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%-38.38sOPOPOPOQOQOQOROROROSOSOS[16~[16~OT[17~[17~OU[18~[18~OV[19~[19~OW[20~[20~OX[21~[21~OY[23~[23~OY[24~[24~OY[1~[1~[H[5~[5~[V[AOA[A[DOD[D[COC[C[BOB[B[4~[4~[Y[6~[6~[U[2~[2~[@[3~[3~ [?1;0c[?c[%d;%dR[?1;2c[?c[%c;1;1;120;120;1;0xcursor.oncursor.offlinewrap.onlinewrap.off@(#)Minicom V1.83.1p &X &\ &` &d &h &l &p &t &x &| &€ &„ &ˆ & &˜ &œ &¤ &¬ &° &ø &Ą &Ä &Ģ &Ō &Ų &ą &č &ģ &ō &ü ' ' ' ' ' '$ '( ', '0 '4 '8 '< '@ 'D 'H 'L 'P 'T 'X '\ '` 'd 'h 'l 'p 't 'x '| '€ '„ 'ˆ 'Œ ' '” '˜ 'œ  !"#$%&'()*+,-./0123456789:;<=>?@ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ[\]^_`abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz{|}~€‚ƒ„…†‡ˆ‰Š‹ŒŽ‘’“”•–—˜™š›œžŸ ”¢£¤„¦§Ø©Ŗ«¬­®Æ°±²³“µ¶·ø¹ŗ»¼½¾æĄĮĀĆÄÅĘĒČÉŹĖĢĶĪĻŠŃŅÓŌÕÖ×ŲŁŚŪÜŻŽßąįāćäåęēčéźėģķīļšńņóōõö÷ųłśūüżž’YUNYYzmodem D8YUNYYymodem DLYUNYNxmodem D`NDNYYzmodem DtNDNYYymodem DˆYDNYNxmodem DœYUYNNkermit D°NDYNNkermit DÄYUNYNascii DŲ Dä Dš Dü/usr/local/bin/sz -vv E/usr/local/bin/sb -vv E?@ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ[\]^_`abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz{|}~€‚ƒ„…†‡ˆ‰Š‹ŒŽ‘’“”•–—˜™š›œžŸ ”¢£¤„¦§Ø©Ŗ«¬­®Æ°±²³“µ¶·ø¹ŗ»¼½¾æĄĮĀĆÄÅĘĒČÉŹĖĢĶĪĻŠŃŅÓŌÕÖ×ŲŁŚŪÜŻŽßąįāćäåęēčéźėģķīļšńņóōõö÷ųłśūüżž’’’’’%s/%sa%04d%02d%02d %02d:%02d:%02d %s/%sCannot chdir to %.30s%dUploadDownloadPlease enter file names%s %suploaddownload%.30s %s - Press CTRL-C to quitOut of memory: could not fork()%19sReceivingSendingBytesOut of memory: could not fork()Cannot re-create lockfile!%05d minicom %.20s %s=%sSame as last A - Username : B - Password : C - Name of script :Run a script %s %s %s %s %s %s %d%s %s %s %sOut of memory: could not fork()LOGINPASSTERMLINChange which setting? (Return to run, ESC to stop)~`$&*()=|{};?></bin/shsh-cr.:;, :;, ’’’’ Yes No %*.*s>%*.*s %%-%ds[%s] %%-%ds[%s]%s/%sone or more filesa filea directorydownloaduploadSelect %s for %sDirectory: %%-%ds...%s...//Can't back up!//%s/%s Can select only one!Goto directory:Filename pattern:Can select only one!Tag pattern:No file(s) taggedUntag pattern:No file(s) untaggedFile: "%s" exists!. Over-write?no such file!BEEP! PH PT R€ [Goto] [Prev] [Show] [Tag] [Untag] [Okay] ( Escape to exit, Space to tag )Too many files tagged - buffer would overflowNo file selected - enter filename:readdir..%s/%sDBUG: initial readdir() failed (errno == %d)  C“ CĄ CĢ CŲ Cä Cš Cü D D D Initializing ModemResetting ModemHanging upHangup (%ld:%02ld:%02ld)%2dSending BREAK No connection: %s. Max retriesAutodial %s : %s Dialing At : %s Last on : %s at %s Dialing : %s At : %s Last on : %s at %s Time : %-3d Attempt #%dCancelled%ld%s %s, %s%4.4d%2.2d%2.2d%02d:%02d %s %-3d TimeoutCurr8N11Manually entered number%s/.dialdirrPhonelist garbled (?)cp %s %s.%hdOld dialdir copied as %s.%hd%s/.dialdirwCan't write to ~/.dialdirError writing ~/.dialdir!VT102MINIXANSI A - Name : B - Number : C - Dial string # : D - Local echo : E - Script : F - Username : G - Password : H - Terminal Emulation : I - Backspace key sends : J - Linewrap : K - Line Settings : L - Conversion table :Change which setting?%s %s %s %s %s %d %s %s %s %s %s %s %s %s %s %s DeleteBackspace%s %s OnOff%s %s %s %s %s%s%s %s %s Times on : %d%d%sDelete BackspaceOn OffDelete BackspaceOn Off%s %s%s%s %*.*s>%*.*s Yes No DELBS%ld,;,;Dialing Directory%*.*s%cFind an entryRemove entry?%*.*s%*.*sEnter number tģ tų x wŠ r\ rd rl xh xŒ Press any key to continue.. Retry in %2d seconds Retry in %2d seconds You are already online! Hang up first. Escape to cancel, space to retry.Connected. Press any key to continueCannot open ~/.dialdir: permission deniedPhonelist garbled (unknown version?)Unknown dialing directory versionOut of memory while reading dialing directory Last dialed : %s %s Dial Find Add Edit Remove moVe Manual %2d %c%-16.16s%-16.16s%8.8s %5.5s %4d %-15.15s Entry "%s" not found. Enter dialdir?( Escape to exit, Space to tag ) Move entry up/down, Escape to exit Name Number Last on Times Script rrrLCK.Change which setting?Logging options%s %s %s %s %s %s %s %s A - Download directory : B - Upload directory : C - Script directory : D - Script program : E - Kermit program : F - Logging optionsChange which setting?%s %.44s %s %.44s %s %.44s %s %.44s %s %.44s %s YesNo %c%c%c%c%c Name ProgramName U/D FullScr IO-Red. Multi%c -%s %c%s %s%s %sDelete which protocol? - %c%cNo %s %s Yes%s %s A - Serial Device : B - Lockfile Location : C - Callin Program : D - Callout Program : E - Bps/Par/Bits : F - Hardware Flow Control : G - Software Flow Control :Change which setting?%s %.41s %s %.41s %s %.41s %s %.41s %s %s %s%s%s %s %s %s %s %s %s%s%s %s %s DTE speed line speed A - Init string ......... B - Reset string ........ C - Dialing prefix #1.... D - Dialing suffix #1.... E - Dialing prefix #2.... F - Dialing suffix #2.... G - Dialing prefix #3.... H - Dialing suffix #3.... I - Connect string ...... J - No connect strings .. K - Hang-up string ...... L - Dial cancel string .. M - Dial time ........... N - Delay before redial . O - Number of tries ..... P - DTR drop time (0=no). Q - Auto bps detect ..... R - Modem has DCD line .. S - Status line shows ... T - Multi-line untag ....Change which setting? %s %.48s %s %.48s %s %.48s %s %.48s %s %.48s %s %.48s %s %.48s %s %.48s %s %.48s %s %-20.20s %.20s %-20.20s %.20s %s %.48s %s %.48s %s %.3s %s %.3s %s %.3s %s %.3s %s %s %s %s %s %s %s %s %s (Return or Esc to exit)ld A - Command key is : B - Backspace key sends : C - Status line is : D - Alarm sound : E - Foreground Color (menu): F - Background Color (menu): G - Foreground Color (term): H - Background Color (term): I - Foreground Color (stat): J - Background Color (stat): K - History Buffer Size : L - Macros file : N - Macros enabled : O - Character conversion :Screen and keyboard %s %s %s %s %s %s %s %s %s %s %s %s %s %s %s %s %s %s %s %s %s %s %s %s M - Edit Macros %s %s %s %s %s History Buffer SizeProgram new command key the META or ALT key enter: Press new command key: Meta-8th bit Escape (Meta)^%c BSDEL%s disabledenabled%s %s%s %s %s %s %s %s 05000%s r+Reading macros%s%-16.16s A - Terminal emulation : B - Backspace key sends : C - Status line is : D - Newline delay (ms) :Change which setting?Terminal settings VT102ANSI%s %s %s %s %s %s %s %d BSDELVT102ANSI%s %s BSDEL%s disabledenabled%s %d%-3dwCannot write to %sConfiguration savedwCannot write to %sConfiguration savedCHANGEDwCannot write macros file %sMacros savedSAVED%s/minirc.%s/usr/local/libFilenames and pathsFile transfer protocolsSerial port setupModem and dialingScreen and keyboardSave setup as..ExitExit from Minicom/usr/local/libSave setup as %sconfigurationBLACKREDGREENYELLOWBLUEMAGENTACYANWHITE3001200240048009600192003840057600115200230400CurrComm Parameters E: 9600 P: Space I: 115200 Q: 8-N-1 Q: 8-N-1 J: 230400 R: 7-E-1 R: 7-E-1 K: Current Choice, or to exit? Current: %5s %s%s%c [none] %c : %.67s F1 to F10 Macros %s CHANGEDCHANGEDCHANGEDCHANGEDCHANGEDCHANGEDCHANGEDCHANGEDCHANGEDCHANGEDCharacter conversion%3d (%c) %3d %3d %3d (%c) %3d %3d %3d (%c) %3d %3d %3d (%c) %3d %3d A - load table B - save table file:%s F - convert capture: %s Load file: %sSave as file: %sCharacter to be edited: %d%uChange input to: %s%d%uChange output to: %s%drbCannot open conversion table %swb †4 †< †@ †H †P †X †` †hminicom: WARNING: configuration file not found, using defaults minicom: there is no global configuration file %s Ask your sysadm to create one (with minicom -s). minicom: cannot open macro file %s You are not allowed to change this parameterYou are not allowed to change this parameterYou are not allowed to change this parameter A - File name (empty=disable) : B - Log connects and hangups : C - Log file transfers :M Zmodem download string activates...N Use filename selection window......O Prompt for download directory......Change which setting? (SPACE to delete)%c %-10.10s %-31.31s %c %c %c %c %cModem and dialing parameter setupChange which setting? (Esc to exit)Menu foreground == background color, change!Terminal foreground == background color, change! You have changed the history buffer size. You will need to save the configuration file and restart minicom for the change to take effect. Hit a key to Continue... Press the new command key. If you want to use o SPACE if your meta key sets the 8th bit high o ESC if your meta key sends the ESCAPE prefix (standard) ERROR: you do not have permission to create a file there!ERROR: cannot open macro file %sERROR: Macros have changed but no filename is set!You are not allowed to create a configurationGive name to save this configuration? Speed Parity Data A: 300 L: None S: 5 B: 1200 M: Even T: 6 C: 2400 N: Odd U: 7 D: 4800 O: Mark V: 8 F: 19200 Stopbits Stopbits G: 38400 W: 1 W: 1 H: 57600 X: 2 X: 2 Change which setting? (Esc to exit) (LEGEND: ^M = C-M, ^L = C-L, ^G = C-G, ^R = C-R, ^~ = pause 1 second, \u = username, \p = password, \\ = \) char in out char in out char in out char in out C - edit char D - next screen E - prev screen Input character ascii value 0-255Input character ascii value 0-255Input character ascii value 0-255Cannot write conversion table %s †p †t †| †„ †Œ †” †œ †¤ †¬ †“ †¼ …l …€ …˜ …¬ …Ą ŁØ …Ō …ä …ģ –Š –Ü –č –ō — — —Minicom Command SummaryMain FunctionsOther FunctionsSuspend minicom....J lineWrap on/off....W| scroll Back........BCommands can be called by %s Dialing directory..D run script (Go)....G | Clear Screen.......C Send files.........S Receive files......R | cOnfigure Minicom..O comm Parameters....P Add linefeed.......A | Capture on/off.....L Hangup.............H | eXit and reset.....X send break.........F initialize Modem...M | Quit with no reset.Q Terminal settings..T run Kermit.........K | Cursor key mode....I local Echo on/off..E | Help screen........ZWritten by Miquel 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C£HiHŃ|nx|ex8`’’ee8`8€A‚”!’ČH€A8!88`€Ī|ȦĪN€ @h sigsetjmp‘£‘Ñ㒠’#$’C(’c,’ƒ0’£4’Ć8’ć<“@“#D“CH“cL“ƒP“£T“ĆX“ć\N€ `@P jmpsavegprŁĆhŁćpŚxŚ#€ŚCˆŚcŚƒ˜Ś£ ŚĆØŚć°ŪøŪ#ĄŪCČŪcŠŪƒŲŪ£ąŪĆčŪćšN€ `@L jmpsavefpr‚°A€ €L| ¦N€  ‚“A€ €L| ¦N€  ‚øA€ €L| ¦N€  ‚¼A€ €L| ¦N€  ‚ĄA€ €L| ¦N€  ‚ĐA€ €L| ¦N€  ‚ȐA€ €L| ¦N€  |fx|ƒ#x|Ä3x`````bXT Ł‹@qŒ@¢|ƒ @M† A„|*|€@A…ŒpiA‚<8„’’8Ć’’!)})¦ŒäœęB’ų|©(8„’ż8Ę’żpØT„čž|©¦HpØT„čž|©¦8„’ü8Ć’ü„ä…$”ę•&B’šM‚ } ¦8„8ĘŒäœęB’ųN€ |Ć*|ä*pČA‚} ¦'’’&’’B’ų|Ø(pØT„čž|©¦…'’ü…G’ü•&’ü•F’üB’šM‚ } ¦'’’&’’B’ųN€ |”¦| $*| *N€ |„@@„ }D(|ƒP@| ¦8 |¦T ’a|dA„(| $*|£%*0„ B’ō|¦| $*|£%*€aN€ |„(0„’ą| $*|£%*B’ō|€ |¦| $*|£%*€aN€ @Ąbcopy‚̐A€ €L| ¦N€  ‚АA€ €L| ¦N€  ‚ԐA€ €L| ¦N€  bX‹8 qŒA‚(|¦| "+| *M‚ |¤+|£*0 @‚’ōN€ p‹=@!k9J}i¦|exA‚ ˆÄ,˜Å8„M‚ 8„B’č€ä0„’ü|éP8})P},Pł@‚4…”å} P8})P},Pł@‚,„ä•|éP8})P},PłA‚’Š})8ų})PyA‚’ÄH})@ų})PyA‚’Ģ}Cx8„tę’Tē@>œå@‚’ōN€ @šstrcpybX‹8ĄqŒ8’äA‚||Į¦04„’ä@T|Ä+|Ć*@‚’ģ0„|Į¦||¦(8ą|į¦8ą94„’ų@|ć*0K’’š0„|”¦|ć*N€ 0„|”¦|Ä+|Ć*A‚’°N€ /…T€æ,€/|©¦Mž 0„’’0£’’A‚HA†Aš,Œä,œåN@ A‚¬,N@ A‚¤$, %N@ A‚œŒÄŒä$,,‡//‰œÅN@ A‚LœåN@ A†LN@ AšL%N@ AžLŒÄŒä$,,‡//‰K’’°œÅB’üN€ œåB’üN€ B’üN€ %B’üN€ @œstrncpy‚ąA€ €L| ¦N€  ‚äA€ €L| ¦N€  |px|Ž#x€£ć,’’,’’LB2A‚(”!’Č|dx8`8 K’ł%€A8!8~ƒx}Äsx€£€# €CK’ķ1K’ķ™,|ئ€£`|£ |ƒ#x@‚8`N€ @x siglongjmp‚šA€ €L| ¦N€  ‚ųA€ €L| ¦N€  |€&ƒ`|ˆ¦# €įćųCƒK’÷}K’÷å|nx”!’Č|ex8`8€K’ų5€A8!88`€Ī|ȦĪN€ `@\setjmp|¦æĮ’ų”!’ ƒāaxƒĀcĆHcÅ`d`£Dˆc(@‚H“€aD8ŸK’ś­€A(a@@‚H”8ax8caP8`H=€AaL8aLHU€A`dH€a@€¤8„l€Ä8Ę€ä $D8Ÿ K’ž©€A€a@€x€”PH1€A€a@8Ÿ,K’ž…€A€a@H=€A€h|¦8!`»Į’ųN€ A€do_log|¦æĮ’ų”!’°ƒāah€įh(A‚4ˆg(/A‚(ƒĀ€ĀcåcĆ8€’K’驀AcĆH€ah€X|¦8!P»Į’ųN€ A€l pfix_home0‚A€ €L| ¦N€  ‚ A€ €L| ¦N€  ‚A€ €L| ¦N€  ‚A€ €L| ¦N€  € A| ¦€KkN€  @_ptrgl |č  Ä       X   4@(#)61 1.13 src/bos/usr/ccs/lib/libc/__threads_init.c, libcthrd, bos43N 3/25/99 13:50:27  namepasswordLOGIN=LOGIN=PASS=PASS=LOGINPASS script "%s": global timeout%s (word contains ESC or quote)rrunscript: couldn't open %s%s script %s: out of memory%s script "%s": out of memory%s $? }(garbage after })(too many arguments)exit 1 {(garbage after {)timeout(argument expected)(invalid argument) (in goto/gosub label)%s: (missing var name)(expected variable)(expected variable)(if)(if)!=(if)(if)(expected command after if)(unknown operator)(argument expected)(invalid argument)onoff(unexpected argument) (argument expected) expectsend!gotogosubreturnexitprintsetincdeciftimeoutverbosesleepbreakcalllog HOME@(#)runscript 1.23 31-May-1999 JLscript "%s": syntax error in line %d %s%s script "%s" line %d: unknown variable "%s"%s script "%s": unexpected end of file%s script "%s" line %d: nested expect%s script "%s" line %d: label "%s" not found%s script "%s": no return from gosub%s script "%s" line %d: break outside of expect%s script "%s" line %d: call inside expect%s script "%s" line %d: unknown command "%s"%s Usage: runscript [logfile [homedir]]%s x   ¼ 0 Ä < Ģ H Š T Ų ` ą l č x š „ ų  ü œ  Ø  “  Ą  Ģ  Ų  ä ( š 0 ü%s/%sa%04d%02d%02d %02d:%02d:%02d  Č !Ü š  œ    Ų  X  t  ¼ t   ˆ Ų š d Ü š @Ą  ( Ø   0 , 0 4 4C@ 8 X 8 < 8š $ @ D H ą 8 x x)‘ Ď āenviron@errno@@ @ @__divss2@_iob@exit@ free@ malloc@ strlen@ fopen@ getenv@ atoi@ fprintf@ fflush@ fclose@ vfprintf@ snprintf@ read@ strncmp@ fputc@ fgets@ signal@ sleep@ atol@ fputs@ 5@ system@ alarm@ time@ wait@ A@ O@ ]@ i@ u@ pause@ ƒ@ __crt0v@__start !   @ D H L P T X \ ` d h l p t x | € „ ˆ Œ  ” ˜ œ   ¤ Ø ¬ ° “ ø ¼ Ą Ä Č Ģ Š Ō     $ ( 0 4 < @ H L T X ` d l p x | „ ˆ  ” œ   Ø ¬ “ ø Ą Ä Ģ Š Ų Ü ä č š ō ü  , 0* 4 8 <) @ D H L P  T X \( ` d h  l p  t x | €" „% ˆ Œ$ # ”& ˜ œ'   ¤ Ø ¬ ° “ ø ¼ Ą  Ä Č Ģ Š Ō Ų Ü  ą ä č ģ  š ō ų ü     !     $/usr/lib:/liblibc.ashr.o sigcleanup sigprocmask_system_configuration localtime cfsetispeed cfsetospeed tcgetattr tcsetattr tcsendbreak __mod_init kźØ ¾#큽^Nx9^Nx9^Nx9€ ½./usr/local/bin/xminicomname.c ķ#!/bin/sh # # xminicom Run minicom in an xterm. This script looks for # color_xterm, rxvt and xterm (in that order) and # starts it up with minicom inside it. # findcmd() { IFS=: for i in $PATH do if [ -x $i\/$1 ] then result=$i\/$1 IFS= return 0 fi done result= IFS= return 1 } if findcmd color_xterm then exec $result -bg black -fg grey -n minicom -geometry 80x25 -e minicom -m -c on $* exit 1 fi if findcmd rxvt then exec $result -bg black -fg grey -n minicom -T minicom -sl 0 -geometry 80x25 -e minicom -c on -m $* exit 1 fi if findcmd kterm then exec $result -n minicom -geometry 80x25 -e minicom -m $* exit 1 fi if findcmd xterm then if [ -f /etc/debian_version ] then exec $result -bg black -fg grey -n minicom -geometry 80x25 -e minicom -m -c on $* else exec $result -n minicom -geometry 80x25 -e minicom -m $* fi exit 1 fi echo "xminicom: rxvt, color_xterm or xterm NOT found!" 1>&2 exit 1 č kźź?~T$¤8˜Ox9˜Ox9˜Ox9€ 8./usr/local/lib/minicom-1.83.1/demos/htsalogin` ¤# To login to htsa call unixlogin send "DialUpPassword"  kź:#T$¤Ē™Ox9™Ox9™Ox9€ Ē./usr/local/lib/minicom-1.83.1/demos/saralogin` ¤# This script logs in to a dutch gateway called 'sara' # We want to go to the terminal server. # set a 0 set b 0 print "+++ Trying to login to the sara terminal server +++" loop1: # Wake up sara by sending a lot of 'ENTER's. inc a if a > 10 goto failed1 send \r\r # When sara wakes up, it asks "DESTINATION?" expect { "DESTI" timeout 1 goto loop1 } # We want destination 'terms' send terms set a 0 loop2: # Wake up terminal server inc a if a > 10 goto failed2 send \r\r # When terminal server is awake, it prompts with 'sara-vts1>' expect { "sara" timeout 1 goto loop2 } exit failed1: print "\nNo answer from gateway" exit failed2: print "\nNo answer from terminal server" exit n kźŽ€T$¤™Ox9™Ox9™Ox9€ ./usr/local/lib/minicom-1.83.1/demos/scriptdemo ¤# A little demonstration of the possibilities of "runscript". # This script can be executed by typing: "runscript scriptdemo". # # Adjust the stty's below to your system: BSD-like or SysV-like. # Linux ofcourse accepts both :-) # goto main left: print "\010 \010\010*\c" return right: print "\010 *\c" return main: # ! stty -echo cbreak ! stty -echo -icanon min 1 verbose off print Demo! press 'q' to move left, 'w' to move right, 'ESC' to stop. print " *\c" expect { "q" gosub left "w" gosub right "\033" break } print \nEnd of demonstration. # ! stty -cbreak echo ! stty icanon echo min 5 sleep 1 a kźR±T$¤Ž™Ox9™Ox9™Ox9€ Ž./usr/local/lib/minicom-1.83.1/demos/unixlogin ¤# Generic UNIX login script. # Can be used to automatically login to almost every UNIX box. # # Some variables. set a 0 set b a print Trying to Login.. # Skip initial 'send ""', it seems to matter sometimes.. goto skip loop1: # Send loginname not more than three times. send "" inc a skip: if a > 3 goto failed1 expect { "ogin:" "assword:" send "" "NO CARRIER" exit timeout 60 goto loop1 } loop2: send "$(LOGIN)" # Send password not more than three times. inc b if b > 3 goto failed1 expect { "assword:" "ogin:" goto loop2 timeout 60 goto loop2 } send "$(PASS)" # If we don't get "incorrect" within 3 seconds, it's probably OK. # If they ask for a terminal, we are logged in. Tell them we're # using vt100. # If we get the bash prompt, send them the screen geometry. expect { "TERM=" goto wantterm "incorrect" goto loop1 "bash$" goto screengeom timeout 3 break "asswd" break } exit wantterm: send "vt100" exit screengeom: send "stty rows $(TERMLIN) columns 80" # If you use a display mode with some other width than 80 columns, # you may want to use the following format. #send "stty rows $(TERMLIN) columns $(COLUMNS)" exit failed1: print \nLogin Failed (wrong password?) exit x kź‚b$¤ķOx9īOx9īOx9€ ./usr/local/lib/minicom-1.83.1/minicom.usersn ¤# # Minicom.users Access file for the minicom program. # # Format: Either just one username per line, or # a username followed by one or more # configuration-names. The name of the # default configuration is "dfl". The maximum # significant line length is 70 characters. # # Location: The minicom library directory, probably # /etc or /var/lib/minicom or whatever. # # Notes: If you don't install this file in the # specified location, everybody will have # access to minicom. # # This doesn't matter if minicom isn't installed # setuid root since access will then be based # on the permissions set on the serial port. # # # Who may use minicom? # # User [line] [..line] # # Everyone has access to all configurations. ALL ## The rest are examples. ## # Erik only has access to the default configuration ## erik dfl ## ## # minicom has access to the default configuration, and configuration 'tty5'. ## minicom dfl tty5  kźāO&€%¤*Px9*Px9*Px9€ ./usr/local/lib/minicom-1.83.1/tables/mc.ison ¤  !"#$%&'()*+,-./0123456789:;<=>?@ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ[\]^_`abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz{|}~€‚ƒ„…†‡ˆ‰Š‹ŒŽ‘'“”•–—˜™š›œžŸ ”¢£¤„¦§Ø©Ŗ«¬­®Æ°±²³'µ¶·ø¹ŗ»¼½¾æĄĮĀĆÄÅĘĒČÉŹĖĢĶĪĻŠŃŅÓŌÕÖ×ŲŁŚŪÜŻŽßąįāćäåęēčéźėģķīļšńņóōõö÷ųłśūüżž’  !"#$%&'()*+,-./0123456789:;<=>?@ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ[\]^_`abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz{|}~€‚ƒ„…†‡ˆ‰Š‹ŒŽ‘’“”•–—˜™š›œžŸ ”¢£¤„¦§Ø©Ŗ«¬­®Æ°±²³“µ¶·ø¹ŗ»¼½¾æĄĮĀĆÄÅĘĒČÉŹĖĢĶĪĻŠŃŅÓŌÕÖ×ŲŁŚŪÜŻŽßąįāćäåęēčéźėģķīļšńņóōõö÷ųłśūüżž’ kźĮ'€%$*Px9*Px9*Px9€ ./usr/local/lib/minicom-1.83.1/tables/mc.noconv $  !"#$%&'()*+,-./0123456789:;<=>?@ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ[\]^_`abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz{|}~€‚ƒ„…†‡ˆ‰Š‹ŒŽ‘’“”•–—˜™š›œžŸ ”¢£¤„¦§Ø©Ŗ«¬­®Æ°±²³“µ¶·ø¹ŗ»¼½¾æĄĮĀĆÄÅĘĒČÉŹĖĢĶĪĻŠŃŅÓŌÕÖ×ŲŁŚŪÜŻŽßąįāćäåęēčéźėģķīļšńņóōõö÷ųłśūüżž’  !"#$%&'()*+,-./0123456789:;<=>?@ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ[\]^_`abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz{|}~€‚ƒ„…†‡ˆ‰Š‹ŒŽ‘’“”•–—˜™š›œžŸ ”¢£¤„¦§Ø©Ŗ«¬­®Æ°±²³“µ¶·ø¹ŗ»¼½¾æĄĮĀĆÄÅĘĒČÉŹĖĢĶĪĻŠŃŅÓŌÕÖ×ŲŁŚŪÜŻŽßąįāćäåęēčéźėģķīļšńņóōõö÷ųłśūüżž’ kźą+(€%¤*Px9*Px9*Px9€ ./usr/local/lib/minicom-1.83.1/tables/mc.pc8nv ¤  !"#$%&'()*+,-./0123456789:;<=>?@ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ[\]^_`abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz{|}~ĒüéćäąåēźėčļīģÄÅÉęĘōöņūł’ÖÜ¢£„žŸįķóśńѦ§æ©Ŗ½¼”«»°±²³“µ¶·ø¹ŗ»¼½¾æĄĮĀĆÄÅĘĒČÉŹĖĢĶĪĻŠŃŅÓŌÕÖ×ŲŁŚŪÜŻŽßąßā¶äåµēčéźšģųīļšńņóōõ÷÷ŗłśūüżž’  !"#$%&'()*+,-./0123456789:;<=>?@ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ[\]^_`abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz{|}~€‚ƒ„…†‡ˆ‰Š‹ŒŽ‘’“”•–—˜™š›œžŸ ”¢£¤„¦§Ø©Ŗ«¬­®Æ°±²³“µ¶·ø¹ŗ»¼½¾æĄĮĀƎĘĒČÉŹĖĢĶĪĻŠŃŅÓŌՙ×ŲŁŚŪÜŻŽßąįā愆ęēčéźėģķīļšńņóōõ”÷ųłśūüżž’ kźā`)€%¤*Px9*Px9*Px9€ ./usr/local/lib/minicom-1.83.1/tables/mc.sf7nv ¤  !"#$%&'()*+,-./0123456789:;<=>?@ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZÄÖÅ^_`abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyzäöå~€‚ƒä…凈‰Š‹ŒÄՑ’“ö•–—˜Öš›œžŸ ”¢£¤„¦§Ø©Ŗ«¬­®Æ°±²³“µ¶·ø¹ŗ»¼½¾æĄĮĀĆÄÅĘĒČÉŹĖĢĶĪĻŠŃŅÓŌÕÖ×ŲŁŚŪÜŻŽßąįāćäåęēčéźėģķīļšńņóōõö÷ųłśūüżž’  !"#$%&'()*+,-./0123456789:;<=>?@ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ[\]^_`abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz{|}~€‚ƒ„…†‡ˆ‰Š‹ŒŽ‘’“”•–—˜™š›œžŸ ”¢£¤„¦§Ø©Ŗ«¬­®Æ°±²³“µ¶·ø¹ŗ»¼½¾æĄĮĀĆ[]ĘĒČÉŹĖĢĶĪĻŠŃŅÓŌÕ\×ŲŁŚŪÜŻŽßąįāć{}ęēčéźėģķīļšńņóōõ|÷ųłśūüżž’ kź$Ź#¢!¤¾ĒNx9ČNx9ČNx9€ ¾./usr/local/man/man1/ascii-xfr.1bles/mc ¤.TH ASCII-XFR 1 "Februari 18, 1996" "" "Linux Users Manual" .SH NAME ascii-xfr \- upload/download files using the ASCII protocol .SH SYNOPSIS .B ascii-xfr .B -s|-r .RB [ \-dnv ] .RB [ \-l .IR linedelay ] .RB [ \-c .IR characterdelay ] .I filename .SH DESCRIPTION .B Ascii-xfr Transfers files in ASCII mode. This means no flow control, no checksumming and no file-name negotiation. It should \fIonly\fP be used if the remote system doesn't understand anything else. .PP The ASCII protocol transfers files line-by-line. The EOL (End-Of-Line) character is transmitted as CRLF. When receiving, the CR character is stripped from the incoming file. The Control-Z (ASCII 26) character signals End-Of-File. .PP \fBAscii-xfr\fP reads from \fIstdin\fP when receiving, and sends data on \fIstdout\fP when sending. Some form of input or output redirection to the the modem device is thus needed when downloading or uploading, respectively. .SH OPTIONS .IP \fB\-s\fP Send a file. .IP \fB\-r\fP Receive a file. One of \fB-s\fP or \fB-r\fP \fImust\fP be present. .IP \fB\-d\fP Use the Control-D (ASCII 4) as End-Of-File character. .IP \fB\-n\fP Do not translate CR to CRLF and vice versa. .IP \fB\-v\fP Verbose: show tranfer statistics on the stderr output. .IP "\fB\-l\fP \fImilliseconds\fP" When transmitting, pause for this delay after each line. .IP "\fB\-c\fP \fImilliseconds\fP" When transmitting, pause for this delay after each character. .IP \fIfile\fP Name of the file to send or receive. When receiving, any existing file by this name will be truncated. .SH USAGE WITH MINICOM If you want to call this program from \fBminicom(1)\fP, start minicom and go to the \fBO\fPptions menu. Select \fIFile transfer protocols\fP. Add the following lines, for example as protocols \fBI\fP and \fBJ\fP. .sp 1 .nf I Ascii /usr/bin/ascii-xfr -sv Y U N Y J Ascii /usr/bin/ascii-xfr -rv Y D N Y .fi .SH AUTHOR Miquel van Smoorenburg, miquels@cistron.nl .SH "SEE ALSO" minicom(1) %s kźØĢ$¢!¤;0ČNx9ČNx9ČNx9€ ;0./usr/local/man/man1/lrz.1xfr.1 ¤'\" '\" Revision Level '\" Last Delta 04-22-88 .TH RZ 1 OMEN .SH NAME rx, rb, rz \- XMODEM, YMODEM, ZMODEM (Batch) file receive .SH SYNOPSIS .B rz .RB [\- "\ +8abeOpqRtTuUvy" ] .br .B rb .RB [\- "\ +abqRtuUvy" ] .br .B rx .RB [\- "\ abceqRtuUv" ] .I file .br .RB [ \- ][ v ] rzCOMMAND .SH DESCRIPTION This program uses error correcting protocols to receive files over a dial-in serial port from a variety of programs running under PC-DOS, CP/M, .SM Unix, and other operating systems. It is invoked from a shell prompt manually, or automatically as a result of an "sz file ..." command given to the calling program. While .I rz is smart enough to be called from .I cu(1), very few versions of .I cu(1) are smart enough to allow .I rz to work properly. Unix flavors of Professional-YAM are available for such dial-out application. .B Rz (Receive ZMODEM) receives files with the ZMODEM batch protocol. Pathnames are supplied by the sending program, and directories are made if necessary (and possible). Normally, the "rz" command is automatically issued by the calling ZMODEM program, but some defective ZMODEM implementations may require starting .I rz the old fashioned way. .B Rb receives file(s) with YMODEM, accepting either standard 128 byte sectors or 1024 byte sectors (YAM sb .B -k option). The user should determine when the 1024 byte block length actually improves throughput without causing lost data or even system crashes. If True YMODEM (Omen Technology trademark) file information (file length, etc.) is received, the file length controls the number of bytes written to the output dataset, and the modify time and file mode (iff non zero) are set accordingly. If no True YMODEM file information is received, slashes in the pathname are changed to underscore, and any trailing period in the pathname is eliminated. This conversion is useful for files received from CP/M systems. With YMODEM, each file name is converted to lower case unless it contains one or more lower case letters. .B Rx receives a single .I file with XMODEM or XMODEM-1k protocol. The user should determine when the 1024 byte block length actually improves throughput without causing problems. The user must supply the file name to both sending and receiving programs. Up to 1023 garbage characters may be added to the received file. .B Rz may be invoked as .B rzCOMMAND (with an optional leading \- as generated by login(1)). For each received file, .I rz will pipe the file to ``COMMAND filename'' where filename is the name of the transmitted file with the file contents as standard input. Each file transfer is acknowledged when COMMAND exits with 0 status. A non zero exit status terminates transfers. A typical use for this form is .I rzrmail which calls rmail(1) to post mail to the user specified by the transmitted file name. For example, sending the file "caf" from a PC-DOS system to .I rzrmail on a .SM Unix system would result in the contents of the DOS file "caf" being mailed to user "caf". On some .SM Unix systems, the login directory must contain a link to COMMAND as login sets SHELL=rsh which disallows absolute pathnames. If invoked with a leading ``v'', .I rz will be verbose (see .B v option). The following entry works for .SM Unix SYS III/V: .ce rzrmail::5:1::/bin:/usr/local/rzrmail If the SHELL environment variable includes .I "rsh" , .I "rbash" or .I "rksh" (restricted shell), .I rz will not accept absolute pathnames or references to a parent directory, will not modify an existing file, and removes any files received in error. If .B rz is invoked with stdout and stderr to different datasets, Verbose is set to 2, causing frame by frame progress reports to stderr. This may be disabled with the .B q option. .SH OPTIONS The meanings of the available options are: .PP .PD 0 .TP .B "-+, --append" append received data to an existing file (ZMODEM, ASCII only). .TP .B "-a, --ascii" Convert files to .SM Unix conventions by stripping carriage returns and all characters beginning with the first Control Z (CP/M end of file). .TP .B "-b, --binary" Binary (tell it like it is) file transfer override. .TP .B "-B NUMBER, --bufsize NUMBER" Buffer .B NUMBER bytes before writing to disk. Default ist 32768, which should be enough for most situations. If you have a slow machine or a bad disk interface or suffer from other hardware problems you might want to increase the buffersize. .B -1 or .B auto use a buffer large enough to buffer the whole file. Be careful with this options - things normally get worse, not better, if the machine starts to swap. .TP .B "-c, --with-crc" XMODEM only. Use 16 bit CRC (normally a one byte checksum is used). .TP .B "-C, --allow-remote-commands" allow remote command execution ( .B insecure ). This allows the sender to execute an arbitrary command through .B system () or .B execl (). Default is to disable this feature (?). This option is ignored if running in restricted mode. .TP .B "-D, --null" Output file data to /dev/null; for testing. (Unix only) .TP .B "--delay-startup N" Wait .B N seconds before doing anything. .TP .B "-e, --escape" Force sender to escape all control characters; normally XON, XOFF, DLE, CR-@-CR, and Ctrl-X are escaped. .TP .B "-E, --rename" Rename incoming file if target filename already exists. The new file name will have a dot and a number (0..999) appended. .TP .B "-h, --help" give help screen. .TP .B "-m N, --min-bps N" Stop transmission if BPS-Rate (Bytes Per Second) falls below N for a certain time (see --min-bps-time option). .TP .B "-M N, --min-bps-time" Used together with --min-bps. Default is 120 (seconds). .TP .B "-O, --disable-timeouts" Disable read timeout handling code. This makes lrz hang if the sender does not send any more, but increases performance (a bit) and decreases system load (through reducing the number of system calls by about 50 percent). Use this option with care. .TP .B "--o-sync" Open output files in synchronous write mode. This may be useful if you experience errors due to lost interrupts if update (or bdflush or whoever this daemon is called on your system) writes the buffers to the disk. This option is silently ignored if your systems doesn't support O_SYNC. .TP .B "-p, --protect" (ZMODEM) Protect: skip file if destination file exists. .TP .B "-q, --quiet" Quiet suppresses verbosity. .TP .B "-r, --resume" Crash recovery mode. lrz tries to resume interrupted file transfers. .TP .B "-R, --restricted" Enter more restricted mode. lrz will not create directories or files with a leading dot if this option is given twice. See .B SECURITY for mode information about restricted mode. .TP .B "-s HH:MM, --stop-at HH:MM" Stop transmission at .B HH hours, .B MM minutes. Another variant, using .B +N instead of .B HH:MM, stops transmission in .B N seconds. .TP .B "-S, --timesync" Request timesync packet from the sender. The sender sends its system time, causing lrz to complain about more then 60 seconds difference. Lrz tries to set the local system time to the remote time if this option is given twice (this fails if lrz is not run by root). This option makes lrz incompatible with certain other ZModems. Don't use it unless you know what you are doing. .TP .B "--syslog[=off]" turn syslogging on or off. the default is set at configure time. This option is ignored if no syslog support is compiled in. .TP .B "-t TIM, --timeout TIM" Change timeout to .I TIM tenths of seconds. This is ignored if timeout handling is turned of through the .B O option. .TP .B "-U, --unrestrict" turn off restricted mode (this is not possible if running under a restricted shell). .TP .B "--version" prints out version number. .TP .B "-v, --verbose" Verbose causes a list of file names to be appended to stderr. More v's generate more output. .TP .B "-wN, --windowsize N" Set window size to N. .TP .B "-X, --xmodem" use XMODEM protocol. .TP .B "-y, --overwrite" Yes, clobber any existing files with the same name. .TP .B "--ymodem" use YMODEM protocol. .TP .B "-Z, --zmodem" use ZMODEM protocol. .PD .ne 6 .SH SECURITY Contrary to the original ZMODEM lrz defaults to restricted mode. In restricted mode lrz will not accept absolute pathnames or references to a parent directory, will not modify an existing file, and removes any files received in error. Remote command execution is disabled. To use a more restricted mode set the environment variable .B ZMODEM_RESTRICTED or give the .B R option. This disables creation of subdirectories and invisible files. Restricted mode may be turned off with the .B U option, unless lrz runs under a restricted shell. .SH ENVIRONMENT lrz uses the following environment variables: .TP .B SHELL lrz recognizes a restricted shell if this variable includes .I "rsh" or .I "rksh" \. .TP .B ZMODEM_RESTRICTED lrz enters the more restricted mode if the variable is set. .SH EXAMPLES .RE (Pro-YAM command) .RS .I .br Pro-YAM Command: .I "sz *.h *.c" .br (This automatically invokes .I rz on the connected system.) .RE .SH SEE ALSO ZMODEM.DOC, YMODEM.DOC, Professional-YAM, crc(omen), sz(omen), usq(omen), undos(omen) Compile time options required for various operating systems are described in the source file. .SH NOTES Sending serial data to timesharing minicomputers at sustained high speeds has been known to cause lockups, system halts, kernel panics, and occasional antisocial behaviour. When experimenting with high speed input to a system, consider rebooting the system if the file transfers are not successful, especially if the personality of the system appears altered. The Unix "ulimit" parameter must be set high enough to permit large file transfers. The TTY input buffering on some systems may not allow long blocks or streaming input at high speed. You should suspect this problem when you can't send data to the Unix system at high speeds using ZMODEM, YMODEM-1k or XMODEM-1k, when YMODEM with 128 byte blocks works properly. If the system's tty line handling is really broken, the serial port or the entire system may not survive the onslaught of long bursts of high speed data. The DSZ or Pro-YAM .B "zmodem l" numeric parameter may be set to a value between 64 and 1024 to limit the burst length ("zmodem pl128"). 32 bit CRC code courtesy Gary S. Brown. Directory creation code from John Gilmore's PD TAR program. .SH BUGS Calling .I rz from most versions of cu(1) doesn't work because cu's receive process fights .I rz for characters from the modem. Programs that do not properly implement the specified file transfer protocol may cause .I sz to "hang" the port for a minute or two. Every reported instance of this problem has been corrected by using ZCOMM, Pro-YAM, or other program with a correct implementation of the specified protocol. Many programs claiming to support YMODEM only support XMODEM with 1k blocks, and they often don't get that quite right. Pathnames are restricted to 127 characters. In XMODEM single file mode, the pathname given on the command line is still processed as described above. The ASCII option\'s CR/LF to NL translation merely deletes CR\'s; undos(omen) performs a more intelligent translation. .SH "VMS VERSION" The VMS version does not set the file time. VMS C Standard I/O and RMS may interact to modify file contents unexpectedly. The VMS version does not support invocation as .B rzCOMMAND . The current VMS version does not support XMODEM, XMODEM-1k, or YMODEM. According to the VMS documentation, the buffered input routine used on the VMS version of .I rz introduces a delay of up to one second for each protocol transaction. This delay may be significant for very short files. Removing the "#define BUFREAD" line from rz.c will eliminate this delay at the expense of increased CPU utilization. The VMS version causes DCL to generate a random off the wall error message under some error conditions; this is a result of the incompatibility of the VMS "exit" function with the Unix/MSDOS standard. .SH "ZMODEM CAPABILITIES" .I Rz supports incoming ZMODEM binary (-b), ASCII (-a), protect (-p), clobber (-y), and append (-+) requests. The default is protect (-p) and binary (-b). The Unix versions support ZMODEM command execution. .SH FILES rz.c, crctab.c, rbsb.c, zm.c, zmodem.h Unix source files. rz.c, crctab.c, vrzsz.c, zm.c, zmodem.h, vmodem.h, vvmodem.c, VMS source files. g fil kźœĻ%¢!¤:AČNx9ČNx9ČNx9€ :A./usr/local/man/man1/lsz.1xfr.1 ¤'\" '\" Revision Level '\" Last Delta 04-21-88 .TH SZ 1 2.6.1996 lrzsz-0.12b .SH NAME sx, sb, sz \- XMODEM, YMODEM, ZMODEM file send .SH SYNOPSIS sz .RB [\- +8abdefkLlNnopqTtuvyY ] .I file ... .br sb .RB [\- adfkqtuv ] .I file ... .br sx .RB [\- akqtuv ] .I file .br sz .RB [\- oqtv ] .B "-c COMMAND" .br sz .RB [\- oqtv ] .B "-i COMMAND" .br sz -TT .SH DESCRIPTION .B Sz uses the ZMODEM, YMODEM or XMODEM error correcting protocol to send one or more files over a dial-in serial port to a variety of programs running under PC-DOS, CP/M, Unix, VMS, and other operating systems. While .I rz is smart enough to be called from .I cu(1), very few versions of .I cu(1) are smart enough to allow .I sz to work properly. Unix flavors of Professional-YAM are available for such dial-out application. .B Sz sends one or more files with ZMODEM protocol. ZMODEM greatly simplifies file transfers compared to XMODEM. In addition to a friendly user interface, ZMODEM provides Personal Computer and other users an efficient, accurate, and robust file transfer method. ZMODEM provides complete .B "END-TO-END" data integrity between application programs. ZMODEM's 32 bit CRC catches errors that sneak into even the most advanced networks. Advanced file management features include AutoDownload (Automatic file Download initiated without user intervention), Display of individual and total file lengths and transmission time estimates, Crash Recovery, selective file transfers, and preservation of exact file date and length. Output from another program may be piped to .B sz for transmission by denoting standard input with "-": .ce ls -l | sz - The program output is transmitted with the filename sPID.sz where PID is the process ID of the .B sz program. If the environment variable .B ONAME is set, that is used instead. In this case, the Unix command: .ce ls -l | ONAME=con sz -ay - will send a "file" to the PC-DOS console display. The .B -y option instructs the receiver to open the file for writing unconditionally. The .B -a option causes the receiver to convert Unix newlines to PC-DOS carriage returns and linefeeds. .B Sb batch sends one or more files with YMODEM or ZMODEM protocol. The initial ZMODEM initialization is not sent. When requested by the receiver, .B sb supports .B YMODEM-g with "cbreak" tty mode, XON/XOFF flow control, and interrupt character set to CAN (^X). .B YMODEM-g (Professional-YAM .B g option) increases throughput over error free channels (direct connection, X.PC, etc.) by not acknowledging each transmitted sector. On .SM Unix systems, additional information about the file is transmitted. If the receiving program uses this information, the transmitted file length controls the exact number of bytes written to the output dataset, and the modify time and file mode are set accordingly. .B Sx sends a single .I file with .B XMODEM or .B XMODEM-1k protocol (sometimes incorrectly called "ymodem"). The user must supply the file name to both sending and receiving programs. If .B sz is invoked with $SHELL set and iff that variable contains the string .I "rsh" , .I "rbash" or .I "rksh" (restricted shell), .B sz operates in restricted mode. Restricted mode restricts pathnames to the current directory and PUBDIR (usually /usr/spool/uucppublic) and/or subdirectories thereof. The fourth form sends a single COMMAND to a ZMODEM receiver for execution. .B Sz exits with the COMMAND return value. If COMMAND includes spaces or characters special to the shell, it must be quoted. The fifth form sends a single COMMAND to a ZMODEM receiver for execution. .B Sz exits as soon as the receiver has correctly received the command, before it is executed. The sixth form (sz -TT) attempts to output all 256 code combinations to the terminal. In you are having difficulty sending files, this command lets you see which character codes are being eaten by the operating system. If .B sz is invoked with stdout and stderr to different datasets, Verbose is set to 2, causing frame by frame progress reports to stderr. This may be disabled with the .B q option. .PP The meanings of the available options are: .PP .PD 0 .TP .B "-+, --append" Instruct the receiver to append transmitted data to an existing file (ZMODEM only). .TP .B "-2, --twostop" use two stop bits (if possible). Do not use this unless you know what you are doing. .TP .B "-8, --try-8k" Try to go up to 8KB blocksize. This is incompatible with standard zmodem, but a common extension in the bbs world. (ZMODEM only). .TP .B "--start-8k" Start with 8KB blocksize. Like --try-8k. .TP .B "-a, --ascii" Convert NL characters in the transmitted file to CR/LF. This is done by the sender for XMODEM and YMODEM, by the receiver for ZMODEM. .TP .B "-b, --binary" (ZMODEM) Binary override: transfer file without any translation. .TP .B "-B NUMBER, --bufsize NUMBER" Use a readbuffer of .B NUMBER bytes. Default ist 16384, which should be enough for most situations. If you have a slow machine or a bad disk interface or suffer from other hardware problems you might want to increase the buffersize. .B -1 or .B auto use a buffer large enough to buffer the whole file. Be careful with this option - things normally get worse, not better, if the machine starts to swap. Using this option turns of memory mapping of the input file. This increases memory and cpu usage. .TP .B "-c COMMAND, --command COMMAND" Send COMMAND to the receiver for execution, return with COMMAND\'s exit status. .TP .B "-C N, --command-tries N" Retry to send command N times (default: 11). .TP .B "-d, --dot-to-slash" Change all instances of "." to "/" in the transmitted pathname. Thus, C.omenB0000 (which is unacceptable to MSDOS or CP/M) is transmitted as C/omenB0000. If the resultant filename has more than 8 characters in the stem, a "." is inserted to allow a total of eleven. This option enables the .B "--full-path" option. .TP .B "--delay-startup N" Wait .B N seconds before doing anything. .TP .B "-e, --escape" Escape all control characters; normally XON, XOFF, DLE, CR-@-CR, and Ctrl-X are escaped. .TP .B"-E, --rename" Force the sender to rename the new file if a file with the same name already exists. .TP .B "-f, --full-path" Send Full pathname. Normally directory prefixes are stripped from the transmitted filename. This is also turned on with to .B "--dot-to-slash" option. .TP .B "-h, --help" give help. .TP .B "-i COMMAND, --immediate-command COMMAND" Send COMMAND to the receiver for execution, return immediately upon the receiving program's successful recption of the command. .TP .B "-k, --1k" (XMODEM/YMODEM) Send files using 1024 byte blocks rather than the default 128 byte blocks. 1024 byte packets speed file transfers at high bit rates. (ZMODEM streams the data for the best possible throughput.) .TP .B "-L N, --packetlen N" Use ZMODEM sub-packets of length N. A larger N (32 <= N <= 1024) gives slightly higher throughput, a smaller N speeds error recovery. The default is 128 below 300 baud, 256 above 300 baud, or 1024 above 2400 baud. .TP .B "-m N, --min-bps N" Stop transmission if BPS-Rate (Bytes Per Second) falls below N for a certain time (see --min-bps-time option). .TP .B "-M N, --min-bps-time" Used together with --min-bps. Default is 120 (seconds). .TP .B "-l N, --framelen N" Wait for the receiver to acknowledge correct data every .B N (32 <= N <= 1024) characters. This may be used to avoid network overrun when XOFF flow control is lacking. .TP .B "-n, --newer" (ZMODEM) Send each file if destination file does not exist. Overwrite destination file if source file is newer than the destination file. .TP .B "-N, --newer-or-longer" (ZMODEM) Send each file if destination file does not exist. Overwrite destination file if source file is newer or longer than the destination file. .TP .B "-o, --16-bit-crc" (ZMODEM) Disable automatic selection of 32 bit CRC. .TP .B "-O, --disable-timeouts" Disable read timeout handling. This makes lsz hang if the other side doesn't send anything, but increases performance (not much) and decreases system load (reduces number of system calls by about 50 percent). Use this option with care. .TP .B "-p, --protect" (ZMODEM) Protect existing destination files by skipping transfer if the destination file exists. .TP .B "-q, --quiet" Quiet suppresses verbosity. .TP .B "-R, --restricted" Restricted mode: restricts pathnames to the current directory and PUBDIR (usually /usr/spool/uucppublic) and/or subdirectories thereof. .TP .B "-r, --resume" (ZMODEM) Resume interrupted file transfer. If the source file is longer than the destination file, the transfer commences at the offset in the source file that equals the length of the destination file. .TP .B "-s HH:MM, --stop-at HH:MM" Stop transmission at .B HH hours, .B MM minutes. Another variant, using .B +N instead of .B HH:MM, stops transmission in .B N seconds. .TP .B "-S, --timesync" enable timesync protocol support. See timesync.doc for further information. This option is incompatible with standard zmodem. Use it with care. .TP .B "--syslog[=off]" turn syslogging on or off. the default is set at configure time. This option is ignored if no syslog support is compiled in. .TP .B "-t TIM, --timeout TIM" Change timeout to .I TIM tenths of seconds. .TP .B "-T, --turbo" Do not escape certain characters (^P, ^P|0x80, telenet escape sequence [CR + @]). This improves performance by about 1 percent and shouldn't hurt in the normal case (but be careful - ^P might be useful if connected through a terminal server). .TP .B "-u" Unlink the file after successful transmission. .TP .B "-U, --unrestrict" Turn off restricted mode (this is not possible if running under a restricted shell). .TP .B "-w N, --windowsize N" Limit the transmit window size to N bytes (ZMODEM). .TP .B "-v, --verbose" Verbose output to stderr. More v's generate more output. .TP .B "-X, --xmodem" use XMODEM protocol. .TP .B "-y, --overwrite" Instruct a ZMODEM receiving program to overwrite any existing file with the same name. .TP .B "-Y, --overwrite-or-skip" Instruct a ZMODEM receiving program to overwrite any existing file with the same name, and to skip any source files that do have a file with the same pathname on the destination system. .TP .B "--ymodem" use ZMODEM protocol. .TP .B "-Z, --zmodem" use ZMODEM protocol. .PD .SH SECURITY Restricted mode restricts pathnames to the current directory and PUBDIR (usually /var/spool/uucppublic) and/or subdirectories thereof, and disables remote command execution. Restricted mode is entered if the .B R option is given or if lsz detects that it runs under a restricted shell or if the environment variable ZMODEM_RESTRICTED is found. Restricted mode can be turned of with the .B U option if not running under a restricted shell. .SH ENVIRONMENT .TP .B ZNULLS may be used to specify the number of nulls to send before a ZDATA frame. .TP .B SHELL lsz recognizes a restricted shell if this variable includes .I "rsh" or .I "rksh" .TP .B ZMODEM_RESTRICTED lrz enters restricted mode if the variable is set. .TP .B TMPDIR If this environment variable is set its content is used as the directory to place in the answer file to a .B timesync request. .B TMP Used instead of TMPDIR if TMPDIR is not set. If neither TMPDIR nor TMP is set /tmp will be used. .SH EXAMPLES .ne 7 .B "ZMODEM File Transfer" (Unix to DSZ/ZCOMM/Professional-YAM) .br .B "% sz \-a *.c" .br This single command transfers all .c files in the current Unix directory with conversion .RB ( \-a ) to end of line conventions appropriate to the receiving environment. With ZMODEM AutoDownload enabled, Professional-YAM and ZCOMM will automatically recieve the files after performing a security check. .br .B "% sz \-Yan *.c *.h" .br Send only the .c and .h files that exist on both systems, and are newer on the sending system than the corresponding version on the receiving system, converting Unix to DOS text format. .br .B $ sz -\\Yan file1.c file2.c file3.c foo.h baz.h .R (for VMS) .br .B "ZMODEM Command Download" (Unix to Professional-YAM) .br cpszall:all sz \-c "c:;cd /yam/dist" sz \-ya $(YD)/*.me sz \-yqb y*.exe sz \-c "cd /yam" sz \-i "!insms" .br This Makefile fragment uses .B sz to issue commands to Professional-YAM to change current disk and directory. Next, .B sz transfers the .I .me files from the $YD directory, commanding the receiver to overwrite the old files and to convert from Unix end of line conventions to PC-DOS conventions. The third line transfers some .I .exe files. The fourth and fifth lines command Pro-YAM to change directory and execute a PC-DOS batch file .I insms . Since the batch file takes considerable time, the .B "\-i" form is used to allow .B sz to exit immediately. .B "XMODEM File Transfer" (Unix to Crosstalk) .br % .B "sx \-a foo.c" .br .B "ESC" .br .B "rx foo.c" .br The above three commands transfer a single file from Unix to a PC and Crosstalk with .I sz translating Unix newlines to DOS CR/LF. This combination is much slower and far less reliable than ZMODEM. .SH ERROR MESSAGES "Caught signal 99" indicates the program was not properly compiled, refer to "bibi(99)" in rbsb.c for details. .SH SEE ALSO rz(omen), ZMODEM.DOC, YMODEM.DOC, Professional-YAM, crc(omen), sq(omen), todos(omen), tocpm(omen), tomac(omen), yam(omen) Compile time options required for various operating systems are described in the source file. .SH "VMS VERSION" The VMS version does not support wild cards. Because of VMS DCL, upper case option letters muse be represented by \\ proceding the letter. The current VMS version does not support XMODEM, XMODEM-1k, or YMODEM. VMS C Standard I/O and RMS may interact to modify the file contents. .SH FILES 32 bit CRC code courtesy Gary S. Brown. sz.c, crctab.c, rbsb.c, zm.c, zmodem.h Unix source files sz.c, crctab.c, vrzsz.c, zm.c, zmodem.h, vmodem.h, vvmodem.c, VMS source files. /tmp/szlog stores debugging output (sz -vv) (szlog on VMS). .SH "TESTING FEATURE" The command "sz -T file" exercises the .B Attn sequence error recovery by commanding errors with unterminated packets. The receiving program should complain five times about binary data packets being too long. Each time .B sz is interrupted, it should send a ZDATA header followed by another defective packet. If the receiver does not detect five long data packets, the .B Attn sequence is not interrupting the sender, and the .B Myattn string in .B sz.c must be modified. After 5 packets, .B sz stops the "transfer" and prints the total number of characters "sent" (Tcount). The difference between Tcount and 5120 represents the number of characters stored in various buffers when the Attn sequence is generated. .SH BUGS Calling .I sz from most versions of cu(1) doesn't work because cu's receive process fights .I sz for characters from the modem. On at least one BSD system, sz would hang or exit when it got within a few kilobytes of the end of file. Using the "-w 8192" flag fixed the problem. The real cause is unknown, perhaps a bug in the kernel TTY output routines. Programs that do not properly implement the specified file transfer protocol may cause .I sz to "hang" the port for a minute or two. This problem is corrected by using ZCOMM, Pro-YAM, or other program with a correct implementation of the specified protocol. Many programs claiming to support YMODEM only support XMODEM with 1k blocks, and they often don't get that quite right. XMODEM transfers add up to 127 garbage bytes per file. XMODEM-1k and YMODEM-1k transfers use 128 byte blocks to avoid extra padding. YMODEM programs use the file length transmitted at the beginning of the transfer to prune the file to the correct length; this may cause problems with source files that grow during the course of the transfer. This problem does not pertain to ZMODEM transfers, which preserve the exact file length unconditionally. Most ZMODEM options are merely passed to the receiving program; some do not implement all these options. Circular buffering and a ZMODEM sliding window should be used when input is from pipes instead of acknowledging frames each 1024 bytes. If no files can be opened, .B sz sends a ZMODEM command to echo a suitable complaint; perhaps it should check for the presence of at least one accessible file before getting hot and bothered. The test mode leaves a zero length file on the receiving system. A few high speed modems have a firmware bug that drops characters when the direction of high speed transmissson is reversed. The environment variable ZNULLS may be used to specify the number of nulls to send before a ZDATA frame. Values of 101 for a 4.77 mHz PC and 124 for an AT are typical. irecto kźTč&¢!¤ĻƒČNx9ČNx9ČNx9€ σ./usr/local/man/man1/minicom.11 ¤.\" This file Copyright 1992,93 Michael K. Johnson (johnsonm@stolaf.edu) .\" Copyright 1995,1996 Miquel van Smoorenburg .\" Copyright 1997-2000 Jukka Lahtinen .\" It may be distributed under the GNU Public License, version 2, or .\" any higher version. See section COPYING of the GNU Public license .\" for conditions under which this file may be redistributed. .TH MINICOM 1 "24 May 2000" "User's Manual" .SH NAME minicom \- friendly serial communication program .SH SYNOPSIS .B minicom .RI "[-somlz8] [-c on|off] [-S script] [-d entry]" .br .in 15 .RI "[-a on|off] [-t term] [-p pty] [-C capturefile] [" configuration ] .SH DESCRIPTION .B minicom is a communication program which somewhat resembles the shareware program TELIX but is free with source code and runs under most unices. Features include dialing directory with auto-redial, support for UUCP-style lock files on serial devices, a seperate script language interpreter, capture to file, multiple users with individual configurations, and more. .SH COMMAND-LINE .TP 0.5i .B -s .BR S etup. Root edits the system-wide defaults in /etc/minirc.dfl with this option. When it is used, minicom does .I not initialize, but puts you directly into the configuration menu. This is very handy if minicom refuses to start up because your system has changed, or for the first time you run minicom. For most systems, reasonable defaults are already compiled in. .TP 0.5i .B -o Do not initialize. Minicom will skip the initialization code. This option is handy if you quitted from minicom without resetting, and then want to restart a session. It is potentially dangerous though: no check for lock files etc. is made, so a normal user could interfere with things like uucp... Maybe this will be taken out later. For now it is assumed, that users who are given access to a modem are responsible enough for their actions. .TP 0.5i .B -m Override command-key with the Meta or ALT key. This is the default in 1.80 and it can also be configured in one of minicom's menus, but if you use different terminals all the time, of which some don't have a Meta or ALT key, it's handy to set the default command key to Ctrl-A and use this option when you have a keyboard supporting Meta or ALT keys. Minicom assumes that your Meta key sends the ESC prefix, not the other variant that sets the highest bit of the character. .TP 0.5i .B -M Same as -m, but assumes that your Meta key sets the 8th bit of the character high (sends 128 + character code). .TP 0.5i .B -z Use terminal status line. This only works on terminals that support it and that have the relevant information in their \fItermcap\fP or \fIterminfo\fP database entry. .TP 0.5i .B -l .BR L iteral translation of characters with the high bit set. With this flag on, minicom will not try to translate the IBM line characters to ASCII, but passes them straight trough. Many PC-unix clones will display them correctly without translation (Linux in a special mode, Coherent and Sco). .TP 0.5i .B -a .BR A ttribute usage. Some terminals, notably televideo's, have a rotten attribute handling (serial instead of parallel). By default, minicom uses '-a on', but if you are using such a terminal you can (must!) supply the option '-a off'. The trailing 'on' or 'off' is needed. .TP 0.5i .B -t .BR T erminal type. With this flag, you can override the environment TERM variable. This is handy for use in the MINICOM environment variable; one can create a special termcap entry for use with minicom on the console, that initializes the screen to raw mode so that in conjunction with the -l flag, the IBM line characters are displayed untranslated. .TP 0.5i .B -c .BR C olor usage. Some terminals (such as the Linux console) support color with the standard ANSI escape sequences. Because there is apparently no termcap support for color, these escape sequences are hard-coded into minicom. Therefore this option is off by default. You can turn it on with '-c on'. This, and the '-m' option, are good candidates to put into the MINICOM environment variable. .TP 0.5i .B -S .BR script . Run the named script at startup. So far, passing username and password to a startup script is not supported. If you also use the -d option to start dialing at startup, the -S script will be run BEFORE dialing the entries specified with -d. .TP 0.5i .B -d .BR D ial an entry from the dialing directory on startup. You can specify an index number, but also a substring of the name of the entry. If you specify a name that has multiple entries in the directory, they are all tagged for dialing. You can also specify multiple names or index numbers by separating them with commas. The dialing will start from the first entry specified after all other program initialization procedures are completed. .TP 0.5i .B -p .BR P seudo terminal to use. This overrrides the terminal port defined in the configuration files, but only if it is a pseudo tty. The filename supplied must be of the form (/dev/)tty[p-z][0-f]. .TP 0.5i .B -C .BR filename . Open capture file at startup. .TP 0.5i .B -8 '8bit clean' and 'continuous' mode. '8bit clean' means Minicom let 8bit characters pass through without any modification. 'Continuous' means no locate/attribute control sequences are inserted without real change of locate/attribute. This mode is to display 8bit multibyte characters such as Japanese. Not needed in every language with 8bit characters. (For example displaying Finnish text doesn't need this.) .PP .RS 0.5i When .B minicom starts, it first searches the MINICOM environment variable for command-line arguments, which can be over-ridden on the command line. Thus, if you have done .PP .RS 0.5i .PD 0 MINICOM='-m -c on' .PP export MINICOM .PP .PD 1 .PP .RE or the equivalent, and start minicom, minicom will assume that your terminal .I has a Meta or key and that color is supported. If you then log in from a terminal without color support, and you have set MINICOM in your startup (.profile or equivalent) file, and don't want to re-set your environment variable, you can type 'minicom -c off' and run without color support for that session. .RE .TP 0.5i .B configuration The .I configuration argument is more interesting. Normally, minicom gets its defaults from a file called "minirc.dfl". If you however give an argument to minicom, it will try to get its defaults from a file called "minirc.\fIconfiguration\fR\|". So it is possible to create multiple configuration files, for different ports, different users etc. Most sensible is to use device names, such as tty1, tty64, sio2 etc. If a user creates his own configuration file, it will show up in his home directory as '.minirc.dfl'. .SH USE Minicom is windows-based. To popup a window with the function you want, press Control-A (from now on, we will use C-A to mean Control-A), and then the function key (a-z or A-Z). By pressing C-A first and then 'z', a help screen comes up with a short summary of all commands. This escape key can be altered when minicom is configured (-s option or C-A O), but we'll stick to Control-A for now. .PP .PD 0 For every menu the next keys can be used: .TP 0.75i .B UP arrow-up or 'k' .TP 0.75i .B DOWN arrow-down or 'j' .TP 0.75i .B LEFT arrow-left or 'h' .TP 0.75i .B RIGHT arrow-right or 'l' .TP 0.75i .B CHOOSE Enter .TP 0.75i .B CANCEL ESCape. .PD 1 .PP The screen is divided into two portions: the upper 24 lines are the terminal-emulator screen. In this window, ANSI or VT100 escape sequences are interpreted. If there is a line left at the bottom, a status line is placed there. If this is not possible the status line will be showed every time you press C-A. On terminals that have a special status line that will be used if the termcap information is complete \fIand\fP the \fB-k\fP flag has been given. .PP .PD 0 Possible commands are listed next, in alphabetical order. .TP 0.5i .B C-A Pressing C-A a second time will just send a C-A to the remote system. If you have changed your "escape character" to something other than C-A, this works analogously for that character. .TP 0.5i .B A Toggle 'Add Linefeed' on/off. If it is on, a linefeed is added before every carriage return displayed on the screen. .TP 0.5i .B B Gives you a scroll back buffer. You can scroll up with \fBu\fP, down with \fBd\fP, a page up with \fBb\fP, a page down with \fBf\fP, and if you have them the \fBarrow\fP and \fBpage up/page down\fP keys can also be used. You can search for text in the buffer with \fBs\fP (case-sensitive) or \fBS\fP (case-insensitive). \fBN\fP will find the next occurrence of the string. \fBc\fP will enter citation mode. A text cursor appears and you specify the start line by hitting Enter key. Then scroll back mode will finish and the contents with prefix '>' will be sent. .TP 0.5i .B C Clears the screen. .TP 0.5i .B D Dial a number, or go to the dialing directory. .TP 0.5i .B E Toggle local echo on and off (if your version of minicom supports it). .TP 0.5i .B F A break signal is sent to the modem. .TP 0.5i .B G Run script (Go). Runs a login script. .TP 0.5i .B H Hangup. .TP 0.5i .B I Toggle the type of escape sequence that the cursor keys send between normal and applications mode. (See also the comment about the status line below). .TP 0.5i .B J Jump to a shell. On return, the whole screen will be redrawn. .TP 0.5i .B K Clears the screen, runs kermit and redraws the screen upon return. .TP 0.5i .B L Turn Capture file on off. If turned on, all output sent to the screen will be captured in the file too. .TP 0.5i .B M Sends the modem initialization string. If you are online and the DCD line setting is on, you are asked for confirmation before the modem is initialized. .TP 0.5i .B O Configure minicom. Puts you in the configuration menu. .TP 0.5i .B P Communication Parameters. Allows you to change the bps rate, parity and number of bits. .TP 0.5i .B Q Exit minicom without resetting the modem. If macros changed and were not saved, you will have a chance to do so. .TP 0.5i .B R Receive files. Choose from various protocols (external). If you have the filename selection window and the prompt for download directory enabled, you'll get a selection window for choosing the directory for downloading. Otherwise the download directory defined in the Filenames and paths menu will be used. .TP 0.5i .B S Send files. Choose the protocol like you do with the receive command. If you don't have the filename selection window enabled (in the File transfer protocols menu), you'll just have to write the filename(s) in a dialog window. If you have the selection window enabled, a window will pop up showing the filenames in your upload directory. You can tag and untag filenames by pressing spacebar, and move the cursor up and down with the cursor keys or j/k. The selected filenames are shown highlighted. Directory names are shown [within brackets] and you can move up or down in the directory tree by pressing the spacebar twice. Finally, send the files by pressing ENTER or quit by pressing ESC. .TP 0.5i .B T Choose Terminal emulation: Ansi(color) or vt100. You can also change the backspace key here, turn the status line on or off, and define delay (in milliseconds) after each newline if you need that. .TP 0.5i .B W Toggle linewrap on/off. .TP 0.5i .B X Exit minicom, reset modem. If macros changed and were not saved, you will have a chance to do so. .TP 0.5i .B Z Pop up the help screen. .PD 1 .SH "DIALING DIRECTORY" By pressing C-A D the program puts you in the dialing directory. Select a command by pressing the capitalized letter or moving cursor right/left with the arrow keys or the h/l keys and pressing Enter. You can add, delete or edit entries and move them up and down in the directory list. By choosing "dial" the phone numbers of the tagged entries, or if nothing is tagged, the number of the highlighted entry will be dialed. While the modem is dialing, you can press escape to cancel dialing. Any other key will close the dial window, but won't cancel the dialing itself. Your dialing directory will be saved into a the file ".dialdir" in your home directory. You can scroll up and down with the arrow keys, but you can also scroll complete pages by pressing the PageUp or PageDown key. If you don't have those, use Control-B (Backward) and Control-F (Forward). You can use the space bar to \fBtag\fP a number of entries and minicom will rotate trough this list if a connection can't be made. A '>' symbol is drawn in the directory before the names of the tagged entries. .PP The "edit" menu speaks for itself, but I will discuss it briefly here. .PD 0 .TP 1.0i .B A - Name The name for this entry .TP 1.0i .B B - Number and its telephone number. .TP 1.0i .B C - Dial string # Which specific dial string you want to use to connect. There are three different dial strings (prefixes and suffixes) that can be configured in the \fBModem and dialing\fP menu. .TP 1.0i .B D - Local echo can be on or off for this system (if your version of minicom supports it). .TP 1.0i .B E - Script The script that must be executed after a succesfull connection is made (see the manual for runscript) .TP 1.0i .B F - Username The username that is passed to the runscript program. It is passed in the environment string "$LOGIN". .TP 1.0i .B G - Password The password is passed as "$PASS". .TP 1.0i .B H - Terminal Emulation Use ANSI or VT100 emulation. .TP 1.0i .B I - Backspace key sends What code (Backspace or Delete) the backspace key sends. .TP 1.0i .B J - Linewrap Can be on or off. .TP 1.0i .B K - Line settings Bps rate, bits, parity and number of stop bits to use for this connection. You can choose \fBcurrent\fP for the speed, so that it will use whatever speed is being used at that moment (useful if you have multiple modems). .TP 1.0i .B L - Conversion table You may spacify a character conversion table to be loaded whenever this entry answers, before running the login script. If this field is blank, the conversion table stays unchanged. .PP .PD 1 The edit menu also shows the latest date and time when you called this entry and the total number of calls there, but doesn't let you change them. They are updated automatically when you connect. .PD 1 .PP The moVe command lets you move the highlighted entry up or down in the dialing directory with the up/down arrow keys or the k and j keys. Press Enter or ESC to end moving the entry. .PP .SH CONFIGURATION By pressing C-A O you will be thrown into the setup menu. Most settings there can be changed by everyone, but some are restricted to root only. Those priviliged settings are marked with a star (*) here. .PP .PD 0 .B "Filenames and paths" .PP .RS 0.25i This menu defines your default directories. .TP 0.5i .B A - Download directory where the downloaded files go to. .TP 0.5i .B B - Upload directory where the uploaded files are read from. .TP 0.5i .B C - Script directory Where you keep your login scripts. .TP 0.5i .B D - Script program Which program to use as the script interpreter. Defaults to the program "runscript", but if you want to use something else (eg, /bin/sh or "expect") it is possible. Stdin and stdout are connected to the modem, stderr to the screen. .RS 0.5i If the path is relative (ie, does not start with a slash) then it's relative to your home directory, except for the script interpreter. .RE .TP 0.5i .B E - Kermit program Where to find the executable for kermit, and it's options. Some simple macro's can be used on the command line: '%l' is expanded to the complete filename of the dial out-device, '%f' is expanded to the serial port file descriptor and '%b' is expanded to the current serial port speed. .TP 0.5i .B F - Logging options Options to configure the logfile writing. .RS 0.5i .PD 1 .TP 0.5i .B A - File name Here you can enter the name of the logfile. The file will be written in your home directory, and the default value is "minicom.log". If you blank the name, all logging is turned off. .TP 0.5i .B B - Log connects and hangups This option defines whether or not the logfile is written when the remote end answers the call or hangs up. Or when you give the hangup command yourself or leave minicom without hangup while online. .TP 0.5i .B C - Log file transfers Do you want log entries of receiving and sending files. .RE The 'log' command in the scripts is not affected by logging options B and C. It is always executed, if you just have the name of the log file defined. .RE .PD 1 .PP .B "File Transfer Protocols" .PD 0 .PP .RS 0.25i Protocols defined here will show up when C-A s/r is pressed. "Name" in the beginning of the line is the name that will show up in the menu. "Program" is the path to the protocol. "Name" after that defines if the program needs an argument, eg. a file to be transmitted. U/D defines if this entry should show up in the upload or the download menu. Fullscr defines if the program should run full screen, or that minicom will only show it's stderr in a window. IO-Red defines if minicom should attach the program's standard in and output to the modem port or not. "Multi" tells the filename selection window whether or not the protocol can send multiple files with one command. It has no effect on download protocols, and it is also ignored with upload protocols if you don't use the filename selection window. The old sz and rz are not full screen, and have IO-Red set. However, there are curses based versions of at least rz that do not want their stdin and stdout redirected, and run full screen. All file transfer protocols are run with the UID of the user, and not with UID=root. '%l', '%f' and '%b' can be used on the command line as with kermit. Within this menu you can also define if you want to use the filename selection window when prompted for files to upload, and if you like to be prompted for the download directory every time the automatic download is started. If you leave the download directory prompt disabled, the download directory defined in the file and directory menu is used. .RE .PD 1 .PP .B "Serial port setup" .RS 0.25i .PD 0 .TP 0.5i .B *A - Serial device /dev/tty1 or /dev/ttyS1 for most people. /dev/cua is still possible under linux, but not recommended any more because these devices are obsolete and many newly installed systems with kernel 2.2.x don't have them. Use /dev/ttyS instead. You may also have /dev/modem as a symlink to the real device. .br If you have modems connected to two or more serial ports, you may specify all of them here in a list separated by space, comma or semicolon. When Minicom starts, it checks the list until it finds an available modem and uses that one. (However, you can't specify different init strings to them ..at least not yet.) .TP 0.5i .B *B - Lock file location On most systems This should be /usr/spool/uucp. Linux systems use /var/lock. If this directory does not exist, minicom will not attempt to use lockfiles. .TP 0.5i .B *C - Callin program If you have a uugetty or something on your serial port, it could be that you want a program to be run to switch the modem cq. port into dialin/dialout mode. This is the program to get into dialin mode. .TP 0.5i .B *D - Callout program And this to get into dialout mode. .TP 0.5i .B E - Bps/Par/Bits Default parameters at startup. .PD 1 .PP If one of the entries is left blank, it will not be used. So if you don't care about locking, and don't have a getty running on your modemline, entries B - D should be left blank. Be warned! The callin and callout programs are run with the effective user id of "root", eg 0! .RE .PP .B "Modem and Dialing" .PD 0 .PP .RS 0.25i Here, the parameters for your modem are defined. I will not explain this further because the defaults are for generic Hayes modems, and should work always. This file is not a Hayes tutorial :-) The only things worth noticing are that control characters can be sent by prefixing them with a '^', in which '^^' means '^' itself, and the '\\' character must also be doubled as '\\\\', because backslash is used specially in the macro definitions. Some options however, don't have much to do with the modem but more with the behaviour of minicom itself: .PP .TP 0.5i .B M - Dial time The number of seconds before minicom times out if no connection is established. .TP 0.5i .B N - Delay before redial Minicom will redial if no connection was made, but it first waits some time. .TP 0.5i .B O - Number of tries Maximum number of times that minicom attempts to dial. .TP 0.5i .B P - Drop DTR time If you set this to 0, minicom hangs up by sending a Hayes-type hangup sequence. If you specify a non-zero value, the hangup will be done by dropping the DTR line. The value tells in seconds how long DTR will be kept down. .TP 0.5i .B Q - Auto bps detect If this is on, minicom tries to match the dialed party's speed. With most modern modems this is NOT desirable, since the modem buffers the data and converts the speed. .TP 0.5i .B R - Modem has DCD line If your modem, and your O/S both support the DCD line (that goes 'high' when a connection is made) minicom will use it. When you have this option on, minicom will also NOT start dialing while you are already online. .TP 0.5i .B S - Status line shows DTE speed / line speed You can toggle the status line to show either the DTE speed (the speed which minicom uses to communicate with your modem) or the line speed (the speed that your modem uses on the line to communicate with the other modem). Notice that the line speed may change during the connection, but you will still only see the initial speed that the modems started the connection with. This is because the modem doesn't tell the program if the speed is changed. Also, to see the line speed, you need to have the modem set to show it in the connect string. Otherwise you will only see 0 as the line speed. .TP 0.5i .B T - Multi-line untag You can toggle the feature to untag entries from the dialing directory when a connection is established to a multi-line BBS. All the tagged entries that have the same name are untagged. .PD 1 .PP .RE .RS 0.5i .B Note that a special exception is made for this menu: every user .B can change all parameters here, but some of them will not be saved. .RE .PP .B "Screen and keyboard" .RS 0.25i .PD 0 .TP 0.5i .B A - Command key is the 'Hot Key' that brings you into command mode. If this is set to 'ALT' or 'meta key', you can directly call commands by alt-key instead of HotKey-key. .TP 0.5i .B B - Backspace key sends There still are some systems that want a VT100 to send DEL instead of BS. With this option you can enable that stupidity. (Eh, it's even on by default...) .TP 0.5i .B C - Status line is Enabled or disabled. Some slow terminals (for example, X-terminals) cause the status line to jump "up and down" when scrolling, so you can turn it off if desired. It will still be shown in command-mode. .TP 0.5i .B D - Alarm sound If turned on, minicom will sound an alarm (on the console only) after a succesfull connection and when up/downloading is complete. .TP 0.5i .B E - Foreground Color (menu) indicates the foreground color to use for all the configuration windows in minicom. .TP 0.5i .B F - Background Color (menu) indicates the background color to use for all the configuration windows in minicom. Note that minicom will not allow you to set forground and background colors to the same value. .TP 0.5i .B G - Foreground Color (term) indicates the foreground color to use in the terminal window. .TP 0.5i .B H - Background Color (term) indicates the background color to use in the terminal window. Note that minicom will not allow you to set forground and background colors to the same value. .TP 0.5i .B I - Foreground Color (stat) indicates the foreground color to use in for the status bar. .TP 0.5i .B J - Background Color (stat) indicates the color to use in for the status bar. Note that minicom will allow you to set the status bar's forground and background colors to the same value. This will effectively make the status bar invisible but if these are your intensions, please see the option .TP 0.5i .B K - History buffer size The number of lines to keep in the history buffer (for backscrolling). .TP 0.5i .B L - Macros file is the full path to the file that holds macros. Macros allow you to define a string to be sent when you press a certain key. In minicom, you may define F1 through F10 to send up to 256 characters [this is set at compile time]. The filename you specify is verified as soon as you hit ENTER. If you do not have permissions to create the specified file, an error message will so indicate and you will be forced to re-edit the filename. If you are permitted to create the file, minicom checks to see if it already exists. If so, it assumes it's a macro file and reads it in. If it isn't, well, it's your problem :-) If the file does not exist, the filename is accepted. .TP 0.5i .B M - Edit Macros opens up a new window which allows you to edit the F1 through F10 macros. .TP 0.5i .B N - Macros enabled - Yes or No. If macros are disabled, the F1-F10 keys will just send the VT100/VT220 function key escape sequences. .TP 0.5i .B O - Character conversion The active conversion table filename is shown here. If you can see no name, no conversion is active. Pressing O, you will see the conversion table edit menu. .RS 0.5i .PD 1 .TP 0.25i .B "Edit Macros" Here, the macros for F1 through F10 are defined. The bottom of the window shows a legend of character combinations that have special meaning. They allow you to enter special control characters with plain text by prefixing them with a '^', in which '^^' means '^' itself. You can send a 1 second delay with the '^~' code. This is useful when you are trying to login after ftp'ing or telnet'ing somewhere. You can also include your current username and password from the phone directory in the macros with '\\u' and '\\p', respectively. If you need the backslash character in the macro, write it doubled as '\\\\'. To edit a macro, press the number (or letter for F10) and you will be moved to the end of the macro. When editing the line, you may use the left & right arrows, Home & End keys, Delete & BackSpace, and ESC and RETURN. ESC cancels any changes made while ENTER accepts the changes. .PD 1 .TP 0.25i .B "Character conversion" Here you can edit the character conversion table. If you are not an American, you know that in many languages there are characters that are not included in the ASCII character set, and in the old times they may have replaced some less important characters in ASCII and now they are often represented with character codes above 127. AND there are various different ways to represent them. This is where you may edit conversion tables for systems that use a character set different from the one on your computer. .TP 0.5i .B A - Load table You probably guessed it. This command loads a table from the disk. You are asked a file name for the table. Predefined tables .mciso, .mcpc8 and .mcsf7 should be included with the program. Table .mciso does no conversion, .mcpc8 is to be used for connections with systems that use the 8-bit pc character set, and .mcsf7 is for compatibility with the systems that uses the good old 7-bit coding to replace the characters {|}[]\\ with the diacritical characters used in Finnish and Swedish. .TP 0.5i .B B - Save table This one saves the active table on the filename you specify. .TP 0.5i .B C - edit char This is where you can make your own modifications to the existing table. First you are asked the character value (in decimal) whose conversion you want to change. Next you'll say which character you want to see on your screen when that character comes from the outside world. And then you'll be asked what you want to be sent out when you enter that character from your keyboard. .TP 0.5i .B D - next screen .TP 0.5i .B E - prev screen Yeah, you probably noticed that this screen shows you what kind of conversions are active. The screen just is (usually) too small to show the whole table at once in an easy-to-understand format. This is how you can scroll the table left and right. .TP 0.5i .B F - convert capture Toggles whether or not the character conversion table is used when writing the capture file. .RE .RE .PD 1 .TP 0.25i .B "Save setup as dfl" Save the parameters as the default for the next time the program is started. Instead of dfl, any other parameter name may appear, depending on which one was used when the program was started. .TP 0.25i .B "Save setup as.." Save the parameters under a special name. Whenever Minicom is started with this name as an argument, it will use these parameters. This option is of course priviliged to root. .TP 0.25i .B "Exit" Escape from this menu without saving. This can also be done with ESC. .TP 0.25i .B "Exit from minicom" Only root will see this menu entry, if he/she started minicom with the '-s' option. This way, it is possible to change the configuration without actually running minicom. .PD 1 .SH "STATUS LINE" The status line has several indicators, that speak for themselves. The mysterious APP or NOR indicator probably needs explanation. The VT100 cursor keys can be in two modes: applications mode and cursor mode. This is controlled by an escape sequence. If you find that the cursor keys do not work in, say, vi when you're logged in using minicom then you can see with this indicator whether the cursor keys are in applications or cursor mode. You can toggle the two with the C-A I key. If the cursor keys then work, it's probably an error in the remote system's termcap initialization strings (is). .PD 1 .SH "LOCALES" Minicom has now support for local languages. This means you can change most of the English messages and other strings to another language by setting the environment variable LANG. On June 1999 the supported languages are Brazilian Portuguese, Finnish, Japanese, French, Polish and Korean. Turkish is under construction. .PD 1 .SH "SECURITY ISSUES" Since Minicom is run setuid root on some computers, you probably want to restrict access to it. This is possible by using a configuration file in the same directory as the default files, called "minicom.users". The syntax of this file is as following: .PP .RS 0.5i [configuration...] .RE .PP To allow user 'miquels' to use the default configuration, enter the following line into "minicom.users": .PP .RS 0.5i miquels dfl .RE .PP If you want users to be able to use more than the default configurations, just add the names of those configurations behind the user name. If no configuration is given behind the username, minicom assumes that the user has access to all configurations. .PD 1 .SH MISC If minicom is hung, kill it with SIGTERM . (This means kill -15, or since sigterm is default, just plain "kill ". This will cause a graceful exit of minicom, doing resets and everything. You may kill minicom from a script with the command "! killall -9 minicom" without hanging up the line. Without the -9 parameter, minicom first hangs up before exiting. .PP Since a lot of escape sequences begin with ESC (Arrow up is ESC [ A), Minicom does not know if the escape character it gets is you pressing the escape key, or part of a sequence. .PP An old version of Minicom, V1.2, solved this in a rather crude way: to get the escape key, you had to press it .IR twice . .PP As of release 1.3 this has bettered a little: now a 1-second timeout is builtin, like in vi. For systems that have the select() system call the timeout is 0.5 seconds. And... surprise: a special Linux-dependant .BR hack " :-) was added. Now, minicom can separate the escape key and" escape-sequences. To see how dirty this was done, look into wkeys.c. But it works like a charm! .SH FILES Minicom keeps it's configuration files in one directory, usually /var/lib/minicom, /usr/local/etc or /etc. To find out what default directory minicom has compiled in, issue the command \fIminicom -h\fP. You'll probably also find the demo files for \fBrunscript\fP(1), and the examples of character conversion tables either there or in the subdirectories of /usr/doc/minicom*. The conversion tables are named something like mc.* in that directory, but you probably want to copy the ones you need in your home directory as something beginning with a dot. .sp 1 .nf minicom.users minirc.* $HOME/.minirc.* $HOME/.dialdir $HOME/minicom.log /usr/share/locale/*/LC_MESSAGES/minicom.mo .fi .SH VERSION Minicom is now up to version 1.83.1. .SH AUTHORS The original author of minicom is Miquel van Smoorenburg (miquels@cistron.nl). He wrote versions up to 1.75. .br Jukka Lahtinen (walker@clinet.fi, walker@megabaud.fi) has been responsible for new versions since 1.78, helped by some other people, including: .br filipg@paranoia.com wrote the History buffer searching to 1.79. .br Arnaldo Carvalho de Melo (acme@conectiva.com.br) did the internationalization and the Brasilian Portuguese translations. .br Jim Seymour (jseymour@jimsun.LinxNet.com) wrote the multiple modem support and the filename selection window used since 1.80. .br Tomohiro Kubota (kubota@debian.or.jp) wrote the Japanese translations and the citation facility, and did some fixes. .br Gael Queri (gqueri@mail.dotcom.fr) wrote the French translations. .br Arkadiusz Miskiewicz (misiek@debian.eu.org) wrote the Polish translations. .br Kim soyoung (nexti@chollian.net) wrote the Korean translations. .PP Most of this man page is copied, with corrections, from the original minicom README, but some pieces and the corrections are by Michael K. Johnson. .PP Jukka Lahtinen (walker@clinet.fi) has added some information of the changes made after version 1.75. . kźŲ.'¢!¤³ČNx9ČNx9ČNx9€ ³./usr/local/man/man1/modemu.11 ¤.\" -*- nroff -*- .TH MODEMU 1 "1 April 1995" "Version 0.0" .\" .\" .SH NAME .\" modemu \- dialup TCP connecting .\" .\" .SH SYNOPSIS .\" .B modemu [\fB-c \fIcomm_prog\fR] [\fB-d \fIpty_master\fR] [\fB-e \fIatcmds\fR] [\fB-h\fR] [\fB-s\fR] [\fB-\fR] .\" .\" .SH DESCRIPTION .\" .B Modemu is a TELNET client with a modem-like user interface. It can redirect its I/O via a .BR pty (4) so that a comm program can handle the pty as a tty with a real modem. .PP .B Modemu has two major modes: a command mode and online mode. When invoked, .B modemu is in the command mode, waiting for AT commands input. Entering a D or O command will put into the online mode, in which \" <=== .B modemu communicate with a remote host. Connection closing or a escape command input returns to the command mode. .\" .\" .SH OPTIONS .\" ===== -c ===== .TP .BI -c " comm_prog" Invoke a comm program \fIcomm_prog\fP. .B Modemu invokes it by passing /bin/sh an option `-c \fIcomm_prog\fP'. Therefore, any .BR sh (1) commands can be specified. The string \fIcomm_prog\fP can include a `%s', which will be replaced with the last two letters of a device name. The device is a pty slave device which the comm program must open. .RS Example: .RS modemu -c "xc -l tty%s" .RE .RE .\" ===== -d ===== .TP .BI -d " pty_master" Open a file \fIpty_master\fP and talk through it. A named pipe can be a .I pty_master as well as a pty master device because .B modemu doesn't ioctl a \fIpty_master\fP. .\" ===== -e ===== .TP .BI -e " atcmds" Execute a series of AT commands \fIatcmds\fP initially. .I Atcmds must have an `AT' or `at' prefix. D and O commands in \fIatcmds\fP are ignored. .\" ===== -h ===== .TP .B -h Print a usage summary. .\" ===== -s ===== .TP .B -s Print the last two letters of a device name. The device is a pty master device which .B modemu talks through. Therefore, when .B modemu prints `p8', comm program must open /dev/tty\fIp8\fP. .\" ===== - ===== .TP .B `-' .B Modemu talks through the standard input/output. (Default) .\" ========== .PP Note: -c, -d, -s and - options are exclusive each other. If two or more of the options are specified, only the last one is effective. .\" .\" .SH COMMAND MODE .\" Command mode expects lines in the following format: .IP "" [\fIgarbage\fP]\fIat\fP[\fIsp\fP][\fIcmd\fP[\fIsp\fP]]...\fIcr\fP .PP where .I at is an `AT' or `at', .I sp is spaces, .I cr is a carriage return character (register S3), .I garbage is a string includes no \fIat\fP. If a `#' prefixes a line, the line is ignored. Available .IR cmd s are listed below. They are all case in-sensitive except for some literally used arguments. A (*) marks default settings. .\" ===== D ===== .TP .BI D str Dialing command. Open a connection to \fIhost\fP. If \fIport\fP is specified, .B modemu attempts to connect with the port instead of the default TELNET port, and doesn't initiate TELNET option negotiation. The following formats are available for \fIstr\fP: .RS .TP \fIhost\fP[:\fIport\fP] \fIHost\fP is an Internet address in numbers-and-dots notation. Optional \fIport\fP is a port number. .TP "\fIhost\fP[:\fIport\fP]["] \fIHost\fP is an Internet address or host name. Optional \fIport\fP is a port number or service name. The closing double quote can be omitted if no command follows. .PP .I Str can be prefixed with `T', `P', `\fIdigit\fPW' and/or `\fIdigit\fP,'. The prefixes are simply ignored. .br Example: .RS ATDT0W127.0.0.1 .br ATDP"foo.bar.jp:daytime .RE .RE .\" ===== E ===== .TP .B E1 No operation. .\" ===== F ===== .TP .B F1 No operation. .\" ===== H ===== .TP .BR H [ 0 ] Close the current TELNET session. .\" ===== I ===== .TP .BI I n Print various information. .RS .IP I4 Current settings .IP I5 `&W'ed settings .IP I6 TELNET option states .IP I7 .B Modemu version .RE .\" ===== O ===== .TP .BR O [ 0 ] Return to online mode. .\" ===== P ===== .TP .B P No operation. .\" ===== Q ===== .TP .BR Q [ 0 ] No operation. .TP .B T No operation. .\" ===== V ===== .TP .B V1 No operation. .\" ===== X ===== .TP .BR X [ 0 ] No operation. .\" ===== Sn=m ===== .TP .BI S n = m Set S-register S\fIn\fP to \fIm\fP. A number from 0-255 is allowed for \fIm\fP. .\" ===== Sn? ===== .TP .BI S n ? Print an S-register S\fIn\fP's value. .\" ===== Z ===== .TP .B Z Close the current TELNET session, and restore `&W'ed settings. .\" ===== &W ===== .TP .B &W Save current settings. The saved settings will be lost with the end of the process because they are not stored into NV-RAM nor files. .\" ===== %B ===== .TP .BI %B n = m Control TELNET binary option. Valid values for \fIn\fP are: .RS .RS .IP 0 Control the local (modemu) option .IP 1 Control the remote (TELNET server) option .RE .PP Valid values for \fIm\fP are: .RS .IP 0 Request non-binary transmission mode (*) .IP 1 Request binary transmission (8bit through) mode .TP .I above+2 Disconnect if the request is refused .RE .PP Example: .RS .IP AT%B1=1 Requesting binary mode in remote-to-modemu direction .IP AT%B0=3%B1=3 Requesting binary mode in both remote-to-modemu and modemu-to-remote direction. No use connecting in non-binary mode (using file xfer protocol or something) .RE .RE .\" ===== %D ===== .TP .BI %D n Control dial-canceling. .RS .IP %D0 A keypress cancels dialing (*) .IP %D1 Keypresses don't cancel dialing .RE .\" ===== %L ===== .TP .BI %L n Control line-mode. .RS .IP %L0 Request character-at-a-time mode (*) .IP %L1 Request line-at-a-time mode (old line-mode). Input characters are buffered and not sent until a CR character is entered. .RE .\" ===== %Q ===== .TP .B %Q Quit .BR modemu . .\" ===== %R ===== .TP .BI %R n Control raw-mode. .RS .IP %R0 Normal mode (*) .IP %R1 Raw mode. .B Modemu transmits every octet as received. Applied to both remote-to-modemu and modemu-to-remote direction. Override %B and %L settings. .RE .\" ===== %T ===== .TP .BI %T str Control TELNET terminal-type option. .RS .IP %T0 Refuse terminal-type option .IP %T1 Same as %T="$\fBTERM\fP" (\fBTERM\fP environment value is used) (*) .IP %T="\fIterm\fP["] Send \fIterm\fP as the terminal-type if remote requests. The closing double quote can be omitted if no command follows. .RE .\" ===== %V ===== .TP .BI %V n Control verbose level. %V0 (*) is the quietest, and adding following values to \fIn\fP lets .B modemu print more information to stderr. .RS .IP +1 Print misc info to make up for less descriptive ATX0 indication .IP +2 Print TELNET option negotioation .RE .\" .\" .SH ONLINE MODE .\" .B Modemu recognizes only the following command when in online mode. .\" ===== +++ ===== .TP .IB "wait " +++ " wait" Escape to command mode. The `+++' must be input within the guard time. .I Wait is a period of time longer than the guard time without hitting any key. See also S2 and S12 register descriptions. .\" .\" .SH S REGISTERS .\" Only meaningful registers are listed here. Values in braces are default ones. .TP .B S2 Escape character code. (43 = `+') .TP .B S3 Carriage return character code. (13) .TP .B S4 Line feed character code. (10) .TP .B S5 Backspace character code. (8) .TP .B S7 Connecting attempt time limit in seconds. (20) .TP .B S12 Escape sequence guard time in 50ths of a second. (50) .\" .\" .SH ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES .\" .TP .B MODEMU Initially evaluated as AT commands (before -e option argument is evaluated). Must have an `AT' or `at' prefix. .TP .B TERM See %T1 command description. .\" .\" .SH AUTHOR Toru Egashira (egashira@nwk.CL.nec.co.jp) .\" .\" .SH SEE ALSO telnet(1), .I Your favorite modem's manual .\" .\" .SH BUGS .\" No dial-resriction, or blacklisting, capability. So using .B modemu maybe unlawful in some countries. B) ===== kźX(¢!¤-ČNx9ČNx9ČNx9€ -./usr/local/man/man1/runscript.1bles/mc ¤.\" This file Copyright 1992,93,94 Miquel van Smoorenburg .\" 1998-1999 Jukka Lahtinen .\" It may be distributed under the GNU Public License, version 2, or .\" any higher version. See section COPYING of the GNU Public license .\" for conditions under which this file may be redistributed. .TH RUNSCRIPT 1 "5 Apr 1998" "User's Manual" .SH NAME runscript \- script interpreter for minicom .SH SYNOPSIS .B runscript .RI "scriptname [logfile [homedir]]" .SH DESCRIPTION .B runscript is a simple script interpreter that can be called from within the minicom communications program to automate tasks like logging in to a unix system or your favorite bbs. .SH INVOCATION The program expects a script name and optionally a filename and the user's home directory as arguments, and it expects that it's input and output are connected to the \^"remote end\^", the system you are connecting to. All messages from \fBrunscript\fP ment for the local screen are directed to the \fBstderr\fP output. All this is automatically taken care of if you run it from \fBminicom\fP. The logfile and home directory parameters are only used to tell the log command the name of the logfile and where to write it. If the homedir is omitted, runscript uses the directory found in the $HOME environment variable. If also the logfile name is omitted, the log commands are ignored. .SH KEYWORDS .TP 0.5i Runscript recognizes the following commands: .br .RS .nf expect send goto gosub return \^! exit print set inc dec if timeout verbose sleep break call log .fi .RE .SH "OVERVIEW OF KEYWORDS" .TP 0.5i .B "send " is sent to the modem. It is followed by a '\\r'. can be: - regular text, eg 'send hello' - text enclosed in quotes, eg 'send \^"hello world\^"' .TP 0.5i Within the following sequences are recognized: \\n - newline \\r - carriage return \\a - bell \\b - backspace \\c - don't send the default '\\r'. \\f - formfeed \\o - send character \fBo\fP (\fBo\fP is an octal number) .br Also $(environment_variable) can be used, for example $(TERM). Minicom passes three special environment variables: $(LOGIN), which is the username, $(PASS), which is the password, as defined in the proper entry of the dialing directory, and $(TERMLIN) which is the number of actual terminal lines on your screen (that is, the statusline excluded). .TP 0.5i .B "print " Prints to the local screen. Default followed by '\\r\\n'. See the description of 'send' above. .TP 0.5i .B "label:" Declares a label (with the name 'label') to use with goto or gosub. .TP 0.5i .B "goto