WELCOME TO KERMIT 95 2.1.3

1 January 2003

Kermit 95: Powerful, flexible, customizable, secure 32-bit communications software for Microsoft Windows, now in GUI form. Please remember: this is licensed software, not to be redistributed in any form without license to do so, nor made available to unlicensed persons for copying by any means (including but not limited to network copying).

Unlike the K95 1.1.x releases, K95 2.0 and later run in a GUI window (a Console version is available too). A description of the Graphical User Interface is HERE and also in the updated Kermit 95 manual.

Copyright © 1995, 2003, the Trustees of Columbia University in the City of New York, all rights reserved.

Portions Copyright © 1986 Gary S. Brown.
Portions Copyright © 1990, Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
Portions Copyright © 1991, 1993 Regents of the University of California.
Portions Copyright © 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995 by AT&T.
Portions Copyright © 1995 Tatu Ylonen <[email protected]>, Espoo, Finland.
Portions Copyright © 1995, Oy Online Solutions Ltd., Jyvaskyla, Finland.
Portions Copyright © 1995-1998, Eric Young <[email protected]>.
Portions Copyright © 1997, Stanford University.
Portions Copyright © 1998 CORE SDI S.A., Buenos Aires, Argentina.
Portions Copyright © 1998-2001 The OpenSSL Project.
Portions Copyright © (date unspecified) Markus Friedl, Theo de Raadt, Niels Provos, Dug Song, Aaron Campbell.


CONTENTS

  1. WHAT'S WHAT
  2. WHAT'S NEW
  3. SYSTEM REQUIREMENTS
  4. SECURITY AND ENCRYPTION
  5. INSTALLING KERMIT 95
  6. UNINSTALLING KERMIT 95
  7. REGISTRATION
  8. RESOURCES
  9. FILES AND DIRECTORIES
    1. The New Directory Structure
    2. Patches and Search Order
    3. Important K95 Files
  10. ORIENTATION AND NAVIGATION
    1. K95's Initial Directory
    2. K95's CD Command
    3. Where Is My Customization File?
    4. Structure of .INI Files
    5. Where is the File I Just Downloaded?


1. WHAT'S WHAT

This is version 2.1.3 of Kermit 95 -- the twenty-fourth update since the original release in September 1995. You might have received this version as an update patch to a previous version, or you might have received it as part of a bulk or site license, or you might have purchased it new in its box or via some means of electronic delivery. All versions include:

The Kermit 95 Software
The CDROM includes Kermit 95 for Windows 95/98/ME/NT/2000/XP and OS/2. The appropriate version is installed for you automatically.

The Kermit 95 Manual
The new Seventh Edition of the online Kermit 95 manual is completely up to date with version 2.1.3. It is in HyperText Markup Language (HTML) format so you can navigate it with your Web browser. This manual concentrates on the unique aspects of Kermit 95, primarily the K95 Dialer and the terminal emulator.

The shrinkwrapped retail version, Kermit 95+, also includes the following (hence the "+"):

The C-Kermit CDROM
C-Kermit is Kermit 95's file-transfer and client/server partner for UNIX (Linux, Solaris, AIX, HP-UX, etc), VMS, VOS, and many other operating systems. It is not part of Kermit 95; it has been included to ensure that you have an up-to-date, high-performance, supported Kermit file transfer partner on the UNIX, VMS, or VOS systems that you connect to with Kermit 95.

The C-Kermit Manual
The book, Using C-Kermit, is the technical reference manual for the Command Window and script programming language, as well as for file transfer, and also contains useful tutorials on character sets, data communications and troubleshooting of dialing and connection problems. It is also the user manual for C-Kermit itself, which has the same command and scripting language as Kermit 95. The second edition of Using C-Kermit was published concurrently with the release of C-Kermit 6.0 and Kermit 95 1.1.8; updates for C-Kermit 7.0 (which corresponds to Kermit 95 1.1.20) and 8.0 (Kermit 95 1.1.21 / 2.0) are included with the K95 manual. Beginning with Kermit 95 1.1.20, Using C-Kermit is provided in online PDF format (with shrinkwrapped retail copies only). Beginning with version 2.1, the PDF version of the manual must be downloaded from the Kermit 95 publisher, using your Kermit 95 serial number as license key (Kermit 95 2.1 shrinkwrapped copies only). See the Kermit website for more (and perhaps more up-to-date) information about Using C-Kermit.

Your Serial Number Stickers and Registration Card
Explained below.

If you have Kermit 95 as part of a bulk or site license, then you received only the Kermit 95 software and online Kermit 95 (but not C-Kermit) documentation, preregistered and possibly customized for your site. Copies of Using C-Kermit (ISBN 1-55558-164-1) should be available at your organization's library or software licensing office, and can also be ordered separately or purchased in book or computer stores or from Amazon.Com or from the Kermit Project.

[ Top ] [ Contents ] [ K95 Manual ]


2. WHAT'S NEW

Kermit 95 2.1 is an update of version 2.0 to prepare it for shrinkwrap manufacturing. Differences from 2.0 include:

Kermit 95 2.1.3 is a minor update to 2.1 that includes:

[ Top ] [ Contents ] [ K95 Manual ]


3. SYSTEM REQUIREMENTS

All you need to use Kermit 95 are:

The following are not supported:

Windows 95/98/ME and Windows NT/2000/XP are demand-paged virtual memory operating systems, and so the time-honored question, "How much RAM is required?" does not strictly apply to Kermit 95. But as with most Windows applications: the more the better. K95 together with all the DLLs it might use (which in turns depend on which features you elected during installation or invoke at runtime) needs between 5 and 30MB, most of which is (a) shared among multiple copies of K95 and other applications, and (b) usually paged out to disk. Thus the incremental cost of running two, three, four, or more copies of K95 is small.

Kermit 95's total disk footprint after installation is about 42MB, of which about half is the Using C-Kermit PDF file (included only with shrinkwrapped versions). Approximately one additional megabyte is needed when the Dialer is active, for backup and temporary files, depending on the size of your Dialer database.

[ Top ] [ Contents ] [ K95 Manual ]


4. SECURITY AND ENCRYPTION

Kermit 95 is capable of making secure, authenticated, encrypted Internet connections using a variety of methods, all of which include strong cryptography. Effective 16 July 2002, the US Department of Commerce Bureau of Industry and Security has granted Kermit 95 an export license exception allowing export to all countries except Iraq, Iran, Libya, North Korea, Sudan, Syria, and Cuba; a non-cryptographic version is available for those countries.

See the Kermit 95 Online Manual's Network Security Methods Reference for further information on Authentication and Encryption methods supported by Kermit 95.

[ Top ] [ Contents ] [ K95 Manual ]


5. INSTALLING KERMIT 95

New copies of Kermit 1.1.21 and later are installed using a new graphical InstallShield procedure that replaces the text-mode question and answer session of the SETUP.EXE program that came with K95 1.1.20 and earlier. If you are patching up from an original installation of 1.1.20 or earlier, you will never see the InstallShield procedure. If you are installing a new copy Kermit 95, the installation instructions appear on your screen when you install it. You can also read them HERE.

[ Top ] [ Contents ] [ K95 Manual ]


6. UNINSTALLING KERMIT 95

Should you wish to remove Kermit 95 from your Windows 95 system, it depends on how you installed it in the first place. In both cases you should exit from all Kermit programs (K95, the Dialer) first. Then:

If you installed K95 with the text-mode installer (SETUP.EXE):
  1. If you used K95 Registry Tool to add Kermit 95 configuration information into the Windows Registry, run it again to remove the information from the Registry.
  2. Drag the Kermit 95 folder to the Recycle Bin. Do the same with any shortcuts you might have created to Kermit 95.

If you installed K95 with the GUI InstallShield installer:
Simply use Add/Remove Programs in the Windows Control Panel to remove it:
  1. Press the Change/Remove button to re-start the installer.
  2. Select Remove all installed components
  3. The uninstall process deliberately leaves behind certain files associated with Kermit 95, in case you ever re-install K95 and want your customizations intact, or you want to keep files that you downloaded, etc:
    • IKSD.KSC
    • K95CUSTOM.INI
    • DIALUSR.DAT
    • KRB.CON
    • KRBREALM.CON
    • KRB5.INI
    • Each user's application data directory and subdirectories.
    • Each user's DOWNLOAD directory.
    • Any files the K95 Installer didn't install.
    If you wish to remove these files you may do so after the uninstall is complete by deleting the files in the Windows Explorer.
  4. If you have installed Kerberos the uninstall might require a reboot to remove the krbcc32s.exe application that stores your Kerberos credentials in memory.

[ Top ] [ Contents ] [ K95 Manual ]


7. REGISTRATION

If you have a site- or bulk-licensed version of Kermit 95, or if you are upgrading from an earlier version by applying a patch, then your copy of Kermit 95 is already registered, in which case please ignore this section, which applies to the shrinkwrapped package.

If you have downloaded a Try-and-Buy version of K95 or are installing an electronically delivered version of K95, also please ignore this section.

Kermit 95 comes with two serial-number stickers. The serial number on each sticker should be the same.

The installation software includes a registration procedure that asks for your name, company, and Kermit 95 serial number. You should enter your real name, since it will be announced every time you (or anyone else) starts the program. The company name is optional. The serial number must be entered exactly as shown on the sticker: letters, punctuation, and all.

Then please affix ONE of the stickers to your mailback registration card, fill out the card, and mail it back to us. Keep the other sticker as a record of your serial number; for example, in case your PC stops working and you have to install K95 on a new PC. In case you lose your serial number, we'll have a record of it if you sent in your card.

If you have an e-mail address, be sure to include it so we can notify you of new releases or patches (mailings are infrequent and there is no junk mail; the list is private and is not sold or otherwise provided to anyone else for any purpose).

[ Top ] [ Contents ] [ K95 Manual ]


8. RESOURCES

Using C-Kermit, 2nd Edition
The user manual for C-Kermit and the technical reference manual for Kermit95 in PDF format. Included only with shrinkwrapped copies of Kermit 95 1.1.20 and later. Access from the References links in the Kermit 95 manual. Also available in book form.

The C-Kermit 7.0 Update Notes
The C-Kermit 8.0 Update Notes
Kermit 95 1.1.21 and 2.0 are based on C-Kermit 8.0, but Using C-Kermit is current with C-Kermit 6.0. The C-Kermit 7.0 and 8.0 update notes document all the features added to C-Kermit since the second edition of the book was published in 1997. These are fully cross-linked HTML documents, rather than plain text as in earlier K95 releases. Access them via the link in the References section at the top your K95 manual.

The Kermit 95 FAQ
Frequently Asked Questions (and answers) about Kermit 95. If you have a question about Kermit 95, look here first. Access the K95 FAQ via the link in the References section at the top your K95 manual.

The Kermit 95 Bug List
A chronological list of bugs in all the Kermit 95 releases. Most of them have been fixed; most of those that remain are due to bugs or limitations in the underlying operating system. In many cases, workarounds are suggested. If you have problems with Kermit 95, be sure to look here for a discussion of it and a possible solution. This is a fully indexed and crosslinked HTML document, rather than plain text. Access it via the link in the References section at the top your K95 manual.

The Kermit Security Reference
A detailed explanation of Kermit's many security methods, with command lists for each.

http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/
The Kermit Project website on the Internet. Here you will find information about Kermit software for other platforms, news about Kermit 95, hints and tips, script programming examples, and lots more. Internet connection required. Here are some points of interest:

ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/k95/newbugs.txt
The newbugs.txt file at the Kermit Project website. This file lists bugs or other information discovered after this release of Kermit 95 was packaged.

http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/k95.html
The Kermit 95 page.

http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/k95pricing.html
Kermit 95 pricing and licensing options. Details about low-cost bulk right-to-copy licenses and academic site licenses.

http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/k95next.html
News about upcoming K95 releases.

http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ckermit.html
The C-Kermit page, K95's companion software for UNIX, VMS, and other platforms.

http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/support.html
The technical support page, explaining how to get technical support, and including some hints and tips to save you some time.

http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/scriptlib.html
The Kermit Script Library. Lots of sample scripts demonstrating how to automate everything from dialing to Internet sessions to complex file-management and computation tasks.

comp.protocols.kermit.announce
The Kermit software announcements newsgroup (moderated).

comp.protocols.kermit.misc
The Kermit software discussion newsgroup (unmoderated).

[ Top ] [ Contents ] [ K95 Manual ]


9. FILES AND DIRECTORIES

  9.1. The New Directory Structure
  9.2. Patches and Search Order
  9.3. Important K95 Files

Version 1.1.21 of Kermit 95 marks a dramatic departure from earlier versions in file and directory structure. 1.1.20 and earlier stored everything in a single directory tree, such as C:\K95. This was simple to explain, short to type, kept everything together in one place, and made your Kermit files easy to find; for example, when you wanted to edit your K95CUSTOM.INI file. However, the original scheme does mesh with multiuser file systems like the ones on Windows XP or Terminal Server. Not only does it prevent users from having their own separate customization files, dialing directories, download areas, and so on, it also prevents system administrators from being able to enforce appropriate file access permissions on the program tree.

The new directory structure makes server installation much more natural. The Program files directory goes on the server, read-only. The Global (All Users) K95 data directory goes on the server too, with any desired site-specific customizations, and then made read-only too. Then the user-specific K95 data tree goes with the user's other data files in the user's Application Data tree, read/write.


9.1. The New Directory Structure

As of version 1.1.21, Kermit 95 is installed just like any other Windows application. Parts of it go into "Program Files", other parts into the All Users data area, and still others into the user's directory tree. This is the Windows Way of installing applications. The Windows directory paths are long and contain spaces, which tends to confuse text-based programs -- not just Kermit 95, but any program that has commands composed of fields separated by spaces. For this reason Kermit 95 represents these directories by variables that expand into Windows "short names" such as "MYDOCU~1" rather than long names like "My Documents". Kermit 95's new directory structure is as follows:

The Program Directory
Created by: InstallShield (the Kermit 95 installer)
Purpose: Read/Execute-only software, DLLs, icons, documentation.
Win9x/ME: C:\Program Files\Kermit 95\
NT/2000/XP:   C:\Program Files\Kermit 95\
Symbolic Name: EXEDIR
Variable: \v(exedir)
Contents:
  • The Kermit 95 executable, K95.EXE
  • The Dialer, K95DIAL.EXE, and its supporting resources (but not data)
  • Any DLLs needed by Kermit 95 or the Dialer
  • Assorted utilities and scripts
  • The following subdirectories:
    DOCS: Kermit 95 Documentation
    ICONS:    Kermit 95 Icons

Global (All Users) data for K95
Created by: InstallShield
Purpose: Read-only site-specific, site-wide configurations and data.
Win9x/ME: C:\WINDOWS\All Users\Application Data\Kermit 95\
NT/2000/XP:   C:\Documents and Settings\All Users\Application Data\Kermit 95\
Symbolic Name: COMMON
Variable: \v(common)
Contents:
  • Kermit 95's initialization file, K95.INI.
  • Site-specific customization file, K95SITE.INI (new).
  • The DIALINF.DAT Dialer database (factory predefined entries).
  • The DIALORG.DAT Dialer database (organizational predefined entries).
  • The following subdirectories containing data for all users at the site. The files in these directories are initially as distributed with K95, but might be modified by the site administrator:
    CERTS Site-wide X.509 certificates for SSL/TLS.
    CRLS Site-wide X.509 certificate revocation lists for SSL/TLS.
    KEYMAPS    Site-wide key mapping files and information.
    PHONES Site-wide dialing directories.
    PRINTER Printer-related utilities and information
    SCRIPTS Sample and/or production scripts
    SSH Site-specific SSH host keys

NOTE: On Windows NT, 2000, and XP, if the person installing Kermit 95 does not have write access to the All Users tree (e.g. because Administrator privilege is lacking), all of the items listed above for the \v(common) tree are placed instead in the \v(appdata) tree (next item). In Windows 95, 98, and ME, the \v(common) tree is always used as described above.

User-specific data for all applications (s = single-user, m = multiuser):
Created by: Windows 98 and higher when your ID is created. Not standard in Windows 95.
Purpose: Read/Write user-specific data for all applications.
Win95: C:\My Documents\ (if it exists).
Win98/ME (s): C:\My Documents\
Win98/ME (m): C:\WINDOWS\Profiles\username\My Documents\
NT/2000/XP:   C:\Documents and Settings\username\My Documents\
Symbolic Name: PERSONAL
Variable: \v(personal) (might be empty in Win95).
Contents:
  • Kermit's DOWNLOAD directory, possibly shared with AOL, MSN, and other applications.
  • Other data or subdirectories not specific to any particular application.

User-specific data for K95 (s = single-user, m = multiuser):
Created by: Kermit 95 upon first use.
Purpose: Read/Write user-specific configurations and data.
Win9x/ME (s): C:\WINDOWS\Application Data\Kermit 95\
Win9x/ME (m): C:\WINDOWS\Profiles\username\Application Data\Kermit 95\
NT/2000/XP:   C:\Documents and Settings\username\Application Data\Kermit 95\
Symbolic Name APPDATA
Variable: \v(appdata)
Contents:
  • Each user's customization file, K95CUSTOM.INI
  • Each user's DIALUSR.DAT Dialer database
  • For each user, the following subdirectories, initially empty; can be populated by the user:
    CERTS Your personal X.509 certificates for SSL/TSL.
    CRLS Your personal X.509 certificate revocation lists for SSL/TSL.
    DOWNLOAD   Your personal download directory.
    KEYMAPS Your personal key mapping files.
    PHONES Your personal dialing directories.
    SCRIPTS Your personal scripts.
    SSH Your personal SSH host keys.
    TMP Your personal Temporary directory.

The symbolic names are used in K95's new KCD command (Section 10.2) for convenient navigation.

To alleviate confusion, Kermit 95 1.1.21 has a new ORIENTATION command that gives this information as it applies to your computer. Here's an example from Windows XP:

  [C:\Documents and Settings\Olga\] K-95> orient 

  Program name:
    k95

  Your home directory:
    Variable:   \v(home)
    Long name:  C:/Documents and Settings/Olga/
    Short name: C:/DOCUME~1/OLGA/

  K95's current directory:
    Variable:   \v(directory)
    Long name:  C:/Documents and Settings/Olga/
    Short name: C:/DOCUME~1/OLGA/

  K95 Program directory:
    Variable:   \v(exedir)
    Long name:  C:/Program Files/Kermit 95/
    Short name: C:/PROGRAM~/KERMIT~/

  K95 Initialization file directory:
    Variable:   \v(inidir)
    Long name:  C:/Documents and Settings/All Users/Application Data/Kermit 95/
    Short name: C:/DOCUME~1/ALLUSE~1/APPLIC~1/KERMIT~1/

  Current directory when started:
    Variable:   \v(startup)
    Long name:  C:/tmp/
    Short name: C:/tmp/

  K95 data for all users:
    Variable:   \v(common)
    Long name:  C:/Documents and Settings/All Users/Application Data/Kermit 95/
    Short name: C:/DOCUME~1/ALLUSE~1/APPLIC~1/KERMIT~1/

  Your personal data directory tree:
    Variable:   \v(personal)
    Long name:  C:/Documents and Settings/Olga/My Documents/
    Short name: C:/DOCUME~1/OLGA/MYDOCU~1/

  Your deskop directory tree:
    Variable:   \v(desktop)
    Long name:  C:/Documents and Settings/Olga/Desktop/
    Short name: C:/DOCUME~1/OLGA/DESKTOP/

  Your personal K95 data tree:
    Variable:   \v(appdata)
    Long name:  C:/Documents and Settings/Olga/Application Data/Kermit 95/
    Short name: C:/DOCUME~1/OLGA/APPLIC~1/KERMIT~1/

  Your K95 download directory:
    Variable:   \v(download)
    Long name:
    Short name:

For script writers, a pair of new functions has been added to convert between Windows long and short names:

\flongpathname(path)
Converts the given path (file or directory name) from whatever format it's in (short or long) to long format, except in Windows 95 and NT, which do not have this capability, and therefore simply return the path as it was given.

\fshortpathname(path)
Converts the given path to short format.

\flongpathname() (except in Windows 95 and NT) can be used in conjunction with \fpathname(), which returns the full pathname of a given file in short format, to show the full long path for a given file, e.g.:

  K95> cd \v(exedir)
  K95> echo \flongpathname(\fpathname(k95.exe))
  C:\Program Files\Kermit 95\k95.exe
  K95> 


9.2. Patches and Search Order

Those who patch up to version 1.1.21 from earlier releases will have a hybrid structure; the old structure remains as it was, but the new structure is created upon first use of the new K95.EXE or Dialer. This adds an element of doubt as to where a particular file is or, if there are multiple copies, which one is used? The following rules apply:

If you patch up to version 1.1.21 from an earlier version, it is recommended that you convert the old structure to the new one to (a) allow multiple user arrangements, (b) reduce confusion arising from multiple copies of files and directories, and (c) to prepare for an easy transition to K95 2.0. Here's a table summarizing what should be moved where, which can be done at your convenience.

File Old New Description
K95.INI \v(exedir) \v(common) Standard Initialization File
K95SITE.INI --- \v(common) Site-Wide Customization File
K95CUSTOM.INI   \v(exedir)    \v(appdata) Per-User Customization File
DIALINF.DAT \v(exedir) \v(common) Built-in Dialer Entries
DIALORG.DAT \v(exedir) \v(common) Site-Wide Dialer Entries
DIALUSR.DAT \v(exedir) \v(appdata) Per-User Dialer Entries
Directory Old New Description
DOCS \v(exedir) \v(exedir) K95 Documentation
DOWNLOAD \v(exedir) \v(personal) Download Directory
ICONS \v(exedir) \v(exedir) Icons
INCOMING \v(exedir) \v(common) Host Mode Upload Directory (2)
KEYMAPS \v(exedir) \v(common) or \v(appdata)   Key maps and info (1)
PHONES \v(exedir) \v(common) or \v(appdata) Dialing and Network Directories (1)
PRINTER \v(exedir) \v(common) Printer Utilties and Info
PUBLIC \v(exedir) \v(common) Host Mode Public Directory (2)
SCRIPTS \v(exedir) \v(common) or \v(appdata) Kermit Scripts (1)
TMP \v(exedir) \v(appdata) Directory for Temporary Files
USERS \v(exedir) \v(common) Root of Host Mode User Tree (2)

Notes:

  1. In entries that give "\v(common) or \v(appdata)" as new location choices, pick the destination for each file according to whether it's for all users or only for you.
  2. Host Mode should be considered obsolescent, replaceable by WIKSD, at least in Windows NT, 2000, and XP.

HINT: Entire directories and directory trees can be moved with the MOVE command in the Windows Command Prompt or CMD window, provided you have shut down any applications that might be using any of the affected directories or files. Example:

  C:\> cd \k95
  C:\K95\> move phones "\C:\Documents and Settings\Olga\Application Data\Kermit 95\Phones"


9.3. Important K95 Files

  9.3.1. In the Program Directory
  9.3.2. In the All Users Kermit 95 Directory
  9.3.3. In Each User's My Documents Directory
  9.3.4. In Each User's K95 Application Data Directory

9.3.1. In the Program Directory

In multiuser Windows installation, this directory should be writeable only by the system administrator.
SETUP.EXE
The Kermit 95 setup (installation) program. This is the old text-based one, which is being phased out in favor a GUI InstallShield procedure (Windows only). It is not yet clear at this writing whether version 1.1.21 will be packaged for retail, or only downloadable as a patch; it depends on when 2.0 is released. If it is packaged for retail, it will have the GUI installation rather than the text one (except if OS/2).
K95DIAL.EXE
The Kermit 95 Dialer. This is the GUI program that gives you point-and-click access to all your connections. It is normally found in the Program Files Kermit 95 directory. Depending on your selections at install time, you might have a desktop icon and/or Start menu entry for this, as well as for K95.EXE (next item). Location: Program Directory.
K95.EXE
The Kermit 95 program. You can run this directly to bypass the Dialer (normally only Kermit veterans would do this). In version 1.1.21 and earlier, this is the console version of K95.
K95G.EXE
The GUI version of the Kermit 95 program (for future reference).
K95.EXE
The Console version of the Kermit 95 program.
K95D.EXE
An Internet Listener for incoming Host Mode connections.
K95D.CFG
The configuration file for K95D.EXE.
DIALER.DAT
Dialer screen definitions. Note: All *.DAT and *.ZNC files, as well as *.BKn files, are associated with the Dialer.
TELNET.EXE
A "stub" that lets you use Kermit 95 as though its name and command-line personality were those of Telnet.
RLOGIN.EXE
A "stub" that lets you use Kermit 95 as though its name and command-line personality were those of Rlogin.
SSH-AGENT.EXE
The SSH Agent program (explained in the SSH Client documentation.
HOSTMODE.BAT
Run this to start the host-mode management program.
The Program Directory also includes the following subdirectories:
DOCS
Supplemental documentation on various topics.
DOCS\MANUAL
(under the Kermit 95 Program directory) The Kermit 95 Manual, to be accessed with your Web browser. This is done most conveniently from the Dialer's Help menu. This directory also contains the Using C-Kermit PDF file (shrinkwrapped Kermit 95 versions only) and the C-Kermit 7.0 Update Notes, the C-Kermit 8.0 Update Notes, and the Kermit 95 Bug List.
ICONS
Icons for use with K95 data files such as scripts.


9.3.2. In the All Users Kermit 95 Directory

In multiuser Windows installation, this directory should be writeable only by the system administrator.
K95.INI
Initialization file for K95.EXE, normally found in the All Users directory for Kermit 95, but in patched versions is likely to be in the Program Directory. Contains commands that are to be executed every time K95.EXE is started. See Using C-Kermit for more about initialization files. In Kermit 95, however, most of the traditional functions of initialization files are taken over by the Dialer. In any case, you should not change or delete this file; all customizations should be made in:
K95SITE.INI
Site-specific customizations. If this file exists, it is executed by the standard K95.INI file and, in turn, it executes the user's customization file, K95CUSTOM.INI. If this file does not exist, the user's customization file is executed directly. As shipped, Kermit 95 includes a skeleton version of this file that simply prints a message and executes the user's customization file.
CA_CERTS.PEM
Site-wide OpenSSL X.509 Certificate Authority certificates.
DIALINF.DAT
The Kermit 95 Dialer preloaded database (read-only).
DIALORG.DAT
This file is not shipped from the factory. If you wish to have organization/site-wide Dialer entries, they can be created by adding new entries to the Dialer and then renaming the resulting DIALUSR.DAT file to DIALORG.DAT, from which point it is read-only.

The All Users K95 directory also contains the subdirectories listed in the previous section. Of particular interest are:

PHONES
Dialing and network directories for use by everybody at the site.
SCRIPTS
Kermit scripts for use by everybody at the site.
PRINTER
Printer-related utilities, e.g. shell scripts for Unix to send Unix files to your PC printer via K95's Pass-Through Printing feature.
KEYMAPS
Sample and default key maps for reference and/or copying and modification to suit your needs and preferences.
Files in the KEYMAPS directory include:
CTRL2CAP.*
A utility for Win9x/ME for swapping the Ctrl and Caps Lock keys, and optionally the Esc and `/~ keys.
KEYCODES.TXT
A reference listing of K95 and MS-DOS Kermit keycodes (plain text, wide).
DEFAULT.KSC
A listing of K95's default Key mappings for each of its terminal types.
EMACS.KSC
A sample key map for use with the EMACS fullscreen text editor on the host.
SNI.KSC
A sample key map for Siemens-Nixdorf 97801 terminal emulation.
VT220.KSC
A sample key map for Digital Equipment Corporation VT220 terminal emulation.


9.3.3. In Each User's My Documents Directory

This directory is for keeping data files that are not necessarily associated with a particular application. This is where K95's DOWNLOAD directory goes, since the files you download with Kermit might be for any application at all. For this reason, your My Documents directory can also contain other material, unrelated to K95.

In Windows 95, the user's My Documents directory does not necessarily exist, since it is not part of the standard Windows 95 directory layout (it was first added in Windows 98). But it still might have been created by a Microsoft Office component, Internet Explorer, or some other Microsoft application. If it does exist, and it does not already have a DOWNLOAD subdirectory, K95 installation creates one. If it does not exist, no DOWNLOAD directory is created.

Note that the \v(download) variable does not necessarily denote Kermit's download directory. Initially, this variable has no value. It takes on a value only when you have designated a download directory, either on the General page of a Dialer entry, or with Kermit's SET FILE DOWNLOAD-DIRECTORY command. The \v(personal)DOWNLOAD directory is an obvious choice, but you can designate any directory you like for this purpose, or none at all, in which case downloaded files go into K95's current directory, in the absence of explicit instructions to the contrary.

If you want K95 to save downloaded files in its current directory by default, leave its out-of-the-box configuration alone. If you want it to save all downloaded files in one specific directory by default, then do this in the Dialer, or edit your K95CUSTOM.INI file (next section) to include a SET FILE DOWNLOAD-DIRECTORY command.


9.3.4. In Each User's K95 Application Data Directory

In multiuser Windows installation, each Kermit 95 user automatically gets her/his own K95 application data directory upon first use of K95 1.1.21 or later. This directory tree allows full read/write access to its owner.
K95CUSTOM.INI
Customization file for K95.EXE, normally found in the user-specific data directory for Kermit 95 (\v(appdata)), or in patched versions in the Program Directory (\v(exedir)). On multiuser file systems, each user should have her/his own copy of this file. You may edit your copy to change your customizations, add new ones, define macros, special keys, and so on. In newly installed copies of K95 1.1.21, a sample copy of this file is copied from the \v(common) directory to the user's \v(appdata) directory the first time the user starts K95. The customization file is never modifed by Patch or InstallShield.

DIALUSR.DAT
Your personal Dialer database (read/write). The K95 Dialer creates this file for you the first time you add, clone, or change an entry.

Your Personal K95 Read/Write Subdirectories:
CERTS (X.509 certificates for SSL/TLS), CRLS (X.509 certificate revocation lists for SSL/TLS), KEYMAPS (key mapping files), PHONES (dialing and network directories), SCRIPTS (scripts), SSH (SSH host keys), TMP (temporary directory). These are initially empty. Some of them are used by K95; for example to when adding SSH host keys when you make a connection to a new host. Others are for your own use; for example, for installing X.509 certificates for hosts that you visit, personalized key maps, your own scripts, etc.


10. ORIENTATION AND NAVIGATION

  10.1. K95's Initial Directory
  10.2. K95's CD Command
  10.3. Where Is My Customization File?
  10.4. Where is the File I Just Downloaded?
  10.5. Structure of .INI Files
The new directory structure, although necessary for all the reasons listed above, can bewilder even seasoned K95 users. Here we try to clarify some confusing points, primarily for those who use K95 directly at its command prompt.

10.1. K95's Initial Directory

Kermit 95's current directory when you first start it depends on how you started it, which initialization files it executed, and whether an environment variable named HOME is defined to be a valid directory name.

Any of these can be changed by the initialization file sequence, except when starting from the Dialer since, in that case, the instructions emitted by the Dialer are executed after the initialization files.


10.2. K95's CD Command

To simplify navigation among K95's many directories, Kermit 95 2.0 (but not 1.1.21) has a new KCD command that takes as an operand the symbolic name of any of the directories that are significant to K95:

  [C:\Tmp\] K-95> kcd ? Symbolic directory name, one of the following:
   appdata   desktop   exedir    inidir    startup   tmpdir
   common    download  home      personal  textdir
  [C:\Tmp\] K-95> kcd exedir
  [C:\Program Files\Kermit 95\] K-95>

Unlike the variable names described below, such as \v(exedir), you can abbreviate symbolic names, use completion on them, etc, just like any other command keyword.

The remainder of this section was written for version 1.1.21, but still applies to version 2.00.

When Kermit 95 is installed the new way described in the previous section, the CD command can be confusing. Here are a few tips that might help:

You can get additional information about CD, BACK, CDUP, SET CD, or any other command, by giving a HELP command for it at the K-95> prompt, e.g. "help set cd".


10.3. Where Is My Customization File?

K95 1.1.21 (and later), when installed from scratch, looks for your K95CUSTOM.INI file in your \v(appdata) directory. If it does not find it there, it looks in K95's program directory, \v(exedir). In the old days, when we said "edit your customization file", this generally meant something simple like:

  K-95> edit c:/k95/k95custom.ini

Now it means something like this:

  K-95> edit "C:/Documents and Settings/Olga/Application Data/Kermit 95/k95custom.ini"

But who wants to type all that? Instead you can use this:

  K-95> edit \v(appdata)k95custom.ini

Of course if that's not where it really is you might need something more elaborate, like this:

  if exist \v(appdata)k95custom.ini edit \v(appdata)k95custom.ini
  else if exist \v(exedir)k95custom.ini edit \v(exedir)k95custom.ini
  else echo "Where is it?"

HINT: If you installed K95 1.1.21 from patches and fear that you might have multiple K95CUSTOM.INI files lurking in various directories, of course you can find them all with Windows Search or Find. Then edit each one to include a line like this:

  echo EXECUTING \v(user)'s \flongpathname(\fpathname(\v(cmdfile)))...

Then when K95 starts, this line prints the full pathname of the customization file that was actually executed.


10.4. Structure of .INI Files

In K95 1.1.21 and later, which can run remotely in its WIKSD guise, adds a new complication to construction of K95's .INI files because certain K95 commands are not legal in WIKSD. These include:

Yet if you log in through WIKSD using your own Windows ID, then your own K95CUSTOM.INI file -- which is likely to contain many such commands -- is executed. If you are going to be accessing the same computer from its physical keyboard and screen (or facsimile thereof) and remotely via WIKSD, your K95CUSTOM.INI file should separate the commonly valid commands from the ones that can only be executed by K95.EXE and not by WIKSD. It's easy. Just put the common commands at the top, then:

  if iksd end 0 IKSD Setup Complete.

And then the rest of your K95 customizations. If you do not protect commands like SET TERMINAL, SET KEY, and so on, by IF [ NOT ] IKSD, you'll get tons of error messages when you log in to WIKSD. The same guidelines should be followed by the system administrator when setting up the K95.INI and K95SITE.INI files. The K95*.INI files that we distribute with version 1.1.21 have this structure already, but if you install 1.1.21 by patching, your old .INI files are preserved.


10.5. Where is the File I Just Downloaded?

Rather than try to enumerate the rules and their relative precedence, let's just say how to get this information during the transfer and after the transfer:

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Kermit 95 README / Version 2.1.3 / 1 January 2003