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RFC2877 - 5250 Telnet Enhancements

王朝other·作者佚名  2008-05-31
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Network Working Group T. Murphy, Jr.

Request for Comments: 2877 P. Rieth

Category: Informational J. Stevens

Updates: 1205 IBM Corporation

July 2000

5250 Telnet Enhancements

Status of this Memo

This memo provides information for the Internet community. It does

not specify an Internet standard of any kind. Distribution of this

memo is unlimited.

Copyright Notice

Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2000). All Rights Reserved.

Abstract

This memo describes the interface to the IBM 5250 Telnet server that

allows client Telnet to request a Telnet terminal or printer session

using a specific device name. If a requested device name is not

available, a method to retry the request using a new device name is

described. Methods to request specific Telnet session settings and

auto-signon function are also described.

By allowing a Telnet client to select the device name, the 5250

Telnet server opens the door for applications to set and/or extract

useful information about the Telnet client. Some possibilities are

1) selecting a customized device name associated with a particular

user profile name for National Language Support or subsystem routing,

2) connecting PC and network printers as clients and 3) auto-signon

using clear-text or DES-encrypted passWord exchange.

Applications may need to use system API's on the AS/400 in order to

extract Telnet session settings from the device name description.

Refer to the Retrieve Device Description (QDCRDEVD) API described in

the AS/400 System API book [3] on how to extract information using

the DEVD0600 and DEVD1100 templates.

This memo describes how the IBM 5250 Telnet server supports Work

Station Function (WSF) printers using 5250 Display Station Pass-

Through. A response code is returned by the Telnet server to

indicate sUCcess or failure of the WSF printer session.

Table of Contents

1. Enhancing Telnet Negotiations...................... 3

2. Standard Telnet Option Negotiation................. 3

3. Enhanced Telnet Option Negotiation................. 4

4. Enhanced Display Emulation Support................. 7

5. Enhanced Display Auto-Signon and Password

Encryption......................................... 8

5.1 Password Substitutes Processing.............. 12

5.2 Handling passwords of length 9 and 10........ 14

5.3 Example Password Substitute Calculation...... 15

6. Device Name Collision Processing................... 15

7. Enhanced Printer Emulation Support................. 16

8. Telnet Printer Terminal Types...................... 18

9. Telnet Printer Startup Response Record for Printer

Emulators.......................................... 20

9.1 Example of a Success Response Record......... 20

9.2 Example of an Error Response Record.......... 21

9.3 Response Codes............................... 22

10. Printer Steady-State Pass-Through Interface........ 23

10.1 Example of a Print Record.................... 25

10.2 Example of a Print Complete Record........... 27

10.3 Example of a Null Print Record............... 27

11. End-to-End Print Example........................... 28

12. Authors' Note...................................... 33

13. References......................................... 33

14. Security Considerations............................ 35

15. Authors' Addresses................................. 35

16. Relation to Other RFC's............................ 35

17. Full Copyright Statement........................... 36

LIST OF FIGURES

Figure 1. Example of a success status response

record....................................... 20

Figure 2. Example of an error response record.......... 21

Figure 3. Layout of the printer pass-through

header....................................... 23

Figure 4. Server sending client data with a print

record....................................... 26

Figure 5. Client sending server a print complete

record....................................... 27

Figure 6. Server sending client a null print

record....................................... 28

1. Enhancing Telnet Negotiations

The 5250 Telnet server enables clients to negotiate both terminal and

printer device names through Telnet Environment Options Negotiations,

defined in the Standards Track RFC1572 [13].

The purpose of RFC1572 is to exchange environment information using

a set of standard or custom variables. By using a combination of

both standard VAR's and custom USERVAR's, the 5250 Telnet server

allows client Telnet to request a pre-defined specific device by

name.

If no pre-defined device exists then the device will be created, with

client Telnet having the option to negotiate device attributes, such

as the code page, character set, keyboard type, etc.

Since printers can now be negotiated as a device name, new terminal

types have been defined to request printers. For example, you can

now negotiate "IBM-3812-1" and "IBM-5553-B01" as valid TERMINAL-TYPE

options [11].

Finally, the 5250 Telnet server will allow exchange of user profile

and password information, where the password may be in either clear-

text or encrypted form. If a valid combination of profile and

password is received, then the client is allowed to bypass the sign-

on panel. The setting of the QRMTSIGN system value must be either

*VERIFY or *SAMEPRF for the bypass of the sign-on panel to succeed.

2. Standard Telnet Option Negotiation

Telnet server option negotiation typically begins with the issuance,

by the server, of an invitation to engage in terminal type

negotiation with the Telnet client (DO TERMINAL-TYPE) [11]. The

client and server then enter into a series of sub-negotiations to

determine the level of terminal support that will be used. After the

terminal type is agreed upon, the client and server will normally

negotiate a required set of additional options (EOR [12], BINARY

[10], SGA [15]) that are required to support "transparent mode" or

full screen 5250/3270 block mode support. As soon as the required

options have been negotiated, the server will suspend further

negotiations, and begin with initializing the actual virtual device

on the AS/400. A typical exchange might start like the following:

AS/400 Telnet server Enhanced Telnet client

-------------------------- -------------------------

IAC DO TERMINAL-TYPE -->

<-- IAC WILL TERMINAL-TYPE

IAC SB TERMINAL-TYPE SEND

IAC SE -->

IAC SB TERMINAL-TYPE IS

<-- IBM-5555-C01 IAC SE

IAC DO EOR -->

<-- IAC WILL EOR

<-- IAC DO EOR

IAC WILL EOR -->

.

.

(other negotiations) .

Actual bytes transmitted in the above example are shown in hex below.

AS/400 Telnet server Enhanced Telnet client

-------------------------- -------------------------

FF FD 18 -->

<-- FF FB 18

FF FA 18 01 FF F0 -->

FF FA 18 00 49 42 4D 2D

35 35 35 35 2D 43 30 31

<-- FF F0

FF FD 19 -->

<-- FF FB 19

<-- FF FD 19

FF FB 19 -->

.

.

(other negotiations) .

Some negotiations are symmetrical between client and server and some

are negotiated in one direction only. Also, it is permissible and

common practice to bundle more than one response or request, or

combine a request with a response, so the actual exchange may look

different in practice to what is shown above.

3. Enhanced Telnet Option Negotiation

In order to accommodate the new environment option negotiations, the

server will bundle an environment option invitation along with the

standard terminal type invitation request to the client.

A client should either send a negative acknowledgment (WONT NEW-

ENVIRON), or at some point after completing terminal-type

negotiations, but before completing the full set of negotiations

required for 5250 transparent mode, engage in environment option

sub-negotiation with the server. A maximum of 1024 bytes of

environment strings may be sent to the server. A recommended

sequence might look like the following:

AS/400 Telnet server Enhanced Telnet client

-------------------------- -------------------------

IAC DO NEW-ENVIRON

IAC DO TERMINAL-TYPE -->

(2 requests bundled)

<-- IAC WILL NEW-ENVIRON

IAC SB NEW-ENVIRON SEND

VAR IAC SE -->

IAC SB NEW-ENVIRON IS

VAR "USER" VALUE "JONES"

USERVAR "DEVNAME"

VALUE "MYDEVICE07"

<-- IAC SE

<-- IAC WILL TERMINAL-TYPE

(do the terminal type

sequence first)

IAC SB TERMINAL-TYPE SEND

IAC SE -->

IAC SB TERMINAL-TYPE IS

<-- IBM-5555-C01 IAC SE

(terminal type negotiations

completed)

IAC DO EOR -->

(server will continue

with normal transparent

mode negotiations)

<-- IAC WILL EOR

.

.

(other negotiations) .

Actual bytes transmitted in the above example are shown in hex below.

AS/400 Telnet server Enhanced Telnet client

-------------------------- -------------------------

FF FD 27

FF FD 18 -->

(2 requests bundled)

<-- FF FB 27

FF FA 27 01 00 FF F0 -->

FF FA 27 00 00 55 53 45

52 01 4A 4F 4E 45 53 03

44 45 56 4E 41 4D 45 01

4D 59 44 45 56 49 43 45

<-- 30 37 FF F0

<-- FF FB 18

(do the terminal type

sequence first)

FF FA 18 01 FF F0 -->

FF FA 18 00 49 42 4D 2D

35 35 35 35 2D 43 30 31

<-- FF F0

FF FD 19 -->

(server will continue

with normal transparent

mode negotiations)

<-- FF FB 19

.

.

(other negotiations) .

RFC1572 defines 6 standard VAR's: USER, JOB, ACCT, PRINTER,

SYSTEMTYPE, and DISPLAY. The USER standard VAR will hold the value

of the AS/400 user profile name to be used in auto-signon requests.

The Telnet server will make no direct use of the additional 5 VAR's,

nor are any of them required to be sent. All standard VAR's and

their values that are received by the Telnet server will be placed in

a buffer, along with any USERVAR's received (described below), and

made available to a registered initialization exit program to be used

for any purpose desired.

There are some reasons you may want to send NEW-ENVIRON negotiations

prior to TERMINAL-TYPE negotiations. With AS/400 TELNET server,

several virtual device modes can be negotiated: 1) VTxxx device 2)

3270 device 3) 5250 device (includes Network Station). The virtual

device mode selected depends on the TERMINAL-TYPE negotiated plus any

other TELNET option negotiations necessary to support those modes.

The AS/400 TELNET server will create the desired virtual device at

the first opportunity it thinks it has all the requested attributes

needed to create the device. This can be as early as completion of

the TERMINAL-TYPE negotiations.

For the case of Transparent mode (5250 device), then the moment

TERMINAL-TYPE, BINARY, and EOR options are negotiated the TELNET

server will go create the virtual device. Receiving any NEW-ENVIRON

negotiations after these option negotiations are complete will result

in the NEW-ENVIRON negotiations having no effect on device

attributes, as the virtual device will have already been created.

So, for Transparent mode, NEW-ENVIRON negotiations are effectively

closed once EOR is negotiated, since EOR is generally the last option

done.

For other devices modes (such as VTxxx or 3270), you cannot be sure

when the AS/400 TELNET server thinks it has all the attributes to

create the device. Recall that NEW-ENVIRON negotiations are

optional, and therefore the AS/400 TELNET server need not wait for

any NEW-ENVIRON options prior to creating the virtual device. It is

in the clients best interest to send NEW-ENVIRON negotiations as soon

as possible, preferably before TERMINAL-TYPE is negotiated. That

way, the client can be sure the requested attributes were received

before the virtual device is created.

4. Enhanced Display Emulation Support

RFC1572 style USERVAR variables have been defined to allow a

compliant Telnet client more control over the Telnet server virtual

device on the AS/400. These USERVAR's allow the client Telnet to

create or select a previously created virtual device. If the virtual

device does not exist and must be created, then the USERVAR variables

are used to create and initialize the device attributes. If the

virtual device already exists, the device attributes are modified.

The USERVAR's defined to accomplish this are:

USERVAR VALUE EXAMPLE DESCRIPTION

-------- ---------------- ---------------- -------------------

DEVNAME us-ascii char(x) MYDEVICE07 Display device name

KBDTYPE us-ascii char(3) USB Keyboard type

CODEPAGE us-ascii char(y) 437 Code page

CHARSET us-ascii char(y) 1212 Character set

x - up to a maximum of 10 characters

y - up to a maximum of 5 characters

For a description of the KBDTYPE, CODEPAGE and CHARSET parameters and

their permissible values, refer to Chapter 8 in the Communications

Configuration Reference [5] and also to Appendix C in National

Language Support [16].

The CODEPAGE and CHARSET USERVAR's must be associated with a KBDTYPE

USERVAR. If either CODEPAGE or CHARSET are sent without KBDTYPE,

they will default to system values. A default value for KBDTYPE can

be sent to force CODEPAGE and CHARSET values to be used.

AS/400 system objects such as device names, user profiles, clear-text

passwords, programs, libraries, etc. are required to be specified in

English Upper Case (EUC). This includes:

Any letter (A-Z), any number (0-9), special characters (# $ _ @)

Therefore, where us-ascii is specified for VAR or USERVAR values, it

is recommended that upper-cased ASCII values be sent, which will be

converted to EBCDIC by the Telnet server.

A special case occurs for encrypted passwords (described in the next

section), where both the initial password and user profile used to

build the encrypted password must be EBCDIC English Upper Case, in

order to be properly authenticated by the Telnet server.

5. Enhanced Display Auto-Signon and Password Encryption

Several 5250 Telnet server specific USERVAR's will be defined. One

will carry a random seed to be used in Data Encryption Standard (DES)

password encryption, and another will carry the encrypted copy of the

password. This would use the same 7-step DES-based password

substitution scheme as APPC and Client Access. For a description of

DES encryption, refer to Federal Information Processing Standards

Publications (FIPS) 46-2 [17] and 81 [18], which can be found at the

Federal Information Processing Standards Publications link:

http://www.itl.nist.gov/div897/pubs/by-num.htm

For a description of the 7-step password substitution scheme, refer

to these IBM Customer Support FTP Server links:

ftp://ftp.networking.ibm.com/pub/standards/ciw/sig/sec/pwsubciw.ps

ftp://ftp.networking.ibm.com/pub/standards/ciw/sig/sec/pwsubciw.ps.Z

ftp://ftp.networking.ibm.com/pub/standards/ciw/sig/sec/pwsubciw.zip

If encrypted password exchange is not required, clear-text password

exchange is permitted using the same USERVAR's defined for

encryption. For this case, the random client seed should be set to

either an empty value (RFC1572 preferred method) or to hexadecimal

zeros to indicate the password is not encrypted, but is clear-text.

It should be noted that security of clear-text password exchange

cannot be guaranteed unless the network is physically protected or a

trusted network (such as an intranet). If your network is vulnerable

to IP address spoofing or directly connected to the Internet, you

should engage in encrypted password exchange to validate a clients

identity.

Additional VAR's and USERVAR's have also been defined to allow an

auto-signon user greater control over their startup environment,

similar to what is supported using the Open Virtual Terminal

(QTVOPNVT) API [3].

The standard VAR's supported to accomplish this are:

VAR VALUE EXAMPLE DESCRIPTION

-------- ---------------- ---------------- -------------------

USER us-ascii char(x) USERXYZ User profile name

x - up to a maximum of 10 characters

The custom USERVAR's defined to accomplish this are:

USERVAR VALUE EXAMPLE DESCRIPTION

-------- ---------------- ---------------- -------------------

IBMRSEED binary(8) 8-byte hex field Random client seed

IBMSUBSPW binary(10) 10-byte hex field Substitute password

IBMCURLIB us-ascii char(x) QGPL Current library

IBMIMENU us-ascii char(x) MAIN Initial menu

IBMPROGRAM us-ascii char(x) QCMD Program to call

x - up to a maximum of 10 characters

In order to communicate the server random seed value to the client,

the server will request a USERVAR name made up of a fixed part (the 8

characters "IBMRSEED" immediately followed by an 8-byte hexadecimal

variable part, which is the server random seed. The client generates

its own 8-byte random seed value, and uses both seeds to encrypt the

password. Both the encrypted password and the client random seed

value are then sent to the server for authentication. RFC1572 rules

will need to be adhered to when transmitting the client random seed

and substituted password values to the server. Specifically, since a

typical environment string is a variable length hexadecimal field,

the hexadecimal fields are required to be escaped and/or byte stuffed

according to the RFC854 [8], where any single byte could be mis-

construed as a Telnet IAC or other Telnet option negotiation control

character. The client must escape and/or byte stuff any bytes which

could be seen as a RFC1572 [13] option, specifically VAR, VALUE, ESC

and USERVAR.

The following illustrates the encrypted case:

AS/400 Telnet server Enhanced Telnet client

-------------------------- -------------------------------

IAC DO NEW-ENVIRON -->

<-- IAC WILL NEW-ENVIRON

IAC SB NEW-ENVIRON SEND

USERVAR "IBMRSEEDxxxxxxxx"

USERVAR "IBMSUBSPW"

VAR USERVAR IAC SE -->

IAC SB NEW-ENVIRON IS

VAR "USER" VALUE "DUMMYUSR"

USERVAR "IBMRSEED" VALUE "yyyyyyyy"

USERVAR "IBMSUBSPW" VALUE "zzzzzzzz"

<-- IAC SE

.

.

(other negotiations) .

In this example, "xxxxxxxx" is an 8-byte hexadecimal random server

seed, "yyyyyyyy" is an 8-byte hexadecimal random client seed and

"zzzzzzzz" is an 8-byte hexadecimal encrypted password. If the

password is not valid, then the sign-on panel is displayed. If the

password is eXPired, then the Change Password panel is displayed.

Actual bytes transmitted in the above example are shown in hex below,

where the server seed is "7D3E488F18080404", the client seed is

"4E4142334E414233" and the encrypted password is "DFB0402F22ABA3BA".

The user profile used to generate the encrypted password is

"44554D4D59555352" (DUMMYUSR), with a clear-text password of

"44554D4D595057" (DUMMYPW).

AS/400 Telnet server Enhanced Telnet client

-------------------------- -------------------------

FF FD 27 -->

<-- FF FB 27

FF FA 27 01 03 49 42 4D

52 53 45 45 44 7D 3E 48

8F 18 08 04 04 03 49 42

4D 53 55 42 53 50 57 03

00 FF F0 -->

FF FA 27 00 00 55 53 45

52 01 44 55 4D 4D 59 55

53 52 03 49 42 4D 52 53

45 45 44 01 4E 41 42 33

4E 41 42 33 03 49 42 4D

53 55 42 53 50 57 01 DF

B0 40 2F 22 AB A3 BA FF

<-- F0

The following illustrates the clear-text case:

AS/400 Telnet server Enhanced Telnet client

-------------------------- -------------------------

IAC DO NEW-ENVIRON -->

<-- IAC WILL NEW-ENVIRON

IAC SB NEW-ENVIRON SEND

USERVAR "IBMRSEEDxxxxxxxx"

USERVAR "IBMSUBSPW"

VAR USERVAR IAC SE -->

IAC SB NEW-ENVIRON IS

VAR "USER" VALUE "DUMMYUSR"

USERVAR "IBMRSEED" VALUE

USERVAR "IBMSUBSPW" VALUE "yyyyyyyy"

<-- IAC SE

.

.

(other negotiations) .

In this example, "xxxxxxxx" is an 8-byte hexadecimal random server

seed, "yyyyyyyyyy" is a 10-byte us-ascii client clear-text password.

If the password has expired, then the sign-on panel is displayed.

Actual bytes transmitted in the above example are shown in hex below,

where the server seed is "7D3E488F18080404", the client seed is empty

and the clear-text password is "44554D4D595057" (DUMMYPW). The user

profile used is "44554D4D59555352" (DUMMYUSR).

AS/400 Telnet server Enhanced Telnet client

-------------------------- -------------------------

FF FD 27 -->

<-- FF FB 27

FF FA 27 01 03 49 42 4D

52 53 45 45 44 7D 3E 48

8F 18 08 04 04 03 49 42

4D 53 55 42 53 50 57 03

00 FF F0 -->

FF FA 27 00 00 55 53 45

52 01 44 55 4D 4D 59 55

53 52 03 49 42 4D 52 53

45 45 44 01 03 49 42 4D

53 55 42 53 50 57 01 44

<-- 55 4D 4D 59 50 57 FF F0

5.1 Password Substitutes Processing

Both APPC and Client Access use well-known DES encryption algorithms

to create encrypted passwords. A Network Station or Enhanced Client

can generate compatible encrypted passwords if they follow these

steps, details of which can be found in the Federal Information

Processing Standards 46-2 [17].

1. Padded_PW = Left justified user password padded to the right with

'40'X to 8 bytes.

The users password must be left justified in an 8 byte variable

and padded to the right with '40'X up to an 8 byte length. If the

users password is 8 bytes in length, no padding would occur. For

computing password substitutes for passwords of length 9 and 10

see section "Handling passwords of length 9 and 10" below.

Passwords less than 1 byte or greater than 10 bytes in length are

not valid. Please note, if password is not in EBCDIC, it must be

converted to EBCDIC uppercase.

2. XOR_PW = Padded_PW xor '5555555555555555'X

The padded password is Exclusive OR'ed with 8 bytes of '55'X.

3. SHIFT_RESULT = XOR_PW << 1

The entire 8 byte result is shifted 1 bit to the left; the

leftmost bit value is discarded, and the rightmost bit value is

cleared to 0.

4. PW_TOKEN = DES_ECB_mode(SHIFT_RESULT, /* key */

userID_in_EBCDIC_uppercase /* data */ )

This shifted result is used as key to the Data Encryption Standard

(Federal Information Processing Standards 46-2 [17]) to encipher

the user identifier. When the user identifier is less than 8

bytes, it is left justified in an 8 byte variable and padded to

the right with '40'X. When the user identifier is 9 or 10 bytes,

it is first padded to the right with '40'X to a length of 10

bytes. Then bytes 9 and 10 are "folded" into bytes 1-8 using the

following algorithm:

Bit 0 is the high-order bit (i.e. has value of '80'X).

Byte 1, bits 0 and 1 are replaced with byte 1, bits 0 and 1

Exclusive OR'ed with byte 9, bits 0 and 1.

Byte 2, bits 0 and 1 are replaced with byte 2, bits 0 and 1

Exclusive OR'ed with byte 9, bits 2 and 3.

Byte 3, bits 0 and 1 are replaced with byte 3, bits 0 and 1

Exclusive OR'ed with byte 9, bits 4 and 5.

Byte 4, bits 0 and 1 are replaced with byte 4, bits 0 and 1

Exclusive OR'ed with byte 9, bits 6 and 7.

Byte 5, bits 0 and 1 are replaced with byte 5, bits 0 and 1

Exclusive OR'ed with byte 10, bits 0 and 1.

Byte 6, bits 0 and 1 are replaced with byte 6, bits 0 and 1

Exclusive OR'ed with byte 10, bits 2 and 3.

Byte 7, bits 0 and 1 are replaced with byte 7, bits 0 and 1

Exclusive OR'ed with byte 10, bits 4 and 5.

Byte 8, bits 0 and 1 are replaced with byte 8, bits 0 and 1

Exclusive OR'ed with byte 10, bits 6 and 7.

User identifier greater than 10 bytes or less than 1 byte are not

the result of this encryption id known as PW_TOKEN in the paper.

5. Increment PWSEQs and store it.

Each LU must maintain a pair of sequence numbers for ATTACHs sent

and received on each session. Each time an ATTACH is generated,

(and password substitutes are in use on the session) the sending

sequence number, PWSEQs, is incremented and saved for the next

time. Both values are set to zero at BIND time. So the first use

of PWSEQs has the value of 1, and increases by one with each use.

A new field is added to the ATTACH to carry this sequence number.

However, in certain error conditions, it is possible for the

sending side to increment the sequence number and the receiver may

not increment it. When the sender sends a subsequent ATTACH, the

receiver will detect a missing sequence. This is allowed.

However the sequence number received must always be larger than

the previous one, even if some are missing.

The maximum number of consecutive missing sequence numbers allowed

is 16. If this is exceeded, the session is unbound with a

protocol violation.

Note: The sequence number must be incremented for every ATTACH

sent. However, the sequence number field is only required to be

included in the FMH5 if a password substitute is sent (byte 4, bit

3 on).

6. RDrSEQ = RDr + PWSEQs /* RDr is server seed. */

The current value of PWSEQs is added to RDr, the random value

received from the partner LU on this session, yielding RDrSEQ,

essentially a predictably modified value of the random value

received from the partner LU at BIND time.

7. PW_SUB = DES_CBC_mode(PW_TOKEN, /* key */

(RDrSEQ, /* 8 bytes */

RDs, /* 8 bytes */

ID xor RDrSEQ, /* 16 bytes */

PWSEQs, /* 8 bytes */

) /* data */

)

The PW_TOKEN is used as a key to the DES function to generate

a 8 bytes value for the following string of inputs. The DES

CBC mode Initialization Vector (IV) used is 8 bytes of '00'X.

RDrSEQ: the random data value received from the partner LU

plus the sequence number.

RDs: the random data value sent to the partner LU on BIND

for this session.

A 16 byte value created by:

- padding the user identifier with '40'X to a

length of 16 bytes.

- Exclusive OR the two 8 byte halves of the padded

user identifier with the RDrSEQ value.

Note: User ID must first be converted to EBCDIC

upper case.

PWSEQs: the sequence number.

This is similar to the process used on LU-LU verification as

described in the Enhanced LU-LU Bind Security. The resulting

enciphered random data is the 'password substitute'.

5.2 Handling passwords of length 9 and 10

1. Generate PW_TOKENa by using characters 1 to 8 of the password and

steps 1-4 from the previous section.

2. Generate PW_TOKENb by using characters 9 and 10 and steps 1-4 from

the previous section. In this case Padded_PW from step 1 will be

characters 9 and 10 padded to the right with '40'X, for a total

length of 8.

3. PW_TOKEN = PW_TOKENa xor PW_TOKENb

4. Now compute PW_SUB by performing steps 5-7 from the previous

section.

5.3 Example Password Substitute Calculation

ID: USER123

Password: ABCDEFG

Server seed: '7D4C2319F28004B2'X

Client seed: '08BEF662D851F4B1'X

PWSEQs: 1 (PWSEQs is a sequence number needed in the

7-step encryption, and it is always one)

Encrypted Password should be : '5A58BD50E4DD9B5F'X

6. Device Name Collision Processing

Device name collision occurs when a Telnet client sends the Telnet

server a virtual device name that it wants to use, but that device is

already in use on the server. When this occurs, the Telnet server

sends a request to the client aSKINg it to try another device name.

The environment option negotiation uses the USERVAR name of DEVNAME

to communicate the virtual device name. The following shows how the

Telnet server will request the Telnet client to send a different

DEVNAME when device name collision occurs.

AS/400 Telnet server Enhanced Telnet client

-------------------------- -------------------------

IAC SB NEW-ENVIRON SEND

VAR USERVAR IAC SE -->

Server requests all environment variables be sent.

IAC SB NEW-ENVIRON IS USERVAR

"DEVNAME" VALUE "MYDEVICE1"

USERVAR "xxxxx" VALUE "xxx"

...

<-- IAC SE

Client sends all environment variables, including DEVNAME. Server

tries to select device MYDEVICE1. If the device is already in use,

server requests DEVNAME be sent again.

IAC SB NEW-ENVIRON SEND

USERVAR "DEVNAME" IAC SE -->

Server sends a request for a single environment variable: DEVNAME

IAC SB NEW-ENVIRON IS USERVAR

<-- "DEVNAME" VALUE "MYDEVICE2" IAC SE

Client sends one environment variable, calculating a new value of

MYDEVICE2. If MYDEVICE2 is different from the last request, then

server tries to select device MYDEVICE2, else server disconnects

client. If MYDEVICE2 is also in use, server will send DEVNAME

request again, and keep doing so until it receives a device that is

not in use, or the same device name twice in row.

7. Enhanced Printer Emulation Support

RFC1572 style USERVAR variables have been defined to allow a

compliant Telnet client more control over the Telnet server virtual

device on the AS/400. These USERVAR's allow the client Telnet to

select a previously created virtual device or auto-create a new

virtual device with requested attributes.

This makes the enhancements available to any Telnet client that

chonoses to support the new negotiations.

The USERVAR's defined to accomplish this are:

USERVAR VALUE EXAMPLE DESCRIPTION

------------- ---------------- ---------------- -------------------

DEVNAME us-ascii char(x) PRINTER1 Printer device name

IBMIGCFEAT us-ascii char(6) 2424J0 IGC feature (DBCS)

IBMMSGQNAME us-ascii char(x) QSYSOPR *MSGQ name

IBMMSGQLIB us-ascii char(x) QSYS *MSGQ library

IBMFONT us-ascii char(x) 12 Font

IBMFORMFEED us-ascii char(1) C U A Formfeed

IBMTRANSFORM us-ascii char(1) 1 0 Transform

IBMMFRTYPMDL us-ascii char(x) *IBM42023 Mfg. type and model

IBMPPRSRC1 binary(1) 1-byte hex field Paper source 1

IBMPPRSRC2 binary(1) 1-byte hex field Paper source 2

IBMENVELOPE binary(1) 1-byte hex field Envelope hopper

IBMASCII899 us-ascii char(1) 1 0 ASCII 899 support

IBMWSCSTNAME us-ascii char(x) *NONE WSCST name

IBMWSCSTLIB us-ascii char(x) *LIBL WSCST library

x - up to a maximum of 10 characters

The "IBM" prefix on the USERVAR's denotes AS/400 specific attributes.

The DEVNAME USERVAR is used both for displays and printers. The

IBMFONT and IBMASCII899 are used only for SBCS environments.

For a description of most of these parameters (drop the "IBM" from

the USERVAR) and their permissible values, refer to Chapter 8 in the

Communications Configuration Reference [5].

The IBMIGCFEAT supports the following variable DBCS language

identifiers in position 5 (positions 1-4 must be '2424', position 6

must be '0'):

'J' = Japanese 'K' = Korean

'C' = Traditional Chinese 'S' = Simplified Chinese

The IBMTRANSFORM and IBMASCII899 values correspond to:

'1' = Yes '2' = No

The IBMFORMFEED values correspond to:

'C' = Continuous 'U' = Cut 'A' = Autocut

The IBMPPRSRC1, IBMPPRSRC2 and IBMENVELOPE custom USERVAR's do not

map directly to their descriptions in Chapter 8 in the Communications

Configuration Reference [5]. To map these, use the index listed

here:

IBMPPRSRC1 HEX IBMPPRSRC2 HEX IBMENVELOPE HEX

---------- ----- ---------- ----- ----------- -----

*NONE 'FF'X *NONE 'FF'X *NONE 'FF'X

*MFRTYPMDL '00'X *MFRTYPMDL '00'X *MFRTYPMDL '00'X

*LETTER '01'X *LETTER '01'X *B5 '06'X

*LEGAL '02'X *LEGAL '02'X *MONARCH '09'X

*EXECUTIVE '03'X *EXECUTIVE '03'X *NUMBER9 '0A'X

*A4 '04'X *A4 '04'X *NUMBER10 '0B'X

*A5 '05'X *A5 '05'X *C5 '0C'X

*B5 '06'X *B5 '06'X *DL '0D'X

*CONT80 '07'X *CONT80 '07'X

*CONT132 '08'X *CONT132 '08'X

*A3 '0E'X *A3 '0E'X

*B4 '0F'X *B4 '0F'X

*LEDGER '10'X *LEDGER '10'X

Note 1: For IBMPPRSRC2, *CONT80 and *CONT132 support starts at V3R7.

Note 2: For IBMPPRSRC1 and IBMPPRSRC2, *A3, *B4 and *LEDGER support

starts at V3R7.

8. Telnet Printer Terminal Types

New Telnet options are defined for the printer pass-through mode of

operation. To enable printer pass-through mode, both the client and

server must agree to at least support the Transmit-Binary, End-Of-

Record, and Terminal-Type Telnet options. The following are new

terminal types for printers:

TERMINAL-TYPE DESCRIPTION

------------- -------------------

IBM-5553-B01 Double-Byte printer

IBM-3812-1 Single-Byte printer

Specific characteristics of the IBM-5553-B01 or IBM-3812-1 printers

are specified through the USERVAR IBMMFRTYPMDL, which specifies the

manufacturer type and model.

An example of a typical negotiation process to establish printer

pass-through mode of operation is shown below. In this example, the

server initiates the negotiation by sending the DO TERMINAL-TYPE

request.

For DBCS environments, if IBMTRANSFORM is set to 1 (use Host Print

Transform), then the virtual device created is 3812, not 5553.

Therefore, IBM-3812-1 should be negotiated for TERMINAL-TYPE, and not

IBM-5553-B01.

AS/400 Telnet server Enhanced Telnet client

-------------------------- --------------------------

IAC DO NEW-ENVIRON -->

<-- IAC WILL NEW-ENVIRON

IAC SB NEW-ENVIRON SEND

VAR USERVAR IAC SE -->

IAC SB NEW-ENVIRON IS

USERVAR "DEVNAME" VALUE "PCPRINTER"

USERVAR "IBMMSGQNAME" VALUE "QSYSOPR"

USERVAR "IBMMSGQLIB" VALUE "*LIBL"

USERVAR "IBMTRANSFORM" VALUE "0"

USERVAR "IBMFONT" VALUE "12"

USERVAR "IBMFORMFEED" VALUE "C"

USERVAR "IBMPPRSRC1" VALUE ESC '01'X

USERVAR "IBMPPRSRC2" VALUE '04'X

USERVAR "IBMENVELOPE" VALUE IAC 'FF'X

<-- IAC SE

IAC DO TERMINAL-TYPE -->

<-- IAC WILL TERMINAL-TYPE

IAC SB TERMINAL-TYPE SEND

IAC SE -->

IAC SB TERMINAL-TYPE IS IBM-3812-1

<-- IAC SE

IAC DO BINARY -->

<-- IAC WILL BINARY

IAC DO EOR -->

<-- IAC WILL EOR

Some points about the above example. The IBMPPRSRC1 value requires

escaping the value using ESC according to RFC1572 [13]. The

IBMPPRSRC2 does not require an ESC character since '04'X has no

conflict with RFC1572 options. Finally, to send 'FF'X for the

IBMENVELOPE value, escape the 'FF'X value by using another 'FF'X

(called "doubling"), so as not to have the value interpreted as a

Telnet character per RFC854 [8].

Actual bytes transmitted in the above example are shown in hex below.

AS/400 Telnet server Enhanced Telnet client

-------------------------- --------------------------

FF FD 27 -->

<-- FF FB 27

FF FA 27 01 00 03 FF F0 -->

FF FA 27 00 03 44 45 56

4E 41 4D 45 01 50 43 50

52 49 4E 54 45 52 03 49

42 4D 4D 53 47 51 4E 41

4D 45 01 51 53 59 53 4F

50 52 03 49 42 4D 4D 53

47 51 4C 49 42 01 2A 4C

49 42 4C 03 49 42 4D 54

52 41 4E 53 46 4F 52 4D

01 30 03 49 42 4D 46 4F

4E 54 01 31 32 03 49 42

4D 46 4F 52 4D 46 45 45

44 01 43 03 49 42 4D 50

50 52 53 52 43 31 01 02

01 03 49 42 4D 50 50 52

53 52 43 32 01 04 03 49

42 4D 45 4E 56 45 4C 4F

<-- 50 45 01 FF FF FF F0

FF FD 18 -->

<-- FF FB 18

FF FA 18 01 FF F0 -->

FF FA 18 00 49 42 4D 2D

<-- 33 38 31 32 2D 31 FF F0

FF FD 00 -->

<-- FF FB 00

FF FD 19 -->

FF FB 19

9. Telnet Printer Startup Response Record for Printer Emulators

Once Telnet negotiation for a 5250 pass-through mode is completed,

the 5250 Telnet server will initiate a virtual printer power-on

sequence on behalf of the Telnet client. The Telnet server will

supply a Startup Response Record to the Telnet client with the status

of the printer power-on sequence, indicating success or failure of

the virtual printer power-on sequence.

This section shows an example of two Startup Response Records. The

source device is a type 3812 model 01 printer with name "PCPRINTER"

on the target system "TARGET".

Figure 1 shows an example of a successful response; Figure 2 shows an

example of an error response.

9.1 Example of a Success Response Record

The response record in Figure 1 was sent by an AS/400 at Release

V4R2. It is an example of the target sending back a successful

Startup Response Record.

+------------------------------------------------------------------+

+----- Pass-Through header

+--- Response data

+---- Start diagnostic information

+----------++----------++---------------------------------------

004912A090000560060020C0003D0000C9F9F0F2E3C1D9C7C5E34040D7C3D7D9

T A R G E T P C P R

+------+

Response Code (I902)

----------------------------------------------------------------

C9D5E3C5D9400000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000

I N T E R

+------- End of diagnostic information

-----------------+

000000000000000000

+------------------------------------------------------------------+

Figure 1. Example of a success response record.

- '0049'X = Length pass-through data, including this length field

- '12A0'X = GDS LU6.2 header

- '90000560060020C0003D0000'X = Fixed value fields

- 'C9F9F0F2'X = Response Code (I902)

- 'E3C1D9C7C5E34040'X = System Name (TARGET)

- 'D7C3D7D9C9D5E3C5D940'X = Object Name (PCPRINTER)

9.2 Example of an Error Response Record

The response record in Figure 2 is one that reports an error. The

virtual device named "PCPRINTER", is not available on the target

system "TARGET", because the device is not available. You would

normally see this error if the printer was already assigned to

another Telnet session.

+------------------------------------------------------------------+

+----- Pass-Through header

+--- Response data

+---- Start diagnostic information

+----------++----------++---------------------------------------

004912A09000056006008200003D0000F8F9F0F2E3C1D9C7C5E34040D7C3D7D9

T A R G E T P C P R

+------+

Response Code (8902)

----------------------------------------------------------------

C9D5E3C5D9400000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000

I N T E R

+------- End of diagnostic information

-----------------+

000000000000000000

+------------------------------------------------------------------+

Figure 2. Example of an error response record.

- '0049'X = Length pass-through data, including this length field

- '12A0'X = GDS LU6.2 header

- '90000560060020C0003D0000'X = Fixed value fields

- 'F8F9F0F2'X = Response Code (8902)

- 'E3C1D9C7C5E34040'X = System Name (TARGET)

- 'D7C3D7D9C9D5E3C5D940'X = Object Name (PCPRINTER)

9.3 Response Codes

The Start-Up Response Record success response codes:

CODE DESCRIPTION

---- ------------------------------------------------------

I901 Virtual device has less function than source device

I902 Session successfully started

I906 Automatic sign-on requested, but not allowed.

Session still allowed; a sign-on screen will be

coming.

The Start-Up Response Record error response codes:

CODE DESCRIPTION

---- ------------------------------------------------------

2702 Device description not found.

2703 Controller description not found.

2777 Damaged device description.

8901 Device not varied on.

8902 Device not available.

8903 Device not valid for session.

8906 Session initiation failed.

8907 Session failure.

8910 Controller not valid for session.

8916 No matching device found.

8917 Not authorized to object.

8918 Job canceled.

8920 Object partially damaged.

8921 Communications error.

8922 Negative response received.

8923 Start-up record built incorrectly.

8925 Creation of device failed.

8928 Change of device failed.

8929 Vary on or vary off failed.

8930 Message queue does not exist.

8934 Start-up for S/36 WSF received.

8935 Session rejected.

8936 Security failure on session attempt.

8937 Automatic sign-on rejected.

8940 Automatic configuration failed or not allowed.

I904 Source system at incompatible release.

10. Printer Steady-State Pass-Through Interface

The information in this section applies to the passthrough session

after the receipt of startup confirmation records is complete.

Following is the printer header interface used by Telnet.

+------------------------------------------------------------------+

+-- Length of structure (LLLL)

+-- GDS identifier

+-- Data flow record

+-- Length of pass-through specific header (LL)

+-- Flags

+-- Printer operation code

+-- Diagnostic field - zero pad to

LL specified

+-- Printer data

+--+ +--+ +--+ ++ +--+ ++ +----------+ +----------------+

xxxx 12A0 xxxx xx xxxx xx xxxxxxxxxxxx ... print data ...

+------------------------------------------------------------------+

Figure 3. Layout of the printer pass-through header

BYTES 0-1: Length of structure including this field (LLLL)

BYTES 2-3: GDS Identifier ('12A0'X)

BYTE 4-5: Data flow record

This field contains flags that describe what type of

data pass-through should expect to find following this

header. Generally, bits 0-2 in the first byte are

mutually exclusive (that is, if one of them is set to '

1'B, the rest will be set to '0'B.) The bits, and their

meanings follow.

BIT DESCRIPTION

0 Start-Up confirmation

1 Termination record

2 Start-Up Record

3 Diagnostic information included

4 - 5 Reserved

6 Reserved

7 Printer record

8 - 13 Reserved

14 Client-originated (inbound) printer record

15 Server-originated (outbound) printer record

BYTE 6: Length printer pass-through header including this

field (LL)

BYTES 7-8: Flags

BYTE 7 BITS: xxxx x111 --> Reserved

xxxx 1xxx --> Last of chain

xxx1 xxxx --> First of chain

xx1x xxxx --> Printer now ready

x1xx xxxx --> Intervention Required

1xxx xxxx --> Error Indicator

BYTE 8 BITS: xxxx xxxx --> Reserved

BYTE 9: Printer operation code

'01'X Print/Print complete

'02'X Clear Print Buffers

BYTE 10-LL: Diagnostic information (1)

If BYTE 7 = xx1x xxxx then bytes 10-LL may contain:

Printer ready C9 00 00 00 02

If BYTE 7 = x1xx xxxx then bytes 10-LL may contain: (2)

Command/parameter not valid C9 00 03 02 2x

Print check C9 00 03 02 3x

Forms check C9 00 03 02 4x

Normal periodic condition C9 00 03 02 5x

Data stream error C9 00 03 02 6x

Machine/print/ribbon check C9 00 03 02 8x

If BYTE 7 = 1xxx xxxx then bytes 10-LL may contain: (3)

Cancel 08 11 02 00

Invalid print parameter 08 11 02 29

Invalid print command 08 11 02 28

Diagnostic information notes:

1. LL is the length of the structure defined in Byte 6. If no

additional data is present, the remainder of the structure must

be padded with zeroes.

2. These are printer SIGNAL commands. Further information on these

commands may be oBTained from the 5494 Remote Control Unit

Functions Reference guide [2]. Refer to your AS/400 printer

documentation for more specific information on these data stream

exceptions. Some 3812 and 5553 errors that may be seen:

Machine check C9 00 03 02 11

Graphics check C9 00 03 02 26

Print check C9 00 03 02 31

Form jam C9 00 03 02 41

Paper jam C9 00 03 02 47

End of forms C9 00 03 02 50

Printer not ready C9 00 03 02 51

Data stream - class 1 C9 00 03 02 66 loss of text

Data stream - class 2 C9 00 03 02 67 text appearance

Data stream - class 3 C9 00 03 02 68 multibyte control error

Data stream - class 4 C9 00 03 02 69 multibyte control parm

Cover unexpectedly open C9 00 03 02 81

Machine check C9 00 03 02 86

Machine check C9 00 03 02 87

Ribbon check C9 00 03 02 88

3. These are printer negative responses. Further information on

these commands may be obtained from the 5494 Remote Control Unit

Functions Reference guide [2].

The print data will start in byte LL+1.

10.1 Example of a Print Record

Figure 4 shows the server sending the client data with a print

record. This is normally seen following receipt of a Success

Response Record, such as the example in Figure 1.

+--------------------------------------------------------------------+

+-- Length of structure (LLLL)

+-- GDS identifier

+-- Data flow record

+-- Length of pass-through specific header (LL)

+-- Flags

+-- Printer operation code

+-- Zero pad to LL specified (0A)

+-- Printer data

+--+ +--+ +--+ ++ +--+ ++ +----------+ +---------------------------

0085 12A0 0101 0A 1800 01 000000000000 34C4012BD20345FF2BD2044C0002

------------------------------------------------------------

2BD2040D00002BD20A8501010201030204022BD20309022BD2061100014A

------------------------------------------------------------

402BD20601010000012BD306F60000FFFF2BD20A48000001000000010100

------------------------------------------------------------

2BD10705000B0090012BD2044900F02BD206404A403DE02BD2041500F034

end of printer data

-------------------------+

C4012BD10381FF002BC8034001

+--------------------------------------------------------------------+

Figure 4. Server sending client data with a print record

- '0085'X = Logical record length, including this byte (LLLL)

- '12A0'X = GDS LU6.2 header

- '0101'X = Data flow record (server to client)

- '0A'X = Length of pass-through specific header (LL)

- '1800'X = First of chain / Last of chain indicators

- '01'X = Print

- '000000000000'X = Zero pad header to LL specified

- '34C401'X = First piece of data for spooled data

- Remainder is printer data/commands/orders

10.2 Example of a Print Complete Record

Figure 5 shows the client sending the server a print complete record.

This would normally follow receipt of a print record, such as the

example in Figure 4. This indicates successful completion of a print

request.

+-------------------------------------------------------------------+

+-- Length of structure (LLLL)

+-- GDS identifier

+-- Data flow record

+-- Length of pass-through specific header (LL)

+-- Flags

+-- Printer operation code

+--+ +--+ +--+ ++ +--+ ++

000A 12A0 0102 04 0000 01

+-------------------------------------------------------------------+

Figure 5. Client sending server a print complete record

- '000A'X = Logical record length, including this byte (LLLL)

- '12A0'X = GDS LU6.2 header

- '0102'X = Data flow response record (client to server)

- '04'X = Length of pass-through specific header (LL)

- '0000'X = Good Response

- '01'X = Print Complete

10.3 Example of a Null Print Record

Figure 6 shows the server sending the client a null print record.

The null print record is the last print command the server sends to

the client for a print job, and indicates to the printer there is no

more data. The null data byte '00'X is optional, and in some cases

may be omitted (in particular, this scenario occurs in DBCS print

streams).

This example would normally follow any number of print records, such

as the example in Figure 4. This indicates successful completion of

a print job. The client normally responds to this null print record

with another print complete record, such as in Figure 5.

+------------------------------------------------------------------+

+-- Length of structure (LLLL)

+-- GDS identifier

+-- Data flow record

+-- Length of pass-through specific header (LL)

+-- Flags

+-- Printer operation code

+-- Zero pad to LL specified (0A)

+-- Printer data

+--+ +--+ +--+ ++ +--+ ++ +----------+ ++

0011 12A0 0101 0A 0800 01 000000000000 00

+------------------------------------------------------------------+

Figure 6. Server sending client a null print record

- '0011'X = Logical record length, including this byte

- '12A0'X = GDS LU6.2 header

- '0101'X = Data flow record

- '0A'X = Length of pass-through specific header (LL)

- '0800'X = Last of Chain

- '01'X = Print

- '000000000000'X = Zero pad header to LL specified

- '00'X = Null data byte

11. End-to-End Print Example

The next example shows a full print exchange between a Telnet client

and server for a 526 byte spooled file. Selective translation of the

hexadecimal streams into 1) Telnet negotiations and 2) ASCII/EBCDIC

characters are done to aid readability. Telnet negotiations are

delimited by '(' and ')' parenthesis characters; ASCII/EBCDIC

conversions are bracketed by '' vertical bar characters.

AS/400 Telnet server Enhanced Telnet client

------------------------------- ---------------------------------

FFFD27 -->

(IAC DO NEW-ENVIRON)

<-- FFFB27

(IAC WILL NEW-ENVIRON)

FFFD18FFFA270103 49424D5253454544

7EA5DFDDFD300404 0003FFF0 -->

(IAC DO TERMINAL-TYPE

IAC SB NEW-ENVIRON SEND USERVAR

IBMRSEED xxxxxxxx VAR USERVAR

IAC SE)

<-- FFFB18

(IAC WILL TERMINAL-TYPE)

FFFA1801FFF0 -->

(IAC SB TERMINAL-TYPE SEND IAC

SE)

FFFA27000349424D 52534545447EA5DF

DDFD300404000344 45564E414D450144

554D4D5950525403 49424D4D5347514E

414D450151535953 4F50520349424D4D

5347514C4942012A 4C49424C0349424D

464F4E5401313103 49424D5452414E53

464F524D01310349 424D4D4652545950

4D444C012A485049 490349424D505052

5352433101020103 49424D5050525352

433201040349424D 454E56454C4F5045

01FFFF0349424D41 5343494938393901

<-- 30FFF0

(IAC SB NEW-ENVIRON IS USERVAR

IBMRSEED xxxxxxxx VAR

USERVAR DEVNAME VALUE DUMMYPRT

USERVAR IBMMSGQNAME VALUE QSYSOPR

USERVAR IBMMSGQLIB VALUE *LIBL

USERVAR IBMFONT VALUE 11

USERVAR IBMTRANSFORM VALUE 1

USERVAR IBMMFRTYPMDL VALUE *HPII

USERVAR IBMPPRSRC1 VALUE ESC '01'X

USERVAR IBMPPRSRC2 VALUE '04'X

USERVAR IBMENVELOPE VALUE IAC

USERVAR IBMASCII899 VALUE 0

IAC SE)

<-- FFFA180049424D2D 333831322D31FFF0

(IAC SB TERMINAL-TYPE IS

IBM-3812-1 IAC SE)

FFFD19 -->

(IAC DO EOR)

<-- FFFB19

(IAC WILL EOR)

FFFB19 -->

(IAC WILL EOR)

<-- FFFD19

(IAC DO EOR)

FFFD00 -->

(IAC DO BINARY)

<-- FFFB00

(IAC WILL BINARY)

FFFB00 -->

(IAC WILL BINARY)

<-- FFFD00

(IAC DO BINARY)

004912A090000560 060020C0003D0000 - {

C9F9F0F2C5D3C3D9 E3D7F0F6C4E4D4D4 I902ELCRTP06DUMM (EBCDIC)

E8D7D9E340400000 0000000000000000 YPRT

0000000000000000 0000000000000000

0000000000000000 00FFEF -->

(73-byte startup success response

record ... IAC EOR)

00DF12A001010A18 0001000000000000

03CD1B451B283130 551B287330703130 E (10U (s0p10 (ASCII)

2E30306831327630 733062303033541B .00h12v0s0b003T

287330421B266440 1B266C304F1B266C (s0B &d@ &l0O &l

303038431B266C30 3035431B28733070 008C &l005C (s0p

31372E3130683130 7630733062303030 17.10h10v0s0b000

541B283130551B28 73307031372E3130 T (10U (s0p17.10

6831307630733062 303030541B287330 h10v0s0b000T (s0

421B2664401B266C 314F1B266C303035 B &d@ &l1O &l005

431B287330703137 2E31306831307630 C (s0p17.10h10v0

733062303030541B 266C314F1B287330 s0b000T &l1O (s0

7031372E31306831 3076307330623030 p17.10h10v0s0b00

30541B2873307031 372E313068313076 0T (s0p17.10h10v

3073306230303054 1B266C30303543FF 0s0b000T &l005C

EF -->

(... 223-byte print record ...

... first of chain ...

... last of chain ... IAC EOR)

<-- 000A12A001020400 0001FFEF

(10-byte print complete header)

031012A001010A10 0001000000000000

03FFFF1B451B2831 30551B2873307031 E (10U (s0p1 (ASCII)

372E313068313076 3073306230303054 7.10h10v0s0b000T

1B287330421B2664 401B266C314F1B26 (s0B &d@ &l1O &

6C303035431B266C 31481B266C314F1B l005C &l1H &l1O

266C3032411B266C 31431B266C303030 &l02A &l1C &l000

38451B266C303038 431B266C30303439 8E &l008C &l0049

461B266130521B26 6C303035430A0A0A F &a0R &l005C

0A0A0A0A1B26612B 3030303130561B26 &a+00010V &

6C303035431B2661 2B30303231364820 l005C &a+00216H

2020202020202020 2020202020202020

2020202020205072 696E74204B657920 Print Key

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2020202020202020 2020202020202020

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1B26612B30303231 3648202020203537 &a+00216H 57

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30204D61696E204D 656E750D0A1B2661 0 Main Menu &a

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20454C4352545030 360D0A1B26612B30 ELCRTP06 &a+0

3032313648205365 6C656374206F6E65 0216H Select one

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673A0D0A1B26612B 3030323136480D0A g: &a+00216H

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312E205573657220 7461736B730D0A1B 1. User tasks

26612B3030323136 4820202020202032 &a+00216H 2

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1B26612B30303231 36480D0A1B26612B &a+00216H &a+

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696C65732C206C69 627261726965732C iles, libraries,

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(... 784-byte print record ...

... first of chain ... IAC EOR)

<-- 000A12A001020400 0001FFEF

(10-byte print complete header)

020312A001010A00 0001000000000000

64206603FFFF6F6C 646572730D0A1B26 d f olders & (ASCII)

612B303032313648 0D0A1B26612B3030 a+00216H &a+00

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2B3030323136480D 0A1B26612B303032 +00216H &a+002

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0A1B26612B303032 3136482020202020 &a+00216H

31302E20496E666F 726D6174696F6E20 10. Information

417373697374616E 74206F7074696F6E Assistant option

730D0A1B26612B30 3032313648202020 s &a+00216H

202031312E20436C 69656E7420416363 11. Client Acc

6573732F34303020 7461736B730D0A1B ess/400 tasks

26612B3030323136 480D0A1B26612B30 &a+00216H &a+0

303231364803ED20 2020202039302E20 0216H 90.

5369676E206F6666 0D0A1B26612B3030 Sign off &a+00

323136480D0A1B26 612B303032313648 216H &a+00216H

2053656C65637469 6F6E206F7220636F Selection or co

6D6D616E640D0A1B 26612B3030323136 mmand &a+00216

48203D3D3D3E0D0A 1B26612B30303231 H ===> &a+0021

36480D0A1B26612B 3030323136482046 6H &a+00216H F

333D457869742020 2046343D50726F6D 3=Exit F4=Prom

707420202046393D 5265747269657665 pt F9=Retrieve

2020204631323D43 616E63656C202020 F12=Cancel

4631333D496E666F 726D6174696F6E20 F13=Information

417373697374616E 740D0A1B26612B30 Assistant &a+0

3032313648204632 333D53657420696E 0216H F23=Set in

697469616C206D65 6E750D0A1B26612B itial menu &a+

3030323136480D0A 1B26612B30303231 00216H &a+0021

36480D0CFFEF 6H

(... 515-byte print record ...

IAC EOR)

<-- 000A12A001020400 0001FFEF

(10-byte print complete header)

001412A001010A00 0001000000000000

03021B45FFEF E (ASCII)

(... 20-byte print record ...

IAC EOR)

<-- 000A12A001020400 0001FFEF

(10-byte print complete header)

001112A001010A08 0001000000000000

00FFEF -->

(... 17-byte NULL print record ...

... last of chain ... IAC EOR)

<-- 000A12A001020400 0001FFEF

(10-byte print complete header)

12. Authors' Note

Discussion of this memo should occur in one of these mailing lists:

TN3270E List (Roger Fajman raf@cu.nih.gov). Send subscription

requests as e-mail with "subscribe tn3270e your_full_name" to

listserv@list.nih.gov.

Midrange-L List (David Gibbs david@midrange.com). Send

subscription requests as email with "subscribe midrange-l

your_internet_address" to majordomo@midrange.com.

Telnet Working Group Mailing List: Send subscription requests as

email with "subscribe telnet-ietf" to telnet-ietf-

request@bsdi.com.

13. References

[1] IBM, "IBM 5250 Information Display System, Functions Reference

Manual", SA21-9247-6, March 1987.

[2] IBM, "5494 Remote Control Unit, Functions Reference", SC30-

3533-04, August 1995.

[3] IBM, "AS/400 System API Reference", SC41-5801-01, February

1998.

[4] IBM, "AS/400 TCP/IP Configuration and Reference", SC41-5420-02,

September 1998.

[5] IBM, "AS/400 Communications Configuration", SC41-5401-00,

August 1997.

[6] IBM, "SNA Formats", GA27-3136-13, November 1993.

[7] IBM, "Using the Pageprinter 3812 with System/36 or System/38",

S544-3343-01, September 1997.

[8] Postel, J. and J. Reynolds, "Telnet Protocol Specification",

STD 8, RFC854, May 1983.

[9] Postel, J. and J. Reynolds, "Telnet Option Specifications", STD

8, RFC855, May 1983.

[10] Postel, J. and J. Reynolds, "Telnet Binary Transmission", STD

27, RFC856, May 1983.

[11] VanBokkeln, J., "Telnet Terminal-Type Option", RFC1091,

February 1989.

[12] Postel, J. and J. Reynolds, "Telnet End of Record Option", RFC

885, December 1983.

[13] Alexander, S., "Telnet Environment Option", RFC1572, January

1994.

[14] Chmielewski, P., "5250 Telnet Interface", RFC1205, February

1991.

[15] Postel, J. and J. Reynolds, "Telnet Supress Go Ahead Option",

STD 29, RFC858, May 1983.

[16] IBM, "AS/400 National Language Support", SC41-5101-01, February

1998.

[17] Data Encryption Standard (DES), Federal Information Processing

Standards Publication 46-2, January 22, 1988.

[18] DES Modes of Operation, Federal Information Processing

Standards Publication 81, December 1980.

[19] Reynolds, J. and J. Postel, "Assigned Numbers", STD 2, RFC

1700, October 1994.

[20] IBM, "IBM Pageprinter 3812 Programming Reference", S544-3268.

14. Security Considerations

Security considerations of passwords are discussed in Section 6.

15. Authors' Addresses

Thomas E. Murphy, Jr.

IBM Corporation

1701 North Street

Endicott, NY 13760

Phone: (607) 752-5482

Fax: (607) 752-5421

EMail: murphyte@us.ibm.com

Paul F. Rieth

IBM Corporation

1701 North Street

Endicott, NY 13760

Phone: (607) 752-5474

Fax: (607) 752-5421

EMail: rieth@us.ibm.com

Jeffrey S. Stevens

IBM Corporation

1701 North Street

Endicott, NY 13760

Phone: (607) 752-5488

Fax: (607) 752-5421

EMail: jssteven@us.ibm.com

16. Relation to Other RFC's

UPDATES

This memo is an update to RFC1205 [14], which describes the 5250

Telnet Interface. This update enhances that description to

include device negotiation as well as printer support.

This memo makes use of RFC1572 [13] to enhance communications

with 5250 Telnet clients. RFC1572 is currently on the Standards

Track as a Proposed Standard, and is listed in Assigned Numbers

[19].

17. Full Copyright Statement

Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2000). All Rights Reserved.

This document and translations of it may be copied and furnished to

others, and derivative works that comment on or otherwise explain it

or assist in its implementation may be prepared, copied, published

and distributed, in whole or in part, without restriction of any

kind, provided that the above copyright notice and this paragraph are

included on all such copies and derivative works. However, this

document itself may not be modified in any way, such as by removing

the copyright notice or references to the Internet Society or other

Internet organizations, except as needed for the purpose of

developing Internet standards in which case the procedures for

copyrights defined in the Internet Standards process must be

followed, or as required to translate it into languages other than

English.

The limited permissions granted above are perpetual and will not be

revoked by the Internet Society or its successors or assigns.

This document and the information contained herein is provided on an

"AS IS" basis and THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND THE INTERNET ENGINEERING

TASK FORCE DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING

BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF THE INFORMATION

HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF

MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.

Acknowledgement

Funding for the RFCEditor function is currently provided by the

Internet Society.

 
 
 
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