s set will have the word 'SECRET' appended to the message (See Message Formats). /BROADCAST /BROADCAST [Chnl#] <> This command will allow a user to send a message to any valid channel ignoring the users' password protection. If channel is specified, then the message will be sent to that channel, otherwise, the message will go to your current Talk channel. This command is useful if you would like to send one message to everyone on your channel, but would like to keep most of your messages 'Private'. /XEQ /XEQ [command] This command will activate/deactivate Background (BG) processing. If entered without the command and the user has activated BG, then BG will be turned OFF. If entered without the command and BG has not been activated, it will be activated. Once activated, more /XEQ commands can be entered to execute. anything that is legal to be entered at a terminal may be entered to BG mode. I.E. You can do SYSTAT, enter a new program, edit a file etc. If your BG job generates large amounts of output, you may ^C (Control/C) interrupt the background job. THIS WILL ONLY WORK WHILE IN BG OUTPUT MODE, if entered at other times, CB will be exited. Note: If command entered is '<>', it will be translated to NULL line (i.e. only), it a line contains anything of the form '^n' where 'n' is a letter, that combination will be translated to CTRL/n. To override this, the user must append an underscore ('_') to the control sequence. If the user would like to send an underscore, they must enter 2 underscores which will translate to 1. Also note that if the BG job does not enter a KB wait or I/O state within appoximately 10 seconds, the user will be placed back in CB command mode. A scan for BG I/O will occur appoximately every 3 seconds. This scan will be invisible to the user as he may enter CB commands during these scans. Only when I/O is found, will the user be interrupted to show this I/O. If the BG job is running, then any attempt to send a command to the background (except '/XEQ ^ctrl/char') will cause an error and the command will NOT BE SENT. Note that '/XEQ ^C' will interrupt the BG and cause it to enter KB state. Note: A user on a V9 RSTS system with a HASHED password will be required to login the background job with PPn, password information. /ESCAPE KEY ($) $ (ESCAPE KEY) The escape key allows the user to enter or exit a 'locked' background environment. This environment is equivalent to an ATPK run using KB: for input file. If currently in locked background mode, another entered Escape character will unlock the background, BUT LEAVE BG mode open allowing for re-entry by entering another escape. NOTE: Control characters such as CTRL/C, CTRL/T, CTRL/Z should be entered as 'uparrow letter' (^n) to be recognized as background control characters, otherwise, it is possible that they might be interpreted as forground control. To send a message while in 'locked' mode, append 2 periods ('..') to the beginning of the message, they will be removed and the message sent on your talk channel. Note: You may also execute CB commands by entering '../command' as you can think of '..' as a reverse-shift. Note: A user on a V9 RSTS system with a HASHED password will be required to login the background job with PPn, password information. /CALL /CALL Kb# This command will send a message to the specified terminal currently NOT running CB, to request that they do run CB. The message sent is of the form: **CB - User: Handle - Please enter CB on Channel #n** where: Handle is the current user NAME n is the current users' TALK channel Note: If the specified job is already in CB, an error message is generated and the message is not sent. /TIME /TIME This command will display the current date and time. This is useful when using CB for an extended period of time. /KB /KB KB will toggle a bit in the user flag word allowing him to recieve KB numbers when a message is recieved byCB HLP[.050015]CB .HLP[.050015]    X14|H [4;Ik(&'( k ߫H&P` \RrPP2PPzPP{PPPPP2P~\$\\TD 0D \~ hi) +\ ^( n ^( np\^txY\^ˀ\!kVk<\F˰<˴ˬ\VVkˤ1`@lP ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ$.?0123456789<@<SЬTЬ UQS>?\\\\\\\\\`:#@'="\abcdefghi\\\\\\\jklmnopqr\\\\\\\~stuvwxyz\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\{ABCDEFGHI\\\\\\}JKLMNOPQR\\\\\\\\STUVWXYZ\\\\\\0123456789\\\\\  !"#$%&'()*+,-./0123456789:;<=>?@ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ[\]^_`ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ{|}~@ggh<i|o<m<4p<p<k|Zn<l fr rwx<x<x<x޺<w@]@@fjnr]Ze@@|> | |v<H|  |  |xz|  |zt f r   < &^ @&@'*/V,"?Lh:hmBmz|z{x`y~|fN|@@|@͂|@ ݃ƃ<ns<|Ŏ |️|ep|u|-@率|<ᄇ2ֻr||ZRM | ntB|xyvZw|J=|R>|J? nnaa|bddflayed as 'Cxx' or 'Bxx' indicating channel number is replaced by the string 'OPR' /STAT /STAT Display CB statistics. Init date, last use date and user counts. *Attributes Job attributes associate special processing modes with a specific job. Special modes cause different forms of the broadcast header to be displayed upon recieving a message. The mode or attributes set cause different information to be displayed (See Message Formats). *Message Formats Messages recieved are displayed in different formats depending on the Job attributes set. See below for description: +SPY+SECRET (KBxxx:*[PPN](xx)HANDLE/Cxx) Message text here | | PnnJjj | | | | | | | | | | | | +----Message sent | | | | | | +-------------Channel message sent | | | | | | on (xx), If message | | | | | | sent by broadcast, | | | | | | then Bxx is displayed | | | | | | If message is sent by | | | | | | /ALL then OPR is | | | | | | displayed | | | | | +--------------------Sending Jobs' handle | | | | +------------------------Job sending message. | | | | This can be displayed | | | | if /JOB is toggled ON | | | +----------------------------Job PPN sending Msg. | | | This can be displayed | | | if /PPN is toggled ON | | +-----------------------------------Job KB# sending Msg. | | This can be displayed | | if /KB is toggled ON. | | If the KB is on a | | dial-up line, the star | | shown is displayed. | +-------------------------------------------This is displayed if | the message sent has | the /RESTRICT option | set. +------------------------------------------------This is displayed if the message is sent with the /RESTRICT option, but recieved with the /SPY option set, which is privileged. *Ccl-logged-out CB can be set up by the operator to be called by CCL for certain functions (See Installation for installation instructions). Commands that are valid through CCL are: /LIST - list jobs on CCL /WATCH n - Watch jobs on a certain channel. Note: For CCL, channel number MUST be specified. /HELP - Display help message /KILL xx - PRIV - Kill a job in CB, user must be privileged to do this. /TIME - Display current Date/Time CB may also be entered with the HANDLE in place of the command. Example: CB LONESTAR will enter you into CB with the handle set to 'LONESTAR'. Note: If CB is set up to be entered logged-out (See Installation), all CCL commands are valid EXCEPT entering CB with a 'handle' set, which gives an error message. *AUTHOR Philip Hunt System Industries 1855 Barber Lane M/S 401 Milpitas, CA 95035 (408)942-1212 x417 CB HLP[.050015]CB .HLP[.050015]    X14|H [4;Ik(&'( k ߫H&P` \RrPP2PPzPP{PPPPP2P~\$\\TD 0D \~ hi) +\ ^( n ^( np\^txY\^ˀ\!kVk<\F˰<˴ˬ\VVkˤ1`@lP ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ$.?0123456789<@<SЬTЬ UQS>?\\\\\\\\\`:#@'="\abcdefghi\\\\\\\jklmnopqr\\\\\\\~stuvwxyz\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\{ABCDEFGHI\\\\\\}JKLMNOPQR\\\\\\\\STUVWXYZ\\\\\\0123456789\\\\\  !"#$%&'()*+,-./0123456789:;<=>?@ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ[\]^_`ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ{|}~@ggh<i|o<m<4p<p<k|Zn<l fr rwx<x<x<x޺<w@]@@fjnr]Ze@@|> | |v<H|  |  |xz|  |zt f r   < &^ @&@'*/V,"?Lh:hmBmz|z{x`y~|fN|@@|@͂|@ ݃ƃ<ns<|Ŏ |️|ep|u|-@率|<ᄇ2ֻr||ZRM | ntB|xyvZw|J=|R>|J? nnaa|bddf