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c3270(1)							      c3270(1)

NAME
       c3270 - curses-based IBM host access tool

SYNOPSIS
       c3270 [options] [host]

DESCRIPTION
       c3270 opens a telnet connection to an IBM host in a console window.  It
       implements RFCs 2355 (TN3270E), 1576 (TN3270) and 1646 (LU name	selec‐
       tion),  and supports IND$FILE file transfer.  If the console is capable
       of displaying colors, then c3270 emulates an IBM 3279.	Otherwise,  it
       emulates a 3278.

       The full syntax for host is:
	      [prefix:]...[LUname@]hostname[:port]

       Prepending  a  P: onto hostname causes the connection to go through the
       telnet-passthru service rather than directly to the host.  See PASSTHRU
       below.

       Prepending  an  S:  onto	 hostname  removes  the "extended data stream"
       option reported to the host.  See -tn below for further information.

       Prepending an N: onto hostname turns off TN3270E support for  the  ses‐
       sion.

       Prepending an L: onto hostname causes c3270 to first create an SSL tun‐
       nel to the host, and then create a TN3270 session  inside  the  tunnel.
       (This  function	is supported only if c3270 was built with SSL/TLS sup‐
       port).  Note that TLS-encrypted sessions	 using	the  TELNET  START-TLS
       option  are  negotiated with the host automatically; for these sessions
       the L: prefix should not be used.

       A specific LU name to use may be specified  by  prepending  it  to  the
       hostname	 with  an  `@'.	  Multiple LU names to try can be separated by
       commas.	An empty LU can be placed in the list with an extra comma.

       The hostname may optionally be placed inside square-bracket  characters
       `['  and	 `]'.  This will prevent any colon `:' characters in the host‐
       name from being interpreted as indicating option prefixes or port  num‐
       bers.  This allows numeric IPv6 addresses to be used as hostnames.

       On  systems  that support the forkpty library call, the hostname may be
       replaced with -e and a command string.  This will cause c3270  to  con‐
       nect to a local child process, such as a shell.

       The port to connect to defaults to telnet.  This can be overridden with
       the -port option, or by appending a port to the hostname with  a	 colon
       `:'.   (For  compatability  with	 previous  versions  of c3270 and with
       tn3270(1), the port may also be specified as a second,  separate	 argu‐
       ment.)

OPTIONS
	c3270 understands the following options:

       -allbold
	      Forces  all characters to be displayed in bold.  This helps with
	      PC consoles which display non-bold characters in unreadably  dim
	      colors.

       -altscreen rowsxcols=init_string
	      Defines  the  dimensions	and  escape sequence for the alternate
	      (132-column) screen mode.	 See SCREEN SIZE SWITCHING, below.

       -cbreak
	      Causes c3270 to operate in cbreak mode, instead of raw mode.  In
	      cbreak  mode,  the TTY driver will properly process XOFF and XON
	      characters, which are required  by  some	terminals  for	proper
	      operation.   However,  those  characters (usually ^S and ^Q), as
	      well as the characters for interrupt, quit, and  lnext  (usually
	      ^C,  ^\  and ^V respectively) will be seen by c3270 only if pre‐
	      ceded by the lnext character.  The susp character	 (usually  ^Z)
	      cannot be seen by c3270 at all.

       -charset name
	      Specifies	 an  EBCDIC  host  character  set.  See CHARACTER SETS
	      below.

       -clear toggle
	      Sets the initial value of toggle to false.  The list  of	toggle
	      names is under TOGGLES below.

       -defscreen rowsxcols=init_string
	      Defines  the  dimensions	and  escape  sequence  for the default
	      (80-column) screen mode.	See SCREEN SIZE SWITCHING, below.

       -hostsfile file
	      Uses file as the hosts file, which allows aliases for host names
	      and  scripts  to	be  executed  at  login.  See ibm_hosts(1) for
	      details.

       -im method
	      Specifies the name of the input method  to  use  for  multi-byte
	      input.   (Supported  only	 when c3270 is compiled with DBCS sup‐
	      port.)

       -keymap name
	      Specifies	 a  keyboard  map  to  be  found   in	the   resource
	      c3270.keymap.name	 or  the  file	name.	See  KEYMAPS below for
	      details.

       -km name
	      Specifies the local encoding method for multi-byte  text.	  name
	      is  an  encoding name recognized by the ICU library.  (Supported
	      only when c3270 is compiled with	DBCS  support,	and  necessary
	      only when c3270 cannot figure it out from the locale.)

       -model name
	      The  model of 3270 display to be emulated.  The model name is in
	      two parts, either of which may be omitted:

	      The first part is the base model, which is either 3278 or	 3279.
	      3278 specifies a monochrome 3270 display; 3279 specifies a color
	      3270 display.

	      The second part is the model number, which specifies the	number
	      of rows and columns.  Model 4 is the default.

			    Model Number   Columns   Rows
			    ──────────────────────────────
				 2	     80	      24
				 3	     80	      30
				 4	     80	      43
				 5	     132      27

	      Note:  Technically, there is no such 3270 display as a 3279-4 or
	      3279-5, but most hosts seem to work with them anyway.

	      The default  model  for  a  color	 display  is  3279-4.	For  a
	      monochrome display, it is 3278-4.

       -mono  Forces 3278 emulation.

       -oversize colsxrows
	      Makes  the  screen  larger than the default for the chosen model
	      number.	This  option  has  effect  only	 in  combination  with
	      extended data stream support (controlled by the "c3270.extended"
	      resource), and  only  if	the  host  supports  the  Query	 Reply
	      structured  field.   The	number	of  columns  multiplied by the
	      number of rows must not exceed 16383 (3fff hex),	the  limit  of
	      14-bit 3270 buffer addressing.

       -port n
	      Specifies	 a  different TCP port to connect to.  n can be a name
	      from /etc/services  like	telnet,	 or  a	number.	  This	option
	      changes  the default port number used for all connections.  (The
	      positional parameter affects only the initial connection.)

       -printerlu luname
	      Causes c3270 to automatically start a  pr3287  printer  session.
	      If  luname  is  ".", then the printer session will be associated
	      with the interactive terminal session (this  requires  that  the
	      host  support  TN3270E).	 Otherwise,  the  value is used as the
	      explicit LU name to associate with the printer session.

       -secure
	      Disables the interactive c3270> prompt.  When used,  a  hostname
	      must be provided on the command line.

       -set toggle
	      Sets  the	 initial  value of toggle to true.  The list of toggle
	      names is under TOGGLES below.

       -tn name
	      Specifies the terminal name to be transmitted  over  the	telnet
	      connection.   The default name is IBM-model_name-E, for example,
	      IBM-3279-4-E  for	 a  color  display,  or	 IBM-3278-4-E  for   a
	      monochrome display.

	      Some  hosts  are confused by the -E suffix on the terminal name,
	      and will ignore the extra screen area on	models	3,  4  and  5.
	      Prepending   an	s:   on	  the	hostname,   or	 setting   the
	      "c3270.extended" resource to "false", removes the	 -E  from  the
	      terminal name when connecting to such hosts.

	      The  name	 can  also  be	specified  with	 the  "c3270.termName"
	      resource.

       -trace Turns on data stream and event tracing at startup.  The  default
	      trace file name is /tmp/x3trc.process_id.

       -tracefile file
	      Specifies	 a  file  to  save  data stream and event traces into,
	      overriding the default of /tmp/x3trc.process_id.

       -tracefilesize size
	      Places a limit on the size of a trace file.  If this  option  is
	      not specified, or is specified as 0 or none, the trace file will
	      be unlimited.  If	 specified,  the  trace	 file  cannot  already
	      exist,  and  the	(silently enforced) minimum size is 64 Kbytes.
	      The value of size can have a K or M suffix, indicating kilobytes
	      or megabytes respectively.

       -xrm "c3270.resource: value"
	      Sets  the	 value	of  the	 named	resource  to value.  Resources
	      control  less  common  c3270  options,  and  are	defined	 under
	      RESOURCES below.

CHARACTER SETS
       The -charset option or the "c3270.charset" resource controls the EBCDIC
       host character set used by c3270.  Available sets include:

		Charset Name	     Code Page	 Display Character
						 Sets
		─────────────────────────────────────────────────────
		apl		     37		 3270cg-1a
		belgian		     500	 3270cg-1a 3270-cg1
						 iso8859-1
		bracket		     37		 3270cg-1a 3270-cg1
						 iso8859-1
		brazilian	     275	 3270cg-1a 3270-cg1
						 iso8859-1
		finnish		     278	 3270cg-1a 3270-cg1
						 iso8859-1
		french		     297	 3270cg-1a 3270-cg1
						 iso8859-1
		german		     273	 3270cg-1a 3270-cg1
						 iso8859-1
		icelandic	     871	 3270cg-1a 3270-cg1
						 iso8859-1
		iso-hebrew	     424	 iso8859-8
		iso-turkish	     1026	 iso8859-9
		italian		     280	 3270cg-1a 3270-cg1
						 iso8859-1
		japanese	     1027+300	 jisx0201.1976-0 +
						 jisx0208.1983-0
		norwegian	     277	 3270cg-1a 3270-cg1
						 iso8859-1
		russian		     880	 koi8-r
		simplified-chinese   836+837	 3270cg-1a iso8859-1
						 + gb2312.1980-0
		slovenian	     870	 iso8859-2
		thai		     838	 iso8859-11
						 tis620.2529-0
		uk		     285	 3270cg-1a 3270-cg1
						 iso8859-1
		us-intl		     37		 3270cg-1a 3270-cg1
						 iso8859-1

       The  default  character	set is bracket, which is useful for common IBM
       hosts which use EBCDIC  codes  0xAD  and	 0xBD  for  the	 `['  and  `]'
       characters, respectively.

HOSTS DATABASE
       c3270 uses the ibm_hosts database to define aliases for host names, and
       to specify macros to be executed when a connection is first made.   See
       ibm_hosts(5) for details.

       You   may   specify   a	 different   ibm_hosts	 database   with   the
       "c3270.hostsFile" resource.

NVT (ANSI) MODE
       Some hosts use an ASCII front-end to do initial login negotiation, then
       later  switch  to  3270 mode.  c3270 will emulate an ANSI X.64 terminal
       until the host places it in 3270	 mode  (telnet	BINARY	and  SEND  EOR
       modes, or TN3270E mode negotiation).

       If  the	host  later negotiates to stop functioning in 3270 mode, c3270
       will return to ANSI emulation.

       In NVT mode, c3270 supports both character-at-a-time mode and line mode
       operation.   You	 may select the mode with a menu option.  When in line
       mode,  the  special  characters	and  operational  characteristics  are
       defined by resources:

		    Mode/Character	    Resource	 Default
		    ─────────────────────────────────────────────
		    Translate CR to NL	  c3270.icrnl	  true
		    Translate NL to CR	  c3270.inlcr	  false

		    Erase previous	  c3270.erase	   ^?
		    character
		    Erase entire line	   c3270.kill	   ^U
		    Erase previous word	  c3270.werase	   ^W
		    Redisplay line	  c3270.rprnt	   ^R
		    Ignore special	  c3270.lnext	   ^V
		    meaning of next
		    character
		    Interrupt		   c3270.intr	   ^C
		    Quit		   c3270.quit	   ^\
		    End of file		   c3270.eof	   ^D

       Separate keymaps can be defined for use only when c3270 is in 3270 mode
       or NVT mode.  See KEYMAPS for details.

TOGGLES
       c3270  has  a number of configurable modes which may be selected by the
       -set and -clear options.

       monoCase
	      If set, c3270 operates in uppercase-only mode.

       blankFill
	      If set, c3270 behaves in some un-3270-like ways.	First, when  a
	      character	 is  typed into a field, all nulls in the field to the
	      left of that character are changed to blanks.  This eliminates a
	      common  3270  data-entry	surprise.   Second,  in	 insert	 mode,
	      trailing blanks in a field are treated like  nulls,  eliminating
	      the  annoying `lock-up' that often occurs when inserting into an
	      field with (apparent) space at the end.

       lineWrap
	      If set, the  ANSI	 terminal  emulator  automatically  assumes  a
	      NEWLINE character when it reaches the end of a line.

       The  names  of the toggles for use with the -set and -clear options are
       as follows:

			Option			 Name
			─────────────────────────────────────
			Monocase		 monoCase
			Blank Fill		 blankFill
			Track Cursor		 cursorPos
			Trace Data Stream	 dsTrace
			Trace Events		 eventTrace
			Save Screen(s) in File	 screenTrace
			Wraparound		 lineWrap

       These names are also used as the first parameter to the Toggle action.

STATUS LINE
       If the terminal that c3270 is running on has at least one more row that
       the  3270  model	 requires  (e.g.,  25  rows for a model 2), c3270 will
       display a status line.  The c3270 status line  contains	a  variety  of
       information.  From left to right, the fields are:

       comm status
	      Three  symbols indicate the state of the connection to the host.
	      If connected, the right-hand symbol is a solid box; if  not,  it
	      is a question mark.

       keyboard lock
	      If  the  keyboard	 is  locked, an "X" symbol and a message field
	      indicate the reason for the keyboard lock.

       typeahead
	      The letter "T" indicates that one or more keystrokes are in  the
	      typeahead buffer.

       temporary keymap
	      The letter "K" indicates that a temporary keymap is in effect.

       reverse
	      The  letter  "R" indicates that the keyboard is in reverse field
	      entry mode.

       insert mode
	      The letter "I" indicates that the keyboard is in insert mode.

       printer session
	      The letter "P" indicates that a pr3287 session is active.

       LU name
	      The LU name associated with the session, if there is one.

       cursor position
	      The cursor row and column are optionally displayed, separated by
	      a "/".

ACTIONS
       Here  is	 a  complete  list  of	basic  c3270 actions.  Script-specific
       actions are described on the x3270-script(1) manual page.

       Actions marked with an asterisk (*) may block, sending data to the host
       and possibly waiting for a response.

	   *Attn			    attention key
	   BackSpace			    move cursor left (or send
					    ASCII BS)
	   BackTab			    tab to start of previous input
					    field
	   CircumNot			    input "^" in NVT mode, or
					    "notsign" in 3270 mode
	   *Clear			    clear screen
	   Compose			    next two keys form a special
					    symbol
	   *Connect(host)		    connect to host
	   *CursorSelect		    Cursor Select AID
	   Delete			    delete character under cursor
					    (or send ASCII DEL)
	   DeleteField			    delete the entire field
	   DeleteWord			    delete the current or previous
					    word
	   *Disconnect			    disconnect from host
	   Down				    move cursor down
	   Dup				    duplicate field
	   *Enter			    Enter AID (or send ASCII CR)
	   Erase			    erase previous character (or
					    send ASCII BS)
	   EraseEOF			    erase to end of current field
	   EraseInput			    erase all input fields
	   Escape			    escape to c3270> prompt
	   Execute(cmd)			    execute a command in a shell
	   FieldEnd			    move cursor to end of field
	   FieldMark			    mark field
	   HexString(hex_digits)	    insert control-character
					    string
	   Home				    move cursor to first input
					    field
	   Insert			    set insert mode
	   *Interrupt			    send TELNET IP to host
	   Key(keysym)			    insert key keysym
	   Key(0xxx)			    insert key with ASCII code xx
	   Left				    move cursor left
	   Left2			    move cursor left 2 positions
	   MonoCase			    toggle uppercase-only mode
	   MoveCursor(row, col)		    move cursor to (row,col)
	   Newline			    move cursor to first field on
					    next line (or send ASCII LF)
	   NextWord			    move cursor to next word
	   *PA(n)			    Program Attention AID (n from
					    1 to 3)

	   *PF(n)			    Program Function AID (n from 1
					    to 24)
	   PreviousWord			    move cursor to previous word
	   Printer(Start[,lu]|Stop)	    Start or stop printer session
	   PrintText(command)		    print screen text on printer
	   Quit				    exit c3270
	   Redraw			    redraw window
	   Reset			    reset locked keyboard
	   Right			    move cursor right
	   Right2			    move cursor right 2 positions
	   *Script(command[,arg...])	    run a script
	   *String(string)		    insert string (simple macro
					    facility)
	   *SysReq			    System Request AID
	   Tab				    move cursor to next input
					    field
	   Toggle(option[,set|clear])	    toggle an option
	   ToggleInsert			    toggle insert mode
	   ToggleReverse		    toggle reverse-input mode
	   *Transfer(option=value...)	    file transfer
	   Up				    move cursor up
	   ignore			    do nothing

       Any  of	the  above  actions may be entered at the c3270> prompt; these
       commands are also available for use in keymaps (see KEYMAPS).   Command
       names   are   case-insensitive.	  Parameters  can  be  specified  with
       parentheses and commas, e.g.:
	      PF(1)
       or with spaces, e.g.:
	      PF 1
       Parameters can be quoted with double-quote characters, to allow spaces,
       commas, and parentheses to be used.

       c3270 also supports the following interactive commands:

       Help   Displays a list of available commands.

       Show   Displays statistics and settings.

       Trace  Turns  tracing  on  or  off.   The command trace on enables data
	      stream  and  keyboard  event  tracing;  the  command  trace  off
	      disables	it.   The  qualifier data or keyboard can be specified
	      before on or off to enable or disable a particular trace.	 After
	      on,  a  filename	may be specified to override the default trace
	      file name of /tmp/x3trc.pid.

KEYMAPS
       The -keymap option allows a keymap to  be  specified.   If  the	option
       -keymap	xxx  is given, then c3270 will first look for a resource named
       c3270.keymap.xxx; if that is not found, then it will look  for  a  file
       named xxx.

       Multiple	 keymaps  may  be  specified  be  separating  their names with
       commas.	Definitions  in	 later	keymaps	 supercede  those  in  earlier
       keymaps.

       In  addition,  separate	keymaps may be defined that apply only in 3270
       mode or only  in	 NVT  mode.   For  example,  the  resource  definition
       c3270.keymap.xxx.nvt  will  augment the definition of c3270.keymap.xxx,
       when  c3270  is	in  NVT	 mode.	 Similarly,  the  resource  definition
       c3270.keymap.xxx.3270  will augment the definition of c3270.keymap.xxx,
       when c3270 is in 3270 mode.

       Keymaps specify actions to perform when a particular sequence  of  keys
       is pressed.  Each line in a keymap has the following syntax:

	      [Meta][Ctrl]<Key>key...: Action[(param[,...])] ...

       For example:

	      Meta<Key>c: Clear()
	      <Key>PPAGE: PF(7)
	      Ctrl<Key>A <Key>F1: PF(13)

       The  optional  Meta  or	Ctrl qualifiers specify that the Meta and Ctrl
       keys are pressed along with the specified key, respectively.   The  key
       is  either  a  valid X11 keysym (these are the ISO 8859-1 symbol names,
       such as equal for `=' and a for `a') or a valid	symbolic  ncurses  key
       name,  such  as	UP.   The  Action  is an action from the ACTIONS list,
       above.  More than one action may be  specified.	 (Note	that  symbolic
       ncurses	key  names can be used only if the c3270.cursesKeymap resource
       is set to True, which enables ncurses keymap mode.)

       Keymap entries are case-sensitive and  modifier-specific.   This	 means
       that a keymap for the b key will match only a lowercase b.  Actions for
       uppercase B, or for Meta-b or Control-B, must be specified separately.

       The base keymap is:

       Key		       Action
       ─────────────────────────────────────
       Ctrl<Key>]	       Escape
       Ctrl<Key>a Ctrl<Key>a   Key(0x01)
       Ctrl<Key>a Ctrl<Key>]   Key(0x1d)
       Ctrl<Key>a <Key>Tab     BackTab
       Ctrl<Key>a <Key>c       Clear
       Ctrl<Key>a <Key>e       Escape
       Ctrl<Key>a <Key>r       Reset
       Ctrl<Key>a <Key>l       Redraw
       Ctrl<Key>a <Key>m       Compose
       Ctrl<Key>a <Key>^       Key(notsign)
       <Key>UP		       Up
       <Key>DOWN	       Down
       <Key>LEFT	       Left
       <Key>RIGHT	       Right
       <Key>F(n)	       PF(n)
       Ctrl<Key>a <Key>F(n)    PF(n+12)
       Ctrl<Key>a <Key>1       PA(1)
       Ctrl<Key>a <Key>2       PA(2)
       Ctrl<Key>a <Key>3       PA(3)

       The base 3270-mode keymap adds:

       Key		Action
       ───────────────────────────
       Ctrl<Key>c	Clear
       Ctrl<Key>r	Reset
       Ctrl<Key>l	Redraw
       <Key>Tab		Tab
       <Key>DC		Delete
       <Key>BACKSPACE	BackSpace
       <Key>BackSpace	BackSpace
       <Key>Return	Enter
       <Key>Linefeed	Newline

THE META OR ALT KEY
       Some keyboards do not have a Meta key.  Instead, they have an Alt  key.
       Sometimes this key acts as a proper Meta key, that is, it is a modifier
       key that sets the high-order bit (0x80) in the code that is transmitted
       for  each  key.	Other keyboards send a two-character sequence when the
       Alt key is pressed with	another	 key:  the  Escape  character  (0x1b),
       followed by the code for the other key.

       The  resource c3270.metaEscape and the termcap km attribute control how
       c3270 will interpret these sequences.  When c3270.metaEscape is set  to
       true,  or  when	c3270.metaEscape  is  set  to  auto and the termcap km
       attribute is set, the keyboard is assumed to have a separate Meta  key.
       The  Escape  key can be used as an ordinary data key and has no special
       meaning.

       When c3270.metaEscape is set to true, or when c3270.metaEscape  is  set
       to  auto	 and  the  termcap  km	attribute  is not set, the keyboard is
       assumed to use the Escape character as a prefix to  indicate  that  the
       following  character  is supposed to have the high-order bit set.  When
       c3270 sees an Escape character from  the	 keyboard,  it	sets  a	 short
       timeout.	 If another character arrives before the timeout expires, then
       c3270 will combine the two characters, setting the  high-order  bit  of
       the  second.   In an event trace file, the combined character is listed
       as derived.  In a keymap, only  the  combined  character	 or  the  Meta
       prefix  may  be	used.  The Escape key can still be used by itself, but
       only if there is a short pause before pressing another key.

       The default value for c3270.metaEscape is auto.

FILE TRANSFER
       The Transfer action implements IND$FILE	file  transfer.	  This	action
       requires	 that  the  IND$FILE program be installed on the IBM host, and
       that the 3270 cursor be located in a field that will accept  a  TSO  or
       VM/CMS command.

       Because	of the complexity and number of options for file transfer, the
       parameters to the Transfer action take the unique form of option=value,
       and can appear in any order.  The options are:

       Option		Required?   Default   Other Values
       ────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
       Direction	   No	    send      receive
       HostFile		   Yes
       LocalFile	   Yes
       Host		   No	    tso	      vm
       Mode		   No	    ascii     binary
       Cr		   No	    remove    add, keep
       Exist		   No	    keep      replace, append
       Recfm		   No		      fixed, variable,
					      undefined
       Lrecl		   No
       Blksize		   No
       Allocation	   No		      tracks,
					      cylinders,
					      avblock
       PrimarySpace	   No
       SecondarySpace	   No
       BufferSize	   No	    4096

       The option details are as follows.

       Direction
	      send (the default) to send  a  file  to  the  host,  receive  to
	      receive a file from the host.

       HostFile
	      The name of the file on the host.

       LocalFile
	      The name of the file on the local workstation.

       Host   The  type	 of  host  (which  dictates  the  form of the IND$FILE
	      command): tso (the default) or vm.

       Mode   Use  ascii  (the	default)  for  a  text	file,  which  will  be
	      translated  between  EBCDIC  and ASCII as necessary.  Use binary
	      for non-text files.

       Cr     Controls how Newline characters are  handled  when  transferring
	      Mode=ascii   files.    remove   (the   default)  strips  Newline
	      characters in local files before transferring them to the	 host.
	      add  adds	 Newline  characters  to  each host file record before
	      transferring  it	to  the	 local	workstation.   keep  preserves
	      Newline characters when transferring a local file to the host.

       Exist  Controls	what happens when the destination file already exists.
	      keep (the default) preserves  the	 file,	causing	 the  Transfer
	      action  to  fail.	  replace overwrites the destination file with
	      the  source  file.   append  appends  the	 source	 file  to  the
	      destination file.

       Recfm  Controls	the  record   of  files	 created  on  the host.	 fixed
	      creates a file with fixed-length records.	  variable  creates  a
	      file  with  variable-length  records.   undefined creates a file
	      with undefined-length  records  (TSO  hosts  only).   The	 Lrecl
	      option  controls	the record length or maximum record length for
	      Recfm=fixed and Recfm=variable files, respectively.

       Lrecl  Specifies the record length (or maximum record length) for files
	      created on the host.

       Blksize
	      Specifies	 the  block  size for files created on the host.  (TSO
	      hosts only.)

       Allocation
	      Specifies	 the  units  for  the  TSO   host   PrimarySpace   and
	      SecondarySpace options: tracks, cylinders or avblock.

       PrimarySpace
	      Primary  allocation for a file created on a TSO host.  The units
	      are given by the Allocation option.

       SecondarySpace
	      Secondary allocation for a file created  on  a  TSO  host.   The
	      units are given by the Allocation option.

       BufferSize
	      Buffer  size  for	 DFT-mode  transfers.	Can  range from 256 to
	      32768.  Larger values give better performance,  but  some	 hosts
	      may not be able to support them.

SCRIPTS
       There are several types of script functions available.

       The String Action
	      The  simplest  method  for  scripting is provided via the String
	      action.  The arguments to String are one or  more	 double-quoted
	      strings  which  are  inserted  directly  as  if  typed.	The  C
	      backslash conventions are honored as follows.  (Entries marked *
	      mean  that  after	 sending  the AID code to the host, c3270 will
	      wait  for	 the  host  to	unlock	the  keyboard  before  further
	      processing the string.)

	      \b      Left
	      \f      Clear*
	      \n      Enter*
	      \pan    PA(n)*
	      \pfnn   PF(nn)*
	      \r      Newline
	      \t      Tab
	      \T      BackTab

	      An example keymap entry would be:
	      Meta<Key>p: String("probs clearrdr\n")

	      Note:  The  strings  are	in  ASCII  and converted to EBCDIC, so
	      beware of inserting control codes.

	      There is also an alternate form of the String action, HexString,
	      which  is	 used  to  enter  non-printing	data.  The argument to
	      HexString is a string of hexadecimal digits, two per  character.
	      A	 leading  0x or 0X is optional.	 In 3270 mode, the hexadecimal
	      data represent EBCDIC characters, which  are  entered  into  the
	      current  field.	In  NVT	 mode,	the hexadecimal data represent
	      ASCII characters, which are sent directly to the host.

       The Script Action
	      This action causes c3270 to start	 a  child  process  which  can
	      execute c3270 actions.  Standard input and output from the child
	      process are piped back to c3270.	The  Script  action  is	 fully
	      documented in x3270-script(1).

COMPOSITE CHARACTERS
       c3270  allows the direct entry of accented letters and special symbols.
       Pressing and releasing the "Compose" key, followed by two  other	 keys,
       causes  entry  of  the  symbol  combining those two keys.  For example,
       "Compose" followed by the "C" key and the "," (comma) key,  enters  the
       "C-cedilla"  symbol.   A	 C  on	the  status  line  indicates a pending
       composite character.

       The mappings between these pairs of ordinary keys and the symbols  they
       represent  is  controlled  by the "c3270.composeMap" resource; it gives
       the  name  of  the  map	to  use.   The	maps  themselves   are	 named
       "c3270.composeMap.name".	 The default is "latin1", which gives mappings
       for most of the symbols in the ISO 8859-1 Latin-1  character  set  that
       are not in the 7-bit ASCII character set.

       Note:  The default keymap defines Meta<Key>m as the "Compose" key.  You
       may set up your own "Compose" key with a keymap that  maps  some	 other
       keysym onto the Compose action.

PRINTER SUPPORT
       c3270  supports	associated printer sessions via the pr3287(1) program.
       The Printer action is used to start or stop a pr3287 session.

       The action Printer Start starts a printer session, associated with  the
       current LU.  (This works only if the host supports TN3270E.)

       The action Printer Start lu starts a printer session, associated with a
       specific lu.

       The action Printer Stop stops a printer session.

       The resource c3270.printer.command specifies the command used to	 print
       each	job;	 it	defaults     to	    lpr.      The     resource
       c3270.printer.assocCommandLine specifies the command used to  start  an
       associated printer session.  It defaults to:

	      pr3287 -assoc %L% -command "%C%" %H%

       The  resource c3270.printer.luCommandLine specifies the command used to
       start a specific-LU printer session.  It defaults to:

	      pr3287 -command "%C%" %L%@%H%

       When the printer session command is run,	 the  following	 substitutions
       are made:

       Token   Substitition
       %C%     Command (value of
	       c3270.printer.command)
       %H%     Host IP address
       %L%     Current or specified LU

       See pr3287(1) for further details.

PASSTHRU
       c3270  supports	the  Sun  telnet-passthru  service  provided  by   the
       in.telnet-gw server.  This allows outbound telnet connections through a
       firewall machine.  When a p: is prepended to  a	hostname,  c3270  acts
       much  like  the	itelnet(1)  command.   It  contacts  the machine named
       internet-gateway at  the	 port  defined	in  /etc/services  as  telnet-
       passthru	 (which	 defaults  to  3514).	It  then  passes the requested
       hostname and port to the in.telnet-gw server.

SCREEN SIZE SWITCHING
       When running as a 3270 Model 5, c3270 can take advantage	 of  terminals
       that can switch between 80 and 132 column modes.

       Because	the curses library does not support mode switching, the escape
       sequences and resulting screen dimensions must be specified  explicitly
       to  c3270.   These  are	specified  with	 the -altscreen and -defscreen
       command-line  options,  or  the	altScreen  and	defScreen   resources.
       -altscreen  or  altScreen  defines  the	alternate  (132-column)	 mode;
       -defscreen or defScreen defines the default (80-column) mode.

       The syntax for the  options  and	 resources  is	rowsxcols=init_string,
       where  rows and cols give the screen dimensions, and init_string is the
       escape sequence to transmit to the terminal to enter  that  mode.   For
       defscreen,  the	minimum	 dimensions  are  24 rows and 80 columns.  For
       altscreen, the minimum dimensions are 27 rows and 132 columns.	Within
       init_string,  the  usual escape sequences are supported (\E for escape,
       \r, \b, etc.).  For example, the init string for a 132-column xterm is:

	      \E[?40h\E[?3h

       Note: When defscreen and altscreen are specified, the model  number  is
       always set to 5.

RESOURCES
       Certain	c3270  options can be configured via resources.	 Resources are
       defined in the file .c3270pro in the user's home directory, and by -xrm
       options.	  The  definitions  are	 similar  to  X11 resources, and use a
       similar syntax.	The resources available in c3270 are:

       Resource	      Default	 Option		  Purpose
       ────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
       allBold	      Auto	 -allbold	  Display all
						  characters bold
       altScreen		 -altscreen	  132-col screen
						  definition
       blankFill      False	 -set blankFill	  Blank Fill mode
       charset	      bracket	 -charset	  EBCDIC character
						  set
       charset.foo				  Definition of
						  character set
						  foo
       composeMap     latin1			  Name of
						  composed-
						  character map
       cursesKeymap   True			  Set curses
						  keymap option
       defScreen		 -defscreen	  80-col screen
						  definition
       dsTrace	      False	 -trace		  Data stream
						  tracing
       eof	      ^D			  NVT-mode EOF
						  character
       erase	      ^H			  NVT-mode erase
						  character
       extended	      True			  Use 3270
						  extended data
						  stream
       eventTrace     False	 -trace		  Event tracing
       ftCommand      ind$file			  Host file
						  transfer command
       hostsFile		 -hostsfile	  Host alias/macro
						  file
       icrnl	      False			  Map CR to NL on
						  NVT-mode input
       inlcr	      False			  Map NL to CR in
						  NVT-mode input
       intr	      ^C			  NVT-mode
						  interrupt
						  character
       keymap			 -keymap	  Keyboard map
						  name
       keymap.foo				  Definition of
						  keymap foo
       kill	      ^U			  NVT-mode kill
						  character
       lineWrap	      False	 -set lineWrap	  NVT line wrap
						  mode
       lnext	      ^V			  NVT-mode lnext
						  character

       m3279	      (note 1)	 -mono		  3279 (color)
						  emulation
       metaEscape     Auto			  Interpret ESC-x
						  as Meta-x
       monoCase	      False	 -set monoCase	  Mono-case mode
       numericLock    False			  Lock keyboard
						  for numeric
						  field error
       oerrLock	      True			  Lock keyboard
						  for input error
       oversize			 -oversize	  Oversize screen
						  dimensions
       port	      telnet	 -port		  Non-default TCP
						  port
       printer.*      (note 4)			  Printer session
						  config
       quit	      ^\			  NVT-mode quit
						  character
       rprnt	      ^R			  NVT-mode reprint
						  character
       secure	      False			  Disable
						  "dangerous"
						  options
       termName	      (note 2)	 -tn		  TELNET terminal
						  type string
       traceDir	      /tmp			  Directory for
						  trace files
       traceFile      (note 3)	 -tracefile	  File for trace
						  output
       typeahead      True			  Allow typeahead
       werase	      ^W			  NVT-mode word-
						  erase character

	      Note  1:	m3279 defaults to True if the terminal supports color,
	      False otherwise.	It can be  forced  to  False  with  the	 -mono
	      option.

	      Note 2: The default terminal type string is constructed from the
	      model number, color emulation, and extended data	stream	modes.
	      E.g.,  a	model  2  with	color  emulation and the extended data
	      stream option would be sent as  IBM-3279-2-E.   Note  also  that
	      when  TN3270E  mode is used, the terminal type is always sent as
	      some type of 3278.

	      Note 3: The default trace file is	 x3trc.pid  in	the  directory
	      specified by the traceDir resource.

	      Note 4: See PRINTER SUPPORT for details.

       In .c3270pro, lines are continued with a backslash character.

       -xrm options override definitions found in .c3270pro.  If more than one
       -xrm option is given for the same resource, the last one on the command
       line is used.

FILES
       /usr/local/lib/x3270/ibm_hosts
       $HOME/.c3270pro

SEE ALSO
       x3270(1),    s3270(1),	tcl3270(1),   ibm_hosts(5),   x3270-script(1),
       pr3287(1), telnet(1), tn3270(1)
       Data Stream Programmer's Reference, IBM GA23-0059
       Character Set Reference, IBM GA27-3831
       RFC 1576, TN3270 Current Practices
       RFC 1646, TN3270 Extensions for LUname and Printer Selection
       RFC 2355, TN3270 Enhancements

COPYRIGHTS
       Modifications Copyright 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1999, 2000, 2001,
       2002, 2004 by Paul Mattes.
       Original X11 Port Copyright 1990 by Jeff Sparkes.
	      Permission  to  use,  copy, modify, and distribute this software
	      and its documentation for any purpose and without fee is	hereby
	      granted,	provided that the above copyright notice appear in all
	      copies and that both that copyright notice and  this  permission
	      notice appear in supporting documentation.
       Copyright 1989 by Georgia Tech Research Corporation, Atlanta, GA 30332.
	      All  Rights  Reserved.   GTRC  hereby  grants public use of this
	      software.	  Derivative  works  based  on	this   software	  must
	      incorporate this copyright notice.
       c3270  is  distributed  in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT
       ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of  MERCHANTABILITY  or
       FITNESS	FOR  A	PARTICULAR  PURPOSE.   See  the	 file LICENSE for more
       details.

VERSION
       c3270 3.3.4

				 09 April 2005			      c3270(1)
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