From 9a7523d4b2c09cefef7372e8a011b8d54fb07e5e Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: peter Date: Tue, 21 May 2002 05:30:25 +0000 Subject: Import ncurses-5.2-20020518 onto the vendor branch. Obtained from: ftp://dickey.his.com/ncurses/ --- contrib/ncurses/misc/terminfo.src | 771 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++--- 1 file changed, 717 insertions(+), 54 deletions(-) (limited to 'contrib/ncurses/misc/terminfo.src') diff --git a/contrib/ncurses/misc/terminfo.src b/contrib/ncurses/misc/terminfo.src index 124b023..2285f6a 100644 --- a/contrib/ncurses/misc/terminfo.src +++ b/contrib/ncurses/misc/terminfo.src @@ -1,11 +1,16 @@ ######## TERMINAL TYPE DESCRIPTIONS SOURCE FILE # # This version of terminfo.src is distributed with ncurses. -# Report bugs to +# Report bugs and new terminal descriptions to # bug-ncurses@gnu.org # +# The original header is preserved below for reference. It is noted that there +# is a newer version which differs in some cosmetic details; we have decided +# to not change the header unless there is also a change in content. +# +#------------------------------------------------------------------------------ # Version 10.2.1 -# $Date: 2001/05/05 23:09:00 $ +# $Date: 2002/01/12 17:31:53 $ # terminfo syntax # # Eric S. Raymond (current maintainer) @@ -763,7 +768,7 @@ mach|Mach Console, cuf=\E[%p1%dC, cuf1=\E[C, cup=\E[%i%p1%d;%p2%dH, cuu=\E[%p1%dA, cuu1=\E[A, dl=\E[%p1%dM, dl1=\E[M, ed=\E[J, el=\E[K, home=\E[H, ht=^I, il=\E[%p1%dL, il1=\E[L, ind=^J, - kbs=^H, kcub1=\E[D, kcud1=\E[B, kcuf1=\E[C, kcuu1=\E[A, + kbs=\177, kcub1=\E[D, kcud1=\E[B, kcuf1=\E[C, kcuu1=\E[A, kdch1=\E[9, kend=\E[Y, kf1=\EOP, kf10=\EOY, kf2=\EOQ, kf3=\EOR, kf4=\EOS, kf5=\EOT, kf6=\EOU, kf7=\EOV, kf8=\EOW, kf9=\EOX, khome=\E[H, kich1=\E[@, kll=\E[F, knp=\E[U, @@ -2401,6 +2406,57 @@ crt|crt-vt220|CRT 2.3 emulating VT220, hts=\EH, u6=\E[%i%d;%dR, u7=\E[6n, u8=\E[?1;2c, u9=\E[c, use=vt220, use=ecma+color, +# PuTTY 0.51 (released 14 December 2000) +# http://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~sgtatham/putty/ +# +# This emulates vt100 + vt52 (plus a few vt220 features: ech, SRM, DECTCEM, as +# well as SCO and Atari, color palettes from Linux console). Reading the code, +# it is intended to be VT102 plus selected features By default, it sets $TERM +# to xterm, which is incorrect, since several features are misimplemented: +# +# Alt+key always sends ESC+key, so 'km' capability is removed. +# +# Control responses, wrapping and tabs are buggy, failing a couple of +# screens in vttest. +# +# xterm mouse support is not implemented (unrelease version may). +# +# Several features such as backspace/delete are optional; this entry documents +# the default behavior -TD +putty|xterm clone (win32), + am, bw, ccc, km, mir, msgr, xenl, + colors#8, cols#80, it#8, lines#24, pairs#64, + acsc=``aaffggiijjkkllmmnnooppqqrrssttuuvvwwxxyyzz{{||}}~~, + bel=^G, blink=\E[5m, bold=\E[1m, civis=\E[?25l, + clear=\E[H\E[2J, cnorm=\E[?25h, cr=^M, + csr=\E[%i%p1%d;%p2%dr, cub=\E[%p1%dD, cub1=^H, + cud=\E[%p1%dB, cud1=^J, cuf=\E[%p1%dC, cuf1=\E[C, + cup=\E[%i%p1%d;%p2%dH, cuu=\E[%p1%dA, cuu1=\E[A, + dch=\E[%p1%dP, dch1=\E[P, dl=\E[%p1%dM, dl1=\E[M, + ech=\E[%p1%dX, ed=\E[J, el=\E[K, enacs=\E)0, home=\E[H, + hpa=\E[%i%p1%dG, ht=^I, hts=\EH, il=\E[%p1%dL, il1=\E[L, + ind=^J, + initc=\E]P%?%p1%{9}%>%t%p1%{10}%-%'a'%+%c%e%p1%d%;%p2%{255}%&%Pr%gr%{16}%/%Px%?%gx%{9}%>%t%gx%{10}%-%'A'%+%c%e%gx%d%;%gr%{15}%&%Px%?%gx%{9}%>%t%gx%{10}%-%'A'%+%c%e%gx%d%;%p3%{255}%&%Pr%gr%{16}%/%Px%?%gx%{9}%>%t%gx%{10}%-%'A'%+%c%e%gx%d%;%gr%{15}%&%Px%?%gx%{9}%>%t%gx%{10}%-%'A'%+%c%e%gx%d%;%p4%{255}%&%Pr%gr%{16}%/%Px%?%gx%{9}%>%t%gx%{10}%-%'A'%+%c%e%gx%d%;%gr%{15}%&%Px%?%gx%{9}%>%t%gx%{10}%-%'A'%+%c%e%gx%d%;, + is2=\E7\E[r\E[m\E[?7h\E[?1;3;4;6l\E[4l\E8\E>, + kbs=\177, kcbt=\E[Z, kcub1=\EOD, kcud1=\EOB, kcuf1=\EOC, + kcuu1=\EOA, kdch1=\E[3~, kf1=\E[11~, kf10=\E[21~, + kf11=\E[23~, kf12=\E[24~, kf13=\E[25~, kf14=\E[26~, + kf15=\E[28~, kf16=\E[29~, kf17=\E[31~, kf18=\E[32~, + kf19=\E[33~, kf2=\E[12~, kf20=\E[34~, kf3=\E[13~, + kf4=\E[14~, kf5=\E[15~, kf6=\E[17~, kf7=\E[18~, kf8=\E[19~, + kf9=\E[20~, kfnd=\E[1~, kich1=\E[2~, kmous=\E[M, knp=\E[6~, + kpp=\E[5~, kslt=\E[4~, oc=\E]R, op=\E[39;49m, rc=\E8, + rev=\E[7m, ri=\EM, rmacs=^O, rmam=\E[?7l, + rmcup=\E[2J\E[?47l\E8, rmir=\E[4l, rmkx=\E[?1l\E>, + rmso=\E[27m, rmul=\E[24m, + rs2=\E7\E[r\E8\E[m\E[?7h\E[?1;3;4;6l\E[4l\E>, sc=\E7, + setab=\E[4%p1%dm, setaf=\E[3%p1%dm, + sgr=\E[0%?%p6%t;1%;%?%p2%t;4%;%?%p1%p3%|%t;7%;%?%p4%t;5%;m%?%p9%t\016%e\017%;, + sgr0=\E[m, smacs=^N, smam=\E[?7h, smcup=\E7\E[?47h, + smir=\E[4h, smkx=\E[?1h\E=, smso=\E[7m, smul=\E[4m, + tbc=\E[3g, u6=\E[%i%d;%dR, u7=\E[6n, u8=\E[?1;2c, u9=\E[c, + vpa=\E[%i%p1%dd, + # This entry is for Tera Term Pro version 2.3, for MS-Windows 95/NT written by # T. Teranishi dated Mar 10, 1998. It is a free software terminal emulator # (communication program) which supports: @@ -2462,11 +2518,31 @@ teraterm|Tera Term Pro, # Tested with WinNT 4.0, the telnet application assumes the screensize is # 25x80. This entry uses the 'Terminal' font, to get line-drawing characters. +# +# Other notes: +# a) Fails tack's cup (cursor-addressing) test, though cup works well enough +# for casual (occasional) use. Also fails several of the vttest screens, +# but that is not unusual for vt100 "emulators". +# b) Does not implement vt100 keypad +# c) Recognizes a subset of vt52 controls. ms-vt100|MS telnet imitating dec vt100, lines#25, acsc=+\020\,\021-\030.^Y0\333`\004a\261f\370g\361h\260i\316j\331k\277l\332m\300n\305o~p\304q\304r\304s_t\303u\264v\301w\302x\263y\363z\362{\343|\330}\234~\376, - tbc@, u6=\E[%i%d;%dR, u7=\E[6n, u8=\E[?6c, u9=\E[c, - use=vt100, + ka1@, ka3@, kb2@, kc1@, kc3@, kent@, kf0@, kf1@, kf10@, kf2@, kf3@, kf4@, + kf5@, kf6@, kf7@, kf8@, kf9@, tbc@, u6=\E[%i%d;%dR, u7=\E[6n, + u8=\E[?6c, u9=\E[c, use=vt100, + +# Tested with Windows 2000, the telnet application runs in a console window, +# also using 'Terminal' font. +# +# Other notes: +# a) This version has no function keys or numeric keypad. Unlike the older +# version, the numeric keypad is entirely ignored. +# b) The program sets $TERM to "ansi", which of course is inaccurate. +ms-vt100-color|windows 2000 ansi (sic), + bce, + dch=\E[%p1%dP, ich=\E[%p1%d@, use=ecma+color, + use=ms-vt100, #### X terminal emulators # @@ -2899,17 +2975,114 @@ nxterm|xterm-color|generic color xterm, op=\E[m, use=xterm-r6, use=klone+color, # this describes the alpha-version of Gnome terminal shipped with Redhat 6.0 -gnome|Gnome terminal, +gnome-rh62|Gnome terminal, bce, kdch1=\177, kf1=\EOP, kf2=\EOQ, kf3=\EOR, kf4=\EOS, use=xterm-color, +# GNOME Terminal 1.4.0.4 (Redhat 7.2) +# +# This implements a subset of vt102 with a random selection of features from +# other terminals such as color and function-keys. +# +# shift-f1 to shift-f10 are f11 to f20 +# +# NumLock changes the application keypad to approximate vt100 keypad, except +# that there is no escape sequence matching comma (,). +# +# Other defects observed: +# vt100 LNM mode is not implemented. +# vt100 80/132 column mode is not implemented. +# vt100 DECALN is not implemented. +# vt100 DECSCNM mode is not implemented, so flash does not work. +# vt100 TBC (tab reset) is not implemented. +# xterm alternate screen controls do not restore cursor position properly +# it hangs in tack after running function-keys test. +gnome-rh72|GNOME Terminal, + bce, + civis=\E[?25l, cnorm=\E[?25h, kdch1=\E[3~, kf1=\EOP, + kf2=\EOQ, kf3=\EOR, kf4=\EOS, rmam=\E[?7l, + sgr=\E[0%?%p6%t;1%;%?%p2%t;4%;%?%p1%p3%|%t;7%;m%?%p9%t\016%e\017%;, + smam=\E[?7h, tbc@, use=xterm-color, + +gnome|GNOME Terminal, + use=gnome-rh72, + # This is kvt 0-18.7, shipped with Redhat 6.0 (though whether it supports bce # or not is debatable). kvt|KDE terminal, bce, km@, kdch1=\177, kend=\E[F, khome=\E[H, use=xterm-color, +# Konsole 1.0.1 +# (formerly known as kvt) +# +# This program hardcodes $TERM to 'xterm', which is not accurate. However, to +# simplify this entry (and point out why konsole isn't xterm), we base this on +# xterm-r6. The default keyboard appears to be 'linux'. +# +# Notes: +# a) konsole implements several features from XFree86 xterm, though none of +# that is documented - except of course in its source code - apparently +# because its implementors are unaccustomed to reading documentation - as +# evidenced by the sparse and poorly edited documentation distributed with +# konsole. Some features such as the 1049 private mode are recognized but +# incorrectly implemented as a duplicate of the 47 private mode. +# b) even with the "vt100 (historical)" keyboard setting, the numeric keypad +# sends PC-style escapes rather than vt100. +# c) fails vttest menu 3 (Test of character sets) because it does not properly +# parse some control sequences. Also fails vttest Primary Device Attributes +# by sending a bogus code (in the source it says it's supposed to be a +# vt220, which is doubly incorrect because it does not implement vt220 +# control sequences except for a few special cases). Treat it as a +# mildly-broken vt102. +konsole-base|KDE console window, + bce, km@, npc, + bel@, blink=\E[5m, civis=\E[?25l, cnorm=\E[?25h, + ech=\E[%p1%dX, flash=\E[?5h$<100/>\E[?5l, + hpa=\E[%i%p1%dG, kbs@, kdch1@, kend@, kf1@, kf10@, kf11@, kf12@, + kf13@, kf14@, kf15@, kf16@, kf17@, kf18@, kf19@, kf2@, kf20@, kf3@, + kf4@, kf5@, kf6@, kf7@, kf8@, kf9@, kfnd@, khome@, kslt@, + rmam=\E[?7l, rmso=\E[27m, rmul=\E[24m, + sgr=\E[0%?%p6%t;1%;%?%p2%t;4%;%?%p1%p3%|%t;7%;%?%p4%t;5%;m%?%p9%t\016%e\017%;, + smam=\E[?7h, vpa=\E[%i%p1%dd, use=ecma+color, + use=xterm-r6, +konsole-linux|KDE console window with linux keyboard, + kdch1=\E[3~, kf1=\E[[A, kf10=\E[21~, kf11=\E[23~, + kf12=\E[24~, kf13@, kf14@, kf15@, kf16@, kf17@, kf18@, kf19@, + kf2=\E[[B, kf20@, kf3=\E[[C, kf4=\E[[D, kf5=\E[[E, + kf6=\E[17~, kf7=\E[18~, kf8=\E[19~, kf9=\E[20~, + use=konsole-base, +# KDE's "XFree86 3.x.x" keyboard is based on reading the xterm terminfo rather +# than testing the code. +konsole-xf3x|KDE console window with keyboard for XFree86 3.x xterm, + kend=\E[4~, khome=\E[1~, use=konsole-vt100, +# The value for kbs reflects local customization rather than the settings used +# for XFree86 xterm. +konsole-xf4x|KDE console window with keyboard for XFree86 4.x xterm, + kbs=^H, kend=\EOF, kf1=\EOP, kf2=\EOQ, kf3=\EOR, kf4=\EOS, + khome=\EOH, use=konsole-vt100, +# KDE's "vt100" keyboard has no relationship to any terminal that DEC made, but +# it is still useful for deriving the other entries. +konsole-vt100|KDE console window with vt100 (sic) keyboard, + kbs=\177, kdch1=\E[3~, kend=\E[F, kf1=\E[11~, kf10=\E[21~, + kf11=\E[23~, kf12=\E[24~, kf13@, kf14@, kf15@, kf16@, kf17@, + kf18@, kf19@, kf2=\E[12~, kf20@, kf3=\E[13~, kf4=\E[14~, + kf5=\E[15~, kf6=\E[17~, kf7=\E[18~, kf8=\E[19~, kf9=\E[20~, + khome=\E[H, use=konsole-base, +konsole-vt420pc|KDE console window with vt420 pc keyboard, + kbs=^H, kdch1=\177, use=konsole-vt100, +konsole-16color|klone of xterm-16color, + colors#16, ncv#32, pairs#256, + setab=\E[%?%p1%{8}%<%t%p1%'('%+%e%p1%{92}%+%;%dm, + setaf=\E[%?%p1%{8}%<%t%p1%{30}%+%e%p1%'R'%+%;%dm, + setb=%p1%{8}%/%{6}%*%{4}%+\E[%d%p1%{8}%m%Pa%?%ga%{1}%=%t4%e%ga%{3}%=%t6%e%ga%{4}%=%t1%e%ga%{6}%=%t3%e%ga%d%;m', + setf=%p1%{8}%/%{6}%*%{3}%+\E[%d%p1%{8}%m%Pa%?%ga%{1}%=%t4%e%ga%{3}%=%t6%e%ga%{4}%=%t1%e%ga%{6}%=%t3%e%ga%d%;m', + use=konsole, +# make a default entry for konsole +konsole|KDE console window, + use=konsole-linux, + # From: Thomas Dickey 04 Oct 1997 # Updated: Oezguer Kesim 02 Nov 1997 # Notes: @@ -2927,7 +3100,7 @@ kvt|KDE terminal, # # rxvt is normally configured to look for "xterm" or "xterm-color" as $TERM. # Since rxvt is not really compatible with xterm, it should be configured as -# "rxvt" (monochrome) and "rxvt-color". +# "rxvt-basic" (monochrome) and "rxvt". rxvt-basic|rxvt terminal base (X Window System), OTbs, am, bce, eo, km, mir, msgr, xenl, xon, cols#80, it#8, lines#24, @@ -2967,7 +3140,6 @@ rxvt|rxvt terminal emulator (X Window System), # From: Michael Jennings # removed kf0 which conflicts with kf10 -TD # remove cvvis which conflicts with cnorm -TD -# There's no u6 because Eterm appears to lack CPR (cursor position report). Eterm|Eterm-color|Eterm with xterm-style color support (X Window System), am, bce, bw, eo, km, mc5i, mir, msgr, xenl, xon, btns#5, cols#80, it#8, lines#24, lm#0, ncv@, @@ -3003,8 +3175,8 @@ Eterm|Eterm-color|Eterm with xterm-style color support (X Window System), sgr=\E[0%?%p1%p6%|%t;1%;%?%p2%t;4%;%?%p1%p3%|%t;7%;%?%p4%t;5%;m%?%p9%t\016%e\017%;, sgr0=\E[m\017, smacs=^N, smam=\E[?7h, smcup=\E7\E[?47h, smir=\E[4h, smkx=, smso=\E[7m, smul=\E[4m, tbc=\E[3g, - u7=\E[6n, u8=\E[?1;2c, u9=\E[c, vpa=\E[%i%p1%dd, - use=ecma+color, + u6=\E[%i%d;%dR, u7=\E[6n, u8=\E[?1;2c, u9=\E[c, + vpa=\E[%i%p1%dd, use=ecma+color, # These (xtermc and xtermm) are distributed with Solaris. They refer to a # variant of xterm which is apparently no longer supported, but are interesting @@ -3399,6 +3571,45 @@ pilot|tgtelnet|Top Gun Telnet on the Palm Pilot Professional, ind=^J, kbs=^H, kcub1=^H, kcud1=^J, knp=^L, kpp=^K, nel=\Em~\s, rmso=\EB, smso=\Eb, +# From: Federico Bianchi +# These entries are for the Embeddable Linux Kernel System (ELKS) +# project - an heavily stripped down Linux to be run on 16 bit +# boxes or, eventually, to be used in embedded systems - and have been +# adapted from the stock ELKS termcap. The project itself looks stalled, +# and the latest improvements I know of date back to March 2000. +# +# To cope with the ELKS dumb console I added an "elks-glasstty" entry; +# as an added bonus, this deals with all the capabilities common to +# both VT52 and ANSI (or, eventually, "special") modes. + +elks-glasstty|ELKS glass-TTY capabilities, + OTbs, am, + cols#80, it#8, lines#25, + bel=^G, cr=^M, ht=^I, ind=^J, kbs=^H, kcub1=^H, kcud1=^J, + nel=^M^J, + +elks-vt52|ELKS vt52 console, + clear=\EH\EJ, cub1=\ED, cud1=\EB, cuf1=\EC, + cup=\EY%p1%{32}%+%c%p2%{32}%+%c, cuu1=\EA, el=\EK, + home=\EH, use=elks-glasstty, + +elks-ansi|ELKS ANSI console, + clear=\E[H\E[2J, cub1=\E[D, cud1=\E[B, cuf1=\E[C, + cup=\E[%i%p1%d;%p2%dH, cuu1=\E[A, el=\E[K, home=\E[H, + rmso=\E[m, smso=\E[7m, use=elks-glasstty, + +# As a matter of fact, ELKS 0.0.83 on PCs defaults to ANSI emulation +# instead of VT52, but the "elks" entry still refers to the latter. + +elks|default ELKS console, + use=elks-vt52, + +# Project SIBO (for Psion 3 palmtops) console is identical to the ELKS +# one but in screen size + +sibo|ELKS SIBO console, + cols#61, it#8, lines#20, use=elks-vt52, + ######## COMMERCIAL WORKSTATION CONSOLES # @@ -14416,69 +14627,497 @@ mac|macintosh|Macintosh with MacTerminal, mac-w|macterminal-w|Apple Macintosh with Macterminal in 132 column mode, cols#132, use=mac, -# Apple's MacOS X includes a Terminal.app derived from the old NeXT -# Terminal.app. It is a partial VT100 emulation with some extensions. -# -# There are no function keys, at least not in version 41. -# -# It supports mouse pointer position reporting using xterm-like -# sequences (not used in these entries.) When using emacs, the cursor -# can be positioned using option-click. -# -# It provides partial ANSI color support (background colors interact -# badly with bold, though.) The monochrome (-m) entries are useful if -# you've disabled color support. +# The AppKit Terminal.app descriptions all have names beginning with +# "nsterm". Note that the statusline (-s) versions use the window +# titlebar as a phony status line, and may produce warnings during +# compilation as a result ("tsl uses 0 parameters, expected 1".) Ignore +# these warnings, or even ignore these entries entirely. Apps which +# need to position the cursor or do other fancy stuff inside the status +# line won't work with these entries. They're primarily useful for +# programs like Pine which provide simple notifications in the status +# line. Please note that non-ASCII characters don't work right in the +# status line, since Terminal.app incorrectly interprets their Unicode +# codepoints as MacRoman codepoints. +# +# * Renamed the AppKit Terminal.app entry from "Apple_Terminal" to +# "nsterm" to comply with the name length and case conventions and +# limitations of various software packages [notably Solaris terminfo +# and UNIX.] A single Apple_Terminal alias is retained for +# backwards-compatbility. +# +# * Added function key support (F1-F4). These only work in Terminal.app +# version 51, hopefully the capabilities won't cause problems for people +# using version 41. +# +# * Added "full color" (-c) entries which support the 16-color mode in +# version 51. +# +# * By default, version 51 uses UTF-8 encoding with broken altcharset +# support, so "ASCII" (-7) entries without altcharset support were +# added. + +# nsterm - AppKit Terminal.app +# +# Apple's Mac OS X includes a Terminal.app derived from the old NeXT +# Terminal.app. It is a partial VT100 emulation with some xterm-like +# extensions. This terminfo was written to describe versions 41 +# (shipped with Mac OS X version 10.0) and 51 (shipped with Mac OS X +# version 10.1) of Terminal.app. +# +# Terminal.app runs under the Mac OS X Quartz windowing system (and +# other AppKit-supported windowing systems.) On the Mac OS X machine I +# use, the executable for Terminal.app is: +# /Applications/Utilities/Terminal.app/Contents/MacOS/Terminal +# +# If you're looking for a description of the full-screen system +# console which runs under Apple's Darwin operating system on PowerPC +# platforms, see the "xnuppc" entry instead. +# +# There were no function keys in version 41. In version 51, there are +# four working function keys (F1, F2, F3 and F4.) The function keys +# are included in all of these entries. +# +# It does not support mouse pointer position reporting. Under some +# circumstances the cursor can be positioned using option-click; this +# works by comparing the cursor position and the selected position, +# and simulating enough cursor-key presses to move the cursor to the +# selected position. This technique fails in all but the simplest +# applications. +# +# It provides partial ANSI color support (background colors interacted +# badly with bold in version 41, though, as reflected in :ncv:.) The +# monochrome (-m) entries are useful if you've disabled color support +# or use a monochrome monitor. The full color (-c) entries are useful +# in version 51, which doesn't exhibit the background color bug. They +# also enable an xterm-compatible 16-color mode. # # The configurable titlebar is set using xterm-compatible sequences; -# it is used as a status bar in these entries. +# it is used as a status bar in the statusline (-s) entries. Its width +# depends on font sizes and window sizes, but 50 characters seems to +# be the default for an 80x24 window. # # The MacRoman character encoding is used for some of the alternate -# characters in the "MacRoman" entries; the "ASCII" (-ascii) entries -# rely instead on Terminal.app's own buggy VT100 graphics emulation, -# which seems to think the character encoding is the old NeXT charset -# instead of MacRoman. +# characters in the "MacRoman" entries; the "ASCII" (-7) entries +# disable alternate character set support entirely, and the "VT100" +# (-acs) entries rely instead on Terminal.app's own buggy VT100 +# graphics emulation, which seems to think the character encoding is +# the old NeXT charset instead of MacRoman. The "ASCII" (-7) entries +# are useful in Terminal.app version 51, which supports UTF-8 and +# other ASCII-compatible character encodings but does not correctly +# implement VT100 graphics; once VT100 graphics are correctly +# implemented in Terminal.app, the "VT100" (-acs) entries should be +# usable in any ASCII-compatible character encoding [except perhaps +# in UTF-8, where some experts argue for disallowing alternate +# characters entirely.] # # Terminal.app reports "vt100" as the terminal type, but exports # several environment variables which may aid detection in a shell -# profile: +# profile (i.e. .profile or .login): # # TERM=vt100 # TERM_PROGRAM=Apple_Terminal -# TERM_PROGRAM_VERSION=41 - -Apple_Terminal-ascii-m|Apple MacOS X Terminal.app v41 w/ASCII charset (monochrome), - am, bw, hs, msgr, xenl, xon, - cols#80, it#8, lines#24, vt#3, wsl#40, - acsc=``aaffggjjkkllmmnnooppqqrrssttuuvvwwxxyyzz{{||}}~~, +# TERM_PROGRAM_VERSION=41 # in Terminal.app version 41 +# TERM_PROGRAM_VERSION=51 # in Terminal.app version 51 +# +# For example, the following Bourne shell script would detect the +# correct terminal type: +# +# if [ :"$TERM" = :"vt100" -a :"$TERM_PROGRAM" = :"Apple_Terminal" ] +# then +# export TERM +# if [ :"$TERM_PROGRAM_VERSION" = :41 ] +# then +# TERM="nsterm" +# else +# TERM="nsterm-c-7" +# fi +# fi +# +# In a C shell derivative, this would be accomplished by: +# +# if ( $?TERM && $?TERM_PROGRAM && $?TERM_PROGRAM_VERSION) then +# if ( :"$TERM" == :"vt100" && :"$TERM_PROGRAM" == :"Apple_Terminal" ) then +# if ( :"$TERM_PROGRAM_VERSION" == :41 ) then +# setenv TERM "nsterm" +# else +# setenv TERM "nsterm-c-7" +# endif +# endif +# endif + +# The '+' entries are building blocks +nsterm+7|AppKit Terminal.app v41+ basic capabilities w/ASCII charset, + am, bw, msgr, xenl, xon, + cols#80, it#8, lines#24, bel=^G, blink=\E[5m, bold=\E[1m, clear=\E[H\E[J, cr=^M, csr=\E[%i%p1%d;%p2%dr, cub=\E[%p1%dD, cub1=^H, cud=\E[%p1%dB, cud1=^J, cuf=\E[%p1%dC, cuf1=\E[C, cup=\E[%i%p1%d;%p2%dH, cuu=\E[%p1%dA, cuu1=\E[A, - dl=\E[%p1%dM, dl1=\E[M, dsl=\E]2;\007, ed=\E[J, el=\E[K, - el1=\E[1K, enacs=\E(B\E)0, fsl=^G, home=\E[H, ht=^I, hts=\EH, - il=\E[%p1%dL, il1=\E[L, ind=^J, ka1=\EOq, ka3=\EOs, kb2=\EOr, - kbs=\177, kc1=\EOp, kc3=\EOn, kcub1=\EOD, kcud1=\EOB, - kcuf1=\EOC, kcuu1=\EOA, kent=\EOM, rc=\E8, rev=\E[7m, ri=\EM, - rmacs=^O, rmam=\E[?7l, rmkx=\E[?1l\E>, rmso=\E[m, - rmul=\E[m, rs2=\E>\E[?3l\E[?4l\E[?5l\E[?7h\E[?8h, - sc=\E7, - sgr=\E[0%?%p1%p6%|%t;1%;%?%p2%t;4%;%?%p1%p3%|%t;7%;%?%p4%t;5%;m%?%p9%t\016%e\017%;, - sgr0=\E[m\017, smacs=^N, smam=\E[?7h, smkx=\E[?1h\E=, - smso=\E[7m, smul=\E[4m, tbc=\E[3g, tsl=\E]2;, u8=\E[?1;2c, - u9=\E[c, + dl=\E[%p1%dM, dl1=\E[M, ed=\E[J, el=\E[K, el1=\E[1K, + home=\E[H, ht=^I, hts=\EH, il=\E[%p1%dL, il1=\E[L, ind=^J, + ka1=\EOq, ka3=\EOs, kb2=\EOr, kbs=\177, kc1=\EOp, kc3=\EOn, + kcub1=\EOD, kcud1=\EOB, kcuf1=\EOC, kcuu1=\EOA, kent=\EOM, + kf1=\EOP, kf2=\EOQ, kf3=\EOR, kf4=\EOS, rc=\E8, rev=\E[7m, + ri=\EM, rmam=\E[?7l, rmkx=\E[?1l\E>, rmso=\E[m, rmul=\E[m, + rs2=\E>\E[?3l\E[?4l\E[?5l\E[?7h\E[?8h, sc=\E7, + sgr=\E[0%?%p6%t;1%;%?%p2%t;4%;%?%p1%p3%|%t;7%;%?%p4%t;5%;m, + sgr0=\E[m\017, smam=\E[?7h, smkx=\E[?1h\E=, smso=\E[7m, + smul=\E[4m, tbc=\E[3g, u6=\E[%i%d;%dR, u7=\E[6n, + u8=\E[?1;2c, u9=\E[c, + +nsterm+acs|AppKit Terminal.app v41+ basic capabilities w/VT100 alternate-charset, + acsc=``aaffggjjkkllmmnnooppqqrrssttuuvvwwxxyyzz{{||}}~~, + enacs=\E(B\E)0, rmacs=^O, + sgr=\E[0%?%p6%t;1%;%?%p2%t;4%;%?%p1%p3%|%t;7%;%?%p4%t;5%;m%?%p9%t\016%e\017%;, + smacs=^N, use=nsterm+7, + +nsterm+mac|AppKit Terminal.app v41+ basic capabilities w/MacRoman alternate-charset, + acsc=0#`\327a\:f\241g\261h#i\360jjkkllmmnno\370p\370q\321rrssttuuvvwwxxy\262z\263{\271|\255}\243~\245+\335-\366\,\334.\377, + enacs=\E(B\E)0, rmacs=^O, + sgr=\E[0%?%p6%t;1%;%?%p2%t;4%;%?%p1%p3%|%t;7%;%?%p4%t;5%;m%?%p9%t\016%e\017%;, + smacs=^N, use=nsterm+7, + +nsterm+s|AppKit Terminal.app v41+ status-line (window titlebar) support, + hs, + wsl#50, + dsl=\E]2;\007, fsl=^G, tsl=\E]2;, -Apple_Terminal-ascii|Apple MacOS X Terminal.app v41 w/ASCII charset (color), +nsterm+c|AppKit Terminal.app v51+ full color support (including 16 colors), + colors#16, pairs#256, + op=\E[0m, + setab=\E[%?%p1%{8}%<%t%p1%{40}%+%e%p1%{92}%+%;%dm, + setaf=\E[%?%p1%{8}%<%t%p1%{30}%+%e%p1%{82}%+%;%dm, + +nsterm+c41|AppKit Terminal.app v41 color support, colors#8, ncv#37, pairs#64, + op=\E[0m, setab=\E[4%p1%dm, setaf=\E[3%p1%dm, + +# These are different combinations of the building blocks + +# ASCII charset (-7) +nsterm-m-7|nsterm-7-m|AppKit Terminal.app v41+ w/ASCII charset (monochrome), + use=nsterm+7, + +nsterm-m-s-7|nsterm-7-m-s|AppKit Terminal.app v41+ w/ASCII charset (monochrome w/statusline), + use=nsterm+s, use=nsterm+7, + +nsterm-7|AppKit Terminal.app v41+ w/ASCII charset (color), + use=nsterm+c41, use=nsterm+7, + +nsterm-7-c|nsterm-c-7|AppKit Terminal.app v51+ w/ASCII charset (full color), + use=nsterm+c, use=nsterm+7, + +nsterm-s-7|nsterm-7-s|AppKit Terminal.app v41+ w/ASCII charset (color w/statusline), + use=nsterm+s, use=nsterm+c41, use=nsterm+7, + +nsterm-c-s-7|nsterm-7-c-s|AppKit Terminal.app v51+ w/ASCII charset (full color w/statusline), + use=nsterm+s, use=nsterm+c, use=nsterm+7, + +# VT100 alternate-charset (-acs) +nsterm-m-acs|nsterm-acs-m|AppKit Terminal.app v41+ w/VT100 alternate-charset (monochrome), + use=nsterm+acs, + +nsterm-m-s-acs|nsterm-acs-m-s|AppKit Terminal.app v41+ w/VT100 alternate-charset (monochrome w/statusline), + use=nsterm+s, use=nsterm+acs, + +nsterm-acs|AppKit Terminal.app v41+ w/VT100 alternate-charset (color), + use=nsterm+c41, use=nsterm+acs, + +nsterm-c-acs|nsterm-acs-c|AppKit Terminal.app v51+ w/VT100 alternate-charset (full color), + use=nsterm+c, use=nsterm+acs, + +nsterm-s-acs|nsterm-acs-s|AppKit Terminal.app v41+ w/VT100 alternate-charset (color w/statusline), + use=nsterm+s, use=nsterm+c41, use=nsterm+acs, + +nsterm-c-s-acs|nsterm-acs-c-s|AppKit Terminal.app v51+ w/VT100 alternate-charset (full color w/statusline), + use=nsterm+s, use=nsterm+c, use=nsterm+acs, + +# MacRoman charset +nsterm-m|AppKit Terminal.app v41+ w/MacRoman charset (monochrome), + use=nsterm+mac, + +nsterm-m-s|AppKit Terminal.app v41+ w/MacRoman charset (monochrome w/statusline), + use=nsterm+s, use=nsterm+mac, + +nsterm|Apple_Terminal|AppKit Terminal.app v41+ w/MacRoman charset (color), + use=nsterm+c41, use=nsterm+mac, + +nsterm-c|AppKit Terminal.app v51+ w/MacRoman charset (full color), + use=nsterm+c, use=nsterm+mac, + +nsterm-s|AppKit Terminal.app v41+ w/MacRoman charset (color w/statusline), + use=nsterm+s, use=nsterm+c41, use=nsterm+mac, + +nsterm-c-s|AppKit Terminal.app v51+ w/MacRoman charset (full color w/statusline), + use=nsterm+s, use=nsterm+c, use=nsterm+mac, + +# xnuppc - Darwin PowerPC Console (a.k.a. "darwin") +# +# On PowerPC platforms, Apple's Darwin operating system uses a +# full-screen system console derived from a NetBSD framebuffer +# console. It is an ANSI-style terminal, and is not really VT-100 +# compatible. +# +# Under Mac OS X, this is the system console driver used while in +# single-user mode [reachable by holding down Command-S during the +# boot process] and when logged in using console mode [reachable by +# typing ">console" at the graphical login prompt.] +# +# If you're looking for a description of the Terminal.app terminal +# emulator which runs under the Mac OS X Quartz windowing system (and +# other AppKit-supported windowing systems,) see the "nsterm" +# entry instead. +# +# NOTE: Under Mac OS X version 10.1, the default login window does not +# prompt for user name, instead requiring an icon to be selected from +# a list of known users. Since the special ">console" login is not in +# this list, you must make one of two changes in the Login Window +# panel of the Login section of System Prefs to make the special +# ">console" login accessible. The first option is to enable 'Show +# "Other User" in list for network users', which will add a special +# "Other..." icon to the graphical login panel. Selecting "Other..." +# will present the regular graphical login prompt. The second option +# is to change the 'Display Login Window as:' setting to 'Name and +# password entry fields', which replaces the login panel with a +# graphical login prompt. +# +# There are no function keys, at least not in Darwin 1.3. +# +# It has no mouse support. +# +# It has full ANSI color support, and color combines correctly with +# all three supported attributes: bold, inverse-video and underline. +# However, bold colored text is almost unreadable (bolding is +# accomplished using shifting and or-ing, and looks smeared) so bold +# has been excluded from the list of color-compatible attributes +# [using (ncv)]. The monochrome entry (-m) is useful if you use a +# monochrome monitor. +# +# There is one serious bug with this terminal emulation's color +# support: repositioning the cursor onto a cell with non-matching +# colors obliterates that cell's contents, replacing it with a blank +# and displaying a colored cursor in the "current" colors. There is +# no complete workaround at present [other than using the monochrome +# (-m) entries,] but removing the (msgr) capability seemed to help. +# +# The "standout" chosen was simple reverse-video, although a colorful +# standout might be more aesthetically pleasing. Similarly, the bold +# chosen is the terminal's own smeared bold, although a simple +# color-change might be more readable. The color-bold (-b) entries +# uses magenta colored text for bolding instead. The fancy color (-f +# and -f2) entries use color for bold, standout and underlined text +# (underlined text is still underlined, though.) +# +# Apparently the terminal emulator does support a VT-100-style +# alternate character set, but all the alternate character set +# positions have been left blank in the font. For this reason, no +# alternate character set capabilities have been included in this +# description. The console driver appears to be ASCII-only, so (enacs) +# has been excluded [although the VT-100 sequence does work.] +# +# The default Mac OS X and Darwin installation reports "vt100" as the +# terminal type, and exports no helpful environment variables. To fix +# this, change the "console" entry in /etc/ttys from "vt100" to +# "xnuppc-WxH", where W and H are the character dimensions of your +# console (see below.) +# +# The font used by the terminal emulator is apparently one originally +# drawn by Ka-Ping Yee, and uses 8x16-pixel characters. This +# file includes descriptions for the following geometries: +# +# Pixels Characters Entry Name (append -m for monochrome) +# ------------------------------------------------------------------- +# 640x400 80x25 xnuppc-80x25 +# 640x480 80x30 xnuppc-80x30 +# 720x480 90x30 xnuppc-90x30 +# 800x600 100x37 xnuppc-100x37 +# 896x600 112x37 xnuppc-112x37 +# 1024x640 128x40 xnuppc-128x40 +# 1024x768 128x48 xnuppc-128x48 +# 1152x768 144x48 xnuppc-144x48 +# 1280x1024 160x64 xnuppc-160x64 +# 1600x1024 200x64 xnuppc-200x64 +# 1600x1200 200x75 xnuppc-200x75 +# 2048x1536 256x96 xnuppc-256x96 +# +# The basic "xnuppc" entry includes no size information, and the +# emulator includes no reporting capability, so you'll be at the mercy +# of the TTY device (which reports incorrectly on my hardware.) The +# color-bold entries do not include size information. + +# The '+' entries are building blocks +xnuppc+basic|Darwin PowerPC Console basic capabilities, + am, bce, mir, xenl, + it#8, + bold=\E[1m, clear=\E[H\E[J, cr=^M, csr=\E[%i%p1%d;%p2%dr, + cub=\E[%p1%dD, cub1=\E[D, cud=\E[%p1%dB, cud1=\E[B, + cuf=\E[%p1%dC, cuf1=\E[C, cup=\E[%i%p1%d;%p2%dH, + cuu=\E[%p1%dA, cuu1=\E[A, dsl=\E]2;\007, ed=\E[J, el=\E[K, + el1=\E[1K, home=\E[H, ht=^I, hts=\EH, ind=^J, ka1=\EOq, + ka3=\EOs, kb2=\EOr, kbs=\177, kc1=\EOp, kc3=\EOn, kcub1=\EOD, + kcud1=\EOB, kcuf1=\EOC, kcuu1=\EOA, rc=\E8, rev=\E[7m, + ri=\EM, rmam=\E[?7l, rmkx=\E[?1l\E>, rmso=\E[m, rmul=\E[m, + rs2=\E>\E[?3l\E[?4l\E[?5l\E[?7h\E[?8h, sc=\E7, + sgr=\E[0%?%p6%t;1%;%?%p2%t;4%;%?%p1%p3%|%t;7%;m, + sgr0=\E[m\017, smam=\E[?7h, smkx=\E[?1h\E=, smso=\E[7m, + smul=\E[4m, tbc=\E[3g, + +xnuppc+c|Darwin PowerPC Console ANSI color support, + colors#8, ncv#32, pairs#64, op=\E[37;40m, setab=\E[4%p1%dm, setaf=\E[3%p1%dm, - use=Apple_Terminal-ascii-m, -Apple_Terminal-m|Apple MacOS X Terminal.app v41 w/MacRoman charset (monochrome), - acsc=0#`\327a*f\241g\261h#i\360jjkkllmmnno\370p\370q\321rrssttuuvvwwxxy\262z\263{\271|\255}\243~\245+\335-\366\,\334.\377, - use=Apple_Terminal-ascii-m, +xnuppc+b|Darwin PowerPC Console color-bold support, + ncv#32, + bold=\E[35m, + sgr=\E[0%?%p6%t;35%;%?%p2%t;4%;%?%p1%p3%|%t;7%;m, + use=xnuppc+basic, + +xnuppc+f|Darwin PowerPC Console fancy color support, + ncv#35, + sgr=\E[0%?%p6%t;35%;%?%p2%t;36;4%;%?%p1%t;33;44%;%p3%t;7%;m, + smso=\E[33;44m, smul=\E[36;4m, use=xnuppc+b, + +xnuppc+f2|Darwin PowerPC Console alternate fancy color support, + ncv#35, + bold=\E[33m, + sgr=\E[0%?%p6%t;33%;%?%p2%t;34%;%?%p1%t;31;47%;%p3%t;7%;m, + smso=\E[31;47m, smul=\E[34m, use=xnuppc+basic, + +# Building blocks for specific screen sizes +xnuppc+80x25|Darwin PowerPC Console 80x25 support (640x400 pixels), + cols#80, lines#25, + +xnuppc+80x30|Darwin PowerPC Console 80x30 support (640x480 pixels), + cols#80, lines#30, + +xnuppc+90x30|Darwin PowerPC Console 90x30 support (720x480 pixels), + cols#90, lines#30, + +xnuppc+100x37|Darwin PowerPC Console 100x37 support (800x600 pixels), + cols#100, lines#37, + +xnuppc+112x37|Darwin PowerPC Console 112x37 support (896x600 pixels), + cols#112, lines#37, + +xnuppc+128x40|Darwin PowerPC Console 128x40 support (1024x640 pixels), + cols#128, lines#40, + +xnuppc+128x48|Darwin PowerPC Console 128x48 support (1024x768 pixels), + cols#128, lines#48, + +xnuppc+144x48|Darwin PowerPC Console 144x48 support (1152x768 pixels), + cols#144, lines#48, -Apple_Terminal|Apple MacOS X Terminal.app v41 w/MacRoman charset (color), - acsc=0#`\327a*f\241g\261h#i\360jjkkllmmnno\370p\370q\321rrssttuuvvwwxxy\262z\263{\271|\255}\243~\245+\335-\366\,\334.\377, - use=Apple_Terminal-ascii, +xnuppc+160x64|Darwin PowerPC Console 160x64 support (1280x1024 pixels), + cols#160, lines#64, + +xnuppc+200x64|Darwin PowerPC Console 200x64 support (1600x1024 pixels), + cols#200, lines#64, + +xnuppc+200x75|Darwin PowerPC Console 200x75 support (1600x1200 pixels), + cols#200, lines#75, + +xnuppc+256x96|Darwin PowerPC Console 256x96 support (2048x1536 pixels), + cols#256, lines#96, + +# These are different combinations of the building blocks + +xnuppc-m|darwin-m|Darwin PowerPC Console (monochrome), + use=xnuppc+basic, + +xnuppc|darwin|Darwin PowerPC Console (color), + use=xnuppc+c, use=xnuppc+basic, + +xnuppc-m-b|darwin-m-b|Darwin PowerPC Console (monochrome w/color-bold), + use=xnuppc+b, + +xnuppc-b|darwin-b|Darwin PowerPC Console (color w/color-bold), + use=xnuppc+b, use=xnuppc+c, + +xnuppc-m-f|darwin-m-f|Darwin PowerPC Console (fancy monochrome), + use=xnuppc+f, + +xnuppc-f|darwin-f|Darwin PowerPC Console (fancy color), + use=xnuppc+f, use=xnuppc+c, + +xnuppc-m-f2|darwin-m-f2|Darwin PowerPC Console (alternate fancy monochrome), + use=xnuppc+f2, + +xnuppc-f2|darwin-f2|Darwin PowerPC Console (alternate fancy color), + use=xnuppc+f2, use=xnuppc+c, + +# Combinations for specific screen sizes +xnuppc-80x25-m|darwin-80x25-m|Darwin PowerPC Console (monochrome) 80x25, + use=xnuppc+80x25, use=xnuppc+basic, + +xnuppc-80x25|darwin-80x25|Darwin PowerPC Console (color) 80x25, + use=xnuppc+c, use=xnuppc+80x25, use=xnuppc+basic, + +xnuppc-80x30-m|darwin-80x30-m|Darwin PowerPC Console (monochrome) 80x30, + use=xnuppc+80x30, use=xnuppc+basic, + +xnuppc-80x30|darwin-80x30|Darwin PowerPC Console (color) 80x30, + use=xnuppc+c, use=xnuppc+80x30, use=xnuppc+basic, + +xnuppc-90x30-m|darwin-90x30-m|Darwin PowerPC Console (monochrome) 90x30, + use=xnuppc+90x30, use=xnuppc+basic, + +xnuppc-90x30|darwin-90x30|Darwin PowerPC Console (color) 90x30, + use=xnuppc+c, use=xnuppc+90x30, use=xnuppc+basic, + +xnuppc-100x37-m|darwin-100x37-m|Darwin PowerPC Console (monochrome) 100x37, + use=xnuppc+100x37, use=xnuppc+basic, + +xnuppc-100x37|darwin-100x37|Darwin PowerPC Console (color) 100x37, + use=xnuppc+c, use=xnuppc+100x37, use=xnuppc+basic, + +xnuppc-112x37-m|darwin-112x37-m|Darwin PowerPC Console (monochrome) 112x37, + use=xnuppc+112x37, use=xnuppc+basic, + +xnuppc-112x37|darwin-112x37|Darwin PowerPC Console (color) 112x37, + use=xnuppc+c, use=xnuppc+112x37, use=xnuppc+basic, + +xnuppc-128x40-m|darwin-128x40-m|Darwin PowerPC Console (monochrome) 128x40, + use=xnuppc+128x40, use=xnuppc+basic, + +xnuppc-128x40|darwin-128x40|Darwin PowerPC Console (color) 128x40, + use=xnuppc+c, use=xnuppc+128x40, use=xnuppc+basic, + +xnuppc-128x48-m|darwin-128x48-m|Darwin PowerPC Console (monochrome) 128x48, + use=xnuppc+128x48, use=xnuppc+basic, + +xnuppc-128x48|darwin-128x48|Darwin PowerPC Console (color) 128x48, + use=xnuppc+c, use=xnuppc+128x48, use=xnuppc+basic, + +xnuppc-144x48-m|darwin-144x48-m|Darwin PowerPC Console (monochrome) 144x48, + use=xnuppc+144x48, use=xnuppc+basic, + +xnuppc-144x48|darwin-144x48|Darwin PowerPC Console (color) 144x48, + use=xnuppc+c, use=xnuppc+144x48, use=xnuppc+basic, + +xnuppc-160x64-m|darwin-160x64-m|Darwin PowerPC Console (monochrome) 160x64, + use=xnuppc+160x64, use=xnuppc+basic, + +xnuppc-160x64|darwin-160x64|Darwin PowerPC Console (color) 160x64, + use=xnuppc+c, use=xnuppc+160x64, use=xnuppc+basic, + +xnuppc-200x64-m|darwin-200x64-m|Darwin PowerPC Console (monochrome) 200x64, + use=xnuppc+200x64, use=xnuppc+basic, + +xnuppc-200x64|darwin-200x64|Darwin PowerPC Console (color) 200x64, + use=xnuppc+c, use=xnuppc+200x64, use=xnuppc+basic, + +xnuppc-200x75-m|darwin-200x75-m|Darwin PowerPC Console (monochrome) 200x75, + use=xnuppc+200x75, use=xnuppc+basic, + +xnuppc-200x75|darwin-200x75|Darwin PowerPC Console (color) 200x75, + use=xnuppc+c, use=xnuppc+200x75, use=xnuppc+basic, + +xnuppc-256x96-m|darwin-256x96-m|Darwin PowerPC Console (monochrome) 256x96, + use=xnuppc+256x96, use=xnuppc+basic, + +xnuppc-256x96|darwin-256x96|Darwin PowerPC Console (color) 256x96, + use=xnuppc+c, use=xnuppc+256x96, use=xnuppc+basic, #### Radio Shack/Tandy # @@ -18780,6 +19419,30 @@ v3220|LANPAR Vision II model 3220/3221/3222, # 2001-05-05 # * corrected/updated screen.xterm-xfree86 # +# 2001-05-19 +# * ELKS descriptions, from Federico Bianchi +# * add u6 (CSR) to Eterm (Michael Jennings). +# +# 2001-07-21 +# * renamed "Apple_Terminal" entries to "nsterm" to work with Solaris's +# tic which handles names no longer than 14 characters. Add +# corresponding descriptions for the Darwin PowerPC console named +# "xnuppc" -Benjamin Sittler +# +# 2001-09-01 +# * change kbs in mach entries to ^? (Marcus Brinkmann). +# +# 2001-11-17 +# * add "putty" entry -TD +# * updated "Apple_Terminal" entries -Benjamin Sittler +# +# 2001-11-24 +# * add ms-vt100-color entry -TD +# * add "konsole" entries -TD +# +# 2001-12-08 +# * update gnome entry to Redhat 7.2 -TD +# # The following sets edit modes for GNU EMACS. # Local Variables: # fill-prefix:"\t" -- cgit v1.1