Path: utzoo!utgpu!watmath!clyde!att!mtuxo!mtgzz!avr
From: avr@mtgzz.att.com (a.v.reed)
Newsgroups: comp.unix.wizards
Subject: Re: using System V 'cu'
Summary: Use ~+umodem -options < /dev/culine
Message-ID: <4700@mtgzz.att.com>
Date: 28 Nov 88 19:28:54 GMT
References: <6808@venera.isi.edu>
Organization: AT&T, Middletown NJ
Lines: 27

In article <6808@venera.isi.edu>, cracraft@venera.isi.edu (Stuart Cracraft) writes:
< How do you slow down cu's file transfer capability (e.g. the tilde-put
< command) ??
< 
< When the transmitting machine is fast, such as a PC running Unix
< System V, and the connection is slow (a 1200 baud modem) to another
< Unix system, a few seconds after issuing the tilde-put command, the
< input buffer of the target system overflows and one continuous bell is
< heard. The file isn't successfully transferred.
< 
< Any ideas on how to solve this one?
< 
< 	Stuart

Use a protocol-based file transfer program - that is why I put the
tilda-plus escape in cu in the first place. For example, start up umodem
on the remote, then do
	
	~+ umodem -options < /dev/culine

or the equivalent with the protocol of your choice.  This way you can
also transfer binary files. (No, I don't know why ~+ is still
undocumented, even though it has been in cu for 6 years already. Or why
it is not in SVID. So it is possible that your machine's cu doesn't have
it. But probably it does.... )

				Adam Reed (avr@mtgzz.ATT.COM)