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- From barnacle.erc.clarkson.edu!sun.soe.clarkson.edu!uupc-info-request Thu, 03 Sep 1992 14:16:48 EDT remote from mit-eddie
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- Thu, 03 Sep 1992 14:16:48 EDT
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- for uupc-info@sun.soe.clarkson.edu); Thu, 3 Sep 1992 10:25:44 -0700
- Received: by gstream.com (UUPC/extended 1.11r); Thu, 03 Sep 1992 09:49:57 PDT
- Date: Thu, 03 Sep 1992 09:49:47 PDT
- From: "Blake C. Ramsdell" <blake@gstream.COM>
- Message-Id: <2aa64236.gstream@gstream.com>
- Organization: GlobalStream Corporation (West Coast)
- To: "William R. Ward" <hermit@bayview.COM>
- Cc: UUPC Mailing List <uupc-info@sun.soe.clarkson.EDU>
- Subject: Re: Query: -ssite,any
-
- On Wed, 02 Sep 1992 13:49:12 PDT, "William R. Ward" <hermit@bayview.com>
- wrote:
- > Is there some way to tell UUPOLL to call a particular site at the
- > specified interval, and also to call any site for which outgoing mail
- > is queued, but only if there is outgoing mail queued?
- >
- > I poll three sites which can poll me, and one which can't. I would
- > like to make it so that the one which can't poll me gets polled every
- > hour, and at that time if there is mail queued for any of the other
- > three, they get polled too.
- >
- > If this is not currently possible (I don't think it is), I suggest
- > the syntax "-ssite1,site2,Any" as a legal way to specify more than
- > the simple "-ssite1" or "-sall" or "-sany".
-
- I use UUPC 1.11r currently, and this information is extracted from the docs
- for 1.11q (the last docs version) from COMMANDS.TXT under UUPOLL:
-
- -s system System name to poll. Default is "all" followed by
- "any", which cannot be explicit specified.
- ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
- !
- (I'm not sure what this means...)
-
- We have a network installation here, and a dedicated machine that runs
- UUPOLL all day. We invoke UUPOLL from a batch file (CALLANY.BAT) that
- forces a poll to them every twelve hours. The following is CALLANY.BAT:
-
- uupoll -i 0005 -d 1200 -s any
- uustat -P nwnexus
- callany
-
- This basically checks to see if there's any work to be done every five
- minutes (-i 0005), and terminates after 12 hours (-d 1200). After UUPOLL
- terminates, the batch file takes over and forces a poll to our mail server
- (nwnexus) and then runs itself again. After UUPOLL runs for five minutes
- this second time, it notices that it has work to do (the poll I did) and
- calls NWNEXUS.
-
- If you want to poll the site that can't poll you every hour, just change
- the -d 1200 to -d 0100 and change the NWNEXUS to the name of the site
- you want to poll every hour.
-
- If there is mail to go out, it will automatically get sent at most after
- the interval specified by "-i".
-
- Is this what you wanted to know, or am I completely out of the park?
-
- Blake
- --
- Blake C. Ramsdell | Voice: (206) 858-7858
- GlobalStream Corporation | FAX: (206) 858-7862
- 5122 Olympic Dr. NW Ste. A102 | UUCP: nwnexus!gstream!blake
- Gig Harbor, WA 98335 | Internet: blake@gstream.com
- From mit-eddie!sun.soe.clarkson.edu!uupc-info-request Sat, 15 Jun 1991 18:10:11 EDT remote from kendra
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- Sat, 15 Jun 1991 19:07:20 gmt
- Date: Sat, 15 Jun 1991 19:07:18 gmt
- From: Andrew Hardie <mit-eddie!relay.eu.net!omega!ash>
- Message-Id: <285a6569@omega.uucp>
- To: "UUPC-info list uupc-info"@sun.soe.clarkson.edu
- Subject: Unix Permissions file
-
- There was some traffic on the net recently about problems with using UUPC
- to talk to unix system that have the /usr/lib/uucp/Permissions file.
-
- Having had these problems and sorted them out by a combination of repeated
- RTFM'ing, calling Tech Support at a SCO supplier and guesswork, I have
- worked up a reasonable rule of thumb which, although probably excessively
- lax for the very security conscious, works ok for me.
-
- The Permissions file has entries for LOGNAME (for incoming calls from other
- machines) and MACHINE for outgoing calls to other machines. Fine. The one
- point more often missed than any other seems to be the caveat that for
- those systems that call you, ALL THEIR LOGIN IDS MUST APPEAR IN A SINGLE
- LOGNAME ENTRY. This one can drive you potty. You put in one system and it
- works. You add a second, as a second LOGNAME entry and it doesn't work.
- You are looking at everything else except Permissions because you *know*
- uucp must be OK because the first system is working!
-
- My Permissions file looks like this (names changed to protect the guilty):
-
- LOGNAME=usys1:usys2:usys3:usys4:usys5:usys6:usys7:usys8:usys9:usys10 \
- COMMANDS=rmail:rnews:uucp \
- READ=/ \
- WRITE=/ \
- SENDFILES=yes REQUEST=no
-
- MACHINE=sys1:sys2:sys3:sys4:sys5:sys6:sys7:sys8:sys9:sys10 \
- COMMANDS=rmail:rnews:uucp \
- READ=/usr/spool/uucppublic:/usr/tmp:/tmp \
- WRITE=/usr/spool/uucppublic:/usr/tmp:/tmp \
- SENDFILES=yes REQUEST=no
-
- I have always made a habit of giving each incoming system a separate login id
- formed from the name of the system with "u" added. I find it makes tracking
- easier. Hence, LOGNAME shows "u"sys1 and MACHINE shows just sys1.
-
- If you are just running plain vanilla HDB UUCP, then just make sure the
- /usr/lib/uucp/Systems file is right and the mail should flow. If you are
- running mmdf (e.g. SCO UNIX), then for the outgoing mail to get anywhere
- you need to make sure that the uucp files in /usr/mmdf/table are OK, (unless
- you are routing out through a single or smart host by just using the badhosts
- channel to forward everything unrecognised to somewhere else) e.g.:
-
- #
- # uucp.chn
- #
-
- sys1.UUCP: sys1!%s
- sys2.UUCP: sys2!%s
- ... etc ...
-
- #
- # uucp.dom domain file for all *.UUCP
- #
-
- sys1: sys1.UUCP
- sys2: sys2.UUCP
- ... etc ...
-
- Hope this helps anyone who has been struggling with this!
- I'm sure someone will write in to point out that I have got this all wrong!
-
- Andrew
- --
-
- +----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
- | Andrew Hardie ash@omega.uucp |
- | London, England ukc!cctal!omega!ash |
- +----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
- From mit-eddie!sun.soe.clarkson.edu!uupc-info-request Sun, 18 Aug 1991 15:27:13 EDT remote from kendra
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- Sun, 18 Aug 1991 15:34:54 GMT
- Date: Sun, 18 Aug 1991 15:34:28 GMT
- From: Andrew Hardie <mit-eddie!relay.eu.net!omega!ash>
- Message-Id: <28ae939f.omega@omega.UUCP>
- To: UUPC Mailing List <uupc-info@sun.soe.clarkson.edu>
- Subject: PC-ELM and UUPC
-
- There has been some netchat recently about using PC-ELM with UUPC.
- Herewith my experiences ...
- I obtained the PC-ELM 2.1 archive. The archive is incomplete. In particular,
- it did not contain the file PCENV.BAT, referred to in what passes for the
- documentation, which shows example of how to configure the environment
- variables. I found that the only variable which has to be set is HOME, to
- point to the directory containing the PC-ELM config file, which *is*
- called ELM.RC (docs say it is called BM.RC but can be changed in the
- source to be somthing else - someone has already done this!). I set the
- ELM.RC file as follows:
-
- # configuration file for Bdale's Mailer... format is:
- # host <space> this_host_name
- # uucphost <space> UUCP host name
- # user <space> this_user_name
- # fullname <space> your full name for mail headers (optional)
- # reply <space> your reply address if not this machine (optional)
- # useful for pc on large network off smart hosts
- # smtp <space> path to mailboxes default /spool/mail
- # edit <space> path your editor (optional)
- # maxlet <space> max number of message in mbox ( optional default 300)
- # video <1|0> direct | bios video mode ( turbo C only default direct )
- # startmode <0|1> uucp v nos mail standards - use 1 mostly
- # zone <space> your timezone
- #
- host omega.uucp
- uucphost omega
- user ash
- fullname Andrew Hardie
- reply ash@omega.uucp
- edit c:\usr\bin\ed.exe
- smtp /tmp/ash
- maxlet 600
- video 1
- startmode 0
- zone GMT
-
- Originally, I had the startup mode set to 1 (nos/smtp mailbox). This read
- a mailbox file OK, provided it was called (in my case) ash.txt. For the
- startmode of 0 (uucp), nothing - complained that it "could not stat file
- c:/tmp/ash/ash." Made a file called c:/tmp/ash/ash. - still no luck.
- Looked at the code - in uucp mode, it looks for separator lines the begin
- "From uucp"; that went out in UUPC ages ago (right Drew?). I am no C
- programmer and although I do have Turbo C I couldn't be bothered to set it
- up to fix this. However, I am a great fan of patching binaries with NU.
- Attacked PCELM.EXE; changed the first instance of "From uucp" to "From <00>"
- (where <00> is binary 00, which I assume to be a string terminator in Turbo
- C parlance. It now read the mailbox, but was fooled by lines in a mail file
- that started "From ", even though they weren't the real start. Tried changing
- the string to "CR LF From <00>"; no good. Then I tried changing the entire
- "From uucp" string to all binary 01s, as used by UUPC as the mail message
- separator. This worked a treat; read the file reliably and was no longer
- fooled by the false From lines. There is a second instance of "From uucp"
- in the file; I didn't change that as I didn't know what it did - may be for
- outgoing?
-
- Next, I tried a reply and got the "From /dev/null!ash" problem, as described
- by a number of correspondents. Looked at the code to see where it invokes
- rmail. Remembered that someone had said that rmail may need to be invoked
- with the -t option in this circumstance. Tried patching the part of the
- binary that had "rmail %s < UUCPMAIL.$$$" to "rl -t %s < UUCPMAIL.$$$", with
- rmail.com copied to rl.com, so as to keep the string the same length.
- rmail complained about "missing or additional" stuff on command line. Then
- tried "rmail -t < UUCPMAIL.$$$", assuming that rmail was supposed to find
- the intended recipient from the "To: " line in the message (in the absence
- of any docs for rmail ...). rmail then complained that there was no-one to
- send the message to. Got bored with this and then just changed the "rmail
- %s < UUCPMAIL.$$$" to "mail %s < UUCPMAIL.$$$" (note the two spaces before
- %s, again to keep thestring the same length). This worked, both on replies
- and for originating mail within PC-ELM and had the additional benefit of
- appending my UUPC .sig file which PC-ELM does not support (I don't think!).
-
- Drew: I'd appreciate knowing whether this is "A Bad Thing" to do and
- where "rmail" is appropriate (I thought it was only for delivering mail,
- not creating or replying). Perhaps PC-ELM can't make up its mind whether
- it is a User agent or a Mail agent!
-
- After I had finished messing about with this, I found 4 lost clusters,
- as reported by another correspondent. I have not used PC-ELM sufficiently
- after having fixed the /dev/null and invisible mailbox problems to say
- whether this problem has gone away, but I suspect not. One problem does
- remain, for sure: when replying to a message in PC-ELM, with include, an
- arbitrary binary character gets (usually with bit 8 set) gets included at
- the start of the included section. I have a feeling this code is doing
- some absolute referencing during random disk access (you can tell I know
- what I'm talking about here, can't you :-)) and that this may explain this
- and the lost clusters (which all contained PC-ELM headers, followed by
- whatever happenned to be on the disk at that point). As they say here in
- England, I think the code needs going through with a Bren gun.
-
- That said, PC-ELM *does* provide a front end for UUCP better suited to the
- novice or casual user and, if it wasn't for the reply and lost cluster
- problems, I would put it in front of the ten or so UUPC users I support.
- One thing I definitely do not like, but the new users wouldn't notice,
- is that the meaning of the X and Q commands are swapped, i.e., in PC-ELM,
- Q leaves the mailbox unaltered and X saves changes and exits.
-
- If there is enough interest in PC-ELM amongst the UUCP users and they
- are having difficulty getting it and there are some C programmers out there
- who fancy exercising their skills in making this into a rock-solid frontend
- for UUPC, I am happy to send it to Drew or someone he cares to nominate,
- so that it can be put up on sun.soe.clarkson.edu. No individual e-mail
- requests, please; after all, I am in England! The ZIP is 116683 bytes.
-
- Reading the notes at the start of the main source code file (TCMAIN.C),
- it became clear that PC-ELM is *not* a port of the highly recommended (but
- not yet made to compile by me!) unix program of the same name. It started
- life as an extension of the mailer supplied with KA9Q, that most mysterious
- and legendary of programs, which does everything except make tea, if its
- proponents are to be believed! Primarily, it was intended for the Amateur
- Packet Radio environment (NET/ROM, AX.25, and all that) but then included
- SMTP and TCP/IP and thus started to stray into DOS/unix territory and get
- used as a router, including doing routing between TCP/IP and Novell IPX
- environments (ask me how if you are interested!). It had a simple mailer,
- called BM (for Bdale's Mailer, after Bdale Garbee, who wrote it). This
- then got taken over by a number of other radio types, mostly European,
- it seems, including Trulli, Freiss, Siebeck and, finally, Kelvin Hill,
- whose call sign is G1EMM, which explains those g1emm directories you see
- on KA9Q ftp sites! At some point in its evolution, the idea of using a
- user interface like the unix ELM was adopted.
-
- The fact that it handles both UUCP mail (which I have now got working)
- and SMTP mail (which I have not yet tried) in the one program and that
- you can cross-reply between these is a plus. The lack of any kind of
- mmdf channel handling or sendmail rule processing will, I think, make
- its use in such a dual-universe environment only suitable for "end-user"
- nodes ("leaf" in uucp parlance). It is clear that the people working on
- PC-ELM have not looked at UUPC in a *long* time. The last revision date
- on the V2.1 of PC-ELM is October 1990; if anyone knows of a later version,
- do tell. Tantalisingly, one of the revision notes mentions the addition
- of NNTP traffic handling - nothing mentioned in the docs and, not having
- a newsfeed here and, consequently, not knowing anything about NNTP, I can't
- tell by casting my ignorant eye over the code what support it provides.
-
- I'll end by saying that the difference in programming quality between PC-ELM
- and Drew's work with UUPC *really* shows! Now, if Drew could be persuaded
- to take a look at PC-ELM .... The front end is OK, it's how it interfaces
- to the back end (and the disk!) that is the problem. Someone who knows a
- good bit about KA9Q is probably a must; do we have any KA9Q experts amongst
- the UUCP worldwide fraternity?
-
- Hope this provides a useful review of PC-ELM.
-
- Andrew
- --
- +----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
- | Andrew Hardie ash@omega.uucp |
- | London, England ukc!cctal!omega!ash |
- +----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
- From mit-eddie!sun.soe.clarkson.edu!uupc-info-request Wed, 20 Nov 1991 21:57:48 EST remote from kendra
- Received: from kendra by ffactory.kew.com (UUPC/extended 1.11o) with UUCP;
- Wed, 20 Nov 1991 21:57:48 EST
- Received: from mit-eddie by kewgate.kew.com (UUPC/extended 1.11o) with UUCP;
- Wed, 20 Nov 1991 00:13:05 EST
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- id AA27353; Tue, 19 Nov 91 20:44:05 EST
- Return-Path: <wang!altacoma.wang.com!plummer@uunet.UU.NET>
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- Tue, 19 Nov 1991 19:59:04 EST
- Date: Tue, 19 Nov 1991 19:59:03 EST
- From: "William W. Plummer" <mit-eddie!altacoma.wang.com!plummer>
- Message-Id: <2929b359.AltaComa@AltaComa.wang.com>
- To: UUPC-Info <uupc-info@sun.soe.clarkson.edu>
- Subject: MAKE-O-MANIA
-
- For those who like to roll their own, I just did a bit of experimenting
- with various make programs. I built only the DOS version of UUPC. Of
- course we know that old MS make that came with MSC 5 will not work with
- the current nmake file, but the make that comes with MSC 6, 6.00A and
- 6.00AX will. The new nmk program also works very well by saying,
- nmk /nologo /s /f nmake installR . Polymake, however, chokes
- on much of nmake (Ask me if I really care!). FYI. --Bill
- --
- William W. Plummer H: 508-256-9570
- 7 Country Club Dr. plummer@wang.com
- Chelmsford, MA 01824
- From mit-eddie!sun.soe.clarkson.edu!uupc-info-request Sun, 17 Nov 1991 12:20:47 EST remote from kendra
- Received: from kendra by ffactory.kew.com (UUPC/extended 1.11o) with UUCP;
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- Sun, 17 Nov 1991 20:22:49 EST
- Date: Sun, 17 Nov 1991 20:22:44 EST
- From: Mark Purcell <mit-eddie!sserve.cc.adfa.oz.au!posmac!msp>
- Message-Id: <292715ea.posmac@posmac.UUCP>
- Reply-To: Mark Purcell <mit-eddie!sserve.cc.adfa.oz.au!posmac!msp>
- To: tfpoage@ucdavis.edu
- Cc: UUPC Mailing List <uupc-info@sun.soe.clarkson.edu>
- Subject: Re: Can UUPC coexist with Netware
-
-
- On Thu, 14 Nov 91 09:37:09 PST, "Tom Poage" <tfpoage@ucdavis.edu> wrote:
- >
- > So, has anyone tried to use UUPC on a NetWare host/server?
- >
- > If so, how does it handle multiple users/hosts?
- >
- > Is this even possible?
-
- Well I currently have UUPC running over a Netware 3.11 network.
- I only have one host so it makes things quite simple. In fact using it this
- way for local mail uucico is not even needed. The mail command looks
- after deliver and movemt of all mail.
-
- I set up UUPC as if I had one machine with a number of users on it, as
- per the docs. Then in my netware system login script I assigned
- the uupcuserrc variable to be dependant on the %LOGIN_NAME of the
- user. Something like:
-
- SET uupcusrrc = "f:\lib\uupc\%LOGIN_NAME.rc"
-
- Then it is a matter of creating a personal.rc file for each user who
- is going to utilize mail.
-
- After a bit of playing around it is all done.
-
- Security is non existant as every user must have access to the ..\mail
- directory they are required to write sent mail there. But as most my
- users are well behaved, security is not really a problem.
-
- There is no such thing as a UUPC module, that I know of, that can be run
- on the Netware host. If you do wan't to run external mail delivery, ie
- uucico, then you will have to envoke uucico from one of your hosts, any one.
- But this can be done in the background under Windows in 386 eh mode.
-
- As for delivery to multiple hosts, maybe if you map different users to
- different drives it would be possible, but sound like too much trouble to
- me, better to keep all your mail in one spot.
-
- If you do find any other solutions, or have any questions, feel free to
- give me a yell.
-
- Mark
- --
- Mark Purcell UUCP: uunet!sserve.cc.adfa.oz.au!posmac!msp
- KINGSTON ACT INTERNET: msp%posmac@sserve.cc.adfa.oz.au
- AUSTRALIA PHONE: (06) 295 8358 INT: +61 6 295 8358
- --
- Mark Purcell UUCP: uunet!sserve.cc.adfa.oz.au!posmac!msp
- KINGSTON ACT INTERNET: msp%posmac@sserve.cc.adfa.oz.au
- AUSTRALIA PHONE: (06) 295 8358 INT: +61 6 295 8358
- From mit-eddie!sun.soe.clarkson.edu!uupc-info-request Sun, 26 Jan 1992 07:26:50 EST remote from kendra
- Received: from kendra by ffactory.kew.com (UUPC/extended 1.11s) with UUCP;
- Sun, 26 Jan 1992 07:26:50 EST
- Received: from mit-eddie by kewgate.kew.com (UUPC/extended 1.11r) with UUCP;
- Sun, 26 Jan 1992 04:10:47 EST
- Received: from OMNIGATE.CLARKSON.EDU by EDDIE.MIT.EDU with SMTP (5.65/25-eef)
- id AA28668; Sun, 26 Jan 92 02:31:00 -0500
- Received: from sun.soe.clarkson.edu by omnigate.clarkson.edu id aa15772;
- 25 Jan 92 15:39 EST
- Received: by sun.soe.clarkson.edu (4.1/SMI-4.1)
- id AA01985; Sat, 25 Jan 92 15:00:10 EST
- Return-Path: <@EDDIE.MIT.EDU:ffactory!ffactory.kew.com!ahd@EDDIE.MIT.EDU>
- Received: from EDDIE.MIT.EDU by sun.soe.clarkson.edu (4.1/SMI-4.1)
- id AA01981; Sat, 25 Jan 92 15:00:02 EST
- Received: by EDDIE.MIT.EDU with UUCP (5.65/25-eef)
- id AA14410; Sat, 25 Jan 92 14:58:22 -0500
- Received: from ffactory by kewgate.kew.com (UUPC/extended 1.11r) with UUCP;
- Sat, 25 Jan 1992 14:53:32 EST
- Received: by ffactory.kew.com (UUPC/extended 1.11r);
- Sat, 25 Jan 1992 14:47:05 EST
- Date: Sat, 25 Jan 1992 14:47:02 EST
- From: Drew Derbyshire <mit-eddie!kew.com!ahd>
- Message-Id: <2981beb9.ffactory@ffactory.kew.com>
- Organization: Kendra Electronic Wonderworks
- To: "Katherine E. Williams" <kewms@kew.com>
- Cc: UUPC Mailing List <uupc-info@sun.soe.clarkson.edu>
- Subject: Re: uupc
-
- On Thu, 23 Jan 1992 00:27:24 PST, "Katherine E. Williams" <kewms@kew.com> wrote:
- > you told me once but I forgot...
- >
- > How do I tell uupoll to call every n (5,10, whatever) minutes until
- > it gets through, and then stop?
-
- UUSTAT -P kendra (creates dummy job to make -s any work)
- UUPOLL -i hhmm -s any
-
- Where hhmm = n in hours and minutes. Once queue is empty, "-s any" will
- not call any more.
-
- -ahd-
- --
- Drew Derbyshire
-
- Internet: ahd@kew.com U.S. Mail: Post Office Box 132
- Voice: 617-641-3739 Arlington, MA 02174
-
- Be careful, the last person using this keyboard had a terminal disease.
- From mit-eddie!kram.demon.co.uk!mt Sun, 26 Jan 1992 08:28:53 EST remote from kendra
- Received: from kendra by ffactory.kew.com (UUPC/extended 1.11s) with UUCP;
- Sun, 26 Jan 1992 08:28:53 EST
- Received: from mit-eddie by kewgate.kew.com (UUPC/extended 1.11r) with UUCP;
- Sun, 26 Jan 1992 08:19:18 EST
- Received: from eros.uknet.ac.uk by EDDIE.MIT.EDU with SMTP (5.65/25-eef)
- id AA02566; Sun, 26 Jan 92 06:22:19 -0500
- Received: from demon.co.uk by eros.uknet.ac.uk with UUCP
- id <8230-0@eros.uknet.ac.uk>; Sun, 26 Jan 1992 11:22:58 +0000
- Received: from kram by office.demon.co.uk id aa05899;
- Sun, 26 Jan 92 11:22:05 GMT
- Received: from bedroom by demon.co.uk (UUPC/extended 1.11r) with UUCP;
- Sun, 26 Jan 1992 10:21:08 gmt
- Received: by kram.demon.co.uk (UUPC/extended 1.11r);
- Sun, 26 Jan 1992 10:04:05 gmt
- Date: Sun, 26 Jan 1992 10:04:01 gmt
- From: Mark Turner <mit-eddie!kram.demon.co.uk!mt>
- Message-Id: <29828796.bedroom@kram.demon.co.uk>
- Organization: Demon Systems Limited
- Reply-To: Mark Turner <mit-eddie!demon.co.uk!mt>
- To: help@kew.com
- Subject: Obtaining UUPC/Extended in the UK
-
-
- Drew,
-
- just for the record.... if anyone in the UK is having problems
- obtaining new releases of UUPC/Extended (cos we don't have a real
- Internet yet, but watch this space) we usually pull it down to
- Demon within a few days and then upload it to Cix (The Compulink
- Information eXchange). If any UK UUPCers would find it easier to
- get the files from within the UK perhaps they could either use Cix
- or suggest some suitable BBS over here that could hold the files.
-
- Regards,
-
- Mark.
- --
- _ _ ___ mt@demon.co.uk
- | | |ark |urner ....uunet!uknet!demon!mt
- Demon Systems, 42 Hendon Lane, Finchley, London N3 1TT
- Work 081 349-0063, Mobile 0831 823212
- Brown sauce makes it taste better!
- From mit-eddie!sun.soe.clarkson.edu!uupc-info-request Sun, 26 Jan 1992 15:46:06 EST remote from kendra
- Received: from kendra by ffactory.kew.com (UUPC/extended 1.11s) with UUCP;
- Sun, 26 Jan 1992 15:46:06 EST
- Received: from mit-eddie by kewgate.kew.com (UUPC/extended 1.11r) with UUCP;
- Sun, 26 Jan 1992 14:13:57 EST
- Received: from OMNIGATE.CLARKSON.EDU by EDDIE.MIT.EDU with SMTP (5.65/25-eef)
- id AA09935; Sun, 26 Jan 92 13:42:32 -0500
- Received: from sun.soe.clarkson.edu by omnigate.clarkson.edu id aa02742;
- 26 Jan 92 9:45 EST
- Received: by sun.soe.clarkson.edu (4.1/SMI-4.1)
- id AA10566; Sun, 26 Jan 92 09:04:01 EST
- Return-Path: <@EDDIE.MIT.EDU:ffactory!ffactory.kew.com!snuffles@EDDIE.MIT.EDU>
- Received: from EDDIE.MIT.EDU by sun.soe.clarkson.edu (4.1/SMI-4.1)
- id AA10562; Sun, 26 Jan 92 09:03:57 EST
- Received: by EDDIE.MIT.EDU with UUCP (5.65/25-eef)
- id AA04942; Sun, 26 Jan 92 09:02:12 -0500
- Received: from ffactory by kewgate.kew.com (UUPC/extended 1.11r) with UUCP;
- Sun, 26 Jan 1992 08:29:24 EST
- Received: by ffactory.kew.com (UUPC/extended 1.11s);
- Sun, 26 Jan 1992 07:52:51 EST
- Date: Sun, 26 Jan 1992 07:52:48 EST
- From: "Snuffles P. Bear" <mit-eddie!kew.com!snuffles>
- Message-Id: <2982af23.ffactory@ffactory.kew.com>
- Organization: Kendra Electronic Wonderworks
- To: mit-eddie!plethora.media.mit.edu!klund%dobbs.UUCP@eddie.mit.edu
- Cc: UUPC Mailing List <uupc-info@sun.soe.clarkson.edu>
- Subject: Re: option fixedspeed ?
-
- On Sat, 25 Jan 1992 23:33:21 est, (Kent H Lundberg) mit-eddie!dobbs!klund wrote:
- > Could you possibly give me a quick rundown of what option=fixedspeed
- > does? Exactly what do you mean by "autobaud the modem"? I have a
- > number of links around here that use V.42bis compression (with the
- > serial ports operating at 4 times the connection speed) and it sounds
- > like this is an option that I should be concerned about (or at least
- > I should understand it) since it sounds like it applies to me...
-
- The option is documented in the MAIL.PRN file.
-
- Some modems, specifically the Hayes SmartModem series, will accept
- commands at a certain port speed xxxx (say 2400 bps), and then if the
- other modem it connects to is running a lower speed, issue a CONNECT
- yyyy message at the original speed xxxx and *then* change its own port
- speed to yyyy. Thus, to continue talking to the modem, the computer
- must switch to speed yyyy as well.
-
- Autobauding is simply the process of the modems finding each other's
- speed. In some cases it also refers to the computer figuring out the
- modem switched speed on it as well.
-
- options=nofixedspeed
-
- The default, options=nofixedspeed, tells the UUPC/extended to scan for a
- number after the CONNECT and/or ANSWER strings defined in the *.MDM
- file, and automatically switch the port speed to the that number if it
- is found.
-
- options=fixedspeed
-
- options=fixedspeed, commonly used with Telebit Trailblzers, v.42bis
- modems, and other data compressing modems, tells UUPC/extended to ignore
- the connection speed and continue talking to the modem at the original
- speed. This is possible (and desired) because these modems buffer
- characters to compress them, and thus can talk to the computer faster
- than it sends the data down the telephone line. (This is desired
- because compress/decompression will result in more bits per second
- exchanged with the computer than actually sent over the phone line.)
-
- In summary, use nofixedspeed for most Hayes compatible modems, but
- use fixedspeed for v.42bis, Telebits, or other data compressing modems.
- Check your modem manual to determine whether it changes speed when it
- connects.
-
- Snuffles
- --
- Your faithful furry servant, Chocolate: PO Box 132
- Snuffles P. Bear Arlington, MA 02174-0002
- Internet: snuffles@kew.com
-
- I just program for Drew because Binkley Bunny (who is as snowy white as
- I am) and Gunther Bear used to help Drew program from the top of
- kendra's monitor. They went west in September [1990] with Mom so that
- Mom and Binkley could work on their PhDs. That made the Wonderworks
- understaffed, so at Christmas [1990] Mom asked me to live with Drew.
- From mit-eddie!INDYVAX.IUPUI.EDU!ICBJ100 Sun, 26 Jan 1992 15:45:46 EST remote from kendra
- Received: from kendra by ffactory.kew.com (UUPC/extended 1.11s) with UUCP;
- Sun, 26 Jan 1992 15:45:46 EST
- Received: from mit-eddie by kewgate.kew.com (UUPC/extended 1.11r) with UUCP;
- Sun, 26 Jan 1992 12:19:00 EST
- Received: from indyvax.iupui.edu by EDDIE.MIT.EDU with SMTP (5.65/25-eef)
- id AA07852; Sun, 26 Jan 92 11:47:32 -0500
- Received: from INDYVAX.IUPUI.EDU by INDYVAX.IUPUI.EDU (PMDF #12264) id
- <01GFRRC2PG7K002UBN@INDYVAX.IUPUI.EDU>; Sun, 26 Jan 1992 11:47 -0500
- Date: Sun, 26 Jan 1992 11:46 -0500
- From: "Michael R. Morrett" <mit-eddie!INDYVAX.IUPUI.EDU!ICBJ100>
- Subject: FROGSHID.INF
- To: help@kew.com
- Message-Id: <01GFRRC2PG7K002UBN@INDYVAX.IUPUI.EDU>
- X-Vms-To: IN%"help@kew.com"
- X-Vms-Cc: ICBJ100
-
- Hi Drew,
-
- I have rewritted the documentaion for my UNIX host setup I sent you
- and the person in Finland.
-
- You have not told me to not send updates to you...
- (For some reason, the above sentence looks weird, ie: stupid!)
-
- For security reasons, I am using the hostname of 'frogshid' instead
- of my real host name I have at work. I work for the telephone
- company and they would cut off my ..... if I gave any information a
- hacker might use.
-
- My PC is not called 'flybait', just made it up to be funny. Also, I
- have been trying for about three months to get a mail feed here in
- Indianapolis. I called in a favor to get a free mail account on the
- local university and the temporary mail account expires May 1992. :-(
-
- I'm still trying very hard to get a mail account and then I will
- have a real UUCP node! I LOVE "Star Trek" and have a nodename I think
- is not used by anybody and that is also why I have not told anybody what
- it is.
-
- thanks,
- mike
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
- FROGSHID.INF Sunday, January 26, 1992 10:30 am Page 1
-
-
- Michael R. Morrett
- icbj100@indyvax.iupui.edu
- Indianapolis, Indiana USA
- 1-317-265-1870
-
- Here is how my UNIX host is configured to run UUCP...
-
- +------------------+
- | Intergraph | +-------+ +-------+
- | InterPro 2020 | | Hayes | | Hayes |
- | UNIX Workstation X-----X V9600 | . . . . . . . . . . | V9600 |
- | System V 3.1 | ^ | Modem | ^ | Modem |
- | HoneyDanBer UUCP | ^ +-------+ ^ +---X---+
- +------------------+ ^ ^ |
- "frogshid" ^ telephone line |
- ^ |
- 25 pin male/female straight +-------X-------+
- through RS-232 cable (The | PC running |
- workstation only has pins | UUPC/extended |
- 1-8 & 20 cabled to the +---------------+
- modem port /dev/tty00.) "flybait"
-
- The Hayes modem is connected to port /dev/tty00 (the only port with
- modem control on the workstation). This port is configured at 9600
- baud and with RTS/CTS hardware flow control.
-
- +-------------------+
- | /etc/inittab file |
- +-------------------+
- t0:234:respawn:/usr/lib/uucp/uugetty -r -t 30 tty00 9600H
-
- This port (tty00) is using uugetty to allow the port to dial in or
- dial out. The "-r" flag causes uugetty to wait to read a character
- before it displays the login message. The "-t" flag specifies the
- length of time in seconds (30 seconds for my host) uugetty will wait
- before aborting if no response. The 9600H is a pointer to an entry
- in the /etc/gettydefs file.
-
- +---------------------+
- | /etc/gettydefs file |
- +---------------------+
- 9600H# B9600 BRKINT IGNPAR ICRNL IXON IXANY OPOST ONLCR CS8 \
- CREAD ISIG HUPCL ECHO ECHOE ECHOK ICANON # B9600 BRKINT IGNPAR \
- ICRNL IXON IXANY OPOST ONLCR CS8 CREAD ISIG HUPCL ECHO ECHOE \
- ECHOK ICANON #login: #2400H
-
- 2400H# B2400 BRKINT IGNPAR ICRNL IXON IXANY OPOST ONLCR CS8 \
- CREAD ISIG HUPCL ECHO ECHOE ECHOK ICANON # B2400 BRKINT IGNPAR \
- ICRNL IXON IXANY OPOST ONLCR CS8 CREAD ISIG HUPCL ECHO ECHOE \
- ECHOK ICANON #login: #1200H
-
- 1200H# B1200 BRKINT IGNPAR ICRNL IXON IXANY OPOST ONLCR CS8 \
- CREAD ISIG HUPCL ECHO ECHOE ECHOK ICANON # B1200 BRKINT IGNPAR \
- ICRNL IXON IXANY OPOST ONLCR CS8 CREAD ISIG HUPCL ECHO ECHOE \
- ECHOK ICANON #login: #9600H
-
-
-
- FROGSHID.INF Sunday, January 26, 1992 10:30 am Page 2
-
-
- The "\" continuation character is NOT part of the lines above. They
- are just three really long lines. It is shown this way to make it
- "pretty" for this document. The first line starts with 9600H# and
- ends with #2400H. The second line starts with 2400H# and ends with
- #1200H. The third line starts with 1200H# and ends with #9600H.
-
- The first part and last part of each line are labels. The line in
- the /etc/inittab file says to read the line labeled 9600H in the
- /etc/gettydefs file. If there is an error reading this line or the
- remote host or the remote user sends a BREAK, the label at the end of
- the 9600H line says to read the line labeled 2400H. These labels
- provide a "goto" function.
-
- To create the three lines for modem use, a line in the existing
- /etc/gettydefs file labeled 9600 was copied to create three new lines
- labeled 9600H, 2400H, and 1200H. CLOCAL was changed to HUPCL in two
- places in each line so that when the connection stops (carrier detect
- is lost), uugetty will die and drop the DTR lead. The baud Bxxx
- settings in two places in each line also need to be changed.
-
- Besides HUPCL, another important option is CS8. This sets the
- character size to eight (needed for "g" UUCP protocol). The "man
- pages" for gettydefs(4) and termio(7) describe in detail the other
- options in the /etc/gettydefs file.
-
- +------------------+
- | /etc/passwd file |
- +------------------+
- uucp:*:5:1:admin & cron login:/usr/lib/uucp:
- nuucp:*:6:1:wkg login:/usr/spool/uucppublic:/usr/lib/uucp/uucico
- uubugs:xxx:6:1:wkg login:/usr/spool/uucppublic:/usr/lib/uucp/uucico
- ^
- |
- (13 character encrypted password)
-
- The "uucp" login is the administrative login id that "owns" all UUCP
- files and directories. It is also used by cron to execute the UUCP
- maintenance programs.
-
- The "nuucp" login is the login id remote uucico programs will use to
- log into the local host. For security reasons, this account on my
- host is disabled. The "nuucp" account was copied to create a
- separate login for each remote host that calls my host. For example,
- the "uubugs" login id will be used by the PC host "flybait".
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- FROGSHID.INF Sunday, January 26, 1992 10:30 am Page 3
-
-
- +----------------------------+
- | /usr/lib/uucp/Systems file |
- +----------------------------+
- flybait Any ACU 9600 9=123-4567 "" \r\d\r in:--in: tadpole word: toad
-
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11
- \----------- chat script -----------/
-
- 1 = remote host name
- 2 = time to call
- 3 = device type, an index pointing to the /usr/lib/uucp/Devices file
- (1st field). ACU = Automatic Call Unit, a modem.
- 4 = baud rate, an index pointing to the /usr/lib/uucp/Devices file
- (4th field)
- 5 = remote host phone number
- 6 = expect ""
- 7 = send carriage return + delay (1-2 seconds) + carriage return
- 8 = expect-send and subexpect-subsend information
- Expect "in:" (part of "login:"). If not received, send a
- carriage return or linefeed, look again for "in:". Between the
- "--" is where the carriage return or linefeed is sent. If
- needed, additional characters can be included between the "--".
- 9 = send remote host login id
- 10 = expect "word:" (part of "Password:")
- 11 = send remote host password
-
- +----------------------------+
- | /usr/lib/uucp/Devices file |
- +----------------------------+
- ACU tty00 - 9600 hayes
-
- 1 2 3 4 5
-
- 1 = device type, pointed to by the /usr/lib/uucp/Systems file
- 2 = physical device port
- 3 = not used
- 4 = baud rate, pointed to by the /usr/lib/uucp/Systems file
- 5 = modem name, an index pointing to the /usr/lib/uucp/Dialers file
- (1st field)
-
- +----------------------------+
- | /usr/lib/uucp/Dialers file |
- +----------------------------+
- hayes =,-, "" \dAT "" \dAT OK-\dAT-OK \dATDT\T CONNECT
-
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
-
- 1 = modem name, pointed to by the /usr/lib/uucp/Devices file
- 2 = "=" equals "," and "-" equals ","
- This allows the use of "=" and "-" in the /usr/lib/uucp/Systems
- file (fifth field) for the remote host phone number. This
- translates the "=" and the "-" characters to the Hayes modem ","
- pause character.
- 3 = expect ""
- 4 = send delay + AT
-
-
-
- FROGSHID.INF Sunday, January 26, 1992 10:30 am Page 4
-
-
- 5 = expect ""
- 6 = send delay + AT
- 7 = expect OK, if not received, send delay + AT again, expect OK
- 8 = send delay + ATDT + remote host phone number. The "\T" means use
- the information in the /usr/lib/uucp/Dialcodes file if needed.
- 9 = expect CONNECT
-
- +------------------------------+
- | /usr/lib/uucp/Dialcodes file |
- +------------------------------+
- (I do not use.)
-
- +--------------------------------+
- | /usr/lib/uucp/Permissions file |
- +--------------------------------+
- LOGNAME=uubugs VALIDATE=flybait MACHINE=flybait \
- REQUEST=yes SENDFILES=yes \
- PUBDIR=/usr/spool/uucppublic/flybait \
- READ=/ WRITE=/usr/spool/uucppublic/flybait \
- COMMANDS=rmail
-
- LOGNAME MACHINE
- Options (remote calls local) (local calls remote)
- ------------------ ----------------------- --------------------
- VALIDATE Remote host must log in Does not apply
- with user id specified
- by LOGNAME. This links
- MACHINE and COMMANDS
- with a LOGNAME entry.
-
- REQUEST=yes/no Can remote host request Same meaning
- files from local host
- (default is no).
-
- SENDFILES=yes/call Can local host send Does not apply
- files queued for remote
- host (default is call,
- only send when local
- host calls remote host).
-
- READ=pathnames Directories uucico may Same meaning
- read from (default
- /usr/spool/uucppublic).
-
- WRITE=pathnames Directories uucico may Same meaning
- write to (default
- /usr/spool/uucppublic).
-
- COMMANDS=commands Does not apply Commands uuxqt will
- execute for remote
- host (default rmail).
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- FROGSHID.INF Sunday, January 26, 1992 10:30 am Page 5
-
-
- +-------------------------+
- | /usr/lib/uucp/Poll file |
- +-------------------------+
- flybait<tab>9 13
-
- My host has a cron job execute the /usr/lib/uucp/uudemon.poll
- shell script at eight minutes before every hour. This shell script
- checks the /usr/lib/uucp/Poll file to find remote hosts that are to
- be polled. A work file named /usr/spool/uucp/flybait/C.flybaitn0000
- is then created. Another cron job executes the
- /usr/lib/uucp/uudemon.hour shell script (it runs uusched and uuxqt in
- the background) at four minutes before every hour. As a result of
- these two cron jobs, the remote host "flybait" will be called at
- 9:56am and 1:56pm.
-
- The work file name (C.flybaitn0000 for example) is created by UUCP in
- an unique way by adding "C." + first seven characters of remote host
- name + an ASCII character representing the grade (priority) of the
- work + a 4-digit job sequence number. The "C" stands for Command
- file. Uucico processes the file priority ("n" in this case) in order
- from A to Z and then a to z. The latest sequence number is stored in
- the /usr/lib/uucp/SEQF file, but polling work files are always
- sequence number 0000.
-
- +--------------------------+
- | Hayes Modem Setup String |
- +--------------------------+
- AT&FM0Q2&C2&D3S0=1&Y0&W0&W1
-
- The modem is setup by executing the above command on a PC temporarily
- connected to the Hayes modem. I have mixed luck trying to echo the
- modem setup string to the modem port (echo "AT&F..." > /dev/tty00).
-
- AT&F recall factory configuration
- M0 turn speaker off
- Q2 return result codes in originate mode, do not return result
- codes in answer mode
- &C2 Pin 8 - presume presence of carrier detect (CD) signal until
- on-line, then monitor status of signal
- &D3 Pin 20 - monitor DTR signal and when an on-to-off transition
- of DTR signal occurs, hang up and perform a hard reset
- S0=1 answer on 1 ring
- &Y0 specify stored user profile 0 as power-up configuration
- &W0 write storable parameters as profile 0
- &W1 write storable parameters as profile 1
-
- Option Q2 (it appears most people use Q1) is used because it allows
- the modem result codes (OK, CONNECT, etc) to be seen on a manually
- dialed connection and disables the modem result codes in answer mode.
- If the modem echoes the result code (CONNECT for example) on an
- incoming call, the local uugetty will see the capital letters in the
- result code and think the remote host only understands uppercase. At
- least three weeks of time was spent in tracking down this problem!
-
-
-
-
-
- FROGSHID.INF Sunday, January 26, 1992 10:30 am Page 6
-
-
- Option &C2 (it appears most people use &C1) is used because it allows
- a manually dialed connection to the modem (Kermit for example) even
- if carried detect is not present or enabled. Because the
- /etc/gettydefs file has HUPCL, uugetty will NOT communicate with the
- modem without seeing carrier detect if option &C1 is used.
-
- Option &D3 (it appears most people use &D2) is used because this
- causes the modem to do a HARD reset when the line disconnects and DTR
- is dropped by uugetty. A Zillion dollar phone bill would be a BIG
- shock!
-
- The &Y0, &W0, and &W1 commands make sure when the modem resets, it
- comes up in a known configuration. My modem had a weird setup stored
- in profile 1 (from some other project) and &Y1 was set. Again, it
- took a long time to figure out this problem.
-
- By default, the Hayes modem has RTS/CTS local hardware flow control
- (&K3) and V.42 error-control with V.42bis data compression (&Q5)
- enabled.
-
- +---------------+
- | Required Book |
- +---------------+
- "Managing UUCP and Usenet" by O'Reilly & Associates. (A new "10th
- Edition Revised and Update" book is now available.)
-
- +----------------+
- | Optional Books |
- +----------------+
- "UNIX Administration Guide for System V" by Rebecca Thomas & Rik
- Farrow. (This book has a very good 106 page chapter on UUCP.)
-
- "Using UUCP and Usenet" by O'Reilly & Associates
-
- "The Waite Group's UNIX Communications" by SAMS
-
- +---------+
- | Remarks |
- +---------+
- The hardest part about UUCP is the modem setup string, then the chat
- script.
-
- The first modem on my workstation was a NEC modem that has about
- 3,000,000 setup commands and the factory default configuration makes
- absolutely no sense. At first, I thought my problems were with the
- chat script until I discovered the NEC modem has a factory default
- setting of NO flow control! About TWO months of time was spent
- trying to get UUCP to work with the NEC modem!! After the NEC modem
- was replaced with a Hayes modem, UUCP started working just great! :-)
-
- If you have any comments (good or bad), corrections, questions,
- PLEASE send me mail!
-
-
- From mit-eddie!sun.soe.clarkson.edu!uupc-info-request Tue, 28 Jan 1992 17:08:15 EST remote from kendra
- Received: from kendra by ffactory.kew.com (UUPC/extended 1.11s) with UUCP;
- Tue, 28 Jan 1992 17:08:15 EST
- Received: from mit-eddie by kewgate.kew.com (UUPC/extended 1.11s) with UUCP;
- Tue, 28 Jan 1992 16:09:59 EST
- Received: from OMNIGATE.CLARKSON.EDU by EDDIE.MIT.EDU with SMTP (5.65/25-eef)
- id AA01990; Tue, 28 Jan 92 15:40:16 -0500
- Received: from sun.soe.clarkson.edu by omnigate.clarkson.edu id aa11985;
- 28 Jan 92 0:01 EST
- Received: by sun.soe.clarkson.edu (4.1/SMI-4.1)
- id AA12505; Mon, 27 Jan 92 23:01:13 EST
- Return-Path: <omega!ash>
- Received: from eros.uknet.ac.uk by sun.soe.clarkson.edu (4.1/SMI-4.1)
- id AA12500; Mon, 27 Jan 92 23:00:57 EST
- Received: from cctal.uucp by eros.uknet.ac.uk with UUCP
- id <8158-0@eros.uknet.ac.uk>; Tue, 28 Jan 1992 00:36:48 +0000
- Received: from omega by cctal.UUCP (UUPC/extended 1.11n) with UUCP;
- Mon, 27 Jan 1992 23:00:32 gmt
- Received: by omega.UUCP (UUPC/extended 1.11q); Mon, 27 Jan 1992 22:46:45 GMT
- Date: Mon, 27 Jan 1992 22:46:43 GMT
- From: Andrew Hardie <mit-eddie!omnigate.clarkson.edu!omega!ash>
- Message-Id: <29848bd6.omega@omega.UUCP>
- To: UUPC Mailing List <uupc-info@sun.soe.clarkson.edu>
- Subject: Mail forwarding to PRN
-
-
- Someone posted recently about wanting to be able to forward files to
- a printer. He wanted to use uucp. I don't use uucp, but I am doing it
- with mail. Here's how:
-
- (1) Get yourself the DOS ports of some essential Unix tools for doing this
- sort of messing around: cat, sed, grep and, while you are at it, mv.
- Should be listed along with the Nutshell books as required UUPC items.
-
- (2) set up a password file entry like:
- prinput:*:::printer input:/usr/prinput
-
- (3) in /usr/prinput, make a FORWARD file with:
- | cat > prn
-
- Mail to prinput goes straight to the printer. That's it.
-
- OK, you are left with the headers, but I am sure a whizz with sed (i.e. not
- me) can knock up a little script to chop the headers off (delete everything
- from the Ctrl-As or the From up to the first blank line?), so that the
- FORWARD becomes:
-
- | sed -f chophead.sed > prn
-
- or some such.
-
- I am sure there are many other ways of cracking this nut, this is just
- an example.
-
- Andrew
- --
- +----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
- | Andrew Hardie ash@omega.uucp |
- | London, England uknet!cctal!omega!ash |
- +----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
- From ffactory.kew.com!help Fri, 31 Jan 1992 20:01:18 EST remote from kendra
- Received: from kendra by ffactory.kew.com (UUPC/extended 1.11s) with UUCP;
- Fri, 31 Jan 1992 20:01:18 EST
- Received: from ffactory by kewgate.kew.com (UUPC/extended 1.11s) with UUCP;
- Fri, 31 Jan 1992 19:42:15 EST
- Received: by ffactory.kew.com (UUPC/extended 1.11s);
- Fri, 31 Jan 1992 19:06:09 EST
- Date: Fri, 31 Jan 1992 19:06:04 EST
- From: "Drew Derbyshire - UUPC/Extended Help" <help@kew.com>
- Message-ID: <2989e471.ffactory@ffactory.kew.com>
- Organization: Kendra Electronic Wonderworks
- To: admwi@cunyvm.cuny.edu
- Cc: "UUPC Mailing List" <uupc-info@sun.soe.clarkson.edu>,
- hints@kew.com
-
- Delete the commands=all. ALL *must* be upper case if used, but you
- should NEVER NEVER NEVER authorize a strange system to ALL commands.
- The PSI folks are wonderful people, but I don't even grant ALL commands
- to people within the kew.com domain I've personally known 12 years.
-
- -ahd-
- --
- Drew Derbyshire UUPC/extended e-mail: help@kew.com
- Chocolate Ice Cream Fund: Post Office Box 132
- Arlington, MA 02174-0002 USA
-
- "Hi Snuffles!!" - The Grey-eyed Elf
- From ffactory.kew.com!help Sat, 01 Feb 1992 07:58:24 EST remote from kendra
- Received: from kendra by ffactory.kew.com (UUPC/extended 1.11s) with UUCP;
- Sat, 01 Feb 1992 07:58:24 EST
- Received: from ffactory by kewgate.kew.com (UUPC/extended 1.11s) with UUCP;
- Sat, 01 Feb 1992 07:25:03 EST
- Received: by ffactory.kew.com (UUPC/extended 1.11s);
- Sat, 01 Feb 1992 07:03:41 EST
- Date: Sat, 01 Feb 1992 07:03:37 EST
- From: "Drew Derbyshire - UUPC/Extended Help" <help@kew.com>
- Message-ID: <298a8c9d.ffactory@ffactory.kew.com>
- Organization: Kendra Electronic Wonderworks
- To: (Dwatney Farthinghale III) mit-eddie!bikini.cis.ufl.edu!arms!0
- Cc: "UUPC Mailing List" <uupc-info@sun.soe.clarkson.edu>,
- hints@kew.com
- Subject: Re: making a list server
-
- On Tue, 28 Jan 1992 09:34:04 EST, (Dwatney Farthinghale III) mit-eddie!bikini.cis.ufl.edu!arms!0 wrote:
- > Hi,
- > I'm trying to set up a small list server through my system. I have
- > aliases set up so that local mail can be sent to multiple people, but I dont
- > know how to set things up so that mail from a remote system can be done the
- > same way. for example, if i have the alias "test_list" defined to send mail
- > to 10 different local or remote users, what do i have to do so that a remote
- > user could send mail to "test_list@arms.uucp" and having it do the same
- > thing?
-
- Aliases are only used by the user interface, which as you have
- discovered, doesn't enter into the picture for remote mail.
-
- Add the mailing list address to the PASSWD file, and put all the
- addresses in a FORWARD file for the mailingf list address, and then then
- mail to that addresses. Be forewarned that that mail will bounce to the
- original person who sends the mail, since such a simple list doesn't
- handle actually re-queueing the mail from the list.
-
- -ahd-
- --
- Drew Derbyshire UUPC/extended e-mail: help@kew.com
- Chocolate Ice Cream Fund: Post Office Box 132
- Arlington, MA 02174-0002 USA
-
- "Hi Snuffles!!" - The Grey-eyed Elf
- From mit-eddie!dobbs!dobbs.cambridge.ma.us!klund Sat, 22 Feb 1992 07:03:00 EST remote from kendra
- Received: from kendra by ffactory.kew.com (UUPC/extended 1.11s) with UUCP;
- Sat, 22 Feb 1992 07:03:00 EST
- Received: from mit-eddie by kewgate.kew.com (UUPC/extended 1.11s) with UUCP;
- Sat, 22 Feb 1992 01:30:37 EST
- Received: from plethora.media.mit.edu by EDDIE.MIT.EDU with SMTP (5.65/25-eef)
- id AA27797; Thu, 20 Feb 92 11:45:01 -0500
- Received: by plethora.media.mit.edu (NeXT-1.0 (From Sendmail 5.52)/NeXT-2.0-plethora)
- id AA12731; Thu, 20 Feb 92 11:43:09 EST
- Received: by dobbs.cambridge.ma.us (UUPC/extended 1.11q);
- Thu, 20 Feb 1992 11:20:31 est
- Date: Thu, 20 Feb 1992 11:20:29 est
- From: "Kent H Lundberg" <mit-eddie!dobbs.cambridge.ma.us!klund>
- Message-Id: <29a3d54f.dobbs@dobbs.cambridge.ma.us>
- Reply-To: "Kent H Lundberg" <mit-eddie!dobbs.cambridge.ma.us!klund>
- To: help@kew.com
-
- Drew,
- May I suggest that you include this file in the next
- release of the UUPC11_D.ZIP file? It describes the US Domain.
- Currently, people may register hosts in the US domain, (which
- has its own name servers) for no charge.
- (As you'll probably notice, I just registered my host,
- dobbs.cambridge.ma.us. It was much easier that I expected. The
- hardest part was convincing my mailserver that it was a good
- idea, but now it works great!)
- Just trying to be helpful,
- Kent.
-
- PS : UUnet now charges $50 for domain registration... you
- may want to update uunetdom.inf.
-
-
- The US Domain
- =============
-
- Introduction:
-
- The US domain is an official top-level domain in the Domain Name
- System (DNS) of the Internet community. It is registered with the
- Network Information Center (DDN-NIC). The domain administrators are
- Jon Postel and Ann Westine Cooper at the Information Sciences
- Institute of the University of Southern California (USC-ISI).
-
- The US domain hierarchy is based on political geography, that is, the US
- domain is subdivided into states, then cities, and so on. Any computer
- in the United States may be registered in the US domain.
-
- Typical host names in the US domain are:
-
- VIXIE.SF.CA.US
- DOGWOOD.ATL.GA.US
- KILLER.DALLAS.TX.US
- HOLODEK.SANTA-CRUZ.CA.US
- GRIAN.CPS.ALTADENA.CA.US
-
- Membership:
-
- Because many computers in the United States are already registered in
- the COM, EDU, and other top level domains, relatively few computers are
- currently registered in the US domain. However the US Domain is
- beginning to grow.
-
- In the past the computers registered the US Domain were primarily
- owned by small companies or individuals (and often located in homes).
- It is expected than many more computers of all types and belonging to
- all sizes of organizations will be registered in the US Domain.
-
- Large organizations or companies are also encouraged to register in
- the US Domain. Typically these have many hosts and will operate their
- own DNS name servers. The US Domain will delegate an appropriate part
- of the name space to such large organizations on the same terms as the
- NIC requires for delegations of portions of the COM or EDU domains.
-
- Administration:
-
- Currently, the US Domain and all of its subdivisions (i.e., states,
- cities etc.) are managed by the US Domain Registrar. The US Domain is
- just beginning to grow and we want to be careful about what names get
- used and how control is allocated until some usage patterns are
- established. We will run the servers for all the states in the US
- domain.
-
- Registration of a host in the US domain does not grant permission to use
- the Internet or its component networks. Any restrictions on sending
- mail through (or other use of) the Internet is independent of host
- registration in the US domain. Registration in the US domain does not
- allocate any IP address, or cause registration in HOSTS.TXT.
-
- There is no change in the procedures for registration in, or operation
- of, other top-level domains such as COM, EDU, GOV, MIL, NET, or ORG.
- These domains are not being moved under the US domain.
-
- Delegation:
-
- At some future point we will hand off the administration of individual
- states to appropriate responsible people, probably in the state they
- administer. Early experience shows that delegation of cities and of
- companies within cities is most practical. The delegated part of the
- name space will most likely be in the form of
- <org-name>.<city>.<state>.US.
-
- For example: IBM.ARMONK.NY.US.
-
- Generally, organizations requesting delegations must provide at least
- two independent DNS name servers in physically separate locations on
- the Internet that provide the the domain service for translating names
- to addresses in this domain.
-
- The state codes are those assigned by the US Postal Service. Cities
- may be named (designated) by their full name (spelled out with hyphens
- replacing spaces (e.g., Los-Angeles or New-York)), or by a city code.
- The first choice is the full city name, the second choice is the city
- codes from Western Union's "City Mnemonics" list, and a third choice
- is a code for your city that you choose. However, it is very
- desirable that all users in the same city use the same designator for
- the city.
-
- For example: Joes-Bar.Santa-Monica.CA.US
-
- Groups:
-
- The administrator of a company or the organizer of a group (or "domain
- park") of users with individual hosts may coordinate the registration of
- the group by forwarding all the information for the group to the US
- Domain Administrator.
-
- In this case, the explicit specific information for each host must be
- provided. All fully qualified names must be unique. If a host is not
- directly on the Internet an MX record is required pointing to an
- Internet host for forwarding. The forwarding host must be directly on
- the Internet (that is, have an IP address), no "double MX-ing" is
- allowed.
-
- A group coordinator of, for example, the Computer Club in Chicago (CLUB),
- could arrange to coordinate the registration of all the computers used
- by members of the club. The registered names might have the form:
-
- ALPHA.CLUB.CHI.IL.US MX 10 CS.CHICAGO-U.EDU
-
- Only hosts on the Internet can act as forwarding hosts. Hosts on
- networks such as CSNET, UUCP, BITNET, must be registered with an
- Internet forwarding host. When registering a destination host in the US
- domain with an MX record, the requester is responsible for also
- registering the destination host with the administrator of the
- forwarding host.
-
- For example, when a message is sent to "Susan@ALPHA.CLUB.CHI.IL.US"
- it will be routed to the Internet host "CS.CHICAGO-U.EDU" as directed
- by the MX record. The host "CS.CHICAGO-U.EDU" must know some way of
- delivering the message to the host "ALPHA.CLUB.CHI.IL.US" (uucp, slip,
- whatever). So the destination host (ALPHA.CLUB.CHI.IL.US) must be
- known to (registered with) the forwarding host (CS.CHICAGO-U.EDU), as
- well as being registered in the US domain DNS database.
-
- The administrator of the destination host must make an agreement with
- the administrator of the forwarding host for the forwarding service.
- This agreement must be in place before the request for registration is
- sent to the US Domain Administrator.
-
- Other Networks:
-
- A section of the DNS database is called a "zone". With careful
- coordination, a domain (like EDU) can be divided into several zones.
- This has been done for the EDU and COM domains to aid in the
- registration of hosts from the UUCP, CSNET and BITNET communities. If
- a host is registered in UUCP, BITNET, or CSNET portion of a domain (as
- something.EDU or something.COM), it need not be registered in the US
- domain, unless a geographical name (something.city.state.US) is
- desired.
-
- If a host is in a UUCP, BITNET, or CSNET network, it doesn't need to
- register in the US domain, unless it wants to be registered with a
- geographical DNS domain name.
-
- Only hosts on the Internet can act as forwarding hosts. Hosts on
- networks such as CSNET, UUCP, BITNET, etc., must affiliate their hosts
- with an Internet host. This is necessary because when messages for
- your host arrive at the Internet host it will need to know where to
- forward them. MX records are necessary.
-
- Unique Name:
-
- It is the policy that a computer must have a single primary name, so it
- should not be registered in both US and COM (or both US and EDU). It is
- possible to have "nicknames" for a brief period while a host name change
- is in progress.
-
- Wild Cards:
-
- While we strongly believe that it is in everyone's interest and good
- for the Internet to have each host explicitly registered (that is, we
- believe that wild cards should not be used), we also realize that not
- everyone agrees with this belief. Thus, we will allow wild card
- records in the US domain under groups or organizations. For example,
- "*.BIRDSONG.SUVL.CA.US".
-
- Servers:
-
- The US domain is currently supported by four name servers:
-
- VENERA.ISI.EDU, VAXA.ISI.EDU, HERCULES.CSL.SRI.COM, and NNSC.NSF.NET.
-
- Cost:
-
- Currently, there is no cost for registering a host in the US domain.
-
- References:
-
- RFC-974, Partridge, C., "Mail Routing and the Domain Name System".
- RFC-1034, Mockapetris, P., "Domain Names - Concepts and Facilities".
- RFC-1035, Mockapetris, P., "Domain Names - Implementation and Specification".
-
- Registration:
-
- To register in the US Domain send a message to the US Domain Registrar
- (Cooper@ISI.EDU). The response will be a US Domain Questionnaire for
- you to fill out.
-
- In several cities a "coordinator" has volunteered to process requests
- locally and communicate with the US Domain Registrar on behalf of all
- interested users in that city, or organization within that city. If
- in your request we see that you are in a city or organization with a
- coordinator we will refer you to that coordinator.
-
- More Information:
-
- For more information about the US domain please contact:
- Ann Westine Cooper at (COOPER@ISI.EDU).
-
-
- --
- Kent H Lundberg klund@dobbs.cambridge.ma.us
- 3 Ames Street #242, Cambridge, MA 02139
- also : klund@athena.mit.edu voice/fax 617 225 6419
- From ffactory.kew.com!help Sat, 22 Feb 1992 11:57:04 EST remote from kendra
- Received: from kendra by ffactory.kew.com (UUPC/extended 1.11s) with UUCP;
- Sat, 22 Feb 1992 11:57:04 EST
- Received: from ffactory by kewgate.kew.com (UUPC/extended 1.11s) with UUCP;
- Sat, 22 Feb 1992 10:13:48 EST
- Received: by ffactory.kew.com (UUPC/extended 1.11s);
- Sat, 22 Feb 1992 09:15:32 EST
- Date: Sat, 22 Feb 1992 09:14:51 EST
- From: "Drew Derbyshire - UUPC/Extended Help" <help@kew.com>
- Message-ID: <29a65b04.ffactory@ffactory.kew.com>
- Organization: Kendra Electronic Wonderworks (Arlington, MA)
- To: mit-eddie!uunet.uu.net!uworld!alans
- Subject: Re: Need Info
-
- On Wed, 12 Feb 92 09:33:10 -0500, mit-eddie!uunet.uu.net!uworld!alans wrote:
- > We are mentioning your WonderWorks product in a review and would
- > like information on pricing, as well as location of compnay,
- > contact names, etc. Also, if you want, please send a press
- > kit to:
- > Alan Southerton
- > Product Reviews Editor
- > UNIXWORLD Magazine
- > 234 Cabot Street #9
- > Beverly, MA 01915
-
- Alan,
-
- You can publish any of the following as you chose. Lucky for us, you
- won't have room for it all.
-
- When are you going to do this review? We are constantly putting out new
- releases, and we're late enough in the cycle that I can get you the next
- release (1.11s or 1.11t) the day after it is released. The soonest we
- could get out a release is in about two weeks (3/8/92).
-
- The current official release is 1.11q. If you should have happen to
- find 1.11r (a beta release), don't test it, go back to 1.11q.
-
- ---> Part I
-
- Contact Address:
-
- U.S. Snail: Andrew H. Derbyshire
- Kendra Electronic Wonderworks
- P. O. Box 132
- Arlington, MA 02174
-
- Internet: help@kew.com
-
- UUCP: uunet!mit-eddie!kendra!help
-
- Telephone: 617-641-3739
-
- We *strongly* prefer to receive e-mail over both snail mail and phone
- calls.
-
- Distribution:
-
- UUPC/extended is distributed electronically; the primary method is
- anonyous FTP over the Internet. It can also be retrieved from at least
- two BBS systems without charge (except for long distance charges), or
- ordered on diskette from a company in Potsdam, NY. The full
- HOWTOGET.TXT file which included with each release follows; you can
- extract what you wish from it, and include a note to send e-mail to
- help@kew.com for the full retrieval instructions.
-
- The source is included with the program.
-
- Basic softcopy documentation is included with UUPC/extended. No
- hardcopy documenation is included, although this can be requested when
- registering.
-
- Pricing:
-
- UUPC/extended is, at its most basic level, free.
-
- Most new users of UUCP oriented mail systems should buy the Nutshell
- Handbooks "Using UUCP and USENET" and "Managing UUCP and USENET" from
- O'Reilly & Associates. People should consider the costs of these books
- when totalling the cost of setting up a UUPC/extended system. (The
- Wonderworks is not associated with O'Reilly & Associates; we just read
- their stuff.)
-
- Beginning the fall of 1991, people can register UUPC/extended to support
- the expenses of producing it, including our hardware and
- telecommunications costs. They can also optionally support the staff's
- love of Chocolate Ice Cream. The information to register is included in
- the documentation archive as well.
-
- Registering is not required to use the programs; we would rather see
- people using an unregistered copies than paying money for a worse
- program. (In other words, Snuffles would rather be famous than rich.)
-
- Support:
-
- Support is normally done via e-mail to help@kew.com or the Internet
- mailing list for UUPC/extended. Registered users can also get phone
- support. Bug fixes are shipped as a part of new releases; we never
- slip-stream fixes or apply changes to back-level code.
-
- As previously noted, source is always available. The program requires
- MicroSoft C 6.0 or Borland C++ 2.0 to compile, plus a Macro Assembler
- (MASM or TASM).
-
- ---> Part II
-
- Now comes the funny parts; hence the switch from editorial we to first
- personal singular. Save this, it's your press kit.
-
- UUPC/extended is a very real program, make no mistake; the source code
- requires 1.6 Megabytes, over half of which was written by me personally.
- I am told by others it is among the best of the UUCP programs for DOS
- available, including comments from various people that UUNET recommends
- it for people hooking up DOS machines to UUNET. (I'd confirm this
- latter fact before publishing it.)
-
- But, as for the Wonderworks itself, it's a little more complicated than
- that. For starters, my chief assistant's full name is Snuffles Polar
- Bear; she's a 12 inch tall plush Gund who lives on kendra's monitor.
- (Ooops. Make that 12 inch tall _cute_ plush Gund; Recycled Paper
- Products even has a card with her picture on it.) She sends e-mail (her
- address is snuffles@kew.com), write documentation, and sometimes even
- does bug fixes.
-
- In other words, we're all a little weird over here in Arlington.
-
- A little history ... enter ramble mode.
-
- UUPC was originally written for a number of platforms in the mid-1980's
- by a crew up in Vancouver, B.C., and posted to the Net with a GNU-ish
- Copyleft in the source files. While still at Clarkson University in
- 1986, I encountered an early version but was unable to get it to work
- because of incompatible hardware.
-
- In 1989, I tried the second widely distributed of version of UUPC,
- (commonly known as UUPC 1.05 or just the interim release). It worked,
- but had problems. In getting it to behave for my use on a system I
- registered as kendra, I created UUPC/extended 1.06a. I made additional
- changes until I worked up my way up to 1.07c by the end of that year.
-
- In 1989, I also met an MIT co-ed, Katherine E. Williams, over the net; I
- then moved to Boston for unrelated professional reasons. When I chose
- to seek an internet domain for my system in early 1990, Katherine let me
- back into her initials as a joke, and thus was created Kendra Electronic
- Wonderworks (kew.com). (Another choice was Kickbacks, Wirefraud, and
- Extortion, which doesn't look good in a family magazine like UNIX World.
- I try to plan ahead.)
-
- About the time I registered kew.com with the Internet NIC, I also
- started giving away UUPC/extended to the unsuspecting. My original
- policy was staying not-for-profit by neither accepting money nor
- spending money on UUPC; the former worked, the latter didn't. Thus,
- I have given up on the latter but still distribute the source and
- accept pleas from help from the unregistered.
-
- I am the primary author, but not the sole author. As a partial list:
- The UUCP command was written in England, a prototype of the OS/2 support
- was done in Germany, news and RN support (which is still in testing) was
- written in Los Angles and updated in San Francisco, UUX/UUXQT
- enhancements were written in Texas, and improved serial port support was
- written here in the Bay State. Also, bug fixes come from everywhere.
-
- As for Snuffles the Plush Programming Polar Bear, Katherine gave
- Snuffles to me for Christmas 1990 to replace two other creatures she
- left in my care the previous summer. Those creatures currently live on
- the monitor of Katherine's system, athena.kew.com, in Santa Barbara.
- Creatures, computer, and fiance are moving back here next month.
-
- Snuffles used to ask for Chocolate in all her e-mail, then someone sent
- her 144 (18 pounds!) of Snickers Bars. Now, she's only allowed to ask
- for donations to the Chocolate Ice Cream fund. (There's this ice cream
- place in the MIT student union ...)
-
- End of history ... exit ramble mode.
-
- For additional UUPC/extended background and credits, be sure to read the
- README.PRN file included with the documentation archive.
-
- -ahd-
- --
- Drew Derbyshire UUPC/extended e-mail: help@kew.com
- Chocolate Ice Cream Fund: Post Office Box 132
- Arlington, MA 02174-0002 USA
-
- UUPC/extended is "system crash" spelled sideways.
- From mit-eddie!adm.brl.mil!info-ibmpc-request Sat, 28 Mar 1992 13:39:30 EST remote from kendra
- Received: from kendra by ffactory.kew.com (UUPC/extended 1.11s) with UUCP;
- Sat, 28 Mar 1992 13:39:30 EST
- Received: from mit-eddie by kew.com (UUPC/extended 1.11s) with UUCP;
- Sat, 28 Mar 1992 12:19:12 EST
- Received: from ADM.BRL.MIL by EDDIE.MIT.EDU with SMTP (5.65/25-eef)
- id AA18093; Sat, 28 Mar 92 11:24:09 -0500
- Date: Sat, 28 Mar 92 11:24:09 -0500
- From: mit-eddie!adm.brl.mil!info-ibmpc-request
- Received: by ADM.BRL.MIL id aa19118; 28 Mar 92 6:44 EST
- Received: from ADM.BRL.MIL by ADM.brl.MIL id ab17897; 28 Mar 92 5:42 EST
- Received: from adm.brl.mil by ADM.BRL.MIL id aa17744; 28 Mar 92 5:16 EST
- Message-Id: <9203280644.aa19118@ADM.BRL.MIL>
- Apparently-To: <premise!chang@eddie.mit.edu>
- Apparently-To: <ibmpc-local%kendra.kew.com@eddie.mit.edu>
-
- =RETURN-PATH:INFO-IBMPC-REQUEST@brl.mil
- _brl.mil
- brl.mil
- Message-ID: <920324222450.V92N52@brl.mil>
- Date: Tue, 24 Mar 92 22:24:47 GMT
- From: "Info-IBMPC Digest" <Info-IBMPC@brl.mil>
- Reply-To: Info-IBMPC@brl.mil
- Subject: Info-IBMPC Digest V92 #52
- To: "Info-IBMPC Distribution": ;
-
- Info-IBMPC Digest Tue, 24 Mar 92 Volume 92 : Issue 52
-
- Today's Editor:
- Gregory Hicks - Rota Spain <GHICKS@brl.mil>
-
- Today's Topics:
- Recent msdos uploads to SIMTEL20 (Feb 16 - Mar 15 1992)
-
- Send Replies or notes for publication to: <INFO-IBMPC@brl.mil>
-
- Send requests of an administrative nature (addition to, deletion from
- the distribution list, et al) to: <INFO-IBMPC-REQUEST@brl.mil>
-
- Addition and Deletion requests for UK readers should be sent to:
- <INFO-IBMPC-REQUEST@NSFNET-RELAY.AC.UK>
-
- Archives of past issues of the Info-IBMPC Digest are available by FTP
- ONLY from WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL in directory PD2:<ARCHIVES.IBMPC>.
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Date: Sun, 15 Mar 1992 13:22 MST
- From: Keith Petersen <w8sdz@wsmr-simtel20.army.mil>
- Subject: Recent msdos uploads to SIMTEL20 (Feb 16 - Mar 15 1992)
-
- The following files have been recently uploaded to SIMTEL20
- (between 16-Feb-92 and 15-Mar-92):
-
- NOTE: Type B is Binary; Type A is ASCII
-
- Filename Type Length Date Description
- ==============================================
- Directory PD1:<MSDOS.4DOS>
- PKBTM111.ZIP B 10759 920312 4DOS batch file serves as archiver shell
-
- Directory PD1:<MSDOS.ARC-LBR>
- AC212.ZIP B 47120 920312 Converts between any two archive types
- AM71.ZIP B 210807 920312 ArcMaster front-end/convert for .ARC/.ZIP/.LZH
- HPACK75.ZIP B 66431 920312 High performance archiver from New Zealand
-
- Directory PD1:<MSDOS.AT>
- ATCLOK.ZIP B 5989 920312 Use hardwre clock instead of DOS for time/date
-
- Directory PD1:<MSDOS.AUTOCAD>
- ELEBLKS.ZIP B 50134 920312 Electrical symbols for AutoCAD
-
- Directory PD1:<MSDOS.BATUTL>
- EVERY15.ZIP B 11223 920312 BATutil: Execute cmd if given time has passed
- FDATE61A.ZIP B 40668 920312 Date manipulation utility for batch files
- TSBAT33.ZIP B 78856 920312 Collection of useful batch files by Timo Salmi
-
- Directory PD1:<MSDOS.BBS>
- ACF540R0.ZIP B 362135 920312 QBBS/RA/SBBS total file system w/CD-ROM supprt
- FDSEC200.ZIP B 43926 920312 Security package for BBS Front Door v2.00
-
- PD1:<MSDOS.BBSDOORS>
- PHONE266.ZIP B 59248 920312 Split screen BBS Chat door. Fossil required
-
- Directory PD1:<MSDOS.BBSLISTS>
- 313BBS25.ZIP B 18834 920312 Horst Mann's 313 area BBS list. Feb. 17, 1992
-
- Directory PD1:<MSDOS.C>
- HANDLES.ZIP B 20112 920312 Get >20 handles in TC (also DJGPP). Docs & src
-
- Directory PD1:<MSDOS.CAD>
- PSPIC43A.ZIP B 298990 920312 Pspice 4.3, Electrical Circuit Simulator, 1/4
- PSPIC43B.ZIP B 304468 920312 Pspice 4.3, Electrical Circuit Simulator, 2/4
- PSPIC43C.ZIP B 329313 920312 Pspice 4.3, Electrical Circuit Simulator, 3/4
- PSPIC43D.ZIP B 320778 920312 Pspice 4.3, Electrical Circuit Simulator, 4/4
-
- Directory PD1:<MSDOS.CALCULATOR>
- EVAL104.ZIP B 30442 920312 EVAL v1.04: Mathematical expression evaluator
- PIBCAL11.ZIP B 35739 920312 Programmable calculator, with Turbo Pascal src
-
- Directory PD1:<MSDOS.CPLUSPLUS>
- DPMIFI.ZIP B 9652 920312 Borland C++v3.00 DPMILOAD DV-compatibility fix
-
- Directory PD1:<MSDOS.CROSSASM>
- AS11V103.ZIP B 34135 920312 Assembler for Motorola 68HC11 MicroController
-
- Directory PD1:<MSDOS.DATABASE>
- FISHBYTE.ZIP B 217487 920312 Fishbyte: Salt water fishing and Loran log pgm
- JOGGR105.ZIP B 59053 920312 Runner's log and analysis database, v1.05
- MM-631.ZIP B 139255 920312 MealMaster database program for recipes, v6.31
-
- Directory PD1:<MSDOS.DBASE>
- POPDBF40.ZIP B 149617 920312 TSR: Popup view, edit, print, read dBASE files
- WAMPUM42.ZIP B 362496 920312 dBASE III-compatible datadase management syst.
-
- Directory PD1:<MSDOS.DESKACCESS>
- JOTIT2.ZIP B 33642 920312 JotIt: Netbios-compatible phone message taker
- PHONEM50.ZIP B 36437 920312 Fast phone number indexer (not a TSR)
- XASC10.ZIP B 34048 920312 Pop-up extended (256 character) ASCII table
-
- Directory PD1:<MSDOS.DESKPUB>
- BUSPM.ZIP B 35431 920312 Business icons for Printmaster
- PEANUTS2.ZIP B 8690 920312 Peanuts Gang icons for Printmaster
- PMMED.ZIP B 11189 920312 Medical icons for Printmaster
-
- Directory PD1:<MSDOS.DESQVIEW>
- DSHELL.ZIP B 263525 920312 Unix-like COMMAND.COM replacement for DESQview
- DVC18.ZIP B 58212 920312 DV Commander: Command-line control of DESQview
- DVFAQ2.ZIP B 19558 920312 Questions and answers on DESQview, QEMM
- DVSI2_00.ZIP B 233443 920312 15 DV utils: performance,printing,window mgmt
- RBMGR101.ZIP B 1896 920312 Reboot Manager: Carrier detect monitor for DV
-
- Directory PD1:<MSDOS.DIRUTL>
- DELDIR10.ZIP B 14356 920312 Safe recursive directory and file removal pgm
- DFS097.ZIP B 16158 920312 Delete/find/calc. size of files/directory tree
- MOVE453.ZIP B 13345 920312 Move files from one drive/directory to another
- RCD151.ZIP B 25933 920312 Ray's Change Directory - fast and intuitive
- WIZ251.ZIP B 33832 920312 Fast file find utility with many filters
-
- Directory PD1:<MSDOS.DISASM>
- BUBBLE.ZIP B 85743 920312 Bubble: A disassembler for COM or EXE programs
- DIS86122.ZIP B 75632 920312 Disassembler for 8086, 80286, 80386 programs
-
- Directory PD1:<MSDOS.DSKUTL>
- ACT204.ZIP B 175630 920312 ActaeOn v2.04: Graphical hard disk manager
- ATFMT100.ZIP B 36552 920312 Floppy formatter. Gets 1066K on 720K diskette
- DRS120.ZIP B 116131 920312 Data Recovery Software: Reads BAD disks
- KLSPACE.ZIP B 11239 920312 Keith Ledbetter's graphical disk space display
- MICROPLS.ZIP B 42444 920312 List of parameters for Micropolis drives
- PRUNE21.ZIP B 10026 920312 Clear out unallocated bytes at the end of file
- TDCHK110.ZIP B 14301 920312 TeleDisk image file validator. SYDEX
-
- Directory PD1:<MSDOS.EDITOR>
- ADAMI90.ZIP B 153222 920312 Tamil word processer in 16 colors
- TERSE12.ZIP B 20735 920312 Full-screen Ed. Brief-like commands. Only 4K
-
- Directory PD1:<MSDOS.EDUCATION>
- ABCTLK23.ZIP B 207303 920312 Teaches children to talk, read/alphabet/spell
- CAPFUN.ZIP B 31360 920314 DEMO: prog. teaches sentence capitalization
- FRNCH102.ZIP B 90714 920312 Ultimate French v1.02: Learn basic French
- LIE33.ZIP B 85934 920312 Analysis of differential equations
- LP100210.ZIP B 210606 920312 Linear programming, solve optimizing problems
- LTBLIT30.ZIP B 119613 920312 Potato late blight management game for Windows
- SFS101.ZIP B 277775 920312 Space Flight Simulator, CGA/HGC/EGA/VGA
- SM2.ZIP B 91354 920312 Learning tool; automated repetitave study
- SPNSH102.ZIP B 95757 920312 Ultimate Spanish v1.02: Learn basic Spanish
- USGEO102.ZIP B 130285 920312 USA geography teacher & tester (req. EGA/VGA)
-
- Directory PD1:<MSDOS.EMULATORS>
- JPP-B1.ZIP B 36513 920312 Sinclair ZX Spectrum 48K emulator, req 386+VGA
- MCX11V15.ZIP B 73874 920312 MC68HC11 MicroController multitask eXecutive
- SIM68102.ZIP B 80820 920312 Motorola 68HC11 MicroController simulater
-
- Directory PD1:<MSDOS.FILEDOCS>
- AAAREAD.ME A 4423 920312 Information about the files in this directory
- DOWNLOAD.INF A 1810 920314 How to get SIMTEL20 files via telephone modem
- SIMIBM.ARC B 366854 920315 Comma-delim list of all MSDOS files w/descrip.
- SIMLIST.ARC B 326938 920315 Text format list of all MSDOS files w/descrip.
- UPLOAD.INF A 1482 920314 How to upload programs to SIMTEL20
-
- Directory PD1:<MSDOS.FILUTL>
- UUEXE510.ZIP B 31751 920312 R.E.Marks' UUdecode/UUencode/XXdecode/XXencode
- ZCOPY101.ZIP B 14297 920312 SHARE-aware copying utility by Peter Stewart
-
- Directory PD1:<MSDOS.FINANCE>
- DEBTFREE.ZIP B 147103 920312 Home mortgage mgr, calculate/record payments
- ECON.ZIP B 68682 920312 ECON: Econometric stock market forcasting
-
- Directory PD1:<MSDOS.FLOWCHART>
- TMASTR23.ZIP B 262811 920312 Task Master v2.3: All purpose project tracking
-
- Directory PD1:<MSDOS.FORTH>
- FORTHCOM.ZIP B 100907 920312 Native Code Forth Compiler:COM,EXE,SYS,TSR,ROM
- FPC355-1.ZIP B 335473 920312 Forth-PC compiler, w/editor & examples, 1of5
- FPC355-2.ZIP B 321760 920312 Forth-PC compiler, w/editor & examples, 2of5
- FPC355-3.ZIP B 341823 920312 Forth-PC compiler, w/editor & examples, 3of5
- FPC355-4.ZIP B 340569 920312 Forth-PC compiler, w/editor & examples, 4of5
- FPC355-5.ZIP B 303155 920312 Forth-PC compiler, w/editor & examples, 5of5
-
- Directory PD1:<MSDOS.FORTRAN>
- FTNCHK25.ZIP B 67800 920314 FTNCHEK: Fortran code analyzer for debugging
- TOKEN.FOR B 2226 920312 Tokenize a string (C 'StrTok') for Fortran 77
-
- Directory PD1:<MSDOS.GIF>
- NAKED101.ZIP B 320320 920314 NakedEye v1.01, a SuperVGA GIF viewer
- VUIMG330.ZIP B 123136 920312 GIF/GIF89a/PCX/TIFF view/print, zoom/pan/scale
-
- Directory PD1:<MSDOS.GNUISH>
- 00MSDOS.GNU A 26743 920312 Explains the MSDOS GNU-ish project
- 00README.GCC A 25098 920312 Explains how to find the GNU gcc port to msdos
- INDE11AS.ZIP B 66083 920312 GNU Indent: 'C' pgm reformatter (C src only)
- INDE11AX.ZIP B 37994 920312 GNU Indent: 'C' pgm reformatter (EXE & doc)
-
- Directory PD1:<MSDOS.GRAPHICS>
- ALCH151.ZIP B 384567 920312 Targa/EPS/GIF/IFF/JPEG/PCX/Sun/TIFF/BMP convrt
- EEDPR23S.ZIP B 63368 920312 C sources for EEDRAW23.ZIP drivers. TC/BC++
- EEDRW23S.ZIP B 121824 920312 C sources for EEDRAW23.ZIP program. TC/BC++
- FRAIN172.ZIP B 448901 920312 FRACTINT v17.2 EGA/VGA/XGA fractal generator
- FRASR172.ZIP B 777944 920312 C & ASM src for FRACTINT v17.2 fractal gen.
- GLE33A.TXT A 3677 920312 Installation instructions for GLE graphics pkg
- GLE33A_1.ZIP B 359424 920312 GLE Scientific Graphs, Slides, (Core & Screen)
- GLE33A_2.ZIP B 397824 920312 GLE PostScript Driver & Expanded Memory versns
- GLE33A_3.ZIP B 629248 920312 GLE Epson & Laserjet device drvrs &extra fonts
- GLE33A_4.ZIP B 465920 920312 GLE Utilities, surface plotting, HPGL driver
- ITERANT.ZIP B 40350 920312 Makes bifurcation graphical plots, w/QB4.5 src
- SPLT240.ZIP B 152654 920312 Advanced HP-GL & DXY-GL pen plotter simulator
-
- Directory PD1:<MSDOS.INFO>
- ALTMPX33.ZIP B 3842 920312 Alternate multiplex interrupt proposal v3.3
- COMP0292.ZIP B 20662 920312 DRC's directory of computer companies 02/92
- CON0292.ZIP B 40489 920312 DRC's directory of corporate controllers 02/92
- DOSREF22.ZIP B 241113 920312 List of interrupts, memory locations, IO ports
- DVFAQ2.ZIP B 19558 920312 Questions and answers on DESQview, QEMM
- FAX0292.ZIP B 48596 920312 DRC's directory of corporate FAX numbers 02/92
- FTPLIST.ZIP B 39480 920312 List of Internet sites with FTP & mail access
- HR0292.ZIP B 63577 920312 DRC's directory of human resources execs 02/92
- MIS0292.ZIP B 35773 920312 DRC's directory of MIS executives 02/92
- MKT0292.ZIP B 50642 920312 DRC's directory of sales/mktg executives 02/92
- MODER.LST B 9221 920312 List of MS-DOS FTP sites and their moderators
- TL0292.ZIP B 9408 920312 DRC's directory of telecomm companies 02/92
- TRE0292.ZIP B 35384 920312 DRC's directory of corporate treasurers 02/92
- TSFAQ26.ZIP B 101251 920312 T.Salmi: Frequently asked questions & answers
- XGAQOS.ZIP B 1935 920312 QOS tech bulletin on IBM XGA standard
-
- Directory PD1:<MSDOS.IRIT>
- INTRLIB1.ZIP B 104670 920312 IRIT Interaction library 1.0. BC++, DJGPP
- IRIT386E.ZIP B 523191 920312 IRIT 3.0 EXEs for 386/486 using DJGPP 1.05
- IRITSM3E.ZIP B 559207 920312 IRIT 3.0 executables using BC++ 3.0
- IRITSM3S.ZIP B 697255 920312 IRIT 3.0 solid modeler src for BC++/DJGPP/Unix
-
- Directory PD1:<MSDOS.KA9Q-TCPIP>
- VIEW9201.ZIP B 381868 920312 Electronic mail program for use w/KA9Q TCP/IP
-
- Directory PD1:<MSDOS.KEYBOARD>
- CMDEDT21.ZIP B 79999 920312 cmdline ed w/history/completion/aliases/SOURCE
- PB19C.ZIP B 30738 920312 TSR runs keystrokes from self-made .COM file
- REGAIN.ZIP B 44451 920312 Cmd-line editor, history recall, aliases, etc.
-
- Directory PD1:<MSDOS.LAN>
- LANMENU2.ZIP B 69948 920312 Lanmenu 2.0: Local Area Network DOS shell menu
- MAILCALL.ZIP B 25653 920312 LAN: TSR util provides pop-up access to ccMail
- MSG_14.ZIP B 3049 920312 Novell Msg interceptor w/alarm, popup window
- NFSML202.ZIP B 21376 920312 NFS Mail: Unix mail reader for use with PC-NFS
- SFC33.ZIP B 66750 920312 Serial File Copy v3.3: PC to PC file transfers
-
- Directory PD1:<MSDOS.MENU>
- FASTM60A.ZIP B 237453 920312 FastMenu 6.0, graphical menu system, 1 of 2
- FASTM60B.ZIP B 274568 920312 FastMenu 6.0, graphical menu system, 2 of 2
- PM600-1.ZIP B 350588 920312 Brown Bag's Power Menu program, v6.00. 1 of 2
- PM600-2.ZIP B 313793 920312 Brown Bag's Power Menu program, v6.00. 2 of 2
-
- Directory PD1:<MSDOS.MODEM>
- EZ136.ZIP B 185565 920312 EZ-Reader for Qmail, v1.36 (PC Board/ProDoor)
- HSLK11B1.ZIP B 89695 920312 HS/Link external protocol driver, Beta v1.1
- JMOD311.ZIP B 104159 920312 Jmodem file transfer protocol, with C source
- OFFLI136.ZIP B 125945 920312 Offline: QWK mail manager by Harvey Parisien
- XPC.FRM A 5635 920312 Order form for getting X.PC files on disk
- XPC401.ZIP B 475316 920312 X.PC v4.00+ communications driver, with source
-
- Directory PD1:<MSDOS.NETWORK>
- PCBRI121.ZIP B 75908 920312 Use PC as a cheap Ethernet-Ethernet Bridge
- PCRTE223.ZIP B 234485 920312 Make PC into TCP/IP router for about $450
-
- Directory PD1:<MSDOS.OPUS>
- OMAN_174.ZIP B 254796 920312 BBS manager for OPUS version 1.7x
-
- Directory PD1:<MSDOS.PASCAL>
- PNL010.ZIP B 123504 920312 The Pascal NewsLetter, issue #10, March 1992
-
- Directory PD1:<MSDOS.PCMAG>
- VOL11N05.ZIP B 43134 920312 PcMag: DD.SC, OPENSPEC.XLA, REBOOT.BAS, WINPTR
- VOL11N06.ZIP B 49419 920312 PcMag: CLRPRI, MIDIDE, PCDICT, PCUNZP, TRYALT
-
- Directory PD1:<MSDOS.PCTECHNIQUES>
- PCTV1N1.ZIP B 85355 920312 PC Techniques mag listings - April/May 1990
- PCTV1N2.ZIP B 31116 920312 PC Techniques mag listings - June/July 1990
- PCTV1N3.ZIP B 29416 920312 PC Techniques mag listings - Aug/Sept. 1990
- PCTV1N4.ZIP B 29620 920312 PC Techniques mag listings - Oct./Nov. 1990
- PCTV1N6.ZIP B 41548 920312 PC Techniques mag listings - Feb/March 1991
- PCTV2N1.ZIP B 36844 920312 PC Techniques mag listings - April/May 1991
- PCTV2N4.ZIP B 25458 920312 PC Techniques mag listings - Oct./Nov. 1991
- PCTV2N6.ZIP B 36794 920312 PC Techniques mag listings - Feb/March 1992
-
- Directory PD1:<MSDOS.PKTDRVR>
- 3C503.ZIP B 13690 920312 3c503 pkt drvr; works w/shared memory disabled
- DRIVERS3.ZIP B 61432 920314 Updates to 10.x packet driver release
-
- Directory PD1:<MSDOS.QBASIC>
- IQB9202.ZIP B 7253 920312 Inside QuickBasic source listing, Feb. 1992
- IQB9203.ZIP B 10068 920312 Inside QuickBasic source listing, March 1992
-
- Directory PD1:<MSDOS.RAMDISK>
- SRDISK13.ZIP B 49600 920312 Resizeable XMS ramdisk capable of >32M disks
-
- Directory PD1:<MSDOS.SCREEN>
- NNANS192.ZIP B 67648 920312 Enhanced/fast ANSI.SYS replacement, COM or SYS
- SPS21.ZIP B 37228 920312 Make PrtSc print parts of screen, many options
- VIZ423.ZIP B 78522 920312 VIz v4.23 BIOS & DOS video acceleration util.
-
- Directory PD1:<MSDOS.SNOBOL4>
- VSNBL220.ZIP B 250971 920312 Vanilla SNOBOL4, PD vers. 2.20 of the language
-
- Directory PD1:<MSDOS.SOUND>
- PCTALK21.ZIP B 139748 920312 Digitized speech/music on PC speaker. DEMO
- SCOPTRAX.ZIP B 246814 920312 Super PC sound/sample editor with a scope
- SOUND.ZIP B 21174 920312 Plays .VOC & .SND files thru PC speaker
-
- Directory PD1:<MSDOS.STARTER>
- 00-FILES.DOC A 7857 920314 All about file types in the SIMTEL20 archives
- SIMTEL20.INF A 16272 920312 Complete overview of the SIMTEL20 archives
-
- Directory PD1:<MSDOS.STATISTICS>
- NONLIN10.ZIP B 159508 920312 Nonlinear regression analysis
-
- Directory PD1:<MSDOS.SYSUTL>
- BREAK.ZIP B 3593 920312 Inhibit CTRL-C in DOS but not in program
- CONFISET.ZIP B 9321 920312 Export DR-DOS config environ to 4DOS (w/src)
- COUNT.ZIP B 6032 920312 Execute a specified command after X reboots
- CRON28.ZIP B 49880 920312 Timed command dispatcher; like Unix cron
- PCC.DOC A 1491 920312 PC-Choices installation (for PCC.ZIP)
- PCC.ZIP B 753552 920312 PC-Choices object-oriented 386 operating syst.
- RESET.ZIP B 2176 920312 Presses the reset button or CTRL+ALT+DEL
- SHROM19C.ZIP B 19148 920314 ShellRoom v1.9c: Swap program from MEM to disk
- TSRCOM34.ZIP B 75275 920312 TSR memory managmt utils (MARK/RELEASE/MAPMEM)
- TSRSRC34.ZIP B 75334 920312 Source code for TSRCOM v3.4 pkg. (TASM, TP6.0)
- TSUTLE16.ZIP B 53693 920312 Fifth set of command-like utilities, T.Salmi
-
- Directory PD1:<MSDOS.TELIX>
- SALTB.ZIP B 22518 920312 Telix SALT-language source code beautifier
-
- Directory PD1:<MSDOS.TROJAN-PRO>
- AAVIRUS.ZIP B 14955 920312 Check/save/restore disk boot record/MBR
- CHK4FE.ZIP B 33822 920312 Front-end driver for CHK4COMP.ZIP, needs mouse
- CPAVSE.ZIP B 225888 920312 Central Point Anti-Virus special free edition
- HCOPY14.ZIP B 66759 920312 COPY with virus protection, from Hilgraeve
- I-M111A.ZIP B 280814 920312 Integrity Master data integrity/anti-virus sys
- NAVM.ZIP B 199856 920312 Norton's AntiVirus, free Michelangelo edition
- STEALTH.ZIP B 56220 920312 Self-scanning executable w/TP and MSC source
- TBSCAN33.ZIP B 86502 920312 Thunderbyte Virus Scan 3.3; needs VSIGyyxx.ZIP
- TBSCNX30.ZIP B 69933 920312 Thunderbyte XScan v3.0 TSR; needs VSIGyyxx.ZIP
- VIRSH11E.ZIP B 80364 920312 ViruShell: Shell for McAfee's anti-viral pgms
- VIRX21.ZIP B 79510 920312 VIRx, v2.1: Easy to use free virus scanner
- VSIG9201.ZIP B 18020 920312 Virus signatures for HTSCAN/TBSCAN - v92#01
-
- Directory PD1:<MSDOS.TURBO-C>
- EXPR11.ZIP B 15464 920314 Expression parsing, differentiating lib for TC
-
- Directory PD1:<MSDOS.TURBOPAS>
- CLEARMEM.ZIP B 1713 920312 TP unit to init stack, heap & global variables
- INASM10.ZIP B 24060 920312 Inline assembler generator for TP, w/src
- JPDOOR32.ZIP B 177802 920312 TP 5.5 & 6.0 BBS door writing TPU utilites
- OMOUSE.ZIP B 22476 920312 Object-oriented mouse for Turbo Pascal 5.5
- PDIR10.ZIP B 12581 920312 Palcic's directory routines using TP 5.5 OOP
- TP55TSR.ZIP B 33217 920312 TSR unit for Turbo Pascal 5.5 applications
- TPFLEX.ZIP B 25807 920312 Turbo Pascal 5.5 linked lists, generic
- TPMUL221.ZIP B 7226 920312 Make your TP 6.0 programs DV/Win/TV/DDOS aware
- TPREAL1.ZIP B 10323 920313 Improved 'real' routines for Turbo Pascal
- TPV24.ZIP B 4738 920312 Fast interrupt-driven serial comm rtns for TP
-
- Directory PD1:<MSDOS.TXTUTL>
- FLEX237.ZIP B 286819 920312 Fast Unix-like LEX lexical analyzer for MS-DOS
- INDXX802.ZIP B 244272 920312 Make back-of-book index from page proofs. DEMO
- KWS111.ZIP B 16845 920312 Keyword Search: And/or finds in text files
- SSPELL12.ZIP B 99384 920312 TurboC++ or Unix C source for Unix Spell clone
- TXS25.ZIP B 56330 920312 Fast text search with existential dictionaries
-
- Directory PD1:<MSDOS.UUCP>
- UUCPFAQ.ZIP B 11574 920312 uucp frequently asked questions by Ian Taylor
-
- Directory PD1:<MSDOS.WAFFLE>
- APPSIG.ZIP B 13803 920312 Roy's Signature Picker for Waffle BBS
- ATMOVE.ZIP B 7892 920312 Move Waffle BBS files and @files description
- BAT164A.ZIP B 13985 920312 Tom Dell's batcher for Waffle - can feedbymail
- DISKHOG.ZIP B 14418 920312 List the top 10 Waffle BBS users by disk usage
- FSEDWAFL.ZIP B 2560 920312 Examples of how to use fsed with your Waffle
- GENPASS.ZIP B 6568 920312 Generate passwords for Waffle BBS
- GRAFFITI.ZIP B 46075 920312 Allows Waffle BBS users to generate graffiti
- HK-SET.ZIP B 24441 920312 Hunt & Kill message file delete for Waffle BBS
- LINES.ZIP B 10575 920312 Add Lines: headers to Waffle BBS postings
- NEWUSER.ZIP B 12757 920312 Push files into Waffle BBS user directories
- PMAIL02.ZIP B 3946 920312 Waffle BBS Perl Mail reader by Budi Rahardjo
- PRIVLIST.ZIP B 10520 920312 List Waffle BBS users with certain priv level
- PURGEDIR.ZIP B 9214 920312 Delete old user directories on Waffle BBS
- QUOTA01.ZIP B 19409 920312 Jonathan Herr's Disk quota program for Waffle
- REQ.ZIP B 10067 920312 Display requests file entry for a Waffle user
- RETRY10.ZIP B 17194 920312 Poll pgm for Waffle, more flexible than PPOLL
- TRIM.ZIP B 6980 920312 Trim whitespace from ends of lines
- VOTE.ZIP B 17419 920312 A voting booth for Waffle BBS
- WAFDAY.ZIP B 21074 920312 Display Waffle BBS daily usage statistics
- WAFDB.ZIP B 9410 920312 Convert the waffle 1.64 password file to ASCII
- WAFDL111.ZIP B 21344 920312 External file section door for Waffle's BBS
- WAFM10.ZIP B 66733 920312 WafMail 1.0: Offline mail door for Waffle BBS
- WAFPROT.ZIP B 1421 920312 Waffle BBS external protocols - sample setups
- WUTL10.ZIP B 39485 920312 A collection of Waffle BBS (mail) utilities
-
- Directory PD1:<MSDOS.WINDOWS3>
- BENVELOP.ZIP B 78381 920312 WIN3: Addresses envelope incl. postal barcodes
- FILEMA21.ZIP B 49211 920312 Windows3 file manager copy/move/rename/delete
- FRONTW11.ZIP B 125242 920312 Enhanced file manager for Windows 3, ver 1.1
- METER.ZIP B 19931 920312 Windows Mag. disk space meter, (req. VBRUN100)
- OOT-1-03.ZIP B 83927 920312 WIN3: OO Documentation Tool; OoaToolFree v1.03
- PFP219.ZIP B 118714 920312 Programmer's text file printer for Windows 3
- WCRON22G.ZIP B 199691 920312 Unix's cron-like utility for Windows 3.0/3.1
- ZM301.ZIP B 88627 920312 ZIP/LHARC shell for Windows 3.0 w/mouse supp.
- ZM30W.ZIP B 82548 920312 WIN3: ZIP/LHARC shell (with BIOS bug fix)
-
- Directory PD1:<MSDOS.ZIP>
- PCUNZIP.ZIP B 18718 920312 Fast free UNZIP program, with ASM source
- ZLAB-19C.ZIP B 274505 920312 Ziplab v1.9C; a ZIP file tester for PCBoard
- ZM28.ZIP B 142708 920312 ZipMaster 2.8, ZIP file compression manager
-
- SIMTEL20 files are also available from mirror sites OAK.Oakland.Edu
- (141.210.10.117), wuarchive.wustl.edu (128.252.135.4), ftp.uu.net
- (137.39.1.9), nic.funet.fi (128.214.6.100), src.doc.ic.ac.uk
- (146.169.3.7) or archie.au (139.130.4.6), by e-mail through the
- BITNET/EARN file servers, or by uucp from UUNET's 1-900-GOT-SRCS.
- See UUNET file uunet!~/info/archive-help for details.
-
- If you cannot access them via FTP or e-mail, most SIMTEL20 MSDOS
- files, including the PC-Blue collection, are also available for
- downloading from Detroit Download Central (313) 885-3956. DDC
- has multiple lines which support 300/1200/2400/9600/14400 bps
- (103/212/V22bis/HST/V32bis/V42bis/MNP). This is a subscription system
- with an average hourly cost of 17 cents. It is also accessable on
- Telenet via PC Pursuit and on Tymnet via StarLink outdial. New files
- uploaded to SIMTEL20 are usually available on DDC within 24 hours.
-
- Public, private or corporate institutions and libraries interested in
- the SIMTEL20 MS-DOS collection in CD-ROM format bundled with library
- card-catalog type access and duplication software can contact Coyote
- Data, Ltd. by mail at 1142 N. Main, Rochester, MI 48307 or by FAX at
- (313) 651-4071. Others who do not need the access and duplication
- software should send e-mail to rab@sprite.Berkeley.EDU (Robert Bruce)
- or telephone (510) 947-5996 for details on his CD-ROM offer.
-
- Keith Petersen
- Maintainer of the MSDOS, MISC and CP/M archives at SIMTEL20 [192.88.110.20]
- Co-SysOp, Detroit Download Central 313-885-3956 (V22bis/HST/V32bis/V42bis/MNP)
- Internet: w8sdz@TACOM-EMH1.Army.Mil or w8sdz@vela.acs.oakland.edu
- Uucp: uunet!umich!vela!w8sdz BITNET: w8sdz@OAKLAND
-
- ------------------------------
-
- End of Info-IBMPC Digest V92 #52
- ********************************
- -------
- From help Mon, 21 Sep 1992 17:37:18 EDT
- Received: by kendra.kew.com (UUPC/extended 1.11w);
- Mon, 21 Sep 1992 17:37:18 EDT
- Date: Mon, 21 Sep 1992 17:37:11 EDT
- From: "Drew Derbyshire - UUPC/Extended Help" <help@kew.com>
- Message-ID: <2abe408e.kendra@kendra.kew.com>
- Organization: Kendra Electronic Wonderworks (PO Box 132, Arlington, MA 02174)
- To: "Mark Purcell" <msp@pos.pub.uu.oz.au>
- Cc: hints@kew.com,
- "UUPC Mailing List" <uupc-info@sun.soe.clarkson.edu>
- Subject: Re: Anonymous uucp login
-
- On Mon, 21 Sep 1992 20:34:13 GMT, Mark.Purcell@pos.pub.uu.oz.AU wrote:
- > Hi Drew,
- >
- > I'm trying to get anonymous uucp login working but am having some problems.
- > I'm running uupc 1.11v and this is what my uucico.log is spitting out:
- >
- > uucico.log
- > -----------
- > 09/21-18:55 UUCICO: UUPC/extended 1.11v (Sep 02 1992 23:02:55)
- > 09/21-18:55 callin: Waiting for answer on port COM2 device HAYES24 for 184 minutes
- > 09/21-18:56 login: login user nuucp (*anonymous) at Mon, 21 Sep 1992 18:56:26 GMT
- > 09/21-18:56 pos called by fonsc: 1200 bps, g protocol, z grade
- > 09/21-18:56 Receiving "D.fonsc0RXd" as "D.fonsc0RXr" (*anonymo/D/#ms~2k-x.r}i)
- > 09/21-18:56 reof: Unable to rename TMP1.$$$ to *anonymo/D/#ms~2k-x.r}i
- > 09/21-18:56 *anonymo/D/#ms~2k-x.r}i: No such file or directory
- > 09/21-18:56 Extended DOS Error Information: Number = 3, Class = 8, Action = 3, Locus = 2
- > 09/21-18:56 reof: Deleting corrupted file TMP1.$$$
- > 09/21-18:56 process: Aborting connection to *anonymous, previous system state = q
- > 09/21-18:56 0 files sent, 0 files received, 6 bytes sent, 58 bytes received
- > 09/21-18:56 13 packets transferred, 0 errors, connection time 0:11, 5 bytes/second
- > -----------
- >
- > As you can see the system then kicks out the anonymous host, I can't create the
- > *anonymo directory so I don't know what to do.
-
- You can't receive files into the anonymous directory. That's a feature.
- This prevents anonymous system from queuing a request such as a UUCP
- back to it and having a second anonymous system pick up the first
- system's request by mistake.
-
- It also prevents an anonymous system from sending mail to you, which is
- also by design. This prevents a horde of security and response
- problems.
-
- Anonymous systems can write the public directory if you choose to let
- them.
-
- -ahd-
- --
- Drew Derbyshire UUPC/extended e-mail: help@kew.com
-
- I have not lost my mind; it's backed up on tape on somewhere.
- From cs.utexas.edu!cactus.org!hen3ry Mon, 12 Oct 1992 16:13:19 EDT remote from mit-eddie
- Received: from mit-eddie by kendra.kew.com (UUPC/extended 1.11w) with UUCP;
- Mon, 12 Oct 1992 16:13:19 EDT
- Received: from cs.utexas.edu by eddie.mit.edu id aa13237; 12 Oct 92 15:36 EDT
- Received: from cactus.org by cs.utexas.edu (5.64/1.142) with UUCP
- id AA23215; Mon, 12 Oct 92 14:45:14 -0500
- Received: by cactus.org (4.1/SMI-4.1)
- id AA20354; Mon, 12 Oct 92 13:11:48 CDT
- From: Henry Velick <hen3ry@cactus.ORG>
- Message-Id: <9210121811.AA20354@cactus.org>
- Subject: UUPC/extended & 4DOS
- To: UUPC bugz & maintenance <help@kew.com>
- Date: Mon, 12 Oct 92 13:11:48 CDT
- X-Mailer: ELM [version 2.3 PL11]
-
- Drew,
-
- Just got the new UUPC/extended. Followed all the installation
- instructions. Haven't yet set up a mail server, but thought I'd
- test it locally. Everything I tried gave me something like:
-
- c:\util\comm\uucp } mail -s "Clang Honk Tweet" postmaster
- MAIL: UUPC/extended 1.11v (02Sep92 23:02)
- Changes Copyright (c) 1989 by Andrew H. Derbyshire. Changes and
- Compilation Copyright (c) 1990-1992 by Kendra Electronic Wonderworks. May
- be freely distributed if original documentation and source is included.
-
- Enter message. Enter ~? for help. End input with a period (.)
- ? This be a test.
- ? .
-
- Abort, Continue, Edit, List, or Send? Send
- rmail: No such file or directory
- Extended DOS Error Information: Number = 3, Class = 8, Action = 3, Locus = 4
- Unable to execute rmail; mail not delivered.
-
- c:\util\comm\uucp }
-
- Everything, that is, until I tried ditching 4DOS and running mail
- under COMMAND.COM. Then all went smoothly. The workaround is easy:
- a batch file that sets up the path and environment variables and
- invokes COMMAND /c mail %&. That last is 4DOS's way of including
- the rest of the command line.
-
- Works like a champ, so far, but I thought you'd like to know about
- this incompatibilty. Anyone who uses COMMAND when 4DOS is available
- (or CMD rather than 4OS2), really is missing a lot. Thanks for a
- cool tool, and you'll probably hear more from me soon.
-
- --
- \-- Henry Velick \ Millions long for immortality, who don't know what \
- \-- Datalingus \ to do with themselves on a rainy Sunday afternoon. \
- \-- Austin, Texas \ ----------------------------------- Susan Ertz \
- \-- 512-459-5770 \ Purveyors of Fine Graphics Software and Consultation \
-
- From mit-eddie!adm.brl.mil!info-ibmpc-request Wed, 02 Dec 1992 18:25:30 EST remote from pandora
- Received: from pandora by kendra.kew.com (UUPC/extended 1.11x) with UUCP;
- Wed, 02 Dec 1992 18:25:30 EST
- Received: from mit-eddie by kendra.kew.com (UUPC/extended 1.11x) with UUCP;
- Wed, 02 Dec 1992 00:16:04 EST
- Received: from adm.brl.mil by eddie.mit.edu id ab29999; 1 Dec 92 23:25 EST
- Received: from ADM.BRL.MIL by ADM.brl.MIL id ac07987; 1 Dec 92 15:38 EST
- Received: from adm.brl.mil by ADM.BRL.MIL id aa07730; 1 Dec 92 15:02 EST
- Message-ID: <921129002734.V92N183@wsmr-simtel20.Army.Mil>
- Date: Sun, 29 Nov 92 00:27:33 GMT
- From: Info-IBMPC Digest <Info-IBMPC@wsmr-simtel20.army.MIL>
- Reply-To: Info-IBMPC@wsmr-simtel20.army.MIL
- Subject: Info-IBMPC Digest V92 #183
- To: Info-IBMPC Distribution: ;
-
- Info-IBMPC Digest Sun, 29 Nov 92 Volume 92 : Issue 183
-
- Today's Editor:
- Gregory Hicks - Rota Spain <GHICKS@wsmr-simtel20.Army.Mil>
-
- Today's Topics:
- FTP for Internet sites with E-Mail only
-
- Send Replies or notes for publication to: <INFO-IBMPC@brl.mil>
-
- Send requests of an administrative nature (addition to, deletion from
- the distribution list, et al) to: <INFO-IBMPC-REQUEST@brl.mil>
-
- Addition and Deletion requests for UK readers should be sent to:
- <INFO-IBMPC-REQUEST@DARESBURY.AC.UK>
-
- Archives of past issues of the Info-IBMPC Digest are available by FTP
- ONLY from WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL in directory PD2:<ARCHIVES.IBMPC>.
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Date: Sat, 21 Nov 92 07:50:56 EST
- From: Message Center <FZC%NIHCU.BITNET@pucc.princeton.edu>
- Subject: FTP for Internet sites with E-Mail only.
-
- One of the features of the Internet is the ability to connect to
- another location and obtain files stored at that location. This
- capability is called "FTP" (for "File Transfer Protocol".) This
- means that an installation can place important sources or binaries on
- a particular machine and then "advertise" the place where the
- material is stored. Then, anyone who wants or needs this material
- can use FTP to request it. There are two types of FTP, one where you
- have advance permission and have a specific account and password on
- that system, and one where the system allows anyone to request files
- from it. The latter is done by using the "standard" account name of
- "anonymous" with your internet address as your password, and is known
- as "anonymous FTP".
-
- Note: If you are using a system on BITNET, you have special
- capabilities through a different method. See the bottom of this memo
- for additional details.
-
- FTP can be for small to enormous file areas. Columbia University
- provides an anonymous FTP site to allow people to obtain the sources
- to the Kermit file transfer protocol. In some cases, such as the
- massive SIMTEL20 archive operated by the White Sands Missle Range,
- this includes thousands of files which can be used by the IBM-PC,
- Macintosh, Amiga and other systems.
-
- While some people who either have university or commercial service
- accounts have the ability to do FTP directly to their local machine,
- then download the files from their local machine, a lot more people
- have E-Mail only access to Internet, and thus have no means available
- to do FTP and acquire these files.
-
- However, there is a way to obtain files from FTP sites and retrieve
- files by E-Mail. This service is available by sending E-Mail
- messages to the FTPMAIL service provided by Digital Equipment
- Corporation to anyone with an Internet E-Mail address. In fact, DEC
- operates an anonymous FTP site called "gatekeeper" that if you don't
- ask for a specific other site, it will make requests from gatekeeper.
-
- To be able to do E-Mail based FTP, you need to know the name of the
- site, then you simply tell FTPMAIL and ask it to obtain the files for
- you if that site permits "anonymous" FTP, i.e. where anyone can
- obtain any file from the system. You send the message, and FTPMAIL
- eventually will either (1) send you back confirmation or (2) send you
- back a note saying you made a mistake. If you got (1), it will then
- send you the requested files, in chunks of 64K or less. If the file
- is smaller than 64K, you get it in one message. If the file is
- larger than 64K, you get it in multiple messages. (If you are on
- Compuserve, you need to set this limit to 49K; send a HELP message to
- find out about the CHUNKSIZE command.)
-
- I personally have used this method to send over 10 megabytes of files
- to me at my account on MCI Mail. Note that you must know the system
- you want to retrieve and the exact file names. In almost all
- instances, the particular case, UPPER OR lower, is critical and must
- be done exactly as indicated based on a listing from a DIR request.
-
- The way to make E-Mail FTP requests is to send a message to:
-
- FTPMAIL@DECWRL.DEC.COM
-
- where a set of commands are sent as the text of the message. (The
- title of the message is not used except to identify file(s) returned
- to you.)
-
- The full instructions can be obtained by sending a message with: HELP
- as a line in the text of the message. The complete FTPMAIL
- capability includes other features including non-anonymous FTP,
- ability to retrieve a file in different sized pieces, and special
- password capability.
-
- The general method of sending a request is as follows (lines
- beginning with ; are comments; these comments are not included on
- FTPMAIL requests):
-
- TO: FTPMAIL@DECWRL.DEC.COM
- ; FTPMAIL's address
- CONNECT WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL
- ; This is the name of the system I want to request from
- REPLY TDARCOS@MCIMAIL.COM
- ; Here is where I want files I receive sent to
- BINARY
- UUENCODE
- ; These two lines indicate I will be receiving 8-bit character
- ; files and they should be sent to me as uuencoded binary so
- ; that they can be sent as E-Mail. If you are only doing DIR
- ; requests, you can skip both of these
- GET PD1:<MSDOS.DBASE>WAMPUM42.ZIP
- ; Here I am requesting the system send me a particular file
- ; I am interested in. Note that you can only request 10 files
- ; at a time, more than that and your request is rejected
- DIR PD1:<MSDOS>
- ; Here I want a directory listing. This will come back as a
- ; separate message
- QUIT
- ; This is an optional command indicating that there are no more
- ; FTPMAIL commands. If your system appends tag lines or disclaimers,
- ; to your messages, you should put this in so FTPMAIL will ignore
- ; them.
-
- NOTE: If your local system is a BITNET system, however, you can use
- the BITFTP server from Princeton, whose syntax is slightly different,
- and allows special features including direct binary transfers as
- opposed to DEC's FTPMAIL which, since it is running on the Internet
- as opposed to internal BITNET transfers, cannot provide this
- capability. To use the BITNET server, you should send a message with
- HELP as the text to "BITFTP@PUCC.BITNET". BITFTP will not send files
- to non-BITNET sites.
-
- Paul Robinson -- TDARCOS@MCIMAIL.COM -- These opinions are mine alone.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- End of Info-IBMPC Digest V92 #183
- *********************************
- -------
- From /dev/null Fri, 18 Dec 1992 02:46:45 EST remote from kendra
- Received: from kendra by kendra.kew.com (UUPC/extended 1.11x) with UUCP;
- Fri, 18 Dec 1992 02:46:45 EST
- Path: kendra!eddie.mit.edu!micro-heart-of-gold.mit.edu!news.bbn.com!usc!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!uwm.edu!cs.utexas.edu!qt.cs.utexas.edu!yale.edu!nigel.msen.com!emv
- From: emv@msen.com (Edward Vielmetti)
- Newsgroups: comp.mail.uucp
- Subject: Re: My new domain name -- what do I do with it?
- Date: 17 Dec 1992 00:56:14 GMT
- Organization: Msen, Inc. -- Ann Arbor, Michigan
- Lines: 12
- Message-ID: <1goj7tINNoed@nigel.msen.com>
- References: <1992Dec15.145739.1359@bogart.uucp>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: garnet.msen.com
- X-Newsreader: TIN [version 1.1 PL8]
-
- Michael Faurot (mfaurot@bogart.uucp) wrote:
- : :
- : : 1) Send $50 to UUNET and have them set up name servers for you. E-mail
- : : info@uunet.uu.net.
-
- Msen will do the same for $35, and if you don't have a real machine to
- deliver the mail to we'll drop it in any mailbox on the planet (internet,
- MCI, Compuserve, what not). E-mail info@msen.com.
-
- Edward Vielmetti, vice president for research, Msen Inc. emv@Msen.com
- Msen Inc., 628 Brooks, Ann Arbor MI 48103 +1 313 998 GLOB
-
-