rlogin(1c)rlogin(1c)Namerlogin - remote login
Syntaxrlogin rhost [-ec] [-8] [-L] [-l username]
rhost [-ec] [-8] [-L] [-l username]
Description
The command connects your terminal on the current local host system,
lhost, to the remote host system, rhost.
Each host has a file which contains a list of rhosts with which it
shares account names. The host names must be the standard names as
described in When you use the command to login as the same user on an
equivalent host, you do not need to specify a password.
You can also have a private equivalence list in a file .rhosts in your
login directory. Each line in this file should contain the rhost name
and a username separated by a space, giving additional cases where
logins without passwords are permitted. If the originating user is not
equivalent to the remote user, then the remote system prompts for a
login and password as in
To avoid security problems, the .rhosts file must be owned by either
the remote user or root and it may not be a symbolic link.
Your remote terminal type is the same as your local terminal type,
which is specified by your environment TERM variable. Except for
delays, all echoing takes place at the remote site so the rlogin is
transparent. Flow control by and <CTRL/Q>, and flushing of input and
output on interrupts are handled properly. The optional argument -8
allows an eight-bit input data path at all times. Otherwise, parity
bits are stripped except when the remote site's stop and start charac‐
ters are other than and <CTRL/Q>. A tilde followed by a dot (~.) on a
separate line disconnects from the remote host, where the tilde (~) is
the escape character. Similarly, a tilde followed by <CTRL/Z> (~
<CTRL/Z>), where is the suspend character, suspends the rlogin session.
Substitution of the delayed-suspend character, which is normally
<CTRL/Y>, for the suspend character suspends the send portion of the
rlogin, but allows output from the remote system. A different escape
character may be specified by the -e option. There is no space sepa‐
rating this option flag and the argument character.
Options-8 Allows an 8-bit input data path at all times.
-ec Uses the specified character as the escape charac‐
ter. If not specified, uses a tilde (~).
-l username Logs you in as the specified user, not as your user
login name.
-L Runs session in litout mode.
Files
/usr/hosts/* for rhost version of the command
See Alsorsh(1c)rlogin(1c)