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System Administration Guide: Network Services     Oracle Solaris 11 Express 11/10
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Document Information

Preface

Part I Network Services Topics

1.  Network Service (Overview)

2.  Managing Web Cache Servers

3.  Time-Related Services

Part II Accessing Network File Systems Topics

4.  Managing Network File Systems (Overview)

5.  Network File System Administration (Tasks)

6.  Accessing Network File Systems (Reference)

Part III SLP Topics

7.  SLP (Overview)

8.  Planning and Enabling SLP (Tasks)

9.  Administering SLP (Tasks)

10.  Incorporating Legacy Services

11.  SLP (Reference)

Part IV Mail Services Topics

12.  Mail Services (Overview)

13.  Mail Services (Tasks)

14.  Mail Services (Reference)

Part V Serial Networking Topics

15.  Solaris PPP 4.0 (Overview)

16.  Planning for the PPP Link (Tasks)

17.  Setting Up a Dial-up PPP Link (Tasks)

18.  Setting Up a Leased-Line PPP Link (Tasks)

19.  Setting Up PPP Authentication (Tasks)

20.  Setting Up a PPPoE Tunnel (Tasks)

21.  Fixing Common PPP Problems (Tasks)

22.  Solaris PPP 4.0 (Reference)

23.  Migrating From Asynchronous Solaris PPP to Solaris PPP 4.0 (Tasks)

24.  UUCP (Overview)

25.  Administering UUCP (Tasks)

26.  UUCP (Reference)

UUCP /etc/uucp/Systems File

System-Name Field in /etc/uucp/Systems File

Time Field in /etc/uucp/Systems File

day Portion of Time Field

time Portion of Time Field

retry Portion of Time Field

Type Field in /etc/uucp/Systems File

Speed Field in /etc/uucp/Systems File

Phone Field in /etc/uucp/Systems File

Chat-Script Field in /etc/uucp/Systems File

Enabling Dialback Through the Chat Script

Hardware Flow Control in /etc/uucp/Systems File

Setting Parity in /etc/uucp/Systems File

UUCP /etc/uucp/Devices File

Type Field in /etc/uucp/Devices File

Direct Keyword

ACU Keyword

Port Selector

System-Name Variable

Type Fields in Devices File and Systems File

Line Field in the /etc/uucp/Devices File

Line2 Field in the /etc/uucp/Devices File

Class Field in the /etc/uucp/Devices File

Dialer-Token-Pairs Field in the /etc/uucp/Devices File

Structure of the Dialer-Token-Pairs Field in the /etc/uucp/Devices File

Protocol Definitions in /etc/uucp/Devices File

UUCP /etc/uucp/Dialers File

Enabling Hardware Flow Control in the /etc/uucp/Dialers File

Setting Parity in the /etc/uucp/Dialers File

Other Basic UUCP Configuration Files

UUCP /etc/uucp/Dialcodes File

UUCP /etc/uucp/Sysfiles File

UUCP /etc/uucp/Sysname File

UUCP /etc/uucp/Permissions File

UUCP Structuring Entries

UUCP Considerations

UUCP REQUEST Option

UUCP SENDFILES Option

UUCP MYNAME Option

UUCP READ and WRITE Options

UUCP NOREAD and NOWRITE Options

UUCP CALLBACK Option

UUCP COMMANDS Option

UUCP VALIDATE Option

UUCP MACHINE Entry for OTHER

Combining MACHINE and LOGNAME Entries for UUCP

UUCP Forwarding

UUCP /etc/uucp/Poll File

UUCP /etc/uucp/Config File

UUCP/etc/uucp/Grades File

UUCP User-job-grade Field

UUCP System-job-grade Field

Relationship Between User and System Job Grades

Default Grade

UUCP Job-size Field

UUCP Permit-type Field

UUCP ID-list Field

Other UUCP Configuration Files

UUCP /etc/uucp/Devconfig File

UUCP /etc/uucp/Limits File

UUCP remote.unknown File

UUCP Administrative Files

UUCP Error Messages

UUCP ASSERT Error Messages

UUCP STATUS Error Messages

UUCP Numerical Error Messages

Part VI Working With Remote Systems Topics

27.  Working With Remote Systems (Overview)

28.  Administering the FTP Server (Tasks)

29.  Accessing Remote Systems (Tasks)

Part VII Monitoring Network Services Topics

30.  Monitoring Network Performance (Tasks)

Glossary

Index

UUCP /etc/uucp/Dialers File

The /etc/uucp/Dialers file contains dialing instructions for commonly used modems. You probably do not need to change or add entries to this file unless you plan to use a nonstandard modem or plan to customize your UUCP environment. Nevertheless, you should understand what is in the file and how it relates to the Systems and Devices file.

The text specifies the initial conversation that must occur on a line before the line can be made available for transferring data. This conversation, known as a chat script, is usually a sequence of ASCII strings that is transmitted and is expected. A chat script is often used to dial a phone number.

As shown in the examples in UUCP /etc/uucp/Devices File, the fifth field in a Devices file entry is an index into the Dialers file or a special dialer type, such as TCP, TLI, or TLIS. The uucico daemon attempts to match the fifth field in the Devices file with the first field of each Dialers file entry. In addition, each odd-numbered Devices field, starting with the seventh position, is used as an index into the Dialers file. If the match succeeds, the Dialers entry is interpreted to perform the dialer conversation.

Each entry in the Dialers file has the following syntax:

dialer   substitutions   expect-send

The following example shows the entry for a U.S. Robotics V.32bis modem.

Example 26-10 Entry in /etc/uucp/Dialers File

usrv32bis-e    =,-,  ""    dA\pT&FE1V1X1Q0S2=255S12=255&A1&H1&M5&B2&W\r\c OK\r 
                           \EATDT\T\r\c CONNECT\s14400/ARQ STTY=crtscts
usrv32bis-e

Entry in the Dialer field. The Dialer field matches the fifth and additional odd-numbered fields in the Devices file.

=,-, ""

Entry in the Substitutions field. The Substitutions field is a translation string. The first of each pair of characters is mapped to the second character in the pair. This mapping is usually used to translate = and - into whatever the dialer requires for “wait for dial tone” and “pause.”

dA\pT&FE1V1X1Q0S2=255S12=255&A1&H1&M5&B2&W\r\c OK\r

Entry in Expect-Send field. The Expect-Send fields are character strings.

\EATDT\T\r\c CONNECT\s14400/ARQ STTY=crtscts

More of the Expect-Send field.

The following example shows sample entries in the Dialers file, as distributed when you install UUCP as part of the Oracle Solaris installation program.

Example 26-11 Excerpts From /etc/uucp/Dialers

penril    =W-P "" \d > Q\c : \d- > s\p9\c )-W\p\r\ds\p9\c-) y\c : \E\TP > 9\c OK 
 
ventel    =&-%    "" \r\p\r\c $ <K\T%%\r>\c ONLINE! 
 
vadic    =K-K    "" \005\p *-\005\p-*\005\p-* D\p BER? \E\T\e \r\c LINE 
 
develcon    ""    "" \pr\ps\c est:\007 
 
\E\D\e \n\007 micom    ""    "" \s\c NAME? \D\r\c GO 
 
hayes    =,-,    "" \dA\pTE1V1X1Q0S2=255S12=255\r\c OK\r \EATDT\T\r\c CONNECT 
 
#   Telebit TrailBlazer 
tb1200    =W-,    "" \dA\pA\pA\pTE1V1X1Q0S2=255S12=255S50=2\r\c OK\r 
\EATDT\T\r\c CONNECT\s1200   
tb2400    =W-,    "" \dA\pA\pA\pTE1V1X1Q0S2=255S12=255S50=3\r\c OK\r 
\EATDT\T\r\c CONNECT\s2400   
tbfast    =W-,    "" \dA\pA\pA\pTE1V1X1Q0S2=255S12=255S50=255\r\c OK\r 
\EATDT\T\r\c CONNECT\sFAST 
 
# USrobotics, Codes, and DSI modems 
 
dsi-ec  =,-,    "" \dA\pTE1V1X5Q0S2=255S12=255*E1*F3*M1*S1\r\c OK\r \EATDT\T\r\c 
CONNECT\sEC STTY=crtscts,crtsxoff 
 
dsi-nec =,-,    "" \dA\pTE1V1X5Q0S2=255S12=255*E0*F3*M1*S1\r\c OK\r \EATDT\T\r\c CONNECT 
STTY=crtscts,crtsxoff 
 
usrv32bis-ec =,-,  "" \dA\pT&FE1V1X1Q0S2=255S12=255&A1&H1&M5&B2&W\r\c OK\r \EATDT\T\r\c 
CONNECT\s14400/ARQ STTY=crtscts,crtsxoff 
 
usrv32-nec =,-, "" \dA\pT&FE1V1X1Q0S2=255S12=255&A0&H1&M0&B0&W\r\c OK\r \EATDT\T\r\c 
CONNECT STTY=crtscts,crtsxoff 
 
codex-fast =,-, "" \dA\pT&C1&D2*MF0*AA1&R1&S1*DE15*FL3S2=255S7=40S10=40*TT5&W\r\c OK\r 
\EATDT\T\r\c CONNECT\s38400 STTY=crtscts,crtsxoff 
 
tb9600-ec =W-,  "" \dA\pA\pA\pTE1V1X1Q0S2=255S12=255S50=6\r\c OK\r 
\EATDT\T\r\cCONNECT\s9600 STTY=crtscts,crtsxoff 
 
tb9600-nec =W-, "" \dA\pA\pA\pTE1V1X1Q0S2=255S12=255S50=6S180=0\r\c OK\r \EATDT\T\r\c 
CONNECT\s9600 STTY=crtscts,crtsxoff

The following table lists escape characters that are commonly used in the send strings in the Dialers file.

Table 26-3 Backslash Characters for /etc/uucp/Dialers

Character
Description
\b
Sends or expects a backspace character.
\c
No newline or carriage return.
\d
Delays for approximately 2 seconds.
\D
Phone number or token without Dialcodes translation.
\e
Disables echo checking.
\E
Enables echo checking for slow devices.
\K
Inserts a Break character.
\n
Sends newline.
\nnn
Sends octal number. Additional escape characters that can be used are listed in the section UUCP /etc/uucp/Systems File.
\N
Sends or expects a NULL character (ASCII NUL).
\p
Pauses for approximately 12–14 seconds.
\r
Returns.
\s
Sends or expects a space character.
\T
Phone number or token with Dialcodes translation.

Here is a penril entry in the Dialers file:

penril =W-P "" \d > Q\c : \d- > s\p9\c )-W\p\r\ds\p9\c-) y\c : \E\TP > 9\c OK 

First, the substitution mechanism for the phone number argument is established so that any = is replaced with a W (wait for dial tone) and any - with a P (pause).

The handshake that is given by the remainder of the line works as listed:

Enabling Hardware Flow Control in the /etc/uucp/Dialers File

You can also use the pseudo-send STTY=value string to set modem characteristics. For instance, STTY=crtscts enables outbound hardware flow control. STTY=crtsxoff enables inbound hardware flow control. STTY=crtscts,crtsxoff enables both outbound and inbound hardware flow control.

STTY accepts all the stty modes. See the stty(1) and termio(7I) man pages.

The following example would enable hardware flow control in a Dialers entry:

dsi =,–, "" \dA\pTE1V1X5Q0S2=255S12=255*E1*F3*M1*S1\r\c OK\r \EATDT\T\r\c 
CONNECT\sEC STTY=crtscts 

This pseudo-send string can also be used in entries in the Systems file.

Setting Parity in the /etc/uucp/Dialers File

In some situations, you have to reset the parity because the system that you are calling checks port parity and drops the line if it is wrong. The expect-send couplet P_ZERO sets parity to zero:

foo =,-, "" P_ZERO "" \dA\pTE1V1X1Q0S2=255S12=255\r\c OK\r\EATDT\T\r\c CONNECT 

The following are parity couplets that can follow the expect-send couplet:

"" P_EVEN

Sets the parity to even, which is the default

"" P_ODD

Sets the parity to odd

"" P_ONE

Sets the parity to one

This pseudo-send string can also be used in entries in the Systems file.