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diff --git a/src/appl/telnet/telnet/telnet.0.txt b/src/appl/telnet/telnet/telnet.0.txt deleted file mode 100644 index 41d410babe..0000000000 --- a/src/appl/telnet/telnet/telnet.0.txt +++ /dev/null @@ -1,718 +0,0 @@ -TELNET(1) BSD Reference Manual TELNET(1) - -NNAAMMEE - tteellnneett - user interface to the TELNET protocol - -SSYYNNOOPPSSIISS - tteellnneett [--88] [--EE] [--FF] [--KK] [--LL] [--SS _t_o_s] [--XX _a_u_t_h_t_y_p_e] [--aa] [--cc] [--dd] [--ee - _e_s_c_a_p_e_c_h_a_r] [--ff] [--kk _r_e_a_l_m] [--ll _u_s_e_r] [--nn _t_r_a_c_e_f_i_l_e] [--rr] [--xx] - [_h_o_s_t [port]] - -DDEESSCCRRIIPPTTIIOONN - The tteellnneett command is used to communicate with another host using the - TELNET protocol. If tteellnneett is invoked without the _h_o_s_t argument, it en- - ters command mode, indicated by its prompt (tteellnneett>>). In this mode, it - accepts and executes the commands listed below. If it is invoked with - arguments, it performs an ooppeenn command with those arguments. - - Options: - - --88 Specifies an 8-bit data path. This causes an attempt to negoti- - ate the TELNET BINARY option on both input and output. - - --EE Stops any character from being recognized as an escape character. - - --FF If Kerberos V5 authentication is being used, the --FF option allows - the local credentials to be forwarded to the remote system, in- - cluding any credentials that have already been forwarded into the - local environment. - - --KK Specifies no automatic login to the remote system. - - --LL Specifies an 8-bit data path on output. This causes the BINARY - option to be negotiated on output. - - --SS _t_o_s Sets the IP type-of-service (TOS) option for the telnet connec- - tion to the value _t_o_s_, which can be a numeric TOS value or, on - systems that support it, a symbolic TOS name found in the - /etc/iptos file. - - --XX _a_t_y_p_e - Disables the _a_t_y_p_e type of authentication. - - --aa Attempt automatic login. Currently, this sends the user name via - the USER variable of the ENVIRON option if supported by the re- - mote system. The name used is that of the current user as re- - turned by getlogin(2) if it agrees with the current user ID, oth- - erwise it is the name associated with the user ID. - - --cc Disables the reading of the user's _._t_e_l_n_e_t_r_c file. (See the - ttooggggllee sskkiipprrcc command on this man page.) - - --dd Sets the initial value of the ddeebbuugg toggle to TRUE - - --ee _e_s_c_a_p_e _c_h_a_r - Sets the initial tteellnneett tteellnneett escape character to _e_s_c_a_p_e _c_h_a_r_. - If _e_s_c_a_p_e _c_h_a_r is omitted, then there will be no escape charac- - ter. - - --ff If Kerberos V5 authentication is being used, the --ff option allows - the local credentials to be forwarded to the remote system. - - --kk _r_e_a_l_m - If Kerberos authentication is being used, the --kk option requests - that telnet obtain tickets for the remote host in realm realm in- - stead of the remote host's realm, as determined by - - krb_realmofhost(3). - - --ll _u_s_e_r - When connecting to the remote system, if the remote system under- - stands the ENVIRON option, then _u_s_e_r will be sent to the remote - system as the value for the variable USER. This option implies - the --aa option. This option may also be used with the ooppeenn com- - mand. - - --nn _t_r_a_c_e_f_i_l_e - Opens _t_r_a_c_e_f_i_l_e for recording trace information. See the sseett - ttrraacceeffiillee command below. - - --rr Specifies a user interface similar to rlogin(1). In this mode, - the escape character is set to the tilde (~) character, unless - modified by the -e option. - - --xx Turns on encryption of the data stream if possible. This option - is not available outside of the United States and Canada. - - _h_o_s_t Indicates the official name, an alias, or the Internet address of - a remote host. - - _p_o_r_t Indicates a port number (address of an application). If a number - is not specified, the default tteellnneett port is used. - - When in rlogin mode, a line of the form ~. disconnects from the remote - host; ~ is the telnet escape character. Similarly, the line ~^Z suspends - the telnet session. The line ~^] escapes to the normal telnet escape - prompt. - - Once a connection has been opened, tteellnneett will attempt to enable the - TELNET LINEMODE option. If this fails, then tteellnneett will revert to one of - two input modes: either ``character at a time'' or ``old line by line'' - depending on what the remote system supports. - - When LINEMODE is enabled, character processing is done on the local sys- - tem, under the control of the remote system. When input editing or char- - acter echoing is to be disabled, the remote system will relay that infor- - mation. The remote system will also relay changes to any special charac- - ters that happen on the remote system, so that they can take effect on - the local system. - - In ``character at a time'' mode, most text typed is immediately sent to - the remote host for processing. - - In ``old line by line'' mode, all text is echoed locally, and (normally) - only completed lines are sent to the remote host. The ``local echo char- - acter'' (initially ``^E'') may be used to turn off and on the local echo - (this would mostly be used to enter passwords without the password being - echoed). - - If the LINEMODE option is enabled, or if the llooccaallcchhaarrss toggle is TRUE - (the default for ``old line by line``; see below), the user's qquuiitt, iinnttrr, - and fflluusshh characters are trapped locally, and sent as TELNET protocol se- - quences to the remote side. If LINEMODE has ever been enabled, then the - user's ssuusspp and eeooff are also sent as TELNET protocol sequences, and qquuiitt - is sent as a TELNET ABORT instead of BREAK There are options (see ttooggggllee - aauuttoofflluusshh and ttooggggllee aauuttoossyynncchh below) which cause this action to flush - subsequent output to the terminal (until the remote host acknowledges the - TELNET sequence) and flush previous terminal input (in the case of qquuiitt - and iinnttrr). - - While connected to a remote host, tteellnneett command mode may be entered by - typing the tteellnneett ``escape character'' (initially ``^]''). When in com- - mand mode, the normal terminal editing conventions are available. - - The following tteellnneett commands are available. Only enough of each command - to uniquely identify it need be typed (this is also true for arguments to - the mmooddee, sseett, ttooggggllee, uunnsseett, ssllcc, eennvviirroonn, and ddiissppllaayy commands). - - aauutthh _a_r_g_u_m_e_n_t _._._. - The auth command manipulates the information sent through the - TELNET AUTHENTICATE option. Valid arguments for the auth com- - mand are as follows: - - ddiissaabbllee _t_y_p_e Disables the specified type of authentication. - To obtain a list of available types, use the - aauutthh ddiissaabbllee ?? command. - - eennaabbllee _t_y_p_e Enables the specified type of authentication. - To obtain a list of available types, use the - aauutthh eennaabbllee ?? command. - - ssttaattuuss Lists the current status of the various types of - authentication. - - cclloossee Close a TELNET session and return to command mode. - - ddiissppllaayy _a_r_g_u_m_e_n_t _._._. - Displays all, or some, of the sseett and ttooggggllee values (see be- - low). - - eennccrryypptt _a_r_g_u_m_e_n_t _._._. - The encrypt command manipulates the information sent through - the TELNET ENCRYPT option. - - Note: Because of export controls, the TELNET ENCRYPT option - is not supported outside of the United States and Canada. - - Valid arguments for the encrypt command are as follows: - - ddiissaabbllee _t_y_p_e [[iinnppuutt||oouuttppuutt]] - Disables the specified type of encryption. If - you omit the input and output, both input and - output are disabled. To obtain a list of avail- - able types, use the eennccrryypptt ddiissaabbllee ?? command. - - eennaabbllee _t_y_p_e [[iinnppuutt||oouuttppuutt]] - Enables the specified type of encryption. If - you omit input and output, both input and output - are enabled. To obtain a list of available - types, use the eennccrryypptt eennaabbllee ?? command. - - iinnppuutt This is the same as the eennccrryypptt ssttaarrtt iinnppuutt com- - mand. - - --iinnppuutt This is the same as the eennccrryypptt ssttoopp iinnppuutt com- - mand. - - oouuttppuutt This is the same as the eennccrryypptt ssttaarrtt oouuttppuutt - command. - - --oouuttppuutt This is the same as the eennccrryypptt ssttoopp oouuttppuutt com- - mand. - - ssttaarrtt [[iinnppuutt||oouuttppuutt]] - Attempts to start encryption. If you omit iinnppuutt - and oouuttppuutt,, both input and output are enabled. - To obtain a list of available types, use the - - eennccrryypptt eennaabbllee ?? command. - - ssttaattuuss Lists the current status of encryption. - - ssttoopp [[iinnppuutt||oouuttppuutt]] - Stops encryption. If you omit input and output, - encryption is on both input and output. - - ttyyppee _t_y_p_e Sets the default type of encryption to be used - with later eennccrryypptt ssttaarrtt or eennccrryypptt ssttoopp com- - mands. - - eennvviirroonn _a_r_g_u_m_e_n_t_s_._._. - The eennvviirroonn command is used to manipulate the the variables - that my be sent through the TELNET ENVIRON option. The ini- - tial set of variables is taken from the users environment, - with only the DISPLAY and PRINTER variables being exported by - default. The USER variable is also exported if the --aa or --ll - options are used. - Valid arguments for the eennvviirroonn command are: - - ddeeffiinnee _v_a_r_i_a_b_l_e _v_a_l_u_e - Define the variable _v_a_r_i_a_b_l_e to have a value of - _v_a_l_u_e_. Any variables defined by this command are - automatically exported. The _v_a_l_u_e may be enclosed - in single or double quotes so that tabs and spaces - may be included. - - uunnddeeffiinnee _v_a_r_i_a_b_l_e - Remove _v_a_r_i_a_b_l_e from the list of environment vari- - ables. - - eexxppoorrtt _v_a_r_i_a_b_l_e - Mark the variable _v_a_r_i_a_b_l_e to be exported to the - remote side. - - uunneexxppoorrtt _v_a_r_i_a_b_l_e - Mark the variable _v_a_r_i_a_b_l_e to not be exported un- - less explicitly asked for by the remote side. - - lliisstt List the current set of environment variables. - Those marked with a ** will be sent automatically, - other variables will only be sent if explicitly - requested. - - ?? Prints out help information for the eennvviirroonn com- - mand. - - llooggoouutt Sends the TELNET LOGOUT option to the remote side. This com- - mand is similar to a cclloossee command; however, if the remote - side does not support the LOGOUT option, nothing happens. If, - however, the remote side does support the LOGOUT option, this - command should cause the remote side to close the TELNET con- - nection. If the remote side also supports the concept of sus- - pending a user's session for later reattachment, the logout - argument indicates that you should terminate the session imme- - diately. - - mmooddee _t_y_p_e _T_y_p_e is one of several options, depending on the state of the - TELNET session. The remote host is asked for permission to go - into the requested mode. If the remote host is capable of en- - tering that mode, the requested mode will be entered. - - cchhaarraacctteerr Disable the TELNET LINEMODE option, or, if the - remote side does not understand the LINEMODE op- - - tion, then enter ``character at a time`` mode. - - lliinnee Enable the TELNET LINEMODE option, or, if the - remote side does not understand the LINEMODE op- - tion, then attempt to enter ``old-line-by-line`` - mode. - - iissiigg (--iissiigg) Attempt to enable (disable) the TRAPSIG mode of - the LINEMODE option. This requires that the - LINEMODE option be enabled. - - eeddiitt (--eeddiitt) Attempt to enable (disable) the EDIT mode of the - LINEMODE option. This requires that the - LINEMODE option be enabled. - - ssooffttttaabbss (--ssooffttttaabbss) - Attempt to enable (disable) the SOFT_TAB mode of - the LINEMODE option. This requires that the - LINEMODE option be enabled. - - lliitteecchhoo (--lliitteecchhoo) - Attempt to enable (disable) the LIT_ECHO mode of - the LINEMODE option. This requires that the - LINEMODE option be enabled. - - ?? Prints out help information for the mmooddee com- - mand. - - ooppeenn _h_o_s_t [[--ll] _u_s_e_r][--_p_o_r_t] - Open a connection to the named host. If no port number is - specified, tteellnneett will attempt to contact a TELNET server at - the default port. The host specification may be either a host - name (see hosts(5)) or an Internet address specified in the - ``dot notation'' (see inet(3)). The [--ll] option may be used - to specify the user name to be passed to the remote system via - the ENVIRON option. When connecting to a non-standard port, - tteellnneett omits any automatic initiation of TELNET options. When - the port number is preceded by a minus sign, the initial op- - tion negotiation is done. After establishing a connection, - the file _._t_e_l_n_e_t_r_c in the users home directory is opened. - Lines beginning with a # are comment lines. Blank lines are - ignored. Lines that begin without white space are the start - of a machine entry. The first thing on the line is the name - of the machine that is being connected to. The rest of the - line, and successive lines that begin with white space are as- - sumed to be tteellnneett commands and are processed as if they had - been typed in manually to the tteellnneett command prompt. - - qquuiitt Close any open TELNET session and exit tteellnneett. An end of file - (in command mode) will also close a session and exit. - - sseenndd _a_r_g_u_m_e_n_t_s - Sends one or more special character sequences to the remote - host. The following are the arguments which may be specified - (more than one argument may be specified at a time): - - aabboorrtt Sends the TELNET ABORT (Abort processes) sequence. - - aaoo Sends the TELNET AO (Abort Output) sequence, which - should cause the remote system to flush all output - _f_r_o_m the remote system _t_o the user's terminal. - - aayytt Sends the TELNET AYT (Are You There) sequence, to - which the remote system may or may not choose to re- - - - spond. - - bbrrkk Sends the TELNET BRK (Break) sequence, which may have - significance to the remote system. - - eecc Sends the TELNET EC (Erase Character) sequence, which - should cause the remote system to erase the last char- - acter entered. - - eell Sends the TELNET EL (Erase Line) sequence, which - should cause the remote system to erase the line cur- - rently being entered. - - eeooff Sends the TELNET EOF (End Of File) sequence. - - eeoorr Sends the TELNET EOR (End of Record) sequence. - - eessccaappee Sends the current tteellnneett escape character (initially - ``^''). - - ggaa Sends the TELNET GA (Go Ahead) sequence, which likely - has no significance to the remote system. - - ggeettssttaattuuss - If the remote side supports the TELNET STATUS command, - ggeettssttaattuuss will send the subnegotiation to request that - the server send its current option status. - - iipp Sends the TELNET IP (Interrupt Process) sequence, - which should cause the remote system to abort the cur- - rently running process. - - nnoopp Sends the TELNET NOP (No OPeration) sequence. - - ssuusspp Sends the TELNET SUSP (SUSPend process) sequence. - - ssyynncchh Sends the TELNET SYNCH sequence. This sequence causes - the remote system to discard all previously typed (but - not yet read) input. This sequence is sent as TCP ur- - gent data (and may not work if the remote system is a - 4.2BSD system -- if it doesn't work, a lower case - ``r'' may be echoed on the terminal). - - ddoo _c_m_d - - ddoonntt _c_m_d - - wwiillll _c_m_d - - wwoonntt _c_m_d - Sends the TELNET DO _c_m_d sequence. _C_m_d can be either a - decimal number between 0 and 255, or a symbolic name - for a specific TELNET command. _C_m_d can also be either - hheellpp or ?? to print out help information, including a - list of known symbolic names. - - ?? Prints out help information for the sseenndd command. - - sseett _a_r_g_u_m_e_n_t _v_a_l_u_e - - uunnsseett _a_r_g_u_m_e_n_t _v_a_l_u_e - The sseett command will set any one of a number of tteellnneett vari- - ables to a specific value or to TRUE. The special value ooffff - turns off the function associated with the variable, this is - equivalent to using the uunnsseett command. The uunnsseett command will - disable or set to FALSE any of the specified functions. The - values of variables may be interrogated with the ddiissppllaayy com- - mand. The variables which may be set or unset, but not tog- - gled, are listed here. In addition, any of the variables for - the ttooggggllee command may be explicitly set or unset using the - sseett and uunnsseett commands. - - aayytt If TELNET is in localchars mode, or LINEMODE is en- - abled, and the status character is typed, a TELNET AYT - sequence (see sseenndd aayytt preceding) is sent to the re- - mote host. The initial value for the "Are You There" - character is the terminal's status character. - - eecchhoo This is the value (initially ``^E'') which, when in - ``line by line'' mode, toggles between doing local - echoing of entered characters (for normal processing), - and suppressing echoing of entered characters (for en- - tering, say, a password). - - eeooff If tteellnneett is operating in LINEMODE or ``old line by - line'' mode, entering this character as the first - character on a line will cause this character to be - sent to the remote system. The initial value of the - eof character is taken to be the terminal's eeooff char- - acter. - - eerraassee If tteellnneett is in llooccaallcchhaarrss mode (see ttooggggllee llooccaallcchhaarrss - below), aanndd if tteellnneett is operating in ``character at a - time'' mode, then when this character is typed, a - TELNET EC sequence (see sseenndd eecc above) is sent to the - remote system. The initial value for the erase char- - acter is taken to be the terminal's eerraassee character. - - eessccaappee This is the tteellnneett escape character (initially ``^['') - which causes entry into tteellnneett command mode (when con- - nected to a remote system). - - fflluusshhoouuttppuutt - If tteellnneett is in llooccaallcchhaarrss mode (see ttooggggllee llooccaallcchhaarrss - below) and the fflluusshhoouuttppuutt character is typed, a - TELNET AO sequence (see sseenndd aaoo above) is sent to the - remote host. The initial value for the flush charac- - ter is taken to be the terminal's fflluusshh character. - - ffoorrww11 - - ffoorrww22 If TELNET is operating in LINEMODE, these are the - characters that, when typed, cause partial lines to be - forwarded to the remote system. The initial value for - the forwarding characters are taken from the termi- - nal's eol and eol2 characters. - - iinntteerrrruupptt - If tteellnneett is in llooccaallcchhaarrss mode (see ttooggggllee llooccaallcchhaarrss - below) and the iinntteerrrruupptt character is typed, a TELNET - IP sequence (see sseenndd iipp above) is sent to the remote - host. The initial value for the interrupt character - is taken to be the terminal's iinnttrr character. - - kkiillll If tteellnneett is in llooccaallcchhaarrss mode (see ttooggggllee llooccaallcchhaarrss - below), aanndd if tteellnneett is operating in ``character at a - time'' mode, then when this character is typed, a - TELNET EL sequence (see sseenndd eell above) is sent to the - remote system. The initial value for the kill charac- - ter is taken to be the terminal's kkiillll character. - - llnneexxtt If tteellnneett is operating in LINEMODE or ``old line by - line`` mode, then this character is taken to be the - terminal's llnneexxtt character. The initial value for the - lnext character is taken to be the terminal's llnneexxtt - character. - - qquuiitt If tteellnneett is in llooccaallcchhaarrss mode (see ttooggggllee llooccaallcchhaarrss - below) and the qquuiitt character is typed, a TELNET BRK - sequence (see sseenndd bbrrkk above) is sent to the remote - host. The initial value for the quit character is - taken to be the terminal's qquuiitt character. - - rreepprriinntt - If tteellnneett is operating in LINEMODE or ``old line by - line`` mode, then this character is taken to be the - terminal's rreepprriinntt character. The initial value for - the reprint character is taken to be the terminal's - rreepprriinntt character. - - rrllooggiinn This is the rlogin escape character. If set, the nor- - mal TELNET escape character is ignored unless it is - preceded by this character at the beginning of a line. - This character, at the beginning of a line followed by - a "." closes the connection; when followed by a ^Z it - suspends the telnet command. The initial state is to - disable the rlogin escape character. - - ssttaarrtt If the TELNET TOGGLE-FLOW-CONTROL option has been en- - abled, then this character is taken to be the termi- - nal's ssttaarrtt character. The initial value for the kill - character is taken to be the terminal's ssttaarrtt charac- - ter. - - ssttoopp If the TELNET TOGGLE-FLOW-CONTROL option has been en- - abled, then this character is taken to be the termi- - nal's ssttoopp character. The initial value for the kill - character is taken to be the terminal's ssttoopp charac- - ter. - - ssuusspp If tteellnneett is in llooccaallcchhaarrss mode, or LINEMODE is en- - abled, and the ssuussppeenndd character is typed, a TELNET - SUSP sequence (see sseenndd ssuusspp above) is sent to the re- - mote host. The initial value for the suspend charac- - ter is taken to be the terminal's ssuussppeenndd character. - - ttrraacceeffiillee - This is the file to which the output, caused by - nneettddaattaa or ooppttiioonn tracing being TRUE, will be written. - If it is set to ``--'', then tracing information will - be written to standard output (the default). - - wwoorrddeerraassee - If tteellnneett is operating in LINEMODE or ``old line by - line`` mode, then this character is taken to be the - terminal's wwoorrddeerraassee character. The initial value for - the worderase character is taken to be the terminal's - wwoorrddeerraassee character. - - ?? Displays the legal sseett (uunnsseett) commands. - - ssllcc _s_t_a_t_e The ssllcc command (Set Local Characters) is used to set or - change the state of the the special characters when the TELNET - LINEMODE option has been enabled. Special characters are - characters that get mapped to TELNET commands sequences (like - iipp or qquuiitt) or line editing characters (like eerraassee and kkiillll). - - - By default, the local special characters are exported. - - cchheecckk Verify the current settings for the current spe- - cial characters. The remote side is requested to - send all the current special character settings, - and if there are any discrepancies with the local - side, the local side will switch to the remote - value. - - eexxppoorrtt Switch to the local defaults for the special char- - acters. The local default characters are those of - the local terminal at the time when tteellnneett was - started. - - iimmppoorrtt Switch to the remote defaults for the special - characters. The remote default characters are - those of the remote system at the time when the - TELNET connection was established. - - ?? Prints out help information for the ssllcc command. - - ssttaattuuss Show the current status of tteellnneett. This includes the peer one - is connected to, as well as the current mode. - - ttooggggllee _a_r_g_u_m_e_n_t_s _._._. - Toggle (between TRUE and FALSE) various flags that control how - tteellnneett responds to events. These flags may be set explicitly - to TRUE or FALSE using the sseett and uunnsseett commands listed - above. More than one argument may be specified. The state of - these flags may be interrogated with the ddiissppllaayy command. - Valid arguments are: - - aauutthhddeebbuugg Turns on debugging information for the authenti- - cation code. - - aauuttoofflluusshh If aauuttoofflluusshh and llooccaallcchhaarrss are both TRUE, then - when the aaoo, or qquuiitt characters are recognized - (and transformed into TELNET sequences; see sseett - above for details), tteellnneett refuses to display - any data on the user's terminal until the remote - system acknowledges (via a TELNET TIMING MARK - option) that it has processed those TELNET se- - quences. The initial value for this toggle is - TRUE if the terminal user had not done an "stty - noflsh", otherwise FALSE (see stty(1)). - - aauuttooddeeccrryypptt When the TELNET ENCRYPT option is negotiated, by - default the actual encryption (decryption) of - the data stream does not start automatically. - The autoencrypt (autodecrypt) command states - that encryption of the output (input) stream - should be enabled as soon as possible. - - Note: Because of export controls, the TELNET - ENCRYPT option is not supported outside the - United States and Canada. - - aauuttoollooggiinn If the remote side supports the TELNET - AUTHENTICATION option TELNET attempts to use it - to perform automatic authentication. If the - AUTHENTICATION option is not supported, the us- - er's login name are propagated through the - TELNET ENVIRON option. This command is the same - as specifying _a option on the ooppeenn command. - - aauuttoossyynncchh If aauuttoossyynncchh and llooccaallcchhaarrss are both TRUE, then - when either the iinnttrr or qquuiitt characters is typed - (see sseett above for descriptions of the iinnttrr and - qquuiitt characters), the resulting TELNET sequence - sent is followed by the TELNET SYNCH sequence. - This procedure sshhoouulldd cause the remote system to - begin throwing away all previously typed input - until both of the TELNET sequences have been - read and acted upon. The initial value of this - toggle is FALSE. - - bbiinnaarryy Enable or disable the TELNET BINARY option on - both input and output. - - iinnbbiinnaarryy Enable or disable the TELNET BINARY option on - input. - - oouuttbbiinnaarryy Enable or disable the TELNET BINARY option on - output. - - ccrrllff If this is TRUE, then carriage returns will be - sent as <CR><LF>. If this is FALSE, then car- - riage returns will be send as <CR><NUL>. The - initial value for this toggle is FALSE. - - ccrrmmoodd Toggle carriage return mode. When this mode is - enabled, most carriage return characters re- - ceived from the remote host will be mapped into - a carriage return followed by a line feed. This - mode does not affect those characters typed by - the user, only those received from the remote - host. This mode is not very useful unless the - remote host only sends carriage return, but nev- - er line feed. The initial value for this toggle - is FALSE. - - ddeebbuugg Toggles socket level debugging (useful only to - the ssuuppeerr uusseerr). The initial value for this tog- - gle is FALSE. - - eennccddeebbuugg Turns on debugging information for the encryp- - tion code. - - llooccaallcchhaarrss If this is TRUE, then the fflluusshh, iinntteerrrruupptt, - qquuiitt, eerraassee, and kkiillll characters (see sseett above) - are recognized locally, and transformed into - (hopefully) appropriate TELNET control sequences - (respectively aaoo, iipp, bbrrkk, eecc, and eell; see sseenndd - above). The initial value for this toggle is - TRUE in ``old line by line'' mode, and FALSE in - ``character at a time'' mode. When the LINEMODE - option is enabled, the value of llooccaallcchhaarrss is - ignored, and assumed to always be TRUE. If - LINEMODE has ever been enabled, then qquuiitt is - sent as aabboorrtt, and eeooff aanndd are sent as eeooff aanndd - ssuusspp, see sseenndd above). - - nneettddaattaa Toggles the display of all network data (in hex- - adecimal format). The initial value for this - toggle is FALSE. - - ooppttiioonnss Toggles the display of some internal tteellnneett pro- - tocol processing (having to do with TELNET op- - tions). The initial value for this toggle is - FALSE. - - pprreettttyydduummpp When the nneettddaattaa toggle is enabled, if - pprreettttyydduummpp is enabled the output from the - nneettddaattaa command will be formatted in a more user - readable format. Spaces are put between each - character in the output, and the beginning of - any TELNET escape sequence is preceded by a '*' - to aid in locating them. - - sskkiipprrcc When the skiprc toggle is TRUE, TELNET skips the - reading of the _._t_e_l_n_e_t_r_c file in the users home - directory when connections are opened. The ini- - tial value for this toggle is FALSE. - - tteerrmmddaattaa Toggles the display of all terminal data (in - hexadecimal format). The initial value for this - toggle is FALSE. - - vveerrbboossee__eennccrryypptt - When the vveerrbboossee__eennccrryypptt toggle is TRUE, TELNET - prints out a message each time encryption is en- - abled or disabled. The initial value for this - toggle is FALSE. Note: Because of export con- - trols, data encryption is not supported outside - of the United States and Canada. - - ?? Displays the legal ttooggggllee commands. - - zz Suspend tteellnneett. This command only works when the user is using - the csh(1). - - !! [_c_o_m_m_a_n_d] - Execute a single command in a subshell on the local system. - If ccoommmmaanndd is omitted, then an interactive subshell is in- - voked. - - ?? [_c_o_m_m_a_n_d] - Get help. With no arguments, tteellnneett prints a help summary. - If a command is specified, tteellnneett will print the help informa- - tion for just that command. - -EENNVVIIRROONNMMEENNTT - TTeellnneett uses at least the HOME, SHELL, DISPLAY, and TERM environment vari- - ables. Other environment variables may be propagated to the other side - via the TELNET ENVIRON option. - -FFIILLEESS - ~/.telnetrc user customized telnet startup values - -HHIISSTTOORRYY - The TTeellnneett command appeared in 4.2BSD. - -NNOOTTEESS - On some remote systems, echo has to be turned off manually when in ``old - line by line'' mode. - - In ``old line by line'' mode or LINEMODE the terminal's eeooff character is - only recognized (and sent to the remote system) when it is the first - character on a line. - -4.2 Berkeley Distribution February 3, 1994 11 |