I installed microcom and like it as it is very similar to the functionality I had with ckermit.
I briefly thought of compiling from source but laziness got the better of me and I am happy with microcom. Expect is what I am using for scripting so I just took my kermit scripts and saved the important strings and put those in to an expect script. This is what I love about unix. I have had a little trouble getting the expect scripts to be happy with the output from microcom but when you can exactly define what should be there either literally or via a RE, it works beautifully. For some reason, "\r" and "\n" seem to never match and I even tried "\r\n" and it just times out so the project I was working with is accomplished by setting timeout in expect to 1 second but hopefully I can figure out what is wrong and make it run at it's maximum speed. Martin The Wanderer <wande...@fastmail.fm> writes: > On 2020-04-03 at 17:40, elvis wrote: > > > On 3/4/20 11:04 pm, Martin McCormick wrote: > > > >> The only thing that I truly miss after upgrading to buster is that > >> the package known as ckermit has fallen beside the road. > >> > >> I had a hard-drive fail on one system so installed buster from > >> installation media and the ckermit package apparently isn't part of > >> the distribution any more. > > > > Have you tried compiling from source? Just because it wasn't > > packaged, doesn't mean that you can't try installing it yourself... > > does it say why it was dropped anywhere? > > https://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=918061 and > https://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=921098 are the best > I've found on it. > > Basically, no maintainer activity in years, and multiple RC bugs. > > If there's an upstream active enough that any upstream aspects of the RC > bugs can be addressed, and if someone were to volunteer to maintain it > and fix any packaging-related aspects of the RC bugs, there's probably > no reason this couldn't be reintroduced. Depending on what those bugs > were (I haven't bothered digging for that info), that might be a tall > order, or it might be trivial. > > -- > The Wanderer > > The reasonable man adapts himself to the world; the unreasonable one > persists in trying to adapt the world to himself. Therefore all > progress depends on the unreasonable man. -- George Bernard Shaw > > > <<attachment: signature.asc>> >