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WY60(1)								       WY60(1)

NAME
       wy60 - curses based emulator for the Wyse 60™ terminal

SYNOPSIS
       wy60   [ -c | --command command ]   [ -h | --help ]   [ -j | --job-con‐
	      trol { on | off } ] [ -l | --login ] [ -o | --option key=value ]
	      [ -t | --term terminal ]	[ -v | --version ]  [ -- ] shell argu‐
	      ments

DESCRIPTION
       The wy60 utility program invokes a new shell or command and adjusts the
       $TERM  environment  variable  to	 have a value of wyse60.  All commands
       executed within this shell or any of its child processes	 automatically
       have  their terminal escape sequences translated to be processed by the
       terminal that wy60 was invoked from.

       Unless a different command was requested, the user's default  shell  as
       determined  by the value of the $SHELL environment variable is invoked.
       If the environment variable has not been set, then the  default	system
       shell /bin/sh is used instead. This value can be overridden in the con‐
       figuration file.

OPTIONS
       Parameters are parsed until the first unknown parameter is encountered,
       or  until  the special parameter -- is found. All the following parame‐
       ters are passed on to the inferior shell or to the user specified  com‐
       mand.  Check the manual page for sh(1) for a detailed list of options.

       The  following  parameters are directly understood by wy60 and will not
       be forwarded to any child process  unless  they	appear	after  the  --
       marker or after another set of unknown parameters:

       -c | --command command
	    Rather  than invoking the user's shell, run the specified command,
	    instead.

       -h | --help
	    Display a brief usage  message  showing  the  valid	 command  line
	    parameters.

       -j | --job-control { on | off }
	    Enable  or	disable	 job control. If the parent process is a shell
	    that supports job control then wy60 can enable this capability for
	    its children by forking an additional process monitoring the chil‐
	    dren. By default, this option is enabled.

       -l | --login
	    Invoke the inferior shell as  a  login  shell.  This  is  done  by
	    prepending a minus character to the application name. This conven‐
	    tion is supported by all shells but probably gets ignored by  most
	    other applications. The --login parameter is ignored if the --com‐
	    mand parameter has also been given.

	    As a special case, it is possible to make wy60  a  user's  default
	    login  shell.  To  do  so, wy60 must be entered into the shells(5)
	    file and you must call chsh(1) to change the user's default shell.
	    If	the  emulator  detects	that  it is invoked as a wrapper for a
	    shell, it ignores all command  line	 parameters.  It  then	resets
	    $SHELL  to	the  value  specified  in the configuration file or to
	    /bin/sh and launches that shell passing all	 the  parameters  that
	    were given to wy60.

       -o | --option key=value
	    All	 of  the configuration variables listed later in this document
	    can also be overriden on the command line. The syntax is identical
	    to the one used in the configuration files.

	    When  using	 this  option,	it  might  be  neccessary to quote the
	    key/value  pair  to	 prevent  the  shell  from  expanding	escape
	    sequences.

       -t | --term terminal
	    Override  the  value  of  the  $TERM environment variable. If this
	    parameter is not present, then a default of wyse60	will  be  used
	    for the value that is passed to the inferior shell.

       -v | --version
	    Display the version number of the program and the date when it was
	    compiled.

       --   All parameters following this argument will be literally passed to
	    the inferior shell.

EXAMPLES
       wy60 If invoked without parameters, an interactive shell is invoked.

       wy60 -c emacs -nw README
	    The	 -c  parameter	can  be used to directly invoke an interactive
	    application that should run in an emulated environment. The emula‐
	    tor will terminate when the invoked application has quit.

       wy60 -c infocmp
	    use infocmp(1M) to verify that the terminfo(5) database has appro‐
	    priate entries for the emulated wyse60 terminal.

CONFIGURATION FILES
       Some of the execution parameters can be controlled  through  configura‐
       tion  files.  Every  user  can  have  a	private	 configuration file in
       $HOME/.wy60rc that  overrides  any  system-wide	settings.  The	system
       administrator  can also set global parameters in /usr/local/etc/wy60.rc
       or in /etc/wy60.rc.

       All configuration files are in plain ASCII format. Comments are	intro‐
       duced  by  the hash mark # character and extend to the end of the line.
       Blank lines are ignored. All lines are of the form  variable  =	value.
       Variable	 names	are case insensitive. Leading and trailing white space
       for both the variables and the values is stripped prior to  processing.
       Non ASCII characters have to be escaped:

       \ooo  Up	 to  three  octal digits can be used to specify a character in
	     the range \001 through \177.

       \xXX  Up to two hexadecimal digits can be used to specify  a  character
	     in the range \x01 through \xFF.

       \a    The BEL character (ASCII 7).

       \b    The BS character (ASCII 8).

       \e    The ESC character (ASCII 27).

       \f    The FF character (ASCII 12).

       \n    The NL character (ASCII 10).

       \r    The CR character (ASCII 13).

       \t    The TAB character (ASCII 9).

       \v    The VT character (ASCII 11).

       Please  note  that continuation lines are not supported and that is not
       possible to input a NUL character (ASCII 0).

       The configuration file supports the following parameters:

       IDENTIFIER
		 The terminal identifier string that is reported when  an  ENQ
		 (ASCII 5) is received, can be overridden by setting the IDEN‐
		 TIFIER configuration variable. If this	 option	 is  not  set,
		 then the emulator replies with an ACK (ASCII 6).

       PRINTCOMMAND
		 Programs can print to a local printer by sending escape codes
		 to wy60.  If this variable is set to "auto"  then  wy60  will
		 try  to  print to either lp(1) or to lpr(1).  Otherwise, this
		 variable should contain the name of a script that can	accept
		 data on its standard input.

       RESIZE	 If  you want to use an external script to resize the console,
		 then you can specify the absolute path to this script by set‐
		 ting  the  RESIZE configuration variable. For example, if you
		 have SVGATextMode(8) installed and you want to run wy60  from
		 the  Linux  text  console,  then you might try using a script
		 such as this one:

		 #!/bin/sh
		 PATH=/usr/local/bin:/usr/local/sbin:/usr/bin:/usr/sbin:/bin:/sbin
		 egrep '.+' /proc/fb >&2 && exit 0
		 (tty <&3 | egrep '^/dev/tty[0-9]*$' >&2) 3<&1
		 if test "$?" -eq 0; then
		   SVGATextMode "$1x$2"	  <&1 >&2 ||
		   SVGATextMode "$1x$2x9" <&1 >&2 ||
		   SVGATextMode "$1x$2x8" <&1 >&2
		 fi
		 exit 0
		 Make  sure  that  SVGATextMode(8)  understands	 these	modes:
		 80x24, 80x25, 80x42, 80x43, 132x24, 132x25, 132x42, 132x43.

       SHELL	 If neither a command has been passed on the command line, nor
		 the user's $SHELL environment variable was set, then use this
		 variable  to  determine the default shell. If the variable is
		 not set, then a value of /bin/sh is used instead.

       TERM	 If no terminal type has been specified on the	command	 line,
		 the  program  defaults	 to wyse60.  This default value can by
		 overridden by setting the TERM configuration variable.

       WRITEPROTECT
		 The default attribute for indicating  write-protect  mode  is
		 REVERSE.   This  value	 can  be  overridden  by  setting  the
		 WRITEPROTECT configuration variable to one of	these  values:
		 NORMAL, BLANK, BLINK, REVERSE, UNDERSCORE, DIM.	   The
		 attributes can be combined with each other by listing	multi‐
		 ple in the same line.

       All the other variables specify character sequences that should be sent
       whenever the user presses a function key. The following table lists the
       variable	 name,	the  default  value,  and the terminfo(5) name for the
       function key.

	      Variable Name	  Default Key Sequence	 Terminfo Name
	      A1					 ka1
	      A3					 ka3
	      B2					 kb2

	      C1					 kc1
	      C3					 kc2
	      Backspace		  \b			 kbs
	      Backtab		  \eI			 kcbt
	      Begin					 kbeg
	      Cancel					 kcan
	      Clear					 kclr
	      Clear All Tabs				 ktbc
	      Clear Tab					 kctab
	      Close					 kclo
	      Command					 kcmd
	      Copy					 kcpy
	      Create					 kcrt
	      Delete		  \eW			 kdch1
	      Delete Line	  \eR			 kdl1
	      Down		  \n			 kcud1
	      End		  \eT			 kend
	      End Of Line	  \eY			 kel
	      End Of Screen	  \eT			 ked
	      Enter		  \e7			 kent
	      Exit					 kext
	      Exit Insert Mode				 krmir
	      Find					 kfnd
	      Help					 khlp
	      Home		  \x1E			 khome
	      Insert		  \eE			 kich1
	      Insert Line	  \eQ			 kil1
	      Left		  \b			 kcub1
	      Lower Left				 kll
	      Mark					 kmrk
	      Message					 kmsg
	      Move					 kmov
	      Next		  \eK			 knxt
	      Open					 kopn
	      Options					 kopt
	      Page Down		  \eK			 knp
	      Page Up		  \eJ			 kpp
	      Previous		  \eJ			 kprv
	      Print		  \eP			 kprt
	      Redo					 krdo
	      Reference					 kref
	      Refresh					 krfr
	      Replace		  \er			 krpl
	      Restart					 krst
	      Resume					 kres
	      Right		  \f			 kcuf1
	      Save					 ksav
	      Scroll Down				 kind
	      Scroll Up					 kri
	      Select					 kslt
	      Set Tab					 khts
	      Suspend		  \x1A			 kspd
	      Undo					 kund
	      Up		  \v			 kcuu1
	      Shift Begin				 kBEG
	      Shift Cancel				 kCAN
	      Shift Command				 kCMD
	      Shift Copy				 kCPY
	      Shift Create				 kCRT
	      Shift Delete	  \eW			 kDC
	      Shift Delete Line	  \eR			 kDL
	      Shift End		  \eT			 kEND
	      Shift End Of Line	  \eT			 kEOL
	      Shift Exit				 kEXT
	      Shift Find				 kFND
	      Shift Help				 kHLP

	      Shift Home	  \e{			 kHOM
	      Shift Insert	  \eQ			 kIC
	      Shift Left	  \b			 kLFT
	      Shift Message				 kMSG
	      Shift Move				 kMOV
	      Shift Next	  \eK			 kNXT
	      Shift Options				 kOPT
	      Shift Previous	  \eJ			 kPRV
	      Shift Print	  \eP			 kPRT
	      Shift Redo				 kRDO
	      Shift Replace	  \er			 kRPL
	      Shift Resume				 kRES
	      Shift Right	  \f			 kRIT
	      Shift Save				 kSAV
	      Shift Suspend				 kSPD
	      Shift Undo				 kUND
	      F0					 kf0
	      F1		  \001@\r		 kf1
	      F2		  \001A\r		 kf2
	      F3		  \001B\r		 kf3
	      F4		  \001C\r		 kf4
	      F5		  \001D\r		 kf5
	      F6		  \001E\r		 kf6
	      F7		  \001F\r		 kf7
	      F8		  \001G\r		 kf8
	      F9		  \001H\r		 kf9
	      F10		  \001I\r		 kf10
	      F11		  \001J\r		 kf11
	      F12		  \001K\r		 kf12
	      F13		  \001`\r		 kf13
	      F14		  \001a\r		 kf14
	      F15		  \001b\r		 kf15
	      F16		  \001c\r		 kf16
	      F17		  \001d\r		 kf17
	      F18		  \001e\r		 kf18
	      F19		  \001f\r		 kf19
	      F20		  \001g\r		 kf20
	      F21		  \001h\r		 kf21
	      F22		  \001i\r		 kf22
	      F23		  \001j\r		 kf23
	      F24		  \001k\r		 kf24
	      F25		  \001L\r		 kf25
	      F26		  \001M\r		 kf26
	      F27		  \001N\r		 kf27
	      F28		  \001O\r		 kf28
	      F29		  \001l\r		 kf29
	      F30		  \001m\r		 kf30
	      F31		  \001n\r		 kf31
	      F32		  \001o\r		 kf32
	      F33					 kf33
	      F34					 kf34
	      F35					 kf35
	      F36					 kf36
	      F37					 kf37
	      F38					 kf38
	      F39					 kf39
	      F40					 kf40
	      F41					 kf41
	      F42					 kf42
	      F43					 kf43
	      F44					 kf44
	      F45					 kf45
	      F46					 kf46
	      F47					 kf47
	      F48					 kf48
	      F49					 kf49

	      F50					 kf50
	      F51					 kf51
	      F52					 kf52
	      F53					 kf53
	      F54					 kf54
	      F55					 kf55
	      F56					 kf56
	      F57					 kf57
	      F58					 kf58
	      F59					 kf59
	      F60					 kf60
	      F61					 kf61
	      F62					 kf62
	      F63					 kf63
	      Alt a		  \ea
	      Alt b		  \eb
	      Alt c		  \ec
	      Alt d		  \ed
	      Alt e		  \ee
	      Alt f		  \ef
	      Alt g		  \eg
	      Alt h		  \eh
	      Alt i		  \ei
	      Alt j		  \ej
	      Alt k		  \ek
	      Alt l		  \el
	      Alt m		  \em
	      Alt n		  \en
	      Alt o		  \eo
	      Alt p		  \ep
	      Alt q		  \eq
	      Alt r		  \er
	      Alt s		  \es
	      Alt t		  \et
	      Alt u		  \eu
	      Alt v		  \ev
	      Alt w		  \ew
	      Alt x		  \ex
	      Alt y		  \ey
	      Alt z		  \ez
	      Alt A		  \eA
	      Alt B		  \eB
	      Alt C		  \eC
	      Alt D		  \eD
	      Alt E		  \eE
	      Alt F		  \eF
	      Alt G		  \eG
	      Alt H		  \eH
	      Alt I		  \eI
	      Alt J		  \eJ
	      Alt K		  \eK
	      Alt L		  \eL
	      Alt M		  \eM
	      Alt N		  \eN
	      Alt O		  \eO
	      Alt P		  \eP
	      Alt Q		  \eQ
	      Alt R		  \eR
	      Alt S		  \eS
	      Alt T		  \eT
	      Alt U		  \eU
	      Alt V		  \eV
	      Alt W		  \eW
	      Alt X		  \eX
	      Alt Y		  \eY
	      Alt Z		  \eZ

	      Alt 0		  \e0
	      Alt 1		  \e1
	      Alt 2		  \e2
	      Alt 3		  \e3
	      Alt 4		  \e4
	      Alt 5		  \e5
	      Alt 6		  \e6
	      Alt 7		  \e7
	      Alt 8		  \e8
	      Alt 9		  \e9
	      Alt Space		  \e\x20
	      Alt Exclamation	  \e!
	      Alt Double Quote	  \e"
	      Alt Pound		  \e#
	      Alt Dollar	  \e$
	      Alt Percent	  \e%
	      Alt Ampersand	  \e&
	      Alt Single Quote	  \e'
	      Alt Left Paren	  \e(
	      Alt Right Paren	  \e)
	      Alt Asterisk	  \e*
	      Alt Plus		  \e+
	      Alt Comma		  \e,
	      Alt Dash		  \e-
	      Alt Period	  \e.
	      Alt Slash		  \e/
	      Alt Colon		  \e:
	      Alt Semicolon	  \e;
	      Alt Less		  \e<
	      Alt Equals	  \e=
	      Alt Greater	  \e>
	      Alt Question	  \e?
	      Alt At		  \e@
	      Alt Left Bracket	  \e[
	      Alt Backslash	  \e\\
	      Alt Right Bracket	  \e]
	      Alt Circumflex	  \e^
	      Alt Underscore	  \e_
	      Alt Backtick	  \e`
	      Alt Left Brace	  \e{
	      Alt Pipe		  \e|
	      Alt Right Brace	  \e}
	      Alt Tilde		  \e~
	      Alt Backspace	  \e\x7F

       Not all of these keys are necessarily available on all types of	termi‐
       nals.   This  is	 particularly true for the keys with the Alt modifier,
       which assume that the terminal precedes	all  characters	 with  an  ESC
       character if Alt is pressed.

EXIT STATUS
       0      Successful program execution.

       125    The inferior shell or command terminated abnormally.

       126    The emulator has been terminated by an unexpected signal.

       127    Some fatal error prevented or aborted the execution of wy60.

       Other  The inferior shell or command returned a non-zero exit status.

DIAGNOSTICS
       The most common cause for the emulator to fail is the $TERM environment
       variable not being set or the terminal  having  insufficient  capabili‐
       ties. If this happens, try using a more powerful terminal type and also
       use infocmp(1M) to verify that your terminfo(5) database is  configured
       correctly.

       You might also see an error message saying that the terminal size could
       not be determined.  wy60 requires that the terminal settings have  been
       configured  properly  prior to invoking the emulator. This usually hap‐
       pens at the time when you log into the system, but you can also	adjust
       the values by calling stty(1).

       If  the emulator complains that it cannot launch the child process then
       verify that $SHELL is set and points to a valid shell.

FILES
       $HOME/.wy60rc	       Per-user configuration settings.

       /usr/local/etc/wy60.rc  System-wide configuration settings.

       /etc/wy60.rc	       System-wide configuration settings  (this  file
			       must be created manually and does not get over‐
			       written when upgrading wy60).

       /usr/share/terminfo/?/* Files containing terminal descriptions.

ENVIRONMENT
       The $TERM environment variable must be set for the emulator to work. If
       the  $SHELL  environment	 variable  is  set, its value will be used for
       launching the inferior shell. Otherwise a  default  filename  is	 taken
       from the configuration files or /bin/sh is used.

       The emulator sets the $TERM, $COLUMNS, and $LINES environment variables
       for its child processes.

SEE ALSO
       chsh(1), infocmp(1M), lp(1), lpr(1), sh(1), shells(5),  stty(1),	 SVGA‐
       TextMode(8), terminfo(5), tput(1), xterm(1).

SECURITY
       The  program  can be executed with normal user privileges. As such, the
       amount of damage that a malicious application could cause is limited to
       the  user's  account. To the best of the author's knowledge the current
       version of wy60 does not have any security  issues,  but	 common	 sense
       should still be used whenever running any untrusted software within the
       emulator.

AUTHOR
       Copyright     (C)     2001,	2002	  by	  Markus      Gutschke
       <markus+wy60@wy60.gutschke.com>.

       This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
       under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published  by  the
       Free  Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your
       option) any later version.

       This program is distributed in the hope that it	will  be  useful,  but
       WITHOUT	ANY  WARRANTY;	without	 even  the  implied  warranty  of MER‐
       CHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the GNU  General
       Public License for more details.

       You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along
       with this program; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc.,
       59 Temple Place, Suite 330, Boston, MA  02111-1307  USA

MAILING LIST
       There  is a low-traffic mailing list for the discussion of this program
       at		    http://gutschke.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/Wy60.
       ⟨http://gutschke.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/Wy60⟩

TRADEMARKS
       Wyse  and Wyse 60 are trademarks or registered trademarks of Wyse Tech‐
       nology, Inc.

BUGS
       The emulator attempts to seamlessly switch to  wyse60  emulation.  This
       requires the ability to query the host terminal for its cursor position
       at the time when the emulator is started. As terminfo(5) does not  pro‐
       vide  this  capability,	wy60  can only support seamless switching on a
       small number of well known terminal types. If it does not recognize the
       terminal type, then the screen will be cleared at startup.

       The  escape sequences for setting the screen size can only be processed
       if the host terminal supports dynamic resizing under  program  control.
       Currently,  xterm(1) appears to be the only program that has this capa‐
       bility.

       Function keys work only if the host terminal generates distinct charac‐
       ter  sequences  for  each  of them and if the terminfo(5) entry for the
       host terminal is correct. Frequently one or the other is not  the  case
       which limits the usability of the emulator. Testing has shown, that the
       most correct implementation appears to be available in very recent ver‐
       sions of xterm(1).

       The current version of the emulator supports only a small subset of the
       full features offered by a real	Wyse  60™  terminal.  Several  of  the
       advanced features are missing. Most notably this means that there is no
       support for reprogrammable function keys (but you can use the  configu‐
       ration  file  to	 assign	 strings to individual keys) or for the status
       bar. Frequently, the supported set of escape sequences is sufficient to
       run  an	application  within the emulated environment, but if that does
       not work, you should consider either filing a detailed bug report  with
       the author or you should switch to using a hardware terminal.

				 Feb 02, 2007			       WY60(1)
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