*nix Documentation Project
·  Home
 +   man pages
·  Linux HOWTOs
·  FreeBSD Tips
·  *niX Forums

  man pages->OpenBSD man pages -> map3270 (5)              
Title
Content
Arch
Section
 

MAP3270(5)

Contents


NAME    [Toc]    [Back]

       map3270  -  database for mapping ASCII keystrokes into IBM
       3270 keys

SYNOPSIS    [Toc]    [Back]

       map3270

DESCRIPTION    [Toc]    [Back]

       When emulating IBM-style 3270 terminals  under  UNIX  (see
       tn3270(1)),  a mapping must be performed between sequences
       of keys hit on a user's (ASCII)  keyboard,  and  the  keys
       that  are  available on a 3270.  For example, a 3270 has a
       key labeled EEOF which erases the contents of the  current
       field  from  the  location  of  the cursor to the end.  In
       order to accomplish this function, the terminal user and a
       program  emulating  a 3270 must agree on what keys will be
       typed to invoke the EEOF function.

       The requirements for these sequences are:

           1)    that the first character of the sequence be outside of the
                standard ASCII printable characters;

           2)   that no sequence be an initial  part  of  another
(although
                sequences may share initial parts).

FORMAT    [Toc]    [Back]

       The file consists of entries for various  keyboards.   The
       first  part  of  an entry lists the names of the keyboards
       which use that entry.  These names will often be the  same
       as  in  /usr/share/misc/termcap (see termcap(5)); however,
       note that often the terminals from various termcap entries
       will all use the same map3270 entry; for example, both 925
       and 925vb (for 925 with visual bells) would  probably  use
       the same map3270 entry.  Additionally, there are occasions
       when the terminal type defines a window  manager,  and  it
       will then be necessary to specify a keyboard name (via the
       KEYBD environment variable) as  the  name  of  the  entry.
       After the names, separated by vertical bars (`|'), comes a
       left brace (`{'); the definitions; and, finally,  a  right
       brace (`}').

       Each  definition  consists of a reserved keyword (see list
       below) which identifies the  3270  function  (extended  as
       defined  below), followed by an equal sign (`='), followed
       by the various ways to generate this particular  function,
       followed by a semi-colon (`;').  Each way is a sequence of
       strings of printable ASCII characters enclosed inside single
  quotes  (`'');  various ways (alternatives) are separated
 by vertical bars (`|').

       Inside the single quotes, a few characters are special.  A
       caret  (`^')  specifies  that  the  next  character is the
       ``control'' character of whatever the character  is.   So,
       `^a'  represents  control-a,  ie: hexadecimal 1 (note that
       `^A' would generate the same code).   To  generate  rubout
       (DEL),  one enters `^?'.  To represent a control character
       inside a file requires using the caret to represent a control
  sequence;  simply  typing  control-A  will not work.
       Note: the ctrl-caret sequence (to generate  a  hexadecimal
       1E) is represented as `^^' (not `^').

       In  addition  to  the caret, a letter may be preceded by a
       backslash (`').  Since this has little  effect  for  most
       characters,  its  use is usually not recommended.  For the
       case of a single quote (`''), the backslash prevents  that
       single quote from terminating the string.  For the case of
       a caret (`^'), the backslash prevents the caret from  having
 its special meaning.  To have the backslash be part of
       the string, it  is  necessary  to  place  two  backslashes
       ('\') in the file.

       In addition, the following characters are special:

            `'  means an escape character;
            `0  means newline;
            `'  means carriage return.
            `

       It  is  not necessary for each character in a string to be
       enclosed  within  single  quotes.   `\E'  means  three
       escape characters.

       Comments,  which may appear anywhere on a line, begin with
       a hash mark (`#'), and terminate at the end of that  line.
       However,  comments  cannot begin inside a quoted string; a
       hash mark inside a quoted string has no special meaning.


3270 KEYS SUPPORTED
       The following is the list of 3270 key names that are  supported
  in  this  file.   Note that some of the keys don't
       really exist on a 3270.  In particular, the developers  of
       this  file have relied extensively on the work at the Yale
       University Computer Center with their 3270 emulator  which
       runs  in  an  IBM  Series/1 front end.  The following list
       corresponds closely to the functions that  the  developers
       of the Yale code offer in their product.

       In the following list, the starred ("*") functions are not
       supported by  tn3270(1).   An  unsupported  function  will
       cause  tn3270(1) to send a (possibly visual) bell sequence
       to the user's terminal.

               3270 Key Name   Functional description

            (*)LPRT            local print
               DP              dup character
               FM              field mark character
               CURSEL          cursor select
               CENTSIGN        EBCDIC cent sign
               RESHOW          redisplay the screen
               EINP            erase input
               EEOF            erase end of field
               DELETE          delete character
               INSRT           toggle insert mode
               TAB             field tab
               BTAB            field back tab
               COLTAB          column tab
               COLBAK          column back tab
               INDENT          indent one tab stop
               UNDENT          undent one tab stop
               NL              new line
               HOME            home the cursor
               UP              up cursor
               DOWN            down cursor
               RIGHT           right cursor
               LEFT            left cursor
               SETTAB          set a column tab
               DELTAB          delete a column tab
               SETMRG          set left margin
               SETHOM          set home position
               CLRTAB          clear all column tabs
            (*)APLON           apl on
            (*)APLOFF          apl off
            (*)APLEND          treat input as ASCII
            (*)PCON            Xon/Xoff on
            (*)PCOFF           Xon/Xoff off
               DISC            disconnect (suspend)
            (*)INIT            new terminal type
            (*)ALTK            alternate keyboard dvorak
               FLINP           flush input
               ERASE           erase last character
               WERASE          erase last word
               FERASE          erase field
               SYNCH           we are in synch with the user
               RESET           reset key-unlock keyboard
               MASTER_RESET    reset, unlock and redisplay
            (*)XOFF            please hold output
            (*)XON             please give me output
               ESCAPE          enter telnet command mode
               WORDTAB         tab to beginning of next word
               WORDBACKTAB      tab  to beginning of current/last
word
               WORDEND         tab to end of current/next word
               FIELDEND        tab  to  last  non-blank  of  current/next
                               unprotected (writable) field.

               PA1             program attention 1
               PA2             program attention 2
               PA3             program attention 3
               CLEAR           local clear of the 3270 screen
               TREQ            test request
               ENTER           enter key

               PFK1            program function key 1
               PFK2            program function key 2
               etc.            etc.
               PFK36           program function key 36

A SAMPLE ENTRY    [Toc]    [Back]

       The following entry is used by tn3270(1)  when  unable  to
       locate  a reasonable version in the user's environment and
       in /usr/share/misc/map3270:

               name  {           #  actual  name  comes from TERM
variable
               clear = '^z';
               flinp = '^x';
               enter = '^m';
               delete = '^d' | '^?';   # note that '^?' is delete
(rubout)
               synch = '^r';
               reshow = '^v';
               eeof = '^e';
               tab = '^i';
               btab = '^b';
               nl = '^n';
               left = '^h';
               right = '^l';
               up = '^k';
               down = '^j';
               einp = '^w';
               reset = '^t';
               xoff = '^s';
               xon = '^q';
               escape = '^c';
               ferase = '^u';
               insrt = ' ';
               # program attention keys
               pa1 = '^p1'; pa2 = '^p2'; pa3 = '^p3';
               # program function keys
               pfk1 = '1'; pfk2 = '2'; pfk3 = '3'; pfk4 = '4';
               pfk5 = '5'; pfk6 = '6'; pfk7 = '7'; pfk8 = '8';
               pfk9 = '9'; pfk10 = ' '; pfk11 = '-'; pfk12 = '=';
               pfk13   =   '';   pfk14   =   '@';   pfk15   =   '
pfk17 = ''; pfk18 = ''; pfk19 = ''; pfk20 = ';
               pfk21 = ' pfk22 = ''; pfk23 = '_'; pfk24 = '+';
               }

IBM 3270 KEY DEFINITONS FOR AN ABOVE DEFINITION    [Toc]    [Back]

       The charts below show the proper keys to emulate each 3270
       function  when using the default key mapping supplied with
       tn3270(1) and mset(1).

            Command     Keys                 IBM     3270     Key
Default Key(s)
                                     Enter
RETURN
                                     Clear
control-z
            Cursor Movement Keys
                                     New                     Line
control-n or
                                                                   Home
                                     Tab
control-i
                                     Back                     Tab
control-b
                                     Cursor                  Left
control-h
                                     Cursor                 Right
control-l
                                     Cursor                    Up
control-k
                                     Cursor                  Down
control-j or
                                                                   LINE
FEED
            Edit Control Keys
                                     Delete                  Char
control-d or
                                                                   RUB
                                     Erase                    EOF
control-e
                                     Erase                  Input
control-w
                                     Insert                  Mode
ESC Space
                                     End                   Insert
ESC Space
            Program Function Keys
                                     PF1
ESC 1
                                     PF2
ESC 2
                                     ...
...
                                     PF10
ESC 0
                                     PF11
ESC -
                                     PF12
ESC =
                                     PF13
ESC !
                                     PF14
ESC @
                                     ...
...
                                     PF24
ESC +
            Program Attention Keys
                                     PA1
control-p 1
                                     PA2
control-p 2
                                     PA3
control-p 3
            Local Control Keys
                                     Reset      After       Error
control-r
                                     Purge      Input      Buffer
control-x
                                     Keyboard              Unlock
control-t
                                     Redisplay             Screen
control-v
            Other Keys
                                     Erase     current      field
control-u

FILES    [Toc]    [Back]

       /etc/map3270

SEE ALSO    [Toc]    [Back]

      
      
       tn3270(1), mset(1), Yale ASCII Terminal Communication Sys-
       tem   II   Program   Description/Operator's   Manual  (IBM
       SB30-1911)

AUTHOR    [Toc]    [Back]

       Greg Minshall

BUGS    [Toc]    [Back]

       Tn3270 doesn't yet  understand  how  to  process  all  the
       functions  available  in  map3270; when such a function is
       requested tn3270 will beep at you.

       The definition of "word" (for "word  erase",  "word  tab")
       should  be  a run-time option.  Currently it is defined as
       the kernel tty driver defines it (strings  of  non-whitespace);
 more than one person would rather use the "vi" definition
 (strings of specials, strings of alphanumeric).


                          July 31, 1991                         6
[ Back ]
 Similar pages
Name OS Title
mset OpenBSD retrieve ASCII to IBM 3270 keyboard map
ypmatch OpenBSD print the values of one or more keys in a YP database
ypcat OpenBSD print the values of all keys in a YP database
ypcat Linux print values of all keys in a NIS database
ypcat FreeBSD print the values of all keys in a YP database
ypmatch FreeBSD print the values of one or more keys in a YP database
t3270 IRIX Silicon Graphics 3270 interface card
ypmatch Tru64 print the value of one or more keys from an NIS map
CSP_FreeKey Tru64 Clean up keys (CDSA)
FreeKey Tru64 Clean up keys (CDSA)
Copyright © 2004-2005 DeniX Solutions SRL
newsletter delivery service