repo/extra/ncurses/files/terminfo.src
Dylan Araps 9af8f93349
ncurses: reduce package to 3MB~
- Disables manual pages.
- Smaller terminfo database.
2021-07-06 13:06:34 +03:00

4390 lines
190 KiB
Terminfo

######## TERMINAL TYPE DESCRIPTIONS SOURCE FILE
#
# This version of terminfo.src is distributed with ncurses and is maintained
# by Thomas E. Dickey (TD).
#
# Report bugs and new terminal descriptions to
# bug-ncurses@gnu.org
#
# $Revision: 1.779 $
# $Date: 2020/01/19 01:09:38 $
#
# The original header is preserved below for reference. It is noted that there
# is a "newer" version which differs in some cosmetic details (but actually
# stopped updates several years ago); we have decided to not change the header
# unless there is also a change in content.
#
# To further muddy the waters, it is noted that changes to this file as part of
# maintenance of ncurses (since 1996) are generally conceded to be copyright
# under the ncurses MIT-style license. That was the effect of the agreement
# which the principal authors of ncurses made in 1998. However, since much of
# the file itself is of unknown authorship (and the disclaimer below makes it
# obvious that Raymond cannot or will not convey rights over those parts),
# there is no explicit copyright notice on the file itself.
#
# It would also be a nuisance to split the file into unknown/known authorship
# and move pieces as they are maintained, since many of the maintenance changes
# have been small corrections to Raymond's translations to/from termcap format,
# correcting the data but not the accompanying annotations.
#
# In any case, note that almost half of this file is not data but annotations
# which reflect creative effort. Furthermore, the structure of entries to
# reuse common chunks also is creative (and subject to copyright). Finally,
# some portions of the data are derivative work under a compatible MIT-style
# license from xterm.
#
#------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# https://invisible-island.net/ncurses/ncurses.faq.html#terminfo_copying
# https://invisible-island.net/personal/copyrights.html#removing_notes
#------------------------------------------------------------------------------
#
# Version 10.2.1
# terminfo syntax
#
# Eric S. Raymond (current maintainer)
# John Kunze, Berkeley
# Craig Leres, Berkeley
#
# Please e-mail changes to terminfo@thyrsus.com; the old termcap@berkeley.edu
# address is no longer valid. The latest version can always be found at
# <http://www.tuxedo.org/terminfo>.
#
# PURPOSE OF THIS FILE:
#
# This file describes the capabilities of various character-cell terminals,
# as needed by software such as screen-oriented editors.
#
# Other terminfo and termcap files exist, supported by various OS vendors
# or as relics of various older versions of UNIX. This one is the longest
# and most comprehensive one in existence. It subsumes not only the entirety
# of the historical 4.4BSD, GNU, System V and SCO termcap files and the BRL
# termcap file, but also large numbers of vendor-maintained termcap and
# terminfo entries more complete and carefully tested than those in historical
# termcap/terminfo versions.
#
# Pointers to related resources (including the ncurses distribution) may
# be found at <http://www.tuxedo.org/terminfo>.
#
# INTERNATIONALIZATION:
#
# This file uses only the US-ASCII character set (no ISO8859 characters).
#
# This file assumes a US-ASCII character set. If you need to fix this, start
# by global-replacing \E(B and \E)B with the appropriate ISO 6429 enablers
# for your character set. \E(A and \E)A enables the British character set
# with the pound sign at position 2/3.
#
# In a Japanese-processing environment using EUC/Japanese or Shift-JIS,
# C1 characters are considered the first-byte set of the Japanese encodings,
# so \E)0 should be avoided in <enacs> and initialization strings.
#
# FILE FORMAT:
#
# The version you are looking at may be in any of three formats: master
# (terminfo with OT capabilities), stock terminfo, or termcap. You can tell
# which by the format given in the header above.
#
# The master format is accepted and generated by the terminfo tools in the
# ncurses suite; it differs from stock (System V-compatible) terminfo only
# in that it admits a group of capabilities (prefixed `OT') equivalent to
# various obsolete termcap capabilities. You can, thus, convert from master
# to stock terminfo simply by filtering with `sed "/OT[^,]*,/s///"'; but if
# you have ncurses `tic -I' is nicer (among other things, it automatically
# outputs entries in a canonical form).
#
# The termcap version is generated automatically from the master version
# using tic -C. This filtering leaves in the OT capabilities under their
# original termcap names. All translated entries fit within the 1023-byte
# string-table limit of archaic termcap libraries except where explicitly
# noted below. Note that the termcap translation assumes that your termcap
# library can handle multiple tc capabilities in an entry. 4.4BSD has this
# capability. Older versions of GNU termcap, through 1.3, do not.
#
# For details on these formats, see terminfo(5) in the ncurses distribution,
# and termcap(5) in the 4.4BSD Unix Programmer's Manual. Be aware that 4.4BSD
# curses has been declared obsolete by the caretakers of the 4.4BSD sources
# as of June 1995; they are encouraging everyone to migrate to ncurses.
#
# Note: unlike some other distributed terminfo files (Novell Unix & SCO's),
# no entry in this file has embedded comments. This is so source translation
# to termcap only has to carry over leading comments. Also, no name field
# contains embedded whitespace (such whitespace confuses rdist).
#
# Further note: older versions of this file were often installed with an editor
# script (reorder) that moved the most common terminal types to the front of
# the file. This should no longer be necessary, as the file is now ordered
# roughly by type frequency with ANSI/VT100 and other common types up front.
#
# Some information has been merged in from terminfo files distributed by
# USL and SCO (see COPYRIGHTS AND OTHER DELUSIONS below). Much information
# comes from vendors who maintain official terminfos for their hardware
# (notably DEC and Wyse).
#
# A detailed change history is included at the end of this file.
#
# FILE ORGANIZATION:
#
# Comments in this file begin with # - they cannot appear in the middle
# of a terminfo/termcap entry (this feature had to be sacrificed in order
# to allow standard terminfo and termcap syntax to be generated cleanly from
# the master format). Individual capabilities are commented out by
# placing a period between the colon and the capability name.
#
# The file is divided up into major sections (headed by lines beginning with
# the string "########") and minor sections (beginning with "####"); do
#
# grep "^####" <file> | more
#
# to see a listing of section headings. The intent of the divisions is
# (a) to make it easier to find things, and (b) to order the database so
# that important and frequently-encountered terminal types are near the
# front (so that you'll get reasonable search efficiency from a linear
# search of the termcap form even if you don't use reorder). Minor sections
# usually correspond to manufacturers or standard terminal classes.
# Parenthesized words following manufacturer names are type prefixes or
# product line names used by that manufacturers.
#
# HOW TO READ THE ENTRIES:
#
# The first name in an entry is the canonical name for the model or
# type, last entry is a verbose description. Others are mnemonic synonyms for
# the terminal.
#
# Terminal names look like <manufacturer> <model> - <modes/options>
# The part to the left of the dash, if a dash is present, describes the
# particular hardware of the terminal. The part to the right may be used
# for flags indicating special ROMs, extra memory, particular terminal modes,
# or user preferences.
#
# All names should be in lower case, for consistency in typing.
#
# The following are conventionally used suffixes:
# -2p Has two pages of memory. Likewise 4p, 8p, etc.
# -am Enable auto-margin.
# -m Monochrome. Suppress color support
# -mc Magic-cookie. Some terminals (notably older Wyses) can
# only support one attribute without magic-cookie lossage.
# Their base entry is usually paired with another that
# uses magic cookies to support multiple attributes.
# -nam No auto-margin - suppress <am> capability
# -nl No labels - suppress soft labels
# -ns No status line - suppress status line
# -rv Terminal in reverse video mode (black on white)
# -s Enable status line.
# -vb Use visible bell (<flash>) rather than <bel>.
# -w Wide - in 132 column mode.
# If a name has multiple suffixes and one is a line height, that one should
# go first. Thus `aaa-30-s-rv' is recommended over `aaa-s-rv-30'.
#
# Entries with embedded plus signs are designed to be included through use/tc
# capabilities, not used as standalone entries.
#
# To avoid search clashes, some older all-numeric names for terminals have
# been removed (i.e., "33" for the Model 33 Teletype, "2621" for the HP2621).
# All primary names of terminals now have alphanumeric prefixes.
#
# Comments marked "esr" are mostly results of applying the termcap-compiler
# code packaged with ncurses and contemplating the resulting error messages.
# In many cases, these indicated obvious fixes to syntax garbled by the
# composers. In a few cases, I was able to deduce corrected forms for garbled
# capabilities by looking at context. All the information in the original
# entries is preserved in the comments.
#
# In the comments, terminfo capability names are bracketed with <> (angle
# brackets). Termcap capability names are bracketed with :: (colons).
#
# INTERPRETATION OF USER CAPABILITIES
#
# The System V Release 4 and XPG4 terminfo format defines ten string
# capabilities for use by applications, <u0>...<u9>. In this file, we use
# certain of these capabilities to describe functions which are not covered
# by terminfo. The mapping is as follows:
#
# u9 terminal enquire string (equiv. to ANSI/ECMA-48 DA)
# u8 terminal answerback description
# u7 cursor position request (equiv. to VT100/ANSI/ECMA-48 DSR 6)
# u6 cursor position report (equiv. to ANSI/ECMA-48 CPR)
#
# The terminal enquire string <u9> should elicit an answerback response
# from the terminal. Common values for <u9> will be ^E (on older ASCII
# terminals) or \E[c (on newer VT100/ANSI/ECMA-48-compatible terminals).
#
# The cursor position request (<u7>) string should elicit a cursor position
# report. A typical value (for VT100 terminals) is \E[6n.
#
# The terminal answerback description (u8) must consist of an expected
# answerback string. The string may contain the following scanf(3)-like
# escapes:
#
# %c Accept any character
# %[...] Accept any number of characters in the given set
#
# The cursor position report (<u6>) string must contain two scanf(3)-style
# %d format elements. The first of these must correspond to the Y coordinate
# and the second to the %d. If the string contains the sequence %i, it is
# taken as an instruction to decrement each value after reading it (this is
# the inverse sense from the cup string). The typical CPR value is
# \E[%i%d;%dR (on VT100/ANSI/ECMA-48-compatible terminals).
#
# These capabilities are used by tack(1m), the terminfo action checker
# (distributed with ncurses 5.0).
#
# TABSET FILES
#
# All the entries in this file have been edited to assume that the tabset
# files directory is /usr/share/tabset, in conformance with the File Hierarchy
# Standard for Linux and open-source BSD systems. Some vendors (notably Sun)
# use /usr/lib/tabset or (more recently) /usr/share/lib/tabset.
#
# No curses package we know of actually uses these files. If their location
# is an issue, you will have to hand-patch the file locations before compiling
# this file.
#
# REQUEST FOR CONTACT INFORMATION AND HISTORICAL MATERIAL
#
# As the ANSI/ECMA-48 standard and variants take firmer hold, and as
# character-cell terminals are increasingly replaced by X displays, much of
# this file is becoming a historical document (this is part of the reason for
# the new organization, which puts ANSI types, xterm, Unix consoles,
# and vt100 up front in confidence that this will catch 95% of new hardware).
#
# For the terminal types still alive, I'd like to have manufacturer's
# contact data (Internet address and/or snail-mail + phone).
#
# I'm also interested in enriching the comments so that the latter portions of
# the file do in fact become a potted history of VDT technology as seen by
# UNIX hackers. Ideally, I'd like the headers for each manufacturer to
# include its live/dead/out-of-the-business status, and for as many
# terminal types as possible to be tagged with information like years
# of heaviest use, popularity, and interesting features.
#
# I'm especially interested in identifying the obscure entries listed under
# `Miscellaneous obsolete terminals, manufacturers unknown' before the tribal
# wisdom about them gets lost. If you know a lot about obscure old terminals,
# please go to the terminfo resource page, grab the UFO file (ufo.ti), and
# eyeball it for things you can identify and describe.
#
# If you have been around long enough to contribute, please read the file
# with this in mind and send me your annotations.
#
# COPYRIGHTS AND OTHER DELUSIONS
#
# The BSD ancestor of this file had a standard Regents of the University of
# California copyright with dates from 1980 to 1993.
#
# Some information has been merged in from a terminfo file SCO distributes.
# It has an obnoxious boilerplate copyright which I'm ignoring because they
# took so much of the content from the ancestral BSD versions of this file
# and didn't attribute it, thereby violating the BSD Regents' copyright.
#
# Not that anyone should care. However many valid functions copyrights may
# serve, putting one on a termcap/terminfo file with hundreds of anonymous
# contributors makes about as much sense as copyrighting a wall-full of
# graffiti -- it's legally dubious, ethically bogus, and patently ridiculous.
#
# This file deliberately has no copyright. It belongs to no one and everyone.
# If you claim you own it, you will merely succeed in looking like a fool.
# Use it as you like. Use it at your own risk. Copy and redistribute freely.
# There are no guarantees anywhere. Svaha!
#
######## ANSI, UNIX CONSOLE, AND SPECIAL TYPES
#
# This section describes terminal classes and brands that are still
# quite common.
#
#### Specials
#
# Special "terminals". These are used to label tty lines when you don't
# know what kind of terminal is on it. The characteristics of an unknown
# terminal are the lowest common denominator - they look about like a ti 700.
#
dumb|80-column dumb tty,
am,
cols#80,
bel=^G, cr=\r, cud1=\n, ind=\n,
unknown|unknown terminal type,
gn, use=dumb,
lpr|printer|line printer,
OTbs, hc, os,
cols#132, lines#66,
bel=^G, cr=\r, cub1=^H, cud1=\n, ff=^L, ind=\n,
glasstty|classic glass tty interpreting ASCII control characters,
OTbs, am,
cols#80,
bel=^G, clear=^L, cr=\r, cub1=^H, cud1=\n, ht=^I, kcub1=^H,
kcud1=\n, nel=\r\n, .kbs=^H,
vanilla|dumb tty,
OTbs,
bel=^G, cr=\r, cud1=\n, ind=\n,
#### ANSI.SYS/ISO 6429/ECMA-48 Capabilities
#
# See the end-of-file comment for more on these.
#
# ANSI capabilities are broken up into pieces, so that a terminal
# implementing some ANSI subset can use many of them.
ansi+local1|ANSI normal-mode cursor-keys,
cub1=\E[D, cud1=\E[B, cuf1=\E[C, cuu1=\E[A,
ansi+local|ANSI normal-mode parameterized cursor-keys,
cub=\E[%p1%dD, cud=\E[%p1%dB, cuf=\E[%p1%dC,
cuu=\E[%p1%dA, use=ansi+local1,
ansi+tabs|ANSI tab-stops,
cbt=\E[Z, ht=^I, hts=\EH, tbc=\E[3g,
ansi+inittabs|ANSI initial tab-stops,
it#8, use=ansi+tabs,
ansi+erase|ANSI clear screen/line,
clear=\E[H\E[J, ed=\E[J, el=\E[K,
ansi+rca|ANSI relative cursor-addressing,
hpa=\E[%p1%{1}%+%dG, vpa=\E[%p1%{1}%+%dd,
ansi+cup|ANSI absolute cursor-addressing,
cup=\E[%i%p1%d;%p2%dH, home=\E[H,
ansi+rep|ANSI repeat-character,
rep=%p1%c\E[%p2%{1}%-%db,
ansi+idl1|ANSI insert/delete one line,
dl1=\E[M, il1=\E[L,
ansi+idl|ANSI insert/delete lines,
dl=\E[%p1%dM, il=\E[%p1%dL, use=ansi+idl1,
ansi+idc1|ANSI insert/delete one character,
dch1=\E[P, ich1=\E[@, rmir=\E[4l, smir=\E[4h,
ansi+idc|ANSI insert/delete characters,
dch=\E[%p1%dP, ich=\E[%p1%d@, use=ansi+idc1,
ansi+arrows|ANSI normal-mode cursor-keys,
kbs=^H, kcub1=\E[D, kcud1=\E[B, kcuf1=\E[C, kcuu1=\E[A,
khome=\E[H,
ansi+sgr|ANSI graphic renditions,
blink=\E[5m, invis=\E[8m, rev=\E[7m,
sgr=\E[0%?%p3%t;7%;%?%p4%t;5%;%?%p7%t;8%;m,
sgr0=\E[0m,
ansi+sgrso|ANSI standout only,
rmso=\E[m, smso=\E[7m,
ansi+sgrul|ANSI underline only,
rmul=\E[m, smul=\E[4m,
ansi+sgrbold|ANSI graphic renditions; assuming terminal has bold; not dim,
bold=\E[1m,
sgr=\E[%?%p1%t7;%;%?%p2%t4;%;%?%p3%t7;%;%?%p4%t5;%;%?%p6%t1;
%;%?%p7%t8;%;m,
use=ansi+sgr, use=ansi+sgrso, use=ansi+sgrul,
ansi+sgrdim|ANSI graphic renditions; assuming terminal has dim; not bold,
dim=\E[2m,
sgr=\E[%?%p1%t7;%;%?%p2%t4;%;%?%p3%t7;%;%?%p4%t5;%;%?%p5%t2;
%;%?%p7%t8;%;m,
use=ansi+sgr, use=ansi+sgrso, use=ansi+sgrul,
# ECMA-48 does not specify scroll-regions, but most people consider it to be
# "ANSI" because it is widely-supported. See ecma+index for the standard form.
ansi+csr|ANSI scroll-region plus cursor save & restore,
csr=\E[%i%p1%d;%p2%dr, rc=\E8, sc=\E7,
# The normal (ANSI) flavor of "media copy" building block asserts that
# characters sent to the printer do not echo on the screen. DEC terminals
# can also be put into autoprinter mode, where each line is sent to the
# printer as you move off that line, e.g., by a carriage return.
ansi+pp|ANSI printer port,
mc5i,
mc0=\E[i, mc4=\E[4i, mc5=\E[5i,
dec+pp|DEC autoprinter mode,
mc0=\E[i, mc4=\E[?4i, mc5=\E[?5i,
# The IBM PC alternate character set. Plug this into any Intel console entry.
# We use \E[11m for rmacs rather than \E[12m so the <acsc> string can use the
# ROM graphics for control characters such as the diamond, up- and down-arrow.
# This works with the System V, Linux, and BSDI consoles. It's a safe bet this
# will work with any Intel console, they all seem to have inherited \E[11m
# from the ANSI.SYS de-facto standard.
klone+acs|alternate character set for ansi.sys displays,
acsc=+\020\,\021-\030.^Y0\333`\004a\261f\370g\361h\260j
\331k\277l\332m\300n\305o~p\304q\304r\304s_t\303u\264v
\301w\302x\263y\363z\362{\343|\330}\234~\376,
rmacs=\E[10m, smacs=\E[11m,
# Highlight controls corresponding to the ANSI.SYS standard. Most
# console drivers for Intel boxes obey these. Makes the same assumption
# about \E[11m as klone+acs. True ANSI/ECMA-48 would have <rmso=\E[27m>,
# <rmul=\E[24m>, but this isn't a documented feature of ANSI.SYS.
klone+sgr|attribute control for ansi.sys displays,
blink=\E[5m, bold=\E[1m, rev=\E[7m, rmpch=\E[10m,
rmso=\E[m, rmul=\E[m,
sgr=\E[0;10%?%p1%t;7%;%?%p2%t;4%;%?%p3%t;7%;%?%p4%t;5%;%?%p6
%t;1%;%?%p9%t;11%;m,
sgr0=\E[0;10m, smpch=\E[11m, smso=\E[7m, smul=\E[4m,
use=klone+acs,
# Most Intel boxes do not treat "invis" (invisible) text.
klone+sgr8|attribute control for ansi.sys displays,
invis=\E[8m,
sgr=\E[0;10%?%p1%t;7%;%?%p2%t;4%;%?%p3%t;7%;%?%p4%t;5%;%?%p6
%t;1%;%?%p7%t;8%;%?%p9%t;11%;m,
use=klone+sgr,
# Highlight controls corresponding to the ANSI.SYS standard. *All*
# console drivers for Intel boxes obey these. Does not assume \E[11m will
# work; uses \E[12m instead, which is pretty bulletproof but loses you the ACS
# diamond and arrow characters under curses.
klone+sgr-dumb|attribute control for ansi.sys displays (no ESC [ 11 m),
blink=\E[5m, bold=\E[1m, invis=\E[8m, rev=\E[7m, rmso=\E[m,
rmul=\E[m,
sgr=\E[0;10%?%p1%t;7%;%?%p2%t;4%;%?%p3%t;7%;%?%p4%t;5%;%?%p6
%t;1%;%?%p7%t;8%;%?%p9%t;12%;m,
sgr0=\E[0;10m, smacs=\E[12m, smso=\E[7m, smul=\E[4m,
use=klone+acs,
# KOI8-R (RFC1489) acs (alternate character set)
# From: Qing Long <qinglong@Bolizm.ihep.su>, 24 Feb 1996.
klone+koi8acs|alternate character set for ansi.sys displays with KOI8 charset,
acsc=+\020\,\021-\036.^_0\215`\004a\237f\234g\232h\222i
\220j\205k\203l\202m\204n\212o\213p\216q\0r\217s\214t
\206u\207v\210w\211x\201y\230z\231{\267|\274}L~
\225,
rmacs=\E[10m, smacs=\E[11m,
# ANSI.SYS color control. The setab/setaf caps depend on the coincidence
# between SVr4/XPG4's color numbers and ANSI.SYS attributes. Here are longer
# but equivalent strings that don't rely on that coincidence:
# setb=\E[4%?%p1%{1}%=%t4%e%p1%{3}%=%t6%e%p1%{4}%=%t1%e%p1%{6}%=%t3%e%p1%d%;m,
# setf=\E[3%?%p1%{1}%=%t4%e%p1%{3}%=%t6%e%p1%{4}%=%t1%e%p1%{6}%=%t3%e%p1%d%;m,
# The DOS 5 manual asserts that these sequences meet the ISO 6429 standard.
# They match a subset of ECMA-48.
klone+color|color control for ansi.sys and ISO6429-compatible displays,
colors#8, ncv#3, pairs#64,
op=\E[37;40m, setab=\E[4%p1%dm, setaf=\E[3%p1%dm,
# This is better than klone+color, it doesn't assume white-on-black as the
# default color pair, but many `ANSI' terminals don't grok the <op> cap.
ecma+color|color control for ECMA-48-compatible terminals,
AX,
colors#8, ncv#3, pairs#64,
op=\E[39;49m, setab=\E[4%p1%dm, setaf=\E[3%p1%dm,
ecma+italics|ECMA-48 italics,
ritm=\E[23m, sitm=\E[3m,
# Attribute control for ECMA-48-compatible terminals
ecma+sgr|attribute capabilities for true ECMA-48 terminals,
rmso=\E[27m, rmul=\E[24m, use=klone+sgr8,
ecma+strikeout|ECMA-48 strikeout/crossed-out,
rmxx=\E[29m, smxx=\E[9m,
# ECMA-48 does not include the VT100 indexing and scroll-margins. It has its
# own variation.
ecma+index|ECMA-48 scroll up/down,
indn=\E[%p1%dS, rin=\E[%p1%dT,
#### ANSI/ECMA-48 terminals and terminal emulators
#
# See near the end of this file for details on ANSI conformance.
# Don't mess with these entries! Lots of other entries depend on them!
#
# This section lists entries in a least-capable to most-capable order.
# if you're in doubt about what `ANSI' matches yours, try them in that
# order and back off from the first that breaks.
# ansi-mr is for ANSI terminals with ONLY relative cursor addressing
# and more than one page of memory. It uses local motions instead of
# direct cursor addressing, and makes almost no assumptions. It does
# assume auto margins, no padding and/or xon/xoff, and a 24x80 screen.
ansi-mr|mem rel cup ansi,
am, xon,
cols#80, lines#24, use=vanilla, use=ansi+erase,
use=ansi+local1,
# ansi-mini is a bare minimum ANSI terminal. This should work on anything, but
# beware of screen size problems and memory relative cursor addressing.
ansi-mini|any ansi terminal with pessimistic assumptions,
am, xon,
cols#80, lines#24, use=vanilla, use=ansi+cup,
use=ansi+erase,
# ansi-mtabs adds relative addressing and minimal tab support
ansi-mtabs|any ansi terminal with pessimistic assumptions,
it#8,
ht=^I, use=ansi-mini, use=ansi+local1,
# ANSI X3.64 from emory!mlhhh (Hugh Hansard) via BRL
#
# The following is an entry for the full ANSI 3.64 (1977). It lacks
# padding, but most terminals using the standard are "fast" enough
# not to require any -- even at 9600 bps. If you encounter problems,
# try including the padding specifications.
#
# Note: the :as: and :ae: specifications are not implemented here, for
# the available termcap documentation does not make clear WHICH alternate
# character set to specify. ANSI 3.64 seems to make allowances for several.
# Please make the appropriate adjustments to fit your needs -- that is
# if you will be using alternate character sets.
#
# There are very few terminals running the full ANSI 3.64 standard,
# so I could only test this entry on one verified terminal (Visual 102).
# I would appreciate the results on other terminals sent to me.
#
# Please report comments, changes, and problems to:
#
# U.S. MAIL: Hugh Hansard
# Box: 22830
# Emory University
# Atlanta, GA. 30322.
#
# USENET {akgua,msdc,sb1,sb6,gatech}!emory!mlhhh.
#
# (Added vt100 <rc>,<sc> to quiet a tic warning --esr)
ansi77|ANSI 3.64 standard 1977 version,
OTbs, am, mir,
cols#80, it#8, lines#24,
bel=^G, clear=\E[;H\E[2J, cr=\r, csr=\E[%i%p1%d;%p2%dr,
cub1=^H, cud1=\E[B, cuf1=\E[C, cup=\E[%i%p1%d;%p2%dH,
cuu1=\E[A, dch1=\E[P, dl1=\E[M$<5*/>, ed=\E[J, el=\E[K,
home=\E[H, ht=^I, il1=\E[L$<5*/>, ind=\ED, kbs=^H,
kcub1=\E[D, kcud1=\E[B, kcuf1=\E[C, kcuu1=\E[A, kf1=\EOP,
kf2=\EOR, kf4=\EOS, khome=\E[H, nel=\r\ED, rc=\E8, ri=\EM,
rmir=\E[4l, rmso=\E[m, rmul=\E[m, sc=\E7, smir=\E[4h,
smso=\E[7m, smul=\E[4m,
# Procomm and some other ANSI emulations don't recognize all of the ANSI-
# standard capabilities. This entry deletes <cuu>, <cuf>, <cud>, <cub>, and
# <vpa>/<hpa> capabilities, forcing curses to use repetitions of <cuu1>,
# <cuf1>, <cud1> and <cub1>. Also deleted <ich> and <ich1>, as QModem up to
# 5.03 doesn't recognize these. Finally, we delete <rep> and <ri>, which seem
# to confuse many emulators. On the other hand, we can count on these programs
# doing <rmacs>/<smacs>/<sgr>. Older versions of this entry featured
# <invis=\E[9m>, but <invis=\E[8m> now seems to be more common under
# ANSI.SYS influence.
# From: Eric S. Raymond <esr@snark.thyrsus.com> Oct 30 1995
pcansi-m|pcansi-mono|ibm-pc terminal programs claiming to be ansi (mono mode),
OTbs, am, mir, msgr,
cols#80, it#8, lines#24,
bel=^G, cbt=\E[Z, clear=\E[H\E[J, cr=\r, cub1=\E[D,
cud1=\E[B, cuf1=\E[C, cup=\E[%i%p1%d;%p2%dH, cuu1=\E[A,
dch1=\E[P, dl1=\E[M, ed=\E[J, el=\E[K, home=\E[H, ht=^I,
hts=\EH, il1=\E[L, ind=\n, kbs=^H, kcub1=\E[D, kcud1=\E[B,
kcuf1=\E[C, kcuu1=\E[A, khome=\E[H, tbc=\E[3g,
use=klone+sgr-dumb,
pcansi-25-m|pcansi25m|ibm-pc terminal programs with 25 lines (mono mode),
lines#25, use=pcansi-m,
pcansi-33-m|pcansi33m|ibm-pc terminal programs with 33 lines (mono mode),
lines#33, use=pcansi-m,
pcansi-43-m|ansi43m|ibm-pc terminal programs with 43 lines (mono mode),
lines#43, use=pcansi-m,
# The color versions. All PC emulators do color...
pcansi|ibm-pc terminal programs claiming to be ansi,
use=klone+color, use=pcansi-m,
pcansi-25|pcansi25|ibm-pc terminal programs with 25 lines,
lines#25, use=pcansi,
pcansi-33|pcansi33|ibm-pc terminal programs with 33 lines,
lines#33, use=pcansi,
pcansi-43|pcansi43|ibm-pc terminal programs with 43 lines,
lines#43, use=pcansi,
# ansi-m -- full ANSI X3.64 with ANSI.SYS-compatible attributes, no color.
# If you want pound signs rather than dollars, replace `B' with `A'
# in the <s0ds>, <s1ds>, <s2ds>, and <s3ds> capabilities.
# From: Eric S. Raymond <esr@snark.thyrsus.com> Nov 6 1995
ansi-m|ansi-mono|ANSI X3.64-1979 terminal with ANSI.SYS compatible attributes,
mc5i,
cub=\E[%p1%dD, cud=\E[%p1%dB, cuf=\E[%p1%dC,
cuu=\E[%p1%dA, dch=\E[%p1%dP, dl=\E[%p1%dM,
ech=\E[%p1%dX, el1=\E[1K, hpa=\E[%i%p1%dG, ht=\E[I,
ich=\E[%p1%d@, il=\E[%p1%dL, kbs=^H, kcbt=\E[Z, kcub1=\E[D,
kcud1=\E[B, kcuf1=\E[C, kcuu1=\E[A, kich1=\E[L, mc4=\E[4i,
mc5=\E[5i, nel=\r\E[S, rep=%p1%c\E[%p2%{1}%-%db,
s0ds=\E(B, s1ds=\E)B, s2ds=\E*B, s3ds=\E+B, tbc=\E[3g,
vpa=\E[%i%p1%dd, use=ecma+index, use=pcansi-m,
ansi+enq|ncurses extension for ANSI ENQ,
u6=\E[%i%d;%dR, u7=\E[6n, u8=\E[?%[;0123456789]c,
u9=\E[c,
# ansi -- this terminfo expresses the largest subset of X3.64 that will fit in
# standard terminfo. Assumes ANSI.SYS-compatible attributes and color.
# From: Eric S. Raymond <esr@snark.thyrsus.com> Nov 6 1995
ansi|ansi/pc-term compatible with color,
use=ansi+enq, use=ecma+color, use=klone+sgr8, use=ansi-m,
# ansi-generic is a vanilla ANSI terminal. This is assumed to implement
# all the normal ANSI stuff with no extensions. It assumes
# insert/delete line/char is there, so it won't work with
# vt100 clones. It assumes video attributes for bold, blink,
# underline, and reverse, which won't matter much if the terminal
# can't do some of those. Padding is assumed to be zero, which
# shouldn't hurt since xon/xoff is assumed.
ansi-generic|ansiterm|generic ansi standard terminal,
am, xon,
cols#80, lines#24, use=vanilla, use=ansi+csr, use=ansi+cup,
use=ansi+rca, use=ansi+erase, use=ansi+tabs,
use=ansi+local, use=ansi+idc, use=ansi+idl, use=ansi+rep,
use=ansi+sgrbold, use=ansi+arrows,
#### DOS ANSI.SYS variants
#
# This completely describes the sequences specified in the DOS 2.1 ANSI.SYS
# documentation (except for the keyboard key reassignment feature, which
# doesn't fit the <pfkey> model well). The klone+acs sequences were valid
# though undocumented. The <pfkey> capability is untested but should work for
# keys F1-F10 (%p1 values outside this range will yield unpredictable results).
# From: Eric S. Raymond <esr@snark.thyrsus.com> Nov 7 1995
ansi.sys-old|ANSI.SYS under PC-DOS 2.1,
OTbs, am, mir, msgr, xon,
cols#80, lines#25,
clear=\E[2J, cub1=^H, cud1=\E[B, cuf1=\E[C,
cup=\E[%i%p1%d;%p2%dH, cuu1=\E[A, el=\E[k, home=\E[H,
is2=\E[m\E[?7h, kcub1=^H, kcud1=\n, kcuf1=^L, kcuu1=^K,
khome=^^, pfkey=\E[0;%p1%{58}%+%d;%p2"%s"p, rc=\E[u,
rmam=\E[?7l, sc=\E[s, smam=\E[?7h, u6=\E[%i%d;%dR,
u7=\E[6n, use=klone+color, use=klone+sgr8,
# Keypad: Home=\0G Up=\0H PrPag=\0I
# ka1,kh kcuu1 kpp,ka3
#
# Left=\0K 5=\0L Right=\0M
# kcub1 kb2 kcuf1
#
# End=\0O Down=\0P NxPag=\0Q
# kc1,kend kcud1 kc3,knp
#
# Ins=\0R Del=\0S
# kich1 kdch1
#
# On keyboard with 12 function keys,
# shifted f-keys: F13-F24
# control f-keys: F25-F36
# alt f-keys: F37-F48
# The shift/control/alt keys do not modify each other, but alt overrides both,
# and control overrides shift.
#
# <pfkey> capability for F1-F48 -TD
ansi.sys|ANSI.SYS 3.1 and later versions,
el=\E[K, ka1=\0G, ka3=\0I, kb2=\0L, kbs=^H, kc1=\0O, kc3=\0Q,
kcbt=\0^O, kcub1=\0K, kcud1=\0P, kcuf1=\0M, kcuu1=\0H,
kdch1=\0S, kend=\0O, kf1=\0;, kf10=\0D, kf11=\0\205,
kf12=\0\206, kf13=\0T, kf14=\0U, kf15=\0V, kf16=\0W,
kf17=\0X, kf18=\0Y, kf19=\0Z, kf2=\0<, kf20=\0[, kf21=\0\\,
kf22=\0], kf23=\0\207, kf24=\0\210, kf25=\0\^, kf26=\0_,
kf27=\0`, kf28=\0a, kf29=\0b, kf3=\0=, kf30=\0c, kf31=\0d,
kf32=\0e, kf33=\0f, kf34=\0g, kf35=\0\211, kf36=\0\212,
kf37=\0h, kf38=\0i, kf39=\0j, kf4=\0>, kf40=\0k, kf41=\0l,
kf42=\0m, kf43=\0n, kf44=\0o, kf45=\0p, kf46=\0q,
kf47=\0\213, kf48=\0\214, kf5=\0?, kf6=\0@, kf7=\0A, kf8=\0B,
kf9=\0C, khome=\0G, kich1=\0R, knp=\0Q, kpp=\0I,
pfkey=\E[0;%?%p1%{11}%<%t%'\:'%e%p1%{13}%<%t%'z'%e%p1%{23}%<
%t%'G'%e%p1%{25}%<%t%'p'%e%p1%'#'%<%t%'E'%e%p1%'%'%<%t
%'f'%e%p1%'/'%<%t%'C'%e%{92}%;%p1%+%d;%p2"%s"p,
use=ansi.sys-old,
#
# Define IBM PC keypad keys for vi as per MS-Kermit while using ANSI.SYS.
# This should only be used when the terminal emulator cannot redefine the keys.
# Since redefining keys with ansi.sys also affects PC-DOS programs, the key
# definitions must be restored. If the terminal emulator is quit while in vi
# or others using <smkx>/<rmkx>, the keypad will not be defined as per PC-DOS.
# The PgUp and PgDn are prefixed with ESC so that tn3270 can be used on Unix
# (^U and ^D are already defined for tn3270). The ESC is safe for vi but it
# does "beep". ESC ESC i is used for Ins to avoid tn3270 ESC i for coltab.
# Note that <kcub1> is always BS, because PC-dos can tolerate this change.
# Caution: vi is limited to 256 string bytes, longer crashes or weirds out vi.
# Consequently the End keypad key could not be set (it is relatively safe and
# actually useful because it sends ^@ O, which beeps and opens a line above).
ansi.sysk|ansisysk|PC-DOS 3.1 ANSI.SYS with keypad redefined for vi,
is2=U2\sPC-DOS\s3.1\sANSI.SYS\swith\skeypad\sredefined\sfor
\svi\s9-29-86\n\E[;75;8p,
rmkx=\E[;71;0;71p\E[;72;0;72p\E[;73;0;73p\E[;77;0;77p\E[;80;
0;80p\E[;81;0;81p\E[;82;0;82p\E[;83;0;83p,
smkx=\E[;71;30p\E[;72;11p\E[;73;27;21p\E[;77;12p\E[;80;10p
\E[;81;27;4p\E[;82;27;27;105p\E[;83;127p,
use=ansi.sys,
#
# Adds ins/del line/character, hence vi reverse scrolls/inserts/deletes nicer.
nansi.sys|nansisys|PC-DOS Public Domain NANSI.SYS,
dch1=\E[1P, dl1=\E[1M, ich1=\E[1@, il1=\E[1L,
is2=U3 PC-DOS Public Domain NANSI.SYS 9-23-86\n,
use=ansi.sys,
#
# See ansi.sysk and nansi.sys above.
nansi.sysk|nansisysk|PC-DOS Public Domain NANSI.SYS with keypad redefined for vi,
dch1=\E[1P, dl1=\E[1M, ich1=\E[1@, il1=\E[1L,
is2=U4\sPC-DOS\sPublic\sDomain\sNANSI.SYS\swith\skeypad
\sredefined\sfor\svi\s9-29-86\n\E[;75;8p,
use=ansi.sysk,
#### Linux consoles
#
# This entry is good for the 1.2.13 or later version of the Linux console.
#
# ***************************************************************************
# * *
# * WARNING: *
# * Linuxes come with a default keyboard mapping kcbt=^I. This entry, in *
# * response to user requests, assumes kcbt=\E[Z, the ANSI/ECMA reverse-tab *
# * character. Here are the keymap replacement lines that will set this up: *
# * *
# keycode 15 = Tab Tab
# alt keycode 15 = Meta_Tab
# shift keycode 15 = F26
# string F26 ="\033[Z"
# * *
# * This has to use a key slot which is unfortunate (any unused one will *
# * do, F26 is the higher-numbered one). The change ought to be built *
# * into the kernel tables. *
# * *
# ***************************************************************************
#
# All linux kernels since 1.2.13 (at least) set the screen size
# themselves; this entry assumes that capability.
#
linux-basic|linux console,
am, bce, eo, mir, msgr, xenl, xon,
it#8, ncv#18, U8#1,
acsc=+\020\,\021-\030.^Y0\333`\004a\261f\370g\361h\260i
\316j\331k\277l\332m\300n\305o~p\304q\304r\304s_t\303u
\264v\301w\302x\263y\363z\362{\343|\330}\234~\376,
bel=^G, clear=\E[H\E[J, cr=\r, csr=\E[%i%p1%d;%p2%dr,
cub=\E[%p1%dD, cub1=^H, cud=\E[%p1%dB, cud1=\n,
cuf=\E[%p1%dC, cuf1=\E[C, cup=\E[%i%p1%d;%p2%dH,
cuu=\E[%p1%dA, cuu1=\E[A, dch=\E[%p1%dP, dch1=\E[P,
dim=\E[2m, dl=\E[%p1%dM, dl1=\E[M, ech=\E[%p1%dX, ed=\E[J,
el=\E[K, el1=\E[1K, flash=\E[?5h$<200/>\E[?5l, home=\E[H,
hpa=\E[%i%p1%dG, ht=^I, hts=\EH, ich=\E[%p1%d@, ich1=\E[@,
il=\E[%p1%dL, il1=\E[L, ind=\n, kb2=\E[G, kbs=^?, kcbt=\E[Z,
kcub1=\E[D, kcud1=\E[B, kcuf1=\E[C, kcuu1=\E[A,
kdch1=\E[3~, kend=\E[4~, kf1=\E[[A, kf10=\E[21~,
kf11=\E[23~, kf12=\E[24~, kf13=\E[25~, kf14=\E[26~,
kf15=\E[28~, kf16=\E[29~, kf17=\E[31~, kf18=\E[32~,
kf19=\E[33~, kf2=\E[[B, kf20=\E[34~, kf3=\E[[C, kf4=\E[[D,
kf5=\E[[E, kf6=\E[17~, kf7=\E[18~, kf8=\E[19~, kf9=\E[20~,
khome=\E[1~, kich1=\E[2~, kmous=\E[M, knp=\E[6~, kpp=\E[5~,
kspd=^Z, nel=\r\n, rc=\E8, rev=\E[7m, ri=\EM, rmam=\E[?7l,
rmir=\E[4l, rmso=\E[27m, rmul=\E[24m, rs1=\Ec\E]R, sc=\E7,
sgr=\E[0;10%?%p1%t;7%;%?%p2%t;4%;%?%p3%t;7%;%?%p4%t;5%;%?%p5
%t;2%;%?%p6%t;1%;%?%p9%t;11%;m,
smam=\E[?7h, smir=\E[4h, smul=\E[4m, tbc=\E[3g,
vpa=\E[%i%p1%dd, use=vt102+enq, use=klone+sgr,
use=ecma+color,
linux-m|Linux console no color,
colors@, pairs@,
setab@, setaf@, setb@, setf@, use=linux,
# The 1.3.x kernels add color-change capabilities; if yours doesn't have this
# and it matters, turn off <ccc>. The %02x escape used to implement this is
# not supposedly back-portable to older SV curses (although it has worked fine
# on Solaris for several years) and not supported in ncurses versions before
# 1.9.9.
linux-c-nc|linux console with color-change,
ccc,
initc=\E]P%p1%x%p2%{255}%*%{1000}%/%02x%p3%{255}%*%{1000}%/
%02x%p4%{255}%*%{1000}%/%02x,
oc=\E]R, use=linux-basic,
# From: Dennis Henriksen <opus@osrl.dk>, 9 July 1996
linux-c|linux console 1.3.6+ for older ncurses,
ccc,
initc=\E]P%?%p1%{9}%>%t%p1%{10}%-%'a'%+%c%e%p1%d%;%p2%{255}
%*%{1000}%/%Pr%gr%{16}%/%Px%?%gx%{9}%>%t%gx%{10}%-%'a'
%+%c%e%gx%d%;%gr%{15}%&%Px%?%gx%{9}%>%t%gx%{10}%-%'a'
%+%c%e%gx%d%;%p3%{255}%*%{1000}%/%Pr%gr%{16}%/%Px%?%gx
%{9}%>%t%gx%{10}%-%'a'%+%c%e%gx%d%;%gr%{15}%&%Px%?%gx
%{9}%>%t%gx%{10}%-%'a'%+%c%e%gx%d%;%p4%{255}%*%{1000}
%/%Pr%gr%{16}%/%Px%?%gx%{9}%>%t%gx%{10}%-%'a'%+%c%e%gx
%d%;%gr%{15}%&%Px%?%gx%{9}%>%t%gx%{10}%-%'a'%+%c%e%gx
%d%;,
oc=\E]R, use=linux-basic,
# The 2.2.x kernels add a private mode that sets the cursor type; use that to
# get a block cursor for cvvis.
# reported by Frank Heckenbach <frank@g-n-u.de>.
linux2.2|linux 2.2.x console,
civis=\E[?25l\E[?1c, cnorm=\E[?25h\E[?0c,
cvvis=\E[?25h\E[?8c, use=linux-c-nc,
# Linux 2.6.x has a fix for SI/SO to work with UTF-8 encoding added here:
# http://lkml.iu.edu/hypermail/linux/kernel/0602.2/0738.html
# Although the kernel has mappings for these, they were not in the default
# font (tested with Debian and Fedora):
# '`' diamond
# '~' scan line 1
# 'p' scan line 3
# 'r' scan line 7
# '_' scan line 9
linux2.6|linux 2.6.x console,
acsc=++\,\,--..00__``aaffgghhiijjkkllmmnnooppqqrrssttuuvvwwx
xyyzz{{||}c~~,
enacs=\E)0, rmacs=^O,
sgr=\E[0;10%?%p1%t;7%;%?%p2%t;4%;%?%p3%t;7%;%?%p4%t;5%;%?%p5
%t;2%;%?%p6%t;1%;m%?%p9%t\016%e\017%;,
sgr0=\E[m\017, smacs=^N, use=linux2.2,
# The 3.0 kernel adds support for clearing scrollback buffer (capability E3).
# It is the same as xterm's erase-saved-lines feature.
linux3.0|linux 3.0 kernels,
E3=\E[3J, use=linux2.6,
# This is Linux console for ncurses.
linux|linux console,
use=linux3.0,
# Subject: linux 2.6.26 vt back_color_erase
# Changes to the Linux console driver broke bce model as reported in
# https://bugzilla.novell.com/show_bug.cgi?id=418613
# apparently from
# http://lkml.org/lkml/2008/4/26/305
# http://lkml.org/lkml/2008/10/3/66
linux2.6.26|linux console w/o bce,
bce@, use=linux2.6,
# See the note on ICH/ICH1 VERSUS RMIR/SMIR near the end of file
linux-nic|linux with ich/ich1 suppressed for non-curses programs,
ich@, ich1@, use=linux,
# This assumes you have used setfont(8) to load one of the Linux koi8-r fonts.
# acsc entry from Pavel Roskin" <pavel@absolute.spb.su>, 29 Sep 1997.
linux-koi8|linux with koi8 alternate character set,
acsc=+\020\,\021-\030.^Y0\215`\004a\221f\234g\237h\220i
\276j\205k\203l\202m\204n\212o~p\0q\0r\0s_t\206u\207v
\211w\210x\201y\230z\231{\267|\274~\224,
use=linux, use=klone+koi8acs,
# Another entry for KOI8-r with Qing Long's acsc.
# (which one better complies with the standard?)
linux-koi8r|linux with koi8-r alternate character set,
use=linux, use=klone+koi8acs,
# Entry for the latin1 and latin2 fonts
linux-lat|linux with latin1 or latin2 alternate character set,
acsc=+\020\,\021-\030.^Y0\333`\004a\013f\370g\361h\260i
\316j\211k\214l\206m\203n\305o~p\304q\212r\304s_t\207u
\215v\301w\302x\205y\363z\362{\343|\330}\234~\376,
use=linux,
# This uses graphics from VT codeset instead of from cp437.
# reason: cp437 (aka "straight to font") is not functional under luit.
# from: Andrey V Lukyanov <land@long.yar.ru>.
linux-vt|linux console using VT codes for graphics,
acsc=++\,\,--..00``aaffgghhiijjkkllmmnnooppqqrrssttuuvvwwxxy
yzz~~,
rmacs=\E(K, rmpch@, sgr@, sgr0=\E[0m\E(K\017, smacs=\E(0,
smpch@, use=linux,
# FbTerm
# Another variant. There are two parts (src, src/lib) with the latter
# comprising the escape-sequence parsing. The copyright notice on that
# says it is based on GTerm by Timothy Miller.
#
# The original developer "dragchan" has left, but as of March 2017 there is
# (still dead) code from May 2015 here:
# https://github.com/izmntuk/fbterm
#
# The acsc string may be incorrect.
#
# Not used here, the program recognizes escapes for italic, underline and
# dim, rendering those as green, cyan and gray respectively.
fbterm|FbTerm for Linux with framebuffer,
colors#0x100, pairs#0x10000,
acsc=+\020\,\021-\030.^Y0\333`\004a\261f\370g\361h\260i
\316j\331k\277l\332m\300n\305o~p\304q\304r\304s_t\303u
\264v\301w\302x\263y\363z\362{\343|\330}\234~\376,
initc=\E[3;%p1%d;%p2%d;%p3%d;%p4%d}, rmacs=\E[10m,
setab=\E[2;%p1%d}, setaf=\E[1;%p1%d},
sgr=\E[0;10%?%p1%t;7%;%?%p2%t;4%;%?%p3%t;7%;%?%p4%t;5%;%?%p5
%t;2%;%?%p6%t;1%;%?%p9%t;11%;m,
sgr0=\E[0;10m, smacs=\E[11m, use=linux,
# 16-color linux console entry; this works with a 256-character
# console font but bright background colors turn into dim ones when
# you use a 512-character console font. This uses bold for bright
# foreground colors and blink for bright background colors.
#
# Interestingly, the original version of this entry in 2009 used a documented
# (but nonstandard) SGR 21, which was supported in the Linux console since 1992
# as an equivalent for SGR 22. Long after (early 2018), someone modified the
# console driver to make it ignore SGR 21 because the ECMA-48 standard
# suggested a different use for that particular code.
linux-16color|linux console with 16 colors,
colors#16, ncv#42, pairs#0x100,
setab=\E[4%p1%{8}%m%d%?%p1%{7}%>%t;5%e;25%;m,
setaf=\E[3%p1%{8}%m%d%?%p1%{7}%>%t;1%e;22%;m,
use=linux,
#### DEC VT52
# (<acsc>/<rmacs>/<smacs> capabilities aren't in DEC's official entry -- esr)
#
# Actually (TD pointed this out at the time the acsc string was added):
# vt52 shouldn't define full acsc since most of the cells don't match.
# see vt100 manual page A-31. This is the list that does match:
# f degree
# g plus/minus
# h right-arrow
# k down-arrow
# m scan-1
# o scan-3
# q scan-5
# s scan-7
# The line-drawing happens to work in several terminal emulators, but should
# not be used as a guide to the capabilities of the vt52. Note in particular
# that vt52 does not support line-drawing characters (the scan-X values refer
# to a crude plotting feature) -TD
vt52|dec vt52,
OTbs,
cols#80, it#8, lines#24,
acsc=+h.k0affggolpnqprrss, bel=^G, clear=\EH\EJ, cr=\r,
cub1=\ED, cud1=\EB, cuf1=\EC,
cup=\EY%p1%{32}%+%c%p2%{32}%+%c, cuu1=\EA, ed=\EJ,
el=\EK, home=\EH, ht=^I, ind=\n, kbs=^H, kcub1=\ED, kcud1=\EB,
kcuf1=\EC, kcuu1=\EA, nel=\r\n, ri=\EI, rmacs=\EG, smacs=\EF,
#### DEC VT100 and compatibles
#
# DEC terminals from the vt100 forward are collected here. Older DEC terminals
# and micro consoles can be found in the `obsolete' section. More details on
# the relationship between the VT100 and ANSI X3.64/ISO 6429/ECMA-48 may be
# found near the end of this file.
#
# Except where noted, these entries are DEC's official terminfos.
# Contact Bill Hedberg <hedberg@hannah.enet.dec.com> of Terminal Support
# Engineering for more information. Updated terminfos and termcaps
# are kept available at ftp://gatekeeper.dec.com/pub/DEC/termcaps.
#
# In October 1995 DEC sold its terminals business, including the VT and Dorio
# line and trademark, to SunRiver Data Systems. SunRiver has since changed
# its name to Boundless Technologies; see http://www.boundless.com.
#
# NOTE: Any VT100 emulation, whether in hardware or software, almost
# certainly includes what DEC called the `Level 1 editing extension' codes;
# only the very oldest VT100s lacked these and there probably aren't any of
# those left alive. To capture these, use one of the VT102 entries.
#
# Note that the <xenl> glitch in vt100 is not quite the same as on the Concept,
# since the cursor is left in a different position while in the
# weird state (concept at beginning of next line, vt100 at end
# of this line) so all versions of vi before 3.7 don't handle
# <xenl> right on vt100. The correct way to handle <xenl> is when
# you output the char in column 80, immediately output CR LF
# and then assume you are in column 1 of the next line. If <xenl>
# is on, am should be on too.
#
# I assume you have smooth scroll off or are at a slow enough baud
# rate that it doesn't matter (1200? or less). Also this assumes
# that you set auto-nl to "on", if you set it off use vt100-nam
# below.
#
# The padding requirements listed here are guesses. It is strongly
# recommended that xon/xoff be enabled, as this is assumed here.
#
# The vt100 uses <rs2> and <rf> rather than <is2>/<tbc>/<hts> because the
# tab settings are in non-volatile memory and don't need to be
# reset upon login. Also setting the number of columns glitches
# the screen annoyingly. You can type "reset" to get them set.
#
# The VT100 series terminals have cursor ("arrows") keys which can operate
# in two different modes: Cursor Mode and Application Mode. Cursor Mode
# is the reset state, and is assumed to be the normal state. Application
# Mode is the "set" state. In Cursor Mode, the cursor keys transmit
# "Esc [ {code}" sequences, conforming to ANSI standards. In Application
# Mode, the cursor keys transmit "Esc O <code>" sequences. Application Mode
# was provided primarily as an aid to the porting of VT52 applications. It is
# assumed that the cursor keys are normally in Cursor Mode, and expected that
# applications such as vi will always transmit the <smkx> string. Therefore,
# the definitions for the cursor keys are made to match what the terminal
# transmits after the <smkx> string is transmitted. If the <smkx> string
# is a null string or is not defined, then cursor keys are assumed to be in
# "Cursor Mode", and the cursor keys definitions should match that assumption,
# else the application may fail. It is also expected that applications will
# always transmit the <rmkx> string to the terminal before they exit.
#
# The VT100 series terminals have an auxiliary keypad, commonly referred to as
# the "Numeric Keypad", because it is a cluster of numeric and function keys.
# The Numeric Keypad which can operate in two different modes: Numeric Mode and
# Application Mode. Numeric Mode is the reset state, and is assumed to be
# the normal state. Application Mode is the "set" state. In Numeric Mode,
# the numeric and punctuation keys transmit ASCII 7-bit characters, and the
# Enter key transmits the same as the Return key (Note: the Return key
# can be configured to send either LF (\015) or CR LF). In Application Mode,
# all the keypad keys transmit "Esc O {code}" sequences. The PF1 - PF4 keys
# always send the same "Esc O {code}" sequences. It is assumed that the keypad
# is normally in Numeric Mode. If an application requires that the keypad be
# in Application Mode then it is expected that the user, or the application,
# will set the TERM environment variable to point to a terminfo entry which has
# defined the <smkx> string to include the codes that switch the keypad into
# Application Mode, and the terminfo entry will also define function key
# fields to match the Application Mode control codes. If the <smkx> string
# is a null string or is not defined, then the keypad is assumed to be in
# Numeric Mode. If the <smkx> string switches the keypad into Application
# Mode, it is expected that the <rmkx> string will contain the control codes
# necessary to reset the keypad to "Normal" mode, and it is also expected that
# applications which transmit the <smkx> string will also always transmit the
# <rmkx> string to the terminal before they exit.
#
# Here's a diagram of the VT100 keypad keys with their bindings.
# The top line is the name of the key (some DEC keyboards have the keys
# labelled somewhat differently, like GOLD instead of PF1, but this is
# the most "official" name). The second line is the escape sequence it
# generates in Application Keypad mode (where "$" means the ESC
# character). The third line contains two items, first the mapping of
# the key in terminfo, and then in termcap.
# _______________________________________
# | PF1 | PF2 | PF3 | PF4 |
# | $OP | $OQ | $OR | $OS |
# |_kf1__k1_|_kf2__k2_|_kf3__k3_|_kf4__k4_|
# | 7 8 9 - |
# | $Ow | $Ox | $Oy | $Om |
# |_kf9__k9_|_kf10_k;_|_kf0__k0_|_________|
# | 4 | 5 | 6 | , |
# | $Ot | $Ou | $Ov | $Ol |
# |_kf5__k5_|_kf6__k6_|_kf7__k7_|_kf8__k8_|
# | 1 | 2 | 3 | |
# | $Oq | $Or | $Os | enter |
# |_ka1__K1_|_kb2__K2_|_ka3__K3_| $OM |
# | 0 | . | |
# | $Op | $On | |
# |___kc1_______K4____|_kc3__K5_|_kent_@8_|
#
# Note however, that the arrangement of the 5-key ka1-kc3 do not follow the
# terminfo guidelines. That is a compromise used to assign the remaining
# keys on the keypad to kf5-kf0, used on older systems with legacy termcap
# support:
vt100+keypad|dec vt100 numeric keypad no fkeys,
ka1=\EOq, ka3=\EOs, kb2=\EOr, kc1=\EOp, kc3=\EOn,
vt100+pfkeys|dec vt100 numeric keypad,
kent=\EOM, kf1=\EOP, kf2=\EOQ, kf3=\EOR, kf4=\EOS,
use=vt100+keypad,
vt100+fnkeys|dec vt100 numeric keypad,
kf0=\EOy, kf10=\EOx, kf5=\EOt, kf6=\EOu, kf7=\EOv, kf8=\EOl,
kf9=\EOw, use=vt100+pfkeys,
#
# A better adaptation to modern keyboards such as the PC's, which have a dozen
# function keys and the keypad 2,4,6,8 keys are labeled with arrows keys, is to
# use the 5-key arrangement to model the arrow keys as suggested in the
# terminfo guidelines:
# _______________________________________
# | PF1 | PF2 | PF3 | PF4 |
# | $OP | $OQ | $OR | $OS |
# |_kf1__k1_|_kf2__k2_|_kf3__k3_|_kf4__k4_|
# | 7 8 9 - |
# | $Ow | $Ox | $Oy | $Om |
# |_ka1__K1_|_________|_ka3__K3_|_________|
# | 4 | 5 | 6 | , |
# | $Ot | $Ou | $Ov | $Ol |
# |_________|_kb2__K2_|_________|_________|
# | 1 | 2 | 3 | |
# | $Oq | $Or | $Os | enter |
# |_kc1__K4_|_________|_kc3__K5_| $OM |
# | 0 | . | |
# | $Op | $On | |
# |___________________|_________|_kent_@8_|
#
vt220+keypad|dec vt220 numeric keypad,
ka1=\EOw, ka3=\EOy, kb2=\EOu, kc1=\EOq, kc3=\EOs, kent=\EOM,
kf1=\EOP, kf2=\EOQ, kf3=\EOR, kf4=\EOS, ka2=\EOx, kb1=\EOt,
kb3=\EOv, kc2=\EOr,
#
vt100+enq|ncurses extension for vt100-style ENQ,
u8=\E[?1;2c, use=ansi+enq,
vt102+enq|ncurses extension for vt102-style ENQ,
u8=\E[?6c, use=ansi+enq,
#
# And here, for those of you with orphaned VT100s lacking documentation, is
# a description of the soft switches invoked when you do `Set Up'.
#
# Scroll 0-Jump Shifted 3 0-#
# | 1-Smooth | 1-British pound sign
# | Autorepeat 0-Off | Wrap Around 0-Off
# | | 1-On | | 1-On
# | | Screen 0-Dark Bkg | | New Line 0-Off
# | | | 1-Light Bkg | | | 1-On
# | | | Cursor 0-Underline | | | Interlace 0-Off
# | | | | 1-Block | | | | 1-On
# | | | | | | | |
# 1 1 0 1 1 1 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 <--Standard Settings
# | | | | | | | |
# | | | Auto XON/XOFF 0-Off | | | Power 0-60 Hz
# | | | 1-On | | | 1-50 Hz
# | | ANSI/VT52 0-VT52 | | Bits Per Char. 0-7 Bits
# | | 1-ANSI | | 1-8 Bits
# | Keyclick 0-Off | Parity 0-Off
# | 1-On | 1-On
# Margin Bell 0-Off Parity Sense 0-Odd
# 1-On 1-Even
#
# The following SET-UP modes are assumed for normal operation:
# ANSI_MODE AUTO_XON/XOFF_ON NEWLINE_OFF 80_COLUMNS
# WRAP_AROUND_ON JUMP_SCROLL_OFF
# Other SET-UP modes may be set for operator convenience or communication
# requirements; I recommend
# AUTOREPEAT_ON BLOCK_CURSOR MARGIN_BELL_OFF SHIFTED_3_#
# Unless you have a graphics add-on such as Digital Engineering's VT640
# (and even then, whenever it can be arranged!) you should set
# INTERLACE_OFF
#
# (vt100: I added <rmam>/<smam> based on the init string, also <OTbs>. -- esr)
vt100|vt100-am|dec vt100 (w/advanced video),
OTbs, mc5i, xenl, xon,
vt#3,
csr=\E[%i%p1%d;%p2%dr, kcub1=\EOD, kcud1=\EOB,
kcuf1=\EOC, kcuu1=\EOA, lf1=pf1, lf2=pf2, lf3=pf3, lf4=pf4,
mc0=\E[0i, mc4=\E[4i, mc5=\E[5i, rc=\E8, rmam=\E[?7l,
rmkx=\E[?1l\E>, rs2=\E<\E>\E[?3;4;5l\E[?7;8h\E[r,
sc=\E7,
sgr=\E[0%?%p1%p6%|%t;1%;%?%p2%t;4%;%?%p1%p3%|%t;7%;%?%p4%t;5
%;m%?%p9%t\016%e\017%;$<2>,
smam=\E[?7h, smkx=\E[?1h\E=, smso=\E[7m$<2>,
use=vt100+4bsd, use=vt100+fnkeys,
vt100+4bsd|dec vt100 from 4.0BSD,
am, msgr,
cols#80, it#8, lines#24,
acsc=``aaffggjjkkllmmnnooppqqrrssttuuvvwwxxyyzz{{||}}~~,
bel=^G, blink=\E[5m$<2>, bold=\E[1m$<2>,
clear=\E[H\E[J$<50>, cr=\r, cub=\E[%p1%dD, cub1=^H,
cud=\E[%p1%dB, cud1=\n, cuf=\E[%p1%dC, cuf1=\E[C$<2>,
cup=\E[%i%p1%d;%p2%dH$<5>, cuu=\E[%p1%dA,
cuu1=\E[A$<2>, ed=\E[J$<50>, el=\E[K$<3>, el1=\E[1K$<3>,
enacs=\E(B\E)0, home=\E[H, ht=^I, hts=\EH, ind=\n, kbs=^H,
kcub1=\E[D, kcud1=\E[B, kcuf1=\E[C, kcuu1=\E[A,
rev=\E[7m$<2>, ri=\EM$<5>, rmacs=^O, rmso=\E[m$<2>,
rmul=\E[m$<2>, rs2=\E>\E[?3l\E[?4l\E[?5l\E[?7h\E[?8h,
sgr=\E[0%?%p1%p6%|%t;1%;%?%p2%t;4%;%?%p1%p3%|%t;7%;%?%p4%t;5
%;m%?%p9%t\016%e\017%;$<2>,
sgr0=\E[m\017$<2>, smacs=^N, smso=\E[1;7m$<2>,
smul=\E[4m$<2>, tbc=\E[3g,
vt100nam|vt100-nam|vt100 no automargins,
am@, xenl@,
rs2=\E>\E[?3l\E[?4l\E[?5l\E[?7l\E[?8h, use=vt100-am,
vt100-vb|dec vt100 (w/advanced video) & no beep,
bel@, flash=\E[?5h$<100/>\E[?5l, use=vt100,
# Ordinary vt100 in 132 column ("wide") mode.
vt100-w|vt100-w-am|dec vt100 132 cols (w/advanced video),
cols#132, lines#24,
rs2=\E>\E[?3h\E[?4l\E[?5l\E[?8h, use=vt100-am,
vt100-w-nam|vt100-nam-w|dec vt100 132 cols (w/advanced video no automargin),
cols#132, lines#14, vt@,
rs2=\E>\E[?3h\E[?4l\E[?5l\E[?8h, use=vt100-nam,
# vt100 with no advanced video.
vt100-nav|vt100 without advanced video option,
xmc#1,
blink@, bold@, rev@, rmso=\E[m, rmul@, sgr@, sgr0@, smso=\E[7m,
smul@, use=vt100,
vt100-nav-w|vt100-w-nav|dec vt100 132 cols 14 lines (no advanced video option),
cols#132, lines#14, use=vt100-nav,
# vt100 with one of the 24 lines used as a status line.
# We put the status line on the top.
vt100-s|vt100-s-top|vt100-top-s|vt100 for use with top sysline,
eslok, hs,
lines#23,
clear=\E[2;1H\E[J$<50>, csr=\E[%i%i%p1%d;%p2%dr,
cup=\E[%i%p1%{1}%+%d;%p2%dH$<5>, dsl=\E7\E[1;24r\E8,
fsl=\E8, home=\E[2;1H, is2=\E7\E[2;24r\E8,
tsl=\E7\E[1;%p1%dH\E[1K, use=vt100-am,
# Status line at bottom.
# Clearing the screen will clobber status line.
vt100-s-bot|vt100-bot-s|vt100 for use with bottom sysline,
eslok, hs,
lines#23,
dsl=\E7\E[1;24r\E8, fsl=\E8, is2=\E[1;23r\E[23;1H,
tsl=\E7\E[24;%p1%dH\E[1K, use=vt100-am,
# Most of the `vt100' emulators out there actually emulate a vt102
# This entry (or vt102-nsgr) is probably the right thing to use for
# these.
vt102|dec vt102,
dch1=\E[P, dl1=\E[M, il1=\E[L, rmir=\E[4l, smir=\E[4h,
use=vt100,
vt102-w|dec vt102 in wide mode,
cols#132,
rs3=\E[?3h, use=vt102,
# Many brain-dead PC comm programs that pretend to be `vt100-compatible'
# fail to interpret the ^O and ^N escapes properly. Symptom: the <sgr0>
# string in the canonical vt100 entry above leaves the screen littered
# with little snowflake or star characters (IBM PC ROM character \017 = ^O)
# after highlight turnoffs. This entry should fix that, and even leave
# ACS support working, at the cost of making multiple-highlight changes
# slightly more expensive.
# From: Eric S. Raymond <esr@snark.thyrsus.com> July 22 1995
vt102-nsgr|vt102 no sgr (use if you see snowflakes after highlight changes),
sgr@, sgr0=\E[m, use=vt102,
# VT125 Graphics CRT. Clear screen also erases graphics
# Some vt125's came configured with vt102 support.
vt125|vt125 graphics terminal,
mir,
clear=\E[H\E[2J\EPpS(E)\E\\$<50>, use=vt100,
# This isn't a DEC entry, it came from University of Wisconsin.
# (vt131: I added <rmam>/<smam> based on the init string, also <OTbs> -- esr)
vt131|dec vt131,
OTbs, am, xenl,
cols#80, it#8, lines#24, vt#3,
bel=^G, blink=\E[5m$<2/>, bold=\E[1m$<2/>,
clear=\E[;H\E[2J$<50/>, cr=\r, csr=\E[%i%p1%d;%p2%dr,
cub1=^H, cud1=\n, cuf1=\E[C$<2/>,
cup=\E[%i%p1%d;%p2%dH$<5/>, cuu1=\E[A$<2/>,
ed=\E[J$<50/>, el=\E[K$<3/>, home=\E[H, ht=^I,
is2=\E[1;24r\E[24;1H, kbs=^H, kcub1=\EOD, kcud1=\EOB,
kcuf1=\EOC, kcuu1=\EOA, kf1=\EOP, kf2=\EOQ, kf3=\EOR,
kf4=\EOS, nel=\r\n, rc=\E8, rev=\E[7m$<2/>, ri=\EM$<5/>,
rmam=\E[?7h, rmkx=\E[?1l\E>, rmso=\E[m$<2/>,
rmul=\E[m$<2/>,
rs1=\E>\E[?3l\E[?4l\E[?5l\E[?7h\E[?8h, sc=\E7,
sgr0=\E[m$<2/>, smam=\E[?7h, smkx=\E[?1h\E=,
smso=\E[7m$<2/>, smul=\E[4m$<2/>,
# vt132 - like vt100 but slower and has ins/del line and such.
# I'm told that <smir>/<rmir> are backwards in the terminal from the
# manual and from the ANSI standard, this describes the actual
# terminal. I've never actually used a vt132 myself, so this
# is untested.
#
vt132|DEC vt132,
xenl,
dch1=\E[P$<7>, dl1=\E[M$<99>, il1=\E[L$<99>, ind=\n$<30>,
ip=$<7>, rmir=\E[4h, smir=\E[4l, use=vt100,
# This vt220 description maps F5--F9 to the second block of function keys
# at the top of the keyboard. The "DO" key is used as F10 to avoid conflict
# with the key marked (ESC) on the vt220. See vt220d for an alternate mapping.
# PF1--PF4 are used as F1--F4.
#
# added msgr -TD
vt220-old|vt200-old|DEC VT220 in vt100 emulation mode,
OTbs, OTpt, am, mir, msgr, xenl, xon,
cols#80, lines#24, vt#3,
OTnl=\n,
acsc=``aaffggjjkkllmmnnooppqqrrssttuuvvwwxxyyzz{{||}}~~,
bel=^G, blink=\E[5m$<2>, bold=\E[1m$<2>, civis=\E[?25l,
clear=\E[H\E[2J$<50>, cnorm=\E[?25h, cr=\r,
csr=\E[%i%p1%d;%p2%dr, cub1=^H, cud1=\E[B, cuf1=\E[C,
cup=\E[%i%p1%d;%p2%dH$<10>, cuu1=\E[A, dch1=\E[P,
dl1=\E[M, ed=\E[J$<50>, el=\E[K$<3>, home=\E[H, ht=^I,
if=/usr/share/tabset/vt100, il1=\E[L, ind=\ED$<20/>,
is2=\E[1;24r\E[24;1H, kbs=^H, kcub1=\E[D, kcud1=\E[B,
kcuf1=\E[C, kcuu1=\E[A, kdch1=\E[3~, kend=\E[4~, kf1=\EOP,
kf10=\E[29~, kf2=\EOQ, kf3=\EOR, kf4=\EOS, kf5=\E[17~,
kf6=\E[18~, kf7=\E[19~, kf8=\E[20~, kf9=\E[21~,
khome=\E[1~, kich1=\E[2~, knp=\E[6~, kpp=\E[5~, rc=\E8,
rev=\E[7m$<2>, rf=/usr/share/tabset/vt100,
ri=\EM$<14/>, rmacs=\E(B$<4>, rmam=\E[?7l, rmir=\E[4l,
rmso=\E[27m, rmul=\E[24m,
rs2=\E>\E[?3l\E[?4l\E[?5l\E[?7h\E[?8h, sc=\E7,
sgr=\E[0%?%p6%t;1%;%?%p2%t;4%;%?%p4%t;5%;%?%p1%p3%|%t;7%;m%?
%p9%t\E(0%e\E(B%;$<2>,
sgr0=\E[m$<2>, smacs=\E(0$<2>, smam=\E[?7h, smir=\E[4h,
smso=\E[7m, smul=\E[4m,
# A much better description of the VT200/220; used to be vt220-8
# changed rmacs/smacs from shift-in/shift-out to vt200-old's explicit G0/G1
# designation to accommodate bug in pcvt -TD
#
# Here's a picture of the VT220 editing keypad:
# +--------+--------+--------+
# | Find | Insert | Remove |
# +--------+--------+--------+
# | Select | Prev | Next |
# +--------+--------+--------+
vt220|vt200|dec vt220,
OTbs, am, mir, msgr, xenl, xon,
cols#80, it#8, lines#24, vt#3,
acsc=``aaffggjjkkllmmnnooppqqrrssttuuvvwwxxyyzz{{||}}~~,
bel=^G, blink=\E[5m, bold=\E[1m, clear=\E[H\E[J, cr=\r,
csr=\E[%i%p1%d;%p2%dr, cub=\E[%p1%dD, cub1=^H,
cud=\E[%p1%dB, cud1=\n, cuf=\E[%p1%dC, cuf1=\E[C,
cup=\E[%i%p1%d;%p2%dH, cuu=\E[%p1%dA, cuu1=\E[A,
dch=\E[%p1%dP, dch1=\E[P, dl=\E[%p1%dM, dl1=\E[M,
ech=\E[%p1%dX, ed=\E[J, el=\E[K, el1=\E[1K, enacs=\E)0,
flash=\E[?5h$<200/>\E[?5l, home=\E[H, ht=^I, hts=\EH,
ich=\E[%p1%d@, if=/usr/share/tabset/vt100,
il=\E[%p1%dL, il1=\E[L, ind=\ED,
is2=\E[?7h\E[>\E[?1l\E F\E[?4l, kbs=^H, kcub1=\E[D,
kcud1=\E[B, kcuf1=\E[C, kcuu1=\E[A, kdch1=\E[3~, kf1=\EOP,
kf10=\E[21~, kf11=\E[23~, kf12=\E[24~, kf13=\E[25~,
kf14=\E[26~, kf17=\E[31~, kf18=\E[32~, kf19=\E[33~,
kf2=\EOQ, kf20=\E[34~, kf3=\EOR, kf4=\EOS, kf6=\E[17~,
kf7=\E[18~, kf8=\E[19~, kf9=\E[20~, kfnd=\E[1~,
khlp=\E[28~, kich1=\E[2~, knp=\E[6~, kpp=\E[5~,
krdo=\E[29~, kslt=\E[4~, lf1=pf1, lf2=pf2, lf3=pf3, lf4=pf4,
nel=\EE, rc=\E8, rev=\E[7m, ri=\EM, rmacs=\E(B$<4>,
rmam=\E[?7l, rmir=\E[4l, rmso=\E[27m, rmul=\E[24m,
rs1=\E[?3l, sc=\E7,
sgr=\E[0%?%p6%t;1%;%?%p2%t;4%;%?%p4%t;5%;%?%p1%p3%|%t;7%;m%?
%p9%t\E(0%e\E(B%;$<2>,
sgr0=\E[m\E(B, smacs=\E(0$<2>, smam=\E[?7h, smir=\E[4h,
smso=\E[7m, smul=\E[4m, tbc=\E[3g, use=ansi+pp,
use=ansi+enq,
vt220-w|vt200-w|DEC vt220 in wide mode,
cols#132,
rs3=\E[?3h, use=vt220,
vt220-8bit|vt220-8|vt200-8bit|vt200-8|dec vt220/200 in 8-bit mode,
OTbs, am, mc5i, mir, msgr, xenl, xon,
cols#80, it#8, lines#24, vt#3,
acsc=``aaffggjjkkllmmnnooppqqrrssttuuvvwwxxyyzz{{||}}~~,
bel=^G, blink=\2335m, bold=\2331m, clear=\233H\233J, cr=\r,
csr=\233%i%p1%d;%p2%dr, cub=\233%p1%dD, cub1=^H,
cud=\233%p1%dB, cud1=\n, cuf=\233%p1%dC, cuf1=\233C,
cup=\233%i%p1%d;%p2%dH, cuu=\233%p1%dA, cuu1=\233A,
dch=\233%p1%dP, dch1=\233P, dl=\233%p1%dM, dl1=\233M,
ech=\233%p1%dX, ed=\233J, el=\233K, el1=\2331K, enacs=\E)0,
flash=\233?5h$<200/>\233?5l, home=\233H, ht=^I, hts=\EH,
ich=\233%p1%d@, if=/usr/share/tabset/vt100,
il=\233%p1%dL, il1=\233L, ind=\ED,
is2=\233?7h\233>\233?1l\E F\233?4l, kbs=^H,
kcub1=\233D, kcud1=\233B, kcuf1=\233C, kcuu1=\233A,
kdch1=\2333~, kf1=\EOP, kf10=\23321~, kf11=\23323~,
kf12=\23324~, kf13=\23325~, kf14=\23326~, kf17=\23331~,
kf18=\23332~, kf19=\23333~, kf2=\EOQ, kf20=\23334~,
kf3=\EOR, kf4=\EOS, kf6=\23317~, kf7=\23318~, kf8=\23319~,
kf9=\23320~, kfnd=\2331~, khlp=\23328~, khome=\233H,
kich1=\2332~, knp=\2336~, kpp=\2335~, krdo=\23329~,
kslt=\2334~, lf1=pf1, lf2=pf2, lf3=pf3, lf4=pf4, mc0=\233i,
mc4=\2334i, mc5=\2335i, nel=\EE, rc=\E8, rev=\2337m, ri=\EM,
rmacs=\E(B, rmam=\233?7l, rmir=\2334l, rmso=\23327m,
rmul=\23324m, rs1=\233?3l, sc=\E7,
sgr=\2330%?%p6%t;1%;%?%p2%t;4%;%?%p4%t;5%;%?%p1%p3%|%t;7%;m
%?%p9%t\E(0%e\E(B%;$<2>,
sgr0=\2330m\E(B, smacs=\E(0, smam=\233?7h, smir=\2334h,
smso=\2337m, smul=\2334m, tbc=\2333g,
# vt220d:
# This vt220 description regards F6--F10 as the second block of function keys
# at the top of the keyboard. This mapping follows the description given
# in the VT220 Programmer Reference Manual and agrees with the labeling
# on some terminals that emulate the vt220. There is no support for an F5.
# See vt220 for an alternate mapping.
#
vt220d|DEC VT220 in vt100 mode with DEC function key labeling,
kf10=\E[21~, kf11=\E[23~, kf12=\E[24~, kf13=\E[25~,
kf14=\E[26~, kf15=\E[28~, kf16=\E[29~, kf17=\E[31~,
kf18=\E[32~, kf19=\E[33~, kf20=\E[34~, kf5@, kf6=\E[17~,
kf7=\E[18~, kf8=\E[19~, kf9=\E[20~, use=vt220-old,
vt220-nam|v200-nam|VT220 in vt100 mode with no auto margins,
am@,
rs2=\E>\E[?3l\E[?4l\E[?5l\E[?7l\E[?8h, use=vt220,
# vt220 termcap written Tue Oct 25 20:41:10 1988 by Alex Latzko
# (not an official DEC entry!)
# The problem with real vt220 terminals is they don't send escapes when in
# in vt220 mode. This can be gotten around two ways. 1> don't send
# escapes or 2> put the vt220 into vt100 mode and use all the nifty
# features of vt100 advanced video which it then has.
#
# This entry takes the view of putting a vt220 into vt100 mode so
# you can use the escape key in emacs and everything else which needs it.
#
# You probably don't want to use this on a VMS machine since VMS will think
# it has a vt220 and will get fouled up coming out of emacs
#
# From: Alexander Latzko <latzko@marsenius.rutgers.edu>, 30 Dec 1996
# (Added vt100 <rc>,<sc> to quiet a tic warning -- esr)
# added msgr -TD
vt200-js|vt220-js|dec vt200 series with jump scroll,
am, msgr,
cols#80,
bel=^G, clear=\E[H\E[J, cr=\r, csr=\E[%i%p1%d;%p2%dr,
cub1=^H, cud1=\n, cuf1=\E[C, cup=\E[%i%p1%d;%p2%dH,
cuu1=\E[A, dch1=\E[P, dl1=\E[M, ed=\E[J, el=\E[K, home=\E[H,
ht=^I, il1=\E[L, ind=\ED,
is2=\E[61"p\E[H\E[?3l\E[?4l\E[?1h\E[?5l\E[?6l\E[?7h\E[?8h\E[
?25h\E>\E[m,
kbs=^H, kcub1=\EOD, kcud1=\EOB, kcuf1=\EOC, kcuu1=\EOA,
kf1=\EOP, kf2=\EOQ, kf3=\EOR, kf4=\EOS, nel=\r\ED, rc=\E8,
rf=/usr/share/tabset/vt100, ri=\EM, rmdc=, rmir=\E[4l,
rmkx=\E[?1l\E>, rmso=\E[27m$<5/>, rmul=\E[24m,
rs1=\E>\E[?3l\E[?4l\E[?5l\E[?7h\E[?8h, sc=\E7, smdc=,
smir=\E[4h, smkx=\E[?1h\E=, smso=\E[7m$<5/>, smul=\E[4m,
# This was DEC's vt320. Use the purpose-built one below instead
#vt320|DEC VT320 in vt100 emulation mode,
# use=vt220,
# Use v320n for SCO's LYRIX. Otherwise, use Adam Thompson's vt320-nam.
#
vt320nam|v320n|DEC VT320 in vt100 emul. mode with NO AUTO WRAP mode,
am@,
rs2=\E>\E[?3l\E[?4l\E[?5l\E[?7l\E[?8h, use=vt220,
# These entries are not DEC's official ones, they were purpose-built for the
# VT320. Here are the designer's notes:
# <kel> is end on a PC kbd. Actually 'select' on a VT. Mapped to
# 'Erase to End of Field'... since nothing seems to use 'end' anyways...
# khome is Home on a PC kbd. Actually 'FIND' on a VT.
# Things that use <knxt> usually use tab anyways... and things that don't use
# tab usually use <knxt> instead...
# kprv is same as tab - Backtab is useless...
# I left out <sgr> because of its RIDICULOUS complexity,
# and the resulting fact that it causes the termcap translation of the entry
# to SMASH the 1k-barrier...
# From: Adam Thompson <athompso@pangea.ca> Sept 10 1995
# (vt320: uncommented <fsl> --esr)
vt320|vt300|dec vt320 7 bit terminal,
am, hs, mir, msgr, xenl,
cols#80, lines#24, wsl#80,
acsc=``aaffggjjkkllmmnnooppqqrrssttuuvvwwxxyyzz{{||}}~~,
bel=^G, blink=\E[5m, bold=\E[1m, civis=\E[?25l,
clear=\E[H\E[2J, cnorm=\E[?25h, cr=\r,
csr=\E[%i%p1%d;%p2%dr, cub=\E[%p1%dD, cub1=^H,
cud=\E[%p1%dB, cud1=\n, cuf=\E[%p1%dC, cuf1=\E[C,
cup=\E[%i%p1%d;%p2%dH, cuu=\E[%p1%dA, cuu1=\E[A,
dch=\E[%p1%dP, dch1=\E[P, dl=\E[%p1%dM, dl1=\E[M,
ech=\E[%p1%dX, ed=\E[J, el=\E[K, el1=\E[1K, home=\E[H, ht=^I,
hts=\EH, ich=\E[%p1%d@, il=\E[%p1%dL, il1=\E[L, ind=\ED,
is2=\E>\E[?3l\E[?4l\E[?5l\E[?7h\E[?8h\E[1;24r\E[24;1H,
kbs=^?, kcub1=\EOD, kcud1=\EOB, kcuf1=\EOC, kcuu1=\EOA,
kdch1=\E[3~, kel=\E[4~, kf10=\E[21~, kf11=\E[23~,
kf12=\E[24~, kf13=\E[25~, kf14=\E[26~, kf15=\E[28~,
kf16=\E[29~, kf17=\E[31~, kf18=\E[32~, kf19=\E[33~,
kf20=\E[34~, kf6=\E[17~, kf7=\E[18~, kf8=\E[19~,
kf9=\E[20~, khome=\E[1~, kich1=\E[2~, knp=\E[6~, knxt=^I,
kpp=\E[5~, kprv=\E[Z, kslt=\E[4~, nel=\EE, rc=\E8, rev=\E[7m,
rf=/usr/share/tabset/vt300, ri=\EM, rmacs=\E(B,
rmam=\E[?7l, rmir=\E[4l, rmkx=\E[?1l\E>, rmso=\E[m,
rmul=\E[m,
rs2=\E>\E[?3l\E[?4l\E[?5l\E[?7h\E[?8h\E[1;24r\E[24;1H,
sc=\E7,
sgr=\E[0%?%p6%t;1%;%?%p2%t;4%;%?%p4%t;5%;%?%p1%p3%|%t;7%;m%?
%p9%t\E(0%e\E(B%;$<2>,
sgr0=\E[m\E(B, smacs=\E(0, smam=\E[?7h, smir=\E[4h,
smkx=\E[?1h\E=, smso=\E[7m, smul=\E[4m, tbc=\E[3g,
use=dec+pp, use=vt220+keypad, use=dec+sl, use=ansi+enq,
vt320-nam|vt300-nam|dec vt320 7 bit terminal with no am to make SAS happy,
am@,
is2=\E>\E[?3l\E[?4l\E[?5l\E[?7l\E[?8h\E[1;24r\E[24;1H,
rs2=\E>\E[?3l\E[?4l\E[?5l\E[?7l\E[?8h\E[1;24r\E[24;1H, use=vt320,
# We have to init 132-col mode, not 80-col mode.
vt320-w|vt300-w|dec vt320 wide 7 bit terminal,
cols#132, wsl#132,
is2=\E>\E[?3h\E[?4l\E[?5l\E[?7h\E[?8h\E[1;24r\E[24;1H,
rs2=\E>\E[?3h\E[?4l\E[?5l\E[?7h\E[?8h\E[1;24r\E[24;1H, use=vt320,
vt320-w-nam|vt300-w-nam|dec vt320 wide 7 bit terminal with no am,
am@,
is2=\E>\E[?3h\E[?4l\E[?5l\E[?7l\E[?8h\E[1;24r\E[24;1H,
rs2=\E>\E[?3h\E[?4l\E[?5l\E[?7l\E[?8h\E[1;24r\E[24;1H, use=vt320-w,
# VT330 and VT340 -- These are ReGIS and SIXEL graphics terminals
# which are pretty much a superset of the VT320. They have the
# host writable status line, yet another different DRCS matrix size,
# and such, but they add the DEC Technical character set, Multiple text
# pages, selectable length pages, and the like. The difference between
# the vt330 and vt340 is that the latter has only 2 planes and a monochrome
# monitor, the former has 4 planes and a color monitor. These terminals
# support VT131 and ANSI block mode, but as with much of these things,
# termcap/terminfo doesn't deal with these features.
#
# Note that this entry is are set up in what was the standard way for GNU
# Emacs v18 terminal modes to deal with the cursor keys in that the arrow
# keys were switched into application mode at the same time the numeric pad
# is switched into application mode. This changes the definitions of the
# arrow keys. Emacs v19 is smarter and mines its keys directly out of
# your termcap or terminfo entry,
#
# From: Daniel Glasser <dag@persoft.persoft.com>, 13 Oct 1993
# (vt340: string capability "sb=\E[M" corrected to "sr";
# also, added <rmam>/<smam> based on the init string -- esr)
vt340|dec-vt340|vt330|dec-vt330|dec vt340 graphics terminal with 24 line page,
am, eslok, hs, mir, msgr, xenl, xon,
cols#80, it#8, lines#24, vt#3,
acsc=``aaffggjjkkllmmnnooppqqrrssttuuvvwwxxyyzz{{||}}~~,
blink=\E[5m, bold=\E[1m, civis=\E[?25l, clear=\E[H\E[J,
cnorm=\E[?25h, cr=\r, csr=\E[%i%p1%d;%p2%dr,
cub=\E[%p1%dD, cub1=^H, cud=\E[%p1%dB, cud1=\n,
cuf=\E[%p1%dC, cuf1=\E[C, cup=\E[%i%p1%d;%p2%dH,
cuu=\E[%p1%dA, cuu1=\E[A, dch=\E[%p1%dP, dch1=\E[P,
dl=\E[%p1%dM, dl1=\E[M, dsl=\E[2$~\r\E[1$}\E[K\E[$},
ed=\E[J, el=\E[K, flash=\E[?5h$<200/>\E[?5l, fsl=\E[$},
home=\E[H, ht=^I, hts=\EH, ich=\E[%p1%d@, il=\E[%p1%dL,
il1=\E[L, ind=\ED,
is2=\E<\E\sF\E>\E[?1h\E[?3l\E[?4l\E[?5l\E[?7h\E[?8h\E[1;24r
\E[24;1H,
kbs=^H, kcub1=\EOD, kcud1=\EOB, kcuf1=\EOC, kcuu1=\EOA,
kf1=\EOP, kf2=\EOQ, kf3=\EOR, kf4=\EOS, kf6=\E[17~,
kf7=\E[18~, kf8=\E[19~, kf9=\E[20~, lf1=pf1, lf2=pf2,
lf3=pf3, lf4=pf4, nel=\r\ED, rc=\E8, rev=\E[7m,
rf=/usr/share/tabset/vt300, ri=\EM, rmacs=\E(B,
rmam=\E[?7l, rmir=\E[4l, rmkx=\E[?1l\E>, rmso=\E[27m,
rmul=\E[24m, rs1=\E[?3l, sc=\E7,
sgr=\E[0%?%p6%t;1%;%?%p2%t;4%;%?%p4%t;5%;%?%p1%p3%|%t;7%;m%?
%p9%t\E(0%e\E(B%;$<2>,
sgr0=\E[m\E(B, smacs=\E(0, smam=\E[?7h, smir=\E[4h,
smkx=\E[?1h\E=, smso=\E[7m, smul=\E[4m, tbc=\E[3g,
tsl=\E[2$~\E[1$}\E[1;%dH,
# Left/right margins are supported in xterm since patch #279 (2012/05/10)
vt420+lrmm|VT420 left/right margins,
mgc=\E[?69l, smglr=\E[?69h\E[%i%p1%d;%p2%ds,
# DEC doesn't supply a vt400 description, so we add Daniel Glasser's
# (originally written with vt420 as its primary name, and usable for it).
#
# VT400/420 -- This terminal is a superset of the vt320. It adds the multiple
# text pages and long text pages with selectable length of the vt340, along
# with left and right margins, rectangular area text copy, fill, and erase
# operations, selected region character attribute change operations,
# page memory and rectangle checksums, insert/delete column, reception
# macros, and other features too numerous to remember right now. TERMCAP
# can only take advantage of a few of these added features.
#
# Note that this entry is are set up in what was the standard way for GNU
# Emacs v18 terminal modes to deal with the cursor keys in that the arrow
# keys were switched into application mode at the same time the numeric pad
# is switched into application mode. This changes the definitions of the
# arrow keys. Emacs v19 is smarter and mines its keys directly out of
# your termcap entry,
#
# From: Daniel Glasser <dag@persoft.persoft.com>, 13 Oct 1993
# (vt400: string capability ":sb=\E[M:" corrected to ":sr=\E[M:";
# also, added <rmam>/<smam> based on the init string -- esr)
vt400|vt400-24|dec-vt400|dec vt400 24x80 column autowrap,
am, eslok, hs, mir, msgr, xenl, xon,
cols#80, it#8, lines#24, vt#3,
acsc=``aaffggjjkkllmmnnooppqqrrssttuuvvwwxxyyzz{{||}}~~,
blink=\E[5m, bold=\E[1m, civis=\E[?25l,
clear=\E[H\E[J$<10/>, cnorm=\E[?25h, cr=\r,
csr=\E[%i%p1%d;%p2%dr, cub=\E[%p1%dD, cub1=^H,
cud=\E[%p1%dB, cud1=\n, cuf=\E[%p1%dC, cuf1=\E[C,
cup=\E[%i%p1%d;%p2%dH, cuu=\E[%p1%dA, cuu1=\E[A,
dch=\E[%p1%dP, dch1=\E[P, dl=\E[%p1%dM, dl1=\E[M,
dsl=\E[2$~\r\E[1$}\E[K\E[$}, ed=\E[J$<10/>,
el=\E[K$<4/>, flash=\E[?5h$<200/>\E[?5l, fsl=\E[$},
home=\E[H, ht=^I, hts=\EH, ich=\E[%p1%d@, ich1=\E[@,
il=\E[%p1%dL, il1=\E[L, ind=\ED,
is2=\E<\E\sF\E>\E[?1h\E[?3l\E[?4l\E[?5l\E[?7h\E[?8h\E[1;24r
\E[24;1H,
kbs=^H, kcub1=\EOD, kcud1=\EOB, kcuf1=\EOC, kcuu1=\EOA,
kf1=\EOP, kf2=\EOQ, kf3=\EOR, kf4=\EOS, kf6=\E[17~,
kf7=\E[18~, kf8=\E[19~, kf9=\E[20~, lf1=pf1, lf2=pf2,
lf3=pf3, lf4=pf4, nel=\r\ED, rc=\E8, rev=\E[7m,
rf=/usr/share/tabset/vt300, ri=\EM, rmacs=\E(B,
rmam=\E[?7l, rmir=\E[4l, rmkx=\E[?1l\E>, rmso=\E[27m,
rmul=\E[24m, rs1=\E<\E[?3l\E[!p\E[?7h, sc=\E7,
sgr=\E[0%?%p6%t;1%;%?%p2%t;4%;%?%p4%t;5%;%?%p1%p3%|%t;7%;m%?
%p9%t\E(0%e\E(B%;$<2>,
sgr0=\E[m\E(B, smacs=\E(0, smam=\E[?7h, smir=\E[4h,
smkx=\E[?1h\E=, smso=\E[7m, smul=\E[4m, tbc=\E[3g,
tsl=\E[2$~\E[1$}\E[1;%dH, use=dec+sl,
# (vt420: I removed <kf0>, it collided with <kf10>. I also restored
# a missing <sc> -- esr)
# add msgr and other capabilities from vt220 -TD
vt420|DEC VT420,
am, mir, msgr, xenl, xon,
cols#80, it#8, lines#24, vt#3,
acsc=``aaffggjjkkllmmnnooppqqrrssttuuvvwwxxyyzz{{||}}~~,
bel=^G, blink=\E[5m$<2>, bold=\E[1m$<2>, civis=\E[?25l,
clear=\E[H\E[2J$<50>, cnorm=\E[?25h, cr=\r,
csr=\E[%i%p1%d;%p2%dr, cub=\E[%p1%dD, cub1=^H,
cud=\E[%p1%dB, cud1=\n, cuf=\E[%p1%dC, cuf1=\E[C,
cup=\E[%i%p1%d;%p2%dH$<10>, cuu=\E[%p1%dA, cuu1=\E[A,
dch=\E[%p1%dP, dch1=\E[P, dl=\E[%p1%dM, dl1=\E[M,
ech=\E[%p1%dX, ed=\E[J$<50>, el=\E[K$<3>, el1=\E[1K,
enacs=\E)0, flash=\E[?5h$<200/>\E[?5l, home=\E[H, ht=^I,
hts=\EH, ich=\E[%p1%d@, if=/usr/share/tabset/vt300,
il=\E[%p1%dL, il1=\E[L, ind=\ED, is2=\E[1;24r\E[24;1H,
is3=\E[?67h\E[64;1"p, kbs=^H, kcub1=\E[D, kcud1=\E[B,
kcuf1=\E[C, kcuu1=\E[A, kdch1=\E[3~, kf1=\EOP, kf10=\E[29~,
kf2=\EOQ, kf3=\EOR, kf4=\EOS, kf5=\E[17~, kf6=\E[18~,
kf7=\E[19~, kf8=\E[20~, kf9=\E[21~, kfnd=\E[1~,
kich1=\E[2~, knp=\E[6~, kpp=\E[5~, kslt=\E[4~, nel=\EE,
rc=\E8, rev=\E[7m$<2>, rf=/usr/share/tabset/vt300,
ri=\EM, rmacs=\E(B$<4>, rmam=\E[?7l, rmir=\E[4l, rmkx=\E>,
rmsc=\E[?0;0r\E>\E[?3l\E[?4l\E[?5l\E[?7h\E[?8h,
rmso=\E[27m, rmul=\E[24m, rs3=\E[?67h\E[64;1"p, sc=\E7,
sgr=\E[0%?%p6%t;1%;%?%p2%t;4%;%?%p4%t;5%;%?%p1%p3%|%t;7%;m%?
%p9%t\E(0%e\E(B%;$<2>,
sgr0=\E[m\E(B$<2>, smacs=\E(0$<2>, smam=\E[?7h,
smir=\E[4h, smkx=\E=, smso=\E[7m, smul=\E[4m, tbc=\E[3g,
use=ansi+pp, use=dec+sl, use=ansi+enq,
# DEC VT220 and up support DECUDK (user-defined keys). DECUDK (i.e., pfx)
# takes two parameters, the key and the string. Translating the key is
# straightforward (keys 1-5 are not defined on real terminals, though some
# emulators define these):
#
# if (key < 16) then value = key;
# else if (key < 21) then value = key + 1;
# else if (key < 25) then value = key + 2;
# else if (key < 27) then value = key + 3;
# else if (key < 30) then value = key + 4;
# else value = key + 5;
#
# The string must be the hexadecimal equivalent, e.g., "5052494E" for "PRINT".
# There's no provision in terminfo for emitting a string in this format, so the
# application has to know it.
#
vt420pc|DEC VT420 w/PC keyboard,
kdch1=^?, kend=\E[4~, kf1=\E[11~, kf10=\E[21~, kf11=\E[23~,
kf12=\E[24~, kf13=\E[11;2~, kf14=\E[12;2~, kf15=\E[13;2~,
kf16=\E[14;2~, kf17=\E[15;2~, kf18=\E[17;2~,
kf19=\E[18;2~, kf2=\E[12~, kf20=\E[19;2~, kf21=\E[20;2~,
kf22=\E[21;2~, kf23=\E[23;2~, kf24=\E[24;2~, kf25=\E[23~,
kf26=\E[24~, kf27=\E[25~, kf28=\E[26~, kf29=\E[28~,
kf3=\E[13~, kf30=\E[29~, kf31=\E[31~, kf32=\E[32~,
kf33=\E[33~, kf34=\E[34~, kf35=\E[35~, kf36=\E[36~,
kf37=\E[23;2~, kf38=\E[24;2~, kf39=\E[25;2~, kf4=\E[14~,
kf40=\E[26;2~, kf41=\E[28;2~, kf42=\E[29;2~,
kf43=\E[31;2~, kf44=\E[32;2~, kf45=\E[33;2~,
kf46=\E[34;2~, kf47=\E[35;2~, kf48=\E[36;2~, kf5=\E[15~,
kf6=\E[17~, kf7=\E[18~, kf8=\E[19~, kf9=\E[20~, khome=\E[H,
pctrm=USR_TERM\:vt420pcdos\:,
pfx=\EP1;1|%?%{16}%p1%>%t%{0}%e%{21}%p1%>%t%{1}%e%{25}%p1%>
%t%{2}%e%{27}%p1%>%t%{3}%e%{30}%p1%>%t%{4}%e%{5}%;%p1%+
%d/%p2%s\E\\,
use=vt420,
vt420pcdos|DEC VT420 w/PC for DOS Merge,
lines#25,
dispc=%?%p1%{19}%=%t\E\023\021%e%p1%{32}%<%t\E%p1%c%e%p1
%{127}%=%t\E\177%e%p1%c%;,
pctrm@,
rmsc=\E[?0;0r\E>\E[?3l\E[?4l\E[?5l\E[?7h\E[?8h, sgr@,
sgr0=\E[m, smsc=\E[?1;2r\E[34h, use=vt420pc,
vt420f|DEC VT420 with VT kbd; VT400 mode; F1-F5 used as Fkeys,
kdch1=^?, kf1=\E[11~, kf10=\E[21~, kf11=\E[23~,
kf12=\E[24~, kf13=\E[25~, kf14=\E[26~, kf15=\E[28~,
kf16=\E[29~, kf17=\E[31~, kf18=\E[32~, kf19=\E[33~,
kf2=\E[12~, kf20=\E[34~, kf3=\E[13~, kf4=\E[14~,
kf5=\E[15~, kf6=\E[17~, kf7=\E[18~, kf8=\E[19~, kf9=\E[20~,
khome=\E[H, lf1=\EOP, lf2=\EOQ, lf3=\EOR, lf4=\EOS,
use=vt420,
vt510|DEC VT510,
use=vt420,
vt510pc|DEC VT510 w/PC keyboard,
use=vt420pc,
vt510pcdos|DEC VT510 w/PC for DOS Merge,
use=vt420pcdos,
# VT520/VT525
#
# The VT520 is a monochrome text terminal capable of managing up to
# four independent sessions in the terminal. It has multiple ANSI
# emulations (VT520, VT420, VT320, VT220, VT100, VT PCTerm, SCO Console)
# and ASCII emulations (WY160/60, PCTerm, 50/50+, 150/120, TVI 950,
# 925 910+, ADDS A2). This terminfo data is for the ANSI emulations only.
#
# Terminal Set-Up is entered by pressing [F3], [Caps Lock]/[F3] or
# [Alt]/[Print Screen] depending upon which keyboard and which
# terminal mode is being used. If Set-Up has been disabled or
# assigned to an unknown key, Set-Up may be entered by pressing
# [F3] as the first key after power up, regardless of keyboard type.
vt520|DEC VT520,
use=ansi+rca, use=vt420, use=ansi+tabs,
vt525|DEC VT525,
use=vt520,
# I just got a brand new Boundless VT520 with that company's "ANSI 2011"
# Keyboard, which replaces the old LK41R-AA keyboard.
#
# In trying to get the function keys to work, I had to cobble my own
# terminfo.src entry, since the existing vt520 entry doesn't include most of
# the function keys. If I blend the entries for "vt420f" and "vt220+keypad"
# I seem to get them all -Mike Gran
vt520ansi|Boundless VT520 ANSI,
use=ansi+rca, use=vt420f, use=vt220+keypad,
use=ansi+tabs,
#### VT100 emulations
# John Hawkinson <jhawk@MIT.EDU> tells us that the EWAN telnet for Windows
# (the best Windows telnet as of September 1995) presents the name `dec-vt100'
# to telnetd. Michael Deutschmann <ldeutsch@mail.netshop.net> informs us
# that this works best with a stock vt100 entry.
dec-vt100|EWAN telnet's vt100 emulation,
use=vt100,
# From: Adrian Garside <94ajg2@eng.cam.ac.uk>, 19 Nov 1996
dec-vt220|DOS tnvt200 terminal emulator,
am@, use=vt220,
######## X TERMINAL EMULATORS
#### XTERM
#
# You can add the following line to your .Xdefaults to change the terminal type
# set by the xterms you start up to my-xterm:
#
# *termName: my-xterm
#
# System administrators can change the default entry for xterm instances
# by adding a similar line to /usr/X11/lib/X11/app-defaults/XTerm. In either
# case, xterm will detect and reject an invalid terminal type, falling back
# to the default of xterm.
#
# Compatible with the R5 xterm
# (from the XFree86 3.2 distribution, <blink=@> removed)
# added khome/kend, rmir/smir, rmul/smul, hts based on the R5 xterm code - TD
# corrected typos in rs2 string - TD
# added u6-u9 -TD
xterm-r5|xterm R5 version,
OTbs, am, km, msgr, xenl,
cols#80, it#8, lines#24,
bel=^G, bold=\E[1m, clear=\E[H\E[2J, cr=\r,
csr=\E[%i%p1%d;%p2%dr, cub=\E[%p1%dD, cub1=^H,
cud=\E[%p1%dB, cud1=\n, cuf=\E[%p1%dC, cuf1=\E[C,
cup=\E[%i%p1%d;%p2%dH, cuu=\E[%p1%dA, cuu1=\E[A,
dch=\E[%p1%dP, dch1=\E[P, dl=\E[%p1%dM, dl1=\E[M, ed=\E[J,
el=\E[K, home=\E[H, ht=^I, hts=\EH, ich=\E[%p1%d@, ich1=\E[@,
il=\E[%p1%dL, il1=\E[L, ind=\n, kcub1=\EOD, kcud1=\EOB,
kcuf1=\EOC, kcuu1=\EOA, kdch1=\E[3~, kdl1=\E[31~,
kel=\E[8~, kend=\E[4~, kf0=\EOq, kf1=\E[11~, kf10=\E[21~,
kf11=\E[23~, kf12=\E[24~, kf2=\E[12~, kf3=\E[13~,
kf4=\E[14~, kf5=\E[15~, kf6=\E[17~, kf7=\E[18~, kf8=\E[19~,
kf9=\E[20~, khome=\E[1~, kich1=\E[2~, kil1=\E[30~,
kmous=\E[M, knp=\E[6~, kpp=\E[5~, rc=\E8, rev=\E[7m, ri=\EM,
rmir=\E[4l, rmkx=\E[?1l\E>, rmso=\E[m, rmul=\E[m,
rs2=\E>\E[?1;3;4;5;6l\E[4l\E[?7h\E[m\E[r\E[2J\E[H,
sc=\E7,
sgr=\E[%?%p1%t;7%;%?%p2%t;4%;%?%p3%t;7%;%?%p4%t;5%;%?%p6%t;1
%;m,
sgr0=\E[m, smir=\E[4h, smkx=\E[?1h\E=, smso=\E[7m,
smul=\E[4m, tbc=\E[3g, use=vt100+enq, use=xterm+kbs,
# Compatible with the R6 xterm
# (from XFree86 3.2 distribution, <acsc> and <it> added, <blink@> removed)
# added khome/kend, hts based on the R6 xterm code - TD
# (khome/kend do not actually work in X11R5 or X11R6, but many people use this
# for compatibility with other emulators).
xterm-r6|xterm X11R6 version,
OTbs, am, km, mir, msgr, xenl,
cols#80, it#8, lines#24,
acsc=``aaffggiijjkkllmmnnooppqqrrssttuuvvwwxxyyzz{{||}}~~,
bel=^G, bold=\E[1m, clear=\E[H\E[2J, cr=\r,
csr=\E[%i%p1%d;%p2%dr, cub=\E[%p1%dD, cub1=^H,
cud=\E[%p1%dB, cud1=\n, cuf=\E[%p1%dC, cuf1=\E[C,
cup=\E[%i%p1%d;%p2%dH, cuu=\E[%p1%dA, cuu1=\E[A,
dch=\E[%p1%dP, dch1=\E[P, dl=\E[%p1%dM, dl1=\E[M, ed=\E[J,
el=\E[K, enacs=\E)0, home=\E[H, ht=^I, hts=\EH, il=\E[%p1%dL,
il1=\E[L, ind=\n,
is2=\E[m\E[?7h\E[4l\E>\E7\E[r\E[?1;3;4;6l\E8,
kcub1=\EOD, kcud1=\EOB, kcuf1=\EOC, kcuu1=\EOA,
kdch1=\E[3~, kf1=\E[11~, kf10=\E[21~, kf11=\E[23~,
kf12=\E[24~, kf13=\E[25~, kf14=\E[26~, kf15=\E[28~,
kf16=\E[29~, kf17=\E[31~, kf18=\E[32~, kf19=\E[33~,
kf2=\E[12~, kf20=\E[34~, kf3=\E[13~, kf4=\E[14~,
kf5=\E[15~, kf6=\E[17~, kf7=\E[18~, kf8=\E[19~, kf9=\E[20~,
kfnd=\E[1~, kich1=\E[2~, kmous=\E[M, knp=\E[6~, kpp=\E[5~,
kslt=\E[4~, meml=\El, memu=\Em, rc=\E8, rev=\E[7m, ri=\EM,
rmacs=^O, rmcup=\E[2J\E[?47l\E8, rmir=\E[4l,
rmkx=\E[?1l\E>, rmso=\E[m, rmul=\E[m,
rs2=\E[m\E[?7h\E[4l\E>\E7\E[r\E[?1;3;4;6l\E8, sc=\E7,
sgr0=\E[m, smacs=^N, smcup=\E7\E[?47h, smir=\E[4h,
smkx=\E[?1h\E=, smso=\E[7m, smul=\E[4m, tbc=\E[3g,
use=xterm+kbs, use=vt100+enq,
xterm-old|antique xterm version,
use=xterm-r6,
# The monochrome version began as a copy of "xtermm" (from Solaris), and was
# initially part of the xterm sources (in XFree86). But "xterm" continued to
# grow, while "xterm-mono" had none of the newer features. Additionally,
# inheriting from "xtermm" runs into several problems, including different
# function keys as well as the fact that the mouse support is not compatible.
# This entry restores the original intent, intentionally not an alias to
# simplify maintenance -TD
xterm-mono|monochrome xterm,
use=xterm-r6,
# This is the base xterm entry for the xterm supplied with XFree86 3.2 & up.
# The name has been changed and some aliases have been removed.
xterm-xf86-v32|xterm terminal emulator (XFree86 3.2 Window System),
OTbs, am, bce, km, mir, msgr, xenl, XT,
cols#80, it#8, lines#24, ncv@,
acsc=``aaffggiijjkkllmmnnooppqqrrssttuuvvwwxxyyzz{{||}}~~,
bel=^G, bold=\E[1m, cbt=\E[Z, civis=\E[?25l,
clear=\E[H\E[2J, cnorm=\E[?25h, cr=\r,
csr=\E[%i%p1%d;%p2%dr, cub=\E[%p1%dD, cub1=^H,
cud=\E[%p1%dB, cud1=\n, cuf=\E[%p1%dC, cuf1=\E[C,
cup=\E[%i%p1%d;%p2%dH, cuu=\E[%p1%dA, cuu1=\E[A,
dch=\E[%p1%dP, dch1=\E[P, dl=\E[%p1%dM, dl1=\E[M,
ech=\E[%p1%dX, ed=\E[J, el=\E[K, el1=\E[1K, enacs=\E(B\E)0,
flash=\E[?5h$<100/>\E[?5l, home=\E[H, hpa=\E[%i%p1%dG,
ht=^I, hts=\EH, ich=\E[%p1%d@, ich1=\E[@, il=\E[%p1%dL,
il1=\E[L, ind=\n,
is2=\E7\E[r\E[m\E[?7h\E[?1;3;4;6l\E[4l\E8\E>,
kbeg=\EOE, kcub1=\EOD, kcud1=\EOB, kcuf1=\EOC, kcuu1=\EOA,
kdch1=^?, kend=\EOF, kf1=\E[11~, kf10=\E[21~, kf11=\E[23~,
kf12=\E[24~, kf13=\E[25~, kf14=\E[26~, kf15=\E[28~,
kf16=\E[29~, kf17=\E[31~, kf18=\E[32~, kf19=\E[33~,
kf2=\E[12~, kf20=\E[34~, kf3=\E[13~, kf4=\E[14~,
kf5=\E[15~, kf6=\E[17~, kf7=\E[18~, kf8=\E[19~, kf9=\E[20~,
kfnd=\E[1~, khome=\EOH, kich1=\E[2~, kmous=\E[M, knp=\E[6~,
kpp=\E[5~, kslt=\E[4~, meml=\El, memu=\Em, rc=\E8, rev=\E[7m,
ri=\EM, rmacs=^O, rmam=\E[?7l, rmcup=\E[2J\E[?47l\E8,
rmir=\E[4l, rmkx=\E[?1l\E>, rmso=\E[27m, rmul=\E[24m,
rs1=^O, rs2=\E7\E[r\E8\E[m\E[?7h\E[?1;3;4;6l\E[4l\E>,
sc=\E7,
setb=\E[4%?%p1%{1}%=%t4%e%p1%{3}%=%t6%e%p1%{4}%=%t1%e%p1%{6}
%=%t3%e%p1%d%;m,
setf=\E[3%?%p1%{1}%=%t4%e%p1%{3}%=%t6%e%p1%{4}%=%t1%e%p1%{6}
%=%t3%e%p1%d%;m,
sgr=\E[0%?%p1%p6%|%t;1%;%?%p2%t;4%;%?%p1%p3%|%t;7%;%?%p4%t;5
%;m%?%p9%t\016%e\017%;,
sgr0=\E[m\017, smacs=^N, smam=\E[?7h, smcup=\E7\E[?47h,
smir=\E[4h, smkx=\E[?1h\E=, smso=\E[7m, smul=\E[4m,
tbc=\E[3g, vpa=\E[%i%p1%dd, use=xterm+kbs, use=vt100+enq,
use=ecma+color, use=vt220+keypad,
# This is the stock xterm entry supplied with XFree86 3.3, which uses VT100
# codes for F1-F4 except while in VT220 mode.
xterm-xf86-v33|xterm terminal emulator (XFree86 3.3 Window System),
kf1=\EOP, kf2=\EOQ, kf3=\EOR, kf4=\EOS, use=xterm-xf86-v32,
# This version was released in XFree86 3.3.3 (November 1998).
# Besides providing printer support, it exploits a new feature that allows
# xterm to use terminfo-based descriptions with the titeInhibit resource.
# -- the distribution contained incorrect khome/kend values -TD
xterm-xf86-v333|xterm terminal emulator (XFree86 3.3.3 Window System),
blink=\E[5m, ich1@, invis=\E[8m,
is2=\E[!p\E[?3;4l\E[4l\E>, kdch1=\E[3~, kfnd@, kslt@,
rmcup=\E[?1047l\E[?1048l, rs1=\Ec,
rs2=\E[!p\E[?3;4l\E[4l\E>,
sgr=\E[0%?%p1%p6%|%t;1%;%?%p2%t;4%;%?%p1%p3%|%t;7%;%?%p4%t;5
%;%?%p7%t;8%;m%?%p9%t\016%e\017%;,
smcup=\E[?1048h\E[?1047h, use=ansi+pp,
use=xterm-xf86-v33,
# This version was released in XFree86 4.0.
xterm-xf86-v40|xterm terminal emulator (XFree86 4.0 Window System),
npc,
kDC=\E[3;5~, kEND=\EO5F, kHOM=\EO5H, kIC=\E[2;5~,
kLFT=\EO5D, kNXT=\E[6;5~, kPRV=\E[5;5~, kRIT=\EO5C, ka1@,
ka3@, kb2=\EOE, kc1@, kc3@, kcbt=\E[Z, kdch1=\E[3~, kend=\EOF,
kf13=\EO2P, kf14=\EO2Q, kf15=\EO2R, kf16=\EO2S,
kf17=\E[15;2~, kf18=\E[17;2~, kf19=\E[18;2~,
kf20=\E[19;2~, kf21=\E[20;2~, kf22=\E[21;2~,
kf23=\E[23;2~, kf24=\E[24;2~, kf25=\EO5P, kf26=\EO5Q,
kf27=\EO5R, kf28=\EO5S, kf29=\E[15;5~, kf30=\E[17;5~,
kf31=\E[18;5~, kf32=\E[19;5~, kf33=\E[20;5~,
kf34=\E[21;5~, kf35=\E[23;5~, kf36=\E[24;5~, kf37=\EO6P,
kf38=\EO6Q, kf39=\EO6R, kf40=\EO6S, kf41=\E[15;6~,
kf42=\E[17;6~, kf43=\E[18;6~, kf44=\E[19;6~,
kf45=\E[20;6~, kf46=\E[21;6~, kf47=\E[23;6~,
kf48=\E[24;6~, khome=\EOH,
sgr=\E[0%?%p6%t;1%;%?%p2%t;4%;%?%p1%p3%|%t;7%;%?%p4%t;5%;m%?
%p9%t\016%e\017%;,
use=xterm+alt1049, use=xterm-xf86-v333,
# This version was released in XFree86 4.3.
xterm-xf86-v43|xterm terminal emulator (XFree86 4.3 Window System),
kDC=\E[3;2~, kEND=\E[1;2F, kHOM=\E[1;2H, kIC=\E[2;2~,
kLFT=\E[1;2D, kNXT=\E[6;2~, kPRV=\E[5;2~, kRIT=\E[1;2C,
kbeg@,
sgr=\E[0%?%p6%t;1%;%?%p2%t;4%;%?%p1%p3%|%t;7%;%?%p4%t;5%;%?
%p7%t;8%;m%?%p9%t\016%e\017%;,
use=xterm-xf86-v40,
# This version was released in XFree86 4.4.
xterm-xf86-v44|xterm terminal emulator (XFree86 4.4 Window System),
cnorm=\E[?12l\E[?25h, cvvis=\E[?12;25h, use=ecma+index,
use=xterm-xf86-v43,
xterm-xfree86|xterm terminal emulator (XFree86),
use=xterm-xf86-v44,
# This version reflects the current xterm features.
xterm-new|modern xterm terminal emulator,
npc,
kcbt=\E[Z, kent=\EOM, use=ecma+index, use=ansi+rep,
use=ecma+strikeout, use=xterm+keypad, use=vt420+lrmm,
use=xterm+sm+1006, use=xterm+pcfkeys, use=xterm+tmux,
use=xterm-basic,
# This fragment is for people who cannot agree on what the backspace key
# should send.
xterm+kbs|fragment for backspace key,
kbs=^H,
#
# This fragment describes as much of XFree86 xterm's "pc-style" function
# keys as will fit into terminfo's 60 function keys.
# From ctlseqs.ms:
# Code Modifiers
# ---------------------------------
# 2 Shift
# 3 Alt
# 4 Shift + Alt
# 5 Control
# 6 Shift + Control
# 7 Alt + Control
# 8 Shift + Alt + Control
# ---------------------------------
# The meta key may also be used as a modifier in this scheme, adding another
# bit to the parameter.
xterm+pcfkeys|fragment for PC-style fkeys,
use=xterm+app, use=xterm+pcf2, use=xterm+pcc2,
use=xterm+pce2,
#
xterm+noapp|fragment with cursor keys in normal mode,
kcub1=\E[D, kcud1=\E[B, kcuf1=\E[C, kcuu1=\E[A, kend=\E[F,
khome=\E[H,
xterm+app|fragment with cursor keys in application mode,
kcub1=\EOD, kcud1=\EOB, kcuf1=\EOC, kcuu1=\EOA, kend=\EOF,
khome=\EOH,
#
# The "PC-style" modifier scheme was introduced in xterm patch #94 (1999/3/27)
# and revised in xterm patch #167 (2002/8/24). Some other terminal emulators
# copied the earlier scheme, as noted in the "use=" clauses in this file.
#
# The original assignments from patch #94 for cursor-keys had some technical
# issues:
#
# A parameter for a function-key to represent a modifier is just more
# bits. But for a cursor-key it may change the behavior of the
# application. For instance, emacs decodes the first parameter of a
# cursor-key as a repeat count.
#
# A parameterized string should (really) not begin with SS3 (\EO).
# Rather, CSI (\E[) should be used.
#
# For these reasons, the original assignments were deprecated. For
# compatibility reasons, they are still available as a setting of xterm's
# modifyCursorKeys resource. These fragments list the modified cursor-keys
# that might apply to xterm+pcfkeys with different values of that resource.
#
# These entries will have warnings when checking with tic because the kri/kind
# capabilities duplicate the kUP/kDN extensions. This is intentional, though
# not part of the original plan. The changes for xterm patch #206 (2005/11/3)
# show that kri/kind were seen much later as part of a set including kLFT/kRIT:
#
# * modify xterm-new terminfo entry to use capabilities for shifted
# scroll forward/reverse as shifted cursor up/down.
#
# In the 1980s when terminfo was defined, the developers made more of
# a distinction between shifted up/down versus shifted left/right since most
# terminals can index (scroll up/down), while few can scroll left/right.
xterm+pcc3|fragment with modifyCursorKeys:3,
kLFT=\E[>1;2D, kRIT=\E[>1;2C, kind=\E[>1;2B,
kri=\E[>1;2A, kDN=\E[>1;2B, kDN3=\E[>1;3B, kDN4=\E[>1;4B,
kDN5=\E[>1;5B, kDN6=\E[>1;6B, kDN7=\E[>1;7B,
kLFT3=\E[>1;3D, kLFT4=\E[>1;4D, kLFT5=\E[>1;5D,
kLFT6=\E[>1;6D, kLFT7=\E[>1;7D, kRIT3=\E[>1;3C,
kRIT4=\E[>1;4C, kRIT5=\E[>1;5C, kRIT6=\E[>1;6C,
kRIT7=\E[>1;7C, kUP=\E[>1;2A, kUP3=\E[>1;3A,
kUP4=\E[>1;4A, kUP5=\E[>1;5A, kUP6=\E[>1;6A,
kUP7=\E[>1;7A,
xterm+pcc2|fragment with modifyCursorKeys:2,
kLFT=\E[1;2D, kRIT=\E[1;2C, kind=\E[1;2B, kri=\E[1;2A,
kDN=\E[1;2B, kDN3=\E[1;3B, kDN4=\E[1;4B, kDN5=\E[1;5B,
kDN6=\E[1;6B, kDN7=\E[1;7B, kLFT3=\E[1;3D, kLFT4=\E[1;4D,
kLFT5=\E[1;5D, kLFT6=\E[1;6D, kLFT7=\E[1;7D,
kRIT3=\E[1;3C, kRIT4=\E[1;4C, kRIT5=\E[1;5C,
kRIT6=\E[1;6C, kRIT7=\E[1;7C, kUP=\E[1;2A, kUP3=\E[1;3A,
kUP4=\E[1;4A, kUP5=\E[1;5A, kUP6=\E[1;6A, kUP7=\E[1;7A,
xterm+pcc1|fragment with modifyCursorKeys:1,
kLFT=\E[2D, kRIT=\E[2C, kind=\E[2B, kri=\E[2A, kDN=\E[2B,
kDN3=\E[3B, kDN4=\E[4B, kDN5=\E[5B, kDN6=\E[6B, kDN7=\E[7B,
kLFT3=\E[3D, kLFT4=\E[4D, kLFT5=\E[5D, kLFT6=\E[6D,
kLFT7=\E[7D, kRIT3=\E[3C, kRIT4=\E[4C, kRIT5=\E[5C,
kRIT6=\E[6C, kRIT7=\E[7C, kUP=\E[2A, kUP3=\E[3A,
kUP4=\E[4A, kUP5=\E[5A, kUP6=\E[6A, kUP7=\E[7A,
xterm+pcc0|fragment with modifyCursorKeys:0,
kLFT=\EO2D, kRIT=\EO2C, kind=\EO2B, kri=\EO2A, kDN=\EO2B,
kDN3=\EO3B, kDN4=\EO4B, kDN5=\EO5B, kDN6=\EO6B, kDN7=\EO7B,
kLFT3=\EO3D, kLFT4=\EO4D, kLFT5=\EO5D, kLFT6=\EO6D,
kLFT7=\EO7D, kRIT3=\EO3C, kRIT4=\EO4C, kRIT5=\EO5C,
kRIT6=\EO6C, kRIT7=\EO7C, kUP=\EO2A, kUP3=\EO3A,
kUP4=\EO4A, kUP5=\EO5A, kUP6=\EO6A, kUP7=\EO7A,
#
# Here are corresponding fragments from xterm patch #216:
#
xterm+pcf0|fragment with modifyFunctionKeys:0,
kf1=\EOP, kf10=\E[21~, kf11=\E[23~, kf12=\E[24~,
kf13=\EO2P, kf14=\EO2Q, kf15=\EO2R, kf16=\EO2S,
kf17=\E[15;2~, kf18=\E[17;2~, kf19=\E[18;2~, kf2=\EOQ,
kf20=\E[19;2~, kf21=\E[20;2~, kf22=\E[21;2~,
kf23=\E[23;2~, kf24=\E[24;2~, kf25=\EO5P, kf26=\EO5Q,
kf27=\EO5R, kf28=\EO5S, kf29=\E[15;5~, kf3=\EOR,
kf30=\E[17;5~, kf31=\E[18;5~, kf32=\E[19;5~,
kf33=\E[20;5~, kf34=\E[21;5~, kf35=\E[23;5~,
kf36=\E[24;5~, kf37=\EO6P, kf38=\EO6Q, kf39=\EO6R,
kf4=\EOS, kf40=\EO6S, kf41=\E[15;6~, kf42=\E[17;6~,
kf43=\E[18;6~, kf44=\E[19;6~, kf45=\E[20;6~,
kf46=\E[21;6~, kf47=\E[23;6~, kf48=\E[24;6~, kf49=\EO3P,
kf5=\E[15~, kf50=\EO3Q, kf51=\EO3R, kf52=\EO3S,
kf53=\E[15;3~, kf54=\E[17;3~, kf55=\E[18;3~,
kf56=\E[19;3~, kf57=\E[20;3~, kf58=\E[21;3~,
kf59=\E[23;3~, kf6=\E[17~, kf60=\E[24;3~, kf61=\EO4P,
kf62=\EO4Q, kf63=\EO4R, kf7=\E[18~, kf8=\E[19~, kf9=\E[20~,
#
xterm+pcf2|fragment with modifyFunctionKeys:2,
kf1=\EOP, kf10=\E[21~, kf11=\E[23~, kf12=\E[24~,
kf13=\E[1;2P, kf14=\E[1;2Q, kf15=\E[1;2R, kf16=\E[1;2S,
kf17=\E[15;2~, kf18=\E[17;2~, kf19=\E[18;2~, kf2=\EOQ,
kf20=\E[19;2~, kf21=\E[20;2~, kf22=\E[21;2~,
kf23=\E[23;2~, kf24=\E[24;2~, kf25=\E[1;5P, kf26=\E[1;5Q,
kf27=\E[1;5R, kf28=\E[1;5S, kf29=\E[15;5~, kf3=\EOR,
kf30=\E[17;5~, kf31=\E[18;5~, kf32=\E[19;5~,
kf33=\E[20;5~, kf34=\E[21;5~, kf35=\E[23;5~,
kf36=\E[24;5~, kf37=\E[1;6P, kf38=\E[1;6Q, kf39=\E[1;6R,
kf4=\EOS, kf40=\E[1;6S, kf41=\E[15;6~, kf42=\E[17;6~,
kf43=\E[18;6~, kf44=\E[19;6~, kf45=\E[20;6~,
kf46=\E[21;6~, kf47=\E[23;6~, kf48=\E[24;6~,
kf49=\E[1;3P, kf5=\E[15~, kf50=\E[1;3Q, kf51=\E[1;3R,
kf52=\E[1;3S, kf53=\E[15;3~, kf54=\E[17;3~,
kf55=\E[18;3~, kf56=\E[19;3~, kf57=\E[20;3~,
kf58=\E[21;3~, kf59=\E[23;3~, kf6=\E[17~, kf60=\E[24;3~,
kf61=\E[1;4P, kf62=\E[1;4Q, kf63=\E[1;4R, kf7=\E[18~,
kf8=\E[19~, kf9=\E[20~,
#
# Chunks from xterm #230:
xterm+pce2|fragment with modifyCursorKeys:2,
kDC=\E[3;2~, kEND=\E[1;2F, kHOM=\E[1;2H, kIC=\E[2;2~,
kNXT=\E[6;2~, kPRV=\E[5;2~, kich1=\E[2~, knp=\E[6~,
kpp=\E[5~, kDC3=\E[3;3~, kDC4=\E[3;4~, kDC5=\E[3;5~,
kDC6=\E[3;6~, kDC7=\E[3;7~, kEND3=\E[1;3F, kEND4=\E[1;4F,
kEND5=\E[1;5F, kEND6=\E[1;6F, kEND7=\E[1;7F,
kHOM3=\E[1;3H, kHOM4=\E[1;4H, kHOM5=\E[1;5H,
kHOM6=\E[1;6H, kHOM7=\E[1;7H, kIC3=\E[2;3~, kIC4=\E[2;4~,
kIC5=\E[2;5~, kIC6=\E[2;6~, kIC7=\E[2;7~, kNXT3=\E[6;3~,
kNXT4=\E[6;4~, kNXT5=\E[6;5~, kNXT6=\E[6;6~,
kNXT7=\E[6;7~, kPRV3=\E[5;3~, kPRV4=\E[5;4~,
kPRV5=\E[5;5~, kPRV6=\E[5;6~, kPRV7=\E[5;7~,
use=xterm+edit,
xterm+edit|fragment for 6-key editing-keypad,
kdch1=\E[3~, kich1=\E[2~, knp=\E[6~, kpp=\E[5~,
use=xterm+pc+edit,
xterm+pc+edit|fragment for pc-style editing keypad,
kend=\E[4~, khome=\E[1~,
xterm+vt+edit|fragment for vt220-style editing keypad,
kfnd=\E[1~, kslt=\E[4~,
# These variations for alternate-screen and title-stacking were introduced by
# xterm patch #331:
xterm+noalt|xterm without altscreen,
rmcup@, smcup@,
xterm+alt1049|xterm 90 feature,
rmcup=\E[?1049l, smcup=\E[?1049h,
xterm+titlestack|xterm 251 feature,
rmcup=\E[23;0;0t, smcup=\E[22;0;0t,
xterm+alt+title|xterm 90 and 251 features combined,
rmcup=\E[?1049l\E[23;0;0t, smcup=\E[?1049h\E[22;0;0t,
# https://invisible-island.net/xterm/xterm.faq.html#xterm_keypad
#
# Xterm's emulation of the VT100 numeric keypad on a PC-keyboard runs into the
# problem that the keypad layout is different, and that the natural choice for
# PF1 is NumLock (which happens to be reserved for other use). To work around
# that, PF1-PF4 are emulated via F1-F4, which leaves the "/", "*" and "+" not
# directly related to VT100.
#
# With the VT220 keypad block that uses the 1-9 keys as suggested in
# terminfo(5), the other keys can be handled with user-defined capabilities:
#
# _______________________________________
# | NumLock | / | * | - |
# | | $Oo | $Oj | $OS |
# |_________|__kpDIV__|__kpMUL__|__kpSUB__|
# | 7 8 9 | |
# | $Ow | $Ox | $Oy | + |
# |_ka1__K1_|_________|_ka3__K3_| $Ok |
# | 4 | 5 | 6 | kpADD |
# | $Ot | $Ou | $Ov | |
# |_________|_kb2__K2_|_________|_________|
# | 1 | 2 | 3 | |
# | $Oq | $Or | $Os | |
# |_kc1__K4_|_________|_kc3__K5_| enter |
# | 0 | . | $OM |
# | $Op | $On | |
# |___________________|_________|_kent_@8_|
#
xterm+keypad|xterm emulating VT100/VT220 numeric keypad,
kp5=\EOE, kpADD=\EOk, kpCMA=\EOl, kpDIV=\EOo, kpDOT=\EOn,
kpMUL=\EOj, kpSUB=\EOm, kpZRO=\EOp, use=vt220+keypad,
#
# Those chunks use the new-style (the xterm oldFunctionKeys resource is false).
# Alternatively, the same scheme with old-style function keys as in xterm-r6
# is shown here (because that is used in mrxvt and mlterm):
xterm+r6f2|xterm with oldFunctionKeys and modifyFunctionKeys:2,
kf1=\E[11~, kf13=\E[11;2~, kf14=\E[12;2~, kf15=\E[13;2~,
kf16=\E[14;2~, kf2=\E[12~, kf25=\E[11;5~, kf26=\E[12;5~,
kf27=\E[13;5~, kf28=\E[14;5~, kf3=\E[13~, kf37=\E[11;6~,
kf38=\E[12;6~, kf39=\E[13;6~, kf4=\E[14~, kf40=\E[14;6~,
kf49=\E[11;3~, kf50=\E[12;3~, kf51=\E[13;3~,
kf52=\E[14;3~, kf61=\E[11;4~, kf62=\E[12;4~,
kf63=\E[13;4~, use=xterm+pcf2,
#
# This chunk is used for building the VT220/Sun/PC keyboard variants.
xterm-basic|modern xterm terminal emulator - common,
OTbs, am, bce, km, mir, msgr, xenl, AX, XT,
colors#8, cols#80, it#8, lines#24, pairs#64,
acsc=``aaffggiijjkkllmmnnooppqqrrssttuuvvwwxxyyzz{{||}}~~,
bel=^G, blink=\E[5m, bold=\E[1m, cbt=\E[Z, civis=\E[?25l,
clear=\E[H\E[2J, cnorm=\E[?12l\E[?25h, cr=\r,
csr=\E[%i%p1%d;%p2%dr, cub=\E[%p1%dD, cub1=^H,
cud=\E[%p1%dB, cud1=\n, cuf=\E[%p1%dC, cuf1=\E[C,
cup=\E[%i%p1%d;%p2%dH, cuu=\E[%p1%dA, cuu1=\E[A,
cvvis=\E[?12;25h, dch=\E[%p1%dP, dch1=\E[P, dim=\E[2m,
dl=\E[%p1%dM, dl1=\E[M, ech=\E[%p1%dX, ed=\E[J, el=\E[K,
el1=\E[1K, flash=\E[?5h$<100/>\E[?5l, home=\E[H,
hpa=\E[%i%p1%dG, ht=^I, hts=\EH, ich=\E[%p1%d@,
il=\E[%p1%dL, il1=\E[L, ind=\n, invis=\E[8m,
is2=\E[!p\E[?3;4l\E[4l\E>, kmous=\E[M, meml=\El,
memu=\Em, op=\E[39;49m, rc=\E8, rev=\E[7m, ri=\EM,
rmacs=\E(B, rmam=\E[?7l, rmir=\E[4l, rmkx=\E[?1l\E>,
rmm=\E[?1034l, rmso=\E[27m, rmul=\E[24m, rs1=\Ec,
rs2=\E[!p\E[?3;4l\E[4l\E>, sc=\E7, setab=\E[4%p1%dm,
setaf=\E[3%p1%dm,
setb=\E[4%?%p1%{1}%=%t4%e%p1%{3}%=%t6%e%p1%{4}%=%t1%e%p1%{6}
%=%t3%e%p1%d%;m,
setf=\E[3%?%p1%{1}%=%t4%e%p1%{3}%=%t6%e%p1%{4}%=%t1%e%p1%{6}
%=%t3%e%p1%d%;m,
sgr=%?%p9%t\E(0%e\E(B%;\E[0%?%p6%t;1%;%?%p5%t;2%;%?%p2%t;4%;
%?%p1%p3%|%t;7%;%?%p4%t;5%;%?%p7%t;8%;m,
sgr0=\E(B\E[m, smacs=\E(0, smam=\E[?7h, smir=\E[4h,
smkx=\E[?1h\E=, smm=\E[?1034h, smso=\E[7m, smul=\E[4m,
tbc=\E[3g, vpa=\E[%i%p1%dd, E3=\E[3J, use=ecma+italics,
use=ansi+pp, use=xterm+kbs, use=xterm+alt+title,
use=ansi+enq,
ibm+16color|IBM aixterm color definitions,
colors#16, pairs#0x100,
setab=\E[%?%p1%{8}%<%t%p1%{40}%+%e%p1%{92}%+%;%dm,
setaf=\E[%?%p1%{8}%<%t%p1%{30}%+%e%p1%{82}%+%;%dm,
setb=%p1%{8}%/%{6}%*%{4}%+\E[%d%p1%{8}%m%Pa%?%ga%{1}%=%t4%e
%ga%{3}%=%t6%e%ga%{4}%=%t1%e%ga%{6}%=%t3%e%ga%d%;m,
setf=%p1%{8}%/%{6}%*%{3}%+\E[%d%p1%{8}%m%Pa%?%ga%{1}%=%t4%e
%ga%{3}%=%t6%e%ga%{4}%=%t1%e%ga%{6}%=%t3%e%ga%d%;m,
#### XTERM Colors
# 16-colors is one of the variants of XFree86 3.3 xterm, updated for 4.0
# (T.Dickey)
#
# If configured to support 88- or 256-colors (which is fairly common in 2009),
# xterm also recognizes the control sequences for initc -TD
xterm-16color|xterm with 16 colors like aixterm,
ccc,
initc=\E]4;%p1%d;rgb\:%p2%{255}%*%{1000}%/%2.2X/%p3%{255}%*
%{1000}%/%2.2X/%p4%{255}%*%{1000}%/%2.2X\E\\,
use=xterm+osc104, use=ibm+16color, use=xterm-new,
# 256-colors is a compile-time feature of XFree86 xterm beginning with
# xterm patch #111 (1999/7/10) -TD
xterm+256color|xterm 256-color feature,
ccc,
colors#0x100, pairs#0x10000,
initc=\E]4;%p1%d;rgb\:%p2%{255}%*%{1000}%/%2.2X/%p3%{255}%*
%{1000}%/%2.2X/%p4%{255}%*%{1000}%/%2.2X\E\\,
oc=\E]104\007,
setab=\E[%?%p1%{8}%<%t4%p1%d%e%p1%{16}%<%t10%p1%{8}%-%d%e48;
5;%p1%d%;m,
setaf=\E[%?%p1%{8}%<%t3%p1%d%e%p1%{16}%<%t9%p1%{8}%-%d%e38;5
;%p1%d%;m,
setb@, setf@,
# xterm OSC 104 resets the color palette. Using it as part of xterm+256color
# has the drawback that some of the xterm-alikes which use that building block
# require a different approach to rs1 -TD
xterm+osc104|reset color palette,
oc=\E]104\007, rs1=\Ec\E]104\007,
# palette is hardcoded...
xterm+256setaf|xterm 256-color (set-only),
ccc@,
colors#0x100, pairs#0x10000,
initc@, op=\E[39;49m,
setab=\E[%?%p1%{8}%<%t4%p1%d%e%p1%{16}%<%t10%p1%{8}%-%d%e48;
5;%p1%d%;m,
setaf=\E[%?%p1%{8}%<%t3%p1%d%e%p1%{16}%<%t9%p1%{8}%-%d%e38;5
;%p1%d%;m,
setb@, setf@,
# 88-colors is a compile-time feature of XFree86 xterm beginning with
# xterm patch #115 (1999/9/18) -TD
#
# Note that the escape sequences used are the same as for 256-colors - xterm
# has a different table of default color resource values. If built for
# 256-colors, it can still handle an 88-color palette by using the initc
# capability.
#
# At this time (2007/7/14), except for rxvt 2.7.x, none of the other terminals
# which support the xterm+256color feature support the associated initc
# capability. So it is cancelled in the entries which use this and/or the
# xterm+256color block.
#
# The default color palette for the 256- and 88-colors are different. A
# given executable will have one palette (perhaps compiled-in). If the program
# supports xterm's control sequence, it can be programmed using initc.
xterm+88color|xterm 88-color feature,
colors#88, pairs#7744, use=xterm+256color,
# These variants of XFree86 3.9.16 xterm are built as a configure option.
xterm-256color|xterm with 256 colors,
use=xterm+osc104, use=xterm+256color, use=xterm-new,
xterm-88color|xterm with 88 colors,
use=xterm+osc104, use=xterm+88color,
use=xterm-256color,
# Emacs 26.1 and later support direct color mode in terminals, using a
# combination of user-defined capabilities and ncurses-dependent function
# calls. We will not include that here.
#
# Here is a first revision, which (disregarding the reuse of colors 1-7 which
# is of interest only to the numerically illiterate), is compatible with other
# terminal descriptions written for curses. It relies upon the extended range
# for numeric capabilities provided in ncurses 6.1:
xterm+direct2|xterm with direct-color indexing,
RGB,
colors#0x1000000, pairs#0x10000,
initc@, op=\E[39;49m,
setab=\E[%?%p1%{8}%<%t4%p1%d%e48\:2\:%p1%{65536}%/%d\:%p1
%{256}%/%{255}%&%d\:%p1%{255}%&%d%;m,
setaf=\E[%?%p1%{8}%<%t3%p1%d%e38\:2\:%p1%{65536}%/%d\:%p1
%{256}%/%{255}%&%d\:%p1%{255}%&%d%;m,
setb@, setf@,
xterm-direct2|xterm with direct-color indexing (old),
use=xterm+direct2, use=xterm+titlestack, use=xterm,
# That in turn had a problem: in the original patch submitted for KDE konsole
# in 2006, the submitter and the developer alike overlooked a "color space
# identifier" parameter. This version provides for that parameter:
xterm+direct|xterm with direct-color indexing,
RGB,
colors#0x1000000, pairs#0x10000,
initc@, op=\E[39;49m,
setab=\E[%?%p1%{8}%<%t4%p1%d%e48\:2\:\:%p1%{65536}%/%d\:%p1
%{256}%/%{255}%&%d\:%p1%{255}%&%d%;m,
setaf=\E[%?%p1%{8}%<%t3%p1%d%e38\:2\:\:%p1%{65536}%/%d\:%p1
%{256}%/%{255}%&%d\:%p1%{255}%&%d%;m,
setb@, setf@,
xterm-direct|xterm with direct-color indexing,
use=xterm+direct, use=xterm,
# Here are corresponding flavors for terminals which could use the feature:
mlterm-direct|mlterm with direct-color indexing,
use=xterm+direct, use=mlterm,
# Meanwhile, in KDE #107487, the patch submitter and the developer both saw
# that xterm's original implementation should have used colons for the
# subparameter separators, but chose not to correct this in konsole. As of
# late 2017, konsole still accepts only the nonstandard semicolon delimiters.
xterm+indirect|xterm with direct-color indexing (old),
RGB,
colors#0x1000000, pairs#0x10000,
initc@, op=\E[39;49m,
setab=\E[%?%p1%{8}%<%t4%p1%d%e48;2;%p1%{65536}%/%d;%p1%{256}
%/%{255}%&%d;%p1%{255}%&%d%;m,
setaf=\E[%?%p1%{8}%<%t3%p1%d%e38;2;%p1%{65536}%/%d;%p1%{256}
%/%{255}%&%d;%p1%{255}%&%d%;m,
setb@, setf@,
konsole-direct|konsole with direct-color indexing,
use=xterm+indirect, use=konsole,
st-direct|st with direct-color indexing,
use=xterm+indirect, use=st,
vte-direct|vte with direct-color indexing,
use=xterm+indirect, use=vte,
# As for others:
# + Apple's Terminal.app does not recognize either form of the direct-color
# sequences.
# + Cygwin's mintty recognizes xterm's original implementation, does okay with
# the colors. Like vte, it is a subset of xterm, although different
# omissions/reservations of modified-keys are seen in testing.
# + PuTTY 0.70 seems to recognize xterm's original implementation but does
# nothing useful with the colors.
# + Teraterm 4.97, like PuTTY (no good).
# + terminology 0.91 recognizes xterm's original implementation, but does
# nothing useful with it.
#### XTERM Features
# This chunk is based on suggestions by Ailin Nemui and Nicholas Marriott, who
# asked for some of xterm's advanced features to be added to its terminfo
# entry. It defines extended capabilities not found in standard terminfo or
# termcap. These are useful in tmux, for instance, hence the name.
#
# One caveat in adding extended capabilities in ncurses is that if the names
# are longer than two characters, then they will not be visible through the
# termcap interface.
#
# Ms modifies the selection/clipboard. Its parameters are
# p1 = the storage unit (clipboard, selection or cut buffer)
# p2 = the base64-encoded clipboard content.
#
# Ss is used to set the cursor style as described by the DECSCUSR
# function to a block or underline.
# Se resets the cursor style to the terminal power-on default.
#
# Cs and Cr set and reset the cursor colour.
xterm+tmux|advanced xterm features used in tmux,
Cr=\E]112\007, Cs=\E]12;%p1%s\007,
Ms=\E]52;%p1%s;%p2%s\007, Se=\E[2 q, Ss=\E[%p1%d q,
# This is another variant, for XFree86 4.0 xterm (T.Dickey)
# This is an 8-bit version of xterm, which emulates DEC vt220 with ANSI color.
# To use it, your decTerminalID resource must be set to 200 or above.
#
# HTS \E H \210
# RI \E M \215
# SS3 \E O \217
# CSI \E [ \233
#
xterm-8bit|xterm terminal emulator 8-bit controls (X Window System),
OTbs, am, bce, km, mc5i, mir, msgr, npc, xenl, AX,
colors#8, cols#80, it#8, lines#24, pairs#64,
acsc=``aaffggiijjkkllmmnnooppqqrrssttuuvvwwxxyyzz{{||}}~~,
bel=^G, blink=\2335m, bold=\2331m, cbt=\233Z,
civis=\233?25l, clear=\233H\2332J,
cnorm=\233?25l\233?25h, cr=\r, csr=\233%i%p1%d;%p2%dr,
cub=\233%p1%dD, cub1=^H, cud=\233%p1%dB, cud1=\n,
cuf=\233%p1%dC, cuf1=\233C, cup=\233%i%p1%d;%p2%dH,
cuu=\233%p1%dA, cuu1=\233A, cvvis=\233?12;25h,
dch=\233%p1%dP, dch1=\233P, dl=\233%p1%dM, dl1=\233M,
ech=\233%p1%dX, ed=\233J, el=\233K, el1=\2331K,
flash=\233?5h$<100/>\233?5l, home=\233H,
hpa=\233%i%p1%dG, ht=^I, hts=\210, ich=\233%p1%d@,
il=\233%p1%dL, il1=\233L, ind=\n, invis=\2338m,
is2=\E[62"p\E\sG\233m\233?7h\E>\E7\233?1;3;4;6l\2334l\233r
\E8,
ka1=\217w, ka3=\217u, kb2=\217y, kbeg=\217E, kc1=\217q,
kc3=\217s, kcbt=\233Z, kcub1=\217D, kcud1=\217B,
kcuf1=\217C, kcuu1=\217A, kdch1=\2333~, kend=\2334~,
kent=\217M, kf1=\23311~, kf10=\23321~, kf11=\23323~,
kf12=\23324~, kf13=\23325~, kf14=\23326~, kf15=\23328~,
kf16=\23329~, kf17=\23331~, kf18=\23332~, kf19=\23333~,
kf2=\23312~, kf20=\23334~, kf3=\23313~, kf4=\23314~,
kf5=\23315~, kf6=\23317~, kf7=\23318~, kf8=\23319~,
kf9=\23320~, khome=\2331~, kich1=\2332~, kmous=\233M,
knp=\2336~, kpp=\2335~, mc0=\233i, mc4=\2334i, mc5=\2335i,
meml=\El, memu=\Em, op=\23339;49m, rc=\E8, rev=\2337m,
ri=\215, rmacs=\E(B, rmam=\233?7l, rmcup=\233?1049l,
rmir=\2334l, rmkx=\233?1l\E>, rmso=\23327m, rmul=\23324m,
rs1=\Ec,
rs2=\E[62"p\E\sG\233m\233?7h\E>\E7\233?1;3;4;6l\2334l\233r
\E8,
sc=\E7, setab=\2334%p1%dm, setaf=\2333%p1%dm,
setb=\2334%?%p1%{1}%=%t4%e%p1%{3}%=%t6%e%p1%{4}%=%t1%e%p1
%{6}%=%t3%e%p1%d%;m,
setf=\2333%?%p1%{1}%=%t4%e%p1%{3}%=%t6%e%p1%{4}%=%t1%e%p1
%{6}%=%t3%e%p1%d%;m,
sgr=\2330%?%p6%t;1%;%?%p2%t;4%;%?%p1%p3%|%t;7%;%?%p4%t;5%;%?
%p7%t;8%;m%?%p9%t\E(0%e\E(B%;,
sgr0=\2330m\E(B, smacs=\E(0, smam=\233?7h,
smcup=\233?1049h, smir=\2334h, smkx=\233?1h\E=,
smso=\2337m, smul=\2334m, tbc=\2333g, u6=\233[%i%d;%dR,
u7=\E[6n, u8=\233[?%[;0123456789]c, u9=\E[c,
vpa=\233%i%p1%dd, use=xterm+kbs,
xterm-hp|xterm with hpterm function keys,
kclr=\EJ, kcub1=\ED, kcud1=\EB, kcuf1=\EC, kcuu1=\EA,
kdch1=\EP, kend=\EF, kf1=\Ep, kf2=\Eq, kf3=\Er, kf4=\Es,
kf5=\Et, kf6=\Eu, kf7=\Ev, kf8=\Ew, khome=\Eh, kich1=\EQ,
knp=\ES, kpp=\ET, use=xterm-basic,
xterm-sco|xterm with SCO function keys,
kbeg=\E[E, kcub1=\E[D, kcud1=\E[B, kcuf1=\E[C, kcuu1=\E[A,
kdch1=^?, kend=\E[F, kf1=\E[M, kf10=\E[V, kf11=\E[W,
kf12=\E[X, kf13=\E[Y, kf14=\E[Z, kf15=\E[a, kf16=\E[b,
kf17=\E[c, kf18=\E[d, kf19=\E[e, kf2=\E[N, kf20=\E[f,
kf21=\E[g, kf22=\E[h, kf23=\E[i, kf24=\E[j, kf25=\E[k,
kf26=\E[l, kf27=\E[m, kf28=\E[n, kf29=\E[o, kf3=\E[O,
kf30=\E[p, kf31=\E[q, kf32=\E[r, kf33=\E[s, kf34=\E[t,
kf35=\E[u, kf36=\E[v, kf37=\E[w, kf38=\E[x, kf39=\E[y,
kf4=\E[P, kf40=\E[z, kf41=\E[@, kf42=\E[[, kf43=\E[\\,
kf44=\E[], kf45=\E[\^, kf46=\E[_, kf47=\E[`, kf48=\E[{,
kf5=\E[Q, kf6=\E[R, kf7=\E[S, kf8=\E[T, kf9=\E[U, khome=\E[H,
kich1=\E[L, kmous=\E[>M, knp=\E[G, kpp=\E[I,
use=xterm-basic,
# The xterm-new description has all of the features, but is not completely
# compatible with vt220. If you are using a Sun or PC keyboard, set the
# sunKeyboard resource to true:
# + maps the editing keypad
# + interprets control-function-key as a second array of keys, so a
# 12-fkey keyboard can support vt220's 20-fkeys.
# + maps numeric keypad "+" to ",".
# + uses DEC-style control sequences for the application keypad.
#
xterm-vt220|xterm emulating vt220,
kcbt=\E[Z, kcub1=\EOD, kcud1=\EOB, kcuf1=\EOC, kcuu1=\EOA,
kend=\E[4~, kf10=\E[21~, kf11=\E[23~, kf12=\E[24~,
kf13=\E[25~, kf14=\E[26~, kf15=\E[28~, kf16=\E[29~,
kf17=\E[31~, kf18=\E[32~, kf19=\E[33~, kf20=\E[34~,
kf5=\E[15~, kf6=\E[17~, kf7=\E[18~, kf8=\E[19~, kf9=\E[20~,
khome=\E[1~, kich1=\E[2~, kmous=\E[M, knp=\E[6~, kpp=\E[5~,
use=xterm+app, use=xterm+edit, use=xterm-basic,
use=vt220+keypad,
xterm-vt52|xterm emulating dec vt52,
cols#80, it#8, lines#24,
acsc=``aaffggjjkkllmmnnooppqqrrssttuuvvwwxxyyzz{{||}}~~,
bel=^G, clear=\EH\EJ, cr=\r, cub1=\ED, cud1=\EB, cuf1=\EC,
cup=\EY%p1%' '%+%c%p2%' '%+%c, cuu1=\EA, ed=\EJ, el=\EK,
home=\EH, ht=^I, ind=\n, kcub1=\ED, kcud1=\EB, kcuf1=\EC,
kcuu1=\EA, nel=\r\n, ri=\EI, rmacs=\EG, smacs=\EF,
use=xterm+kbs,
xterm-noapp|xterm with cursor keys in normal mode,
rmcup@, rmkx=\E>, smcup@, smkx=\E=, use=xterm+noapp,
use=xterm,
xterm-24|vs100|xterms|xterm terminal emulator (X Window System),
lines#24, use=xterm-old,
# This is xterm for ncurses.
xterm|xterm terminal emulator (X Window System),
use=xterm-new,
# This entry assumes that xterm's handling of VT100 SI/SO is disabled by
# setting the vt100Graphics resource to false.
xterm-utf8|xterm with no VT100 line-drawing in UTF-8 mode,
U8#1, use=xterm,
# These building-blocks allow access to the X titlebar and icon name as a
# status line. There are a few problems in using them in entries:
#
# a) tsl should have a parameter to denote the column on which to transfer to
# the status line.
# b) the "0" code for xterm updates both icon-title and window title. Some
# window managers such as twm (and possibly window managers descended from
# it such as tvtwm, ctwm, and vtwm) track windows by icon-name. Thus, you
# don't want to mess with icon-name when using those window managers.
#
# The extension "TS" is preferable, because it does not accept a parameter.
# However, if you are using a non-extended terminfo, "TS" is not visible.
xterm+sl|access X title line and icon name,
hs,
dsl=\E]0;\007, fsl=^G, tsl=\E]0;, TS=\E]0;,
xterm+sl-twm|access X title line (pacify twm-descended window managers),
hs,
dsl=\E]2;\007, fsl=^G, tsl=\E]2;, TS=\E]2;,
# In contrast, this block can be used for a DEC vt320 and up. There are two
# controls used.
#
# DECSASD (select active status display)
# \E[0$} Main display
# \E[1$} Status line
#
# DECSSDT (select status line type)
# \E[0$~ No status line
# \E[1$~ Indicator status line
# \E[2$~ Host-writable status line
#
# The building block assumes that the terminal always shows something at the
# status line (either the indicator, or status line). That is because if no
# status line is used, then the terminal makes that line part of the user
# window, changing its size without notice.
#
# Because there is no "esl" (enable status line) capability, the "tsl"
# capability ensures that the status line is host-writable. A DEC terminal
# will clear the status line when changing from indicator to host-writable
# mode.
#
# Once on the status line, the row part of cursor addressing is ignored. Since
# tsl expects a parameter (to specify the column), the shortest addressing that
# can be used for this purpose is HPA, e.g., \E[5d to go to column 5.
#
dec+sl|DEC VTxx status line,
eslok, hs,
dsl=\E[1$~, fsl=\E[0$}, tsl=\E[2$~\E[1$}\E[%i%p1%d`,
#
# The following xterm variants don't depend on your base version
#
# xterm with bold instead of underline
xterm-bold|xterm terminal emulator (X11R6 Window System) standout w/bold,
sgr=%?%p9%t\016%e\017%;B\E[0%?%p6%t;1%;%?%p2%t;1%;%?%p1%p3%|
%t;7%;m,
smso=\E[7m, smul=\E[1m, use=xterm-old,
# See the note on ICH/ICH1 VERSUS RMIR/SMIR near the end of file
xterm-nic|xterm with ich/ich1 suppressed for non-curses programs,
ich@, ich1@, use=xterm,
# From: Mark Sheppard <kimble@mistral.co.uk>, 4 May 1996
xterm1|xterm terminal emulator ignoring the alternate screen buffer,
rmcup@, smcup@, use=xterm,
#### XTERM Mouse
# The xterm mouse protocol is used by other terminal emulators.
# In this section, two extended capabilities are used to illustrate the mouse
# protocol: XM and xm. The "XM" capability is recognized by ncurses to allow
# enabling/disabling other mouse protocols. The "xm" capability describes the
# mouse response; currently there is no interpreter which would use this
# information to make the mouse support completely data-driven.
# Here is the conventional xterm mouse protocol, introduced with X11R1 in
# September 1987.
#
# The mouse responses for the X11 protocol covered button releases, as well as
# modifiers:
# shift 4
# alt/meta 8 (technically the "mod1" mask, because X11 has no such keys)
# control 16
#
# The modifiers are not reflected in this description because as used in xterm
# they are normally inaccessible because the translations resources assign
# shift and control to other features. However, they are important because
# they take up space in the first byte of the response. The other bits of this
# byte are used to encode the button number for both presses and releases.
# In the X11 protocol, any button-release is encoded with "3" (the lowest 2
# bits in the byte). Later work on XFree86 xterm used the remaining 3 bits to
# provide additional features, e.g., wheel mouse.
#
# X11R1's xterm also supported an "emacs" mouse protocol, with final character
# "t" or "T", which was activated by double-clicking. The "t" response was
# used when the starting/ending positions were the same.
#
# X11R3 (February 1988) added the highlight/tracking mode.
#
# X11R4 (December 1989) added the control sequences document, listing the
# control sequences for the X10/X11 protocols without descriptions. It also
# mentioned the "emacs" ("T") response. Comments in button.c referred to the
# X11 protocol as "DEC vt200 compatible", although DEC offered no such terminal.
#
# X11R5 (November 1993) gave a description of the mouse protocol.
#
# X11R6 (January 1995) moved the control sequences document out of the xterm
# source-directory to xc/doc/specs/xterm, polishing the formatting but adding
# no new information.
xterm+x11mouse|X11 xterm mouse protocol,
kmous=\E[M, XM=\E[?1000%?%p1%{1}%=%th%el%;,
xm=\E[M%?%p4%t%p3%e%{3}%;%'\s'%+%c%p2%'!'%+%c%p1%'!'%+%c,
xterm-x11mouse|X11 mouse,
use=xterm+x11mouse, use=xterm,
# Here is a suggested description of the xterm highlighting protocol.
# A more complicated example could be constructed to account for the "t"
# response.
xterm+x11hilite|X11 xterm mouse protocol with highlight,
kmous=\E[M, XM=\E[?1001%?%p1%{1}%=%th%el%;,
xm=\E[%p6%'!'%+%p5%'!'%+%c%p8%'!'%+%c%p7%'!'%+%c%p2%'!'%+%c
%p1%'!'%+%cT,
xterm-x11hilite|X11 mouse with highlight,
use=xterm+x11mouse, use=xterm,
# The preceding were the sources from X Consortium. Other sources (or patches)
# were available. Starting in mid-1995, XFree86 developers collected some of
# those changes and began improvements, e.g., to support color. This was, by
# the way, around the same time that rxvt developers began implementing color,
# though dates (and attributions) are not well documented. I became interested
# in xterm in late 1995, and involved in early 1996. To complete the picture,
# CDE's dtterm was introduced around the same time, with no mouse protocol -TD
# xterm patch #83 (1998/10/7), added Jason Bacon's changes to provide an
# "any-event" mouse mode.
xterm+sm+1002|xterm any-event mouse,
kmous=\E[M, XM=\E[?1002%?%p1%{1}%=%th%el%;,
xterm-1002|xterm any-event mouse,
use=xterm+sm+1002, use=xterm,
xterm+sm+1003|testing xterm-mouse,
kmous=\E[M, XM=\E[?1003%?%p1%{1}%=%th%el%;,
xterm-1003|testing xterm-mouse,
use=xterm+sm+1003, use=xterm,
# xterm patch #116 (1999/9/25) added Stephen P Wall's changes to support DEC
# locator mode.
# xterm patch #120 (1999/10/28) added my change to support wheel mouse, by
# dropping support for the X11 mouse protocol's shift-modifier and using
# available bits in the first byte of the response to encode buttons 4 and 5.
# xterm patch #126 (2000/2/8) amended that change to avoid conflicting with
# older configurations which might have used the obsolete modifiers.
# xterm patch #262 (2010/8/30) added Ryan Johnson's changes to provide a mode
# where the coordinates in the mouse response would be encoded in UTF-8,
# thereby extending the range of coordinates past 222=(255-33). This is the
# "1005" mouse mode.
xterm+sm+1005|xterm UTF-8 mouse,
kmous=\E[M, XM=\E[?1005;1000%?%p1%{1}%=%th%el%;,
xm=\E[M%?%p4%t3%e%p3%'\s'%+%c%;%p2%'!'%+%u%p1%'!'%+%u,
xterm-1005|xterm UTF-8 mouse,
use=xterm+sm+1005, use=xterm,
# xterm patch #277 (2012/1/7) provides a mode where the mouse response uses
# SGR-style parameters.
#
# Someone stated that the 1005 mouse mode would not be handled properly in luit.
# (By the way, this is a problem with the X11 protocol). A more plausible
# criticism is that the responses provided by the 1005 mode are not distinct
# from the non-1005 responses.
#
# As an alternative (and fixing the longstanding limitation of X11 mouse
# protocol regarding button-releases), I provided the 1006 mode, referring
# to it as "SGR 1006" since the replies resemble the SGR control string:
xterm+sm+1006|xterm SGR-mouse,
kmous=\E[<, XM=\E[?1006;1000%?%p1%{1}%=%th%el%;,
xm=\E[<%i%p3%d;%p1%d;%p2%d;%?%p4%tM%em%;,
xterm-1006|xterm SGR-mouse,
use=xterm+sm+1006, use=xterm,
#### Other XTERM
# The 'nxterm' distributed with Redhat Linux 5.2 is a slight rehack of
# xterm-sb_right-ansi-3d, which implements ANSI colors, but does not support
# SGR 39 or 49. SGR 0 does reset colors (along with everything else). This
# description is "compatible" with color_xterm, rxvt and XFree86 xterm, except
# that each of those implements the home, end, delete keys differently.
#
# Redhat Linux 6.x distributes XFree86 xterm as "nxterm", which uses bce
# colors; note that this is not compatible with the 5.2 version.
# csw (2002-05-15): make xterm-color primary instead of nxterm, to
# match XFree86's xterm.terminfo usage and prevent circular links
xterm-color|generic color xterm,
ncv@,
op=\E[m, use=xterm-r6, use=klone+color,
#### GNOME (VTE)
# this describes the alpha-version of Gnome terminal shipped with Redhat 6.0
gnome-rh62|Gnome terminal,
bce,
kdch1=^?, kf1=\EOP, kf2=\EOQ, kf3=\EOR, kf4=\EOS,
use=xterm-color,
# GNOME Terminal 1.4.0.4 (Redhat 7.2)
#
# This implements a subset of vt102 with a random selection of features from
# other terminals such as color and function-keys.
#
# shift-f1 to shift-f10 are f11 to f20
#
# NumLock changes the application keypad to approximate vt100 keypad, except
# that there is no escape sequence matching comma (,).
#
# Other defects observed:
# vt100 LNM mode is not implemented.
# vt100 80/132 column mode is not implemented.
# vt100 DECALN is not implemented.
# vt100 DECSCNM mode is not implemented, so flash does not work.
# vt100 TBC (tab reset) is not implemented.
# xterm alternate screen controls do not restore cursor position properly
# it hangs in tack after running function-keys test.
gnome-rh72|GNOME Terminal,
bce, km@,
civis=\E[?25l, cnorm=\E[?25h, kdch1=\E[3~, kf1=\EOP,
kf2=\EOQ, kf3=\EOR, kf4=\EOS, rmam=\E[?7l,
sgr=\E[0%?%p6%t;1%;%?%p2%t;4%;%?%p1%p3%|%t;7%;m%?%p9%t\016%e
\017%;,
sgr0=\E[0m\017, smam=\E[?7h, tbc@, use=xterm-color,
# GNOME Terminal 2.0.1 (Redhat 8.0)
#
# Documentation now claims it implements vt220 (which is demonstrably false).
# However, it does implement ECH, which is a vt220 feature. And there are
# workable vt100 LNM, DECALN, DECSNM modes, making it possible to display
# more of its bugs using vttest.
#
# However, note that bce and msgr are broken in this release. Tabs (tbc and
# hts) are broken as well. Sometimes flash (as in xterm-new) works.
#
# kf1 and kf10 are not tested since they're assigned (hardcoded?) to menu
# operations. Shift-tab generates a distinct sequence so it can be argued
# that it implements kcbt.
gnome-rh80|GNOME Terminal,
bce@, msgr@,
ech=\E[%p1%dX, flash=\E[?5h$<100/>\E[?5l, kbs=^?,
kcbt=\E^I, op=\E[39;49m, use=gnome-rh72,
# GNOME Terminal 2.2.1 (Redhat 9.0)
#
# bce and msgr are repaired.
gnome-rh90|GNOME Terminal,
bce, msgr, XT,
hpa=\E[%i%p1%dG, kDC=\E[3;2~, kLFT=\EO2D, kRIT=\EO2C,
kb2=\E[E, kcbt=\E[Z, kend=\EOF, khome=\EOH, tbc=\E[3g,
vpa=\E[%i%p1%dd, use=xterm+pcf0, use=xterm+pcfkeys,
use=gnome-rh80,
# GNOME Terminal 2.14.2 (Fedora Core 5)
# Ed Catmur notes that gnome-terminal has recognized soft-reset since May 2002.
gnome-fc5|GNOME Terminal,
rs1=\Ec,
rs2=\E7\E[r\E8\E[m\E[?7h\E[!p\E[?1;3;4;6l\E[4l\E>\E[?1000l
\E[?25h,
use=ansi+enq, use=xterm+pcc0, use=gnome-rh90,
# GNOME Terminal 2.18.1 (2007 snapshot)
#
# For any "recent" version of gnome-terminal, it is futile to attempt to
# support modifiers on cursor- and keypad keys because the program usually
# is hardcoded to set $TERM to "xterm", and on startup, it builds a subset
# of the keys (which more/less correspond to the termcap values), and will
# interpret those according to the $TERM value, but others not in the
# terminfo according to some constantly changing set of hacker guidelines -TD
vte-2007|VTE in GNOME Terminal snapshot 2.18.1,
use=xterm+pcc2, use=gnome-fc5,
gnome-2007|GNOME Terminal snapshot 2.18.1,
use=vte-2007,
# GNOME Terminal 2.22.3 (2008 snapshot)
#
# In vttest, it claims to be a vt220 with national replacement character-sets,
# but aside from the identifier string, implements only a small fraction of
# vt220's behavior, which will make it less usable on a VMS system (unclear
# what the intent of the developer is, since the NRC feature exposed in vttest
# by this change does not work).
vte-2008|VTE in GNOME Terminal snapshot 2.22.3,
use=vte+pcfkeys, use=vte-2007,
gnome-2008|GNOME Terminal snapshot 2.22.3,
use=vte-2008,
# GNOME Terminal 3.6.0 (2012)
# VTE 0.34.1 was marked in git 2012-10-15 (three days after patch was applied
# in ncurses). It inherited from gnome-fc5, which broke the modified forms
# of f1-f4 -TD
#
# Testing with tack shows that flash does not/has not worked -TD
vte-2012|VTE 0.34.1,
ncv#16,
dim=\E[2m, flash@, invis=\E[8m, rmso=\E[27m, rmul=\E[24m,
sgr=\E[0%?%p6%t;1%;%?%p2%t;4%;%?%p5%t;2%;%?%p7%t;8%;%?%p1%p3
%|%t;7%;m%?%p9%t\016%e\017%;,
use=ecma+italics, use=vte-2008,
# Version 3.6.1 sets TERM to xterm-256color (still hardcoded), which has
# 61 differences from a correct entry for gnome terminal.
gnome-2012|GNOME Terminal 3.6.0,
use=vte-2012,
# Before 2008, GNOME terminal could automatically use the contents of the
# "xterm" terminfo to supply key information which is not built into the
# program. With 2.22.3, this list was built into the program (which addressed
# the inadvertent use of random terminfo data, though using a set of values
# which did not correspond to any that xterm produced - still not solving the
# problem that GNOME terminal hardcoded the $TERM variable as "xterm").
#
# terminfo modifier code keys
# kf13-kf24 shift 2 F1 to F12
# kf25-kf36 control 5 F1 to F12
# kf37-kf48 shift/control 6 F1 to F12
# kf49-kf60 alt 3 F1 to F12
# kf61-kf63 shift-alt 4 F1 to F3
#
# The parameters with \EO (SS3) are technically an error, since SS3 should have
# no parameters. This appears to be rote copying based on xterm+pcc0.
vte+pcfkeys|VTE's variation on xterm+pcfkeys,
kf1=\EOP, kf13=\EO1;2P, kf14=\EO1;2Q, kf15=\EO1;2R,
kf16=\EO1;2S, kf2=\EOQ, kf25=\EO1;5P, kf26=\EO1;5Q,
kf27=\EO1;5R, kf28=\EO1;5S, kf3=\EOR, kf37=\EO1;6P,
kf38=\EO1;6Q, kf39=\EO1;6R, kf4=\EOS, kf40=\EO1;6S,
kf49=\EO1;3P, kf50=\EO1;3Q, kf51=\EO1;3R, kf52=\EO1;3S,
kf61=\EO1;4P, kf62=\EO1;4Q, kf63=\EO1;4R,
use=xterm+pcfkeys,
gnome+pcfkeys|VTE's variation on xterm+pcfkeys,
use=vte+pcfkeys,
# deprecated - use "vte" for newer versions
gnome|GNOME Terminal,
use=vte-2012,
gnome-256color|GNOME Terminal with xterm 256-colors,
use=xterm+256color, use=gnome,
# relevant changes were made in January 2014, and later.
#
# Originally VTE was promoted as a library able to emulate any terminal by
# reading its terminal description. In practice, that never got beyond the
# ability to read definitions of special keys (function-, editing-, cursor).
#
# Before 2014, VTE had a termcap reader (originally pointing to a private copy
# of a termcap file derived from xterm). That was incomplete because it did
# not have any of the modifier-key information used for xterm's function-,
# editing-, and cursor-keys. Having its own reader was unnecessary since
# ncurses provides that information; used since xterm patch #225 in 2007.
#
# During April/May 2014, a few bug reports (e.g., gnome #169295, gnome #728900,
# gnome #730137) dealt with attempts to recast that termcap reader as library
# calls, then attempting to adapt a chunk of code from ncurses (src/vteti.c),
# abandoning that and finally constructing a table to match xterm's default
# behavior, e.g., for "xterm+pcfkeys".
vte-2014|VTE 0.35.1,
ncv@,
cbt=\E[Z, el1=\E[1K, flash=\E[?5h$<100/>\E[?5l,
ich=\E[%p1%d@, kent=\EOM, use=ecma+index,
use=xterm+sm+1006, use=xterm+pcfkeys, use=vte-2012,
# As of January 2018, this was the most recent release,
# e.g., with gnome-terminal 3.26.2
vte-2017|VTE 0.50.2,
use=ecma+strikeout, use=vte-2014,
# VTE 0.51.2 and gnome-terminal 3.28.2 copied a feature from KovId's TTY
# late in 2017 for changing the appearance of underlines, which was
# incorporated into Debian and Fedora testing-packages in February and March
# 2018, respectively. Overline (Smol/Rmol) has been supported since December
# 2017.
vte-2018|VTE 0.51.2,
Rmol=\E[55m, Smol=\E[53m, Smulx=\E[4\:%p1%dm,
use=vte-2017,
vte|VTE aka GNOME Terminal,
use=vte-2018,
vte-256color|VTE with xterm 256-colors,
use=xterm+256color, use=vte,
# XFCE Terminal 0.2.5.4beta2
#
# This is based on some of the same source code, e.g., the VTE library, as
# gnome-terminal, but has fewer features, fails more screens in vttest.
# Since most of the terminfo-related behavior is due to the VTE library,
# the terminfo is the same as gnome-terminal.
xfce|Xfce Terminal,
use=vte-2008,
# TERMITE
#
# https://github.com/thestinger/termite
#
# A review requires install of Arch Linux since Fedora and Debian don't have
# this program. It uses "vte3-ng" (a conflicting package), which is here:
# https://github.com/thestinger/vte-ng
# which (based on the default branch setting) seems to be a fork of vte
# 0.48.2, and is noted as such in Arch:
# https://www.archlinux.org/packages/community/x86_64/vte3-ng/
# It won't be merged:
# https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=679658#c10
# https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=78291
# but perhaps made obsolete.
#
# The entry as given was mislabeled "xterm-termite" (it is not xterm), and
# was mostly cut/paste from xterm-256color, but since VTE does not actually
# implement several of the features in that terminal description, this one is
# trimmed to eliminate those. Also, since it is a slightly older version of
# VTE, it lacks a few more features (again, trimmed).
termite|VTE-based terminal,
am, ccc, km, mir, msgr, npc, xenl,
cols#80, it#8, lines#24, ncv@,
acsc=++\,\,--..00``aaffgghhiijjkkllmmnnooppqqrrssttuuvvwwxxy
yzz{{||}}~~,
bel=^G, bold=\E[1m, cbt=\E[Z, civis=\E[?25l,
clear=\E[H\E[2J, cnorm=\E[?12l\E[?25h, cr=\r,
csr=\E[%i%p1%d;%p2%dr, cub=\E[%p1%dD, cub1=^H,
cud=\E[%p1%dB, cud1=\n, cuf=\E[%p1%dC, cuf1=\E[C,
cup=\E[%i%p1%d;%p2%dH, cuu=\E[%p1%dA, cuu1=\E[A,
dch=\E[%p1%dP, ech=\E[%p1%dX, ed=\E[J, el=\E[K, el1=\E[1K,
flash=\E[?5h$<100/>\E[?5l, home=\E[H, hpa=\E[%i%p1%dG,
ht=^I, hts=\EH, ind=\n, invis=\E[8m,
is2=\E[!p\E[?3;4l\E[4l\E>, kb2=\EOE, kbs=^?, kcbt=\E[Z,
kent=\EOM, kmous=\E[M, rc=\E8, rev=\E[7m, ri=\EM, rmacs=\E(B,
rmam=\E[?7l, rmkx=\E[?1l\E>, rmso=\E[27m, rmul=\E[24m,
rs1=\Ec, rs2=\E[!p\E[?3;4l\E[4l\E>, sc=\E7,
sgr=%?%p9%t\E(0%e\E(B%;\E[0%?%p6%t;1%;%?%p2%t;4%;%?%p1%p3%|
%t;7%;%?%p7%t;8%;m,
sgr0=\E(B\E[m, smacs=\E(0, smam=\E[?7h, smkx=\E[?1h\E=,
smso=\E[7m, smul=\E[4m, tbc=\E[3g, vpa=\E[%i%p1%dd,
use=xterm+alt1049, use=ecma+index, use=ansi+idc,
use=ansi+idl, use=ansi+enq, use=ecma+italics,
use=xterm+256color, use=ecma+color, use=xterm+pcfkeys,
use=xterm+sl-twm,
# Konsole 1.0.1 (2001/11/25)
# (formerly known as kvt)
#
# This program hardcodes $TERM to 'xterm', which is not accurate. However, to
# simplify this entry (and point out why konsole isn't xterm), we base this on
# xterm-r6. The default keyboard appears to be 'linux'.
#
# Notes:
# a) konsole implements several features from XFree86 xterm, though none of
# that is documented - except of course in its source code - apparently
# because its implementors are unaccustomed to reading documentation - as
# evidenced by the sparse and poorly edited documentation distributed with
# konsole. Some features such as the 1049 private mode are recognized but
# incorrectly implemented as a duplicate of the 47 private mode.
# b) even with the "vt100 (historical)" keyboard setting, the numeric keypad
# sends PC-style escapes rather than vt100.
# c) fails vttest menu 3 (Test of character sets) because it does not properly
# parse some control sequences. Also fails vttest Primary Device Attributes
# by sending a bogus code (in the source it says it's supposed to be a
# vt220, which is doubly incorrect because it does not implement vt220
# control sequences except for a few special cases). Treat it as a
# mildly-broken vt102.
#
# Update for konsole 1.3.2:
# The 1049 private mode works (but see the other xterm screens in vttest).
# Primary Device Attributes now returns the code for a vt100 with advanced
# video option. Perhaps that's intended to be a "mildly-broken vt102".
#
# Updated for konsole 1.6.4:
# add konsole-solaris
#
# Updated for konsole 1.6.6:
# add control-key modifiers for function-keys, etc.
#
# Updated for konsole 2.3 (October 2008):
# vttest menu 1 shows that both konsole and gnome terminal do wrapping
# different from xterm (and vt100's). They have the same behavior in
# this detail, but it is unclear which copies the other.
#
# Deferred update for konsole 2.10 (late 2012):
# add SGR 1006 mouse
#
# Updated for konsole 2.12.4 (late 2013):
# add sitm/ritm
#
# Updated for konsole 16.07 (mid 2016):
# add dim, invis, strikeout
# (also overline, which is too rarely used to provide as an extension)
#
# Updated for konsole 17.12.0 (late 2017):
konsole-base|KDE console window,
bce, km@, npc, XT,
ncv@,
bel@, blink=\E[5m, civis=\E[?25l, cnorm=\E[?25h, dim=\E[2m,
ech=\E[%p1%dX, flash=\E[?5h$<100/>\E[?5l,
hpa=\E[%i%p1%dG, invis=\E[8m, kbs=^?, kdch1=\E[3~,
kend=\E[4~, kf1@, kf10@, kf11@, kf12@, kf13@, kf14@, kf15@, kf16@,
kf17@, kf18@, kf19@, kf2@, kf20@, kf3@, kf4@, kf5@, kf6@, kf7@, kf8@,
kf9@, kfnd@, khome=\E[1~, kslt@, rmam=\E[?7l, rmso=\E[27m,
rmul=\E[24m, rs1=\Ec,
rs2=\E7\E[r\E8\E[m\E[?7h\E[?1;3;4;6l\E[4l\E>\E[?1000l\E[?25h,
sgr=\E[0%?%p6%t;1%;%?%p2%t;4%;%?%p1%p3%|%t;7%;%?%p4%t;5%;%?
%p5%t;2%;%?%p7%t;8%;m%?%p9%t\016%e\017%;,
sgr0=\E[0m\017, smam=\E[?7h, vpa=\E[%i%p1%dd,
use=ecma+index, use=xterm+sm+1006, use=ecma+strikeout,
use=ecma+italics, use=ecma+color, use=xterm-r6,
# The keytab feature was introduced in 0.9.12 (February 2000) with "linux" and
# "vt100" key-table files along with a compiled-in default key-table.
#
# The main difference between the two keytabs was that the developer equated
# "vt100" with xterm, and noticed that the Linux console's F1-F5 differed from
# that. For the same reason, the home/end keys differ. A VT100 had none of
# that. The otherwise identical keytabs have definitions to model the VT52
# cursor-keys and the VT100 cursor-keys with application versus normal modes.
#
# An "x11r5" keytab (displayed in the menu as "X11 R5") was added in January
# 2001, and shortly after retitled to "XFree 3.x.x". Both it and "vt100" were
# dropped from the install in June 2008.
#
# The default keytab added in January 2000 was originally titled "X11 R6",
# and likewise retitled to "XFree 4".
#
# A "solaris" keytab was added in Febrary 2005, copying the "vt100" keytab
# and changing backspace to ^H, removing that keytab's attempt to model the
# VT100 keypad and VT52 (KDE #20459).
#
# The developers made changes to the default and linux keytabs. Comparing
# the original and 2018 versions using diffstat:
# default: 119 added, 147 deleted, 28 unchanged
# linux: 47 added, 28 deleted, 104 unchanged
#
# Most of the change for the default keytab was to make konsole act more like
# xterm. That was a feature named AnyMod which came in May 2005 for KDE #92749
# (see also Redhat #122815). Later, in June 2007 the compiled-in keytab was
# made an external file (like "linux" and "solaris"), and some further
# refinement made. But there are still flaws in the scheme.
#
# Essentially AnyMod maps the xterm "PC-style" modifier codes such as 2 for
# Shift into a placeholder in the table entries. That works well if all of the
# modified keys are modified in the same way. But xterm does not do that. The
# first 4 function keys are used in xterm to support the VT100 PF1-PF4 keypad
# keys. For example, F2 sends \EOQ in both terminals because of this feature.
# But a shifted F2 (F14=F2+12) differs like this, in infocmp's listing:
# kf14: '\E[1;2Q', '\EO2Q'.
#
# In effect, a quarter of konsole's function-keys are different from xterm.
#
# It is not a simple blunder:
# a) xterm patch #121 (November 1999), providing the first version of the
# PC-style modifiers would send \EO2Q
# b) xterm patch #216 (July 2006) amended this and other details, provided
# better documentation for the modifiers and made the behavior configurable,
# e.g., using the modifyFunctionKeys resource. The reason why it sends
# \E[1;2Q is that \E[O2Q is not a legal ECMA-48 control sequence. The
# changelog points this out as "avoid sending SS3 with parameters".
# c) That came after AnyMod was introduced, but still early enough that one
# might expect konsole's developers to followup. Twelve years later that
# has yet to happen.
#
# As of 2018, konsole still provides 3 keyboard profiles ("XFree 4", "linux",
# "solaris").
konsole-linux|KDE console window with linux keyboard,
kf1=\E[[A, kf10=\E[21~, kf11=\E[23~, kf12=\E[24~, kf13@,
kf14@, kf15@, kf16@, kf17@, kf18@, kf19@, kf2=\E[[B, kf20@,
kf3=\E[[C, kf4=\E[[D, kf5=\E[[E, kf6=\E[17~, kf7=\E[18~,
kf8=\E[19~, kf9=\E[20~, use=konsole-base,
konsole-solaris|KDE console window with Solaris keyboard,
kbs=^H, kend=\E[4~, khome=\E[1~, use=konsole-vt100,
# Obsolete: x11r5.keymap
# KDE's "XFree86 3.x.x" keyboard was obviously based on reading the xterm
# terminfo at the time rather than testing the code.
konsole-xf3x|KDE console window with keyboard for XFree86 3.x xterm,
kend=\E[4~, khome=\E[1~, use=konsole-vt100,
# The value for kbs (see konsole-vt100) reflects local customization rather
# than the settings used for XFree86 xterm.
konsole-xf4x|KDE console window with keyboard for XFree86 4.x xterm,
kend=\EOF, khome=\EOH, use=konsole+pcfkeys,
use=konsole-vt100,
konsole+pcfkeys|konsole subset of xterm+pcfkeys,
kcbt=\E[Z, use=xterm+pcc2, use=xterm+pcf0,
use=xterm+pce2,
# Obsolete: vt100.keymap
# KDE's "vt100" keyboard has no relationship to any terminal that DEC made, but
# it is still useful for deriving the other entries, since the developer
# provided function-keys based on xterm.
konsole-vt100|KDE console window with vt100 (sic) keyboard,
kbs=^?, kdch1=\E[3~, kend=\E[F, kf1=\E[11~, kf10=\E[21~,
kf11=\E[23~, kf12=\E[24~, kf13@, kf14@, kf15@, kf16@, kf17@,
kf18@, kf19@, kf2=\E[12~, kf20@, kf3=\E[13~, kf4=\E[14~,
kf5=\E[15~, kf6=\E[17~, kf7=\E[18~, kf8=\E[19~, kf9=\E[20~,
khome=\E[H, use=konsole-base,
# Obsolete: vt420pc.keytab was added in June 2000, dropped from the install in
# September 2008 and removed in June 2016. The developer who removed it stated
# that it was never installed.
konsole-vt420pc|KDE console window with vt420 pc keyboard,
kbs=^H, kdch1=^?, use=konsole-vt100,
# make a default entry for konsole
konsole|KDE console window,
use=konsole-xf4x,
# These were written for ncurses:
konsole-16color|klone of xterm-16color,
ncv#32, use=ibm+16color, use=konsole,
konsole-256color|KDE console window with xterm 256-colors,
use=xterm+256setaf, use=konsole,
#### MLTERM
# http://mlterm.sourceforge.net/
mlterm|multi lingual terminal emulator,
use=mlterm3,
# Tested mlterm 3.2.2:
# mlterm 3.x has made changes, but they are not reflected in the included
# mlterm.ti; this entry is based on testing with ncurses, tack and vttest -TD
# 2018/01/21: found xterm+sm+1006 did not work with version 3.3.8
mlterm3|multi lingual terminal emulator,
kf1=\E[11~, kf2=\E[12~, kf3=\E[13~, kf4=\E[14~,
use=ecma+italics, use=xterm+app, use=xterm+pcf0,
use=xterm+pcc2, use=xterm+pce2, use=xterm+x11mouse,
use=mlterm2,
# This is mlterm 2.9.3's mlterm.ti, with some additions/corrections -TD
#
# It is nominally a vt102 emulator, with features borrowed from rxvt and
# xterm.
#
# The function keys are numbered based on shift/control/alt modifiers, except
# that the control-modifier itself is used to spawn a new copy of mlterm (the
# "-P" option). So control/F1 to control/F12 may not be usable, depending on
# how it is configured.
#
# kf1 to kf12 \E[11~ to \E[24~
# shift kf1 to kf12 \E[11;2~ to \E[24;2~
# alt kf1 to kf12 \E[11;3~ to \E[24;3~
# shift/alt kf1 to kf12 \E[11;4~ to \E[24;4~
# control kf1 to kf12 \E[11;5~ to \E[24;5~ (maybe)
# control/shift kf1 to kf12 \E[11;6~ to \E[24;6~
# control/alt kf1 to kf12 \E[11;7~ to \E[24;7~
# control/shift/alt kf1 to kf12 \E[11;8~ to \E[24;8~
#
mlterm2|multi lingual terminal emulator,
am, eslok, km, mc5i, mir, msgr, npc, xenl, XT,
colors#8, cols#80, it#8, lines#24, pairs#64,
acsc=00``aaffgghhjjkkllmmnnooppqqrrssttuuvvwwxxyyzz{{||}}~~,
bel=^G, bold=\E[1m, cbt=\E[Z, civis=\E[?25l,
clear=\E[H\E[2J, cnorm=\E[?25h, cr=\r,
csr=\E[%i%p1%d;%p2%dr, cub=\E[%p1%dD, cub1=^H,
cud=\E[%p1%dB, cud1=\n, cuf=\E[%p1%dC, cuf1=\E[C,
cup=\E[%i%p1%d;%p2%dH, cuu=\E[%p1%dA, cuu1=\E[A,
dch=\E[%p1%dP, dch1=\E[P, dl=\E[%p1%dM, dl1=\E[M,
ech=\E[%p1%dX, ed=\E[J, el=\E[K, el1=\E[1K, enacs=,
home=\E[H, hpa=\E[%i%p1%dG, ht=^I, hts=\EH, ich=\E[%p1%d@,
il=\E[%p1%dL, il1=\E[L, ind=\n,
is2=\E7\E[r\E[m\E[?7h\E[?1;3;4;6l\E[4l\E8\E>, kbs=^?,
kcbt=\E[Z, kcub1=\EOD, kcud1=\EOB, kcuf1=\EOC, kcuu1=\EOA,
kdch1=\E[3~, kend=\EOF, kent=\EOM, kfnd=\E[1~, khome=\EOH,
kich1=\E[2~, kind=\EO1;2B, kmous=\E[M, knp=\E[6~,
kpp=\E[5~, kri=\EO1;2A, kslt=\E[4~, mc0=\E[i, nel=\EE,
op=\E[39;49m, rc=\E8, rev=\E[7m, ri=\EM, rmacs=\E(B,
rmam=\E[?7l, rmir=\E[4l, rmkx=\E[?1l\E>, rmso=\E[27m,
rmul=\E[24m, rs1=\Ec,
rs2=\E7\E[r\E8\E[m\E[?7h\E[?1;3;4;6l\E[4l\E>\E[?1000l,
sc=\E7, setab=\E[4%p1%dm, setaf=\E[3%p1%dm,
sgr=\E[0%?%p6%t;1%;%?%p2%t;4%;%?%p1%p3%|%t;7%;m%?%p9%t\E(0%e
\E(B%;,
sgr0=\E[m\E(B, smacs=\E(0, smam=\E[?7h, smir=\E[4h,
smkx=\E[?1h\E=, smso=\E[7m, smul=\E[4m, tbc=\E[3g,
u6=\E[%i%d;%dR, u7=\E[6n, u8=\E[?1;2c, u9=\E[c,
vpa=\E[%i%p1%dd, use=xterm+alt1049, use=ecma+index,
use=mlterm+pcfkeys, use=xterm+r6f2,
# The insert/delete/home/end keys do not respond to modifiers because mlterm
# looks in its termcap to decide which string to send. If it used terminfo
# (when available), it could use the extended names introduced for xterm.
mlterm+pcfkeys|fragment for PC-style fkeys,
kLFT=\EO1;2D, kNXT=\E[6;2~, kPRV=\E[5;2~, kRIT=\EO1;2C,
kDN=\EO1;2B, kDN3=\EO1;3B, kDN4=\EO1;4B, kDN5=\EO1;5B,
kDN6=\EO1;6B, kDN7=\EO1;7B, kIC5=\E[2;5~, kIC6=\E[2;6~,
kLFT3=\EO1;3D, kLFT4=\EO1;4D, kLFT5=\EO1;5D,
kLFT6=\EO1;6D, kLFT7=\EO1;7D, kNXT5=\E[6;5~,
kNXT6=\E[6;6~, kPRV5=\E[5;5~, kPRV6=\E[5;6~,
kRIT3=\EO1;3C, kRIT4=\EO1;4C, kRIT5=\EO1;5C,
kRIT6=\EO1;6C, kRIT7=\EO1;7C, kUP=\EO1;2A, kUP3=\EO1;3A,
kUP4=\EO1;4A, kUP5=\EO1;5A, kUP6=\EO1;6A, kUP7=\EO1;7A,
mlterm-256color|mlterm 3.0 with xterm 256-colors,
use=xterm+256color, use=mlterm,
#### RXVT
# From: Thomas Dickey <dickey@clark.net> 04 Oct 1997
# Updated: Oezguer Kesim <kesim@math.fu-berlin.de> 02 Nov 1997
# Notes:
# rxvt 2.21b uses
# smacs=\E(B\E)U^N, rmacs=\E(B\E)0^O,
# but some applications don't work with that.
# It also has an AIX extension
# box2=lqkxjmwuvtn,
# and
# ech=\E[%p1%dX,
# but the latter does not work correctly.
#
# The distributed terminfo says it implements hpa and vpa, but they are not
# implemented correctly, using relative rather than absolute positioning.
#
# rxvt is normally configured to look for "xterm" or "xterm-color" as $TERM.
# Since rxvt is not really compatible with xterm, it should be configured as
# "rxvt" or "rxvt-color".
#
# removed dch/dch1 because they are inconsistent with bce/ech -TD
# remove km as per tack test -TD
rxvt-basic|rxvt terminal base (X Window System),
OTbs, am, bce, eo, mir, msgr, xenl, xon, XT,
cols#80, it#8, lines#24,
acsc=``aaffggjjkkllmmnnooppqqrrssttuuvvwwxxyyzz{{||}}~~,
bel=^G, blink=\E[5m, bold=\E[1m, civis=\E[?25l,
clear=\E[H\E[2J, cnorm=\E[?25h, cr=\r,
csr=\E[%i%p1%d;%p2%dr, cub=\E[%p1%dD, cub1=^H,
cud=\E[%p1%dB, cud1=\n, cuf=\E[%p1%dC, cuf1=\E[C,
cup=\E[%i%p1%d;%p2%dH, cuu=\E[%p1%dA, cuu1=\E[A,
dl=\E[%p1%dM, dl1=\E[M, ed=\E[J, el=\E[K, el1=\E[1K,
enacs=\E(B\E)0, flash=\E[?5h$<100/>\E[?5l, home=\E[H,
ht=^I, hts=\EH, ich=\E[%p1%d@, il=\E[%p1%dL, il1=\E[L,
ind=\n, is1=\E[?47l\E=\E[?1l,
is2=\E[r\E[m\E[2J\E[H\E[?7h\E[?1;3;4;6l\E[4l, kbs=^H,
kcbt=\E[Z, kmous=\E[M, rc=\E8, rev=\E[7m, ri=\EM, rmacs=^O,
rmcup=\E[2J\E[?47l\E8, rmir=\E[4l, rmkx=\E>, rmso=\E[27m,
rmul=\E[24m,
rs1=\E>\E[1;3;4;5;6l\E[?7h\E[m\E[r\E[2J\E[H,
rs2=\E[r\E[m\E[2J\E[H\E[?7h\E[?1;3;4;6l\E[4l\E>\E[?1000l\E[?
25h,
s0ds=\E(B, s1ds=\E(0, sc=\E7,
sgr=\E[0%?%p6%t;1%;%?%p2%t;4%;%?%p1%p3%|%t;7%;%?%p4%t;5%;m%?
%p9%t\016%e\017%;,
sgr0=\E[0m\017, smacs=^N, smcup=\E7\E[?47h, smir=\E[4h,
smkx=\E=, smso=\E[7m, smul=\E[4m, tbc=\E[3g, use=vt100+enq,
use=rxvt+pcfkeys, use=vt220+keypad,
# Key Codes from rxvt reference:
#
# Note: Shift + F1-F10 generates F11-F20
#
# For the keypad, use Shift to temporarily override Application-Keypad
# setting use Num_Lock to toggle Application-Keypad setting if Num_Lock
# is off, escape sequences toggle Application-Keypad setting.
# Also note that values of Home, End, Delete may have been compiled
# differently on your system.
#
# Normal Shift Control Ctrl+Shift
# Tab ^I ESC [ Z ^I ESC [ Z
# BackSpace ^H ^? ^? ^?
# Find ESC [ 1 ~ ESC [ 1 $ ESC [ 1 ^ ESC [ 1 @
# Insert ESC [ 2 ~ paste ESC [ 2 ^ ESC [ 2 @
# Execute ESC [ 3 ~ ESC [ 3 $ ESC [ 3 ^ ESC [ 3 @
# Select ESC [ 4 ~ ESC [ 4 $ ESC [ 4 ^ ESC [ 4 @
# Prior ESC [ 5 ~ scroll-up ESC [ 5 ^ ESC [ 5 @
# Next ESC [ 6 ~ scroll-down ESC [ 6 ^ ESC [ 6 @
# Home ESC [ 7 ~ ESC [ 7 $ ESC [ 7 ^ ESC [ 7 @
# End ESC [ 8 ~ ESC [ 8 $ ESC [ 8 ^ ESC [ 8 @
# Delete ESC [ 3 ~ ESC [ 3 $ ESC [ 3 ^ ESC [ 3 @
# F1 ESC [ 11 ~ ESC [ 23 ~ ESC [ 11 ^ ESC [ 23 ^
# F2 ESC [ 12 ~ ESC [ 24 ~ ESC [ 12 ^ ESC [ 24 ^
# F3 ESC [ 13 ~ ESC [ 25 ~ ESC [ 13 ^ ESC [ 25 ^
# F4 ESC [ 14 ~ ESC [ 26 ~ ESC [ 14 ^ ESC [ 26 ^
# F5 ESC [ 15 ~ ESC [ 28 ~ ESC [ 15 ^ ESC [ 28 ^
# F6 ESC [ 17 ~ ESC [ 29 ~ ESC [ 17 ^ ESC [ 29 ^
# F7 ESC [ 18 ~ ESC [ 31 ~ ESC [ 18 ^ ESC [ 31 ^
# F8 ESC [ 19 ~ ESC [ 32 ~ ESC [ 19 ^ ESC [ 32 ^
# F9 ESC [ 20 ~ ESC [ 33 ~ ESC [ 20 ^ ESC [ 33 ^
# F10 ESC [ 21 ~ ESC [ 34 ~ ESC [ 21 ^ ESC [ 34 ^
# F11 ESC [ 23 ~ ESC [ 23 $ ESC [ 23 ^ ESC [ 23 @
# F12 ESC [ 24 ~ ESC [ 24 $ ESC [ 24 ^ ESC [ 24 @
# F13 ESC [ 25 ~ ESC [ 25 $ ESC [ 25 ^ ESC [ 25 @
# F14 ESC [ 26 ~ ESC [ 26 $ ESC [ 26 ^ ESC [ 26 @
# F15 (Help) ESC [ 28 ~ ESC [ 28 $ ESC [ 28 ^ ESC [ 28 @
# F16 (Menu) ESC [ 29 ~ ESC [ 29 $ ESC [ 29 ^ ESC [ 29 @
# F17 ESC [ 31 ~ ESC [ 31 $ ESC [ 31 ^ ESC [ 31 @
# F18 ESC [ 32 ~ ESC [ 32 $ ESC [ 32 ^ ESC [ 32 @
# F19 ESC [ 33 ~ ESC [ 33 $ ESC [ 33 ^ ESC [ 33 @
# F20 ESC [ 34 ~ ESC [ 34 $ ESC [ 34 ^ ESC [ 34 @
#
# Application
# Up ESC [ A ESC [ a ESC O a ESC O A
# Down ESC [ B ESC [ b ESC O b ESC O B
# Right ESC [ C ESC [ c ESC O c ESC O C
# Left ESC [ D ESC [ d ESC O d ESC O D
# KP_Enter ^M ESC O M
# KP_F1 ESC O P ESC O P
# KP_F2 ESC O Q ESC O Q
# KP_F3 ESC O R ESC O R
# KP_F4 ESC O S ESC O S
# XK_KP_Multiply * ESC O j
# XK_KP_Add + ESC O k
# XK_KP_Separator , ESC O l
# XK_KP_Subtract - ESC O m
# XK_KP_Decimal . ESC O n
# XK_KP_Divide / ESC O o
# XK_KP_0 0 ESC O p
# XK_KP_1 1 ESC O q
# XK_KP_2 2 ESC O r
# XK_KP_3 3 ESC O s
# XK_KP_4 4 ESC O t
# XK_KP_5 5 ESC O u
# XK_KP_6 6 ESC O v
# XK_KP_7 7 ESC O w
# XK_KP_8 8 ESC O x
# XK_KP_9 9 ESC O y
#
# The source-code for rxvt actually defines mappings for F21-F35, using
# "ESC [ 35 ~" to "ESC [ 49 ~". Keyboards with more than 12 function keys
# are rare, so this entry uses the shift- and control-modifiers as in
# xterm+pcfkeys to define keys past F12.
#
# kIC is normally not used, since rxvt performs a paste for that (shifted
# insert), unless private mode 35 is set.
#
# kDN, kDN5, kDN6, etc are extensions based on the names from xterm+pcfkeys -TD
# Removed kDN6, etc (control+shift) since rxvt does not implement this -TD
rxvt+pcfkeys|fragment for PC-style fkeys,
kDC=\E[3$, kEND=\E[8$, kHOM=\E[7$, kIC=\E[2$, kLFT=\E[d,
kNXT=\E[6$, kPRV=\E[5$, kRIT=\E[c, kcub1=\E[D, kcud1=\E[B,
kcuf1=\E[C, kcuu1=\E[A, kdch1=\E[3~, kel=\E[8\^,
kend=\E[8~, kf1=\E[11~, kf10=\E[21~, kf11=\E[23~,
kf12=\E[24~, kf13=\E[25~, kf14=\E[26~, kf15=\E[28~,
kf16=\E[29~, kf17=\E[31~, kf18=\E[32~, kf19=\E[33~,
kf2=\E[12~, kf20=\E[34~, kf21=\E[23$, kf22=\E[24$,
kf23=\E[11\^, kf24=\E[12\^, kf25=\E[13\^, kf26=\E[14\^,
kf27=\E[15\^, kf28=\E[17\^, kf29=\E[18\^, kf3=\E[13~,
kf30=\E[19\^, kf31=\E[20\^, kf32=\E[21\^, kf33=\E[23\^,
kf34=\E[24\^, kf35=\E[25\^, kf36=\E[26\^, kf37=\E[28\^,
kf38=\E[29\^, kf39=\E[31\^, kf4=\E[14~, kf40=\E[32\^,
kf41=\E[33\^, kf42=\E[34\^, kf43=\E[23@, kf44=\E[24@,
kf5=\E[15~, kf6=\E[17~, kf7=\E[18~, kf8=\E[19~, kf9=\E[20~,
kfnd=\E[1~, khome=\E[7~, kich1=\E[2~, kind=\E[a, knp=\E[6~,
kpp=\E[5~, kri=\E[b, kslt=\E[4~, kDC5=\E[3\^, kDC6=\E[3@,
kDN=\E[b, kDN5=\EOb, kEND5=\E[8\^, kEND6=\E[8@,
kHOM5=\E[7\^, kHOM6=\E[7@, kIC5=\E[2\^, kIC6=\E[2@,
kLFT5=\EOd, kNXT5=\E[6\^, kNXT6=\E[6@, kPRV5=\E[5\^,
kPRV6=\E[5@, kRIT5=\EOc, kUP=\E[a, kUP5=\EOa,
# rxvt was originally "xvt", first announced in April 1993:
# http://www.krsaborio.net/linux-desktops/research/1993/0416.html
#------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Article: 567 of comp.os.linux.announce
# Path: pavo.csi.cam.ac.uk!warwick!uknet!pipex!uunet!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!
# caen!batcomputer!theory.TC.Cornell.EDU!mdw
# From: nation@rocket.sanders.com (Robert Nation)
# Newsgroups: comp.os.linux.announce
# Subject: xvt upload
# Date: 16 Apr 1993 18:13:07 GMT
# Organization: Cornell Theory Center
# Lines: 13
# Approved: linux-announce@tc.cornell.edu (Matt Welsh)
# Message-ID: <1qmsvj$pvj@fitz.TC.Cornell.EDU>
# NNTP-Posting-Host: theory.tc.cornell.edu
# Keywords: xvt, xterm, Xwindows
# Originator: mdw@theory.TC.Cornell.EDU
#
# Rxvt has been uploaded to /pub/Linux/Incoming/rxvt.tar.z and
# rxvt.README on sunsite.unc.edu.
#
# Xvt is an xterm replacement which uses a little less memory, and is
# suitable for use on machines with small memories. Tek4010 support
# is removed.
#
# Modifications were made by Rob Nation (nation@rocket.sanders.lockheed.com)
# to make it a little more compact, and to add and remove certain features.
#
#
# --
# Send submissions for comp.os.linux.announce to: linux-announce@tc.cornell.edu
#------------------------------------------------------------------------------
#
# Though its change-log does not mention this, John Davis has stated that he
# was the author of the changes to use the bce ("new color model") which was
# incorporated into rxvt 2.11 (June 15, 1995). The change-log does not give
# dates, nor give developer's names. Initial color support was added for rxvt
# "2.0", which was sometime in 1994.
#
# rxvt had usable color support with 2.16 (April 2, 1996), with some help by my
# work on vttest, as well as bug reports to Mark Olesen. For instance, the fix
# mentioned here
# https://web.archive.org/web/20141016124430/http://web.archiveorange.com/archive/v/6ETvLb5wHtbbzCaS4S9J
# was from one of my bug-reports -TD
#
# While the color model both for xterm and rxvt was based on Linux console,
# Olesen (or possibly Davis) diverged in one respect from Linux's bce color
# behavior: inserting/deleting characters does not fill the newly empty cell
# with the default background color.
rxvt|rxvt terminal emulator (X Window System),
ncv@,
hpa=\E[%i%p1%dG, kf0=\E[21~, sgr0=\E[m\017,
vpa=\E[%i%p1%dd, use=rxvt-basic, use=ecma+color,
rxvt-color|rxvt terminal emulator (X Window System),
use=rxvt,
rxvt-256color|rxvt 2.7.9 with xterm 256-colors,
use=xterm+256color, use=rxvt,
rxvt-88color|rxvt 2.7.9 with xterm 88-colors,
use=xterm+88color, use=rxvt,
rxvt-xpm|rxvt terminal emulator (X Window System),
use=rxvt,
# This variant is supposed to work with rxvt 2.7.7 when compiled with
# NO_BRIGHTCOLOR defined. rxvt needs more work...
rxvt-16color|rxvt with 16 colors like aixterm,
ncv#32, use=ibm+16color, use=rxvt,
#### SIMPLETERM
# st.suckless.org
st,
use=st-0.8,
# Reviewed 0.8.2:
# In tack,
# there is some problem turning off line-drawing
# shift+control function-keys do nothing; shift+control cursor keys work
# the padding tests make the terminal non-functional.
# In vttest,
# SD/SU work
# SL/SR/REP do not work
# ECMA-48 cursor movement works, e.g., CHA, CBT, etc.
#
# This entry discards the ccc/initc capabilities from st-0.7 because they
# belong in st-256color.
st-0.8|simpleterm 0.7,
dim=\E[2m, kcbt@, kent@, oc=\E]104\007,
sgr=%?%p9%t\E(0%e\E(B%;\E[0%?%p6%t;1%;%?%p2%t;4%;%?%p1%p3%|
%t;7%;%?%p4%t;5%;%?%p5%t;2%;%?%p7%t;8%;m,
Ms=\E]52;%p1%s;%p2%s\007, kDN3=\E[1;3B, kDN5=\E[1;5B,
kLFT3=\E[1;3D, kLFT5=\E[1;5D, kNXT3=\E[6;3~,
kNXT5=\E[6;5~, kPRV3=\E[5;3~, kPRV5=\E[5;5~,
kRIT3=\E[1;3C, kRIT5=\E[1;5C, kUP3=\E[1;3A, kUP5=\E[1;5A,
use=ecma+strikeout, use=st-0.6,
# Reviewed 0.7:
# dim is intermittent, sometimes works, sometimes does not
# italics may show up with yellow color
# has control cursor-keys, alt cursor-keys, still no combinations
# has control pageup/down
# tmux extensions, see TERMINFO EXTENSIONS in tmux(1)
# Se and Ss are implemented in the source-code, but the terminfo
# provided with the source is incorrect, since Se/Ss are mis-coded
# as booleans rather than strings.
st-0.7|simpleterm 0.7,
ccc,
dim=\E[2m,
initc=\E]4;%p1%d;rgb\:%p2%{255}%*%{1000}%/%2.2X/%p3%{255}%*
%{1000}%/%2.2X/%p4%{255}%*%{1000}%/%2.2X\E\\,
kcbt@, kent@, oc=\E]104\007,
sgr=%?%p9%t\E(0%e\E(B%;\E[0%?%p6%t;1%;%?%p2%t;4%;%?%p1%p3%|
%t;7%;%?%p4%t;5%;%?%p5%t;2%;%?%p7%t;8%;m,
Ms=\E]52;%p1%s;%p2%s\007, kDN3=\E[1;3B, kDN5=\E[1;5B,
kLFT3=\E[1;3D, kLFT5=\E[1;5D, kNXT3=\E[6;3~,
kNXT5=\E[6;5~, kPRV3=\E[5;3~, kPRV5=\E[5;5~,
kRIT3=\E[1;3C, kRIT5=\E[1;5C, kUP3=\E[1;3A, kUP5=\E[1;5A,
use=ecma+strikeout, use=st-0.6,
# st-0.4.1
#
# This version uses a table which supports a single modifier (a subset of
# xterm's keys, using the same scheme). Because it supports only a single
# modifier in this table, function keys f36-f48 are normally unavailable
# because they are assigned to modifier-4.
#
# The program assigns TERM to match the program name (the upstream source says
# "st", but Debian renames it to "stterm").
#
# The source includes two entries which are not useful here:
# st-meta| simpleterm with meta key,
# st-meta-256color| simpleterm with meta key and 256 colors,
# because st's notion of "meta" does not correspond to the terminfo definition.
# Rather, it acts like xterm - when the meta feature is disabled.
#
# Removed invis -TD
# Added eo, removed ul -TD
#
# Reviewed st 0.5:
# implements control-modifier, but not control-shift for special keys
# implements alt-modifier, but not alt-shift for special keys
#
# Reviewed st 0.6:
# http://git.suckless.org/st/log/st.info
# Tmux unofficial extensions, see TERMINFO EXTENSIONS in tmux(1)
# still has no function keys past kf36 (no combinations of modifiers)
# no application keypad mode, e.g, kent.
st-0.6|simpleterm 0.6,
am, bce, hs, mir, msgr, npc, xenl, XT,
colors#8, cols#80, it#8, lines#24, pairs#64,
acsc=+C\,D-A.B0E``aaffgghFiGjjkkllmmnnooppqqrrssttuuvvwwxxyy
zz{{||}}~~,
bel=^G, blink=\E[5m, bold=\E[1m, cbt=\E[Z, civis=\E[?25l,
clear=\E[H\E[2J, cnorm=\E[?12l\E[?25h, cr=\r,
csr=\E[%i%p1%d;%p2%dr, cub=\E[%p1%dD, cub1=^H,
cud=\E[%p1%dB, cud1=\n, cuf=\E[%p1%dC, cuf1=\E[C,
cup=\E[%i%p1%d;%p2%dH, cuu=\E[%p1%dA, cuu1=\E[A,
cvvis=\E[?25h, dch=\E[%p1%dP, dch1=\E[P, dl=\E[%p1%dM,
dl1=\E[M, ech=\E[%p1%dX, ed=\E[J, el=\E[K, el1=\E[1K,
enacs=\E)0, flash=\E[?5h$<100/>\E[?5l, fsl=^G, home=\E[H,
hpa=\E[%i%p1%dG, ht=^I, hts=\EH, ich=\E[%p1%d@,
il=\E[%p1%dL, il1=\E[L, ind=\n, invis=\E[8m,
is2=\E[4l\E>\E[?1034l, kDC=\E[3;2~, kEND=\E[1;2F,
kHOM=\E[1;2H, kIC=\E[2;2~, kLFT=\E[1;2D, kNXT=\E[6;2~,
kPRV=\E[5;2~, kRIT=\E[1;2C, ka1=\E[1~, ka3=\E[5~, kb2=\EOu,
kbs=^?, kc1=\E[4~, kc3=\E[6~, kcbt=\E[Z, kclr=\E[3;5~,
kcub1=\EOD, kcud1=\EOB, kcuf1=\EOC, kcuu1=\EOA,
kdch1=\E[3~, kdl1=\E[3;2~, ked=\E[1;5F, kel=\E[1;2F,
kend=\E[4~, kent=\EOM, kf1=\EOP, kf10=\E[21~, kf11=\E[23~,
kf12=\E[24~, kf13=\E[1;2P, kf14=\E[1;2Q, kf15=\E[1;2R,
kf16=\E[1;2S, kf17=\E[15;2~, kf18=\E[17;2~,
kf19=\E[18;2~, kf2=\EOQ, kf20=\E[19;2~, kf21=\E[20;2~,
kf22=\E[21;2~, kf23=\E[23;2~, kf24=\E[24;2~,
kf25=\E[1;5P, kf26=\E[1;5Q, kf27=\E[1;5R, kf28=\E[1;5S,
kf29=\E[15;5~, kf3=\EOR, kf30=\E[17;5~, kf31=\E[18;5~,
kf32=\E[19;5~, kf33=\E[20;5~, kf34=\E[21;5~,
kf35=\E[23;5~, kf36=\E[24;5~, kf37=\E[1;6P, kf38=\E[1;6Q,
kf39=\E[1;6R, kf4=\EOS, kf40=\E[1;6S, kf41=\E[15;6~,
kf42=\E[17;6~, kf43=\E[18;6~, kf44=\E[19;6~,
kf45=\E[20;6~, kf46=\E[21;6~, kf47=\E[23;6~,
kf48=\E[24;6~, kf49=\E[1;3P, kf5=\E[15~, kf50=\E[1;3Q,
kf51=\E[1;3R, kf52=\E[1;3S, kf53=\E[15;3~, kf54=\E[17;3~,
kf55=\E[18;3~, kf56=\E[19;3~, kf57=\E[20;3~,
kf58=\E[21;3~, kf59=\E[23;3~, kf6=\E[17~, kf60=\E[24;3~,
kf61=\E[1;4P, kf62=\E[1;4Q, kf63=\E[1;4R, kf7=\E[18~,
kf8=\E[19~, kf9=\E[20~, khome=\E[1~, kich1=\E[2~,
kil1=\E[2;5~, kind=\E[1;2B, kmous=\E[M, knp=\E[6~,
kpp=\E[5~, kri=\E[1;2A, krmir=\E[2;2~, mc0=\E[i, mc4=\E[4i,
mc5=\E[5i, op=\E[39;49m, rc=\E8, rev=\E[7m, ri=\EM,
rmacs=\E(B, rmir=\E[4l, rmkx=\E[?1l\E>, rmso=\E[27m,
rmul=\E[24m, rs1=\Ec, rs2=\E[4l\E>\E[?1034l, sc=\E7,
setab=\E[4%p1%dm, setaf=\E[3%p1%dm,
setb=\E[4%?%p1%{1}%=%t4%e%p1%{3}%=%t6%e%p1%{4}%=%t1%e%p1%{6}
%=%t3%e%p1%d%;m,
setf=\E[3%?%p1%{1}%=%t4%e%p1%{3}%=%t6%e%p1%{4}%=%t1%e%p1%{6}
%=%t3%e%p1%d%;m,
sgr=%?%p9%t\E(0%e\E(B%;\E[0%?%p6%t;1%;%?%p2%t;4%;%?%p1%p3%|
%t;7%;%?%p4%t;5%;%?%p7%t;8%;m,
sgr0=\E[0m, smacs=\E(0, smir=\E[4h, smkx=\E[?1h\E=,
smso=\E[7m, smul=\E[4m, tbc=\E[3g, u6=\E[%i%d;%dR,
u7=\E[6n, u8=\E[?1;2c, u9=\E[c, vpa=\E[%i%p1%dd, Se=\E[2 q,
Ss=\E[%p1%d q, use=ecma+index, use=xterm+alt1049,
use=xterm+sl, use=ecma+italics,
#
# st-0.1.1
#
# Note: the original terminfo description uses leading blank to persuade
# ncurses to use "st" as its name. Proper fix for that is to use "st" as an
# alias.
#
# Reading the code shows it should work for aixterm 16-colors
# - added st-16color
#
# Using tack:
# - set eo (erase-overstrike)
# - set xenl
# - tbc doesn't work
# - hts works
# - cbt doesn't work
# - shifted cursor-keys send sequences like rxvt
# - sgr referred to unimplemented "invis" mode.
# Fixes: add eo and xenl per tack, remove nonworking cbt, hts and tbc, invis
simpleterm|old-st| simpleterm 0.1.1,
am, eo, mir, msgr, ul, xenl,
colors#8, cols#80, it#8, lines#24, ncv#3, pairs#64,
acsc=``aaffggiijjkkllmmnnooppqqrrssttuuvvwwxxyyzz{{||}}~~,
bel=^G, bold=\E[1m, civis=\E[?25l, clear=\E[H\E[2J,
cnorm=\E[?12l\E[?25h, cr=\r, csr=\E[%i%p1%d;%p2%dr,
cub1=^H, cud=\E[%p1%dB, cud1=\n, cuf=\E[%p1%dC, cuf1=\E[C,
cup=\E[%i%p1%d;%p2%dH, cuu=\E[%p1%dA, cuu1=\E[A,
dch1=\E[P, dl=\E[%p1%dM, dl1=\E[M, ed=\E[J, el=\E[K,
home=\E[H, hpa=\E[%i%p1%dG, ht=^I, ich=\E[%p1%d@,
il=\E[%p1%dL, il1=\E[L, ind=\n, kbs=^?, kcub1=\E[D,
kcud1=\E[B, kcuf1=\E[C, kcuu1=\E[A, kdch1=\E[3~,
kend=\E[4~, kf1=\EOP, kf10=\E[21~, kf11=\E[23~,
kf12=\E[24~, kf2=\EOQ, kf3=\EOR, kf4=\EOS, kf5=\E[15~,
kf6=\E[17~, kf7=\E[18~, kf8=\E[19~, kf9=\E[20~,
khome=\E[1~, knp=\E[6~, kpp=\E[5~, op=\E[37;40m, rc=\E8,
rev=\E[7m, rmacs=\E(B, rmso=\E[m, rmul=\E[m, sc=\E7,
setab=\E[4%p1%dm, setaf=\E[3%p1%dm,
sgr=%?%p9%t\E(0%e\E(B%;\E[0%?%p6%t;1%;%?%p2%t;4%;%?%p1%p3%|
%t;7%;m,
sgr0=\E[0m, smacs=\E(0, smso=\E[7m, smul=\E[4m,
use=ecma+index,
st-16color|simpleterm with 16-colors,
use=ibm+16color, use=st,
# Tested with st 0.8.2
# The issue with the titlebar is fixed, though st is very slow.
# In st 0.7, 256 colors "works", but when running xterm's test-scripts, some
# garbage is shown in the titlebar.
#
# terminal wants to use TERM=stterm-256color, but that is longer than 14
# characters, making the choice nonportable.
st-256color|simpleterm with 256 colors,
use=xterm+256color, use=st,
#### TERMINATOR
# https://github.com/software-jessies-org/jessies/wiki/Terminator
#
# Tested using the Debian package org.jessies.terminator 6.104.3256 on 64-bit
# Debian/current -TD (2011/8/20)
#
# There were some packaging problems:
# a) using Java, the program starts off using 50Mb, and climbs from there,
# up to 114Mb after testing (no scrollback).
# b) it insists on reinstalling its terminal description in $HOME/.terminfo
# (two copies, just in case the host happens to be Mac OS X).
# I deleted this after testing with tack.
#
# Issues/features found with tack:
# a) tbc does not work (implying that hts also is broken).
# Comparing with the tabs utility shows a problem with the last tabstop on
# a line.
# b) has xterm-style shifted function-key strings
# meta also is used, but control is ignored.
# c) has xterm-style modifiers for cursor keys (shift, control, shift+control,
# meta)
# d) some combinations of shift/control send xterm-style sequences for
# insert/delete/home/end.
# e) numeric keypad sends only numbers (compare with vttest).
# f) meta mode (km) is not implemented.
#
# Issues found with ncurses test-program:
# a) bce is inconsistently implemented
# b) widths of Unicode values above 256 do not always agree with wcwidth.
#
# Checked with vttest, found low degree of compatibility there.
#
# Checked with xterm's scripts, found that the 256-color palette is fixed.
#
# Fixes:
# a) add sgr string
# b) corrected sgr0 to reset alternate character set
# c) modified smacs/rmacs to use SCS rather than SI/SO
# d) removed bce
# e) removed km
#
# Revisiting in May 2019, the Debian package was no longer available, and a
# developer-provided ".deb" does not work. However, a usable Windows ".msi"
# (which relies upon Cygwin) can be tested. The developers provide a terminfo,
# but some of the features it lists do not work reliably (bce, italics, invis).
#
# tack:
# tbc fails
# invis attribute fails
# key-definitions could be expanded, with some work:
# + supports xterm-style cursor key-modifiers for shift
# + supports xterm-style function key-modifiers for shift,control,alt
# + supports xterm-style editing key-modifiers for shift,control,alt
# (kbs=^?)
# ncurses test-program:
# "C" menu shows that bce implementation is incomplete
# italics did not work
# dim worked once in tack, but not in ncurses test-program
# "F" thick-line characters do not display
# vttest:
# terminal does not respond to 80/132-column switching
# wrapping at the right margin is erratic
# there are several problems in the cursor-movements and screen-features
# no vt52, no double-sized characters
# Device attributes response says it is a vanilla VT100
# does not respond to xterm mouse controls
# alternate screen tests do not fill the screen, return wrong position
# window modify/report operations do not work
# miscellaneous ISO-6429 tests, e.g., REP, do not work
# CBT, CHT, HPR, CNL,CPL, VPR do not work
#
# removed the cancel for "hs", removed cbt, invis, corrected sgr -TD
# use xterm+256setaf, etc -TD
terminator|Terminator no line wrap,
bce, eo, mir, msgr, xenl, xon,
cols#80, it#8, lines#24, lm#0,
acsc=``aaffggjjkkllmmnnooppqqrrssttuuvvwwxxyyzz{{||}}~~,
bold=\E[1m, civis=\E[?25l, clear=\E[H\E[2J,
cnorm=\E[?25h, cr=\r, csr=\E[%i%p1%d;%p2%dr,
cub=\E[%p1%dD, cub1=^H, cud=\E[%p1%dB, cud1=\n,
cuf=\E[%p1%dC, cuf1=\E[C, cup=\E[%i%p1%d;%p2%dH,
cuu=\E[%p1%dA, cuu1=\E[A, dch=\E[%p1%dP, dch1=\E[P,
dim=\E[2m, dl=\E[%p1%dM, dl1=\E[M, ed=\E[J, el=\E[K,
el1=\E[1K, enacs=\E(B\E)0, flash=^G, home=\E[H,
hpa=\E[%i%p1%dG, ht=^I, hts=\EH, il=\E[%p1%dL, il1=\E[L,
ind=\n, is1=\E[?47l\E=\E[?1l,
is2=\E[r\E[m\E[2J\E[H\E[?7h\E[?1;3;4;6l\E[4l, kbs=^?,
kcub1=\E[D, kcud1=\E[B, kcuf1=\E[C, kcuu1=\E[A,
kdch1=\E[3~, kend=\E[4~, kf1=\EOP, kf10=\E[21~,
kf11=\E[23~, kf12=\E[24~, kf13=\E[25~, kf14=\E[26~,
kf15=\E[28~, kf16=\E[29~, kf2=\EOQ, kf3=\EOR, kf4=\EOS,
kf5=\E[15~, kf6=\E[17~, kf7=\E[18~, kf8=\E[19~, kf9=\E[20~,
khome=\E[1~, kich1=\E[2~, knp=\E[6~, kpp=\E[5~, rc=\E8,
rev=\E[7m, ri=\EM, rmacs=\E(B, rmir=\E[4l, rmso=\E[27m,
rmul=\E[24m, rs1=\Ec, rs2=\E[!p\E[?3;4l\E[4l\E>,
s0ds=\E(B, s1ds=\E(0, sc=\E7,
sgr=\E[0%?%p1%p6%|%t;1%;%?%p2%t;4%;%?%p5%t;2%;%?%p1%p3%|%t;7
%;m%?%p9%t\E(0%e\E(B%;,
sgr0=\E[m\E(B, smacs=\E(0, smir=\E[4h, smso=\E[7m,
smul=\E[4m, tbc=\E[3g, tsl=\E]2;%p1, vpa=\E[%i%p1%dd,
use=ecma+italics, use=ecma+index, use=xterm+256setaf,
use=xterm+sl-twm, use=xterm+alt1049,
#### TERMINOLOGY
# https://www.enlightenment.org/about-terminology
#
# Tested terminology-0.3.0, 0.6.1, using tack and vttest. This is not a vt100
# emulator, nor is it compatible with xterm, but it uses a few features from
# both -TD
#
# General comments:
# cursor does not fill on focus
# there are pervasive problems with clearing/erasing parts of the screen
# resizing the window causes it to stop listening to the keyboard
# tack -
# doesn't understand vt100 CPR needed for resize
# no CBT
# no cvvis
# has invis
# no blink
# uses bce model for colors, but (see below) fails the vttest screens
# has partial support for 256color feature.
# tack function-keys (a subset of xterm+pcf0), and
# tack cursor-keys (a subset of xterm+pce2):
# ctrl+shift (ignored)
# 2 shift
# shift-alt modifier -> shift (2)
# 3 alt
# 4
# 5 ctrl
# tack modifiers did not work for fkeys in 0.3.0; subset works in 0.6.1
# ctrl + khome/kend works - none of the other modifiers do
# vttest -
# spits lots of messages from termptyesc.c especially in vttest.
# no 132-column mode
# fails menu 1, 2 (definitely not vt100-compatible)
# primary (claims vt420 with several options, apparently none work) and
# secondary report says (perhaps... vt420): \E[>41;285;0c
# CHA, HPR, VPA, CNL, CPL work
# BCE with ED/EL - fail
# BCE with ECH/indexing - fail
# SD/SU work
# unlike teken, background light/dark works
# can set title
# X10 and Normal mouse work
# Any-event mouse works
# Mouse button-event works
#
# This description uses xterm+pcf0, which is misleading because the program
# does not handle combinations of modifiers - but listing them all would
# involve more effort than its developers spent -TD
terminology-0.6.1|EFL-based terminal emulator,
mc5i@,
blink@, ed@, el@, el1@, invis=\E[8m, kLFT=\E[1;2D,
kRIT=\E[1;2C, kf10=\E[21~, kf11=\E[23~, kf12=\E[24~,
kf5=\E[15~, kf6=\E[17~, kf7=\E[18~, kf8=\E[19~, kf9=\E[20~,
kind=\E[1;2B, kri=\E[1;2A,
sgr=\E[0%?%p1%p6%|%t;1%;%?%p2%t;4%;%?%p1%p3%|%t;7%;%?%p7%t;8
%;m%?%p9%t\016%e\017%;$<2>,
vpa=\E[%i%p1%dd, kDC3=\E[3;3~, kDC4=\E[3;4~,
kDC5=\E[3;5~, kDC6=\E[3;6~, kDC7=\E[3;7~, kDN=\E[1;2B,
kDN3=\E[1;3B, kDN4=\E[1;4B, kDN5=\E[1;5B, kDN6=\E[1;6B,
kDN7=\E[1;7B, kEND5=\E[1;5F, kHOM5=\E[1;5H,
kLFT3=\E[1;3D, kLFT4=\E[1;4D, kLFT5=\E[1;5D,
kLFT6=\E[1;6D, kLFT7=\E[1;7D, kRIT3=\E[1;3C,
kRIT4=\E[1;4C, kRIT5=\E[1;5C, kRIT6=\E[1;6C,
kRIT7=\E[1;7C, kUP=\E[1;2A, use=xterm+pcf0, use=vt100,
use=xterm+256setaf,
# Tested terminology 1.0.0
#
# tack -
# Shifted cursor-keys send nothing, but xterm modifiers for control+shift
# and control+alt were added like xterm+pcc2
# Editing keys have some features from xterm+pce2
# Changed from xterm+pcf0 to xterm+pcf2
#
# vttest -
# REP, SL, SR fail
#
# Aside from the partial fixes for function/cursor/editing keys, no improvement
# in other tests versus 0.6.1
terminology-1.0.0|EFL-based terminal emulator,
civis=\E[?25l, cnorm=\E[?12l\E[?25h, dim=\E[2m,
flash=\E[?5h$<100/>\E[?5l, kend=\E[OF, khome=\E[OH,
rmacs=\E(B,
sgr=%?%p9%t\E(0%e\E(B%;\E[0%?%p6%t;1%;%?%p5%t;2%;%?%p2%t;4%;
%?%p1%p3%|%t;7%;%?%p7%t;8%;m$<2>,
sgr0=\E(B\E[m, smacs=\E(0, use=ecma+italics,
use=xterm+x11mouse, use=xterm+pce2, use=xterm+pcf2,
use=xterm+pcc2, use=terminology-0.6.1,
terminology|EFL-based terminal emulator,
use=terminology-1.0.0,
######## OPENGL CLIENTS
#### Alacritty
# https://github.com/jwilm/alacritty
# Version 0.4.0 (2019/11/25)
# Version 0.3.3 (2019/08/03)
# Version 0.2.1 (2018/10/03)
# Project started in 2016/02, uses Rust and OpenGL, and in contrast to (most X
# terminal programs) is not designed to run with a remote server.
#
# Packaged in Arch Linux -
# vttest:
# initial screensize 24x80
# no DECCOLM (does not switch between 80/132 columns)
# otherwise, passes wrapping test
# no DECSCNM
# identifies as a vt102
# numeric keypad does not send expected codes (seen in 0.4.0)
# passes bce test
# vt220:
# ECH works in 0.3.3 (0.2.1 left text on right margin)
# no SRM, DECSCA
# vt320:
# fails DECXCPR
# does not implement any of the DECRQM/DECRPM controls
# does not implement any of the DECRQSS controls
# vt420:
# no DECLRMM
# no DECBI, DECFI
# other:
# fails CHT, otherwise ECMA-48 cursor movement ok
# fails ERM/SPA, SL, SR, passes REP, SD, SU
# xterm:
# no X10 mouse
# has normal and highlight mouse
# has any-event and button-event mouse
# + does support SGR-mouse
# + does not correctly support focus in/out events (seen in 0.4.0)
# cursor-position wrong after alternate-screen (fixed in 0.4.0)
# none of the dtterm controls work
# tack:
# bell and flash do not work
# blink does not work
# italics and crossed-out work (latter did not work in 0.2.1)
# function-keys work up (tested combinations which window manager allows)
# treats meta as escape-prefix
#
# The program sources include "alacritty" and "alacritty-direct", which are
# copied from "xterm-256color" and "xterm-direct" (but using semicolon for
# subparameter delimiter). Refactored here to use ncurses building blocks -TD
alacritty|alacritty terminal emulator,
rs1=\Ec\E]104\007, use=xterm+256color,
use=alacritty+common,
alacritty-direct|alacritty with direct color indexing,
use=xterm+indirect, use=alacritty+common,
# cancel km, since it is not actually meta mode -TD
# added ecma+strikeout in 0.3.3 -TD
# added xterm+sl-twm in 0.3.3 -TD
alacritty+common|base fragment for alacritty,
km@, npc,
kb2=\EOE, kbs=^?, kcbt=\E[Z, kent=\EOM, Se=\E[0 q,
use=ecma+index, use=xterm+sm+1006, use=xterm-basic,
use=xterm+app, use=ansi+rep, use=xterm+tmux,
use=ecma+strikeout, use=xterm+sl-twm, use=ecma+italics,
use=xterm+pce2, use=xterm+pcc2, use=xterm+pcf2,
#### Kitty
# https://github.com/kovidgoyal/kitty
# Version 0.13.3
# Project started in 2016/10 (see alacritty), but is a Python script rather
# than Rust, using OpenGL. The same caveats regarding remote connections
# apply. This is not an X terminal, though (like alacritty), it copies
# features from xterm.
#
# Regarding the name "kitty", that is a pun, reflected in the description.
# But see
# http://www.9bis.net/kitty/
# https://github.com/kovidgoyal/kitty/issues/9
# https://github.com/kovidgoyal/kitty/issues/1025
# and
# http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/bug-ncurses/2018-09/msg00005.html
# https://github.com/kovidgoyal/kitty/issues/879
#
# Notes:
# initial screensize 71x22
# does not respond to "resize -s"
# resizing with window manager gives no clues
# vttest
# does not switch between 80/132 columns
# fails wrapping test, copying vte/rxvt
# no reverse-background, no blink
# claims to be vt200:
# primary \E[?62;c
# secondary \E[>1;4000;12c
# however -
# no GR in the locking-shifts screen
# no NRCS or ISO-2022, anyway
# no VT52
# VT220:
# has DECTCEM, ECH, but no SRM and DECSCA
# has operating condition report, none of the others
# VT320:
# has SU/SD
# DECRQSS ok for DECSTBM, SGR, none of the others
# no status-line
# VT420:
# DECXCPR device status works, none of the others
# no left/right margins
# has DECCARA, but not DECERA, DECFRA, DECRARA, DECSERA
# inside of DECCARA is uncolored
# line-drawing with DECCARA does not work
# aside from left/right margins, editing sequences look ok
# no DECFI, DECBI
# color:
# fails ECH test for bce
# ISO-6429
# fails REP, SL, SL, but other cursor-movement ok
# xterm:
# does not recognize original alternate-screen
# cursor-position wrong after alternate-screen
# has normal mouse, any-event, any-button, but
# no X10 mouse
# no mouse-highlight tracking
# no DEC locator
# dtterm - only supports report-size chars/pixels
# recognizes tcap-query
# tack:
# flash doesn't work
# italics do not work
# bce should be set (but see vttest)
#* developer's terminfo stopped at kf25, but the program continues,
# copying xterm for the rest of the control+fkey sequence
# (but only one modifier is supported, like iTerm2).
#* it omitted shifted pageup/down
#* control+editing keys work
# In contrast to function-keys, some additional modifier combinations
# act like xterm for the editing/cursor-keys, e.g., alt+shift. While
# the implementation is incomplete, the building-blocks are consistent
# with what has been implemented -TD
# DECKPAM does not work -TD
#* ka1, ka3, kc1, kc3 were bogus (removed)
#* meta sends escape (removed kmm) -TD
#* cvvis does not make cursor "more visible" -TD
kitty|KovId's TTY,
use=xterm+256color, use=kitty+common,
kitty-direct|KovId's TTY using direct colors,
oc=\E]104\007, use=xterm+direct2, use=kitty+common,
kitty+common|KovId's TTY common properties,
am, mc5i, mir, msgr, npc, xenl,
cols#80, it#8, lines#24,
acsc=++\,\,--..00``aaffgghhiijjkkllmmnnooppqqrrssttuuvvwwxxy
yzz{{||}}~~,
bel=^G, bold=\E[1m, cbt=\E[Z, civis=\E[?25l,
clear=\E[H\E[2J, cnorm=\E[?12l\E[?25h, cr=\r,
csr=\E[%i%p1%d;%p2%dr, cub=\E[%p1%dD, cub1=^H,
cud=\E[%p1%dB, cud1=\n, cuf=\E[%p1%dC, cuf1=\E[C,
cup=\E[%i%p1%d;%p2%dH, cuu=\E[%p1%dA, cuu1=\E[A,
dch=\E[%p1%dP, dch1=\E[P, dim=\E[2m, dl=\E[%p1%dM,
dl1=\E[M, ech=\E[%p1%dX, ed=\E[J, el=\E[K, el1=\E[1K,
flash=\E[?5h$<100/>\E[?5l, home=\E[H, hpa=\E[%i%p1%dG,
ht=^I, hts=\EH, ich=\E[%p1%d@, il=\E[%p1%dL, il1=\E[L,
ind=\n, kbs=^?, kcbt=\E[Z, kcub1=\EOD, kcud1=\EOB,
kcuf1=\EOC, kcuu1=\EOA, kdch1=\E[3~, kend=\EOF, kf1=\EOP,
kf10=\E[21~, kf11=\E[23~, kf12=\E[24~, kf13=\E[1;2P,
kf14=\E[1;2Q, kf15=\E[1;2R, kf16=\E[1;2S, kf17=\E[15;2~,
kf18=\E[17;2~, kf19=\E[18;2~, kf2=\EOQ, kf20=\E[19;2~,
kf21=\E[20;2~, kf22=\E[21;2~, kf23=\E[23;2~,
kf24=\E[24;2~, kf25=\E[1;5P, kf26=\E[1;5Q, kf27=\E[1;5R,
kf28=\E[1;5S, kf29=\E[15;5~, kf3=\EOR, kf30=\E[17;5~,
kf31=\E[18;5~, kf32=\E[19;5~, kf33=\E[20;5~,
kf34=\E[21;5~, kf35=\E[23;5~, kf36=\E[24;5~, kf4=\EOS,
kf5=\E[15~, kf6=\E[17~, kf7=\E[18~, kf8=\E[19~, kf9=\E[20~,
khome=\EOH, kich1=\E[2~, kind=\E[1;2B, kmous=\E[M,
knp=\E[6~, kpp=\E[5~, kri=\E[1;2A, op=\E[39;49m, rc=\E8,
rev=\E[7m, ri=\EM, rmacs=\E(B, rmam=\E[?7l, rmir=\E[4l,
rmkx=\E[?1l, rmso=\E[27m, rmul=\E[24m, rs1=\Ec, sc=\E7,
sgr=%?%p9%t\E(0%e\E(B%;\E[0%?%p6%t;1%;%?%p5%t;2%;%?%p2%t;4%;
%?%p1%p3%|%t;7%;m,
sgr0=\E(B\E[m, smacs=\E(0, smam=\E[?7h, smir=\E[4h,
smkx=\E[?1h, smso=\E[7m, smul=\E[4m, tbc=\E[3g,
vpa=\E[%i%p1%dd, use=ecma+index, use=xterm+sl-twm,
use=ecma+strikeout, use=xterm+pce2, use=xterm+pcc2,
use=ecma+italics, use=xterm+alt1049,
#### Emacs
# https://www.emacswiki.org/emacs/AnsiTerm
# https://github.com/emacs-mirror/emacs/blob/master/lisp/term.el
#
# The codes supported by the term.el terminal emulation in GNU Emacs 19.30
eterm|gnu emacs term.el terminal emulation,
am, mir, xenl,
cols#80, lines#24,
bel=^G, bold=\E[1m, clear=\E[H\E[J, cr=\r,
csr=\E[%i%p1%d;%p2%dr, cub=\E[%p1%dD, cub1=^H,
cud=\E[%p1%dB, cud1=\n, cuf=\E[%p1%dC, cuf1=\E[C,
cup=\E[%i%p1%d;%p2%dH, cuu=\E[%p1%dA, cuu1=\E[A,
dch=\E[%p1%dP, dch1=\E[P, dl=\E[%p1%dM, dl1=\E[M, ed=\E[J,
el=\E[K, el1=\E[1K, home=\E[H, ht=^I, ich=\E[%p1%d@,
il=\E[%p1%dL, il1=\E[L, ind=\n, rev=\E[7m,
rmcup=\E[2J\E[?47l\E8, rmir=\E[4l, rmso=\E[m, rmul=\E[m,
sgr0=\E[m, smcup=\E7\E[?47h, smir=\E[4h, smso=\E[7m,
smul=\E[4m,
# The codes supported by the term.el terminal emulation in GNU Emacs 22.2
eterm-color|Emacs term.el terminal emulator term-protocol-version 0.96,
am, mir, msgr, xenl,
colors#8, cols#80, lines#24, pairs#64,
bel=^G, blink=\E[5m, bold=\E[1m, clear=\E[H\E[J, cr=\r,
csr=\E[%i%p1%d;%p2%dr, cub=\E[%p1%dD, cub1=^H,
cud=\E[%p1%dB, cud1=\n, cuf=\E[%p1%dC, cuf1=\E[C,
cup=\E[%i%p1%d;%p2%dH, cuu=\E[%p1%dA, cuu1=\E[A,
dch=\E[%p1%dP, dch1=\E[P, dl=\E[%p1%dM, dl1=\E[M, ed=\E[J,
el=\E[K, el1=\E[1K, home=\E[H, ht=^I, ich=\E[%p1%d@,
il=\E[%p1%dL, il1=\E[L, ind=\n, invis=\E[8m, kbs=^?,
kcub1=\EOD, kcud1=\EOB, kcuf1=\EOC, kcuu1=\EOA,
kdch1=\E[3~, kend=\E[4~, khome=\E[1~, kich1=\E[2~,
knp=\E[6~, kpp=\E[5~, op=\E[39;49m, rc=\E8, rev=\E[7m,
ri=\EM, rmir=\E[4l, rmso=\E[27m, rmul=\E[24m, rs1=\Ec,
sc=\E7, setab=\E[%p1%'('%+%dm, setaf=\E[%p1%{30}%+%dm,
sgr=\E[0%?%p1%p3%|%t;7%;%?%p2%t;4%;%?%p4%t;5%;%?%p6%t;1%;%?
%p7%t;8%;m,
sgr0=\E[m, smir=\E[4h, smso=\E[7m, smul=\E[4m,
u6=\E[%i%d;%dR, u7=\E[6n,
# shell.el can "do" color, though not nearly as well.
#
# seen here:
# http://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/237943/changing-colors-used-by-ls-does-not-work-in-emacs-shell-mode
#
# and
# https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/bug-gnu-emacs/2012-08/msg00481.html
# https://github.com/emacs-mirror/emacs/blob/master/lisp/shell.el
# https://github.com/emacs-mirror/emacs/blob/master/lisp/ansi-color.el
#
# however, as tested with Emacs 24.5.1, the result is buggy, losing overlays
# frequently. The contemporaneous term.el aka ansi-term does not "support"
# italics but does not lose the color information -TD 2017/01/28.
dumb-emacs-ansi|Emacs dumb terminal with ANSI color codes,
am, hc,
colors#8, it#8, ncv#13, pairs#64,
bold=\E[1m, cud1=\n, ht=^I, ind=\n, op=\E[39;49m,
rmul=\E[24m, setab=\E[4%p1%dm, setaf=\E[3%p1%dm,
sgr0=\E[m, smul=\E[4m, use=ecma+italics,
#### Screen
# Entries for use by the `screen' program by Juergen Weigert,
# Michael Schroeder, Oliver Laumann. The screen and
# screen-w entries came with version 3.7.1. The screen2 and screen3 entries
# come from University of Wisconsin and may be older.
# (screen: added <cnorm> on ANSI model -- esr)
#
# 'screen' defines extensions to termcap. Some are used in its terminal
# description:
# G0 (bool) Terminal can deal with ISO 2022 font selection sequences.
# AX (bool) Does understand ANSI set default fg/bg color
# (\E[39m / \E[49m).
# S0 (str) Switch charset 'G0' to the specified charset.
# E0 (str) Switch charset 'G0' back to standard charset.
#
# Initially tested with screen 3.09.08
#
# According to its manual page
#
# Screen is a full-screen window manager that multiplexes a physical
# terminal between several processes (typically interactive shells). Each
# virtual terminal provides the functions of a DEC VT100 terminal and, in
# addition, several control functions from the ISO 6429 (ECMA 48, ANSI
# X3.64) and ISO 2022 standards (e.g. insert/delete line and support for
# multiple character sets).
#
# However, there is a design error in its support for video highlights. The
# program uses a table (rendlist) which equates the SGR codes to terminal
# capabilities. That, and color-decoding are hardcoded in screen; its behavior
# is modified only by the presence or absence of the corresponding capabilities.
# Not by their values.
#
# If screen sets the TERMCAP variable, it uses hardcoded strings which
# correspond to the rendlist table.
#
# The table gives this information:
#
# SGR capability
# --- ---------
# 1 bold
# 2 dim
# 3 standout
# 4 underline
# 5 blink
# - (unused 6)
# 7 reverse
# - (unused 8-21)
# 22 reset bold, standout and dim
# 23 reset standout
# 24 reset underline
# 25 reset blink
# - (unused 26)
# 27 reset reverse
#
# ECMA-48 differs from this: 3 and 23 set and reset italics, respectively.
# ECMA-48 does not define "standout" - that is a termcap/terminfo abstraction.
# Without some redesign of screen, it is not possible to extend the set of
# capabilities. Substitution would be possible, e.g., sending italics in
# place of underline.
#
# Because screen uses hard-coded parsing, it does not check if two capabilities
# use the same value. For example, changing standout to be the same as any of
# the other capabilities will confuse screen. Curses applications which use
# sgr are not impacted (because that usually resets all capabilities before
# setting any), but termcap applications do not use sgr -TD
#
# The "screen" entry should use ecma+index rather than just indn, but tmux
# defaults to using "screen". For background, screen supported ecma+index
# since 1994 (i.e., screen 3.0.5), stating that it was an obscure code used by
# the (Siemens Nixdorf) 97801 terminal. It was not shown in the termcap or
# terminfo entries (which list about 60% of the control sequences).
screen|VT 100/ANSI X3.64 virtual terminal,
OTbs, OTpt, am, km, mir, msgr, xenl, G0,
colors#8, cols#80, it#8, lines#24, ncv@, pairs#64, U8#1,
acsc=++\,\,--..00``aaffgghhiijjkkllmmnnooppqqrrssttuuvvwwxxy
yzz{{||}}~~,
bel=^G, blink=\E[5m, bold=\E[1m, cbt=\E[Z, civis=\E[?25l,
clear=\E[H\E[J, cnorm=\E[34h\E[?25h, cr=\r,
csr=\E[%i%p1%d;%p2%dr, cub=\E[%p1%dD, cub1=^H,
cud=\E[%p1%dB, cud1=\n, cuf=\E[%p1%dC, cuf1=\E[C,
cup=\E[%i%p1%d;%p2%dH, cuu=\E[%p1%dA, cuu1=\EM,
cvvis=\E[34l, dch=\E[%p1%dP, dch1=\E[P, dim=\E[2m,
dl=\E[%p1%dM, dl1=\E[M, ed=\E[J, el=\E[K, el1=\E[1K,
enacs=\E(B\E)0, flash=\Eg, home=\E[H, hpa=\E[%i%p1%dG,
ht=^I, hts=\EH, ich=\E[%p1%d@, il=\E[%p1%dL, il1=\E[L,
ind=\n, indn=\E[%p1%dS, is2=\E)0, kbs=^H, kcbt=\E[Z,
kcub1=\EOD, kcud1=\EOB, kcuf1=\EOC, kcuu1=\EOA,
kdch1=\E[3~, kend=\E[4~, kf1=\EOP, kf10=\E[21~,
kf11=\E[23~, kf12=\E[24~, kf2=\EOQ, kf3=\EOR, kf4=\EOS,
kf5=\E[15~, kf6=\E[17~, kf7=\E[18~, kf8=\E[19~, kf9=\E[20~,
khome=\E[1~, kich1=\E[2~, kmous=\E[M, knp=\E[6~, kpp=\E[5~,
nel=\EE, rc=\E8, rev=\E[7m, ri=\EM, rmacs=^O, rmir=\E[4l,
rmkx=\E[?1l\E>, rmso=\E[23m, rmul=\E[24m,
rs2=\Ec\E[?1000l\E[?25h, sc=\E7,
sgr=\E[0%?%p6%t;1%;%?%p1%t;3%;%?%p2%t;4%;%?%p3%t;7%;%?%p4%t;
5%;%?%p5%t;2%;m%?%p9%t\016%e\017%;,
sgr0=\E[m\017, smacs=^N, smir=\E[4h, smkx=\E[?1h\E=,
smso=\E[3m, smul=\E[4m, tbc=\E[3g, vpa=\E[%i%p1%dd,
E0=\E(B, S0=\E(%p1%c, use=xterm+alt1049, use=ecma+color,
# The bce and status-line entries are from screen 3.9.13 (and require some
# changes to .screenrc).
screen-bce|VT 100/ANSI X3.64 virtual terminal with bce,
bce,
ech@, use=screen4,
screen-s|VT 100/ANSI X3.64 virtual terminal with hardstatus line,
dsl=\E_\E\\, fsl=\E\\, tsl=\E_, use=screen4,
# ======================================================================
# Entries for GNU Screen with 16 colors.
# Those variations permit to benefit from 16 colors palette, and from
# bold font and blink attribute separated from bright colors. But they
# are less portable than the generic "screen" 8 color entries: Their
# usage makes real sense only if the terminals you attach and reattach
# do all support 16 color palette.
screen-16color|GNU Screen with 16 colors,
use=ibm+16color, use=screen4,
screen-16color-s|GNU Screen with 16 colors and status line,
use=ibm+16color, use=screen-s,
screen-16color-bce|GNU Screen with 16 colors and BCE,
use=ibm+16color, use=screen-bce,
screen-16color-bce-s|GNU Screen with 16 colors using BCE and status line,
bce, use=ibm+16color, use=screen-s,
# ======================================================================
# Entries for GNU Screen 4.02 with --enable-colors256.
screen-256color|GNU Screen with 256 colors,
use=xterm+256setaf, use=screen4,
screen-256color-s|GNU Screen with 256 colors and status line,
use=xterm+256setaf, use=screen-s,
screen-256color-bce|GNU Screen with 256 colors and BCE,
bce, use=xterm+256setaf, use=screen-bce,
screen-256color-bce-s|GNU Screen with 256 colors using BCE and status line,
bce, use=xterm+256setaf, use=screen-s,
screen.xterm-256color|GNU Screen with xterm using 256 colors,
use=xterm+256setaf, use=screen.xterm-new,
screen.konsole-256color|GNU Screen with konsole using 256 colors,
use=xterm+256setaf, use=screen.konsole,
screen.vte-256color|GNU Screen with vte using 256 colors,
use=xterm+256setaf, use=screen.vte,
screen.mlterm-256color|GNU Screen with mlterm using 256 colors,
use=xterm+256setaf, use=screen.mlterm,
# ======================================================================
# Read the fine manpage:
# When screen tries to figure out a terminal name for
# itself, it first looks for an entry named "screen.<term>",
# where <term> is the contents of your $TERM variable. If
# no such entry exists, screen tries "screen" (or "screen-w"
# if the terminal is wide (132 cols or more)). If even this
# entry cannot be found, "vt100" is used as a substitute.
#
# Notwithstanding the manpage, screen uses its own notion of the termcap
# and some keys from "screen.<term>" are ignored. Here is an entry which
# covers those (tested with screen 4.00.02) -TD
screen+fkeys|function-keys according to screen,
kend=\E[4~, kf1=\EOP, kf2=\EOQ, kf3=\EOR, kf4=\EOS, kfnd@,
khome=\E[1~, kslt@,
# See explanation before "screen" entry. Cancel italics so that applications
# do not assume screen supports the feature. Add this tweak to entries which
# extend screen for terminals which do support italics.
screen+italics|screen cannot support italics,
ritm@, sitm@,
#
# Here are a few customized entries which are useful -TD
#
# Notes:
# (a) screen does not support invis.
# (b) screen's implementation of bw is incorrect according to tack.
# (c) screen appears to hardcode the strings for khome/kend, making it
# necessary to override the "use=" clause's values (screen+fkeys).
# (d) screen sets $TERMCAP to a termcap-formatted copy of the 'screen' entry,
# which is NOT the same as the terminfo screen.<term>.
# (e) when screen finds one of these customized entries, it sets $TERM to
# match. Hence, no "screen.xterm" entry is provided, since that would
# create heartburn for people running remote xterm's.
# (f) screen does not support rep.
#
# xterm (-xfree86 or -r6) does not normally support kIC, kNXT and kPRV
# since the default translations override the built-in keycode
# translation. They are suppressed here to show what is tested by tack.
screen.xterm-xfree86|screen.xterm-new|screen customized for modern xterm,
bce@, bw,
invis@, kIC@, kNXT@, kPRV@, meml@, memu@, rep@,
sgr=%?%p9%t\E(0%e\E(B%;\E[0%?%p6%t;1%;%?%p2%t;4%;%?%p1%p3%|
%t;7%;%?%p4%t;5%;%?%p5%t;2%;m,
E3@, use=screen+italics, use=screen+fkeys,
use=xterm+x11mouse, use=xterm-new,
#:screen.xterm|screen for modern xterm,
#: use=screen.xterm-new,
# xterm-r6 does not really support khome/kend unless it is propped up by
# the translations resource.
screen.xterm-r6|screen customized for X11R6 xterm,
bw, use=xterm+x11mouse, use=screen+fkeys, use=xterm-r6,
# Other terminals
screen.rxvt|screen in rxvt,
bw, XT,
cvvis@, flash@, kcub1=\EOD, kcud1=\EOB, kcuf1=\EOC,
kcuu1=\EOA, use=screen+fkeys, use=vt100+enq,
use=rxvt+pcfkeys, use=xterm+x11mouse, use=vt220+keypad,
use=screen4,
screen.vte|screen in any VTE-based terminal,
use=xterm+x11mouse, use=screen+italics,
use=screen+fkeys, use=vte,
screen.gnome|screen in GNOME Terminal,
use=xterm+x11mouse, use=screen+italics,
use=screen+fkeys, use=gnome,
screen.konsole|screen in KDE console window,
use=xterm+x11mouse, use=screen+italics,
use=screen+fkeys, use=konsole,
# fix the backspace key
screen.linux|screen in linux console,
bw,
kbs=^?, kcbt@, use=xterm+x11mouse, use=screen+fkeys,
use=screen4,
screen.mlterm|screen in mlterm,
use=xterm+x11mouse, use=screen+fkeys, use=mlterm,
# The default "screen" entry is reasonably portable, but not optimal for the
# most widely-used terminal emulators. The "bce" capability is supported in
# screen since 3.9.13, and when used, will require fewer characters to be sent
# to the terminal for updates.
#
# If you are using only terminals which support bce, then you can use this
# feature in your screen configuration.
#
# Adding these lines to your ".screenrc" file will allow using these customized
# entries:
# term screen-bce
# bce on
# defbce on
screen-bce.xterm-new|screen optimized for modern xterm,
bce,
ech@, use=screen+italics, use=screen.xterm-new,
screen-bce.rxvt|screen optimized for rxvt,
bce,
ech@, use=screen.rxvt,
screen-bce.gnome|screen optimized for GNOME-Terminal,
bce,
ech@, use=screen+italics, use=screen.gnome,
screen-bce.konsole|screen optimized for KDE console window,
bce,
ech@, use=screen+italics, use=screen.konsole,
screen-bce.linux|screen optimized for linux console,
bce,
ech@, use=screen.linux,
screen2|old VT 100/ANSI X3.64 virtual terminal,
cols#80, it#8, lines#24,
cbt=\E[Z, clear=\E[2J\E[H, cr=\r, cub=\E[%p1%dD, cub1=^H,
cud=\E[%p1%dB, cud1=\E[B, cuf=\E[%p1%dC, cuf1=\E[C,
cup=\E[%i%p1%d;%p2%dH, cuu=\E[%p1%dA, cuu1=\E[A,
dch=\E[%p1%dP, dch1=\E[P, dl=\E[%p1%dM, dl1=\E[M, ed=\E[J,
el=\E[K, ht=^I, hts=\EH, ich=\E[%p1%d@, ich1=, il=\E[%p1%dL,
il1=\E[L, ind=\n, kbs=^H, kcub1=\ED, kcud1=\EB, kcuf1=\EC,
kcuu1=\EA, kf0=\E~, kf1=\ES, kf2=\ET, kf3=\EU, kf4=\EV,
kf5=\EW, kf6=\EP, kf7=\EQ, kf8=\ER, kf9=\E0I, khome=\EH,
nel=\r\n, rc=\E8, ri=\EM, rmir=\E[4l, rmso=\E[23m,
rmul=\E[24m, rs1=\Ec, sc=\E7, sgr0=\E[m, smir=\E[4h,
smso=\E[3m, smul=\E[4m, tbc=\E[3g,
# (screen3: removed unknown ":xv:LP:G0:" -- esr)
screen3|older VT 100/ANSI X3.64 virtual terminal,
km, mir, msgr,
cols#80, it#8, lines#24,
bel=^G, blink=\E[5m, bold=\E[1m, cbt=\E[Z, clear=\E[H\E[J,
cr=\r, csr=\E[%i%p1%d;%p2%dr, cub=\E[%p1%dD, cub1=^H,
cud=\E[%p1%dB, cud1=\n, cuf=\E[%p1%dC, cuf1=\E[C,
cup=\E[%i%p1%d;%p2%dH, cuu=\E[%p1%dA, cuu1=\EM,
dch=\E[%p1%dP, dch1=\E[P, dl=\E[%p1%dM, dl1=\E[M, ed=\E[J,
el=\E[K, home=\E[H, ht=^I, hts=\EH, ich=\E[%p1%d@,
il=\E[%p1%dL, il1=\E[L, ind=\n, is2=\E)0, kbs=^H, kcub1=\EOD,
kcud1=\EOB, kcuf1=\EOC, kcuu1=\EOA, kf1=\EOP, kf2=\EOQ,
kf3=\EOR, kf4=\EOS, nel=\EE, rc=\E8, rev=\E[7m, ri=\EM,
rmir=\E[4l, rmkx=\E>, rmso=\E[23m, rmul=\E[24m, rs1=\Ec,
sc=\E7, sgr0=\E[m, smir=\E[4h, smkx=\E=, smso=\E[3m,
smul=\E[4m, tbc=\E[3g,
# screen 4.0 was released 2003-07-21, and as of March 2019, its terminfo file
# was last updated in 2009 to include 256-color support. The most recent
# release is 4.6.2 (October 2017).
screen4|VT 100/ANSI X3.64 virtual terminal,
use=ecma+index, use=screen,
# As of March 2019, screen 5.0 has not been released.
#
# However,
#
# https://savannah.gnu.org/bugs/?36676
#
# mentions a change to implement italics which should be in a version 5,
# (implemented 2016-11-05, but merged 2017-07-09). That does away with the
# longstanding use of SGR 3 for standout, and interprets it as italics.
#
# The same development branch has some support for direct-colors, but none
# of this has been documented.
screen5|VT 100/ANSI X3.64 virtual terminal (someday),
rmso=\E[27m,
sgr=\E[0%?%p6%t;1%;%?%p2%t;4%;%?%p1%p3%|%t;7%;%?%p4%t;5%;%?
%p5%t;2%;m%?%p9%t\016%e\017%;,
smso=\E[7m, use=ecma+italics, use=screen4,
#### Tmux
# tmux is mostly compatible with screen, but has support for italics, and some
# of the xterm cursor bits.
#
# However, unlike screen, tmux has no provision for using derived terminal
# descriptions. When screen starts, it looks for a suitable "inner" terminal
# such as "screen.$TERM" to correspond to the outer terminal's quirks. The
# various entries such as screen.xterm-new provide a way to more closely
# match the terminal.
tmux|tmux terminal multiplexer,
invis=\E[8m, rmso=\E[27m,
sgr=\E[0%?%p6%t;1%;%?%p2%t;4%;%?%p1%p3%|%t;7%;%?%p4%t;5%;%?
%p5%t;2%;%?%p7%t;8%;m%?%p9%t\016%e\017%;,
smso=\E[7m, E3=\E[3J, Smulx=\E[4\:%p1%dm,
use=ecma+italics, use=ecma+strikeout, use=xterm+edit,
use=xterm+pcfkeys, use=xterm+sl, use=xterm+tmux,
use=screen,
tmux-256color|tmux with 256 colors,
use=xterm+256setaf, use=tmux,
#### Dvtm
# dvtwm 0.15
# http://www.brain-dump.org/projects/dvtm/
#
# + This uses ncurses to manage the display, including support for italics and
# default-colors.
# + However, default-colors are incomplete: do not set bce.
# + It does not implement flash (since no \e[?5h)
# + Do not set XT: dvtm knows about OSC 0 and 2, but not 1.
# Oddly enough, if $TERM contains "linux", it attempts to set the title.
# + Some of the program is cut/paste from rxvt-unicode, e.g., the ACS table.
# + The built-in table of function-keys (based on rxvt) is incomplete (ends
# with kf22).
# + It also omits the shifted cursor- and editing-keypad keys.
# However, it is confused by xterm's shifted cursor- and editing-keypad keys
# (and passes those through without interpretation)
# and may simply pass-through rxvt's, making it appear to work.
# In other cases such as kf23 and up, no pass-through is done.
# + Most of the mode-settings in the initialization/reset strings are not
# implemented; dvtm copies its description from rxvt.
dvtm|dynamic virtual terminal manager,
am, eo, mir, msgr, xenl, AX,
colors#8, cols#80, it#8, lines#24, ncv@, pairs#64,
acsc=``aaffggjjkkllmmnnooppqqrrssttuuvvwwxxyyzz{{||}}~~,
bel=^G, blink=\E[5m, bold=\E[1m, civis=\E[?25l,
clear=\E[H\E[2J, cnorm=\E[?25h, cr=\r,
csr=\E[%i%p1%d;%p2%dr, cub=\E[%p1%dD, cub1=^H,
cud=\E[%p1%dB, cud1=\n, cuf=\E[%p1%dC, cuf1=\E[C,
cup=\E[%i%p1%d;%p2%dH, cuu=\E[%p1%dA, cuu1=\E[A,
dl=\E[%p1%dM, dl1=\E[M, ed=\E[J, el=\E[K, el1=\E[1K,
enacs=\E(B\E)0, home=\E[H, hpa=\E[%i%p1%dG, ht=^I, hts=\EH,
ich=\E[%p1%d@, ich1=\E[@, il=\E[%p1%dL, il1=\E[L, ind=\n,
is1=\E[?47l\E=\E[?1l,
is2=\E[r\E[m\E[2J\E[H\E[?7h\E[?1;3;4;6l\E[4l,
kDC=\E[3$, kEND=\E[8$, kHOM=\E[7$, kIC=\E[2$, kLFT=\E[d,
kNXT=\E[6$, kPRV=\E[5$, kRIT=\E[c, ka1=\EOw, ka3=\EOy,
kb2=\EOu, kbs=^?, kc1=\EOq, kc3=\EOs, kcbt=\E[Z, kcub1=\E[D,
kcud1=\E[B, kcuf1=\E[C, kcuu1=\E[A, kdch1=\E[3~,
kel=\E[8\^, kend=\E[8~, kent=\EOM, kf0=\E[21~, kf1=\E[11~,
kf10=\E[21~, kf11=\E[23~, kf12=\E[24~, kf13=\E[25~,
kf14=\E[26~, kf15=\E[28~, kf16=\E[29~, kf17=\E[31~,
kf18=\E[32~, kf19=\E[33~, kf2=\E[12~, kf20=\E[34~,
kf21=\E[23$, kf22=\E[24$, kf3=\E[13~, kf4=\E[14~,
kf5=\E[15~, kf6=\E[17~, kf7=\E[18~, kf8=\E[19~, kf9=\E[20~,
kfnd=\E[1~, khome=\E[7~, kich1=\E[2~, kind=\E[a,
kmous=\E[M, knp=\E[6~, kpp=\E[5~, kri=\E[b, kslt=\E[4~,
op=\E[39;49m, rc=\E8, rev=\E[7m, ri=\EM, rmacs=^O,
rmcup=\E[2J\E[?47l\E8, rmir=\E[4l, rmso=\E[27m,
rmul=\E[24m,
rs1=\E>\E[1;3;4;5;6l\E[?7h\E[m\E[r\E[2J\E[H,
rs2=\E[r\E[m\E[2J\E[H\E[?7h\E[?1;3;4;6l\E[4l\E>\E[?1000l\E[?
25h,
s0ds=\E(B, s1ds=\E(0, sc=\E7, setab=\E[4%p1%dm,
setaf=\E[3%p1%dm,
sgr=\E[0%?%p6%t;1%;%?%p2%t;4%;%?%p1%p3%|%t;7%;%?%p4%t;5%;m%?
%p9%t\016%e\017%;,
sgr0=\E[m\017, smacs=^N, smcup=\E7\E[?47h, smir=\E[4h,
smso=\E[7m, smul=\E[4m, tbc=\E[3g, vpa=\E[%i%p1%dd,
use=ecma+italics,
dvtm-256color|dynamic virtual terminal manager with 256 colors,
colors#0x100, pairs#0x10000,
setab=\E[%?%p1%{8}%<%t4%p1%d%e%p1%{16}%<%t10%p1%{8}%-%d%e48;
5;%p1%d%;m,
setaf=\E[%?%p1%{8}%<%t3%p1%d%e%p1%{16}%<%t9%p1%{8}%-%d%e38;5
;%p1%d%;m,
use=dvtm,