Lets the world know we're alive — but nothing else.
0
Reports startup options.
1
Reports connection and disconnection events.
2
Reports numbers of characters being sent/received.
4
Displays data written to the client process.
8
Displays data written to the Terminal Server.
16
Reports telnet negotiations.
32
Displays data read from the Terminal Server.
64
Displays data read from the client process.
128
Adding the desired level numbers together can combine
these levels. Care should be taken when a high debug level
is set because the log file could grow too large.
-s<string> Used to transmit breaks to modems. If the daemon reads
in the specified string from the client it will send a Telnet
'Do Break' command to the Terminal Server. The
maximum length of the string is 15 characters though, for
the sake of efficiency, a minimal length should be used so
long as the string is not accidentally duplicated by the real
data. This option requires you to also use the -T option.
-c<n> Network connection timeout option. The daemon will
try for n seconds to establish a TCP connection after
which time it will abort and discard any pending data.
The default is to try forever.
An example of a daemon configuration file is:
-x3 -T TSERVER1 10011 TSERVER1.11
-x35 -T -a -h -s xxx -c60 TSERVER1 10013 TSERVER1.13
-x39 -p -T -h -a -k60 TSERVER2 10009 TSERVER2.9
Each line represents a daemon to be started with the
arguments on that line.
Other Devices Setup
75