41
Aux Baud Rate:
[110, 134.5, 150, 300, 600, 1200, 1800, 2000, 2400, 4800,
9600
, 19200, 38400]
See the Quick menu earlier in this chapter.
AUX Data Format:
[7/1/O, 7/1/E, 7/1/M, 7/1/S, 7/2/N, 7/2/O, 7/2/E, 7/2/M, 7/2/S,
8/1/N
, 8/1/O, 8/1/E,
8/1/M, 8/1/S, 8/2/N]
See the Quick menu earlier in this chapter.
EIA (Aux) Recv:
[No Protocol
Xon-Xoff (XPC),
Xany-Xoff (XPC)
, DTR (DSR), Xany-Xoff/DTR (DSR)]
Choose the form of flow control for data received from the primary or
secondary host. Software flow control uses
Xon-Xoff D
C1 (11h) and DC3
(13h).
XPC
is used by “Scan Code” mode because it uses DC1 and DC3 as
data.
Xany-Xoff (XPC)
is similar to Xon-Xoff, except that any character
transmitted to the host is treated as an Xon, so data from the terminal is
buffered, rather than being sent to the host.
DTR (DSR
for Aux
)
relies on the
hardware signal DTR or DSR (pin 20 or pin 6) from the device.
Xany-Xoff/DTR (DSR)
uses software and hardware flow control
.
Flow control is recommended to protect against data loss.
EIA (Aux) Xmit:
[
No Protocol
,
Xon-Xoff, DSR (DTR), Both]
This is similar to “EIA (Aux) Recv,” except that it applies to the data
transmitted from the terminal to the primary or secondary host or printer.
DSR is the hardware signal for Data Set Ready (pin 6).
In ADDS
VP emulation and WP Graphics mode DC1 and
DC3 can be interpreted as data and should not be selected as
a form of Protocol.
EIA (Aux) Xmt Pace:
[
Baud
,
35 cps, 60 cps, 150 cps]
Define the maximum number of characters per second that the terminal can
transmit. When a characters limit (35 cps, 60 cps, or 135 cps) is set, the
delays are averaged between characters for the selected baud rate. This is
also known as “pacing.” The
Baud
option provides no pacing, allowing data
to be transmitted at the specified baud rate.