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- NWG/RFC# 734 MRC 07-OCT-77 08:46 41953
- SUPDUP Display Protocol Page 1
-
- Network Working Group Mark Crispin
- Request for Comments 734 SU-AI
- NIC 41953 7 October 1977
-
- SUPDUP Protocol
-
- INTRODUCTION
-
- This document describes the SUPDUP protocol, a highly efficient display
- telnet protocol. It originally started as a private protocol between the
- ITS systems at MIT to allow a user at any one of these systems to use one
- of the others as a display. At the current writing, SUPDUP user programs
- also exist for Data Disc and Datamedia displays at SU-AI and for
- Datamedias at SRI-KL. The author is not aware of any SUPDUP servers other
- than at the four MIT ITS sites.
-
- The advantage of the SUPDUP protocol over an individual terminal's
- protocol is that SUPDUP defines a "virtual" or "software" display terminal
- that implements relevant cursor motion operations. The protocol is not
- built on any particular display terminal but rather on the set of
- functions common to all display terminals; hence it is completely device-
- independent. In addition, the protocol also provides for terminals which
- cannot handle certain operations, such as line or character insert/delete.
- In fact, it is more than this. It provides for terminals which are
- missing any set of features, all the way down to model 33 Teletypes.
-
- The advantage over the TELNET protocol is that SUPDUP takes advantage of
- the full capabilities of display terminals, although it also has the
- ability to run printing terminals.
-
- It is to be noted that SUPDUP operates independently from TELNET; it is
- not an option to the TELNET protocol. In addition, certain assumptions
- are made about the server and the user programs and their capabilities.
- Specifically, it is assumed that the operating system on a server host
- provides all the display-oriented features of ITS. However, a server may
- elect not to do certain display operations available in SUPDUP; the SUPDUP
- protocol is far-reaching enough so that the protocol allows terminals to
- be handled as well as that host can handle terminals in general. Of
- course, if a host does not support display terminals in any special way,
- there is no point in bothering to implement a SUPDUP server since TELNET
- will work just as well.
-
- A more complete description of the display facilities of SUPDUP and ITS
- can be found by FTP'ing the online file .INFO.;ITS TTY from ARPAnet host
- MIT-AI (host 206 octal, 134. decimal). For more information, the mailing
- address for SUPDUP is "(BUG SUPDUP) at MIT-AI". If your mail system won't
- allow you to use parentheses, use Bug-SUPDUP@MIT-AI.
- NWG/RFC# 734 MRC 07-OCT-77 08:46 41953
- SUPDUP Display Protocol Page 2
-
- BACKGROUND
-
- The SUPDUP protocol originated as the internal protocol used between parts
- of ITS, and between ITS and "intelligent" terminals. Over the network, a
- user host acts like an intelligent terminal programmed for ITS.
-
- The way terminal output works in ITS is as follows: The user program
- tells the system to do various operations, such as printing characters,
- clearing the screen, moving the cursor, etc. These operations are formed
- into 8-bit characters (using the %TD codes described below) and stored
- into a buffer. At interrupt level, as the terminal demands output,
- characters are removed from the buffer and translated into terminal
- dependent codes. At this time padding and cursor motion optimization are
- also done.
-
- In some cases, the interrupt side does not run on the same machine as the
- user program. SUPDUP terminals have their "interrupt side" running in the
- user host. When SUPDUP is run between two ITS's, the SUPDUP user and
- server programs and the network simply move characters from the buffer in
- the server machine to the buffer in the user machine. The interrupt side
- then runs on the user machine just as if the characters had been generated
- locally.
-
- Due to the highly interactive characteristics of both the SUPDUP protocol
- and the ITS system, all transactions are strictly character at a time and
- all echoing is remote. In addition, all padding and cursor control
- optimization must be done by the user.
-
- Because this is also the internals of ITS, the right to change it any time
- if necessary to provide new features is reserved by MIT. In particular,
- the initial negotiation is probably going to be changed to transmit
- additional variables, and additional %TD codes may be added at any time.
- User programs should ignore those they don't know about.
-
- The following conventions are used in this document: function keys (ie,
- keys which represent a "function" rather than a "graphic character") are
- in upper case in square brackets. Prefix keys (ie, keys which generate no
- character but rather are held down while typing another character to
- modify that character) are in upper case in angle brackets. Hence
- "<CONTROL><META>[LINE FEED]" refers to the character generated when both
- the CONTROL and META keys are held down while a LINE FEED is typed. Case
- should be noted; <CONTROL>A refers to a different character from
- <CONTROL>a. Finally, all numbers which do not explicitly specify a base
- (ie, octal or decimal) should be read as octal unless the number is
- immediately followed by a period, in which case it is decimal.
- NWG/RFC# 734 MRC 07-OCT-77 08:46 41953
- SUPDUP Display Protocol Page 3
-
- INITIALIZATION
-
- The SUPDUP server listens on socket 137 octal. ICP proceeds in the normal
- way for establishing 8-bit connections. After the ICP is completed, the
- user side sends several parameters to the server side in the form of
- 36.-bit words. Each word is sent through the 8-bit connection as six
- 6-bit bytes, most-significant first. Each byte is in the low-order 6 bits
- of a character. The first word is the negative of the number of variables
- to follow in the high order 18. bits (the low-order 18. bits are ignored),
- followed by the values of the TCTYP, TTYOPT, TCMXV, TCMXH, and TTYROL
- terminal descriptor variables (these are the names they are known by at
- ITS sites). These variables are 36.-bit binary numbers and define the
- terminal characteristics for the virtual terminal at the REMOTE host.
-
- The count is for future compatability. If more variables need to be sent
- in the future, the server should assume "reasonable" default values if the
- user does not specify them. PDP-10 fans will recognize the format of the
- count (ie, -count,,0) as being an AOBJN pointer. At the present writing
- there are five variables hence this word should be -5,,0.
-
- The TCTYP variable defines the terminal type. It MUST be 7 (%TNSFW). Any
- other value is a violation of protocol.
-
- The TTYOPT variable specifies what capabilities or options the user's
- terminal has. A bit being true implies that the terminal has this option.
- This variable also includes user options which the user may wish to alter
- at his or her own descretion; these options are included since they may be
- specified along with the terminal capabilities in the initial negotiation.
- See below for the relevant TTYOPT bits.
-
- The TCMXV variable specifies the screen height in number of lines.
-
- The TCMXH variable specifies the line width in number of characters. This
- value is one less than the screen width (ITS indicates line overflow by
- outputting an exclamation point at the end of the display line before
- moving to the next line). Note: the terminal must not do an automatic
- CRLF when a character is printed in the rightmost column. If this is
- unavoidable, the user SUPDUP must decrement the width it sends by one.
-
- Note: Setting either the TCMXV or TCMXH dimension greater than 128. will
- work, but will have some problems as coordinates are sometimes represented
- in only 7 bits. The main problems occur in the SUPDUP protocol when
- sending the cursor position after an output reset and in ITS user programs
- using the display position codes ^PH and ^PV.
-
- The TTYROL variable specifies the "glitch count" when scrolling. This is
- the number of lines to scroll up when scrolling is required. If zero, the
- terminal is not capable of scrolling. 1 is the usual value, but some
- terminals glitch up by more than one line when they scroll.
-
- Following the transmission of the terminal options by the user, the server
- should respond with an ASCII greeting message, terminated with a %TDNOP
- code (%TD codes are described below). All transmissions from the server
- after the %TDNOP are either printing characters or virtual terminal
- display codes.
- NWG/RFC# 734 MRC 07-OCT-77 08:46 41953
- SUPDUP Display Protocol Page 4
-
- The user and the server now both communicate using the intelligent
- terminal protocol (described below) from the user and %TD codes from the
- server. The user has two commands in addition to these; they are escaped
- by sending 300 (octal). If following the escape is a 301 (octal), the
- server should attempt to log off the remote job (generally this is sent
- immediately before the user disconnects, so this logout procedure should
- be done regardless of the continuing integrity of the connection). If the
- character following the escape is a 302 (octal), all ASCII characters
- following up to a null (000 octal) are interpreted as "console location"
- which the server can handle as it pleases. No carriage return or line
- feed should be in the console location text. Normally this is saved away
- to be displayed by the "who" command when other users ask where this user
- is located.
- NWG/RFC# 734 MRC 07-OCT-77 08:46 41953
- SUPDUP Display Protocol Page 5
-
- TTYOPT FUNCTION BITS
-
- The relevant TTYOPT bits for SUPDUP usage follow. The values are given in
- octal, with the left and right 18-bit halves separated by ",," as in the
- usual PDP-10 convention.
-
- Bit name Value Meaning
-
- %TOALT 200000,,0 characters 175 and 176 are converted to
- altmode (033) on input.
-
- %TOERS 40000,,0 this terminal is capable of selectively
- erasing its screen. That is, it supports
- the %TDEOL, the %TDDLF, and (optionally)
- the %TDEOF operations. For terminals
- which can only do single-character
- erasing, see %TOOVR.
-
- %TOMVB 10000,,0 this terminal is capable of backspacing
- (ie, moving the cursor backwards).
-
- %TOSAI 4000,,0 this terminal has the Stanford/ITS
- extended ASCII graphics character set.
-
- %TOOVR 1000,,0 this terminal is capable of overprinting;
- if two characters are displayed in the
- same position, they will both be visible,
- rather than one replacing the other.
-
- Lack of this capability but the capability
- to backspace (see %TOMVB) implies that the
- terminal can do single character erasing
- by overstriking with a space. This allows
- terminals without the %TOERS capability to
- have display-style "rubout processing", as
- this capability depends upon either %TOERS
- or [%TOMVB and not %TOOVR].
-
- %TOMVU 400,,0 this terminal is capable of moving the
- cursor upwards.
-
- %TOLWR 20,,0 this terminal's keyboard is capable of
- generating lowercase characters; this bit
- is mostly provided for programs which want
- to know this information.
-
- %TOFCI 10,,0 this terminal's keyboard is capable of
- generating CONTROL and META characters as
- described below.
-
- %TOLID 2,,0 this terminal is capable of doing line
- insert/delete operations, ie, it supports
- %TDILP and %TDDLP.
-
- %TOCID 1,,0 this terminal is capable of doing
- character insert/delete operations, ie, it
- supports %TDICP and %TDDCP.
- NWG/RFC# 734 MRC 07-OCT-77 08:46 41953
- SUPDUP Display Protocol Page 6
-
- TTYOPT FUNCTION BITS (continued)
-
- Bit name Value Meaning
-
- %TPCBS 0,,40 this terminal is using the "intelligent
- terminal protocol".
- THIS BIT MUST BE ON.
-
- %TPORS 0,,10 the server should process output resets
- instead of ignoring them.
- IT IS HIGHLY RECOMMENDED THAT THIS BIT BE
- ON; OTHERWISE THERE MAY BE LARGE DELAYS IN
- ABORTING OUTPUT.
-
-
-
- The following bits are user option bits. They may be set or not set at
- the user's discretion. The bits that are labelled "normally on" are those
- that are normally set on when a terminal is initialized (ie, by typing
- [CALL] on a local terminal).
-
- Bit name Value Meaning
-
- %TOCLC 100000,,0 convert lower-case input to upper case.
- Many terminals have a "shift lock" key
- which makes this option useless.
- NORMALLY OFF.
-
- %TOSA1 2000,,0 characters 001-037 should be displayed
- using the Stanford/ITS extended ASCII
- graphics character set instead of uparrow
- followed by 100+character.
- NORMALLY OFF.
-
- %TOMOR 200,,0 the system should provide "**MORE**"
- processing when the cursor reaches the
- bottom line of the screen. **MORE**
- processing is described in ITS TTY.
- NORMALLY ON.
-
- %TOROL 100,,0 the terminal should scroll when attempting
- output below the bottom line of the screen
- instead of wrapping around to the top.
- NORMALLY OFF.
- NWG/RFC# 734 MRC 07-OCT-77 08:46 41953
- SUPDUP Display Protocol Page 7
-
- INPUT -- THE INTELLIGENT TERMINAL PROTOCOL
-
- Note: only the parts of the intelligent terminal protocol relevant to
- SUPDUP are discussed here. For more information, read ITS TTY.
-
-
- CHARACTER SETS
-
- There are two character sets available for use with SUPDUP; the 7-bit
- character set of standard ASCII, and the 12-bit character set of extended
- ASCII. Extended ASCII has 5 high order or "bucky" bits on input and has
- graphics for octal 000-037 and 177 (see the section entitled "Stanford/ITS
- character set" for more details). The two character sets are identical on
- output since the protocol specifies that the host should never send the
- standard ASCII formatting characters (ie, TAB, LF, VT, FF, CR) as
- formatting characters; the characters whose octal values are the same as
- these formatting characters are never output unless the user job has these
- characters enabled (setting %TOSAI and %TOSA1 generally does this).
-
- Input differs dramatically between the 7-bit and 12-bit character sets.
- In the 7-bit character set, all characters input whose value is 037 octal
- or less are assumed to be (ASCII) control characters. In the 12-bit
- character set, there are 5 "bucky" bits which may be attached to the
- character. The two most important of these are CONTROL and META, which
- form a 9-bit character set. TOP is used to distinguish between printing
- graphics in the extended character set and ASCII controls. The other two
- are reserved and should be ignored. Since both 7-bit and 12-bit terminals
- are commonly in use, 0001, 0301, and 0341 are considered to be <CONTROL>A
- on input by most programs, while 4001 is considered to be downwards arrow.
-
-
- MAPPING BETWEEN CHARACTER SETS
-
- Many programs and hosts do not process 12-bit input. In this case, 12-bit
- input is folded down to 7-bit as follows: TOP and META are discarded. If
- CONTROL is on, then if the 7-bit part of the character specifies a lower
- case alphabetic it is converted to upper case; then if the 7-bit part is
- between 077 and 137 the 100 bit is complemented or if the 7-bit part is
- 040 the 040 bit is subtracted (that's right, <CONTROL>? is converted to
- [RUBOUT] and <CONTROL>[SPACE] is converted to [NULL]). In any case the
- CONTROL bit is discarded, and the remainder is treated as a 7-bit ASCII
- character. It should be noted that in this case downwards arrow is read
- by the program as standard ASCII <CONTROL>A.
-
- Servers which expect 12-bit input and are told to use the 7-bit character
- set should do appropriate unfolding from the 7-bit character set to
- 12-bit. It is up to the individual server to decide upon the unfolding
- scheme. On ITS, user programs that use the 12-bit character set generally
- have an alternative method for 7-bit; this often takes the form of prefix
- characters indicating that the next character should be "controllified" or
- "metized", etc.
- NWG/RFC# 734 MRC 07-OCT-77 08:46 41953
- SUPDUP Display Protocol Page 8
-
- INPUT -- THE INTELLIGENT TERMINAL PROTOCOL (continued)
-
-
- BUCKY BITS
-
- Under normal circumstances, characters input from the keyboard are sent to
- the foreign host as is. There are two exceptions; the first occurs when
- an octal 034 character is to be sent; it must be quoted by being sent
- twice, because 034 is used as an escape character for protocol commands.
- The second exception occurs when %TOFCI is set and a character with
- non-zero bucky bits is to be sent. In this case, the character, which is
- in the 12-bit form:
-
- Name Value Description
-
- %TXTOP 4000 This character has the [TOP] key depressed.
-
- %TXSFL 2000 Reserved, must be zero.
-
- %TXSFT 1000 Reserved, must be zero.
-
- %TXMTA 400 This character has the [META] key depressed.
-
- %TXCTL 200 This character has the [CONTROL] key depressed.
-
- %TXASC 177 The ASCII portion of the character
-
- is sent as three bytes. The first byte is always 034 octal (that is why
- 034 must be quoted). The next byte contains the "bucky bits", ie, the
- %TXTOP through %TXCTL bits, shifted over 7 bits (ie, %TXTOP becomes 20)
- with the 100 bit on. The third byte contains the %TXASC part of the
- character. Hence the character <CONTROL><META>[LINE FEED] is sent as 034
- 103 012.
-
-
- OUTPUT RESETS
-
- The intelligent terminal protocol also is involved when a network
- interrupt (INR/INS) is received by the user program. The user program
- should increment a count of received network interrupts when this happens.
- It should not do any output, and if possible abort any output in progress,
- if this count is greater than zero (NOTE: the program MUST allow for the
- count to go less than zero).
-
- Since the server no longer knows where the cursor is, it suspends all
- output until the user informs it of the cursor position. This also gives
- the server an idea of how much was thrown out in case it has to have some
- of the aborted output displayed at a later time. The user program does
- this when it receives a %TDORS from the server. When this happens it
- should decrement the "number of received network interrupts" count
- described in the previous paragraph and then send 034 followed by 020, the
- vertical position, and the horizontal position of where the cursor
- currently is located on the user's screen.
- NWG/RFC# 734 MRC 07-OCT-77 08:46 41953
- SUPDUP Display Protocol Page 9
-
- OUTPUT -- DISPLAY PROTOCOL (%TD CODES)
-
- Display output is somewhat simpler. Codes less than 200 octal are
- printing characters and are displayed on the terminal (see the section
- describing the "Stanford/ITS character set"). Codes greater than or equal
- to 200 (octal) are known as "%TD codes", so called since their names begin
- with %TD. The %TD codes that are relevant to SUPDUP operation are listed
- here. Any other code received should be ignored, although a bug report
- might be sent to the server's maintainers. Note that the normal ASCII
- formatting characters (011 - 015) do NOT have their formatting sense under
- SUPDUP and should not occur at all unless the Stanford/ITS extended ASCII
- character set is in use (ie, %TOSAI is set in the TTYOPT word).
-
- For cursor positioning operations, the top left corner is (0,0), ie,
- vertical position 0, horizontal position 0.
-
- %TD code Value Meaning
-
- %TDMOV 200 General cursor position code. Followed by
- four bytes; the first two are the "old"
- vertical and horizontal positions and may
- be ignored. The next two are the new
- vertical and horizontal positions. The
- cursor should be moved to this position.
-
- On printing consoles (non %TOMVU), the old
- vertical position may differ from the true
- vertical position; this can occur when
- scrolling. In this case, the user program
- should set its idea of the old vertical
- position to what the %TDMOV says and then
- proceed. Hence a %TDMOV with an old vpos
- of 20. and a new vpos of 22. should always
- move the "cursor" down two lines. This is
- used to prevent the vertical position from
- becoming infinite.
-
- %TDMV1 201 An internal cursor motion code which
- should not be seen; but if it is, it has
- two argument bytes after it and should be
- treated the same as %TDMV0.
-
- %TDEOF 202 Erase to end of screen. This is an
- optional function since many terminals do
- not support this. If the terminal does
- not support this function, it should be
- treated the same as %TDEOL.
-
- %TDEOF does an erase to end of line, then
- erases all lines lower on the screen than
- the cursor. The cursor does not move.
-
- %TDEOL 203 Erase to end of line. This erases the
- character position the cursor is at and
- all positions to the right on the same
- line. The cursor does not move.
- NWG/RFC# 734 MRC 07-OCT-77 08:46 41953
- SUPDUP Display Protocol Page 10
-
- OUTPUT -- DISPLAY PROTOCOL (%TD CODES) (continued)
-
- %TD code Value Meaning
-
- %TDDLF 204 Clear the character position the cursor is
- on. The cursor does not move.
-
- %TDCRL 207 If the cursor is not on the bottom line of
- the screen, move cursor to the beginning
- of the next line and clear that line. If
- the cursor is at the bottom line, scroll
- up.
-
- %TDNOP 210 No-op; should be ignored.
-
- %TDORS 214 Output reset. This code serves as a data
- mark for aborting output much as IAC DM
- does in the ordinary TELNET protocol.
-
- %TDQOT 215 Quotes the following character. This is
- used when sending 8-bit codes which are
- not %TD codes, for instance when loading
- programs into an intelligent terminal.
- The following character should be passed
- through intact to the terminal.
-
- %TDFS 216 Non-destructive forward space. The cursor
- moves right one position; this code will
- not be sent at the end of a line.
-
- %TDMV0 217 General cursor position code. Followed by
- two bytes; the new vertical and horizontal
- positions.
-
- %TDCLR 220 Erase the screen. Home the cursor to the
- top left hand corner of the screen.
-
- %TDBEL 221 Generate an audio tone, bell, whatever.
-
- %TDILP 223 Insert blank lines at the cursor; followed
- by a byte containing a count of the number
- of blank lines to insert. The cursor is
- unmoved. The line the cursor is on and
- all lines below it move down; lines moved
- off the bottom of the screen are lost.
-
- %TDDLP 224 Delete lines at the cursor; followed by a
- count. The cursor is unmoved. The first
- line deleted is the one the cursor is on.
- Lines below those deleted move up. Newly-
- created lines at the bottom of the screen
- are blank.
- NWG/RFC# 734 MRC 07-OCT-77 08:46 41953
- SUPDUP Display Protocol Page 11
-
- OUTPUT -- DISPLAY PROTOCOL (%TD CODES) (continued)
-
- %TD code Value Meaning
-
- %TDICP 225 Insert blank character positions at the
- cursor; followed by a count. The cursor
- is unmoved. The character the cursor is
- on and all characters to the right on the
- current line move to the right; characters
- moved off the end of the line are lost.
-
- %TDDCP 226 Delete characters at the cursor; followed
- by a count. The cursor is unmoved. The
- first character deleted is the one the
- cursor is on. Newly-created characters at
- the end of the line are blank.
-
- %TDBOW 227 Display black characters on white screen.
- HIGHLY OPTIONAL.
-
- %TDRST 230 Reset %TDBOW and such any future options.
- NWG/RFC# 734 MRC 07-OCT-77 08:46 41953
- SUPDUP Display Protocol Page 12
-
- STANFORD/ITS CHARACTER SET
-
- This section describes the extended ASCII character set. It originated
- with the character set developed at SAIL but was modified for 1968 ASCII.
-
- This character set only applies to terminals with the %TOSAI and %TOFCI
- bits set in its TTYOPT word. For non-%TOSAI terminals, the standard ASCII
- printing characters are the only available output characters. For
- non-%TOFCI terminals, the standard ASCII characters are the only available
- input characters.
-
-
- PRINTING CHARACTERS
-
- The first table describes the printing characters. For output, the 7-bit
- code is sent (terminal operations are performed by %TD codes). For input,
- the characters with values 000-037 and 177 must have the %TXTOP bit on to
- indicate the graphic is intended rather than a function or ASCII control.
-
- Value Character
-
- 4000 centered dot
- 4001 downward arrow
- 4002 alpha
- 4003 beta
- 4004 logical AND
- 4005 logical NOT
- 4006 epsilon
- 4007 pi
- 4010 lambda
- 4011 gamma
- 4012 delta
- 4013 uparrow
- 4014 plus-minus
- 4015 circle-plus
- 4016 infinity
- 4017 partial delta
- 4020 proper subset (left horseshoe)
- 4021 proper superset (right horseshoe)
- 4022 intersection (up horseshoe)
- 4023 union (downward horseshoe)
- 4024 universal quantifer
- 4025 existential quantifier
- 4026 circle-X
- 4027 double arrow
- 4030 left arrow
- 4031 right arrow
- 4032 not-equal
- 4033 lozenge (diamond)
- 4034 less-than-or-equal
- 4035 greater-than-or-equal
- 4036 equivalence
- 4037 logical OR
- 0040 first standard ASCII character (space)
- .. . . .
- 0176 last standard ASCII character (tilde)
- 4177 integral
- NWG/RFC# 734 MRC 07-OCT-77 08:46 41953
- SUPDUP Display Protocol Page 13
-
- STANFORD/ITS CHARACTER SET (continued)
-
-
- FUNCTION KEYS AND SPECIAL CHARACTERS
-
- In addition, the following special characters exist for input only. These
- characters are function keys rather than printing characters; however,
- some of these characters have some format effect or graphic which they
- echo as; the host, not the SUPDUP program, handles any such mappings.
-
- Value Character Usual echo Usual Function
-
- 0000 [NULL]
- 0010 [BACK SPACE] text formatting
- 0011 [TAB] text formatting
- 0012 [LINE FEED] text formatting
- 0013 [VT] text formatting
- 0014 [FORM] text formatting
- 0015 [RETURN] text formatting
- 0032 [CALL] uparrow-Z escape to system
- 0033 [ALTMODE] lozenge or $ special activation
- 0037 [BACK NEXT] uparrow-underscore monitor command prefix
- 0177 [RUBOUT] character delete
-
- 4101 [ESCAPE] local terminal command
- 4102 [BREAK] local subsystem escape
- 4103 [CLEAR]
- 4110 [HELP] requests a help message
-
-
- BUCKY BITS
-
- For all input characters, the following "bucky bits" may be added to the
- character. Their interpretation depends entirely upon the host. <TOP> is
- not listed here, as it has been considered part of the character in the
- previous tables.
-
- <CONTROL> is different from ASCII CTRL, however, many programs may request
- the operating system to map such characters to the ASCII forms (with the
- <TOP> bit off). In this case <META> is ignored.
-
- Value Key
-
- 2000 Reserved
- 1000 Reserved
- 0400 <META>
- 0200 <CONTROL>
- NWG/RFC# 734 MRC 07-OCT-77 08:46 41953
- SUPDUP Display Protocol Page 14
-
- ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
-
- Richard M. Stallman (RMS@MIT-AI) and David A. Moon (Moon@MIT-MC) of the
- MIT-AI and MIT-MC systems staff wrote the source documentation and the
- wonderful ITS terminal support that made this protocol possible. It must
- be emphasized that this is a functional protocol which has been in
- operation for some years now.
-
- In addition, Moon, Stallman, and Michael McMahon (MMcM@SRI-KL) provided
- many helpful comments and corrections to this document.
-
- For further reference, the sources for the known currently existing SUPDUP
- user programs are available online as:
-
- [MIT-AI] SYSENG;SUPDUP > for the ITS monitor,
- [SU-AI] SUPDUP.MID[NET,MRC] for the SAIL monitor,
- [SRI-KL] <MMcM>SD.FAI for the TOPS-20 monitor.
-
- The source for the known currently existing SUPDUP server program is:
-
- [MIT-AI] SYSENG;TELSER > for the ITS monitor.
-
- These programs are written in the MIDAS and FAIL dialects of PDP-10
- assembly language.
-