C-Kermit on UNIX, VMS, etc, does not perform terminal
emulation at all; nobody ever claimed it did. Instead, it is a
semitransparent (or, if you make it so) a fully transparent communications pipe
between the remote computer or service and your local terminal, terminal
emulator, terminal window, or console, which provides the terminal functions.
Thus, it is similar to Telnet, cu, tip, "set host" in VMS, etc, but with added
functionality (file transfer and management, character-set translation,
scripting, etc).
If you experience fractured screens, you probably have a mismatch
between the type of terminal or emulator you are running C-Kermit and the type
the remote host or service thinks you have. Solution: let the host know what
type of terminal you really have. For example, in Linux it would be ANSI or
SCOANSI. In an HPTERM window, it would be HPTERM. In an AIX window, it would
be AIXTERM, etc.
If your arrow and function keys don't work, then you must configure
your terminal or emulator to have these keys send what the host or application
expects them to send. The method for doing this depends on your terminal or
emulator. For example, when using xterm or another X-based terminal window,
use xmodmap to configure your keyboard. C-Kermit itself can't be used for this
(even though it has a SET KEY command) because it can't "see" the special keys
(arrow keys, function keys, editing keys, etc).
If host-directed transparent printing doesn't work, this is a
deficiency in your terminal or emulator and has nothing to do with Kermit.
However, if you have the ability to change the host application, then you can
use C-Kermit's autodownload and/or APC features to accomplish the same thing.
See the manual for
details.
36 I'm Having Terminal Emulation Problems with C-Kermit
Kermit FAQ / Columbia University / kermit@columbia.edu