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NO SPAM OR VIRUS E-MAIL ORIGINATES FROM THE KERMIT PROJECT.
If you receive
junk mail from a Kermit Project address or member, it is forged.
For more on this topic, CLICK HERE.
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The Kermit Project at Columbia University
is cancelled effective 1 July 2011
The Columbia University Kermit Project website and software archive are
frozen effective 1 October 2011, but remain available as a
public resource. A new Kermit Project website has been established
outside of Columbia at www.kermitproject.org for
the continued development of C-Kermit, E-Kermit, and Kermit 95.
See the announcement here. Kermit
software and documentation remain available at the Kermit website and ftp
archive, as always, but with changes described here. C-Kermit and E-Kermit have been published with an Open Source license and the
source code for Kermit 95 (except for
portions to which Columbia does not have publication rights)
have been too.
Kermit 95 executables and install packages will
not be distributed in a free and open manner because they
include strong encryption, whose export is controlled by the United States
Government. For Kermit customers who cannot use open source licenses, and
would like to continue to purchase copies of the software as they have
previously done, please contact techventures@columbia.edu and
mention Kermit in the subject line. Technical support is no longer
available from Columbia University effective July 1, 2011. The pages of the
Kermit website have been updated to reflect the new support and licensing
status of the Kermit software. See the Transition Roadmap (button just
below) for the latest and most accurate information.
The Kermit Project
On 29 April 2011 the Kermit Project turned 30 years old, initiated at
Columbia in 1981 as a way to set up microcomputers as terminals to our
central mainframes and allow files to be transferred reliably back and forth
so students could archive their files on floppy diskettes (read history here). Since then, as one of the
world's first distributed volunteer-based software development projects,
Kermit has evolved into an all-purpose cross-platform tool for
transport-independent text-mode communication, file transfer and management,
and automation. [Read more...]
Kermit software versions
All Kermit software programs are built around the Kermit File-Transfer
Protocol designed at Columbia in 1981 and refined and extended over the
years, which allows two software programs on each end of a communication
connection to transfer both text and binary files correctly and completely
[Read more...]
In addition, many Kermit programs also make connections over various
communication media and act as a terminal. And in many cases they
also include a built-in programming language to allow any
communication procedure, any dialog, and any file-transfer or -management
task to be fully automated.
The most popular Kermit programs are listed in the table below.
Unless otherwise noted, all of these can make TCP/IP network connections
(clear-text or secured by Kerberos IV, Kerberos V, or SSL/TLS), direct
serial-port connections, and dialed modem connections, and can accept
incoming connections of all these types. They can conduct interactive
terminal sessions. They can transfer files with Kermit or FTP protocol.
Those that can make Internet connections support the Telnet, Rlogin, FTP,
and HTTP protocols unless otherwise noted. Their operation can be automated
using the script programming language. And they can convert among a wide
variety of text character sets in both terminal sessions and file transfer.
[Read more...]
Program/Link
| Platform
| Description
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Kermit 95
2.1.3
| MS Windows, IBM OS/2
| Since 1995. Supports all 32-bit versions of Microsoft Windows as well
as OS/2 Warp. Runs on 64-bit Windows versions in 32-bit mode. Emulates
over 40 different terminals including VT100, VT220, VT320, ANSI, HP, IBM,
Linux Console, Sun Console, QNX, AT386, SCO ANSI, SNI 97801, Televideo,
Wyse, and many others. Also supports XYZMODEM file transfer and SSH
security in addition to Kerberos and SSL/TLS. As of 30 March 2011
the K95 manual is available online and as of
20 July 2011, the source code is too.
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C-Kermit
9.0.302
| Unix, VMS, VOS, OS-9, AOS/VS, others
| Since 1985. Supports hundreds of 32-bit and 64-bit Unix varieties
(Linux, Mac OS X, Solaris, AIX, HP-UX, FreeBSD, NetBSD, SCO, many others) as well as VMS on VAX, Alpha, and IA64.
Older versions available for 16-bit Unix versions as well as for other
operating systems including Stratus VOS, OS-9, AOS/VS, Atari ST, Commodore
Amiga, and Apple Macintosh. The Unix version can make ssh connections using
the external Unix SSH client, and has optional built-in support for SSL/TLS and
Kerberos security. C-Kermit is also the basis for Kermit 95.
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MS-DOS Kermit
3.14, 3.15, 3.16
| MS-DOS, PC-DOS, Windows 3.x
| Since 1982. For DOS 2.0 or later and 16-bit Microsoft Windows versions
through 3.11. Includes built-in TCP/IP stack. Emulates 15 terminals,
including DEC VT100, 220, 320; Data General DASHER, Wyse50, ANSI text
terminals as well as Tektronix and DG color graphics. Does not include
encryption, TCP/IP supports Telnet only. Fits on a single diskette.
Not for 32-bit or 64-bit Windows.
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G-Kermit
1.00
| Unix
| Since 1999. Simple and fast Kermit protocol implementation written to
satisfy the demand for a GPL Kermit file-transfer program for Unix. File
transfer only, remote end only; no making connections, no terminal
emulation, no scripting, no character-set conversion.
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E-Kermit
1.7
| (Any)
| Since 2004. Super-compact and efficient Kermit protocol code for
embedding. File transfer only, no security, no making connections, no
terminal emulation, no scripting, no character-set conversion. This is not
a complete communication application, just a "subroutine" that executes the
Kermit file transfer protocol suitable for embedding in other programs or
in chips or devices. Source code now available.
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IBM Mainframe Kermit
4.3.2
| VM/CMS, MVS/TSO, OS/390, CICS, MUSIC
| Since 1982. Kermit file transfer for IBM mainframe operating systems.
Far end only, no making connections, no terminal emulation. Extensive
character-set conversion capabilities supporting many Country Encoded
EBCDIC code pages.
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And all the
others...
| MULTICS, DTSS, NOS, GCOS, MUMPS, RT-11,
Cray, RSX-11, TOPS-10, TOPS-20, OS/8, MPE, CP/M-80, CP/M-86, iRMX-86, ISIS,
PICK, UCSD p-System, Flex, IDRIS, Xelos, TISP, PRIMOS, Sperry VS9, Nonstop,
TRSDOS, Soviet mainframes, ..... About 180 Kermit programs spanning 30
years in
36 different programming languages. As of 18 August 2011, every
Kermit program ever written by or submitted to the Kermit Project is
archived and cataloged HERE.
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Resources
The Kermit Project /
Columbia University /
kermit@columbia.edu /
30 September 2011
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