.fo off .cs 1 on BINHEX Use the BINHEX command to work with Macintosh files containing binary data which are stored in CMS. BINHEX may be used with HQX files, such as those created by BinHex 4.0 on the Macintosh, and also with BIN files, such as those created by BinHex 5.0. BINHEX checks files in these formats, describes the contents of the files, and converts between the two formats. .cs 1 off .cs 2 on The format of the BINHEX command is: ÚÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄľÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ¿ ³ ³ ³ ³ BINHEX ³ ? | Check | Describe | COnvert fn > [(options...[)]] ³ ³ ³ ³ ³ ³ Options: ³ ³ ³ Ú ¿ Ú ¿ Ú ¿ ³ ³ ³ ³To fm ³ ³Stack ³ ³Fifo ³ ³ ³ ³ ³Rate cps ³ ³Lifo ³ ³STEm stm ³ ³ ³ ³ À Ù À Ù À Ù ³ ³ ³ ³ ÀÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÊÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÙ .cs 2 off .cs 3 on OPERANDS ? causes BINHEX to type a brief description of the command format, including all the valid operands and options. When "?" is specified, the remainder of the command line is ignored. Check cause BINHEX to check the input file for errors, such as missing or corrupted data. BINHEX will either report there are no errors, or respond with an error message describing the problem. BINHEX also checks the input file when the Describe or COnvert operand is specified. Describe causes BINHEX to display information about the input file, including the full Macintosh filename, the type, creator, flags values, and the sizes of the data and resource forks. See the "Responses" section below for examples of the information which is displayed. COnvert causes BINHEX to convert the input file from BinHex to MacBinary format or vice-versa. The resulting file has the same filename as the input file, and a filetype of either BIN (for MacBinary format) or HQX (for BinHex format). The file is written to the same disk as the input file, unless the "To" option has been specified. fn specifies the filename of the input file. ft specifies the filetype of the input file. When "ft" is omitted or specified as "*", all filetypes will be searched to find a match for "fn". fm specifies the filemode of the input file. When "fm" is omitted or specified as "*", all accessed disks will be searched for a file matching "fn" and "ft". OPTIONS To fm specifies the disk to which the output file will be written when the "COnvert" operand is specified. When "To" is omitted, the output file is written to the same disk as the input file. Rate cps specifies a file transfer rate in characters per second. When a rate is specified, the information displayed by the "Describe" function will include an estimate of the time required to download the file. Stack cause the output from the "Describe" function to be stacked in FIFO order. "Fifo" is a synonym for "Stack". Lifo causes the output from the "Describe" function to be stacked in LIFO order. Fifo cause the output from the "Describe" function to be stacked in FIFO order. "Stack" is a synonym for "Fifo". STEm stm causes the output from the "Describe" function to be stored directly into REXX or EXEC2 variables. "stm" is the name of the stem for these variables, i.e. the characters preceding a period in their names. Only the first eight characters of "stm" are significant. The following variables are defined: stm.FN CMS filename stm.FT CMS filetype stm.FM CMS filemode stm.FORMAT BinHex or MacBinary stm.NAME Mac filename stm.TYPE Mac type stm.CREATOR Mac creator stm.FLAGS Mac flags stm.DATASIZE Mac data fork size stm.RESCSIZE Mac resource fork size stm.CRDATE Mac creation date stm.MDDATE Mac last modified date stm.CHARCNT Total character count stm.TIMEEST Download time estimate The creation and last modified dates are not defined for BinHex format files, which do not include them. The time estimate is defined only when the Rate option has been specified. USING THE BINHEX COMMAND The BINHEX command allows Macintosh users to obtain information about files stored in CMS which would ordinarily not be available until the files had been downloaded to a Macintosh. The Check function verifies that a file will be accepted by BinHex on the Macintosh, and the Describe function provides detailed information about a file. With this information, a Macintosh user can often avoid spending time downloading unwanted files or files which contain errors. The COnvert function provides conversion between the two file formats BINHEX accepts: BinHex format and MacBinary format. Conversion is useful because each of these formats offers advantages for storing Macintosh programs. BinHex format is used by BinHex 4.0 on the Macintosh. It consists of a header, the data fork, and the resource fork of a Macintosh file, compressed and converted to printable characters. Converting a file from binary to printable characters increases its size (in spite of the inclusion of file compression). However, since they contain only printable characters, BinHex files can be included in electronic mail, and can be uploaded and downloaded in nearly any environment. In CMS, BinHex files usually are given filetypes containing "HQX", and may have fixed or variable-length records. The files usually begin with the line (This file must be converted with BinHex 4.0) MacBinary format is used by BinHex 5.0 and MacTerminal on the Macintosh. It is similar to BinHex format, but retains the file contents in binary form instead of converting to printable characters. It also includes the dates the Macintosh file was created and last modified, and some extra flag bits. MacBinary is the most compact format for storing a Macintosh file. However, because MacBinary files retain binary data, they can be uploaded and downloaded only by programs which use an 8-bit data path. Usually, such a path is not available for VM/CMS systems. Programs such as Kermit can simulate an 8-bit path using printable characters, but only at the expense of a much longer transfer time. MacBinary files in CMS usually are given filetypes containing "BIN". They consist of fixed-length 128-byte records. USAGE NOTES 1) Although the filetype of the input file will usually indicate which format it is in, BINHEX determines the file's format by examining its characteristics. If the file has fixed-length 128-byte records, BINHEX assumes MacBinary format. Otherwise, BINHEX assumes BinHex format. 2) The data in a BinHex format file begins with a line containing a colon in column one, and ends with a line having a colon as the last character. CMS BINHEX skips any other lines in the file. However, BinHex on the Macintosh only skips the comment line "(This file must be converted with BinHex 4.0)". Thus, even when the Check function reports no errors, it may still be necessary to delete extraneous lines from the BinHex file before BinHex on the Macintosh will accept the file. 3) BinHex format files do not contain all the information included in MacBinary files. In particular, the creation and last modified dates, and some flag bits are not stored. As a result, this information is lost when the COnvert function is used to convert from MacBinary to BinHex format. 4) BINHEX cannot detect if the input file is not in either MacBinary or BinHex format. In this case, BINHEX will usually assume the file is in BinHex format, and give an "unexpected end-of-file" message when it fails to find the first line of BinHex data. 5) For a BinHex file, the maximum line length BINHEX can process is 256. RESPONSES 'fn ft fm': No errors detected. This is the normal response from the Check function. This response is omitted when BINHEX is called from a CMS command, or from an exec file with "address COMMAND" in effect. File: 'STARS16 HQX T1' Format: BinHex Filename: 'Stars 1.6' Type: 'DFIL' Creator: 'DMOV' Flags: none Data fork size: 0; Resource fork size: 6,054 Character count: 10,140. This is the response from the Describe function for a BinHex file when the Rate option is not used. This is the shortest possible description. File: 'TERM412 BIN M1' Format: MacBinary Filename: 'Term 4.12' Type: 'APPL' Creator: 'TRMA' Flags: Bndl+Init Data fork size: 0; Resource fork size: 52,947 Created: Thu, May 28, 1987 2:01:25 AM Last Modified: Thu, May 28, 1987 2:02:04 AM Character count: 53,120 (4 minutes, 55 seconds at 180 cps). This is the response from the Describe function for a MacBinary file when the Rate option is used. This is the longest possible description. OTHER MESSAGES AND RETURN CODES DMSBIN631E 'STEM' option is only available from an EXEC2 or REXX exec. RC=4 DMSBIN001E Error in command after 'token'. RC=24 DMSBIN002I Issue BINHEX ? or HELP CMS BINHEX for more information. DMSBIN003E Invalid option 'xxxxxxxx'. RC=24 DMSBIN010E Invalid rate 'xxxxxxxx'. RC=24 DMSBIN048E Invalid mode 'xxxxxxxx'. RC=24 DMSBIN637E Missing value for the 'STEM' option. RC=24 DMSBIN002E File 'fn ft fm' not found. RC=28 DMSBIN024E File 'fn ft fm' already exists. RC=28 DMSBIN044E Record length exceeds allowable maximum. RC=32 DMSBIN005E Invalid character 'x' in 'fn ft fm' at line mmmmmm position nnn. RC=36 DMSBIN006E Unexpected end-of-file reading 'fn ft fm'. RC=36 DMSBIN037E Disk 'mode' is read-only. RC=36 DMSBIN069E Disk 'mode' not accessed. RC=36 DMSBIN007E 'fn ft fm': CRC error for BinHex header. RC=44 DMSBIN008E 'fn ft fm': CRC error for BinHex data fork. RC=44 DMSBIN009E 'fn ft fm': CRC error for BinHex resource fork. RC=44 DMSBIN104S Error 'nn' reading file 'fn ft fm' from disk. RC=1nn DMSBIN105S Error 'nn' writing file 'fn ft fm' on disk. RC=1nn DMSBIN632E Error setting EXEC variable: RC=nnnnn from 'EXECCOMM'. RC=200 .cs 3 off