Since
-+ the relaxation of USA export laws, they are included with the
-+ general source-code distribution. Secure C-Kermit binaries can
-+ be built using special targets in the standard makefile.
-+ However, secure prebuilt binaries may not be distributed.
-+
-+ For other implementations, the files may, and probably do, have
-+ different names. For example, the Macintosh graphical user interface
-+ filenames start with "ckm". Kermit 95 uses the ckucmd and ckuus*
-+ modules, but has its own CONNECT command modules. And so on.
-+
-+ Here is a brief description of C-Kermit's "user interface interface",
-+ from ckuusr.c. It is nowhere near complete; in particular, hundreds of
-+ global variables are shared among the many modules. These should, some
-+ day, be collected into classes or structures that can be passed around
-+ as needed; not only for purity's sake, but also to allow for multiple
-+ simultaneous communication sessions and or user interfaces. Our list of
-+ things to do is endless, and reorganizing the source is almost always
-+ at the bottom.
-+
-+ The ckuus*.c modules (like many of the ckc*.c modules) depend on the
-+ existence of C library features like fopen, fgets, feof, (f)printf,
-+ argv/argc, etc. Other functions that are likely to vary among operating
-+ systems -- like setting terminal modes or interrupts -- are invoked via
-+ calls to functions that are defined in the [103]Group E
-+ platform-dependent modules, ck?[ft]io.c. The command line parser
-+ processes any arguments found on the command line, as passed to main()
-+ via argv/argc. The interactive parser uses the facilities of the cmd
-+ package (developed for this program, but, in theory, usable by any
-+ program). Any command parser may be substituted for this one. The only
-+ requirements for the Kermit command parser are these:
-+
-+ 1. Set parameters via global variables like duplex, speed, ttname,
-+ etc. See [104]ckcmai.c for the declarations and descriptions of
-+ these variables.
-+ 2. If a command can be executed without the use of Kermit protocol,
-+ then execute the command directly and set the sstate (start state)
-+ variable to 0. Examples include SET commands, local directory
-+ listings, the CONNECT command.
-+ 3. If a command requires the Kermit protocol, set the following
-+ variables:
-+ sstate string data
-+ 'x' (enter server mode) (none)
-+ 'r' (send a 'get' command) cmarg, cmarg2
-+ 'v' (enter receive mode) cmarg2
-+ 'g' (send a generic command) cmarg
-+ 's' (send files) nfils, cmarg & cmarg2 OR cmlist
-+ 'c' (send a remote host command) cmarg
-+
-+
-+ cmlist is an array of pointers to strings.
-+ cmarg, cmarg2 are pointers to strings.
-+ nfils is an integer (hmmm, probably should be an unsigned long).
-+
-+ cmarg can be:
-+ A filename string (possibly wild), or:
-+ a pointer to a prefabricated generic command string, or:
-+ a pointer to a host command string.
-+
-+ cmarg2 is:
-+ The name to send a single file under, or:
-+ the name under which to store an incoming file; must not
-+ be wild.
-+ If it's the name for receiving, a null value means to
-+ store the file under the name it arrives with.
-+
-+ cmlist is:
-+ A list of nonwild filenames, such as passed via argv.
-+
-+ nfils is an integer, interpreted as follows:
-+ -1: filespec (possibly wild) in cmarg, must be expanded
-+ internally.
-+ 0: send from stdin (standard input).
-+ >0: number of files to send, from cmlist.
-+
-+ The screen() function is used to update the screen during file
-+ transfer. The tlog() function writes to a transaction log (if TLOG is
-+ defined). The debug() function writes to a debugging log (if DEBUG is
-+ defined). The intmsg() and chkint() functions provide the user i/o for
-+ interrupting file transfers.
-+
-+ [ [105]Contents ] [ [106]C-Kermit ] [ [107]Kermit Home ]
-+
-+4.E. Group E: Platform-Dependent I/O
-+
-+ Platform-dependent function definitions. All the Kermit modules,
-+ including the command package, call upon these functions, which are
-+ designed to provide system-independent primitives for controlling and
-+ manipulating devices and files. For Unix, these functions are defined
-+ in the files [108]ckufio.c (files), [109]ckutio.c (communications), and
-+ [110]ckusig.c (signal handling).
-+
-+ For VMS, the files are [111]ckvfio.c, ckvtio.c, and [112]ckusig.c (VMS
-+ can use the same signal handling routines as Unix). It doesn't really
-+ matter what the files are called, except for Kermit distribution
-+ purposes (grouping related files together alphabetically), only that
-+ each function is provided with the name indicated, observes the same
-+ calling and return conventions, and has the same type.
-+
-+ The Group E modules contain both functions and global variables that
-+ are accessed by modules in the other groups. These are now described.
-+
-+ (By the way, I got this list by linking all the C-Kermit modules
-+ together except ckutio and ckufio. These are the symbols that ld
-+ reported as undefined. But that was a long time ago, probably circa
-+ Version 6.)
-+
-+4.E.1. Global Variables
-+
-+ char *DELCMD;
-+ Pointer to string containing command for deleting files.
-+ Example: char *DELCMD = "rm -f "; (UNIX)
-+ Example: char *DELCMD = "delete "; (VMS)
-+ Note trailing space. Filename is concatenated to end of this
-+ string. NOTE: DELCMD is used only in versions that do not
-+ provide their own built-in DELETE command.
-+
-+ char *DIRCMD;
-+ Pointer to string containing command for listing files when a
-+ filespec is given.
-+ Example: char *DIRCMD = "/bin/ls -l "; (UNIX)
-+ Example: char *DIRCMD = "directory "; (VMS)
-+ Note trailing space. Filename is concatenated to end of this
-+ string. NOTE: DIRCMD is used only in versions that do not
-+ provide their own built-in DIRECTORY command.
-+
-+ char *DIRCM2;
-+ Pointer to string containing command for listing files when a
-+ filespec is not given. (currently not used, handled in another
-+ way.)
-+ Example: char *DIRCMD2 = "/bin/ls -ld *";
-+ NOTE: DIRCMD2 is used only in versions that do not provide their
-+ own built-in DIRECTORY command.
-+
-+ char *PWDCMD;
-+ Pointer to string containing command to display current
-+ directory.
-+ Example: char *PWDCMD = "pwd ";
-+ NOTE: PWDCMD is used only in versions that do not provide their
-+ own built-in PWD command.
-+
-+ char *SPACMD;
-+ Pointer to command to display free disk space in current
-+ device/directory.
-+ Example: char *SPACMD = "df .";
-+ NOTE: SPACMD is used only in versions that do not provide their
-+ own built-in SPACE command.
-+
-+ char *SPACM2;
-+ Pointer to command to display free disk space in another
-+ device/directory.
-+ Example: char *SPACM2 = "df ";
-+ Note trailing space. Device or directory name is added to this
-+ string. NOTE: SPACMD2 is used only in versions that do not
-+ provide their own built-in SPACE command.
-+
-+ char *TYPCMD;
-+ Pointer to command for displaying the contents of a file.
-+ Example: char *TYPCMD = "cat ";
-+ Note trailing space. Device or directory name is added to this
-+ string. NOTE: TYPCMD is used only in versions that do not
-+ provide their own built-in TYPE command.
-+
-+ char *WHOCMD;
-+ Pointer to command for displaying logged-in users.
-+ Example: char *WHOCMD = "who ";
-+ Note trailing space. Specific user name may be added to this
-+ string.
-+
-+ int backgrd = 0;
-+ Flag for whether program is running in foreground (0) or
-+ background (nonzero). Background operation implies that screen
-+ output should not be done and that all errors should be fatal.
-+
-+ int ckxech;
-+ Flag for who is to echo console typein:
-+ 1: The program (system is not echoing).
-+ 0: The OS, front end, terminal, etc (not this program).
-+
-+ char *ckxsys;
-+ Pointer to string that names the computer and operating system.
-+ Example: char *ckxsys = " NeXT Mach 1.0";
-+ Tells what computer system ckxv applies to. In UNIX Kermit, this
-+ variable is also used to print the program herald, and in the
-+ SHOW VERSION command.
-+
-+ char *ckxv;
-+ Pointer to version/edit info of ck?tio.c module.
-+ Example: char *ckxv = "UNIX Communications Support, 6.0.169, 6
-+ Sep 96";
-+ Used by SHOW VERSION command.
-+
-+ char *ckzsys;
-+ Like ckxsys, but briefer.
-+ Example: char *ckzsys = " 4.3 BSD";
-+ Tells what platform ckzv applies to. Used by the SHOW VERSION
-+ command.
-+
-+ char *ckzv;
-+ Pointer to version/edit info of ck?fio.c module.
-+ Example: char *ckzv = "UNIX File support, 6.0.113, 6 Sep 96";
-+ Used by SHOW VERSION command.
-+
-+ int dfflow;
-+ Default flow control. 0 = none, 1 = Xon/Xoff, ... (see FLO_xxx
-+ symbols in ckcdeb.h)
-+ Set by Group E module. Used by [113]ckcmai.c to initialize flow
-+ control variable.
-+
-+ int dfloc;
-+ Default location. 0 = remote, 1 = local. Set by Group E module.
-+ Used by ckcmai.c to initialize local variable. Used in various
-+ places in the user interface.
-+
-+ int dfprty;
-+ Default parity. 0 = none, 'e' = even, 'o' = odd, 'm' = mark, 's'
-+ = space. Set by Group E module. Used by ckcmai.c to initialize
-+ parity variable.
-+
-+ char *dftty;
-+ Default communication device. Set by Group E module. Used in
-+ many places. This variable should be initialized the the symbol
-+ CTTNAM, which is defined in ckcdeb.h, e.g. as "/dev/tty" for
-+ UNIX, "TT:" for VMS, etc. Example: char *dftty = CTTNAM;
-+
-+ char *mtchs[];
-+ Array of string pointers to filenames that matched the most
-+ recent wildcard match, i.e. the most recent call to zxpand().
-+ Used (at least) by command parsing package for partial filename
-+ completion.
-+
-+ int tilde_expand;
-+ Flag for whether to attempt to expand leading tildes in
-+ directory names (used in UNIX only, and then only when the
-+ symbol DTILDE is defined.
-+
-+ int ttnproto;
-+ The protocol being used to communicate over a network device.
-+ Values are defined in ckcnet.h. Example: NP_TELNET is network
-+ protocol "telnet".
-+
-+ int maxnam;
-+ The maximum length for a filename, exclusive of any device or
-+ directory information, in the format of the host operating
-+ system.
-+
-+ int maxpath;
-+ The maximum length for a fully specified filename, including
-+ device designator, directory name, network node name, etc, in
-+ the format of the host operating system, and including all
-+ punctuation.
-+
-+ int ttyfd;
-+ File descriptor of the communication device. -1 if there is no
-+ open or usable connection, including when C-Kermit is in remote
-+ mode. Since this is not implemented everywhere, references to it
-+ are in #ifdef CK_TTYFD..#endif.
-+
-+ [ [114]Contents ] [ [115]C-Kermit ] [ [116]Kermit Home ]
-+
-+4.E.2. Functions
-+
-+ These are divided into three categories: file-related functions (B.1),
-+ communication functions (B.2), and miscellaneous functions (B.3).
-+
-+4.E.2.1. File-Related Functions
-+
-+ In most implementations, these are collected together into a module
-+ called ck?fio.c, where ? = "u" ([117]ckutio.c for Unix), "v"
-+ ([118]ckvtio.c for VMS), [119]etc. To be totally platform-independent,
-+ C-Kermit maintains its own file numbers, and provides the functions
-+ described in this section to deal with the files associated with them.
-+ The file numbers are referred to symbolically, and are defined as
-+ follows in ckcker.h:
-+
-+ #define ZCTERM 0 /* Console terminal */
-+ #define ZSTDIO 1 /* Standard input/output */
-+ #define ZIFILE 2 /* Current input file for SEND command */
-+ #define ZOFILE 3 /* Current output file for RECEIVE command */
-+ #define ZDFILE 4 /* Current debugging log file */
-+ #define ZTFILE 5 /* Current transaction log file */
-+ #define ZPFILE 6 /* Current packet log file */
-+ #define ZSFILE 7 /* Current session log file */
-+ #define ZSYSFN 8 /* Input from a system function (pipe) */
-+ #define ZRFILE 9 /* Local file for READ command */ (NEW)
-+ #define ZWFILE 10 /* Local file for WRITE command */ (NEW)
-+ #define ZMFILE 11 /* Auxilliary file for internal use */ (NEW)
-+ #define ZNFILS 12 /* How many defined file numbers */
-+
-+ In the descriptions below, fn refers to a filename, and n refers to one
-+ of these file numbers. Functions are of type int unless otherwise
-+ noted, and are listed mostly alphabetically.
-+
-+ int
-+ chkfn(n) int n;
-+ Checks the file number n. Returns:
-+ -1: File number n is out of range
-+ 0: n is in range, but file is not open
-+ 1: n in range and file is open
-+
-+ int
-+ iswild(filspec) char *filespec;
-+ Checks if the file specification is "wild", i.e. contains
-+ metacharacters or other notations intended to match multiple
-+ filenames. Returns:
-+ 0: not wild
-+ 1: wild.
-+
-+ int
-+ isdir(string) char *string;
-+ Checks if the string is the name of an existing directory. The
-+ idea is to check whether the string can be "cd'd" to, so in some
-+ cases (e.g. DOS) it might also indicate any file structured
-+ device, such as a disk drive (like A:). Other nonzero returns
-+ indicate system-dependent information; e.g. in VMS
-+ isdir("[.FOO]") returns 1 but isdir("FOO.DIR;1") returns 2 to
-+ indicate the directory-file name is in a format that needs
-+ conversion before it can be combined with a filename. Returns:
-+ 0: not a directory (including any kind of error)
-+ 1: it is an existing directory
-+
-+ char *
-+ zfcdat(name) char *name;
-+ Returns modification (preferably, otherwise creation) date/time
-+ of file whose name is given in the argument string. Return value
-+ is a pointer to a string of the form yyyymmdd hh:mm:ss, for
-+ example 19931231 23:59:59, which represents the local time (no
-+ timezone or daylight savings time finagling required). Returns
-+ the null string ("") on failure. The text pointed to by the
-+ string pointer might be in a static buffer, and so should be
-+ copied to a safe place by the caller before any subsequent calls
-+ to this function.
-+
-+ struct zfnfp *
-+ zfnqfp(fn, buflen, buf) char * fn; int buflen; char * buf;
-+ Given the filename fn, the corresponding fully qualified,
-+ absolute filename is placed into the buffer buf, whose length is
-+ buflen. On failure returns a NULL pointer. On success returns a
-+ pointer to a struct zfnfp containing pointers to the full
-+ pathname and to just the filename, and an int giving the length
-+ of the full pathname. All references to this function in
-+ mainline code must be protected by #ifdef ZFNQFP..#endif,
-+ because it is not present in all of the ck*fio.c modules. So if
-+ you implement this function in a version that did not have it
-+ before, be sure to add #define ZFNQFP in the appropriate spot in
-+ ckcdeb.h or in the build-procedure CFLAGS.
-+
-+ int
-+ zcmpfn(s1,s2) char * s2, * s2;
-+ Compares two filenames to see if they refer to the same.
-+ Internally, the arguments can be converted to fully qualified
-+ pathnames, e.g. with zfnqfp(), realpath(), or somesuch. In Unix
-+ or other systems where symbolic links exist, the link should be
-+ resolved before making the comparison or looking at the inodes.
-+ Returns:
-+ 0: Files are not identical.
-+ 1: Files are identical.
-+
-+ int
-+ zfseek(pos) long pos;
-+ Positions the input pointer on the current input file to the
-+ given position. The pos argument is 0-based, the offset
-+ (distance in bytes) from beginning of the file. Needed for
-+ RESEND, PSEND, and other recovery operations. This function is
-+ not necessarily possible on all systems, e.g. record-oriented
-+ systems. It should only be used on binary files (i.e. files we
-+ are sending in binary mode) and stream-oriented file systems.
-+ Returns:
-+ -1: on failure.
-+ 0: On success.
-+
-+ int
-+ zchdir(dirnam) char *dirnam;
-+ Changes current or default directory to the one given in dirnam.
-+ Returns:
-+ 0: On failure.
-+ 1: on success.
-+
-+ long
-+ zchki(fn) char *fn;
-+ Check to see if file with name fn is a regular, readable,
-+ existing file, suitable for Kermit to send -- not a directory,
-+ not a symbolic link, etc. Returns:
-+ -3: if file exists but is not accessible (e.g. read-protected);
-+ -2: if file exists but is not of a readable type (e.g. a
-+ directory);
-+ -1: on error (e.g. file does not exist, or fn is garbage);
-+ >=0: (length of file) if file exists and is readable.
-+ Also see isdir(), zgetfs().
-+
-+ int
-+ zchkpid(pid) unsigned long pid;
-+ Returns:
-+ 1: If the given process ID (e.g. pid in UNIX) is valid and
-+ active
-+ 0: otherwise.
-+
-+ long
-+ zgetfs(fn) char *fn;
-+ Gets the size of the given file, regardless of accessibility.
-+ Used for directory listings. Unlike zchki(), should return the
-+ size of any kind of file, even a directory. zgetfs() also should
-+ serve as a mini "get file info" function that can be used until
-+ we design a better one, by also setting some global variables:
-+ int zgfs_link = 1/0 = file is (not) a symbolic link.
-+ int zgfs_dir = 1/0 = file is (not) a directory.
-+ char linkname[] = if zgfs_link != 0, name of file link points
-+ to.
-+ Returns:
-+ -1: on error (e.g. file does not exist, or fn is garbage);
-+ >=0: (length of file) if file exists and is readable.
-+
-+ int
-+ zchko(fn) char *fn;
-+ Checks to see if a file of the given name can be created.
-+ Returns:
-+ -1: if file cannot be created, or on any kind of error.
-+ 0: if file can be created.
-+
-+ int
-+ zchkspa(fn,len) char *f; long len;
-+ Checks to see if there is sufficient space to store the file
-+ named fn, which is len bytes long. If you can't write a function
-+ to do this, then just make a dummy that always returns 1; higher
-+ level code will recover from disk-full errors. The receiving
-+ Kermit uses this function to refuse an incoming file based on
-+ its size, via the attribute mechanism. Returns:
-+ -1: on error.
-+ 0: if there is not enough space.
-+ 1: if there is enough space.
-+
-+ int
-+ zchin(n,c) int n; int *c;
-+ Gets a character from file number n, return it in c (call with
-+ &c). Returns:
-+ -1: on failure, including EOF.
-+ 0: on success with character in c.
-+
-+ int
-+ zchout(n,c) int n; char c;
-+ Writes the character c to file number n. Returns:
-+ -1: on error.
-+ 0: on success.
-+
-+ int
-+ zclose(n) int n;
-+ Closes file number n. Returns:
-+ -1: on error.
-+ 1: on success.
-+
-+ int
-+ zdelet(fn) char *name;
-+ Attempts to delete (remove, erase) the named file. Returns:
-+ -1: on error.
-+ 1: if file was deleted successfully.
-+
-+ char *
-+ zgperm(char * f)
-+ Returns a pointer to the system-dependent numeric
-+ permissions/protection string for file f, or NULL upon failure.
-+ Used if CK_PERMS is defined.
-+
-+ char *
-+ ziperm(char * f)
-+ Returns a pointer to the system-dependent symbolic
-+ permissions/protection string for file f, or NULL upon failure.
-+ Used if CK_PERMS is defined. Example: In UNIX zgperm(f) might
-+ return "100770", but ziperm() might return "-rwxrwx---". In VMS,
-+ zgperm() would return a hexadecimal string, but ziperm() would
-+ return something like "(RWED,RWED,RE,)".
-+
-+ char *
-+ zgtdir()
-+ Returns a pointer to the name of the current directory, folder,
-+ etc, or a NULL pointer if the current directory cannot be
-+ determined. If possible, the directory specification should be
-+ (a) fully specified, e.g. as a complete pathname, and (b) be
-+ suitable for appending a filename. Thus, for example, Unix
-+ directory names should end with '/'. VMS directory names should
-+ look like DEV:[NAME] (rather than, say, NAME.DIR;1).
-+
-+ char *
-+ zhome()
-+ Returns a pointer to a string containing the user's home
-+ directory, or NULL upon error. Should be formatted like zgtdir()
-+ (q.v.).
-+
-+ int
-+ zinfill()
-+ Fill buffer from input file. This function is used by the macro
-+ zminchar(), which is defined in ckcker.h. zminchar() manages its
-+ own buffer, and calls zinfill() to fill it whenever it becomes
-+ empty. It is used only for sending files, and reads characters
-+ only from file number ZIFILE. zinfill() returns -1 upon end of
-+ file, -2 upon fatal error, and -3 upon timeout (e.g. when
-+ reading from a pipe); otherwise it returns the first character
-+ from the buffer it just read.
-+
-+ int
-+ zkself()
-+ Kills the current job, session, process, etc, logs out,
-+ disappears. Used by the Kermit server when it receives a BYE
-+ command. On failure, returns -1. On success, does not return at
-+ all! This function should not be called until all other steps
-+ have been taken to close files, etc.
-+
-+ VOID
-+ zstrip(fn,&fn2) char *fn1, **fn2;
-+ Strips device and directory, etc, from file specification fn,
-+ leaving only the filename (including "extension" or "filetype"
-+ -- the part after the dot). For example DUA0:[PROGRAMS]OOFA.C;3
-+ becomes OOFA.C, or /usr/fdc/oofa.c becomes oofa.c. Returns a
-+ pointer to result in fn2.
-+
-+ int
-+ zsetperm(char * file, unsigned int code)
-+ Set permissions of file to given system-dependent code. 0: On
-+ failure.
-+ 1: on success.
-+
-+ int
-+ zsetroot(char * dir)
-+ Sets the root for the user's file access, like Unix chroot(),
-+ but does not require privilege. In Unix, this must be
-+ implemented entirely by Kermit's own file access routines.
-+ Returns:
-+ 1: Success
-+ -1: Invalid argument
-+ -2:
-+ -3: Internal error
-+ -4: Access to given directory denied
-+ -5: New root not within old root
-+
-+ int
-+ zinroot(char * file)
-+ If no root is set (zsetroot()), returns 1.
-+ Otherwise, if given file is in the root, returns 1.
-+ Otherwise, returns 0.
-+
-+ VOID
-+ zltor(fn,fn2) char *fn1, *fn2;
-+ Local-To-Remote filename translation. OBSOLETE: replaced by
-+ nzltor() (q.v.). Translates the local filename fn into a format
-+ suitable for transmission to an arbitrary type of computer, and
-+ copies the result into the buffer pointed to by fn2. Translation
-+ may involve (a) stripping the device and/or directory/path name,
-+ (b) converting lowercase to uppercase, (c) removing spaces and
-+ strange characters, or converting them to some innocuous
-+ alphabetic character like X, (d) discarding or converting extra
-+ periods (there should not be more than one). Does its best.
-+ Returns no value. name2 is a pointer to a buffer, furnished by
-+ the caller, into which zltor() writes the resulting name. No
-+ length checking is done.
-+
-+ #ifdef NZLTOR
-+ VOID
-+ nzltor(fn,fn2,convert,pathnames,max) char *fn1,*fn2; int
-+ convert,pathnames,max;
-+ Replaces zltor(). This new version handles pathnames and checks
-+ length. fn1 and fn2 are as in zltor(). This version is called
-+ unconditionally for each file, rather than only when filename
-+ conversion is enabled. Pathnames can have the following values:
-+
-+ PATH_OFF: Pathname, if any, is to be stripped
-+ PATH_REL: The relative pathname is to be included
-+ PATH_ABS: The full pathname is to be included
-+
-+ After handling pathnames, conversion is done to the result as in
-+ the zltor() description if convert != 0; if relative or absolute
-+ pathnames are included, they are converted to UNIX format, i.e.
-+ with slash (/) as the directory separator. The max parameter
-+ specifies the maximum size of fn2. If convert > 0, the regular
-+ conversions are done; if convert < 0, minimal conversions are
-+ done (we skip uppercasing the letters, we allow more than one
-+ period, etc; this can be used when we know our partner is UNIX
-+ or similar).
-+
-+ #endif /* NZLTOR */
-+
-+ int
-+ nzxpand(fn,flags) char *fn; int flags;
-+ Replaces zxpand(), which is obsolete as of C-Kermit 7.0.
-+ Call with:
-+ fn = Pointer to filename or pattern.
-+ flags = option bits:
-+ flags & ZX_FILONLY Match regular files
-+ flags & ZX_DIRONLY Match directories
-+ flags & ZX_RECURSE Descend through directory tree
-+ flags & ZX_MATCHDOT Match "dot files"
-+ flags & ZX_NOBACKUP Don't match "backup files"
-+ flags & ZX_NOLINKS Don't follow symlinks.
-+
-+ Returns the number of files that match fn, with data structures
-+ set up so the first file (if any) will be returned by the next
-+ znext() call. If ZX_FILONLY and ZX_DIRONLY are both set, or
-+ neither one is set, files and directories are matched. Notes:
-+
-+ 1. It is essential that the number returned by nzxpand() reflect
-+ the actual number of filenames that will be returned by
-+ znext() calls. In other words:
-+ for (n = nzxpand(string,flags); n > 0; n--) {
-+ znext(buf);
-+ printf("%s\n", buf);
-+ }
-+
-+ should print all the file names; no more, no less.
-+ 2. In UNIX, DOS, OS-9, etc, where directories contain entries for
-+ themselves (.) and the superior directory (..), these should
-+ NOT be included in the list under any circumstances, including
-+ when ZX_MATCHDOT is set.
-+ 3. Additional option bits might be added in the future, e.g. for
-+ sorting (sort by date/name/size, reverse/ascending, etc).
-+ Currently this is done only in higher level code (through a
-+ hack in which the nzxpand() exports its filename array, which
-+ is not portable because not all OS's can use this mechanism).
-+
-+ int
-+ zmail(addr,fn) char *addr, fn;
-+ Send the local, existing file fn as e-mail to the address addr.
-+ Returns:
-+ 0: on success
-+ 2: if mail delivered but temp file can't be deleted
-+ -2: if mail can't be delivered
-+
-+ int
-+ zmkdir(path) char *path;
-+ The path can be a file specification that might contain
-+ directory information, in which the filename is expected to be
-+ included, or an unambiguous directory specification (e.g. in
-+ UNIX it must end with "/"). This routine attempts to create any
-+ directories in the given path that don't already exist. Returns
-+ 0 or greater success: no directories needed creation, or else
-+ all directories that needed creation were created successfully;
-+ the return code is the number of directories that were created.
-+ Returns -1 on failure to create any of the needed directories.
-+
-+ int
-+ zrmdir(path) char *path;
-+ Attempts to remove the given directory. Returns 0 on success, -1
-+ on failure. The detailed semantics are open -- should it fail if
-+ the directory contains any files or subdirectories, etc. It is
-+ probably best for this routine to behave in whatever manner is
-+ customary on the underlying platform; e.g. in UNIX, VMS, DOS,
-+ etc, where directories can not be removed unless they are empty.
-+
-+ VOID
-+ znewn(fn,s) char *fn, **s;
-+ Transforms the name fn into a filename that is guaranteed to be
-+ unique. If the file fn does not exist, then the new name is the
-+ same as fn; Otherwise, it's different. this function does its
-+ best, returns no value. New name is created in caller's space.
-+ Call like this: znewn(old,&new);. The second parameter is a
-+ pointer to the new name. This pointer is set by znewn() to point
-+ to a static string in its own space, so be sure to the result to
-+ a safe place before calling this function again.
-+
-+ int
-+ znext(fn) char *fn;
-+ Copies the next file name from a file list created by zxpand()
-+ into the string pointed to by fn (see zxpand). If no more files,
-+ then the null string is placed there. Returns 0 if there are no
-+ more filenames, with 0th element the array pointed to by fn set
-+ to NUL. If there is a filename, it is stored in the array
-+ pointed to by fn and a positive number is returned. NOTE: This
-+ is a change from earlier definitions of this function
-+ (pre-1999), which returned the number of files remaining; thus 0
-+ was the return value when returning the final file. However, no
-+ mainline code ever depended on the return value, so this change
-+ should be safe.
-+
-+ int
-+ zopeni(n,fn) int n; char *fn;
-+ Opens the file named fn for input as file number n. Returns:
-+ 0: on failure.
-+ 1: on success.
-+
-+ int
-+ zopeno(n,fn,zz,fcb) int n; char *name; struct zattr *zz; struct
-+ filinfo *fcb;
-+ Attempts to open the named file for output as file number n. zz
-+ is a Kermit file attribute structure as defined in ckcdeb.h,
-+ containing various information about the file, including its
-+ size, creation date, and so forth. This function should attempt
-+ to honor as many of these as possible. fcb is a "file control
-+ block" in the traditional sense, defined in ckcdeb.h, containing
-+ information relevant to complicated file systems like VMS (RMS),
-+ IBM MVS, etc, like blocksize, record length, organization,
-+ record format, carriage control, etc. Returns:
-+ 0: on failure.
-+ 1: on success.
-+
-+ int
-+ zoutdump()
-+ Dumps a file output buffer. Used with the macro zmchout()
-+ defined in ckcker.h. Used only with file number ZOFILE, i.e. the
-+ file that is being received by Kermit during file transfer.
-+ Returns:
-+ -1: on failure.
-+ 0: on success.
-+
-+ int
-+ zprint(p,fn) char *p, *f;
-+ Prints the file with name fn on a local printer, with options p.
-+ Returns:
-+ 0: on success
-+ 3: if file sent to printer but can't be deleted
-+ -3: if file can't be printed
-+
-+ int
-+ zrename(fn,fn2) char *fn, *fn2;
-+ Changes the name of file fn to fn2. If fn2 is the name of an
-+ existing directory, or a file-structured device, then file fn is
-+ moved to that directory or device, keeping its original name. If
-+ fn2 lacks a directory separator when passed to this function, an
-+ appropriate one is supplied. Returns:
-+ -1: on failure.
-+ 0: on success.
-+
-+ int
-+ zcopy(source,dest) char * source, * dest;
-+ Copies the source file to the destination. One file only. No
-+ wildcards. The destination string may be a filename or a
-+ directory name. Returns:
-+ 0: on success.
-+ <0: on failure:
-+ -2: source file is not a regular file.
-+ -3: source file not found.
-+ -4: permission denied.
-+ -5: source and destination are the same file.
-+ -6: i/o error.
-+ -1: other error.
-+
-+ char *
-+ zlocaltime(char *)
-+ Call with: "yyyymmdd hh:mm:ss" GMT/UTC date-time. Returns
-+ pointer to local date-time string "yyyymmdd hh:mm:ss" on
-+ success, NULL on failure.
-+
-+ VOID
-+ zrtol(fn,fn2) char *fn, *fn2;
-+ Remote-To-Local filename translation. OBSOLETE: replaced by
-+ nzrtol(). Translates a "standard" filename to a local filename.
-+ For example, in Unix this function might convert an
-+ all-uppercase name to lowercase, but leave lower- or mix-case
-+ names alone. Does its best, returns no value. New name is in
-+ string pointed to by fn2. No length checking is done.
-+
-+ #ifdef NZLTOR
-+ int
-+ nzrtol(fn,fn2,convert,pathnames,max) char *fn1,*fn2; int
-+ convert,pathnames,max;
-+ Replaces zrtol. Like zrtol but handles pathnames and checks
-+ length. See nzltor for detailed description of parameters.
-+
-+ #endif /* NZLTOR */
-+
-+ int
-+ zsattr(xx) struct zattr *xx;
-+ Fills in a Kermit file attribute structure for the file which is
-+ to be sent, namely the currently open ZIFILE. Note that this is
-+ not a very good design, but we're stuck with it. Callers must
-+ ensure that zsattr() is called only on real files, not on pipes,
-+ internally generated file-like objects such as server REMOTE
-+ command responses, etc. Returns:
-+ -1: on failure.
-+ 0: on success with the structure filled in.
-+ If any string member is null, it should be ignored by the
-+ caller.
-+ If any numeric member is -1, it should be ignored by the caller.
-+
-+ int
-+ zshcmd(s) char *s;
-+ s contains to pointer to a command to be executed by the host
-+ computer's shell, command parser, or operating system. If the
-+ system allows the user to choose from a variety of command
-+ processors (shells), then this function should employ the user's
-+ preferred shell. If possible, the user's job (environment,
-+ process, etc) should be set up to catch keyboard interruption
-+ signals to allow the user to halt the system command and return
-+ to Kermit. The command must run in ordinary, unprivileged user
-+ mode. If possible, this function should return -1 on failure to
-+ start the command, or else it should return 1 if the command
-+ succeeded and 0 if it failed.
-+
-+ int
-+ pexitstatus
-+ zshcmd() and zsyscmd() should set this to the command's actual
-+ exit status code if possible.
-+
-+ int
-+ zsyscmd(s) char *s;
-+ s contains to pointer to a command to be executed by the host
-+ computer's shell, command parser, or operating system. If the
-+ system allows the user to choose from a variety of command
-+ processors (shells), then this function should employ the system
-+ standard shell (e.g. /bin/sh for Unix), so that the results will
-+ always be the same for everybody. If possible, the user's job
-+ (environment, process, etc) should be set up to catch keyboard
-+ interruption signals to allow the user to halt the system
-+ command and return to Kermit. The command must run in ordinary,
-+ unprivileged user mode. If possible, this function should return
-+ -1 on failure to start the command, or else it should return 1
-+ if the command succeeded and 0 if it failed.
-+
-+ VOID
-+ z_exec(s,args) char * s; char * args[];
-+ This one executes the command s (which is searched for using the
-+ system's normal searching mechanism, such as PATH in UNIX), with
-+ the given argument vector, which follows the conventions of UNIX
-+ argv[]: the name of the command pointed to by element 0, the
-+ first arg by element 1, and so on. A null args[] pointer
-+ indicates the end of the arugment list. All open files must
-+ remain open so the exec'd process can use them. Returns only if
-+ unsuccessful.
-+
-+ int
-+ zsinl(n,s,x) int n, x; char *s;
-+ Reads a line from file number n. Writes the line into the
-+ address s provided by the caller. Writing terminates when
-+ newline is read, but with newline discarded. Writing also
-+ terminates upon EOF or if length x is exhausted. Returns:
-+ -1: on EOF or error.
-+ 0: on success.
-+
-+ int
-+ zsout(n,s) int n; char *s;
-+ Writes the string s out to file number n. Returns:
-+ -1: on failure.
-+ 0: on success.
-+
-+ int
-+ zsoutl(n,s) int n; char *s;
-+ Writes the string s out to file number n and adds a line
-+ (record) terminator (boundary) appropriate for the system and
-+ the file format. Returns:
-+ -1: on failure.
-+ 0: on success.
-+
-+ int
-+ zsoutx(n,s,x) int n, x; char *s;
-+ Writes exactly x characters from string s to file number n. If s
-+ has fewer than x characters, then the entire string s is
-+ written. Returns:
-+ -1: on failure.
-+ >= 0: on success, the number of characters actually written.
-+
-+ int
-+ zstime(fn,yy,x) char *fn; struct zattr *yy; int x;
-+ Sets the creation date (and other attributes) of an existing
-+ file, or compares a file's creation date with a given date. Call
-+ with:
-+
-+ fn: pointer to name of existing file.
-+ yy: Pointer to a Kermit file attribute structure in which yy->date.val
-+ is a date of the form yyyymmdd hh:mm:ss, e.g. 19900208 13:00:00, which
-+ is to be used for setting or comparing the file date. Other attributes
-+ in the struct can also be set, such as the protection/permission (See
-+ [120]Appendix I), when it makes sense (e.g. "yy->lprotect.val" can be
-+ set if the remote system ID matches the local one).
-+ x: A function code: 0 means to set the file's creation date as given.
-+ 1 means compare the date from the yy struct with the file's date.
-+
-+ Returns:
-+ -1: on any kind of error.
-+ 0: if x is 0 and the file date was set successfully.
-+ 0: if x is 1 and date from attribute structure > file creation
-+ date.
-+ 1: if x is 1 and date from attribute structure <= file
-+ creation date.
-+
-+ VOID
-+ zstrip(name,name2) char *name, **name2;
-+ Strips pathname from filename "name". Constructs the resulting
-+ string in a static buffer in its own space and returns a pointer
-+ to it in name2. Also strips device name, file version numbers,
-+ and other "non-name" material.
-+
-+ int
-+ zxcmd(n,s) char *s;
-+ Runs a system command so its output can be accessed as if it
-+ were file n. The command is run in ordinary, unprivileged user
-+ mode.
-+ If n is ZSTDIO or ZCTERM, returns -1.
-+ If n is ZIFILE or ZRFILE, then Kermit reads from the command,
-+ otherwise Kermit writes to the command.
-+ Returns 0 on error, 1 on success.
-+
-+ int
-+ zxpand(fn) char *fn;
-+ OBSOLETE: Replaced by nzxpand(), q.v.
-+
-+ #ifdef ZXREWIND
-+ int
-+ zxrewind()
-+ Returns the number of files returned by the most recent
-+ nzxpand() call, and resets the list to the beginning so the next
-+ znext() call returns the first file. Returns -1 if zxpand has
-+ not yet been called. If this function is available, ZXREWIND
-+ should be defined; otherwise it should not be referenced.
-+
-+ #endif /* ZXREWIND */
-+
-+ int
-+ xsystem(cmd) char *cmd;
-+ Executes the system command without redirecting any of its i/o,
-+ similar (well, identical) to system() in Unix. But before
-+ passing the command to the system, xsystem() ensures that all
-+ privileges are turned off, so that the system command executes
-+ in ordinary unprivileged user mode. If possible, xsystem()
-+ returns the return code of the command that was executed.
-+
-+4.E.2.2. IKSD Variables and Functions
-+
-+ These must be implemented in any C-Kermit version that is to be
-+ installed as an Internet Kermit Service Daemon (IKSD). IKSD is expected
-+ to be started by the Internet Daemon (e.g. inetd) with its standard i/o
-+ redirected to the incoming connection.
-+
-+ int ckxanon;
-+ Nonzero if anonymous logins allowed.
-+
-+ extern int inserver;
-+ Nonzero if started in IKSD mode.
-+
-+ extern int isguest;
-+ Nonzero if IKSD and user logged in anonymously.
-+
-+ extern char * homdir;
-+ Pointer to user's home directory.
-+
-+ extern char * anonroot;
-+ Pointer to file-system root for anonymous users.
-+
-+ Existing functions must make "if (inserver && isguest)" checks for
-+ actions that would not be legal for guests: zdelete(), zrmdir(),
-+ zprint(), zmail(), etc.
-+
-+ int
-+ zvuser(name) char * name;
-+ Verifies that user "name" exists and is allowed to log in. If
-+ the name is "ftp" or "anonymous" and ckxanon != 0, a guest login
-+ is set up. Returns 0 if user not allowed to log in, nonzero if
-+ user may log in.
-+
-+ int
-+ zvpass(string) char * string;
-+ Verifies password of the user from the most recent zvuser()
-+ call. Returns nonzero if password is valid for user, 0 if it
-+ isn't. Makes any appropriate system log entries (IKSD logins,
-+ failed login attempts, etc). If password is valid, logs the user
-+ in as herself (if real user), or sets up restricted anonymous
-+ access if user is guest (e.g. changes file-system root to
-+ anonroot and sets isguest = 1).
-+
-+ VOID
-+ zsyslog()
-+ Begins any desired system logging of an IKSD session.
-+
-+ VOID
-+ zvlogout()
-+ Terminates an IKSD session. In most cases this is simply a
-+ wrapper for exit() or doexit(), with some system logging added.
-+
-+4.E.2.3. Privilege Functions
-+
-+ These functions are used by C-Kermit to adapt itself to operating
-+ systems where the program can be made to run in a "privileged" mode,
-+ e.g. setuid or setgid in Unix. C-Kermit should NOT read and write files
-+ or start subprocesses as a privileged program. This would present a
-+ serious threat to system security. The security package has been
-+ installed to prevent such security breaches by turning off the
-+ program's special privileges at all times except when they are needed.
-+
-+ In UNIX, the only need Kermit has for privileged status is access to
-+ the UUCP lockfile directory, in order to read, create, and destroy
-+ lockfiles, and to open communication devices that are normally
-+ protected against the user (see the [121]Unix C-Kermit Installation
-+ Instructions for discussion). Therefore, privileges should only be
-+ enabled for these operations and disabled at all other times. This
-+ relieves the programmer of the responsibility of putting expensive and
-+ unreliable access checks around every file access and subprocess
-+ creation.
-+
-+ Strictly speaking, these functions are not required in all C-Kermit
-+ implementations, because their use (so far, at least) is internal to
-+ the Group E modules. However, they should be included in all C-Kermit
-+ implementations for operating systems that support the notion of a
-+ privileged program (UNIX, RSTS/E, what others?).
-+
-+ int
-+ priv_ini()
-+ Determine whether the program is running in privileged status.
-+ If so, turn off the privileges, in such a way that they can be
-+ turned on again when needed. Called from sysinit() at program
-+ startup time. Returns:
-+ 0 on success
-+ nonzero on failure, in which case the program should halt
-+ immediately.
-+
-+ int
-+ priv_on()
-+ If the program is not privileged, this function does nothing. If
-+ the program is privileged, this function returns it to
-+ privileged status. priv_ini() must have been called first.
-+ Returns:
-+ 0 on success
-+ nonzero on failure
-+
-+ int
-+ priv_off()
-+ Turns privileges off (if they are on) in such a way that they
-+ can be turned back on again. Returns:
-+ 0 on success
-+ nonzero on failure
-+
-+ int
-+ priv_can()
-+ Turns privileges off in such a way that they cannot be turned
-+ back on. Returns:
-+ 0 on success
-+ nonzero on failure
-+
-+ int
-+ priv_chk()
-+ Attempts to turns privileges off in such a way that they can be
-+ turned on again later. Then checks to make sure that they were
-+ really turned off. If they were not really turned off, then they
-+ are cancelled permanently. Returns:
-+ 0 on success
-+ nonzero on failure
-+
-+4.E.2.4. Console-Related Functions
-+
-+ These relate to the program's "console", or controlling terminal, i.e.
-+ the terminal that the user is logged in on and types commands at, or on
-+ a PC or workstation, the actual keyboard and screen.
-+
-+ int
-+ conbin(esc) char esc;
-+ Puts the console into "binary" mode, so that Kermit's command
-+ parser can control echoing and other treatment of characters
-+ that the user types. esc is the character that will be used to
-+ get Kermit's attention during packet mode; puts this in a global
-+ place. Sets the ckxech variable. Returns:
-+ -1: on error.
-+ 0: on success.
-+
-+ int
-+ concb(esc) char esc;
-+ Put console in "cbreak" (single-character wakeup) mode. That is,
-+ ensure that each console character is available to the program
-+ immediately when the user types it. Otherwise just like
-+ conbin(). Returns:
-+ -1: on error.
-+ 0: on success.
-+
-+ int
-+ conchk()
-+ Returns a number, 0 or greater, the number of characters waiting
-+ to be read from the console, i.e. the number of characters that
-+ the user has typed that have not been read yet by Kermit.
-+
-+ long
-+ congspd();
-+ Returns the speed ("baud rate") of the controlling terminal, if
-+ known, otherwise -1L.
-+
-+ int
-+ congks(timo) int timo;
-+ Get Keyboard Scancode. Reads a keyboard scan code from the
-+ physical console keyboard. If the timo parameter is greater than
-+ zero, then times out and returns -2 if no character appears
-+ within the given number of seconds. Upon any other kind of
-+ error, returns -1. Upon success returns a scan code, which may
-+ be any positive integer. For situations where scan codes cannot
-+ be read (for example, when an ASCII terminal is used as the
-+ job's controlling terminal), this function is identical to
-+ coninc(), i.e. it returns an 8-bit character value. congks() is
-+ for use with workstations whose keyboards have Alternate,
-+ Command, Option, and similar modifier keys, and Function keys
-+ that generate codes greater than 255.
-+
-+ int
-+ congm()
-+ Console get modes. Gets the current console terminal modes and
-+ saves them so that conres() can restore them later. Returns 1 if
-+ it got the modes OK, 0 if it did nothing (e.g. because Kermit is
-+ not connected with any terminal), -1 on error.
-+
-+ int
-+ coninc(timo) int timo;
-+ Console Input Character. Reads a character from the console. If
-+ the timo parameter is greater than zero, then coninc() times out
-+ and returns -2 if no character appears within the given number
-+ of seconds. Upon any other kind of error, returns -1. Upon
-+ success, returns the character itself, with a value in the range
-+ 0-255 decimal.
-+
-+ VOID
-+ conint(f,s) SIGTYP (*f)(), (*s)();
-+ Sets the console to generate an interrupt if the user types a
-+ keyboard interrupt character, and to transfer control the
-+ signal-handling function f. For systems with job control, s is
-+ the address of the function that suspends the job. Sets the
-+ global variable "backgrd" to zero if Kermit is running in the
-+ foreground, and to nonzero if Kermit is running in the
-+ background. See ckcdeb.h for the definition of SIGTYP. No return
-+ value.
-+
-+ VOID
-+ connoi()
-+ Console no interrupts. Disable keyboard interrupts on the
-+ console. No return value.
-+
-+ int
-+ conoc(c) char c;
-+ Writes character c to the console terminal. Returns:
-+ 0 on failure, 1 on success.
-+
-+ int
-+ conol(s) char *s;
-+ Writes string s to the console. Returns -1 on error, 0 or
-+ greater on success.
-+
-+ int
-+ conola(s) char *s[]; {
-+ Writes an array of strings to the console. Returns -1 on error,
-+ 0 or greater on success.
-+
-+ int
-+ conoll(s) char *s;
-+ Writes string s to the console, followed by the necessary line
-+ termination characters to put the console cursor at the
-+ beginning of the next line. Returns -1 on error, 0 or greater on
-+ success.
-+
-+ int
-+ conres()
-+ Restores the console terminal to the modes obtained by congm().
-+ Returns: -1 on error, 0 on success.
-+
-+ int
-+ conxo(x,s) int x; char *s;
-+ Write x characters from string s to the console. Returns 0 or
-+ greater on success, -1 on error.
-+
-+ char *
-+ conkbg();
-+ Returns a pointer to the designator of the console keyboard
-+ type. For example, on a PC, this function would return "88",
-+ "101", etc. Upon failure, returns a pointer to the empty string.
-+
-+4.E.2.5. Communications Functions
-+
-+ The communication device is the device used for terminal emulation and
-+ file transfer. It may or may not be the same device as the console, and
-+ it may or may not be a terminal (serial-port) device; it could also be
-+ a network connection. For brevity, the communication device is referred
-+ to here as the "tty". When the communication device is the same as the
-+ console device, Kermit is said to be in remote mode. When the two
-+ devices are different, Kermit is in local mode.
-+
-+ int
-+ ttchk()
-+ Returns the number of characters that have arrived at the
-+ communication device but have not yet been read by ttinc(),
-+ ttinl(), and friends. If communication input is buffered (and it
-+ should be), this is the sum of the number of unread characters
-+ in Kermit's buffer PLUS the number of unread characters in the
-+ operating system's internal buffer. The call must be
-+ nondestructive and nonblocking, and as inexpensive as possible.
-+ Returns:
-+ 0: or greater on success,
-+ 0: in case of internal error,
-+ -1: or less when it determines the connection has been broken,
-+ or there is no connection.
-+
-+ That is, a negative return from ttchk() should reliably indicate
-+ that there is no usable connection. Furthermore, ttchk() should
-+ be callable at any time to see if the connection is open. When
-+ the connection is open, every effort must be made to ensure that
-+ ttchk returns an accurate number of characters waiting to be
-+ read, rather than just 0 (no characters) or 1 (1 or more
-+ characters), as would be the case when we use select(). This
-+ aspect of ttchk's operation is critical to successful operation
-+ of sliding windows and streaming, but "nondestructive buffer
-+ peeking" is an obscure operating system feature, and so when it
-+ is not available, we have to do it ourselves by managing our own
-+ internal buffer at a level below ttinc(), ttinl(), etc, as in
-+ the UNIX version (non-FIONREAD case).
-+
-+ An external global variable, clsondisc, if nonzero, means that
-+ if a serial connection drops (carrier on-to-off transition
-+ detected by ttchk()), the device should be closed and released
-+ automatically.
-+
-+ int
-+ ttclos()
-+ Closes the communication device (tty or network). If there were
-+ any kind of exclusive access locks connected with the tty, these
-+ are released. If the tty has a modem connection, it is hung up.
-+ For true tty devices, the original tty device modes are
-+ restored. Returns:
-+ -1: on failure.
-+ 0: on success.
-+
-+ int
-+ ttflui()
-+ Flush communications input buffer. If any characters have
-+ arrived but have not yet been read, discard these characters. If
-+ communications input is buffered by Kermit (and it should be),
-+ this function flushes Kermit's buffer as well as the operating
-+ system's internal input buffer. Returns:
-+ -1: on failure.
-+ 0: on success.
-+
-+ int
-+ ttfluo()
-+ Flush tty output buffer. If any characters have been written but
-+ not actually transmitted (e.g. because the system has been
-+ flow-controlled), remove them from the system's output buffer.
-+ (Note, this function is not actually used, but it is recommended
-+ that all C-Kermit programmers add it for future use, even if it
-+ is only a dummy function that returns 0 always.)
-+
-+ int
-+ ttgmdm()
-+ Looks for the modem signals CTS, DSR, and CTS, and returns those
-+ that are on in as its return value, in a bit mask as described
-+ for ttwmdm, in which a bit is on (1) or off (0) according to
-+ whether the corresponding signal is on (asserted) or off (not
-+ asserted). Return values:
-+ -3: Not implemented
-+ -2: if the line does not have modem control
-+ -1: on error
-+ >=0: on success, with bit mask containing the modem signals.
-+
-+ long
-+ ttgspd()
-+ Returns the current tty speed in BITS (not CHARACTERS) per
-+ second, or -1 if it is not known or if the tty is really a
-+ network, or upon any kind of error. On success, the speed
-+ returned is the actual number of bits per second, like 1200,
-+ 9600, 19200, etc.
-+
-+ int
-+ ttgwsiz()
-+ Get terminal window size. Returns -1 on error, 0 if the window
-+ size can't be obtained, 1 if the window size has been
-+ successfully obtained. Upon success, the external global
-+ variables tt_rows and tt_cols are set to the number of screen
-+ rows and number of screen columns, respectively. As this
-+ function is not implemented in all ck*tio.c modules, calls to it
-+ must be wrapped in #ifdef CK_TTGWSIZ..#endif. NOTE: This
-+ function must be available to use the TELNET NAWS feature
-+ (Negotiate About Window Size) as well as Rlogin.
-+
-+ int
-+ tthang()
-+ Hang up the current tty device. For real tty devices, turn off
-+ DTR for about 1/3-1/2 second (or other length of time, depending
-+ on the system). If the tty is really a network connection, close
-+ it. Returns:
-+ -1: on failure.
-+ 0: if it does not even try to hang up.
-+ 1: if it believes it hung up successfully.
-+
-+ VOID
-+ ttimoff()
-+ Turns off all pending timer interrupts.
-+
-+ int
-+ ttinc(timo) int timo; (function is old, return codes are new)
-+ Reads one character from the communication device. If timo is
-+ greater than zero, wait the given number of seconds and then
-+ time out if no character arrives, otherwise wait forever for a
-+ character. Returns:
-+ -3: internal error (e.g. tty modes set wrong)
-+ -2: communications disconnect
-+ -1: timeout or other error
-+ >=0: the character that was read.
-+ It is HIGHLY RECOMMENDED that ttinc() be internally buffered so
-+ that calls to it are relatively inexpensive. If it is possible
-+ to to implement ttinc() as a macro, all the better, for example
-+ something like:
-+
-+ #define ttinc(t) ( (--txbufn >= 0) ? txbuf[ttbufp++] : txbufr(t) )
-+
-+ (see description of txbufr() below)
-+
-+ int
-+ ttinl(dest,max,timo,eol,start,turn) int max,timo,turn; CHAR
-+ *dest, eol, start;
-+ ttinl() is Kermit's packet reader. Reads a packet from the
-+ communications device, or up to max characters, whichever occurs
-+ first. A line is a string of characters starting with the start
-+ character up to and including the character given in eol or
-+ until the length is exhausted, or, if turn != 0, until the line
-+ turnaround character (turn) is read. If turn is 0, ttinl()
-+ *should* use the packet length field to detect the end, to allow
-+ for the possibility that the eol character appears unprefixed in
-+ the packet data. (The turnaround character is for half-duplex
-+ linemode connections.)
-+
-+ If timo is greater than zero, ttinl() times out if the eol
-+ character is not encountered within the given number of seconds
-+ and returns -1.
-+
-+ The characters that were input are copied into "dest" with their
-+ parity bits stripped if parity is not none. The first character
-+ copied into dest should be the start character, and the last
-+ should be the final character of the packet (the last block
-+ check character). ttinl() should also absorb and discard the eol
-+ and turn characters, and any other characters that are waiting
-+ to be read, up until the next start character, so that
-+ subsequent calls to ttchk() will not succeed simply because
-+ there are some terminators still sitting in the buffer that
-+ ttinl() didn't read. This operation, if performed, MUST NOT
-+ BLOCK (so if it can't be performed in a guaranteed nonblocking
-+ way, don't do it).
-+
-+ On success, ttinl() returns the number of characters read.
-+ Optionally, ttinl() can sense the parity of incoming packets. If
-+ it does this, then it should set the global variable ttprty
-+ accordingly. ttinl() should be coded to be as efficient as
-+ possible, since it is at the "inner loop" of packet reception.
-+ ttinl() returns:
-+ -1: Timeout or other possibly correctable error.
-+ -2: Interrupted from keyboard.
-+ -3: Uncorrectable i/o error -- connection lost, configuration
-+ problem, etc.
-+ >=0: on success, the number of characters that were actually
-+ read and placed in the dest buffer, not counting the trailing
-+ null.
-+
-+ int
-+ ttoc(c) char c;
-+ Outputs the character c to the communication line. If the
-+ operation fails to complete within two seconds, this function
-+ returns -1. Otherwise it returns the number of characters
-+ actually written to the tty (0 or 1). This function should only
-+ be used for interactive, character-mode operations, like
-+ terminal connection, script execution, dialer i/o, where the
-+ overhead of the signals and alarms does not create a bottleneck.
-+ (THIS DESCRIPTION NEEDS IMPROVEMENT -- If the operation fails
-+ within a "certain amount of time"... which might be dependent on
-+ the communication method, speed, etc. In particular,
-+ flow-control deadlocks must be accounted for and broken out of
-+ to prevent the program from hanging indefinitely, etc.)
-+
-+ int
-+ ttol(s,n) int n; char *s;
-+ Kermit's packet writer. Writes the n characters of the string
-+ pointed to to by s. NOTE: It is ttol's responsibility to write
-+ ALL of the characters, not just some of them. Returns:
-+ -1: on a possibly correctable error (so it can be retried).
-+ -3: on a fatal error, e.g. connection lost.
-+ >=0: on success, the actual number of characters written (the
-+ specific number is not actually used for anything).
-+
-+ int
-+ ttopen(ttname,lcl,modem,timo) char *ttname; int *lcl, modem,
-+ timo;
-+ Opens a tty device, if it is not already open. ttopen must check
-+ to make sure the SAME device is not already open; if it is,
-+ ttopen returns successfully without doing anything. If a
-+ DIFFERENT device is currently open, ttopen() must call ttclos()
-+ to close it before opening the new one.
-+
-+ Parameters:
-+
-+ ttname:
-+ character string - device name or network host name.
-+
-+ lcl:
-+ If called with lcl < 0, sets value of lcl as
-+ follows:
-+ 0: the terminal named by ttname is the job's
-+ controlling terminal.
-+ 1: the terminal named by ttname is not the job's
-+ controlling terminal.
-+ If the device is already open, or if the requested
-+ device can't be opened, then lcl remains (and is
-+ returned as) -1.
-+
-+ modem:
-+ Less than zero: this is the negative of the network
-+ type, and ttname is a network host name. Network
-+ types (from [122]ckcnet.h:
-+
-+ NET_TCPB 1 TCP/IP Berkeley (socket) (implemented in [123]ckutio.c)
-+ NET_TCPA 2 TCP/IP AT&T (streams) (not yet implemented)
-+ NET_DEC 3 DECnet (not yet implemented)
-+
-+ Zero or greater: ttname is a terminal device name.
-+ Zero means a direct connection (don't use modem
-+ signals). Positive means use modem signals depending
-+ on the current setting of ttcarr (see ttscarr()).
-+
-+ timo:
-+ > 0: number of seconds to wait for open() to return
-+ before timing out.
-+ <=0: no timer, wait forever (e.g. for incoming
-+ call).
-+ For real tty devices, ttopen() attempts to gain
-+ exclusive access to the tty device, for example in
-+ UNIX by creating a "lockfile" (in other operating
-+ systems, like VMS, exclusive access probably
-+ requires no special action).
-+
-+ Side effects:
-+ Copies its arguments and the tty file descriptor to global
-+ variables that are available to the other tty-related
-+ functions, with the lcl value altered as described above.
-+ Gets all parameters and settings associated with the line
-+ and puts them in a global area, so that they can be
-+ restored by ttres(), e.g. when the device is closed.
-+
-+ Returns:
-+ 0: on success
-+ -5: if device is in use
-+ -4: if access to device is denied
-+ -3: if access to lock mechanism denied
-+ -2: upon timeout waiting for device to open
-+ -1: on other error
-+
-+ int
-+ ttpkt(speed,flow,parity) long speed; int flow, parity;
-+ Puts the currently open tty device into the appropriate modes
-+ for transmitting and receiving Kermit packets.
-+
-+ Arguments:
-+
-+ speed:
-+ if speed > -1, and the device is a true tty device,
-+ and Kermit is in local mode, ttpkt also sets the
-+ speed.
-+
-+ flow:
-+ if in the range 0-3, ttpkt selects the corresponding
-+ type of flow control. Currently 0 is defined as no
-+ flow control, 1 is Xon/Xoff, and no other types are
-+ defined. If (and this is a horrible hack, but it
-+ goes back many years and will be hard to eradicate)
-+ flow is 4, then the appropriate tty modes are set
-+ for modem dialing, a special case in which we talk
-+ to a modem-controlled line without requiring
-+ carrier. If flow is 5, then we require carrier.
-+
-+ parity:
-+ This is simply copied into a global variable so that
-+ other functions (like ttinl, ttinc, etc) can use it.
-+
-+ Side effects:
-+ Copies its arguments to global variables, flushes the
-+ terminal device input buffer.
-+
-+ Returns:
-+ -1: on error.
-+ 0: on success.
-+
-+ int
-+ ttsetflow(int)
-+ Enables the given type of flow control on the open serial
-+ communications device immediately. Arguments are the FLO_xxx
-+ values from ckcdeb.h, except FLO_DIAL, FLO_DIAX, or FLO_AUTO,
-+ which are not actual flow-control types. Returns 0 on success,
-+ -1 on failure.
-+
-+ #ifdef TTSPDLIST
-+ long *
-+ ttspdlist()
-+ Returns a pointer to an array of longs, or NULL on failure. On
-+ success, element 0 of the array contains number, n, indicating
-+ how many follow. Elements 1-n are serial speeds, expressed in
-+ bits per second, that are legal on this platform. The user
-+ interface may use this list to construct a menu, keyword table,
-+ etc.
-+
-+ #endif /* TTSPDLIST */
-+
-+ int
-+ ttres()
-+ Restores the tty device to the modes and settings that were in
-+ effect at the time it was opened (see ttopen). Returns:
-+ -1: on error.
-+ 0: on success.
-+
-+ int
-+ ttruncmd(string) char * string;
-+ Runs the given command on the local system, but redirects its
-+ input and output to the communication (SET LINE, SET PORT, or
-+ SET HOST) device. Returns:
-+ 0: on failure.
-+ 1: on success.
-+
-+ int
-+ ttscarr(carrier) int carrier;
-+ Copies its argument to a variable that is global to the other
-+ tty-related functions, and then returns it. The values for
-+ carrier are defined in ckcdeb.h: CAR_ON, CAR_OFF, CAR_AUTO.
-+ ttopen(), ttpkt(), and ttvt() use this variable when deciding
-+ how to open the tty device and what modes to select. The
-+ meanings are these:
-+
-+ CAR_OFF: Ignore carrier at all times.
-+ CAR_ON: Require carrier at all times, except when dialing. This means,
-+ for example, that ttopen() could hang forever waiting for carrier if it
-+ is not present.
-+ CAR_AUTO: If the modem type is zero (i.e. the connection is direct),
-+ this is the same as CAR_OFF. If the modem type is positive, then heed
-+ carrier during CONNECT (ttvt mode), but ignore it at other times
-+ (packet mode, during SET LINE, etc). Compatible with pre-5A versions of
-+ C-Kermit. This should be the default carrier mode.
-+
-+ Kermit's DIAL command ignores the carrier setting, but ttopen(),
-+ ttvt(), and ttpkt() all honor the carrier option in effect at
-+ the time they are called. None of this applies to remote mode
-+ (the tty device is the job's controlling terminal) or to network
-+ host connections (modem type is negative).
-+
-+ int
-+ ttsndb()
-+ Sends a BREAK signal on the tty device. On a real tty device,
-+ send a real BREAK lasting approximately 275 milliseconds. If
-+ this is not possible, simulate a BREAK by (for example) dropping
-+ down some very low baud rate, like 50, and sending a bunch of
-+ null characters. On a network connection, do the appropriate
-+ network protocol for BREAK. Returns:
-+ -1: on error.
-+ 0: on success.
-+
-+ int
-+ ttsndlb()
-+ Like ttsndb(), but sends a "Long BREAK" (approx 1.5 seconds).
-+ For network connections, it is identical to ttsndb(). Currently,
-+ this function is used only if CK_LBRK is defined (as it is for
-+ UNIX and VMS).
-+
-+ int
-+ ttsspd(cps) int cps;
-+ For serial devices only, set the device transmission speed to
-+ (note carefully) TEN TIMES the argument. The argument is in
-+ characters per second, but transmission speeds are in bits per
-+ second. cps are used rather than bps because high speeds like
-+ 38400 are not expressible in a 16-bit int but longs cannot be
-+ used because keyword-table values are ints and not longs. If the
-+ argument is 7, then the bps is 75, not 70. If the argument is
-+ 888, this is a special code for 75/1200 split-speed operation
-+ (75 bps out, 1200 bps in). Returns:
-+ -1: on error, meaning the requested speed is not valid or
-+ available.
-+ >=0: on success (don't try to use this value for anything).
-+
-+ int
-+ ttvt(speed,flow) long speed; int flow;
-+ Puts the currently open tty device into the appropriate modes
-+ for terminal emulation. The arguments are interpreted as in
-+ ttpkt(). Side effects: ttvt() stores its arguments in global
-+ variables, and sets a flag that it has been called so that
-+ subsequent calls can be ignored so long as the arguments are the
-+ same as in the last effective call. Other functions, such as
-+ ttopen(), ttclose(), ttres(), ttvt(), etc, that change the tty
-+ device in any way must unset this flag. In UNIX Kermit, this
-+ flag is called tvtflg.
-+
-+ int
-+ ttwmdm(mdmsig,timo) int mdmsig, timo;
-+ Waits up to timo seconds for all of the given modem signals to
-+ appear. mdmsig is a bit mask, in which a bit is on (1) or off
-+ (0) according to whether the corresponding signal is to be
-+ waited for. These symbols are defined in ckcdeb.h:
-+ BM_CTS (bit 0) means wait for Clear To Send
-+ BM_DSR (bit 1) means wait for Data Set Ready
-+ BM_DCD (bit 2) means wait for Carrier Detect
-+ Returns:
-+ -3: Not implemented.
-+ -2: This line does not have modem control.
-+ -1: Timeout: time limit exceeded before all signals were
-+ detected.
-+ 1: Success.
-+
-+ int
-+ ttxin(n,buf) int n; CHAR *buf;
-+ Reads x characters from the tty device into the specified buf,
-+ stripping parity if parity is not none. This call waits forever,
-+ there is no timeout. This function is designed to be called only
-+ when you know that at least x characters are waiting to be read
-+ (as determined, for example, by ttchk()). This function should
-+ use the same buffer as ttinc().
-+
-+ int
-+ txbufr(timo) int timo;
-+ Reads characters into the internal communications input buffer.
-+ timo is a timeout interval, in seconds. 0 means no timeout, wait
-+ forever. Called by ttinc() (and possibly ttxin() and ttinl())
-+ when the communications input buffer is empty. The buffer should
-+ be called ttxbuf[], its length is defined by the symbol TXBUFL.
-+ The global variable txbufn is the number of characters available
-+ to be read from ttxbuf[], and txbufp is the index of the next
-+ character to be read. Should not be called if txbufn > 0, in
-+ which case the buffer does not need refilling. This routine
-+ returns:
-+ -2: Communications disconnect
-+ -1: Timeout
-+ >=0: A character (0 - 255) On success, the first character that
-+ was read, with the variables txbufn and txbufp set appropriately
-+ for any remaining characters.
-+ NOTE: Currently this routine is used internally only by the UNIX
-+ and VMS versions. The aim is to make it available to all
-+ versions so there is one single coherent and efficient way of
-+ reading from the communications device or network.
-+
-+4.E.2.6. Miscellaneous system-dependent functions
-+
-+ VOID
-+ ztime(s) char **s;
-+ Returns a pointer, s, to the current date-and-time string in s.
-+ This string must be in the fixed-field format associated with
-+ the C runtime asctime() function, like: "Sun Sep 16 13:23:45
-+ 1973\n" so that callers of this function can extract the
-+ different fields. The pointer value is filled in by ztime, and
-+ the data it points to is not safe, so should be copied to a safe
-+ place before use. ztime() has no return value. As a side effect,
-+ this routine can also fill in the following two external
-+ variables (which must be defined in the system-dependendent
-+ modules for each platform):
-+ long ztusec: Fraction of seconds of clock time, microseconds.
-+ long ztmsec: Fraction of seconds of clock time, milliseconds.
-+ If these variables are not set by zstime(), they remain at their
-+ initial value of -1L.
-+
-+ int
-+ gtimer()
-+ Returns the current value of the elapsed time counter in seconds
-+ (see rtimer), or 0 on any kind of error.
-+
-+ #ifdef GFTIMER
-+ CKFLOAT
-+ gftimer()
-+ Returns the current value of the elapsed time counter in
-+ seconds, as a floating point number, capable of representing not
-+ only whole seconds, but also the fractional part, to the
-+ millisecond or microsecond level, whatever precision is
-+ available. Requires a function to get times at subsecond
-+ precision, as well as floating-point support. That's why it's
-+ #ifdef'd.
-+
-+ #endif /* GFTIMER */
-+
-+ int
-+ msleep(m) int m;
-+ Sleeps (pauses, does nothing) for m milliseconds (a millisecond
-+ is one thousandth of a second). Returns:
-+ -1: on failure.
-+ 0: on success.
-+
-+ VOID
-+ rtimer()
-+ Sets the elapsed time counter to zero. If you want to time how
-+ long an operation takes, call rtimer() when it starts and gtimer
-+ when it ends. rtimer() has no return value.
-+
-+ #ifdef GFTIMER
-+ VOID
-+ rftimer()
-+ Sets the elapsed time counter to zero. If you want to time how
-+ long an operation takes, call rftimer() when it starts and
-+ gftimer when it ends. rftimer() has no return value. Note:
-+ rftimer() is to be used with gftimer() and rtimer() is to be
-+ used with gtimer(). See the rftimer() description.
-+
-+ #endif /* GFTIMER */
-+
-+ int
-+ sysinit()
-+ Does whatever needs doing upon program start. In particular, if
-+ the program is running in any kind of privileged mode, turns off
-+ the privileges (see priv_ini()). Returns:
-+ -1: on error.
-+ 0: on success.
-+
-+ int
-+ syscleanup()
-+ Does whatever needs doing upon program exit. Returns:
-+ -1: on error.
-+ 0: on success.
-+
-+ int
-+ psuspend()
-+ Suspends the Kermit process, puts it in the background so it can
-+ be continued ("foregrounded") later. Returns:
-+ -1: if this function is not supported.
-+ 0: on success.
-+
-+ [ [124]Contents ] [ [125]C-Kermit ] [ [126]Kermit Home ]
-+
-+4.F. Group F: Network Support
-+
-+ As of version 5A, C-Kermit includes support for several networks.
-+ Originally, this was just worked into the ttopen(), ttclos(), ttinc(),
-+ ttinl(), and similar routines in [127]ckutio.c. But this made it
-+ impossible to share this code with non-UNIX versions, like VMS, AOS/VS,
-+ OS/2, etc. So as of edit 168, network code has been separated out into
-+ its own module and header file, ckcnet.c and ckcnet.h:
-+
-+ [128]ckcnet.h: Network-related symbol definitions.
-+ [129]ckcnet.c: Network i/o (TCP/IP, X.25, etc), shared by most
-+ platforms.
-+ [130]cklnet.c: Network i/o (TCP/IP, X.25, etc) specific to Stratus
-+ VOS.
-+
-+ The routines and variables in these modules fall into two categories:
-+
-+ 1. Support for specific network packages like SunLink X.25 and TGV
-+ MultiNet, and:
-+ 2. support for specific network virtual terminal protocols like CCITT
-+ X.3 and TCP/IP Telnet.
-+
-+ Category (1) functions are analogs to the tt*() functions, and have
-+ names like netopen, netclos, nettinc, etc. Group A-D modules do not
-+ (and must not) know anything about these functions -- they continue to
-+ call the old Group E functions (ttopen, ttinc, etc). Category (2)
-+ functions are protocol specific and have names prefixed by a protocol
-+ identifier, like tn for telnet x25 for X.25.
-+
-+ ckcnet.h contains prototypes for all these functions, as well as symbol
-+ definitions for network types, protocols, and network- and protocol-
-+ specific symbols, as well as #includes for the header files necessary
-+ for each network and protocol.
-+
-+ The following functions are to be provided for networks that do not use
-+ normal system i/o (open, read, write, close):
-+
-+ int
-+ netopen()
-+ To be called from within ttopen() when a network connection is
-+ requested. Calling conventions and purpose same as Group E
-+ ttopen().
-+
-+ int
-+ netclos()
-+ To be called from within ttclos() when a network connection is
-+ being closed. Calling conventions and purpose same as Group E
-+ ttclos().
-+
-+ int
-+ nettchk()
-+ To be called from within ttchk(). Calling conventions and
-+ purpose same as Group E ttchk().
-+
-+ int
-+ netflui()
-+ To be called from within ttflui(). Calling conventions and
-+ purpose same as Group E ttflui().
-+
-+ int
-+ netbreak()
-+ To send a network break (attention) signal. Calling conventions
-+ and purpose same as Group E ttsndbrk().
-+
-+ int
-+ netinc()
-+ To get a character from the network. Calling conventions same as
-+ Group E ttsndbrk().
-+
-+ int
-+ nettoc()
-+ Send a "character" (byte) to the network. Calling conventions
-+ same as Group E ttoc().
-+
-+ int
-+ nettol()
-+ Send a "line" (sequence of bytes) to the network. Calling
-+ conventions same as Group E ttol().
-+
-+ Conceivably, some systems support network connections simply by letting
-+ you open a device of a certain name and letting you do i/o to it.
-+ Others (like the Berkeley sockets TCP/IP library on UNIX) require you
-+ to open the connection in a special way, but then do normal i/o (read,
-+ write). In such a case, you would use netopen(), but you would not use
-+ nettinc, nettoc, etc.
-+
-+ VMS TCP/IP products have their own set of functions for all network
-+ operations, so in that case the full range of netxxx() functions is
-+ used.
-+
-+ The technique is to put a test in each corresponding ttxxx() function
-+ to see if a network connection is active (or is being requested), test
-+ for which kind of network it is, and if necessary route the call to the
-+ corresponding netxxx() function. The netxxx() function must also
-+ contain code to test for the network type, which is available via the
-+ global variable ttnet.
-+
-+ [ [131]Contents ] [ [132]C-Kermit ] [ [133]Kermit Home ]
-+
-+4.F.1. Telnet Protocol
-+
-+ (This section needs a great deal of updating...)
-+
-+ As of edit 195, Telnet protocol is split out into its own files, since
-+ it can be implemented in remote mode, which does not have a network
-+ connection:
-+
-+ [134]ckctel.h: Telnet protocol symbol definitions.
-+ [135]ckctel.c: Telnet protocol.
-+
-+ The Telnet protocol is supported by the following variables and
-+ routines:
-+
-+ int tn_init
-+ Nonzero if telnet protocol initialized, zero otherwise.
-+
-+ int
-+ tn_init()
-+ Initialize the telnet protocol (send initial options).
-+
-+ int
-+ tn_sopt()
-+ Send a telnet option.
-+
-+ int
-+ tn_doop()
-+ Receive and act on a telnet option from the remote.
-+
-+ int
-+ tn_sttyp()
-+ Send terminal type using telnet protocol.
-+
-+4.F.2. FTP Protocol
-+
-+ (To be filled in...)
-+
-+4.F.3. HTTP Protocol
-+
-+ (To be filled in...)
-+
-+4.F.4. X.25 Networks
-+
-+ These routines were written SunLink X.25 and have since been adapted to
-+ at least on one other: IBM AIXLink/X.25.
-+
-+ int
-+ x25diag()
-+ Reads and prints X.25 diagnostics
-+
-+ int
-+ x25oobh()
-+ X.25 out of band signal handler
-+
-+ int
-+ x25intr()
-+ Sends X.25 interrupt packet
-+
-+ int
-+ x25reset()
-+ Resets X.25 virtual circuit
-+
-+ int
-+ x25clear()
-+ Clear X.25 virtual circuit
-+
-+ int
-+ x25stat()
-+ X.25 status
-+
-+ int
-+ setqbit()
-+ Sets X.25 Q-bit
-+
-+ int
-+ resetqbit()
-+ Resets X.25 Q-bit
-+
-+ int
-+ x25xin()
-+ Reads n characters from X.25 circuit.
-+
-+ int
-+ x25inl()
-+ Read a Kermit packet from X.25 circuit.
-+
-+ [ [136]Contents ] [ [137]C-Kermit ] [ [138]Kermit Home ]
-+
-+4.F.5. Adding New Network Types
-+
-+ Example: Adding support for IBM X.25 and Hewlett Packard X.25. First,
-+ add new network type symbols for each one. There are already some
-+ network types defined for other X.25 packages:
-+
-+ NET_SX25 is the network-type ID for SunLink X.25.
-+ NET_VX25 is the network-type ID for VOS X.25.
-+
-+ So first you should new symbols for the new network types, giving them
-+ the next numbers in the sequence, e.g.:
-+
-+#define NET_HX25 11 /* Hewlett-Packard X.25 */
-+#define NET_IX25 12 /* IBM X.25 */
-+
-+ This is in ckcnet.h.
-+
-+ Then we need symbols to say that we are actually compiling in the code
-+ for these platforms. These would be defined on the cc command line:
-+
-+ -DIBMX25 (for IBM)
-+ -DHPX25 (for HP)
-+
-+ So we can build C-Kermit versions for AIX and HP-UX both with and
-+ without X.25 support (since not all AIX and IBM systems have the needed
-+ libraries, and so an executable that was linked with them might no
-+ load).
-+
-+ Then in ckcnet.h:
-+
-+#ifdef IBMX25
-+#define ANYX25
-+#endif /* IBMX25 */
-+
-+#ifdef HPX25
-+#define ANYX25
-+#endif /* HPX25 */
-+
-+ And then use ANYX25 for code that is common to all of them, and IBMX25
-+ or HPX25 for code specific to IBM or HP.
-+
-+ It might also happen that some code can be shared between two or more
-+ of these, but not the others. Suppose, for example, that you write code
-+ that applies to both IBM and HP, but not Sun or VOS X.25. Then you add
-+ the following definition to ckcnet.h:
-+
-+#ifndef HPORIBMX25
-+#ifdef HPX25
-+#define HPORIBMX25
-+#else
-+#ifdef IBMX25
-+#define HPORIBMX25
-+#endif /* IBMX25 */
-+#endif /* HPX25 */
-+#endif /* HPORIBMX25 */
-+
-+ You can NOT use constructions like "#if defined (HPX25 || IBMX25)";
-+ they are not portable.
-+
-+ [ [139]Contents ] [ [140]C-Kermit ] [ [141]Kermit Home ]
-+
-+4.G. Group G: Formatted Screen Support
-+
-+ So far, this is used only for the fullscreen local-mode file transfer
-+ display. In the future, it might be extended to other uses. The
-+ fullscreen display code is in and around the routine screenc() in
-+ [142]ckuusx.c.
-+
-+ In the UNIX version, we use the curses library, plus one call from the
-+ termcap library. In other versions (OS/2, VMS, etc) we insert dummy
-+ routines that have the same names as curses routines. So far, there are
-+ two methods for simulating curses routines:
-+
-+ 1. In VMS, we use the Screen Management Library (SMG), and insert
-+ stubs to convert curses calls into SMG calls.
-+ 2. In OS/2, we use the MYCURSES code, in which the stub routines
-+ actually emit the appropriate escape sequences themselves.
-+
-+ Here are the stub routines:
-+
-+ int
-+ tgetent(char *buf, char *term)
-+ Arguments are ignored. Returns 1 if the user has a supported
-+ terminal type, 0 otherwise. Sets a global variable (for example,
-+ "isvt52" or "isdasher") to indicate the terminal type.
-+
-+ VOID
-+ move(int row, int col)
-+ Sends the escape sequence to position the cursor at the
-+ indicated row and column. The numbers are 0-based, e.g. the home
-+ position is 0,0.
-+
-+ int
-+ clear()
-+ Sends the escape sequence to clear the screen.
-+
-+ int
-+ clrtoeol()
-+ Sends the escape sequence to clear from the current cursor
-+ position to the end of the line.
-+
-+ In the MYCURSES case, code must be added to each of the last three
-+ routines to emit the appropriate escape sequences for a new terminal
-+ type.
-+
-+ clearok(curscr), wrefresh()
-+ In real curses, these two calls are required to refresh the
-+ screen, for example after it was fractured by a broadcast
-+ message. These are useful only if the underlying screen
-+ management service keeps a copy of the entire screen, as curses
-+ and SMG do. C-Kermit does not do this itself.
-+
-+ [ [143]Contents ] [ [144]C-Kermit ] [ [145]Kermit Home ]
-+
-+4.H. Group H: Pseudoterminal Support
-+
-+ (To be filled in...)
-+
-+4.I. Group I: Security
-+
-+ (To be filled in...)
-+
-+ [ [146]Contents ] [ [147]C-Kermit ] [ [148]Kermit Home ]
-+
-+APPENDIX I. FILE PERMISSIONS
-+
-+I.1. Format of System-Dependent File Permissions in A-Packets
-+
-+ The format of this field (the "," attribute) is interpreted according
-+ to the System ID ("." Attribute).
-+
-+ For UNIX (System ID = U1), it's the familiar 3-digit octal number, the
-+ low-order 9 bits of the filemode: Owner, Group, World, e.g. 660 =
-+ read/write access for owner and group, none for world, recorded as a
-+ 3-digit octal string. High-order UNIX permission bits are not
-+ transmitted.
-+
-+ For VMS (System ID = D7), it's a 4-digit hex string, representing the
-+ 16-bit file protection WGOS fields (World,Group,Owner,System), in that
-+ order (which is the reverse of how they're shown in a directory
-+ listing); in each field, Bit 0 = Read, 1 = Write, 2 = Execute, 3 =
-+ Delete. A bit value of 0 means permission is granted, 1 means
-+ permission is denied. Sample:
-+
-+ r-01-00-^A/!FWERMIT.EXE'"
-+ s-01-00-^AE!Y/amd/watsun/w/fdc/new/wermit.exe.DV
-+ r-02-01-^A]"A."D7""B8#119980101 18:14:05!#8531&872960,$A20B-!7(#512@ #.Y
-+ s-02-01-^A%"Y.5!
-+
-+ A VMS directory listing shows the file's protection as (E,RWED,RED,RE)
-+ which really means (S=E,O=RWED,G=RED,W=RE), which is reverse order from
-+ the internal storage, so (RE,RED,RWED,E). Now translate each letter to
-+ its corresponding bit:
-+
-+ RE=0101, RED=1101, RWED=1111, E=0010
-+
-+ Now reverse the bits:
-+
-+ RE=1010, RED=0010, RWED=0000, E=1101
-+
-+ This gives the 16-bit quantity:
-+
-+ 1010001000001101
-+
-+ This is the internal representation of the VMS file permission; in hex:
-+
-+ A20B
-+
-+ as shown in the sample packet above.
-+
-+ The VMS format probably would also apply to RSX or any other FILES-11
-+ system.
-+
-+I.2. Handling of Generic Protection
-+
-+ To be used when the two systems are different (and/or do not recognize
-+ or understand each other's local protection codes).
-+
-+ First of all, the book is wrong. This should not be the World
-+ protection, but the Owner protection. The other fields should be set
-+ according to system defaults (e.g. UNIX umask, VMS default protection,
-+ etc), except that no non-Owner field should give more permissions than
-+ the Owner field.
-+
-+ [ [149]Top ] [ [150]Contents ] [ [151]C-Kermit Home ] [ [152]Kermit
-+ Home ]
-+ __________________________________________________________________
-+
-+
-+ C-Kermit Program Logic Manual / [153]The Kermit Project /
-+ [154]kermit@columbia.edu / 30 June 2011
-+
-+References
-+
-+ 1. http://www.columbia.edu/
-+ 2. mailto:kermit@columbia.edu
-+ 3. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 4. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/k95.html
-+ 5. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 6. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckscripts.html
-+ 7. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/current.html
-+ 8. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/whatsnew.html
-+ 9. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckfaq.html
-+ 10. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/support.html
-+ 11. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/
-+ 12. http://www.columbia.edu/
-+ 13. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcplm.html
-+ 14. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 15. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 16. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcplm.html#x1
-+ 17. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcplm.html#x2
-+ 18. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcplm.html#x3
-+ 19. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcplm.html#x4
-+ 20. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcplm.html#x4.A
-+ 21. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcplm.html#x4.B
-+ 22. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcplm.html#x4.C
-+ 23. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcplm.html#x4.D
-+ 24. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcplm.html#x4.E
-+ 25. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcplm.html#x4.F
-+ 26. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcplm.html#x4.G
-+ 27. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcplm.html#x4.H
-+ 28. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcplm.html#x4.I
-+ 29. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcplm.html#xa1
-+ 30. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcplm.html#contents
-+ 31. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcplm.html#contents
-+ 32. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 33. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 34. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckcpro.w
-+ 35. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcplm.html#contents
-+ 36. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 37. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 38. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcplm.html#x3.2
-+ 39. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcplm.html#contents
-+ 40. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 41. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 42. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcplm.html#x4.A
-+ 43. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcplm.html#contents
-+ 44. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 45. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 46. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcplm.html#contents
-+ 47. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 48. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 49. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcplm.html#contents
-+ 50. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 51. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 52. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckclib.h
-+ 53. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckclib.c
-+ 54. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcplm.html#x3.1
-+ 55. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcplm.html#contents
-+ 56. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 57. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 58. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckcsym.h
-+ 59. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckcasc.h
-+ 60. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckcsig.h
-+ 61. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckcdeb.h
-+ 62. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckcker.h
-+ 63. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckcxla.h
-+ 64. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckcmai.c
-+ 65. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckcpro.w
-+ 66. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckcfns.c
-+ 67. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckcfn2.c
-+ 68. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckcfn3.c
-+ 69. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcplm.html#x4.B
-+ 70. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcplm.html#x4.E
-+ 71. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcplm.html#x4.D
-+ 72. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcplm.html#contents
-+ 73. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 74. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 75. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcplm.html#x4.B
-+ 76. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckuxla.c
-+ 77. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckuxla.h
-+ 78. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckcxla.h
-+ 79. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckuxla.h
-+ 80. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckmxla.h
-+ 81. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ck?xla
-+ 82. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckcuni.h
-+ 83. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckcuni.c
-+ 84. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcplm.html#contents
-+ 85. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 86. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 87. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcplm.html#x4.B
-+ 88. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckucmd.h
-+ 89. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckucmd.c
-+ 90. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcplm.html#x4.E
-+ 91. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckuusr.h
-+ 92. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckuusr.c
-+ 93. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckuus2.c
-+ 94. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckuus3.c
-+ 95. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckuus4.c
-+ 96. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckuusy.c
-+ 97. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckuusx.c
-+ 98. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckuver.h
-+ 99. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckuscr.c
-+ 100. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckudia.c
-+ 101. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckucon.c
-+ 102. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckucns.c
-+ 103. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcplm.html#x4.E
-+ 104. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckcmai.c
-+ 105. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcplm.html#contents
-+ 106. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 107. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 108. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckufio.c
-+ 109. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckutio.c
-+ 110. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckusig.c
-+ 111. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckvfio.c
-+ 112. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckusig.c
-+ 113. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckcmai.c
-+ 114. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcplm.html#contents
-+ 115. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 116. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 117. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckutio.c
-+ 118. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckvtio.c
-+ 119. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcplm.html#x2
-+ 120. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcplm.html#xa1
-+ 121. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckuins.html
-+ 122. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckcnet.h
-+ 123. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckutio.c
-+ 124. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcplm.html#contents
-+ 125. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 126. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 127. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckutio.c
-+ 128. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckcnet.h
-+ 129. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckcnet.c
-+ 130. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/cklnet.c
-+ 131. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcplm.html#contents
-+ 132. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 133. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 134. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckctel.h
-+ 135. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckctel.c
-+ 136. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcplm.html#contents
-+ 137. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 138. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 139. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcplm.html#contents
-+ 140. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 141. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 142. ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/c-kermit/ckuusx.c
-+ 143. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcplm.html#contents
-+ 144. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 145. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 146. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcplm.html#contents
-+ 147. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 148. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 149. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcplm.html#top
-+ 150. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckcplm.html#contents
-+ 151. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+ 152. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 153. http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/index.html
-+ 154. mailto:kermit@columbia.edu
---- /dev/null
-+++ ckermit-301/ockermod.ini
-@@ -0,0 +1,144 @@
-+; File CKERMOD.INI, Sample C-Kermit 7.0 customization file.
-+;
-+; This file, which is ONLY A SAMPLE, should be called:
-+;
-+; .mykermrc (UNIX, OS-9, Aegis, BeBox, Plan 9)
-+; CKERMOD.INI (VMS, OpenVMS, AOS/VS, OS/2, Amiga, Atari ST)
-+; ckermod.ini (Stratus VOS)
-+;
-+; This file is executed automatically by the standard C-Kermit initialization
-+; file, CKERMIT.INI (or .kermrc). This file is not executed by C-Kermit itself
-+; unless the initialization file is not found.
-+;
-+; MODify this file to suit your needs and preferences, and install it in your
-+; home directory. Or replace it entirely with a new file.
-+;
-+; The design of this sample customization file lets you fill in a section for
-+; each different operating system where you run C-Kermit.
-+;
-+; In UNIX, if you give this file execute permission and make sure the top
-+; line indicates the full path of the C-Kermit 7.0-or-later executable, you
-+; can execute this file directly, as if it was a shell script, except it is
-+; interpreted by Kermit rather than the shell. This lets you have as many
-+; different startup files as you like, each suited to a particular purpose.
-+;
-+; Authors: Christine Gianone, Frank da Cruz, Jeffrey Altman,
-+; The Kermit Project, Columbia University.
-+; Creation: 23 November 1992 for C-Kermit 5A(188).
-+; Modified: 30 June 1993 for edit 189.
-+; 04 October 1994 for edit 190.
-+; 17 April 1995 for edit 191.
-+; 6 September 1996 for version 6.0, edit 192.
-+; 1 January 2000 for version 7.0, edit 196.
-+; 14 October 2001 for version 8.0, edit 200.
-+
-+ECHO
-+ECHO Executing SAMPLE C-Kermit customization file \v(cmdfile) for \v(system)...
-+ECHO { Please edit this file to reflect your needs and preferences.}
-+ECHO
-+;
-+; ... and then remove the ECHO commands above.
-+
-+COMMENT - Settings that apply to all the systems I use:
-+;
-+set delay 1 ; I escape back quickly
-+set dial display on ; I like to watch C-Kermit dial
-+
-+; Dialing locale and method
-+;
-+; SET DIAL COUNTRY-CODE 1 ; Uncomment and replace with yours
-+; SET DIAL AREA-CODE 000 ; Uncomment and replace with yours
-+; SET DIAL LD-PREFIX 1 ; Uncomment and replace with yours
-+; SET DIAL INTL-PREFIX 011 ; Uncomment and replace with yours
-+; SET DIAL METHOD TONE ; Uncomment and replace with PULSE if necessary
-+; SET DIAL DIRECTORY ... ... ; List dialing directory files here
-+
-+if < \v(version) 600192 -
-+ stop 1 \v(cmdfile): C-Kermit 6.0.192 or later required.
-+
-+set take error on ; Make errors fatal temporarily
-+check if ; Do we have an IF command?
-+set take error off ; Yes we do, back to normal
-+
-+; The ON_EXIT macro is executed automatically when C-Kermit exits.
-+; Define as desired.
-+;
-+define ON_EXIT echo Returning you to \v(system) now.
-+
-+; System-independent quick dialing macro. Depends on having the
-+; macros MYMODEM, MYPORT, and (optionally) MYSPEED defined in the
-+; system-dependent sections below.
-+;
-+define MYDIAL {
-+ if not defined MYMODEM end 1 {\%0: Modem type not defined.}
-+ set modem type \m(MYMODEM)
-+ if fail end 1 {\%0: \m(MYMODEM): Unsupported modem type.}
-+ if not defined MYPORT end 1 {\%0: Communication port not defined.}
-+ set port \m(MYPORT)
-+ if fail end 1 {\%0: SET PORT \m(MYPORT) failed.}
-+ if defined MYFLOW set flow \m(MYFLOW)
-+ if fail end 1 {\%0: SET FLOW \m(MYFLOW) failed.}
-+ if defined MYSPEED set speed \m(MYSPEED)
-+ if fail end 1 {\%0: SET SPEED \m(MYSPEED) failed.}
-+ dial \%1\%2\%3\%4\%5\%6\%7\%8\%9
-+ end \v(status)
-+}
-+
-+forward \v(system) ; Go execute system-dependent commands
-+
-+:UNIX ; UNIX, all versions...
-+define MYPORT /dev/cua ; My dialing environment
-+define MYMODEM usr ; Replace these by what you actually have
-+define MYSPEED 57600
-+;
-+; If you want all your downloads to go to the same directory, no matter
-+; what your current directory is, uncomment and edit the following command:
-+;
-+; set file download-directory ~/download ; Download directory for UNIX
-+
-+; Put other UNIX-specific commands here...
-+end ; End of UNIX section
-+
-+:VMS ; VMS and OpenVMS
-+define MYPORT TXA0: ; My dialing environment
-+define MYMODEM usr ; Replace these by what you actually have
-+define MYSPEED 57600
-+; set file download-directory [\$(USER).DOWNLOAD] ; Download directory for VMS
-+; Put other VMS-specific commands here...
-+end ; End of VMS section
-+
-+:WIN32 ; Windows and OS/2 customizations...
-+:OS/2
-+define MYPORT COM1 ; My dialing environment
-+define MYMODEM usr ; Replace these by what you actually have
-+define MYSPEED 57600
-+set command byte 8 ; Use 8 bits between Kermit and console
-+set xfer char latin1 ; Use Latin-1 for text file transfer
-+set term char latin1 ; And use Latin-1 during CONNECT mode
-+; set file download-directory C:\DOWNLOADS
-+end
-+
-+:OS9/68K ; OS-9/68000
-+define MYPORT /t3 ; My dialing environment
-+define MYMODEM usr ; Replace these by what you actually have
-+define MYSPEED 9600
-+; set file download-directory ~/downloads
-+end ; End of OS-9 section
-+
-+:AOS/VS ; Data General AOS/VS
-+define MYPORT @con3 ; My dialing environment
-+define MYMODEM usr ; Replace these by what you actually have
-+define MYSPEED 9600
-+; set file download-directory \v(home)DOWNLOADS
-+end
-+
-+; And so on, you get the idea...
-+; Fill in the sections that apply to you.
-+
-+:Stratus_VOS ; Stratus VOS
-+:Amiga ; Commodore Amiga
-+:Atari_ST ; Atari ST
-+:Macintosh ; Apple Macintosh
-+:unknown ; Others
-+
-+; (End of CKERMOD.INI)
---- /dev/null
-+++ ckermit-301/ckaaaa.txt
-@@ -0,0 +1,380 @@
-+ckaaaa.txt June 2011
-+
-+ C-KERMIT VERSION 9.0.300
-+ OVERVIEW OF FILES
-+
-+ Communications software for UNIX and (Open)VMS.
-+
-+ And in former versions also for:
-+ Stratus VOS, AOS/VS, QNX,
-+ Plan 9, OS-9, Apollo Aegis, and the Commodore Amiga.
-+ The Apple Macintosh, the Atari ST.
-+
-+ The Kermit Project - Columbia University
-+
-+ http://kermit.columbia.edu/ - kermit@columbia.edu
-+
-+
-+ Copyright (C) 1985, 2011,
-+ Trustees of Columbia University in the City of New York.
-+ All rights reserved. See the C-Kermit COPYING.TXT file or the
-+ copyright text in the ckcmai.c module for disclaimer and permissions.
-+ BRIEFLY: C-Kermit 9.0 has the OPEN SOURCE 3-clause MODIFIED BSD LICENSE.
-+
-+
-+DOCUMENTATION
-+
-+ C-Kermit is documented in the book "Using C-Kermit", Second Edition, by
-+ Frank da Cruz and Christine M. Gianone, Digital Press, ISBN 1-55558-164-1,
-+ supplementated by Web-based updates for C-Kermit 7.0, 8.0, and 9.0.
-+
-+PLATFORMS
-+ Security
-+ Name Included Last Updated
-+
-+ Unix Yes 9.0.300 30 Jun 2011
-+ (Open)VMS Yes 9.0.300 30 Jun 2011
-+ Windows (K95) Yes 8.0.208 14 Mar 2003 (K95 2.1)
-+ OS/2 (K95) Yes 8.0.208 14 Mar 2003 (K95 2.1)
-+ DG AOS/VS No 7.0.196 1 Jan 2000
-+ Stratus VOS No 7.0.196 1 Jan 2000
-+ Bell Plan 9 No 7.0.196 1 Jan 2000
-+ Microware OS-9 No 7.0.196 1 Jan 2000
-+ Commodore Amiga No 7.0.196 1 Jan 2000
-+ Macintosh No 5A(190) 16 Aug 1994 (Mac Kermit 0.991)
-+ Atari ST No 5A(189) 30 Jun 1993
-+
-+QUICK START FOR FTP USERS
-+
-+ If you have a Web browser, go to:
-+
-+ http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
-+
-+ And take it from there. Otherwise...
-+
-+ The definitive FTP source for Kermit software is kermit.columbia.edu.
-+ Kermit software obtained from other FTP sites is not necessarily complete
-+ or up to date, and may have been modified.
-+
-+C-Kermit for UNIX computers that have a C compiler and 'make' program:
-+
-+ Directory kermit/archives, binary mode, file cku211.tar.Z or cku211.tar.gz
-+
-+ This is a compressed tar archive of UNIX C-Kermit source code, makefile, and
-+ other files. It unpacks into its current directory, so download it into a
-+ fresh directory. Transfer in binary mode, uncompress (or gunzip), untar (tar
-+ xvf cku211.tar), and then give the appropriate "make" command to build for
-+ your UNIX system; read the comments in the makefile and ckuins.txt for
-+ further info.
-+
-+C-Kermit for VMS:
-+
-+ If you have VMS UNZIP, get the file kermit/archives/ckv211.zip in binary
-+ mode, unzip -aa, and build with CKVKER.COM (@ckvker.com). Read the comments
-+ at the top of CKVKER.COM for details.
-+
-+Others: In the kermit/f or kermit/test directories under the appropriate
-+prefixes, explained below.
-+
-+
-+INSTALLATION
-+
-+Installation procedures depend on the operating system. Please read the
-+CK?INS.TXT, if any, file for your operating system (?=U for UNIX, V for VMS,
-+etc). Please note the naming and placement for the initialization files:
-+
-+ CKERMIT.INI
-+ .kermrc in the user's home directory (UNIX).
-+ CKERMIT.INI in the user's home directory (other OS's).
-+
-+
-+ CKERMOD.INI
-+ .mykermrc in the user's home directory (UNIX).
-+ CKERMOD.INI elsewhere.
-+
-+ DIALING DIRECTORIES
-+ Dialing directory files can be system-wide, per-group, or per-user, or
-+ any combination. For example, there can be a corporate wide directory
-+ shared by all users, a supplemental directory for each division or
-+ department, and a personal directory for each user. Simply be sure the
-+ dialing directory files are identified a SET DIAL DIRECTORY command in
-+ the user's (or the system-wide) C-Kermit initialization file, or in the
-+ environment variable (logical name, symbol) K_DIAL_DIRECTORY. (The
-+ standard initialization file looks by default in the user's home or login
-+ directory.) When installing C-Kermit on multiuser platforms from which
-+ users will dial out, you can also set environment variables for area
-+ code, country code, and the various dialing prefixes as described on page
-+ 478 of "Using C-Kermit" (second edition), so users don't have to worry
-+ about defining these items themselves. Network directories and service
-+ directories can also be set up in a similar manner.
-+
-+ DOCUMENTATION
-+ In UNIX, the general C-Kermit man page (or one of the versions tailored
-+ for a specific platform, like HP-UX or Solaris) should be installed in
-+ the appropriate place. In VMS, the VMS help topic (CKVKER.HLP) should
-+ be installed as described in CKVINS.TXT. Plain-text documentation such
-+ as CKERMIT2.TXT should be put in whatever place people are accustomed
-+ to looking.
-+
-+FILES AND FILE NAMING CONVENTIONS
-+
-+C-Kermit is a family of Kermit programs for many different computer systems.
-+The program shares a common set of system-independent file transfer protocol
-+modules, written in the C language. System-dependent operations are collected
-+into system-specific modules for each system.
-+
-+C-Kermit file names all start with the letters "CK", followed by a single
-+letter indicating the subgroup. When referring to these files in the UNIX,
-+AOS/VS, or VOS environments, use lowercase letters, rather than the uppercase
-+letters shown here. Subgroups:
-+
-+ _: Security/Authentication/Encryption code, possibly regulated by law
-+ a: General descriptive material and documentation
-+ b: BOO file encoders and decoders (obsolete)
-+ c: All platforms with C compilers
-+ d: Data General AOS/VS
-+ e: Reserved for "ckermit" files, like CKERMIT.INI, CKERMIT80.TXT
-+ f: (reserved)
-+ g: (reserved)
-+ h: (reserved)
-+ i: Commodore Amiga (Intuition)
-+ j: (unused)
-+ k: (unused)
-+ l: Stratus VOS
-+ m: Macintosh with Mac OS
-+ n: Microsoft Windows NT
-+ o: OS/2 and/or Microsoft Windows 95/98/ME/NT/2000/XP/...
-+ p: Bell Labs Plan 9
-+ q: (reserved)
-+ r: DEC PDP-11 with RSTS/E (reserved)
-+ s: Atari ST GEMDOS (last supported in version 5A(189))
-+ t: DEC PDP-11 with RT-11 (reserved)
-+ u: UNIX or environments with UNIX-like C libraries
-+ v: VMS and OpenVMS
-+ w: Wart (Lex-like preprocessor, used with all systems)
-+ x: (reserved)
-+ y: (reserved)
-+ z: (reserved)
-+ 0-3: (reserved)
-+ 4: IBM AS/400 (reserved but probably never will be used)
-+ 5-8: (reserved)
-+ 9: Microware OS-9
-+
-+Examples:
-+
-+ ckaaaa.txt - This file
-+ ckufio.c - File i/o for UNIX
-+ ckstio.c - Communications i/o for the Atari ST
-+ makefile - makefile for building UNIX C-Kermit
-+ ckpker.mk - makefile for building Plan 9 C-Kermit
-+ ckvker.com - build procedure for VMS C-Kermit
-+
-+IMPORTANT FILES (use lowercase names on UNIX, VOS, or AOS/VS):
-+
-+ ckaaaa.txt - This file (overview of the C-Kermit files).
-+ For system-specific distributions, this will normally
-+ be replaced by a system-specific READ.ME file.
-+
-+ ckermit70.txt - Updates: Supplement to "Using C-Kermit", 2nd Ed, for 7.0.
-+ ckermit80.txt - Updates: Supplement to "Using C-Kermit", 2nd Ed, for 8.0.
-+ ckututor.txt - C-Kermit Tutorial for Unix (plain text)
-+ ckcbwr.txt - "Beware file" (limitations, known bugs, hints), general.
-+ ckermit.ini - Standard initialization file (rename to .kermrc in UNIX, OS-9)
-+ ckermod.ini - Sample customization file (rename to .mykermrc in UNIX, OS-9)
-+
-+The following can be found at the Kermit FTP site:
-+
-+ ckermit.kdd - Sample dialing directory file (rename to .kdd in UNIX, OS-9)
-+ ckermit.knd - Sample dialing directory file (rename to .knd in UNIX, OS-9)
-+ ckermit.ksd - Sample services directory file (rename to .ksd in UNIX, OS-9)
-+ ckedemo.ksc - Demonstration macros from "Using C-Kermit"
-+ ckepage.ksc - Ditto
-+ ckevt.ksc - Ditto
-+
-+UNIX-specific files:
-+
-+ ckuins.txt - UNIX-specific installation instructions.
-+ ckubwr.txt - UNIX-specific beware file.
-+ ckuker.nr - "man page" for UNIX.
-+
-+VMS-specific files:
-+
-+ ckvins.txt - VMS-specific installation instructions.
-+ ckvbwr.txt - VMS-specific beware file
-+ ckvker.hlp - VMS C-Kermit HELP topic (needs updating).
-+
-+DG AOS/VS-specific files:
-+
-+ ckdins.txt - Data General AOS/VS C-Kermit installation instructions
-+ ckdbwr.txt - AOS/VS "beware" file
-+ ckd*.cli - Procedures for building AOS/VS C-Kermit
-+
-+The following files are of interest mainly to programmers and historians
-+(find them at the Kermit ftp site in the kermit/f directory):
-+
-+ ckcker.ann - Release announcements.
-+ ckccfg.txt - Configuration information (feature selection), general.
-+ ckcplm.txt - Program logic manual (for programmers).
-+ ckc300.txt - Program update history for edit 212-300 (C-Kermit 9.0).
-+ ckc211.txt - Program update history for edit 201-211.
-+ ckc200.txt - Program update history for edit 198-200 (big)
-+ ckc197.txt - Program update history for edit 195-197 (big)
-+ ckc190.txt - Program update history for edits 189-190 (big).
-+ ckc188.txt - Program update history, edits 179-188 (big).
-+ ckc178.txt - Program edit history, 5A edits through 178 (very big).
-+ ckcv4f.txt - Program edit history, version 4F.
-+ ckcv4e.txt - Program edit history, version 4E.
-+
-+BINARIES
-+
-+If you have FTP access to kermit.columbia.edu (also known as
-+kermit.cc.columbia.edu, ftp.cc.columbia.edu), you can also retrieve various
-+C-Kermit binaries from the directory kermit/bin/ck*.*, or more conventiently
-+from the web page:
-+
-+ http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ck80binaries.html
-+
-+Test versions would be in kermit/test/bin/ck*.*. Be sure to transfer these
-+files in binary mode. The READ.ME file in that directory explains what's
-+what.
-+
-+SOURCE FILES
-+
-+The source files for the UNIX version (all UNIX versions) are available in
-+kermit/archives/ckuNNN.tar.Z, approximately 1MB in size. Transfer this file
-+in binary mode. This is a compressed tar archive. There is also a gzip'd
-+version, cku211.tar.gz. To get the binary tar archive:
-+
-+ mkdir kermit (at shell prompt, make a Kermit directory)
-+ cd kermit (make it your current directory)
-+
-+ ftp kermit.columbia.edu (make an ftp connection)
-+ user: anonymous (log in as user "anonymous", lower case!)
-+ password: (use your email id as a password)
-+ cd kermit/archives (go to the archives directory)
-+ type binary (specify binary file transfer)
-+ get cku300.tar.Z (get the tar archive) (or get cku192.tar.gz)
-+ bye (disconnect and exit from ftp)
-+
-+ uncompress cku300.tar.Z (at the shell prompt, uncompress the archive)
-+ tar xvf cku300.tar (extract the files from the tar archive)
-+ make xxx (build C-Kermit for your system)
-+
-+(where "xxx" is the makefile entry appropriate for your system.)
-+
-+All C-Kermit source and other text files are also kept separately in the
-+kermit/f directory. The files necessary to build a particular implementation
-+of C-Kermit are listed in the appropriate makefile or equivalent:
-+
-+ UNIX: makefile (or rename ckuker.mak to makefile)
-+ 2.11 BSD: ckubs2.mak (rename to makefile), ckustr.sed
-+ Plan 9: ckpker.mk (rename to mkfile)
-+ Macintosh: ckmker.mak (rename to kermit.make, use MPW C 3.2)
-+ VMS: CKVKER.COM (DCL) (and optionally also CKVKER.MMS)
-+ or CKVOLD.COM (for VMS 4.x)
-+ Amiga: CKIKER.MAK (Aztec C) or CKISAS.MAK (SAS C)
-+ Atari ST: CKSKER.MAK
-+ OS-9: ck9ker.mak or ck9ker.gcc
-+ AOS/VS: ckdmak.cli, ckdcc.cli, ckdlnk.cli
-+Stratus VOS: cklmak.cm
-+
-+Minimal source files for building selected versions (these patterns get all
-+the files you need, and in some cases maybe a few extra):
-+
-+ UNIX: ck[cuw]*.[cwh] (including QNX, Plan 9, and BeBox)
-+ UNIX: ck[cuw_]*.[cwh] (Unix with security modules)
-+ VMS: ck[cuwv]*.[cwh] VMS
-+ VMS: ck[cuwv_]*.[cwh] VMS with SSL/TLS
-+ Mac: ck[cuwm]*.[cwhr] Old Mac OS, not Mac OS X, which is UNIX.
-+ AOS/VS: ck[cuwd]*.[cwh]
-+ VOS: ck[cwhl]*.[cwh]
-+ Amiga: ck[cuwi]*.[cwh]
-+ Atari: ck[cuws]*.[cwh]
-+ OS-9: ck[cuw9]*.[cwha]
-+
-+Finally, here is a more detailed description of the C-Kermit file naming
-+conventions. A C-Kermit filename has the form:
-+
-+ CK<system><what>.<type>
-+
-+where:
-+
-+<system> is described earlier in this file;
-+
-+<type> is the file type (use lowercase on UNIX, VOS, or AOS/VS):
-+
-+ c: C language source
-+ h: Header file for C language source
-+ w: Wart preprocessor source, converted by Wart (or Lex) to a C program
-+ r: Macintosh resource file (8-bit text)
-+ a: Assembler source
-+
-+ txt: Plain text.
-+ nr: Nroff/Troff text formatter source for UNIX "man page"
-+ mss: Scribe text formatter source
-+ ps: Typeset material to be printed on a PostScript printer
-+ pdf: An Adobe PDF file
-+ hlp: A VMS Help topic
-+
-+ ini: Initialization file
-+ ksc: A Kermit Script to be executed by the TAKE command
-+ kdd: A Kermit Dialing Directory
-+ knd: A Kermit Network Directory
-+ ksd: A Kermit Services Directory
-+
-+ mak: A Makefile or other build procedure (often needs renaming)
-+ com: (VMS only) a DCL command procedure
-+ cli: (AOS/VS only) a command procedure
-+ cmd: (OS/2 only) a Rexx command procedure
-+
-+ boo: "boo"-encoded executable program, decode with CKBUNB program.
-+ hex: "hex"-encoded executable program, decode with CKVDEH program (VMS only).
-+ hqx: BinHex'd Macintosh Kermit program, decode with BinHex version 4.0.
-+ uue: A uuencoded binary file, decode with uudecode or (DG only) CKDECO.
-+
-+ def: An OS/2 linker definitions file.
-+ sh: A UNIX shell script.
-+ sed: A UNIX sed (editor) script.
-+ str: A file of character strings extracted from C-Kermit (BSD 2.1x only).
-+
-+<what> is mnemonic (up to 3 characters) for what's in the file:
-+
-+NOTE: After C-Kermit 6.0, text filetypes such as .DOC and .HLP were changed
-+to .TXT to avoid confusion in Windows-based Web browsers, which would
-+otherwise mistake them for Microsoft Word or Windows Help documents.
-+
-+ aaa: A "read-me" file, like this one
-+ ins: Installation instructions or procedures
-+ bwr: "Beware" file -- things to watch out for, hints and tips
-+ plm: Program Logic Manual
-+ ker: General C-Kermit definitions, information, documentation
-+
-+ nnn: Digits: C-Kermit edit number (e.g. cku300.tar.gz)
-+ cmd: Command parsing
-+ con: CONNECT command
-+ cns: CONNECT command (UNIX only - version that uses select(), not fork())
-+ deb: Debug/Transaction Log formats, Typedefs
-+ dia: Modem/Dialer control
-+ fio: System-depdendent File I/O
-+ fns: Protocol support functions
-+ fn2: More protocol support functions (and FN3, ...)
-+ lib: Common library routines module
-+ mai: Main program
-+ net: Network i/o module
-+ pro: Protocol
-+ scr: SCRIPT command
-+ tel: Telnet protocol module
-+ tio: System-dependent communications i/o & control and interrupt handing
-+ sig: Signal handling module
-+ usr: Interactive/script user interface
-+ us2: More user interface (mainly help text)
-+ us3: Still more user interface (and USR4, USR5, USR6, USR7)
-+ usx: Common user interface functions
-+ usy: Command-line parsing
-+ xla: Character set translation module
-+ uni: Unicode support
-+ pty: Pseudoterminal support
-+ mdb: Malloc-debugging module (not included in real builds)
-+ str: Strings module (only for 2.xBSD)
-+
-+(End of ckaaaa.txt)