Query: cu
OS: v7
Section: 1c
Format: Original Unix Latex Style Formatted with HTML and a Horizontal Scroll Bar
CU(1C) CU(1C)NAMEcu - call UNIXSYNOPSIScu telno [ -t ] [ -s speed ] [ -a acu ] [ -l line ]DESCRIPTIONCu calls up another UNIX system, a terminal, or possibly a non-UNIX system. It manages an interactive conversation with possible transfers of text files. Telno is the telephone number, with minus signs at appropriate places for delays. The -t flag is used to dial out to a terminal. Speed gives the transmission speed (110, 134, 150, 300, 1200); 300 is the default value. The -a and -l values may be used to specify pathnames for the ACU and communications line devices. They can be used to override the fol- lowing built-in choices: -a /dev/cua0 -l /dev/cul0 After making the connection, cu runs as two processes: the send process reads the standard input and passes most of it to the remote sys- tem; the receive process reads from the remote system and passes most data to the standard output. Lines beginning with `~' have special meanings. The send process interprets the following: ~. terminate the conversation. ~EOT terminate the conversation ~<file send the contents of file to the remote system, as though typed at the terminal. ~! invoke an interactive shell on the local system. ~!cmd ... run the command on the local system (via sh -c). ~$cmd ... run the command locally and send its output to the remote system. ~%take from [to] copy file `from' (on the remote system) to file `to' on the local system. If `to' is omitted, the `from' name is used both places. ~%put from [to] copy file `from' (on local system) to file `to' on remote system. If `to' is omitted, the `from' name is used both places. ~~... send the line `~...'. The receive process handles output diversions of the following form: ~>[>][:]file zero or more lines to be written to file ~> In any case, output is diverted (or appended, if `>>' used) to the file. If `:' is used, the diversion is silent, i.e., it is written only to the file. If `:' is omitted, output is written both to the file and to the standard output. The trailing `~>' terminates the diver- sion. The use of ~%put requires stty and cat on the remote side. It also requires that the current erase and kill characters on the remote sys- tem be identical to the current ones on the local system. Backslashes are inserted at appropriate places. The use of ~%take requires the existence of echo and tee on the remote system. Also, stty tabs mode is required on the remote system if tabs are to be copied without expansion.FILES/dev/cua0 /dev/cul0 /dev/nullSEE ALSOdn(4), tty(4)DIAGNOSTICSExit code is zero for normal exit, nonzero (various values) otherwise.BUGSThe syntax is unique. CU(1C)
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