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The Lounge What is on Your Mind? Networks alternative to Internet Post 302402876 by Corona688 on Wednesday 10th of March 2010 10:38:36 PM
Old 03-10-2010
I used compuserve back in the day. It was a network of sorts, at least among its service half. Ordinary people dialed in. I was quite young at the time but I remember it mostly as a ball of services. My father used it instead of DATAPAC to access medical research, it meant that instead of having to sign up for access to one silly remote mainframe at exorbatant prices then fight for dial-in time, you could sign up for compuserve and access it more cheaply and conveniently -- if that system was offered on compuserve. They also had something like email, file repositories, and forums, and a search that could (slowly) trawl through them all.

It's all gone now as far as I can tell. Compuserve bit by bit became an internet provider instead of a compuserve provider, compuserve messaging dumped for more globally-useful email, compuserve search dumped for, in those days, the woefully more primitive web spiders... It's only now that Google's parcelled up its internet search that it's anything like it was. Forums and repositories either dumped outright or converted to web, prices going up as their lucrative big services dumped them to make web interfaces(so they could charge ordinary people ridiculous prices again, bleh!).

If there's not decent internet access where you are, the data lines just may not be there. Compuserve was built out of data lines too.

Last edited by Corona688; 03-10-2010 at 11:49 PM..
 

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PPPCTL(8)						    BSD System Manager's Manual 						 PPPCTL(8)

NAME
pppctl -- PPP control program SYNOPSIS
pppctl [-v] [-t n] [-p passwd] [host:]Port | LocalSocket [command[;command]...] DESCRIPTION
This utility provides command line control of the ppp(8) daemon. Its primary use is to facilitate simple scripts that control a running dae- mon. The pppctl utility is passed at least one argument, specifying the socket on which ppp is listening. Refer to the 'set server' command of ppp for details. If the socket contains a leading '/', it is taken as an AF_LOCAL socket. If it contains a colon, it is treated as a host:port pair, otherwise it is treated as a TCP port specification on the local machine (127.0.0.1). Both the host and port may be speci- fied numerically if you wish to avoid a DNS lookup or do not have an entry for the given port in /etc/services. All remaining arguments are concatenated to form the command(s) that will be sent to the ppp daemon. If any semi-colon characters are found, they are treated as command delimiters, allowing more than one command in a given 'session'. For example: pppctl 3000 set timeout 300; show timeout Do not forget to escape or quote the ';' as it is a special character for most shells. If no command arguments are given, pppctl enters interactive mode, where commands are read from standard input. When reading commands, the editline(3) library is used, allowing command-line editing (with editrc(5) defining editing behaviour). The history size defaults to 20 lines. The following command line options are available: -v Display all data sent to and received from the ppp daemon. Normally, pppctl displays only non-prompt lines received. This option is ignored in interactive mode. -t n Use a timeout of n instead of the default 2 seconds when connecting. This may be required if you wish to control a daemon over a slow (or even a dialup) link. -p passwd Specify the password required by the ppp daemon. If this switch is not used, pppctl will prompt for a password once it has success- fully connected to ppp. ENVIRONMENT
The following environment variables are understood by pppctl when in interactive mode: EL_SIZE The number of history lines. The default is 20. EL_EDITOR The edit mode. Only values of "emacs" and "vi" are accepted. Other values are silently ignored. This environment variable will override the bind -v and bind -e commands in ~/.editrc. EXAMPLES
If you run ppp in -auto mode, pppctl can be used to automate many frequent tasks (you can actually control ppp in any mode except interactive mode). Use of the -p option is discouraged (even in scripts that are not readable by others) as a ps(1) listing may reveal your secret. The best way to allow easy, secure pppctl access is to create a local server socket in /etc/ppp/ppp.conf (in the correct section) like this: set server /var/run/internet "" 0177 This will instruct ppp to create a local domain socket, with srw------- permissions and no password, allowing access only to the user that invoked ppp. Refer to the ppp(8) man page for further details. You can now create some easy-access scripts. To connect to the internet: #! /bin/sh test $# -eq 0 && time=300 || time=$1 exec pppctl /var/run/internet set timeout $time; dial To disconnect: #! /bin/sh exec pppctl /var/run/internet set timeout 300; close To check if the line is up: #! /bin/sh pppctl -p '' -v /var/run/internet quit | grep ^PPP >/dev/null if [ $? -eq 0 ]; then echo Link is up else echo Link is down fi You can even make a generic script: #! /bin/sh exec pppctl /var/run/internet "$@" You could also use pppctl to control when dial-on-demand works. Suppose you want ppp to run all the time, but you want to prevent dial-out between 8pm and 8am each day. However, any connections active at 8pm should continue to remain active until they are closed or naturally time out. A cron(8) entry for 8pm which runs pppctl /var/run/internet set filter dial 0 deny 0 0 will block all further dial requests, and the corresponding 8am entry pppctl /var/run/internet set filter dial -1 will allow them again. SEE ALSO
ps(1), editline(3), editrc(5), services(5), ppp(8) HISTORY
The pppctl utility first appeared in FreeBSD 2.2.5. BSD
June 26, 1997 BSD
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