I am using a really great free Win32 based console telnet program called
Console Telnet(ftp://argeas.cs-net.gr/Telnet-Win32/) under Windows NT. It
(like most telnet applications I've experienced) uses the following format
for it's key maps:
VK_F1 \0301
VK_F2 \0302
VK_F3 \0303
VK_F4 \0304
VK_F5 \0305
VK_F6 \0306
VK_F7 \0307
VK_F8 \0308
VK_F9 \0309
VK_F10 \0300
VK_F11 \030-
VK_F12 \030=
VK_F1 SHIFT ^[[Y
VK_F2 SHIFT ^[[Z
(By the way, the first 12 work)
It doesn't lend well to the system of Ctrl^a Ctrl^1 for doing things. For
example the sequence \030a\0301 for Alt+F1 doesn't work.
I have read the help screen that is viewed by pressing Ctrl + ^ H. That is
how I got F1-F12 to work, but I don't understand what Ctrl^K0 (Insert)
means.
In an older document buried deep in the help of DosEmu there was an
alternate keymap file (that would apparently affect the entire Linux system)
that worked better for telnet, but considering the age of the document, I
was extremely wary of implementing it.
I would love some help getting this working. Has anyone else gotten all the
keys to work when using DOSEMU through Telnet? Send me your key map file...
TIA
Matthew E. Nuzum
IS Director
Florida Vacation Accommodations
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Friday, October 22, 1999 6:54 PM
To: Matthew Nuzum
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: keyboard mapping
> From: Matthew Nuzum <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Date: Fri, 22 Oct 1999 11:53:58 -0400
> Is there anyone out there using DOS-EMU with a telnet client other than
> Power-Term that has full access to their keyboard including the Alt+F? and
> Ctrl+F? keys? I would like to use one of the many free, open source
A question: I guess you telnet Linux box, where DosEmu is
used, from another computer, used as terminal. What system
is used on the terminal? For DOS clone, it is possible to
find many telnet clients, and I wrote a program which works
as keyboard converter - it sends to the telnet proper codes
for DosEmu to see almost all keys as they are pressed on
the terminal (only exception is CapsLock, which performs
its normal action of uppercasing letters, but its state is
not sent to DosEmu - simply it has no definition for it;
and I use the CapsLock to send control sequences to the
terminal emulator - otherwise it might be hard to get out,
note usual Alt-Ctrl-Del would be passed to DosEmu, too ;-).