ptrepan1@umn-d-ub.D.UMN.EDU (pat trepanier) (10/26/89)
Here are the docs for kermit 3.86 in ascii there are two files that must
be appended toghether.
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APPLE II KERMIT USER GUIDE
VERSION 3.86
Ted Medin, NOSC
1989 Sept 25
Copyright (C) 1981,1989
Trustees of Columbia University in the City of New York
Permission is granted to any individual or institution to use, copy,
or redistribute this document so long as it is not sold for profit, and
provided this copyright notice is retained.
1. Apple II Kermit Page 1
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1. Apple II Kermit
Authors: Antonino N. J. Mione (Stevens Institute of Technology),
Peter Trei (Columbia University),
Ted Medin (NOSC),
Bob Holley (SERDAC)
Version: 3.86
Date: 1989 Sept
Kermit-65 Capabilities At A Glance:
Local operation: Yes
Remote operation: Yes
Transfers text files: Yes
Transfers binary files: Yes
Wildcard send: Yes
^X/^Y interruption(Q): Yes
Filename collision avoidance: Yes
Can time out: Yes
8th-bit prefixing: Yes
Repeat count prefixing: No
Alternate block checks: No
Terminal emulation: Yes (VT52, VT100)
Communication settings: Yes
Transmit BREAK: Yes
IBM communication: Yes
Transaction logging: No
Session logging (raw download): Yes
Raw upload: No
Act as server: Yes
Talk to server: Yes
Advanced commands for servers: Yes
Long packets: Yes
Sliding windows: No
Local file management: Yes
Handle file attributes: No
Command/init files: Yes
Printer control: Yes
Kermit-65 is a program that implements the Kermit file transfer protocol for
the Motorola 6502 processor family (hence the name, Kermit-65) on the Apple II
microcomputer system. It is written in 6502 assembly language and should run
on any Apple II or compatible running DOS 3.3 or PRODOS. This section will
describe the things you should know about the file system in order to make ef-
fective use of Kermit, and then it will describe the special features of the
Kermit-65 program.
1.1. Supported Systems and Devices Page 2
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1.1. Supported Systems and Devices
There are several different Apple II's which can run Kermit-65. Kermit will
have no problems running on an Apple II, II+, //e, //c or //gs system. Of the
different communication devices available for the Apple II, Kermit-65 supports
the ones shown in Table 1-1.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
AE Serial Pro (super serial driver - sw 1 & 3 open 2 & 4 closed)
AIO II (Uses the Apple Com Card driver??? - untested)
ALS dispatcher (Uses the Apple Com Card driver)
Apple Cat Serial Card
Apple Com Serial Card
ASIO (Uses the Apple Com Card driver??? - untested)
Apple Super Serial Card & //c Serial Port
Apple //gs Serial Port
CCS 7710 Serial Card
CCS 7711 (Uses the Apple Com Card driver??? - untested)
D.C. Hayes Micromodem.
Microtek sv-622 Card
Prometheus Versacard (Uses the Apple Com Card driver)
SSM AIO (Uses the Apple Com Card driver??? - untested)
Table 1-1: Apple II Communication Cards Supported by Kermit-65
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
It is possible that other cards may have operational characteristics very
similar or identical to one of the devices above. If this is the case, it may
work using one of the currently available device drivers. The user may want to
try each of the above options to see if any of them work. Kermit-65 must be
told in which slot the card resides. This may be done with the 'SET' command
(documented below).
1.2. The DOS 3.3 File System
Items of importance which will be discussed in this section include filenames
and file characteristics.
Apple DOS Filenames
Filenames under Apple DOS may contain almost any ASCII character (including
space). It is not recommended that special characters, (i.e. control characters
or spaces) be used in a filename to be transferred by Kermit-65 since they may
cause problems when parsing the filename. Filenames may be up to 40 characters
in length.
Apple DOS File Characteristics
All files in Apple DOS have a file type associated with them which is contained
1.2. The DOS 3.3 File System Page 3
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in the directory entry for the file but is not part of the filename itself.
There are four types of files in DOS 3.3. They are:
1. APPLESOFT BASIC
2. INTEGER BASIC
3. BINARY
4. TEXT
All file types have their data stored in eight-bit bytes although not all of
them need the eighth bit. The two file types containing basic programs required
the eighth bit due to the nature of the data being stored. BINARY files are
images of memory copied into a file. Often, these are machine code programs.
These files require all eight bits. TEXT files normally contain only printable
or carriage control characters. They are stored in the form of seven-bit ASCII
characters but the eighth bit should always be set since Apples manipulate all
text internally as 'Negative ASCII'. When transmitting non-text files the user
must insure that both Kermits are handling eight-bit data so that no infor-
mation is lost. If an eight-bit data path is not available (i.e. the remote
Kermit needs to do parity checking with the eighth bit), then eight-bit quoting
should be used. Of course, BINARY files as well as Apple BASIC files will not
have much meaning on a different system. If the user desires to edit a BASIC
file on a mainframe, for instance, s/he must convert it to a TEXT file before
sending it over. After receiving the file back on the Apple, the user may con-
vert it back to BASIC once again. The reason BASIC files would be meaningless
to a different machine is that the Apple stores BASIC keywords as single
character tokens to save space and processing time. To convert a BASIC program
to and from a TEXT file, consult the Apple DOS 3.3 Manual. File information
can be obtained by issuing the CATALOG command. For example:
]CATALOG
DISK VOLUME 010
*A 002 HELLO
B 078 KERMIT
A 002 READER
T 005 TESTFILE
]
When Kermit-65 is receiving a file, the file it creates on diskette will be of
the type indicated by the FILE-TYPE parameter. The file will always be left in
an unlocked state after it is closed by Kermit-65. When sending a file,
Kermit-65 will use the FILE-TYPE parameter to determine how to detect an
End-of-file condition. Thus, it is important to have this set properly in all
cases.
Recommendations for Archiving Files
When using a large system for archiving purposes, there is no reason to convert
Apple Basic programs into text files before sending them if there is no need to
edit them on the mainframe. The FILE-TYPE parameter must always be set cor-
rectly when sending and receiving files. The procedure for archiving files is:
1. Run Kermit on remote system.
1.2. The DOS 3.3 File System Page 4
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2. SET FILE-TYPE TEXT (or APPLESOFT or ...) on Kermit-65.
3. Send the files.
1.3. The PRODOS File System
The PRODOS system is essentialy the same as the DOS system with the exception
that performance has been improved, hardware usage has been expanded and file
names have different syntax. File names are the major importance to the Kermit
system. File names have the following syntax:
/volname/subdirectory1/.../subdirectoryn/filename
where "volname" is the volume name where the file is located. Subdirectory(n)
is a subdirectory on the volume and may be omitted. Filenames are much more
restrictive than DOS filenames. PRODOS filenames are limited to 15 characters
with no imbedded spaces and few special characters, and must begin with an al-
phabetic character. /volname/sub ... may be omited from the filename by use
of the SET PREFIX command.
Binary file transfer using PRODOS has its dangers when creating new files.
PRODOS keeps the file's size and starting location in the directory which is of
course not transferred. Therefore a new binary file will have its starting
location 0 which can cause some interesting problems if you try and BRUN the
file. Basic files all start at $801 (it says here) so Kermit creates new basic
files with a starting address of $801.
1.4. Program Operation
Prior to using Kermit-65 for transferring files, the modem interface must be
set to handle data in a certain manner. First, the data format should be 8
data bits and 1 stop bit. Second, the card should be set to no parity. The
baud rate (if adjustable) must be set to whatever rate the modem can handle.
For the D.C. Hayes Micromodem, these parameters are set correctly by default,
so very little has to be done. For the Apple Super Serial Card these are set
from within Kermit-65 except the interrupt switch (sw6-2) which must be set for
interupts on. For the Microtek SV-622, all applicable parameters are set by
Kermit-65. Some mainframes may need parity checking (i.e. most IBM machines).
In this case some parity setting (other than none) will usually work. When
talking with such mainframes, binary and basic files on the Apple cannot be
transferred unless Eighth-bit-quoting is acceptable to the host. If you have
the parameters set correctly then the "CONNECT" command will start Kermit talk-
ing out the communication port.
File transfer is very dependent upon parity. Make sure the host and local
parity are the same. Following are a couple of site's method for file transfer.
We have an IBM 3033 and 4381 and use both 3705/3725 and 7171 or Series/1 front
ends. The differences in front ends as far as any microcomputer Kermit is con-
cerned duplex (local-echo on for the 3705, local-echo off for the 7171 or
Series/1), parity (the two front ends might use different parity, e.g. Mark for
the 3705 and Even for the 7171), and flow control (None for the 3705, XON/XOFF
for the 7171).
In Kermit-65, IBM mainframe users need to set the following parameters:
1.4. Program Operation Page 5
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BAUD Whatever is supported.
PARITY EVEN, ODD, or MARK, whatever your front end requires.
FLOW XON for the 7171, NONE for the 3705.
FLOW DELAY 00
LOCAL-ECHO OFF for 7171, ON for 3705
In Kermit-65, SERDAC VAX 8800 users need to set the following parameters:
BAUD SERDAC Dial-up & 300, 1200, or 2400 baud FIRN Dialup: (the highest
your modem and the dial-up connection will support)
Ethernet Hardwire: 300, 1200, 2400, or 4800 baud.
PARITY NONE
FLOW XON
FLOW DELAY 00 (higher for printers, logging, or "slow" Apples)
LOCAL-ECHO OFF
NOTE: If you want to do a binary file transfer (Apple binary or BASIC
files) via a FIRN Network connection to the SERDAC VAX
8800, you must SET PARITY SPACE before the transfer is in-
itiated; that will insure that eight-bit quoting is used.
If you dial directly into the VAX 8800, SET PARITY NONE;
eight-bit quoting (which is less efficient) is not re-
quired.
Conversing With Kermit-65
Kermit-65 reads file KERMIT.INIT from the default drive when started. The
lines of this file are executed one at a time starting at the begining. This
file should be an ASCII text file and contain commands to set up Kermit's
parameters as desired. It will also execute Kermit's other commands. However,
any command which reads a file (like MODEM) or leaves local mode (like CONNECT)
will terminate reading of this file and continue with the command specified.
Use your favorite editor to produce this file. Here's a sample:
set display 80 3
set keyboard 2e
set baud 4800
modem
Kermit-65's prompt is "Kermit-65>". To run Kermit-65 and issue commands to it,
type "brun kermit". Example:
]BRUN KERMIT
NOSC/STEVENS/CU - APPLE ][ KERMIT-65 - VER 3.86
Kermit-65>send testfile
1.4. Program Operation Page 6
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(file is sent...)
Kermit-65>status
(performance statistics are printed...)
Kermit-65>(other commands...)
.
.
.
Kermit-65>exit
]
Like many Kermit programs, Kermit-65 uses a DEC-20 style command parser.
During interactive operation, you may use the ?-prompting help feature ("?")
and recognition (ESC) features while typing commands. A question mark typed at
any point in a command displays the options available at that point; typing an
ESC character causes the current keyword to be completed (or default value to
be supplied). If you have not typed sufficient characters to uniquely specify
the keyword (or if there is no default value) then a beep will be sounded and
you may continue typing. Keywords may be abbreviated to any prefix that is
unique.
Remote and Local Operation
Kermit-65 is normally run in local mode. It may be run as a remote Kermit as
well although there is no advantage to doing things that way. Kermit-65 sup-
ports User-mode commands for talking to a Server, and it does support a limited
server mode.
1.5. Kermit-65 Commands
1.5.1. The CATALOG Command
Syntax: CATALOG
Typing CATALOG produces a catalog (directory) listing of your default drive.
1.5.2. The CONNECT Command
Syntax: CONNECT
Establish a terminal connection to the remote system using all the current SET
paramaters for terminal type, speed, parity, etc. Get back to Kermit-65 by
typing the escape character followed by the letter C. The escape character is
Control-@ by default. When you type the escape character, several
single-character commands are possible. These are shown in Table 1-2.
You can use the SET ESCAPE command to define a different escape character.
When CONNECTed, Kermit-65 will be passing characters entered on the keyboard to
the remote system, and passing characters from the remote system to the Apple
screen. Incoming characters are interpreted according the selected terminal
1.5.2. The CONNECT Command Page 7
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-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
? List all the possible single-character arguments.
B send a Break signal.
C Command mode (returning to kermit-65).
D Drop the phone line to the remote and return to Kermit-65.
E Erase the screen (useful for clearing garbage on screen).
K toggle Keypad application-mode on/off.
M execute the Modem command.
Q execute the Quit command.
P toggle the Printer on/off.
R pRint the screen, >= //e required
S show Status of the connection.
W sWap the del and backspace key.
0 send a null (ASCII 0).
^@ (or whatever the Connect-Escape character is): send the
Connect-Escape character itself.
Table 1-2: Kermit-65 Single-Character CONNECT Escape Commands
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type (see SET TERMINAL).
On an Apple II+ with an incomplete keyboard, special characters can be typed by
prefixing regular characters with a right-arrow. On uppercase-only screens,
uppercase characters are shown in inverse and lowercase characters are dis-
played as normal uppercase characters.
Here are the rules for using the special 2/2+ input, to get all printable ASCII
characters, and how they appear on the screen. Special meanings are applied in
various contexts to certain characters. The left and right arrow keys do spe-
cial things, and sometimes the escape key does as well. For letters, the
keyboard is always in either default UPPERCASE mode or default lowercase mode.
When in UPPERCASE, all letters typed are sent out as uppercase. In lowercase,
all letters are sent as lowercase. To reverse the case for the next character
only, hit the right-arrow ("prefix") key. To switch the default case, hit the
prefix-key twice in a row. For funny characters, the prefix key is also used
to get the unusual punctuation characters which are not on the Apple keyboard.
Table 1-3 shows the Apple II/II+ keyboard escapes; the letter "p" represents
the prefix character.
The left-arrow key sends a rubout (ASCII 127). With left-arrow and right arrow
doing special things, it's a little hard to enter their characters (^H and ^U
respectively). There is therefore an escape from prefix mode sequence. If you
type prefix-ESC, the next character is sent without any interpretation. If you
have the capability for upper/lower case, etc, then use the 'SET KEYBOARD' and
'SET DISPLAY' commands to specify complete keyboards.
While in connect mode if you have a //e or better with 80 column display, the
cursor will blink. The rate of blink is tied to the "SET TIMING" constant.
1.5.3. The DELETE Command Page 8
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
To Get Type Appearence
Left Square Bracket p( [
Right Square Bracket p) ]
Left Curly Bracket p< {
Right Curly Bracket p> }
Underline p- _
Backslash p/ \
Tilde (wiggle) p^ ~
Vertical Line p. |
Table 1-3: Apple II/II+ Keyboard Escapes
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1.5.3. The DELETE Command
Syntax: DELETE filespec
Typing DELETE causes the file specified to be deleted.
1.5.4. The EXIT and QUIT Commands
Syntax: EXIT or QUIT
Exit from Kermit-65. When using dos 3.3 you can probably restart the program,
provided you haven't run anything else, by typing 'CALL 4096'.
1.5.5. The GET Command
Syntax: GET remote-filespec[,local-filespec]
The GET command requests a remote Kermit server to send the file or file group
specified by remote-filespec. This command can be used with a Kermit server on
the other end. The remote filespec is any string that can be a legal file
specification for the remote system; it is not parsed or validated locally. So
if the remote Kermit supports wildcards you can specify them in the
remote-filespec. Local-filespec is optional and is the file name to be used
locally. If the remote Kermit is not capable of server functions, then you
will probably get an error message back from it like "Illegal packet type". In
this case, you must connect to the other Kermit, give a SEND command, escape
back, and give a RECEIVE command. Currently, a packet can be retransmitted
manually by typing anything on the keyboard. If a 'Q' is typed, the entire
transmission will be cancelled.
1.5.6. The HELP Command Page 9
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1.5.6. The HELP Command
Syntax: HELP
Typing HELP alone prints a brief summary of the Kermit-65 commands.
1.5.7. The LOCK Command
Syntax: LOCK filespec
LOCK will file lock the given filespec on the default drive.
1.5.8. The LOG Command
Syntax: LOG filespec
When connected to a remote site, log the remote session's output to the
specified file. The file type and file warning protocols are observed. This
command is dependent upon the flow control (XON/XOFF) working. Without flow
control there is little possibility of getting a correct copy of the terminal
session. The logging begins when you connect to the remote and is terminated
when you escape back to the local Kermit with the ESCAPE character followed by
the "C" command.
1.5.9. The MODEM Command
Syntax: MODEM
This command is designed for the hayes smart modem. Typing MODEM causes the
file KERMIT.MODEM in the default drive/path to be used as a menu. You will be
able to select any line in the file to be sent to the modem. Sorry, you can't
back up to a previous menu, you will have to Quit and execute MODEM again. A
"CONNECT" response from the smart modem will cause Kermit to leave the modem
command and execute the CONNECT command. The Hayes smart modem must reply with
text status responses (not numbers). One command per line with comments al-
lowed after the first space (blank). Use your favorite editor to produce this
ASCII text file. Since the attention Hayes command (AT) requires a delay the
"&" character becomes the time delay for Kermit. Each "&" causes a delay of
one second on a 6502 chip. If you have a //gs or an accelerator board you may
have to use the SET TIMING command to produce a one second delay. If you
really need to send the "&" character to the modem then the "\" is the escape
character. Put a "\" before any character and that character will be sent as
is. Of course two "\"'s will produce one "\". Normally Kermit will wait for 27
seconds (again on a 6502 chip) for the modem to respond, but any character
typed on the keyboard will terminate this wait. You may hear the busy signal
and there is no sense waiting any longer, so hit (owch!-not so hard) any key on
the keyboard.
Following is an example of the KERMIT.MODEM file:
+++&&ATH Get the Hayes Smartmodem's attention and then hang up.
ATDP1234567 Call your local BBS with pulse dialing.
ATDT8901234 Call your work dialup phone with touch tone dialing.
1.5.10. The RECEIVE Command Page 10
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1.5.10. The RECEIVE Command
Syntax: RECEIVE [filespec]
The RECEIVE command tells Kermit-65 to receive a file or file group from the
other system. If only one file is being received, you may include the optional
filespec as the name to store the incoming file under; otherwise, the name is
taken from the incoming file header. If the name in the header is not a legal
filename, Kermit-65 will attempt to change it into something legal. If
FILE-WARNING is on and an incoming file has a name identical to a file already
existing on the diskette, Kermit-65 will issue a warning to the user and at-
tempt to modify the filename to make it unique. Currently, a packet can be
retransmitted manually by typing anything on the keyboard. If a 'Q' is typed,
the entire transmission will be aborted. Filespec is required when xmodem
protocol is used.
1.5.11. The REMOTE Command
Syntax: REMOTE [option character-string]
The only option currently is "kermit". This command submits the command
"character-string" to the remote Kermit's command processor. Long replies are
not paged so you will have to use ^S to stop the screen. The obvious usage is
for setting and showing parameters on the remote Kermit.
1.5.12. The RENAME Command
Syntax: RENAME filespec,new-filespec
RENAME will rename filespec to new-filespec on the default drive.
1.5.13. The SEND Command
Syntax: SEND filespec[,remote-filespec]
The SEND command causes a file to be sent from the Apple to the remote system.
The Filespec is the name of the file on the Apple diskette to be sent. The
parser will not accept control characters and certain special characters in a
filename (like comma). Remote-filespec is optional and is the name of the file
on the remote kermit. Thanks to Dick Atlee, wildcards are now acceptable when
sending files (they have always been acceptable when receiving files). The "*"
is a multiple character wildcard and the "=" is a single character wildcard.
The default disk drive is used for file transfers this can be changed with the
'SET DEFAULT-DISK'(DOS) or 'SET PREFIX'(PRODOS) command (explained below). As
a file is being sent, the screen displays 'RECEIVING NUMBER OF BYTES' and
'SENDING NUMBER OF BYTES' followed by the hexidecimal number of bytes trans-
ferred since start of transmission. If a packet must be transmitted several
times and it reaches the maximum retry count, the transfer will fail and the
'Kermit-65>' prompt will return. If the remote Kermit sends an error packet,
the text of the packet will be displayed on the screen, the transfer will fail,
and the prompt will return. Currently, a packet can be retransmitted manually
by typing anything on the keyboard. If a 'Q' is typed, the entire transmission
1.5.13. The SEND Command Page 11
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will be aborted.
1.5.14. The SERVER Command
Syntax: SERVER
Typing SERVER alone turns Kermit into a file server to a remote Kermit. Cur-
rently server mode will handle remote "send", "get", "remote" and "fin" com-
mands. Variants of the above commands will probably work but file serving is
very limited at present. Because the Apple requires knowledge of file types
you can use the "remote Kermit" (or whatever the remote Kermit's syntax is)
command to set the file-type on the server. Yes, the server will execute any
command so you can really get the server into trouble (this is not a BBS). You
must have the appropiate file type set before transfering files. You can exit
server mode by typing Control-C (^C) when not doing file transfers or the
remote can of course terminate via the "fin" command.
1.5.15. The SET Command
Syntax: SET parameter [option [value]]
Establish or modify various parameters for file transfer or terminal connec-
tion. You can examine their values with the SHOW command. The following
parameters may be SET:
APPLICATION-MODE Set VT100 gs keypad in/out of application mode.
BAUD Which baud rate should the com card use?
CURSOR-KEYS-VT100 In VT100 mode cursor keys give VT100 sequences.
DEBUGGING TERSE or VERBOSE packet information.
DEFAULT-DISK Which Diskette drive is used for DOS 3.3 file transfer?
DISPLAY Which type of screen display is being used?
ESCAPE Character for terminal connection.
FILE-TYPE Type of Apple file being sent/received.
FILE-WARNING Warn users if incoming file exists?
FLOW Should xon/xoff flow control be used to the remote?
KEYBOARD II+ or //e keyboard.
KEYPAD Is there a gs keypad?
LOCAL-ECHO Full or half duplex switch.
PARITY Character parity to use
PREFIX Which default prefix to use with PRODOS?
PRINTER Should the printer be used for the display?
PROTOCOL Which protocol is to be used for file transfer.
RECEIVE Various parameters for receiving files
SEND Various parameters for sending files
SLOT Which slot # is communication device in?
TIMER Should Kermit observe the receive timeout value?
TIMIMG Change the time loop for 1 ms. delays.
TERMINAL Which type of terminal should Kermit emulate?
SET APPLICATION-MODE
Syntax: SET APPLICATION-MODE {ON, OFF}
1.5.15. The SET Command Page 12
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
For VT100 emulation with a gs keypad you can set the keypad in or out of ap-
plication mode. Some computer systems set this via escape sequences so it may
not be necessary to use this command.
SET BAUD
Syntax: SET BAUD value
Value is the baud rate for your communication card. For the super serial and
the microtek it can be 300 to 19200. The actual values will depend upon the
com card you are running with.
SET CURSOR-KEYS-VT100
Syntax: SET CURSOR-KEYS-VT100 {ON, OFF}
In VT100 emulation the cursor keys can also emulate the VT100 cursor keys.
SET DEBUGGING
Syntax: SET DEBUGGING {TERSE, VERBOSE, OFF}
Record the packet traffic on your terminal. Options are: TERSE, Show packet
info only (brief). VERBOSE displays packet field descriptions with packet info
(lengthy). OFF disables display of debugging information (this is the
default).
SET DEFAULT-DISK
Syntax: SET DEFAULT-DISK {SLOT, VOLUME, DRIVE} value
This DOS command will tell Kermit-65 which disk drive should be used for file
transfers. The three parameters which may be set separately are SLOT, VOLUME
and DRIVE. The value for SLOT ranges from 1 to 7. The value for DRIVE is ei-
ther 1 or 2. The value for VOLUME ranges from 0 to 255.
SET DISPLAY
Syntax: SET DISPLAY {2E, 2P} or SET DISPLAY 80-COL number
This command will tell Kermit-65 which kind of screen display you want to use.
If you have an Apple II or II+ without an 80 column card, use the first syntax.
If you have any kind of an Apple with an 80 column card, enter: SET DISPLAY 80,
followed by a space and the slot number where the card resides (if you don't
know the slot number, or the card is built-in to the set, try 3 ).
SET ESCAPE
Syntax: SET ESCAPE hexidecimal-number
Specify the control character you want to use to "escape" from remote connec-
1.5.15. The SET Command Page 13
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
tions back to Kermit-65. The default is 0 (Control-@). The number is the hex
value of the ASCII control character, 1 to 37, for instance 2 is Control-B, B
is Control-K.
SET FILE-TYPE
Syntax: SET FILE-TYPE {APPLESOFT, INTEGER, TEXT, BINARY, OTHER hex-value}
This will inform Kermit-65 what type of file is being sent or received. It is
important that this is set correctly since Kermit-65 must create a file of the
appropriate type when receiving (and it has no way of knowing what kind of file
it is). When Kermit-65 is sending, it must also know the type of file since
that tells it how to detect the actual end-of-file. The keywords for this
parameter are listed below. OTHER includes an added hex-value so that the user
may specify the hex value of the file-type. This has meaning only in PRODOS
and allows the user to specify any of the many different file types used in
PRODOS, see Tables 1-5 and 1-6 (thanks to Phil Chien, M L Stier et al).
APPLESOFT The file being transfered is an Applesoft Basic program.
INTEGER The file being sent/received is an Integer Basic program.
TEXT The file being sent/received is an ASCII Text file.
BINARY The file being sent/received is a Binary image.
OTHER The type of file being sent/received is specified by the
hex-value.
SET FILE-WARNING
Syntax: SET FILE-WARNING {ON, OFF}
This tells Kermit-65 whether to warn the user about incoming filenames con-
flicting with existing files or not. If there is a conflict Kermit-65 will at-
tempt to change the file name to something unique.
SET FLOW
Syntax: SET FLOW {OFF, XON, DELAY number}
SET FLOW allows one to use the XON/XOFF protocol when connected to a remote
site. Delay timings are part of this command. Using delay times is probably a
desperation move to keep the screen/printer from losing characters. Setting
the timings will have to be set by experience. Perhaps the best way to set the
timings is to bring the values down until you get failures and then double the
timing figure. Both LOG and SET PRINTER will probably depend on flow control.
OFF Turn off flow control
XON Turn on xon/xoff flow control with the remote
DELAY number Delay the micro until XOFF takes effect
1.5.15. The SET Command Page 14
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Delay followed by a number (including 0) delays the program for that many mil-
liseconds after the XOFF is given to the remote. This delay allows the XOFF to
take effect before the program continues.
NOTE: Except for printing and logging, most Apples will not require you to use
a flow delay, even at rates up thru 19200 baud; for proper screen control,
however, certain older Apple IIe's may require a fairly high delay (120-160
dec), even at 300 baud.
SET KEYBOARD
Syntax: SET KEYBOARD {2P, 2E}
SET KEYBOARD tells Kermit-65 if the user has a full keyboard (2E) or not (2P).
If the user is on an Apple II+, this should be set to 2P (which is the
default). When set to that, character translations are available by using the
right-arrow key as a prefix character, as shown in Table 1-3.
SET KEYPAD
Syntax: SET KEYPAD {ON, OFF}
SET KEYPAD tells Kermit-65 if the user has an Apple//gs keypad available. This
is automatically set on a gs but may be set off if desired. With keypad set ON
then "VT100 keypad on an Apple keyboard" (see below) will not be used but the
actual gs keypad will be used. NOTE! this is gs only.
SET LOCAL-ECHO
Syntax: SET LOCAL-ECHO {ON,OFF} [Default: OFF]
This command tells Kermit-65 to echo to the screen characters you type on the
keyboard (LOCAL-ECHO = ON), or to let the remote system echo the typed charac-
ters (LOCAL-ECHO = OFF). If, when CONNECTed to the remote, you see a duplicate
of every character you type, escape back to Kermit-65, and SET LOCAL-ECHO OFF.
If, when CONNECTed to the remote, you see nothing echoed to the screen, escape
back to Kermit-65, and SET LOCAL-ECHO ON.
SET PARITY
Syntax: SET PARITY {NONE, EVEN, ODD, MARK, SPACE} [Default: NONE]
This command tells Kermit-65 which parity you want to use while communicating
with the remote. Most remotes use NONE; some use EVEN, a few may use the other
possible values. If you have a choice of parity to use with a remote machine,
if possible, choose NONE.
SET PREFIX
Syntax: SET PREFIX string [Default: boot volume]
This command allows you to specify a ProDOS volume/file prefix.
1.5.15. The SET Command Page 15
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SET PRINTER
Syntax: SET PRINTER {ON, SLOT} number
or SET PRINTER OFF
This allows one to turn the printer on for printing what is displayed on the
screen. The printer can also be toggled on/off via the ESCAPE character fol-
lowed by the command "P".
Remember when you use your printer there are a lot of variables here. What was
being sent to the screen now is being sent to your printer. If you were
emulating the VT52 your printer may not know how to handle the escape se-
quences, tabs, etc. It may be you can tell the host you are a tty or some such
device that will produce control codes that your printer can handle. Some
printers may require the flow control and delay to get readable printing.
ON Turn the printer on, slot number is required.
OFF Turn the printer off.
SLOT number Printer card is in slot "number".
SET PROTOCOL
Syntax: SET PROTOCOL {KERMIT, XMODEM}
SET PROTOCOL tells kermit-65 which protocol to use for file transfer. NOTE:
When XMODEM is used you will probably want to change the carriage return and
carriage return/line feed translation in the send/receive parameters. eg. "SET
SEND CR<->CR,LF OFF" and "SET RECEIVE CR<->CR,LF OFF".
SET SLOT
Syntax: SET SLOT number
This option tells Kermit-65 in which slot the communication device is located.
The range for the number parameter is 1-7.
SET SWAP
Syntax: SET SWAP {ON, OFF}
This option tells Kermit-65 to swap the functions of the del and backspace
keys.
SET TIMER
Syntax: SET TIMER {ON, OFF}
SET TIMER will turn on or off the timeout checking for receive file transfers.
Since there is no clock for exact timing a loop of instructions has been set up
assuming a 1 megacycle CPU. CPUs which run faster may have to make allowances
1.5.15. The SET Command Page 16
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via the SET RECEIVE TIMEOUT command or the SET TIMING command.
SET TIMIMG
Syntax: SET TIMIMG { number }
Kermit uses a timing loop with the rom address $fca8 to produce a 1 ms. delay.
If you have a machine that runs faster than the 6502 chip you may have to in-
crease this number to get the 1 ms delay.
SET TERMINAL
Syntax: SET TERMINAL {MONITOR, NONE, VT100, VT52}
When TERMINAL is NONE, then all incoming characters (except nulls) are passed
directly to the display.
MONITOR emulation simply displays all the characters received from the remote
(except nulls) without any formating of the screen (40 or 80 characters per
line). Control characters are displayed inverse.
VT100 Emulation
The Kermit-65 VT100 emulator is a small but working set of a true VT100 ter-
minal. It appears to work with most of the standard full screen editors and
processors on BSD UNIX and VAX/VMS machines. An Apple//e, //c, or //gs is
probably required with the Apple 80 column text card. The VT100 keypad has
also been defined for the application mode via the OA/CA/game button. Figure
1-1 shows the Apple keypad looks like to EDIT (VMS) , and Figure 1-2 shows the
layout on an Apple//gs keyboard. When using EVE (VMS) the meaning of the keys
will of course change.
As you can see the keypad is physically laid out like the VT100 keypad except
for the lower right corner. Notice that above the keys are the VT100 labels
while in middle of the box (key) is the Apple key label. Also the arrow keys
work as VT100 arrow keys with the OA/CA/game button.
VT52 Emulation
SET TERMINAL VT52 will turn on the VT52 terminal emulation. One thing that is
required is your 80-column card must handle the $16 command in order for
reverse scrolling to work. The Apple//e 80 column card handles this fine. The
VT52 keypad has been defined using the open/closed Apple. For II or II+ one
will have to have a game paddle or joy stick (key shift mod too????) and use
the buttons. When a button/open/closed Apple is pushed then the keys starting
with 6,7,8 & 9 form the top of the keypad. Key 6 is the blue key key 7 is the
red key etc. The keys directly below the 6,7,8 & 9 and shifted one-half key to
the right form the second row of the keypad etc. Every thing is fine until you
get to the last row on the keypad. There the sp bar is 0 and the other two keys
are moved to the upper right as the 0 & - keys. This way the arrow keys are
available as VT52 keys with the OA/CA/game button combination (thanks to Dick
Atlee for this idea). With those two exceptions the keypad is physically
1.5.15. The SET Command Page 17
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
PF1 PF2 PF3 PF4 .(period)
------- ------- ------- ------- -------
| | |findnxt|delline|select |
| 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 0 |
| gold | help | find |undelln| reset |
------- ------- ------- ------- -------
7 8 9 -
------- ------- ------- -------
| page |section|append |delword|
| Y | U | I | O |
|command| fill |replace|undelwd|
------- ------- ------- -------
vt100 key ----> 4 5 6 ,
------- ------- ------- -------
vms edit usage ----> |advanc|backup | cut |delchar|
apple key ----> | H | J | K | L |
vms edit usage ----> |bottom| top | paste |undelch|
------- ------- ------- -------
1 2 3 ENTER
------- ------- ------- -------
| word | eol | char | enter |
| N | M | , | . |
|chgcase|deleol |specins| sub |
------- ------- ------- -------
0