05-22-2013
If I recall correctly, the IBM3151 was just a ASCII "green screen". If so, your application might work on many ascii screens if it is interfacing to (granddad)termcaps and/or the "newer" terminfo. screen navigation. In other words, does it only "work" when TERM=ibm3151 (or worse, only work on a IBM3151 device regardless of the TERM setting)?
If I could use putty, and set the TERM value to "vt220" or "ansi" then many standard solutions should support your already - and/or maybe you find a putty/xterm/ssh/telnet program that also supports the IBM3151 interface.
Note that it is standard practice on AIX to enter ESC(ape) followed by a digit to emulate a Fx key (ESC-1 emulates F1,ESC-3 emulate F3, ESC-0 emulates F10) - note: you do not enter the '-' character, that is here for legibility.
Hope this helps!
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GMAN(1x) GMAN(1x)
NAME
gman - GTK+ based front-end for man, a good replacment for xman.
SYNOPSIS
gman
DESCRIPTION
Gman is a front-end for the manual page system. gman builds a database of all the available man pages and displays them in a list. Clicking
on an entry in the list makes gman launch another window with the manual page displayed in it.
Gman can launch more than one window at same time. The user can use the index/key word search function to look for the man pages that they
need.
It is simple, but it is useful.
OPTIONS
There are no command line options for gman, for now.
DISPLAY OPTIONS
Currently gman has 4 different modes to present the man pages, available as the following items in the View menu:
xTerm This will launch an X terminal emulator with the man output shown inside.
You can add the following line to your ~/.gman file in order to select the preferred X terminal emulator:
xterm_command = rxvt
GhostView
gman will present man pages in a GhostView window for you to view and print the man page.
This requires GhostView (command "gv") to be available on your system.
Evince gman will present man pages in an Evince window for you to view and print the man page.
This requires GNOME Evince (command "evince") to be available on your system.
LocalBrowse
gman will launch a web browser window to show you the man page.
This requires man2html and web browser (command "sensible-browser") to be available on your system.
NetBrowse
In this mode, you can view the pages with web browser and navigate from one man page to another by clicking the links in the man
pages.
This requires man2html, web browser (command "sensible-browser") and a HTTP server running on localhost.
FILES
~/.gman
Contains configuration information for gman, such as window size and paths where the manual pages are contained. For example,
v_size = 400
h_size = 300
xterm_command = rxvt
show_warning = 0
man_paths = /usr/local/man:/usr/local/share/man:/usr/share/man
For more information, see init_context() function in gman.c for all the options avialiable.
~/.gman is read by gman on startup, and written on exit.
SEE ALSO
man(1), man(7), xterm(1).
AUTHOR
Gman was written by a smart guy named Xinkai Wang <aakwxk@hotmail.com>.
Home page of gman is at:
http://homex.coolconnect.com/user/xkwang/gman/ <>
Gman May 2002 GMAN(1x)