|
|
| |
X3270-SCRIPT(1) |
FreeBSD General Commands Manual |
X3270-SCRIPT(1) |
Scripting Facilities for x3270, c3270 and s3270
x3270 -script [ x3270-options ]
x3270 -socket [ x3270-options ]
x3270 -scriptport port [
x3270-options ]
c3270 -socket [ c3270-options ]
c3270 -scriptport port [ s3270-options ]
s3270 [ s3270-options ]
Script ( command [ ,arg... ] )
The x3270 scripting facilities allow the interactive 3270 emulators
x3270 and c3270 to be operated under the control of another
program, and forms the basis for the script-only emulator s3270.
There are four basic scripting methods. The first is the peer
script facility, invoked by the x3270 -script switch, and
the default mode for s3270. This runs the emulator as a child of
another process. Typically this would be a script using expect(1),
perl(1), or the co-process facility of the Korn Shell ksh(1).
In this mode, the emulator process looks for commands on its standard input,
and places the responses on standard output.
The second method is the child script facility, invoked by
the emulator's Script() action. This runs a script as a child process
of the emulator. The child has access to pipes connected to the emulator;
the emulator looks for commands on one pipe, and places the responses on the
other. The file descriptor of the pipe for commands to the emulator is
passed in the environment variable X3270INPUT (e.g., the text string
"7" if the file descriptor is 7); the file descriptor of the pipe
for responses from the emulator is passed in the environment variable
X3270OUTPUT.
The third method uses a TCP socket. The -scrpiptport
command-line option causes the emulator to bind a socket to the specified
port (on the IPv4 loopback address, 127.0.0.1). The emulator accepts TCP
connections on that port. Multiple commands and responses can be sent over
each connection.
The fourth method uses a Unix-domain socket. The -socket
command-line option causes the emulator to create a Unix-domain stream
socket named /tmp/x3sck.pid. The emulator accepts connections
to that socket. Multiple commands and responses can be sent over each
connection.
It is possible to nest the methods. For example, a peer or TCP
socket script can invoke the Script() action. The calling script will
be resumed when the nested script completes.
Commands are emulator actions; the syntax is the same as
for the right-hand side of an x3270 or c3270 keymap. Unlike
translation tables, action names are case-insensitive, can be uniquely
abbreviated, and the parentheses may be omitted if there are no parameters.
Any input line that begins with # or ! is treaded as a comment
and will be ignored.
Any emulator action may be specified. Several specific actions
have been defined for use by scripts, and the behavior of certain other
actions (and of the emulators in general) is different when an action is
initiated by a script.
Some actions generate output; some may delay completion until the
certain external events occur, such as the host unlocking the keyboard. The
completion of every command is marked by a two-line message. The first line
is the current status of the emulator, documented below. If the command is
successful, the second line is the string "ok"; otherwise it is
the string "error".
The status message consists of 12 blank-separated fields:
- 1 Keyboard State
- If the keyboard is unlocked, the letter U. If the keyboard is
locked waiting for a response from the host, or if not connected to a
host, the letter L. If the keyboard is locked because of an
operator error (field overflow, protected field, etc.), the letter
E.
- 2 Screen Formatting
- If the screen is formatted, the letter F. If unformatted or in NVT
mode, the letter U.
- 3 Field Protection
- If the field containing the cursor is protected, the letter P. If
unprotected or unformatted, the letter U.
- 4 Connection State
- If connected to a host, the string C(hostname).
Otherwise, the letter N.
- 5 Emulator Mode
- If connected in 3270 mode, the letter I. If connected in NVT line
mode, the letter L. If connected in NVT character mode, the letter
C. If connected in unnegotiated mode (no BIND active from the
host), the letter P. If not connected, the letter N.
- 6 Model Number (2-5)
- 7 Number of Rows
- The current number of rows defined on the screen. The host can request
that the emulator use a 24x80 screen, so this number may be smaller than
the maximum number of rows possible with the current model.
- 8 Number of Columns
- The current number of columns defined on the screen, subject to the same
difference for rows, above.
- 9 Cursor Row
- The current cursor row (zero-origin).
- 10 Cursor Column
- The current cursor column (zero-origin).
- 11 Window ID
- The X window identifier for the main x3270 window, in hexadecimal
preceded by 0x. For s3270 and c3270, this is
zero.
- 12 Command Execution Time
- The time that it took for the host to respond to the previous commnd, in
seconds with milliseconds after the decimal. If the previous command did
not require a host response, this is a dash.
When an action is initiated by a script, the emulators behave in several
different ways:
If an error occurs in processing an action, the usual pop-up
window does not appear. Instead, the text is written to standard output.
If end-of-file is detected on standard input, the emulator exits.
(A script can exit without killing the emulator by using the
CloseScript() action, below.) Note that this applies to peer scripts
only; end-of-file on the pipe connected to a child script simply causes the
pipes to be closed and the Script() action to complete.
The Quit() action always causes the emulator to exit. (When
called from the keyboard, it will exit only if not connected to a host.)
Normally, the AID actions (Clear(), Enter(),
PF(), and PA()) will not complete until the host unlocks the
keyboard. If the parameter to a String() action includes a code for
one these actions, it will also wait for the keyboard to unlock before
proceeding.
The AidWait toggle controls with behavior. When this toggle
is set (the default), actions block as described above. When the toggle is
clear, AID actions complete immediately. The Wait(output) action can
then be used to delay a script until the host changes something on the
screen, and the Wait(unlock) action can be used to delay a script
until the host unlocks the keyboard, regardless of the state of the
AidWait toggle.
Note that the Script() action does not complete until
end-of-file is detected on the pipe or the CloseScript() action is
called by the child process. This behavior is not affected by the state of
the AidWait toggle.
3270 session scripting can be more difficult than other kinds of scripting,
because it can be hard to tell when the host is finished processing a command.
There is a well-defined 3270 Data Stream facility for doing this: The emulator
locks the keyboard when it sends the host an AID, and the later host unlocks
the keyboard. The emulator supports this facility directly by not allowing an
AID action to complete until the keyboard is unlocked. Unfortunately, some
hosts and some host applications unlock the keyboard as soon as they begin
processing the command, instead of after it is finished. A human operator can
see on the screen when the command is finished (e.g., when a READY prompt is
displayed), but it can be difficult for a script to do this. For such
early-unlock hosts, the only option in a script is to poll the screen until it
can determine that the command is complete.
Another complication is that host I/O and script operation are
asynchronous. That is, the host can update the screen at any time, even
between actions that are reading the screen contents, so a script can get
inconsistent results. Assistance for this problem is provided by the
Snap() action. The Snap(save) action saves a snapshot of the
screen in a special buffer. Then the script can use Snap() variants
of the Ascii1() and Ebcdic1() actions (Snap(Ascii1) and
Snap(Ebcdic1)) to query the saved buffer -- which the host cannot
modify -- to get the data it wants. Finally, Snap(wait,output) blocks
the script until the host modifies the screen, specifically since the last
call to Snap(save). Thus a script can poll the screen efficiently by
writing a loop that begins with Snap(save) and ends with
Snap(wait,output).
The following actions have been defined or modified for use with scripts. Note
that actions that use row and column coordinates generally use an origin of 1,
with row 1 at the top and column 1 at the left. This is consistent with the
on-screen cursor position and data stream trace messages.
- AnsiText()
- Outputs whatever data that has been output by the host in NVT mode since
the last time that AnsiText() was called. The data is preceded by
the string "data: ", and has had all control characters
expanded into C backslash sequences.
- This is a convenient way to capture NVT mode output in a synchronous
manner without trying to decode the screen contents.
- Ascii1(row,col,rows,cols)
- Ascii1(row,col,length)
- Ascii1(length)
- Ascii1()
- Outputs an ASCII text representation of the screen contents. Each line is
preceded by the string "data: ", and there are no control
characters.
- If four parameters are given, a rectangular region of the screen is
output. (Note that the row and column are 1-origin.)
- If three parameters are given, length characters are output,
starting at the specified 1-origin row and column.
- If only the length parameter is given, that many characters are
output, starting at the cursor position.
- If no parameters are given, the entire screen is output.
- The EBCDIC-to-ASCII translation and output character set depend on the
both the emulator host code page (the -codepage option) and the
locale. UTF-8 and certain DBCS locales may result in multi-byte expansions
of EBCDIC characters that translate to ASCII codes greater than 0x7f.
- AsciiField()
- Outputs an ASCII text representation of the field containing the cursor.
The text is preceded by the string "data: ".
- Connect(hostname)
- Connects to a host. The command does not return until the emulator is
successfully connected in the proper mode, or the connection fails.
- CloseScript(status)
- Causes the emulator to stop reading commands from the script. This is
useful to allow a peer script to exit, with the emulator proceeding
interactively. (Without this command, the emulator would exit when it
detected end-of-file on standard input.) If the script was invoked by the
Script() action, the optional status is used as the return
status of Script(); if nonzero, Script() will complete with
an error, and if this script was invoked as part of login through the
ibm_hosts file, the connection will be broken.
- Disconnect()
- Disconnects from the host.
- Ebcdic1(row,col,rows,cols)
- Ebcdic1(row,col,length)
- Ebcdic1(length)
- Ebcdic1()
- The same function as Ascii1() above, except that rather than
generating ASCII text, each character is output as a 2-digit or 4-digit
hexadecimal EBCDIC code.
- EbcdicField()
- The same function as AsciiField() above, except that it generates
hexadecimal EBCDIC codes.
- Info(message)
- In x3270, pops up an informational message. In c3270 and wc3270, writes an
informational message to the OIA (the line below the display). Not defined
for s3270 or tcl3270.
- Expect(text[,timeout])
- Pauses the script until the specified text appears in the data
stream from the host, or the specified timeout (in seconds)
expires. If no timeout is specified, the default is 30 seconds.
Text can contain standard C-language escape (backslash) sequences.
No wild-card characters or pattern anchor characters are understood.
Expect() is valid only in NVT mode.
- MoveCursor1(row,col)
- Moves the cursor to the specified 1-origin coordinates.
- MoveCursor1(offset)
- Moves the cursor to the specified offset. Offset 0 is the upper left-hand
corner of the screen.
- PrintText([command,]filter)
- Pipes an ASCII representation of the current screen image through the
named filter, e.g., lpr.
- PrintText([html,][append,][replace,]file,filename)
- Saves the current screen contents in a file. With the html option,
saves it as HTML, otherwise saves it as plain ASCII. The append
option (the default) causes the data to be appended to the file if it
already exists. The replace option causes the file to be
overwritten instead.
- PrintText(html,string)
- Returns the current screen contents as HTML.
- Query(keyword)
- Returns state information. Keywords are:
Keyword |
output |
BindPluName |
BIND PLU returned by the host |
ConnectionState |
TN3270/TN3270E mode and submode |
CodePage |
Host code page |
Cursor |
Cursor position (row col) zero-origin |
Cursor1 |
Cursor position (row col) 1-origin |
Formatted |
3270 format state (formatted or unformatted) |
Host |
Host name and port |
LocalEncoding |
Local character encoding |
LuName |
Host name LU name |
Model |
3270 model name (IBM-327x-n) |
ScreenCurSize |
Current screen size (rows cols) |
ScreenMaxSize |
Maximum screen size (rows cols) |
Tls |
TLS state (secure or not-secure) and host validation state
(host-verified or host-unverified) |
- Without a keyword, Query() returns each of the defined
attributes, one per line, labeled by its name.
- ReadBuffer(ascii)
- Dumps the contents of the screen buffer, one line per row. Each buffer
position inside a data field is generally output as a 2-digit hexadecimal
code, translated from the host EBCDIC code page to the current locale.
(E.g., the EBCDIC value for the letter A in host code page 037 is X'C1'.
In ASCII, this is 0x41, so it is output as 41.) If the current
locale specifies a multi-byte character set such as UTF-8, some positions
may be output as 4-, 6- or 8-digit codes. (E.g., in host code page 037,
the EBCDIC value for a U+00ac NOT symbol is X'5F'. In UTF-8, this is 0xc2,
0xac, so it is output as c2ac.) DBCS characters take two positions
in the screen buffer; the first location is output as a multi-byte code,
and the second location is output as a dash. Start-of-field characters
(each of which takes up a display position) are output as
SF(aa=nn[,...]), where aa is a field attribute type and
nn is its value.
Attribute |
Values |
c0 basic 3270 |
20 protected |
|
10 numeric |
|
04 detectable |
|
08 intensified |
|
0c non-display |
|
01 modified |
41 highlighting |
f1 blink |
|
f2 reverse |
|
f4 underscore |
|
f8 intensify |
42 foreground |
f0 neutral black |
|
f1 blue |
|
f2 red |
|
f3 pink |
|
f4 green |
|
f5 turquoise |
|
f6 yellow |
|
f7 neutral white |
|
f8 black |
|
f9 deep blue |
|
fa orange |
|
fb purple |
|
fc pale green |
|
fd pale turquoise |
|
fe grey |
|
ff white |
43 character set |
f0 default |
|
f1 APL |
|
f8 DBCS |
- Extended attributes (which do not take up display positions) are output as
SA(aa=nn), with aa and nn having the same definitions
as above (though the basic 3270 attribute will never appear as an extended
attribute).
- NULL characters in the screen buffer are reported as ASCII character 00
instead of 20, even though they are displayed as blanks.
- ReadBuffer(ebcdic)
- Equivalent to ReadBuffer(ascii), but with the data fields
output as hexadecimal EBCDIC codes. If a buffer position has the Graphic
Escape attribute, it is displayed as GE(xx). If a buffer
position was written in NVT mode, it does not have an EBCDIC value, and
will be displayed as 00.
- ReadBuffer(unicode)
- Equivalent to ReadBuffer(ascii), but with the data fields
output as 4-digit hexadecimal Unicode values.
- ReadBuffer(field)
- Dumps information about the current field. ascii, ebcdic and
unicode keywords are also accepted. The output consists of keywords
and parameters. Note that `field start' is the location of the
start-of-field character, which is displayed on the screen as a blank to
the left of the field, and is dumped as SF. The Contents
line is always last.
Keyword |
Parameters |
Meaning |
Start1 |
row col |
Field start coordinates (1-origin) |
StartOffset |
offset |
Field start location as offset |
Cursor1 |
row col |
Cursor coordinates (1-origin) |
CursorOffset |
offset |
Cursor location as offset |
Contents |
contents |
Field contents on one line in ReadBuffer() format |
- Script(path[,arg...])
- Runs a child script, passing it optional command-line arguments.
path must specify an executable (binary) program: the emulator will
create a new process and execute it. If you simply want the emulator to
read commands from a file, use the Source() action.
- Snap()
- Equivalent to Snap(save) (see below).
- Snap(Ascii1,...)
- Performs the Ascii1 action on the saved screen image.
- Snap(Cols)
- Returns the number of columns in the saved screen image.
- Snap(Ebcdic1,...)
- Performs the Ebcdic1() action on the saved screen image.
- Snap(ReadBuffer)
- Performs the ReadBuffer() action on the saved screen image.
- Snap(Rows)
- Returns the number of rows in the saved screen image.
- Snap(save)
- Saves a copy of the screen image and status in a temporary buffer. This
copy can be queried with other Snap() actions to allow a script to
examine a consistent screen image, even when the host may be changing the
image (or even the screen dimensions) dynamically.
- Snap(status)
- Returns the status line from when the screen was last saved.
- Snap(wait[,timeout],output)
- Pauses the script until the host sends further output, then updates the
snap buffer with the new screen contents. Used when the host unlocks the
keyboard (allowing the script to proceed after an Enter(),
PF() or PA() action), but has not finished updating the
screen. This action is usually invoked in a loop that uses the
Snap(Ascii1) or Snap(Ebcdic1) action to scan the screen for
some pattern that indicates that the host has fully processed the last
command.
- The optional timeout parameter specifies a number of seconds to
wait before failing the Snap() action. The default is to wait
indefinitely.
- Source(file)
- Read and execute commands from file. Any output from those commands
will become the output from Source(). If any of the commands fails,
the Source() command will not abort; it will continue
reading commands until EOF.
- Title(text)
- Changes the x3270 window title to text.
- Transfer(keyword=value,...)
- Invokes IND$FILE file transfer. See FILE TRANSFER below.
- Wait([timeout,] 3270mode)
- Used when communicating with a host that switches between NVT mode and
3270 mode. Pauses the script or macro until the host negotiates 3270 mode,
then waits for a formatted screen as above.
- The optional timeout parameter specifies a number of seconds to
wait before failing the Wait() action. The default is to wait
indefinitely.
- For backwards compatibility, Wait(3270) is equivalent to
Wait(3270mode)
- Wait([timeout,] disconnect)
- Pauses the script until the host disconnects. Often used to after sending
a logoff command to a VM/CMS host, to ensure that the session is
not unintentionally set to disconnected state.
- The optional timeout parameter specifies a number of seconds to
wait before failing the Wait() action. The default is to wait
indefinitely.
- Wait([timeout,] inputfield)
- A useful utility for use at the beginning of scripts and after the
Connect() action. In 3270 mode, waits until the screen is
formatted, and the host has positioned the cursor on a modifiable field.
In NVT mode, waits until the host sends at least one byte of data.
- The optional timeout parameter specifies a number of seconds to
wait before failing the Wait() action. The default is to wait
indefinitely.
- For backwards compatibility, Wait is equivalent to
Wait(inputfield).
- Wait([timeout,] nvtmode)
- Used when communicating with a host that switches between 3270 mode and
NVT mode. Pauses the script or macro until the host negotiates NVT mode,
then waits for a byte from the host as above.
- The optional timeout parameter specifies a number of seconds to
wait before failing the Wait() action. The default is to wait
indefinitely.
- For backwards compatibility, Wait(ansi) is equivalent to
Wait(nvtmode).
- Wait([timeout,] output)
- Pauses the script until the host sends further output. Often needed when
the host unlocks the keyboard (allowing the script to proceed after a
Clear(), Enter(), PF() or PA() action), but
has not finished updating the screen. Also used in non-blocking AID mode
(see DIFFERENCES for details). This action is usually invoked in a loop
that uses the Ascii1() or Ebcdic1() action to scan the
screen for some pattern that indicates that the host has fully processed
the last command.
- The optional timeout parameter specifies a number of seconds to
wait before failing the Wait() action. The default is to wait
indefinitely.
- Wait([timeout,] unlock)
- Pauses the script until the host unlocks the keyboard. This is useful when
operating in non-blocking AID mode (toggle AidWait clear), to wait
for a host command to complete. See DIFFERENCES for details).
- The optional timeout parameter specifies a number of seconds to
wait before failing the Wait() action. The default is to wait
indefinitely.
- Wait(timeout, seconds)
- Delays the script timeout seconds. Unlike the other forms of
Wait(), the timeout is not optional.
- WindowState(mode)
- If mode is iconic, changes the x3270 window into an icon. If
mode is normal, changes the x3270 window from an icon to a
normal window.
The Transfer() action implements IND$FILE file transfer. This
action requires that the IND$FILE program be installed on the IBM host,
and that the 3270 cursor be located in a field that will accept a TSO or
VM/CMS command.
Because of the complexity and number of options for file transfer,
the parameters to the Transfer() action can take the unique form of
option=value. They can also be given with their parameters
separately. Options can appear in any order. Note that if the value
contains spaces (such as a VM/CMS file name), then the entire parameter must
be quoted, e.g., "hostfile=xxx foo a". With sequential
options, this would be hostfile,"xxx foo a". The options
are:
Option |
Required? |
Default |
Other Values |
direction |
No |
receive |
send |
hostfile |
Yes |
|
|
localfile |
Yes |
|
|
host |
No |
tso |
vm, cics |
mode |
No |
ascii |
binary |
cr |
No |
remove |
add, keep |
remap |
No |
yes |
no |
exist |
No |
keep |
replace, append |
recfm |
No |
|
fixed, variable, undefined |
lrecl |
No |
|
|
blksize |
No |
|
|
allocation |
No |
|
tracks, cylinders, avblock |
primaryspace |
Sometimes |
|
|
secondaryspace |
No |
|
|
avblock |
Sometimes |
|
|
buffersize |
No |
4096 |
|
The option details are as follows.
- direction
- send to send a file to the host, receive to receive a file
from the host.
- hostfile
- The name of the file on the host.
- localfile
- The name of the file on the local workstation.
- host
- The type of host (which dictates the form of the IND$FILE command):
tso (the default), vm or cics.
- mode
- Use ascii (the default) for a text file, which will be translated
between EBCDIC and ASCII as necessary. Use binary for non-text
files.
- cr
- Controls how newline characters are handled when transferring
mode=ascii files. remove (the default) strips newline
characters in local files before transferring them to the host. add
adds newline characters to each host file record before transferring it to
the local workstation. keep preserves newline characters when
transferring a local file to the host.
- remap
- Controls text translation for mode=ascii files. The value
yes (the default) causes x3270 to remap the text to ensure maximum
compatibility between the workstation's character set and encoding and the
host's EBCDIC code page. The value no causes x3270 to pass the text
to or from the host as-is, leaving all translation to the IND$FILE
program on the host.
- exist
- Controls what happens when the destination file already exists.
keep (the default) preserves the file, causing the
Transfer() action to fail. replace overwrites the
destination file with the source file. append appends the source
file to the destination file.
- recfm
- Controls the record format of files created on the host. (TSO and VM hosts
only.) fixed creates a file with fixed-length records.
variable creates a file with variable-length records.
undefined creates a file with undefined-length records (TSO hosts
only). The lrecl option controls the record length or maximum
record length for recfm=fixed and recfm=variable files,
respectively.
- lrecl
- Specifies the record length (or maximum record length) for files created
on the host. (TSO and VM hosts only.)
- blksize
- Specifies the block size for files created on the host. (TSO and VM hosts
only.)
- allocation
- Specifies the units for the primaryspace and secondaryspace
options: tracks, cylinders or avblock. (TSO hosts
only.)
- primaryspace
- Primary allocation for a file. The units are given by the
allocation option. Required when the allocation is specified
as something other than default. (TSO hosts only.)
- secondaryspace
- Secondary allocation for a file. The units are given by the
allocation option. (TSO hosts only.)
- avblock
- Average block size, required when allocation specifies
avblock. (TSO hosts only.)
- buffersize
- Buffer size for DFT-mode transfers. Can range from 256 to 32768. Larger
values give better performance, but some hosts may not be able to support
them.
There are also resources that control the default values for each
of the file transfer parameters. These resources have the same names as the
Transfer() keywords, but with ft prepended and the option name
capitalized. E.g., the default for the mode keyword is the
x3270.ftMode resource.
For comptibility with earlier versions, there are alternate versions of several
of these actions. These versions use zero-origin coordinates, with row 0 at
the top and column 0 on the left.
- Ascii(...)
- Ebcdic(...)
- MoveCursor(...)
- Identical to Ascii1(), Ebcdic1() and MoveCursor1(),
but using zero-origin coordinates.
The Snap() action also accepts Ascii and
Ebcdic keywords, allowing zero-origin coordinates.
expect(1)
perl(1)
ksh(1)
x3270(1)
x3270if(1)
c3270(1)
s3270(1)
Visit the GSP FreeBSD Man Page Interface. Output converted with ManDoc. |