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jhpyle/mTCP

This is an unofficial fork of the Telnet application from Michael B. Brutman's mTCP. It adds:

The binary is available as the TELNET.EXE file and the TELNETNU.EXE file, which are in the bin directory. The TELNETNU.EXE file is the same as TELNET.EXE except that it disables Unicode translation.

The fork is based on the mTCP-src_2022-07-01.zip version of mTCP.

The changes

The purpose of this repository is to expand the ansi terminal emulation capabilities of mTCP's Telnet application. Where a feature is not supported by the ansi standard, ideas are borrowed from the xterm standard.

Keyboard

The following keys are transmitted:

  • Function keys F1-F12;
  • Insert, Delete, Home, End, Page Up, Page Down;
  • Cursor keys;
  • Shift, Ctrl, Ctrl-shift, Alt, and Alt-Shift modifications of the above;
  • Tab, Ctrl-Tab, Shift-Tab;
  • Ctrl-Backspace;
  • Ctrl-Space; and
  • Ctrl-PrtScr.

In the official mTCP, Page Up and Page Down scroll are not passed through but are used for scrolling through the output history. In this version, that function is moved to the Alt-Page Up and Alt-Page Down keys (or Ctrl-Page Up and Ctrl-Page Dn if the Enhanced Keyboard is not available), and Page Up and Page Down are passed through to the server.

For compatibility with Emacs, all Alt-(key) combinations that are not used by the Telnet application are passed through as ESC-(key).

The Delete key is passed through as ESC [ 3 ~ instead of the default of character 127.

Some of the above keys are not available if your computer lacks support for the Enhanced Keyboard.

Mouse

Mouse support is available in two forms.

First, if the server sends back xterm DECSET signals to enable mouse tracking, mouse activity is transmitted to the server using xterm escape sequences. Emacs sends these sequences when xterm-mouse-mode is in use, and Vim sends them when set mouse=a is used. Midnight Commander provides mouse support if the -x switch is used to enable xterm mode.

Second, if the DECSET signals are not received, mouse activity does not result in escape sequences sent to the terminal, but the mouse can be used for copying and pasting. The controls are:

  • Left-click and drag to select a region;
  • Right-click to extend a selection;
  • Double-click to select a word;
  • Triple-click to select a line; and
  • Middle-click to paste the selection.

Clicking the left and right mouse buttons at the same time emulates the middle mouse button.

For mouse support to work, you may need to install a mouse driver (typically MOUSE.COM) before running TELNET.EXE or TELNETNU.EXE.

Unicode

When UTF-8 characters are received, they are translated if possible into one of the 256 characters that can be displayed in text mode. By default, Unicode characters are translated into Code Page 437. If no translation is available, a default character, Âż, is printed.

Unicode translation does not take place when sending outbound characters.

If you are connected to server that sends "extended ASCII" characters (codes greater than 127) with the expectation that your Telnet client will display them directly to video memory (e.g., as Code Page 437 character), TELNET.EXE will misinterpret these codes as the first byte of a Unicode sequence. Thus, you will get garbage on the screen. If you need to to connect to a server that sends "extended ASCII" characters, use TELNETNU.EXE.

The Code Page and the default unprintable character are configurable in the MTCP.CFG file using the directives TELNET_UTF, TELNET_CODEPAGE, and TELNET_UTF_DEFAULT. For example, the following excerpt demonstrates enabling Code Page 737 translation in place of the default Code Page 437, and setting the default character for unprintable Unicode sequences to the space (0x20).

TELNET_CODEPAGE 737
TELNET_UTF_DEFAULT 0x20
TELNET_UTF 737 0x0000 0x00
TELNET_UTF 737 0x0001 0x01
TELNET_UTF 737 0x0002 0x02
TELNET_UTF 737 0x0003 0x03
...
TELNET_UTF 737 0x00a0 0xff

There are complete example configurations in the config folder for Code Page 737, Code Page 775, Code Page 850, Code Page 852, Code Page 855, Code Page 857 Code Page 860, Code Page 861, Code Page 862, Code Page 863, Code Page 864, Code Page 865, Code Page 866, Code Page 869, and Code Page 874. A file is also included for Code Page 437 in case you want to customize the default translation.

You can copy and paste from these files into your MTCP.CFG file. The TELNET_CODEPAGE directive selects a code page, and any directives beginning with TELNET_UTF will be used to define the translations that are used. The format of each line is:

TELNET_UTF <CODE_PAGE_NUMBER> <UNICODE_NUMBER> <CHARACTER_NUMBER>

where CODE_PAGE_NUMBER is the number of the code page (e.g. 737), the UNICODE_NUMBER is a hexadecimal Unicode number (e.g., 0x266a for the musical note character) and CHARACTER_NUMBER is a hexadecimal 8-bit number representing the character on the screen (e.g., 0x0d for the musical note character). Note that the TELNET_CODEPAGE directive will not have any effect in the absence of TELNET_UTF lines that define the translations for the code page.

For best results, sort your TELNET_UTF lines by the Unicode numbers. If they are out of order, they will need to be sorted when Telnet starts, which extends the start time.

The TELNET_UTF_DEFAULT directive indicates which character should be printed if there is no translation for a particular Unicode character. The number must be written in hexadecimal. The default is 0xa8, which is the character Âż in Code Page 437.

If you switch between code pages, you can keep definitions for several code pages in your MTCP.CFG file and change only the TELNET_CODEPAGE line when you want to switch among them.

Depending on what applications you use and what content you view, you may wish to modify the standard Unicode translations, add additional characters, or add additional code pages.

The code page translations in the config folder were created using translation tables available on unicode.org.

Graphics

If a Sixel graphics escape sequence is encountered, the image will be downloaded and then displayed on the screen. It may take significant time for the image to download. While the image is downloading, the screen is unchanged; this is so that you can keep reading what is on the screen while you wait for the graphics image to appear. After viewing the image, you can then press any key to get back to text mode.

The supported graphics modes are:

Telnet will use the highest resolution graphics mode available, given the number of colors in the image. If there are two colors, it will use a two-color graphics mode. If there are four colors, it will use a 320x200x4 mode with the matching palette.

Telnet does not autodetect whether you have a Hercules Graphics Card, VGA, or MCGA. By default, it assumes you have VGA or MCGA and it will try to display images in the VGA/MCGA modes.

If your computer does not support the VGA/MCGA modes, you will need to add a line to your MTCP.CFG file to stop it from using those modes. If you have a CGA adapter, set the following:

TELNET_CGA 1

If you have a Hercules Graphics Card, set the following instead:

TELNET_HGC 1

Telnet will not do any image resizing or dithering. If an image is wider or taller than the graphics mode supports, then it will not display.

For best results when connected to a Linux machine, use the included show script to convert an image file to Sixel escape sequences. This script calls the img2sixel command with the appropriate parameters for resizing images and converting colors.

Without any parameters, show will display an image in 256 colors.

show my_image.png

If you have the Hercules Graphics Card, use the --hercules switch:

show --hercules my_mono_image.png

If you have CGA graphics only, use the --cga switch so that color images are reduced to four colors.

show --cga my_image.png

By default, show will use the bright cyan/magenta/white palette in --cga mode. You can tell it to use a different palette with the --colors switch:

show --colors CyanMagenta my_image.png
show --colors LightCyanMagenta my_image.png
show --colors GreenRed my_image.png
show --colors LightGreenRed my_image.png

To make an image display in monochrome, use the --mono switch:

show --mono my_mono_image.png

By default, the --mono switch will shrink the image to fit in 640x480, which VGA and MCGA monitors can display. If you have CGA only, make sure to include the --cga switch:

show --mono --cga my_mono_image.png

This will resize the image to fit within CGA's 640x200 resolution.

With the --me parameter, show will take a picture with /dev/video0 and then display it:

show --me

To see the usage instructions, call show with the --help switch.

show --help

For instructions on installing the show utility and integrating it with applications, see the Setup section below.

The show utility is a bash script, so you can edit it. You can change the script so that you do not have to provide any flags to get the image format you want.

Printing

Historically, the typewriter preceded the computer, and the first terminals acted like typewriters, printing characters to paper rather than to a screen. Early video terminals, like the VT52 and VT100, supported connecting a printer to the terminal, and could switch into a mode in which incoming characters were sent to the printer and the user could create a "hardcopy" of the session. When the VT100 terminal received ESC [ 5 i, all characters received thereafter would be relayed to the attached printer. When the terminal received ESC [ 4 i, the terminal would stop relaying the characters to the printer. The ansi and xterm protocols incorporated this feature.

This version of mTCP Telnet has been modified to provide support for this method of printing. By default, printing is disabled, however, so that even if the remote server sends ESC [ 5 i, the printer will not print anything. Pressing Alt-P toggles the enabling and disabling of printing. You can see whether printing is enabled by visiting the help screen (Alt-H). If printing is enabled and the remote server sends ESC [ 5 i, Telnet will start sending all received characters to the LPT1 printer. It will continue to do so until it receives ESC [ 4 i. Characters will also be sent to the screen.

If your printer requires initialization, you can add a TELNET_PRINTER_INIT line to your MTCP.CFG file, listing a series of ASCII characters expressed as two-digit hexadecimal numbers separated by commas. For example, these are printer initialization codes for a Diablo 630 printer.

TELNET_PRINTER_INIT 1b,51,0d,1b,1f,0b,1b,1e,09,1b,35

Up to sixteen ASCII characters can be defined using TELNET_PRINTER_INIT. These characters are sent to the printer the first time you type Alt-P to enable printing.

This repository contains a Python script, tprint, that can be used to print a file or an output stream. You can call it either as a pipe or you can give it the name of one or more files:

ps ax | tprint
tprint foo.txt
tprint foo.txt bar.txt
tprint *.msg

In addition, this repository contains two bash scripts, startprint and stopprint, which echo the escape sequences for turning printing on and off. As explained in "Configuring your applications," below, you can also bind keys in bash for turning printing on and off.

Compatibility

This package has been tested on:

Unfortunately, I do not have access to other machines, so I do not know what problems may arise on other systems. Please feel free to create GitHub issues to let me know what doesn't work.

As discussed above, you will need to add TELNET_HGC 1 or TELNET_CGA 1 to your MTCP.CFG file if you have a Hercules Graphics Card or CGA adapter in your system.

EGA is currently not supported, because I do not known an EGA card or EGA-compatible monitor.

Performance

This version of mTCP Telnet is not as fast as the official mTCP Telnet, so you may see that screens do not draw as fast.

The reason for the slowness is due to the increased feature support. In the main loop of the Telnet application, there are more if/else statements that need to run in order to support additional incoming escape sequences, process multi-byte Unicode sequences, support the mouse feature, and support the printing feature.

If the server you are connected to sends UTF-8 instead of Code Page 437 "extended ASCII" characters, it will send two or three bytes instead of one byte to draw one character, so screen draws may appear slower just because more bytes need to be transferred.

If you can think of ways the code can run more efficiently while supporting the same set of features, feel free to create a GitHub pull request.

Setup

In order for your Telnet client and remote servers to communicate effectively using escape sequences for colors, mouse support, and keypresses, the remote machines will need to know the precise capabilities of your Telnet client. On Linux, terminal capabilites are defined in a "terminfo" file. The TERM variable in your remote shell environment tells the remote machine which "terminfo" file to use. TERM is typically set to a value like ansi, vt320, or xterm. Terminal-based applications use the TERM variable to decide what features will be enabled and how they will communicate with you.

The Telnet client reports its terminal type as ANSI. This can be changed by setting the variable TELNET_TERMTYPE in the MTCP.CFG file, but it is generally better to keep it as ANSI. Many terminal-based applications look at the TERM variable and expect it to be set to a standard value like xterm, vt100, or ansi, so you are generally better off using a standard terminal type like ANSI.

The ANSI standard is not well-defined. There are many variants, and the one that this Telnet uses is its own variant. In order to use all of the features of this Telnet's ANSI terminal emulation, you need to create your own "terminfo" file. This package contains the source code for this "terminfo" file (ansi.src).

On every Linux machine to which you might want to connect (directly with Telnet or indirectly with ssh), install the ansi "terminfo" file and the show script.

You can do this by cloning the GitHub repository with git and running ./install.sh as root. If you don't have git installed, you can install it with sudo apt-get install git.

The install.sh script copies show to /usr/local/bin, installs color map PNG files in /usr/local/share/sixel, and compiles and installs the ansi "terminfo" file using tic.

The show script depends on libsixel-bin (for img2sixel), libimage-size-perl (for imgsize), and streamer (for the --me) option. The installation of the ansi "terminfo" file depends on the tic command, which is available in ncurses-bin.

sudo apt-get install libsixel-bin libimage-size-perl streamer ncurses-bin
git clone https://github.com/jhpyle/mTCP
cd mTCP
sudo ./install.sh
cd ..

The names of these packages and the application for installing packages (in this example, apt-get) might be different on your machines, so you may need to revise this.

If /usr/local/bin is not part of your PATH (try echo $PATH to see what your PATH is) you might want to edit the install script so that it installs the show script elsewhere.

Manual installation

If you want to install the show script manually, run commands equivalent to the following:

git clone https://github.com/jhpyle/mTCP
sudo install mTCP/sixel/show /usr/local/bin
sudo mkdir -p /usr/local/share/sixel
sudo install -m 644 mTCP/sixel/*.png /usr/local/share/sixel

The show script needs to go into a directory that is in your PATH. The PNG files can go in any directory, but if you put them in a directory other than /usr/local/share/sixel, make sure you edit the show script to change the definition of COLORMAPS so that it points to the directory you are using.

To install the ansi "terminfo" file manually, compile the ansi.src file with tic:

sudo tic -x -o/etc/terminfo mTCP/ansi.src

Here, /etc/terminfo is the directory where custom terminfo description files are installed. It might be located in a different directory on your system.

This will override the standard terminfo file that is used when the TERM environment variable is set to ansi.

If you do not have administrator access on the machine, you can install the terminfo description for yourself only. You can do this by running:

tic -x mTCP/ansi.src

This will compile the ansi.src file and create the terminfo description file ~/.terminfo/a/ansi.

After installing the terminfo file, you can run rm ansi.src because you will not need the ansi.src file any longer (unless you would like to edit it).

To install the tprint, startprint, and stopprint utilities manually, run commands equivalent to the following:

sudo install mTCP/printing/tprint /usr/local/bin
sudo install mTCP/printing/stopprint /usr/local/bin
sudo install mTCP/printing/startprint /usr/local/bin

Configuring your applications

The "terminfo" file, on its own, is not sufficient for all of your Linux applications to work appropriately with the Telnet client. Many applications look at the TERM environment variable but bypass the "terminfo" system. You will need to edit the configuration files of your applications to get the most out of Telnet.

To improve your bash command line experience, add this to your ~/.inputrc file:

"\e[7;5~" backward-kill-word
"\e[3;2~" delete-char
"\e[3;5~" kill-word
"\e[5~": beginning-of-history
"\e[6~": end-of-history

If you don't have an ~/.inputrc file, you can create one with just these lines in it. This will allow you to type Ctrl-Backspace, Delete, Ctrl-Delete, Page Up, and Page Down on the command line.

If you use Emacs, download ansi.el.

curl -o ansi.el https://github.com/jhpyle/mTCP/blob/master/ansi.el

Incorporate the contents of this file into your .emacs file. This will ensure that Emacs will recognize the control sequences that the Telnet client will send.

If you are using Vim, add the following to your .vimrc file:

if &term =~ "ansi"
  set mouse=a
endif

However, I was not able to get Vim to respect this setting unless I set TERM=xterm, which is not ideal because mTCP's screen-updating mechanism uses ansi sequences rather than xterm sequences.

Modify your .bashrc to add the following before the part that references force_color_prompt:

if [ "$TERM" = "ansi" ]; then
    force_color_prompt=yes
fi

If you would prefer a monochrome prompt, leave out force_color_prompt=yes.

If you want to toggle printing while using bash using keystrokes, you can add the following to your .bashrc file:

bind -x '"\eOP":"echo -n -e \\e[5i"'
bind -x '"\eOQ":"echo -n -e \\e[4i"'

This tells bash that when you press F1, it should send the escape sequence for turning printing on, and when you press F2, it should send the escape sequence for turning printing off.

Add a .mailcap file to your home directory that contains:

image/*; show %s

This will signal to other applications that the show command should be used to display images.

If you are using Lynx, you can set USE_MOUSE:TRUE in your /etc/lynx.cfg file to enable mouse support.

You can also view images using Sixel graphics while using Lynx. You can press * to show links to images, or set MAKE_LINKS_FOR_ALL_IMAGES:TRUE in your /etc/lynx.cfg file to turn this feature on by default. When you click on a link to an image, your ~/.mailcap file will be consulted and the show command will be used to show the image.

You can also view images while using Links. To set this up, go to the Setup menu (press Escape to open the menu bar) and go to Associations. Then you can add file associations for images. The first "Label" should be, e.g., "PNG," and the "Content-Type" should be image/png, and "Program" should be show %. Unselect "Block terminal while program running" (this causes problems). Make sure that "Run on terminal" is selected. Unselect "Ask before opening." Don't select "Accepts HTTP URLs" or "Accepts FTP URLs." Then save the Association and repeat the process for image/jpeg and image/gif. Then do "Save options" under "Setup." This will create a file ~/.links2/links.cfg. The file will contain something like the following:

association "PNG" "image/png" "show %" 11 1
association "JPEG" "image/jpeg" "show %" 11 1
association "GIF" "image/gif" "show %" 11 1

Image support is a little better in Lynx than it is on Links because it will show a link to an image that is itself a hyperlink.

If you use Midnight Commander, you can edit the file /usr/lib/mc/ext.d/image.sh and change this line:

("${MC_XDG_OPEN}" "${MC_EXT_FILENAME}" >/dev/null 2>&1) || \

to:

("${MC_XDG_OPEN}" "${MC_EXT_FILENAME}") || \

Then, if your ~/.mailcap has been set up as discussed above, the xdg-open command will run show in the terminal when you open an image file.

If you use R, you might want to use this shorthand for showing a ggplot2 image:

sx <- function(){
  ggsave("graph.png", width=3.2, height=2.4)
  system("show graph.png")
}

Compiling

I compiled TELNET.EXE and TELNETNU.EXE using Open Watcom 1.9 inside DosBox on a Linux machine.

I created a folder ~/dos and installed Watcom under ~/dos/WATCOM and installed the mTCP source code under ~/dos/MTCP. I used the default DosBox configuration (see ~/.dosbox) with this at the end:

[autoexec]
# Lines in this section will be run at startup.
# You can put your MOUNT lines here.
@echo off
mount c ~/dos
SET PATH=C:\WATCOM\BINW
SET WATCOM=C:\WATCOM
SET INCLUDE=C:\WATCOM\H;C:\MTCP\TCPINC;C:\MTCP\INCLUDE
C:\
CD C:\MTCP\APPS\TELNET

The COMMAND.COM in DosBox limits command lines to 128 characters and there does not appear to be a way to change this. So I had to modify the MAKEFILE by commenting out this line:

compile_options += -i=$(tcp_h_dir) -i=$(common_h_dir)

In its place, I used the INCLUDE environment variable to let the compiler know where the .h files are.

Then I was able to compile Telnet by running wmake from the ~/dos/MTCP/APPS/TELNET directory.

I created a batch file called MAKE.BAT to recompile only the parts I was editing:

del telnet.exe
del telnet.obj
del telnetsc.obj
del telnetsx.obj
del telnet.map
del misc.obj
wmake telnet.exe config=UTF.H

This is much faster than waiting for a full wmake to complete.

To build a version of telnet.exe without the Unicode translation feature support, use the NOUTF.H file instead of UTF.H.

For a final build, run wmake and then wmake patch, and generate both TELNETNU.EXE and TELNET.EXE. (See the file MAKEALL.BAT.)