The Kermit Project |
Columbia
University
612 West 115th Street, New York NY 10025 USA • kermit@columbia.edu
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The most popular Kermit programs are listed in the table below. Unless otherwise noted, all of these can make TCP/IP network connections (clear-text or secured by Kerberos IV, Kerberos V, or SSL/TLS), direct serial-port connections, and dialed modem connections, and can accept incoming connections of all these types. They can conduct interactive terminal sessions. They can transfer files with Kermit or FTP protocol. Those that can make Internet connections support the Telnet, Rlogin, FTP, and HTTP protocols unless otherwise noted. Their operation can be automated using the script programming language. And they can convert among a wide variety of text character sets in both terminal sessions and file transfer. [Read more...]
Program/Link | Platform | Description |
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Kermit 95
2.1.3 | MS Windows, IBM OS/2 | Since 1995. Supports all 32-bit versions of Microsoft Windows as well as OS/2 Warp. Runs on 64-bit Windows versions in 32-bit mode. Emulates over 40 different terminals including VT100, VT220, VT320, ANSI, HP, IBM, Linux Console, Sun Console, QNX, AT386, SCO ANSI, SNI 97801, Televideo, Wyse, and many others. Also supports XYZMODEM file transfer and SSH security in addition to Kerberos and SSL/TLS. As of 30 March 2011 the K95 manual is available online. |
C-Kermit
8.0.211 | Unix, VMS, VOS, OS-9, AOS/VS, others | Since 1985. Supports hundreds of 32-bit and 64-bit Unix varieties (Linux, Mac OS X, Solaris, AIX, HP-UX, FreeBSD, NetBSD, SCO, many others) as well as VMS on VAX, Alpha, and IA64. Older versions available for 16-bit Unix versions as well as for other operating systems including Stratus VOS, OS-9, AOS/VS, Atari ST, Commodore Amiga, and Apple Macintosh. The Unix version can make ssh connections using the external Unix SSH client, and has optional built-in support for SSL/TLS and Kerberos security. C-Kermit is also the basis for Kermit 95. Version 9.0 is in Alpha test. |
MS-DOS Kermit
3.14, 3.15, 3.16 | MS-DOS, PC-DOS, Windows 3.x | Since 1982. For DOS 2.0 or later and 16-bit Microsoft Windows versions through 3.11. Includes built-in TCP/IP stack. Emulates 15 terminals, including DEC VT100, 220, 320; Data General DASHER, Wyse50, ANSI text terminals as well as Tektronix and DG color graphics. Does not include encryption, TCP/IP supports Telnet only. Fits on a single diskette. Not for 32-bit or 64-bit Windows. |
G-Kermit
1.00 | Unix | Since 1999. Simple and fast Kermit protocol implementation written to satisfy the demand for a GPL Kermit file-transfer program for Unix. File transfer only, remote end only; no making connections, no terminal emulation, no scripting, no character-set conversion. |
E-Kermit
1.6 | (Any) | Since 2004. Super-compact and efficient Kermit protocol code for embedding. File transfer only, no security, no making connections, no terminal emulation, no scripting, no character-set conversion. This is not a complete communication application, just a "subroutine" that executes the Kermit file transfer protocol suitable for embedding in other programs or in chips or devices. Source code now available. |
IBM Mainframe Kermit
4.3.2 | VM/CMS, MVS/TSO, OS/390, CICS, MUSIC | Since 1982. Kermit file transfer for IBM mainframe operating systems. Far end only, no making connections, no terminal emulation. Extensive character-set conversion capabilities supporting many Country Encoded EBCDIC code pages. |
There are hundreds of other Kermit programs, most of them for operating systems long forgotten — MULTICS, NOS, GCOS, MUMPS, RT-11, RSX-11, TOPS-10, TOPS-20, OS/8, MPE, CP/M-80, CP/M-86, iRMX-86, ISIS, PICK, UCSD p-System, Flex, IDRIS, Xelos, TISP, PRIMOS, Sperry VS9, Nonstop, TRSDOS, ... And some that are making a comeback on emulators that are much faster than the original machines. Some of these are listed here, and the rest can be found on the Kermit FTP site:
Link | Description |
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ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/ | The Kermit FTP archive accessed by FTP [help and troubleshooting] |
http://kermit.columbia.edu/ftp/ | The Kermit FTP archive accessed via HTTP (Web browser) |
If time permits the FTP archive will be reorganized and catalogued for convenient Web access. The current organization dates from pre-Internet magnetic tape days (each directory holds what will fit on one tape).
Link | Description |
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cancellation.html | Announcement of the cancellation of the Kermit Project |
transition.html | Cancellation roadmap |
kermit.html | What is Kermit? Overview. |
ckututor.html | C-Kermit tutorial |
k95tutor.html | Kermit 95 tutorial |
ckscripts.html | The Kermit script language - tutorial and samples |
ftpclient.html | Kermit's secure scriptable FTP client |
ftpscripts.html | How to automate FTP sessions |
security.html | Internet security methods supported by Kermit software |
FAQ | Frequently asked questions |
iksd.html | The Internet Kermit service |
manuals.html | Kermit Books (published manuals) |
biblio.html | Kermit Bibliography |
comp.protocols.kermit.misc | The Kermit Newsgroup 1994-2011 (at Google Groups) |
knews | Kermit News Issues 1986-1994 |
support.html | Kermit software technical support |
csetnames.html | Kermit character-set names |
csettables.html | Character-set tables |
utf8 | UTF-8 Unicode character-set sampler |
em-apex | Kermit Assists in Storm Tracking |
nasa | Kermit Supports NASA on the International Space Station |
postal | International Postal Addressing |
timeline | Columbia University Computing History 1754-2005 |