CON(1) CON(1) NAME con, telnet, hayes, cu, rx, xms, xmr - remote login, execution, and XMODEM file transfer SYNOPSIS con [ -dCrv ] [ -l [ remuser ] ] [ -c cmd ] net!machine telnet [ -dCr ] net!machine hayes [ -p ] number [ device ] cu number rx [ -n ] net!machine [ command-word ... ] xms file xmr file DESCRIPTION Con connects to the computer whose network address is net!machine and logs in if possible. With no options, the account name used on the remote system is the same as that on the local system. Standard input and output go to the local machine. Options are: -l with an argument causes remuser to be used as the account name on the remote system. Without an argument this option disables automatic login and a normal login session ensues. -C forces cooked mode, that is, local echo. -c runs cmd as if it had been typed as a command from the escape mode. This is used by cu. -v (verbose mode) causes information about connection attempts to be output to standard error. This can be useful when trying to debug network connectivity. -d causes debugging information to be output to standard error. -r suppresses printing of any carriage return followed by a new line. This is useful since carriage return is a printable character in Plan 9. The control-\ character is a local escape. It prompts with Page 1 Plan 9 (printed 11/18/24) CON(1) CON(1) the local machine name and >>>. Legitimate responses to the prompt are i Send a quit [sic] signal to the remote machine. q Exit. b Send a break. . Return from the escape. !cmd Run the command with the network connection as its standard input and standard output. Standard error will go to the screen. This is useful for transmitting and receiving files over the connections using programs such as xms. Telnet is similar to con, but it uses the telnet protocol to communicate with the remote machine. Hayes dials a number using the Hayes modem protocol. Option p uses pulse dialing rather than the default tone dialing. If specified, device is the file opened for the call. The default is /dev/eia0. Cu is a shell script that uses hayes and con to connect to a machine via a modem. If the machine is equipped with a local modem, it is used. Otherwise, the call is placed through Datakit. Rx executes one shell command on the remote machine as if logged in there, but with local standard input and output. Unquoted shell metacharacters in the command are interpreted locally, quoted ones remotely. The assignment REXEC=1 appears in the remote environment. Network addresses for both con and rx have the form network!host. Supported networks are those listed in /net. The commands xms and xmr respectively send and receive a single file using the XMODEM protocol. They use standard input and standard output for communication and are intended for use with con. EXAMPLES rx kremvax cat file1 >file2 Copy remote file1 to local file2. rx kremvax cat file1 '>file2' Copy remote file1 to remote file2. eqn paper | rx kremvax troff -ms | rx deepthought lp Parallel processing: do each stage of a pipeline on a different machine. SEE ALSO Page 2 Plan 9 (printed 11/18/24) CON(1) CON(1) push(1) BUGS Under rx, a program that should behave specially towards terminals may not: e.g., remote shells will not prompt. Also under rx, the remote standard error and standard output are combined and go inseparably to the local standard out- put. Page 3 Plan 9 (printed 11/18/24)