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CU(1C)									CU(1C)

NAME
       cu - call UNIX

SYNOPSIS
       cu telno [ -t ] [ -s speed ] [ -a acu ] [ -l line ]

DESCRIPTION
       Cu  calls  up  another  UNIX system, a terminal, or possibly a non-UNIX
       system.	It manages an interactive conversation with possible transfers
       of  text	 files.	  Telno	 is  the telephone number, with minus signs at
       appropriate places for delays.  The -t flag is used to dial  out	 to  a
       terminal.   Speed  gives	 the  transmission  speed (110, 134, 150, 300,
       1200); 300 is the default value.

       The -a and -l values may be used to specify pathnames for the  ACU  and
       communications  line devices.  They can be used to override the follow‐
       ing built-in choices:

       -a /dev/cua0 -l /dev/cul0

       After making the connection, cu runs as two processes: the send process
       reads  the  standard  input and passes most of it to the remote system;
       the receive process reads from the remote system and passes  most  data
       to  the	standard  output.  Lines beginning with `~' have special mean‐
       ings.

       The send process interprets the following:

       ~.		 terminate the conversation.
       ~EOT		 terminate the conversation

       ~<file		 send the contents of file to the  remote  system,  as
			 though typed at the terminal.

       ~!		 invoke an interactive shell on the local system.

       ~!cmd ...	 run the command on the local system (via sh -c).

       ~$cmd ...	 run  the  command  locally and send its output to the
			 remote system.

       ~%take from [to]	 copy file `from' (on the remote system) to file  `to'
			 on  the local system.	If `to' is omitted, the `from'
			 name is used both places.

       ~%put from [to]	 copy file `from' (on local system) to	file  `to'  on
			 remote	 system.   If `to' is omitted, the `from' name
			 is used both places.

       ~~...		 send the line `~...'.

       The receive process handles output diversions of the following form:

       ~>[>][:]file
       zero or more lines to be written to file
       ~>

       In any case, output is diverted (or appended,  if  `>>'	used)  to  the
       file.   If  `:'	is  used, the diversion is silent, i.e., it is written
       only to the file.  If `:' is omitted, output is	written	 both  to  the
       file  and  to  the  standard  output.  The trailing `~>' terminates the
       diversion.

       The use of ~%put requires stty and cat on the  remote  side.   It  also
       requires	 that the current erase and kill characters on the remote sys‐
       tem be identical to the current ones on the local system.   Backslashes
       are inserted at appropriate places.

       The  use of ~%take requires the existence of echo and tee on the remote
       system.	Also, stty tabs mode is required on the remote system if  tabs
       are to be copied without expansion.

FILES
       /dev/cua0
       /dev/cul0
       /dev/null

SEE ALSO
       dn(4), tty(4)

DIAGNOSTICS
       Exit code is zero for normal exit, nonzero (various values) otherwise.

BUGS
       The syntax is unique.

									CU(1C)
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