From b870b63342a1b7c2cab0123b79942c7dda109d08 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: minima Date: Sun, 2 Sep 2001 21:03:37 +0000 Subject: [PATCH] just rubbing it in a bit more with colours... --- html/connect.html | 27 +++++++++++++++------------ 1 file changed, 15 insertions(+), 12 deletions(-) diff --git a/html/connect.html b/html/connect.html index 885f52fa..485dda50 100644 --- a/html/connect.html +++ b/html/connect.html @@ -20,7 +20,7 @@

-Last modified: Sun Sep 2 21:33:58 BST 2001 +Last modified: Sun Sep 2 22:02:36 BST 2001

At the moment, anybody can connect inwards at any time from outside, either by ax25 or by telnet (assuming you have followed the instructions in installation @@ -167,17 +167,20 @@ Last modified: Sun Sep 2 21:33:58 BST 2001 route that you are going to take to the destination, so this will be typically the callsign of your local node.

-

You will notice that the script waits until it sees the left hand string - of the pair and only then does it send the, - string on the right - hand side. This is called a State Machine.

- -

A state machine "walks" through a conversation (in this case) looking - for "states" (in this case particular strings) and then performs some - "action" (usually some kind of connect command for the type of system - you are trying to navigate). When one "state" "fires" (detects the string - are looking for), it sends the command associated with that state and then - moves onto the next "state", in our case: the next line.

+

You will notice that the script waits + until it sees the left hand string of the pair and only + then does it send the string on the + right hand side. This is called a State Machine.

+ +

A state machine "walks" through a conversation (in this + case) looking for "states" (in this case + particular strings) and then performs some "action" (usually some kind of connect command + for the type of system you are trying to navigate). When one + "state" "fires" + (detects the string are looking for), it sends the command + associated with that state and then moves onto the next "state", in our case: the next line.

PLEASE NOTE: the colouration in the above example is for illustrative purposes only, the debug output is all one colour.

-- 2.43.0