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MS-DOS KERMIT

FOR THE IBM PC FAMILY, COMPATIBLES, AND OTHER MS-DOS COMPUTERS

Version 3.14, January 1995

Last update: Thu Jan 12 13:39:45 1995

This file summarizes the commands and features of MS-DOS Kermit 3.14. For
detailed information, consult "Using MS-DOS Kermit", second edition, by
Christine M. Gianone, published by Digital Press / Butterworth-Heinemann,
Woburn, MA, 1992, ISBN 1-55558-082-3. To order, call (USA, toll free)
1-800-366-2665, or 1-212-854-3703.

A German-language edition, "MS-DOS Kermit -- das universelle
Kommunikationsprogramm", is published by Verlag Heinz Heise GmbH & Co KG,
Hannover, Germany, translated by Gisbert W. Selke, ISBN 3-88229-006-4.
Verlag Heinz Heise GmbH & Co. KG, Helstorfer Strasse 7, D-3000 Hannover.
Tel. +49 (05 11) 53 52-0, Fax. +49 (05 11) 53 53-1 29.

A French-language edition, Christine M. Gianone, "Kermit MS-DOS Mode
d'Emploi", is published by Heinz Schiefer & Cie., Versailles (1993),
translated by Jean Dutertre. ISBN 2-901143-20-2.
Heinz Schiefer & Cie., 45 rue Henri de Regnier, F-78000 Versailles, France.
Tel. +33 13 021 55 05, Fax. +33 13 902 3971.

MS-DOS Kermit users are requested to purchase one of these books. They take
you step-by-step through every phase of setup, use, and automation of MS-DOS
Kermit, they should answer all your questions, and sales of these books is
the primary source of funding for the Kermit development effort.

TCP/IP Users: Please read NETWORKS\SETUP.DOC for TCP/IP network setup.

Internet Users: Consult our Web home page http://www.columbia/edu/kermit/.

TERMS AND CONDITIONS

Copyright (C) 1982, 1995, Trustees of Columbia University in the City of New
York. The MS-DOS Kermit software may not be, in whole or in part, licensed
or sold for profit as a software product itself, nor may it be included in
or distributed with commercial products or otherwise distributed by
commercial concerns to their clients or customers without written permission
of the Office of Kermit Development and Distribution, Columbia University.
This copyright notice must not be removed, altered, or obscured.

MS-DOS Kermit is a product of Kermit Distribution, Columbia University
Academic Information Systems. The principal author of the program is
Professor Joe R. Doupnik of Utah State University, with help from other
volunteer programmers all over the world.

Kermit software is furnished without warranty of any kind. Neither Columbia
University, nor the individual authors, nor Digital Press, nor any institution
or individual that has contributed to the development and documentation
warrant the software in any way.

CONTACT INFORMATION

Technical support: +1 212 854-5126, or use the e-mail addresses below.
Please do not ask for technical support unless you have consulted the manual,
"Using MS-DOS Kermit", as well as the files KERMIT.BWR and KERMIT.UPD from
the Kermit diskette.

Kermit programs are available for hundreds of different kinds of computers on
a variety of magnetic media. For a catalog, write to:

Kermit Distribution, Dept INFO
Columbia University Academic Information Systems
612 West 115th Street
New York, NY 10025 USA

Or call +1 212 854-3703, or Fax +1 212 662-6442 or +1 212 663-8202,
or send e-mail to [email protected] (Internet).

UPDATES

MS-DOS Kermit 3.11 was released September, 1991, and is fully described in
"Using MS-DOS Kermit", second edition. MS-DOS Kermit 3.12 through 3.14 have
some new features not described in the book, but which are listed in this
file, and described fully in the file KERMIT.UPD (MSKERM.UPD).

PROGRAM INSTALLATION

See the READ.ME file for installation instructions.

Read the KERMIT.BWR (MSKERM.BWR) file for problem-solving hints as well as
technical details about internal modems and nonstandard serial ports, Windows,
OS/2, DesqView, memory management, and many other topics. Read the file
NETWORKS\SETUP.DOC for details about network setup and installation.

APPLYING PATCHES TO MS-DOS KERMIT

Sometimes errors are discovered in MS-DOS Kermit programs after they are
released. Rather than issue new releases to correct these problems, we patch
them at runtime. The patches are contained in a small text file called:

MSRxxx.PCH Patch file for full-featured IBM PC version
MSRMxxx.PCH for "medium" IBM PC version
MSRLxxx.PCH for "lite" IBM PC version

where xxx is the MS-DOS Kermit version number, e.g. MSR314.PCH, MSRM314.PCH.

The patch file includes checking information -- the Kermit version and
internal checksum must agree -- plus patches that Kermit applies to itself
when it starts up. The MSRxxx.PCH file should go in the same directory as
your MSKERMIT.INI file.

Kermit reads the patch file and makes changes to the copy of itself which is
currently running in memory. The executable Kermit program file on your disk
or file server is not modified. Thus Kermit can be stored as read-only on a
file server and shared by everyone.

CAUTION: Patches should be applied only to an executable version of MS-DOS
Kermit that was obtained from Columbia University or from the diskette in the
book "Using MS-DOS Kermit".

SUMMARY OF MS-DOS KERMIT COMMANDS

The commands listed are for the IBM PC, PS/2, and compatibles. Other versions
of MS-DOS Kermit (NEC PC9801, DEC Rainbow, Victor 9000, Zenith Z100, etc) may
lack certain commands and features described here, primarily those having to
do with networking, terminal emulation, and character-set translation.

Kermit commands consist of a sequence of "words" (verbs, nouns, numbers,
filenames) separated by spaces and terminated by carriage return (Enter).
Command description use this notation:

- Replace this with an actual number, or filename, etc.
- Replace with an actual decimal number
- A file specification, which may include disk & directory
- Time of day in 24-hour notation, less than 12 hours from now
[] - An optional field, which may be omitted
{A,B,C} - Choose one of the items listed
[{A,B,C}] - Choose zero or one of the items listed
= - Shows default value for a field

The following characters perform special functions in MS-DOS Kermit commands:

Space Separates command words ("fields").
TAB (Ctrl-I) Like space
ESC (Ctrl-[) Completes a keyword if possible.
Enter (Ctrl-M, Carriage Return) Enters a command.
Formfeed (Ctrl-L) Like Enter, but clears the screen first.
Linefeed (Ctrl-J) Like Enter.
Backspace (Ctrl-H, Del) Deletes rightmost character from the command.
Ctrl-W Deletes rightmost word from the command.
Ctrl-U Deletes the entire command.
Ctrl-C Cancels the current command, even if you have already entered it.
? (Question Mark) Requests a menu for the current command field.
; (Semicolon) Introduces a trailing command (in command files only)
\ (Backslash) Introduces a "backslash code".
, (Comma) Separates commands in a macro definition.
{ } (Braces) used for grouping characters or words together.

Backslash codes:

\123 (up to 3 decimal digits) A decimal number or character value
\d123 (up to 3 decimal digits) Same as 123
\o123 (up to 3 octal digits) An octal (base 8) number or char value
\x123 (2 hexadecimal digits) A hexadecimal (base 16) number or character
\{ } For grouping, e.g. \{12}6 = Ctrl-L 6, not ASCII 126 = tilde (~)
\; Include a semicolon in a TAKE-file command or macro definition.
\% Introduce a Kermit variable, \%1, \%2, ..., \%a, \%b, ... \%z
\K (or \k) Introduce a Kermit connect-mode verb like \Kexit
{\Kxxx} A user-defined macro called xxx assigned to a key
\B (or \b) Send a BREAK signal, 275 milliseconds (OUTPUT command only)
\L (or \l) send a Long BREAK, 1.5 seconds (OUTPUT only)
\255 Shorthand for CRLF or LFCR (INPUT command only)
\v(name) A built-in variable like \v(date)
\fname() A built-in function like \fsubstring()
\m(name) A user-defined named variable
\$(name) A DOS environment variable

* PROGRAM MANAGEMENT COMMANDS

EXIT or QUIT
Exit from MS-DOS Kermit. Close all logs and files. Leave serial port DTR
on. Close network connections. Execute ON_EXIT macro if defined.

DEFINE ON_EXIT
Define a macro to be executed automatically when Kermit EXITs.

SET EXIT WARNING {ON, OFF} = OFF
If you try to EXIT from Kermit while a connection (serial or network)
appears to be active, Kermit will warn you and give you a chance to
change your mind if SET EXIT WARNING ON.

STAY
On the MS-DOS Kermit command-line only, makes MS-DOS Kermit issue its prompt
after executing other commands on the command line, rather than EXITing as
it normally does when given command-line arguments.

PATCH [ ]
Apply patches (corrections) to the running memory image from the appropriate
MSRxxx.PCH file. Optional specifies the disk and/or directory for
the patch file.

TAKE
Execute Kermit commands from the specified file instead of the keyboard.

PUSH
Go to the DOS prompt. Return to Kermit prompt by typing the DOS EXIT
command. Preserves connections, settings, etc.

RUN [ ]
Run a DOS program or execute a DOS command, e.g. RUN EDIT AUTOEXEC.BAT.

ECHO [ ]
Display the on the screen, automatically supplying carriage return
and linefeed at the end. The can contain backslash codes, variables,
etc. Leading and trailing spaces are removed unless the is
surrounded by { curly braces }.

SET PROMPT [ ]
Change MS-DOS Kermit's interactive command prompt to the specified text,
which can contain backslash codes, variables, etc. Curly braces can be used
as in the ECHO command. If no , restore default prompt. is
evaluated each time the prompt is printed, e.g. SET PROMPT [\v(dir)]
MS-Kermit> always shows your current directory.

COMMENT
For adding full-line comments to a TAKE file.

; text
Commands in TAKE files can have trailing comments preceded by semicolon (;).
Semicolon must be preceded by whitespace or else be first character on line.

-

Commands in TAKE files or macro definitions can be continued with hyphens,
but not in a trailing comment.

* DOS ACCESS COMMANDS

CD []
Change Directory. Like DOS CD, but a disk drive letter can be included.

CLS
Clear the screen.

DELETE
Delete specified file(s).

DIRECTORY []
Like DOS DIR command.

RUN
RUN the given DOS command or program.

TYPE
Like DOS TYPE command.

SPACE []
Show free space on current or specified disk.

SHOW MEMORY
Show free memory.

Others, such as MORE, COPY, RENAME, etc, are defined as macros in MSKERMIT.INI.

* COMMANDS FOR GETTING INFORMATION

HELP
Display a brief help message.

INTRO
A brief introduction to MS-DOS Kermit.

SHOW
Display current settings, definitions, statistics selectively
(type SHOW ? for a list of categories).

VERSION
Display Kermit's version number.

Alt-h (during CONNECT only) popup help screen about special keys active
during CONNECT mode.

* COMMANDS FOR SETTING COMMUNICATION PARAMETERS

SET COM1
[ ]
Specify the hardware address of COM1, which must be an NSC 8250, 16450,
16550A, or compatible UART, and, optionally, that its interrupt request
(IRQ) number is . Also SET COM2, ..., COM4. Give this command BEFORE
the corresponding SET PORT command. See KERMIT.BWR.

TEST {COM1, COM2, COM3, COM4}
Tests if the given COM port is present and usable.

SET PORT {COM1, COM2, COM3, COM4} = COM1
Select a communication device (SET PORT ? for list of available devices, see
below for local area nets). You can also say SET PORT 1, etc. Port must be
real 8250 or 16450 or 16550A(FN) UART, or device that perfectly emulates
them. If not, Kermit will use BIOS rather than direct hardware control.

SET PORT {BIOS1, BIOS2, BIOS3, BIOS4}
Use BIOS-level driver for COM1, COM2, COM3, or COM4, etc, rather than
Kermit's own built-in hardware driver. Allows Kermit to be used with BIOS
itself, BIOS Int 14H interceptors (on LANs, for example), nonstandard
devices, etc. This works with numerous network packages and drivers.

SET PORT FOSSIL {1, 2, 3, ... 99}
Use a Fossil driver on the given port, rather than Kermit's built-in COM
port driver or the PC BIOS. A fossil driver must be installed.

SET PORT - See section on Local Area Networks.

SET SPEED
Communications port line speed: 1200, 2400, 9600, etc. SET SPEED ? for list.
75/1200 is "split speed" (75 out, 1200 in). Applies to currently selected
serial port (COM1-COM4), or to EBIOS connections. Ignored for other SET
PORT options.

SET MODEM [ text ]
Equivalent to DEFINE _MODEM text. Defines your modem type; text must agree
with the name of a dialing script, e.g. "set modem hayes" for HAYES.SCR.

SET CARRIER {ON, OFF} specifies treatment of Carrier Detect signal:
OFF = ignore it.
ON = require it at all times except during DIAL macro execution.

SET PARITY {EVEN, ODD, MARK, SPACE, NONE} = NONE
Character parity to use during communication.

SET DISPLAY {7, 8} = 7
Synonym for SET TERMINAL BYTESIZE {7, 8}

SET STOP-BITS {1, 2}
This command lets users follow the instructions given by dialup services
to "set your stop bits to 1" (or, rarely, "2").

SET DUPLEX {FULL, HALF} = FULL
Select full or half duplex communication.
FULL = remote echo. HALF = local echo plus RTS/CTS hardware handshake.

SET HANDSHAKE {NONE, XON, CR, LF, CODE } = NONE
Half-duplex line turnaround character (XON is most common) for file-transfer
packets.

SET FLOW-CONTROL {XON/XOFF, RTS/CTS, NONE} = XON/XOFF
Select a full-duplex bidirectional flow-control method.
In addition XON/XOFF can be enabled in one direction only:
SET FLOW {INCOMING-XON/XOFF, OUTGOINGING-XON/XOFF}

* COMMANDS FOR CONNECTING TO A REMOTE COMPUTER OR SERVICE

DIAL
Dial a modem. See KERMIT.UPD.

CONNECT
Make a terminal connection to a device or another computer on the currently
selected port using the current communication settings. Use Alt-x to return
("escape back") to the MS-Kermit> prompt or Ctrl-] (your escape char)
followed by C. You can abbreviate CONNECT as C.

HANGUP
Hang up a serial connection by lowering DTR until the next time the port is
accessed (by CONNECT, OUTPUT, INPUT, DIAL, PAUSE, or similar command), or
close current network connection.

SET ESCAPE \nnn
Change the CONNECT-mode escape character to the character whose ASCII
value is nnn, e.g. SET ESCAPE \28 for Ctrl-Backslash.

SET DEBUG SESSION
Turn off the terminal emulator, display received characters literally for
debugging: ^X = Ctrl-X, ~X = X with 8th bit on.

SET DEBUG OFF
Turn off session debugging, restore normal terminal emulation.

* COMMANDS FOR CONTROLLING TERMINAL EMULATION

SET TERMINAL [ TYPE ] {VT320, VT220, VT102, VT100, VT52, HEATH-19, ANSI,
HONEYWELL, PT200, TEK4010, D470, D463, WYSE50, NONE} = VT320
Select type of terminal to emulate.

SET ROLLBACK
Number of text screens to be kept in the rollback buffer. Each 24x80 screen
occupies about 4K; bigger screens need more space. Also see SET TERMINAL
EXPANDED-MEMORY.

SET TERMINAL ANSWERBACK { ON, OFF, MESSAGE [ ] }
Whether Kermit should respond with string "MS-DOS-KERMIT nnn_ttt" if, during
terminal emulation, it receives Ctrl-E (ENQ) from host. Default is OFF,
no reply. As of version 3.14 nnn = Kermit version number, ttt = terminal
type, e.g. "MS-DOS-KERMIT 314_VT320", terminated by a carriage return;
, if given, appends up to 30 bytes of additional text to the standard
message, with a leading underscore added, before the carriage return.

SET TERMINAL APC {ON, OFF, UNCHECKED}
Enable, disable, or fully open up the Application Program Command feature of
the VT220/320 emulator, which the host send commands to MS-DOS Kermit
embedded in escape sequences. Default is OFF, meaning all such commands are
ignored, ON means allow execution of nominally "safe" commands, UNCHECKED
means all commands are executed without first checking for safety.

SET TERMINAL ARROW-KEYS {APPLICATION, CURSOR}
Put arrow keys in specified mode.

SET TERMINAL BELL {AUDIBLE, VISUAL, NONE} = AUDIBLE.
What to do with arriving BEL (beep, Ctrl-G) characters.

SET TERMINAL BYTESIZE {7, 8} = 7
Use 7 for stripping off parity bit, e.g. with UNIX systems, during terminal
emulation. Use 8 for 8-bit international character sets, and for properly
receiving 8-bit control characters, such as sent by VMS.

SET TERMINAL CHARACTER-SET {LATIN1, DEC-MCS, GERMAN, FRENCH, etc} = LATIN1
Character set used by the host computer during terminal emulation. Optional
trailing parameters G0, G1, G2, and G3 can be used to designate the character
set to the given Gn tables. Example: SET TERM CHAR LATIN1 G1. Type "set
ter char ?" for a complete list.

SET TERMINAL CLEAR-SCREEN
Clear the terminal screen.

SET TERMINAL CODE-PAGE CPnnn
Tells MS-DOS Kermit what code page is presently active on your PC.

SET TERMINAL COLOR [, [, ] ]
Set fore- and background color for text terminal emulation. The numbers are
0 (normal foreground), 1 (high-intensity foreground), 10 (fast screen update
on IBM EGA), 3x (foreground color), 4x (background color), where x is the
sum of any of 1 (Red), 2 (Green), and 4 (Blue). Number 20 (v3.14) says to
restore to these colors after a "reset visual attributes" command from the
host, otherwise current colors are kept.

SET TERMINAL COMPRESSED-TEXT {GRAPHICS, TEXT-132}
Compressed text is how more characters are shown across the same screen.
Some video adapters support compressed text in regular text mode. Others,
like the EGA and VGA, do not. Use the GRAPHICS option to display compressed
text on the EGA or VGA, or else use horizontal scrolling (see \Kverbs).

SET TERMINAL CONTROLS {7-BIT, 8-BIT}
Tell VT220/320 emulator whether to send 7-bit or 8-bit control sequences when
DEC function, arrow, editing, or keypad keys are pressed.

SET TERMINAL CURSOR-STYLE {BLOCK, UNDERLINE} = UNDERLINE
Cursor style for terminal emulation.

SET TERMINAL DIRECTION {LEFT-TO-RIGHT, RIGHT-TO-LEFT}
Direction of screen writing during terminal emulation.

SET TERMINAL DISPLAY {7, 8}
Synonym for SET TERMINAL BYTESIZE.

SET TERMINAL EXPANDED-MEMORY {ON, OFF} = OFF
Whether to use expanded memory for retention of graphics screens and for
text terminal-emulation rollback screens. See KERMIT.UPD.

SET TERMINAL GRAPHICS
Specify the type of graphics adapter in your PC: CGA, EGA, VGA, others (SET
TERM GRAPH ? for complete list). MS-DOS Kermit automatically tries to
figure out what kind of adapter you have. Use this command if it guesses
wrong. Applies to graphics emulation only.

SET TERMINAL GRAPHICS CHARACTER-WRITING {OPAQUE, TRANSPARENT}
Whether text characters written on graphics screens should let graphics
show through.

SET TERMINAL GRAPHICS COLOR [, [, ] ]
Fore- and background colors for graphics screens. Numbers same as for
SET TERMINAL COLOR.

SET TERMINAL GRAPHICS CURSOR {ON, OFF} = ON
Tell whether there should be a text cursor during graphics terminal
emulation.

SET TERMINAL HORIZONTAL-SCROLL {AUTOMATIC, MANUAL}
When Kermit's TERMINAL WIDTH is wider than the physical screen, you can view
characters off the physical screen by horizontal scrolling, which can be
manual (you push keys) or automatic (Kermit scrolls the screen automatically
as characters arrive to keep the cursor on the screen). MANUAL is the
default for VT terminal emulation, AUTOMATIC for DG terminal emulation.

SET TERMINAL KEYCLICK {ON, OFF}
Turn keyclick sound effect on or off.

SET TERMINAL KEYPAD {APPLICATION, NUMERIC}
Put the numeric keypad into the specified mode.

SET TERMINAL MARGIN-BELL {ON, OFF}
Whether to ring the bell when the cursor nears the end of a screen line.

SET TERMINAL NEWLINE {ON, OFF}
ON means to send both a carriage return and a linefeed when you press Enter.
OFF means send only carriage return.

SET TERMINAL OUTPUT-SHIFT {NONE, AUTOMATIC, SI/SO, SS2, SS3, JIS7,
EUC-KANJI, DEC-KANJI, JIS7-KANJI} = NONE
Select the table-shifting commands surrounding a character sent to the host
when parity is other than NONE and the character has its 8th bit set. NONE,
the default, says do nothing and thus the character's high bit is lost and
replaced by a parity bit. SI/SO, SS2, and SS3 shift the character into G1,
G2, or G3, respectively, using ISO 2022 rules. AUTO selects a method based
on the current GL value. See KERMIT.UPD about Kanji.

SET TERMINAL REPLAY
Synonym for REPLAY.

SET TERMINAL RESET
Resets terminal emulator when CONNECT mode is next entered.

SET TERMINAL ROLLBACK {ON, OFF} = OFF
ON = restore rolled-back screens to the end when new characters
arrive. OFF = display new characters at current cursor position.

SET TERMINAL SCREEN-BACKGROUND {NORMAL, REVERSE}
REVERSE exchanges the fore- and background screen colors.

SET TERMINAL TABSTOPS {AT , CLEAR AT , CLEAR ALL}
Sets or clears screen tab stops at the specified positions. can be a
single number, a list of numbers, or : to set tabs
beginning at the specified , every spaces, e.g.
SET TAB AT 1:10. By default, tabs are every eight spaces. If your
tabstops get messed up, restore them to normal with "set term tab at 1:8".

SET TERMINAL TEK4010 {ENABLE, DISABLE}
Whether Kermit should automatically enter Tektronix graphics mode upon
receipt of special escape sequences from the host. ENABLEd by default.

SET TERMINAL TIMESLICE-RELEASE {ENABLE, DISABLE} = ENABLE
ENABLE lets Kermit release a cpu time slice to mulitasking systems DESQview,
Windows, OS/2, etc, when there is no activity.

SET TERMINAL UNDERSCORE
Lets you select the fore- and background colors for underscore simulation
on color monitors. Syntax same as SET TERM COLOR.

SET TERMINAL UPSS {DEC-MCS, LATIN1}
Select which character set to designate as your VT220/VT320 User Preferred
Supplemental Set.

SET TERMINAL VIDEO-WRITING {DIRECT, BIOS} = DEFAULT
Whether screen updates during emulation should be performed by going DIRECT
to the video adapter, or should proceed through the system's video BIOS.
DIRECT is faster. Use BIOS if you you have trouble with DIRECT or you have
a BIOS-level speech device, etc. Applies to text mode only.

SET TERMINAL VIDEO-CHANGE {ENABLED, DISABLED, DOS-ONLY} = DOS-ONLY
Control whether Kermit changes video modes (80 / 132 columns).

SET TERMINAL WIDTH {80, 132}
Put the video adapter into 80- or 132-column mode. If Kermit can do this
itself, it will. Otherwise it will try to run DOS batch program COLS80.BAT
or COLS132.BAT to do the job, which you must supply. They should contain
whatever commands change the screen width on your PC, e.g. MODE or VMODE.

SET TERMINAL WRAP {ON, OFF}
Whether to break overlong screen lines into multiple lines.

* LOCAL AREA NETWORKS

The SET PORT command tells Kermit which type of network connection you want to
use, and in some cases also the network host you want to communicate with.

SET PORT TCP/IP [ [ ] ]
[ {NEW, RESUME} ]
Connect to an IP host using Kermit's built-in TCP/IP. If the host is
omitted, the current TCP/IP session is continued; this lets you switch
to another type of connection and then back to your TCP/IP connection.
During a TCP/IP session, Kermit uses TELNET protocol to communicate with the
TELNET server on the remote host. The default is 23
(TELNET); you can optionally specify any other port except 25.

SET PORT TCP/IP
Resumes given session, 1 through 6.

SET PORT TCP/IP * [ ]
Sets Kermit up as a TCP/IP server, awaiting a connection from a TCP client.
After giving this command, use the SERVER to make the Kermit server
available on the network, or CONNECT to have an interactive "chat" session.

SET PORT BWTCP
Make a TCP/IP connection via Beame & Whiteside TCP/IP, which must be loaded
on your PC. An IP address (not hostname) is required.

SET PORT NETBIOS
Kermit awaits NETBIOS connections from other PCs on the net. Also used with
AT&T StarLAN/StarGROUP.

SET PORT NETBIOS
Tell Kermit to connect to another PC on the NETBIOS network. Also for
AT&T StarLAN/StarGroup.

SET NETBIOS-NAME
Tell Kermit to set your PC's Netbios node name to . Kermit appends
".K" to the end of the name if you don't include it yourself.

SET PORT NOVELL
For using Novell network asynchronous communication servers (NASI/NACS).

SET PORT DECNET [ []]
For PATHWORKS LAT or CTERM connections. Specify node to connect to, LAT
password if required.

SET PORT SUPERLAT
Meridian Technology SuperLAT network interface - similar to SET PORT DECNET.

SET PORT UB-NET1
For Ungermann-Bass Net/One.

SET PORT OPENNET []
For Intel OpenNET, similar to NETBIOS.

SET PORT 3COM
For using 3COM BAPI asynchronous communication server, BRIDGE PCS or 3+OPEN
TCP versions.

SET PORT EBIOS {1, 2, 3, 4} [ name-of-server-port ]
Use Extended BIOS for communication with EBIOS-based asynchronous
communication servers like IBM's LANACS.

SET PORT TELAPI
Connect to an Internet TCP/IP host through Novell LAN Workplace for DOS.

SET PORT TES
Connect to a VMS system that is running Netware/VMS.

SET PORT {BIOS1, BIOS2, BIOS3, BIOS4}
For using any network that operates through a BIOS Int 14h interceptor.

HANGUP
Close network connection, terminate network session.

* CONNECT-MODE ESCAPE-LEVEL COMMANDS

During terminal emulation, you may type Ctrl-] (hold down Ctrl and press the
rightbracket key) followed by any of the following characters (on German
keyboards, hold down Strg and press +):

? Help -- prints the available escape-level commands
0 (the digit zero) Transmit a NUL (ASCII 0)
A Send TELNET Are You There
B (also Alt-B) Transmit a BREAK signal
C (also Alt-X) Return to Kermit prompt level, keep connection open
F (also Ctrl-End) File the current text screen in the screen dump file
H Hangup the phone or network connection
I Send TELNET Interrupt Process
L Transmit a Long Break (1.8 seconds)
M Toggle the mode line, i.e. turn it off if it is on & vice versa
P Push to DOS; get back to CONNECT by typing EXIT at the DOS prompt
Q Temporarily quit logging the remote session
R Resume logging the remote session
S (also Alt-S) Show the status of the connection
^] (or whatever you have set the escape character to be)
Typing the escape character twice sends one copy of it to the host

* SET TRANSLATION INPUT COMMAND

SET TRANSLATION ON
SET TRANSLATION INPUT

Specify that when a character that would normally be translated to
arrives at the communication port during terminal emulation, it should be
translated into before display on the screen. Translations set up in
this way take effect only after you give the command SET TRANSLATION INPUT ON.

* SET KEY COMMAND

SET KEY

Assign to the key whose scan code is given. When you press the key or
key combination that corresponds to the scan code during terminal emulation,
the is translated according to SET TERM CHARACTER-SET and then
transmitted out the communication port. If you don't know the scan code, type
SET KEY alone on a line, then press the desired key or key combination when
prompted, then enter the definition. The can be a single character, a
text string (which may contain backslash codes), or one or more Kermit verbs.

* COMMONLY USED KERMIT KEYBOARD VERBS

The default key assignment is in parentheses.

\Kexit Exit from connect mode (Alt-x, Ctrl-]c)
\Kbreak Send a BREAK signal (Alt-b, Ctrl-]b)
\Kcompose Introduce a Compose-Key sequence
\Kdos Push to DOS (Ctrl-]p)
\Kdump Dump current screen to file (Ctrl-End on numeric keypad)
\Khangup Hangup communication port connection (Ctrl-]h)
\Kignore Ignore this key
\Klfone Scroll left one column
\Klfpage Scroll left 40 columns
\Klogoff Stop session logging (Ctrl-]q)
\Klogon Resume session logging (Ctrl-]r)
\Knethold Enter (non-TCP/IP) network shell (Alt-z)
\Knextsession Toggle to next TCP/IP session, if any (Alt-n)
\Kmodeline Toggle mode line off/on++ (keypad minus)
\Kprtscn Print current screen (Print Screen)
\Kreset Reset terminal emulator (Alt-=)
\Krtone Scroll right one column
\Krtpage Scroll right one 40 columns
\Ktermtype Switch between text and graphics screens (Alt-minus)
\Kupscn Roll back screen (PgUp)
\Kupone Roll back screen one line (Ctrl-PgUp)
\Kdnscn Roll screen forward (PgDn)
\Kdnone Roll screen forward one line (Ctrl-PgDn)
\Knextsession Go to next TCP session
{\Kxxxx} Execute macro named xxxx (xxxx can be any name)

Use SET KEY to assign or reassign these verbs to the keys of your choice.
Example: "SET KEY \315 \Kexit" puts \Kexit on the F1 key.

SET KEY CLEAR Restore all Kermit's default key assignments.
SET KEY ON Use BIOS to read keystrokes (scan codes).
SET KEY OFF Use DOS rather than BIOS to read keystrokes.
SET KEY LK Use external DEC LK250 keyboard driver (if loaded).

* PRINTER CONTROL

During terminal emulation, Kermit controls the printer according to escape
sequences received from the host, including the following for VT102/220/320
emulation:

ESC [ 5 i Begin transparent print (send port characters to printer)
ESC [ 4 i End transparent print
ESC [ ? 5 i Begin autoprint (send screen lines to printer)
ESC [ ? 4 i End autoprint

Kermit also lets you use Ctrl-Print Screen to turn the printer on and off
during terminal emulation. The following command affects all these operations:

SET PRINTER
Sends Connect mode printer material to the indicated file instead of to the
standard DOS printer name PRN; this is a "print to disk" option. SHOW LOG
displays the current filename (defaults to PRN).

If you press Print Screen (no Ctrl), DOS gets the request itself, Kermit never
sees it so the SET PRINTER command does not affect Print Screen.

* COMMANDS FOR TRANSFERRING FILES

Start a Kermit program on the remote computer, give it a "send", "receive",
or "server" command, escape back to MS-DOS Kermit, and give it one of the
following commands:

SEND []
Send files to remote Kermit receiver or server. Can abbreviate as S.

PSEND [ ]
Sends a file starting at the given byte position.

RESEND []
Resumes an interrupted binary-mode transfer from the point of interruption.

RECEIVE []
Wait for a file to arrive from the other Kermit program, which must
be given a SEND command. Can abbreviate as R.

GET
Ask a Kermit server to send the specified file(s). Use GET
to be prompted for remote and local names separately.

MAIL

Send the file as electronic mail to the address (if the remote Kermit
supports this feature).

* GETTING INFORMATION ABOUT FILE TRANSFER

STATISTICS
Display efficiency and other statistics about file transfers.

SHOW PROTOCOL
Display file transfer protocol-related parameter settings.

SHOW CONTROL
List file-transfer control-character prefixing.

SHOW FILE
Display file-related parameter settings

* COMMANDS FOR TALKING TO A SERVER

BYE
Shut down a remote Kermit server and log out its job

FINISH
Shut down a remote Kermit server, put it back at command level

GET
Ask a Kermit server to send the specified file(s)

SEND []
Send files to remote Kermit receiver or server

REMOTE ASSIGN
Tells the remote server to assign the given value to the given variable.

REMOTE CD [ []]
Tell remote server to change to named directory.

REMOTE DELETE
Tell remote server to delete the specified files.

REMOTE DIRECTORY []
Tell remote server to send directory listing for specified files.

REMOTE HELP
Ask the server to list the services it provides

REMOTE HOST command
Command for remote host in its own command language

REMOTE KERMIT command
Send a command to remote Kermit server in its own command language

REMOTE LOGIN user
Login to a remote Kermit server, separate prompts for password, etc.

REMOTE MESSAGE text
Send a one-line message to the remote Kermit server

REMOTE PRINT [ ]
Send the file to a remote server and ask the server to print it with the
specified options, if any.

REMOTE QUERY {KERMIT, SYSTEM, USER}
Tells the remote server to send the value of given type of variable
of the given name. MS-DOS Kermit displays it and also makes it available
in \v(query).

REMOTE SET
Tell remote server to set the specified parameter to the specified value.

REMOTE SPACE [directory]
Show disk space on remote host

REMOTE TYPE filespec
Display remote file(s)

REMOTE WHO
Display users logged on remote system

* COMMANDS FOR ACTING AS A SERVER

DISABLE
Disable various capabilities of the server (DISABLE ? for list)

ENABLE
Enable various capabilities of the server (ENABLE ? for list)

SET SERVER TIMEOUT
How often the server should send NAK packets while waiting for a command,
0 = never (default).

SET SERVER LOGIN
Set up a name and password which must be sent to the server (by REMOTE
LOGIN) before it will accept any other commands.

SHOW SERVER
Examine server-related parameters.

SERVER [{, }]
Act as a Kermit server, optionally for or until the given time. Default time
is forever (until BYE or FINISH received, or interrupted with Ctrl-C).

The MS-DOS Kermit server honors the following requests:

REMOTE ASSIGN REMOTE QUERY
SEND REMOTE CWD REMOTE PRINT
GET REMOTE DELETE REMOTE MESSAGE
FINISH REMOTE DIRECTORY REMOTE SPACE
BYE REMOTE HOST REMOTE TYPE
LOGOUT REMOTE KERMIT REMOTE SET

* INTERRUPTION COMMANDS WHILE A FILE TRANSFER IS IN PROGRESS

X or Ctrl-X: Stop sending the current file and go on to the next one, if any.
Z or Ctrl-Z: Stop sending this file, and don't send any further files.
E or Ctrl-E: Send Error packet to the remote Kermit.
C or Ctrl-C: Return to Kermit command level immediately.
Q or Ctrl-Q: Send a Ctrl-Q (Xon).
Enter key: Try to wake up a stuck file transfer.

* CHANGING FILE TRANSFER PARAMETERS

SET ATTRIBUTES {ON, OFF} = ON
Enable/Disable processing of file attribute packets.

SET ATTRIBUTES {DATE, LENGTH, TYPE, CHARACTER-SET} {ON, OFF} = ON
Enable/Disable processing of specific file attributes.

SET BLOCK-CHECK {1, 2, 3} = 1
Level of error checking, 1 by default, 3 is strongest.

SET BLOCK-CHECK BLANK-FREE-TWO
Like SET BLOCK-CHECK 2, but formats block check characters to never
include blanks.

SET CONTROL-CHARACTER UNPREFIXED {..., ALL}
Says you think it is safe to include the control character represented by
without prefixing in packets that Kermit sends. The is the
numeric ASCII code for a control character. See KERMIT.UPD.

SET CONTROL-CHARACTER PREFIXED {..., ALL}
Says that the given control character(s) must be prefixed in outbound Kermit
packets. By default, all control characters are prefixed.

SET REPEAT {COUNTS {ON, OFF}, PREFIX }
Turns repeat-count prefixing (run-length encoding) on and off, and
lets you select the repeat-count prefix.

SET DEBUG PACKETS
Display packets on screen during file transfer.

SET DEBUG OFF
Turn off display of packets.

SET DESTINATION {DISK, PRINTER, SCREEN} = DISK
Direct incoming files to the specified device.

SET FILE DISPLAY {SERIAL, REGULAR, QUIET} = REGULAR
Format of Kermit's file transfer display. Use SERIAL for hardcopy terminals,
Braille devices, speaking devices, etc. QUIET means no display at all (used
automatically in remote mode). Synonym: SET DISPLAY.

SET EOF {CTRL-Z, NOCTRL-Z} = NOCTRL-Z
Whether Ctrl-Z marks the end of a PC DOS text file.

SET FILE TYPE {TEXT, BINARY} = TEXT
TEXT implies record format conversion and character set translation. Use
BINARY to send or receive files with no conversaion at all.

SET FILE COLLISION {DISCARD, OVERWRITE, RENAME, ...}
What to do when a file arrives that has the same name as an existing file:
APPEND = Append to existing file
RENAME = Automatically give the arriving file a unique name (default).
OVERWRITE = Overwrite the existing file with the new file.
DISCARD = Reject any file that has the same name as an existing file.
UPDATE = Reject incoming file if it is not newer than existing file.

SET {SEND, RECEIVE} PATHNAMES {ON, OFF}
Whether to remove/ignore (OFF) or include/obey (ON) pathnames on
outgoing/incoming files. SEND is OFF and RECEIVE is ON by default.

SET FILE CHARACTER-SET {CP437, CP850, CP852, CP860, CP861, CP862, CP863,
CP865, CP866, SHIFT-JIS}
Tell Kermit which IBM PC code page to use when sending or receiving a text
file. Default is your current PC code page as DOS reports it to Kermit (but
watch out, DOS tends not to report code pages correctly). Kermit translates
between the current file character set and the transfer character set.
SHIFT-JIS is Code Page 932 for Japanese Kanji.

SET TRANSFER CHARACTER-SET {TRANSPARENT, LATIN1, LATIN2, CYRILLIC,
HEBREW, JAPANESE-EUC}
Tell Kermit the character set used in Kermit packets. TRANSPARENT, the
default, means no translation. LATINx is ISO Latin Alphabet x. CYRILLIC is
ISO 8859-5 Latin/Cyrillic, and can be used only with file character-set
CP866. HEBREW is ISO 8859-8 Latin/Hebrew. JAPANESE-EUC is for Japanese
Kanji and can be used only with FILE CHARACTER-SET SHIFT-JIS. Synonym: SET
XFER CHARACTER-SET.

SET TRANSFER LOCKING-SHIFT {OFF, ON, FORCED} = ON
If PARITY is not NONE, Kermit automatically uses a locking-shift technique
for transferring 8-bit more efficiently over the 7-bit connection if other
Kermit agrees. To turn off this feature, use OFF. To force the use of this
feature even when parity is NONE, use FORCED. Synonym: SET XFER ...

SET TRANSFER TRANSLATION {READABLE, INVERTIBLE} = READABLE
The default is READABLE, which optimizes character-set conversion for
"readability", rather than invertibility. INVERTIBLE gives a unique
translation for each character between the FILE CHARACTER-SET and the
TRANSFER CHARACTER-SET. Synonym: SET XFER ...

SET UNKNOWN-CHARACTER-SET {DISCARD, KEEP} = KEEP
What to do when a file arrives that has an unknown character set.

SET FILE WARNING {ON, OFF, NO-SUPERSEDE} = ON
Obsolete synomym for SET FILE COLLISION.

SET INCOMPLETE {KEEP, DISCARD} = KEEP
What to do with a file that does not arrive completely.

SET RETRY = 5
How many times to retransmit a particular packet before giving up.

SET TIMER {ON, OFF} = ON
Enable/Disable timeouts and retransmissions during file transfer.

SET WINDOW = 1
Number of sliding window packet slots. Improves transmission efficiency.

SET SEND (or RECEIVE)
START-OF-PACKET = 1 packet begin character, normally Ctrl-A
END-OF-PACKET = 13 packet end character, normally carriage return
PACKET-LENGTH = 94 packet length; 9024 max; > 94 for "long packets"
PAUSE = 0 Interpacket pause, milliseconds
TIMEOUT = 5 Timeout interval waiting for a packet, seconds
PADDING = 0 How many padding characters before each packet
PADCHAR = 0 Padding character to use
DOUBLE-CHAR Double packet character when sending.
IGNORE-CHAR Discard from packets when receiving.

Use SHOW FILE, SHOW PROTOCOL to examine current file transfer settings.

* COMMANDS FOR FILE TRANSFER WITHOUT ERROR CHECKING

Kermit can also transfer files or other information with remote computers,
services, or devices that do not support the Kermit file transfer protocol.
These methods provide no error detection or correction. No character-set
translation here. Use with caution.

TRANSMIT
Send a text file to the host as if you were typing it at the keyboard a line
at a time. Waits for linefeed (\10) to echo before sending next line. Uses
all current communication settings (parity, flow, etc). CRLF is sent as CR
only unless SET TRANSMIT LINE-FEEDS ON. Empty lines are sent as pairs of
CRs (or CRLFS) unless SET TRANSMIT FILL is used.

SET TRANSMIT
Various parameters used to control TRANSMIT command.
FILL-EMPTY-LINE {NONE, SPACE, }
LINE-FEEDS-SENT {ON, OFF}
PAUSE - pause milliseconds after sending each line.
PROMPT - character to wait for before sending next line (= \10)

LOG SESSION
Capture a remote file, which you must TYPE, into the named file
(SESSION.LOG by default). Use \Klogoff and \Klogon keyboard verbs to
stop and restart logging (Ctrl-]q, Ctrl-]r).

CLOSE SESSION
Stop capturing and close the session log file.

* COMMANDS FOR RECORDING THINGS

LOG TRANSACTION [] = TRANSACT.LOG
Log file transfer names, times, etc, in given file.

LOG SESSION [] = SESSION.LOG
Record terminal session in given file.
Use REPLAY to view the log.

LOG PACKETS [] = PACKET.LOG
Record file transfer packets in given file.

WRITE {FILE, PACKET, SESSION, TRANSACTION, SCREEN} []
Write the text to the specified log file or to the screen. Text may contain
backslash codes, variables, etc. Kermit does not supply line terminators
so include \13\10 at the end of the text if you want the text to end in CRLF.

CLOSE {PACKET, SESSION, TRANSACTION, READ, WRITE, ALL}
Close specified log file and stop logging.

SHOW LOG
Display names and status of log files.

Ctrl-]f (while in Connect mode)
Dump current text screen into a file (even if graphics screen is showing).

Ctrl-End (on numeric keypad, while in Connect mode)
Dump the current screen (text or graphics) into a file.

SET DUMP
Specify name of screen dump file for text screens (KERMIT.SCN by default).
Graphics screens are saved to TEKPLTnn.TIF.

* MACROS

DEFINE []
Defines a macro or variable called "" to have the given value. If
omitted, undefines the named macro or variable. When defining
command macros, should be a list of MS-DOS Kermit commands, separated
by commas. The definition is copied literally (backslash codes not
interpreted).

[DO] [ [ [ [...]]]]
Executes the macro called "", and assigns the parameters, if any, to
the variables \%1, \%2, \%3, etc, and sets the variable ARGC to the number of
parameters plus one (1 = no parameters, 2 = 1 parameter, etc). The variable
\%0 is assigned the name of the macro. These variables are available only
within the macro.

ASSIGN []
Like DEFINE, copies the current value of into the macro or variable,
but (unlike DEFINE) all variables in the are evaluated first.

SHOW MACRO []
Shows the definition of the specified macro or variable.

IF DEFINED
Executes the if the macro or variable name is defined.

IF = ARGC
Executes if ARGC is equal to (numeric constant or variable)

IF < ARGC
Executes if ARGC is less than

IF > ARGC
Executes if ARGC greater than

IF NOT > ARGC
Executes if ARGC less than or equal to

IF =, <, >
Can also be used with any numeric variables or constants, not just ARGC,
including the other predefined numeric variables, VERSION, COUNT, and
ERRORLEVEL, the built-in numeric variables like \v(ndate), \v(status), etc,
or any other variable (\%1, \%a) that has a numeric value. Use IF EQUAL to
compare character strings (see below).

* VARIABLES

\%0 is the name of the currently executing macro (if any). \%1 thru \%9 are
its parameters (arguments), created when the macro is invoked and destroyed
when it terminates. If a macro invokes another macro, a new set of arguments
is created and the old set is preserved.

\%a through \%z are global variables that can be modified or accessed in any
context. Created by DEFINE, ASSIGN, ASK, ASKQ, READ, GETC.

The following commands can be used for arithmetic on variables that have
numeric values:

INCREMENT [ ]
Adds , if given, to the value of the named variable. If no
is given, adds 1.

DECREMENT [ ]
Subtracts , if given, to the value of the named variable. If no
is given, subtracts 1.

Macro definitions can be used as variables too. DEFINE or ASSIGN the macro in
the normal way, but refer to it using \m(name), for example:

define phone-number 7654321
if not defined phone-number echo Phone number is is not defined!
echo The phone number is \m(phone-number).
dial \m(phone-number)

\$(xxx) is a DOS environment variable, e.g. \$(COMSPEC).

\v(xxx) is a built-in variable, where xxx is its name:
\v(argc) Argument count to current macro
\v(carrier) SET CARRIER setting
\v(charset) Code Page currently active, such as CP437
\v(cmdfile) Name of currently executing command file, if any
\v(console) ANSI if ANSI.SYS loaded, else NONE
\v(count) Current SET COUNT value
\v(cmdlevel) Command level (for macros & TAKE files)
\v(cps) Characters per second, most recent file transfer
\v(date) Current date
\v(inidir) Full pathname of MSKERMIT.INI's directory
\v(ndate) Current date, numeric format
\v(directory) Current directory
\v(dosversion) Numeric DOS version, e.g. 500 for 5.00
\v(errorlevel) ERRORLEVEL value
\v(inpath) Drive:\path\ resulting from last IF INPATH command
\v(input) INPUT buffer
\v(keyboard) Keyboard type, e.g. 88, 101
\v(line) Synonym for \v(port)
\v(monitor) Monitor type - COLOR, MONO
\v(parity) Current SET PARITY setting
\v(platform) IBM-PC (or other)
\v(port) Current SET PORT setting
\v(program) MS-DOS_KERMIT
\v(prompt) Current SET PROMPT setting
\v(query) Result of last REMOTE QUERY command, if not a file
\v(session) Current TCP/IP session number (1 through 6)
\v(tcpip_status) Status of current TCP/IP session
\v(space) Free space on current disk, bytes
\v(speed) Current SET SPEED setting
\v(startup) Disk:\Directory\ from which Kermit was started
\v(status) Status of most recent command, 0 = success
\v(sysid) System identification in Kermit packets (U8)
\v(system) MS-DOS
\v(terminal) Current SET TERMINAL TYPE setting
\v(time) Current time
\v(ntime) Current time, numeric (seconds since midnight)
\v(version) MS-DOS Kermit numeric version number, e.g. 314

\fname(...) is a built-in function:
\Fcharacter(number) Character whose numeric value is given
\Fcode(character) Numeric code for the character
\Fcontents(variable) Contents of variable or macro
\Fdate(filename) Creation date of given file
\Fdefinition(macro) Definition of given macro
\Ffiles(filespec) Number of files that match the filespec
\Findex(s1,s2,pos) Position of string s1 in s2 starting at given position
\Flength(string) Length of given string
\Fliteral(string) String, literally, unevaluated
\Flower(string) String with uppercase letters lowercased
\Flpad(string,len,char) String left padded to given length with char
\Fmaximum(n1,n2) Maximum of two numbers
\Fminimum(n1,n2) Minimum of two numbers
\Fnextfile() Next file from \Ffiles() list
\Frepeat(string,num) num repetitions of string
\Freverse(string) String, reversed left to right
\Fright(string,num) Rightmost num characters of string
\Frpad(string,len,char) String right-padded to given length with char
\Fsize(file) Size (bytes) of given file
\Fsubstr(string,pos,length) Substring of string, start position, length
\Fupper(string) String with lowercase letters uppercased

* SCRIPT COMMANDS

These commands are used (in conjunction with other Kermit commands) for
carrying out an automated dialog with a remote computer.

APC
Like OUTPUT (see below) but sends the text enclosed in an APC escape
sequence. See KERMIT.UPD.

ASK
Print the on the screen, assign what user types to the .

ASKQ
Like ASK, but do not echo what user types.

CHECK {TCP/IP, NETWORKS, GRAPHICS, TERMINALS}
Tests if conditional-build items are present.

GETC
Like ASK, but gets a single character.

GETOK
Like ASK, but asks a Yes or No question. Succeeds if answer is Yes,
fails if answer is No, otherwise reprompts.

OUTPUT
Send the out the communications port. May include backslash
codes, variables, etc, plus the special items \B to send a BREAK and
\L to send a Long BREAK.

SET OUTPUT PACING
How many milliseconds (thousands of a second) to pause between each
character in the OUTPUT string.

INPUT []
Wait up to secs for to arrive at communications port.
If it arrives within interval, set SUCCESS, otherwise FAILURE. String may
contain backslash codes.

SET INPUT CASE {IGNORE, OBSERVE} = IGNORE
Whether alphabet case should matter in searching for INPUT string.

SET INPUT DEFAULT-TIMEOUT = 1
Timeout interval to use if none given in INPUT command.

SET INPUT ECHO {ON, OFF} = ON
Whether to display characters read by INPUT command on the screen.

SET INPUT TIMEOUT-ACTION {PROCEED, QUIT} = PROCEED
PROCEED means set SUCCESS or FAILURE and go on to next statement in macro
definition or TAKE file. QUIT means to quit from current macro or TAKE
file immediately upon failure.

IF SUCCESS
Execute the if the preceding command succeeded.

IF FAILURE
Execute the if the preceding command failed.

PAUSE
Do nothing for specified number of seconds, or until any character is typed
at the keyboard. Communications i/o is active.

MPAUSE
Like PAUSE, but number is milliseconds rather than seconds.

SLEEP
Like PAUSE, but does not sample the communications channel.

WAIT [] [CD] [CTS] [DSR] [RI]
Wait (seconds or until time hh:mm:ss) for specified modem signals.

CLEAR [ {INPUT-BUFFER, DEVICE-BUFFER, BOTH} ] = BOTH
CLEAR INPUT clears the INPUT/REINPUT command buffer (characters that have
already been read by Kermit's INPUT command). CLEAR DEVICE clears the
communication device buffer (characters that have not yet been read by
by Kermit), CLEAR BOTH clears both buffers.

STOP
Return immediately from current macro or TAKE file to top level.

STOP [ ] [ ]
Return immdediately to top level, using the , if specified, as the
SUCCESS / FAILURE code, and setting the value of \v(status) to that number.
If the omitted, the SUCCESS / FAILURE status of the previous
command is retained and \v(status) is not changed. If the optional
is given, it is printed.

END
Return from current macro or TAKE file to the macro or TAKE file which
invoked it, or if none, to the MS-Kermit> prompt. Synonym: POP.

END [ number ] [ text ]
Return from current macro or TAKE file to the macro or TAKE file which
invoked it, or if none, to top level. Otherwise, identical to STOP.
Synonym: POP.

GOTO

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