www.pudn.com > ZMODEM code.zip > SZ.1


'\" Revision Level  
'\" Last Delta     01-01-87 
.TH SZ 1 OMEN 
.SH NAME 
sz \- XMODEM, YMODEM, ZMODEM Batch file Send 
.SH SYNOPSIS 
sz 
.RB [\- +1abdefkLlNnpqTtuvy ] 
.I file ... 
.br 
sz -X 
.RB [\- 1kqtuv ] 
.I file 
.br 
sz 
.RB [\- 1qtv ] 
.B "-c COMMAND" 
.br 
sz 
.RB [\- 1qtv ] 
.B "-i COMMAND" 
.SH DESCRIPTION 
.B Sz 
uses the ZMODEM, YMODEM or XMODEM error correcting protocol to send 
one or more files over a serial port to a variety of programs running under 
PC-DOS, CP/M, Unix, VMS, and other operating systems. 
 
 
The first form of 
.B sz 
sends one or more files with ZMODEM or YMODEM batch protocol. 
Normally, only the file name part of the pathname is transmitted. 
On 
.SM Unix 
systems, additional information about the file is transmitted. 
If the receiving program uses this information, 
the transmitted file length controls the exact number of bytes written to 
the output dataset, 
and the modify time and file mode 
are set accordingly. 
 
Output from another program may be piped to 
.B sz 
for transmission by specifying the 
.B -1 
option and denoting standard input by "-": 
.ce 
ps -ef | sz - 
The program output is transmitted with the filename sPID.sz 
where PID is the process ID of the 
.B sz 
program. 
If the environment variable 
.B ONAME 
is set, that is used instead. 
In this case, the Unix command: 
.ce 
ONAME=con ps -ef|sz -ay - 
will send a "file" to the PC-DOS console display. 
The 
.B -y 
option instructs the receiver to open the file for writing unconditionally. 
The 
.B -a 
option 
causes the receiver to convert Unix newlines to PC-DOS carriage returns 
and linefeeds. 
 
Unix 
.B sz 
supports 
.B YMODEM-g 
with "cbreak" tty mode, XON/XOFF flow control, 
and the interrupt character set to CAN. 
.B YMODEM-g 
(Professional-YAM 
.B g 
option) 
increases throughput over error free channels 
(direct connection, X.PC, etc.) 
by not acknowledging each transmitted sector. 
 
 
The second form of 
.B sz 
uses the 
.B -X 
flag to send a single 
.I file 
with 
.B XMODEM 
or 
.B XMODEM-1k 
protocol. 
The user must supply the file name to both sending and receiving programs. 
 
Iff 
.B sz 
is invoked with $SHELL set and iff that variable contains the 
string 
.I "rsh" 
or 
.I "rksh" 
(restricted shell), sz operates in restricted mode. 
Restricted mode restricts pathnames to the current directory and 
PUBDIR (usually /usr/spool/uucppublic) and/or subdirectories 
thereof. 
 
 
The third form sends a single COMMAND to the receiver for execution. 
.B Sz 
exits with the COMMAND return value. 
If COMMAND includes spaces or characters special to the shell, 
it must be quoted. 
 
The fourth form sends a single COMMAND to the receiver for execution. 
.B Sz 
exits as soon as the receiver has correctly received the command, 
before it is executed. 
 
 
If sz is invoked with stdout and stderr to different datasets, 
Verbose is set to 2, causing frame by frame progress reports 
to stderr. 
This may be disabled with the 
.B q 
option. 
.PP 
The meanings of the available options are: 
.PP 
.PD 0 
.TP 
.B + 
Instruct the receiver to append transmitted data to an existing file 
(ZMODEM only). 
.TP 
.B 1 
Use file descriptor 1 for ioctls and reads (Unix only). 
By default, file descriptor 0 is used. 
This option allows 
.B sz 
to be used with the 
.I cu 
~$ 
command. 
If the calling program has spawned a separate process to 
read characters from the modem, 
that process  
must be disabled for 
.I rz 
to operate properly. 
.TP 
.B a 
Convert NL characters in the transmitted file to CR/LF. 
This is done by the sender for XMODEM and YMODEM, by the receiver 
for ZMODEM. 
.TP 
.B b 
(ZMODEM) Binary override: transfer file without any translation. 
.TP 
.B "c COMMAND" 
Send COMMAND to the receiver for execution, return with COMMAND\'s exit status. 
.TP 
.B d 
Change all instances of "." to "/" in the transmitted pathname. 
Thus, C.omenB0000 (which is unacceptable to MSDOS or CP/M) 
is transmitted as C/omenB0000. 
If the resultant filename has more than 8 characters in the stem, 
a "." is inserted to allow a total of eleven. 
.TP 
.B E 
Escape only Ctrl-X control characters; 
normally XON, XOFF, CR-@-CR, and Ctrl-X are escaped. 
.TP 
.B e 
Escape all control characters; 
normally XON, XOFF, CR-@-CR, and Ctrl-X are escaped. 
.TP 
.B f 
Send Full pathname. 
Normally directory prefixes are stripped from the transmitted 
filename. 
.TP 
.B "i COMMAND" 
Send COMMAND to the receiver for execution, return Immediately 
upon the receiving program's successful recption of the command. 
.TP 
.B k 
(XMODEM/YMODEM) Send files using 1024 byte blocks 
rather than the default 128 byte blocks. 
1024 byte packets speed file transfers at high bit rates. 
(ZMODEM streams the data for the best possible throughput.) 
.TP 
.B "L N" 
Use ZMODEM sub-packets of length N. 
A larger N (32 <= N <= 1024) gives slightly higher throughput, 
a smaller N speeds error recovery. 
The default is 128 below 300 baud, 256 above 300 baud, or 1024 above 2400 baud. 
.TP 
.B "l N" 
Wait for the receiver to acknowledge correct data every 
.B N 
(32 <= N <= 1024) 
characters. 
This may be used to avoid network overrun when XOFF flow control is lacking. 
.TP 
.B n 
(ZMODEM) Send each file if 
destination file does not exist. 
Overwrite destination file if 
source file is newer or longer than the destination file. 
.TP 
.B N 
(ZMODEM) Send each file if 
destination file does not exist. 
Overwrite destination file if 
source file has different length or date. 
.TP 
.B p 
(ZMODEM) Protect existing destination files by skipping transfer if the 
destination file exists. 
.TP 
.B q 
Quiet suppresses verbosity. 
.TP 
.B r 
Resume interrupted file transfer. 
If the source file is longer than the destination file, 
the transfer commences at the offset in the source file that equals 
the length of the destination file. 
.TP 
.B "t tim" 
Change timeout to 
.I tim 
tenths of seconds. 
.TP 
.B u 
Unlink the file after successful transmission. 
.TP 
.B v 
Verbose 
causes a list of file 
names to be appended to 
/tmp/szlog . 
More v's generate more output. 
.TP 
.B X 
Send a single file with 
.B XMODEM 
or 
.B XMODEM-1k 
protocol. 
.TP 
.B y 
Instruct a ZMODEM receiving program to overwrite any existing file 
with the same name. 
.PD 
.SH EXAMPLES 
.ne 7 
.B "ZMODEM File Transfer" 
.br 
.B "$ sz -a *.c" 
.br 
This single command transfers all .c files in the current Unix directory 
with conversion 
.RB ( -a ) 
to end of line conventions appropriate to the receiving environment. 
With ZMODEM AutoDownload enabled, Professional-YAM automatically recieves 
the files after performing a security challenge. 
 
.B "ZMODEM Command Download" 
.br 
 cpszall:all 
    sz -c "c:;cd /yam/dist" 
    sz -ya $(YD)/*.me 
    sz -yqb y*.exe 
    sz -c "cd /yam" 
    sz -i "!insms" 
.br 
This Makefile fragment uses 
.B sz 
to issue commands to Professional-YAM to change current disk and directory. 
Next, 
.B sz 
transfers the 
.I .me 
files from the $YD directory, commanding the receiver to overwrite the old files 
and to convert from Unix end of line conventions to PC-DOS conventions. 
The third line transfers some 
.I .exe 
files. 
The fourth and fifth lines command Pro-YAM to 
change directory and execute a PC-DOS batch file 
.I insms . 
Since the batch file takes considerable time, the 
.B "-i" 
form is used to allow 
.B sz 
to exit immediately. 
 
.B "XMODEM File Transfer" 
.br 
$ 
.B "sz -Xa foo.c" 
.br 
.B "ESC" 
.br 
.B "rx foo.c" 
.br 
The above three commands transfer a single file 
from Unix to a PC and Crosstalk XVI 3.6, 
translating Unix newlines to DOS CR/LF. 
 
.SH SEE ALSO 
rz(omen), 
ZMODEM.DOC, 
YMODEM.DOC, 
Professional-YAM manual, 
IMP(CP/M), 
cu(1), 
sq(omen), 
todos(omen), 
tocpm(omen), 
tomac(omen), 
yam(omen) 
 
Compile time options required for various operating systems are described in 
the source file. 
.SH "VMS VERSION" 
The VMS version does not transmit the file date. 
The VMS version calculates the file length by reading the file 
and counting the bytes. 
 
The VMS version does not support YMODEM-g or ZMODEM. 
 
When VMS is lightly loaded, the response time may be too quick for MODEM7 
unless the MODEM7 
.B "q" 
modifier is used. 
 
The VMS C standard i/o package and RMS sometimes interact to modify 
file contents unexpectedly. 
.SH FILES 
sz.c, rbsb.c, zm.c, zmodem.h source files 
 
/tmp/szlog stores debugging output (sz -vv) 
.SH "TESTING FEATURE" 
The command "sz -T file" 
exercises the 
.B Attn 
sequence error recovery by commanding 
errors with unterminated packets. 
The receiving program should complain five times about 
binary data packets being too long. 
Each time 
.B sz 
is interrupted, 
it should send a ZDATA header followed by another defective packet. 
If the receiver does not detect five long data packets, 
the 
.B Attn 
sequence is not interrupting the sender, and the 
.B Myattn 
string in 
.B sz.c 
must be modified. 
 
After 5 packets, 
.B sz 
stops the "transfer" and 
prints the total number of characters "sent" (Tcount). 
The difference between Tcount and 5120 represents the number of characters 
stored in various buffers when the Attn sequence is generated. 
.SH BUGS 
XMODEM transfers add up to 127 garbage bytes per file (1023 bytes with 
XMODEM-k). 
Most YMODEM programs use the file length transmitted at the beginning of the 
transfer to prune the file to the correct length; this may cause problems with 
source files that grow during the course of the transfer. 
This problem does not pertain to ZMODEM transfers, which preserve the exact 
file length unconditionally. 
 
Most ZMODEM options are merely passed to the receiving program; 
some do not implement all these options. 
 
Circular buffering and a ZMODEM sliding window should be used 
when input is from pipes instead of acknowledging frames each 1024 bytes. 
If no files can be opened, 
.B sz 
sends a ZMODEM command to echo a suitable complaint; 
perhaps it should check for the presence of at least one accessible file before 
getting hot and bothered. 
The test mode leaves a zero length file on the receiving system. 
 
Some high speed modems have a firmware bug that drops characters when the 
direction of high speed transmissson is reversed. 
The environment variable ZNULLS may be used to specify the number of nulls to 
send before a ZDATA frame. 
Values of 101 for a 4.77 mHz PC and 124 for an AT are typical.