steve@umnd-cs.UUCP (03/26/87)
Is anyone out there successfully running uucp through dial in's connected to a bridge cs/*? The biggest problem we run into is that telnet on some machines doesn't pass all 8-bits characters through, and uucp times out waiting for them. Has anyone come up with a reasonable workaround for this problem? Backending the bridge into a serial port on our uucp machine isn't an option for us. An option I haven't tried is using an Encore annex to do the same thing. The annex also uses the rlogin protocol which might help. Does anyone have any good ideas as to what we might try to make this work, or as to why it will never work? Thanks, Steve -- Spoken: Steven M. Miller UUCP: umnd-cs!steve CSNET: steve@umn-duluth.csnet ARPA: steve@cs-gw.d.umn.edu USNail: Computer Science Dept, University of Minnesota at Duluth 10 University Drive, Duluth, MN 55812
budd@bu-cs.UUCP (03/28/87)
Summary: Keywords: If you have 4.3 uucp (or 4.2 bsd with the 'f' protocol), you might try that. The 'f' (PAD) protocol assumes only 7 bit characters, flow control, and no control characters other than ^P and NUL. If ^P is a problem you can patch location Msync to contain some other character. The PAD protocol exists for connections on X.25 PAD lines that are "mostly" reliable and flow controlled. Checksumming is done on a per-file basis. The SYSVR2 'x' protocol does NOT appear to be compatible (does no checksumming?) rlogin will still have problems for normal uucp: some control characters are sent as out of band messages, and you cannot disable the attention (~) sequences. I have been experimenting with uucp over our Ungerman/Bass NET1 terminal network with the 'g' (standard uucp packet) protocol modified to quote all control and 8-bit characters. We have only one directly connected modem on bu-cs, but the terminal network has a bank of 97!!