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'''''' '''''' '''''' '''''' '''''' h'''''' H'''''' ('''''' ''' l2'''' 4') )")$)' 2wpZwwpNwYjL80123456789ABCDEF ?VCG-F-File read error?VCG-F-File write errorsave % save state initgraphics % initialize page erasepage /picstr 40 string def % string to hold image data 47 720 translate % relocate origin -90 rotate % switch to portrait mode 648 518 scale % map image to fill page 640 512 1 % width height bits/sample [640 0 0 -512 0 512] % map unit square to source {currentfile picstr % read image data readhexstring pop} image showpage % etch page restore % restore state  L% !3 I$6$Im[m8p        vr5 `%@ECt@PCt@PCt@PCt@Pf 60A(E~e   w w   @A7`w` w@ 11EtPtPtPtP#E C21\1C*1J1C:1n1CB1v1 D 111 ~1111T~ 111 ~AE U U U U ww  @A7`w` r L1\1 h Vww~ J |1  Ewb 2ZT @Af  b&~  @A  6P~ @A wew 7e7@BwwEE PB@w@@@ P]B ~Uvw~A@wrfjhehw^A %2edDper2 Dper2 aa@a@a  .7x 7x  7w, eh%<wq es<` ws2%%%Aq@ElE?Pb`B bE\EE }> *,&(@A7`w`  2  ww   fLww7 7 7  z   L1\1 d7 ^7 ^B-PP7H FB< 8  6eUeEmm   L1\1m~w\   mm eUeE  L1\1m~ z11  APVbZ  eU  AP~eE  AP~"- 0%   L1\1B`@`~w r m7 \ZwL0PwL0NX r mt HFwL0<wL0:-jwL0 wL0 XEU  EU  EU*w8?@L\\LLEUUEE$9X88887h97(9\88887l97000000;<,<< <; <0<<<*ATAA`E F8p8p8p8p8p8p8p8p??8p8p8p8p8p8p8p8p??  $@7 E7 7 5 ( v a m $ 1&xL`E~ ^ mV% r m7 ^wL0X r mr BwL0<-twL0.h&Hx  Hx  HxHx-* "7 - 7   r mWB @ EtEU0?8p vwwB f , d R@AB7`tw`r >  <w4w2w0w.w,w*w(w&7 f www`w77`777 7 @  T7 NJLZ 7 R F< 7 4 p(0 7 * t7 |  7  V7^ 7  87@ 7  7" P  T 7` 4 x  j -Nd  7` 4 : N  -&-* ` * ,  , eE $ 0eU $      ,  "  eT?H`m   | z6 LL4\1 ?`mf F > 6 4 LL4\1?m     LL4\1?m    \ LL4\1D?8Vm  t l j, LL4\1?PmP : . & $ LL4\1? m     LL4\1?vvm    L LL4\1  B%@:|7 v(t%nf\ r - *%&<7 64%.& 7 : %7 "A z- *%&~7 x% jd7 6%VP7 - 7 x &h-`Z\TN vH r m.7@ %  CC$ 7"  E 5e``7wL0wL0 r m7 %6E 5e  ``7wL0wL0-jlwL0 wL0 VEU 7 L50%$.E m4 "m&  5EUEU 7 EU 7 EU] hpts  l  \ C WFh ##{[2 b !|!!*"}""#g###8$x$$$'%[%%%%&5&X&x&&&&&&&' ''' !@ABww 7`w`  h-vw z | jwwBww | FwrwnBw\w X *  -FFB@:<68 ,(  H >  " w @ABww 7`w`BC  eh heh| vbln dLLeh heh20eh heh7   z tf-= E       ,@A$ eZeh ^Zpr'7`P  %Z% e%  @ A A  eh e@< 0BCD &f7 & S  t b0BCD &f|ztvprdh7ef 2& SNPJLD> b w&w" 7 .  7 L2,*2?&ee7  7L2,*2 jeee7 7L2,*2 0 *lj wJwF  D8P 8*  www d-  h wFwRw HE@8E C:1~1CB11 b262L2 ~x262L2b2T~ b262L2 ~@b2n2EtPtPtPtP@AE0 CC7  ~f EEEEWu JQU~ ~CCCCD8DXDxDDDDD""@4@4""@4@4Kc}p9k('XF('Xp9kKc}]]]]]]]]IIII""""@D@D""""@D@Dn]SK w9p.'n]KS????????? 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AAmBB`  B  AaAm f@ @@mlAbe 6  AAmC   C`beq x  e  @ s fWt`e 2 f @ D @@a@m , @ @ @  3P 3@ ňEÈ&f Z   f&` @ e  \ &` @ e ň * e+  e&  eH~ e f Nebf&&F Q$p    ePeNRR RR  FE uuf Ae@eB ȋ Х 0 Ne&e&eN zE U$ 5 $ 5 Ae@ '""He鈇f&      Ab  e 7 NE37 835 .36 * E:3: 38eK e_e xe j E 3 3 3 3 3 3eV e e e` , b e_ e e e7 eb e e& e% e t e e Ze N  Y* vLne 2epee e eV e elb& 1     eP e< e? eɋeE  e> ve e e VenAb e8 @ee(   DD3  dd3" l3,e\ \ Te ee e? eT 5 e7  3%e&  Ȉes l ` Ȉ eS L }e : _  ^ eT ePAbe! e! e  T3` H3( >34 43: ,3; $3< 3=3 8  3LePAb eTeXȈB&  e! Z  eU" @e," 4"e pB` 2 2 x2 n2 f2 ^2 e\ Ȉf& B :;e! ,e! ,0ue,"eR"e" Eeu" l eo" ^eˇ06 -pB`0u2 "2 d2e zeEt beE%ffeQ eH  ~e= e1     & f 8% -v e`  e.eW @Wp(W @Wp(@%e` vp@  %     << 4< , & !   `  `B f Et&  e e  P HU tEpe Ee alp tE `btE @`f&C =^ 5e ɋы l @t`w|wZw\w^wrwwwwwww,w`w$wnw4ww25 \UUU UUU@ *$& 5)%5 ,U ,`l zw 5@ H 4 5  z ` 5 &   ( `  ` 5  j5 " 5 ))p%U@ 25 X   & ҋ `  `5@ 5  5 55 &- 5@  5 Ef &C f  e0 x!f@ @ &Ef@ &E@ e0 @ @ @ @ &EC D <f 6f d D H:  0:  "& !A `C B f r e0 @e0  Df&tE WtEaeT@ h~EeH fEtEa] 2 rtW ne n rm`ee " WtB`f@ ^: @  N@ H. @ :f[  @ . ] fe. ? BBb    ee ee@ 6 f@   &tEa Ea  !  e2  !B eA @ Ee &eЋ6`E :x_^u~<\A? a*6w~ 4{[qU~f}ms*p yYM2vRn\.,*?&Vn6Rq?-F-Unknown error code?USR-F-Directory I/O error?OVL-F-Overlay read error?USR-F-Directory overflow?RMON-F-Illegal instruction or operand at ^K?RMON-F-Illegal channel number?RMON-F-Illegal EMT?LOAD-F-File not found?LOAD-F-Input error?LOAD-F-Bad file format?LOAD-F-Program too large?LOAD-F-Invalid start address?RMON-F-Floating-point trap at ^K?RMON-F-Illegal LDN at ^K?RMON-F-Memory-parity trap at ^K?RMON-F-Memory-management abort at ^K?RMON-F-Illegal trap?RMON-F-Event queue overflow ^BK ^K ^K ^K ^K ^K ^LD ^LT-UT .Commands are:Proc PortID Type Size VecAdr RegAdr Option^/------------------------------------------------------LDN Name Proc Unit Start Size^/--------------------------------------------?KWIK-F-No room?KWIK-F-Illegal device?KWIK-F-Invalid start or stack address?KWIK-F-Invalid virtual address?KWIK-F-Illegal commandFuzzball (21-Oct-84 Version) ^LD ^LTLOGIN(You have new SMTP mail since last login)(You have new MPM mail since last login)(Your files were accessed remotely since last login)(Your files have been printed since last login)xN_^? (;"HzQZ/d`Eyf|xz_^|Process type: ^K options: ^K ^/Buff overflow: ^I0^/Input error: ^I2^/Right margin: ^BI5^/Bottom margin: ^BI6^/Intercept char: ^BK7^/Return delay: ^I8^/Data rate: ^BK:^/Process type: ^K options: ^K Queue: ^A ^F[^I] at: ^DH ^TJ^/Destination: ^F ^C" flags: ^KFxf_v^|? 8R~`t nTqtez'},Process type: ^K options: ^K ^/VOX threshold (THRESHOLD): ^I^/Attack time (ATTACK): ^BI^/Release time (RELEASE): ^BI^/Playout delay (PLAY): ^BI^/Time-to-go (TTG): ^BI^/Terminator flags (TERM): ^BKx_t^zJProcess type: ^K options: ^K ^/Hard errors: ^I^/Unreported errors: ^I^/Hardware overruns: ^I^/Buffer overflows: ^I"x,_^Process type: ^K options: ^K ^/Data checks: ^I^/Seek checks: ^I^/Error ops: ^I^/Hard errors: ^Ix_`^f? "8zBxu~ yꑐ h"&"2#F"e*Lx_^ 8Bx6:,x._^f8mhrn[M\Xk4DU$Process type: ^K options: ^K ^/Subnet: ^R status: ^BK0 hello: ^BI1 timeout: ^I"^/Address: ^C( max size: ^I bias: ^I, queue: ^I.^/Input packets ^MI4 Output packets ^MIH^/ bad format ^I8 frag error ^IL^/ bad checksum ^I: preempted ^IP^/ unreachable ^I< time exceeded ^IN^/ HELLO msgs ^MI> HELLO msgs ^MIR^/Input errors ^IV Output errors ^IB^/Returned ^ID ICMP msgs ^IX^/No buffer ^IF Quenched ^IZReceive errors ^I\ Transmit errors ^I^^/Preamble errors ^Ib Protocol errors ^Id^/No buffer ^I`Control msgs ^I\^/Error msgs ^I^Status: ^K\ statistics cycles: ^I^^/Control msgs Threshold errors Restarts^/ error ^K ^I receive ^Ib local ^It^/ modem ^K ^I transmit ^Id remote ^Ih^/Data errors Buffer errors Timeouts^/ inbound ^BK ^I local ^BK ^I local ^I^/ outbound ^BK ^I remote ^BK ^I remote ^I^/Station errors^/ local ^BK ^I^/ remote ^BK ^I^/ hdr checksum ^IControl msgs: ^I\^/Error msgs: ^I^Line timeouts: ^In^/Data errors: ^Ip^/IMP sequence errors: ^Ir^/Host sequence errors: ^It^/Unit signal: ^KxLCN VCN State TTL Address^/-----------------------------------------^BI ^BI ^BI ^CEthernet address: ^BH\^BH]^BH^^BH_^BH`^BHa^/ARP rqst rcvd ^Ib ^Cd ARP reply sent ^Ih ^BHj^BHk^BHl^BHm^BHn^BHo^/ARP rqst sent ^Ip ^Cr ARP reply rcvd ^Iv ^BHx^BHy^BHz^BH{^BH|^BH}^/ARP output err ^I~ ^C ARP input err ^I ^BH^BH^BH^BH^BH^BHLast CSR/IR: ^I\^/Waited for Clock Tick ^Iz^/Receiver except. Int. ^I|^/Receiver CRC errors ^I~^/Receiver Abort Frames ^I^/Receiver Overruns ^I^/Receiver Byte count 0 ^I^/Receiver IBC errors ^I^/Data Set changes ^I^/Xmitter except. int. ^IV^/CID NID Wgt Status Message^/------------------------------------------------------------^BI^+^BI*^+ ^BI ^BI ^BI ^BI ^BI ^ANID Callsign Flags Links Last Rec Wgt Route^/-------------------------------------------------------^BI ^A^+ ^BK ^BI ^+T ^BI ^+ ^BI^+From To Flags Age^/---------------------------^BI ^BI ^BK ^BIWeight vector: ^I ^I ^I ^I ^I ^I ^I ^IType: ^BK heard: ^BI destination: ^BI route: ^BI ^BI ^BI ^BI ^BINodes: ^BIs ^BIt links: ^BIu ^BIvProcess type: ^K options: ^K ^/Host ID: ^BI% max conn: ^BI$ max size: ^I^/Input packets ^MI Output packets ^MI ^/ bad format ^I Returned ^I^/ bad checksum ^I ICMP msgs rcvd ^I^/ unreachable ^I ICMP msgs sent ^I^/ reass error ^INBS time ^BI2 ^A3^/Poll messages ^MI&^/ no reply ^I*^/ bad format ^I,^/ bad data ^I.^/ last set ^I0Connection ID: ^K protocol: ^BK state: ^K flags: ^K^/ CCB format: ^K max size: ^I protocol flags: ^BK ^/ Local addr: ^C ^XI Foreign addr: ^C ^XI^/ RTX timeout: ^ID delay: ^I buffer: ^IzCatenet source quench: ^I^/Catenet unreachable: ^I^/Input packets received: ^I^/ bad format: ^I^/ bad checksum: ^I^/ connection reset: ^I^/ dropped: ^I^/Accepted packets: ^I^/ null (ACK-only): ^I^/ text stored: ^I^/ duplicate: ^I^/ outside window: ^I^/SYNs processed: ^I^/FINs processed: ^I^/Error packets sent: ^I^/Control packets sent: ^I^/Text packets sent: ^I^/Retransmissions sent: ^I^/ACK-only packets sent: ^I^/Data avail sigs to user: ^IProcess type: ^K options: ^K ^/Reference clock: ^BI from: ^BIL dispersion: ^I refstamp: ^+D ^+T"^/Local clock offset: ^SI* skew: ^SI( comp: ^SBI2 poll: ^SBI3 stratum: ^BI prec: ^SI&^/Processes ^I Free blocks ^I^/Vectors ^I Free bytes ^I^/Nibbles ^I Quench level ^I4^/Packets ^I Uptime ^+T.^/Lost traps: ^IJ ^K> ^K@ ^KB ^KD ^KF ^KH^/Route changes: ^I6 net: ^C: changes: ^I8Internet address: ^C mask: ^CSequence: ^I` pc: ^Kf code: ^BKb process: ^Kd^/Regs: ^Kh ^Kj ^Kl ^Kn ^Kp ^Kr ^Kt ^Kv^/Stack: ^Kx ^Kz ^K| ^K~ ^K ^K ^K ^K^/PSA^K ^+ ^K^+AdrID Address Gateway HostID Flags Status^/--------------------------------------------------------------^C ^C ^BI ^BK ^BI ^BI^I ^+HostID PortID Delay Offset Status Leader Update^/----------------------------------------------------------------^BK ^I ^SI ^BI ^BH ^BH ^BH ^BH ^BH^BH ^+T^BK *** Down *** ^BI ^BH ^BH ^BH ^BH ^BH^BH ^+T^BK^+ *^I^+ ^SI ^BI ^BH ^BH ^BH ^BH ^BH^BH ^+T>J&zQQAA wL^YnH;Zx0Nm<[y1On;Zx0Nm<[y1On(@/SBLPIKRFC D T G + AXHM-BAD-Jan-Feb-Mar-Apr-May-Jun-Jul-Aug-Sep-Oct-Nov-Dec-0123456789ABCDEF +-* /9@Z`z~ Pe,e&e*wee@e eRfepe*,@0 w^,0e!"l,w(@`e@ ew4_` _` ""_`"$$&&_`&((_`( *l"*  .2p0 U epI" em   A m& m & 7 7 0 |4447l0 7-Tee 0, 0 W"_ ttt0 Շ 5"He @0  @ Tq?FRUN-F-File not found?FRUN-F-Input error?FRUN-F-Bad file format?FRUN-F-Program too large?FRUN-F-Output error?FRUN-F-Invalid start addresshz2<>U@$$7 !Jɋ & J$fV&  #( ~MV!7 T!7 R!7 P!# je#Nf wF !nW` 3WB77!WC7*!WL WXK7 !CpPe & # p654#e# pWDU WL WMU WRU WUU WV U  7 25h  L+ | v ( r $ n j  | v r n j ## 7F ( ##F >: ## 7### ne# |e rf# ##<# 0 #(0 ,f# _Mf#  & & & f$@ e f# FF% D71 (Q 7 % ff#  eP X&F% 7F7 @ fpPe  J$Y& #~7 7 J$#@ H@#f de h Z@  Ee &eЋ6`E f&C =^ 5eɋы l @t`w|wZw\w^wrwwwwwww,w`w$wnw4ww25 \UUU UUU@ *$& 5)%5 ,U ,`l zw 5@ H 4 5  z ` 5 &   ( `  ` 5  j5 " 5 ))p%U@ 25 X   ҋ `  `5@ 5  5 55 &- ~5@  5 Ef &C f  e0 *!f@ @ &Ef@ &E@ e0  @ @ @ &EC D <f 6f d D H:  0:  "& !A `C B f r e0 X@e0 N Df&tE WtEae@ ~EeH fEtEa rtW ne n rm`ee " WtB`f@ ^: @  N@ H. r@ :f[ Z @ . B] 8fe ? BBb    ee ee@ f@   &tEak Ea[  !  e2  !B eA @  &  @`@` ~ ^ rD,7 H#,l ePb7  D,77777  7  D,7f7 V,V, *`1ppl `-n)% V ѥ.wY h`q#2* `   7 ]5Y7 D,(,7È7ww(A2w'w +Èw "W `7 ,Z5 e 7 t-n vD,N]7 HR,L ><ɝ.E  5,$, e CCle ,f e 7D,D# ? ȈCCle5? W,,f ,f eD,0 7F ,f R e, > ef"R#SW \# .@!@!g#SW k#\#SW q#ӝӝӝӝf&E 74#xe ze  ke  |YP L FB-*7 ($ P L&!R, "4,e%!    6ы@Eewww` ,RRRR - @R~@ ҕ.E@f` fF T@ [, 8(R, Ep `   ѐ   ѐ    fӕ[R,@  ӕ.ӕ]f&D,J#S7f\ |7\7Z,D,J0 7 2-.(7 &-"( e e - @ ԋԋˋ.  @+,D,0 ՇmXe NX,FA$,D,$0 m e   wf&D,J#N7R, 77,D,0 0 -|7 z-vr  e Ӌ e R,~we ˋ .‚wdw^fE r f~  e0 e0f&fE GDA 5x~ ~@7pvf&f( e A8@~5&&4& 4 e"@p@ p .0 we@p J e wV5 ,q&e8e~ w&f&f(@5 5 ,#2e8f 6e @4P28 ewwf&f( 4 @8)4&@ p .0 ,@~#" \e '$e@p *e 5 Fe(@5 5 #0 "eAe~A4 Be@ &~A6 Be@ ~Be0 #e@t#5 @p .0  ߋ*ww.̋!0 e@Ae 6eR~f15 ,e8# f151 1  # b  ee@ f77 7 7 77 B@1J1R@1Z10 >zjd15-5"w,R-R+ J@1:(0  rePwlem  ew  f& B r,HH r,JJ r,LL@(&ePePff = dCE`  ~F,rI22He@eU~& & IHe < ' & & fIHe "5 `4CE$ ?*  eQ~ eU@U~JJ f@ DJW Ԇ@p ȈNJ 0& & fIHe fEɈ5u@5 eeՕ@U  Օ   @U~@@5e)Eq 1@e 1w& CDB`2  4q$$f"1" " " @ 2&  N D`e@  e@ ILjf V -- ~f f ff @50,A@ e5 u I- e ~A @Hp QQQ QQ Fe zNQy N N N N*Destination? ?PRINT-^+?PRINT-F-Unknown userid ^A ?PRINT-F-Invalid syntax?PRINT-F-Invalid option?PRINT-F-Queue entry unavailable?PRINT-F-File not found?PRINT-F-File write error ^F>?PRINT-I-Queue ^A ^F[^I]?PRINT-I-No output files queuedQueID Submitted Owner, file, destination^/-------------------------------------------------------------------^IP^+ ^TJ ^A , ^F[^I], ^F ^C"Queue: ^F> ^DH ^TJ flags: ^KF copies: ^BIN banners: ^BIO^/Source: ^A ^F[^I] destination: ^A& ^F ^C" /9@Z`z~ ;Zx0Nm<[y1On(@/SBLPIKRFC D T G + AXHM-BAD-Jan-Feb-Mar-Apr-May-Jun-Jul-Aug-Sep-Oct-Nov-Dec-0123456789ABCDEF +-*t { 4 L V !!'!5!F!V!g!|!!!!!!!!!"!"5"I"`"o"""""""" ##I-OpenW-Connection error: ^+W-Host not responding: ^+I-ClosedF-Invalid signalF-Connection reset: ^+I-Remote disconnectI-Remote interruptunspecified reasonparameter errortime exceededreassembly errornet unreachablehost unreachableprotocol unreachableport unreachablefragmentation errorsource route failedgateway downhost downinitial connection timeoutACK timeoutsend window timeoutidle connection timeoutconnection-open statedata-transfer stateconnection-close stateI-Listening...F-Connection open errorF-Parameter errorW-Insufficient resourcesW-Gateway downW-Host downW-Net errorF-Invalid name syntaxW-Name server not respondingW-Name not foundF-Name does not exist  ,k4zk4< *z_Mp:<zFUZZBALL(@5                                                                                                                                91)! ;3+# =5-% ?7/'80( :2*" <4,$ >6.&91)! ;3+# =5-% ?7/'@@@@ @@ @@@@@@@@@@ #(83 *1!: +;2"9 )0'/7?&.6>%- 5=$, 4<#+ 3;"* 2:!) 19 (08'/7?&.6>% -5=$ ,4<# +3;" *2:! )19 (08 @ 2!01 8)*"+9 :#(3&5$.4-<%>, =6   95=.-3;" !8412+:)<&>0$6*#(,%  6>,21<#=95$&:)8* (;%+-0!."438898989898989889898989898988w |D •  t@mEA8@0 UwP@ Ȑ w .ĕBC  &x9 eeC @ww e57fNa Be@ex #7NaNa e@eĕ !Wp@@ep5NNxc 08Naf e@wN8NaNa e@eĕ @ea@x s w e55p7fNa HeB #7NaNa e@eĕ Wp@@ep5NNxc p8Naf e@wZ8NaNa e@eĕ @ea@x3K @&& HBF.U@$TDN +7 8l h e  E `  ,Ull P e  T t  J J l ell eEl@ ~& Jɋf& l@ F@ҕ ҕ l$f > e  Ee &enЋ6`E f&C =^ .5ejɋы l @t`w|wZw\w^wrwwwwwww,w`w$wnw4ww25 \UUU UUU@ *$& 5)%5 ,U ,`l zw 5@ H 4 5  z ` 5 &   ( `  ` 5  j5 " 5 ))p%U@ 25 X   d ҋ `  `5@ 5  5 55 &- 5@  5 Ef &C f  e0 !f@ @ &Ef@ &E@ e0 ~ @ @ @ &EC D <f 6f d D H: , 0:  "& !A `C B f r e0 @e0  Df&tE WtEae@ ~EeH fEtEa' p rtW ne~ n rm`eN e " WtB`f@ ^: @  N@ H. @ :f[  @ . ] fe  ? BBb    ee ee@ t f@ ^ P H&tEa 2Ea " !  e2  !B eA @ ff = dCE`  ~F,rI22He@eU~& & IHe < ' & & fIHe "5 `4CE$ ?*  eQ~ eU@U~JJ f@ DJW Ԇ@p ȈNJ 0& & fIHe fEɈ5u@5 eeՕ@U  Օ   @U~@@5e)Eq 1@e 1w& CDB`2  4q$$f"1" " " @ 2&  N D`e@  e@ ILjf V -- ~f f  & @`@`  ,7( , ePb7  ,77 7 7 7   7  ,7f7 ,, *`1 `-)% x ѥ.w{ h`TL `   >67 0]5Y7 ,p,7È7$w"w A2w w +Èw "W `7 ",. e 7 - ,p7 j,n `^ɝP<E  5,l,  XP R e ȈC e Rf e(0 BBl5 '7 %{!   f | ,ee ׭ f F$ b~Rf  e(B ׭8׭0 " ׭" E7 &H     & f 8% -v e`  e.eW @Wp(W @Wp(@%e` vp@  %     f&C =^ 5eɋы l @t`w|wZw\w^wrwwwwwww,w`w$wnw4ww25 \UUU UUU@ *$& 5)%5 ,U ,`l zw 5@ H 4 5  z ` 5 &   ( `  ` 5  j5 " 5 ))p%U@ 25 X   H ҋ `  `5@ 5  5 55 &- 5@  5 Ef &C f  e0 !f@ @ &Ef@ &E@ e0 b @ @ @ &EC D <f 6f d D H:  0:  "& !A `C B f r e0 @e0  Df&tE WtEae@ ~EeH fEtEa T rtW ne n rm`e e " WtB`f@ ^: @  N@ H. @ :f[  @ . ] fez  ? BBb    ee ee@ X f@ B 4 ,&tEa[ EaK  !  e2  !B eA @ ff = dCE`  ~F,rI22He@eU~& & IHe < ' & & fIHe "5 `4CE$ ?*  eQ~ eU@U~JJ f@ DJW Ԇ@p ȈNJ 0& & fIHe fEɈ5u@5 eeՕ@U  Օ   @U~@@5e)Eq 1@e 1w& CDB`2  4q$$f"1" " " @ 2&  N D`e@  e@ ILjf V -- ~f f  &~| @`@`  r 7 *ePb7  r 77777  7 p r 7ZfX7i T\ R N *`1..* `-,)%  ѥ.w h` `   7 ]5Y7 r V 7È7wwD A2w: w n+Èwr "W `7    e 7> 2-, 4r  7   ɝE  5 R  6.&91)! ;3+# =5-% ?7/'@@@@ @@ @@@@@@@@@@ #(83 *1!: +;2"9 )0'/7?&.6>%- 5=$, 4<#+ 3;"* 2:!) 19 (08'/7?&.6>% -5=$ ,4<# +3;" *2:! )19 (08 @ 2!01 8)*"+9 :#(3&5$.4-<%>, =6   95=.-3;" !8412+:)<&>0$6*#(,%  6>,21<#=95$&:)8* (;%+-0!."43hhh(w |D •  t@mEA @0 UwP@ Ȑ w .ĕBC  & eeC @ww e5fNa Be@ex #@NaNa e@eĕ !Wp@@eNNxc Naf e@wNNaNa e@eĕ @ea@x s w e55fNa HeB #@NaNa e@eĕ Wp@@eNNxc Naf e@wZNaNa e@eĕ @ea@x3K @&& HBF\ U@$Jɋf j e   %\X7 zf7  0 e   E ` P  B  > e  P 2 wf e    :  bi ȈW,  Lf 8 e0 w<7 8fBBle È@ A e@ m@ mw7  @ e = ^f f e xe& h& l  !C B eB e倮 A @ wF !   e .,f&C =^ l5eɋы Pl @t`w|wZw\w^wrwwwwwww,w`w$wnw4ww25 \UUU UUU@ *$& 5)%5 ,U ,`l zw 5@ H 4 5  z ` 5 &   ( `  ` 5  j5 " 5 ))p%U@ 25 X   ҋ `  `5@ 5  5 55 &- H5@  5 Ef &C f  e0 !f@ @ &Ef@ &E@ e0  @ @ @ &EC D <f 6f d D H: j 0: \ "& !A `C B f r e0 "@e0  Df&tE WtEae@ ~EeH fEtEa rtW ne n rm`e e " WtB`f@ ^: R@  N@ H. <@ :f[ $ @ . ] fed  ? BBb    ee ee@ f@   &tEaE pEa5 ` !  e2  !B eA @ ff = dCE`  ~F,rI22He@eU~& & IHe < ' & & fIHe "5 `4CE$ ?*  eQ~ eU@U~JJ f@ DJW Ԇ@p ȈNJ 0& & fIHe fEɈ5u@5 eeՕ@U  Օ   @U~@@5e)Eq 1@e 1w& CDB`2  4q$$f"1" " " @ 2&  N D`e@  e@ ILjf V -- ~f f  & @`@` f  7P^ePb7   77777l  7 \  7FfD7U @H>: *`1 `-)%  ѥ.w h`y `   7 ]5Y7  7È7ww. A2w$ wr Z+Èw^v n"W `7 ^ e 7* -   7  ɝE  5^ 7 <7 :7 8747 6BR0 >5-5"w,-+ (0  rePwlem ew~  jf& B r,HH r,JJ r,LL@(&ePePEe &eЋ6`E ff @50,A@ e5 u I- e ~A @Hp QQQ QQ Fe zNQyANONYMOUS?SPQSRV-F-Unknown userid ^A ?SPQSRV-F-File write error?SPQSRV-F-Insufficient disk storage?SPQSRV-I-Queue ^A ^AZ[^I] as ^F?SPQSRV-I-No output files queued?SPQSRV-I-^As^+ ^RX:^/QueID Submitted Owner, file, destination^/-------------------------------------------------------------------^IV^+ ^TJ ^A , ^F[^I], ^F ^C";Zx0Nm<[y1On(@/SBLPIKRFC D T G + AXHM-BAD-Jan-Feb-Mar-Apr-May-Jun-Jul-Aug-Sep-Oct-Nov-Dec-0123456789ABCDEF +-*z_Mp:<zFUZZBALL /9@Z`z~                                                                                                                                91)! ;3+# =5-% ?7/'80( :2*" <4,$ >6.&91)! ;3+# =5-% ?7/'@@@@ @@ @@@@@@@@@@ #(83 *1!: +;2"9 )0'/7?&.6>%- 5=$, 4<#+ 3;"* 2:!) 19 (08'/7?&.6>% -5=$ ,4<# +3;" *2:! )19 (08 @ 2!01 8)*"+9 :#(3&5$.4-<%>, =6   95=.-3;" !8412+:)<&>0$6*#(,%  6>,21<#=95$&:)8* (;%+-0!."43b'''''''b'''''''b'"'w |D •  t@mEA'@0 UwP@ Ȑ w .ĕBC  &' eeC @ww e5%fNa Be@ex #:&NaNa e@eĕ !Wp@@e#NNxc &Naf e@wNz&NaNa e@eĕ @ea@x s w e55%fNa HeB #:&NaNa e@eĕ Wp@@e#NNxc &Naf e@wZz&NaNa e@eĕ @ea@x3K @&& HBFxVtFBa&fe@BJ%@& fEA  w =Xt=!=4 =@_ =_ @_  =_ =U@$$7 _M7 P n a w e%, Re f nw7 |  r  h#h# h f | z v* f _M Vh#0 T h#0wr  h f n1f \_M׭^ T ׭PO > (5f   eh#0 5h  hh#0h  RUU_M& & & f$@ e  x?r l&X @Ee &eЋ6`E f&C =^ 5eɋы fl @t`w|wZw\w^wrwwwwwww,w`w$wnw4ww25 \UUU UUU@ *$& 5)%5 ,U ,`l zw 5@ H 4 5  z ` 5 &   ( `  ` 5  j5 " 5 ))p%U@ 25 X   ҋ `  `5@ 5  5 55 &- ^5@  5 Ef &C f  e0 !f@ @ &Ef@ &E@ e0  @ @ @ &EC D <f 6f d D H:  0: r "& !A `C B f r e0 8@e0 . Df&tE WtEae@ ~EeH fEtEa rtW ne* n rm`ee " WtB`f@ ^: h@  N@ H. R@ :f[ : @ . "] fe ? BBb    ee ee@ f@   &tEa Eau v !  e2  !B eA @ ff = dCE`  ~F,rI22He@eU~& & IHe < ' & & fIHe "5 `4CE$ ?*  eQ~ eU@U~JJ f@ DJW Ԇ@p ȈNJ 0& & fIHe fEɈ5u@5 eeՕ@U  Օ   @U~@@5e)Eq 1@e 1w& CDB`2  4q$$f"1" " " @ 2&  N D`e@  e@ ILjf V -- ~f f :-7P"-ePb7 6 :-7 7D7A7>7;   7  :-7f7 L-L- *`1 `-)%  ѥ.w h`K|t `   f^7 X]5DY7 @:--7.È7LwJ&0&w"'A2w'w +Èw "W `7 J-&6 e 7 - :-7 H- ɝxdE  5-- he CCle -f 8e 7:- ? ȈCCle5? W,, -f e:-0 7 -f e- eNfFO",SW 6( .@!@!ASW E6SW Kӝ ӝӝӝf&E 7e e  e  |  .t7 r$ P Lp!H- "4,e%! :84 0  6ы@Eewww` -RRRR . @R~@ ҕ.E@f` f @ [v t(H-R Ep `  H  0ѐ 4  ѐ    fӕ[H-@  ӕ.ӕ]f&:-$S7 |77-:-0 7 |-xr7 p-lh( e e -FB @ ԋԋˋ/  @+-:-0 Շme ,ni-:-n0 m@ e   w:f&:-$N7H- 77-:-0 0 -7 -  e Ӌ e H-~we ˋ ~/‚wdw^fE r f~  e0 e0f&fE GDA 5x~ ~@7pvff @50,A@ e5 u I- e ~A @Hp QQQ QQ Fe f&f( e A8@~5&&4& 4 e"@p@ p /0 we@p  e wV5 ,q&e8e~ w&f&f(@5 5 ,#2e8f 6e @4P28 ewwf&f( 4 @8)4&@ p /0 ,@X e '$e@p ve 5 Fe(@5 5 `1 |eAe~A4 Be@ ~A6 Be@ ~Be1 fe@N5 @p /0  ߋ*ww/̋!1 e@Ae 6eR~f77 7 7 77 B 22R 2&20 >025-5"w,-+  2(0  rePwlVemZP ew>  *f& B r,HH r,JJ r,LL@(&ePePzQy?PRTQ-^+?PRTQ-I-No output files queued?PRTQ-F-Unknown userid ^A ?PRTQ-F-Data file not found ^F?PRTQ-F-Invalid output device ^F?PRTQ-I-Transfer begins ^A ^F[^I] to ^F?PRTQ-I-Transfer begins ^A ^F[^I] to ^C"?PRTQ-I-Transfer complete /9@Z`z~ ;Zx0Nm<[y1On(@/SBLPIKRFC D T G + AXHM-BAD-Jan-Feb-Mar-Apr-May-Jun-Jul-Aug-Sep-Oct-Nov-Dec-0123456789ABCDEF +-*  ,k4zk4< *z_Mp:<zFUZZBALL5@&& HBFw D •  t@mEA<@0 Uw@ Ȑ w ĕBC  &< eeC @wVw De5:fNa Be@ex #8;NaNa e@eĕ !Wp@@e8NNxc ;Naf e@wx;NaNa e@eĕ @ea@x s w Ne55:fNa HeB #8;NaNa e@eĕ Wp@@e8NNxc ;Naf e@wx;NaNa e@eĕ @ea@x3K                                                                                                                                 91)! ;3+# =5-% ?7/'80( :2*" <4,$ >6.&91)! ;3+# =5-% ?7/'@@@@ @@ @@@@@@@@@@ #(83 *1!: +;2"9 )0'/7?&.6>%- 5=$, 4<#+ 3;"* 2:!) 19 (08'/7?&.6>% -5=$ ,4<# +3;" *2:! )19 (08 @ 2!01 8)*"+9 :#(3&5$.4-<%>, =6   95=.-3;" !8412+:)<&>0$6*#(,%  6>,21<#=95$&:)8* (;%+-0!."43`<<<<<<<`<<<<<<<`< <[7 7 7 OO׭J 5.F@ O.%0 2e׭O J%0 Xe0% @5\ 5N ( |~ߋ* Ef ǁ:׭65  J@ @ 6[ 5  O [p0 Ff ǁfmjwwww w6w>? <<5 <&(  *K K @: -P ()\\ N@ H@  OOJL 7 7 OQ@~ W [ OnOj4K@ 7TF-L[-DO+K@ e.7%-?   K@ b7   L D@ &t  EE " -P 7   ? -cO n[0 eR[NBw7 $Rݦ$Nݢ$$$5\.$-$z$|$7 ^"7 X"(Z"eT"EN" B"7B$ ^K l? *"&",e Pe   !E >K ! K c0 _M! ecRKTA7 x! h c0 5(Cc%0  zKf TÁ 7! -  Kf Áe w cVK%c0 %0 ~ evc 0 %0 % Lf  m:      *  &  VcRKTA ,c TeE  0+cKf,c c0 m/ 3JVKf,c  v wt7n%Lfc .Lf  e: R %!Lfc ^.Lf N e-c U c2%0 e 7 7 % Dߋ*%7 zKf eh%@7 UXf& e  6 -c5Lf `=Lf PJLf @RLf 0ZL5cLfc lLf |L5sLfc 俁Lf ԿLf Ŀ-c7v7 p &LL @`@` L 0123456789ABCDEF?PRTQ-F-File read error ^F?PRTQ-F-Output device error ^Finitgraphics /stm usertime def /pgc statusdict begin pagecount end def /ps { print flush } def /picstr 40 string def %string for image data /raster { gsave 0 y translate %relocate origin 576 8 scale % map image to fill page 960 24 1 %width height bits/sample [960 0 0 -24 0 24] %matrix { currentfile picstr readhexstring pop } %proc image grestore } def %define clippath pathbbox pop pop exch pop 0 exch translate clippath pathbbox /pgtop exch def pop pop pop /home { restore save newpath 0 pgtop moveto } def /af { statusdict /manualfeed false put } def /jobname (prtq) def userdict /jobname jobname put (Starting Job: ) ps jobname == flush af /y { currentpoint exch pop } def /dopage false def /dpage { dopage { showpage /dopage false def } if } def /creep { /dopage true def y exch sub 0 exch moveto y pgbot lt { dpage home } if } def /n { r 12 creep } def %lf /r { show 0 y moveto } def %cr /Courier-Bold findfont [ 12.0 0 0 12.0 0 0 ] makefont setfont /pgtop pgtop 12 sub def /pgbot currentfont /FontBBox get 1 get neg 1000 div 12 mul def 18 0 translate save home dpage home (time = ) ps usertime stm sub 1000 div == (pages = ) ps statusdict begin pagecount end pgc sub == flush (Ending Job: ) ps jobname == )n )r dpage home raster 8 creep AAAA,CABAAA zymz?PRTQ-F-Insufficient memory?PRTQ-F-File read error ^F?PRTQ-F-Bad file format ^F?PRTQ-F-Protocol error message ^A?PRTQ-F-Protocol error code ^BI?PRTQ-F-Reply timeout^R ^+^I df^K^+^I cf^K^+^A ^+H^A ^+P^A J^F ^+C^A ^+L^A& ^+fdf^K^+vdf^K^+^A ^+Udf^K^+Fdf^K^+^A ^+N^F ^+LMLML4M=MNML=MeMyM=MMMMMMMMNN)N=NJNMTNoN{NNMNNNNNO!O:OIOUOaOwOOOI-OpenW-Connection error: ^+W-Host not responding: ^+I-ClosedF-Invalid signalF-Connection reset: ^+I-Remote disconnectI-Remote interruptunspecified reasonparameter errortime exceededreassembly errornet unreachablehost unreachableprotocol unreachableport unreachablefragmentation errorsource route failedgateway downhost downinitial connection timeoutACK timeoutsend window timeoutidle connection timeoutconnection-open statedata-transfer stateconnection-close stateI-Listening...F-Connection open errorF-Parameter errorW-Insufficient resourcesW-Gateway downW-Host downW-Net errorF-Invalid name syntaxW-Name server not respondingW-Name not foundF-Name does not exist4A% 7 >HE:6Ed%0 2-Z;6E %0  Df ǁe 6E%0 ҆ߋ*Df ǁ7e%7 p7 n7 l6EDFDf% vǁ_M86. e Df Hǁ&"HE!5  6E HEp0 Df Ɓ 6E%0 7e%e ?-FM6E rHE0  eVFEReL7 f&f L7 "w  6weWtw "wp׭f׭^ tpr7 fJpr7> 8*2pXMw.RM$ 7 $7        C~    ^MMBP~ LMt 7  *MB @ ~  7 7 8N  w  ` !   j  w ~w  nwz ^wP  ` ! < :  $w> wL  w wM M M M 7  Dz 7 p W! f d ` ^ ׬  D D7N J 4 4 W! 5DM   ` DݬM :wrDݬM ,w "w< w$ w-  f& !7N T˕ e_  ,e_r    ^ 7N L f7N 8 B 4 ?7 4 F >  8 2   + @ e @ T   T  ^~ Tӕw  7v JPwa -      7 |  MҕLҕ9ҕFҕҕ b -^ 7 V R UUR 8N R tPEtm t`J  7 Z 7 X  5 t7 7 f&fX =MR R  x A v E wP 7 M&@ d~`  & 6 L8%DDD?PRTQ-F-Invalid file format ^F?PRTQ-F-File read error ^F?PRTQ-F-Output device error ^F?PRTQ-I-Converting to compressed format ^XI x ^XI YjLL8F : @ 0`7 Lj%0  Lf .ȁ67e8%v-4-.(-( @ 6 e &  e & erleE7pv7wZe 7` 7-6 e  & ` er h e:% n E_Pe7 BFU2tEP ~ - 燡 %L%0 7 e e ߋ*Lf TƁf&fbM W O 3  Ls ~0dMLLbM    &f&fE-tA"tAlF7 dMNNbM Twz,HCdM MbM dMDMJMbM dMNNbM RR> N\#! ~B,dMMbM >dMFMLMbM 7 @lg j:E dMMbM dMHMNMbM ^ Et]~ 7 x Et]n 7  ~ ׭d ׭\  n pr7 d X pr7L F 7r* 7@ 7 @ 7 :  ML NL$ M      NdMPMbM 7 F   7  dMNNbM HC dM MbM dMJMJMbM | h N -* X tEe D Ee 6 tEe " Ee    7 5@5@ 5 EtE 7P 5 EE 7P EtE 7P EE 7P  pr7  pr7  dMNNbM dMNNbM   F N5 _ -        7e e e  MLW NdMNMbM e   dMNNbM   7 T dMNNbM  -D N0 & dMNNbM n   ; 8?  m - -  N 7 &  z  h 柶  V N H? N 7 dMNbM ' p Nh  (@,7 0e,dMNMbM z    ML NLM  e-N! @A LC@P e-MLe~(~ E>Fr eM bM7f(F\ EP?L F>dMMMMMbM dMMMMMbM dMM M"M$MbM dMM&M(M*MbM r dM M,M.M0MbM R dM M2M4M6MbM 2 dMM8M:MM@MBMbM dMRMbM V%dMTMTMbM 'dMNNNNbM z%wpwwpwffwjwhwdw ZR BH  6% !( @" 8 , $ f>O7 7 7 7 &&@ Ee 4tEe "@ Ee Ee f&f@m> 2 r A h 7 ^ Z A P 7 F B B->4~ 7 2* 7  @ ?e-O>O׭vE7vE7tE7 h׭ ! E O tE O ~E OP f  FGOCt>O . L-(7 @E7Wu@E7WuEw ` ?5(GNW]dm6O   Ç8O   z l V nC D \: X7 P (2 F/> )2*       7 7 7 wf5mW w`w      07 w`-ևz 7 p f@ W ! eW _ @e@ ~   C & D E&Dt7`  W#    DO YjL8?PRTQ-F-File read error ^F% !3 I$6$Im[m8p         Lvr5 `%@ECt@PCt@PCt@PCt@Pf 60A(E~e   w w   @A7`w` w@ WWEtPtPtPtP#E C2W\WC*WJWC:WnWCBWvW D WWW ~WWWWT~ WWW ~AE U U U U ww  @A7`w` r LW\W h Vww~ J |W  Ewb 2ZT @Af  b&~  @A  6P~ @A wew 7e7@BwwEE PB@w@@@ P]B ~Uvw~A@wrfjhehw^A %2edDper2 Dper2 aa@a@a  .7x 7x  7w, eh%<wq es<` ws2%%%Aq@ElE?Pb`B bE\EE }> *,&(@A7`w`  2  ww   fLww7 7 7  z   LW\W d7 ^7 ^B-PP7H FB< 8  6eUeEmm   LW\Wm~w\   mm eUeE  LW\Wm~ zWW  APVbZ  eU  AP~eE  AP~"- 0%   LW\WB`@`~w r m7 \ZwLVPwLVNX r mt HFwLV<wLV:-jwLV wLV XEU  EU  EU*w8?@L\\LLEUUEE$_X^^^^]h_](_\^^^^]l_]VVVVVVab,bb ba b0bbb*gTgg`k l8p8p8p8p8p8p8p8p??8p8p8p8p8p8p8p8p??  $@7 E7 7 5 ( v a m $ W&xL`E~ ^ mV% r m7 ^wLVX r mr BwLV<-twLV.h&Hx  Hx  HxHx-* "7 - 7   r mWB @ EtEU0?8p vwwB f , d R@AB7`tw`r >  <w4w2w0w.w,w*w(w&7 f www`w77`777 7 @  T7 NJLZ 7 R F< 7 4 p(0 7 * t7 |  7  V7^ 7  87@ 7  7" P  T 7` Z x  j -Nd  7` Z : N  -&-* ` * ,  , eE $ 0eU $      ,  "  eT?H`m   | z6 LLZ\W ?`mf F > 6 4 LLZ\W?m     LLZ\W?m    \ LLZ\WD?8Vm  t l j, LLZ\W?PmP : . & $ LLZ\W? m     LLZ\W?vvm    L LLZ\W  B%@:|7 v(t%nf\ r - *%&<7 64%.& 7 : %7 "A z- *%&~7 x% jd7 6%VP7 - 7 x &h-`Z\TN vH r m.7@ %  ii$ 7"  E 5e``7wLVwLV r m7 %6E 5e  ``7wLVwLV-jlwLV wLV VEU 7 L50%$.E m4 "m&  5EUEU 7 EU 7 EU] hpts  l  \ C WFh ##{[2 b !|!!*"}""#g###8$x$$$'%[%%%%&5&X&x&&&&&&&' ''' !@ABww 7`w`  h-vw z | jwwBww | FwrwnBw\w X *  -FFB@:<68 ,(  H >  " w @ABww 7`w`BC  eh heh| vbln dLLeh heh20eh heh7   z tf-c E       ,@A$ eZeh ^Zpr'7`P  %Z% e%  @ A A  eh e@b 0BCD &f7 & S  t b0BCD &f|ztvprdh7ef 2& SNPJLD> b w&w" 7 .  7 LX,*X?&ee7  7LX,*X jeee7 7LX,*X 0 *lj wJwF  D8P 8*  www d-  h wFwRw HE@8E C:W~WCBWW bX6XLX ~xX6XLXbXT~ bX6XLX ~@bXnXEtPtPtPtP@AE0 ii7  ~f EEEEWu JQU~ ~iiiij8jXjxjjjjj""@4@4""@4@4Kc}p9k('XF('Xp9kKc}]]]]]]]]IIII""""@D@D""""@D@Dn]SK w9p.'n]KS????????? Aww  7@A7`w` 7LX,*X  U:<z.0hb 6V P-L7  e67 "4.  7*LX$,*X  e  !e ]f~-|` ]RR f \-XH ]4H 4e:~ex nwAw 2 p a Awwwwwwwww7 7 7 7 7 7  x C 7b < R z 7@ACf , \% wp`wp >% wpJwZ &R z7% 7 <-6wpm(W  -f p- m &-p^X7 !PLW\W eEee7 t  ee7 X  r8eEH V%wpw`&-"@A 7 w wwww w" vwmj $88 m>%~z|x n d\ZV tHDFB ` F C(."$m"  %~ m%- ~xrn @   z h@Aw@w67`w`~wA@ E BWWEP  X,XEtttttp `                                   v n $G7 PG j n 4x 0 , x ɋ(7  V- < <-  " "e@~,  f&C =^ 5eɋы l @t`w|wZw\w^wrwwwwwww,w`w$wnw4ww25 \UUU UUU@ *$& 5)%5 ,U ,`l zw 5@ H 4 5  z ` 5 &   ( `  ` 5  j5 " 5 ))p%U@ 25 X    ҋ `  `5@ 5  5 55 &- 5@  5 Ef &C f  e0 b!f@ @ &Ef@ &E@ e0 * @ @ @ &EC D <f 6f d D H:  0:  "& !A `C B f r e0 @e0  Df&tE WtEae@ R~EeH fEtEa  rtW ne* n rm`ee " WtB`f@ ^: @  N@ H. @ :f[  @ . z] pfe ? BBb    ee ee@ f@   &tEa Eau  !  e2  !B eA @ z_Mp:<?FINGER-F-Login file errorUserid Directory Flags Last login----------------------------------------------------------^A^+^F^+^K& ^D ^T";Zx0Nm<[y1On(@/SBLPIKRFC D T G + AXHM-BAD-Jan-Feb-Mar-Apr-May-Jun-Jul-Aug-Sep-Oct-Nov-Dec-0123456789ABCDEF +-*r'U@$!Jɋ^ J f e  d 7 V &  B   1  Ab  7 7 7 ~pr27 7P 7@& R   NTN 7   7 #>  e  n  0 E ` Z (  H#  , e   !BBle w #f e   R  Z  u : Ȉ BBl5? W, #f v e 0 w$7 e #f : e# & ef   #    B  .@!@!ӝiӝdӝcӝ^!   ӝKӝFӝEӝ@ӕ    f& E  4 f Ve e $ 3 E     w)w$w#we!Xf yf wwwwwwXf cf N`E `];:98W654S1;:N(J P f B?d7 P 7f  X $ f  rf  ^f  w& 7 x7!rBf  T~ @R~@ ҕ.E@f`   &k $f5&BBl ewf  ~   z   & f 8% -v e`  e.eW @Wp(W @Wp(@%e` vp@  %    f&C =^ 5ehɋы l @t`w|wZw\w^wrwwwwwww,w`w$wnw4ww25 \UUU UUU@ *$& 5)%5 ,U ,`l zw 5@ H 4 5  z ` 5 &   ( `  ` 5  j5 " 5 ))p%U@ 25 X   ҋ `  `5@ 5  5 55 &- 5@  5 Ef &C f  e0 8!f@ @ &Ef@ &E@ e0  @ @ @ &EC D <f 6f d D H:  0:  "& !A `C B f r e0 f@e0 \ Df&tE WtEae@ (~EeH fEtEa% rtW ne| n rm`eLe " WtB`f@ ^: @  N@ H. @ :f[ h @ . P] Ffe ? BBb    ee ee@ f@   &tEa Ea  !  e2  !B eA @ ff = dCE`  ~F,rI22He@eU~& & IHe < ' & & fIHe "5 `4CE$ ?*  eQ~ eU@U~JJ f@ DJW Ԇ@p ȈNJ 0& & fIHe fEɈ5u@5 eeՕ@U  Օ   @U~@@5e)Eq 1@e 1w& CDB`2  4q$$f"1" " " @ 2&  N D`e@  e@ ILjf V -- ~f f  & @`@`  "%7 t%ePb7  "%7x7777d  7 T "%7>f<7M 8@4%64%2 *`1 `-)%  ѥ.w h`)  `   7 ]5Y7 "%%7È7w~~w A2w wj R+ÈwVn f"W `7 t%l  e 7" - "%7 0% ɝE  5t%% 6.&91)! ;3+# =5-% ?7/'@@@@ @@ @@@@@@@@@@ #(83 *1!: +;2"9 )0'/7?&.6>%- 5=$, 4<#+ 3;"* 2:!) 19 (08'/7?&.6>% -5=$ ,4<# +3;" *2:! )19 (08 @ 2!01 8)*"+9 :#(3&5$.4-<%>, =6   95=.-3;" !8412+:)<&>0$6*#(,%  6>,21<#=95$&:)8* (;%+-0!."43*^*^*^*^*^*^**^*^*^*^*^*^**)w |D •  t@mEA)@0 UwP@ Ȑ w .ĕBC  &* eeC @ww e5(fNa Be@ex #(NaNa e@eĕ !Wp@@e&NNxc V)Naf e@wN6)NaNa e@eĕ @ea@x s w e55(fNa HeB #(NaNa e@eĕ Wp@@e&NNxc )Naf e@wZ6)NaNa e@eĕ @ea@x3K @&& HBF~D3Ba&feBJ%@& fEA  w 'F3''^'_ '_ b(_  '_  R(_  )_  l*_  *_ ' U$5I F  4% vef4%  n!U  T& N I:U@j h;f4% @4% ef4%   "!Hf&% zaf$ jpf% Zf% J   *e qE i $    7 f '  #E׭#*$%$' *e  &! X h  }  e "  @wTwD77$ Re   l  2 7 7 ~' ,"$%$' Te   L  : ej &70 Z$ҕҕ' !$%' e  e$  E   H U   & t7z! j7p! X   wRjW2 \Xf% 3     wB*W2{ 3 U 5PU$5r7 5@5E7 5$\ ' 5LE7  `  I\ e ^ C SEP{ QU: 2Xf%  X5 EE$ |wE@U@ pr27E@  U@E  UqU YU > ' 'Ћ=4%'F4%% *%%p f% %7 U!  5  l  n ` @f% JE!' E4%'FR%%*%% 7 f% 5J EB5<U4 5 &5&5 5 %&R% J-F*% F<80  *Ee"7 !f% E!xEe &eЋ6`E    & f 8% -v e`  e.eW @Wp(W @Wp(@%e` vp@  % 4   &  f&C =^ 5e4ɋы l @t`w|wZw\w^wrwwwwwww,w`w$wnw4ww25 \UUU UUU@ *$& 5)%5 ,U ,`l zw 5@ H 4 5  z ` 5 &   ( `  ` 5  j5 " 5 ))p%U@ 25 X   @ ҋ `  `5@ 5  5 55 &- 5@  5 Ef &C f  e0 !f@ @ &Ef@ &E@ e0 Z @ @ @ &EC D <f 6f d D H:  0:  "& !A `C B f r e0 @e0  Df&tE WtEae @ ~EeH fEtEa L rtW neH n rm`e e " WtB`f@ ^: @  N@ H. @ :f[  @ . ] fe  ? BBb    ee ee@ P f@ : , $&tEa Ea  !  e2  !B eA @ ff = dCE`  ~F,rI22He@eU~& & IHe < ' & & fIHe "5 `4CE$ ?*  eQ~ eU@U~JJ f@ DJW Ԇ@p ȈNJ 0& & fIHe fEɈ5u@5 eeՕ@U  Օ   @U~@@5e)Eq 1@e 1w& CDB`2  4q$$f"1" " " @ 2&  N D`e@  e@ ILjf V -- ~f f  7777$w, A|f z ` MLGIXCBU@ef& :e-Be ,=#- f  f Ȉ-r f @ B-R-J fV ,, P 7".7 7 7 U@@$5$ Ue (  X 1  Ab  !.!E? 5$    -z!?r.!7lf ` \?P LFX.0@ 0   ?.?.7 & j " &!! R@`@` D " 82vxm&[M{.kLrR4}vLZ; I:;"_^$}TJw\w@ԀԀԀԀ6x z A \Xl}(}xu~%@W*@+S-@X/C5@&O4}W@vLW@Xeg0kQy@}Jww}z_Mav^A TELNET User Process (25-Mar-86 Version) ^LD ^LT^A TALK Service (12-Mar-84 Version) ^LD ^LT^/?TALK-I-Enter device name and mode (default is operator): ^+^A ClosingState: ^I ^K host: ^+(^R) ^C ^XIScript file: ^F[^I] at ^I ^+send file: ^F[^I] at ^I*^+?TELNET-^+?TELNET-F-Unrecognized command?TELNET-F-Unrecognized command character?TELNET-F-Invalid command sequence?TELNET-F-Invalid argument?TELNET-F-Command aborted?TELNET-W-TELNET service unsupported?TELNET-F-Unrecognized service name?TELNET-F-Invalid file name?TELNET-I-Script begins ^F[^I]?TELNET-F-Script ends?TELNET-F-File not found ^F?TELNET-F-File write error ^F?TELNET-F-Null file ^F?TELNET-I-Transfer begins ^F[^I]?TELNET-I-Transfer suspended /9@Z`z~ ;Zx0Nm<[y1On(@/SBLPIKRFC D T G + AXHM-BAD-Jan-Feb-Mar-Apr-May-Jun-Jul-Aug-Sep-Oct-Nov-Dec-0123456789ABCDEF +-*?INET-(^R)-^+?INET-(^R)-I-Open ^C?INET-F-Unrecognized signal ^BI?INET-F-Sequence error ^K ^K ^K ^K ^K?INET-F-Buffer error ^K ^K ^K ^K ^KCommands are:"#"!:"!T"]"n"!]"""]"""""""#$#5#I#]#j#"t####"###$$/$A$Z$i$u$$$$$I-OpenW-Connection error: ^+W-Host not responding: ^+I-ClosedF-Invalid signalF-Connection reset: ^+I-Remote disconnectI-Remote interruptunspecified reasonparameter errortime exceededreassembly errornet unreachablehost unreachableprotocol unreachableport unreachablefragmentation errorsource route failedgateway downhost downinitial connection timeoutACK timeoutsend window timeoutidle connection timeoutconnection-open statedata-transfer stateconnection-close stateI-Listening...F-Connection open errorF-Parameter errorW-Insufficient resourcesW-Gateway downW-Host downW-Net errorF-Invalid name syntaxW-Name server not respondingW-Name not foundF-Name does not exist}070F10 ePb7  077777  7 v 07`f^7o Zb1X1T *`1440 `-2)%  ѥ.w h`0 `   7 ]5Y7 007È7wwzA2wpw t+Èwx "W `7 F10 e 7D 8-2 :0!7 1 ɝE  5F10 Re CCle F1f "e 7p00* ? ȈCCle5? W,,* F1f e00 7  F1f eF1 zef"0SW 0 .@!@!0SW 00SW 0ӝӝӝ~ӝ{f&E 7~0<e >e  /e  |   F27 $ P L!1 "4,e%!    6ы@Eewowjw`f B1RRRRN F2 @R~@ ҕ.E@f` f  @ [ (1 Ep `  t  ѐ `  ѐ    fnӕ[1@  ӕ.ӕ]f&00S7*  |7 7F100 7 -7 -( e e - @ ԋԋˋ;3  @z+lgJEF10J0 Շme , F100 m e   wf&00N71 7t7rF10b0 0 J-F@7 >-:6  e Ӌ e 1~we ˋ 83‚wdw^fE r f~  e0 e0f&fE GDA 5x~ ~@7pxv  ,k4zk4< **5 ,( 7e77~7|e7vE,0 7 jE$7 9E `?=<0/?-Nd, -5u, UpEj,0 7 E$7 ^ e@ w P7 U f eEC ~55 UHC7@E5  ~7O7Eh f+f,   `76L43210/.-,(׭ ׭5U  ,f, f, 6׭pE5 U$5PE$E f B  ~ 7 f-- 5Z?-;,0 \ 7` E7`5@BŀWRWw  H, nElh7b\AUN& ~e  E.5* ', %* ߋ* *,f% ߁H, EJf(@`&숀 (  z,?TELNET-I-Recd ^BK ^BK ^BK?TELNET-I-Sent ^BK ^BK ^BK?TELNET-F-File read error ^F?TELNET-I-Transfer complete?TELNET-I-Closed*^+?INET-F-Insufficient storage7~,AAEAaAmw//7 EAaAmw| ,f/ "d׬^׬N4L045@jU U @3׬5 -f/ -f/  -fA U $/+7 *E $/UEE77A׬ 5 r׭j-5Z r-*/ / %+&  \-30 wwH7E7I ` CUSE u- lBQU T-f% D-L ' - fhE7r7<T5Hr  > V,wwg5Ha-/400 -4042 5@ ŀ%5H    ~" xߋ*  8-f% , - `Ew @׬ F45 . . + . ߇ P /0 /B  @ ݄~/f &D/ j߀/f>/ X߁*. 3W / /fA 6߁ /fA $߁/ PfA ߁ &Up[/f% ށ &|/ ހ&E7 ?TELNET-F-Unassigned or invalid device ^R?TALK-W-Unrecognized command character?TALK-F-File read error ^F?TALK-I-Transfer begins ^F[^I]?TALK-I-Transfer suspended?TALK-I-Transfer complete ?TALK-I-Link from ^R: (enter ^^Z to terminate):?TALK-I-Link to DTE ^R:?TALK-I-Link to DCE ^R:?TALK-I-Link terminated)eJ    N Ê <%! ,c ѐjˋÜ`E &  P   cLp  e W f`  / /@/@/ /B/@/P?TALK-I-Loading begins?TALK-I-Transfer begins ^F[^I]?TALK-I-Transfer suspended^K/^+R7/^+RS/^+^K ^+^K ^+P^+/4040" 7 5z =,5$ 2e&CE  eE  f * _M f  f&C =^ 5e6 ɋы l @t`w|wZw\w^wrwwwwwww,w`w$wnw4ww25 \UUU UUU@ *$& 5)%5 ,U ,`l zw 5@ H 4 5  z ` 5 &   ( `  ` 5  j5 " 5 ))p%U@ 25 X    ҋ `  `5@ 5  5 55 &- 5@  5 Ef &C f  e0 f!f@ @ &Ef@ &E@ e0 . @ @ @ &EC D <f 6f d D H:  0:  "& !A `C B f r e0 @e0  Df&tE WtEae@ V~EeH fEtEa rtW neJ n rm`ee " WtB`f@ ^: @  N@ H. @ :f[  @ . ~] tfe ? BBb    ee ee@ $ f@   &tEa Ea  !  e2  !B eA @ f&f( e A8@~5&&4& 4 e"@p@ p  0 we@p  e wV5 ,q&e8e~ w&f&f(@5 5 ,#2e8f 6e @4P28 ewwf&f( 4 @8)4&@ p  0 ,@r  e '$e@pt e 5 Fe(@5 5 z  t eAe~A4 Be@ ~A6 Be@ ~Be ^ e@h 5 @p  0  ߋ*ww ̋! e@Ae 6eR~Ee &e,Ћ6`E ff @50,A@ e5 u I- e ~A @Hp QQQ QQ Fe = P n ?LOGOUT-I-User ^A logout completeLogout ^A ^LD ^LT?LOGOUT-F-Directory not found?LOGOUT-F-Login file error?LOGOUT-F-Login incorrect?LOGOUT-F-Not logged in;Zx0Nm<[y1On(@/SBLPIKRFC D T G + AXHM-BAD-Jan-Feb-Mar-Apr-May-Jun-Jul-Aug-Sep-Oct-Nov-Dec-0123456789ABCDEF +-*z_Mp:<zFUZZBALL /9@Z`z~                                                                                                                                91)! ;3+# =5-% ?7/'80( :2*" <4,$ >6.&91)! ;3+# =5-% ?7/'@@@@ @@ @@@@@@@@@@ #(83 *1!: +;2"9 )0'/7?&.6>%- 5=$, 4<#+ 3;"* 2:!) 19 (08'/7?&.6>% -5=$ ,4<# +3;" *2:! )19 (08 @ 2!01 8)*"+9 :#(3&5$.4-<%>, =6   95=.-3;" !8412+:)<&>0$6*#(,%  6>,21<#=95$&:)8* (;%+-0!."43((((((((((((w |D •  t@mEA@0 UwP@ Ȑ w .ĕBC  &h eeC @ww e5fNa Be@ex #NaNa e@eĕ !Wp@@e`NNxc  Naf e@wNNaNa e@eĕ @ea@x s w e55`fNa HeB #NaNa e@eĕ Wp@@e`NNxc `Naf e@wZNaNa e@eĕ @ea@x3K @&& HBF|"(f& \  W j\R !"WS7>WAw0n  r  p 0 鈼 w 7  7 77  k4  +  e   \X  t d |׭c: hB Tbc .  @,:, :;U :U     } ( x @hЋ7 , :7  ~@xm |zrp 7r m^^ZR`0JDЋ<74 2 72 Nm w@׭ 2- r ȝ 0    E  ׭;77 ߋ*   ݈7  NPJ7rf7B\ *w :׭1: P?D @-<-2-*?" r  0  wRf  0 @ l -  Re p @h / h < l  ht7 ` \r ` 0 ww ɋ  e ыe @   -7 -wRwѝ @   ~B w hwb`Xw R-zTrL-lv \ f @ % * 8r  * 0 3@ 4r  0  Հ e r   0  w f&fE GDA 5x~ ~@7p<v:7 6 .Ԁ<C?HOSTS-F-Invalid option?HOSTS-F-Output file i/o error?HOSTS-F-Input file i/o error?HOSTS-F-Output file fullProcessing completed Number of lines: ^I^/ Number of entries: ^I^/ Mean block size: ^I^/ Max block size: ^I^/ Overflow entries: ^I ^/ Max file reads: ^I ^/Nets: ^I gateways: ^I hosts: ^I name servers: ^I^I2 ^I0 ^+^BK ^C ^BK ^BK ^BK ^BK^+^BK ^BK ^BK ^BK ^BK ^BK ^BK ^BK ^BK^+ ^C ^A IN CNAME ^AIN A ^BI.^BI.^BI.^BI.ARPA    & f 8% -v e`  e.eW @Wp(W @Wp(@%e` vp@  % ^   P f&C =^ 5eɋы l @t`w|wZw\w^wrwwwwwww,w`w$wnw4ww25 \UUU UUU@ *$& 5)%5 ,U ,`l zw 5@ H 4 5  z ` 5 &   ( `  ` 5  j5 " 5 ))p%U@ 25 X   0 ҋ `  `5@ 5  5 55 &- 5@  5 Ef &C f  e0 !f@ @ &Ef@ &E@ e0 J @ @ @ &EC D <f 6f d D H:  0:  "& !A `C B f r e0 @e0  Df&tE WtEael@ r~EeH fEtEau < rtW ne n rm`ee " WtB`f@ ^: @  N@ H. @ :f[  @ . ] feF ? BBb    ee ee@ @ f@ *  &tEa' Ea  !  e2  !B eA @ Ee &eЋ6`E ;Zx0Nm<[y1On(@/SBLPIKRFC D T G + AXHM-BAD-Jan-Feb-Mar-Apr-May-Jun-Jul-Aug-Sep-Oct-Nov-Dec-0123456789ABCDEF +-* /9@Z`z~ ~2.Ba&feBJ%@& fEA  w "4.""_ "_ P#_  "_  (#_  $_  &_  X(_  ( f! e 5 ff!   fX! f! f! fd"  5J J! :  5E/"!   7 *" :#V!$!" e   7  j ! e  |U[  7 r7 p" XV!!" e   x5 hJ! w 7 H ҕҕ" V!" e  e   -! ~ <7   Iwp  O! P z%f!"F!!\!!   ,ePfV! N   6X!  E `! Ud  g!  n! x a Zy!Ћ=f!!Ff!! \!!p "  L e  U`*$! 7fV!  4f!"F!!\!! ".  e  0 UP2! $PfV! n 6  V!   <! $" ! !ɋ" Ee &eЋ6`E    & f 8% -v e`  e.eW @Wp(W @Wp(@%e` vp@  % 4   &  f&C =^ 5eT ɋы l @t`w|wZw\w^wrwwwwwww,w`w$wnw4ww25 \UUU UUU@ *$& 5)%5 ,U ,`l zw 5@ H 4 5  z ` 5 &   ( `  ` 5  j5 " 5 ))p%U@ 25 X   @ ҋ `  `5@ 5  5 55 &- 5@  5 Ef &C f  e0 !f@ @ &Ef@ &E@ e0 Z @ @ @ &EC D <f 6f d D H:  0:  "& !A `C B f r e0 @e0  Df&tE WtEae @ ~EeH fEtEa L rtW neh n rm`e8 e " WtB`f@ ^: @  N@ H. @ :f[  @ . ] fe ? BBb    ee ee@ P f@ : , $&tEa Ea  !  e2  !B eA @ ff = dCE`  ~F,rI22He@eU~& & IHe < ' & & fIHe "5 `4CE$ ?*  eQ~ eU@U~JJ f@ DJW Ԇ@p ȈNJ 0& & fIHe fEɈ5u@5 eeՕ@U  Օ   @U~@@5e)Eq 1@e 1w& CDB`2  4q$$f"1" " " @ 2&  N D`e@  e@ ILjf V -- ~f f  78767472 w,$ Anf z ` MLGIXCBU@ef& :e-BW ,=#- f  f Ȉ- f @ j-r-j fH LL P> 07B 7 7 7 U@@$5$ Ue (   1  Ab  ! E? 5$    -? 7  |?p lf P@ 0   ?2 ?& 7 & j " & R@`@` D  8ff @50,A@ e5 u I- e ~A @Hp QQQ QQ Fe 2xm&[M{Zk.r4Z_M? \.; DI:`m,wXVq zH^A FTP User Process (07-May-87 Version) ^LD ^LTQUITUSER ^APCWD ^APTYPE ATYPE ITYPE L ^ARETR ^APLIST ^APSTOR ^ADELE ^APRNFR ^APState: ^I ^K host: ^+(^R) ^C ^XI^+ file: ^F[^I] at ^IReply: ^A?FTP-^+?FTP-F-Unrecognized command?FTP-F-Invalid command sequence?FTP-F-Invalid file name?FTP-F-File not found ^F^?FTP-W-FTP service unsupported /9@Z`z~ ;Zx0Nm<[y1On(@/SBLPIKRFC D T G + AXHM-BAD-Jan-Feb-Mar-Apr-May-Jun-Jul-Aug-Sep-Oct-Nov-Dec-0123456789ABCDEF +-*?INET-(^R)-^+?INET-(^R)-I-Open ^C?INET-F-Unrecognized signal ^BI?INET-F-Sequence error ^K ^K ^K ^K ^K?INET-F-Buffer error ^K ^K ^K ^K ^KCommands are:,FO`OwO';O\f ! 3 L [ g s I-OpenW-Connection error: ^+W-Host not responding: ^+I-ClosedF-Invalid signalF-Connection reset: ^+I-Remote disconnectI-Remote interruptunspecified reasonparameter errortime exceededreassembly errornet unreachablehost unreachableprotocol unreachableport unreachablefragmentation errorsource route failedgateway downhost downinitial connection timeoutACK timeoutsend window timeoutidle connection timeoutconnection-open statedata-transfer stateconnection-close stateI-Listening...F-Connection open errorF-Parameter errorW-Insufficient resourcesW-Gateway downW-Host downW-Net errorF-Invalid name syntaxW-Name server not respondingW-Name not foundF-Name does not exist!<+7+4,0 ePb7  +77777  7 v +7`f^7o Zb+X+T *`1440 `-2)%  ѥ.w h`+ `   7 ]5Y7 ++7È7wwzA2wpw t+Èwx "W `7 4,+ e 7D 8-2 :+!7 + ɝE  54,+ 6e CCle 4,f e 7p+|+% ? ȈCCle5? W,,* 4,f e+0 7  4,f re4, ^ef"+SW + .@!@!+SW ++SW +ӝӝӝ~ӝ{f&E 7l+<e >e  /e  |   4-7 $ P L!+ "4,e%!    6ы@Eewowjw`f 0,RRRRN 4- @R~@ ҕ.E@f` f  @ [ (+ Ep `  X  ѐ D  ѐ    fnӕ[+@  ӕ.ӕ]f&++S7*  |7 74,+0 7 -7 -( e e - @ ԋԋˋ).  @z+lgJE4,+J0 Շme , 4,+0 m e   wf&++N7+ 7t7r4,+b0 0 J-F@7 >-:6  e Ӌ e +~we ˋ &.‚wdw^fE r f~  e0 e0f&fE GDA 5x~ ~@7pxv  ,k4zk4< *$5 ,(@( $e?E?7 e 7e7d"z 7 2E ``_[Z8=WW ExE5@, wjW  ,0 ,@)&UPW  >W 5 6U.  xe2, p 5#5 ,p0 ߋ* +f! " PE8| e U7J7 E7`:5n7 "BŀWR WU@ 7`w & e   W !K"@ d" ѕd" Ff& deE,7`fd"w ^%@ŀ 1 f! d" d" (d"w P75 j#--mf& eE7`7`w  W 545@m  w, 0 #Ew`7 V5 E8 t,f! ,f!  F, Eh7   EW   -w D)Wt@`7n d" f[, \ ,0 E<+ .È\ Tr7LLJ7r@7Hy+f, D+fd" d+f! ,0 EXD+fd" Q+f! ,0 E , de E8 >e,0 ,@)&U&w@7 `7 ,È7(w&7 $7 "+-+ +  Z+++&,0 ,@)&U" $ v7  @Uf& e  f(@`&숀 (  q,h))))))******(+ +,*H*d*&&&&&&|(&&'&& ''&&&&&)'&&&&& ''&&&&& '(&''''&(&j''''&(&' ('' ((&''''4'(&'4'''& '&' '('& '&' (''& ' &' ('' & ' &' ('' & ' &' ''' & ' &'' (' & ' &'''' & '?FTP-I-^A^+ to local ^F[^I] from local ^F[^I]?FTP-I-Transfer complete ^MI bytes, ^I sec (^I bytes/sec)PASS ^ATYPE AMODE SSTRU FRNTO ^AABOR*^+?FTP-F-File read error ^F?FTP-F-File write error ^F?FTP-F-Null file ^F?FTP-F-Remote abort?FTP-F-Reply timeout?FTP-F-Protocol error?INET-F-Insufficient storage~~5 "50"  5 "" ^ 5 " D5@!U! ! &  n/fB2 ^ E!5!t5!u28/%0 W"U! ew //m".%.h!5$5%@.w,.w,.%@.w,. C!5 !N! m.!ѕ^ѕ+!.7 !..5 Qv. v ߋ*" ! 2J.@.p0  U 7&.7(. $.E7`.5@z .7 .-BŀWR -WUL  ---& e  H! fwZ--m-L-f& eE7`- ~-W 595@m\- 5@ wJ-2 >-4-0-0 "-Ew`-7 -5z  -! # ! 0" ^" v" b "-{!fB2 !f1 !fB2 2 ,Uw2 pE f R2 T7+Ef B2  5@$ e?E?7+e 7+^e` 2  58(2 ~ I" Z5 Q+,7L+y f1 " t2 xI׭+A׭+aE@ J׭t+I ׭l+i׭d+L׭\+l%U@3 2 ׭8+S׭0+s2  ׭+F ׭+fI"   7. h2 U 53Ex2 *x2h2 .e  dUfB2 N_MfB2 8 w2 J2Ћ=2x2F2B2 2B2p )7 )7 )x)2 e  :U@ fB2  ! 4$# *2 h2x2F2X2U,! 853E2 *2x2F2`2-() ( (2X2 b! |" B# h2 )2x2F2B22B2 { *eG 2 H2x2F2B2V2 B2N! 2 >2x2F2B22B2 '7 'r'2 e  4 U  fB2  ! ." $2 vq2 jkU2x2F2B2ڇ '' '@ '@'2&   227&&5J&2 e  N U0$ fB2  RU0 fB2  555p! b  P7P&55p 6&fB2 &E%  e5j" 5V (    "  L  & f 8% -v e`  e.eW @Wp(W @Wp(@%e` vp@  % 4   &  f&C =^ 5e"ɋы l @t`w|wZw\w^wrwwwwwww,w`w$wnw4ww25 \UUU UUU@ *$& 5)%5 ,U ,`l zw 5@ H 4 5  z ` 5 &   ( `  ` 5  j5 " 5 ))p%U@ 25 X   @ ҋ `  `5@ 5  5 55 &- 5@  5 Ef &C f  e0 !f@ @ &Ef@ &E@ e0 Z @ @ @ &EC D <f 6f d D H:  0:  "& !A `C B f r e0 @e0  Df&tE WtEae@ ~EeH fEtEa L rtW ne6 n rm`ee " WtB`f@ ^: @  N@ H. @ :f[  @ . ] fe ? BBb    ee ee@ P f@ : , $&tEa Ea  !  e2  !B eA @ ff = dCE`  ~F,rI22He@eU~& & IHe < ' & & fIHe "5 `4CE$ ?*  eQ~ eU@U~JJ f@ DJW Ԇ@p ȈNJ 0& & fIHe fEɈ5u@5 eeՕ@U  Օ   @U~@@5e)Eq 1@e 1w& CDB`2  4q$$f"1" " " @ 2&  N D`e@  e@ ILjf V -- ~f f  77771w, A,$f$ z ` MLGIXCBU@ef& :e-B$ ,=#- L$f$  nf Ȉ-` w$f$ @ ,-@-8 f$    7%$$7 7 7 U@@$5$ U  e (    1  Ab  !) E? 5$    -h b*?` )7Z T  N J ?> : 4 $% @ 0   ? %? %7 & j Xf(@`&숀 (  d*ff @50,A@ e5 u I- e ~A @Hp QQQ QQ Fe f&f( e A8@~5&&4& 4 e"@p@ p 30 we@p H e wV5 ,q&e8e~ w&f&f(@5 5 ,#2e8f 6e @4P28 ewwf&f( 4 @8)4&@ p 30 ,@*  e '$e@p ve 5 Fe(@5 5 *5 eAe~A4 Be@ ~A6 Be@ ~Be5 e@*5 @p 30  ߋ*ww3̋!5 e@Ae 6eR~Ee &eЋ6`E &** @`@`  + w |D •  t@mEA1@0 UwP@ Ȑ w .ĕBC  &1 eeC @ww e5/fNa Be@ex #60NaNa e@eĕ !Wp@@e-NNxc 0Naf e@wNv0NaNa e@eĕ @ea@x s w e55/fNa HeB #60NaNa e@eĕ Wp@@e-NNxc 0Naf e@wZv0NaNa e@eĕ @ea@x3K @&& HBFYy2Qqm=;djfr>dS"y<\~y\q{LsYrrH,D,[q(6.&91)! ;3+# =5-% ?7/'@@@@ @@ @@@@@@@@@@ #(83 *1!: +;2"9 )0'/7?&.6>%- 5=$, 4<#+ 3;"* 2:!) 19 (08'/7?&.6>% -5=$ ,4<# +3;" *2:! )19 (08 @ 2!01 8)*"+9 :#(3&5$.4-<%>, =6   95=.-3;" !8412+:)<&>0$6*#(,%  6>,21<#=95$&:)8* (;%+-0!."43^1111111^1111111^11( ~$~=Ba&feBJ%@& fEA  w b,=b,b, _ d,_ ./_ /_  d,_  ,_  ._  0_  1 % e@ 54 Hf% _M  f f@ f f f    jw4 7  z Z|7 x@U6f& | e   X { 7 !  {@F  =f E  7!7 < J '7:! ,:@ w] 8  5:w F 7 @%  e f v | @ l7l  !R e  f \w < L  \ 8 > ,:@Ee &e Ћ6`E    & f 8% -v e`  e.eW @Wp(W @Wp(@%e` vp@  % 4   &  f&C =^ 5e ɋы l @t`w|wZw\w^wrwwwwwww,w`w$wnw4ww25 \UUU UUU@ *$& 5)%5 ,U ,`l zw 5@ H 4 5  z ` 5 &   ( `  ` 5  j5 " 5 ))p%U@ 25 X   @ ҋ `  `5@ 5  5 55 &- 5@  5 Ef &C f  e0 !f@ @ &Ef@ &E@ e0 Z @ @ @ &EC D <f 6f d D H:  0:  "& !A `C B f r e0 @e0  Df&tE WtEae @ ~EeH fEtEa L rtW ne n rm`ee " WtB`f@ ^: @  N@ H. @ :f[  @ . ] feb ? 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BBb    ee ee@ b f@ L > 6&tEa] EaM  !  e2  !B eA @   ! / J k /HW,PFKk4_MԀ^LT 000 ?LOG-I-Log Process (23-Jan-88 Version) ^LD^/^LT 000 ?LOG-I-Current block ^I max blocks ^I^LT ^BK ^+?TRAP-I-^+Clock monitor ^BI ^BI ^I ^+D ^MSI^+ ^SI( ^SBI2 ^SBI3ICMP sent ^BK ^BK ^C to ^CLink ^P up ^CLink ^P downBuffer preemption ^BK ^CLink message ^K ^K ^K ^K ^K TCP rcv ^I ^I ^SI ^SI ^I TCP snd ^I ^BI ^BI ^SI ^SI ^I TCP service request ^C ^XISpool service request ^R ^KDisk error ^P^BI status ^BK ^K block ^I Daemon error ^BK at ^KRoute ^C change ^P ^IRoute ^C downHost [^BI .^BI.^BI.^BI ] link msg ^BI ^BI flags ^BKICMP rcvd ^BK ^BK ^C from ^CTELSRVSMTP SY:UNSENT.MSGPRTQ ?LOG-F-Unable to open log file DK:LOG.TXT ?LOG-F-Read error on log file ?LOG-F-Invalid format on log file ?LOG-F-Write error on log file ?LOG-F-Log file full;Zx0Nm<[y1On(@/SBLPIKRFC D T G + AXHM-BAD-Jan-Feb-Mar-Apr-May-Jun-Jul-Aug-Sep-Oct-Nov-Dec-0123456789ABCDEF +-*H~Df5$?F0 B05$  -w4-,04w6200-40 z7- -/7 -q/4m~-2R~0 h-4Z-0 Vm/N--J-@- :-2/5#I0"-40 17-4#m-# tE ,##n0  #7 #0 ,4,0 UP#"f<# V.#n0  8X,T,P,L,#e0P0$ I$ "8,#fn0 5" 5" & & & x$@ e N"f"  7r"^" 0 e"fV" p5>" E0"7+^" F 60 <^" *E " 1 [@B $ &f 00& e !f1  * $f1 ~!-*n-*p  >@W 1U"J!> d+$ P5&!wH #fn0 ,U!0n0[7**7 **7 (*0*40 8*e42 4/@EC "42 , &  e@ w) W χr7`)w)#fn0 ^ 0n07b)7 b)7 `)-\)R) L)F)H)B)D)7 D)2+"@ .7 *)T( ")V#5 H#1 ?7 T(@ 5 ,1 Fe !f1 w"f1 _Mm"f1 l "f1 T_M"f1 > 5 e$ $T(d#n0 # ?7 T(@ 5 ( $fn0 $fn0  E ''v ' ' w'"fn0 x N.* " $U6 ~5( E"fn0 (w:. @ < : H<  \ > ,:@  .  & f 8% -v e`  e.eW @Wp(W @Wp(@%e` vp@  % D   6 f&C =^ 5eɋы l @t`w|wZw\w^wrwwwwwww,w`w$wnw4ww25 \UUU UUU@ *$& 5)%5 ,U ,`l zw 5@ H 4 5  z ` 5 &   ( `  ` 5  j5 " 5 ))p%U@ 25 X   P ҋ `  `5@ 5  5 55 &- 5@  5 Ef &C f  e0 !f@ @ &Ef@ &E@ e0 j @ @ @ &EC D <f 6f d D H:  0:  "& !A `C B f r e0 @e0  Df&tE WtEaeJ@ ~EeH fEtEaS \ rtW ne n rm`eze " WtB`f@ ^: @  N@ H. @ :f[  @ . ] fe$ ? 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NLH D  6ы@Eew ww` /RRRR 0 @R~@ ҕ.E@f` f @ [ (P/f Ep `    Dѐ r 0 ѐ ( $ " fӕ[P/@  ӕ.ӕ]f&B/d*S7 |77/B/0 7 -7 -|( e e -ZV @ ԋԋˋ1&  @+/B/0 Շme ,}/B/0 mT e   wNf&B/d*N7P/ 77 /B/0 0 -7 -  e Ӌ e P/~we ˋ 1‚wdw^fE r f~  e0 e0f&fE GDA 5x~ ~@7pvf(@`&숀 (  *Ee &eD Ћ6`E &** h@`@` Z + N2x&m&[MPtkrZE` Zg.{J45Ky#Oq8[qf ^A XNET User Process (25-Mar-86 Version) ^LD ^LT?XNET-^+?XNET-I-File open ^F[^I]?XNET-I-File closed?XNET-F-File purged?XNET-I-Operation complete?XNET-I-Message ^K ^K ^K ^K ^K Flags: ^K2 host: ^+(^R) ^C max size: ^I protocol: ^BI Cache pointer: ^K limit: ^K file: ^F[^I]^R ^K ^K ^K ^K ^K ^+T ?XNET-F-Format error?XNET-F-Unrecognized command?XNET-F-Invalid file specification?XNET-F-Invalid address?XNET-F-File not found?XNET-F-File read error?XNET-F-File write error?XNET-F-Net transfer aborted;Zx0Nm<[y1On(@/SBLPIKRFC D T G + AXHM-BAD-Jan-Feb-Mar-Apr-May-Jun-Jul-Aug-Sep-Oct-Nov-Dec-0123456789ABCDEF +-*?INET-(^R)-^+?INET-(^R)-I-Open ^C?INET-F-Unrecognized signal ^BI?INET-F-Sequence error ^K ^K ^K ^K ^K?INET-F-Buffer error ^K ^K ^K ^K ^KCommands are:  ,k4zk4< *?INET-F-Insufficient storage /9@Z`z~ &+-+*D+*^+g+x++g+++g++++++,,.,?,S,g,t,+~,,,,+,,,-!-9-K-d-s------I-OpenW-Connection error: ^+W-Host not responding: ^+I-ClosedF-Invalid signalF-Connection reset: ^+I-Remote disconnectI-Remote interruptunspecified reasonparameter errortime exceededreassembly errornet unreachablehost unreachableprotocol unreachableport unreachablefragmentation errorsource route failedgateway downhost downinitial connection timeoutACK timeoutsend window timeoutidle connection timeoutconnection-open statedata-transfer stateconnection-close stateI-Listening...F-Connection open errorF-Parameter errorW-Insufficient resourcesW-Gateway downW-Host downW-Net errorF-Invalid name syntaxW-Name server not respondingW-Name not foundF-Name does not existD~5l~ 6  Ev$ -0 Re&-`  `5&$ <È3skge1T.L.lF.@.>.:.6.- e,0 e  '&--e`5@b#e1  e  2 r l@ l2r7,w,  r 2 , ,L-D-l>-8-6-2-.-E  ,.D0-2 -+ pe-,, ,EX"5R"#f0 H 5:"1<"#f0 *  H7 ""1@  2%  E!++ 5 !(00 E! +0 e  >F+`  5 !-,F+E ! ,# x k# n * Ze +UJ! * *00 U!5! vE*( pve(*w @*:*eW slw8+6+2 .+È7(+w&+2r 2 r2rE  ,.D*0*2"2  >2) Fe   7)w)-)) ) ))e)))e)) ) 7`)w )7 )7)7 )7)?) )-)30 r)10  X)1V)-N)1 %  2),)*)  @ m)m)@ m)e7)w) @    f BAl & N @d@  Ne@ @ fBBl ewd($f0 $  ~$ $ 1 e0#f1 j0  6(q(((e ^7v'r'e7'e7'$  d%{3  '#f0 #fN0 !'#fN0 m0ej0$fA eB $f0 )$fx1 |)$f1 l)$f1 \''7r'7&>$f0 : &` &7& r&7& d27&m&&$ 7 & &7r&7p&B r7&$f0 `&m& & J7P&L&L&-H&<<>&$f0  7^&$f0 r (&w "& B$ &&7`"& %7 %7 %P1 h&0`0P1 e  K% T7<%È7%w%(%T0 e  \U 47 %7 %P1 %0Z0P1 e   $5~ $ l e00 5 FE1> % < 7$ E" pU p7h$ b7X$ r h LUi0ҕP1 %0P1 e  D ej0 ## 754P1 dP1Ћ=1#P1F10 00p 7 #1#UD% ^% 5  b% E @7###7 #7 #7 ##7 #7 #7 l#1j#5@  $5@$  $5@ #7 #7 #7 #U n   7 #7 #5 R 5@ " pr2 7"7 "E  f 'U  7P 7@& :#   NT(%     & f 8% -v e`  e.eW @Wp(W @Wp(@%e` vp@  % 4   &  f&C =^ 5eɋы l @t`w|wZw\w^wrwwwwwww,w`w$wnw4ww25 \UUU UUU@ *$& 5)%5 ,U ,`l zw 5@ H 4 5  z ` 5 &   ( `  ` 5  j5 " 5 ))p%U@ 25 X   @ ҋ `  `5@ 5  5 55 &- 5@  5 Ef &C f  e0 !f@ @ &Ef@ &E@ e0 Z @ @ @ &EC D <f 6f d D H:  0:  "& !A `C B f r e0 @e0  Df&tE WtEaef@ ~EeH fEtEao L rtW ne n rm`ee " WtB`f@ ^: @  N@ H. @ :f[  @ . ] fe@ ? BBb    ee ee@ P f@ : , $&tEa! Ea  !  e2  !B eA @ ff = dCE`  ~F,rI22He@eU~& & IHe < ' & & fIHe "5 `4CE$ ?*  eQ~ eU@U~JJ f@ DJW Ԇ@p ȈNJ 0& & fIHe fEɈ5u@5 eeՕ@U  Օ   @U~@@5e)Eq 1@e 1w& CDB`2  4q$$f"1" " " @ 2&  N D`e@  e@ ILjf V -- ~f f  7777N0w, A~&f' zb ` MLGIXCBUJL@ef& :e-4Bg& ,=#- &f'  f Ȉ- &f' @ -- fX&  :  70(''7 |7 z7 ~U@@$5$ U``e (  " 1  Ab  !0,(E? 5$    - ,? 0,7  ? &"0( @ 0   ? 0(? 0(7 z &b# j 37,4@ePb7  377777  7  37pfn7 jr3h3d *`1DD@ `-B)% * ѥ.w- h`, `   7 ]5Y7 337È7wwA2ww +Èw "W `7 40 e 7T H-B J3"17 3  ɝE  543 e CCle 4f e 73, ? ȈCCle5? W,,: 4f e30 7 4f Ze4 Fef",SW , .@!@!,SW ,,SW ,ӝӝӝӝf&E 7,Le Ne  ?e  |-$  57 $ P L!3 "4,e%!    6ы@Eewwzw`v 4RRRR^ 5 @R~@ ҕ.E@f` f @ [ (3 Ep `    ѐ r  ѐ    f~ӕ[3@  ӕ.ӕ]f&3,S7:0 |707.430 7 -7 -( e e - @ ԋԋˋ6  @+|wZU43Z0 Շm,e ",,430 m e   wf&3,N73 7743r0 0 Z-VP7 N-JF  e Ӌ e 3~we ˋ 6‚wdw^fE r f~  e0 e0f&fE GDA 5x~ ~@7pvf(@`&숀 (  ,Ee &e Ћ6`E &(-&- h@`@` Z x- N2x2m&[MtBxkr"T`(Zve"[qu~_^ ԀԀԀԀU@u~@^A PING User Process (25-Mar-86 Version) ^LD ^LT?PING-^+?PING-I-Operation complete?PING-I-Host not responding^LD,^LT,^I,^IF,^SIJFlags: ^K host: ^+(^R) ^C max size: ^I protocol: ^BI Options: ^BK ^BI ^BI^CFile: ^F[^I] at ^I^R ^K ^K ^K ^+TSamples: ^I, mean: ^I min: ^I4 max: ^I2 ovfl: ^I6 rtx: ^I seq: ^IValue Count^/----------------+Underflows ^I<Overflows ^IB^I ^I |^G*^K ^+ ^K^+^/ ^+?PING-F-Unrecognized command?PING-F-Net transfer aborted?PING-F-Unrecognized option?PING-F-File already open?PING-F-Invalid file name or size?PING-F-File write error?PING-F-Null file;Zx0Nm<[y1On(@/SBLPIKRFC D T G + AXHM-BAD-Jan-Feb-Mar-Apr-May-Jun-Jul-Aug-Sep-Oct-Nov-Dec-0123456789ABCDEF +-*?INET-(^R)-^+?INET-(^R)-I-Open ^C?INET-F-Unrecognized signal ^BI?INET-F-Sequence error ^K ^K ^K ^K ^K?INET-F-Buffer error ^K ^K ^K ^K ^KCommands are:  ,k4zk4< *?INET-F-Insufficient storage /9@Z`z~ --N--f----p--- .-.1.A.O.`.p........./ /!/.9/O/c/z//////// 0&070I-OpenW-Connection error: ^+W-Host not responding: ^+I-ClosedF-Invalid signalF-Connection reset: ^+I-Remote disconnectI-Remote interruptunspecified reasonparameter errortime exceededreassembly errornet unreachablehost unreachableprotocol unreachableport unreachablefragmentation errorsource route failedgateway downhost downinitial connection timeoutACK timeoutsend window timeoutidle connection timeoutconnection-open statedata-transfer stateconnection-close stateI-Listening...F-Connection open errorF-Parameter errorW-Insufficient resourcesW-Gateway downW-Host downW-Net errorF-Invalid name syntaxW-Name server not respondingW-Name not foundF-Name does not existve~,5! bF Ba&fe@ BJ%@& fEA  w GbG$fG,J Y6_  .H_  `J_  K_  FM_  (O_   T_  T_  hK_  ,O_  TO_  (P_  P_  >R_  U_  VV_  Z_  [_  \_  \_  ^_  ^_  aU@ & vfe*C5 CCB $5z    B %r@V@w2B b%Nef 5-5-W-wn-j B %RNt&Naef `e N aNaNaf eN @ Nff d%-N  Neff B%w $ BfB eNeff %5  [B % -ZW-wH-Dwt EB d%*$5w@ 55 u-Nm@mt&Naef e  N \ fNaNaf Few-wN wlw-b W-wRNJ-FwvN wf*&@m5 wN@t@aA @@7 N@t&Naef eum  7   1B %w B %w- W-wzvr-nwN wNefff ewp-4 W-w$ -wHN R w8Nefff ew N z   fB e BP? %5A& f t%5 AfA ew N 5  fNa %5 AfA \ewV@e5 @ H =@e5 fNaNaf e57 w N V 5  & & Naf ewNe 55 wNNa 5 fNaNaf he5wrW-NW-n5@@m7@ -  A , %w(   A  %w - W-w-wN w@ m5zv@m5 w@t@aXA @@7 R@t@a,N@t&Naef %umum A 4 %N    Af  e-wN w@m5 w@t@aA @@7 @t@a,@t&Naef %um-HwxN wh,(@m5 wP@t@a A @@7 @t@a  @t@a,um@t&Naef %-wN w@m5 w@t@apA @@7 j @t@a,@t@a @t&Naef %um& f %5 AfA $ ew fNa 2%5 zAf}A ew jA %P? 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EE  %@w4 ע עע @  @ d50@ EE2 r El2 E@2 3 05L =  v@&&e e5W-  2 @  w w  e r    w  E`@mAE@`5N - ww D5EE  E `   & v@&&e *e ww N 45C 'ע 7  $52C 6ע 7G 2% ` @w   V  B Nf %@ĕ5!a   %`5@&& HBFw D  Wp(N &   ` ww D!  %a!zew%A!Ze!$!.%0!9e  yYV2.1: COPYRIGHT (C) 1978 BY WHITESMITHS, LTD. +?J+$4*!)-)'z(uz(U't'T'n'N'b'B&z&Z&s&S%r%Rl%ql%Ql%%p%P$l$L$i$I#h#H#g#G"f"F"e"Ep"dp"DP"cP"C!a!A, can't open MSG.HLP msg.hlp MTP commands included MTP commands NOT included Name string: MTP string: Can't open can't open At beginning of file At end of file !!!!! !!!!! can't open can't open SY:UNSENT.MSGmsg Mail Length NOT included Length included Forward message(s): File NOT changed, so NOT updated file Exit and update Answer message: <- MSG -- Version of 27-Apr-86 Type ? for help There is no active mail file is a deleted messageSY:UNSENT.MSGfile name: pathto:<to:<. 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Ae W*wfe5  & & f eN ff %5 G %N  Gf G euAWpfJFfHF& r rAWpfBFf@F& R T G ~%> j  sG `%" L  fG B%5 u- @t@m,   XG %N  9G % = u/ @t@m "uu-@t@m N@t&Nmf &e     @wfe @&&f e5 N   N@&&f e@,@e5@5 *Hf @% 'Hf ,%@, %Hf % #Hf %N f p !Hf %5 Hffe e5u-'@AeAmep@AepN 5W- *N 5Hffe e55 u-* oHf %eW-Naf %N 5  Hffe e5u-w:Gf %@AeAme p@Ae pN 5W- wN 5 Hf <%@AeAmep@AepN 45W- N 5Naf %N 5W- W- Naf %  5 W-w Hf ~% W-AGf ^%7Naf H%N f5W- W-W- Gf %5 Naf %  ; Gffe e5u-'@AeAmp@ApN 5W- Naf t% "W-)Gf R%Naf <%Gf *%Gf %w Gf %@f t Gf %fe@@ez@ex@e?T@ev@eAHu@eHp @eH pu @ A H=  w.feRu @ A H=@wf N ff &f ew&fw  A@   N 5 5 N    @ C B B-C- BC    5 uweF LiLILuLULnLNLeLELdLDLaLAL too large, using Message number too small, using Message number total messages ; Invalid message number There is no active read file -- ************************ chars) , (msg. # Press '2' when ready MSG-W-No LPCM available lpc:fePG5 ?7 @ 7Nf \ 5W- W @= w@w6W  W  0W9@ =W   wW  W  W- aWzA WZ@Gw0*W9,%|tl@ 7\7 ZPHB7 >0W9*Wp @`@e7  Wpw- f % G r% wt-, f % G .%N  G %^   P0W9W  W &&7 0W9Wp @`@e7 -* wG %  dG % bG B%-* OG %v  % ww e @&&f eN    A@AC ``@ f&f e55 N f  Gf  @5, N 2f @, ff %wfeN  @&&f eN  ; 5 W- N @Amx @&&f eNefef .%@pmN \w&w e @&&f e BwN   A@AC ``@ f&f e5 @&&f eN f \  ,@@5Nf  N  ;;f  N hf   A@AC ``@ f&f reN (f  5 @5, N f ww e @&&f eN    A@AC ``@ f&f e55  H %N   H %@  G %@5,:N 5W@N 5 A@AC ``@ C ``@ e@ 5uWV%fff e5`$@,Aff %7@  fff e5`A@AC ``@ C ``@ e@ 5u fff ewfe5 5 5 ?H H%5  &H :%#u fff `e H %  b 5W2@wl Naf %5 W-  @e@m @e@m H @ 5@Et5@A@`5@Et5@E 5@A@`5@Et5@A@`5Naf t%fe5 @wlfeN j @&&f BeN N ; 5 W- N .ܵ @Ax @&&f eNefef %@pN ww e@ t@m, @ t@m, @ t@m,"@ t@m55@ t@m,&@ t@m,  f ff eNaf %wu @ADuDm A fff nefef %5 f ff >eNfef X%A 5`u` u A 5`u`u @ADuDm @ADuDm 5u @t@m, Naf %Nf fff ewfeN D55 u-@ f : wffe fNa nږ%@a0Nef w0DH5& & & x$e HH눇DH5DH5DH5 f N`I > wp are in use file blocks are available of which A maximum of messages in the file of Current message is (and not included) -- Messages from file: can't create LP:lst List is a deleted messagefile name: and NOT included can't create msg Output is a deleted messagefile name: f  Y ٖ%N  p  Y fٖ%N R  YfY @e Y .ٖ%   Y ٖ%  Y ؖ%wpfe@m5 (@t@mA @@7 @t@m,@t&Nmf Ė%wumfe5 5 5 u-3@t@m,1  & & f eNff Ö%5N@t@m&&ff :eN Z@wf feZkZ fbZ e^ZP? ^Ж%5ZZf |ۖ%5RfNa Ԗ%5-**Q +Zf/Zf Fe@m5 :@t@m A @@7 g@t@m ,bN@t&Nm ff eK GZfIZ e a|@m5 S@t@m `A @@7 ZJ@t@m ,@ f Nf@t&Nm f de'umw 'Z *֖%N    Zf eN hwxumfe5 5 @ t@m55@ t@m55 ffffff e ww eZZ fZ feZP? Ζ%5 wf ۖ%5w* fNa >Җ%55 5 N 55 ffNa@&f e 5u@A wJAWp@@FABFCpHFJF AWp@HFAJF@A  5ufff efff eumumu N 5heu f ז%5ZfNa Ж%5@m5 S@t@m tA @@7 nX@t@m ,RN@t&Nm f %? fff e@Aep@0  w8 ZfZ e f T  f F N `whum Z Җ%N   Zf efe5 5 5 W- @ @ 5 u @ 5h5 u-%@eA AmWtAmHp@eA AmWtAmp 5 h@ 5 ffffff ڽe wZ  :4 R  7 *7$4 R 7    w  7 @ ! ͋5$ f& A  tW/Z @ Bw ~ ŀՠ W w X  :7 .4 , MfMf!@! @b  77$   w  7  ͋ b APW W/ wb 7 8 w . :7 ` W"@B e-d*;@ e: /w  &f ~ 7 b w"w,fe b W%ME͋uyow 3 b w M DC$ em4 ȝ0 w"!Ew nwh mZ W   A  W  wQ$BEE"@ > xE` w7 b  A7 ! wHʋ E |w0w q / ʕ: Д l RA7 | E @W MMe: ʋww :ʋ/ CD & -* A7  E -*W    w  :  &fA@@WFWE+ + 7   4  vp0   +wf!W ! P W W:W/  f&ȋ &ff@AEW WaWzE PAE W  W p   m4 ȝpn0  @`w f͕f & N@鈀ff8 ( R   4  0  ҆w  m&  7 7w  @^UA!HELP.ENDM OPTION?HELP-What topic do you want help with? TP z2dԀ  2dԀ " b  , M2d N " F-File not found HELP.TXTF-Illegal option, type 'HELP'F-Syntax error in command, type 'HELP'W-Line printer not available - using terminalF-Help not available for F-File not a valid library HELP.TXTF-HELP.TXT has invalid formatW-Help not available for subtopic W-Help not available for subtopic item F-Read error on HELP.TXTF-Write error on LP:F-Not enough memory @DB  "R  D f   Հ e  C b @` ` Z@9/ $#.- ADE  % b %e ee e  (@~fJBa&feBJ%@& fEA  w 0hJ000# 00x 0: _ 0_  0_  f1_ 0_ 5_ B_ (G_ 0_ 1_ 0 0) *) (e7!((7(&    e7!((7!(7(h,2 .EP7(BBl@ pw*(w,((w&(w(((5? f, t e-l(* -^(5 -P(%P(B(׭H(A(3(׭8( 2($('9 -(E -({  P-'  rf,  ' f,  &t, e &t, te   L'fB'1J'&F'(B'D'*@',<'q,&*q,(,, f,   $ V&f e  r7 &4&& e7 &_M>f6 /2)L&z,/).&e (&F,  0( 7&7&,e ( %" e7 &7 &z, -7%z,%-0  z& -t& %8  fF, -%54  bz,2p   >/ n7 \%%7!%* H% f DE7 *%7$%f|, "f efz, $7!$+ 4 ef mf f f    76$ 7-$ 7$ 7$  7$ 7# 7# C#7!#>e4 x4 p4 h4#ePb44{{ ###E &4 4 h#7!f# 4 e 4  tm eEt eE *͈"+ . e  U5l" eT  B7p 8 e"-"/z, "-0  "-"8 7 ~"ff&  WtAmE30 g!0 WtAmE3:0 g!:0 ڇ œ @0q00 W 10 @:0q;0:0 W 1:0~ Az!Am00  Їff&   WtAmE f!U WtAmE f!U0e @ڇ7 $$  e>0^0RR~0 Az!AmJ&=06=0x F `` e0@n!@p!@r!@t!@v!@x!Wt`BFtWte0! ! BQBQBQBQ ͇ F!}00@x3>0 ^00RR~ $- $w 0BI  Bq""e~^A Ɍ 0~ы fwX$B@`eE7D$@~ 2$ z,$*$($&$@f@eE7#BE  Bm ## &-# -# -#-## f#Etmd &` e7 #7 #7 #7 #Az#t@7xr#@7xn#@7xj#@7xf# 0 Be~Ee &eЋ6`E    & f 8% -v e`  e.eW @Wp(W @Wp(@%e` vp@  % 4   &  f&C =^ 5e<ɋы l @t`w|wZw\w^wrwwwwwww,w`w$wnw4ww25 \UUU UUU@ *$& 5)%5 ,U ,`l zw 5@ H 4 5  z ` 5 &   ( `  ` 5  j5 " 5 ))p%U@ 25 X   @ ҋ `  `5@ 5  5 55 &- 5@  5 Ef &C f  e0 !f@ @ &Ef@ &E@ e0 Z @ @ @ &EC D <f 6f d D H:  0:  "& !A `C B f r e0 @e0  Df&tE WtEae@ ~EeH fEtEa L rtW neP n rm`e e " WtB`f@ ^: @  N@ H. @ :f[  @ . ] fe ? BBb    ee ee@ P f@ : , $&tEa Ea  !  e2  !B eA @ ff = dCE`  ~F,rI22He@eU~& & IHe < ' & & fIHe "5 `4CE$ ?*  eQ~ eU@U~JJ f@ DJW Ԇ@p ȈNJ 0& & fIHe fEɈ5u@5 eeՕ@U  Օ   @U~@@5e)Eq 1@e 1w& CDB`2  4q$$f"1" " " @ 2&  N D`e@  e@ ILjf V -- ~f f  7 7 7 7 +w, A~"f# z ` MLGIXCBU @ef& :e- Bg" ,= #- "f#  f Ȉ-z  "f# @ -Z -R  fX" 4 4 P& 7* 0$##7  7  7  U@@$5$ U  e (  R 1  Ab  !0( E? 5$    - (?z 0(7t n  h d ?X T N "R0$8 @ 0   ? 0$? 0$7  & j " &(( R@`@` D ) 82vxXZa'jmZ"a(&Ev|k4<y<,0$UNSPATOMGPS LORCWWVBWWV GOESDCN NTP UDP MAN NIST?UDP-I-NAME/TIME/TFTP Server (29-Jul-90 Version) ^LD?UDP-^+?UDP-W-Unable to open statistics file DK:STATS.DAT?UDP-W-Statistics file full?UDP-F-Net transfer aborted?UDP-F-Unrecognized command?UDP-I-Current block ^I0 max blocks ^I,?UDP-F-Invalid fragment ^C?UDP-F-Invalid length ^C?UDP-F-Invalid address ^C ^XI?UDP-F-Unrecognized request ^C ^XIAdrID Address Str Pol Sta Rch Delay Offset Weight Update^/------------------------------------------------------------------------^BI free^I^+ ^A^+ ^C ^BIm ^BI ^BHl ^BH ^SI ^SMI ^I ^+TEntryID: ^I Host address: ^C ^XI peer address: ^C ^XI^/Peer status: ^XH keyID: ^BI mode: ^BHl poll: ^SBIn stratum: ^BIm precision: ^SBIo^/Offset: ^SMI delay: ^SI disp: ^I root delay: ^SMIp root disp: ^SMIt^/Reference clock ID: ^+^Ax^+^Cx^+ timestamp: ^+D~ ^+T^/Host mode: ^BH poll: ^SBI flash: ^BH} filter: ^BI sent: ^I rcvd: ^I supr: ^I^/Offset ^SMI ^SMI( ^SMI2 ^SMI< ^SMIF ^SMIP ^SMIZ ^SMId^/Delay ^SI" ^SI, ^SI6 ^SI@ ^SIJ ^SIT ^SI^ ^SIh^/Disp ^I$ ^I. ^I8 ^IB ^IL ^IV ^I` ^Ij?UDP-W-Entry not found x.-+#*7:2*" <4,$ >6.&@80( 91)! ;3+# =5-% ?7/'(08@ '/7?&.6>%- 5=$, 4<#+ 3;"* 2:!) 1991)! :2*" ;3+# <4,$?7/'>6.&=5-%      )4%/7(3-!0,1'8"5.*2$                                                                                                                                     @  0` P@p /9@Z`z~ ;Zx0Nm<[y1On(@/SBLPIKRFC D T G + AXHM-BAD-Jan-Feb-Mar-Apr-May-Jun-Jul-Aug-Sep-Oct-Nov-Dec-0123456789ABCDEF +-*?INET-(^R)-^+?INET-(^R)-I-Open ^C?INET-F-Unrecognized signal ^BI?INET-F-Sequence error ^K ^K ^K ^K ^K?INET-F-Buffer error ^K ^K ^K ^K ^KCommands are:)%)(<)(V)_)p))_)))_))))))**&*7*K*_*l*)v****)*** ++1+C+\+k+w+++++I-OpenW-Connection error: ^+W-Host not responding: ^+I-ClosedF-Invalid signalF-Connection reset: ^+I-Remote disconnectI-Remote interruptunspecified reasonparameter errortime exceededreassembly errornet unreachablehost unreachableprotocol unreachableport unreachablefragmentation errorsource route failedgateway downhost downinitial connection timeoutACK timeoutsend window timeoutidle connection timeoutconnection-open statedata-transfer stateconnection-close stateI-Listening...F-Connection open errorF-Parameter errorW-Insufficient resourcesW-Gateway downW-Host downW-Net errorF-Invalid name syntaxW-Name server not respondingW-Name not foundF-Name does not exist/ *211 48487 284 ^*;   B 84  R 1  Ab 2 *-84*2820  82E ߋ*1 ܱ:?UDP-W-Unable to open command file DK:UDP.INX?UDP-W-Command file read error?UDP-W-Unknown command  H ԇ`< < 5e E)- - 9 - - +  =(=-= :e 2>< e 0ӝq ӝl ӝk ӝf ӕӝH ӝE ӝB ӝ?  8҇f-= .@!@!ӝ ӝ ӝ ӝ -= w w w w @R~@ ҕ.E@f` N>7 <> ePb7 N>7j 7 7 7 7 V  7 F N>70 f. 7?  * 2 `>( `>$ *`1  `- )% ѥ.w h`<  `    7 ]5 Y7 N>2>7x È7 w p z p w A2w w\ D +ÈwH ` X "W `7 >@ fe 7   -  N>7 \> ɝE  5>.> e bCCle >f e 7@N><6 ? ȈCCle5? W,, >f .eN>0 7 >f e> ef" "4,e%! ~ z  6ы@Eew?w:w`6 >RRRR ? @R~@ ҕ.E@f` f ,@ [ (\> Ep `   zѐ  f ѐ ^ Z X f>ӕ[\>@  ӕ.ӕ]f&N><S7 |77>N>0 7 -7 -( e e - @ ԋԋˋ@\  P@J+<7>N>0 Շme ,>N>0 m e   wf&N><N7R\> 7D7B>N>20 0 -7 -   e Ӌ e \>~we ˋ @‚wdw^fE r f~  e0 e0f&fE GDA 5x~ ~@7pHv?UDP-I-Name request ^C&?UDP-F-Name not found?UDP-I-Domain name request ^C&^+ for ^A ty ^I cl ^I for ^C ty ^I cl ^I  ,k4zk4< *557^ 8Pň7TwPwL7 l@7!>: :-t-n-h -h-b-\("7 7lr7 7mr-7e  ԇtEW  ^e ~EW WpE @` G 54 } 4n F h }EUeGf ܁}( F 5 @I&mEtUZI mr mv և 4},0,2 ,4,6},  ,",$,&}e0246@I 0eC C C C   " $  ( * ,}024    -& }eJI ^jZfVb$\ V P"L F @>  7<$, * ("* ( ((* ,4 2 02 00l4w w l2w l0 7 7 (*,4  2 0~~w xw rw j}55@5 }5  A@}e Հ} Հ}eleelS~e~  @Ittt}XI  Ї777777 8 BBleT&3   2ň7$?rÈ5@m@ 7w@" @l3 WtSSe eS~@I 0246e ~85@ B&ÈNw4e (δ tEUeDHf Lׁ544 ( 4G $    4`-tf peb   3`,>>~SSSSSetIW,>$JC CltI , (&eee +~ tI\ 44444 WtetIW tI>B 5@7777  7 7  w w w e~w xw r n j-f>>\mX `->> .f&7 tIE--> m 4-x4-zw   tI `&777 @ 7`w w 7 z t7p j d7` Z7T  7`Hw Bw <7: 4 . ( $ , " ee  e7!w: tI  w     tI  `w   7!z tr -jh f  tID7!B15* Hm Wp>` rtI , (&e IeetI!ee7 7 7 > 7 tI " e  - ftetI  7 D7 b !Ɇ 4e tI T7 E$UH leD@ < 1mmtI m 7  07m7m EUHf сe7z 7 7 7 & Rm7 v 7p W tI`@7t 7p 7l 7d ^ X 7T N 7H D w B w < w 6 e4 w . w ( m( , w & w m  w  m  7 7  7     7 7 7 m w w m w m    v z  l  h  d | f "mmvmr @`f e& f e&&&t@ e 7  7 7  7 7 & 7   . 7 7 7 7 7 7 7 tIB ^@7l w w 7 7 7 7 7 7|  m~ ` w Z w T w N mj L w F w @ mZ < w 6 mN 0 'w @ w : w 4 e2 w , w & .    e   w w w e w w     lfdlEE?R7PN H7!65 FC E?E*7P&췥"EUHf2, \΁ef&  Em lE?@P7777r7mLR z`m |vmv m  &@ e "E2U,IfbI t́e7! e w # -5׭  ׭ e׭׭ 7 f~$<E fe6 ~e    >~> 5@   f5 7!2 etnWtt 4 Mf4 L5  e&0f Ve5 E@-8U@5@e&0f fe4U 5 E UdHf ʁef&-Wpf@\A^Ȉe2 ^10u11D dd11JFwdwbw` L F @ B@>w6 0 * $w(w&   ZfwE7 7 efw w Q  <7 7 w   w7    mjw dw ^mzZw TmnNJHFDX RP> 8 2 P64w 0w *7 (       w w   T(w w w ew w  4w w w w w w ew w w w w &7 7 ~7 |1 p7 n7 l7 j7 h7 fmTXw Rw LmDHw Bm8<~ 2 ~5w 0w *w $w w w ew w w w w  Fw w w ew w w w w ew w     &f   aC B A mB A mA m~ | r jw vw pw jw dw ^w X#~wLJH ~ 07.w, Ble νň #Ep`Tv&fÈe@  !B eA @ e@ ee@ el>28222221211221222121121211?UDP-I-NTP peer ^I reachable ^C ^XI?UDP-I-NTP peer ^I installed ^C ^XI?UDP-I-NTP peer ^I unreachable?UDP-I-NTP peer ^I authentication failure ^BI?UDP-I-NTP peer ^I new stratum ^BIm ^SI ^SMI ^I?UDP-I-NTP lost clock source?UDP-I-NTP new system status ^K?UDP-I-NTP step adjust ^SMI?UDP-I-Time request ^C&wH e D7: RRNJLH|D-f.+-`('-Z"#-Z"-T-N t`wXwtwwwbwHw@K9wJt`w"wwH7 7 |9 Ӈ U.:V:P7h9f( ܁9fV: t܁*&w ы = N(.:8:$79f $܁9f8: ܁7 <w"989c9 <9v%9n7 7 z BB`eBS@ S ,҇-@w7 T w ,ww 5 .: p0 <%` 7.: p0 8w$7 8 4 BB`e~w(-pw7 , \w P L 7 H D-@9 BB`eK .:p0 e ߋ* 7 8 w8w6.&91)! ;3+# =5-% ?7/'@@@@ @@ @@@@@@@@@@ #(83 *1!: +;2"9 )0'/7?&.6>%- 5=$, 4<#+ 3;"* 2:!) 19 (08'/7?&.6>% -5=$ ,4<# +3;" *2:! )19 (08 @ 2!01 8)*"+9 :#(3&5$.4-<%>, =6   95=.-3;" !8412+:)<&>0$6*#(,%  6>,21<#=95$&:)8* (;%+-0!."43*CjCjCjCjCjCjC*CjCjCjCjCjCjC*CB`7LHBe IB74 BB*7 $7 $7 "7 -f{  h -͈-mH7 8r7 .7  -m與 d7 Ble-{Հ~HBSW TB  7 XR7NӟJ F @G~-{ 2e $  &f e7 @7 ۇTB  e7 7@}7 ۇ t'^7LH`E@J7!H  e n 7E 77E?f8, ہ"@f ہ W@f$, ځi@ ňtE7zy@f0B ځ@f ځfAWpe7@ @fH ځ@f8 ~ځ.7!, 4 e@%8 Jڇ7E=f 0ځm4>f ځ(>f ځ@>f ف7 tE7 >f0B ف>f ف p  K  t DX @O 7 هB @9 N8 pه, @# n8 Zه,l``AbfE%5 ׭  1 w2 @ E 7 A ՇHB 87 ,l`  7 b `Ab@E   1 8 5 9  9 r ; bؼ  Z7 L؇ Z/ :7 7!F ;f ؁E7 7 f@B ׁf ׁh ~ -z  n l BDB` : 6~ef>B ׁ Ї22*320542@AEAjAUNSPATOMWWVBWWVGOESDCNNTPUDPMANNIST?UDP-W-Restarting?STAT-F-Illegal process?STAT-F-Invalid command?NTPMON-F-Invalid message length or format?NTPMON-F-Authentication failure?NTPMON-F-Invalid or unsupported request?NTPMON-F-Administratively prohibited?NTPMON-F-Unknown association identifier?NTPMON-F-Unknown variable name?NTPMON-F-Invalid variable valueProcess type: ^K options: ^K ^/Host ID: ^BI% max conn: ^BI$ max size: ^I^/Input packets ^MI Output packets ^MI ^/ bad format ^I Returned ^I^/ bad checksum ^I ICMP msgs rcvd ^I^/ unreachable ^I ICMP msgs sent ^I^/ reass error ^INBS time ^BI2 ^A3^/Poll messages ^MI&^/ no reply ^I*^/ bad format ^I,^/ bad data ^I.^/ last set ^I0Process type: ^K options: ^K ^/Subnet: ^R status: ^BK0 hello: ^BI1 timeout: ^I"^/Address: ^C( max size: ^I bias: ^I, queue: ^I.^/Input packets ^MI4 Output packets ^MIH^/ bad format ^I8 frag error ^IL^/ bad checksum ^I: preempted ^IP^/ unreachable ^I< time exceeded ^IN^/ HELLO msgs ^MI> HELLO msgs ^MIR^/Input errors ^IV Output errors ^IB^/Returned ^ID ICMP msgs ^IX^/No buffer ^IF Quenched ^IZProcess type: ^K options: ^K ^/Reference clock: ^BI from: ^BIL dispersion: ^I refstamp: ^+D ^+T"^/Local clock offset: ^SI* skew: ^SI( comp: ^SBI2 poll: ^SBI3 stratum: ^BI prec: ^SI&^/Processes ^I Free blocks ^I^/Vectors ^I Free bytes ^I^/Nibbles ^I Quench level ^I4^/Packets ^I Uptime ^+T.^/Lost traps: ^IJ ^K> ^K@ ^KB ^KD ^KF ^KH^/Route changes: ^I6 net: ^C: changes: ^I8^/Sequence: ^I` pc: ^Kf code: ^BKb process: ^Kd^/Regs: ^Kh ^Kj ^Kl ^Kn ^Kp ^Kr ^Kt ^Kv^/Stack: ^Kx ^Kz ^K| ^K~ ^K ^K ^K ^Ksrcadr=^C, srcport=^XI, dstadr=^C, dstport=^XI,^/keyid=^BI, stratum=^BIm, precision=^SBIo, rootdelay=^SMIp, rootdispersion=^SMIt,refid=^Ax^+refid=^Cx^+, reftime="^+D~ ^+T",^/delay=^SI, offset=^SMI, dispersion=^I, $weight=^I, pmode=0x^BHl, hmode=0x^BH,^/reach=0x^BH, valid=^BI^+, leap=^BI, hmode=^BI^+, hpoll=^SBI, ppoll=^SBIn, $flash=0x^BH},^/org=0x^H^H.^H^H, rec=0x^H^H .^H ^H, xmt=0x^H^H.^H^H,^/filtdelay= ^SI" ^SI, ^SI6 ^SI@ ^SIJ ^SIT ^SI^ ^SIh,^/filtoffset= ^SMI ^SMI( ^SMI2 ^SMI< ^SMIF ^SMIP ^SMIZ ^SMId,^/filterror= ^I$ ^I. ^I8 ^IB ^IL ^IV ^I` ^Ijprocessor=PDP11/LSI-11, system=FUZZBALL,^/keyid=^BI^+, stratum=^BI, precision=^SI&, rootdispersion=^I^+, rootdelay=^SI,, rootdelay=0, leap=^I^+, peer=^I^+, refid=^A^+, reftime="^+D ^+T"",^/clock="^LD ^LT"^+, phase=^SI*, freq=^SI(, comp=^SBI2, poll=^SBI3device=Spectracom 8170 WWVB Receiver,device=TrueTime 432-DC GOES Receiver,device=Heath GC-1000 WWV/H Receiver,device=Precision Standard Time 1020 (v4.01) WWV/H Receiver,timecode="^A3",^/poll=^I&, noreply=^I*, badformat=^I,, baddata=^I.header=0x^XH, sequence=^XI , ident=^XI, status=0x^XH , count=^XI rXU@ & :w =e'* 55 5 5 5 $5 5 5 5 5 5 FQ7QQ QQPPPPPPPPPeP@ev55 W-d @ @a0 Nev 05 NP 6%   5$  8  fff 6eJPxvNa -%7ZC/wRC+H@e5u@e55@e55uNC P0   ^1 7BBB 20 N 0  :P 5%   B 8%7B#B 5W-=W-9A 5`u`u  ffdB 8eLB V7%7DBf O6BO b5eN /  < NBWpfUfU& : 5 ,P 5%N .  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"-)7 )e  se"5 7!((N 57 ( 5N 5  w@e= (w(@@m-(@@m7r( fe  w @e  7!F(-B(  "F  @w $(4 7(7!( (7( P'  2 * $4 2 w D  0F  e4&& %4  Ewf %  AWp@e\Hww  !  ^)wzw heD Wp@]H5% ̋ w>Wp@e\H5:̋ : Nf  5 HH  5D5.̋ Nf 5Nefe 5.5  5̋ Nf 5NeNa r%   f j Na J%   Na&e L%5@w Na& ,%5W- @ W-  & Na&e e5@3   33 3  3  A v   3s 2' V7$'w .DC  EE   ,9@w EE4 t E@4 Em4 G D Ȕe t   e@ EEf& EE  & v@&&e he  w44 w%%EI%UI E|Uw D ̋ʋ w& ~%f f% PH N N NH  0wRw 8N ~5& tt W-  tmtm t  @mAm@ 4t @ww D5EE  E `   & v@&&e e wFw 4E`@mAE@`5N $ -  wV2.1: COPYRIGHT (C) 1978 BY WHITESMITHS, LTD.  | v p h  ?SYSMGR-W-Unrecognized Command *FUZZBALL?SYSMGR-F-Improper Login File Format ?SYSMGR-W-Standard Login File does not exist SY:LOGIN.DAT) type ? for help 6-17-83SYSMGR-Login File Manager (QUI?ENTDISDELCRE?SYSMGR-W-Standard Login File already exists SY:LOGIN.DATSY:LOGIN.DAT) not in Login File ?SYSMGR-W-Specified User (Username: ---- -------------- User Private Volume Y already in Login File, override?:?SYSMGR-W-User ?SYSMGR-W-Null User Name Not Entered Private Volume: Password: Username: quit -quit executing this program enter -make new entries to the login file display-display current login file entries delete -delete user name from login file create -create a standard login file if none exists ?SYSMGR-I-The following commands are available: SY:LOGIN.DAT                                                                                                                                91)! ;3+# =5-% ?7/'80( :2*" <4,$ >6.&91)! ;3+# =5-% ?7/'@@@@ @@ @@@@@@@@@@ #(83 *1!: +;2"9 )0'/7?&.6>%- 5=$, 4<#+ 3;"* 2:!) 19 (08'/7?&.6>% -5=$ ,4<# +3;" *2:! )19 (08 @ 2!01 8)*"+9 :#(3&5$.4-<%>, =6   95=.-3;" !8412+:)<&>0$6*#(,%  6>,21<#=95$&:)8* (;%+-0!."43@EEEEEEE@EEEEEEE@EEbad finit callcan't write t out of heap spacebad free callbad getc callDK : VHerror @#AC ` %N&&!+_"z$ Ud&X( %+b&8".Pe(W2K(3(yA,"P2d\<k4}]k4d8nv:`p :"EjLpvLDV_M8_Mp:t_MakQkeqQKRvUS?TS\X\X*Xkve+xeIfZf@jspNrs^xyxd3x?T EyL lQyy y% z%zjR}y}Ru~@) 00J[=pNs\M_c:8;no5}oX?},.MACRO AUTOSPOOL AUTOSPOOL Automatic transparent spooling SYNTAX See PIP and other output-oreinted utilities. SEMANTICS Autospool is an operating-system feature that supports automatic transparent spooling for local and remote devices such as line printers, facsimile printers, voice codecs and bitmap displays. It is invoked when output is directed to any of a number of network virtual devices indicated in the configuration tables. The output is spooled in a special file preceeded by control information. When the file is closed an internal message is sent to the spooling daemon PRTQ, which then transmits the file to a local device or forwards it to another host for processing there. See help information for MPM, PRINT, PRTQ, SPQSRV and UDP for further information. Note that for both the FTP and TFTP file-transfer servers, a destination device specification of an autospool device will cause the file to be processed by the spooling system. This feature is intended primarily for use by IBM Personal Computers with the MIT PC-IP software, but can be used in other applications as well. The autospool system can also be used to exchange apool files between Unix and Fuzzball machines, since the protocols used are compatable. For example, it is possible to spool files from Fuzzball to Unix-compatible print servers and from Unix machines to Fuzzball devices, such as Dacom facsimile printers and LPC voice codecs. The autospool system is also used with the Multi-Media Mail (MMM) system. See Help information under MMM for further information. OPTIONS None EXAMPLES None .ENDM .MACRO BINCOM BINCOM Binary compare program SYNTAX BINCOM ;invoke BINCOM.SAV *[listfile][,SIPPfile]=oldfile,newfile[/options] *... ;* is CSI prompt *^Z ;exit to CLI SEMANTICS See the RT-11 System User's Guide OPTIONS /B Compares bytes instead of words /D Compares two entire volumes /E:n Ends comparison at block n /H Prints help information on terminal /O Creates a difference listing file or SIPP command file even if no differences between the input files are found /Q Suppresses terminal output of differences /S:n Starts comparison at block n EXAMPLES None .ENDM .MACRO BUP BUP Backup utility program SYNTAX BUP ;invoke BUP.SAV *[/options]=[/options] *... ;* is CSI prompt *^Z ;exit to CLI SEMANTICS See the RT-11 System User's Guide OPTIONS /I Backs up a large volume on multiple smaller volumes /L Lists directory of a backup volume /X Restores a large file or, with /L, a large volume from multiple backup volumes /Z Initializes a volume for backup no option Backs up a large file on multiple smaller volumes EXAMPLES None .ENDM .MACRO CONFIGURATION CONFIGURATION Configuration SYNTAX None SEMANTICS There are four tables which must be adjusted for each configuration. These are normally part in a module which is included in every fuzzball sharing a single net/subnet configuration and is the same in every fuzzball. The name of this module is usually something like DCN.MAC, where DCN represents the generic name of the configuration. Internet address/mask (.NETID) This establishes the subnet address and address mask for the physical host (note there can be one or more virtual hosts co-resident in that host). The format is as illustrated below, in decimal, where the first field represents the subnet address and the host ID (HID) represents the subfield used for subnet addressing. The second field represents the address mask, which is used only to determine whether an arbitrary address is local or foreign to the subnet. Note that the convention in assigning zero and one bits is opposite to that used in some other systems (e.g. MIT PCIP) and that the bits corresponding to the HID field must be one. Following is an example: .NETID <128,4,0,HID>,<0,0,0,255> ;internet address/mask A standard mask-and-match operation consists of first exclusive-ORing the arbitrary address and the subnet address above, then clearing the bits of the result corresponding to the one bits of the address mask. If the result is zero the arbitrary address is in the same subnet, otherwise not. Clock synchronizing table This table consists of a list of host/network addresses used to syncrhonize the local clock. The entries are used in the order listed. The system will lock on the first address in the list that is up, according to the routing algorithm. Following is an example: .CLKID <128,4,0,15> ;dcn1 clock .CLKID <128,4,0,14> ;dcn6 clock .CLKID <128,5,0,0> ;fordnet clock .CLKID <35,0,0,0> ;umichnet clock .CLKID ;end of table Local host table This table establishes the mapping of Internet address to host ID for all local-net addresses (e.g. those that pass the mask-and-match test implied by the above Internet address/mask quantities). Each line in the table consists of (a) Internet address, (b) HID, (c) address mask (defaults to <0,0,0,0>), (d) flags field. Ordinarily, only those local-net hosts and gateways participating in the Hello routing algorithm need have entries in this table; however, space must be allocated for those hosts whose routing is handled by ARP and/or EGP. Ordinarily, only the last and automatic-ARP lines (defaults) have a nonzero address mask, which is constructed so as to capture all addresses not matched by the preceding items. If the HID field of any entry is set to something larger than the largest possible value (determined from the routing table described later) such as 255, the routing function returns a "destination unreachable;" otherwise, the default HID determines the route. The flags field in the default item is set to NGB to discourage accidental routing updates from broken neighbor hosts that may have invalid subnet addresses. The flags field of the last entry is set to END to avoid castrophe if the automatic-ARP table becomes full. $LOCAD: .GATBL <128,4,0,0>,0 ;broadcast .GATBL <128,4,0,1>,1 ;dcn1 (pogo) .GATBL <128,4,0,2>,2 ;dcn2 (boombah) .GATBL <128,4,0,3>,3 ;dcn3 (albert) .GATBL <128,4,0,4>,4 ;umichnet agent .GATBL <128,4,0,5>,5 ;dcn5 (hepzibah) .GATBL <128,4,0,6>,6 ;dcn6 (backroom) .GATBL <128,4,0,7>,7 ;dcn7 (snavely) .GATBL <128,4,0,8>,8 ;dcn8 (porkypine) .GATBL <128,4,0,9>,9 ;dcn9 (churchy) .GATBL <128,4,0,11>,11 ;fordnet agent .GATBL <128,4,0,12>,12 ;umdnet agent .GATBL <128,4,0,13>,13 ;default agent .GATBL <128,4,0,14>,14 ;dcn6 clock/echo .GATBL <128,4,0,15>,15 ;dcn1 clock/echo .GATBL <128,4,0,17>,17 ;dcn17 (bridgeport) .GATBL <128,4,0,18>,18 ;dcn18 (miggle) .REPT 3 .GATBL <0,0,0,0>,23,<255,255,255,255>,NGB ;subnet 0 agent .ENDR .GATBL <0,0,0,0>,23,<255,255,255,255>,END+NGB ;subnet 0 agent Note the inclusion of several copies of the default entry in the table. More than one copy is necessary only when the automatic-ARP feature is used (see below). Foreign host table This table establishes the mapping of Internet address to physical host ID for all foreign-net addresses (e.g. those that do not pass the mask-and-match test implied by the above Internet address/mask quantitues). The structure of this table is identical to the local host table above, although non-zero masks are more common. The automatic-ARP feature (see below) can be used in this table as in the local host table, but in the example shown an explicit gateway is shown instead. $GATAD: .GATBL <10,0,0,111>,1,,NGB ;dcn1 (pogo) .GATBL <10,0,1,111>,6,,NGB ;dcn6 (backroom) .GATBL <10,0,2,111>,4,,NGB ;gw.umich.edu .GATBL <10,0,0,0>,10,<0,255,255,255>,EGP ;arpanet agent .GATBL <35,0,0,0>,4,<0,255,255,255>,EGP+HLO,<128,4,0,4> ;umichnet agent .GATBL <128,4,1,0>,19,<0,0,0,255> ;subnet 1 agent .GATBL <128,4,0,0>,255,<0,0,255,255>,EGP+NGB ;trap remaining subnets .GATBL <128,5,0,0>,11,<0,0,255,255>,EGP+HLO,<128,4,0,11> ;fordnet agent .GATBL <128,8,0,0>,12,<0,0,255,255>,ALT+HLO,<128,4,0,12> ;umdnet agent .GATBL <0,0,0,0>,13,<255,255,255,255>,END+NGB,<128,4,0,13> ;egp agent In the example a single isolate for 10.0.0.111 is shown, which illustrates the capability to tunnel foreign addresses to or through the subnet. The hop-count field is set nonzero to avoid neighbor routing updates from disturbing the routing for the generic ARPANET 10.0.0.0. Note the default gateway is specified as 128.4.0.13, in which case this address must also occur in the local host table (default agent) above. The hop-count field in the default item is set nonzero to avoid accidental updates; however, this field would ordinarily be set to zero for nets without an EGP default agent. Routing table The routing table determines the packet routes, including local leader (i.e. Ethernet address), process ID (PID) and other information. It consists of two parts, the Hello portion followed by the ARP portion and is preceeded by a count of the total and Hello portions. The Hello portion corresponds to the entities covered by the DCN Hello algorithm, which automatically determines routes between the entities using Hello messages. Those Ethernet entities that do not participate in the Hello algorthm, but do support ARP, are assigned HIDs in the ARP portion. Note that these assignements have nothing to do with the Internet addresses, which are determined by the local and foreign host tables. Each item consists of (a) PID of the network process (defaults to zero, which is interpreted as undefined), (b) delay (milliseconds) (defaults to 30 seconds, which is interpreted as "down"), (c) a flag "B" for broadcast or a string for local leader (defaults to zero). .BYTE 30,24 ;number of (total,routing) entities $HOSAD: .HSTBL 6,100,B ;0 broadcast .HSTBL ;1 dcn1 (pogo) .HSTBL ;2 dcn2 (boombah) .HSTBL ;3 dcn3 (albert) .HSTBL ,,,WWV ;4 umichnet agent .HSTBL ;5 dcn5 (hepzibah) .HSTBL ;6 dcn6 (backroom) .HSTBL ;7 dcn7 (snavely) .HSTBL ;8 dcn8 (porkypine) .HSTBL ;9 dcn9 (churchy) .HSTBL ;10 arpanet agent .HSTBL ,,,GOES ;11 fordnet agent .HSTBL ;12 umdnet agent .HSTBL ;13 default agent .HSTBL ,,,WWV ;14 dcn6 clock/echo .HSTBL ,,,WWVB ;15 dcn1 clock/echo .HSTBL ;16 dcn16 (beauregard) .HSTBL ;17 dcn17 (bridgeport) .HSTBL ;18 dcn18 (miggle) .HSTBL ;19 subnet 1 agent .HSTBL ;20 .HSTBL ;21 .HSTBL ;22 .HSTBL 6,100 ;23 subnet 0 agent .HSTBL ;24 .HSTBL ;25 .HSTBL ;26 .HSTBL ;27 .HSTBL ;28 .HSTBL ;29 In principle, only the broadcast agent and local-net agent (subnet 0 agent in the example) need to have explicit values, since all others are determined automatically by either the Hello algorithm or ARP. In addition, of course, the clock sources must be declared. The above configuration handles the routing for seven entities, including one isolate 10.0.0.111, three neighbor nets 128.5, 128.8 and 35, two subnets 128.4.0 and 128.4.1, and a default which in this case is the EGP process. Note that 128.5 and 35 share the same PID and presumably the same circuit to the neighbor entity. The host for which the tables are shown here "belongs" to subnet 128.4.0, as determined by the Internet address/mask. For all except the default the routing will depend upon ARP response, assuming this host is on an Ethernet; while, for the default case all traffic will be sent to the Ethernet entity responding to the specified gateway address 128.4.0.13. Note that in this configuration a reference to a 128.4 subnet other than 128.4.0 or 128.4.1 will select the default foreign host entry. Presumably, the agent servicing this traffic will return a "net unreachable" ICMP message if the subnet is undefined. In other cases, an entry such as .GATBL <128,4,0,0>,255,<0,0,255,255> can be positioned after all 128.4 references in the foreign host table to trap undefined subnets and avoid routing loops. Automatic ARP In the case of Ethernet hosts (and in future EGP), a feature is included so that hosts not subscribing to the Hello protocols can be supported without explicitly configuring them in the tables. What happens is this: When a host not appearing in the local or foreign host tables is found the specified default is used. For local-subnet hosts in the example configuration shown this results in an Ethernet ARP broadcast for the designated IP destination address but no adjustment in the table entries. The ARP reply causes a search for that address, which lands on the default. A special check inserted at that point causes new entries to be created in either the local/foreign host tables and the routing table. The entry is created with a mask field of zero, so that in the case of foreign hosts a separate entry will be created for very distinct address, not for every generic network. The alternative, which is used in the example configuration, is to explicitly declare a default gateway. Subsequently, the ARP-created entries are used just as if created a-priori. The feature should be of value in configurations including hosts that cannot be modified to support the Hello protocol, such as IBM PCs and silicon front-ends. Note however that a hellod is available for Unix 4.2 systems that does support that protocol. In the current version no provisions are included to discard old ARP-created entries and the only way an old leader can be discarded is if the host goes down with respect to the Hello algorithm. This is slated for early attention. Routing explained The routing function is activated at the time a datagram arrives or is created internally in the host. It first determines whether the destination is in the same subnet or not using the Internet address/mask, then selects either the local or foreign host tables. The tables are constructed so that a match always occurs, if not otherwise at the default. A match results in the following information: (a) the HID of the routing table entry, and thus (b) the PID and (c) the leader (Ethernet address) and, in addition, (d) the gateway address from the local/foreign net table. At this point the datagram buffer is forwarded to the output process with indicated PID and a field in the buffer header filled in with (c) the leader (if nonzero) or (d) the gateway address (if the leader is zero) or the original destination address (if both leader and gateway address are zero). The coding of the field is such that the output process can determine whether the contents are a leader or an IP address. The output process extracts the field from the buffer header and proceeds accordinaly: If a leader is present it is incorporated in the Ethernet leader and the packet forwarded directly. If not, an ARP request is constructed (in a separate buffer) including the specified IP address and the original datagram buffer held for 500 milliseconds. Upon completion of the holding interval the output process calls the routing function again, which results in a recomputation of the buffer header as before, but based on current table contents. If a leader is found the datagram is transmitted as indicated; if not, it sinks without a trace. OPTIONS None EXAMPLES None .ENDM .MACRO CRMAIL CRMAIL Create mail and log files SYNTAX CRMAIL ;invoke CRMAIL.SAV > ;> is CRMAIL prompt SEMANTICS This program creates a mail or log file with name and length . The file is initialized with the first byte set to SUB (^Z) and the remaining bytes set to zero. OPTIONS None EAAMPLES CRMAIL >unsent.msg 500 .ENDM .MACRO DACOM DACOM Facsimile to Bitmap conversion SYNTAX DACOM ;invoke DACOM.SAV *=[/options] *... ;* is CSI prompt *^Z ;exit to CLI SEMANTICS This program converts a file in Dacom (compressed) facsimile format to Sun bitmap format (version 2.0) without scaling or clipping. The resulting file requires 475200 octets (922 blocks) for the 1726 x 2200 x 1 raster. Sun graphics tools presently cannot handle such a large file directly, although the Fuzzball SUNFAX and VCG programs can (See Help information). OPTIONS None EXAMPLES None .ENDM .MACRO DIR DIR Directory program SYNTAX DIR ;invoke DIR.SAV *[/options] ;* is CSI prompt *... *^Z ;exit to CLI SEMANTICS See the RT-11 System User's Guide OPTIONS The syntax of date is dd.:mmm:yy. where dd-day, mmm-month, yy-year /A Lists the directory alphabetically /B Includes starting block numbers in directory listing /C:n Lists directory in n columns; n can be 1 to 9 /D:date Includes only files with date /E Lists entire directory, including unused spaces /F lists short format directory in five columns /G Lists directory entry of specified file and all subsequent directory entries /J:date Lists files created on or after date /K:date Lists files created before date /L Lists volume directory in order of entry /M Lists unused areas /N Lists directory summary /O Gives sizes and block numbers in octal /P Lists all files except those you specify /Q Lists deleted files /R Sorts directory in reverse order; use with /S /S:xxx Sorts directory listing; xxx can be DAT, NAM, POS, SIZ or TYP /T Lists only protected files /U Lists only unprotected files /V:ONL Includes volume ID and owner name as part of directory listing; with ONL lists only ID and name EXAMPLES None .ENDM .MACRO DUMP DUMP File dump program SYNTAX DUMP ;invoke DUMP.SAV *[/options]=[/options] *... ;* is CSI prompt *^Z ;exit to CLI SEMANTICS See the RT-11 System User's Guide OPTIONS /B Outputs octal bytes /E:n Ends output at block n /G Ignores input errors /N Suppresses ASCII output /O:n Outputs only block n /S:n Starts output at block n /T Defines a magtape as non-RT-11 file structured /W Outputs octal words /X Outputs Radix-50 characters EXAMPLES None .ENDM .MACRO DUP DUP Device utility program SYNTAX DUP ;invoke DUP.SAV *[/options] ;* is CSI prompt *... *^Z ;exit to CLI SEMANTICS See the RT-11 System User's Guide OPTIONS /B:RET Writes FILE.BAD entries over bad blocks; use with /Z; with RET, retains FILE.BAD entries created on previous initialization /C Creates a file; use with /G:n /D Restores previously initialized volume /E:n Specifies last block number; use with /I or /K /F Prints names of bad blocks; use with /K /G:n Specifies starting block number; use with /C, /I, or /K /H Verifies after copying; use with /I /I Copies image of one volume to another /K Scans a device for bad blocks /N:n Defines number of directoy segments; use with /Z; n can be 1 to 37 (octal) /O Boots a volume or file (not supported in BOS/VOS) /Q Boots a volume that is not RT-11 V4 or later; use with /O (not supported in BOS/VOS) /R:RET Scans volume for bad blocks and creates a block replacement table; with RET retains previous table (not supported in BOS/VOS) /S Consolidates free space on a volume /T:n Extends a file by n blocks; n free blocks must follow the file /U:DEV Writes bootstrap into blocks 0, 2 through 5 of a volume; DEV is the volume name (not supported in BOS/VOS) /V:ONL Printes user ID and owner name; use with /Z to write new directory, ID and name on volume; with ONL, writes only the a ID and name /W Waits for volume to be mounted before executing the command /X Prevents automatic reboot after using /S on system device /Y Suppresses query messages /Z:n Initializes device directory; n is the number of extra words in each directory entry EXAMPLES None .ENDM .MACRO FAX FAX Dacom 450 Facsimile Transceiver operator's guide SYNTAX SCANNING PIP (* is CSI prompt) *=FAX: *... *^Z (exit to CLI) PRINTING PIP (* is CSI prompt) *FAX:= *... *^Z (exit to CLI) SEMANTICS The Dacom 450 Computerfax Facsimile Transceiver scans and prints documents at resolutions up to 200 pels per inch in a 1726 x 2200 pel raster. It uses a two-dimensional adaptive run-length compressiong algorithm and ordinarily operates at speeds to 2400 bps with the LSI-11/23 processor and to 4800 bps with the LSI-11/73 processor using the DEC DPV11 synchronous interface. Files used with the facsimile system must be formatted as described in RFC-769. The SUNFAX program can be used to convert Sun bitmap files to RFC-769 format and the DACOM program from this format to Sun-bitmap format. The spooling system automatically converts between formats as required. In addition, the VCG program can convert RFC-769 format files for display on the Peritek bitmap display. Facsimile files can be transferred between Internet hosts using the FTP or TFTP programs (IMAGE mode) or using the spooling system. OPTIONS None EXAMPLES None .ENDM .MACRO FILES FILES File specifications and formats SYNTAX :.[] SEMANTICS All programs operate with RT-11 file formats and either file-structured or sequential devices. RT-11 files are block-structured with a block size of 512 bytes. There are two types of files, ASCII and IMAGE. ASCII files consist of a stream of 7-bit ASCII characters stored in eight-bit bytes with the high-order bit set to zero. During transmission the NUL and DEL characters are discarded and the SUB character terminates the transfer. IMAGE files consist of a stream of eight-bit bytes with all bits significant. In both cases data are zero-filled to a block boundary before writing to the device. Files and devices are named according to RT-11 conventions in the following syntax: :.[] where is the logical device name, consisting of up to three alphanumeric characters, is the file name, consisting of up to six alphanumeric characters including $, is the file extension, consisting of up to three characters including $, and is a decimal integer used to specify the maximum file size in blocks. The logical device name (together with the colon) is optional and defaults to DK:, which is the name of the standard RT-11 work volume. With certain exceptions transfers can be specified to or from either file-structured or sequential devices. In the latter case the name, extension and size are ignored. Logical device names are bound to physical devices by the CLI command ASG. The specification (together with the braces) is optional and applies only to new or replacement files to be stored on file-structured devices and not to files that are to be stored on sequential devices or to be read. The algorithm used to estabish the maximum size of a file is as follows: If the specification is missing or zero, half the largest hole on the volume is allocated. If it is a negative number, then the entire extent of the largest hole is allocated. Otherwise, the number of blocks specified is allocated in the first hole large enough to contain them. OPTIONS None EXAMPLES None .ENDM .MACRO FRUN FRUN Foreground loader program SYNTAX FRUN ;invoke FRUN.SAV * ;* is CSI prompt ;exit to loaded program SEMANTICS The foreground loader is used to load programs linked to run in an RT-11 foreground or system job with or without overlays. These programs usually usually have the .REL extension and contain relocatoin information along with the program text. This program would be used ordinarily only in systems without memory-management facilities and when one or more foreground processes have been configured in the system. OPTIONS None EXAMPLES None .ENDM .MACRO FTP FTP File transfer user program SYNTAX FTP ;invoke FTP.SAV ... QUIT ;exit to CLI ;or FTP ;invoke FTP.SAV and execute an ;implied CONNECT ... ;command QUIT ;exit to CLI SEMANTICS The File Transfer Protocol (FTP) functions are provided using two programs, the FTP User and the FTP Server. The FTP User runs in interactive mode on a Fuzzball host. The FTP Server normally resides at some other host and is activated upon receipt of a TCP connection on port 20. The FTP User is controlled by user commands in the same way as the Command Language Interpreter (CLI) and other user programs. It in turn controls the FTP Server by standardized server commands, with the actions taken indicated by standardized replies. These programs operate with the protocol described in RFC-959 and can be used with other implementations conforming to this protocol. A file transfer operation proceeds by first opening a control connection to a remote host using the CONNECT command and then to its operating system using the LOGIN command. In the case of the Fuzzball FTP Server, the LOGIN sequence is supported but the specified user name and password are ignored. Following the connection phase, the SEND and GET commands are used to transfer files to and from the remote host as required. For each transfer a data connection separate from the control connection is established by the remote server. The sender closes the connection to signal end-of-file and terminate the transfer. The QUIT command is used to close the control connection and exit to the CLI. The FTP User prompt is "*", signifying the program is ready for the next command. The first prompt appears when the herald is received from the FTP Server following the CONNECT command. Subsequent prompts appear as each command sequence is completed with the FTP Server. Prompts will not appear following commands which have only local significance or in which errors are detected. FTP transfers can be in either ASCII (default) or IMAGE mode (see the FILES help information for relevant file structures). ASCII mode is compatible with all implementations of RFC-765 servers known at this time. In the case of IMAGE mode with the TOPS-20, however, care must be taken to assure that 8-bit bytes are stored four per 36-bit TOPS-20 word. This is assured if the TYPE L 8 command is used, rather than the TYPE I command (see the IMAGE command below). OPTIONS ABORT If a file transfer is not in progress, do nothing. If it is, abort the transfer, send the ABOR command to the Server and wait for it to close the data connection. ASCII The ASCII and IMAGE commands set the mode for subsequent file transfers. The default is ASCII. In the case of the IMAGE command, a TYPE I command is sent to the server unless an optional argument is present, in which case a TYPE L command is sent, where is the argument. In all except unusual cases should be 8. This feature is included to support the TOPS-20. ASG Assign the local work volume DK: for subsequent file transfers to . See the VOLUMES help information for further details. BRIEF The BRIEF and VERBOSE commands control output of detailed commentary dialog. BRIEF disables this and VERBOSE enables it. The default is BRIEF. CONNECT Open a control connection to host . CWD Assign the working directory on the remote host for subsequent file transfers to . DELETE Delete the file on the remote host. The must contain no more than 40 ASCII printing characters. DIRECTORY Open a data connection to the remote host previously specified by the CONNECT and LOGIN commands. Then transmit a list of the files in on the remote host to on the local host. The must contain no more than 40 ASCII printing characters. When operating with the Fuzzball FTP Server, it must be a valid RT-11 file name and can include wildcards in the same manner as the RT-11 DIRECTORY command. The must be a valid RT-11 file or sequential device name. DISCONNECT If the control connection does not exist, do nothing. Otherwise, send the QUIT command to the Server and wait for the it to close the connection. GET Open a data connection to the remote host previously specified by the CONNECT, LOGIN and ASCII/IMAGE commands. Then transfer the file on the remote host to on the local host. The must contain no more than 40 ASCII printing characters, while the must be a valid RT-11 file name or sequential device name. If is missing, assume the string in its place. HELP Display helpful information, including a list of commands. IMAGE (see the ASCII command) LOCAL Set the local address for the control and data connections to , with default the local primary address. This feature can be used to select local secondary addresses in the case of a multi-homed host. LOGIN Log into the remote host previously specified by the CONNECT command as with . Both and Rename the file on the remote host to . Both and must contain no more than 40 ASCII printing characters. ROUTE ... Specify the Internet source route as the sequence ... (up to nine) for the data connection. SEND Open a data connection to the remote host previously specified by the CONNECT, LOGIN and ASCII/IMAGE commands. Then transfer the file on the local host to on the remote host. The must be a valid RT-11 file or sequential device name, while the must contain no more than 40 ASCII printing characters. If is missing, assume the string in its place. SHOW Display a formatted summary of various quantitites of interest, including the current host, file and block number. TOS Specify the Internet type-of-service octet (in octal) for the data connection. VERBOSE (see the BRIEF command) EXAMPLES None .ENDM .MACRO FTPSRV FTPSRV File transfer server program SYNTAX See RFC-959. SEMANTICS The FTP Server is designed to be compatible with the protocol specified in RFC-959. It is invoked by the TELSRV progam upon receipt of a TCP connection on port 21. Commands consist of four characters, only the first three of which are significant. Replies consist of a three-digit code, the first of which indicates the status of the request according to the following codes: 1xx The action requested has begun. Additional server commands can be given to initiate unrelated actions. 2xx The action requested has completed successfully. 3xx Additional commands are necessary to completely specify the action requested. 4xx The action requested was aborted due to an error condition believed to be temporary. The command may be retried at a later time. 5xx The action requested was aborted due to an error condition believed to be permanent. FTP transfers can be in either ASCII (default) or IMAGE mode (see the FILES help information for relevant file structures). ASCII mode is compatible with all implementations of RFC-959 servers known at this time. In the case of IMAGE mode with the TOPS-20, however, care must be taken to assure that 8-bit bytes are stored four per 36-bit TOPS-20 word. This is assured if the TYPE L 8 command is used, rather than the TYPE I command (see the TOPS-20 documentation). OPTIONS ABOR If a data transfer is not in progress, return a 200 reply code. If a data transfer is in progress, signal the data connection to close and return a 426 reply code, flushing data received meanwhile. When the connection closes return a 226 reply code. CWD Assign the work volume DK: on the local hosts for subsequent file transfers to . See the VOLUMES help information for further details. DELE Delete the file on the local host, where must be a valid RT-11 file name. Reply code 200 is returned. HELP Display helpful user information, including a list of FTP Server commands. All but the last line returned have reply code 111. The last line returned has reply code 211. LIST Open the data connection and transfer a list of files in on the local host to the FTP User host. The must be a valid RT-11 file name and can include wildcards in the same manner as the RT-11 DIRECTORY command. Reply code 150 indicates the transfer has begun and that a 2xx, 4xx or 5xx will be returned when the transfer terminates. The transfer terminates normally with a 226 reply code when the FTP Server closes the data connection and abnormally with a 4xx or 5xx reply code in all other cases. In the list of files returned each file name is on a separate line followed by size and date information. MODE Set the transfer mode for subsequent data transfers to . Currently, must be S (STREAM), which is also the default. Reply code 200 is returned. NLST Open the data connection and transfer a list of files in on the local host to the FTP User host. The must be a valid RT-11 file name and can include wildcards in the same manner as the RT-11 DIRECTORY command. Reply code 150 indicates the transfer has begun and that a 2xx, 4xx or 5xx will be returned when the transfer terminates. The transfer terminates normally with a 226 reply code when the FTP Server closes the data connection and abnormally with a 4xx or 5xx reply code in all other cases. In the list of files returned each file name is on a separate line terminated by with no other information on the line. NOOP Do nothing. Reply code 200 is returned. PASS Syntax check only (for compatibility). Reply code 230 is returned. PASV This command is used only in special situations involving a third-party transfer to indicate the FTP Server should listen on a data connection and to return the host and port of this connection in the reply code. Note that the data connection is not opened at this time, but will be opened in passive mode as necessary by subsequent data-transfer commands. The reply code returned is: 227 Entering passive mode. h1,h2,h3,h4,p1,p2 where h1,...,h4 is the host and p1,p2 is the port with the same interpretation as the PORT command. PORT h1,h2,h3,h4,p1,p2 This command is used only in special situations involving a third-party transfer to specify the host and port for the data connection. The host is specified by the four decimal integers h1,...,h4 and the port by the two decimal integers p1,p2. All six of these integers must have values in the range 0-255. Note that the data connection is not opened at this time, but will be opened in active mode as necessary by subsequent data-transfer commands. Reply code 200 is returned. QUIT Close the control connection and exit to the CLI. Reply code 226 is returned. REIN Reinitialize the program status as it was upon initial entry. Reply code 330 is returned along with the FTP Server herald. RETR Open the data connection and transfer on the local host to the FTP User host. The must be a valid RT-11 file or sequential device name. Reply code 150 indicates the transfer has begun and that a 2xx, 4xx or 5xx will be returned when the transfer terminates. The transfer terminates normally with a 226 reply code when the FTP Server closes the data connection and abnormally with a 4xx or 5xx reply code in all other cases. RNFR Begin a file-rename sequence specifying on the local host as the existing file. The must be a valid RT-11 file name. Reply code 333 is returned, indicating the RNTO command must follow. RNTO Conclude a file-rename sequence begun by the previous RNFR command and specifying on the local host as the new file. The must be a valid RT-11 file name on the same device specified by the previous RNFR command. Reply code 200 is returned. STAT Display a formatted summary of various quantitites of interest, including the current host, file and block number. All but the last line returned have reply code 114. The last line returned has reply code 214. STOR Open the data connection and transfer a file from the FTP User host to on the local host. The must be a valid RT-11 file or sequential device name. Reply code 150 indicates the transfer has begun and that a 2xx, 4xx or 5xx will be returned when the transfer terminates. The transfer terminates normally with a 226 reply code when the FTP User closes the data connection and abnormally with a 4xx or 5xx reply code in all other cases. STRU Set the file structure for subsequent data transfers to . Currently, must be F (FILE), which is also the default. Reply code 200 is returned. TYPE Set the representation type for subsequent data transfers to . Currently, can be A (ASCII), I (IMAGE) or L (IMAGE). The default when this command has not been given is A. Note that the specification permits an additional argument; however, which is ignored by the FTP Server. Reply code 200 is returned. USER Syntax check only (for compatibility). Reply code 331 is returned, indicating the PASS command must follow. EXAMPLES See RFC-959. .ENDM .MACRO GENERAL GENERAL General description SYNTAX Following is a summary of syntactic types /options RT-11 file specification options (see OPTIONS in HELP information)
Internet address (four fields separated by "." each field a decimal integer in the rangd 0 through 255) Argument list (strings separated by and terminated by Command name (only the first three characters are significant) RT-11 physical device name (see HELP information for FILES) RT-11 file specification (see HELP information for FILES) Host ID (decimal integer in the range 0-n, where n depends on network) Host name (registered in NIC data base HOSTS.TXT, or four fields as in
format). RT-11 logical device name (assigned by ASG command) Port ID (octal integer in the range 0-n, where n depends on configuration) SEMANTICS The Fuzzball internet software system has been developed with DARPA sponsorship over the last several years and used extensively for testing, evaluation and experimentation with other implementations. It currently runs in a sizable number of PDP11s and LSI-11s with varying configurations and applications. The system is designed to be used with DCnet local-network protocols as described in RFC-891 and the Fuzzball operating system for a multi-media internet workstation (also called a Fuzzball), which operates using emulation techniques to support the DEC RT-11 operating system and application programs. However, the system has also been used on other networks, including ARPANET, and with other operating systems, including RSX-11. An RSX-11 based version incorporating only the IP/TCP modules is presently used to support the INTELPOST electronic-mail network. The software system consists of a package of MACRO-11 and C modules structured into levels corresponding to local-net, IP, TCP and application levels, with user interfaces at each level. The local-net level supports several comunication devices, including synchronous and asynchronous serial lines, 16-bit parallel links, Ethernet and 1822 interfaces. Hosts using these devices have been connected to ARPANET IMPs, Satellite IMPs, MACRO-11 Internet Gateways, SRI Port Expanders and to standard Ethernets, DECnets and X.25 public networks, as well as several DCnet local networks. When used on DCnet the system supports subnets as described in RFC-950, supports network-level alternate routing and local-level dynamic routing, as well as time-synchronization and error-reporting functions. The IP level conforms to the RFC-791 specification, including fragmentation, reassembly, extended addressing and options, as well as the source-route option. A full set of ICMP features compatible with RFC-792 is available, including destination-unreachable, timestamp, redirect and source-quench messages. Destination-unreachable and source-quench information is conveyed to the user level via the TCP and raw-datagram protocol modules. Internet gateway (routing and non-routing) facilities conforming to the Exterior Gateway Protocol (EGP) RFC-904 specification can be included on an optional basis. This support can be configured to support hierarchically structured gateways and subnets. The TCP level conforms to the RFC-793 specification, including PUSH, URGENT and options. Its structure is based on circular buffers for reassembly and retransmission, with repacketizing on each retransmission. Retransmission timeouts are dynamically determined using measured roundtrip delays, as adjusted for backoff. Data flow into the network is controlled by measured network bandwidth, and adjusted by source-quench information. Features are included to avoid excessive segment fragmentation and retransmission into zero windows. The user interface level provides error and URGENT notification, as well as a means to set outgoing IP/TCP options. A raw-datagram interface is available for non-TCP protocols such as UDP (RFC-768). It includes internal congestion and fairness controls, multiple-connection management and timestamping. Protocols above UDP supported in the present system include Network Time Protocol (RFC-958), Time Server (RFC-868), Name Server (IEN-116), Domain-Name Server (RFC-883) and Trivial File-Transfer Protocol (RFC-783). Other raw-datagram services include XNET (IEN-158), Exterior Gateway Protocol (RFC-904) and several experimental services. A number of user-level protocol modules above TCP have been built and tested with other internet hosts, including TELNET (RFC-854), File Transfer Protocol (RFC-959), Simple Mail Transfer Protocol (RFC-821), Multi-Media Mail Protocol (RFC-759/RFC-767) and various other file-transfer, debugging and control/monitoring protocols. Code sizes and speeds depend greatly on the system configuration and features selected. A typical 30K-word LSI-11/2 single-user configuration with all features selected and including the operating system, device drivers and all buffers and control blocks, leaves about 16K words for user-level application programs and protocol modules. A typical 124K-word LSI-11/23 or LSI-11/73 configuration provides the same service for up to 24 individually relocated users. Disk-to-disk FTP transfers across a DMA interprocessor link between LSI-11/23s operate in the range 30-50 Kbps with 576-octet packets. The 124K-word PDP11/34 INTELPOST adaptation supports two 56-Kbps lines and a number of lower-speed lines. Typical throughputs range from 100 to 400 packets per second, depending on processor type and interface type. OPTIONS None EXAMPLES None .ENDM .MACRO HELP HELP Lists helpful information SYNTAX HELP ;invoke HELP.SAV What topic do you want help with? ;...? is prompt ; has the form: topic ;[ subtopic[:items...]...]] or * SEMANTICS * lists the items for which help is available. lists the HELP text (of which this is a part). topic lists information on the specific topic only. topic subtopic lists information on the specific subtopic only (for example, HELP HELP SEMANTICS lists the paragraph of which this text is a part). topic subtopic:item lists only the text associated with the specific item. topic/item lists the text associated with the specific item under the subtopic OPTIONS. Subtopics are "SYNTAX", "SEMANTICS", "OPTIONS", and "EXAMPLES". Items are specific command options. OPTIONS None EXAMPLES None .ENDM .MACRO HOST HOST Host Process commands SYNTAX SET ;CLI command SEMANTICS See USER process commands and GENERAL help information OPTIONS CMD List the available commands. Additional information is available with the HELP program. HOST Set the Host Table entry for the DCnet virtual host to the values specified in the arguments. The Network Process PID is specified by the first argument, the roundtrip delay by the second and the status by the last. If is missing, simply display a summary of the entire table. If is given with no arguments, display the table entry for that host. See Appendix C for a list of DCnet virtual hosts. Note that the Host Table is constructed automatically during normal system operations and that this command is provided only for exceptional circumstances. IDENT
Set the virtual-host ID for the master-clock host to . If
is given set the internet address for the physical host to the
. MINIMUM Set the minimum source-quench threshold to . ICMP source-quench messages will be returned to the sender if the number of free buffers falls below this threshold. NET Set the Network Table entry for the network to the values specified in . The only argument that can be specified at present is the virtual host HID for the gateway to that network. If is missing, display a summary of the entire table. If is given with no arguments, display the table entry for that network. OFF The ON and OFF commands can be used to set and clear bits in the options word of the parameter area associated with the process. The ON command sets the option bits corresponding to the one bits of (which is an octal value) to one, while the OFF command sets these bits to to zero. Options for the host process are interpreted as the RT-11 configuration word, which is normally stored at relative location 300 in the monitor area (see RT-11 documentation). ON (see the OFF command) SHOW Display a formatted summary of various quantitites of interest. EXAMPLES .set hos cmd Commands are: CMD SHO ON OFF ID MIN NET HOS .set hos hos Host PortID Delay Offset Status Leader ---------------------------------------------------- DC6 002 0 0 119 000000000000 .set hos net Net Address HostID Hops Leader ---------------------------------------------- ARP [10.0.0.0] 0 0 0,0 DCN [128.4.0.1] 6 0 0,0 WAS [128.4.1.2] 14 0 0,0 SAN [128.4.2.3] 11 0 0,0 FRD [128.5.0.4] 13 0 0,0 UMD [128.8.0.5] 12 0 0,0 NET [0.0.0.6] 0 255 1,20 .set hos sho Process type: 000030 options: 111001 Last clock update: 0 from: 1 reset: 00:00:00 Processes: 18 Vectors: 10 Nibbles: 29 Small packets: 0 Large packets: 12 Min packets: 2 Internet address: [128.4.0.6] .ENDM .MACRO HOSTS HOSTS Make Internet host name/address table SYNTAX HOSTS ;invoke HOSTS.SAV *outfile,dnsfile=infile[options],... *... ;* is CSI prompt *^Z ;exit to CLI SEMANTICS This program reads a file of Internet host name/address entries in the Standard Network Information Center (NIC) format described in RFC810 and produces a hash-coded output file suitable for use by the user and server programs in this system. The domain-name system described in RFC-882 and RFC-883 is used by all Fuzzball hosts to resolve an Internet address from a domain name and also to resolve a domain name from its Internet address. The program that does this, called the namesolver, first searches the local HOSTS.DAT file and returns the name or address immediately if found. If not found, the namesolver searches a set of hierarchically structured remote domain-name servers as indicated by special entries in HOSTS.DAT. Present practice is to configure one Fuzzball host on the local net as a domain-name server along with a HOSTS.DAT file produced by the HOSTS program from the complete HOSTS.TXT file (obtained periodically from the NIC) and configure all other Fuzzball hosts with a HOSTS.DAT file containing only the local-net hosts and domain-name pointers to the server. The primary output file outfile, usually named HOSTS.DAT, consists of a set of lists, one for each block (512 bytes) terminated by a zero byte. Items in each list are either names, consisting of four bytes of address, one byte of flags and a name string terminated by a zero byte; or addresses, consisting of four bytes of address, one byte of flags and a three-byte pointer. Entries are hashed according to the polynomial 1 + x + x**6 + x**7 reduced modulo the output file size. The secondary output file dnsfile, usually named HOSTS.DNS, consists of a domain-name data base in the format described in RFC-883. This may be the primary format of the HOST.TXT table in the future. This feature is included for compatibility. One entry for every address and every name for each host in the input file is included in the output file. The address entries are hashed by the address and the name entries are hashed by the name. Bits in the service-specification byte determine the entry format and whether the host advertises TELNET, FTP or SMTP service. OPTIONS /A Delete all domain-structured entries (".ARPA" domain in the present table) and pad the remaining names with ".ARPA". This feature is intended for use during the transition period while the domain-name system is being put into place. /S:n Allocates n blocks for output file (default is 256 blocks). The value of n must be at least two. EXAMPLES Following is a slightly reformatted table used as input to the HOSTS program to produce the HOSTS.DAT file for a host configured without the full domain-name server. The GATEWAY and HOST entries are taken directly from the HOSTS.TXT table with the ".ARPA" domain edited into all entries. The DOMAIN entries are associated with the name server for the domain appearing in the host-name field. GATEWAY : 10.0.0.111, 128.4.0.1, 128.5.0.1, 128.8.0.1 : DCN-GATEWAY.ARPA : LSI-11/23 : FUZZ : IP/GW,GW/PRIME : HOST : 128.4.0.1, 10.0.0.111 : DCN1.ARPA,POGO.ARPA : LSI-11/23 : FUZZ : TCP/TELNET,TCP/SMTP,TCP/FTP,TCP/ECHO,TCP/DISCARD, TCP/CHARGEN,TCP/DAYTIME,TCP/TIME,TCP/TALK,UDP/ECHO,UDP/TIME, UDP/NAME,UDP/TFTP : HOST : 128.4.0.2 : DCN2.ARPA,BOOMBAH.ARPA : LSI-11/2 : FUZZ : TCP/TELNET,TCP/SMTP,TCP/FTP,TCP/ECHO,TCP/DISCARD,TCP/CHARGEN, TCP/DAYTIME,TCP/TIME,TCP/TALK,UDP/ECHO : HOST : 128.4.0.3 : DCN3.ARPA,ALBERT.ARPA : LSI-11/23 : FUZZ : TCP/TELNET,TCP/SMTP,TCP/FTP,TCP/ECHO,TCP/DISCARD,TCP/CHARGEN, TCP/DAYTIME,TCP/TIME,TCP/TALK,UDP/ECHO : HOST : 128.4.0.4 : DCN4.ARPA,HOWLAND.ARPA : LSI-11/23 : FUZZ : TCP/TELNET,TCP/SMTP,TCP/FTP,TCP/ECHO,TCP/DISCARD,TCP/CHARGEN, TCP/DAYTIME,TCP/TIME,TCP/TALK,UDP/ECHO : HOST : 128.4.0.5 : DCN5.ARPA,HEPZIBAH.ARPA : LSI-11/23 : FUZZ : TCP/TELNET,TCP/SMTP,TCP/FTP,TCP/ECHO,TCP/DISCARD,TCP/CHARGEN, TCP/DAYTIME,TCP/TIME,TCP/TALK,UDP/ECHO,UDP/TIME,UDP/NAME, UDP/TFTP : HOST : 128.4.0.6 : DCN6.ARPA,BACKROOM.ARPA : LSI-11/23 : FUZZ : TCP/TELNET,TCP/SMTP,TCP/FTP,TCP/ECHO,TCP/DISCARD,TCP/CHARGEN, TCP/DAYTIME,TCP/TIME,TCP/TALK,UDP/ECHO,UDP/TIME,UDP/NAME, UDP/TFTP : HOST : 128.4.0.7 : DCN7.ARPA,SNAVELY.ARPA : LSI-11/23 : FUZZ : TCP/TELNET,TCP/SMTP,TCP/FTP,TCP/ECHO,TCP/DISCARD,TCP/CHARGEN, TCP/DAYTIME,TCP/TIME,TCP/TALK,UDP/ECHO,UDP/TIME,UDP/NAME, UDP/TFTP : HOST : 128.4.0.8 : DCN8.ARPA,PORKYPINE.ARPA : LSI-11/23 : FUZZ : TCP/TELNET,TCP/SMTP,TCP/FTP,TCP/ECHO,TCP/DISCARD,TCP/CHARGEN, TCP/DAYTIME,TCP/TIME,TCP/TALK,UDP/ECHO : HOST : 128.4.0.9 : DCN9.ARPA,CHURCHY.ARPA : SUN-170 : UNIX : TCP/TELNET,TCP/SMTP,TCP/FTP,TCP/TIME,UDP : HOST : 128.4.0.15 : DCN-ECHO.ARPA ::: IP/ECHO : HOST : 128.4.0.16 : DCN16.ARPA,BEAUREGARD.ARPA : IBM-PC : MSDOS : IP : HOST : 128.4.0.17 : DCN17.ARPA,BRIDGEPORT.ARPA : IBM-PC : MSDOS : IP : HOST : 128.4.0.18 : DCN18.ARPA,MIGGLE.ARPA : IBM-PC : MSDOS : IP : DOMAIN : 128.4.0.1 : ARPA ::: TCP/TELNET,TCP/FTP,TCP/SMTP : DOMAIN : 128.4.0.1 : IN-ADDR ::: TCP/TELNET,TCP/FTP,TCP/SMTP : .ENDM .MACRO IBM-PC IBM-PC IBM Personal Computer Information SYNTAX None SEMANTICS An IBM Personal Computer with the MIT PC-IP software can be connected via a serial line to a DCN host, which then serves as a gateway to the Internet system. The PC-IP software includes support for TELNET, TFTP and several other TCP- and UDP-based utility programs. It operates using Internet datagrams encapsulated in the MIT serial-line protocol and transmitted via the serial line. The DCN host running this protocol manages the datagram-switching and encapsulation functions and provides reachability information for the network. The IBM Personal Computer can be used with DCN hosts just as with any other Internet host. DCN hosts can be configured with TELNET and TFTP servers. OPTIONS None EXAMPLES None .ENDM .MACRO INFORMATION INFORMATION General information SYNTAX None SEMANTICS BOOTING Mount the Fuzzball work volume on DK:. Mount an ordinary RT-11 system volume on SY:. The system volume sould contain at least the following files: PIP.SAV Peripheral interchange program DUP.SAV Device utility program DIR.SAV Directory program KED.SAV Keypad Editor and other RT-11 system and application programs as desired. The system volume should also contain at least the following Fuzzball files: CLI.SAV Command language interpreter FRUN.SAV Foreground process loader (BOS only) LOGIN.SAV Login program LOGOUT.SAV Logout program TN.SAV TELNET virtual terminal user program TELSRV.SAV TELNET virtual terminal server program FTP.SAV File transfer user program FTPSRV.SAV File transfer server program SMTP.SAV Mail transfer user program SMPSRV.SAV Mail transfer server program MSG.SAV Mail reader program SNDMSG.SAV Mail composition program HOSTS.DAT Internet host table (constructed by HOSTS) LOGIN.DAT User login/password table (constructed by SYSMGR) LOGIN.MSG Login text file (constructed by KED or EDIT) UNSENT.MSG Mail file (constructed by CRMAIL) The following files can be used in certain configurations: UDP.SAV Internet name/time/file server process EGP.SAV Internet gateway process NSP.SAV DECnet gateway (special configuration) LOG.SAV Log process WATCH.SAV SIMP monitor program LOG.TXT Log file (constructed by CRMAIL) The following files will be useful for many applications: NIFTP.SAV Network-independent FTP user program PING.SAV Internet measurements user/server program XNET.SAV Internet loader/debugger user/server program VCG.SAV Peritek VCG display program FINGER.SAV Display user information SETCLK.SAV Set system time and date from local clock NETCLK.SAV Set system time and date from remote time server RTCLK.SAV Set TCU-50 from system time and date SYSMGR.SAV System manager utility program HOSTS.SAV Creates Internet host tables (HOSTS.DAT) CRMAIL.SAV Creates mail files (UNSENT.MSG) and log files (LOG.TXT) HELP.SAV Help utility program HELP.TXT Help file (this file) MPM.SAV MPM mail utility program *.CTL MPM mail control files SPQSRV.SAV Network spooler server PRINT.SAV Local spooler server PRTQ.SAV Spooler daemon WHOIS.SAV NIC data-base access program RSOLV.SAV Domain Name Server data-base access program These files operate with all versions of the Fuzzball software, while MSG, SNDMSG, CRMAIL, HELP, SETCLK snd RTCLOK operate with RT-11 as well. In addition, the work or system volume should contain the Fuzzball resident system file configured for the particular hardware system on which it is run. This file and other RT-11 system components are used only to load the Fuzzball resident system and are not referenced after that. Once the system and work volumes are mounted, load the Fuzzball resident system using the RT-11 RUN command. Be sure the real-time harware clock is running. The system should come up with heralds from the several daemons specified in the configuration file. One or more prompt characters (".") may also appear. The system then begins to send HELLO messages to neighboring hosts and constructs its Host Table, which determines the routing to these and other hosts on the network. This can take a minute or two, during which the SET HOST HOST command can be used to identify the other hosts as they come up. The SHOW command can be used to confirm the correct configuration of the processes and devices in the system and the SET HOST SHOW command to determine the resources in use. Once the Host Table has stabilized the system is ready for use. In configurations using remote domain-name servers, some hosts may not appear reachable until the entire network path to the selected domain-name server(s) comes up. IN-CASE-OF-TROUBLE In case of trouble the following procedures may be helpful. The system can be restarted at any time from location zero, following which it will recompute the checksum of the read-only code and data areas and reinitialize all processes. In addition, the RESET command will do the same thing. Finally, the XNET Internet loader/debugger can be used to send a special message to a remote system, causing the same action. Obviously, these mechanisms are potentially hazardous, but in keeping with the uses the Fuzzball software is likely to be put. Protection features may be incorporated in future versions. CONFIGURATIONS There are two versions of the Fuzzball resident system presently in use. One of these, called the basic system, supports up to 60K bytes of memory and PDP11 or LSI-11 processors without memory-management features. The other, called the virtual system, supports the maximum available memory and PDP11 or LSI-11 processors with these features. The standard basic system is configured for a 60K-byte LSI-11/2 with EIS and one 32K-byte background process. The standard virtual system is configured for a 256K-byte LSI-11/23 and up to seven 32K-byte virtual processes. The remainder of memory is used for the resident system and various storage areas. PROCESSES Processes are identified by three-character physical names, which appear in the SHOW and DEVICE command arguments and their responses. In the case of ordinary direct-access and sequential input/output devices, these names correspond to standard RT-11 conventions. In many cases several instances of a particular process type may appear, in which case the final character will be a digit in the range zero through nine. Each process is identified by a port identifier, or PID, which appears as an argument in some commands. Following is a list of the current process types (n denotes a digit): HOS Host process INP Internet process (with optional radio-clock support) DHn Network process (SRI or ACC ARPANET 1822 link) DMn Network process (DEC DDCMP link) DQn Network process (DEC DEQNA Ethernet link) HDn Network process (ACC HDH/1822 link) HYn Network process (NSC A400 HYPERchannel link) ILn Network process (Interlan or 3COM Ethernet link) KHn Network process (U Michigan LAPB link) KMn Network process (U Maryland Univac link) LHn Network process (serial synch or asynch link) LNn Network process (Ford serial or parallel LNA link) PCn Network process (IBM PC serial asynch link) PPn Network process (ACC or RSRE X.25 link) PRn Network process (AX.25 packet radio link) CWn Terminal process (FSK radio terminal) TTn Terminal process (operator terminal/line printer) MXn Multiplexor terminal process (DEC DZ11 multiplexor) BGD Background user process (BOS) FGD Foreground user process (BOS) VMn Virtual user process (VOS) DXn Disk process (RX01 single-density floppy disk) DYn Disk process (RX02 double-density floppy disk) PDn Disk process (PDT-150 single-density floppy disk) RKn Disk process (RK05 disk cartridge) DSn Disk process (RH11/RJS03 fixed-head disk) DLn Disk process (RL11/RL01 disk cartridge) FDn Disk process (AED 6200 double-density floppy disk) CSn Disk process (USDC Winchester disk/tape cartridge) SMn Disk process (SMS Winchester disk) FAX Dacom 450 Facsimile process LPC LPCM packet speech process UDP Internet name/time/tftp server process EGP Internet gateway process NSP DECnet gateway process LOG Log process As in RT-11, logical names can be associated with most of the above names using the ASG command. VIRTUAL-HOSTS Of fundamental importance to the DCnet architecture is the concept of physical and virtual hosts. A physical host is an ordinary processor with memory and a complement of direct-access and sequential devices. A virtual host is a portable process that resides in a physical host. Virtual hosts are assigned names and 32-bit internet addresses as shown elsewhere. Each virtual host residing in a physical host is supported by an Internet process, the name of which is the name of the virtual host. The internet address of the physical host itself (necessary only to break routing loops) must be the address of one of its virtual hosts. Virtual hosts are identified within DCnet by the host identifier (HID), which presently is taken as the fourth octet of the four-octet internet address. The particular virtual host supported by a given Internet process is determined by its HID, which can be changed by an operator command. When the HID is changed, the name is changed automatically as well. TERMINAL-OPERATIONS Operation of the standard Fuzzball terminal is like RT-11, but with some differences. Following is a list of the special keyboard functions (codes correspond to the standard ASCII interpretation): Code Echo Function ------------------------ CR CR-LF End of line SUB ^Z End of file DEL BS-SP-BS Delete previous character CAN ^U Delete current line ETX ^C Interrupt DLE none Begin escape sequence EOT ^D Panic reset (not in RT-11) DC3 ^S Stop output DC1 ^Q Resume output The Fuzzball interrupt and end-of-file functions operate rather differently than their RT-11 counterparts. A single (not two) ETX function always causes an immediate termination of the program. A SUB function causes the emulated RT-11 Command String Interpreter (CSI) to return to the Fuzzball Command Language Interpreter (CLI). The DLE function introduces a special function sequence consisting of the DLE itself followed by a single character. It the following character is another DLE, a single DLE is placed in the input buffer. If it is a digit, the function performed is as follows: 0 Switch to channel 0 1 Switch to channel 1 2 Switch to channel 2 3 Switch to channel 3 4-9 Reserved Operator terminals are ordinarily connected to user processes on a one-to-one basis. Usually channel 0 for each terminal is assigned the associated user process and the remaining channels assigned for special purposes, such as net servers. These assignments can be changed with the ASG command. The options in effect for each terminal can be specified with the SET command. MEMORY-MANAGEMENT In the basic system the supervisor and all processes share the identity virtual-physical address mapping. The hardware vector area is followed by the working storage allocated to the background process. This is followed by the code and read-only storage areas for the resident system, including the supervisor and all processes. Next is the code and read-only storage areas for the RT-11 emulator, which is re-entrant, position-independent and shared by all user processes. Following this is the parameter area containing tables and other information which can be accessed by the SET and SHOW commands. Finally are the buffers, state vectors and stacks used by the various components of the system. The working storage for each foreground process is allocated as part of its state vector. The virtual system is structured in a similar way, except that each user process has its own address mapping. Physical memory is organized as in the basic system, except that there is no working storage allocated to the background or foreground processes. Instead, the working storage for each user process is allocated in turn above the areas described in the previous paragraph. The supervisor and all processes except user processes operate in kernel space with identity virtual-physical mappings, except that segment 7 is mapped to the input/output page and segments 5 and 6 are used as windows to other spaces. Each user process operates in user space with its own working storage mapped to virtual space starting at location zero. Segments 6 and 7 of each user process are mapped to the RT-11 emulator and parameter areas, while segment 5 is used as a virtual window to other spaces. those functions that require it. Within each user process in both the basic and virtual systems, memory is organized as in RT-11. In the background process the chain area starts at location 500 and the various "RMON areas" and emulator working storage extends downward from the end of its allocated working storage. In the foreground processes the chain area starts at the first location of its allocated working storage. Virtual user processes appear as background processes. Features have been incorporated into the Fuzzball system to support re-entrant and position-independent load modules in both background and foreground processes. EXAMPLES None .ENDM .MACRO INTERNET INTERNET Internet Process commands SYNTAX SET ;CLI command SEMANTICS See USER process commands and GENERAL help information OPTIONS CCB Display a summary of connection data from the Connection Control Block for connection . If is missing, display all open connections. The optional arguments TRA and TCP select additional displays applicable only to TCP. TRA displays a received packet trace, while TCP displays packet and signal counts by type. CMD List the available commands. Additional information is available with the HELP program. IDENT Change the virtual host ID for the process to . After this is done the name of the process will change accordingly and the new routing information will circulate in the network. Once changed, the ID should not be changed for at least two minutes, to allow old routing information to dissipate and prevent loops. OFF The ON and OFF commands can be used to set and clear bits in the options word of the parameter area associated with the process. The ON command sets the option bits corresponding to the one bits of (which is an octal value) to one, while the OFF command sets these bits to to zero. Options for the internet process are as follows: 12 NBS clock (OFF: disable, ON: enable) 13 Echo all datagrams (OFF: disable, ON: enable) ON (see the OFF command) SHOW Display a formatted summary of various quantitites of interest. SIZE Set the maximum datagram size to , which must be a decimal integer in the range 20-576 (40-576 for TCP). EXAMPLES .set dc6 ccb Connection ID: 051240 protocol: 006 state: 000007 CCB format: 004000 max size: 256 protocol flags: 041 Local addr: [128.4.0.6] 3072 Foreign addr: [128.4.0.6] 23 Rate: 60 delay: 1055 RTD rate: 327 RTD delay: 17 .set dc6 ccb 4 tcp Catenet source quench: 0 Catenet unreachable: 0 Input packets received: 66 bad format: 0 bad checksum: 0 connection reset: 0 dropped: 1 Accepted packets: 66 null (ACK-only): 24 text stored: 42 duplicate: 0 outside window: 0 SYNs processed: 1 FINs processed: 0 Error packets sent: 0 Control packets sent: 1 Text packets sent: 25 Retransmissions sent: 0 ACK-only packets sent: 43 Data avail sigs to user: 43 .set dc6 ccb 4 tra Seq ID Start Length Window Offset ---------------------------------------------- 30005 30005 0 1 399 0 35905 35905 0 216 184 0 37888 37888 0 46 354 0 38955 38955 0 1 399 0 46288 46288 0 68 332 0 46772 46772 0 1 399 0 62172 62172 0 155 245 0 63372 63372 0 1 399 0 64969 64969 0 214 186 0 1200 1200 0 1 399 0 5183 5183 0 216 184 0 6966 6966 0 46 354 0 8050 8050 0 1 399 0 25616 25616 0 216 184 0 27533 27533 0 216 184 0 30150 30150 0 216 184 0 32250 32250 0 216 184 0 34350 34350 0 216 184 0 36450 36450 0 108 292 0 38050 38050 0 1 399 0 46283 46283 0 216 184 0 48133 48133 0 216 184 0 .set dc6 cmd Commands are: CMD SHO ON OFF ID SIZ CCB .set dc6 show Process type: 000026 options: 000000 Host ID: 6 max conn: 8 max size: 256 Input packets: 156 timeouts: 0 net signals: 0 bad format: 0 bad checksum: 0 returned: 0 dropped: 0 Control msgs: 0 Output packets: 158 .ENDM .MACRO KED KED Keypad Editor program SYNTAX KED ;invoke KED.SAV *[/options] ;* is CSI prompt *... *^Z ;exit to CLI SEMANTICS See the RT-11 Keypad Editor User's Guide. Termination of the Keypad Editor [GOLD] [COMMAND] Prompt is Command: EXIT [ENTER] to save current edit version QUIT [ENTER] to terminate without saving edit modifications To define page size, screen size and margin wrap [GOLD] [COMMAND] Prompt is Command: SET PAGE _ [ENTER] to number of lines per page (Default=Formfeed) SET SCREEN _ [ENTER] to 80/132 characters per line on screen SET WRAP _ [ENTER] to line length for auto right margin OPTIONS /C Creates a new file /I Inspects input file; does not allow changes No switch to edit file. A back-up file will be created with the extension .BAK EXAMPLES See the RT-11 Keypad Editor User's Guide. .ENDM .MACRO LIBR LIBR Librarian program SYNTAX LIBR ;invoke LIBR.SAV *[libraryfile][,listfile]=inputfiles[/options] *... ;* is CSI prompt *^Z ;exit to CLI SEMANTICS See the RT-11 System User's Guide OPTIONS /A Includes in library directory all global symbols includeing absolute global symbols /C Allows multiple input lines /D Deletes a module from a library file /E Extracts a module from a library and stores it as a .OBJ file /G Deletes a global symbol from a library directory /M:n Creates a macro library from an ASCII input file and allocates n blocks for the macro name directory /N Includes module names in library directory /P Includes psect names in library directory /R Replaces modules in a library file /U Updates (inserts and replaces) modules in a library file /W Produces a wide (132 column) library directory listing /X Creates a library with multiple global definitions // Allows multiple input lines until next occurance of // no option Assumes module insertion EXAMPLES None .ENDM .MACRO LINK LINK Linker program SYNTAX LINK ;invoke LINK.SAV *[binfile][,mapfile][,stbfile]=objfiles[/options] *... ;* is CSI prompt *^Z ;exit to CLI SEMANTICS See the RT-11 System User's Guide OPTIONS /A Lists global symbols in alphabetical order /B:n Sets bottom address of program to n; invalid with /H and /R /C Continues input on new line; do not use with // /D Allows duplicate library subroutines /E:n Extends root program segment to specified value /F Uses default FORTRAN library FORLIB.OBJ when linking /G Increases size of linker's library directory buffer /H:n Specifies highest address to be used by relocatable code; invalid with /B, /Q, /R, /Y /K:n Inserts value of n into word 56 of block 0 as virtual SETTOP high limit; n can be 1 to 32 (decimal); valid only with /V /L Produces output file in .LDA format; invalid with /R, /V /M:n Defines stack address /N Produces global cross-reference listing as part of load map /O:n Produces overlay structure; invalid with /L /P:n Changes amount of space linker uses for library routines; default is 170 /Q Specifeis start address of up to eight root program sections; invalid iwht /R, /H /R:n Produces output in .REL format; n is the stack size; invalid with /B, /H, /K, /L, /Q /S Allows maximum memory space for linker symbol table /T:n Defines transfer address /U:n Rounds up a program section; n must be a power of 2 /V Enables special XM monitor SETTOP and LIMIT features; invalid with /L /W Produces a wide load map listing (132 columns) /X Does not output bitmap if codes is below 400 /Y:n Starts a program section on address boundary n; invalid with /H /Z:n sets unused location to n // Allows multiple input lines; use on first and last lines of input EXAMPLES None .ENDM .MACRO LOG LOG Log process SYNTAX None SEMANTICS The Log process is used to record significant system events (traps) for later analysis. Traps are evoked when unusual but nonfatal network events occur, such as invalid packet formats, misrouted datagrams, etc., and when users log in and out of the system, for example. The data are recorded in a special file called LOG.TXT, which can be created using the CRMAIL utility and inspected using any text editor. Each line begins with a timestamp followed by the PID of the process generating the line. The data describing the event occupies the remainder of the line. Detailed coding formats are described in the program module identified following the "?" character. The Log process is also used to initiate TCP server processes and initiate daemons to send or receive mail and transmit spool files, if enabled. OPTIONS The Log process runs as a special server (dedicated user process). Any of the commands which change fixed user-process tables (see HELP information for USER) can be used with the Log process as well, including the ON and OFF commands. The ON and OFF commands can be used to set and clear bits in the options word of the parameter area associated with the process. The ON command sets the option bits corresponding to the one bits of (which is an octal value) to one, while the OFF command sets these bits to to zero. Options for the Log process are as follows: 2 Log to file LOG.TXT (OFF: disable, ON: enable) 3 Log to terminal TT: (OFF: disable, ON: enable) 4 Mail daemon (OFF: disable, ON: enable) 5 Spool daemon (OFF: disable, ON: enable) EXAMPLES 17:19:56 002 ?TRAP-I-TCP service request [10.2.0.62] 37 17:19:58 042 ?TELSRV-I-Open UT-SALLY.ARPA 37 17:20:03 042 ?TELSRV-I-Closed 18:10:21 006 ?TRAP-I-ICMP 005 000 [10.0.0.89] -> [128.8.0.2] 18:13:08 050 ?GATE-F-Neighbor down 2 [10.3.0.27] 18:24:19 046 ?UDP-I-Time request [18.26.0.8] 18:24:34 046 ?UDP-I-Name request [18.26.0.8] 18:30:54 006 ?TRAP-I-Leader error 000017 003400 001400 015400 000633 18:33:59 006 ?TRAP-I-ICMP 005 000 [10.0.0.89] -> [128.8.0.2] 18:34:22 012 ?TRAP-I-Link up 18:37:30 014 ?TRAP-I-Link down 18:44:46 046 ?UDP-I-Time request [18.26.0.33] 18:50:14 050 ?GATE-I-Neighbor up 2 [10.3.0.27] .ENDM .MACRO LOGIN LOGIN Assign user private volume SYNTAX login ;entered by user ;or login ;entered by user Password: ;host prompts for pw ;or login ;entered by user Userid: ;host prompts for name Password: ;host prompts for pw SEMANTICS This program is used to log a user into the system, as well as assign a private volume for his files. Its use is mandatory for remote virtual-terminal (see TELSRV) and file-transfer (see FTPSRV) access and optional for local access. See the SYSMGR information and the ON command in the USER information for further information. OPTIONS None, but see also the help information for LOGOUT. EXAMPLES .login smith .Password: (Note: the password is not echoed and a message is given only in the event of an error.) .ENDM .MACRO LOGOUT LOGOUT De-assign user private volume SYNTAX logout ;entered by user SEMANTICS After a user has assigned a private volume using the LOGIN command, the default volume may be restored by typing LOGOUT. Also causes disconnect in the case of the TELNET server. OPTIONS None, but see also the help information for LOGIN. EXAMPLES None .ENDM .MACRO MACPIC MACPIC Macintosh to bitmap conversion SYNTAX MACPIC ;invoke MACPIC.SAV *= *... ;* is CSI prompt *^Z ;exit to CLI SEMANTICS This program reads a MacPaint file encoded in uuencode format and constructs a bitmap file in Sun format. The first 512 bytes of the file are the header. The first four bytes comprise the version number, followed by 38 * 8 = 304 bytes of patterns. The remaining 204 bytes are reserved for future expansion. If the version number is zero, the patterns are ignored. Hence, programs that wish to create files to be read into MacPaint can just write out 512 bytes of zero as the header. Following the header are 720 compressed scanlines of data which form the 576 wide by 720 tall bitmap. OPTIONS None EXAMPLES None .ENDM .MACRO MAIL MAIL Message and mail-file formats SYNTAX See RFC-822. SEMANTICS The format of the ARPANET message data structures is described in RFC-822. In this model messages are sent by a user to a specified recipent in the format @, where is the name of a host and is the name of an user known to that host. The implied address, usually called a mailbox, is typically associated with a mail file belonging to the recipient. The mail file format used in the Fuzzball system is line-structured, with each line terminated by the ASCII sequence , and contains only ASCII printing characters and format effectors. Messages consist of a file header, which contains a character count, followed by the message itself. Messages are stored one after the other with the last followed by an ASCII character for compatibility with other RT-11 components. Figure 1 shows the format of a typical message. 17-Sep-83 17:53:49,314;000000000000 RCPT to: RCPT to:<@dcn1:Gross@dcn5> DLVD to: Return-path: Date: 17-Sep-83 17:53:25-UT From: Mills@dcn6 Subject: Test message To: Zorica@dcn5 cc: <@dcn1:Gross@dcn5>, Mills@dcn6 Folks, This message demonstrates RFC-821 and RFC-822 formats. Dave ------- The first line is the file header, including the date, time and count of characters in the message text, and followed by an array of twelve flag characters used by other programs of the message system. The message itself begins immediately following the which terminates this line and includes first the transport (RFC-822) header followed by the message (RFC-821) header and, finally, the body of the message itself. In the above example the lines beginning with RCPT and DLVD belong to the transport header and the lines following that up until the blank line belong to the message header. Mail files can be created in three ways: (1) by copying a mail file from a TOPS-20 or Fuzzball host as-is to a Fuzzball host, (2) by creating and appending a new message locally and (3) by receiving and appending a message from another host. Case (1) has been found useful during testing and in cases involving large amounts of mail which can be bulk-transferred more efficient file-transfer protocols like FTP and NIFTP. However, TOPS-20 files do not include the transport header, so that messages sent from these files require manual intervention. Case (2) is implemented by an interactive mail editor which operates much like the TOPS-20 SNDMSG program to construct and edit messages and append them, along with their transport and message headers, onto a specified mail file. Case (3) is implemented by the SMTP Server, which listens for messages from the network and appends them onto the UNSENT.MSG mail file. OPTIONS None EXAMPLES See above. .ENDM .MACRO MESSAGES MESSAGES Network messages SYNTAX ?-- name of module originating the message I = information, W = warning, F = fatal explanatory string SEMANTICS Following is a list of network-related messages which may be generated by network-layer and transport-layer protocol modules. In most cases additional information is available in the help information under the name indicated in the field. ?-I-Open The connection has opened successfully. ?-I-Closed The connection has closed and all resources returned to the operating system. ?-F-Invalid signal This indicates a serious, probably fatal, software error. ?-I-Remote disconnect The remote end of the connection has initiated a close sequence (FIN indication). The sequence will be complete only after the local end initiates a companion close sequence. ?-I-Remote interrupt The remote end of the connection has initiated a TCP URGENT sequence, but no provision for that has been incorporated in the local end. ?-W-Connection error: An error in the protocol or network has been recognized, either explicitly by an ICMP message received from the network or implicitily as the result of a problem in the local host routing tables. Additional information is provided by , which can be one of the following: String Source Most probable cause ----------------------------------------------------------- unspecified reason internal software error parameter error ICMP message bad datagram format time exceeded ICMP message routing loop reassembly error ICMP message high packet losses net unreachable ICMP message remote gateway down host unreachable ICMP message remote host down protocol unreachable ICMP message unsupported protocol port unreachable ICMP message unsupported service fragmentation error ICMP message bad datagram format source route failed ICMP message bad network route gateway down local routing local gateway down host down local routing local host down ?-W-Host not responding: A timeout has occured during transmission due to the condition indicated by , which may be one of the following: String Condition -------------------------------------------------------------- unspecified reason software error initial connection timeout waiting for connection to open ACK timeout waiting for acknowledgment of data sent send window timeout waiting for the receiver to accept more data idle connection timeout nothing whatever heard for an unreasonably long time ?-F-Connection reset: A TCP RESET segment has been received, usually indicating a broken or unsynchronized connection. Additional information is provided by , which can be one of the following: String Cause -------------------------------------------------------------- unspecified reason software error connection-open state (a) unsupported service (port) or (b) previous half-open connection data-transfer state other end has crashed or timed out and has restarted connection-close state other end has prematurely terminated TIME-WAIT state ?-I-Listening... This message, produced by some modules, indicates the module is listening for a connection request and does not represent an error. ?-F-Connection open error An attempt was made to transfer data over a connection that has not opened or an attempt was made to open a connection already open. This usually indicates a software error. ?-F-Invalid parameter An invalid parameter was detected in a call to a system routine, indicating a software error. ?-W-Insufficient resources Sufficient system resources are not currently available for the operation requested. Protocol modules typically retry the operation, so this message does not necessarily indicate an error. ?-W-Gateway down A local gateway is down. ?-W-Host down A local host is down. OPTIONS None EXAMPLES None .ENDM .MACRO MMM MMM Multi-Media Mail program SYNTAX MMM ;invoke MMM.SAV ... ;* is prompt QUIT ;return to CLI SEMANTICS The Multi-Media Mail (MMM) program is used to compose, read, answer and forward documents in the format described in RFC-759 and RFC-767 as amended. It is designed to operate with other user and server programs conforming to these protocols. Multi-media messages can be composed and displayed under either the RT-11 or Fuzzball operating systems; however, they can be sent to and received from other systems only under the Fuzzball operating system. The MMM program can be used with ordinary text data and no special peripheral devices other than a standard video or hardcopy terminal; however, full functionality requires special peripheral devices for non-text data. The Fuzzball operating system presently supports the Lincoln Laboratory LPCM Speech Codec for voice data input/output, the Dacom 450 Facsimile Transceiver for hardcopy image and facsimile data input/output and the Peritek VCG Color Bitmap Display for text, image, facsimile and graphics data presentation. Following is a summary of the data types, protocols and attributes presently supported: Data type Protocol Attributes --------------------------------------------------------------------- Text VERBATIM, PARAGRAPH size, font (Peritek VCG only) Image BITMAP width, height Voice LPC none Facsimile Rapicom-450-BLOCK none Graphics TEKTRONIX (see elsewhere) The MMM program is is used in interactive mode to compose and display multi-media messages. It consists of a number of overlayed modules which operate with special files, called mailbags, in RFC-759 format. A mailbag consists of a list structure containing one or more multi-media messages, each of which includes the message proper in Multi-Media Content Protocol (MMCP) format enclosed in an envelope in Multi-Media Transport Protocol (MMTP) format. A mailbag is queued by MMM for transmission to a designated Internet host, following which the system spooler daemon (PRTQ) transmits it using TCP and port number 45 as specified in RFC-759. Upon recognizing a TCP connection request on port 45, the TCP dispatcher (TELSRV) activates the MMM program in daemon mode to process the incoming mailbag. The program extracts messages from the mailbag and delivers them to the respective users and also queues acknowledgments for these messages, which are then returned to the sender via the system spooler daemon. Acknowledgements for previously sent messages may also be included in the mailbag. These are extracted by the MMM program and matched with previously sent but not acknowledged messages. Upon successful match the message and its acknowledgment are discarded. Each MMM message is saved in a separate file with extension MMM and can be separately extracted and read using the MMM program. As the message is read various data objects, including speech, image and text data, either displayed immediately or sent to the spooling system for possible forwarding to special devices that may be attached to other hosts. Alternativiely, the data objects can be stored in local files for later manipulation or playback. A MMM message is constructed from data previously recorded, including speech, image and text data stored in separate files. The MMM program is used to assemble these data objects in the message, include address and subject information and send the message to the spooling system for transmission. Facilities are included to answer and forward previously received messages. OPTIONS ANSWER Answer a previously received message. The program will prompt for the of the message, then prompt for each data item in turn ("Protocol?") as described under the SEND command. PLAY Playback MMM message previously read using the READ command. The program will display the message header followed by a request for disposition for each data object in the message. In each request the type and size of the object is displayed followed by the default device name. An empty line causes the data to be output to that device, which need not reside on the same machine. Alternatively, a causes the data to be stored in the file of that name with default extensions shown in the SEND command. QUIT Return to the CLI. READ Read MMM mailbag (default extension is MMM). SEND Compose and send an MMM message to one or more recipients. The program will prompt first for the "To:" list and expect a recipient in the usual form @ in each line, with the list terminated by a single . It will then prompt for the "Cc:" list in the same way. Next, it will prompt for the "Subject:" line and, finally, for each data item in turn ("Protocol?"). In response to the data-item prompt, the one of the following can be supplied: Name Data Type Extension ------------------------------------------- VERBAT ASCII Text TXT IMAGE Sun bitmap BIT VOICE LPCM Voice LPC FACSIM Dacom Facsimile FAX GRAPHI Tektronix Graphics TEK DOCUME MMM Message MMM The program will then ask for the name of the file containing the data type and insert it into the MMM message. The list of data types is terminated by an empty line. At this point the message is queued for transmission. SHOW Display data structure summary, including tallies of nodes, main storage, temporary files and file sizes. EXAMPLES .mmm DCN6.ARPA MMM User Process (11-Oct-84 Version) 05-Jan-86 01:47:28 *read msg56 *play Return-path: Received-from: USC-ISIB.ARPA by dcn6.arpa at 1985-12-24-02:43:57 Transaction: 6230 number 48444 Date: 1985-12-23-12:17:25,000-07:00 From: JKReynolds@USC-ISIB.ARPA Subject: Christmas Vision To: mills@dcn6.arpa, forsdick@bbn-diamond.arpa, rthomas@usc-isib.arpa, tcrowley@bbn-jade.arpa, rschaaf@usc-isib.arpa, rtomlinson@usc-isib.arpa, travers@bbn-diamond.arpa, clynn@bbn-diamond.arpa, khuber@bbn-diamonds.arpa, jsecunda@bbn-diamond.arpa --- Sequential presentation --- Image protocol BITMAP-1 [508x82 pels] (11 blocks): Destination [VCG:]? [The image appears immediately on the Peritek display.] Image protocol BITMAP-1 [504x471 pels] (58 blocks): Destination [VCG:]? joyce [The image is stored in the file JOYCE.BIT in Sun bitmap format for possible later display or transport to a Sun workstation or another Fuzzball.] *read msg55 *play Return-path: Received-from: bbn-diamond.arpa by DCN6.ARPA at 1985-11-07-17:33:50 Transaction: 350 number 1 Date: 1985-11-07-12:39:00,0-05:00 From: forsdick@bbn-diamond.ARPA Subject: Stock Market and Weather for November 7, 1985 To: Mills@DCN6.ARPA, MOConner@ISIB.ARPA Cc: Forsdick@BBN-Diamond.ARPA --- Sequential presentation --- Text protocol Verbatim-1 (2 blocks): Destination [TT:]? From the New York Times, Thursday November 7, 1985: With a concerted push from institutional investors in the waning minutes of trading, the Dow Jones industrial average jumped the historic 1,400 hurdle yesterday with relative ease, ending the day at 1,403.44. ... The Dow first closed above 1,000 on Nov. 14, 1972. It took more than 10 years, until Feb. 24, 1983, for it to finish above 1,100. In the rush of that year's bull market, it was just two months -- until April 26 -- before the Dow ended above 1,300. Text protocol Verbatim-1 (1 blocks): Destination [TT:]? Satellite Photo Nov 6 2 P.M. (EST) Image protocol BitMap-1 [664x459 pels] (75 blocks): Destination [VCG:]? [A satellite photograph appears immediately on the Peritek display.] Text protocol Verbatim-1 (1 blocks): Destination [TT:]? Low and middle clouds extend from New England to the Ohio Valley. A band of frontal clouds causing light and moderate rain extends from the upper lake region to Oklahoma. Skies are mostly clear over the southern portion of the country and the Midwest. Broken clouds and snow are visible over the Rockies and the Northwest. Image protocol BitMap-1 [683x494 pels] (83 blocks): Destination [VCG:]? [A weather map appears immediately on the Peritek display.] Voice protocol LPCM-1 (24 blocks): Destination [LPC:]? [The speech data are automatically stored in a spool file, transmitted to another Fuzzball equipped with an LPCM speech codec and decoded. Meanwhile, the operator dials a special PBX trunk (code 422 in our version) and hears the playback.] *send To? mills@dcn7 To? Cc? Subject? Test message Protocol? verbat Text protocol source? y.txt Protocol? image Image protocol source? joyce Protocol? ?MMM-I-Queue MILLS DK:VM3001.MMM[61] for [128.4.0.7] *quit .ENDM .MACRO MSG MSG Mail reader program SYNTAX MSG ;invoke MSG.SAV ... ;-> is prompt Q(uit) or E(xit) or ^Z ;return to CLI SEMANTICS This module is part of the groupe of modules (SNDMSG,CRMAIL,SMTP) which form the mail system The purpose of MSG is to examine and operate on messages that are stored in the mail file. The program first attempts to open a given file which has to be in the mail format (created by CRMAIL). If it succeedes it creates a table which holds the information about each message. The information is : offset to that message and number of bytes in that message. After displaying the information about the file blocks: A maximum of 500 file blocks are available of which 70 are in use. it displayes a promt ' <- '. The process is now ready to accept the user command. Every command is followed by a message sequence which is composed of one of the following: 1) a number 2) two numbers separated by any nonnumeric character 3) one of the following special sequence characters: A - All messages D - Deleted messages E - Examined messages I - All messages in inverse order N - Not examined messages U - Undeleted messages The valid command characters and their operations are: A - Answers to the specified message The process first displayes the header of the message- Answer message: 1 09-Mar Mills at dcn3 COMSAT final report(298char) then it chains to the SNDMSG process to form the answer message. Below are the prompt fields issued by the SNDMSG process: From: - enter user address Reply-to (t or c): - request for the address that will appear on the 'To:' line in the answer message. In every case the address from the 'From:' field in the original message ( the senders address) is entered on the 'To:' line. The following are the options for the 'To:' line: [RET] - only the senders address t - senders address and all the address in the 'To:' field of the original message c - senders address, all the addresses in the original 'To:' field and all the addresses in the original 'Cc:' field. Cc: - Additional address Message: - text of the message ^Z terminates the message after which the program chains back to the MSG. Note that the user is not prompted for the subject. The answer messsage uses the same subject title that was in the original message prefixed by 'Re:'. The only time when the user is promted for the subject is when the original message does not have that field. (for more information check SNDMSG) B - Backup, print previous message It prints the message in the same format as in t command C - Print the information about the current message number and file name: Current message number is 36 of 37 messages in the file UNSENT.MSG A maximum of 500 file blocks are availableof which 70 are in use. D - Mark a given message sequence for deletion. The message remains part of the file until the file is updated. E - Exit the program and update the open file Examines all of the messages and deletes the ones that are marked for deletion. F - Forward one or more messages The process first displayes headers of all the messages that have to be forwarded: Forward message(s): 1 09-Mar Mills at dcn3 COMSAT final report After this the process chains to SNDMSG which will build the message that has to be forwarded. (check SNDMSG for explanation of promt fields). The first part of the message text is the text that the user types in. The second part is the inserted forwarded message(s). Forwarded text is preceeded by the line that says- --- beginning of forwarded message --- and ended by the line --- end of forwarded message --- ^Z will complete the message and chain back to MSG. G - Set the current message number to the one given H - Print the header information of the given message sequence Prints the message number, date, from filed and the first 30 characters of the subject field: 1 09-Mar Mills at dcn3 COMSAT final report I - Include the byte count in the headers It is an ON/OFF switch giving either a prompt Length included or Length NOT included in the present implementation the length is always included L - Create a listing file of the given message sequence After entering the l command with the message sequence the process prompts for the file name - List file name: and then copies all the required message into the given file N - Next, print next message Same action as the t command P - Put a message from the open file into another file The file created of the specified subset of messages is again in the mail file format Q - Quit the msg program Quits the MSG program closing the mail file without updating it (see E command) S - Chain to SNDMSG chains to SNDMSG process inorder to create a new message (for more information see SNDMSG) R - Use the given file as the active file It opens a message file. If another message file was already active it closes that file and issues a prompt - Mail file name: The new file becomes an active mail file T - Displayes a given message sequence to the console U - Unmark a given message sequence for deletion - Mark a given message sequence as examined - - Mark a given message sequence as not examined ! - Search the file "UNSENT.TXT" ? - Type a list of valid command characters to the console Prints the text from the msg.hlp file OPTIONS None EXAMPLES None .ENDM .MACRO NETCLK NETCLK Network set-clock program SYNTAX NETCLK ;invoke NETCLK.SAV SEMANTICS This program can be used to set the local host date and time from a remote host supporting an RFC-868 compatible time server. The defaults to DCN1.ARPA, which is presently synchronized to NBS Radio WWVB to within a few milliseconds. OPTIONS None EXAMPLES None .ENDM .MACRO NETWORK NETWORK Network Process commands SYNTAX SET ;CLI command SEMANTICS See USER process commands and GENERAL help information OPTIONS ASG This command is used for special network processes that can process ASCII data in addition to ordinary datagrams. It is used to establish the process or device as the destination of ASCII data received via the link. CMD List the available commands. Additional information is available with the HELP program. DEVICE Display a formatted summary of the device table, which establishes the association between the logical and physical names of each process together with additional data. If is a valid logical name, the data associated with that process is displayed. If is defaulted the entire table is displayed. IDENT
Set the address assigned to the link to
. Note that these values are constructed automatically during normal system operations, so that this command is intended only for exceptional circumstances. OFF The ON and OFF commands can be used to set and clear bits in the options word of the parameter area associated with the process. The ON command sets the option bits corresponding to the one bits of (which is an octal value) to one, while the OFF command sets these bits to to zero. Options for the network process are as follows: 10 Link enable (OFF: enable, ON: disable) 11 HELLO neighbor (OFF: enable, ON: disable) 13 External loopback (OFF: disable, ON: enable) 14 HELLO messages (OFF: disable, ON: enable) ON (see the OFF command) SHOW Display a formatted summary of various quantitites of interest, including packet tallies, network parameters and addresses. SIZE Set the buffer size for inbound datagrams and the maximum fragment size for outbound datagrams to . Note that the size is ordinarily set at the maximum transmission unit (MTU) size, which is an intrinsic parameter of the network, so that this command is intended only for exceptional circumstances. STATUS Display a formatted summary of device-dependent status variables. The interpretation of these data depend on the various device drivers used. There are several formats for the status information depending upon the network driver and configuration. Among these are the following: Code Driver/network -------------------------------- ARP ARPAnet 1822 DH protocol DCN DCnet network link DMV DCNet DMV11 network link ETH Ethernet HDH ARPAnet HDH protocol PCG IBM PCIP gateway PKT AX.25 packet radio X25 X.25 network link EXAMPLES .set lh0 cmd Commands are: CMD SHO ON OFF ID SIZ STA .set lh0 sho Process type: 000027 options: 040000 Subnet: DCN status: 0 min buf: 0 retry: 3750 Foreign address: [0.0.0.0] max size: 256 Input packets: 0 bad format: 0 bad checksum: 0 returned: 0 dropped: 0 HELLO msgs: 0 ICMP msgs: 0 Output packets: 29 Input errors: 0 Output errors: 0 No buffer: 0 .ENDM .MACRO NIFTP NIFTP Network-independent file transfer program SYNTAX NIFTP ;invoke NIFTP.SAV ... QUIT ;exit to CLI SEMANTICS The Network-Independent File Transfer Protocol (NIFTP) has been the object of an ongoing standardization effort in the United Kingdom. The current specifications are given in a document called the Blue Book and published by the National Physical Laboratory in 1980. A subset of this protocol is supported for file transfers between Fuzzball hosts and certain TOPS-20 ARPANET hosts using two programs, the NIFTP User, a PDP11 program written in the C language by Steve Treadwell and the NIFTP Server, a TOPS-20 program written in the BCPL language by Chris Bennett, both of University College London. The NIFTP User runs in interactive mode on a Fuzzball host. The NIFTP Server resides at a TOPS-20 ARPANET host (presently USC-ISIE) and is activated upon receipt of a TCP connection on port 47. The NIFTP User is controlled by user commands in the same way as the Command Language Interpreter (CLI) and other user programs. It in turn controls the NIFTP Server by the protocol specified in the Blue Book. These programs can also be used with other implementations conforming to the Blue Book protocol. A file transfer operation proceeds by first specifying the remote host using the CONNECT command and then the user name and password using the LOGIN command. Following this, the SEND and GET commands are used to transfer files to and from the remote host as required. For each transfer a connection is established to the NIFTP Server, which verifies the user name and password and establishes the working directory, following which the file transfer takes place. At the conclusion of the file transfer the connection is closed. The QUIT command is used to exit to the CLI. The NIFTP User is normally controls all connection and file-transfer operations. The syntax of NIFTP User commands is similar to that of CLI commands and consists of a keyword followed by a list of arguments separated by spaces. Only the first three characters of a keyword are significant. In the case of some commands expecting two file names as arguments, if the second argument is missing a copy of the first argument replaces it. Ordinarily this convention leads to the intended action; however, there are cases where misdirected use of this feature can result in unintended actions. The NIFTP User prompt is "*", signifying the program is ready for the next command. A prompt appears as each command sequence is completed with the NIFTP Server. Prompts will not appear following commands which have only local significance or in which errors are detected. OPTIONS ABORT If a data transfer is not in progress, do nothing. Else, send the NIFTP Server ABORT signal and wait for the connection to be closed from the remote end. ASCII The ASCII and IMAGE commands set the mode for subsequent file transfers. The default is ASCII. BRIEF The BRIEF and VERBOSE commands control output of detailed commentary dialog. BRIEF disables this and VERBOSE enables it. The default is BRIEF. CONNECT Set the and for a subsequent file transfer. The specification is in the form n1,n2,n3,n4, where n1,...,n4 are decimal integers with values in the range 0-255, and the default is the ARPANET host USC-ISID (10,1,0,27). The specification is a decimal number in the range 0-32767 with a default of 47 (NIFTP). GET Open a connection to the remote host previously specified by the CONNECT, LOGIN and ASCII/IMAGE commands. Then transfer the file on the remote host to on the local host. The must contain no more than 40 ASCII printing characters, while the must be a valid RT-11 file name or sequential device name. If is missing, assume the string in its place. HELP Display helpful information, including a list of commands. IMAGE (see the ASCII command) LOGIN Specify the and for subsequent data transfers. Both and must contain no more than 40 ASCII printing characters. QUIT Execute an implied ABORT command and exit to the CLI. SEND Open a connection to the remote host previously specified by the CONNECT, LOGIN and ASCII/IMAGE commands. Then transfer the file on the local host to on the remote host. The must be a valid RT-11 file or sequential device name, while the must contain no more than 40 ASCII printing characters. If is missing, assume the string in its place. SHOW Display a formatted summary of various quantitites of interest, including the current host, file and block number. VERBOSE (see the BRIEF command) EXAMPLES None .ENDM .MACRO PING PING Internet measurements program SYNTAX PING ;invoke PING.SAV ... QUIT ;exit to CLI SEMANTICS The Packet InterNet Groper (PING) is an internet measurement and debugging tool. It can function both as a user and server and is normally run in interactive mode by a user at a Fuzzball host. PING is designed to send datagrams to cooperating internet hosts and gateways which echo these datagrams to the sender. The roundtrip delays are then recorded and used to develop summary statistics and histograms. PING is not designed to test throughput capabilities, since only a single datagram is allowed on the roudtrip path. Ordinarily, PING datagrams use the Internet Control Message Protocol (ICMP) Echo and Echo Reply messages, since these are echoed by many Internet hosts and gateways, including all those using the Fuzzball internet software. However, the ICMP datagram formats can be used with other protocol numbers in the IP header. A PING operation proceeds by first opening a raw-datagram connection with the remote host using the CONNECT command. The PING command is used to begin a volley of ICMP Echo - ICMP Echo Reply exchanges between the local and remote hosts. Roundtrip delay samples are recorded in a buffer capable of holding about 500 samples. Finally, the SHOW command is used to select the format and display the results. The QUIT command is used to exit to the CLI. OPTIONS ABORT Terminate the PING volley and ignore subsequent datagrams. BRIEF The BRIEF and VERBOSE commands control output of detailed commentary dialog. BRIEF disables this and VERBOSE enables it. The default is VERBOSE. CLOSE Close the data-collection file. CONNECT Open a raw-datagram connection to with specified. The is a decimal integer In the range 0-255 and defaults to 1 (ICMP). CREATE Create a data-collection file for delay samples. As each ICMP Echo Reply message is received from the network and the roundtrip delay is calculated the value is written to the file as a 16-bit integer. DISCONNECT Execute an implied ABORT command and close the raw-datagram connection. HELP Display helpful information, including a list of commands. LOCAL Set the local address to , with default the local primary address. This feature can be used to select local secondary addresses in the case of a multi-homed host. OFF The ON and OFF commands are used to set and clear selected options. The ON command enables the selected option and the OFF command disables it. Options supported include: ACK Controls response to the ICMP Echo datagram (OFF: process, ON: return AN ICMP Echo Reply datagram) DUMP Controls printing of the IP header (OFF: disable, ON: enable) TIME Controls packet type (OFF: ICMP Echo, ON: ICMP Timestamp) TRACE Controls printing of the datagram header, including the roundtrip delay and clock offsets (OFF: disable, ON: enable) ON (see the OFF command) OPTION ... Specify the Internet source route as the sequence ... (up to nine). Set the option code in the IP options field to (octal), where code is 203 (loose source route), 207 (record route) or 211 (strict source route). PING Begin a PING volley with the selected remote host and protocol. The number of roundtrip volleys requested is , which defaults to one. QUIT Execute an implied DISCONNECT command and return to the CLI. RESTART Resume a PING volley with the select remote host and protocol. This command is useful after a PING datagram has been lost in the network. ROUTE ... Specify the Internet source route as the sequence ... (up to nine). SHOW Display a formatted summary of various quantitites of interest, including the current host and PING headers. The selects the format of the display. If it is SUMMARY the data printed include the number of volleys together with the mean, minimum, maximum and overflow of the samples collected. If it is HISTOGRAM a histogram of the samples collected is printed. SIZE Set the maximum datagram size to octets, including the Internet header. The can be FIXED (default) or RANDOM. In the latter case the size is uniformly distributed on the interval 40 to octets. TIME