Date: Fri, 28 Jul 2000 12:21:22 -0400 (EDT) From: Vivek Khera <khera@kciLink.com> To: questions@FreeBSD.ORG Subject: Re: FreeBSD Console Message-ID: <14721.45826.622357.504546@onceler.kcilink.com> In-Reply-To: <Pine.BSF.4.10.10007281126540.56940-100000@markl.com> References: <20000728100018.A12519@edgemaster.zombie.org> <Pine.BSF.4.10.10007281126540.56940-100000@markl.com>
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>>>>> "DH" == Damon Hammis <squirrel@hammis.com> writes:
DH> I have TERM=vt100 set in the .profiles of my remote machines for that same
DH> problem. I run KDE on 4.0-STABLE and connect to Sun, HP, and IBM boxes
DH> all day long. Setting the envrionment variable on the remote side at
DH> login seems to work well for me, as I've had no problems with more, vi, or
DH> any other programs since.
If you're within X, then terminal type xterm should be recognized by
HP, Sun, and IBM boxes. No need to fake it out with vt100.
I haven't dealt with FreeBSD console remote logins, but I have for
other systems. I have this mess in my .login file to deal with
funkified terminal definitions. If I can't figure it out, I punt with
some aliases to let me choose which term type I've got.
# for dial-in logins. tcsh doesn't like type "modem"
if ( $term == modem ) then
set term = dumb
stty 9600 # gross assumption, but needed for curses to work efficiently
endif
# linux term type not defined either
if ( $term == linux ) then
set term = vt100
endif
# set up aliases to set terminal types only if it is not yet known.
if ( $term == unknown || $term == network || $term == dumb ) then
alias cons25 'set term=cons25;unterm'
alias vt100 'set term=vt100;unterm'
alias vt102 'set term=vt102;unterm'
alias unterm 'unalias vt100 vt102 cons25 unterm'
endif
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