On 21/03/2019 13:33, Michael Olbrich wrote:
On Thu, Mar 21, 2019 at 12:46:40PM +0000, Ian Abbott wrote:
On 20/03/2019 15:41, Michael Olbrich wrote:
On Wed, Mar 20, 2019 at 12:41:47PM +0000, Ian Abbott wrote:
On 20/03/2019 09:15, Dold, Wolfram wrote:
On Tue, 2019-03-19 at 17:42 +0000, Ian Abbott wrote:
On 19/03/2019 12:33, Dold, Wolfram wrote:
Hi Ian,
On Tue, 2019-03-19 at 12:06 +0000, Ian Abbott wrote:
On 19/03/2019 09:17, Dold, Wolfram wrote:
Hi there,
when we connect via ssh to our embedded device, the backspace key does not work.
During the analysis we found out that the passage

# This fixes the backspace when telnetting in.
if [ "$TERM" != "linux" ]; then
             stty erase ^H
fi

from the file '/etc/profile' contained in ptxdist.

Now I want to ask, how best to fix this behavior?
Can the passage simply be omitted? (At least the comment lets me assume that, 
because there 'telnet' is
mentioned
and
that is no longer necessarily state of the art).
Or does omitting it lead to other unwanted side effects?

Any help would be appreciated.
[snip because it's getting a bit long]

I've no idea why that bit of the /etc/profile file is there, but I guess it
must have suited one of the PTXdist developers at the time.  A "git blame"
only revealed that the whole file was added in 2006, so I don't know how
relevant that part of it is today.

This code was moved around some more. It was actually introduced in the
initial import from CVS in 2003 :-). Telnet works just fine without this,
so I guess this is no longer needed.

Perhaps it was there for the Windows Telnet client which seems to send ASCII
BS when the "Backspace" key is pressed and ASCII DEL when the (less
conveniently placed) "Delete" key is pressed.  This mimics the codes sent by
the VT-102 "Backspace" and "Delete" keys which were both conveniently
placed.

The Windows telnet client has a -t option to set the terminal type to one of
"vt100", "vt52", "ansi", or "vtnt", but it doesn't pass the selected
terminal type to the server, and this doesn't seem to have any effect on the
codes sent by the "Backspace" and "Delete" keys.  The TERM environment
variable ends up getting set to "vt102" by default on my PTXdist systems if
a terminal type hasn't been passed through by the Telnet client.  I don't
know if that is configurable.

The Windows Telnet client isn't installed by default, but can still be
installed as a "Windows Feature".  I guess most people who used it would
have switched to something like PuTTY by now.

I'm pretty sure it was a Linux issue. I remember having problems like this
a long time ago.

I'll be happy to apply a patch that removes this.

I'm worried that doing so might annoy some people who expect the existing
behavior.

I'd rather fix a real problem. If it causes issues, then we'll try to find
a solution.

Changing it would probably annoy gtkterm users, and annoy minicom users less so. For both of those, the Backspace key sends BS by default. There is an option to change it to DEL in minicom, but no such option in gtkterm (or if it exists, it is well hidden!). (Personally, I prefer minimalist, dumb serial terminal emulators such as picocom, nanocom, and microcom which just run inside a local terminal session.)

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