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Full Discussion: Unix on Mac
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Unix on Mac Post 19360 by LivinFree on Wednesday 10th of April 2002 07:00:22 AM
Old 04-10-2002
Ahh, I guess I do forget that shells other than sh/ksh/bash exist, or should for that matter Smilie

That should work in any semi-modern Bourne (/bin/sh) shell or variant (bash, ksh, zsh, etc...)...

Oh, and I made a typo above. It should be:
export TERM=vt100
(TERM, not $TERM)
 

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telnetrc(4)						     Kernel Interfaces Manual						       telnetrc(4)

NAME
telnetrc, .telnetrc - Specifies setup commands for a telnet session SYNOPSIS
$HOME/.telnetrc DESCRIPTION
The .telnetrc file contains the setup information for a telnet session. It is a hidden file in your home directory and must be readable by the user logging in. The file can consist of multiple entries for each remote host to which a user can connect. A remote host entry consists of multiple lines. The first line is the name of a remote host. The subsequent lines must begin with blank spaces, and contain telnet subcommands. These sub- commands are processed as though they were typed in manually. Lines beginning with a number sign (#) are comment lines. See telnet(1) for a complete list of telnet subcommands. To specify subcommands that apply to all systems, create an entry, using the word "DEFAULT" as the system name, and specify the telnet sub- commands in the subsequent lines. EXAMPLES
The following shows a sample .telnetrc file: # Beginning of telnetrc file # Default subcommands that apply to all systems DEFAULT environ undefine USER # First system entry system1 set echo toggle crlf # Second system entry system2 set echo mode line toggle crlf FILES
User-customized telnet startup values. RELATED INFORMATION
Commands: telnet(1). delim off telnetrc(4)
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