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NAME

       Scripting Facilities for x3270, s3270, ws3270 and c3270

SYNOPSIS

       x3270 -script [ x3270-options ]
       s3270 [ s3270-options ]
       ws3270 [ ws3270-options ]
       Script ( command [ ,arg... ] )

DESCRIPTION

       The  x3270  scripting  facilities  allow the interactive 3270 emulators
       x3270 and c3270 to be operated under the control  of  another  program,
       and form the basis for the script-only emulators s3270 and ws3270.

       There  are  two  basic scripting methods.  The first is the peer script
       facility, invoked by the x3270 -script switch, and the default mode for
       s3270  and  ws3270.   This  runs  x3270,  s3270 or ws3270 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).  Inthis
       mode, the emulator process looks for commands on  its  standard  input,
       and  places the responses on standard output and standard error output.

       The second method is the child script facility, invoked by  the  Script
       action  in  x3270,  c3270,  or  s3270.   This  runs a script as a child
       process of the emulator.  The child has access to  pipes  connected  to
       the  emulator;  the  emulator look 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; the file descriptor of the  pipe  for  responses  from  the
       emulator is passed in the environment variable X3270OUTPUT.)

       It  is  possible  to  mix the two methods.  A script can invoke another
       script with the Script action, and may also be implicitly nested when a
       script  invokes  the Connect action, and the ibm_hosts file specifies a
       login script for that host name.

       Commands are emulator actions; the syntax is the same as for the right-
       hand  side of an Xt translation table entry (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".

STATUS FORMAT

       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, ws3270 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.

DIFFERENCES

       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  error
       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.

SCRIPT-SPECIFIC ACTIONS

       The following actions have  been  defined  or  modified  for  use  with
       scripts.  (Note that unlike the display on the status line, row and col
       coordinates used in these  actions  use  [0,0]  as  their  origin,  not
       [1,1]).

       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.

       Ascii(row,col,rows,cols)

       Ascii(row,col,length)

       Ascii(length)

       Ascii  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.

              If  three  parameters  are  given, length characters are output,
              starting at the specified 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 character set (the -charset 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.

       ContinueScript(param)
              Allows a script that is waiting in a PauseScript action,  below,
              to  continue.   The  param  given  is  output by the PauseScript
              action.

       Disconnect
              Disconnects from the host.

       Ebcdic(row,col,rows,cols)

       Ebcdic(row,col,length)

       Ebcdic(length)

       Ebcdic The same function  as  Ascii  above,  except  that  rather  than
              generating ASCII text, each character is output as a hexadecimal
              EBCDIC code, preceded by 0x.

       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.

       MoveCursor(row,col)
              Moves the cursor to the specified coordinates.

       PauseScript
              Stops a  script  until  the  ContinueScript  action,  above,  is
              executed.   This  allows  a  script  to  wait for user input and
              continue.  Outputs the single parameter to ContinueScript.

       PrintText([command,]filter))
              Pipes an  ASCII  representation  of  the  current  screen  image
              through the named filter, e.g., lpr.

       PrintText([html,],file,filename))
              Saves  the  current  screen  contents  in a file.  With the html
              option, saves it as HTML, otherwise saves it as plain ASCII.

       PrintText(html,string)
              Returns the current screen contents as HTML.

       ReadBuffer(Ascii)
              Dumps the contents of the screen buffer, one  line  at  a  time.
              Positions  inside  data  fields  are generally output as 2-digit
              hexadecimal codes in the current display character set.  If  the
              current locale specifies UTF-8 (or certain DBCS character sets),
              some positions may be output as multi-byte strings  (4-,  6-  or
              8-digit  codes).   DBCS  characters  take  two  positions in the
              screen buffer; the first location  is  output  as  a  multi-byte
              string in the current locale codeset, 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).

              In  addition,  NULL characters in the screen buffer are reported
              as ASCII character 00 instead of 20, even though they should  be
              displayed as blanks.

       ReadBuffer(Ebcdic)
              Equivalent  to  Snap(Ascii),  but with the data fields output as
              hexadecimal EBCDIC codes instead.   Additionally,  if  a  buffer
              position  has  the  Graphic Escape attribute, it is displayed as
              GE(xx).

       Snap   Equivalent to Snap(Save) (see below).

       Snap(Ascii,...)
              Performs the Ascii action on the saved screen image.

       Snap(Cols)
              Returns the number of columns in the saved screen image.

       Snap(Ebcdic,...)
              Performs the Ebcdic 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(Ascii)  or  Snap(Ebcdic) 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 Ascii or Ebcdic 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.

FILE TRANSFER

       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.

       The  Transfer  action  can  be  entered  at  the command prompt with no
       parameters, which will cause it to prompt interactively  for  the  file
       names  and  options.   It can also be invoked with parameters to define
       the entire transfer.

       Because of the complexity and number of options for file transfer,  the
       parameters to the Transfer action take the unique form of option=value,
       and 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".  The options are:

       Option           Required?   Default   Other Values
       --------------------------------------------------------
       Direction           No       receive   send
       HostFile            Yes

       LocalFile           Yes
       Host                No       tso       vm
       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        No
       SecondarySpace      No
       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) or vm.

       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-script 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-script 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.  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.

       Blksize
              Specifies  the  block  size for files created on the host.  (TSO
              hosts only.)

       Allocation
              Specifies  the  units  for  the  TSO   host   PrimarySpace   and
              SecondarySpace options: tracks, cylinders or avblock.

       PrimarySpace
              Primary  allocation for a file created on a TSO host.  The units
              are given by the Allocation option.

       SecondarySpace
              Secondary allocation for a file created  on  a  TSO  host.   The
              units are given by the Allocation option.

       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.

SEE ALSO

       expect(1)
       ksh(1)
       x3270(1)
       c3270(1)
       s3270(1)
       ws3270(1)

VERSION

       Version 3.3.10ga4

                                02 October 2009