When I use telnet inside Konsole, to close telnet: Escape character is '^]'
once upon a time, pressing Contr and ] closed telnet session, now it enlarge fonts, sadly. I have searched into
Konsole/Settings/Edit currente Profile.../Keyboard Kde Menu/Settings/System settings/Shortcuts and Gestures
but I haven't found anything relevant please help, to close a telnet session I have to open a 2^ console and kill -9 telnet pid Ugly
-m
What about C^d?
On Thu, Jul 9, 2015, 13:40 Maurizio Marini maumar@datalogica.com wrote:
When I use telnet inside Konsole, to close telnet: Escape character is '^]'
once upon a time, pressing Contr and ] closed telnet session, now it enlarge fonts, sadly. I have searched into
Konsole/Settings/Edit currente Profile.../Keyboard Kde Menu/Settings/System settings/Shortcuts and Gestures
but I haven't found anything relevant please help, to close a telnet session I have to open a 2^ console and kill -9 telnet pid Ugly
-m
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On 2015-07-09 12:40, Maurizio Marini wrote:
When I use telnet inside Konsole, to close telnet:
Please tell me you're connecting to a *really* old and/or dumb device and not another at-least-semi-modern *nix machine. If not... just do yourself a HUGE favor and use SSH. (Seriously... even if you don't [think you] need the encryption, use ssh. For one, it's 'kill' sequence is enter,'~','.', which is very unlikely to ever be consumed by any terminal emulator.)
once upon a time, pressing Contr and ] closed telnet session, now it enlarge fonts, sadly.
KF5? You could try asking on Konsole's list and/or filing a bug. It seems to work on KDE4 (Fedora 20).
I have searched into
Konsole/Settings/Edit currente Profile.../Keyboard Kde Menu/Settings/System settings/Shortcuts and Gestures
but I haven't found anything relevant
Did you try Konsole/Settings/Configure Shortcuts?
Sometimes you simply can't ssh - like when you need to test a connection to a web server or a DDBB. As I see it, telnet is far from dying.
On Thu, Jul 9, 2015 at 2:24 PM Matthew Woehlke mwoehlke.floss@gmail.com wrote:
On 2015-07-09 12:40, Maurizio Marini wrote:
When I use telnet inside Konsole, to close telnet:
Please tell me you're connecting to a *really* old and/or dumb device and not another at-least-semi-modern *nix machine. If not... just do yourself a HUGE favor and use SSH. (Seriously... even if you don't [think you] need the encryption, use ssh. For one, it's 'kill' sequence is enter,'~','.', which is very unlikely to ever be consumed by any terminal emulator.)
once upon a time, pressing Contr and ] closed telnet session, now it enlarge fonts, sadly.
KF5? You could try asking on Konsole's list and/or filing a bug. It seems to work on KDE4 (Fedora 20).
I have searched into
Konsole/Settings/Edit currente Profile.../Keyboard Kde Menu/Settings/System settings/Shortcuts and Gestures
but I haven't found anything relevant
Did you try Konsole/Settings/Configure Shortcuts?
-- Matthew
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On 07/09/2015 10:27 AM, Martin Cigorraga wrote:
Sometimes you simply can't ssh - like when you need to test a connection to a web server or a DDBB. As I see it, telnet is far from dying.
Use "nc" (provided by nmap-ncat).
When you're connecting to a non-telnet service, you just need a TCP connection. Telnet isn't that. Telnet is actually a protocol of its own, with infrastructure to propagate environment variables, and communicate terminal size changes, etc, across an interactive shell session. For simple TCP connections, it's the wrong tool.
Thank you Gordon, will try it :D
On Thu, Jul 9, 2015 at 2:42 PM Gordon Messmer gordon.messmer@gmail.com wrote:
On 07/09/2015 10:27 AM, Martin Cigorraga wrote:
Sometimes you simply can't ssh - like when you need to test a connection to a web server or a DDBB. As I see it, telnet is far from dying.
Use "nc" (provided by nmap-ncat).
When you're connecting to a non-telnet service, you just need a TCP connection. Telnet isn't that. Telnet is actually a protocol of its own, with infrastructure to propagate environment variables, and communicate terminal size changes, etc, across an interactive shell session. For simple TCP connections, it's the wrong tool. -- users mailing list users@lists.fedoraproject.org To unsubscribe or change subscription options: https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/users Fedora Code of Conduct: http://fedoraproject.org/code-of-conduct Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Mailing_list_guidelines Have a question? Ask away: http://ask.fedoraproject.org
In case anyone else wants to follow Gordon's advice here is an interesting guide to get started quickly: http://www.irongeek.com/i.php?page=videos/ncat-nmap-netcat
HTH
On Thu, Jul 9, 2015 at 2:55 PM Martin Cigorraga martincigorraga@gmail.com wrote:
Thank you Gordon, will try it :D
On Thu, Jul 9, 2015 at 2:42 PM Gordon Messmer gordon.messmer@gmail.com wrote:
On 07/09/2015 10:27 AM, Martin Cigorraga wrote:
Sometimes you simply can't ssh - like when you need to test a connection to a web server or a DDBB. As I see it, telnet is far from dying.
Use "nc" (provided by nmap-ncat).
When you're connecting to a non-telnet service, you just need a TCP connection. Telnet isn't that. Telnet is actually a protocol of its own, with infrastructure to propagate environment variables, and communicate terminal size changes, etc, across an interactive shell session. For simple TCP connections, it's the wrong tool. -- users mailing list users@lists.fedoraproject.org To unsubscribe or change subscription options: https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/users Fedora Code of Conduct: http://fedoraproject.org/code-of-conduct Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Mailing_list_guidelines Have a question? Ask away: http://ask.fedoraproject.org
Very often I check smtp server for any issue using telnet mailserver 25
pop3 server, too, to check credentials, when a customer complain: server says my credentials are wrong
I telnet pop3 server on port 100 and I realize he is using wrong credentials
and many other amenities....
for sure I don't use telnet instead of ssh, of course :)
-m
On 2015-07-10 09:26, Maurizio Marini wrote:
Very often I check smtp server for any issue using telnet mailserver 25
pop3 server, too, to check credentials, when a customer complain: server says my credentials are wrong
I telnet pop3 server on port 100 and I realize he is using wrong credentials
and many other amenities....
for sure I don't use telnet instead of ssh, of course :)
*But*, as Gordon pointed out, those *aren't* telnet servers, and you'd probably do better to use 'nc' than 'telnet'. While 'nc' isn't exactly feature-filled, you're not able to *use* any telnet features with things that aren't telnet servers anyway, so you really aren't losing anything.
(Admittedly, I've done the same thing... it's habit, and habits die hard. This is one worth breaking, though; 'nc' should exit with a ^D, which Konsole won't eat. Or had better not, because that would be a serious bug if it did.)