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CKAAAA.HLP September 1996 C-KERMIT VERSION 6.0.192, OVERVIEW OF FILES Communications software for UNIX, (Open)VMS, Stratus VOS, AOS/VS, QNX, BeBox, Plan 9, OS-9, Apollo Aegis, and the Commodore Amiga.C-Kermit 6.0.192 bears the following copyright notice: Copyright (C) 1985, 1996, Trustees of Columbia University in the City of New York. The C-Kermit software may not be, in whole or in part, licensed or sold for profit as a software product itself, nor may it be included in or distributed with commercial products or otherwise distributed by commercial concerns to their clients or customers without written permission of the Office of Kermit Development and Distribution, Columbia University. This copyright notice must not be removed, altered, or obscured.And the following disclaimer: The C-Kermit software is provided in source code form by Kermit Development and Distribution, Columbia University. The software is provided "as is;" no other warranty is provided, express or implied, including without limitations, any implied warranty of merchantability or implied warranty of fitness for a particular purpose. Neither Columbia University nor any of the contributors to the C-Kermit development effort, including, but not limited to, AT&T, Digital Equipment Corporation, Data General Corporation, Hewlett-Packard Company, or International Business Machines Corporation, warrant C-Kermit software or documentation in any way. In addition, neither the authors of any Kermit programs, publications or documentation, nor Columbia University nor any contributing institutions or individuals acknowledge any liability resulting from program or documentation errors.DOCUMENTATION C-Kermit is documented in the book "Using C-Kermit", Second Edition, by Frank da Cruz and Christine M. Gianone, Digital Press, ISBN 1-55558-164-1. Available at book and computer stores, or order from Columbia University by calling +1 212 854-3703 (MasterCard and Visa accepted), or by calling Digital Press / Butterworth-Heinemann at one of the numbers below (MasterCard, Visa, and American Express accepted). PLEASE PURCHASE THE DOCUMENTATION: it shows you step-by-step how to use C-Kermit with lots of examples and illustrations, it will answer most of your questions, and sales help to fund the Kermit development and support effort. Digital Press phone numbers: +1 800 366-2665 (Woburn, Massachusetts office for USA & Canada) +44 1865 314627 (Oxford, England distribution centre for UK & Europe) +61 03 9245 7111 (Melbourne, Vic, office for Australia & NZ) +65 356-1968 (Singapore office for Asia) +27 (31) 2683111 (Durban office for South Africa) A German edition is available from Verlag Heinz Heise in Hannover, Germany, Tel. +49 (05 11) 53 52-0, Fax. +49 (05 11) 53 52-1 29.CD-ROMS If you have obtained C-Kermit on a CD-ROM collection of "free software", C-Kermit was very likely included without permission. Please help to support the Kermit project by obtaining Kermit software through the proper channels, with proper documentation.QUICK START FOR FTP USERS (UNIX, VMS, AOS/VS, VOS, ...) The definitive FTP source for Kermit software is kermit.columbia.edu. Kermit software obtained from other FTP sites is not necessarily complete or up to date, and may have been modified.C-Kermit for UNIX computers that have a C compiler and 'make' program: Directory kermit/archives, binary mode, file cku192.tar.Z or cku192.tar.gz This is a compressed tar archive of UNIX C-Kermit source code, makefile, and other files. Transfer in binary mode, uncompress (or gunzip), untar (tar xvf cku192.tar), and then give the appropriate "make" command to build for your UNIX system; read the comments in the makefile and ckuins.doc for further info. TEST VERSION, if any: kermit/test/tar/ckuNNN.tar.Z or .gz, where NNN is the edit number.C-Kermit for VMS: Get the file kermit/f/ckvaaa.hlp in text mode, read it, take it from there. TEST VERSION, if any: kermit/test/text/ckvaaa.hlp.Others: In the kermit/f or kermit/test directories under the appropriateprefixes, explained below.QUICK INSTALLInstallation procedures depend on the system. Please read the CK?INS.DOC,if any, file for your system (?=U for UNIX, V for VMS, etc). Please notethe naming and placement for the initialization files: CKERMIT.INI The standard initialization file. Please leave it as is unless you know what you are doing and (if you are changing it or replacing it for others to use) you are prepared to support it. Rename this file to .kermrc in UNIX, OS-9, BeBox, or Plan 9. In Stratus VOS, rename it ckermit.ini (lowercase). On multiuser systems, it goes either in the (or EACH) user's home (login) directory, or else in a common shared place if C-Kermit has been configured to look in that place. CKERMOD.INI A *sample* customization file. On multiuser OS's, a copy of this file goes in each user's home directory, and then each user edits it to suit her needs and preferences; e.g. defining the dialing locale and the dialout device and characteristics. DIALING DIRECTORIES Dialing directory files can be system-wide, per-group, or per-user, or any combination. For example, there can be a corporate wide directory shared by all users, a supplemental directory for each division or department, and a personal directory for each user. Simply be sure the dialing directory files are identified a SET DIAL DIRECTORY command in the user's (or the system-wide) C-Kermit initialization file, or in the environment variable (logical name, symbol) K_DIAL_DIRECTORY. (The standard initialization file looks by default in the user's home or login directory.) When installing C-Kermit on multiuser platforms from which users will dial out, you can also set environment variables for area code, country code, and the various dialing prefixes as described on page 478 of "Using C-Kermit" (second edition), so users don't have to worry about defining these items themselves. Network directories and service directories can also be set up in a similar manner.FILES AND FILE NAMING CONVENTIONSC-Kermit is a family of Kermit programs for many different computer systems.The program shares a common set of system-independent file transfer protocolmodules, written in the C language. System-dependent operations are collectedinto system-specific modules for each system.C-Kermit file names all start with the letters "CK", followed by a singleletter indicating the subgroup. When referring to these files in the UNIXenvironment, use lowercase letters, rather than the uppercase letters shownhere. Subgroups: A: General descriptive material and documentation B: BOO file encoders and decoders (mostly obsolete) C: All systems with C compilers D: Data General AOS/VS E: Reserved for "ckermit" files, like CKERMIT.INI, CKERMIT.UPD F: (reserved) H: (reserved) I: Commodore Amiga (Intuition) J: (unused) K: (unused) L: Stratus VOS M: Macintosh with Mac OS N: Microsoft Windows NT O: OS/2 P: Bell Labs Plan 9 Q: (reserved) R: DEC PDP-11 with RSTS/E (reserved) S: Atari ST GEMDOS (last supported in version 5A(189)) T: DEC PDP-11 with RT-11 (reserved) U: UNIX or environments with UNIX-like C libraries V: VMS and OpenVMS W: Wart (Lex-like preprocessor, used with all systems) X: DEC PDP-11 with RSX-11 (reserved) Y: (reserved) Z: (reserved) 0-8: (reserved) 9: Microware OS-9Examples (use lowercase on UNIX): CKAAAA.HLP - This file CKVAAA.HLP - Read-me file for the VMS version CKOAAA.HLP - Read-me file for the OS/2 version CKUFIO.C - File i/o for UNIX CKSTIO.C - Communications i/o for the Atari ST CKUKER.NR - Nroff source file for UNIX C-Kermit man page MAKEFILE - Makefile for building UNIX C-Kermit CKOKER.MAK - Makefile for building OS/2 C-KermitIMPORTANT FILES (use lowercase names on UNIX): CKAAAA.HLP - This file (overview of the C-Kermit files).
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