NAME¶
Dislocate - disconnect and reconnect processes
SYNOPSIS¶
dislocate [
program args... ]
INTRODUCTION¶
Dislocate allows processes to be disconnected and reconnected to the
terminal. Possible uses:
- •
- You can disconnect a process from a terminal at work and
reconnect from home, to continue working.
- •
- After having your line be dropped due to noise, you can get
back to your process without having to restart it from scratch.
- •
- If you have a problem that you would like to show someone,
you can set up the scenario at your own terminal, disconnect, walk down
the hall, and reconnect on another terminal.
- •
- If you are in the middle of a great game (or whatever) that
does not allow you to save, and someone else kicks you off the terminal,
you can disconnect, and reconnect later.
USAGE¶
When run with no arguments,
Dislocate tells you about your disconnected
processes and lets you reconnect to one. Otherwise,
Dislocate runs the
named program along with any arguments.
By default, ^] is an escape that lets you talk to
Dislocate itself. At
that point, you can disconnect (by pressing ^D) or suspend
Dislocate
(by pressing ^Z).
Any Tcl or Expect command is also acceptable at this point. For example, to
insert the contents of a the file /etc/motd as if you had typed it, say:
send -i $out [exec cat /etc/motd]
To send the numbers 1 to 100 in response to the prompt "next #", say:
for {set i 0} {$i<100} {incr i} {
expect -i $in "next #"
send -i $out "$i\r"
}
Scripts can also be prepared and sourced in so that you don't have to type them
on the spot.
Dislocate is actually just a simple
Expect script. Feel free to
make it do what you want it to do or just use
Expect directly, without
going through
Dislocate.
Dislocate understands a few special
arguments. These should appear before any program name. Each should be
separated by whitespace. If the arguments themselves takes arguments, these
should also be separated by whitespace.
The
-escape flag sets the escape to whatever follows. The default escape
is ^].
CAVEATS¶
This program was written by the author as an exercise to show that communicating
with disconnected processes is easy. There are many features that could be
added, but that is not the intent of this program.
SEE ALSO¶
Tcl(3),
libexpect(3)
"Exploring Expect: A Tcl-Based Toolkit for Automating Interactive
Programs" by Don Libes, O'Reilly and Associates, January 1995.
AUTHOR¶
Don Libes, National Institute of Standards and Technology