Comm program with scripting language needed

Jean-Pierre Radley jpr at jpradley.uucp
Thu Oct 18 15:30:36 AEST 1990


In article <57 at genco.uucp> rad at genco. (Bob Daniel) writes:
>I need a comm program with a robust scripting language that will be distruted
>to several hundred sites.  I have 'TERM' by Century Software but it costs $500
>per site.  I have 'expect' but it will not do what we need.  I need something
>under $200/site.  I understand ProComm is on UNIX.  How much is it?  Anyone
>have their number?  Any other comm programs out there with scripting languages?
>
>Oh yeah, I also have XCOMM but the scripting language is too limited.

Several generations after XCOMM, there's XCMALT.
Scripting language improvements are but the least of its features.
I'm the "curator" thereof, and it's being dispatched to you even as I write
this.


----------

Once upon a time, Eric Coe wrote XCOMM; Larry Gensch wrote XCOMM 2.0; Fred Buck
enhanced it to XCMALT.
XCMALT is currently at version 2.9

I fixed loose ends, condensed the documentation, tightened the code. Put/take
now function, and allow an optional second filename for the target file. The
dialing directory adjusts to the length of your screen. Startup and user
scripts and the phonelist are sought in your current directory, home directory,
or a default library directory. Tty output is now unbuffered. Getty/LCK-file
support allow dialing out on an enabled line. The baud rate choices now extend
from 300 to 19200. More inverse video for error messages.
As before, you can:
	send a modem BREAK
	set 7-bit masking or 8-bit masking
	up/download using
		ZMODEM
		XMODEM/YMODEM (if you have rx/sz)
		CompuServe Quick-B Protocol
		plain old ASCII
	name your capture file
	toggle your capture file on or off
	upload from a file on disk
	dial from a directory of numbers,
		optionally using a script which can, for example, log you on
		to CIS, get you into a Forum, start reading messages or upload
		replies
	escape to a shell
	attach the stdin and stdout of a system command to the modem port
and other goodies.
	
Buy it, you'll like it; at any rate, it's free. 

-----------
-- 
 Jean-Pierre Radley          HIGH-Q	     jpr at jpradley	CIS: 72160,1341



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