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- Fnordadel Reference Manual
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
- 2nd Edition
- Revised August 1991
- for Fnordadel version 1.32
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- Adrian Ashley
- Royce Howland
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
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- This manual is copyright (C) 1990, 1991 by Adrian Ashley and Royce Howland.
-
- Permission is granted to distribute unmodified copies of this manual,
- provided that no more than a reasonable handling and/or materials fee is
- charged for it.
-
- Permission is granted to modify this manual and to distribute such modified
- copies, provided that no more than a reasonable handling and/or materials
- fee is charged for it; and provided that such modified copies are not
- represented as being the original Fnordadel Reference Manual; and provided
- that credit is given to the original authors.
-
-
-
- Copying Conditions and Credits 1
-
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-
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- Copying Conditions and Credits
-
-
-
-
- Copying Conditions
-
- The Fnordadel sources and binaries are in the public domain. They may
- be freely distributed, modified or whatever you like. If you do distribute
- or modify Fnordadel, please adhere to the following conditions:
-
- 1. You may not charge more than a reasonable handling or materials fee for
- Fnordadel sources or binaries.
-
- 2. Redistributions of Fnordadel must be complete, containing all programs,
- documentation and other files present in the original distributions.
-
- 3. Redistributed versions of the original Fnordadel must not be altered in
- any way.
-
- 4. Altered versions of Fnordadel must be plainly marked as such, and must
- not be represented as the original Fnordadel. In particular, they
- must not be given the name ``Fnordadel''. Credit must be given to the
- original authors.
-
- Basically, you are free to do whatever you like with Fnordadel except
- make money off it or pretend that you wrote it.
-
- This Reference Manual is the original work of, and is copyright (C) 1991
- by, Adrian Ashley and Royce Howland. Distribution and modification of the
- manual are subject to the same conditions as for binaries and sources.
-
-
- Credits
-
- Fnordadel is the aggregate work of many people. Chief among these
- are Cynbe ru Taren (CrT), who did the original Citadel for CP/M; H.A.
- White (Hue, Jr.) of Minneapolis, who ported Citadel to MS/DOS and created
- Citadel-86; and David L. Parsons (orc), who ported Citadel-86 to the Atari
- ST and created STadel. We (Adrian Ashley and Royce Howland) took STadel
- and hacked it to create Fnordadel; any bugs and misfeatures should be
- assumed to be our fault alone, unless you're planning to sue.
-
- We would like to thank the following people for their help and input
- into both Fnordadel and this manual: John Edstrom, Hue, Jr., David Parsons
- (orc), David ``Wally'' Williscroft, Garth Wood, Ken Badertscher (kbad @
- Virtuality) and many others.
-
- Special thanks to Garth Wood, who contributed material for the first
- draft of this manual; as with everything else we get, we've hacked it to
- bits, but an original word or two probably still remains. Also to kbad,
- who proofed the first draft of the Texinfo version of this manual and
- provided critiques. Look, Ken, no Dreaded Emoticons! (-: (-: (-:
-
-
-
- Copying Conditions and Credits 2
-
-
-
-
- Thanks also to the loyal users of secret and RT (our own boards), and
- our many beta testers who suffered (and continue to suffer) through buggy
- beta versions. We appreciate your input.
-
- Final thanks to the Coca-Cola company, without whose product (Coke
- Classic) we probably would be richer but further behind.
-
-
-
- Introduction 3
-
-
-
-
- Introduction
-
-
- Fnordadel is a bulletin board system (``BBS'') program. It is a member
- of the family of BBS programs descended from Citadel, which was written by
- CrT in the early 1980's. Fnordadel currently runs on the Atari ST and
- TT machines only. There are many other variants and clones of Citadel
- available for a wide variety of machines, including the IBM PC and its
- clones, the Mac, the Amiga, Unix machines, and others. Fnordadel is
- derived from STadel by David Parsons (orc). See Appendix B [History],
- page 173, for more on the history and lineage of Fnordadel.
-
- Citadels operate on the ``room'' metaphor, where discussions take place
- in named rooms which can be easily and dynamically managed. Citadels are
- thus considerably different from most other BBSes, which tend to use more
- static ``message areas'' and the like. Citadel is intended for discussion
- systems, not heavy file-transfer sites; however, reasonable file transfer
- mechanisms are provided. The user interface is orthogonal, fast and highly
- interactive, while shunning the typical menu-based interface of most BBS
- programs.
-
- A few significant features of Fnordadel (and, in general, all Citadels)
- are:
-
- o __Ease of maintenence__. Fnordadel requires little human intervention
- to operate. Most system files are fixed-size circular files which are
- inherently self-maintaining. Barring power failures and bugs, you can
- let a Fnordadel run for months without even looking at it.
-
- o __Ease of configuration__. All configuration options are in one
- well-documented file. See Chapter 1 [Fifteen Minute Guide To
- Fnordadel], page 5.
-
- o __Runs on any ST__. Even if you have only a 512k machine with a single
- floppy drive, you can still run Fnordadel.
-
- o __Good connectivity__. Fnordadel supports standard Citadel networking
- with minimal incompatibilities with other Citadel variants. You can
- share mail, rooms and files with other Citadels.
-
- o __Flexible security__. Citadels are traditionally open systems, but if
- you have pests, Fnordadel has a fair number of ways to help control
- them without sacrificing too much of the traditional openness.
-
- Oh, and since you may have been wondering ... : ``fnord'' is a
- subliminal trigger word, adapted from a well-known science fiction work.
- Since we figure hacking on BBSes is about as subliminal as you can get, it
- fits. Besides, all the good names were taken.
-
-
-
- Introduction 4
-
-
-
-
- Notations Used in This Manual
-
- Several standard notations are used throughout this manual, the online
- help files and in general Citadel usage which you should be aware of.
-
- 1. The sequence `^X', where `X' is a letter or symbol on the keyboard,
- represents a control character. To type one, hold down the `Control'
- key and press `X'.
-
- 2. The sequence `<FOO>' refers to one of the special keys on the keyboard
- such as the carriage-return key (`<CR>'), the escape key (`<ESC>'),
- etc. This notation is also used occasionally to refer to special
- characters which may not have their own keys on the keyboard; an
- example is the linefeed character, `<LF>'.
-
- 3. The sequence `[X]' where `X' is any key, indicates a Fnordadel
- single-key command. Single-key commands are usually referenced using
- a full word or two, indicating what the command means---usually this
- is derived from the words that Fnordadel echoes back to you when you
- press the key. For example, `[N]ew' refers to the command to read new
- messages; you press `N' and the system echoes `New'.
-
- 4. The sequence `.X(stuff) Y(stuff) Z(stuff) ...' indicates a Fnordadel
- multi-key command. Such commands always start with a special character
- such as `.', `;' or `!'. The text in parentheses represents what
- Fnordadel will echo back to you as you type the command. For example,
- the notation `.R(ead) X(modem) N(ew)' means that you type `.RXN' and
- the system will echo `.Read Xmodem New'.
-
- Please note that case is insignificant; i.e., a capital letter is the
- same as a lower-case letter so far as commands are concerned.
-
-
-
- A Warning
-
- This manual makes occasional use of *humor*. Read with caution, as
- we wash our hands of any responsibility for any offense generated in
- unappreciative or humorless readers.
-
-