Dorio news ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// Newsgroups: comp.terminals Path: cs.utk.edu!gatech!europa.eng.gtefsd.com!uunet!decwrl!pa.dec.com !nntpd.lkg.dec.com!hannah.enet.dec.com!hedberg NNTP-Posting-Host: level.enet.dec.com X-Newsreader: mxrn 6.18-4 Organization: Digital Equipment Corporation, Westford, MA Message-ID: <2e5nt1$i27@nntpd.lkg.dec.com> References: <2dt4kd$rdi@cnj.digex.com> <2e2j9p$liv@nntpd.lkg.dec.com> Date: 8 Dec 1993 23:27:29 GMT From: Bill Hedberg Subject: Re: Wanted: Good ASCII terminal pdsmith@bbn.com (Peter D. Smith) writes: > > What is it with Dorio terminals? They say they're made by DEC - are > they a subsidiary of DEC? An independant company? Is the Dorio some > sort of repackaged VT420? From the marketing literature... The short story is, that "Dorio" is a new "brand name" (marketing speak) for this terminal. The VT510 and the Dorio were announced in Sept '93. The VT510 is for traditional Digital customers and the Dorio is for the "ASCII" terminal world. There are some h/w and s/w differences between VT510 and Dorio, but they are very similar products. The Dorio is: - Built by Digital Equipment Corporation. - A new "brand name" (marketing speak). - It is an "ANSI/ASCII" terminal. ie. it has traditional Digital ANSI standard terminal modes VT320, VT220, VT100, VT52 and (new for Digital) ASCII terminal emulations: WYSE 60, PCTerm, WYSE 50, WYSE 150/120, Televideo 950, 925, 910+, ADDS A2 and SCO Console. - It was designed to replace existing terminals found in UNIX, Pick, multiuser DOS, etc. "ASCII" environments. - Keyboard and character set support for 27 languages. - It is *not* a repackaged VT420 (Dorio is new hardware). - It has new features specifically for VARs like . A Power Up screen banner (advertise your name here) . A completely reprogrammable keyboard (onboard Define Key Editor) (Set-Up or Num Lock key can be disabled to prevent user error, any key can be a Function key) . Local user functions: Clock/Calculator . Local Program/debug functions: Show character sets, Show control chars . Snap-in ROM cartridge for bug fixes and custom code - SCO Console mode maps to the "ansi" terminfo found on SCO UNIX, but it works with other UNIX also. VT is a registered trademark of Digital Equipment Corporation WYSE is a registered trademark of WYSE Technologies, etc... > Inquiring minds want to know! Call 1-800-BY-DORIO (1-800-293-6746) for info. - Bill \/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/ Newsgroups: comp.terminals Path: cs.utk.edu!gatech!howland.reston.ans.net!math.ohio-state.edu!caen !crl.dec.com!crl.dec.com!pa.dec.com!mrnews.mro.dec.com !hannah.enet.dec.com!hedberg Organization: Digital Equipment Corporation Message-ID: <3jf8i2$9ao@mrnews.mro.dec.com> References: NNTP-Posting-Host: raynal.enet.dec.com Lines: 51 From: hedberg@hannah.enet.dec.com (Bill Hedberg) Subject: Re: INFO WANTED: The "Un-terminal" Date: 6 MAR 1995 10:07:28 The "Un-terminal" is marketed by Advance Micro Research, San Jose, CA (408-456-9430). UnTerminal product literature describes it as a system box into which is plugged a VGA monitor, PC keyboard and mouse. The system box connected to a driver card in the PC using a serial wire. It appears that the driver card mimics a set of VGA registers and communicates with the "terminal" system box using a proprietary protocol. Compressed bitmap data is sent to the to update the display. Drivers available for SCO XENIX, UNIX, Open Desk Top, SunSoft-Interactive, UNIXWARE, IGC-VM/386, Microbase-VirtuOS, TSL-PCMOS. The Digital VT525 or Dorio25 color text terminal also uses a system box design (aka "pizza box"). It accepts an SVGA color monitor and a PC keyboard. It communicates with the host using standard RS232. It has standard ANSI/ASCII text terminal emulations. ANSI emulations: VT525, VT420, VT320, VT220, VT100, PCTerm ASCII emulations: Wyse 325, 160/60, PCTerm, 50/50+, 120/150 Televideo TVI 950, 925, 910+, ADDS A2, DEC VT52, SCO Console (like ANSI.SYS or UNIX terminal emulation) Built-in features: Calculator and Clock We now have EZ-SetUp cartridges for VT500 terminals. SetUp data is stored in a plug-in cartridge so that it can be copied to other VT500 family terminals, reducing effort to manage groups of VT500 terminals. For information on Digital terminal products, contact marketing manager: Bjorn Waenerlund (Waenerlund@mro.mts.dec.com) [2004: email address is long stale, alas] .............................................................................. Bill Hedberg Digital Equipment Corp. Video Architecture Engineering http://www.digital.com ftp://gatekeeper.dec.com/pub/DEC/termcaps [ 2004: after all this time, the anonymous-FTP site "gatekeeper.dec.com" is now canonically called "gatekeeper.research.compaq.com". It no longer appears to have the DEC termcap files, but it does offer some GNU documentation for *using* termcap: ftp://gatekeeper.research.compaq.com/pub/GNU/Manuals/termcap-1.3/text/termcap.txt ] ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// Newsgroups: comp.terminals,comp.periphs.printers,comp.os.linux.development.apps References: <80200dd9.0402071013.4a541148@posting.google.com> Message-ID: Organization: The Late, Great Stratagy Users Group Date: Mon, 16 Feb 2004 20:59:59 -0500 From: Richard S. Shuford Subject: Re: Send ESC sequences to printer attached to terminal Igor Bujna wrote: | | I have Oki 3390 printer attached to terminal "Dario 10-vgb10". | I want send ESC-sequences to printer for bar-codes printing. | I found out that i can use "mc5p" sequences for printing some bytes | to given printer. I don't find this sequences on my linux system. | | When I write to printer given ESC-sequences for printing bar-codes | via "Open printer sequence-mc5" and "Close printer sequence-mc4" | data didn't reach printer in right format. It prints only bar-code | numbers instead of bar-code+bar-code numbers. Igor: I think you must mean a "Dorio" terminal, not "Dario". The Dorio brand was first applied in 1993 by Digital Equipment Corporation to Value-Added Reseller versions of its VT510 character-cell terminal. A few years later, DEC sold off its entire video-terminal business to Boundless Technologies. The characteristics of the Dorio VGB-10 are still [as of 2004-02-16] noted on the Boundless anonymous-FTP site: ftp://ftp.boundless.com/pub/text/dec/specs/dor10.txt Now, as to your programming problem. Think of this proverb: "There are more modes of failure than modes of success." Lots of things could be going wrong. The technology you want is spread out through operating-system libraries, OS databases, your application software, the firmware of the Dorio terminal, and the firmware and setup of the attached printer. I have no experience with the particular Oki printer model (3390) you say you have. However, to produce bar codes, many printer types use a special bar-code font, with a separate font for each different type of bar code (UPC-A, Code-39, etc.) You should read the technical documentation for this Oki 3390 printer to find out what it needs. You might need to have your application software explicitly download a barcode font to the printer before beginning other operations. [brief pause for web search] I found the following web page about an Oki Microline 3391 printer, which is probably a successor to the 3390... http://www.shopoki.co.uk/datasheet/ml3391_spec.htm ..and the page describes a 24-pin dot-matrix unit equipped with a number of built-in barcode fonts (Code 39, UPC-A, UPC-E, EAN 8, EAN 13, Interleaved 2 of 5, ZIP, and Code 128). So, if the 3390 also had these, perhaps the solution involves invoking the proper font before sending the digits. (And switching the font back afterwards.) Here again, you must read the documentation to find out what is required. As to the precise issues you mention above: the "mc5p" capability is the "terminfo" way of saying "turn the printer on, to print a specified number of bytes" where the number of bytes/octets can be up to 256. (In "termcap" the "pO" capability is the equivalent.) Typically, such capabilities are invoked programmatically via library-function calls to "curses" or "ncurses" entry points. The Linux Documentation Project provides information on "Terminfo and Termcap" in several places, among which is: http://www.tldp.org/HOWTO/Text-Terminal-HOWTO-15.html You should check to make certain that several things are true: * that your Dorio terminal actually is able to perform the "mc5p" function of passing a counted number of bytes to an attached printer * that your TERM environment variable is properly set * that your Linux machine contains a "terminfo" database entry which corresponds to the TERM variable you are setting (or has a termcap entry to which the library will fall back) * that this corresponding terminfo-database entry contains a functional control sequence that actually causes the "turn the printer on, to print a specified number of bytes" functionality to happen Some "termcap" style advice appearing here... http://www.delorie.com/gnu/docs/termcap/termcap_43.html ..contains a sentence of some relevance: Most terminals with printers do not support all of `ps', `po' and `pO'; any one or two of them may be supported. The DEC-style terminals with which I am familiar implement only the non-parameterized capabilities "mc5" and "mc4", like this: TERMINFO TERMCAP CONTROL CAPABILITY CAPABILITY SEQUENCE MEANING ---------- ---------- --------- --------------------------- mc5 po ESC [ 5 i Printer-Controller Mode On mc4 pf ESC [ 4 i Printer-Controller Mode Off While it is possible that the Dorio VBG-10 is able to do what "mc5p" asks it to do, it may not, so you may have to fall back to using mc5 and mc4. You can check the documentation for the VBG-10 or for whatever equivalent model Boundless is currently supporting. There is also a possible behavioral surprise lurking in all this: if the "mc5p" command is properly implemented in the curses library and in the terminal, it has the following property: while 'mc5p' is in effect, "all text, including 'mc4', is transparently passed to the printer." (Which you probably don't want.) There are numerous other resources about related issues which you can find, or find pointers to, from web pages I keep at: http://www.cs.utk.edu/~shuford/terminal_index.html A wonderfully helpful book on all such topics is this: "termcap and terminfo" by John Strang, Linda Mui and Tim O'Reilly 3rd Edition April 1988 270 pages, ISBN: 0-937175-22-6, $29.95 U.S. http://www.oreilly.com/catalog/term/ http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ISBN=0937175226 ...RSS -- K.L. says to try http://www.celestialseasonings.com/products/herb/r.php which, however, contains no caffeine. ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// Message-ID: References: Organization: Extreme Systems Consulting Date: Tue, 17 Aug 1999 13:43:11 -0500 (CDT) From: Aaron Baugher Subject: Re: Dorio VGB10 Command Keys | Can anyone tell me the command key(s) to change the | configuration on a Dorio VGB10? I've tried every | combination of ALT- CTRL- and such that I can think of. | ... | Everything I can find assumes that I can hit a SET-UP key to | configure the thing, but it just has a PS/2 keyboard hooked | to it, so no special keys. My quest continues... > Worth a try: if this is what is called an "EPC" keyboard, > try pressing the Control and Scroll-Lock keys simultaneously. > That might get you into and out of Setup. That was close; it turned out to be the ALT and Print Screen (or SysRq) keys simultaneously. I thought I'd tried that already, but apparently I'd missed it. Thanks, Aaron -- Aaron Baugher - - Quincy, IL, USA Extreme Systems Consulting - http://haruchai.rnet.com/esc/ CGI, Perl, Java, and Linux/Unix Administration //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////