John Davidorff Pell wrote: > To turn on echo you can just run `stty echo'. :-) > > I'm very intreagued by your abuse of screen. You've solved (in a > rather obtuse way) a dilema I've had for a while! How to reverse > ssh! :-D > > JP >
Hehe, My coleagues also think that I am a bit nutty :) - always trying to ask hard questions, solve atypical situations. We are mostly M$ shop here, but also have a couple of people, who prefer to work on Linux. Me - I'm just starting to discover it... Step by step - a bit of cygwin at work, dual boot to Win/Lin at home :) What I've noticed, that even among the current Linux users the old and glorious tty lore is often forgotten, or not understood enough. The GUI is rampant everywhere ;). Thats why I'm fascinated with screen. Its like the old antiquity, archeologic artefact from ancient times, long forgotten lore of commanding text screens, swiss army knife manage the terminals :D >To turn on echo you can just run `stty echo'. :-) Thanks for a tip. Seems like i've haven't read the approriate man page. Oh well :) "How to reverse ssh" - interesting, in fact my original formulation of the question was exactly this!! :D Only when writting the letter, I've reformulated the question and broken it into smaller pieces - for better understanding. In fact I solved this problem by decomposing it into 2 problems. One "to flip over" the console at remote end of the ssh pipe. This is achieved with - exec screen -D -m `tty` The other to attach bash to the local end of the ssh pipe. Here I simply run ssh in screen, and then attach bash as a screen session subprocess - exec ::: /bin/bash PS forgive me my graphomania :) -- Tomas Juknevicius _______________________________________________ screen-users mailing list [email protected] http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/screen-users
