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| 4 | - 1 - |
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| 7 | |
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| 8 | XMODEM/YMODEM PROTOCOL REFERENCE |
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| 9 | A compendium of documents describing the |
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| 10 | |
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| 11 | XMODEM and YMODEM |
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| 12 | |
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| 13 | File Transfer Protocols |
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| 14 | |
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| 17 | |
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| 18 | This document was formatted 10-14-88. |
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| 26 | Edited by Chuck Forsberg |
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| 27 | |
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| 35 | |
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| 36 | This file may be redistributed without restriction |
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| 37 | provided the text is not altered. |
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| 38 | |
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| 39 | Please distribute as widely as possible. |
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| 40 | |
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| 41 | Questions to Chuck Forsberg |
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| 46 | |
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| 47 | Omen Technology Inc |
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| 48 | The High Reliability Software |
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| 49 | 17505-V Sauvie Island Road |
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| 50 | Portland Oregon 97231 |
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| 51 | VOICE: 503-621-3406 :VOICE |
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| 52 | TeleGodzilla BBS: 503-621-3746 Speed 19200(Telebit PEP),2400,1200,300 |
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| 53 | CompuServe: 70007,2304 |
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| 54 | GEnie: CAF |
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| 55 | UUCP: ...!tektronix!reed!omen!caf |
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| 70 | - 2 - |
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| 72 | |
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| 73 | |
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| 74 | 1. TOWER OF BABEL |
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| 75 | |
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| 76 | A "YMODEM Tower of Babel" has descended on the microcomputing community |
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| 77 | bringing with it confusion, frustration, bloated phone bills, and wasted |
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| 78 | man hours. Sadly, I (Chuck Forsberg) am partly to blame for this mess. |
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| 79 | |
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| 80 | As author of the early 1980s batch and 1k XMODEM extensions, I assumed |
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| 81 | readers of earlier versions of this document would implement as much of |
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| 82 | the YMODEM protocol as their programming skills and computing environments |
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| 83 | would permit. This proved a rather naive assumption as programmers |
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| 84 | motivated by competitive pressure implemented as little of YMODEM as |
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| 85 | possible. Some have taken whatever parts of YMODEM that appealed to them, |
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| 86 | applied them to MODEM7 Batch, Telink, XMODEM or whatever, and called the |
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| 87 | result YMODEM. |
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| 88 | |
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| 89 | Jeff Garbers (Crosstalk package development director) said it all: "With |
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| 90 | protocols in the public domain, anyone who wants to dink around with them |
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| 91 | can go ahead." [1] |
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| 92 | |
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| 93 | Documents containing altered examples derived from YMODEM.DOC have added |
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| 94 | to the confusion. In one instance, some self styled rewriter of history |
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| 95 | altered the heading in YMODEM.DOC's Figure 1 from "1024 byte Packets" to |
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| 96 | "YMODEM/CRC File Transfer Protocol". None of the XMODEM and YMODEM |
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| 97 | examples shown in that document were correct. |
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| 98 | |
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| 99 | To put an end to this confusion, we must make "perfectly clear" what |
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| 100 | YMODEM stands for, as Ward Christensen defined it in his 1985 coining of |
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| 101 | the term. |
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| 102 | |
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| 103 | To the majority of you who read, understood, and respected Ward's |
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| 104 | definition of YMODEM, I apologize for the inconvenience. |
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| 105 | |
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| 106 | 1.1 Definitions |
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| 107 | |
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| 108 | ARC ARC is a program that compresses one or more files into an archive |
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| 109 | and extracts files from such archives. |
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| 110 | |
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| 111 | XMODEM refers to the file transfer etiquette introduced by Ward |
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| 112 | Christensen's 1977 MODEM.ASM program. The name XMODEM comes from |
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| 113 | Keith Petersen's XMODEM.ASM program, an adaptation of MODEM.ASM |
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| 114 | for Remote CP/M (RCPM) systems. It's also called the MODEM or |
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| 115 | MODEM2 protocol. Some who are unaware of MODEM7's unusual batch |
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| 116 | file mode call it MODEM7. Other aliases include "CP/M Users' |
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| 117 | Group" and "TERM II FTP 3". The name XMODEM caught on partly |
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| 118 | because it is distinctive and partly because of media interest in |
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| 119 | |
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| 120 | |
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| 121 | __________ |
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| 122 | |
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| 123 | 1. Page C/12, PC-WEEK July 12, 1987 |
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| 124 | |
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| 127 | |
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| 128 | Chapter 1 |
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| 136 | X/YMODEM Protocol Reference June 18 1988 3 |
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| 139 | |
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| 140 | bulletin board and RCPM systems where it was accessed with an |
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| 141 | "XMODEM" command. This protocol is supported by every serious |
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| 142 | communications program because of its universality, simplicity, |
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| 143 | and reasonable performance. |
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| 144 | |
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| 145 | XMODEM/CRC replaces XMODEM's 1 byte checksum with a two byte Cyclical |
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| 146 | Redundancy Check (CRC-16), giving modern error detection |
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| 147 | protection. |
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| 148 | |
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| 149 | XMODEM-1k Refers to the XMODEM/CRC protocol with 1024 byte data blocks. |
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| 150 | |
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| 151 | YMODEM Refers to the XMODEM/CRC (optional 1k blocks) protocol with batch |
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| 152 | transmission as described below. In a nutshell, YMODEM means |
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| 153 | BATCH. |
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| 154 | |
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| 155 | YMODEM-g Refers to the streaming YMODEM variation described below. |
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| 156 | |
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| 157 | True YMODEM(TM) In an attempt to sort out the YMODEM Tower of Babel, Omen |
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| 158 | Technology has trademarked the term True YMODEM(TM) to represent |
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| 159 | the complete YMODEM protocol described in this document, including |
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| 160 | pathname, length, and modification date transmitted in block 0. |
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| 161 | Please contact Omen Technology about certifying programs for True |
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| 162 | YMODEM(TM) compliance. |
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| 163 | |
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| 164 | ZMODEM uses familiar XMODEM/CRC and YMODEM technology in a new protocol |
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| 165 | that provides reliability, throughput, file management, and user |
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| 166 | amenities appropriate to contemporary data communications. |
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| 167 | |
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| 168 | ZOO Like ARC, ZOO is a program that compresses one or more files into |
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| 169 | a "zoo archive". ZOO supports many different operating systems |
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| 170 | including Unix and VMS. |
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| 193 | |
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| 194 | Chapter 1 |
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| 202 | X/YMODEM Protocol Reference June 18 1988 4 |
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| 204 | |
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| 205 | |
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| 206 | 2. YMODEM MINIMUM REQUIREMENTS |
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| 207 | |
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| 208 | All programs claiming to support YMODEM must meet the following minimum |
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| 209 | requirements: |
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| 210 | |
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| 211 | + The sending program shall send the pathname (file name) in block 0. |
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| 212 | |
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| 213 | + The pathname shall be a null terminated ASCII string as described |
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| 214 | below. |
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| 215 | |
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| 216 | For those who are too lazy to read the entire document: |
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| 217 | |
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| 218 | + Unless specifically requested, only the file name portion is |
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| 219 | sent. |
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| 220 | |
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| 221 | + No drive letter is sent. |
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| 222 | |
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| 223 | + Systems that do not distinguish between upper and lower case |
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| 224 | letters in filenames shall send the pathname in lower case only. |
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| 225 | |
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| 226 | |
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| 227 | + The receiving program shall use this pathname for the received file |
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| 228 | name, unless explicitly overridden. |
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| 229 | |
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| 230 | + When the receiving program receives this block and successfully |
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| 231 | opened the output file, it shall acknowledge this block with an ACK |
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| 232 | character and then proceed with a normal XMODEM file transfer |
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| 233 | beginning with a "C" or NAK tranmsitted by the receiver. |
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| 234 | |
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| 235 | + The sending program shall use CRC-16 in response to a "C" pathname |
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| 236 | nak, otherwise use 8 bit checksum. |
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| 237 | |
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| 238 | + The receiving program must accept any mixture of 128 and 1024 byte |
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| 239 | blocks within each file it receives. Sending programs may |
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| 240 | arbitrarily switch between 1024 and 128 byte blocks. |
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| 241 | |
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| 242 | + The sending program must not change the length of an unacknowledged |
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| 243 | block. |
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| 244 | |
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| 245 | + At the end of each file, the sending program shall send EOT up to ten |
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| 246 | times until it receives an ACK character. (This is part of the |
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| 247 | XMODEM spec.) |
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| 248 | |
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| 249 | + The end of a transfer session shall be signified by a null (empty) |
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| 250 | pathname, this pathname block shall be acknowledged the same as other |
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| 251 | pathname blocks. |
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| 252 | |
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| 253 | Programs not meeting all of these requirements are not YMODEM compatible, |
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| 254 | and shall not be described as supporting YMODEM. |
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| 255 | |
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| 256 | Meeting these MINIMUM requirements does not guarantee reliable file |
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| 259 | |
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| 260 | Chapter 2 |
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| 268 | X/YMODEM Protocol Reference June 18 1988 5 |
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| 269 | |
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| 270 | |
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| 271 | |
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| 272 | transfers under stress. Particular attention is called to XMODEM's single |
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| 273 | character supervisory messages that are easily corrupted by transmission |
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| 274 | errors. |
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| 325 | |
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| 326 | Chapter 2 |
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| 333 | |
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| 334 | X/YMODEM Protocol Reference June 18 1988 6 |
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| 335 | |
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| 336 | |
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| 337 | |
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| 338 | 3. WHY YMODEM? |
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| 339 | |
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| 340 | Since its development half a decade ago, the Ward Christensen modem |
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| 341 | protocol has enabled a wide variety of computer systems to interchange |
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| 342 | data. There is hardly a communications program that doesn't at least |
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| 343 | claim to support this protocol. |
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| 344 | |
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| 345 | Advances in computing, modems and networking have revealed a number of |
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| 346 | weaknesses in the original protocol: |
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| 347 | |
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| 348 | + The short block length caused throughput to suffer when used with |
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| 349 | timesharing systems, packet switched networks, satellite circuits, |
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| 350 | and buffered (error correcting) modems. |
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| 351 | |
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| 352 | + The 8 bit arithmetic checksum and other aspects allowed line |
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| 353 | impairments to interfere with dependable, accurate transfers. |
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| 354 | |
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| 355 | + Only one file could be sent per command. The file name had to be |
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| 356 | given twice, first to the sending program and then again to the |
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| 357 | receiving program. |
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| 358 | |
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| 359 | + The transmitted file could accumulate as many as 127 extraneous |
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| 360 | bytes. |
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| 361 | |
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| 362 | + The modification date of the file was lost. |
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| 363 | |
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| 364 | A number of other protocols have been developed over the years, but none |
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| 365 | have displaced XMODEM to date: |
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| 366 | |
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| 367 | + Lack of public domain documentation and example programs have kept |
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| 368 | proprietary protocols such as Blast, Relay, and others tightly bound |
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| 369 | to the fortunes of their suppliers. |
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| 370 | |
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| 371 | + Complexity discourages the widespread application of BISYNC, SDLC, |
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| 372 | HDLC, X.25, and X.PC protocols. |
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| 373 | |
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| 374 | + Performance compromises and complexity have limited the popularity of |
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| 375 | the Kermit protocol, which was developed to allow file transfers in |
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| 376 | environments hostile to XMODEM. |
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| 377 | |
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| 378 | The XMODEM protocol extensions and YMODEM Batch address some of these |
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| 379 | weaknesses while maintaining most of XMODEM's simplicity. |
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| 380 | |
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| 381 | YMODEM is supported by the public domain programs YAM (CP/M), |
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| 382 | YAM(CP/M-86), YAM(CCPM-86), IMP (CP/M), KMD (CP/M), rz/sz (Unix, Xenix, |
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| 383 | VMS, Berkeley Unix, Venix, Xenix, Coherent, IDRIS, Regulus). Commercial |
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| 384 | implementations include MIRROR, and Professional-YAM.[1] Communications |
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| 391 | |
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| 392 | Chapter 3 |
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| 400 | X/YMODEM Protocol Reference June 18 1988 7 |
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| 401 | |
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| 403 | |
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| 404 | programs supporting these extensions have been in use since 1981. |
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| 405 | |
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| 406 | The 1k block length (XMODEM-1k) described below may be used in conjunction |
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| 407 | with YMODEM Batch Protocol, or with single file transfers identical to the |
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| 408 | XMODEM/CRC protocol except for minimal changes to support 1k blocks. |
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| 409 | |
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| 410 | Another extension is the YMODEM-g protocol. YMODEM-g provides batch |
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| 411 | transfers with maximum throughput when used with end to end error |
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| 412 | correcting media, such as X.PC and error correcting modems, including 9600 |
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| 413 | bps units by TeleBit, U.S.Robotics, Hayes, Electronic Vaults, Data Race, |
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| 414 | and others. |
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| 415 | |
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| 416 | To complete this tome, edited versions of Ward Christensen's original |
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| 417 | protocol document and John Byrns's CRC-16 document are included for |
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| 418 | reference. |
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| 419 | |
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| 420 | References to the MODEM or MODEM7 protocol have been changed to XMODEM to |
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| 421 | accommodate the vernacular. In Australia, it is properly called the |
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| 422 | Christensen Protocol. |
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| 423 | |
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| 424 | |
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| 425 | 3.1 Some Messages from the Pioneer |
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| 426 | |
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| 427 | #: 130940 S0/Communications 25-Apr-85 18:38:47 |
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| 428 | Sb: my protocol |
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| 429 | Fm: Ward Christensen 76703,302 [2] |
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| 430 | To: all |
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| 431 | |
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| 432 | Be aware the article[3] DID quote me correctly in terms of the phrases |
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| 433 | like "not robust", etc. |
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| 434 | |
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| 435 | It was a quick hack I threw together, very unplanned (like everything I |
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| 436 | do), to satisfy a personal need to communicate with "some other" people. |
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| 437 | |
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| 438 | ONLY the fact that it was done in 8/77, and that I put it in the public |
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| 439 | domain immediately, made it become the standard that it is. |
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| 440 | |
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| 446 | |
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| 447 | __________________________________________________________________________ |
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| 448 | |
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| 449 | 1. Available for IBM PC,XT,AT, Unix and Xenix |
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| 450 | |
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| 451 | 2. Edited for typesetting appearance |
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| 452 | |
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| 453 | 3. Infoworld April 29 p. 16 |
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| 458 | Chapter 3 |
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| 466 | X/YMODEM Protocol Reference June 18 1988 8 |
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| 467 | |
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| 468 | |
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| 469 | |
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| 470 | I think its time for me to |
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| 471 | |
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| 472 | (1) document it; (people call me and say "my product is going to include |
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| 473 | it - what can I 'reference'", or "I'm writing a paper on it, what do I put |
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| 474 | in the bibliography") and |
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| 475 | |
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| 476 | (2) propose an "incremental extension" to it, which might take "exactly" |
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| 477 | the form of Chuck Forsberg's YAM protocol. He wrote YAM in C for CP/M and |
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| 478 | put it in the public domain, and wrote a batch protocol for Unix[4] called |
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| 479 | rb and sb (receive batch, send batch), which was basically XMODEM with |
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| 480 | (a) a record 0 containing filename date time and size |
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| 481 | (b) a 1K block size option |
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| 482 | (c) CRC-16. |
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| 483 | |
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| 484 | He did some clever programming to detect false ACK or EOT, but basically |
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| 485 | left them the same. |
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| 486 | |
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| 487 | People who suggest I make SIGNIFICANT changes to the protocol, such as |
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| 488 | "full duplex", "multiple outstanding blocks", "multiple destinations", etc |
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| 489 | etc don't understand that the incredible simplicity of the protocol is one |
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| 490 | of the reasons it survived to this day in as many machines and programs as |
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| 491 | it may be found in! |
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| 492 | |
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| 493 | Consider the PC-NET group back in '77 or so - documenting to beat the band |
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| 494 | - THEY had a protocol, but it was "extremely complex", because it tried to |
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| 495 | be "all things to all people" - i.e. send binary files on a 7-bit system, |
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| 496 | etc. I was not that "benevolent". I (emphasize > I < ) had an 8-bit UART, |
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| 497 | so "my protocol was an 8-bit protocol", and I would just say "sorry" to |
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| 498 | people who were held back by 7-bit limitations. ... |
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| 499 | |
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| 500 | Block size: Chuck Forsberg created an extension of my protocol, called |
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| 501 | YAM, which is also supported via his public domain programs for UNIX |
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| 502 | called rb and sb - receive batch and send batch. They cleverly send a |
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| 503 | "block 0" which contains the filename, date, time, and size. |
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| 504 | Unfortunately, its UNIX style, and is a bit weird[5] - octal numbers, etc. |
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| 505 | BUT, it is a nice way to overcome the kludgy "echo the chars of the name" |
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| 506 | introduced with MODEM7. Further, chuck uses CRC-16 and optional 1K |
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| 507 | blocks. Thus the record 0, 1K, and CRC, make it a "pretty slick new |
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| 508 | protocol" which is not significantly different from my own. |
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| 509 | |
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| 510 | Also, there is a catchy name - YMODEM. That means to some that it is the |
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| 511 | "next thing after XMODEM", and to others that it is the Y(am)MODEM |
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| 512 | |
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| 513 | |
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| 514 | __________ |
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| 515 | |
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| 516 | 4. VAX/VMS versions of these programs are also available. |
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| 517 | |
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| 518 | 5. The file length, time, and file mode are optional. The pathname and |
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| 519 | file length may be sent alone if desired. |
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| 520 | |
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| 523 | |
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| 524 | Chapter 3 |
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| 532 | X/YMODEM Protocol Reference June 18 1988 9 |
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| 533 | |
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| 534 | |
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| 535 | |
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| 536 | protocol. I don't want to emphasize that too much - out of fear that |
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| 537 | other mfgrs might think it is a "competitive" protocol, rather than an |
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| 538 | "unaffiliated" protocol. Chuck is currently selling a much-enhanced |
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| 539 | version of his CP/M-80 C program YAM, calling it Professional Yam, and its |
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| 540 | for the PC - I'm using it right now. VERY slick! 32K capture buffer, |
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| 541 | script, scrolling, previously captured text search, plus built-in commands |
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| 542 | for just about everything - directory (sorted every which way), XMODEM, |
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| 543 | YMODEM, KERMIT, and ASCII file upload/download, etc. You can program it |
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| 544 | to "behave" with most any system - for example when trying a number for |
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| 545 | CIS it detects the "busy" string back from the modem and substitutes a |
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| 546 | diff phone # into the dialing string and branches back to try it. |
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| 565 | |
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| 566 | |
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| 567 | |
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| 568 | |
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| 572 | |
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| 573 | |
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| 577 | |
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| 578 | |
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| 579 | |
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| 580 | |
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| 581 | |
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| 582 | |
---|
| 583 | |
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| 584 | |
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| 585 | |
---|
| 586 | |
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| 587 | |
---|
| 588 | |
---|
| 589 | |
---|
| 590 | Chapter 3 |
---|
| 591 | |
---|
| 592 | |
---|
| 593 | |
---|
| 594 | |
---|
| 595 | |
---|
| 596 | |
---|
| 597 | |
---|
| 598 | X/YMODEM Protocol Reference June 18 1988 10 |
---|
| 599 | |
---|
| 600 | |
---|
| 601 | |
---|
| 602 | 4. XMODEM PROTOCOL ENHANCEMENTS |
---|
| 603 | |
---|
| 604 | This chapter discusses the protocol extensions to Ward Christensen's 1982 |
---|
| 605 | XMODEM protocol description document. |
---|
| 606 | |
---|
| 607 | The original document recommends the user be asked whether to continue |
---|
| 608 | trying or abort after 10 retries. Most programs no longer ask the |
---|
| 609 | operator whether he wishes to keep retrying. Virtually all correctable |
---|
| 610 | errors are corrected within the first few retransmissions. If the line is |
---|
| 611 | so bad that ten attempts are insufficient, there is a significant danger |
---|
| 612 | of undetected errors. If the connection is that bad, it's better to |
---|
| 613 | redial for a better connection, or mail a floppy disk. |
---|
| 614 | |
---|
| 615 | |
---|
| 616 | 4.1 Graceful Abort |
---|
| 617 | |
---|
| 618 | The YAM and Professional-YAM X/YMODEM routines recognize a sequence of two |
---|
| 619 | consecutive CAN (Hex 18) characters without modem errors (overrun, |
---|
| 620 | framing, etc.) as a transfer abort command. This sequence is recognized |
---|
| 621 | when is waiting for the beginning of a block or for an acknowledgement to |
---|
| 622 | a block that has been sent. The check for two consecutive CAN characters |
---|
| 623 | reduces the number of transfers aborted by line hits. YAM sends eight CAN |
---|
| 624 | characters when it aborts an XMODEM, YMODEM, or ZMODEM protocol file |
---|
| 625 | transfer. Pro-YAM then sends eight backspaces to delete the CAN |
---|
| 626 | characters from the remote's keyboard input buffer, in case the remote had |
---|
| 627 | already aborted the transfer and was awaiting a keyboarded command. |
---|
| 628 | |
---|
| 629 | |
---|
| 630 | 4.2 CRC-16 Option |
---|
| 631 | |
---|
| 632 | The XMODEM protocol uses an optional two character CRC-16 instead of the |
---|
| 633 | one character arithmetic checksum used by the original protocol and by |
---|
| 634 | most commercial implementations. CRC-16 guarantees detection of all |
---|
| 635 | single and double bit errors, all errors with an odd number of error |
---|
| 636 | bits, all burst errors of length 16 or less, 99.9969% of all 17-bit error |
---|
| 637 | bursts, and 99.9984 per cent of all possible longer error bursts. By |
---|
| 638 | contrast, a double bit error, or a burst error of 9 bits or more can sneak |
---|
| 639 | past the XMODEM protocol arithmetic checksum. |
---|
| 640 | |
---|
| 641 | The XMODEM/CRC protocol is similar to the XMODEM protocol, except that the |
---|
| 642 | receiver specifies CRC-16 by sending C (Hex 43) instead of NAK when |
---|
| 643 | requesting the FIRST block. A two byte CRC is sent in place of the one |
---|
| 644 | byte arithmetic checksum. |
---|
| 645 | |
---|
| 646 | YAM's c option to the r command enables CRC-16 in single file reception, |
---|
| 647 | corresponding to the original implementation in the MODEM7 series |
---|
| 648 | programs. This remains the default because many commercial communications |
---|
| 649 | programs and bulletin board systems still do not support CRC-16, |
---|
| 650 | especially those written in Basic or Pascal. |
---|
| 651 | |
---|
| 652 | XMODEM protocol with CRC is accurate provided both sender and receiver |
---|
| 653 | |
---|
| 654 | |
---|
| 655 | |
---|
| 656 | Chapter 4 XMODEM Protocol Enhancements |
---|
| 657 | |
---|
| 658 | |
---|
| 659 | |
---|
| 660 | |
---|
| 661 | |
---|
| 662 | |
---|
| 663 | |
---|
| 664 | X/YMODEM Protocol Reference June 18 1988 11 |
---|
| 665 | |
---|
| 666 | |
---|
| 667 | |
---|
| 668 | both report a successful transmission. The protocol is robust in the |
---|
| 669 | presence of characters lost by buffer overloading on timesharing systems. |
---|
| 670 | |
---|
| 671 | The single character ACK/NAK responses generated by the receiving program |
---|
| 672 | adapt well to split speed modems, where the reverse channel is limited to |
---|
| 673 | ten per cent or less of the main channel's speed. |
---|
| 674 | |
---|
| 675 | XMODEM and YMODEM are half duplex protocols which do not attempt to |
---|
| 676 | transmit information and control signals in both directions at the same |
---|
| 677 | time. This avoids buffer overrun problems that have been reported by |
---|
| 678 | users attempting to exploit full duplex asynchronous file transfer |
---|
| 679 | protocols such as Blast. |
---|
| 680 | |
---|
| 681 | Professional-YAM adds several proprietary logic enhancements to XMODEM's |
---|
| 682 | error detection and recovery. These compatible enhancements eliminate |
---|
| 683 | most of the bad file transfers other programs make when using the XMODEM |
---|
| 684 | protocol under less than ideal conditions. |
---|
| 685 | |
---|
| 686 | |
---|
| 687 | 4.3 XMODEM-1k 1024 Byte Block |
---|
| 688 | |
---|
| 689 | Disappointing throughput downloading from Unix with YMODEM[1] lead to the |
---|
| 690 | development of 1024 byte blocks in 1982. 1024 byte blocks reduce the |
---|
| 691 | effect of delays from timesharing systems, modems, and packet switched |
---|
| 692 | networks on throughput by 87.5 per cent in addition to decreasing XMODEM's |
---|
| 693 | 3 per cent overhead (block number, CRC, etc.). |
---|
| 694 | |
---|
| 695 | Some environments cannot accept 1024 byte bursts, including some networks |
---|
| 696 | and minicomputer ports. The longer block length should be an option. |
---|
| 697 | |
---|
| 698 | The choice to use 1024 byte blocks is expressed to the sending program on |
---|
| 699 | its command line or selection menu.[2] 1024 byte blocks improve throughput |
---|
| 700 | in many applications. |
---|
| 701 | |
---|
| 702 | An STX (02) replaces the SOH (01) at the beginning of the transmitted |
---|
| 703 | block to notify the receiver of the longer block length. The transmitted |
---|
| 704 | block contains 1024 bytes of data. The receiver should be able to accept |
---|
| 705 | any mixture of 128 and 1024 byte blocks. The block number (in the second |
---|
| 706 | and third bytes of the block) is incremented by one for each block |
---|
| 707 | regardless of the block length. |
---|
| 708 | |
---|
| 709 | The sender must not change between 128 and 1024 byte block lengths if it |
---|
| 710 | has not received a valid ACK for the current block. Failure to observe |
---|
| 711 | |
---|
| 712 | |
---|
| 713 | __________ |
---|
| 714 | |
---|
| 715 | 1. The name hadn't been coined yet, but the protocol was the same. |
---|
| 716 | |
---|
| 717 | 2. See "KMD/IMP Exceptions to YMODEM" below. |
---|
| 718 | |
---|
| 719 | |
---|
| 720 | |
---|
| 721 | |
---|
| 722 | Chapter 4 XMODEM Protocol Enhancements |
---|
| 723 | |
---|
| 724 | |
---|
| 725 | |
---|
| 726 | |
---|
| 727 | |
---|
| 728 | |
---|
| 729 | |
---|
| 730 | X/YMODEM Protocol Reference June 18 1988 12 |
---|
| 731 | |
---|
| 732 | |
---|
| 733 | |
---|
| 734 | this restriction allows transmission errors to pass undetected. |
---|
| 735 | |
---|
| 736 | If 1024 byte blocks are being used, it is possible for a file to "grow" up |
---|
| 737 | to the next multiple of 1024 bytes. This does not waste disk space if the |
---|
| 738 | allocation granularity is 1k or greater. With YMODEM batch transmission, |
---|
| 739 | the optional file length transmitted in the file name block allows the |
---|
| 740 | receiver to discard the padding, preserving the exact file length and |
---|
| 741 | contents. |
---|
| 742 | |
---|
| 743 | 1024 byte blocks may be used with batch file transmission or with single |
---|
| 744 | file transmission. CRC-16 should be used with the k option to preserve |
---|
| 745 | data integrity over phone lines. If a program wishes to enforce this |
---|
| 746 | recommendation, it should cancel the transfer, then issue an informative |
---|
| 747 | diagnostic message if the receiver requests checksum instead of CRC-16. |
---|
| 748 | |
---|
| 749 | Under no circumstances may a sending program use CRC-16 unless the |
---|
| 750 | receiver commands CRC-16. |
---|
| 751 | |
---|
| 752 | Figure 1. XMODEM-1k Blocks |
---|
| 753 | |
---|
| 754 | SENDER RECEIVER |
---|
| 755 | "sx -k foo.bar" |
---|
| 756 | "foo.bar open x.x minutes" |
---|
| 757 | C |
---|
| 758 | STX 01 FE Data[1024] CRC CRC |
---|
| 759 | ACK |
---|
| 760 | STX 02 FD Data[1024] CRC CRC |
---|
| 761 | ACK |
---|
| 762 | STX 03 FC Data[1000] CPMEOF[24] CRC CRC |
---|
| 763 | ACK |
---|
| 764 | EOT |
---|
| 765 | ACK |
---|
| 766 | |
---|
| 767 | Figure 2. Mixed 1024 and 128 byte Blocks |
---|
| 768 | |
---|
| 769 | SENDER RECEIVER |
---|
| 770 | "sx -k foo.bar" |
---|
| 771 | "foo.bar open x.x minutes" |
---|
| 772 | C |
---|
| 773 | STX 01 FE Data[1024] CRC CRC |
---|
| 774 | ACK |
---|
| 775 | STX 02 FD Data[1024] CRC CRC |
---|
| 776 | ACK |
---|
| 777 | SOH 03 FC Data[128] CRC CRC |
---|
| 778 | ACK |
---|
| 779 | SOH 04 FB Data[100] CPMEOF[28] CRC CRC |
---|
| 780 | ACK |
---|
| 781 | EOT |
---|
| 782 | ACK |
---|
| 783 | |
---|
| 784 | |
---|
| 785 | |
---|
| 786 | |
---|
| 787 | |
---|
| 788 | Chapter 4 XMODEM Protocol Enhancements |
---|
| 789 | |
---|
| 790 | |
---|
| 791 | |
---|
| 792 | |
---|
| 793 | |
---|
| 794 | |
---|
| 795 | |
---|
| 796 | X/YMODEM Protocol Reference June 18 1988 13 |
---|
| 797 | |
---|
| 798 | |
---|
| 799 | |
---|
| 800 | 5. YMODEM Batch File Transmission |
---|
| 801 | |
---|
| 802 | The YMODEM Batch protocol is an extension to the XMODEM/CRC protocol that |
---|
| 803 | allows 0 or more files to be transmitted with a single command. (Zero |
---|
| 804 | files may be sent if none of the requested files is accessible.) The |
---|
| 805 | design approach of the YMODEM Batch protocol is to use the normal routines |
---|
| 806 | for sending and receiving XMODEM blocks in a layered fashion similar to |
---|
| 807 | packet switching methods. |
---|
| 808 | |
---|
| 809 | Why was it necessary to design a new batch protocol when one already |
---|
| 810 | existed in MODEM7?[1] The batch file mode used by MODEM7 is unsuitable |
---|
| 811 | because it does not permit full pathnames, file length, file date, or |
---|
| 812 | other attribute information to be transmitted. Such a restrictive design, |
---|
| 813 | hastily implemented with only CP/M in mind, would not have permitted |
---|
| 814 | extensions to current areas of personal computing such as Unix, DOS, and |
---|
| 815 | object oriented systems. In addition, the MODEM7 batch file mode is |
---|
| 816 | somewhat susceptible to transmission impairments. |
---|
| 817 | |
---|
| 818 | As in the case of single a file transfer, the receiver initiates batch |
---|
| 819 | file transmission by sending a "C" character (for CRC-16). |
---|
| 820 | |
---|
| 821 | The sender opens the first file and sends block number 0 with the |
---|
| 822 | following information.[2] |
---|
| 823 | |
---|
| 824 | Only the pathname (file name) part is required for batch transfers. |
---|
| 825 | |
---|
| 826 | To maintain upwards compatibility, all unused bytes in block 0 must be set |
---|
| 827 | to null. |
---|
| 828 | |
---|
| 829 | Pathname The pathname (conventionally, the file name) is sent as a null |
---|
| 830 | terminated ASCII string. This is the filename format used by the |
---|
| 831 | handle oriented MSDOS(TM) functions and C library fopen functions. |
---|
| 832 | An assembly language example follows: |
---|
| 833 | DB 'foo.bar',0 |
---|
| 834 | No spaces are included in the pathname. Normally only the file name |
---|
| 835 | stem (no directory prefix) is transmitted unless the sender has |
---|
| 836 | selected YAM's f option to send the full pathname. The source drive |
---|
| 837 | (A:, B:, etc.) is not sent. |
---|
| 838 | |
---|
| 839 | Filename Considerations: |
---|
| 840 | |
---|
| 841 | |
---|
| 842 | |
---|
| 843 | __________ |
---|
| 844 | |
---|
| 845 | 1. The MODEM7 batch protocol transmitted CP/M FCB bytes f1...f8 and |
---|
| 846 | t1...t3 one character at a time. The receiver echoed these bytes as |
---|
| 847 | received, one at a time. |
---|
| 848 | |
---|
| 849 | 2. Only the data part of the block is described here. |
---|
| 850 | |
---|
| 851 | |
---|
| 852 | |
---|
| 853 | |
---|
| 854 | Chapter 5 XMODEM Protocol Enhancements |
---|
| 855 | |
---|
| 856 | |
---|
| 857 | |
---|
| 858 | |
---|
| 859 | |
---|
| 860 | |
---|
| 861 | |
---|
| 862 | X/YMODEM Protocol Reference June 18 1988 14 |
---|
| 863 | |
---|
| 864 | |
---|
| 865 | |
---|
| 866 | + File names are forced to lower case unless the sending system |
---|
| 867 | supports upper/lower case file names. This is a convenience for |
---|
| 868 | users of systems (such as Unix) which store filenames in upper |
---|
| 869 | and lower case. |
---|
| 870 | |
---|
| 871 | + The receiver should accommodate file names in lower and upper |
---|
| 872 | case. |
---|
| 873 | |
---|
| 874 | + When transmitting files between different operating systems, |
---|
| 875 | file names must be acceptable to both the sender and receiving |
---|
| 876 | operating systems. |
---|
| 877 | |
---|
| 878 | If directories are included, they are delimited by /; i.e., |
---|
| 879 | "subdir/foo" is acceptable, "subdir\foo" is not. |
---|
| 880 | |
---|
| 881 | Length The file length and each of the succeeding fields are optional.[3] |
---|
| 882 | The length field is stored in the block as a decimal string counting |
---|
| 883 | the number of data bytes in the file. The file length does not |
---|
| 884 | include any CPMEOF (^Z) or other garbage characters used to pad the |
---|
| 885 | last block. |
---|
| 886 | |
---|
| 887 | If the file being transmitted is growing during transmission, the |
---|
| 888 | length field should be set to at least the final expected file |
---|
| 889 | length, or not sent. |
---|
| 890 | |
---|
| 891 | The receiver stores the specified number of characters, discarding |
---|
| 892 | any padding added by the sender to fill up the last block. |
---|
| 893 | |
---|
| 894 | Modification Date The mod date is optional, and the filename and length |
---|
| 895 | may be sent without requiring the mod date to be sent. |
---|
| 896 | |
---|
| 897 | Iff the modification date is sent, a single space separates the |
---|
| 898 | modification date from the file length. |
---|
| 899 | |
---|
| 900 | The mod date is sent as an octal number giving the time the contents |
---|
| 901 | of the file were last changed, measured in seconds from Jan 1 1970 |
---|
| 902 | Universal Coordinated Time (GMT). A date of 0 implies the |
---|
| 903 | modification date is unknown and should be left as the date the file |
---|
| 904 | is received. |
---|
| 905 | |
---|
| 906 | This standard format was chosen to eliminate ambiguities arising from |
---|
| 907 | transfers between different time zones. |
---|
| 908 | |
---|
| 909 | |
---|
| 910 | |
---|
| 911 | |
---|
| 912 | |
---|
| 913 | __________ |
---|
| 914 | |
---|
| 915 | 3. Fields may not be skipped. |
---|
| 916 | |
---|
| 917 | |
---|
| 918 | |
---|
| 919 | |
---|
| 920 | Chapter 5 XMODEM Protocol Enhancements |
---|
| 921 | |
---|
| 922 | |
---|
| 923 | |
---|
| 924 | |
---|
| 925 | |
---|
| 926 | |
---|
| 927 | |
---|
| 928 | X/YMODEM Protocol Reference June 18 1988 15 |
---|
| 929 | |
---|
| 930 | |
---|
| 931 | |
---|
| 932 | Mode Iff the file mode is sent, a single space separates the file mode |
---|
| 933 | from the modification date. The file mode is stored as an octal |
---|
| 934 | string. Unless the file originated from a Unix system, the file mode |
---|
| 935 | is set to 0. rb(1) checks the file mode for the 0x8000 bit which |
---|
| 936 | indicates a Unix type regular file. Files with the 0x8000 bit set |
---|
| 937 | are assumed to have been sent from another Unix (or similar) system |
---|
| 938 | which uses the same file conventions. Such files are not translated |
---|
| 939 | in any way. |
---|
| 940 | |
---|
| 941 | |
---|
| 942 | Serial Number Iff the serial number is sent, a single space separates the |
---|
| 943 | serial number from the file mode. The serial number of the |
---|
| 944 | transmitting program is stored as an octal string. Programs which do |
---|
| 945 | not have a serial number should omit this field, or set it to 0. The |
---|
| 946 | receiver's use of this field is optional. |
---|
| 947 | |
---|
| 948 | |
---|
| 949 | Other Fields YMODEM was designed to allow additional header fields to be |
---|
| 950 | added as above without creating compatibility problems with older |
---|
| 951 | YMODEM programs. Please contact Omen Technology if other fields are |
---|
| 952 | needed for special application requirements. |
---|
| 953 | |
---|
| 954 | The rest of the block is set to nulls. This is essential to preserve |
---|
| 955 | upward compatibility.[4] |
---|
| 956 | |
---|
| 957 | If the filename block is received with a CRC or other error, a |
---|
| 958 | retransmission is requested. After the filename block has been received, |
---|
| 959 | it is ACK'ed if the write open is successful. If the file cannot be |
---|
| 960 | opened for writing, the receiver cancels the transfer with CAN characters |
---|
| 961 | as described above. |
---|
| 962 | |
---|
| 963 | The receiver then initiates transfer of the file contents with a "C" |
---|
| 964 | character, according to the standard XMODEM/CRC protocol. |
---|
| 965 | |
---|
| 966 | After the file contents and XMODEM EOT have been transmitted and |
---|
| 967 | acknowledged, the receiver again asks for the next pathname. |
---|
| 968 | |
---|
| 969 | Transmission of a null pathname terminates batch file transmission. |
---|
| 970 | |
---|
| 971 | Note that transmission of no files is not necessarily an error. This is |
---|
| 972 | possible if none of the files requested of the sender could be opened for |
---|
| 973 | reading. |
---|
| 974 | |
---|
| 975 | |
---|
| 976 | |
---|
| 977 | __________ |
---|
| 978 | |
---|
| 979 | 4. If, perchance, this information extends beyond 128 bytes (possible |
---|
| 980 | with Unix 4.2 BSD extended file names), the block should be sent as a |
---|
| 981 | 1k block as described above. |
---|
| 982 | |
---|
| 983 | |
---|
| 984 | |
---|
| 985 | |
---|
| 986 | Chapter 5 XMODEM Protocol Enhancements |
---|
| 987 | |
---|
| 988 | |
---|
| 989 | |
---|
| 990 | |
---|
| 991 | |
---|
| 992 | |
---|
| 993 | |
---|
| 994 | X/YMODEM Protocol Reference June 18 1988 16 |
---|
| 995 | |
---|
| 996 | |
---|
| 997 | |
---|
| 998 | Most YMODEM receivers request CRC-16 by default. |
---|
| 999 | |
---|
| 1000 | The Unix programs sz(1) and rz(1) included in the source code file |
---|
| 1001 | RZSZ.ZOO should answer other questions about YMODEM batch protocol. |
---|
| 1002 | |
---|
| 1003 | Figure 3. YMODEM Batch Transmission Session (1 file) |
---|
| 1004 | |
---|
| 1005 | SENDER RECEIVER |
---|
| 1006 | "sb foo.*<CR>" |
---|
| 1007 | "sending in batch mode etc." |
---|
| 1008 | C (command:rb) |
---|
| 1009 | SOH 00 FF foo.c NUL[123] CRC CRC |
---|
| 1010 | ACK |
---|
| 1011 | C |
---|
| 1012 | SOH 01 FE Data[128] CRC CRC |
---|
| 1013 | ACK |
---|
| 1014 | SOH 02 FC Data[128] CRC CRC |
---|
| 1015 | ACK |
---|
| 1016 | SOH 03 FB Data[100] CPMEOF[28] CRC CRC |
---|
| 1017 | ACK |
---|
| 1018 | EOT |
---|
| 1019 | NAK |
---|
| 1020 | EOT |
---|
| 1021 | ACK |
---|
| 1022 | C |
---|
| 1023 | SOH 00 FF NUL[128] CRC CRC |
---|
| 1024 | ACK |
---|
| 1025 | |
---|
| 1026 | Figure 7. YMODEM Header Information and Features |
---|
| 1027 | |
---|
| 1028 | _____________________________________________________________ |
---|
| 1029 | | Program | Length | Date | Mode | S/N | 1k-Blk | YMODEM-g | |
---|
| 1030 | |___________|________|______|______|_____|________|__________| |
---|
| 1031 | |Unix rz/sz | yes | yes | yes | no | yes | sb only | |
---|
| 1032 | |___________|________|______|______|_____|________|__________| |
---|
| 1033 | |VMS rb/sb | yes | no | no | no | yes | no | |
---|
| 1034 | |___________|________|______|______|_____|________|__________| |
---|
| 1035 | |Pro-YAM | yes | yes | no | yes | yes | yes | |
---|
| 1036 | |___________|________|______|______|_____|________|__________| |
---|
| 1037 | |CP/M YAM | no | no | no | no | yes | no | |
---|
| 1038 | |___________|________|______|______|_____|________|__________| |
---|
| 1039 | |KMD/IMP | ? | no | no | no | yes | no | |
---|
| 1040 | |___________|________|______|______|_____|________|__________| |
---|
| 1041 | |
---|
| 1042 | 5.1 KMD/IMP Exceptions to YMODEM |
---|
| 1043 | |
---|
| 1044 | KMD and IMP use a "CK" character sequence emitted by the receiver to |
---|
| 1045 | trigger the use of 1024 byte blocks as an alternative to specifying this |
---|
| 1046 | option to the sending program. This two character sequence generally |
---|
| 1047 | works well on single process micros in direct communication, provided the |
---|
| 1048 | programs rigorously adhere to all the XMODEM recommendations included |
---|
| 1049 | |
---|
| 1050 | |
---|
| 1051 | |
---|
| 1052 | Chapter 5 XMODEM Protocol Enhancements |
---|
| 1053 | |
---|
| 1054 | |
---|
| 1055 | |
---|
| 1056 | |
---|
| 1057 | |
---|
| 1058 | |
---|
| 1059 | |
---|
| 1060 | X/YMODEM Protocol Reference June 18 1988 17 |
---|
| 1061 | |
---|
| 1062 | |
---|
| 1063 | |
---|
| 1064 | Figure 4. YMODEM Batch Transmission Session (2 files) |
---|
| 1065 | |
---|
| 1066 | SENDER RECEIVER |
---|
| 1067 | "sb foo.c baz.c<CR>" |
---|
| 1068 | "sending in batch mode etc." |
---|
| 1069 | C (command:rb) |
---|
| 1070 | SOH 00 FF foo.c NUL[123] CRC CRC |
---|
| 1071 | ACK |
---|
| 1072 | C |
---|
| 1073 | SOH 01 FE Data[128] CRC CRC |
---|
| 1074 | ACK |
---|
| 1075 | SOH 02 FC Data[128] CRC CRC |
---|
| 1076 | ACK |
---|
| 1077 | SOH 03 FB Data[100] CPMEOF[28] CRC CRC |
---|
| 1078 | ACK |
---|
| 1079 | EOT |
---|
| 1080 | NAK |
---|
| 1081 | EOT |
---|
| 1082 | ACK |
---|
| 1083 | C |
---|
| 1084 | SOH 00 FF baz.c NUL[123] CRC CRC |
---|
| 1085 | ACK |
---|
| 1086 | C |
---|
| 1087 | SOH 01 FB Data[100] CPMEOF[28] CRC CRC |
---|
| 1088 | ACK |
---|
| 1089 | EOT |
---|
| 1090 | NAK |
---|
| 1091 | EOT |
---|
| 1092 | ACK |
---|
| 1093 | C |
---|
| 1094 | SOH 00 FF NUL[128] CRC CRC |
---|
| 1095 | ACK |
---|
| 1096 | |
---|
| 1097 | Figure 5. YMODEM Batch Transmission Session-1k Blocks |
---|
| 1098 | |
---|
| 1099 | SENDER RECEIVER |
---|
| 1100 | "sb -k foo.*<CR>" |
---|
| 1101 | "sending in batch mode etc." |
---|
| 1102 | C (command:rb) |
---|
| 1103 | SOH 00 FF foo.c NUL[123] CRC CRC |
---|
| 1104 | ACK |
---|
| 1105 | C |
---|
| 1106 | STX 01 FD Data[1024] CRC CRC |
---|
| 1107 | ACK |
---|
| 1108 | SOH 02 FC Data[128] CRC CRC |
---|
| 1109 | ACK |
---|
| 1110 | SOH 03 FB Data[100] CPMEOF[28] CRC CRC |
---|
| 1111 | ACK |
---|
| 1112 | EOT |
---|
| 1113 | NAK |
---|
| 1114 | EOT |
---|
| 1115 | |
---|
| 1116 | |
---|
| 1117 | |
---|
| 1118 | Chapter 5 XMODEM Protocol Enhancements |
---|
| 1119 | |
---|
| 1120 | |
---|
| 1121 | |
---|
| 1122 | |
---|
| 1123 | |
---|
| 1124 | |
---|
| 1125 | |
---|
| 1126 | X/YMODEM Protocol Reference June 18 1988 18 |
---|
| 1127 | |
---|
| 1128 | |
---|
| 1129 | |
---|
| 1130 | ACK |
---|
| 1131 | C |
---|
| 1132 | SOH 00 FF NUL[128] CRC CRC |
---|
| 1133 | ACK |
---|
| 1134 | |
---|
| 1135 | Figure 6. YMODEM Filename block transmitted by sz |
---|
| 1136 | |
---|
| 1137 | -rw-r--r-- 6347 Jun 17 1984 20:34 bbcsched.txt |
---|
| 1138 | |
---|
| 1139 | 00 0100FF62 62637363 6865642E 74787400 |...bbcsched.txt.| |
---|
| 1140 | 10 36333437 20333331 34373432 35313320 |6347 3314742513 | |
---|
| 1141 | 20 31303036 34340000 00000000 00000000 |100644..........| |
---|
| 1142 | 30 00000000 00000000 00000000 00000000 |
---|
| 1143 | 40 00000000 00000000 00000000 00000000 |
---|
| 1144 | 50 00000000 00000000 00000000 00000000 |
---|
| 1145 | 60 00000000 00000000 00000000 00000000 |
---|
| 1146 | 70 00000000 00000000 00000000 00000000 |
---|
| 1147 | 80 000000CA 56 |
---|
| 1148 | |
---|
| 1149 | herein. Programs with marginal XMODEM implementations do not fare so |
---|
| 1150 | well. Timesharing systems and packet switched networks can separate the |
---|
| 1151 | successive characters, rendering this method unreliable. |
---|
| 1152 | |
---|
| 1153 | Sending programs may detect the CK sequence if the operating enviornment |
---|
| 1154 | does not preclude reliable implementation. |
---|
| 1155 | |
---|
| 1156 | Instead of the standard YMODEM file length in decimal, KMD and IMP |
---|
| 1157 | transmit the CP/M record count in the last two bytes of the header block. |
---|
| 1158 | |
---|
| 1159 | |
---|
| 1160 | 6. YMODEM-g File Transmission |
---|
| 1161 | |
---|
| 1162 | Developing technology is providing phone line data transmission at ever |
---|
| 1163 | higher speeds using very specialized techniques. These high speed modems, |
---|
| 1164 | as well as session protocols such as X.PC, provide high speed, nearly |
---|
| 1165 | error free communications at the expense of considerably increased delay |
---|
| 1166 | time. |
---|
| 1167 | |
---|
| 1168 | This delay time is moderate compared to human interactions, but it |
---|
| 1169 | cripples the throughput of most error correcting protocols. |
---|
| 1170 | |
---|
| 1171 | The g option to YMODEM has proven effective under these circumstances. |
---|
| 1172 | The g option is driven by the receiver, which initiates the batch transfer |
---|
| 1173 | by transmitting a G instead of C. When the sender recognizes the G, it |
---|
| 1174 | bypasses the usual wait for an ACK to each transmitted block, sending |
---|
| 1175 | succeeding blocks at full speed, subject to XOFF/XON or other flow control |
---|
| 1176 | exerted by the medium. |
---|
| 1177 | |
---|
| 1178 | The sender expects an inital G to initiate the transmission of a |
---|
| 1179 | particular file, and also expects an ACK on the EOT sent at the end of |
---|
| 1180 | each file. This synchronization allows the receiver time to open and |
---|
| 1181 | |
---|
| 1182 | |
---|
| 1183 | |
---|
| 1184 | Chapter 6 XMODEM Protocol Enhancements |
---|
| 1185 | |
---|
| 1186 | |
---|
| 1187 | |
---|
| 1188 | |
---|
| 1189 | |
---|
| 1190 | |
---|
| 1191 | |
---|
| 1192 | X/YMODEM Protocol Reference June 18 1988 19 |
---|
| 1193 | |
---|
| 1194 | |
---|
| 1195 | |
---|
| 1196 | close files as necessary. |
---|
| 1197 | |
---|
| 1198 | If an error is detected in a YMODEM-g transfer, the receiver aborts the |
---|
| 1199 | transfer with the multiple CAN abort sequence. The ZMODEM protocol should |
---|
| 1200 | be used in applications that require both streaming throughput and error |
---|
| 1201 | recovery. |
---|
| 1202 | |
---|
| 1203 | Figure 8. YMODEM-g Transmission Session |
---|
| 1204 | |
---|
| 1205 | SENDER RECEIVER |
---|
| 1206 | "sb foo.*<CR>" |
---|
| 1207 | "sending in batch mode etc..." |
---|
| 1208 | G (command:rb -g) |
---|
| 1209 | SOH 00 FF foo.c NUL[123] CRC CRC |
---|
| 1210 | G |
---|
| 1211 | SOH 01 FE Data[128] CRC CRC |
---|
| 1212 | STX 02 FD Data[1024] CRC CRC |
---|
| 1213 | SOH 03 FC Data[128] CRC CRC |
---|
| 1214 | SOH 04 FB Data[100] CPMEOF[28] CRC CRC |
---|
| 1215 | EOT |
---|
| 1216 | ACK |
---|
| 1217 | G |
---|
| 1218 | SOH 00 FF NUL[128] CRC CRC |
---|
| 1219 | |
---|
| 1220 | |
---|
| 1221 | |
---|
| 1222 | |
---|
| 1223 | |
---|
| 1224 | |
---|
| 1225 | |
---|
| 1226 | |
---|
| 1227 | |
---|
| 1228 | |
---|
| 1229 | |
---|
| 1230 | |
---|
| 1231 | |
---|
| 1232 | |
---|
| 1233 | |
---|
| 1234 | |
---|
| 1235 | |
---|
| 1236 | |
---|
| 1237 | |
---|
| 1238 | |
---|
| 1239 | |
---|
| 1240 | |
---|
| 1241 | |
---|
| 1242 | |
---|
| 1243 | |
---|
| 1244 | |
---|
| 1245 | |
---|
| 1246 | |
---|
| 1247 | |
---|
| 1248 | |
---|
| 1249 | |
---|
| 1250 | Chapter 6 XMODEM Protocol Enhancements |
---|
| 1251 | |
---|
| 1252 | |
---|
| 1253 | |
---|
| 1254 | |
---|
| 1255 | |
---|
| 1256 | |
---|
| 1257 | |
---|
| 1258 | X/YMODEM Protocol Reference June 18 1988 20 |
---|
| 1259 | |
---|
| 1260 | |
---|
| 1261 | |
---|
| 1262 | 7. XMODEM PROTOCOL OVERVIEW |
---|
| 1263 | |
---|
| 1264 | 8/9/82 by Ward Christensen. |
---|
| 1265 | |
---|
| 1266 | I will maintain a master copy of this. Please pass on changes or |
---|
| 1267 | suggestions via CBBS/Chicago at (312) 545-8086, CBBS/CPMUG (312) 849-1132 |
---|
| 1268 | or by voice at (312) 849-6279. |
---|
| 1269 | |
---|
| 1270 | 7.1 Definitions |
---|
| 1271 | |
---|
| 1272 | <soh> 01H |
---|
| 1273 | <eot> 04H |
---|
| 1274 | <ack> 06H |
---|
| 1275 | <nak> 15H |
---|
| 1276 | <can> 18H |
---|
| 1277 | <C> 43H |
---|
| 1278 | |
---|
| 1279 | |
---|
| 1280 | 7.2 Transmission Medium Level Protocol |
---|
| 1281 | |
---|
| 1282 | Asynchronous, 8 data bits, no parity, one stop bit. |
---|
| 1283 | |
---|
| 1284 | The protocol imposes no restrictions on the contents of the data being |
---|
| 1285 | transmitted. No control characters are looked for in the 128-byte data |
---|
| 1286 | messages. Absolutely any kind of data may be sent - binary, ASCII, etc. |
---|
| 1287 | The protocol has not formally been adopted to a 7-bit environment for the |
---|
| 1288 | transmission of ASCII-only (or unpacked-hex) data , although it could be |
---|
| 1289 | simply by having both ends agree to AND the protocol-dependent data with |
---|
| 1290 | 7F hex before validating it. I specifically am referring to the checksum, |
---|
| 1291 | and the block numbers and their ones- complement. |
---|
| 1292 | |
---|
| 1293 | Those wishing to maintain compatibility of the CP/M file structure, i.e. |
---|
| 1294 | to allow modemming ASCII files to or from CP/M systems should follow this |
---|
| 1295 | data format: |
---|
| 1296 | |
---|
| 1297 | + ASCII tabs used (09H); tabs set every 8. |
---|
| 1298 | |
---|
| 1299 | + Lines terminated by CR/LF (0DH 0AH) |
---|
| 1300 | |
---|
| 1301 | + End-of-file indicated by ^Z, 1AH. (one or more) |
---|
| 1302 | |
---|
| 1303 | + Data is variable length, i.e. should be considered a continuous |
---|
| 1304 | stream of data bytes, broken into 128-byte chunks purely for the |
---|
| 1305 | purpose of transmission. |
---|
| 1306 | |
---|
| 1307 | + A CP/M "peculiarity": If the data ends exactly on a 128-byte |
---|
| 1308 | boundary, i.e. CR in 127, and LF in 128, a subsequent sector |
---|
| 1309 | containing the ^Z EOF character(s) is optional, but is preferred. |
---|
| 1310 | Some utilities or user programs still do not handle EOF without ^Zs. |
---|
| 1311 | |
---|
| 1312 | |
---|
| 1313 | |
---|
| 1314 | |
---|
| 1315 | |
---|
| 1316 | Chapter 7 Xmodem Protocol Overview |
---|
| 1317 | |
---|
| 1318 | |
---|
| 1319 | |
---|
| 1320 | |
---|
| 1321 | |
---|
| 1322 | |
---|
| 1323 | |
---|
| 1324 | X/YMODEM Protocol Reference June 18 1988 21 |
---|
| 1325 | |
---|
| 1326 | |
---|
| 1327 | |
---|
| 1328 | + The last block sent is no different from others, i.e. there is no |
---|
| 1329 | "short block". |
---|
| 1330 | Figure 9. XMODEM Message Block Level Protocol |
---|
| 1331 | |
---|
| 1332 | Each block of the transfer looks like: |
---|
| 1333 | <SOH><blk #><255-blk #><--128 data bytes--><cksum> |
---|
| 1334 | in which: |
---|
| 1335 | <SOH> = 01 hex |
---|
| 1336 | <blk #> = binary number, starts at 01 increments by 1, and |
---|
| 1337 | wraps 0FFH to 00H (not to 01) |
---|
| 1338 | <255-blk #> = blk # after going thru 8080 "CMA" instr, i.e. |
---|
| 1339 | each bit complemented in the 8-bit block number. |
---|
| 1340 | Formally, this is the "ones complement". |
---|
| 1341 | <cksum> = the sum of the data bytes only. Toss any carry. |
---|
| 1342 | |
---|
| 1343 | 7.3 File Level Protocol |
---|
| 1344 | |
---|
| 1345 | 7.3.1 Common_to_Both_Sender_and_Receiver |
---|
| 1346 | All errors are retried 10 times. For versions running with an operator |
---|
| 1347 | (i.e. NOT with XMODEM), a message is typed after 10 errors asking the |
---|
| 1348 | operator whether to "retry or quit". |
---|
| 1349 | |
---|
| 1350 | Some versions of the protocol use <can>, ASCII ^X, to cancel transmission. |
---|
| 1351 | This was never adopted as a standard, as having a single "abort" character |
---|
| 1352 | makes the transmission susceptible to false termination due to an <ack> |
---|
| 1353 | <nak> or <soh> being corrupted into a <can> and aborting transmission. |
---|
| 1354 | |
---|
| 1355 | The protocol may be considered "receiver driven", that is, the sender need |
---|
| 1356 | not automatically re-transmit, although it does in the current |
---|
| 1357 | implementations. |
---|
| 1358 | |
---|
| 1359 | |
---|
| 1360 | 7.3.2 Receive_Program_Considerations |
---|
| 1361 | The receiver has a 10-second timeout. It sends a <nak> every time it |
---|
| 1362 | times out. The receiver's first timeout, which sends a <nak>, signals the |
---|
| 1363 | transmitter to start. Optionally, the receiver could send a <nak> |
---|
| 1364 | immediately, in case the sender was ready. This would save the initial 10 |
---|
| 1365 | second timeout. However, the receiver MUST continue to timeout every 10 |
---|
| 1366 | seconds in case the sender wasn't ready. |
---|
| 1367 | |
---|
| 1368 | Once into a receiving a block, the receiver goes into a one-second timeout |
---|
| 1369 | for each character and the checksum. If the receiver wishes to <nak> a |
---|
| 1370 | block for any reason (invalid header, timeout receiving data), it must |
---|
| 1371 | wait for the line to clear. See "programming tips" for ideas |
---|
| 1372 | |
---|
| 1373 | Synchronizing: If a valid block number is received, it will be: 1) the |
---|
| 1374 | expected one, in which case everything is fine; or 2) a repeat of the |
---|
| 1375 | previously received block. This should be considered OK, and only |
---|
| 1376 | indicates that the receivers <ack> got glitched, and the sender re- |
---|
| 1377 | transmitted; 3) any other block number indicates a fatal loss of |
---|
| 1378 | synchronization, such as the rare case of the sender getting a line-glitch |
---|
| 1379 | |
---|
| 1380 | |
---|
| 1381 | |
---|
| 1382 | Chapter 7 Xmodem Protocol Overview |
---|
| 1383 | |
---|
| 1384 | |
---|
| 1385 | |
---|
| 1386 | |
---|
| 1387 | |
---|
| 1388 | |
---|
| 1389 | |
---|
| 1390 | X/YMODEM Protocol Reference June 18 1988 22 |
---|
| 1391 | |
---|
| 1392 | |
---|
| 1393 | |
---|
| 1394 | that looked like an <ack>. Abort the transmission, sending a <can> |
---|
| 1395 | |
---|
| 1396 | |
---|
| 1397 | 7.3.3 Sending_program_considerations |
---|
| 1398 | While waiting for transmission to begin, the sender has only a single very |
---|
| 1399 | long timeout, say one minute. In the current protocol, the sender has a |
---|
| 1400 | 10 second timeout before retrying. I suggest NOT doing this, and letting |
---|
| 1401 | the protocol be completely receiver-driven. This will be compatible with |
---|
| 1402 | existing programs. |
---|
| 1403 | |
---|
| 1404 | When the sender has no more data, it sends an <eot>, and awaits an <ack>, |
---|
| 1405 | resending the <eot> if it doesn't get one. Again, the protocol could be |
---|
| 1406 | receiver-driven, with the sender only having the high-level 1-minute |
---|
| 1407 | timeout to abort. |
---|
| 1408 | |
---|
| 1409 | |
---|
| 1410 | Here is a sample of the data flow, sending a 3-block message. It includes |
---|
| 1411 | the two most common line hits - a garbaged block, and an <ack> reply |
---|
| 1412 | getting garbaged. <xx> represents the checksum byte. |
---|
| 1413 | |
---|
| 1414 | Figure 10. Data flow including Error Recovery |
---|
| 1415 | |
---|
| 1416 | SENDER RECEIVER |
---|
| 1417 | times out after 10 seconds, |
---|
| 1418 | <--- <nak> |
---|
| 1419 | <soh> 01 FE -data- <xx> ---> |
---|
| 1420 | <--- <ack> |
---|
| 1421 | <soh> 02 FD -data- xx ---> (data gets line hit) |
---|
| 1422 | <--- <nak> |
---|
| 1423 | <soh> 02 FD -data- xx ---> |
---|
| 1424 | <--- <ack> |
---|
| 1425 | <soh> 03 FC -data- xx ---> |
---|
| 1426 | (ack gets garbaged) <--- <ack> |
---|
| 1427 | <soh> 03 FC -data- xx ---> <ack> |
---|
| 1428 | <eot> ---> |
---|
| 1429 | <--- <anything except ack> |
---|
| 1430 | <eot> ---> |
---|
| 1431 | <--- <ack> |
---|
| 1432 | (finished) |
---|
| 1433 | |
---|
| 1434 | 7.4 Programming Tips |
---|
| 1435 | |
---|
| 1436 | + The character-receive subroutine should be called with a parameter |
---|
| 1437 | specifying the number of seconds to wait. The receiver should first |
---|
| 1438 | call it with a time of 10, then <nak> and try again, 10 times. |
---|
| 1439 | |
---|
| 1440 | After receiving the <soh>, the receiver should call the character |
---|
| 1441 | receive subroutine with a 1-second timeout, for the remainder of the |
---|
| 1442 | message and the <cksum>. Since they are sent as a continuous stream, |
---|
| 1443 | timing out of this implies a serious like glitch that caused, say, |
---|
| 1444 | 127 characters to be seen instead of 128. |
---|
| 1445 | |
---|
| 1446 | |
---|
| 1447 | |
---|
| 1448 | Chapter 7 Xmodem Protocol Overview |
---|
| 1449 | |
---|
| 1450 | |
---|
| 1451 | |
---|
| 1452 | |
---|
| 1453 | |
---|
| 1454 | |
---|
| 1455 | |
---|
| 1456 | X/YMODEM Protocol Reference June 18 1988 23 |
---|
| 1457 | |
---|
| 1458 | |
---|
| 1459 | |
---|
| 1460 | + When the receiver wishes to <nak>, it should call a "PURGE" |
---|
| 1461 | subroutine, to wait for the line to clear. Recall the sender tosses |
---|
| 1462 | any characters in its UART buffer immediately upon completing sending |
---|
| 1463 | a block, to ensure no glitches were mis- interpreted. |
---|
| 1464 | |
---|
| 1465 | The most common technique is for "PURGE" to call the character |
---|
| 1466 | receive subroutine, specifying a 1-second timeout,[1] and looping |
---|
| 1467 | back to PURGE until a timeout occurs. The <nak> is then sent, |
---|
| 1468 | ensuring the other end will see it. |
---|
| 1469 | |
---|
| 1470 | + You may wish to add code recommended by John Mahr to your character |
---|
| 1471 | receive routine - to set an error flag if the UART shows framing |
---|
| 1472 | error, or overrun. This will help catch a few more glitches - the |
---|
| 1473 | most common of which is a hit in the high bits of the byte in two |
---|
| 1474 | consecutive bytes. The <cksum> comes out OK since counting in 1-byte |
---|
| 1475 | produces the same result of adding 80H + 80H as with adding 00H + |
---|
| 1476 | 00H. |
---|
| 1477 | |
---|
| 1478 | |
---|
| 1479 | |
---|
| 1480 | |
---|
| 1481 | |
---|
| 1482 | |
---|
| 1483 | |
---|
| 1484 | |
---|
| 1485 | |
---|
| 1486 | |
---|
| 1487 | |
---|
| 1488 | |
---|
| 1489 | |
---|
| 1490 | |
---|
| 1491 | |
---|
| 1492 | |
---|
| 1493 | |
---|
| 1494 | |
---|
| 1495 | |
---|
| 1496 | |
---|
| 1497 | |
---|
| 1498 | |
---|
| 1499 | |
---|
| 1500 | |
---|
| 1501 | |
---|
| 1502 | |
---|
| 1503 | |
---|
| 1504 | |
---|
| 1505 | |
---|
| 1506 | |
---|
| 1507 | __________ |
---|
| 1508 | |
---|
| 1509 | 1. These times should be adjusted for use with timesharing systems. |
---|
| 1510 | |
---|
| 1511 | |
---|
| 1512 | |
---|
| 1513 | |
---|
| 1514 | Chapter 7 Xmodem Protocol Overview |
---|
| 1515 | |
---|
| 1516 | |
---|
| 1517 | |
---|
| 1518 | |
---|
| 1519 | |
---|
| 1520 | |
---|
| 1521 | |
---|
| 1522 | X/YMODEM Protocol Reference June 18 1988 24 |
---|
| 1523 | |
---|
| 1524 | |
---|
| 1525 | |
---|
| 1526 | 8. XMODEM/CRC Overview |
---|
| 1527 | |
---|
| 1528 | Original 1/13/85 by John Byrns -- CRC option. |
---|
| 1529 | |
---|
| 1530 | Please pass on any reports of errors in this document or suggestions for |
---|
| 1531 | improvement to me via Ward's/CBBS at (312) 849-1132, or by voice at (312) |
---|
| 1532 | 885-1105. |
---|
| 1533 | |
---|
| 1534 | The CRC used in the Modem Protocol is an alternate form of block check |
---|
| 1535 | which provides more robust error detection than the original checksum. |
---|
| 1536 | Andrew S. Tanenbaum says in his book, Computer Networks, that the CRC- |
---|
| 1537 | CCITT used by the Modem Protocol will detect all single and double bit |
---|
| 1538 | errors, all errors with an odd number of bits, all burst errors of length |
---|
| 1539 | 16 or less, 99.997% of 17-bit error bursts, and 99.998% of 18-bit and |
---|
| 1540 | longer bursts.[1] |
---|
| 1541 | |
---|
| 1542 | The changes to the Modem Protocol to replace the checksum with the CRC are |
---|
| 1543 | straight forward. If that were all that we did we would not be able to |
---|
| 1544 | communicate between a program using the old checksum protocol and one |
---|
| 1545 | using the new CRC protocol. An initial handshake was added to solve this |
---|
| 1546 | problem. The handshake allows a receiving program with CRC capability to |
---|
| 1547 | determine whether the sending program supports the CRC option, and to |
---|
| 1548 | switch it to CRC mode if it does. This handshake is designed so that it |
---|
| 1549 | will work properly with programs which implement only the original |
---|
| 1550 | protocol. A description of this handshake is presented in section 10. |
---|
| 1551 | |
---|
| 1552 | Figure 11. Message Block Level Protocol, CRC mode |
---|
| 1553 | |
---|
| 1554 | Each block of the transfer in CRC mode looks like: |
---|
| 1555 | <SOH><blk #><255-blk #><--128 data bytes--><CRC hi><CRC lo> |
---|
| 1556 | in which: |
---|
| 1557 | <SOH> = 01 hex |
---|
| 1558 | <blk #> = binary number, starts at 01 increments by 1, and |
---|
| 1559 | wraps 0FFH to 00H (not to 01) |
---|
| 1560 | <255-blk #> = ones complement of blk #. |
---|
| 1561 | <CRC hi> = byte containing the 8 hi order coefficients of the CRC. |
---|
| 1562 | <CRC lo> = byte containing the 8 lo order coefficients of the CRC. |
---|
| 1563 | |
---|
| 1564 | 8.1 CRC Calculation |
---|
| 1565 | |
---|
| 1566 | 8.1.1 Formal_Definition |
---|
| 1567 | To calculate the 16 bit CRC the message bits are considered to be the |
---|
| 1568 | coefficients of a polynomial. This message polynomial is first multiplied |
---|
| 1569 | by X^16 and then divided by the generator polynomial (X^16 + X^12 + X^5 + |
---|
| 1570 | |
---|
| 1571 | |
---|
| 1572 | __________ |
---|
| 1573 | |
---|
| 1574 | 1. This reliability figure is misleading because XMODEM's critical |
---|
| 1575 | supervisory functions are not protected by this CRC. |
---|
| 1576 | |
---|
| 1577 | |
---|
| 1578 | |
---|
| 1579 | |
---|
| 1580 | Chapter 8 Xmodem Protocol Overview |
---|
| 1581 | |
---|
| 1582 | |
---|
| 1583 | |
---|
| 1584 | |
---|
| 1585 | |
---|
| 1586 | |
---|
| 1587 | |
---|
| 1588 | X/YMODEM Protocol Reference June 18 1988 25 |
---|
| 1589 | |
---|
| 1590 | |
---|
| 1591 | |
---|
| 1592 | 1) using modulo two arithmetic. The remainder left after the division is |
---|
| 1593 | the desired CRC. Since a message block in the Modem Protocol is 128 bytes |
---|
| 1594 | or 1024 bits, the message polynomial will be of order X^1023. The hi order |
---|
| 1595 | bit of the first byte of the message block is the coefficient of X^1023 in |
---|
| 1596 | the message polynomial. The lo order bit of the last byte of the message |
---|
| 1597 | block is the coefficient of X^0 in the message polynomial. |
---|
| 1598 | |
---|
| 1599 | Figure 12. Example of CRC Calculation written in C |
---|
| 1600 | |
---|
| 1601 | The following XMODEM crc routine is taken from "rbsb.c". Please refer to |
---|
| 1602 | the source code for these programs (contained in RZSZ.ZOO) for usage. A |
---|
| 1603 | fast table driven version is also included in this file. |
---|
| 1604 | |
---|
| 1605 | /* update CRC */ |
---|
| 1606 | unsigned short |
---|
| 1607 | updcrc(c, crc) |
---|
| 1608 | register c; |
---|
| 1609 | register unsigned crc; |
---|
| 1610 | { |
---|
| 1611 | register count; |
---|
| 1612 | |
---|
| 1613 | for (count=8; --count>=0;) { |
---|
| 1614 | if (crc & 0x8000) { |
---|
| 1615 | crc <<= 1; |
---|
| 1616 | crc += (((c<<=1) & 0400) != 0); |
---|
| 1617 | crc ^= 0x1021; |
---|
| 1618 | } |
---|
| 1619 | else { |
---|
| 1620 | crc <<= 1; |
---|
| 1621 | crc += (((c<<=1) & 0400) != 0); |
---|
| 1622 | } |
---|
| 1623 | } |
---|
| 1624 | return crc; |
---|
| 1625 | } |
---|
| 1626 | |
---|
| 1627 | 8.2 CRC File Level Protocol Changes |
---|
| 1628 | |
---|
| 1629 | 8.2.1 Common_to_Both_Sender_and_Receiver |
---|
| 1630 | The only change to the File Level Protocol for the CRC option is the |
---|
| 1631 | initial handshake which is used to determine if both the sending and the |
---|
| 1632 | receiving programs support the CRC mode. All Modem Programs should support |
---|
| 1633 | the checksum mode for compatibility with older versions. A receiving |
---|
| 1634 | program that wishes to receive in CRC mode implements the mode setting |
---|
| 1635 | handshake by sending a <C> in place of the initial <nak>. If the sending |
---|
| 1636 | program supports CRC mode it will recognize the <C> and will set itself |
---|
| 1637 | into CRC mode, and respond by sending the first block as if a <nak> had |
---|
| 1638 | been received. If the sending program does not support CRC mode it will |
---|
| 1639 | not respond to the <C> at all. After the receiver has sent the <C> it will |
---|
| 1640 | wait up to 3 seconds for the <soh> that starts the first block. If it |
---|
| 1641 | receives a <soh> within 3 seconds it will assume the sender supports CRC |
---|
| 1642 | mode and will proceed with the file exchange in CRC mode. If no <soh> is |
---|
| 1643 | |
---|
| 1644 | |
---|
| 1645 | |
---|
| 1646 | Chapter 8 Xmodem Protocol Overview |
---|
| 1647 | |
---|
| 1648 | |
---|
| 1649 | |
---|
| 1650 | |
---|
| 1651 | |
---|
| 1652 | |
---|
| 1653 | |
---|
| 1654 | X/YMODEM Protocol Reference June 18 1988 26 |
---|
| 1655 | |
---|
| 1656 | |
---|
| 1657 | |
---|
| 1658 | received within 3 seconds the receiver will switch to checksum mode, send |
---|
| 1659 | a <nak>, and proceed in checksum mode. If the receiver wishes to use |
---|
| 1660 | checksum mode it should send an initial <nak> and the sending program |
---|
| 1661 | should respond to the <nak> as defined in the original Modem Protocol. |
---|
| 1662 | After the mode has been set by the initial <C> or <nak> the protocol |
---|
| 1663 | follows the original Modem Protocol and is identical whether the checksum |
---|
| 1664 | or CRC is being used. |
---|
| 1665 | |
---|
| 1666 | |
---|
| 1667 | 8.2.2 Receive_Program_Considerations |
---|
| 1668 | There are at least 4 things that can go wrong with the mode setting |
---|
| 1669 | handshake. |
---|
| 1670 | |
---|
| 1671 | 1. the initial <C> can be garbled or lost. |
---|
| 1672 | |
---|
| 1673 | 2. the initial <soh> can be garbled. |
---|
| 1674 | |
---|
| 1675 | 3. the initial <C> can be changed to a <nak>. |
---|
| 1676 | |
---|
| 1677 | 4. the initial <nak> from a receiver which wants to receive in checksum |
---|
| 1678 | can be changed to a <C>. |
---|
| 1679 | |
---|
| 1680 | The first problem can be solved if the receiver sends a second <C> after |
---|
| 1681 | it times out the first time. This process can be repeated several times. |
---|
| 1682 | It must not be repeated too many times before sending a <nak> and |
---|
| 1683 | switching to checksum mode or a sending program without CRC support may |
---|
| 1684 | time out and abort. Repeating the <C> will also fix the second problem if |
---|
| 1685 | the sending program cooperates by responding as if a <nak> were received |
---|
| 1686 | instead of ignoring the extra <C>. |
---|
| 1687 | |
---|
| 1688 | It is possible to fix problems 3 and 4 but probably not worth the trouble |
---|
| 1689 | since they will occur very infrequently. They could be fixed by switching |
---|
| 1690 | modes in either the sending or the receiving program after a large number |
---|
| 1691 | of successive <nak>s. This solution would risk other problems however. |
---|
| 1692 | |
---|
| 1693 | |
---|
| 1694 | 8.2.3 Sending_Program_Considerations |
---|
| 1695 | The sending program should start in the checksum mode. This will insure |
---|
| 1696 | compatibility with checksum only receiving programs. Anytime a <C> is |
---|
| 1697 | received before the first <nak> or <ack> the sending program should set |
---|
| 1698 | itself into CRC mode and respond as if a <nak> were received. The sender |
---|
| 1699 | should respond to additional <C>s as if they were <nak>s until the first |
---|
| 1700 | <ack> is received. This will assist the receiving program in determining |
---|
| 1701 | the correct mode when the <soh> is lost or garbled. After the first <ack> |
---|
| 1702 | is received the sending program should ignore <C>s. |
---|
| 1703 | |
---|
| 1704 | |
---|
| 1705 | |
---|
| 1706 | |
---|
| 1707 | |
---|
| 1708 | |
---|
| 1709 | |
---|
| 1710 | |
---|
| 1711 | |
---|
| 1712 | Chapter 8 Xmodem Protocol Overview |
---|
| 1713 | |
---|
| 1714 | |
---|
| 1715 | |
---|
| 1716 | |
---|
| 1717 | |
---|
| 1718 | |
---|
| 1719 | |
---|
| 1720 | X/YMODEM Protocol Reference June 18 1988 27 |
---|
| 1721 | |
---|
| 1722 | |
---|
| 1723 | |
---|
| 1724 | 8.3 Data Flow Examples with CRC Option |
---|
| 1725 | |
---|
| 1726 | Here is a data flow example for the case where the receiver requests |
---|
| 1727 | transmission in the CRC mode but the sender does not support the CRC |
---|
| 1728 | option. This example also includes various transmission errors. <xx> |
---|
| 1729 | represents the checksum byte. |
---|
| 1730 | |
---|
| 1731 | Figure 13. Data Flow: Receiver has CRC Option, Sender Doesn't |
---|
| 1732 | |
---|
| 1733 | SENDER RECEIVER |
---|
| 1734 | <--- <C> |
---|
| 1735 | times out after 3 seconds, |
---|
| 1736 | <--- <C> |
---|
| 1737 | times out after 3 seconds, |
---|
| 1738 | <--- <C> |
---|
| 1739 | times out after 3 seconds, |
---|
| 1740 | <--- <C> |
---|
| 1741 | times out after 3 seconds, |
---|
| 1742 | <--- <nak> |
---|
| 1743 | <soh> 01 FE -data- <xx> ---> |
---|
| 1744 | <--- <ack> |
---|
| 1745 | <soh> 02 FD -data- <xx> ---> (data gets line hit) |
---|
| 1746 | <--- <nak> |
---|
| 1747 | <soh> 02 FD -data- <xx> ---> |
---|
| 1748 | <--- <ack> |
---|
| 1749 | <soh> 03 FC -data- <xx> ---> |
---|
| 1750 | (ack gets garbaged) <--- <ack> |
---|
| 1751 | times out after 10 seconds, |
---|
| 1752 | <--- <nak> |
---|
| 1753 | <soh> 03 FC -data- <xx> ---> |
---|
| 1754 | <--- <ack> |
---|
| 1755 | <eot> ---> |
---|
| 1756 | <--- <ack> |
---|
| 1757 | |
---|
| 1758 | Here is a data flow example for the case where the receiver requests |
---|
| 1759 | transmission in the CRC mode and the sender supports the CRC option. This |
---|
| 1760 | example also includes various transmission errors. <xxxx> represents the |
---|
| 1761 | 2 CRC bytes. |
---|
| 1762 | |
---|
| 1763 | |
---|
| 1764 | |
---|
| 1765 | |
---|
| 1766 | |
---|
| 1767 | |
---|
| 1768 | |
---|
| 1769 | |
---|
| 1770 | |
---|
| 1771 | |
---|
| 1772 | |
---|
| 1773 | |
---|
| 1774 | |
---|
| 1775 | |
---|
| 1776 | |
---|
| 1777 | |
---|
| 1778 | Chapter 8 Xmodem Protocol Overview |
---|
| 1779 | |
---|
| 1780 | |
---|
| 1781 | |
---|
| 1782 | |
---|
| 1783 | |
---|
| 1784 | |
---|
| 1785 | |
---|
| 1786 | X/YMODEM Protocol Reference June 18 1988 28 |
---|
| 1787 | |
---|
| 1788 | |
---|
| 1789 | |
---|
| 1790 | Figure 14. Receiver and Sender Both have CRC Option |
---|
| 1791 | |
---|
| 1792 | SENDER RECEIVER |
---|
| 1793 | <--- <C> |
---|
| 1794 | <soh> 01 FE -data- <xxxx> ---> |
---|
| 1795 | <--- <ack> |
---|
| 1796 | <soh> 02 FD -data- <xxxx> ---> (data gets line hit) |
---|
| 1797 | <--- <nak> |
---|
| 1798 | <soh> 02 FD -data- <xxxx> ---> |
---|
| 1799 | <--- <ack> |
---|
| 1800 | <soh> 03 FC -data- <xxxx> ---> |
---|
| 1801 | (ack gets garbaged) <--- <ack> |
---|
| 1802 | times out after 10 seconds, |
---|
| 1803 | <--- <nak> |
---|
| 1804 | <soh> 03 FC -data- <xxxx> ---> |
---|
| 1805 | <--- <ack> |
---|
| 1806 | <eot> ---> |
---|
| 1807 | <--- <ack> |
---|
| 1808 | |
---|
| 1809 | |
---|
| 1810 | |
---|
| 1811 | |
---|
| 1812 | |
---|
| 1813 | |
---|
| 1814 | |
---|
| 1815 | |
---|
| 1816 | |
---|
| 1817 | |
---|
| 1818 | |
---|
| 1819 | |
---|
| 1820 | |
---|
| 1821 | |
---|
| 1822 | |
---|
| 1823 | |
---|
| 1824 | |
---|
| 1825 | |
---|
| 1826 | |
---|
| 1827 | |
---|
| 1828 | |
---|
| 1829 | |
---|
| 1830 | |
---|
| 1831 | |
---|
| 1832 | |
---|
| 1833 | |
---|
| 1834 | |
---|
| 1835 | |
---|
| 1836 | |
---|
| 1837 | |
---|
| 1838 | |
---|
| 1839 | |
---|
| 1840 | |
---|
| 1841 | |
---|
| 1842 | |
---|
| 1843 | |
---|
| 1844 | Chapter 8 Xmodem Protocol Overview |
---|
| 1845 | |
---|
| 1846 | |
---|
| 1847 | |
---|
| 1848 | |
---|
| 1849 | |
---|
| 1850 | |
---|
| 1851 | |
---|
| 1852 | X/YMODEM Protocol Reference June 18 1988 29 |
---|
| 1853 | |
---|
| 1854 | |
---|
| 1855 | |
---|
| 1856 | 9. MORE INFORMATION |
---|
| 1857 | |
---|
| 1858 | Please contact Omen Technology for troff source files and typeset copies |
---|
| 1859 | of this document. |
---|
| 1860 | |
---|
| 1861 | |
---|
| 1862 | 9.1 TeleGodzilla Bulletin Board |
---|
| 1863 | |
---|
| 1864 | More information may be obtained by calling TeleGodzilla at 503-621-3746. |
---|
| 1865 | Speed detection is automatic for 1200, 2400 and 19200(Telebit PEP) bps. |
---|
| 1866 | TrailBlazer modem users may issue the TeleGodzilla trailblazer command to |
---|
| 1867 | swith to 19200 bps once they have logged in. |
---|
| 1868 | |
---|
| 1869 | Interesting files include RZSZ.ZOO (C source code), YZMODEM.ZOO (Official |
---|
| 1870 | XMODEM, YMODEM, and ZMODEM protocol descriptions), ZCOMMEXE.ARC, |
---|
| 1871 | ZCOMMDOC.ARC, and ZCOMMHLP.ARC (PC-DOS shareware comm program with XMODEM, |
---|
| 1872 | True YMODEM(TM), ZMODEM, Kermit Sliding Windows, Telink, MODEM7 Batch, |
---|
| 1873 | script language, etc.). |
---|
| 1874 | |
---|
| 1875 | |
---|
| 1876 | 9.2 Unix UUCP Access |
---|
| 1877 | |
---|
| 1878 | UUCP sites can obtain the current version of this file with |
---|
| 1879 | uucp omen!/u/caf/public/ymodem.doc /tmp |
---|
| 1880 | A continually updated list of available files is stored in |
---|
| 1881 | /usr/spool/uucppublic/FILES. When retrieving these files with uucp, |
---|
| 1882 | remember that the destination directory on your system must be writeable |
---|
| 1883 | by anyone, or the UUCP transfer will fail. |
---|
| 1884 | |
---|
| 1885 | The following L.sys line calls TeleGodzilla (Pro-YAM in host operation). |
---|
| 1886 | TeleGodzilla determines the incoming speed automatically. |
---|
| 1887 | |
---|
| 1888 | In response to "Name Please:" uucico gives the Pro-YAM "link" command as a |
---|
| 1889 | user name. The password (Giznoid) controls access to the Xenix system |
---|
| 1890 | connected to the IBM PC's other serial port. Communications between |
---|
| 1891 | Pro-YAM and Xenix use 9600 bps; YAM converts this to the caller's speed. |
---|
| 1892 | |
---|
| 1893 | Finally, the calling uucico logs in as uucp. |
---|
| 1894 | |
---|
| 1895 | omen Any ACU 2400 1-503-621-3746 se:--se: link ord: Giznoid in:--in: uucp |
---|
| 1896 | |
---|
| 1897 | |
---|
| 1898 | |
---|
| 1899 | 10. REVISIONS |
---|
| 1900 | |
---|
| 1901 | 6-18-88 Further revised for clarity. Corrected block numbering in two |
---|
| 1902 | examples. |
---|
| 1903 | 10-27-87 Optional fields added for number of files remaining to be sent |
---|
| 1904 | and total number of bytes remaining to be sent. |
---|
| 1905 | 10-18-87 Flow control discussion added to 1024 byte block descritpion, |
---|
| 1906 | minor revisions for clarity per user comments. |
---|
| 1907 | |
---|
| 1908 | |
---|
| 1909 | |
---|
| 1910 | Chapter 10 Xmodem Protocol Overview |
---|
| 1911 | |
---|
| 1912 | |
---|
| 1913 | |
---|
| 1914 | |
---|
| 1915 | |
---|
| 1916 | |
---|
| 1917 | |
---|
| 1918 | X/YMODEM Protocol Reference June 18 1988 30 |
---|
| 1919 | |
---|
| 1920 | |
---|
| 1921 | |
---|
| 1922 | 8-03-87 Revised for clarity. |
---|
| 1923 | 5-31-1987 emphasizes minimum requirements for YMODEM, and updates |
---|
| 1924 | information on accessing files. |
---|
| 1925 | 9-11-1986 clarifies nomenclature and some minor points. |
---|
| 1926 | The April 15 1986 edition clarifies some points concerning CRC |
---|
| 1927 | calculations and spaces in the header. |
---|
| 1928 | |
---|
| 1929 | |
---|
| 1930 | 11. YMODEM Programs |
---|
| 1931 | |
---|
| 1932 | ZCOMM, A shareware little brother to Professional-YAM, is available as |
---|
| 1933 | ZCOMMEXE.ARC on TeleGodzilla and other bulletin board systems. ZCOMM may |
---|
| 1934 | be used to test YMODEM amd ZMODEM implementations. |
---|
| 1935 | |
---|
| 1936 | Unix programs supporting YMODEM are available on TeleGodzilla in RZSZ.ZOO. |
---|
| 1937 | This ZOO archive includes a ZCOMM/Pro-YAM/PowerCom script ZUPL.T to upload |
---|
| 1938 | a bootstrap program MINIRB.C, compile it, and then upload the rest of the |
---|
| 1939 | files using the compiled MINIRB. Most Unix like systems are supported, |
---|
| 1940 | including V7, Xenix, Sys III, 4.2 BSD, SYS V, Idris, Coherent, and |
---|
| 1941 | Regulus. |
---|
| 1942 | |
---|
| 1943 | A version for VAX-VMS is available in VRBSB.SHQ. |
---|
| 1944 | |
---|
| 1945 | Irv Hoff has added 1k blocks and basic YMODEM batch transfers to the KMD |
---|
| 1946 | and IMP series programs, which replace the XMODEM and MODEM7/MDM7xx series |
---|
| 1947 | respectively. Overlays are available for a wide variety of CP/M systems. |
---|
| 1948 | |
---|
| 1949 | Questions about Professional-YAM communications software may be directed |
---|
| 1950 | to: |
---|
| 1951 | Chuck Forsberg |
---|
| 1952 | Omen Technology Inc |
---|
| 1953 | 17505-V Sauvie Island Road |
---|
| 1954 | Portland Oregon 97231 |
---|
| 1955 | VOICE: 503-621-3406 :VOICE |
---|
| 1956 | Modem: 503-621-3746 Speed: 19200(Telebit PEP),2400,1200,300 |
---|
| 1957 | Usenet: ...!tektronix!reed!omen!caf |
---|
| 1958 | CompuServe: 70007,2304 |
---|
| 1959 | GEnie: CAF |
---|
| 1960 | |
---|
| 1961 | Unlike ZMODEM and Kermit, XMODEM and YMODEM place obstacles in the path of |
---|
| 1962 | a reliable high performance implementation, evidenced by poor reliability |
---|
| 1963 | under stress of the industry leaders' XMODEM and YMODEM programs. Omen |
---|
| 1964 | Technology provides consulting and other services to those wishing to |
---|
| 1965 | implement XMODEM, YMODEM, and ZMODEM with state of the art features and |
---|
| 1966 | reliability. |
---|
| 1967 | |
---|
| 1968 | |
---|
| 1969 | |
---|
| 1970 | |
---|
| 1971 | |
---|
| 1972 | |
---|
| 1973 | |
---|
| 1974 | |
---|
| 1975 | |
---|
| 1976 | Chapter 11 Xmodem Protocol Overview |
---|
| 1977 | |
---|
| 1978 | |
---|
| 1979 | |
---|
| 1980 | |
---|
| 1981 | |
---|
| 1982 | |
---|
| 1983 | |
---|
| 1984 | |
---|
| 1985 | |
---|
| 1986 | |
---|
| 1987 | |
---|
| 1988 | CONTENTS |
---|
| 1989 | |
---|
| 1990 | |
---|
| 1991 | 1. TOWER OF BABEL................................................... 2 |
---|
| 1992 | 1.1 Definitions................................................. 2 |
---|
| 1993 | |
---|
| 1994 | 2. YMODEM MINIMUM REQUIREMENTS...................................... 4 |
---|
| 1995 | |
---|
| 1996 | 3. WHY YMODEM?...................................................... 6 |
---|
| 1997 | 3.1 Some Messages from the Pioneer.............................. 7 |
---|
| 1998 | |
---|
| 1999 | 4. XMODEM PROTOCOL ENHANCEMENTS..................................... 10 |
---|
| 2000 | 4.1 Graceful Abort.............................................. 10 |
---|
| 2001 | 4.2 CRC-16 Option............................................... 10 |
---|
| 2002 | 4.3 XMODEM-1k 1024 Byte Block................................... 11 |
---|
| 2003 | |
---|
| 2004 | 5. YMODEM Batch File Transmission................................... 13 |
---|
| 2005 | 5.1 KMD/IMP Exceptions to YMODEM................................ 16 |
---|
| 2006 | |
---|
| 2007 | 6. YMODEM-g File Transmission....................................... 18 |
---|
| 2008 | |
---|
| 2009 | 7. XMODEM PROTOCOL OVERVIEW......................................... 20 |
---|
| 2010 | 7.1 Definitions................................................. 20 |
---|
| 2011 | 7.2 Transmission Medium Level Protocol.......................... 20 |
---|
| 2012 | 7.3 File Level Protocol......................................... 21 |
---|
| 2013 | 7.4 Programming Tips............................................ 22 |
---|
| 2014 | |
---|
| 2015 | 8. XMODEM/CRC Overview.............................................. 24 |
---|
| 2016 | 8.1 CRC Calculation............................................. 24 |
---|
| 2017 | 8.2 CRC File Level Protocol Changes............................. 25 |
---|
| 2018 | 8.3 Data Flow Examples with CRC Option.......................... 27 |
---|
| 2019 | |
---|
| 2020 | 9. MORE INFORMATION................................................. 29 |
---|
| 2021 | 9.1 TeleGodzilla Bulletin Board................................. 29 |
---|
| 2022 | 9.2 Unix UUCP Access............................................ 29 |
---|
| 2023 | |
---|
| 2024 | 10. REVISIONS........................................................ 29 |
---|
| 2025 | |
---|
| 2026 | 11. YMODEM Programs.................................................. 30 |
---|
| 2027 | |
---|
| 2028 | |
---|
| 2029 | |
---|
| 2030 | |
---|
| 2031 | |
---|
| 2032 | |
---|
| 2033 | |
---|
| 2034 | |
---|
| 2035 | |
---|
| 2036 | |
---|
| 2037 | |
---|
| 2038 | |
---|
| 2039 | |
---|
| 2040 | |
---|
| 2041 | |
---|
| 2042 | - i - |
---|
| 2043 | |
---|
| 2044 | |
---|
| 2045 | |
---|
| 2046 | |
---|
| 2047 | |
---|
| 2048 | |
---|
| 2049 | |
---|
| 2050 | |
---|
| 2051 | |
---|
| 2052 | |
---|
| 2053 | |
---|
| 2054 | |
---|
| 2055 | |
---|
| 2056 | |
---|
| 2057 | LIST OF FIGURES |
---|
| 2058 | |
---|
| 2059 | |
---|
| 2060 | Figure 1. XMODEM-1k Blocks.......................................... 12 |
---|
| 2061 | |
---|
| 2062 | Figure 2. Mixed 1024 and 128 byte Blocks............................ 12 |
---|
| 2063 | |
---|
| 2064 | Figure 3. YMODEM Batch Transmission Session (1 file)................ 16 |
---|
| 2065 | |
---|
| 2066 | Figure 4. YMODEM Batch Transmission Session (2 files)............... 16 |
---|
| 2067 | |
---|
| 2068 | Figure 5. YMODEM Batch Transmission Session-1k Blocks............... 16 |
---|
| 2069 | |
---|
| 2070 | Figure 6. YMODEM Filename block transmitted by sz................... 16 |
---|
| 2071 | |
---|
| 2072 | Figure 7. YMODEM Header Information and Features.................... 16 |
---|
| 2073 | |
---|
| 2074 | Figure 8. YMODEM-g Transmission Session............................. 19 |
---|
| 2075 | |
---|
| 2076 | Figure 9. XMODEM Message Block Level Protocol....................... 21 |
---|
| 2077 | |
---|
| 2078 | Figure 10. Data flow including Error Recovery........................ 22 |
---|
| 2079 | |
---|
| 2080 | Figure 11. Message Block Level Protocol, CRC mode.................... 24 |
---|
| 2081 | |
---|
| 2082 | Figure 12. Example of CRC Calculation written in C................... 25 |
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| 2083 | |
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| 2084 | Figure 13. Data Flow: Receiver has CRC Option, Sender Doesn't........ 27 |
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| 2085 | |
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| 2086 | Figure 14. Receiver and Sender Both have CRC Option.................. 28 |
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| 2108 | - ii - |
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