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| TALK(1) | General Commands Manual | TALK(1) | 
NAME¶
talk — talk to
    another user
SYNOPSIS¶
| talk | [-p encoding] person [ttyname] | 
DESCRIPTION¶
Talk is a visual communication program
    which copies lines from your terminal to that of another user.
Options available:
- encoding
- The charset encoding sent by your peer (i.e. UTF-8, ISO-8859-1, EUC-JP, whatever). Default is some guesswork based on the incoming data and your current locate.
- person
- If you wish to talk to someone on your own machine, then
      person is just the person's login name. If you wish
      to talk to a user on another host, then person is of
      the form ‘user@host’.
- ttyname
- If you wish to talk to a user who is logged in more than once, the
      ttyname argument may be used to indicate the
      appropriate terminal name, where ttyname is of the
      form ‘ttyXX’ or ‘pts/X’.
When first called, talk contacts the talk
    daemon on the other user's machine, which sends the message
Message from TalkDaemon@his_machine... talk: connection requested by your_name@your_machine. talk: respond with: talk your_name@your_machine
to that user. At this point, he then replies by typing
talk
   your_name@your_machineIt doesn't matter from which machine the recipient replies, as
    long as his login name is the same. Once communication is established, the
    two parties may type simultaneously; their output will appear in separate
    windows. Typing control-L (^L) will cause the screen to be reprinted. The
    erase, kill line, and word erase characters (normally ^H, ^U, and ^W
    respectively) will behave normally. To exit, just type the interrupt
    character (normally ^C); talk then moves the cursor
    to the bottom of the screen and restores the terminal to its previous
  state.
As of netkit-ntalk 0.15 talk supports
    scrollback; use esc-p and esc-n to scroll your window, and ctrl-p and ctrl-n
    to scroll the other window. These keys are now opposite from the way they
    were in 0.16; while this will probably be confusing at first, the rationale
    is that the key combinations with escape are harder to type and should
    therefore be used to scroll one's own screen, since one needs to do that
    much less often.
If you do not want to receive talk requests, you may block them using the mesg(1) command. By default, talk requests are normally not blocked. Certain commands, in particular nroff(1), pine(1), and pr(1), may block messages temporarily in order to prevent messy output.
FILES¶
- /etc/hosts
- to find the recipient's machine
- /var/run/utmp
- to find the recipient's tty
SEE ALSO¶
BUGS¶
The protocol used to communicate with the talk daemon is braindead.
Also, the version of talk(1) released with 4.2BSD uses a different and even more braindead protocol that is completely incompatible. Some vendor Unixes (particularly those from Sun) have been found to use this old protocol.
Old versions of talk may have trouble
    running on machines with more than one IP address, such as machines with
    dynamic SLIP or PPP connections. This problem is fixed as of netkit-ntalk
    0.11, but may affect people you are trying to communicate with.
HISTORY¶
The talk command appeared in
    4.2BSD.
| November 24, 1999 | Linux NetKit (0.17) |