table of contents
RLOGIN(1) | General Commands Manual | RLOGIN(1) |
NAME¶
rlogin
— remote
login
SYNOPSIS¶
rlogin [-8EKLdx
]
[-e
char]
[-l
username]
host
DESCRIPTION¶
Rlogin
starts a terminal session on a
remote host host.
The standard Berkeley rhosts authorization mechanism is used. The options are as follows:
-8
- The
-8
option allows an eight-bit input data path at all times; otherwise parity bits are stripped except when the remote side's stop and start characters are other than ^S/^Q . -E
- The
-E
option stops any character from being recognized as an escape character. When used with the-8
option, this provides a completely transparent connection. -L
- The
-L
option allows the rlogin session to be run in ``litout'' (see tty(4)) mode. -d
- The
-d
option turns on socket debugging (see setsockopt(2)) on the TCP sockets used for communication with the remote host. -e
- The
-e
option allows user specification of the escape character, which is ``~'' by default. This specification may be as a literal character, or as an octal value in the form \nnn.
A line of the form ``<escape char>.'' disconnects from the
remote host. Similarly, the line ``<escape char>^Z'' will suspend the
rlogin
session, and ``<escape
char><delayed-suspend char>'' suspends the send portion of the
rlogin, but allows output from the remote system. By default, the tilde
(``~'') character is the escape character, and normally control-Y (``^Y'')
is the delayed-suspend character.
All echoing takes place at the remote site, so that (except for
delays) the rlogin
is transparent. Flow control via
^S/^Q and flushing of input and output on interrupts are handled
properly.
ENVIRONMENT¶
The following environment variable is utilized by
rlogin
:
TERM
- Determines the user's terminal type.
SEE ALSO¶
HISTORY¶
The rlogin
command appeared in
4.2BSD.
BUGS¶
Rlogin
will be replaced by
telnet(1) in the near future.
More of the environment should be propagated.
August 15, 1999 | Linux NetKit (0.17) |