• binkd FAQ [2/4]

    From binkd Team@2:5020/1042 to All on Sat Nov 25 22:15:02 2023
    31 Mar 16:48:43 [40423] trying 195.209.235.3, port 24554...
    31 Mar 16:48:43 [40423] connected to proxy.osu.ru:24554
    31 Mar 16:48:44 [40423] Connection rejected by proxy (HTTP/1.0 403 Forbidden)
    ? 31 Mar 16:48:44 [40423] unable to connect: {13} Permission denied

    In such a case you may try to use http tunnelling for instance with the help of httport, HTTPTunnel (http://http-tunnel.sourceforge.net/), stunnel (https://www.stunnel.org/) or you may find a node receiving binkp
    connections at port 443.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    07. How Can binkd Work via SOCKS-proxy?

    It is not a rare case when users go out to the internet from their corporate LAN exclusively via the proxy server based at the only computer connected to the internet. Thus binkd cannot make a direct connection to
    the remote node and one must use the proxy server. Proxy servers support
    was included in version 0.9.4 and the later ones.

    binkd works with a SOCKS proxy version 4 and 5. The first one does not demand an authorization (no login and password), the second one demands it
    as a rule.

    Suppose the connected to the Internet computer has the IP address 192.168.0.1 in its LAN and the SOCKS server at the computer responds on
    port 1080. Here is the line in binkd configuration file necessary for
    working via the SOCKS proxy.

    1. A SOCKS server without user authorization (no login and password are demanded):

    socks 192.168.0.1:1080

    2. A proxy server with user authorization (it is necessary to type login and password, e.g. login "user", password "password"):

    socks 192.168.0.1:1080/user/password


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    08. IP-Point: How Can I Make binkd to Get My Mail From My Bossnode (Uplink)?

    Make a poll using the command line option -P:

    binkd -P1:2/3 binkd.cfg

    Usually they want binkd to exit after the session is finished. One can
    use the command line option -p:

    binkd -p -P1:2/3 binkd.cfg

    If binkd does not exit for a long time after the session has been
    finished then decrease the value of rescan-delay (and sometimes the value
    of timeout).

    If binkd works permanently (e.g. as a Windows service) and you want to
    get your mail regularly then you need some additional program or a script.
    As an example in DOS, Windows or OS/2 it is enough to execute the command:

    cd . >> %outbound%\NNNNMMMM.ilo

    where NNNN is the hex net number,
    MMMM is the hex node number,
    %outbound% is the path to the necessary zone outbound.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    09. "start_file_transfer: .: Permission denied" Error

    You get the message when binkd cannot open a file for sending indicated
    in some *.?lo file. Most likely the file has a line containing only "."
    because the poll has been made by a command of the type

    echo . >> xxxxyyyy.flo

    you should change it to "cd . >> xxxxyyyy.flo"


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    10. binkd/win and Dial-up: Dialing-up and Disconnecting Automatically

    The problem is to configure the fidonet box in such a way that binkd
    would initiate a telephone call to your Internet provider, get your mail
    and disconnect.

    The solutions:

    1st Solution

    Configure automatic connection and timeout in the dial-up connection properties (idle time before hanging up). It is convinient to use a non-standard software for dialing-up (Advanced Dialer and others). You
    should start binkd with a command line option -p periodically (and possibly -Paddress for binkd to make a poll to the address).

    binkd -p -P1:2/3.4 binkd.cfg


    2nd Solution

    Use the command line option -p and the batch file where first Remote
    Access Service (RAS) is started then binkd is started and after binkd exits
    RAS is stopped.

    Two variants, for Windows NT and for Windows 2000:
    === binkdpoll1.cmd
    rasdial Connection
    binkd -p binkd.cfg
    rasdial Connection /disconnect
    ===

    === binkdpoll2.cmd
    net start "remote access service"
    net start "remote access auto service"
    binkd -p binkd.cfg
    net stop "remote access auto service"
    net stop "remote access service"
    ===

    3rd Solution (The Best One For Win9x)

    Use the command line options -p and -Paddress and control connection
    with a non-standard dial-up software (for example dialerp). This solution
    is the most reliable one (especially if the modem connection to your
    Internet provider is bad) due to the fact that dialerp can start some
    indicated programs at setting the connection. Here is the batch file you should start in the 'Execute' parameter of the dialerp configuration file:

    ====
    binkd -p -P1:2/3.4 binkd.cfg
    dialerp BREAK *
    ====

    The question you may now ask: Where can I take dialerp? The answer is:
    Ask the author (Alexander Vedjakin, 2:5020/540) or look for it in fileecho archives and in ftp/http.


    In any case you should set a small value for 'rescan-delay' parameter in the binkd configuration file. binkd would exit faster.

    === binkd.cfg
    # Outbound rescans period (sec)
    rescan-delay 2
    ===


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    11. I Have Changed binkd Configuration File On-The-Fly. When Will It Be Reloaded?

    Starting with the version 0.9.1 binkd could feel that its configuration file changed. It exited with code 3 if it had been started with option -C. Modification time was checked after each ingoing session. Here is the batch file for starting binkd versions 0.9.1-0.9.3 and 0.9.4-0.9.6/w32:

    ====
    :aaa
    binkd -C binkd.cfg
    if errorlevel 4 goto end
    if errorlevel 3 goto aaa
    :end
    ====

    In the versions 0.9.4/unix and /os2-emx (and in these ones only) binkd restarts automatically if it is started with -C command line option.
    Besides that starting with version 0.9.4 the files included into the configuration file with the help of 'include' keyword are tested not only
    on incoming sessions but also in every 'rescan-delay' seconds.

    If you install binkd 0.9.4/w32 as a Windows NT service you should use it with -C command line option. Then binkd re-reads its configuration file.

    Before version 0.9.4 changes in the configuration file were not tested if binkd was started in client-only mode (-c command line option).

    In the unix versions configuration file is re-read on SIGHUP signal
    by the command
    kill -HUP `cat /var/run/binkd.pid`

    In the version 1.0 configuration file is re-read automatically if
    changed. binkd tests on changes at every 'rescan-delay' seconds.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    12. How Can binkd Work With T-mail/IP?

    There is no way to do it. The protocols differ in essence: binkd uses
    binkp protocol whereas T-mail/IP uses EMSI etc.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    13. Is There At Least One Log Analyzer Under Unix?

    There exist many Perl scripts and several win32 binaries. For example here:

    binkdstat 0.1 beta4 Christmas version 6.01.2002
    Statistics generator for binkd
    (c) Dmitry Sergienko, 2:464/910@fidonet, dmitry@trifle.net 14.08.2000
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/binkdstat-ds.0.1_beta4_Christmas

    There also exists BndStat program:
    BNDST101.ZIP 34812 14-Aug-01 (AREA:AFTNMISC)
    BndStat 1.01. With sources. binkd statistics generator. Compiled for all
    platforms. Included win32 binaries. (C) Dmitry Rusov, 2:5090/94

    Log analyzer by val khokhlov (perl):
    http://www.vk.kiev.ua/create/soft.html#bnkds
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/stat-binkd.pl.gz

    binkdstat (c) val khokhlov, Dmitry Kolvakh, updated at April 2006
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/binkdstat.zip

    T-Hist (c) Michael Markowsky, 2:5020/378 (KLUG's BBS)
    Binary log file analyzer for various mailers including binkd.
    Works in DOS, Windows NT (2000, XP, 2003) and OS/2.
    ftp://ftp.grumbler.org/pub/binkd/hist30a7.zip

    Kleine Statistiker/BINKD for DOS v0.60a, Russian version
    A small statistics generator for posting statistics to an echo conference.
    ftp://ftp.grumbler.org/pub/binkd/statddos.rar


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    14. binkd Connects Too Slowly (~20 Seconds) Though I Have a High-Speed LAN

    It is possible that 'backresolv' parameter is on (for logging the remote host domain name) and DNS is not configured.

    The simplest solution is to comment the 'backresolv' out in the configuration file. Configuring DNS is a more complex solution.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    15. Why Does binkd Not Understand Command Line Options When I Start It From inetd?

    You should use the program name as the first parameter in inetd.conf (it may be any string for binkd), the second and the following parameters
    are the command line options (-iqs etc.) and the last parameter is the configuration file full path:

    binkp stream tcp nowait root /usr/fido/binkd binkd -isq /usr/fido/binkd.cfg

    If you do not use -q option then you should switch console output off (comment 'printq', 'percents', 'conlog' out).


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    16. Can One Make a File Request From binkd?

    It's a piece of cake! binkd supports WAZOO FREQ with an external helper.

    To request files from a remote system it is necessary to create a file
    of type nnnnmmmm.REQ and to put it in the outbound directory next to *.?ut
    and *.?lo files. But *.REQ files do not initiate binkd to call a link so
    to make a FREQ it is necessary to make a poll. The contents of a .REQ file
    is described in the "!SRIF.TXT" file which is a copy of FSC-0086.001 from http://ftsc.org


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    17. How Can my binkd Respond to a File Request?

    One can configure binkd for calling an external file request processor supporting SRIF (FSC-0086) for receiving and handling FREQs in binkd. Please read the "!SRIF.TXT" file and the comment to 'exec' in the configuration
    file.

    Here are the examples of lines in configuration file for DOS-based OS
    and for *nix (you should use regular expressions in the latter case for
    binkd to match both upper-case and lower-case letters, e.g. both *.REQ and *.req):

    exec "\\ftn\\allfix\\allfix.exe RP -SRIF *S" *.req

    exec "/ftn/bin/tmafreq-srif *S" *.[rR][eE][qQ]

    A bash script "srifreq" is delivered with binkd starting with version 1.1a19.
    The following file request processors are also compatible with binkd
    (but they are not the only ones, any other one supporting SRIF will do):

    Allfix by Harms Software Engineering: it is a fileecho processor with built-in file request processor and it has versions for DOS and OS/2;

    ViReq by Michael Haase (2:2432/280): a specialized FREQ processor for Windows, it is distributed by Michael Massenberg (2:2411/505) via modem,
    ISDN and Fido-over-IP.

    tmafreq by Maxim Timofeyev <tmahome@mail.tma.spb.ru>: the FREQ processor
    is created for a unix-like OS and ported into Windows. One may obtain tmafreq from different BBS and FTP with fileecho archives, or may get tmafreq sources from anonymous CVS :pserver:anoncvs@tma.spb.ru:/cvsroot, module "tmafreq".

    VIREQ/x by Volker Imre <volker@imre.dyndns.org> (2:246/2098): the FREQ processor is created for a unix-like OS but can be compiled in the OS/2, Windows and maybe other operating systems. Now it is included into "ftnapps" project on Sourceforge and may be downloaded from http://ftnapps.sourceforge.net/vireq.html.
    Binaries built for Win32 and OS/2 may be downloaded from http://download.binkd.org and
    https://sites.google.com/view/vasilyevmax/


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    18. How Can I Add binkd To a Fidonet Box Working With a Modem?

    You must configure your modem mailer and tosser for BSO (binkley-style outbound) mode so that all of them including binkd would have the same
    inbound directories (and also the same outbound directories). For example,
    one may put the following line to T-Mail mailer configuration file:

    BinkStyle_Pack_For All

    If your mailer can work with AMA (arcmail-attach) only you may try to
    use fileboxes and/or find programs that can convert your mailer's queue to
    BSO or fileboxes. For example, Mail2dir utility allows using fileboxes with FrontDoor. Such a means disables a possibility of sending your mail to the
    same link both by IP and by modem (for instance, when one of the channels failed). There is another more radical but more flexible way: you may change your mailer.
    See also question 35.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    19. Flags Are Not Created On Receiving a File, Programs Do Not Start

    For sure you have a wrong template in the configuration file. You have to use it this way (the first two lines are for Windows and OS/2, the rest are
    for the Unix-like OS):

    flag m:\\ftn\\flg\\pntseg.flg m:\\\\ftn\\\\inbound\\\\sec\\\\pntstr*.*
    flag m:\\ftn\\flg\\toss.flg *.su? *.mo? *.tu? *.we? *.th? *.fr? *.sa? *.pkt

    exec "/usr/local/bin/ftrack -c /fido/conf/ftrack" *.[Pp][Kk][Tt]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ss][Uu][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Mm][Oo][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Uu][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ww][Ee][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Hh][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ff][Rr][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ss][Aa][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/fech-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Ii][Cc]

    You must use the full path with four slashes for the file to receive or
    the template should start with an asterisk character. You must use two
    slashes for the flag file.

    You must use the full path because using a filename without path means
    the event of receiving the file in the current directory and not in the
    inbound directory. If a template begins with "*" then it means "any
    directory" (and since all the files are received in one of the inbound directories it works for both password protected and for unprotected
    sessions).

    In a UNIX-like OS you should take into account that filenames are case sensitive. Please use regular expressions in templates.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    20. 'skipmask' Keyword Does Not Work

    A filename is compared without path and the comparison is case
    sensitive when 'skipmask' is used.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    21. binkd Under Windows 3.x

    Sergey Zharsky (zharik@usa.net) ported binkd 0.9.2 and binkd 0.9.5 for Windows 3.x. They work using IP stacks Trumpet Winsock ver. 3.0 revision D
    and Novell TCP/IP Client for Win 3.11 (see the answer to the question
    'binkd Under DOS', the section "The DOS version has the feature...").


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    22. Different FTN Domains in binkd And a Tosser Without 5D Support

    Suppose there are two domains (with different zone numbers though it
    does not matter). Mail can be successfully sent to the first domain but
    not to the second one. This situation may arise if the tosser, the tracker
    and the other your FTN programs do not support 5D BSO.

    This is a typical binkd configuration for two FTN domains and 5D
    outbound:

    domain fidonet c:\\ftn\\outbound\\fidonet 2
    domain omeganet c:\\ftn\\outbound\\omeganet 11
    address 2:5070/222@fidonet 11:58/6@omeganet

    One must configure not the zone of your own address for 'domain'
    keyword as one might think but the zone that should not be appended to the outbound name (i.e. the outbound subdirectory extensions are not processed
    for the zone denoted in the 'domain' line).

    If your tosser would create bundles for omeganet in the omeganet
    directory then you should write as indicated above. But since it does not
    --- hpt/lnx 1.9 2023-02-09
    * Origin: Moscow, Russia (2:5020/1042)
  • From binkd Team@2:5020/1042 to All on Sat Dec 2 22:15:02 2023
    31 Mar 16:48:43 [40423] trying 195.209.235.3, port 24554...
    31 Mar 16:48:43 [40423] connected to proxy.osu.ru:24554
    31 Mar 16:48:44 [40423] Connection rejected by proxy (HTTP/1.0 403 Forbidden)
    ? 31 Mar 16:48:44 [40423] unable to connect: {13} Permission denied

    In such a case you may try to use http tunnelling for instance with the help of httport, HTTPTunnel (http://http-tunnel.sourceforge.net/), stunnel (https://www.stunnel.org/) or you may find a node receiving binkp
    connections at port 443.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    07. How Can binkd Work via SOCKS-proxy?

    It is not a rare case when users go out to the internet from their corporate LAN exclusively via the proxy server based at the only computer connected to the internet. Thus binkd cannot make a direct connection to
    the remote node and one must use the proxy server. Proxy servers support
    was included in version 0.9.4 and the later ones.

    binkd works with a SOCKS proxy version 4 and 5. The first one does not demand an authorization (no login and password), the second one demands it
    as a rule.

    Suppose the connected to the Internet computer has the IP address 192.168.0.1 in its LAN and the SOCKS server at the computer responds on
    port 1080. Here is the line in binkd configuration file necessary for
    working via the SOCKS proxy.

    1. A SOCKS server without user authorization (no login and password are demanded):

    socks 192.168.0.1:1080

    2. A proxy server with user authorization (it is necessary to type login and password, e.g. login "user", password "password"):

    socks 192.168.0.1:1080/user/password


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    08. IP-Point: How Can I Make binkd to Get My Mail From My Bossnode (Uplink)?

    Make a poll using the command line option -P:

    binkd -P1:2/3 binkd.cfg

    Usually they want binkd to exit after the session is finished. One can
    use the command line option -p:

    binkd -p -P1:2/3 binkd.cfg

    If binkd does not exit for a long time after the session has been
    finished then decrease the value of rescan-delay (and sometimes the value
    of timeout).

    If binkd works permanently (e.g. as a Windows service) and you want to
    get your mail regularly then you need some additional program or a script.
    As an example in DOS, Windows or OS/2 it is enough to execute the command:

    cd . >> %outbound%\NNNNMMMM.ilo

    where NNNN is the hex net number,
    MMMM is the hex node number,
    %outbound% is the path to the necessary zone outbound.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    09. "start_file_transfer: .: Permission denied" Error

    You get the message when binkd cannot open a file for sending indicated
    in some *.?lo file. Most likely the file has a line containing only "."
    because the poll has been made by a command of the type

    echo . >> xxxxyyyy.flo

    you should change it to "cd . >> xxxxyyyy.flo"


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    10. binkd/win and Dial-up: Dialing-up and Disconnecting Automatically

    The problem is to configure the fidonet box in such a way that binkd
    would initiate a telephone call to your Internet provider, get your mail
    and disconnect.

    The solutions:

    1st Solution

    Configure automatic connection and timeout in the dial-up connection properties (idle time before hanging up). It is convinient to use a non-standard software for dialing-up (Advanced Dialer and others). You
    should start binkd with a command line option -p periodically (and possibly -Paddress for binkd to make a poll to the address).

    binkd -p -P1:2/3.4 binkd.cfg


    2nd Solution

    Use the command line option -p and the batch file where first Remote
    Access Service (RAS) is started then binkd is started and after binkd exits
    RAS is stopped.

    Two variants, for Windows NT and for Windows 2000:
    === binkdpoll1.cmd
    rasdial Connection
    binkd -p binkd.cfg
    rasdial Connection /disconnect
    ===

    === binkdpoll2.cmd
    net start "remote access service"
    net start "remote access auto service"
    binkd -p binkd.cfg
    net stop "remote access auto service"
    net stop "remote access service"
    ===

    3rd Solution (The Best One For Win9x)

    Use the command line options -p and -Paddress and control connection
    with a non-standard dial-up software (for example dialerp). This solution
    is the most reliable one (especially if the modem connection to your
    Internet provider is bad) due to the fact that dialerp can start some
    indicated programs at setting the connection. Here is the batch file you should start in the 'Execute' parameter of the dialerp configuration file:

    ====
    binkd -p -P1:2/3.4 binkd.cfg
    dialerp BREAK *
    ====

    The question you may now ask: Where can I take dialerp? The answer is:
    Ask the author (Alexander Vedjakin, 2:5020/540) or look for it in fileecho archives and in ftp/http.


    In any case you should set a small value for 'rescan-delay' parameter in the binkd configuration file. binkd would exit faster.

    === binkd.cfg
    # Outbound rescans period (sec)
    rescan-delay 2
    ===


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    11. I Have Changed binkd Configuration File On-The-Fly. When Will It Be Reloaded?

    Starting with the version 0.9.1 binkd could feel that its configuration file changed. It exited with code 3 if it had been started with option -C. Modification time was checked after each ingoing session. Here is the batch file for starting binkd versions 0.9.1-0.9.3 and 0.9.4-0.9.6/w32:

    ====
    :aaa
    binkd -C binkd.cfg
    if errorlevel 4 goto end
    if errorlevel 3 goto aaa
    :end
    ====

    In the versions 0.9.4/unix and /os2-emx (and in these ones only) binkd restarts automatically if it is started with -C command line option.
    Besides that starting with version 0.9.4 the files included into the configuration file with the help of 'include' keyword are tested not only
    on incoming sessions but also in every 'rescan-delay' seconds.

    If you install binkd 0.9.4/w32 as a Windows NT service you should use it with -C command line option. Then binkd re-reads its configuration file.

    Before version 0.9.4 changes in the configuration file were not tested if binkd was started in client-only mode (-c command line option).

    In the unix versions configuration file is re-read on SIGHUP signal
    by the command
    kill -HUP `cat /var/run/binkd.pid`

    In the version 1.0 configuration file is re-read automatically if
    changed. binkd tests on changes at every 'rescan-delay' seconds.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    12. How Can binkd Work With T-mail/IP?

    There is no way to do it. The protocols differ in essence: binkd uses
    binkp protocol whereas T-mail/IP uses EMSI etc.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    13. Is There At Least One Log Analyzer Under Unix?

    There exist many Perl scripts and several win32 binaries. For example here:

    binkdstat 0.1 beta4 Christmas version 6.01.2002
    Statistics generator for binkd
    (c) Dmitry Sergienko, 2:464/910@fidonet, dmitry@trifle.net 14.08.2000
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/binkdstat-ds.0.1_beta4_Christmas

    There also exists BndStat program:
    BNDST101.ZIP 34812 14-Aug-01 (AREA:AFTNMISC)
    BndStat 1.01. With sources. binkd statistics generator. Compiled for all
    platforms. Included win32 binaries. (C) Dmitry Rusov, 2:5090/94

    Log analyzer by val khokhlov (perl):
    http://www.vk.kiev.ua/create/soft.html#bnkds
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/stat-binkd.pl.gz

    binkdstat (c) val khokhlov, Dmitry Kolvakh, updated at April 2006
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/binkdstat.zip

    T-Hist (c) Michael Markowsky, 2:5020/378 (KLUG's BBS)
    Binary log file analyzer for various mailers including binkd.
    Works in DOS, Windows NT (2000, XP, 2003) and OS/2.
    ftp://ftp.grumbler.org/pub/binkd/hist30a7.zip

    Kleine Statistiker/BINKD for DOS v0.60a, Russian version
    A small statistics generator for posting statistics to an echo conference.
    ftp://ftp.grumbler.org/pub/binkd/statddos.rar


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    14. binkd Connects Too Slowly (~20 Seconds) Though I Have a High-Speed LAN

    It is possible that 'backresolv' parameter is on (for logging the remote host domain name) and DNS is not configured.

    The simplest solution is to comment the 'backresolv' out in the configuration file. Configuring DNS is a more complex solution.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    15. Why Does binkd Not Understand Command Line Options When I Start It From inetd?

    You should use the program name as the first parameter in inetd.conf (it may be any string for binkd), the second and the following parameters
    are the command line options (-iqs etc.) and the last parameter is the configuration file full path:

    binkp stream tcp nowait root /usr/fido/binkd binkd -isq /usr/fido/binkd.cfg

    If you do not use -q option then you should switch console output off (comment 'printq', 'percents', 'conlog' out).


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    16. Can One Make a File Request From binkd?

    It's a piece of cake! binkd supports WAZOO FREQ with an external helper.

    To request files from a remote system it is necessary to create a file
    of type nnnnmmmm.REQ and to put it in the outbound directory next to *.?ut
    and *.?lo files. But *.REQ files do not initiate binkd to call a link so
    to make a FREQ it is necessary to make a poll. The contents of a .REQ file
    is described in the "!SRIF.TXT" file which is a copy of FSC-0086.001 from http://ftsc.org


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    17. How Can my binkd Respond to a File Request?

    One can configure binkd for calling an external file request processor supporting SRIF (FSC-0086) for receiving and handling FREQs in binkd. Please read the "!SRIF.TXT" file and the comment to 'exec' in the configuration
    file.

    Here are the examples of lines in configuration file for DOS-based OS
    and for *nix (you should use regular expressions in the latter case for
    binkd to match both upper-case and lower-case letters, e.g. both *.REQ and *.req):

    exec "\\ftn\\allfix\\allfix.exe RP -SRIF *S" *.req

    exec "/ftn/bin/tmafreq-srif *S" *.[rR][eE][qQ]

    A bash script "srifreq" is delivered with binkd starting with version 1.1a19.
    The following file request processors are also compatible with binkd
    (but they are not the only ones, any other one supporting SRIF will do):

    Allfix by Harms Software Engineering: it is a fileecho processor with built-in file request processor and it has versions for DOS and OS/2;

    ViReq by Michael Haase (2:2432/280): a specialized FREQ processor for Windows, it is distributed by Michael Massenberg (2:2411/505) via modem,
    ISDN and Fido-over-IP.

    tmafreq by Maxim Timofeyev <tmahome@mail.tma.spb.ru>: the FREQ processor
    is created for a unix-like OS and ported into Windows. One may obtain tmafreq from different BBS and FTP with fileecho archives, or may get tmafreq sources from anonymous CVS :pserver:anoncvs@tma.spb.ru:/cvsroot, module "tmafreq".

    VIREQ/x by Volker Imre <volker@imre.dyndns.org> (2:246/2098): the FREQ processor is created for a unix-like OS but can be compiled in the OS/2, Windows and maybe other operating systems. Now it is included into "ftnapps" project on Sourceforge and may be downloaded from http://ftnapps.sourceforge.net/vireq.html.
    Binaries built for Win32 and OS/2 may be downloaded from http://download.binkd.org and
    https://sites.google.com/view/vasilyevmax/


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    18. How Can I Add binkd To a Fidonet Box Working With a Modem?

    You must configure your modem mailer and tosser for BSO (binkley-style outbound) mode so that all of them including binkd would have the same
    inbound directories (and also the same outbound directories). For example,
    one may put the following line to T-Mail mailer configuration file:

    BinkStyle_Pack_For All

    If your mailer can work with AMA (arcmail-attach) only you may try to
    use fileboxes and/or find programs that can convert your mailer's queue to
    BSO or fileboxes. For example, Mail2dir utility allows using fileboxes with FrontDoor. Such a means disables a possibility of sending your mail to the
    same link both by IP and by modem (for instance, when one of the channels failed). There is another more radical but more flexible way: you may change your mailer.
    See also question 35.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    19. Flags Are Not Created On Receiving a File, Programs Do Not Start

    For sure you have a wrong template in the configuration file. You have to use it this way (the first two lines are for Windows and OS/2, the rest are
    for the Unix-like OS):

    flag m:\\ftn\\flg\\pntseg.flg m:\\\\ftn\\\\inbound\\\\sec\\\\pntstr*.*
    flag m:\\ftn\\flg\\toss.flg *.su? *.mo? *.tu? *.we? *.th? *.fr? *.sa? *.pkt

    exec "/usr/local/bin/ftrack -c /fido/conf/ftrack" *.[Pp][Kk][Tt]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ss][Uu][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Mm][Oo][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Uu][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ww][Ee][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Hh][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ff][Rr][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ss][Aa][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/fech-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Ii][Cc]

    You must use the full path with four slashes for the file to receive or
    the template should start with an asterisk character. You must use two
    slashes for the flag file.

    You must use the full path because using a filename without path means
    the event of receiving the file in the current directory and not in the
    inbound directory. If a template begins with "*" then it means "any
    directory" (and since all the files are received in one of the inbound directories it works for both password protected and for unprotected
    sessions).

    In a UNIX-like OS you should take into account that filenames are case sensitive. Please use regular expressions in templates.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    20. 'skipmask' Keyword Does Not Work

    A filename is compared without path and the comparison is case
    sensitive when 'skipmask' is used.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    21. binkd Under Windows 3.x

    Sergey Zharsky (zharik@usa.net) ported binkd 0.9.2 and binkd 0.9.5 for Windows 3.x. They work using IP stacks Trumpet Winsock ver. 3.0 revision D
    and Novell TCP/IP Client for Win 3.11 (see the answer to the question
    'binkd Under DOS', the section "The DOS version has the feature...").


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    22. Different FTN Domains in binkd And a Tosser Without 5D Support

    Suppose there are two domains (with different zone numbers though it
    does not matter). Mail can be successfully sent to the first domain but
    not to the second one. This situation may arise if the tosser, the tracker
    and the other your FTN programs do not support 5D BSO.

    This is a typical binkd configuration for two FTN domains and 5D
    outbound:

    domain fidonet c:\\ftn\\outbound\\fidonet 2
    domain omeganet c:\\ftn\\outbound\\omeganet 11
    address 2:5070/222@fidonet 11:58/6@omeganet

    One must configure not the zone of your own address for 'domain'
    keyword as one might think but the zone that should not be appended to the outbound name (i.e. the outbound subdirectory extensions are not processed
    for the zone denoted in the 'domain' line).

    If your tosser would create bundles for omeganet in the omeganet
    directory then you should write as indicated above. But since it does not
    --- hpt/lnx 1.9 2023-02-09
    * Origin: Moscow, Russia (2:5020/1042)
  • From binkd Team@2:5020/1042 to All on Sat Dec 9 22:15:02 2023
    31 Mar 16:48:43 [40423] trying 195.209.235.3, port 24554...
    31 Mar 16:48:43 [40423] connected to proxy.osu.ru:24554
    31 Mar 16:48:44 [40423] Connection rejected by proxy (HTTP/1.0 403 Forbidden)
    ? 31 Mar 16:48:44 [40423] unable to connect: {13} Permission denied

    In such a case you may try to use http tunnelling for instance with the help of httport, HTTPTunnel (http://http-tunnel.sourceforge.net/), stunnel (https://www.stunnel.org/) or you may find a node receiving binkp
    connections at port 443.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    07. How Can binkd Work via SOCKS-proxy?

    It is not a rare case when users go out to the internet from their corporate LAN exclusively via the proxy server based at the only computer connected to the internet. Thus binkd cannot make a direct connection to
    the remote node and one must use the proxy server. Proxy servers support
    was included in version 0.9.4 and the later ones.

    binkd works with a SOCKS proxy version 4 and 5. The first one does not demand an authorization (no login and password), the second one demands it
    as a rule.

    Suppose the connected to the Internet computer has the IP address 192.168.0.1 in its LAN and the SOCKS server at the computer responds on
    port 1080. Here is the line in binkd configuration file necessary for
    working via the SOCKS proxy.

    1. A SOCKS server without user authorization (no login and password are demanded):

    socks 192.168.0.1:1080

    2. A proxy server with user authorization (it is necessary to type login and password, e.g. login "user", password "password"):

    socks 192.168.0.1:1080/user/password


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    08. IP-Point: How Can I Make binkd to Get My Mail From My Bossnode (Uplink)?

    Make a poll using the command line option -P:

    binkd -P1:2/3 binkd.cfg

    Usually they want binkd to exit after the session is finished. One can
    use the command line option -p:

    binkd -p -P1:2/3 binkd.cfg

    If binkd does not exit for a long time after the session has been
    finished then decrease the value of rescan-delay (and sometimes the value
    of timeout).

    If binkd works permanently (e.g. as a Windows service) and you want to
    get your mail regularly then you need some additional program or a script.
    As an example in DOS, Windows or OS/2 it is enough to execute the command:

    cd . >> %outbound%\NNNNMMMM.ilo

    where NNNN is the hex net number,
    MMMM is the hex node number,
    %outbound% is the path to the necessary zone outbound.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    09. "start_file_transfer: .: Permission denied" Error

    You get the message when binkd cannot open a file for sending indicated
    in some *.?lo file. Most likely the file has a line containing only "."
    because the poll has been made by a command of the type

    echo . >> xxxxyyyy.flo

    you should change it to "cd . >> xxxxyyyy.flo"


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    10. binkd/win and Dial-up: Dialing-up and Disconnecting Automatically

    The problem is to configure the fidonet box in such a way that binkd
    would initiate a telephone call to your Internet provider, get your mail
    and disconnect.

    The solutions:

    1st Solution

    Configure automatic connection and timeout in the dial-up connection properties (idle time before hanging up). It is convinient to use a non-standard software for dialing-up (Advanced Dialer and others). You
    should start binkd with a command line option -p periodically (and possibly -Paddress for binkd to make a poll to the address).

    binkd -p -P1:2/3.4 binkd.cfg


    2nd Solution

    Use the command line option -p and the batch file where first Remote
    Access Service (RAS) is started then binkd is started and after binkd exits
    RAS is stopped.

    Two variants, for Windows NT and for Windows 2000:
    === binkdpoll1.cmd
    rasdial Connection
    binkd -p binkd.cfg
    rasdial Connection /disconnect
    ===

    === binkdpoll2.cmd
    net start "remote access service"
    net start "remote access auto service"
    binkd -p binkd.cfg
    net stop "remote access auto service"
    net stop "remote access service"
    ===

    3rd Solution (The Best One For Win9x)

    Use the command line options -p and -Paddress and control connection
    with a non-standard dial-up software (for example dialerp). This solution
    is the most reliable one (especially if the modem connection to your
    Internet provider is bad) due to the fact that dialerp can start some
    indicated programs at setting the connection. Here is the batch file you should start in the 'Execute' parameter of the dialerp configuration file:

    ====
    binkd -p -P1:2/3.4 binkd.cfg
    dialerp BREAK *
    ====

    The question you may now ask: Where can I take dialerp? The answer is:
    Ask the author (Alexander Vedjakin, 2:5020/540) or look for it in fileecho archives and in ftp/http.


    In any case you should set a small value for 'rescan-delay' parameter in the binkd configuration file. binkd would exit faster.

    === binkd.cfg
    # Outbound rescans period (sec)
    rescan-delay 2
    ===


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    11. I Have Changed binkd Configuration File On-The-Fly. When Will It Be Reloaded?

    Starting with the version 0.9.1 binkd could feel that its configuration file changed. It exited with code 3 if it had been started with option -C. Modification time was checked after each ingoing session. Here is the batch file for starting binkd versions 0.9.1-0.9.3 and 0.9.4-0.9.6/w32:

    ====
    :aaa
    binkd -C binkd.cfg
    if errorlevel 4 goto end
    if errorlevel 3 goto aaa
    :end
    ====

    In the versions 0.9.4/unix and /os2-emx (and in these ones only) binkd restarts automatically if it is started with -C command line option.
    Besides that starting with version 0.9.4 the files included into the configuration file with the help of 'include' keyword are tested not only
    on incoming sessions but also in every 'rescan-delay' seconds.

    If you install binkd 0.9.4/w32 as a Windows NT service you should use it with -C command line option. Then binkd re-reads its configuration file.

    Before version 0.9.4 changes in the configuration file were not tested if binkd was started in client-only mode (-c command line option).

    In the unix versions configuration file is re-read on SIGHUP signal
    by the command
    kill -HUP `cat /var/run/binkd.pid`

    In the version 1.0 configuration file is re-read automatically if
    changed. binkd tests on changes at every 'rescan-delay' seconds.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    12. How Can binkd Work With T-mail/IP?

    There is no way to do it. The protocols differ in essence: binkd uses
    binkp protocol whereas T-mail/IP uses EMSI etc.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    13. Is There At Least One Log Analyzer Under Unix?

    There exist many Perl scripts and several win32 binaries. For example here:

    binkdstat 0.1 beta4 Christmas version 6.01.2002
    Statistics generator for binkd
    (c) Dmitry Sergienko, 2:464/910@fidonet, dmitry@trifle.net 14.08.2000
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/binkdstat-ds.0.1_beta4_Christmas

    There also exists BndStat program:
    BNDST101.ZIP 34812 14-Aug-01 (AREA:AFTNMISC)
    BndStat 1.01. With sources. binkd statistics generator. Compiled for all
    platforms. Included win32 binaries. (C) Dmitry Rusov, 2:5090/94

    Log analyzer by val khokhlov (perl):
    http://www.vk.kiev.ua/create/soft.html#bnkds
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/stat-binkd.pl.gz

    binkdstat (c) val khokhlov, Dmitry Kolvakh, updated at April 2006
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/binkdstat.zip

    T-Hist (c) Michael Markowsky, 2:5020/378 (KLUG's BBS)
    Binary log file analyzer for various mailers including binkd.
    Works in DOS, Windows NT (2000, XP, 2003) and OS/2.
    ftp://ftp.grumbler.org/pub/binkd/hist30a7.zip

    Kleine Statistiker/BINKD for DOS v0.60a, Russian version
    A small statistics generator for posting statistics to an echo conference.
    ftp://ftp.grumbler.org/pub/binkd/statddos.rar


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    14. binkd Connects Too Slowly (~20 Seconds) Though I Have a High-Speed LAN

    It is possible that 'backresolv' parameter is on (for logging the remote host domain name) and DNS is not configured.

    The simplest solution is to comment the 'backresolv' out in the configuration file. Configuring DNS is a more complex solution.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    15. Why Does binkd Not Understand Command Line Options When I Start It From inetd?

    You should use the program name as the first parameter in inetd.conf (it may be any string for binkd), the second and the following parameters
    are the command line options (-iqs etc.) and the last parameter is the configuration file full path:

    binkp stream tcp nowait root /usr/fido/binkd binkd -isq /usr/fido/binkd.cfg

    If you do not use -q option then you should switch console output off (comment 'printq', 'percents', 'conlog' out).


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    16. Can One Make a File Request From binkd?

    It's a piece of cake! binkd supports WAZOO FREQ with an external helper.

    To request files from a remote system it is necessary to create a file
    of type nnnnmmmm.REQ and to put it in the outbound directory next to *.?ut
    and *.?lo files. But *.REQ files do not initiate binkd to call a link so
    to make a FREQ it is necessary to make a poll. The contents of a .REQ file
    is described in the "!SRIF.TXT" file which is a copy of FSC-0086.001 from http://ftsc.org


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    17. How Can my binkd Respond to a File Request?

    One can configure binkd for calling an external file request processor supporting SRIF (FSC-0086) for receiving and handling FREQs in binkd. Please read the "!SRIF.TXT" file and the comment to 'exec' in the configuration
    file.

    Here are the examples of lines in configuration file for DOS-based OS
    and for *nix (you should use regular expressions in the latter case for
    binkd to match both upper-case and lower-case letters, e.g. both *.REQ and *.req):

    exec "\\ftn\\allfix\\allfix.exe RP -SRIF *S" *.req

    exec "/ftn/bin/tmafreq-srif *S" *.[rR][eE][qQ]

    A bash script "srifreq" is delivered with binkd starting with version 1.1a19.
    The following file request processors are also compatible with binkd
    (but they are not the only ones, any other one supporting SRIF will do):

    Allfix by Harms Software Engineering: it is a fileecho processor with built-in file request processor and it has versions for DOS and OS/2;

    ViReq by Michael Haase (2:2432/280): a specialized FREQ processor for Windows, it is distributed by Michael Massenberg (2:2411/505) via modem,
    ISDN and Fido-over-IP.

    tmafreq by Maxim Timofeyev <tmahome@mail.tma.spb.ru>: the FREQ processor
    is created for a unix-like OS and ported into Windows. One may obtain tmafreq from different BBS and FTP with fileecho archives, or may get tmafreq sources from anonymous CVS :pserver:anoncvs@tma.spb.ru:/cvsroot, module "tmafreq".

    VIREQ/x by Volker Imre <volker@imre.dyndns.org> (2:246/2098): the FREQ processor is created for a unix-like OS but can be compiled in the OS/2, Windows and maybe other operating systems. Now it is included into "ftnapps" project on Sourceforge and may be downloaded from http://ftnapps.sourceforge.net/vireq.html.
    Binaries built for Win32 and OS/2 may be downloaded from http://download.binkd.org and
    https://sites.google.com/view/vasilyevmax/


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    18. How Can I Add binkd To a Fidonet Box Working With a Modem?

    You must configure your modem mailer and tosser for BSO (binkley-style outbound) mode so that all of them including binkd would have the same
    inbound directories (and also the same outbound directories). For example,
    one may put the following line to T-Mail mailer configuration file:

    BinkStyle_Pack_For All

    If your mailer can work with AMA (arcmail-attach) only you may try to
    use fileboxes and/or find programs that can convert your mailer's queue to
    BSO or fileboxes. For example, Mail2dir utility allows using fileboxes with FrontDoor. Such a means disables a possibility of sending your mail to the
    same link both by IP and by modem (for instance, when one of the channels failed). There is another more radical but more flexible way: you may change your mailer.
    See also question 35.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    19. Flags Are Not Created On Receiving a File, Programs Do Not Start

    For sure you have a wrong template in the configuration file. You have to use it this way (the first two lines are for Windows and OS/2, the rest are
    for the Unix-like OS):

    flag m:\\ftn\\flg\\pntseg.flg m:\\\\ftn\\\\inbound\\\\sec\\\\pntstr*.*
    flag m:\\ftn\\flg\\toss.flg *.su? *.mo? *.tu? *.we? *.th? *.fr? *.sa? *.pkt

    exec "/usr/local/bin/ftrack -c /fido/conf/ftrack" *.[Pp][Kk][Tt]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ss][Uu][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Mm][Oo][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Uu][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ww][Ee][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Hh][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ff][Rr][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ss][Aa][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/fech-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Ii][Cc]

    You must use the full path with four slashes for the file to receive or
    the template should start with an asterisk character. You must use two
    slashes for the flag file.

    You must use the full path because using a filename without path means
    the event of receiving the file in the current directory and not in the
    inbound directory. If a template begins with "*" then it means "any
    directory" (and since all the files are received in one of the inbound directories it works for both password protected and for unprotected
    sessions).

    In a UNIX-like OS you should take into account that filenames are case sensitive. Please use regular expressions in templates.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    20. 'skipmask' Keyword Does Not Work

    A filename is compared without path and the comparison is case
    sensitive when 'skipmask' is used.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    21. binkd Under Windows 3.x

    Sergey Zharsky (zharik@usa.net) ported binkd 0.9.2 and binkd 0.9.5 for Windows 3.x. They work using IP stacks Trumpet Winsock ver. 3.0 revision D
    and Novell TCP/IP Client for Win 3.11 (see the answer to the question
    'binkd Under DOS', the section "The DOS version has the feature...").


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    22. Different FTN Domains in binkd And a Tosser Without 5D Support

    Suppose there are two domains (with different zone numbers though it
    does not matter). Mail can be successfully sent to the first domain but
    not to the second one. This situation may arise if the tosser, the tracker
    and the other your FTN programs do not support 5D BSO.

    This is a typical binkd configuration for two FTN domains and 5D
    outbound:

    domain fidonet c:\\ftn\\outbound\\fidonet 2
    domain omeganet c:\\ftn\\outbound\\omeganet 11
    address 2:5070/222@fidonet 11:58/6@omeganet

    One must configure not the zone of your own address for 'domain'
    keyword as one might think but the zone that should not be appended to the outbound name (i.e. the outbound subdirectory extensions are not processed
    for the zone denoted in the 'domain' line).

    If your tosser would create bundles for omeganet in the omeganet
    directory then you should write as indicated above. But since it does not
    --- hpt/lnx 1.9 2023-02-09
    * Origin: Moscow, Russia (2:5020/1042)
  • From binkd Team@2:5020/1042 to All on Sat Dec 16 22:15:02 2023
    31 Mar 16:48:43 [40423] trying 195.209.235.3, port 24554...
    31 Mar 16:48:43 [40423] connected to proxy.osu.ru:24554
    31 Mar 16:48:44 [40423] Connection rejected by proxy (HTTP/1.0 403 Forbidden)
    ? 31 Mar 16:48:44 [40423] unable to connect: {13} Permission denied

    In such a case you may try to use http tunnelling for instance with the help of httport, HTTPTunnel (http://http-tunnel.sourceforge.net/), stunnel (https://www.stunnel.org/) or you may find a node receiving binkp
    connections at port 443.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    07. How Can binkd Work via SOCKS-proxy?

    It is not a rare case when users go out to the internet from their corporate LAN exclusively via the proxy server based at the only computer connected to the internet. Thus binkd cannot make a direct connection to
    the remote node and one must use the proxy server. Proxy servers support
    was included in version 0.9.4 and the later ones.

    binkd works with a SOCKS proxy version 4 and 5. The first one does not demand an authorization (no login and password), the second one demands it
    as a rule.

    Suppose the connected to the Internet computer has the IP address 192.168.0.1 in its LAN and the SOCKS server at the computer responds on
    port 1080. Here is the line in binkd configuration file necessary for
    working via the SOCKS proxy.

    1. A SOCKS server without user authorization (no login and password are demanded):

    socks 192.168.0.1:1080

    2. A proxy server with user authorization (it is necessary to type login and password, e.g. login "user", password "password"):

    socks 192.168.0.1:1080/user/password


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    08. IP-Point: How Can I Make binkd to Get My Mail From My Bossnode (Uplink)?

    Make a poll using the command line option -P:

    binkd -P1:2/3 binkd.cfg

    Usually they want binkd to exit after the session is finished. One can
    use the command line option -p:

    binkd -p -P1:2/3 binkd.cfg

    If binkd does not exit for a long time after the session has been
    finished then decrease the value of rescan-delay (and sometimes the value
    of timeout).

    If binkd works permanently (e.g. as a Windows service) and you want to
    get your mail regularly then you need some additional program or a script.
    As an example in DOS, Windows or OS/2 it is enough to execute the command:

    cd . >> %outbound%\NNNNMMMM.ilo

    where NNNN is the hex net number,
    MMMM is the hex node number,
    %outbound% is the path to the necessary zone outbound.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    09. "start_file_transfer: .: Permission denied" Error

    You get the message when binkd cannot open a file for sending indicated
    in some *.?lo file. Most likely the file has a line containing only "."
    because the poll has been made by a command of the type

    echo . >> xxxxyyyy.flo

    you should change it to "cd . >> xxxxyyyy.flo"


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    10. binkd/win and Dial-up: Dialing-up and Disconnecting Automatically

    The problem is to configure the fidonet box in such a way that binkd
    would initiate a telephone call to your Internet provider, get your mail
    and disconnect.

    The solutions:

    1st Solution

    Configure automatic connection and timeout in the dial-up connection properties (idle time before hanging up). It is convinient to use a non-standard software for dialing-up (Advanced Dialer and others). You
    should start binkd with a command line option -p periodically (and possibly -Paddress for binkd to make a poll to the address).

    binkd -p -P1:2/3.4 binkd.cfg


    2nd Solution

    Use the command line option -p and the batch file where first Remote
    Access Service (RAS) is started then binkd is started and after binkd exits
    RAS is stopped.

    Two variants, for Windows NT and for Windows 2000:
    === binkdpoll1.cmd
    rasdial Connection
    binkd -p binkd.cfg
    rasdial Connection /disconnect
    ===

    === binkdpoll2.cmd
    net start "remote access service"
    net start "remote access auto service"
    binkd -p binkd.cfg
    net stop "remote access auto service"
    net stop "remote access service"
    ===

    3rd Solution (The Best One For Win9x)

    Use the command line options -p and -Paddress and control connection
    with a non-standard dial-up software (for example dialerp). This solution
    is the most reliable one (especially if the modem connection to your
    Internet provider is bad) due to the fact that dialerp can start some
    indicated programs at setting the connection. Here is the batch file you should start in the 'Execute' parameter of the dialerp configuration file:

    ====
    binkd -p -P1:2/3.4 binkd.cfg
    dialerp BREAK *
    ====

    The question you may now ask: Where can I take dialerp? The answer is:
    Ask the author (Alexander Vedjakin, 2:5020/540) or look for it in fileecho archives and in ftp/http.


    In any case you should set a small value for 'rescan-delay' parameter in the binkd configuration file. binkd would exit faster.

    === binkd.cfg
    # Outbound rescans period (sec)
    rescan-delay 2
    ===


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    11. I Have Changed binkd Configuration File On-The-Fly. When Will It Be Reloaded?

    Starting with the version 0.9.1 binkd could feel that its configuration file changed. It exited with code 3 if it had been started with option -C. Modification time was checked after each ingoing session. Here is the batch file for starting binkd versions 0.9.1-0.9.3 and 0.9.4-0.9.6/w32:

    ====
    :aaa
    binkd -C binkd.cfg
    if errorlevel 4 goto end
    if errorlevel 3 goto aaa
    :end
    ====

    In the versions 0.9.4/unix and /os2-emx (and in these ones only) binkd restarts automatically if it is started with -C command line option.
    Besides that starting with version 0.9.4 the files included into the configuration file with the help of 'include' keyword are tested not only
    on incoming sessions but also in every 'rescan-delay' seconds.

    If you install binkd 0.9.4/w32 as a Windows NT service you should use it with -C command line option. Then binkd re-reads its configuration file.

    Before version 0.9.4 changes in the configuration file were not tested if binkd was started in client-only mode (-c command line option).

    In the unix versions configuration file is re-read on SIGHUP signal
    by the command
    kill -HUP `cat /var/run/binkd.pid`

    In the version 1.0 configuration file is re-read automatically if
    changed. binkd tests on changes at every 'rescan-delay' seconds.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    12. How Can binkd Work With T-mail/IP?

    There is no way to do it. The protocols differ in essence: binkd uses
    binkp protocol whereas T-mail/IP uses EMSI etc.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    13. Is There At Least One Log Analyzer Under Unix?

    There exist many Perl scripts and several win32 binaries. For example here:

    binkdstat 0.1 beta4 Christmas version 6.01.2002
    Statistics generator for binkd
    (c) Dmitry Sergienko, 2:464/910@fidonet, dmitry@trifle.net 14.08.2000
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/binkdstat-ds.0.1_beta4_Christmas

    There also exists BndStat program:
    BNDST101.ZIP 34812 14-Aug-01 (AREA:AFTNMISC)
    BndStat 1.01. With sources. binkd statistics generator. Compiled for all
    platforms. Included win32 binaries. (C) Dmitry Rusov, 2:5090/94

    Log analyzer by val khokhlov (perl):
    http://www.vk.kiev.ua/create/soft.html#bnkds
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/stat-binkd.pl.gz

    binkdstat (c) val khokhlov, Dmitry Kolvakh, updated at April 2006
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/binkdstat.zip

    T-Hist (c) Michael Markowsky, 2:5020/378 (KLUG's BBS)
    Binary log file analyzer for various mailers including binkd.
    Works in DOS, Windows NT (2000, XP, 2003) and OS/2.
    ftp://ftp.grumbler.org/pub/binkd/hist30a7.zip

    Kleine Statistiker/BINKD for DOS v0.60a, Russian version
    A small statistics generator for posting statistics to an echo conference.
    ftp://ftp.grumbler.org/pub/binkd/statddos.rar


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    14. binkd Connects Too Slowly (~20 Seconds) Though I Have a High-Speed LAN

    It is possible that 'backresolv' parameter is on (for logging the remote host domain name) and DNS is not configured.

    The simplest solution is to comment the 'backresolv' out in the configuration file. Configuring DNS is a more complex solution.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    15. Why Does binkd Not Understand Command Line Options When I Start It From inetd?

    You should use the program name as the first parameter in inetd.conf (it may be any string for binkd), the second and the following parameters
    are the command line options (-iqs etc.) and the last parameter is the configuration file full path:

    binkp stream tcp nowait root /usr/fido/binkd binkd -isq /usr/fido/binkd.cfg

    If you do not use -q option then you should switch console output off (comment 'printq', 'percents', 'conlog' out).


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    16. Can One Make a File Request From binkd?

    It's a piece of cake! binkd supports WAZOO FREQ with an external helper.

    To request files from a remote system it is necessary to create a file
    of type nnnnmmmm.REQ and to put it in the outbound directory next to *.?ut
    and *.?lo files. But *.REQ files do not initiate binkd to call a link so
    to make a FREQ it is necessary to make a poll. The contents of a .REQ file
    is described in the "!SRIF.TXT" file which is a copy of FSC-0086.001 from http://ftsc.org


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    17. How Can my binkd Respond to a File Request?

    One can configure binkd for calling an external file request processor supporting SRIF (FSC-0086) for receiving and handling FREQs in binkd. Please read the "!SRIF.TXT" file and the comment to 'exec' in the configuration
    file.

    Here are the examples of lines in configuration file for DOS-based OS
    and for *nix (you should use regular expressions in the latter case for
    binkd to match both upper-case and lower-case letters, e.g. both *.REQ and *.req):

    exec "\\ftn\\allfix\\allfix.exe RP -SRIF *S" *.req

    exec "/ftn/bin/tmafreq-srif *S" *.[rR][eE][qQ]

    A bash script "srifreq" is delivered with binkd starting with version 1.1a19.
    The following file request processors are also compatible with binkd
    (but they are not the only ones, any other one supporting SRIF will do):

    Allfix by Harms Software Engineering: it is a fileecho processor with built-in file request processor and it has versions for DOS and OS/2;

    ViReq by Michael Haase (2:2432/280): a specialized FREQ processor for Windows, it is distributed by Michael Massenberg (2:2411/505) via modem,
    ISDN and Fido-over-IP.

    tmafreq by Maxim Timofeyev <tmahome@mail.tma.spb.ru>: the FREQ processor
    is created for a unix-like OS and ported into Windows. One may obtain tmafreq from different BBS and FTP with fileecho archives, or may get tmafreq sources from anonymous CVS :pserver:anoncvs@tma.spb.ru:/cvsroot, module "tmafreq".

    VIREQ/x by Volker Imre <volker@imre.dyndns.org> (2:246/2098): the FREQ processor is created for a unix-like OS but can be compiled in the OS/2, Windows and maybe other operating systems. Now it is included into "ftnapps" project on Sourceforge and may be downloaded from http://ftnapps.sourceforge.net/vireq.html.
    Binaries built for Win32 and OS/2 may be downloaded from http://download.binkd.org and
    https://sites.google.com/view/vasilyevmax/


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    18. How Can I Add binkd To a Fidonet Box Working With a Modem?

    You must configure your modem mailer and tosser for BSO (binkley-style outbound) mode so that all of them including binkd would have the same
    inbound directories (and also the same outbound directories). For example,
    one may put the following line to T-Mail mailer configuration file:

    BinkStyle_Pack_For All

    If your mailer can work with AMA (arcmail-attach) only you may try to
    use fileboxes and/or find programs that can convert your mailer's queue to
    BSO or fileboxes. For example, Mail2dir utility allows using fileboxes with FrontDoor. Such a means disables a possibility of sending your mail to the
    same link both by IP and by modem (for instance, when one of the channels failed). There is another more radical but more flexible way: you may change your mailer.
    See also question 35.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    19. Flags Are Not Created On Receiving a File, Programs Do Not Start

    For sure you have a wrong template in the configuration file. You have to use it this way (the first two lines are for Windows and OS/2, the rest are
    for the Unix-like OS):

    flag m:\\ftn\\flg\\pntseg.flg m:\\\\ftn\\\\inbound\\\\sec\\\\pntstr*.*
    flag m:\\ftn\\flg\\toss.flg *.su? *.mo? *.tu? *.we? *.th? *.fr? *.sa? *.pkt

    exec "/usr/local/bin/ftrack -c /fido/conf/ftrack" *.[Pp][Kk][Tt]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ss][Uu][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Mm][Oo][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Uu][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ww][Ee][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Hh][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ff][Rr][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ss][Aa][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/fech-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Ii][Cc]

    You must use the full path with four slashes for the file to receive or
    the template should start with an asterisk character. You must use two
    slashes for the flag file.

    You must use the full path because using a filename without path means
    the event of receiving the file in the current directory and not in the
    inbound directory. If a template begins with "*" then it means "any
    directory" (and since all the files are received in one of the inbound directories it works for both password protected and for unprotected
    sessions).

    In a UNIX-like OS you should take into account that filenames are case sensitive. Please use regular expressions in templates.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    20. 'skipmask' Keyword Does Not Work

    A filename is compared without path and the comparison is case
    sensitive when 'skipmask' is used.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    21. binkd Under Windows 3.x

    Sergey Zharsky (zharik@usa.net) ported binkd 0.9.2 and binkd 0.9.5 for Windows 3.x. They work using IP stacks Trumpet Winsock ver. 3.0 revision D
    and Novell TCP/IP Client for Win 3.11 (see the answer to the question
    'binkd Under DOS', the section "The DOS version has the feature...").


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    22. Different FTN Domains in binkd And a Tosser Without 5D Support

    Suppose there are two domains (with different zone numbers though it
    does not matter). Mail can be successfully sent to the first domain but
    not to the second one. This situation may arise if the tosser, the tracker
    and the other your FTN programs do not support 5D BSO.

    This is a typical binkd configuration for two FTN domains and 5D
    outbound:

    domain fidonet c:\\ftn\\outbound\\fidonet 2
    domain omeganet c:\\ftn\\outbound\\omeganet 11
    address 2:5070/222@fidonet 11:58/6@omeganet

    One must configure not the zone of your own address for 'domain'
    keyword as one might think but the zone that should not be appended to the outbound name (i.e. the outbound subdirectory extensions are not processed
    for the zone denoted in the 'domain' line).

    If your tosser would create bundles for omeganet in the omeganet
    directory then you should write as indicated above. But since it does not
    --- hpt/lnx 1.9 2023-02-09
    * Origin: Moscow, Russia (2:5020/1042)
  • From binkd Team@2:5020/1042 to All on Sat Dec 23 22:15:02 2023
    31 Mar 16:48:43 [40423] trying 195.209.235.3, port 24554...
    31 Mar 16:48:43 [40423] connected to proxy.osu.ru:24554
    31 Mar 16:48:44 [40423] Connection rejected by proxy (HTTP/1.0 403 Forbidden)
    ? 31 Mar 16:48:44 [40423] unable to connect: {13} Permission denied

    In such a case you may try to use http tunnelling for instance with the help of httport, HTTPTunnel (http://http-tunnel.sourceforge.net/), stunnel (https://www.stunnel.org/) or you may find a node receiving binkp
    connections at port 443.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    07. How Can binkd Work via SOCKS-proxy?

    It is not a rare case when users go out to the internet from their corporate LAN exclusively via the proxy server based at the only computer connected to the internet. Thus binkd cannot make a direct connection to
    the remote node and one must use the proxy server. Proxy servers support
    was included in version 0.9.4 and the later ones.

    binkd works with a SOCKS proxy version 4 and 5. The first one does not demand an authorization (no login and password), the second one demands it
    as a rule.

    Suppose the connected to the Internet computer has the IP address 192.168.0.1 in its LAN and the SOCKS server at the computer responds on
    port 1080. Here is the line in binkd configuration file necessary for
    working via the SOCKS proxy.

    1. A SOCKS server without user authorization (no login and password are demanded):

    socks 192.168.0.1:1080

    2. A proxy server with user authorization (it is necessary to type login and password, e.g. login "user", password "password"):

    socks 192.168.0.1:1080/user/password


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    08. IP-Point: How Can I Make binkd to Get My Mail From My Bossnode (Uplink)?

    Make a poll using the command line option -P:

    binkd -P1:2/3 binkd.cfg

    Usually they want binkd to exit after the session is finished. One can
    use the command line option -p:

    binkd -p -P1:2/3 binkd.cfg

    If binkd does not exit for a long time after the session has been
    finished then decrease the value of rescan-delay (and sometimes the value
    of timeout).

    If binkd works permanently (e.g. as a Windows service) and you want to
    get your mail regularly then you need some additional program or a script.
    As an example in DOS, Windows or OS/2 it is enough to execute the command:

    cd . >> %outbound%\NNNNMMMM.ilo

    where NNNN is the hex net number,
    MMMM is the hex node number,
    %outbound% is the path to the necessary zone outbound.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    09. "start_file_transfer: .: Permission denied" Error

    You get the message when binkd cannot open a file for sending indicated
    in some *.?lo file. Most likely the file has a line containing only "."
    because the poll has been made by a command of the type

    echo . >> xxxxyyyy.flo

    you should change it to "cd . >> xxxxyyyy.flo"


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    10. binkd/win and Dial-up: Dialing-up and Disconnecting Automatically

    The problem is to configure the fidonet box in such a way that binkd
    would initiate a telephone call to your Internet provider, get your mail
    and disconnect.

    The solutions:

    1st Solution

    Configure automatic connection and timeout in the dial-up connection properties (idle time before hanging up). It is convinient to use a non-standard software for dialing-up (Advanced Dialer and others). You
    should start binkd with a command line option -p periodically (and possibly -Paddress for binkd to make a poll to the address).

    binkd -p -P1:2/3.4 binkd.cfg


    2nd Solution

    Use the command line option -p and the batch file where first Remote
    Access Service (RAS) is started then binkd is started and after binkd exits
    RAS is stopped.

    Two variants, for Windows NT and for Windows 2000:
    === binkdpoll1.cmd
    rasdial Connection
    binkd -p binkd.cfg
    rasdial Connection /disconnect
    ===

    === binkdpoll2.cmd
    net start "remote access service"
    net start "remote access auto service"
    binkd -p binkd.cfg
    net stop "remote access auto service"
    net stop "remote access service"
    ===

    3rd Solution (The Best One For Win9x)

    Use the command line options -p and -Paddress and control connection
    with a non-standard dial-up software (for example dialerp). This solution
    is the most reliable one (especially if the modem connection to your
    Internet provider is bad) due to the fact that dialerp can start some
    indicated programs at setting the connection. Here is the batch file you should start in the 'Execute' parameter of the dialerp configuration file:

    ====
    binkd -p -P1:2/3.4 binkd.cfg
    dialerp BREAK *
    ====

    The question you may now ask: Where can I take dialerp? The answer is:
    Ask the author (Alexander Vedjakin, 2:5020/540) or look for it in fileecho archives and in ftp/http.


    In any case you should set a small value for 'rescan-delay' parameter in the binkd configuration file. binkd would exit faster.

    === binkd.cfg
    # Outbound rescans period (sec)
    rescan-delay 2
    ===


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    11. I Have Changed binkd Configuration File On-The-Fly. When Will It Be Reloaded?

    Starting with the version 0.9.1 binkd could feel that its configuration file changed. It exited with code 3 if it had been started with option -C. Modification time was checked after each ingoing session. Here is the batch file for starting binkd versions 0.9.1-0.9.3 and 0.9.4-0.9.6/w32:

    ====
    :aaa
    binkd -C binkd.cfg
    if errorlevel 4 goto end
    if errorlevel 3 goto aaa
    :end
    ====

    In the versions 0.9.4/unix and /os2-emx (and in these ones only) binkd restarts automatically if it is started with -C command line option.
    Besides that starting with version 0.9.4 the files included into the configuration file with the help of 'include' keyword are tested not only
    on incoming sessions but also in every 'rescan-delay' seconds.

    If you install binkd 0.9.4/w32 as a Windows NT service you should use it with -C command line option. Then binkd re-reads its configuration file.

    Before version 0.9.4 changes in the configuration file were not tested if binkd was started in client-only mode (-c command line option).

    In the unix versions configuration file is re-read on SIGHUP signal
    by the command
    kill -HUP `cat /var/run/binkd.pid`

    In the version 1.0 configuration file is re-read automatically if
    changed. binkd tests on changes at every 'rescan-delay' seconds.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    12. How Can binkd Work With T-mail/IP?

    There is no way to do it. The protocols differ in essence: binkd uses
    binkp protocol whereas T-mail/IP uses EMSI etc.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    13. Is There At Least One Log Analyzer Under Unix?

    There exist many Perl scripts and several win32 binaries. For example here:

    binkdstat 0.1 beta4 Christmas version 6.01.2002
    Statistics generator for binkd
    (c) Dmitry Sergienko, 2:464/910@fidonet, dmitry@trifle.net 14.08.2000
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/binkdstat-ds.0.1_beta4_Christmas

    There also exists BndStat program:
    BNDST101.ZIP 34812 14-Aug-01 (AREA:AFTNMISC)
    BndStat 1.01. With sources. binkd statistics generator. Compiled for all
    platforms. Included win32 binaries. (C) Dmitry Rusov, 2:5090/94

    Log analyzer by val khokhlov (perl):
    http://www.vk.kiev.ua/create/soft.html#bnkds
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/stat-binkd.pl.gz

    binkdstat (c) val khokhlov, Dmitry Kolvakh, updated at April 2006
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/binkdstat.zip

    T-Hist (c) Michael Markowsky, 2:5020/378 (KLUG's BBS)
    Binary log file analyzer for various mailers including binkd.
    Works in DOS, Windows NT (2000, XP, 2003) and OS/2.
    ftp://ftp.grumbler.org/pub/binkd/hist30a7.zip

    Kleine Statistiker/BINKD for DOS v0.60a, Russian version
    A small statistics generator for posting statistics to an echo conference.
    ftp://ftp.grumbler.org/pub/binkd/statddos.rar


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    14. binkd Connects Too Slowly (~20 Seconds) Though I Have a High-Speed LAN

    It is possible that 'backresolv' parameter is on (for logging the remote host domain name) and DNS is not configured.

    The simplest solution is to comment the 'backresolv' out in the configuration file. Configuring DNS is a more complex solution.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    15. Why Does binkd Not Understand Command Line Options When I Start It From inetd?

    You should use the program name as the first parameter in inetd.conf (it may be any string for binkd), the second and the following parameters
    are the command line options (-iqs etc.) and the last parameter is the configuration file full path:

    binkp stream tcp nowait root /usr/fido/binkd binkd -isq /usr/fido/binkd.cfg

    If you do not use -q option then you should switch console output off (comment 'printq', 'percents', 'conlog' out).


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    16. Can One Make a File Request From binkd?

    It's a piece of cake! binkd supports WAZOO FREQ with an external helper.

    To request files from a remote system it is necessary to create a file
    of type nnnnmmmm.REQ and to put it in the outbound directory next to *.?ut
    and *.?lo files. But *.REQ files do not initiate binkd to call a link so
    to make a FREQ it is necessary to make a poll. The contents of a .REQ file
    is described in the "!SRIF.TXT" file which is a copy of FSC-0086.001 from http://ftsc.org


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    17. How Can my binkd Respond to a File Request?

    One can configure binkd for calling an external file request processor supporting SRIF (FSC-0086) for receiving and handling FREQs in binkd. Please read the "!SRIF.TXT" file and the comment to 'exec' in the configuration
    file.

    Here are the examples of lines in configuration file for DOS-based OS
    and for *nix (you should use regular expressions in the latter case for
    binkd to match both upper-case and lower-case letters, e.g. both *.REQ and *.req):

    exec "\\ftn\\allfix\\allfix.exe RP -SRIF *S" *.req

    exec "/ftn/bin/tmafreq-srif *S" *.[rR][eE][qQ]

    A bash script "srifreq" is delivered with binkd starting with version 1.1a19.
    The following file request processors are also compatible with binkd
    (but they are not the only ones, any other one supporting SRIF will do):

    Allfix by Harms Software Engineering: it is a fileecho processor with built-in file request processor and it has versions for DOS and OS/2;

    ViReq by Michael Haase (2:2432/280): a specialized FREQ processor for Windows, it is distributed by Michael Massenberg (2:2411/505) via modem,
    ISDN and Fido-over-IP.

    tmafreq by Maxim Timofeyev <tmahome@mail.tma.spb.ru>: the FREQ processor
    is created for a unix-like OS and ported into Windows. One may obtain tmafreq from different BBS and FTP with fileecho archives, or may get tmafreq sources from anonymous CVS :pserver:anoncvs@tma.spb.ru:/cvsroot, module "tmafreq".

    VIREQ/x by Volker Imre <volker@imre.dyndns.org> (2:246/2098): the FREQ processor is created for a unix-like OS but can be compiled in the OS/2, Windows and maybe other operating systems. Now it is included into "ftnapps" project on Sourceforge and may be downloaded from http://ftnapps.sourceforge.net/vireq.html.
    Binaries built for Win32 and OS/2 may be downloaded from http://download.binkd.org and
    https://sites.google.com/view/vasilyevmax/


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    18. How Can I Add binkd To a Fidonet Box Working With a Modem?

    You must configure your modem mailer and tosser for BSO (binkley-style outbound) mode so that all of them including binkd would have the same
    inbound directories (and also the same outbound directories). For example,
    one may put the following line to T-Mail mailer configuration file:

    BinkStyle_Pack_For All

    If your mailer can work with AMA (arcmail-attach) only you may try to
    use fileboxes and/or find programs that can convert your mailer's queue to
    BSO or fileboxes. For example, Mail2dir utility allows using fileboxes with FrontDoor. Such a means disables a possibility of sending your mail to the
    same link both by IP and by modem (for instance, when one of the channels failed). There is another more radical but more flexible way: you may change your mailer.
    See also question 35.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    19. Flags Are Not Created On Receiving a File, Programs Do Not Start

    For sure you have a wrong template in the configuration file. You have to use it this way (the first two lines are for Windows and OS/2, the rest are
    for the Unix-like OS):

    flag m:\\ftn\\flg\\pntseg.flg m:\\\\ftn\\\\inbound\\\\sec\\\\pntstr*.*
    flag m:\\ftn\\flg\\toss.flg *.su? *.mo? *.tu? *.we? *.th? *.fr? *.sa? *.pkt

    exec "/usr/local/bin/ftrack -c /fido/conf/ftrack" *.[Pp][Kk][Tt]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ss][Uu][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Mm][Oo][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Uu][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ww][Ee][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Hh][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ff][Rr][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ss][Aa][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/fech-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Ii][Cc]

    You must use the full path with four slashes for the file to receive or
    the template should start with an asterisk character. You must use two
    slashes for the flag file.

    You must use the full path because using a filename without path means
    the event of receiving the file in the current directory and not in the
    inbound directory. If a template begins with "*" then it means "any
    directory" (and since all the files are received in one of the inbound directories it works for both password protected and for unprotected
    sessions).

    In a UNIX-like OS you should take into account that filenames are case sensitive. Please use regular expressions in templates.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    20. 'skipmask' Keyword Does Not Work

    A filename is compared without path and the comparison is case
    sensitive when 'skipmask' is used.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    21. binkd Under Windows 3.x

    Sergey Zharsky (zharik@usa.net) ported binkd 0.9.2 and binkd 0.9.5 for Windows 3.x. They work using IP stacks Trumpet Winsock ver. 3.0 revision D
    and Novell TCP/IP Client for Win 3.11 (see the answer to the question
    'binkd Under DOS', the section "The DOS version has the feature...").


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    22. Different FTN Domains in binkd And a Tosser Without 5D Support

    Suppose there are two domains (with different zone numbers though it
    does not matter). Mail can be successfully sent to the first domain but
    not to the second one. This situation may arise if the tosser, the tracker
    and the other your FTN programs do not support 5D BSO.

    This is a typical binkd configuration for two FTN domains and 5D
    outbound:

    domain fidonet c:\\ftn\\outbound\\fidonet 2
    domain omeganet c:\\ftn\\outbound\\omeganet 11
    address 2:5070/222@fidonet 11:58/6@omeganet

    One must configure not the zone of your own address for 'domain'
    keyword as one might think but the zone that should not be appended to the outbound name (i.e. the outbound subdirectory extensions are not processed
    for the zone denoted in the 'domain' line).

    If your tosser would create bundles for omeganet in the omeganet
    directory then you should write as indicated above. But since it does not
    --- hpt/lnx 1.9 2023-02-09
    * Origin: Moscow, Russia (2:5020/1042)
  • From binkd Team@2:5020/1042 to All on Sat Dec 30 22:15:02 2023
    31 Mar 16:48:43 [40423] trying 195.209.235.3, port 24554...
    31 Mar 16:48:43 [40423] connected to proxy.osu.ru:24554
    31 Mar 16:48:44 [40423] Connection rejected by proxy (HTTP/1.0 403 Forbidden)
    ? 31 Mar 16:48:44 [40423] unable to connect: {13} Permission denied

    In such a case you may try to use http tunnelling for instance with the help of httport, HTTPTunnel (http://http-tunnel.sourceforge.net/), stunnel (https://www.stunnel.org/) or you may find a node receiving binkp
    connections at port 443.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    07. How Can binkd Work via SOCKS-proxy?

    It is not a rare case when users go out to the internet from their corporate LAN exclusively via the proxy server based at the only computer connected to the internet. Thus binkd cannot make a direct connection to
    the remote node and one must use the proxy server. Proxy servers support
    was included in version 0.9.4 and the later ones.

    binkd works with a SOCKS proxy version 4 and 5. The first one does not demand an authorization (no login and password), the second one demands it
    as a rule.

    Suppose the connected to the Internet computer has the IP address 192.168.0.1 in its LAN and the SOCKS server at the computer responds on
    port 1080. Here is the line in binkd configuration file necessary for
    working via the SOCKS proxy.

    1. A SOCKS server without user authorization (no login and password are demanded):

    socks 192.168.0.1:1080

    2. A proxy server with user authorization (it is necessary to type login and password, e.g. login "user", password "password"):

    socks 192.168.0.1:1080/user/password


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    08. IP-Point: How Can I Make binkd to Get My Mail From My Bossnode (Uplink)?

    Make a poll using the command line option -P:

    binkd -P1:2/3 binkd.cfg

    Usually they want binkd to exit after the session is finished. One can
    use the command line option -p:

    binkd -p -P1:2/3 binkd.cfg

    If binkd does not exit for a long time after the session has been
    finished then decrease the value of rescan-delay (and sometimes the value
    of timeout).

    If binkd works permanently (e.g. as a Windows service) and you want to
    get your mail regularly then you need some additional program or a script.
    As an example in DOS, Windows or OS/2 it is enough to execute the command:

    cd . >> %outbound%\NNNNMMMM.ilo

    where NNNN is the hex net number,
    MMMM is the hex node number,
    %outbound% is the path to the necessary zone outbound.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    09. "start_file_transfer: .: Permission denied" Error

    You get the message when binkd cannot open a file for sending indicated
    in some *.?lo file. Most likely the file has a line containing only "."
    because the poll has been made by a command of the type

    echo . >> xxxxyyyy.flo

    you should change it to "cd . >> xxxxyyyy.flo"


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    10. binkd/win and Dial-up: Dialing-up and Disconnecting Automatically

    The problem is to configure the fidonet box in such a way that binkd
    would initiate a telephone call to your Internet provider, get your mail
    and disconnect.

    The solutions:

    1st Solution

    Configure automatic connection and timeout in the dial-up connection properties (idle time before hanging up). It is convinient to use a non-standard software for dialing-up (Advanced Dialer and others). You
    should start binkd with a command line option -p periodically (and possibly -Paddress for binkd to make a poll to the address).

    binkd -p -P1:2/3.4 binkd.cfg


    2nd Solution

    Use the command line option -p and the batch file where first Remote
    Access Service (RAS) is started then binkd is started and after binkd exits
    RAS is stopped.

    Two variants, for Windows NT and for Windows 2000:
    === binkdpoll1.cmd
    rasdial Connection
    binkd -p binkd.cfg
    rasdial Connection /disconnect
    ===

    === binkdpoll2.cmd
    net start "remote access service"
    net start "remote access auto service"
    binkd -p binkd.cfg
    net stop "remote access auto service"
    net stop "remote access service"
    ===

    3rd Solution (The Best One For Win9x)

    Use the command line options -p and -Paddress and control connection
    with a non-standard dial-up software (for example dialerp). This solution
    is the most reliable one (especially if the modem connection to your
    Internet provider is bad) due to the fact that dialerp can start some
    indicated programs at setting the connection. Here is the batch file you should start in the 'Execute' parameter of the dialerp configuration file:

    ====
    binkd -p -P1:2/3.4 binkd.cfg
    dialerp BREAK *
    ====

    The question you may now ask: Where can I take dialerp? The answer is:
    Ask the author (Alexander Vedjakin, 2:5020/540) or look for it in fileecho archives and in ftp/http.


    In any case you should set a small value for 'rescan-delay' parameter in the binkd configuration file. binkd would exit faster.

    === binkd.cfg
    # Outbound rescans period (sec)
    rescan-delay 2
    ===


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    11. I Have Changed binkd Configuration File On-The-Fly. When Will It Be Reloaded?

    Starting with the version 0.9.1 binkd could feel that its configuration file changed. It exited with code 3 if it had been started with option -C. Modification time was checked after each ingoing session. Here is the batch file for starting binkd versions 0.9.1-0.9.3 and 0.9.4-0.9.6/w32:

    ====
    :aaa
    binkd -C binkd.cfg
    if errorlevel 4 goto end
    if errorlevel 3 goto aaa
    :end
    ====

    In the versions 0.9.4/unix and /os2-emx (and in these ones only) binkd restarts automatically if it is started with -C command line option.
    Besides that starting with version 0.9.4 the files included into the configuration file with the help of 'include' keyword are tested not only
    on incoming sessions but also in every 'rescan-delay' seconds.

    If you install binkd 0.9.4/w32 as a Windows NT service you should use it with -C command line option. Then binkd re-reads its configuration file.

    Before version 0.9.4 changes in the configuration file were not tested if binkd was started in client-only mode (-c command line option).

    In the unix versions configuration file is re-read on SIGHUP signal
    by the command
    kill -HUP `cat /var/run/binkd.pid`

    In the version 1.0 configuration file is re-read automatically if
    changed. binkd tests on changes at every 'rescan-delay' seconds.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    12. How Can binkd Work With T-mail/IP?

    There is no way to do it. The protocols differ in essence: binkd uses
    binkp protocol whereas T-mail/IP uses EMSI etc.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    13. Is There At Least One Log Analyzer Under Unix?

    There exist many Perl scripts and several win32 binaries. For example here:

    binkdstat 0.1 beta4 Christmas version 6.01.2002
    Statistics generator for binkd
    (c) Dmitry Sergienko, 2:464/910@fidonet, dmitry@trifle.net 14.08.2000
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/binkdstat-ds.0.1_beta4_Christmas

    There also exists BndStat program:
    BNDST101.ZIP 34812 14-Aug-01 (AREA:AFTNMISC)
    BndStat 1.01. With sources. binkd statistics generator. Compiled for all
    platforms. Included win32 binaries. (C) Dmitry Rusov, 2:5090/94

    Log analyzer by val khokhlov (perl):
    http://www.vk.kiev.ua/create/soft.html#bnkds
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/stat-binkd.pl.gz

    binkdstat (c) val khokhlov, Dmitry Kolvakh, updated at April 2006
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/binkdstat.zip

    T-Hist (c) Michael Markowsky, 2:5020/378 (KLUG's BBS)
    Binary log file analyzer for various mailers including binkd.
    Works in DOS, Windows NT (2000, XP, 2003) and OS/2.
    ftp://ftp.grumbler.org/pub/binkd/hist30a7.zip

    Kleine Statistiker/BINKD for DOS v0.60a, Russian version
    A small statistics generator for posting statistics to an echo conference.
    ftp://ftp.grumbler.org/pub/binkd/statddos.rar


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    14. binkd Connects Too Slowly (~20 Seconds) Though I Have a High-Speed LAN

    It is possible that 'backresolv' parameter is on (for logging the remote host domain name) and DNS is not configured.

    The simplest solution is to comment the 'backresolv' out in the configuration file. Configuring DNS is a more complex solution.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    15. Why Does binkd Not Understand Command Line Options When I Start It From inetd?

    You should use the program name as the first parameter in inetd.conf (it may be any string for binkd), the second and the following parameters
    are the command line options (-iqs etc.) and the last parameter is the configuration file full path:

    binkp stream tcp nowait root /usr/fido/binkd binkd -isq /usr/fido/binkd.cfg

    If you do not use -q option then you should switch console output off (comment 'printq', 'percents', 'conlog' out).


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    16. Can One Make a File Request From binkd?

    It's a piece of cake! binkd supports WAZOO FREQ with an external helper.

    To request files from a remote system it is necessary to create a file
    of type nnnnmmmm.REQ and to put it in the outbound directory next to *.?ut
    and *.?lo files. But *.REQ files do not initiate binkd to call a link so
    to make a FREQ it is necessary to make a poll. The contents of a .REQ file
    is described in the "!SRIF.TXT" file which is a copy of FSC-0086.001 from http://ftsc.org


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    17. How Can my binkd Respond to a File Request?

    One can configure binkd for calling an external file request processor supporting SRIF (FSC-0086) for receiving and handling FREQs in binkd. Please read the "!SRIF.TXT" file and the comment to 'exec' in the configuration
    file.

    Here are the examples of lines in configuration file for DOS-based OS
    and for *nix (you should use regular expressions in the latter case for
    binkd to match both upper-case and lower-case letters, e.g. both *.REQ and *.req):

    exec "\\ftn\\allfix\\allfix.exe RP -SRIF *S" *.req

    exec "/ftn/bin/tmafreq-srif *S" *.[rR][eE][qQ]

    A bash script "srifreq" is delivered with binkd starting with version 1.1a19.
    The following file request processors are also compatible with binkd
    (but they are not the only ones, any other one supporting SRIF will do):

    Allfix by Harms Software Engineering: it is a fileecho processor with built-in file request processor and it has versions for DOS and OS/2;

    ViReq by Michael Haase (2:2432/280): a specialized FREQ processor for Windows, it is distributed by Michael Massenberg (2:2411/505) via modem,
    ISDN and Fido-over-IP.

    tmafreq by Maxim Timofeyev <tmahome@mail.tma.spb.ru>: the FREQ processor
    is created for a unix-like OS and ported into Windows. One may obtain tmafreq from different BBS and FTP with fileecho archives, or may get tmafreq sources from anonymous CVS :pserver:anoncvs@tma.spb.ru:/cvsroot, module "tmafreq".

    VIREQ/x by Volker Imre <volker@imre.dyndns.org> (2:246/2098): the FREQ processor is created for a unix-like OS but can be compiled in the OS/2, Windows and maybe other operating systems. Now it is included into "ftnapps" project on Sourceforge and may be downloaded from http://ftnapps.sourceforge.net/vireq.html.
    Binaries built for Win32 and OS/2 may be downloaded from http://download.binkd.org and
    https://sites.google.com/view/vasilyevmax/


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    18. How Can I Add binkd To a Fidonet Box Working With a Modem?

    You must configure your modem mailer and tosser for BSO (binkley-style outbound) mode so that all of them including binkd would have the same
    inbound directories (and also the same outbound directories). For example,
    one may put the following line to T-Mail mailer configuration file:

    BinkStyle_Pack_For All

    If your mailer can work with AMA (arcmail-attach) only you may try to
    use fileboxes and/or find programs that can convert your mailer's queue to
    BSO or fileboxes. For example, Mail2dir utility allows using fileboxes with FrontDoor. Such a means disables a possibility of sending your mail to the
    same link both by IP and by modem (for instance, when one of the channels failed). There is another more radical but more flexible way: you may change your mailer.
    See also question 35.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    19. Flags Are Not Created On Receiving a File, Programs Do Not Start

    For sure you have a wrong template in the configuration file. You have to use it this way (the first two lines are for Windows and OS/2, the rest are
    for the Unix-like OS):

    flag m:\\ftn\\flg\\pntseg.flg m:\\\\ftn\\\\inbound\\\\sec\\\\pntstr*.*
    flag m:\\ftn\\flg\\toss.flg *.su? *.mo? *.tu? *.we? *.th? *.fr? *.sa? *.pkt

    exec "/usr/local/bin/ftrack -c /fido/conf/ftrack" *.[Pp][Kk][Tt]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ss][Uu][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Mm][Oo][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Uu][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ww][Ee][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Hh][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ff][Rr][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ss][Aa][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/fech-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Ii][Cc]

    You must use the full path with four slashes for the file to receive or
    the template should start with an asterisk character. You must use two
    slashes for the flag file.

    You must use the full path because using a filename without path means
    the event of receiving the file in the current directory and not in the
    inbound directory. If a template begins with "*" then it means "any
    directory" (and since all the files are received in one of the inbound directories it works for both password protected and for unprotected
    sessions).

    In a UNIX-like OS you should take into account that filenames are case sensitive. Please use regular expressions in templates.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    20. 'skipmask' Keyword Does Not Work

    A filename is compared without path and the comparison is case
    sensitive when 'skipmask' is used.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    21. binkd Under Windows 3.x

    Sergey Zharsky (zharik@usa.net) ported binkd 0.9.2 and binkd 0.9.5 for Windows 3.x. They work using IP stacks Trumpet Winsock ver. 3.0 revision D
    and Novell TCP/IP Client for Win 3.11 (see the answer to the question
    'binkd Under DOS', the section "The DOS version has the feature...").


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    22. Different FTN Domains in binkd And a Tosser Without 5D Support

    Suppose there are two domains (with different zone numbers though it
    does not matter). Mail can be successfully sent to the first domain but
    not to the second one. This situation may arise if the tosser, the tracker
    and the other your FTN programs do not support 5D BSO.

    This is a typical binkd configuration for two FTN domains and 5D
    outbound:

    domain fidonet c:\\ftn\\outbound\\fidonet 2
    domain omeganet c:\\ftn\\outbound\\omeganet 11
    address 2:5070/222@fidonet 11:58/6@omeganet

    One must configure not the zone of your own address for 'domain'
    keyword as one might think but the zone that should not be appended to the outbound name (i.e. the outbound subdirectory extensions are not processed
    for the zone denoted in the 'domain' line).

    If your tosser would create bundles for omeganet in the omeganet
    directory then you should write as indicated above. But since it does not
    --- hpt/lnx 1.9 2023-02-09
    * Origin: Moscow, Russia (2:5020/1042)
  • From binkd Team@2:5020/1042 to All on Sat Jan 6 22:15:02 2024
    31 Mar 16:48:43 [40423] trying 195.209.235.3, port 24554...
    31 Mar 16:48:43 [40423] connected to proxy.osu.ru:24554
    31 Mar 16:48:44 [40423] Connection rejected by proxy (HTTP/1.0 403 Forbidden)
    ? 31 Mar 16:48:44 [40423] unable to connect: {13} Permission denied

    In such a case you may try to use http tunnelling for instance with the help of httport, HTTPTunnel (http://http-tunnel.sourceforge.net/), stunnel (https://www.stunnel.org/) or you may find a node receiving binkp
    connections at port 443.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    07. How Can binkd Work via SOCKS-proxy?

    It is not a rare case when users go out to the internet from their corporate LAN exclusively via the proxy server based at the only computer connected to the internet. Thus binkd cannot make a direct connection to
    the remote node and one must use the proxy server. Proxy servers support
    was included in version 0.9.4 and the later ones.

    binkd works with a SOCKS proxy version 4 and 5. The first one does not demand an authorization (no login and password), the second one demands it
    as a rule.

    Suppose the connected to the Internet computer has the IP address 192.168.0.1 in its LAN and the SOCKS server at the computer responds on
    port 1080. Here is the line in binkd configuration file necessary for
    working via the SOCKS proxy.

    1. A SOCKS server without user authorization (no login and password are demanded):

    socks 192.168.0.1:1080

    2. A proxy server with user authorization (it is necessary to type login and password, e.g. login "user", password "password"):

    socks 192.168.0.1:1080/user/password


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    08. IP-Point: How Can I Make binkd to Get My Mail From My Bossnode (Uplink)?

    Make a poll using the command line option -P:

    binkd -P1:2/3 binkd.cfg

    Usually they want binkd to exit after the session is finished. One can
    use the command line option -p:

    binkd -p -P1:2/3 binkd.cfg

    If binkd does not exit for a long time after the session has been
    finished then decrease the value of rescan-delay (and sometimes the value
    of timeout).

    If binkd works permanently (e.g. as a Windows service) and you want to
    get your mail regularly then you need some additional program or a script.
    As an example in DOS, Windows or OS/2 it is enough to execute the command:

    cd . >> %outbound%\NNNNMMMM.ilo

    where NNNN is the hex net number,
    MMMM is the hex node number,
    %outbound% is the path to the necessary zone outbound.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    09. "start_file_transfer: .: Permission denied" Error

    You get the message when binkd cannot open a file for sending indicated
    in some *.?lo file. Most likely the file has a line containing only "."
    because the poll has been made by a command of the type

    echo . >> xxxxyyyy.flo

    you should change it to "cd . >> xxxxyyyy.flo"


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    10. binkd/win and Dial-up: Dialing-up and Disconnecting Automatically

    The problem is to configure the fidonet box in such a way that binkd
    would initiate a telephone call to your Internet provider, get your mail
    and disconnect.

    The solutions:

    1st Solution

    Configure automatic connection and timeout in the dial-up connection properties (idle time before hanging up). It is convinient to use a non-standard software for dialing-up (Advanced Dialer and others). You
    should start binkd with a command line option -p periodically (and possibly -Paddress for binkd to make a poll to the address).

    binkd -p -P1:2/3.4 binkd.cfg


    2nd Solution

    Use the command line option -p and the batch file where first Remote
    Access Service (RAS) is started then binkd is started and after binkd exits
    RAS is stopped.

    Two variants, for Windows NT and for Windows 2000:
    === binkdpoll1.cmd
    rasdial Connection
    binkd -p binkd.cfg
    rasdial Connection /disconnect
    ===

    === binkdpoll2.cmd
    net start "remote access service"
    net start "remote access auto service"
    binkd -p binkd.cfg
    net stop "remote access auto service"
    net stop "remote access service"
    ===

    3rd Solution (The Best One For Win9x)

    Use the command line options -p and -Paddress and control connection
    with a non-standard dial-up software (for example dialerp). This solution
    is the most reliable one (especially if the modem connection to your
    Internet provider is bad) due to the fact that dialerp can start some
    indicated programs at setting the connection. Here is the batch file you should start in the 'Execute' parameter of the dialerp configuration file:

    ====
    binkd -p -P1:2/3.4 binkd.cfg
    dialerp BREAK *
    ====

    The question you may now ask: Where can I take dialerp? The answer is:
    Ask the author (Alexander Vedjakin, 2:5020/540) or look for it in fileecho archives and in ftp/http.


    In any case you should set a small value for 'rescan-delay' parameter in the binkd configuration file. binkd would exit faster.

    === binkd.cfg
    # Outbound rescans period (sec)
    rescan-delay 2
    ===


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    11. I Have Changed binkd Configuration File On-The-Fly. When Will It Be Reloaded?

    Starting with the version 0.9.1 binkd could feel that its configuration file changed. It exited with code 3 if it had been started with option -C. Modification time was checked after each ingoing session. Here is the batch file for starting binkd versions 0.9.1-0.9.3 and 0.9.4-0.9.6/w32:

    ====
    :aaa
    binkd -C binkd.cfg
    if errorlevel 4 goto end
    if errorlevel 3 goto aaa
    :end
    ====

    In the versions 0.9.4/unix and /os2-emx (and in these ones only) binkd restarts automatically if it is started with -C command line option.
    Besides that starting with version 0.9.4 the files included into the configuration file with the help of 'include' keyword are tested not only
    on incoming sessions but also in every 'rescan-delay' seconds.

    If you install binkd 0.9.4/w32 as a Windows NT service you should use it with -C command line option. Then binkd re-reads its configuration file.

    Before version 0.9.4 changes in the configuration file were not tested if binkd was started in client-only mode (-c command line option).

    In the unix versions configuration file is re-read on SIGHUP signal
    by the command
    kill -HUP `cat /var/run/binkd.pid`

    In the version 1.0 configuration file is re-read automatically if
    changed. binkd tests on changes at every 'rescan-delay' seconds.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    12. How Can binkd Work With T-mail/IP?

    There is no way to do it. The protocols differ in essence: binkd uses
    binkp protocol whereas T-mail/IP uses EMSI etc.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    13. Is There At Least One Log Analyzer Under Unix?

    There exist many Perl scripts and several win32 binaries. For example here:

    binkdstat 0.1 beta4 Christmas version 6.01.2002
    Statistics generator for binkd
    (c) Dmitry Sergienko, 2:464/910@fidonet, dmitry@trifle.net 14.08.2000
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/binkdstat-ds.0.1_beta4_Christmas

    There also exists BndStat program:
    BNDST101.ZIP 34812 14-Aug-01 (AREA:AFTNMISC)
    BndStat 1.01. With sources. binkd statistics generator. Compiled for all
    platforms. Included win32 binaries. (C) Dmitry Rusov, 2:5090/94

    Log analyzer by val khokhlov (perl):
    http://www.vk.kiev.ua/create/soft.html#bnkds
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/stat-binkd.pl.gz

    binkdstat (c) val khokhlov, Dmitry Kolvakh, updated at April 2006
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/binkdstat.zip

    T-Hist (c) Michael Markowsky, 2:5020/378 (KLUG's BBS)
    Binary log file analyzer for various mailers including binkd.
    Works in DOS, Windows NT (2000, XP, 2003) and OS/2.
    ftp://ftp.grumbler.org/pub/binkd/hist30a7.zip

    Kleine Statistiker/BINKD for DOS v0.60a, Russian version
    A small statistics generator for posting statistics to an echo conference.
    ftp://ftp.grumbler.org/pub/binkd/statddos.rar


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    14. binkd Connects Too Slowly (~20 Seconds) Though I Have a High-Speed LAN

    It is possible that 'backresolv' parameter is on (for logging the remote host domain name) and DNS is not configured.

    The simplest solution is to comment the 'backresolv' out in the configuration file. Configuring DNS is a more complex solution.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    15. Why Does binkd Not Understand Command Line Options When I Start It From inetd?

    You should use the program name as the first parameter in inetd.conf (it may be any string for binkd), the second and the following parameters
    are the command line options (-iqs etc.) and the last parameter is the configuration file full path:

    binkp stream tcp nowait root /usr/fido/binkd binkd -isq /usr/fido/binkd.cfg

    If you do not use -q option then you should switch console output off (comment 'printq', 'percents', 'conlog' out).


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    16. Can One Make a File Request From binkd?

    It's a piece of cake! binkd supports WAZOO FREQ with an external helper.

    To request files from a remote system it is necessary to create a file
    of type nnnnmmmm.REQ and to put it in the outbound directory next to *.?ut
    and *.?lo files. But *.REQ files do not initiate binkd to call a link so
    to make a FREQ it is necessary to make a poll. The contents of a .REQ file
    is described in the "!SRIF.TXT" file which is a copy of FSC-0086.001 from http://ftsc.org


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    17. How Can my binkd Respond to a File Request?

    One can configure binkd for calling an external file request processor supporting SRIF (FSC-0086) for receiving and handling FREQs in binkd. Please read the "!SRIF.TXT" file and the comment to 'exec' in the configuration
    file.

    Here are the examples of lines in configuration file for DOS-based OS
    and for *nix (you should use regular expressions in the latter case for
    binkd to match both upper-case and lower-case letters, e.g. both *.REQ and *.req):

    exec "\\ftn\\allfix\\allfix.exe RP -SRIF *S" *.req

    exec "/ftn/bin/tmafreq-srif *S" *.[rR][eE][qQ]

    A bash script "srifreq" is delivered with binkd starting with version 1.1a19.
    The following file request processors are also compatible with binkd
    (but they are not the only ones, any other one supporting SRIF will do):

    Allfix by Harms Software Engineering: it is a fileecho processor with built-in file request processor and it has versions for DOS and OS/2;

    ViReq by Michael Haase (2:2432/280): a specialized FREQ processor for Windows, it is distributed by Michael Massenberg (2:2411/505) via modem,
    ISDN and Fido-over-IP.

    tmafreq by Maxim Timofeyev <tmahome@mail.tma.spb.ru>: the FREQ processor
    is created for a unix-like OS and ported into Windows. One may obtain tmafreq from different BBS and FTP with fileecho archives, or may get tmafreq sources from anonymous CVS :pserver:anoncvs@tma.spb.ru:/cvsroot, module "tmafreq".

    VIREQ/x by Volker Imre <volker@imre.dyndns.org> (2:246/2098): the FREQ processor is created for a unix-like OS but can be compiled in the OS/2, Windows and maybe other operating systems. Now it is included into "ftnapps" project on Sourceforge and may be downloaded from http://ftnapps.sourceforge.net/vireq.html.
    Binaries built for Win32 and OS/2 may be downloaded from http://download.binkd.org and
    https://sites.google.com/view/vasilyevmax/


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    18. How Can I Add binkd To a Fidonet Box Working With a Modem?

    You must configure your modem mailer and tosser for BSO (binkley-style outbound) mode so that all of them including binkd would have the same
    inbound directories (and also the same outbound directories). For example,
    one may put the following line to T-Mail mailer configuration file:

    BinkStyle_Pack_For All

    If your mailer can work with AMA (arcmail-attach) only you may try to
    use fileboxes and/or find programs that can convert your mailer's queue to
    BSO or fileboxes. For example, Mail2dir utility allows using fileboxes with FrontDoor. Such a means disables a possibility of sending your mail to the
    same link both by IP and by modem (for instance, when one of the channels failed). There is another more radical but more flexible way: you may change your mailer.
    See also question 35.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    19. Flags Are Not Created On Receiving a File, Programs Do Not Start

    For sure you have a wrong template in the configuration file. You have to use it this way (the first two lines are for Windows and OS/2, the rest are
    for the Unix-like OS):

    flag m:\\ftn\\flg\\pntseg.flg m:\\\\ftn\\\\inbound\\\\sec\\\\pntstr*.*
    flag m:\\ftn\\flg\\toss.flg *.su? *.mo? *.tu? *.we? *.th? *.fr? *.sa? *.pkt

    exec "/usr/local/bin/ftrack -c /fido/conf/ftrack" *.[Pp][Kk][Tt]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ss][Uu][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Mm][Oo][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Uu][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ww][Ee][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Hh][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ff][Rr][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ss][Aa][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/fech-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Ii][Cc]

    You must use the full path with four slashes for the file to receive or
    the template should start with an asterisk character. You must use two
    slashes for the flag file.

    You must use the full path because using a filename without path means
    the event of receiving the file in the current directory and not in the
    inbound directory. If a template begins with "*" then it means "any
    directory" (and since all the files are received in one of the inbound directories it works for both password protected and for unprotected
    sessions).

    In a UNIX-like OS you should take into account that filenames are case sensitive. Please use regular expressions in templates.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    20. 'skipmask' Keyword Does Not Work

    A filename is compared without path and the comparison is case
    sensitive when 'skipmask' is used.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    21. binkd Under Windows 3.x

    Sergey Zharsky (zharik@usa.net) ported binkd 0.9.2 and binkd 0.9.5 for Windows 3.x. They work using IP stacks Trumpet Winsock ver. 3.0 revision D
    and Novell TCP/IP Client for Win 3.11 (see the answer to the question
    'binkd Under DOS', the section "The DOS version has the feature...").


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    22. Different FTN Domains in binkd And a Tosser Without 5D Support

    Suppose there are two domains (with different zone numbers though it
    does not matter). Mail can be successfully sent to the first domain but
    not to the second one. This situation may arise if the tosser, the tracker
    and the other your FTN programs do not support 5D BSO.

    This is a typical binkd configuration for two FTN domains and 5D
    outbound:

    domain fidonet c:\\ftn\\outbound\\fidonet 2
    domain omeganet c:\\ftn\\outbound\\omeganet 11
    address 2:5070/222@fidonet 11:58/6@omeganet

    One must configure not the zone of your own address for 'domain'
    keyword as one might think but the zone that should not be appended to the outbound name (i.e. the outbound subdirectory extensions are not processed
    for the zone denoted in the 'domain' line).

    If your tosser would create bundles for omeganet in the omeganet
    directory then you should write as indicated above. But since it does not
    --- hpt/lnx 1.9 2023-02-09
    * Origin: Moscow, Russia (2:5020/1042)
  • From binkd Team@2:5020/1042 to All on Sat Jan 13 22:15:02 2024
    31 Mar 16:48:43 [40423] trying 195.209.235.3, port 24554...
    31 Mar 16:48:43 [40423] connected to proxy.osu.ru:24554
    31 Mar 16:48:44 [40423] Connection rejected by proxy (HTTP/1.0 403 Forbidden)
    ? 31 Mar 16:48:44 [40423] unable to connect: {13} Permission denied

    In such a case you may try to use http tunnelling for instance with the help of httport, HTTPTunnel (http://http-tunnel.sourceforge.net/), stunnel (https://www.stunnel.org/) or you may find a node receiving binkp
    connections at port 443.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    07. How Can binkd Work via SOCKS-proxy?

    It is not a rare case when users go out to the internet from their corporate LAN exclusively via the proxy server based at the only computer connected to the internet. Thus binkd cannot make a direct connection to
    the remote node and one must use the proxy server. Proxy servers support
    was included in version 0.9.4 and the later ones.

    binkd works with a SOCKS proxy version 4 and 5. The first one does not demand an authorization (no login and password), the second one demands it
    as a rule.

    Suppose the connected to the Internet computer has the IP address 192.168.0.1 in its LAN and the SOCKS server at the computer responds on
    port 1080. Here is the line in binkd configuration file necessary for
    working via the SOCKS proxy.

    1. A SOCKS server without user authorization (no login and password are demanded):

    socks 192.168.0.1:1080

    2. A proxy server with user authorization (it is necessary to type login and password, e.g. login "user", password "password"):

    socks 192.168.0.1:1080/user/password


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    08. IP-Point: How Can I Make binkd to Get My Mail From My Bossnode (Uplink)?

    Make a poll using the command line option -P:

    binkd -P1:2/3 binkd.cfg

    Usually they want binkd to exit after the session is finished. One can
    use the command line option -p:

    binkd -p -P1:2/3 binkd.cfg

    If binkd does not exit for a long time after the session has been
    finished then decrease the value of rescan-delay (and sometimes the value
    of timeout).

    If binkd works permanently (e.g. as a Windows service) and you want to
    get your mail regularly then you need some additional program or a script.
    As an example in DOS, Windows or OS/2 it is enough to execute the command:

    cd . >> %outbound%\NNNNMMMM.ilo

    where NNNN is the hex net number,
    MMMM is the hex node number,
    %outbound% is the path to the necessary zone outbound.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    09. "start_file_transfer: .: Permission denied" Error

    You get the message when binkd cannot open a file for sending indicated
    in some *.?lo file. Most likely the file has a line containing only "."
    because the poll has been made by a command of the type

    echo . >> xxxxyyyy.flo

    you should change it to "cd . >> xxxxyyyy.flo"


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    10. binkd/win and Dial-up: Dialing-up and Disconnecting Automatically

    The problem is to configure the fidonet box in such a way that binkd
    would initiate a telephone call to your Internet provider, get your mail
    and disconnect.

    The solutions:

    1st Solution

    Configure automatic connection and timeout in the dial-up connection properties (idle time before hanging up). It is convinient to use a non-standard software for dialing-up (Advanced Dialer and others). You
    should start binkd with a command line option -p periodically (and possibly -Paddress for binkd to make a poll to the address).

    binkd -p -P1:2/3.4 binkd.cfg


    2nd Solution

    Use the command line option -p and the batch file where first Remote
    Access Service (RAS) is started then binkd is started and after binkd exits
    RAS is stopped.

    Two variants, for Windows NT and for Windows 2000:
    === binkdpoll1.cmd
    rasdial Connection
    binkd -p binkd.cfg
    rasdial Connection /disconnect
    ===

    === binkdpoll2.cmd
    net start "remote access service"
    net start "remote access auto service"
    binkd -p binkd.cfg
    net stop "remote access auto service"
    net stop "remote access service"
    ===

    3rd Solution (The Best One For Win9x)

    Use the command line options -p and -Paddress and control connection
    with a non-standard dial-up software (for example dialerp). This solution
    is the most reliable one (especially if the modem connection to your
    Internet provider is bad) due to the fact that dialerp can start some
    indicated programs at setting the connection. Here is the batch file you should start in the 'Execute' parameter of the dialerp configuration file:

    ====
    binkd -p -P1:2/3.4 binkd.cfg
    dialerp BREAK *
    ====

    The question you may now ask: Where can I take dialerp? The answer is:
    Ask the author (Alexander Vedjakin, 2:5020/540) or look for it in fileecho archives and in ftp/http.


    In any case you should set a small value for 'rescan-delay' parameter in the binkd configuration file. binkd would exit faster.

    === binkd.cfg
    # Outbound rescans period (sec)
    rescan-delay 2
    ===


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    11. I Have Changed binkd Configuration File On-The-Fly. When Will It Be Reloaded?

    Starting with the version 0.9.1 binkd could feel that its configuration file changed. It exited with code 3 if it had been started with option -C. Modification time was checked after each ingoing session. Here is the batch file for starting binkd versions 0.9.1-0.9.3 and 0.9.4-0.9.6/w32:

    ====
    :aaa
    binkd -C binkd.cfg
    if errorlevel 4 goto end
    if errorlevel 3 goto aaa
    :end
    ====

    In the versions 0.9.4/unix and /os2-emx (and in these ones only) binkd restarts automatically if it is started with -C command line option.
    Besides that starting with version 0.9.4 the files included into the configuration file with the help of 'include' keyword are tested not only
    on incoming sessions but also in every 'rescan-delay' seconds.

    If you install binkd 0.9.4/w32 as a Windows NT service you should use it with -C command line option. Then binkd re-reads its configuration file.

    Before version 0.9.4 changes in the configuration file were not tested if binkd was started in client-only mode (-c command line option).

    In the unix versions configuration file is re-read on SIGHUP signal
    by the command
    kill -HUP `cat /var/run/binkd.pid`

    In the version 1.0 configuration file is re-read automatically if
    changed. binkd tests on changes at every 'rescan-delay' seconds.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    12. How Can binkd Work With T-mail/IP?

    There is no way to do it. The protocols differ in essence: binkd uses
    binkp protocol whereas T-mail/IP uses EMSI etc.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    13. Is There At Least One Log Analyzer Under Unix?

    There exist many Perl scripts and several win32 binaries. For example here:

    binkdstat 0.1 beta4 Christmas version 6.01.2002
    Statistics generator for binkd
    (c) Dmitry Sergienko, 2:464/910@fidonet, dmitry@trifle.net 14.08.2000
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/binkdstat-ds.0.1_beta4_Christmas

    There also exists BndStat program:
    BNDST101.ZIP 34812 14-Aug-01 (AREA:AFTNMISC)
    BndStat 1.01. With sources. binkd statistics generator. Compiled for all
    platforms. Included win32 binaries. (C) Dmitry Rusov, 2:5090/94

    Log analyzer by val khokhlov (perl):
    http://www.vk.kiev.ua/create/soft.html#bnkds
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/stat-binkd.pl.gz

    binkdstat (c) val khokhlov, Dmitry Kolvakh, updated at April 2006
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/binkdstat.zip

    T-Hist (c) Michael Markowsky, 2:5020/378 (KLUG's BBS)
    Binary log file analyzer for various mailers including binkd.
    Works in DOS, Windows NT (2000, XP, 2003) and OS/2.
    ftp://ftp.grumbler.org/pub/binkd/hist30a7.zip

    Kleine Statistiker/BINKD for DOS v0.60a, Russian version
    A small statistics generator for posting statistics to an echo conference.
    ftp://ftp.grumbler.org/pub/binkd/statddos.rar


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    14. binkd Connects Too Slowly (~20 Seconds) Though I Have a High-Speed LAN

    It is possible that 'backresolv' parameter is on (for logging the remote host domain name) and DNS is not configured.

    The simplest solution is to comment the 'backresolv' out in the configuration file. Configuring DNS is a more complex solution.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    15. Why Does binkd Not Understand Command Line Options When I Start It From inetd?

    You should use the program name as the first parameter in inetd.conf (it may be any string for binkd), the second and the following parameters
    are the command line options (-iqs etc.) and the last parameter is the configuration file full path:

    binkp stream tcp nowait root /usr/fido/binkd binkd -isq /usr/fido/binkd.cfg

    If you do not use -q option then you should switch console output off (comment 'printq', 'percents', 'conlog' out).


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    16. Can One Make a File Request From binkd?

    It's a piece of cake! binkd supports WAZOO FREQ with an external helper.

    To request files from a remote system it is necessary to create a file
    of type nnnnmmmm.REQ and to put it in the outbound directory next to *.?ut
    and *.?lo files. But *.REQ files do not initiate binkd to call a link so
    to make a FREQ it is necessary to make a poll. The contents of a .REQ file
    is described in the "!SRIF.TXT" file which is a copy of FSC-0086.001 from http://ftsc.org


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    17. How Can my binkd Respond to a File Request?

    One can configure binkd for calling an external file request processor supporting SRIF (FSC-0086) for receiving and handling FREQs in binkd. Please read the "!SRIF.TXT" file and the comment to 'exec' in the configuration
    file.

    Here are the examples of lines in configuration file for DOS-based OS
    and for *nix (you should use regular expressions in the latter case for
    binkd to match both upper-case and lower-case letters, e.g. both *.REQ and *.req):

    exec "\\ftn\\allfix\\allfix.exe RP -SRIF *S" *.req

    exec "/ftn/bin/tmafreq-srif *S" *.[rR][eE][qQ]

    A bash script "srifreq" is delivered with binkd starting with version 1.1a19.
    The following file request processors are also compatible with binkd
    (but they are not the only ones, any other one supporting SRIF will do):

    Allfix by Harms Software Engineering: it is a fileecho processor with built-in file request processor and it has versions for DOS and OS/2;

    ViReq by Michael Haase (2:2432/280): a specialized FREQ processor for Windows, it is distributed by Michael Massenberg (2:2411/505) via modem,
    ISDN and Fido-over-IP.

    tmafreq by Maxim Timofeyev <tmahome@mail.tma.spb.ru>: the FREQ processor
    is created for a unix-like OS and ported into Windows. One may obtain tmafreq from different BBS and FTP with fileecho archives, or may get tmafreq sources from anonymous CVS :pserver:anoncvs@tma.spb.ru:/cvsroot, module "tmafreq".

    VIREQ/x by Volker Imre <volker@imre.dyndns.org> (2:246/2098): the FREQ processor is created for a unix-like OS but can be compiled in the OS/2, Windows and maybe other operating systems. Now it is included into "ftnapps" project on Sourceforge and may be downloaded from http://ftnapps.sourceforge.net/vireq.html.
    Binaries built for Win32 and OS/2 may be downloaded from http://download.binkd.org and
    https://sites.google.com/view/vasilyevmax/


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    18. How Can I Add binkd To a Fidonet Box Working With a Modem?

    You must configure your modem mailer and tosser for BSO (binkley-style outbound) mode so that all of them including binkd would have the same
    inbound directories (and also the same outbound directories). For example,
    one may put the following line to T-Mail mailer configuration file:

    BinkStyle_Pack_For All

    If your mailer can work with AMA (arcmail-attach) only you may try to
    use fileboxes and/or find programs that can convert your mailer's queue to
    BSO or fileboxes. For example, Mail2dir utility allows using fileboxes with FrontDoor. Such a means disables a possibility of sending your mail to the
    same link both by IP and by modem (for instance, when one of the channels failed). There is another more radical but more flexible way: you may change your mailer.
    See also question 35.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    19. Flags Are Not Created On Receiving a File, Programs Do Not Start

    For sure you have a wrong template in the configuration file. You have to use it this way (the first two lines are for Windows and OS/2, the rest are
    for the Unix-like OS):

    flag m:\\ftn\\flg\\pntseg.flg m:\\\\ftn\\\\inbound\\\\sec\\\\pntstr*.*
    flag m:\\ftn\\flg\\toss.flg *.su? *.mo? *.tu? *.we? *.th? *.fr? *.sa? *.pkt

    exec "/usr/local/bin/ftrack -c /fido/conf/ftrack" *.[Pp][Kk][Tt]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ss][Uu][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Mm][Oo][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Uu][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ww][Ee][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Hh][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ff][Rr][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ss][Aa][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/fech-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Ii][Cc]

    You must use the full path with four slashes for the file to receive or
    the template should start with an asterisk character. You must use two
    slashes for the flag file.

    You must use the full path because using a filename without path means
    the event of receiving the file in the current directory and not in the
    inbound directory. If a template begins with "*" then it means "any
    directory" (and since all the files are received in one of the inbound directories it works for both password protected and for unprotected
    sessions).

    In a UNIX-like OS you should take into account that filenames are case sensitive. Please use regular expressions in templates.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    20. 'skipmask' Keyword Does Not Work

    A filename is compared without path and the comparison is case
    sensitive when 'skipmask' is used.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    21. binkd Under Windows 3.x

    Sergey Zharsky (zharik@usa.net) ported binkd 0.9.2 and binkd 0.9.5 for Windows 3.x. They work using IP stacks Trumpet Winsock ver. 3.0 revision D
    and Novell TCP/IP Client for Win 3.11 (see the answer to the question
    'binkd Under DOS', the section "The DOS version has the feature...").


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    22. Different FTN Domains in binkd And a Tosser Without 5D Support

    Suppose there are two domains (with different zone numbers though it
    does not matter). Mail can be successfully sent to the first domain but
    not to the second one. This situation may arise if the tosser, the tracker
    and the other your FTN programs do not support 5D BSO.

    This is a typical binkd configuration for two FTN domains and 5D
    outbound:

    domain fidonet c:\\ftn\\outbound\\fidonet 2
    domain omeganet c:\\ftn\\outbound\\omeganet 11
    address 2:5070/222@fidonet 11:58/6@omeganet

    One must configure not the zone of your own address for 'domain'
    keyword as one might think but the zone that should not be appended to the outbound name (i.e. the outbound subdirectory extensions are not processed
    for the zone denoted in the 'domain' line).

    If your tosser would create bundles for omeganet in the omeganet
    directory then you should write as indicated above. But since it does not
    --- hpt/lnx 1.9 2023-02-09
    * Origin: Moscow, Russia (2:5020/1042)
  • From binkd Team@2:5020/1042 to All on Sat Jan 20 22:15:02 2024
    31 Mar 16:48:43 [40423] trying 195.209.235.3, port 24554...
    31 Mar 16:48:43 [40423] connected to proxy.osu.ru:24554
    31 Mar 16:48:44 [40423] Connection rejected by proxy (HTTP/1.0 403 Forbidden)
    ? 31 Mar 16:48:44 [40423] unable to connect: {13} Permission denied

    In such a case you may try to use http tunnelling for instance with the help of httport, HTTPTunnel (http://http-tunnel.sourceforge.net/), stunnel (https://www.stunnel.org/) or you may find a node receiving binkp
    connections at port 443.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    07. How Can binkd Work via SOCKS-proxy?

    It is not a rare case when users go out to the internet from their corporate LAN exclusively via the proxy server based at the only computer connected to the internet. Thus binkd cannot make a direct connection to
    the remote node and one must use the proxy server. Proxy servers support
    was included in version 0.9.4 and the later ones.

    binkd works with a SOCKS proxy version 4 and 5. The first one does not demand an authorization (no login and password), the second one demands it
    as a rule.

    Suppose the connected to the Internet computer has the IP address 192.168.0.1 in its LAN and the SOCKS server at the computer responds on
    port 1080. Here is the line in binkd configuration file necessary for
    working via the SOCKS proxy.

    1. A SOCKS server without user authorization (no login and password are demanded):

    socks 192.168.0.1:1080

    2. A proxy server with user authorization (it is necessary to type login and password, e.g. login "user", password "password"):

    socks 192.168.0.1:1080/user/password


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    08. IP-Point: How Can I Make binkd to Get My Mail From My Bossnode (Uplink)?

    Make a poll using the command line option -P:

    binkd -P1:2/3 binkd.cfg

    Usually they want binkd to exit after the session is finished. One can
    use the command line option -p:

    binkd -p -P1:2/3 binkd.cfg

    If binkd does not exit for a long time after the session has been
    finished then decrease the value of rescan-delay (and sometimes the value
    of timeout).

    If binkd works permanently (e.g. as a Windows service) and you want to
    get your mail regularly then you need some additional program or a script.
    As an example in DOS, Windows or OS/2 it is enough to execute the command:

    cd . >> %outbound%\NNNNMMMM.ilo

    where NNNN is the hex net number,
    MMMM is the hex node number,
    %outbound% is the path to the necessary zone outbound.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    09. "start_file_transfer: .: Permission denied" Error

    You get the message when binkd cannot open a file for sending indicated
    in some *.?lo file. Most likely the file has a line containing only "."
    because the poll has been made by a command of the type

    echo . >> xxxxyyyy.flo

    you should change it to "cd . >> xxxxyyyy.flo"


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    10. binkd/win and Dial-up: Dialing-up and Disconnecting Automatically

    The problem is to configure the fidonet box in such a way that binkd
    would initiate a telephone call to your Internet provider, get your mail
    and disconnect.

    The solutions:

    1st Solution

    Configure automatic connection and timeout in the dial-up connection properties (idle time before hanging up). It is convinient to use a non-standard software for dialing-up (Advanced Dialer and others). You
    should start binkd with a command line option -p periodically (and possibly -Paddress for binkd to make a poll to the address).

    binkd -p -P1:2/3.4 binkd.cfg


    2nd Solution

    Use the command line option -p and the batch file where first Remote
    Access Service (RAS) is started then binkd is started and after binkd exits
    RAS is stopped.

    Two variants, for Windows NT and for Windows 2000:
    === binkdpoll1.cmd
    rasdial Connection
    binkd -p binkd.cfg
    rasdial Connection /disconnect
    ===

    === binkdpoll2.cmd
    net start "remote access service"
    net start "remote access auto service"
    binkd -p binkd.cfg
    net stop "remote access auto service"
    net stop "remote access service"
    ===

    3rd Solution (The Best One For Win9x)

    Use the command line options -p and -Paddress and control connection
    with a non-standard dial-up software (for example dialerp). This solution
    is the most reliable one (especially if the modem connection to your
    Internet provider is bad) due to the fact that dialerp can start some
    indicated programs at setting the connection. Here is the batch file you should start in the 'Execute' parameter of the dialerp configuration file:

    ====
    binkd -p -P1:2/3.4 binkd.cfg
    dialerp BREAK *
    ====

    The question you may now ask: Where can I take dialerp? The answer is:
    Ask the author (Alexander Vedjakin, 2:5020/540) or look for it in fileecho archives and in ftp/http.


    In any case you should set a small value for 'rescan-delay' parameter in the binkd configuration file. binkd would exit faster.

    === binkd.cfg
    # Outbound rescans period (sec)
    rescan-delay 2
    ===


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    11. I Have Changed binkd Configuration File On-The-Fly. When Will It Be Reloaded?

    Starting with the version 0.9.1 binkd could feel that its configuration file changed. It exited with code 3 if it had been started with option -C. Modification time was checked after each ingoing session. Here is the batch file for starting binkd versions 0.9.1-0.9.3 and 0.9.4-0.9.6/w32:

    ====
    :aaa
    binkd -C binkd.cfg
    if errorlevel 4 goto end
    if errorlevel 3 goto aaa
    :end
    ====

    In the versions 0.9.4/unix and /os2-emx (and in these ones only) binkd restarts automatically if it is started with -C command line option.
    Besides that starting with version 0.9.4 the files included into the configuration file with the help of 'include' keyword are tested not only
    on incoming sessions but also in every 'rescan-delay' seconds.

    If you install binkd 0.9.4/w32 as a Windows NT service you should use it with -C command line option. Then binkd re-reads its configuration file.

    Before version 0.9.4 changes in the configuration file were not tested if binkd was started in client-only mode (-c command line option).

    In the unix versions configuration file is re-read on SIGHUP signal
    by the command
    kill -HUP `cat /var/run/binkd.pid`

    In the version 1.0 configuration file is re-read automatically if
    changed. binkd tests on changes at every 'rescan-delay' seconds.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    12. How Can binkd Work With T-mail/IP?

    There is no way to do it. The protocols differ in essence: binkd uses
    binkp protocol whereas T-mail/IP uses EMSI etc.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    13. Is There At Least One Log Analyzer Under Unix?

    There exist many Perl scripts and several win32 binaries. For example here:

    binkdstat 0.1 beta4 Christmas version 6.01.2002
    Statistics generator for binkd
    (c) Dmitry Sergienko, 2:464/910@fidonet, dmitry@trifle.net 14.08.2000
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/binkdstat-ds.0.1_beta4_Christmas

    There also exists BndStat program:
    BNDST101.ZIP 34812 14-Aug-01 (AREA:AFTNMISC)
    BndStat 1.01. With sources. binkd statistics generator. Compiled for all
    platforms. Included win32 binaries. (C) Dmitry Rusov, 2:5090/94

    Log analyzer by val khokhlov (perl):
    http://www.vk.kiev.ua/create/soft.html#bnkds
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/stat-binkd.pl.gz

    binkdstat (c) val khokhlov, Dmitry Kolvakh, updated at April 2006
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/binkdstat.zip

    T-Hist (c) Michael Markowsky, 2:5020/378 (KLUG's BBS)
    Binary log file analyzer for various mailers including binkd.
    Works in DOS, Windows NT (2000, XP, 2003) and OS/2.
    ftp://ftp.grumbler.org/pub/binkd/hist30a7.zip

    Kleine Statistiker/BINKD for DOS v0.60a, Russian version
    A small statistics generator for posting statistics to an echo conference.
    ftp://ftp.grumbler.org/pub/binkd/statddos.rar


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    14. binkd Connects Too Slowly (~20 Seconds) Though I Have a High-Speed LAN

    It is possible that 'backresolv' parameter is on (for logging the remote host domain name) and DNS is not configured.

    The simplest solution is to comment the 'backresolv' out in the configuration file. Configuring DNS is a more complex solution.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    15. Why Does binkd Not Understand Command Line Options When I Start It From inetd?

    You should use the program name as the first parameter in inetd.conf (it may be any string for binkd), the second and the following parameters
    are the command line options (-iqs etc.) and the last parameter is the configuration file full path:

    binkp stream tcp nowait root /usr/fido/binkd binkd -isq /usr/fido/binkd.cfg

    If you do not use -q option then you should switch console output off (comment 'printq', 'percents', 'conlog' out).


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    16. Can One Make a File Request From binkd?

    It's a piece of cake! binkd supports WAZOO FREQ with an external helper.

    To request files from a remote system it is necessary to create a file
    of type nnnnmmmm.REQ and to put it in the outbound directory next to *.?ut
    and *.?lo files. But *.REQ files do not initiate binkd to call a link so
    to make a FREQ it is necessary to make a poll. The contents of a .REQ file
    is described in the "!SRIF.TXT" file which is a copy of FSC-0086.001 from http://ftsc.org


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    17. How Can my binkd Respond to a File Request?

    One can configure binkd for calling an external file request processor supporting SRIF (FSC-0086) for receiving and handling FREQs in binkd. Please read the "!SRIF.TXT" file and the comment to 'exec' in the configuration
    file.

    Here are the examples of lines in configuration file for DOS-based OS
    and for *nix (you should use regular expressions in the latter case for
    binkd to match both upper-case and lower-case letters, e.g. both *.REQ and *.req):

    exec "\\ftn\\allfix\\allfix.exe RP -SRIF *S" *.req

    exec "/ftn/bin/tmafreq-srif *S" *.[rR][eE][qQ]

    A bash script "srifreq" is delivered with binkd starting with version 1.1a19.
    The following file request processors are also compatible with binkd
    (but they are not the only ones, any other one supporting SRIF will do):

    Allfix by Harms Software Engineering: it is a fileecho processor with built-in file request processor and it has versions for DOS and OS/2;

    ViReq by Michael Haase (2:2432/280): a specialized FREQ processor for Windows, it is distributed by Michael Massenberg (2:2411/505) via modem,
    ISDN and Fido-over-IP.

    tmafreq by Maxim Timofeyev <tmahome@mail.tma.spb.ru>: the FREQ processor
    is created for a unix-like OS and ported into Windows. One may obtain tmafreq from different BBS and FTP with fileecho archives, or may get tmafreq sources from anonymous CVS :pserver:anoncvs@tma.spb.ru:/cvsroot, module "tmafreq".

    VIREQ/x by Volker Imre <volker@imre.dyndns.org> (2:246/2098): the FREQ processor is created for a unix-like OS but can be compiled in the OS/2, Windows and maybe other operating systems. Now it is included into "ftnapps" project on Sourceforge and may be downloaded from http://ftnapps.sourceforge.net/vireq.html.
    Binaries built for Win32 and OS/2 may be downloaded from http://download.binkd.org and
    https://sites.google.com/view/vasilyevmax/


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    18. How Can I Add binkd To a Fidonet Box Working With a Modem?

    You must configure your modem mailer and tosser for BSO (binkley-style outbound) mode so that all of them including binkd would have the same
    inbound directories (and also the same outbound directories). For example,
    one may put the following line to T-Mail mailer configuration file:

    BinkStyle_Pack_For All

    If your mailer can work with AMA (arcmail-attach) only you may try to
    use fileboxes and/or find programs that can convert your mailer's queue to
    BSO or fileboxes. For example, Mail2dir utility allows using fileboxes with FrontDoor. Such a means disables a possibility of sending your mail to the
    same link both by IP and by modem (for instance, when one of the channels failed). There is another more radical but more flexible way: you may change your mailer.
    See also question 35.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    19. Flags Are Not Created On Receiving a File, Programs Do Not Start

    For sure you have a wrong template in the configuration file. You have to use it this way (the first two lines are for Windows and OS/2, the rest are
    for the Unix-like OS):

    flag m:\\ftn\\flg\\pntseg.flg m:\\\\ftn\\\\inbound\\\\sec\\\\pntstr*.*
    flag m:\\ftn\\flg\\toss.flg *.su? *.mo? *.tu? *.we? *.th? *.fr? *.sa? *.pkt

    exec "/usr/local/bin/ftrack -c /fido/conf/ftrack" *.[Pp][Kk][Tt]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ss][Uu][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Mm][Oo][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Uu][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ww][Ee][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Hh][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ff][Rr][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ss][Aa][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/fech-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Ii][Cc]

    You must use the full path with four slashes for the file to receive or
    the template should start with an asterisk character. You must use two
    slashes for the flag file.

    You must use the full path because using a filename without path means
    the event of receiving the file in the current directory and not in the
    inbound directory. If a template begins with "*" then it means "any
    directory" (and since all the files are received in one of the inbound directories it works for both password protected and for unprotected
    sessions).

    In a UNIX-like OS you should take into account that filenames are case sensitive. Please use regular expressions in templates.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    20. 'skipmask' Keyword Does Not Work

    A filename is compared without path and the comparison is case
    sensitive when 'skipmask' is used.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    21. binkd Under Windows 3.x

    Sergey Zharsky (zharik@usa.net) ported binkd 0.9.2 and binkd 0.9.5 for Windows 3.x. They work using IP stacks Trumpet Winsock ver. 3.0 revision D
    and Novell TCP/IP Client for Win 3.11 (see the answer to the question
    'binkd Under DOS', the section "The DOS version has the feature...").


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    22. Different FTN Domains in binkd And a Tosser Without 5D Support

    Suppose there are two domains (with different zone numbers though it
    does not matter). Mail can be successfully sent to the first domain but
    not to the second one. This situation may arise if the tosser, the tracker
    and the other your FTN programs do not support 5D BSO.

    This is a typical binkd configuration for two FTN domains and 5D
    outbound:

    domain fidonet c:\\ftn\\outbound\\fidonet 2
    domain omeganet c:\\ftn\\outbound\\omeganet 11
    address 2:5070/222@fidonet 11:58/6@omeganet

    One must configure not the zone of your own address for 'domain'
    keyword as one might think but the zone that should not be appended to the outbound name (i.e. the outbound subdirectory extensions are not processed
    for the zone denoted in the 'domain' line).

    If your tosser would create bundles for omeganet in the omeganet
    directory then you should write as indicated above. But since it does not
    --- hpt/lnx 1.9 2023-02-09
    * Origin: Moscow, Russia (2:5020/1042)
  • From binkd Team@2:5020/1042 to All on Sat Jan 27 22:15:02 2024
    31 Mar 16:48:43 [40423] trying 195.209.235.3, port 24554...
    31 Mar 16:48:43 [40423] connected to proxy.osu.ru:24554
    31 Mar 16:48:44 [40423] Connection rejected by proxy (HTTP/1.0 403 Forbidden)
    ? 31 Mar 16:48:44 [40423] unable to connect: {13} Permission denied

    In such a case you may try to use http tunnelling for instance with the help of httport, HTTPTunnel (http://http-tunnel.sourceforge.net/), stunnel (https://www.stunnel.org/) or you may find a node receiving binkp
    connections at port 443.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    07. How Can binkd Work via SOCKS-proxy?

    It is not a rare case when users go out to the internet from their corporate LAN exclusively via the proxy server based at the only computer connected to the internet. Thus binkd cannot make a direct connection to
    the remote node and one must use the proxy server. Proxy servers support
    was included in version 0.9.4 and the later ones.

    binkd works with a SOCKS proxy version 4 and 5. The first one does not demand an authorization (no login and password), the second one demands it
    as a rule.

    Suppose the connected to the Internet computer has the IP address 192.168.0.1 in its LAN and the SOCKS server at the computer responds on
    port 1080. Here is the line in binkd configuration file necessary for
    working via the SOCKS proxy.

    1. A SOCKS server without user authorization (no login and password are demanded):

    socks 192.168.0.1:1080

    2. A proxy server with user authorization (it is necessary to type login and password, e.g. login "user", password "password"):

    socks 192.168.0.1:1080/user/password


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    08. IP-Point: How Can I Make binkd to Get My Mail From My Bossnode (Uplink)?

    Make a poll using the command line option -P:

    binkd -P1:2/3 binkd.cfg

    Usually they want binkd to exit after the session is finished. One can
    use the command line option -p:

    binkd -p -P1:2/3 binkd.cfg

    If binkd does not exit for a long time after the session has been
    finished then decrease the value of rescan-delay (and sometimes the value
    of timeout).

    If binkd works permanently (e.g. as a Windows service) and you want to
    get your mail regularly then you need some additional program or a script.
    As an example in DOS, Windows or OS/2 it is enough to execute the command:

    cd . >> %outbound%\NNNNMMMM.ilo

    where NNNN is the hex net number,
    MMMM is the hex node number,
    %outbound% is the path to the necessary zone outbound.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    09. "start_file_transfer: .: Permission denied" Error

    You get the message when binkd cannot open a file for sending indicated
    in some *.?lo file. Most likely the file has a line containing only "."
    because the poll has been made by a command of the type

    echo . >> xxxxyyyy.flo

    you should change it to "cd . >> xxxxyyyy.flo"


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    10. binkd/win and Dial-up: Dialing-up and Disconnecting Automatically

    The problem is to configure the fidonet box in such a way that binkd
    would initiate a telephone call to your Internet provider, get your mail
    and disconnect.

    The solutions:

    1st Solution

    Configure automatic connection and timeout in the dial-up connection properties (idle time before hanging up). It is convinient to use a non-standard software for dialing-up (Advanced Dialer and others). You
    should start binkd with a command line option -p periodically (and possibly -Paddress for binkd to make a poll to the address).

    binkd -p -P1:2/3.4 binkd.cfg


    2nd Solution

    Use the command line option -p and the batch file where first Remote
    Access Service (RAS) is started then binkd is started and after binkd exits
    RAS is stopped.

    Two variants, for Windows NT and for Windows 2000:
    === binkdpoll1.cmd
    rasdial Connection
    binkd -p binkd.cfg
    rasdial Connection /disconnect
    ===

    === binkdpoll2.cmd
    net start "remote access service"
    net start "remote access auto service"
    binkd -p binkd.cfg
    net stop "remote access auto service"
    net stop "remote access service"
    ===

    3rd Solution (The Best One For Win9x)

    Use the command line options -p and -Paddress and control connection
    with a non-standard dial-up software (for example dialerp). This solution
    is the most reliable one (especially if the modem connection to your
    Internet provider is bad) due to the fact that dialerp can start some
    indicated programs at setting the connection. Here is the batch file you should start in the 'Execute' parameter of the dialerp configuration file:

    ====
    binkd -p -P1:2/3.4 binkd.cfg
    dialerp BREAK *
    ====

    The question you may now ask: Where can I take dialerp? The answer is:
    Ask the author (Alexander Vedjakin, 2:5020/540) or look for it in fileecho archives and in ftp/http.


    In any case you should set a small value for 'rescan-delay' parameter in the binkd configuration file. binkd would exit faster.

    === binkd.cfg
    # Outbound rescans period (sec)
    rescan-delay 2
    ===


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    11. I Have Changed binkd Configuration File On-The-Fly. When Will It Be Reloaded?

    Starting with the version 0.9.1 binkd could feel that its configuration file changed. It exited with code 3 if it had been started with option -C. Modification time was checked after each ingoing session. Here is the batch file for starting binkd versions 0.9.1-0.9.3 and 0.9.4-0.9.6/w32:

    ====
    :aaa
    binkd -C binkd.cfg
    if errorlevel 4 goto end
    if errorlevel 3 goto aaa
    :end
    ====

    In the versions 0.9.4/unix and /os2-emx (and in these ones only) binkd restarts automatically if it is started with -C command line option.
    Besides that starting with version 0.9.4 the files included into the configuration file with the help of 'include' keyword are tested not only
    on incoming sessions but also in every 'rescan-delay' seconds.

    If you install binkd 0.9.4/w32 as a Windows NT service you should use it with -C command line option. Then binkd re-reads its configuration file.

    Before version 0.9.4 changes in the configuration file were not tested if binkd was started in client-only mode (-c command line option).

    In the unix versions configuration file is re-read on SIGHUP signal
    by the command
    kill -HUP `cat /var/run/binkd.pid`

    In the version 1.0 configuration file is re-read automatically if
    changed. binkd tests on changes at every 'rescan-delay' seconds.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    12. How Can binkd Work With T-mail/IP?

    There is no way to do it. The protocols differ in essence: binkd uses
    binkp protocol whereas T-mail/IP uses EMSI etc.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    13. Is There At Least One Log Analyzer Under Unix?

    There exist many Perl scripts and several win32 binaries. For example here:

    binkdstat 0.1 beta4 Christmas version 6.01.2002
    Statistics generator for binkd
    (c) Dmitry Sergienko, 2:464/910@fidonet, dmitry@trifle.net 14.08.2000
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/binkdstat-ds.0.1_beta4_Christmas

    There also exists BndStat program:
    BNDST101.ZIP 34812 14-Aug-01 (AREA:AFTNMISC)
    BndStat 1.01. With sources. binkd statistics generator. Compiled for all
    platforms. Included win32 binaries. (C) Dmitry Rusov, 2:5090/94

    Log analyzer by val khokhlov (perl):
    http://www.vk.kiev.ua/create/soft.html#bnkds
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/stat-binkd.pl.gz

    binkdstat (c) val khokhlov, Dmitry Kolvakh, updated at April 2006
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/binkdstat.zip

    T-Hist (c) Michael Markowsky, 2:5020/378 (KLUG's BBS)
    Binary log file analyzer for various mailers including binkd.
    Works in DOS, Windows NT (2000, XP, 2003) and OS/2.
    ftp://ftp.grumbler.org/pub/binkd/hist30a7.zip

    Kleine Statistiker/BINKD for DOS v0.60a, Russian version
    A small statistics generator for posting statistics to an echo conference.
    ftp://ftp.grumbler.org/pub/binkd/statddos.rar


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    14. binkd Connects Too Slowly (~20 Seconds) Though I Have a High-Speed LAN

    It is possible that 'backresolv' parameter is on (for logging the remote host domain name) and DNS is not configured.

    The simplest solution is to comment the 'backresolv' out in the configuration file. Configuring DNS is a more complex solution.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    15. Why Does binkd Not Understand Command Line Options When I Start It From inetd?

    You should use the program name as the first parameter in inetd.conf (it may be any string for binkd), the second and the following parameters
    are the command line options (-iqs etc.) and the last parameter is the configuration file full path:

    binkp stream tcp nowait root /usr/fido/binkd binkd -isq /usr/fido/binkd.cfg

    If you do not use -q option then you should switch console output off (comment 'printq', 'percents', 'conlog' out).


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    16. Can One Make a File Request From binkd?

    It's a piece of cake! binkd supports WAZOO FREQ with an external helper.

    To request files from a remote system it is necessary to create a file
    of type nnnnmmmm.REQ and to put it in the outbound directory next to *.?ut
    and *.?lo files. But *.REQ files do not initiate binkd to call a link so
    to make a FREQ it is necessary to make a poll. The contents of a .REQ file
    is described in the "!SRIF.TXT" file which is a copy of FSC-0086.001 from http://ftsc.org


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    17. How Can my binkd Respond to a File Request?

    One can configure binkd for calling an external file request processor supporting SRIF (FSC-0086) for receiving and handling FREQs in binkd. Please read the "!SRIF.TXT" file and the comment to 'exec' in the configuration
    file.

    Here are the examples of lines in configuration file for DOS-based OS
    and for *nix (you should use regular expressions in the latter case for
    binkd to match both upper-case and lower-case letters, e.g. both *.REQ and *.req):

    exec "\\ftn\\allfix\\allfix.exe RP -SRIF *S" *.req

    exec "/ftn/bin/tmafreq-srif *S" *.[rR][eE][qQ]

    A bash script "srifreq" is delivered with binkd starting with version 1.1a19.
    The following file request processors are also compatible with binkd
    (but they are not the only ones, any other one supporting SRIF will do):

    Allfix by Harms Software Engineering: it is a fileecho processor with built-in file request processor and it has versions for DOS and OS/2;

    ViReq by Michael Haase (2:2432/280): a specialized FREQ processor for Windows, it is distributed by Michael Massenberg (2:2411/505) via modem,
    ISDN and Fido-over-IP.

    tmafreq by Maxim Timofeyev <tmahome@mail.tma.spb.ru>: the FREQ processor
    is created for a unix-like OS and ported into Windows. One may obtain tmafreq from different BBS and FTP with fileecho archives, or may get tmafreq sources from anonymous CVS :pserver:anoncvs@tma.spb.ru:/cvsroot, module "tmafreq".

    VIREQ/x by Volker Imre <volker@imre.dyndns.org> (2:246/2098): the FREQ processor is created for a unix-like OS but can be compiled in the OS/2, Windows and maybe other operating systems. Now it is included into "ftnapps" project on Sourceforge and may be downloaded from http://ftnapps.sourceforge.net/vireq.html.
    Binaries built for Win32 and OS/2 may be downloaded from http://download.binkd.org and
    https://sites.google.com/view/vasilyevmax/


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    18. How Can I Add binkd To a Fidonet Box Working With a Modem?

    You must configure your modem mailer and tosser for BSO (binkley-style outbound) mode so that all of them including binkd would have the same
    inbound directories (and also the same outbound directories). For example,
    one may put the following line to T-Mail mailer configuration file:

    BinkStyle_Pack_For All

    If your mailer can work with AMA (arcmail-attach) only you may try to
    use fileboxes and/or find programs that can convert your mailer's queue to
    BSO or fileboxes. For example, Mail2dir utility allows using fileboxes with FrontDoor. Such a means disables a possibility of sending your mail to the
    same link both by IP and by modem (for instance, when one of the channels failed). There is another more radical but more flexible way: you may change your mailer.
    See also question 35.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    19. Flags Are Not Created On Receiving a File, Programs Do Not Start

    For sure you have a wrong template in the configuration file. You have to use it this way (the first two lines are for Windows and OS/2, the rest are
    for the Unix-like OS):

    flag m:\\ftn\\flg\\pntseg.flg m:\\\\ftn\\\\inbound\\\\sec\\\\pntstr*.*
    flag m:\\ftn\\flg\\toss.flg *.su? *.mo? *.tu? *.we? *.th? *.fr? *.sa? *.pkt

    exec "/usr/local/bin/ftrack -c /fido/conf/ftrack" *.[Pp][Kk][Tt]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ss][Uu][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Mm][Oo][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Uu][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ww][Ee][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Hh][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ff][Rr][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ss][Aa][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/fech-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Ii][Cc]

    You must use the full path with four slashes for the file to receive or
    the template should start with an asterisk character. You must use two
    slashes for the flag file.

    You must use the full path because using a filename without path means
    the event of receiving the file in the current directory and not in the
    inbound directory. If a template begins with "*" then it means "any
    directory" (and since all the files are received in one of the inbound directories it works for both password protected and for unprotected
    sessions).

    In a UNIX-like OS you should take into account that filenames are case sensitive. Please use regular expressions in templates.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    20. 'skipmask' Keyword Does Not Work

    A filename is compared without path and the comparison is case
    sensitive when 'skipmask' is used.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    21. binkd Under Windows 3.x

    Sergey Zharsky (zharik@usa.net) ported binkd 0.9.2 and binkd 0.9.5 for Windows 3.x. They work using IP stacks Trumpet Winsock ver. 3.0 revision D
    and Novell TCP/IP Client for Win 3.11 (see the answer to the question
    'binkd Under DOS', the section "The DOS version has the feature...").


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    22. Different FTN Domains in binkd And a Tosser Without 5D Support

    Suppose there are two domains (with different zone numbers though it
    does not matter). Mail can be successfully sent to the first domain but
    not to the second one. This situation may arise if the tosser, the tracker
    and the other your FTN programs do not support 5D BSO.

    This is a typical binkd configuration for two FTN domains and 5D
    outbound:

    domain fidonet c:\\ftn\\outbound\\fidonet 2
    domain omeganet c:\\ftn\\outbound\\omeganet 11
    address 2:5070/222@fidonet 11:58/6@omeganet

    One must configure not the zone of your own address for 'domain'
    keyword as one might think but the zone that should not be appended to the outbound name (i.e. the outbound subdirectory extensions are not processed
    for the zone denoted in the 'domain' line).

    If your tosser would create bundles for omeganet in the omeganet
    directory then you should write as indicated above. But since it does not
    --- hpt/lnx 1.9 2023-02-09
    * Origin: Moscow, Russia (2:5020/1042)
  • From binkd Team@2:5020/1042 to All on Sat Feb 3 22:15:02 2024
    31 Mar 16:48:43 [40423] trying 195.209.235.3, port 24554...
    31 Mar 16:48:43 [40423] connected to proxy.osu.ru:24554
    31 Mar 16:48:44 [40423] Connection rejected by proxy (HTTP/1.0 403 Forbidden)
    ? 31 Mar 16:48:44 [40423] unable to connect: {13} Permission denied

    In such a case you may try to use http tunnelling for instance with the help of httport, HTTPTunnel (http://http-tunnel.sourceforge.net/), stunnel (https://www.stunnel.org/) or you may find a node receiving binkp
    connections at port 443.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    07. How Can binkd Work via SOCKS-proxy?

    It is not a rare case when users go out to the internet from their corporate LAN exclusively via the proxy server based at the only computer connected to the internet. Thus binkd cannot make a direct connection to
    the remote node and one must use the proxy server. Proxy servers support
    was included in version 0.9.4 and the later ones.

    binkd works with a SOCKS proxy version 4 and 5. The first one does not demand an authorization (no login and password), the second one demands it
    as a rule.

    Suppose the connected to the Internet computer has the IP address 192.168.0.1 in its LAN and the SOCKS server at the computer responds on
    port 1080. Here is the line in binkd configuration file necessary for
    working via the SOCKS proxy.

    1. A SOCKS server without user authorization (no login and password are demanded):

    socks 192.168.0.1:1080

    2. A proxy server with user authorization (it is necessary to type login and password, e.g. login "user", password "password"):

    socks 192.168.0.1:1080/user/password


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    08. IP-Point: How Can I Make binkd to Get My Mail From My Bossnode (Uplink)?

    Make a poll using the command line option -P:

    binkd -P1:2/3 binkd.cfg

    Usually they want binkd to exit after the session is finished. One can
    use the command line option -p:

    binkd -p -P1:2/3 binkd.cfg

    If binkd does not exit for a long time after the session has been
    finished then decrease the value of rescan-delay (and sometimes the value
    of timeout).

    If binkd works permanently (e.g. as a Windows service) and you want to
    get your mail regularly then you need some additional program or a script.
    As an example in DOS, Windows or OS/2 it is enough to execute the command:

    cd . >> %outbound%\NNNNMMMM.ilo

    where NNNN is the hex net number,
    MMMM is the hex node number,
    %outbound% is the path to the necessary zone outbound.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    09. "start_file_transfer: .: Permission denied" Error

    You get the message when binkd cannot open a file for sending indicated
    in some *.?lo file. Most likely the file has a line containing only "."
    because the poll has been made by a command of the type

    echo . >> xxxxyyyy.flo

    you should change it to "cd . >> xxxxyyyy.flo"


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    10. binkd/win and Dial-up: Dialing-up and Disconnecting Automatically

    The problem is to configure the fidonet box in such a way that binkd
    would initiate a telephone call to your Internet provider, get your mail
    and disconnect.

    The solutions:

    1st Solution

    Configure automatic connection and timeout in the dial-up connection properties (idle time before hanging up). It is convinient to use a non-standard software for dialing-up (Advanced Dialer and others). You
    should start binkd with a command line option -p periodically (and possibly -Paddress for binkd to make a poll to the address).

    binkd -p -P1:2/3.4 binkd.cfg


    2nd Solution

    Use the command line option -p and the batch file where first Remote
    Access Service (RAS) is started then binkd is started and after binkd exits
    RAS is stopped.

    Two variants, for Windows NT and for Windows 2000:
    === binkdpoll1.cmd
    rasdial Connection
    binkd -p binkd.cfg
    rasdial Connection /disconnect
    ===

    === binkdpoll2.cmd
    net start "remote access service"
    net start "remote access auto service"
    binkd -p binkd.cfg
    net stop "remote access auto service"
    net stop "remote access service"
    ===

    3rd Solution (The Best One For Win9x)

    Use the command line options -p and -Paddress and control connection
    with a non-standard dial-up software (for example dialerp). This solution
    is the most reliable one (especially if the modem connection to your
    Internet provider is bad) due to the fact that dialerp can start some
    indicated programs at setting the connection. Here is the batch file you should start in the 'Execute' parameter of the dialerp configuration file:

    ====
    binkd -p -P1:2/3.4 binkd.cfg
    dialerp BREAK *
    ====

    The question you may now ask: Where can I take dialerp? The answer is:
    Ask the author (Alexander Vedjakin, 2:5020/540) or look for it in fileecho archives and in ftp/http.


    In any case you should set a small value for 'rescan-delay' parameter in the binkd configuration file. binkd would exit faster.

    === binkd.cfg
    # Outbound rescans period (sec)
    rescan-delay 2
    ===


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    11. I Have Changed binkd Configuration File On-The-Fly. When Will It Be Reloaded?

    Starting with the version 0.9.1 binkd could feel that its configuration file changed. It exited with code 3 if it had been started with option -C. Modification time was checked after each ingoing session. Here is the batch file for starting binkd versions 0.9.1-0.9.3 and 0.9.4-0.9.6/w32:

    ====
    :aaa
    binkd -C binkd.cfg
    if errorlevel 4 goto end
    if errorlevel 3 goto aaa
    :end
    ====

    In the versions 0.9.4/unix and /os2-emx (and in these ones only) binkd restarts automatically if it is started with -C command line option.
    Besides that starting with version 0.9.4 the files included into the configuration file with the help of 'include' keyword are tested not only
    on incoming sessions but also in every 'rescan-delay' seconds.

    If you install binkd 0.9.4/w32 as a Windows NT service you should use it with -C command line option. Then binkd re-reads its configuration file.

    Before version 0.9.4 changes in the configuration file were not tested if binkd was started in client-only mode (-c command line option).

    In the unix versions configuration file is re-read on SIGHUP signal
    by the command
    kill -HUP `cat /var/run/binkd.pid`

    In the version 1.0 configuration file is re-read automatically if
    changed. binkd tests on changes at every 'rescan-delay' seconds.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    12. How Can binkd Work With T-mail/IP?

    There is no way to do it. The protocols differ in essence: binkd uses
    binkp protocol whereas T-mail/IP uses EMSI etc.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    13. Is There At Least One Log Analyzer Under Unix?

    There exist many Perl scripts and several win32 binaries. For example here:

    binkdstat 0.1 beta4 Christmas version 6.01.2002
    Statistics generator for binkd
    (c) Dmitry Sergienko, 2:464/910@fidonet, dmitry@trifle.net 14.08.2000
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/binkdstat-ds.0.1_beta4_Christmas

    There also exists BndStat program:
    BNDST101.ZIP 34812 14-Aug-01 (AREA:AFTNMISC)
    BndStat 1.01. With sources. binkd statistics generator. Compiled for all
    platforms. Included win32 binaries. (C) Dmitry Rusov, 2:5090/94

    Log analyzer by val khokhlov (perl):
    http://www.vk.kiev.ua/create/soft.html#bnkds
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/stat-binkd.pl.gz

    binkdstat (c) val khokhlov, Dmitry Kolvakh, updated at April 2006
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/binkdstat.zip

    T-Hist (c) Michael Markowsky, 2:5020/378 (KLUG's BBS)
    Binary log file analyzer for various mailers including binkd.
    Works in DOS, Windows NT (2000, XP, 2003) and OS/2.
    ftp://ftp.grumbler.org/pub/binkd/hist30a7.zip

    Kleine Statistiker/BINKD for DOS v0.60a, Russian version
    A small statistics generator for posting statistics to an echo conference.
    ftp://ftp.grumbler.org/pub/binkd/statddos.rar


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    14. binkd Connects Too Slowly (~20 Seconds) Though I Have a High-Speed LAN

    It is possible that 'backresolv' parameter is on (for logging the remote host domain name) and DNS is not configured.

    The simplest solution is to comment the 'backresolv' out in the configuration file. Configuring DNS is a more complex solution.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    15. Why Does binkd Not Understand Command Line Options When I Start It From inetd?

    You should use the program name as the first parameter in inetd.conf (it may be any string for binkd), the second and the following parameters
    are the command line options (-iqs etc.) and the last parameter is the configuration file full path:

    binkp stream tcp nowait root /usr/fido/binkd binkd -isq /usr/fido/binkd.cfg

    If you do not use -q option then you should switch console output off (comment 'printq', 'percents', 'conlog' out).


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    16. Can One Make a File Request From binkd?

    It's a piece of cake! binkd supports WAZOO FREQ with an external helper.

    To request files from a remote system it is necessary to create a file
    of type nnnnmmmm.REQ and to put it in the outbound directory next to *.?ut
    and *.?lo files. But *.REQ files do not initiate binkd to call a link so
    to make a FREQ it is necessary to make a poll. The contents of a .REQ file
    is described in the "!SRIF.TXT" file which is a copy of FSC-0086.001 from http://ftsc.org


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    17. How Can my binkd Respond to a File Request?

    One can configure binkd for calling an external file request processor supporting SRIF (FSC-0086) for receiving and handling FREQs in binkd. Please read the "!SRIF.TXT" file and the comment to 'exec' in the configuration
    file.

    Here are the examples of lines in configuration file for DOS-based OS
    and for *nix (you should use regular expressions in the latter case for
    binkd to match both upper-case and lower-case letters, e.g. both *.REQ and *.req):

    exec "\\ftn\\allfix\\allfix.exe RP -SRIF *S" *.req

    exec "/ftn/bin/tmafreq-srif *S" *.[rR][eE][qQ]

    A bash script "srifreq" is delivered with binkd starting with version 1.1a19.
    The following file request processors are also compatible with binkd
    (but they are not the only ones, any other one supporting SRIF will do):

    Allfix by Harms Software Engineering: it is a fileecho processor with built-in file request processor and it has versions for DOS and OS/2;

    ViReq by Michael Haase (2:2432/280): a specialized FREQ processor for Windows, it is distributed by Michael Massenberg (2:2411/505) via modem,
    ISDN and Fido-over-IP.

    tmafreq by Maxim Timofeyev <tmahome@mail.tma.spb.ru>: the FREQ processor
    is created for a unix-like OS and ported into Windows. One may obtain tmafreq from different BBS and FTP with fileecho archives, or may get tmafreq sources from anonymous CVS :pserver:anoncvs@tma.spb.ru:/cvsroot, module "tmafreq".

    VIREQ/x by Volker Imre <volker@imre.dyndns.org> (2:246/2098): the FREQ processor is created for a unix-like OS but can be compiled in the OS/2, Windows and maybe other operating systems. Now it is included into "ftnapps" project on Sourceforge and may be downloaded from http://ftnapps.sourceforge.net/vireq.html.
    Binaries built for Win32 and OS/2 may be downloaded from http://download.binkd.org and
    https://sites.google.com/view/vasilyevmax/


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    18. How Can I Add binkd To a Fidonet Box Working With a Modem?

    You must configure your modem mailer and tosser for BSO (binkley-style outbound) mode so that all of them including binkd would have the same
    inbound directories (and also the same outbound directories). For example,
    one may put the following line to T-Mail mailer configuration file:

    BinkStyle_Pack_For All

    If your mailer can work with AMA (arcmail-attach) only you may try to
    use fileboxes and/or find programs that can convert your mailer's queue to
    BSO or fileboxes. For example, Mail2dir utility allows using fileboxes with FrontDoor. Such a means disables a possibility of sending your mail to the
    same link both by IP and by modem (for instance, when one of the channels failed). There is another more radical but more flexible way: you may change your mailer.
    See also question 35.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    19. Flags Are Not Created On Receiving a File, Programs Do Not Start

    For sure you have a wrong template in the configuration file. You have to use it this way (the first two lines are for Windows and OS/2, the rest are
    for the Unix-like OS):

    flag m:\\ftn\\flg\\pntseg.flg m:\\\\ftn\\\\inbound\\\\sec\\\\pntstr*.*
    flag m:\\ftn\\flg\\toss.flg *.su? *.mo? *.tu? *.we? *.th? *.fr? *.sa? *.pkt

    exec "/usr/local/bin/ftrack -c /fido/conf/ftrack" *.[Pp][Kk][Tt]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ss][Uu][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Mm][Oo][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Uu][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ww][Ee][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Hh][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ff][Rr][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ss][Aa][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/fech-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Ii][Cc]

    You must use the full path with four slashes for the file to receive or
    the template should start with an asterisk character. You must use two
    slashes for the flag file.

    You must use the full path because using a filename without path means
    the event of receiving the file in the current directory and not in the
    inbound directory. If a template begins with "*" then it means "any
    directory" (and since all the files are received in one of the inbound directories it works for both password protected and for unprotected
    sessions).

    In a UNIX-like OS you should take into account that filenames are case sensitive. Please use regular expressions in templates.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    20. 'skipmask' Keyword Does Not Work

    A filename is compared without path and the comparison is case
    sensitive when 'skipmask' is used.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    21. binkd Under Windows 3.x

    Sergey Zharsky (zharik@usa.net) ported binkd 0.9.2 and binkd 0.9.5 for Windows 3.x. They work using IP stacks Trumpet Winsock ver. 3.0 revision D
    and Novell TCP/IP Client for Win 3.11 (see the answer to the question
    'binkd Under DOS', the section "The DOS version has the feature...").


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    22. Different FTN Domains in binkd And a Tosser Without 5D Support

    Suppose there are two domains (with different zone numbers though it
    does not matter). Mail can be successfully sent to the first domain but
    not to the second one. This situation may arise if the tosser, the tracker
    and the other your FTN programs do not support 5D BSO.

    This is a typical binkd configuration for two FTN domains and 5D
    outbound:

    domain fidonet c:\\ftn\\outbound\\fidonet 2
    domain omeganet c:\\ftn\\outbound\\omeganet 11
    address 2:5070/222@fidonet 11:58/6@omeganet

    One must configure not the zone of your own address for 'domain'
    keyword as one might think but the zone that should not be appended to the outbound name (i.e. the outbound subdirectory extensions are not processed
    for the zone denoted in the 'domain' line).

    If your tosser would create bundles for omeganet in the omeganet
    directory then you should write as indicated above. But since it does not
    --- hpt/lnx 1.9 2023-02-09
    * Origin: Moscow, Russia (2:5020/1042)
  • From binkd Team@2:5020/1042 to All on Sat Feb 10 22:15:02 2024
    31 Mar 16:48:43 [40423] trying 195.209.235.3, port 24554...
    31 Mar 16:48:43 [40423] connected to proxy.osu.ru:24554
    31 Mar 16:48:44 [40423] Connection rejected by proxy (HTTP/1.0 403 Forbidden)
    ? 31 Mar 16:48:44 [40423] unable to connect: {13} Permission denied

    In such a case you may try to use http tunnelling for instance with the help of httport, HTTPTunnel (http://http-tunnel.sourceforge.net/), stunnel (https://www.stunnel.org/) or you may find a node receiving binkp
    connections at port 443.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    07. How Can binkd Work via SOCKS-proxy?

    It is not a rare case when users go out to the internet from their corporate LAN exclusively via the proxy server based at the only computer connected to the internet. Thus binkd cannot make a direct connection to
    the remote node and one must use the proxy server. Proxy servers support
    was included in version 0.9.4 and the later ones.

    binkd works with a SOCKS proxy version 4 and 5. The first one does not demand an authorization (no login and password), the second one demands it
    as a rule.

    Suppose the connected to the Internet computer has the IP address 192.168.0.1 in its LAN and the SOCKS server at the computer responds on
    port 1080. Here is the line in binkd configuration file necessary for
    working via the SOCKS proxy.

    1. A SOCKS server without user authorization (no login and password are demanded):

    socks 192.168.0.1:1080

    2. A proxy server with user authorization (it is necessary to type login and password, e.g. login "user", password "password"):

    socks 192.168.0.1:1080/user/password


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    08. IP-Point: How Can I Make binkd to Get My Mail From My Bossnode (Uplink)?

    Make a poll using the command line option -P:

    binkd -P1:2/3 binkd.cfg

    Usually they want binkd to exit after the session is finished. One can
    use the command line option -p:

    binkd -p -P1:2/3 binkd.cfg

    If binkd does not exit for a long time after the session has been
    finished then decrease the value of rescan-delay (and sometimes the value
    of timeout).

    If binkd works permanently (e.g. as a Windows service) and you want to
    get your mail regularly then you need some additional program or a script.
    As an example in DOS, Windows or OS/2 it is enough to execute the command:

    cd . >> %outbound%\NNNNMMMM.ilo

    where NNNN is the hex net number,
    MMMM is the hex node number,
    %outbound% is the path to the necessary zone outbound.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    09. "start_file_transfer: .: Permission denied" Error

    You get the message when binkd cannot open a file for sending indicated
    in some *.?lo file. Most likely the file has a line containing only "."
    because the poll has been made by a command of the type

    echo . >> xxxxyyyy.flo

    you should change it to "cd . >> xxxxyyyy.flo"


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    10. binkd/win and Dial-up: Dialing-up and Disconnecting Automatically

    The problem is to configure the fidonet box in such a way that binkd
    would initiate a telephone call to your Internet provider, get your mail
    and disconnect.

    The solutions:

    1st Solution

    Configure automatic connection and timeout in the dial-up connection properties (idle time before hanging up). It is convinient to use a non-standard software for dialing-up (Advanced Dialer and others). You
    should start binkd with a command line option -p periodically (and possibly -Paddress for binkd to make a poll to the address).

    binkd -p -P1:2/3.4 binkd.cfg


    2nd Solution

    Use the command line option -p and the batch file where first Remote
    Access Service (RAS) is started then binkd is started and after binkd exits
    RAS is stopped.

    Two variants, for Windows NT and for Windows 2000:
    === binkdpoll1.cmd
    rasdial Connection
    binkd -p binkd.cfg
    rasdial Connection /disconnect
    ===

    === binkdpoll2.cmd
    net start "remote access service"
    net start "remote access auto service"
    binkd -p binkd.cfg
    net stop "remote access auto service"
    net stop "remote access service"
    ===

    3rd Solution (The Best One For Win9x)

    Use the command line options -p and -Paddress and control connection
    with a non-standard dial-up software (for example dialerp). This solution
    is the most reliable one (especially if the modem connection to your
    Internet provider is bad) due to the fact that dialerp can start some
    indicated programs at setting the connection. Here is the batch file you should start in the 'Execute' parameter of the dialerp configuration file:

    ====
    binkd -p -P1:2/3.4 binkd.cfg
    dialerp BREAK *
    ====

    The question you may now ask: Where can I take dialerp? The answer is:
    Ask the author (Alexander Vedjakin, 2:5020/540) or look for it in fileecho archives and in ftp/http.


    In any case you should set a small value for 'rescan-delay' parameter in the binkd configuration file. binkd would exit faster.

    === binkd.cfg
    # Outbound rescans period (sec)
    rescan-delay 2
    ===


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    11. I Have Changed binkd Configuration File On-The-Fly. When Will It Be Reloaded?

    Starting with the version 0.9.1 binkd could feel that its configuration file changed. It exited with code 3 if it had been started with option -C. Modification time was checked after each ingoing session. Here is the batch file for starting binkd versions 0.9.1-0.9.3 and 0.9.4-0.9.6/w32:

    ====
    :aaa
    binkd -C binkd.cfg
    if errorlevel 4 goto end
    if errorlevel 3 goto aaa
    :end
    ====

    In the versions 0.9.4/unix and /os2-emx (and in these ones only) binkd restarts automatically if it is started with -C command line option.
    Besides that starting with version 0.9.4 the files included into the configuration file with the help of 'include' keyword are tested not only
    on incoming sessions but also in every 'rescan-delay' seconds.

    If you install binkd 0.9.4/w32 as a Windows NT service you should use it with -C command line option. Then binkd re-reads its configuration file.

    Before version 0.9.4 changes in the configuration file were not tested if binkd was started in client-only mode (-c command line option).

    In the unix versions configuration file is re-read on SIGHUP signal
    by the command
    kill -HUP `cat /var/run/binkd.pid`

    In the version 1.0 configuration file is re-read automatically if
    changed. binkd tests on changes at every 'rescan-delay' seconds.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    12. How Can binkd Work With T-mail/IP?

    There is no way to do it. The protocols differ in essence: binkd uses
    binkp protocol whereas T-mail/IP uses EMSI etc.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    13. Is There At Least One Log Analyzer Under Unix?

    There exist many Perl scripts and several win32 binaries. For example here:

    binkdstat 0.1 beta4 Christmas version 6.01.2002
    Statistics generator for binkd
    (c) Dmitry Sergienko, 2:464/910@fidonet, dmitry@trifle.net 14.08.2000
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/binkdstat-ds.0.1_beta4_Christmas

    There also exists BndStat program:
    BNDST101.ZIP 34812 14-Aug-01 (AREA:AFTNMISC)
    BndStat 1.01. With sources. binkd statistics generator. Compiled for all
    platforms. Included win32 binaries. (C) Dmitry Rusov, 2:5090/94

    Log analyzer by val khokhlov (perl):
    http://www.vk.kiev.ua/create/soft.html#bnkds
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/stat-binkd.pl.gz

    binkdstat (c) val khokhlov, Dmitry Kolvakh, updated at April 2006
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/binkdstat.zip

    T-Hist (c) Michael Markowsky, 2:5020/378 (KLUG's BBS)
    Binary log file analyzer for various mailers including binkd.
    Works in DOS, Windows NT (2000, XP, 2003) and OS/2.
    ftp://ftp.grumbler.org/pub/binkd/hist30a7.zip

    Kleine Statistiker/BINKD for DOS v0.60a, Russian version
    A small statistics generator for posting statistics to an echo conference.
    ftp://ftp.grumbler.org/pub/binkd/statddos.rar


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    14. binkd Connects Too Slowly (~20 Seconds) Though I Have a High-Speed LAN

    It is possible that 'backresolv' parameter is on (for logging the remote host domain name) and DNS is not configured.

    The simplest solution is to comment the 'backresolv' out in the configuration file. Configuring DNS is a more complex solution.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    15. Why Does binkd Not Understand Command Line Options When I Start It From inetd?

    You should use the program name as the first parameter in inetd.conf (it may be any string for binkd), the second and the following parameters
    are the command line options (-iqs etc.) and the last parameter is the configuration file full path:

    binkp stream tcp nowait root /usr/fido/binkd binkd -isq /usr/fido/binkd.cfg

    If you do not use -q option then you should switch console output off (comment 'printq', 'percents', 'conlog' out).


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    16. Can One Make a File Request From binkd?

    It's a piece of cake! binkd supports WAZOO FREQ with an external helper.

    To request files from a remote system it is necessary to create a file
    of type nnnnmmmm.REQ and to put it in the outbound directory next to *.?ut
    and *.?lo files. But *.REQ files do not initiate binkd to call a link so
    to make a FREQ it is necessary to make a poll. The contents of a .REQ file
    is described in the "!SRIF.TXT" file which is a copy of FSC-0086.001 from http://ftsc.org


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    17. How Can my binkd Respond to a File Request?

    One can configure binkd for calling an external file request processor supporting SRIF (FSC-0086) for receiving and handling FREQs in binkd. Please read the "!SRIF.TXT" file and the comment to 'exec' in the configuration
    file.

    Here are the examples of lines in configuration file for DOS-based OS
    and for *nix (you should use regular expressions in the latter case for
    binkd to match both upper-case and lower-case letters, e.g. both *.REQ and *.req):

    exec "\\ftn\\allfix\\allfix.exe RP -SRIF *S" *.req

    exec "/ftn/bin/tmafreq-srif *S" *.[rR][eE][qQ]

    A bash script "srifreq" is delivered with binkd starting with version 1.1a19.
    The following file request processors are also compatible with binkd
    (but they are not the only ones, any other one supporting SRIF will do):

    Allfix by Harms Software Engineering: it is a fileecho processor with built-in file request processor and it has versions for DOS and OS/2;

    ViReq by Michael Haase (2:2432/280): a specialized FREQ processor for Windows, it is distributed by Michael Massenberg (2:2411/505) via modem,
    ISDN and Fido-over-IP.

    tmafreq by Maxim Timofeyev <tmahome@mail.tma.spb.ru>: the FREQ processor
    is created for a unix-like OS and ported into Windows. One may obtain tmafreq from different BBS and FTP with fileecho archives, or may get tmafreq sources from anonymous CVS :pserver:anoncvs@tma.spb.ru:/cvsroot, module "tmafreq".

    VIREQ/x by Volker Imre <volker@imre.dyndns.org> (2:246/2098): the FREQ processor is created for a unix-like OS but can be compiled in the OS/2, Windows and maybe other operating systems. Now it is included into "ftnapps" project on Sourceforge and may be downloaded from http://ftnapps.sourceforge.net/vireq.html.
    Binaries built for Win32 and OS/2 may be downloaded from http://download.binkd.org and
    https://sites.google.com/view/vasilyevmax/


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    18. How Can I Add binkd To a Fidonet Box Working With a Modem?

    You must configure your modem mailer and tosser for BSO (binkley-style outbound) mode so that all of them including binkd would have the same
    inbound directories (and also the same outbound directories). For example,
    one may put the following line to T-Mail mailer configuration file:

    BinkStyle_Pack_For All

    If your mailer can work with AMA (arcmail-attach) only you may try to
    use fileboxes and/or find programs that can convert your mailer's queue to
    BSO or fileboxes. For example, Mail2dir utility allows using fileboxes with FrontDoor. Such a means disables a possibility of sending your mail to the
    same link both by IP and by modem (for instance, when one of the channels failed). There is another more radical but more flexible way: you may change your mailer.
    See also question 35.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    19. Flags Are Not Created On Receiving a File, Programs Do Not Start

    For sure you have a wrong template in the configuration file. You have to use it this way (the first two lines are for Windows and OS/2, the rest are
    for the Unix-like OS):

    flag m:\\ftn\\flg\\pntseg.flg m:\\\\ftn\\\\inbound\\\\sec\\\\pntstr*.*
    flag m:\\ftn\\flg\\toss.flg *.su? *.mo? *.tu? *.we? *.th? *.fr? *.sa? *.pkt

    exec "/usr/local/bin/ftrack -c /fido/conf/ftrack" *.[Pp][Kk][Tt]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ss][Uu][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Mm][Oo][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Uu][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ww][Ee][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Hh][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ff][Rr][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ss][Aa][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/fech-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Ii][Cc]

    You must use the full path with four slashes for the file to receive or
    the template should start with an asterisk character. You must use two
    slashes for the flag file.

    You must use the full path because using a filename without path means
    the event of receiving the file in the current directory and not in the
    inbound directory. If a template begins with "*" then it means "any
    directory" (and since all the files are received in one of the inbound directories it works for both password protected and for unprotected
    sessions).

    In a UNIX-like OS you should take into account that filenames are case sensitive. Please use regular expressions in templates.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    20. 'skipmask' Keyword Does Not Work

    A filename is compared without path and the comparison is case
    sensitive when 'skipmask' is used.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    21. binkd Under Windows 3.x

    Sergey Zharsky (zharik@usa.net) ported binkd 0.9.2 and binkd 0.9.5 for Windows 3.x. They work using IP stacks Trumpet Winsock ver. 3.0 revision D
    and Novell TCP/IP Client for Win 3.11 (see the answer to the question
    'binkd Under DOS', the section "The DOS version has the feature...").


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    22. Different FTN Domains in binkd And a Tosser Without 5D Support

    Suppose there are two domains (with different zone numbers though it
    does not matter). Mail can be successfully sent to the first domain but
    not to the second one. This situation may arise if the tosser, the tracker
    and the other your FTN programs do not support 5D BSO.

    This is a typical binkd configuration for two FTN domains and 5D
    outbound:

    domain fidonet c:\\ftn\\outbound\\fidonet 2
    domain omeganet c:\\ftn\\outbound\\omeganet 11
    address 2:5070/222@fidonet 11:58/6@omeganet

    One must configure not the zone of your own address for 'domain'
    keyword as one might think but the zone that should not be appended to the outbound name (i.e. the outbound subdirectory extensions are not processed
    for the zone denoted in the 'domain' line).

    If your tosser would create bundles for omeganet in the omeganet
    directory then you should write as indicated above. But since it does not
    --- hpt/lnx 1.9 2024-02-05
    * Origin: Moscow, Russia (2:5020/1042)
  • From binkd Team@2:5020/1042 to All on Sat Feb 17 22:15:02 2024
    31 Mar 16:48:43 [40423] trying 195.209.235.3, port 24554...
    31 Mar 16:48:43 [40423] connected to proxy.osu.ru:24554
    31 Mar 16:48:44 [40423] Connection rejected by proxy (HTTP/1.0 403 Forbidden)
    ? 31 Mar 16:48:44 [40423] unable to connect: {13} Permission denied

    In such a case you may try to use http tunnelling for instance with the help of httport, HTTPTunnel (http://http-tunnel.sourceforge.net/), stunnel (https://www.stunnel.org/) or you may find a node receiving binkp
    connections at port 443.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    07. How Can binkd Work via SOCKS-proxy?

    It is not a rare case when users go out to the internet from their corporate LAN exclusively via the proxy server based at the only computer connected to the internet. Thus binkd cannot make a direct connection to
    the remote node and one must use the proxy server. Proxy servers support
    was included in version 0.9.4 and the later ones.

    binkd works with a SOCKS proxy version 4 and 5. The first one does not demand an authorization (no login and password), the second one demands it
    as a rule.

    Suppose the connected to the Internet computer has the IP address 192.168.0.1 in its LAN and the SOCKS server at the computer responds on
    port 1080. Here is the line in binkd configuration file necessary for
    working via the SOCKS proxy.

    1. A SOCKS server without user authorization (no login and password are demanded):

    socks 192.168.0.1:1080

    2. A proxy server with user authorization (it is necessary to type login and password, e.g. login "user", password "password"):

    socks 192.168.0.1:1080/user/password


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    08. IP-Point: How Can I Make binkd to Get My Mail From My Bossnode (Uplink)?

    Make a poll using the command line option -P:

    binkd -P1:2/3 binkd.cfg

    Usually they want binkd to exit after the session is finished. One can
    use the command line option -p:

    binkd -p -P1:2/3 binkd.cfg

    If binkd does not exit for a long time after the session has been
    finished then decrease the value of rescan-delay (and sometimes the value
    of timeout).

    If binkd works permanently (e.g. as a Windows service) and you want to
    get your mail regularly then you need some additional program or a script.
    As an example in DOS, Windows or OS/2 it is enough to execute the command:

    cd . >> %outbound%\NNNNMMMM.ilo

    where NNNN is the hex net number,
    MMMM is the hex node number,
    %outbound% is the path to the necessary zone outbound.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    09. "start_file_transfer: .: Permission denied" Error

    You get the message when binkd cannot open a file for sending indicated
    in some *.?lo file. Most likely the file has a line containing only "."
    because the poll has been made by a command of the type

    echo . >> xxxxyyyy.flo

    you should change it to "cd . >> xxxxyyyy.flo"


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    10. binkd/win and Dial-up: Dialing-up and Disconnecting Automatically

    The problem is to configure the fidonet box in such a way that binkd
    would initiate a telephone call to your Internet provider, get your mail
    and disconnect.

    The solutions:

    1st Solution

    Configure automatic connection and timeout in the dial-up connection properties (idle time before hanging up). It is convinient to use a non-standard software for dialing-up (Advanced Dialer and others). You
    should start binkd with a command line option -p periodically (and possibly -Paddress for binkd to make a poll to the address).

    binkd -p -P1:2/3.4 binkd.cfg


    2nd Solution

    Use the command line option -p and the batch file where first Remote
    Access Service (RAS) is started then binkd is started and after binkd exits
    RAS is stopped.

    Two variants, for Windows NT and for Windows 2000:
    === binkdpoll1.cmd
    rasdial Connection
    binkd -p binkd.cfg
    rasdial Connection /disconnect
    ===

    === binkdpoll2.cmd
    net start "remote access service"
    net start "remote access auto service"
    binkd -p binkd.cfg
    net stop "remote access auto service"
    net stop "remote access service"
    ===

    3rd Solution (The Best One For Win9x)

    Use the command line options -p and -Paddress and control connection
    with a non-standard dial-up software (for example dialerp). This solution
    is the most reliable one (especially if the modem connection to your
    Internet provider is bad) due to the fact that dialerp can start some
    indicated programs at setting the connection. Here is the batch file you should start in the 'Execute' parameter of the dialerp configuration file:

    ====
    binkd -p -P1:2/3.4 binkd.cfg
    dialerp BREAK *
    ====

    The question you may now ask: Where can I take dialerp? The answer is:
    Ask the author (Alexander Vedjakin, 2:5020/540) or look for it in fileecho archives and in ftp/http.


    In any case you should set a small value for 'rescan-delay' parameter in the binkd configuration file. binkd would exit faster.

    === binkd.cfg
    # Outbound rescans period (sec)
    rescan-delay 2
    ===


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    11. I Have Changed binkd Configuration File On-The-Fly. When Will It Be Reloaded?

    Starting with the version 0.9.1 binkd could feel that its configuration file changed. It exited with code 3 if it had been started with option -C. Modification time was checked after each ingoing session. Here is the batch file for starting binkd versions 0.9.1-0.9.3 and 0.9.4-0.9.6/w32:

    ====
    :aaa
    binkd -C binkd.cfg
    if errorlevel 4 goto end
    if errorlevel 3 goto aaa
    :end
    ====

    In the versions 0.9.4/unix and /os2-emx (and in these ones only) binkd restarts automatically if it is started with -C command line option.
    Besides that starting with version 0.9.4 the files included into the configuration file with the help of 'include' keyword are tested not only
    on incoming sessions but also in every 'rescan-delay' seconds.

    If you install binkd 0.9.4/w32 as a Windows NT service you should use it with -C command line option. Then binkd re-reads its configuration file.

    Before version 0.9.4 changes in the configuration file were not tested if binkd was started in client-only mode (-c command line option).

    In the unix versions configuration file is re-read on SIGHUP signal
    by the command
    kill -HUP `cat /var/run/binkd.pid`

    In the version 1.0 configuration file is re-read automatically if
    changed. binkd tests on changes at every 'rescan-delay' seconds.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    12. How Can binkd Work With T-mail/IP?

    There is no way to do it. The protocols differ in essence: binkd uses
    binkp protocol whereas T-mail/IP uses EMSI etc.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    13. Is There At Least One Log Analyzer Under Unix?

    There exist many Perl scripts and several win32 binaries. For example here:

    binkdstat 0.1 beta4 Christmas version 6.01.2002
    Statistics generator for binkd
    (c) Dmitry Sergienko, 2:464/910@fidonet, dmitry@trifle.net 14.08.2000
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/binkdstat-ds.0.1_beta4_Christmas

    There also exists BndStat program:
    BNDST101.ZIP 34812 14-Aug-01 (AREA:AFTNMISC)
    BndStat 1.01. With sources. binkd statistics generator. Compiled for all
    platforms. Included win32 binaries. (C) Dmitry Rusov, 2:5090/94

    Log analyzer by val khokhlov (perl):
    http://www.vk.kiev.ua/create/soft.html#bnkds
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/stat-binkd.pl.gz

    binkdstat (c) val khokhlov, Dmitry Kolvakh, updated at April 2006
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/binkdstat.zip

    T-Hist (c) Michael Markowsky, 2:5020/378 (KLUG's BBS)
    Binary log file analyzer for various mailers including binkd.
    Works in DOS, Windows NT (2000, XP, 2003) and OS/2.
    ftp://ftp.grumbler.org/pub/binkd/hist30a7.zip

    Kleine Statistiker/BINKD for DOS v0.60a, Russian version
    A small statistics generator for posting statistics to an echo conference.
    ftp://ftp.grumbler.org/pub/binkd/statddos.rar


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    14. binkd Connects Too Slowly (~20 Seconds) Though I Have a High-Speed LAN

    It is possible that 'backresolv' parameter is on (for logging the remote host domain name) and DNS is not configured.

    The simplest solution is to comment the 'backresolv' out in the configuration file. Configuring DNS is a more complex solution.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    15. Why Does binkd Not Understand Command Line Options When I Start It From inetd?

    You should use the program name as the first parameter in inetd.conf (it may be any string for binkd), the second and the following parameters
    are the command line options (-iqs etc.) and the last parameter is the configuration file full path:

    binkp stream tcp nowait root /usr/fido/binkd binkd -isq /usr/fido/binkd.cfg

    If you do not use -q option then you should switch console output off (comment 'printq', 'percents', 'conlog' out).


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    16. Can One Make a File Request From binkd?

    It's a piece of cake! binkd supports WAZOO FREQ with an external helper.

    To request files from a remote system it is necessary to create a file
    of type nnnnmmmm.REQ and to put it in the outbound directory next to *.?ut
    and *.?lo files. But *.REQ files do not initiate binkd to call a link so
    to make a FREQ it is necessary to make a poll. The contents of a .REQ file
    is described in the "!SRIF.TXT" file which is a copy of FSC-0086.001 from http://ftsc.org


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    17. How Can my binkd Respond to a File Request?

    One can configure binkd for calling an external file request processor supporting SRIF (FSC-0086) for receiving and handling FREQs in binkd. Please read the "!SRIF.TXT" file and the comment to 'exec' in the configuration
    file.

    Here are the examples of lines in configuration file for DOS-based OS
    and for *nix (you should use regular expressions in the latter case for
    binkd to match both upper-case and lower-case letters, e.g. both *.REQ and *.req):

    exec "\\ftn\\allfix\\allfix.exe RP -SRIF *S" *.req

    exec "/ftn/bin/tmafreq-srif *S" *.[rR][eE][qQ]

    A bash script "srifreq" is delivered with binkd starting with version 1.1a19.
    The following file request processors are also compatible with binkd
    (but they are not the only ones, any other one supporting SRIF will do):

    Allfix by Harms Software Engineering: it is a fileecho processor with built-in file request processor and it has versions for DOS and OS/2;

    ViReq by Michael Haase (2:2432/280): a specialized FREQ processor for Windows, it is distributed by Michael Massenberg (2:2411/505) via modem,
    ISDN and Fido-over-IP.

    tmafreq by Maxim Timofeyev <tmahome@mail.tma.spb.ru>: the FREQ processor
    is created for a unix-like OS and ported into Windows. One may obtain tmafreq from different BBS and FTP with fileecho archives, or may get tmafreq sources from anonymous CVS :pserver:anoncvs@tma.spb.ru:/cvsroot, module "tmafreq".

    VIREQ/x by Volker Imre <volker@imre.dyndns.org> (2:246/2098): the FREQ processor is created for a unix-like OS but can be compiled in the OS/2, Windows and maybe other operating systems. Now it is included into "ftnapps" project on Sourceforge and may be downloaded from http://ftnapps.sourceforge.net/vireq.html.
    Binaries built for Win32 and OS/2 may be downloaded from http://download.binkd.org and
    https://sites.google.com/view/vasilyevmax/


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    18. How Can I Add binkd To a Fidonet Box Working With a Modem?

    You must configure your modem mailer and tosser for BSO (binkley-style outbound) mode so that all of them including binkd would have the same
    inbound directories (and also the same outbound directories). For example,
    one may put the following line to T-Mail mailer configuration file:

    BinkStyle_Pack_For All

    If your mailer can work with AMA (arcmail-attach) only you may try to
    use fileboxes and/or find programs that can convert your mailer's queue to
    BSO or fileboxes. For example, Mail2dir utility allows using fileboxes with FrontDoor. Such a means disables a possibility of sending your mail to the
    same link both by IP and by modem (for instance, when one of the channels failed). There is another more radical but more flexible way: you may change your mailer.
    See also question 35.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    19. Flags Are Not Created On Receiving a File, Programs Do Not Start

    For sure you have a wrong template in the configuration file. You have to use it this way (the first two lines are for Windows and OS/2, the rest are
    for the Unix-like OS):

    flag m:\\ftn\\flg\\pntseg.flg m:\\\\ftn\\\\inbound\\\\sec\\\\pntstr*.*
    flag m:\\ftn\\flg\\toss.flg *.su? *.mo? *.tu? *.we? *.th? *.fr? *.sa? *.pkt

    exec "/usr/local/bin/ftrack -c /fido/conf/ftrack" *.[Pp][Kk][Tt]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ss][Uu][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Mm][Oo][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Uu][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ww][Ee][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Hh][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ff][Rr][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ss][Aa][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/fech-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Ii][Cc]

    You must use the full path with four slashes for the file to receive or
    the template should start with an asterisk character. You must use two
    slashes for the flag file.

    You must use the full path because using a filename without path means
    the event of receiving the file in the current directory and not in the
    inbound directory. If a template begins with "*" then it means "any
    directory" (and since all the files are received in one of the inbound directories it works for both password protected and for unprotected
    sessions).

    In a UNIX-like OS you should take into account that filenames are case sensitive. Please use regular expressions in templates.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    20. 'skipmask' Keyword Does Not Work

    A filename is compared without path and the comparison is case
    sensitive when 'skipmask' is used.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    21. binkd Under Windows 3.x

    Sergey Zharsky (zharik@usa.net) ported binkd 0.9.2 and binkd 0.9.5 for Windows 3.x. They work using IP stacks Trumpet Winsock ver. 3.0 revision D
    and Novell TCP/IP Client for Win 3.11 (see the answer to the question
    'binkd Under DOS', the section "The DOS version has the feature...").


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    22. Different FTN Domains in binkd And a Tosser Without 5D Support

    Suppose there are two domains (with different zone numbers though it
    does not matter). Mail can be successfully sent to the first domain but
    not to the second one. This situation may arise if the tosser, the tracker
    and the other your FTN programs do not support 5D BSO.

    This is a typical binkd configuration for two FTN domains and 5D
    outbound:

    domain fidonet c:\\ftn\\outbound\\fidonet 2
    domain omeganet c:\\ftn\\outbound\\omeganet 11
    address 2:5070/222@fidonet 11:58/6@omeganet

    One must configure not the zone of your own address for 'domain'
    keyword as one might think but the zone that should not be appended to the outbound name (i.e. the outbound subdirectory extensions are not processed
    for the zone denoted in the 'domain' line).

    If your tosser would create bundles for omeganet in the omeganet
    directory then you should write as indicated above. But since it does not
    --- hpt/lnx 1.9 2024-02-05
    * Origin: Moscow, Russia (2:5020/1042)
  • From binkd Team@2:5020/1042 to All on Sat Feb 24 22:15:02 2024
    31 Mar 16:48:43 [40423] trying 195.209.235.3, port 24554...
    31 Mar 16:48:43 [40423] connected to proxy.osu.ru:24554
    31 Mar 16:48:44 [40423] Connection rejected by proxy (HTTP/1.0 403 Forbidden)
    ? 31 Mar 16:48:44 [40423] unable to connect: {13} Permission denied

    In such a case you may try to use http tunnelling for instance with the help of httport, HTTPTunnel (http://http-tunnel.sourceforge.net/), stunnel (https://www.stunnel.org/) or you may find a node receiving binkp
    connections at port 443.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    07. How Can binkd Work via SOCKS-proxy?

    It is not a rare case when users go out to the internet from their corporate LAN exclusively via the proxy server based at the only computer connected to the internet. Thus binkd cannot make a direct connection to
    the remote node and one must use the proxy server. Proxy servers support
    was included in version 0.9.4 and the later ones.

    binkd works with a SOCKS proxy version 4 and 5. The first one does not demand an authorization (no login and password), the second one demands it
    as a rule.

    Suppose the connected to the Internet computer has the IP address 192.168.0.1 in its LAN and the SOCKS server at the computer responds on
    port 1080. Here is the line in binkd configuration file necessary for
    working via the SOCKS proxy.

    1. A SOCKS server without user authorization (no login and password are demanded):

    socks 192.168.0.1:1080

    2. A proxy server with user authorization (it is necessary to type login and password, e.g. login "user", password "password"):

    socks 192.168.0.1:1080/user/password


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    08. IP-Point: How Can I Make binkd to Get My Mail From My Bossnode (Uplink)?

    Make a poll using the command line option -P:

    binkd -P1:2/3 binkd.cfg

    Usually they want binkd to exit after the session is finished. One can
    use the command line option -p:

    binkd -p -P1:2/3 binkd.cfg

    If binkd does not exit for a long time after the session has been
    finished then decrease the value of rescan-delay (and sometimes the value
    of timeout).

    If binkd works permanently (e.g. as a Windows service) and you want to
    get your mail regularly then you need some additional program or a script.
    As an example in DOS, Windows or OS/2 it is enough to execute the command:

    cd . >> %outbound%\NNNNMMMM.ilo

    where NNNN is the hex net number,
    MMMM is the hex node number,
    %outbound% is the path to the necessary zone outbound.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    09. "start_file_transfer: .: Permission denied" Error

    You get the message when binkd cannot open a file for sending indicated
    in some *.?lo file. Most likely the file has a line containing only "."
    because the poll has been made by a command of the type

    echo . >> xxxxyyyy.flo

    you should change it to "cd . >> xxxxyyyy.flo"


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    10. binkd/win and Dial-up: Dialing-up and Disconnecting Automatically

    The problem is to configure the fidonet box in such a way that binkd
    would initiate a telephone call to your Internet provider, get your mail
    and disconnect.

    The solutions:

    1st Solution

    Configure automatic connection and timeout in the dial-up connection properties (idle time before hanging up). It is convinient to use a non-standard software for dialing-up (Advanced Dialer and others). You
    should start binkd with a command line option -p periodically (and possibly -Paddress for binkd to make a poll to the address).

    binkd -p -P1:2/3.4 binkd.cfg


    2nd Solution

    Use the command line option -p and the batch file where first Remote
    Access Service (RAS) is started then binkd is started and after binkd exits
    RAS is stopped.

    Two variants, for Windows NT and for Windows 2000:
    === binkdpoll1.cmd
    rasdial Connection
    binkd -p binkd.cfg
    rasdial Connection /disconnect
    ===

    === binkdpoll2.cmd
    net start "remote access service"
    net start "remote access auto service"
    binkd -p binkd.cfg
    net stop "remote access auto service"
    net stop "remote access service"
    ===

    3rd Solution (The Best One For Win9x)

    Use the command line options -p and -Paddress and control connection
    with a non-standard dial-up software (for example dialerp). This solution
    is the most reliable one (especially if the modem connection to your
    Internet provider is bad) due to the fact that dialerp can start some
    indicated programs at setting the connection. Here is the batch file you should start in the 'Execute' parameter of the dialerp configuration file:

    ====
    binkd -p -P1:2/3.4 binkd.cfg
    dialerp BREAK *
    ====

    The question you may now ask: Where can I take dialerp? The answer is:
    Ask the author (Alexander Vedjakin, 2:5020/540) or look for it in fileecho archives and in ftp/http.


    In any case you should set a small value for 'rescan-delay' parameter in the binkd configuration file. binkd would exit faster.

    === binkd.cfg
    # Outbound rescans period (sec)
    rescan-delay 2
    ===


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    11. I Have Changed binkd Configuration File On-The-Fly. When Will It Be Reloaded?

    Starting with the version 0.9.1 binkd could feel that its configuration file changed. It exited with code 3 if it had been started with option -C. Modification time was checked after each ingoing session. Here is the batch file for starting binkd versions 0.9.1-0.9.3 and 0.9.4-0.9.6/w32:

    ====
    :aaa
    binkd -C binkd.cfg
    if errorlevel 4 goto end
    if errorlevel 3 goto aaa
    :end
    ====

    In the versions 0.9.4/unix and /os2-emx (and in these ones only) binkd restarts automatically if it is started with -C command line option.
    Besides that starting with version 0.9.4 the files included into the configuration file with the help of 'include' keyword are tested not only
    on incoming sessions but also in every 'rescan-delay' seconds.

    If you install binkd 0.9.4/w32 as a Windows NT service you should use it with -C command line option. Then binkd re-reads its configuration file.

    Before version 0.9.4 changes in the configuration file were not tested if binkd was started in client-only mode (-c command line option).

    In the unix versions configuration file is re-read on SIGHUP signal
    by the command
    kill -HUP `cat /var/run/binkd.pid`

    In the version 1.0 configuration file is re-read automatically if
    changed. binkd tests on changes at every 'rescan-delay' seconds.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    12. How Can binkd Work With T-mail/IP?

    There is no way to do it. The protocols differ in essence: binkd uses
    binkp protocol whereas T-mail/IP uses EMSI etc.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    13. Is There At Least One Log Analyzer Under Unix?

    There exist many Perl scripts and several win32 binaries. For example here:

    binkdstat 0.1 beta4 Christmas version 6.01.2002
    Statistics generator for binkd
    (c) Dmitry Sergienko, 2:464/910@fidonet, dmitry@trifle.net 14.08.2000
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/binkdstat-ds.0.1_beta4_Christmas

    There also exists BndStat program:
    BNDST101.ZIP 34812 14-Aug-01 (AREA:AFTNMISC)
    BndStat 1.01. With sources. binkd statistics generator. Compiled for all
    platforms. Included win32 binaries. (C) Dmitry Rusov, 2:5090/94

    Log analyzer by val khokhlov (perl):
    http://www.vk.kiev.ua/create/soft.html#bnkds
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/stat-binkd.pl.gz

    binkdstat (c) val khokhlov, Dmitry Kolvakh, updated at April 2006
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/binkdstat.zip

    T-Hist (c) Michael Markowsky, 2:5020/378 (KLUG's BBS)
    Binary log file analyzer for various mailers including binkd.
    Works in DOS, Windows NT (2000, XP, 2003) and OS/2.
    ftp://ftp.grumbler.org/pub/binkd/hist30a7.zip

    Kleine Statistiker/BINKD for DOS v0.60a, Russian version
    A small statistics generator for posting statistics to an echo conference.
    ftp://ftp.grumbler.org/pub/binkd/statddos.rar


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    14. binkd Connects Too Slowly (~20 Seconds) Though I Have a High-Speed LAN

    It is possible that 'backresolv' parameter is on (for logging the remote host domain name) and DNS is not configured.

    The simplest solution is to comment the 'backresolv' out in the configuration file. Configuring DNS is a more complex solution.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    15. Why Does binkd Not Understand Command Line Options When I Start It From inetd?

    You should use the program name as the first parameter in inetd.conf (it may be any string for binkd), the second and the following parameters
    are the command line options (-iqs etc.) and the last parameter is the configuration file full path:

    binkp stream tcp nowait root /usr/fido/binkd binkd -isq /usr/fido/binkd.cfg

    If you do not use -q option then you should switch console output off (comment 'printq', 'percents', 'conlog' out).


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    16. Can One Make a File Request From binkd?

    It's a piece of cake! binkd supports WAZOO FREQ with an external helper.

    To request files from a remote system it is necessary to create a file
    of type nnnnmmmm.REQ and to put it in the outbound directory next to *.?ut
    and *.?lo files. But *.REQ files do not initiate binkd to call a link so
    to make a FREQ it is necessary to make a poll. The contents of a .REQ file
    is described in the "!SRIF.TXT" file which is a copy of FSC-0086.001 from http://ftsc.org


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    17. How Can my binkd Respond to a File Request?

    One can configure binkd for calling an external file request processor supporting SRIF (FSC-0086) for receiving and handling FREQs in binkd. Please read the "!SRIF.TXT" file and the comment to 'exec' in the configuration
    file.

    Here are the examples of lines in configuration file for DOS-based OS
    and for *nix (you should use regular expressions in the latter case for
    binkd to match both upper-case and lower-case letters, e.g. both *.REQ and *.req):

    exec "\\ftn\\allfix\\allfix.exe RP -SRIF *S" *.req

    exec "/ftn/bin/tmafreq-srif *S" *.[rR][eE][qQ]

    A bash script "srifreq" is delivered with binkd starting with version 1.1a19.
    The following file request processors are also compatible with binkd
    (but they are not the only ones, any other one supporting SRIF will do):

    Allfix by Harms Software Engineering: it is a fileecho processor with built-in file request processor and it has versions for DOS and OS/2;

    ViReq by Michael Haase (2:2432/280): a specialized FREQ processor for Windows, it is distributed by Michael Massenberg (2:2411/505) via modem,
    ISDN and Fido-over-IP.

    tmafreq by Maxim Timofeyev <tmahome@mail.tma.spb.ru>: the FREQ processor
    is created for a unix-like OS and ported into Windows. One may obtain tmafreq from different BBS and FTP with fileecho archives, or may get tmafreq sources from anonymous CVS :pserver:anoncvs@tma.spb.ru:/cvsroot, module "tmafreq".

    VIREQ/x by Volker Imre <volker@imre.dyndns.org> (2:246/2098): the FREQ processor is created for a unix-like OS but can be compiled in the OS/2, Windows and maybe other operating systems. Now it is included into "ftnapps" project on Sourceforge and may be downloaded from http://ftnapps.sourceforge.net/vireq.html.
    Binaries built for Win32 and OS/2 may be downloaded from http://download.binkd.org and
    https://sites.google.com/view/vasilyevmax/


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    18. How Can I Add binkd To a Fidonet Box Working With a Modem?

    You must configure your modem mailer and tosser for BSO (binkley-style outbound) mode so that all of them including binkd would have the same
    inbound directories (and also the same outbound directories). For example,
    one may put the following line to T-Mail mailer configuration file:

    BinkStyle_Pack_For All

    If your mailer can work with AMA (arcmail-attach) only you may try to
    use fileboxes and/or find programs that can convert your mailer's queue to
    BSO or fileboxes. For example, Mail2dir utility allows using fileboxes with FrontDoor. Such a means disables a possibility of sending your mail to the
    same link both by IP and by modem (for instance, when one of the channels failed). There is another more radical but more flexible way: you may change your mailer.
    See also question 35.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    19. Flags Are Not Created On Receiving a File, Programs Do Not Start

    For sure you have a wrong template in the configuration file. You have to use it this way (the first two lines are for Windows and OS/2, the rest are
    for the Unix-like OS):

    flag m:\\ftn\\flg\\pntseg.flg m:\\\\ftn\\\\inbound\\\\sec\\\\pntstr*.*
    flag m:\\ftn\\flg\\toss.flg *.su? *.mo? *.tu? *.we? *.th? *.fr? *.sa? *.pkt

    exec "/usr/local/bin/ftrack -c /fido/conf/ftrack" *.[Pp][Kk][Tt]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ss][Uu][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Mm][Oo][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Uu][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ww][Ee][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Hh][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ff][Rr][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ss][Aa][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/fech-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Ii][Cc]

    You must use the full path with four slashes for the file to receive or
    the template should start with an asterisk character. You must use two
    slashes for the flag file.

    You must use the full path because using a filename without path means
    the event of receiving the file in the current directory and not in the
    inbound directory. If a template begins with "*" then it means "any
    directory" (and since all the files are received in one of the inbound directories it works for both password protected and for unprotected
    sessions).

    In a UNIX-like OS you should take into account that filenames are case sensitive. Please use regular expressions in templates.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    20. 'skipmask' Keyword Does Not Work

    A filename is compared without path and the comparison is case
    sensitive when 'skipmask' is used.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    21. binkd Under Windows 3.x

    Sergey Zharsky (zharik@usa.net) ported binkd 0.9.2 and binkd 0.9.5 for Windows 3.x. They work using IP stacks Trumpet Winsock ver. 3.0 revision D
    and Novell TCP/IP Client for Win 3.11 (see the answer to the question
    'binkd Under DOS', the section "The DOS version has the feature...").


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    22. Different FTN Domains in binkd And a Tosser Without 5D Support

    Suppose there are two domains (with different zone numbers though it
    does not matter). Mail can be successfully sent to the first domain but
    not to the second one. This situation may arise if the tosser, the tracker
    and the other your FTN programs do not support 5D BSO.

    This is a typical binkd configuration for two FTN domains and 5D
    outbound:

    domain fidonet c:\\ftn\\outbound\\fidonet 2
    domain omeganet c:\\ftn\\outbound\\omeganet 11
    address 2:5070/222@fidonet 11:58/6@omeganet

    One must configure not the zone of your own address for 'domain'
    keyword as one might think but the zone that should not be appended to the outbound name (i.e. the outbound subdirectory extensions are not processed
    for the zone denoted in the 'domain' line).

    If your tosser would create bundles for omeganet in the omeganet
    directory then you should write as indicated above. But since it does not
    --- hpt/lnx 1.9 2024-02-05
    * Origin: Moscow, Russia (2:5020/1042)
  • From binkd Team@2:5020/1042 to All on Sat Mar 2 22:15:02 2024
    31 Mar 16:48:43 [40423] trying 195.209.235.3, port 24554...
    31 Mar 16:48:43 [40423] connected to proxy.osu.ru:24554
    31 Mar 16:48:44 [40423] Connection rejected by proxy (HTTP/1.0 403 Forbidden)
    ? 31 Mar 16:48:44 [40423] unable to connect: {13} Permission denied

    In such a case you may try to use http tunnelling for instance with the help of httport, HTTPTunnel (http://http-tunnel.sourceforge.net/), stunnel (https://www.stunnel.org/) or you may find a node receiving binkp
    connections at port 443.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    07. How Can binkd Work via SOCKS-proxy?

    It is not a rare case when users go out to the internet from their corporate LAN exclusively via the proxy server based at the only computer connected to the internet. Thus binkd cannot make a direct connection to
    the remote node and one must use the proxy server. Proxy servers support
    was included in version 0.9.4 and the later ones.

    binkd works with a SOCKS proxy version 4 and 5. The first one does not demand an authorization (no login and password), the second one demands it
    as a rule.

    Suppose the connected to the Internet computer has the IP address 192.168.0.1 in its LAN and the SOCKS server at the computer responds on
    port 1080. Here is the line in binkd configuration file necessary for
    working via the SOCKS proxy.

    1. A SOCKS server without user authorization (no login and password are demanded):

    socks 192.168.0.1:1080

    2. A proxy server with user authorization (it is necessary to type login and password, e.g. login "user", password "password"):

    socks 192.168.0.1:1080/user/password


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    08. IP-Point: How Can I Make binkd to Get My Mail From My Bossnode (Uplink)?

    Make a poll using the command line option -P:

    binkd -P1:2/3 binkd.cfg

    Usually they want binkd to exit after the session is finished. One can
    use the command line option -p:

    binkd -p -P1:2/3 binkd.cfg

    If binkd does not exit for a long time after the session has been
    finished then decrease the value of rescan-delay (and sometimes the value
    of timeout).

    If binkd works permanently (e.g. as a Windows service) and you want to
    get your mail regularly then you need some additional program or a script.
    As an example in DOS, Windows or OS/2 it is enough to execute the command:

    cd . >> %outbound%\NNNNMMMM.ilo

    where NNNN is the hex net number,
    MMMM is the hex node number,
    %outbound% is the path to the necessary zone outbound.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    09. "start_file_transfer: .: Permission denied" Error

    You get the message when binkd cannot open a file for sending indicated
    in some *.?lo file. Most likely the file has a line containing only "."
    because the poll has been made by a command of the type

    echo . >> xxxxyyyy.flo

    you should change it to "cd . >> xxxxyyyy.flo"


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    10. binkd/win and Dial-up: Dialing-up and Disconnecting Automatically

    The problem is to configure the fidonet box in such a way that binkd
    would initiate a telephone call to your Internet provider, get your mail
    and disconnect.

    The solutions:

    1st Solution

    Configure automatic connection and timeout in the dial-up connection properties (idle time before hanging up). It is convinient to use a non-standard software for dialing-up (Advanced Dialer and others). You
    should start binkd with a command line option -p periodically (and possibly -Paddress for binkd to make a poll to the address).

    binkd -p -P1:2/3.4 binkd.cfg


    2nd Solution

    Use the command line option -p and the batch file where first Remote
    Access Service (RAS) is started then binkd is started and after binkd exits
    RAS is stopped.

    Two variants, for Windows NT and for Windows 2000:
    === binkdpoll1.cmd
    rasdial Connection
    binkd -p binkd.cfg
    rasdial Connection /disconnect
    ===

    === binkdpoll2.cmd
    net start "remote access service"
    net start "remote access auto service"
    binkd -p binkd.cfg
    net stop "remote access auto service"
    net stop "remote access service"
    ===

    3rd Solution (The Best One For Win9x)

    Use the command line options -p and -Paddress and control connection
    with a non-standard dial-up software (for example dialerp). This solution
    is the most reliable one (especially if the modem connection to your
    Internet provider is bad) due to the fact that dialerp can start some
    indicated programs at setting the connection. Here is the batch file you should start in the 'Execute' parameter of the dialerp configuration file:

    ====
    binkd -p -P1:2/3.4 binkd.cfg
    dialerp BREAK *
    ====

    The question you may now ask: Where can I take dialerp? The answer is:
    Ask the author (Alexander Vedjakin, 2:5020/540) or look for it in fileecho archives and in ftp/http.


    In any case you should set a small value for 'rescan-delay' parameter in the binkd configuration file. binkd would exit faster.

    === binkd.cfg
    # Outbound rescans period (sec)
    rescan-delay 2
    ===


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    11. I Have Changed binkd Configuration File On-The-Fly. When Will It Be Reloaded?

    Starting with the version 0.9.1 binkd could feel that its configuration file changed. It exited with code 3 if it had been started with option -C. Modification time was checked after each ingoing session. Here is the batch file for starting binkd versions 0.9.1-0.9.3 and 0.9.4-0.9.6/w32:

    ====
    :aaa
    binkd -C binkd.cfg
    if errorlevel 4 goto end
    if errorlevel 3 goto aaa
    :end
    ====

    In the versions 0.9.4/unix and /os2-emx (and in these ones only) binkd restarts automatically if it is started with -C command line option.
    Besides that starting with version 0.9.4 the files included into the configuration file with the help of 'include' keyword are tested not only
    on incoming sessions but also in every 'rescan-delay' seconds.

    If you install binkd 0.9.4/w32 as a Windows NT service you should use it with -C command line option. Then binkd re-reads its configuration file.

    Before version 0.9.4 changes in the configuration file were not tested if binkd was started in client-only mode (-c command line option).

    In the unix versions configuration file is re-read on SIGHUP signal
    by the command
    kill -HUP `cat /var/run/binkd.pid`

    In the version 1.0 configuration file is re-read automatically if
    changed. binkd tests on changes at every 'rescan-delay' seconds.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    12. How Can binkd Work With T-mail/IP?

    There is no way to do it. The protocols differ in essence: binkd uses
    binkp protocol whereas T-mail/IP uses EMSI etc.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    13. Is There At Least One Log Analyzer Under Unix?

    There exist many Perl scripts and several win32 binaries. For example here:

    binkdstat 0.1 beta4 Christmas version 6.01.2002
    Statistics generator for binkd
    (c) Dmitry Sergienko, 2:464/910@fidonet, dmitry@trifle.net 14.08.2000
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/binkdstat-ds.0.1_beta4_Christmas

    There also exists BndStat program:
    BNDST101.ZIP 34812 14-Aug-01 (AREA:AFTNMISC)
    BndStat 1.01. With sources. binkd statistics generator. Compiled for all
    platforms. Included win32 binaries. (C) Dmitry Rusov, 2:5090/94

    Log analyzer by val khokhlov (perl):
    http://www.vk.kiev.ua/create/soft.html#bnkds
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/stat-binkd.pl.gz

    binkdstat (c) val khokhlov, Dmitry Kolvakh, updated at April 2006
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/binkdstat.zip

    T-Hist (c) Michael Markowsky, 2:5020/378 (KLUG's BBS)
    Binary log file analyzer for various mailers including binkd.
    Works in DOS, Windows NT (2000, XP, 2003) and OS/2.
    ftp://ftp.grumbler.org/pub/binkd/hist30a7.zip

    Kleine Statistiker/BINKD for DOS v0.60a, Russian version
    A small statistics generator for posting statistics to an echo conference.
    ftp://ftp.grumbler.org/pub/binkd/statddos.rar


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    14. binkd Connects Too Slowly (~20 Seconds) Though I Have a High-Speed LAN

    It is possible that 'backresolv' parameter is on (for logging the remote host domain name) and DNS is not configured.

    The simplest solution is to comment the 'backresolv' out in the configuration file. Configuring DNS is a more complex solution.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    15. Why Does binkd Not Understand Command Line Options When I Start It From inetd?

    You should use the program name as the first parameter in inetd.conf (it may be any string for binkd), the second and the following parameters
    are the command line options (-iqs etc.) and the last parameter is the configuration file full path:

    binkp stream tcp nowait root /usr/fido/binkd binkd -isq /usr/fido/binkd.cfg

    If you do not use -q option then you should switch console output off (comment 'printq', 'percents', 'conlog' out).


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    16. Can One Make a File Request From binkd?

    It's a piece of cake! binkd supports WAZOO FREQ with an external helper.

    To request files from a remote system it is necessary to create a file
    of type nnnnmmmm.REQ and to put it in the outbound directory next to *.?ut
    and *.?lo files. But *.REQ files do not initiate binkd to call a link so
    to make a FREQ it is necessary to make a poll. The contents of a .REQ file
    is described in the "!SRIF.TXT" file which is a copy of FSC-0086.001 from http://ftsc.org


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    17. How Can my binkd Respond to a File Request?

    One can configure binkd for calling an external file request processor supporting SRIF (FSC-0086) for receiving and handling FREQs in binkd. Please read the "!SRIF.TXT" file and the comment to 'exec' in the configuration
    file.

    Here are the examples of lines in configuration file for DOS-based OS
    and for *nix (you should use regular expressions in the latter case for
    binkd to match both upper-case and lower-case letters, e.g. both *.REQ and *.req):

    exec "\\ftn\\allfix\\allfix.exe RP -SRIF *S" *.req

    exec "/ftn/bin/tmafreq-srif *S" *.[rR][eE][qQ]

    A bash script "srifreq" is delivered with binkd starting with version 1.1a19.
    The following file request processors are also compatible with binkd
    (but they are not the only ones, any other one supporting SRIF will do):

    Allfix by Harms Software Engineering: it is a fileecho processor with built-in file request processor and it has versions for DOS and OS/2;

    ViReq by Michael Haase (2:2432/280): a specialized FREQ processor for Windows, it is distributed by Michael Massenberg (2:2411/505) via modem,
    ISDN and Fido-over-IP.

    tmafreq by Maxim Timofeyev <tmahome@mail.tma.spb.ru>: the FREQ processor
    is created for a unix-like OS and ported into Windows. One may obtain tmafreq from different BBS and FTP with fileecho archives, or may get tmafreq sources from anonymous CVS :pserver:anoncvs@tma.spb.ru:/cvsroot, module "tmafreq".

    VIREQ/x by Volker Imre <volker@imre.dyndns.org> (2:246/2098): the FREQ processor is created for a unix-like OS but can be compiled in the OS/2, Windows and maybe other operating systems. Now it is included into "ftnapps" project on Sourceforge and may be downloaded from http://ftnapps.sourceforge.net/vireq.html.
    Binaries built for Win32 and OS/2 may be downloaded from http://download.binkd.org and
    https://sites.google.com/view/vasilyevmax/


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    18. How Can I Add binkd To a Fidonet Box Working With a Modem?

    You must configure your modem mailer and tosser for BSO (binkley-style outbound) mode so that all of them including binkd would have the same
    inbound directories (and also the same outbound directories). For example,
    one may put the following line to T-Mail mailer configuration file:

    BinkStyle_Pack_For All

    If your mailer can work with AMA (arcmail-attach) only you may try to
    use fileboxes and/or find programs that can convert your mailer's queue to
    BSO or fileboxes. For example, Mail2dir utility allows using fileboxes with FrontDoor. Such a means disables a possibility of sending your mail to the
    same link both by IP and by modem (for instance, when one of the channels failed). There is another more radical but more flexible way: you may change your mailer.
    See also question 35.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    19. Flags Are Not Created On Receiving a File, Programs Do Not Start

    For sure you have a wrong template in the configuration file. You have to use it this way (the first two lines are for Windows and OS/2, the rest are
    for the Unix-like OS):

    flag m:\\ftn\\flg\\pntseg.flg m:\\\\ftn\\\\inbound\\\\sec\\\\pntstr*.*
    flag m:\\ftn\\flg\\toss.flg *.su? *.mo? *.tu? *.we? *.th? *.fr? *.sa? *.pkt

    exec "/usr/local/bin/ftrack -c /fido/conf/ftrack" *.[Pp][Kk][Tt]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ss][Uu][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Mm][Oo][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Uu][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ww][Ee][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Hh][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ff][Rr][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ss][Aa][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/fech-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Ii][Cc]

    You must use the full path with four slashes for the file to receive or
    the template should start with an asterisk character. You must use two
    slashes for the flag file.

    You must use the full path because using a filename without path means
    the event of receiving the file in the current directory and not in the
    inbound directory. If a template begins with "*" then it means "any
    directory" (and since all the files are received in one of the inbound directories it works for both password protected and for unprotected
    sessions).

    In a UNIX-like OS you should take into account that filenames are case sensitive. Please use regular expressions in templates.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    20. 'skipmask' Keyword Does Not Work

    A filename is compared without path and the comparison is case
    sensitive when 'skipmask' is used.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    21. binkd Under Windows 3.x

    Sergey Zharsky (zharik@usa.net) ported binkd 0.9.2 and binkd 0.9.5 for Windows 3.x. They work using IP stacks Trumpet Winsock ver. 3.0 revision D
    and Novell TCP/IP Client for Win 3.11 (see the answer to the question
    'binkd Under DOS', the section "The DOS version has the feature...").


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    22. Different FTN Domains in binkd And a Tosser Without 5D Support

    Suppose there are two domains (with different zone numbers though it
    does not matter). Mail can be successfully sent to the first domain but
    not to the second one. This situation may arise if the tosser, the tracker
    and the other your FTN programs do not support 5D BSO.

    This is a typical binkd configuration for two FTN domains and 5D
    outbound:

    domain fidonet c:\\ftn\\outbound\\fidonet 2
    domain omeganet c:\\ftn\\outbound\\omeganet 11
    address 2:5070/222@fidonet 11:58/6@omeganet

    One must configure not the zone of your own address for 'domain'
    keyword as one might think but the zone that should not be appended to the outbound name (i.e. the outbound subdirectory extensions are not processed
    for the zone denoted in the 'domain' line).

    If your tosser would create bundles for omeganet in the omeganet
    directory then you should write as indicated above. But since it does not
    --- hpt/lnx 1.9 2024-02-05
    * Origin: Moscow, Russia (2:5020/1042)
  • From binkd Team@2:5020/1042 to All on Sat Mar 9 22:15:02 2024
    31 Mar 16:48:43 [40423] trying 195.209.235.3, port 24554...
    31 Mar 16:48:43 [40423] connected to proxy.osu.ru:24554
    31 Mar 16:48:44 [40423] Connection rejected by proxy (HTTP/1.0 403 Forbidden)
    ? 31 Mar 16:48:44 [40423] unable to connect: {13} Permission denied

    In such a case you may try to use http tunnelling for instance with the help of httport, HTTPTunnel (http://http-tunnel.sourceforge.net/), stunnel (https://www.stunnel.org/) or you may find a node receiving binkp
    connections at port 443.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    07. How Can binkd Work via SOCKS-proxy?

    It is not a rare case when users go out to the internet from their corporate LAN exclusively via the proxy server based at the only computer connected to the internet. Thus binkd cannot make a direct connection to
    the remote node and one must use the proxy server. Proxy servers support
    was included in version 0.9.4 and the later ones.

    binkd works with a SOCKS proxy version 4 and 5. The first one does not demand an authorization (no login and password), the second one demands it
    as a rule.

    Suppose the connected to the Internet computer has the IP address 192.168.0.1 in its LAN and the SOCKS server at the computer responds on
    port 1080. Here is the line in binkd configuration file necessary for
    working via the SOCKS proxy.

    1. A SOCKS server without user authorization (no login and password are demanded):

    socks 192.168.0.1:1080

    2. A proxy server with user authorization (it is necessary to type login and password, e.g. login "user", password "password"):

    socks 192.168.0.1:1080/user/password


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    08. IP-Point: How Can I Make binkd to Get My Mail From My Bossnode (Uplink)?

    Make a poll using the command line option -P:

    binkd -P1:2/3 binkd.cfg

    Usually they want binkd to exit after the session is finished. One can
    use the command line option -p:

    binkd -p -P1:2/3 binkd.cfg

    If binkd does not exit for a long time after the session has been
    finished then decrease the value of rescan-delay (and sometimes the value
    of timeout).

    If binkd works permanently (e.g. as a Windows service) and you want to
    get your mail regularly then you need some additional program or a script.
    As an example in DOS, Windows or OS/2 it is enough to execute the command:

    cd . >> %outbound%\NNNNMMMM.ilo

    where NNNN is the hex net number,
    MMMM is the hex node number,
    %outbound% is the path to the necessary zone outbound.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    09. "start_file_transfer: .: Permission denied" Error

    You get the message when binkd cannot open a file for sending indicated
    in some *.?lo file. Most likely the file has a line containing only "."
    because the poll has been made by a command of the type

    echo . >> xxxxyyyy.flo

    you should change it to "cd . >> xxxxyyyy.flo"


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    10. binkd/win and Dial-up: Dialing-up and Disconnecting Automatically

    The problem is to configure the fidonet box in such a way that binkd
    would initiate a telephone call to your Internet provider, get your mail
    and disconnect.

    The solutions:

    1st Solution

    Configure automatic connection and timeout in the dial-up connection properties (idle time before hanging up). It is convinient to use a non-standard software for dialing-up (Advanced Dialer and others). You
    should start binkd with a command line option -p periodically (and possibly -Paddress for binkd to make a poll to the address).

    binkd -p -P1:2/3.4 binkd.cfg


    2nd Solution

    Use the command line option -p and the batch file where first Remote
    Access Service (RAS) is started then binkd is started and after binkd exits
    RAS is stopped.

    Two variants, for Windows NT and for Windows 2000:
    === binkdpoll1.cmd
    rasdial Connection
    binkd -p binkd.cfg
    rasdial Connection /disconnect
    ===

    === binkdpoll2.cmd
    net start "remote access service"
    net start "remote access auto service"
    binkd -p binkd.cfg
    net stop "remote access auto service"
    net stop "remote access service"
    ===

    3rd Solution (The Best One For Win9x)

    Use the command line options -p and -Paddress and control connection
    with a non-standard dial-up software (for example dialerp). This solution
    is the most reliable one (especially if the modem connection to your
    Internet provider is bad) due to the fact that dialerp can start some
    indicated programs at setting the connection. Here is the batch file you should start in the 'Execute' parameter of the dialerp configuration file:

    ====
    binkd -p -P1:2/3.4 binkd.cfg
    dialerp BREAK *
    ====

    The question you may now ask: Where can I take dialerp? The answer is:
    Ask the author (Alexander Vedjakin, 2:5020/540) or look for it in fileecho archives and in ftp/http.


    In any case you should set a small value for 'rescan-delay' parameter in the binkd configuration file. binkd would exit faster.

    === binkd.cfg
    # Outbound rescans period (sec)
    rescan-delay 2
    ===


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    11. I Have Changed binkd Configuration File On-The-Fly. When Will It Be Reloaded?

    Starting with the version 0.9.1 binkd could feel that its configuration file changed. It exited with code 3 if it had been started with option -C. Modification time was checked after each ingoing session. Here is the batch file for starting binkd versions 0.9.1-0.9.3 and 0.9.4-0.9.6/w32:

    ====
    :aaa
    binkd -C binkd.cfg
    if errorlevel 4 goto end
    if errorlevel 3 goto aaa
    :end
    ====

    In the versions 0.9.4/unix and /os2-emx (and in these ones only) binkd restarts automatically if it is started with -C command line option.
    Besides that starting with version 0.9.4 the files included into the configuration file with the help of 'include' keyword are tested not only
    on incoming sessions but also in every 'rescan-delay' seconds.

    If you install binkd 0.9.4/w32 as a Windows NT service you should use it with -C command line option. Then binkd re-reads its configuration file.

    Before version 0.9.4 changes in the configuration file were not tested if binkd was started in client-only mode (-c command line option).

    In the unix versions configuration file is re-read on SIGHUP signal
    by the command
    kill -HUP `cat /var/run/binkd.pid`

    In the version 1.0 configuration file is re-read automatically if
    changed. binkd tests on changes at every 'rescan-delay' seconds.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    12. How Can binkd Work With T-mail/IP?

    There is no way to do it. The protocols differ in essence: binkd uses
    binkp protocol whereas T-mail/IP uses EMSI etc.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    13. Is There At Least One Log Analyzer Under Unix?

    There exist many Perl scripts and several win32 binaries. For example here:

    binkdstat 0.1 beta4 Christmas version 6.01.2002
    Statistics generator for binkd
    (c) Dmitry Sergienko, 2:464/910@fidonet, dmitry@trifle.net 14.08.2000
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/binkdstat-ds.0.1_beta4_Christmas

    There also exists BndStat program:
    BNDST101.ZIP 34812 14-Aug-01 (AREA:AFTNMISC)
    BndStat 1.01. With sources. binkd statistics generator. Compiled for all
    platforms. Included win32 binaries. (C) Dmitry Rusov, 2:5090/94

    Log analyzer by val khokhlov (perl):
    http://www.vk.kiev.ua/create/soft.html#bnkds
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/stat-binkd.pl.gz

    binkdstat (c) val khokhlov, Dmitry Kolvakh, updated at April 2006
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/binkdstat.zip

    T-Hist (c) Michael Markowsky, 2:5020/378 (KLUG's BBS)
    Binary log file analyzer for various mailers including binkd.
    Works in DOS, Windows NT (2000, XP, 2003) and OS/2.
    ftp://ftp.grumbler.org/pub/binkd/hist30a7.zip

    Kleine Statistiker/BINKD for DOS v0.60a, Russian version
    A small statistics generator for posting statistics to an echo conference.
    ftp://ftp.grumbler.org/pub/binkd/statddos.rar


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    14. binkd Connects Too Slowly (~20 Seconds) Though I Have a High-Speed LAN

    It is possible that 'backresolv' parameter is on (for logging the remote host domain name) and DNS is not configured.

    The simplest solution is to comment the 'backresolv' out in the configuration file. Configuring DNS is a more complex solution.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    15. Why Does binkd Not Understand Command Line Options When I Start It From inetd?

    You should use the program name as the first parameter in inetd.conf (it may be any string for binkd), the second and the following parameters
    are the command line options (-iqs etc.) and the last parameter is the configuration file full path:

    binkp stream tcp nowait root /usr/fido/binkd binkd -isq /usr/fido/binkd.cfg

    If you do not use -q option then you should switch console output off (comment 'printq', 'percents', 'conlog' out).


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    16. Can One Make a File Request From binkd?

    It's a piece of cake! binkd supports WAZOO FREQ with an external helper.

    To request files from a remote system it is necessary to create a file
    of type nnnnmmmm.REQ and to put it in the outbound directory next to *.?ut
    and *.?lo files. But *.REQ files do not initiate binkd to call a link so
    to make a FREQ it is necessary to make a poll. The contents of a .REQ file
    is described in the "!SRIF.TXT" file which is a copy of FSC-0086.001 from http://ftsc.org


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    17. How Can my binkd Respond to a File Request?

    One can configure binkd for calling an external file request processor supporting SRIF (FSC-0086) for receiving and handling FREQs in binkd. Please read the "!SRIF.TXT" file and the comment to 'exec' in the configuration
    file.

    Here are the examples of lines in configuration file for DOS-based OS
    and for *nix (you should use regular expressions in the latter case for
    binkd to match both upper-case and lower-case letters, e.g. both *.REQ and *.req):

    exec "\\ftn\\allfix\\allfix.exe RP -SRIF *S" *.req

    exec "/ftn/bin/tmafreq-srif *S" *.[rR][eE][qQ]

    A bash script "srifreq" is delivered with binkd starting with version 1.1a19.
    The following file request processors are also compatible with binkd
    (but they are not the only ones, any other one supporting SRIF will do):

    Allfix by Harms Software Engineering: it is a fileecho processor with built-in file request processor and it has versions for DOS and OS/2;

    ViReq by Michael Haase (2:2432/280): a specialized FREQ processor for Windows, it is distributed by Michael Massenberg (2:2411/505) via modem,
    ISDN and Fido-over-IP.

    tmafreq by Maxim Timofeyev <tmahome@mail.tma.spb.ru>: the FREQ processor
    is created for a unix-like OS and ported into Windows. One may obtain tmafreq from different BBS and FTP with fileecho archives, or may get tmafreq sources from anonymous CVS :pserver:anoncvs@tma.spb.ru:/cvsroot, module "tmafreq".

    VIREQ/x by Volker Imre <volker@imre.dyndns.org> (2:246/2098): the FREQ processor is created for a unix-like OS but can be compiled in the OS/2, Windows and maybe other operating systems. Now it is included into "ftnapps" project on Sourceforge and may be downloaded from http://ftnapps.sourceforge.net/vireq.html.
    Binaries built for Win32 and OS/2 may be downloaded from http://download.binkd.org and
    https://sites.google.com/view/vasilyevmax/


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    18. How Can I Add binkd To a Fidonet Box Working With a Modem?

    You must configure your modem mailer and tosser for BSO (binkley-style outbound) mode so that all of them including binkd would have the same
    inbound directories (and also the same outbound directories). For example,
    one may put the following line to T-Mail mailer configuration file:

    BinkStyle_Pack_For All

    If your mailer can work with AMA (arcmail-attach) only you may try to
    use fileboxes and/or find programs that can convert your mailer's queue to
    BSO or fileboxes. For example, Mail2dir utility allows using fileboxes with FrontDoor. Such a means disables a possibility of sending your mail to the
    same link both by IP and by modem (for instance, when one of the channels failed). There is another more radical but more flexible way: you may change your mailer.
    See also question 35.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    19. Flags Are Not Created On Receiving a File, Programs Do Not Start

    For sure you have a wrong template in the configuration file. You have to use it this way (the first two lines are for Windows and OS/2, the rest are
    for the Unix-like OS):

    flag m:\\ftn\\flg\\pntseg.flg m:\\\\ftn\\\\inbound\\\\sec\\\\pntstr*.*
    flag m:\\ftn\\flg\\toss.flg *.su? *.mo? *.tu? *.we? *.th? *.fr? *.sa? *.pkt

    exec "/usr/local/bin/ftrack -c /fido/conf/ftrack" *.[Pp][Kk][Tt]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ss][Uu][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Mm][Oo][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Uu][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ww][Ee][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Hh][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ff][Rr][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ss][Aa][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/fech-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Ii][Cc]

    You must use the full path with four slashes for the file to receive or
    the template should start with an asterisk character. You must use two
    slashes for the flag file.

    You must use the full path because using a filename without path means
    the event of receiving the file in the current directory and not in the
    inbound directory. If a template begins with "*" then it means "any
    directory" (and since all the files are received in one of the inbound directories it works for both password protected and for unprotected
    sessions).

    In a UNIX-like OS you should take into account that filenames are case sensitive. Please use regular expressions in templates.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    20. 'skipmask' Keyword Does Not Work

    A filename is compared without path and the comparison is case
    sensitive when 'skipmask' is used.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    21. binkd Under Windows 3.x

    Sergey Zharsky (zharik@usa.net) ported binkd 0.9.2 and binkd 0.9.5 for Windows 3.x. They work using IP stacks Trumpet Winsock ver. 3.0 revision D
    and Novell TCP/IP Client for Win 3.11 (see the answer to the question
    'binkd Under DOS', the section "The DOS version has the feature...").


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    22. Different FTN Domains in binkd And a Tosser Without 5D Support

    Suppose there are two domains (with different zone numbers though it
    does not matter). Mail can be successfully sent to the first domain but
    not to the second one. This situation may arise if the tosser, the tracker
    and the other your FTN programs do not support 5D BSO.

    This is a typical binkd configuration for two FTN domains and 5D
    outbound:

    domain fidonet c:\\ftn\\outbound\\fidonet 2
    domain omeganet c:\\ftn\\outbound\\omeganet 11
    address 2:5070/222@fidonet 11:58/6@omeganet

    One must configure not the zone of your own address for 'domain'
    keyword as one might think but the zone that should not be appended to the outbound name (i.e. the outbound subdirectory extensions are not processed
    for the zone denoted in the 'domain' line).

    If your tosser would create bundles for omeganet in the omeganet
    directory then you should write as indicated above. But since it does not
    --- hpt/lnx 1.9 2024-02-05
    * Origin: Moscow, Russia (2:5020/1042)
  • From binkd Team@2:5020/1042 to All on Sat Mar 16 22:15:04 2024
    31 Mar 16:48:43 [40423] trying 195.209.235.3, port 24554...
    31 Mar 16:48:43 [40423] connected to proxy.osu.ru:24554
    31 Mar 16:48:44 [40423] Connection rejected by proxy (HTTP/1.0 403 Forbidden)
    ? 31 Mar 16:48:44 [40423] unable to connect: {13} Permission denied

    In such a case you may try to use http tunnelling for instance with the help of httport, HTTPTunnel (http://http-tunnel.sourceforge.net/), stunnel (https://www.stunnel.org/) or you may find a node receiving binkp
    connections at port 443.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    07. How Can binkd Work via SOCKS-proxy?

    It is not a rare case when users go out to the internet from their corporate LAN exclusively via the proxy server based at the only computer connected to the internet. Thus binkd cannot make a direct connection to
    the remote node and one must use the proxy server. Proxy servers support
    was included in version 0.9.4 and the later ones.

    binkd works with a SOCKS proxy version 4 and 5. The first one does not demand an authorization (no login and password), the second one demands it
    as a rule.

    Suppose the connected to the Internet computer has the IP address 192.168.0.1 in its LAN and the SOCKS server at the computer responds on
    port 1080. Here is the line in binkd configuration file necessary for
    working via the SOCKS proxy.

    1. A SOCKS server without user authorization (no login and password are demanded):

    socks 192.168.0.1:1080

    2. A proxy server with user authorization (it is necessary to type login and password, e.g. login "user", password "password"):

    socks 192.168.0.1:1080/user/password


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    08. IP-Point: How Can I Make binkd to Get My Mail From My Bossnode (Uplink)?

    Make a poll using the command line option -P:

    binkd -P1:2/3 binkd.cfg

    Usually they want binkd to exit after the session is finished. One can
    use the command line option -p:

    binkd -p -P1:2/3 binkd.cfg

    If binkd does not exit for a long time after the session has been
    finished then decrease the value of rescan-delay (and sometimes the value
    of timeout).

    If binkd works permanently (e.g. as a Windows service) and you want to
    get your mail regularly then you need some additional program or a script.
    As an example in DOS, Windows or OS/2 it is enough to execute the command:

    cd . >> %outbound%\NNNNMMMM.ilo

    where NNNN is the hex net number,
    MMMM is the hex node number,
    %outbound% is the path to the necessary zone outbound.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    09. "start_file_transfer: .: Permission denied" Error

    You get the message when binkd cannot open a file for sending indicated
    in some *.?lo file. Most likely the file has a line containing only "."
    because the poll has been made by a command of the type

    echo . >> xxxxyyyy.flo

    you should change it to "cd . >> xxxxyyyy.flo"


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    10. binkd/win and Dial-up: Dialing-up and Disconnecting Automatically

    The problem is to configure the fidonet box in such a way that binkd
    would initiate a telephone call to your Internet provider, get your mail
    and disconnect.

    The solutions:

    1st Solution

    Configure automatic connection and timeout in the dial-up connection properties (idle time before hanging up). It is convinient to use a non-standard software for dialing-up (Advanced Dialer and others). You
    should start binkd with a command line option -p periodically (and possibly -Paddress for binkd to make a poll to the address).

    binkd -p -P1:2/3.4 binkd.cfg


    2nd Solution

    Use the command line option -p and the batch file where first Remote
    Access Service (RAS) is started then binkd is started and after binkd exits
    RAS is stopped.

    Two variants, for Windows NT and for Windows 2000:
    === binkdpoll1.cmd
    rasdial Connection
    binkd -p binkd.cfg
    rasdial Connection /disconnect
    ===

    === binkdpoll2.cmd
    net start "remote access service"
    net start "remote access auto service"
    binkd -p binkd.cfg
    net stop "remote access auto service"
    net stop "remote access service"
    ===

    3rd Solution (The Best One For Win9x)

    Use the command line options -p and -Paddress and control connection
    with a non-standard dial-up software (for example dialerp). This solution
    is the most reliable one (especially if the modem connection to your
    Internet provider is bad) due to the fact that dialerp can start some
    indicated programs at setting the connection. Here is the batch file you should start in the 'Execute' parameter of the dialerp configuration file:

    ====
    binkd -p -P1:2/3.4 binkd.cfg
    dialerp BREAK *
    ====

    The question you may now ask: Where can I take dialerp? The answer is:
    Ask the author (Alexander Vedjakin, 2:5020/540) or look for it in fileecho archives and in ftp/http.


    In any case you should set a small value for 'rescan-delay' parameter in the binkd configuration file. binkd would exit faster.

    === binkd.cfg
    # Outbound rescans period (sec)
    rescan-delay 2
    ===


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    11. I Have Changed binkd Configuration File On-The-Fly. When Will It Be Reloaded?

    Starting with the version 0.9.1 binkd could feel that its configuration file changed. It exited with code 3 if it had been started with option -C. Modification time was checked after each ingoing session. Here is the batch file for starting binkd versions 0.9.1-0.9.3 and 0.9.4-0.9.6/w32:

    ====
    :aaa
    binkd -C binkd.cfg
    if errorlevel 4 goto end
    if errorlevel 3 goto aaa
    :end
    ====

    In the versions 0.9.4/unix and /os2-emx (and in these ones only) binkd restarts automatically if it is started with -C command line option.
    Besides that starting with version 0.9.4 the files included into the configuration file with the help of 'include' keyword are tested not only
    on incoming sessions but also in every 'rescan-delay' seconds.

    If you install binkd 0.9.4/w32 as a Windows NT service you should use it with -C command line option. Then binkd re-reads its configuration file.

    Before version 0.9.4 changes in the configuration file were not tested if binkd was started in client-only mode (-c command line option).

    In the unix versions configuration file is re-read on SIGHUP signal
    by the command
    kill -HUP `cat /var/run/binkd.pid`

    In the version 1.0 configuration file is re-read automatically if
    changed. binkd tests on changes at every 'rescan-delay' seconds.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    12. How Can binkd Work With T-mail/IP?

    There is no way to do it. The protocols differ in essence: binkd uses
    binkp protocol whereas T-mail/IP uses EMSI etc.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    13. Is There At Least One Log Analyzer Under Unix?

    There exist many Perl scripts and several win32 binaries. For example here:

    binkdstat 0.1 beta4 Christmas version 6.01.2002
    Statistics generator for binkd
    (c) Dmitry Sergienko, 2:464/910@fidonet, dmitry@trifle.net 14.08.2000
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/binkdstat-ds.0.1_beta4_Christmas

    There also exists BndStat program:
    BNDST101.ZIP 34812 14-Aug-01 (AREA:AFTNMISC)
    BndStat 1.01. With sources. binkd statistics generator. Compiled for all
    platforms. Included win32 binaries. (C) Dmitry Rusov, 2:5090/94

    Log analyzer by val khokhlov (perl):
    http://www.vk.kiev.ua/create/soft.html#bnkds
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/stat-binkd.pl.gz

    binkdstat (c) val khokhlov, Dmitry Kolvakh, updated at April 2006
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/binkdstat.zip

    T-Hist (c) Michael Markowsky, 2:5020/378 (KLUG's BBS)
    Binary log file analyzer for various mailers including binkd.
    Works in DOS, Windows NT (2000, XP, 2003) and OS/2.
    ftp://ftp.grumbler.org/pub/binkd/hist30a7.zip

    Kleine Statistiker/BINKD for DOS v0.60a, Russian version
    A small statistics generator for posting statistics to an echo conference.
    ftp://ftp.grumbler.org/pub/binkd/statddos.rar


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    14. binkd Connects Too Slowly (~20 Seconds) Though I Have a High-Speed LAN

    It is possible that 'backresolv' parameter is on (for logging the remote host domain name) and DNS is not configured.

    The simplest solution is to comment the 'backresolv' out in the configuration file. Configuring DNS is a more complex solution.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    15. Why Does binkd Not Understand Command Line Options When I Start It From inetd?

    You should use the program name as the first parameter in inetd.conf (it may be any string for binkd), the second and the following parameters
    are the command line options (-iqs etc.) and the last parameter is the configuration file full path:

    binkp stream tcp nowait root /usr/fido/binkd binkd -isq /usr/fido/binkd.cfg

    If you do not use -q option then you should switch console output off (comment 'printq', 'percents', 'conlog' out).


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    16. Can One Make a File Request From binkd?

    It's a piece of cake! binkd supports WAZOO FREQ with an external helper.

    To request files from a remote system it is necessary to create a file
    of type nnnnmmmm.REQ and to put it in the outbound directory next to *.?ut
    and *.?lo files. But *.REQ files do not initiate binkd to call a link so
    to make a FREQ it is necessary to make a poll. The contents of a .REQ file
    is described in the "!SRIF.TXT" file which is a copy of FSC-0086.001 from http://ftsc.org


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    17. How Can my binkd Respond to a File Request?

    One can configure binkd for calling an external file request processor supporting SRIF (FSC-0086) for receiving and handling FREQs in binkd. Please read the "!SRIF.TXT" file and the comment to 'exec' in the configuration
    file.

    Here are the examples of lines in configuration file for DOS-based OS
    and for *nix (you should use regular expressions in the latter case for
    binkd to match both upper-case and lower-case letters, e.g. both *.REQ and *.req):

    exec "\\ftn\\allfix\\allfix.exe RP -SRIF *S" *.req

    exec "/ftn/bin/tmafreq-srif *S" *.[rR][eE][qQ]

    A bash script "srifreq" is delivered with binkd starting with version 1.1a19.
    The following file request processors are also compatible with binkd
    (but they are not the only ones, any other one supporting SRIF will do):

    Allfix by Harms Software Engineering: it is a fileecho processor with built-in file request processor and it has versions for DOS and OS/2;

    ViReq by Michael Haase (2:2432/280): a specialized FREQ processor for Windows, it is distributed by Michael Massenberg (2:2411/505) via modem,
    ISDN and Fido-over-IP.

    tmafreq by Maxim Timofeyev <tmahome@mail.tma.spb.ru>: the FREQ processor
    is created for a unix-like OS and ported into Windows. One may obtain tmafreq from different BBS and FTP with fileecho archives, or may get tmafreq sources from anonymous CVS :pserver:anoncvs@tma.spb.ru:/cvsroot, module "tmafreq".

    VIREQ/x by Volker Imre <volker@imre.dyndns.org> (2:246/2098): the FREQ processor is created for a unix-like OS but can be compiled in the OS/2, Windows and maybe other operating systems. Now it is included into "ftnapps" project on Sourceforge and may be downloaded from http://ftnapps.sourceforge.net/vireq.html.
    Binaries built for Win32 and OS/2 may be downloaded from http://download.binkd.org and
    https://sites.google.com/view/vasilyevmax/


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    18. How Can I Add binkd To a Fidonet Box Working With a Modem?

    You must configure your modem mailer and tosser for BSO (binkley-style outbound) mode so that all of them including binkd would have the same
    inbound directories (and also the same outbound directories). For example,
    one may put the following line to T-Mail mailer configuration file:

    BinkStyle_Pack_For All

    If your mailer can work with AMA (arcmail-attach) only you may try to
    use fileboxes and/or find programs that can convert your mailer's queue to
    BSO or fileboxes. For example, Mail2dir utility allows using fileboxes with FrontDoor. Such a means disables a possibility of sending your mail to the
    same link both by IP and by modem (for instance, when one of the channels failed). There is another more radical but more flexible way: you may change your mailer.
    See also question 35.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    19. Flags Are Not Created On Receiving a File, Programs Do Not Start

    For sure you have a wrong template in the configuration file. You have to use it this way (the first two lines are for Windows and OS/2, the rest are
    for the Unix-like OS):

    flag m:\\ftn\\flg\\pntseg.flg m:\\\\ftn\\\\inbound\\\\sec\\\\pntstr*.*
    flag m:\\ftn\\flg\\toss.flg *.su? *.mo? *.tu? *.we? *.th? *.fr? *.sa? *.pkt

    exec "/usr/local/bin/ftrack -c /fido/conf/ftrack" *.[Pp][Kk][Tt]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ss][Uu][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Mm][Oo][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Uu][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ww][Ee][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Hh][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ff][Rr][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ss][Aa][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/fech-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Ii][Cc]

    You must use the full path with four slashes for the file to receive or
    the template should start with an asterisk character. You must use two
    slashes for the flag file.

    You must use the full path because using a filename without path means
    the event of receiving the file in the current directory and not in the
    inbound directory. If a template begins with "*" then it means "any
    directory" (and since all the files are received in one of the inbound directories it works for both password protected and for unprotected
    sessions).

    In a UNIX-like OS you should take into account that filenames are case sensitive. Please use regular expressions in templates.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    20. 'skipmask' Keyword Does Not Work

    A filename is compared without path and the comparison is case
    sensitive when 'skipmask' is used.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    21. binkd Under Windows 3.x

    Sergey Zharsky (zharik@usa.net) ported binkd 0.9.2 and binkd 0.9.5 for Windows 3.x. They work using IP stacks Trumpet Winsock ver. 3.0 revision D
    and Novell TCP/IP Client for Win 3.11 (see the answer to the question
    'binkd Under DOS', the section "The DOS version has the feature...").


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    22. Different FTN Domains in binkd And a Tosser Without 5D Support

    Suppose there are two domains (with different zone numbers though it
    does not matter). Mail can be successfully sent to the first domain but
    not to the second one. This situation may arise if the tosser, the tracker
    and the other your FTN programs do not support 5D BSO.

    This is a typical binkd configuration for two FTN domains and 5D
    outbound:

    domain fidonet c:\\ftn\\outbound\\fidonet 2
    domain omeganet c:\\ftn\\outbound\\omeganet 11
    address 2:5070/222@fidonet 11:58/6@omeganet

    One must configure not the zone of your own address for 'domain'
    keyword as one might think but the zone that should not be appended to the outbound name (i.e. the outbound subdirectory extensions are not processed
    for the zone denoted in the 'domain' line).

    If your tosser would create bundles for omeganet in the omeganet
    directory then you should write as indicated above. But since it does not
    --- hpt/lnx 1.9 2024-02-05
    * Origin: Moscow, Russia (2:5020/1042)
  • From binkd Team@2:5020/1042 to All on Sat Mar 23 22:15:04 2024
    31 Mar 16:48:43 [40423] trying 195.209.235.3, port 24554...
    31 Mar 16:48:43 [40423] connected to proxy.osu.ru:24554
    31 Mar 16:48:44 [40423] Connection rejected by proxy (HTTP/1.0 403 Forbidden)
    ? 31 Mar 16:48:44 [40423] unable to connect: {13} Permission denied

    In such a case you may try to use http tunnelling for instance with the help of httport, HTTPTunnel (http://http-tunnel.sourceforge.net/), stunnel (https://www.stunnel.org/) or you may find a node receiving binkp
    connections at port 443.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    07. How Can binkd Work via SOCKS-proxy?

    It is not a rare case when users go out to the internet from their corporate LAN exclusively via the proxy server based at the only computer connected to the internet. Thus binkd cannot make a direct connection to
    the remote node and one must use the proxy server. Proxy servers support
    was included in version 0.9.4 and the later ones.

    binkd works with a SOCKS proxy version 4 and 5. The first one does not demand an authorization (no login and password), the second one demands it
    as a rule.

    Suppose the connected to the Internet computer has the IP address 192.168.0.1 in its LAN and the SOCKS server at the computer responds on
    port 1080. Here is the line in binkd configuration file necessary for
    working via the SOCKS proxy.

    1. A SOCKS server without user authorization (no login and password are demanded):

    socks 192.168.0.1:1080

    2. A proxy server with user authorization (it is necessary to type login and password, e.g. login "user", password "password"):

    socks 192.168.0.1:1080/user/password


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    08. IP-Point: How Can I Make binkd to Get My Mail From My Bossnode (Uplink)?

    Make a poll using the command line option -P:

    binkd -P1:2/3 binkd.cfg

    Usually they want binkd to exit after the session is finished. One can
    use the command line option -p:

    binkd -p -P1:2/3 binkd.cfg

    If binkd does not exit for a long time after the session has been
    finished then decrease the value of rescan-delay (and sometimes the value
    of timeout).

    If binkd works permanently (e.g. as a Windows service) and you want to
    get your mail regularly then you need some additional program or a script.
    As an example in DOS, Windows or OS/2 it is enough to execute the command:

    cd . >> %outbound%\NNNNMMMM.ilo

    where NNNN is the hex net number,
    MMMM is the hex node number,
    %outbound% is the path to the necessary zone outbound.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    09. "start_file_transfer: .: Permission denied" Error

    You get the message when binkd cannot open a file for sending indicated
    in some *.?lo file. Most likely the file has a line containing only "."
    because the poll has been made by a command of the type

    echo . >> xxxxyyyy.flo

    you should change it to "cd . >> xxxxyyyy.flo"


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    10. binkd/win and Dial-up: Dialing-up and Disconnecting Automatically

    The problem is to configure the fidonet box in such a way that binkd
    would initiate a telephone call to your Internet provider, get your mail
    and disconnect.

    The solutions:

    1st Solution

    Configure automatic connection and timeout in the dial-up connection properties (idle time before hanging up). It is convinient to use a non-standard software for dialing-up (Advanced Dialer and others). You
    should start binkd with a command line option -p periodically (and possibly -Paddress for binkd to make a poll to the address).

    binkd -p -P1:2/3.4 binkd.cfg


    2nd Solution

    Use the command line option -p and the batch file where first Remote
    Access Service (RAS) is started then binkd is started and after binkd exits
    RAS is stopped.

    Two variants, for Windows NT and for Windows 2000:
    === binkdpoll1.cmd
    rasdial Connection
    binkd -p binkd.cfg
    rasdial Connection /disconnect
    ===

    === binkdpoll2.cmd
    net start "remote access service"
    net start "remote access auto service"
    binkd -p binkd.cfg
    net stop "remote access auto service"
    net stop "remote access service"
    ===

    3rd Solution (The Best One For Win9x)

    Use the command line options -p and -Paddress and control connection
    with a non-standard dial-up software (for example dialerp). This solution
    is the most reliable one (especially if the modem connection to your
    Internet provider is bad) due to the fact that dialerp can start some
    indicated programs at setting the connection. Here is the batch file you should start in the 'Execute' parameter of the dialerp configuration file:

    ====
    binkd -p -P1:2/3.4 binkd.cfg
    dialerp BREAK *
    ====

    The question you may now ask: Where can I take dialerp? The answer is:
    Ask the author (Alexander Vedjakin, 2:5020/540) or look for it in fileecho archives and in ftp/http.


    In any case you should set a small value for 'rescan-delay' parameter in the binkd configuration file. binkd would exit faster.

    === binkd.cfg
    # Outbound rescans period (sec)
    rescan-delay 2
    ===


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    11. I Have Changed binkd Configuration File On-The-Fly. When Will It Be Reloaded?

    Starting with the version 0.9.1 binkd could feel that its configuration file changed. It exited with code 3 if it had been started with option -C. Modification time was checked after each ingoing session. Here is the batch file for starting binkd versions 0.9.1-0.9.3 and 0.9.4-0.9.6/w32:

    ====
    :aaa
    binkd -C binkd.cfg
    if errorlevel 4 goto end
    if errorlevel 3 goto aaa
    :end
    ====

    In the versions 0.9.4/unix and /os2-emx (and in these ones only) binkd restarts automatically if it is started with -C command line option.
    Besides that starting with version 0.9.4 the files included into the configuration file with the help of 'include' keyword are tested not only
    on incoming sessions but also in every 'rescan-delay' seconds.

    If you install binkd 0.9.4/w32 as a Windows NT service you should use it with -C command line option. Then binkd re-reads its configuration file.

    Before version 0.9.4 changes in the configuration file were not tested if binkd was started in client-only mode (-c command line option).

    In the unix versions configuration file is re-read on SIGHUP signal
    by the command
    kill -HUP `cat /var/run/binkd.pid`

    In the version 1.0 configuration file is re-read automatically if
    changed. binkd tests on changes at every 'rescan-delay' seconds.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    12. How Can binkd Work With T-mail/IP?

    There is no way to do it. The protocols differ in essence: binkd uses
    binkp protocol whereas T-mail/IP uses EMSI etc.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    13. Is There At Least One Log Analyzer Under Unix?

    There exist many Perl scripts and several win32 binaries. For example here:

    binkdstat 0.1 beta4 Christmas version 6.01.2002
    Statistics generator for binkd
    (c) Dmitry Sergienko, 2:464/910@fidonet, dmitry@trifle.net 14.08.2000
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/binkdstat-ds.0.1_beta4_Christmas

    There also exists BndStat program:
    BNDST101.ZIP 34812 14-Aug-01 (AREA:AFTNMISC)
    BndStat 1.01. With sources. binkd statistics generator. Compiled for all
    platforms. Included win32 binaries. (C) Dmitry Rusov, 2:5090/94

    Log analyzer by val khokhlov (perl):
    http://www.vk.kiev.ua/create/soft.html#bnkds
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/stat-binkd.pl.gz

    binkdstat (c) val khokhlov, Dmitry Kolvakh, updated at April 2006
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/binkdstat.zip

    T-Hist (c) Michael Markowsky, 2:5020/378 (KLUG's BBS)
    Binary log file analyzer for various mailers including binkd.
    Works in DOS, Windows NT (2000, XP, 2003) and OS/2.
    ftp://ftp.grumbler.org/pub/binkd/hist30a7.zip

    Kleine Statistiker/BINKD for DOS v0.60a, Russian version
    A small statistics generator for posting statistics to an echo conference.
    ftp://ftp.grumbler.org/pub/binkd/statddos.rar


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    14. binkd Connects Too Slowly (~20 Seconds) Though I Have a High-Speed LAN

    It is possible that 'backresolv' parameter is on (for logging the remote host domain name) and DNS is not configured.

    The simplest solution is to comment the 'backresolv' out in the configuration file. Configuring DNS is a more complex solution.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    15. Why Does binkd Not Understand Command Line Options When I Start It From inetd?

    You should use the program name as the first parameter in inetd.conf (it may be any string for binkd), the second and the following parameters
    are the command line options (-iqs etc.) and the last parameter is the configuration file full path:

    binkp stream tcp nowait root /usr/fido/binkd binkd -isq /usr/fido/binkd.cfg

    If you do not use -q option then you should switch console output off (comment 'printq', 'percents', 'conlog' out).


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    16. Can One Make a File Request From binkd?

    It's a piece of cake! binkd supports WAZOO FREQ with an external helper.

    To request files from a remote system it is necessary to create a file
    of type nnnnmmmm.REQ and to put it in the outbound directory next to *.?ut
    and *.?lo files. But *.REQ files do not initiate binkd to call a link so
    to make a FREQ it is necessary to make a poll. The contents of a .REQ file
    is described in the "!SRIF.TXT" file which is a copy of FSC-0086.001 from http://ftsc.org


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    17. How Can my binkd Respond to a File Request?

    One can configure binkd for calling an external file request processor supporting SRIF (FSC-0086) for receiving and handling FREQs in binkd. Please read the "!SRIF.TXT" file and the comment to 'exec' in the configuration
    file.

    Here are the examples of lines in configuration file for DOS-based OS
    and for *nix (you should use regular expressions in the latter case for
    binkd to match both upper-case and lower-case letters, e.g. both *.REQ and *.req):

    exec "\\ftn\\allfix\\allfix.exe RP -SRIF *S" *.req

    exec "/ftn/bin/tmafreq-srif *S" *.[rR][eE][qQ]

    A bash script "srifreq" is delivered with binkd starting with version 1.1a19.
    The following file request processors are also compatible with binkd
    (but they are not the only ones, any other one supporting SRIF will do):

    Allfix by Harms Software Engineering: it is a fileecho processor with built-in file request processor and it has versions for DOS and OS/2;

    ViReq by Michael Haase (2:2432/280): a specialized FREQ processor for Windows, it is distributed by Michael Massenberg (2:2411/505) via modem,
    ISDN and Fido-over-IP.

    tmafreq by Maxim Timofeyev <tmahome@mail.tma.spb.ru>: the FREQ processor
    is created for a unix-like OS and ported into Windows. One may obtain tmafreq from different BBS and FTP with fileecho archives, or may get tmafreq sources from anonymous CVS :pserver:anoncvs@tma.spb.ru:/cvsroot, module "tmafreq".

    VIREQ/x by Volker Imre <volker@imre.dyndns.org> (2:246/2098): the FREQ processor is created for a unix-like OS but can be compiled in the OS/2, Windows and maybe other operating systems. Now it is included into "ftnapps" project on Sourceforge and may be downloaded from http://ftnapps.sourceforge.net/vireq.html.
    Binaries built for Win32 and OS/2 may be downloaded from http://download.binkd.org and
    https://sites.google.com/view/vasilyevmax/


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    18. How Can I Add binkd To a Fidonet Box Working With a Modem?

    You must configure your modem mailer and tosser for BSO (binkley-style outbound) mode so that all of them including binkd would have the same
    inbound directories (and also the same outbound directories). For example,
    one may put the following line to T-Mail mailer configuration file:

    BinkStyle_Pack_For All

    If your mailer can work with AMA (arcmail-attach) only you may try to
    use fileboxes and/or find programs that can convert your mailer's queue to
    BSO or fileboxes. For example, Mail2dir utility allows using fileboxes with FrontDoor. Such a means disables a possibility of sending your mail to the
    same link both by IP and by modem (for instance, when one of the channels failed). There is another more radical but more flexible way: you may change your mailer.
    See also question 35.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    19. Flags Are Not Created On Receiving a File, Programs Do Not Start

    For sure you have a wrong template in the configuration file. You have to use it this way (the first two lines are for Windows and OS/2, the rest are
    for the Unix-like OS):

    flag m:\\ftn\\flg\\pntseg.flg m:\\\\ftn\\\\inbound\\\\sec\\\\pntstr*.*
    flag m:\\ftn\\flg\\toss.flg *.su? *.mo? *.tu? *.we? *.th? *.fr? *.sa? *.pkt

    exec "/usr/local/bin/ftrack -c /fido/conf/ftrack" *.[Pp][Kk][Tt]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ss][Uu][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Mm][Oo][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Uu][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ww][Ee][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Hh][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ff][Rr][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ss][Aa][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/fech-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Ii][Cc]

    You must use the full path with four slashes for the file to receive or
    the template should start with an asterisk character. You must use two
    slashes for the flag file.

    You must use the full path because using a filename without path means
    the event of receiving the file in the current directory and not in the
    inbound directory. If a template begins with "*" then it means "any
    directory" (and since all the files are received in one of the inbound directories it works for both password protected and for unprotected
    sessions).

    In a UNIX-like OS you should take into account that filenames are case sensitive. Please use regular expressions in templates.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    20. 'skipmask' Keyword Does Not Work

    A filename is compared without path and the comparison is case
    sensitive when 'skipmask' is used.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    21. binkd Under Windows 3.x

    Sergey Zharsky (zharik@usa.net) ported binkd 0.9.2 and binkd 0.9.5 for Windows 3.x. They work using IP stacks Trumpet Winsock ver. 3.0 revision D
    and Novell TCP/IP Client for Win 3.11 (see the answer to the question
    'binkd Under DOS', the section "The DOS version has the feature...").


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    22. Different FTN Domains in binkd And a Tosser Without 5D Support

    Suppose there are two domains (with different zone numbers though it
    does not matter). Mail can be successfully sent to the first domain but
    not to the second one. This situation may arise if the tosser, the tracker
    and the other your FTN programs do not support 5D BSO.

    This is a typical binkd configuration for two FTN domains and 5D
    outbound:

    domain fidonet c:\\ftn\\outbound\\fidonet 2
    domain omeganet c:\\ftn\\outbound\\omeganet 11
    address 2:5070/222@fidonet 11:58/6@omeganet

    One must configure not the zone of your own address for 'domain'
    keyword as one might think but the zone that should not be appended to the outbound name (i.e. the outbound subdirectory extensions are not processed
    for the zone denoted in the 'domain' line).

    If your tosser would create bundles for omeganet in the omeganet
    directory then you should write as indicated above. But since it does not
    --- hpt/lnx 1.9 2024-02-05
    * Origin: Moscow, Russia (2:5020/1042)
  • From binkd Team@2:5020/1042 to All on Sat Mar 30 22:15:02 2024
    31 Mar 16:48:43 [40423] trying 195.209.235.3, port 24554...
    31 Mar 16:48:43 [40423] connected to proxy.osu.ru:24554
    31 Mar 16:48:44 [40423] Connection rejected by proxy (HTTP/1.0 403 Forbidden)
    ? 31 Mar 16:48:44 [40423] unable to connect: {13} Permission denied

    In such a case you may try to use http tunnelling for instance with the help of httport, HTTPTunnel (http://http-tunnel.sourceforge.net/), stunnel (https://www.stunnel.org/) or you may find a node receiving binkp
    connections at port 443.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    07. How Can binkd Work via SOCKS-proxy?

    It is not a rare case when users go out to the internet from their corporate LAN exclusively via the proxy server based at the only computer connected to the internet. Thus binkd cannot make a direct connection to
    the remote node and one must use the proxy server. Proxy servers support
    was included in version 0.9.4 and the later ones.

    binkd works with a SOCKS proxy version 4 and 5. The first one does not demand an authorization (no login and password), the second one demands it
    as a rule.

    Suppose the connected to the Internet computer has the IP address 192.168.0.1 in its LAN and the SOCKS server at the computer responds on
    port 1080. Here is the line in binkd configuration file necessary for
    working via the SOCKS proxy.

    1. A SOCKS server without user authorization (no login and password are demanded):

    socks 192.168.0.1:1080

    2. A proxy server with user authorization (it is necessary to type login and password, e.g. login "user", password "password"):

    socks 192.168.0.1:1080/user/password


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    08. IP-Point: How Can I Make binkd to Get My Mail From My Bossnode (Uplink)?

    Make a poll using the command line option -P:

    binkd -P1:2/3 binkd.cfg

    Usually they want binkd to exit after the session is finished. One can
    use the command line option -p:

    binkd -p -P1:2/3 binkd.cfg

    If binkd does not exit for a long time after the session has been
    finished then decrease the value of rescan-delay (and sometimes the value
    of timeout).

    If binkd works permanently (e.g. as a Windows service) and you want to
    get your mail regularly then you need some additional program or a script.
    As an example in DOS, Windows or OS/2 it is enough to execute the command:

    cd . >> %outbound%\NNNNMMMM.ilo

    where NNNN is the hex net number,
    MMMM is the hex node number,
    %outbound% is the path to the necessary zone outbound.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    09. "start_file_transfer: .: Permission denied" Error

    You get the message when binkd cannot open a file for sending indicated
    in some *.?lo file. Most likely the file has a line containing only "."
    because the poll has been made by a command of the type

    echo . >> xxxxyyyy.flo

    you should change it to "cd . >> xxxxyyyy.flo"


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    10. binkd/win and Dial-up: Dialing-up and Disconnecting Automatically

    The problem is to configure the fidonet box in such a way that binkd
    would initiate a telephone call to your Internet provider, get your mail
    and disconnect.

    The solutions:

    1st Solution

    Configure automatic connection and timeout in the dial-up connection properties (idle time before hanging up). It is convinient to use a non-standard software for dialing-up (Advanced Dialer and others). You
    should start binkd with a command line option -p periodically (and possibly -Paddress for binkd to make a poll to the address).

    binkd -p -P1:2/3.4 binkd.cfg


    2nd Solution

    Use the command line option -p and the batch file where first Remote
    Access Service (RAS) is started then binkd is started and after binkd exits
    RAS is stopped.

    Two variants, for Windows NT and for Windows 2000:
    === binkdpoll1.cmd
    rasdial Connection
    binkd -p binkd.cfg
    rasdial Connection /disconnect
    ===

    === binkdpoll2.cmd
    net start "remote access service"
    net start "remote access auto service"
    binkd -p binkd.cfg
    net stop "remote access auto service"
    net stop "remote access service"
    ===

    3rd Solution (The Best One For Win9x)

    Use the command line options -p and -Paddress and control connection
    with a non-standard dial-up software (for example dialerp). This solution
    is the most reliable one (especially if the modem connection to your
    Internet provider is bad) due to the fact that dialerp can start some
    indicated programs at setting the connection. Here is the batch file you should start in the 'Execute' parameter of the dialerp configuration file:

    ====
    binkd -p -P1:2/3.4 binkd.cfg
    dialerp BREAK *
    ====

    The question you may now ask: Where can I take dialerp? The answer is:
    Ask the author (Alexander Vedjakin, 2:5020/540) or look for it in fileecho archives and in ftp/http.


    In any case you should set a small value for 'rescan-delay' parameter in the binkd configuration file. binkd would exit faster.

    === binkd.cfg
    # Outbound rescans period (sec)
    rescan-delay 2
    ===


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    11. I Have Changed binkd Configuration File On-The-Fly. When Will It Be Reloaded?

    Starting with the version 0.9.1 binkd could feel that its configuration file changed. It exited with code 3 if it had been started with option -C. Modification time was checked after each ingoing session. Here is the batch file for starting binkd versions 0.9.1-0.9.3 and 0.9.4-0.9.6/w32:

    ====
    :aaa
    binkd -C binkd.cfg
    if errorlevel 4 goto end
    if errorlevel 3 goto aaa
    :end
    ====

    In the versions 0.9.4/unix and /os2-emx (and in these ones only) binkd restarts automatically if it is started with -C command line option.
    Besides that starting with version 0.9.4 the files included into the configuration file with the help of 'include' keyword are tested not only
    on incoming sessions but also in every 'rescan-delay' seconds.

    If you install binkd 0.9.4/w32 as a Windows NT service you should use it with -C command line option. Then binkd re-reads its configuration file.

    Before version 0.9.4 changes in the configuration file were not tested if binkd was started in client-only mode (-c command line option).

    In the unix versions configuration file is re-read on SIGHUP signal
    by the command
    kill -HUP `cat /var/run/binkd.pid`

    In the version 1.0 configuration file is re-read automatically if
    changed. binkd tests on changes at every 'rescan-delay' seconds.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    12. How Can binkd Work With T-mail/IP?

    There is no way to do it. The protocols differ in essence: binkd uses
    binkp protocol whereas T-mail/IP uses EMSI etc.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    13. Is There At Least One Log Analyzer Under Unix?

    There exist many Perl scripts and several win32 binaries. For example here:

    binkdstat 0.1 beta4 Christmas version 6.01.2002
    Statistics generator for binkd
    (c) Dmitry Sergienko, 2:464/910@fidonet, dmitry@trifle.net 14.08.2000
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/binkdstat-ds.0.1_beta4_Christmas

    There also exists BndStat program:
    BNDST101.ZIP 34812 14-Aug-01 (AREA:AFTNMISC)
    BndStat 1.01. With sources. binkd statistics generator. Compiled for all
    platforms. Included win32 binaries. (C) Dmitry Rusov, 2:5090/94

    Log analyzer by val khokhlov (perl):
    http://www.vk.kiev.ua/create/soft.html#bnkds
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/stat-binkd.pl.gz

    binkdstat (c) val khokhlov, Dmitry Kolvakh, updated at April 2006
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/binkdstat.zip

    T-Hist (c) Michael Markowsky, 2:5020/378 (KLUG's BBS)
    Binary log file analyzer for various mailers including binkd.
    Works in DOS, Windows NT (2000, XP, 2003) and OS/2.
    ftp://ftp.grumbler.org/pub/binkd/hist30a7.zip

    Kleine Statistiker/BINKD for DOS v0.60a, Russian version
    A small statistics generator for posting statistics to an echo conference.
    ftp://ftp.grumbler.org/pub/binkd/statddos.rar


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    14. binkd Connects Too Slowly (~20 Seconds) Though I Have a High-Speed LAN

    It is possible that 'backresolv' parameter is on (for logging the remote host domain name) and DNS is not configured.

    The simplest solution is to comment the 'backresolv' out in the configuration file. Configuring DNS is a more complex solution.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    15. Why Does binkd Not Understand Command Line Options When I Start It From inetd?

    You should use the program name as the first parameter in inetd.conf (it may be any string for binkd), the second and the following parameters
    are the command line options (-iqs etc.) and the last parameter is the configuration file full path:

    binkp stream tcp nowait root /usr/fido/binkd binkd -isq /usr/fido/binkd.cfg

    If you do not use -q option then you should switch console output off (comment 'printq', 'percents', 'conlog' out).


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    16. Can One Make a File Request From binkd?

    It's a piece of cake! binkd supports WAZOO FREQ with an external helper.

    To request files from a remote system it is necessary to create a file
    of type nnnnmmmm.REQ and to put it in the outbound directory next to *.?ut
    and *.?lo files. But *.REQ files do not initiate binkd to call a link so
    to make a FREQ it is necessary to make a poll. The contents of a .REQ file
    is described in the "!SRIF.TXT" file which is a copy of FSC-0086.001 from http://ftsc.org


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    17. How Can my binkd Respond to a File Request?

    One can configure binkd for calling an external file request processor supporting SRIF (FSC-0086) for receiving and handling FREQs in binkd. Please read the "!SRIF.TXT" file and the comment to 'exec' in the configuration
    file.

    Here are the examples of lines in configuration file for DOS-based OS
    and for *nix (you should use regular expressions in the latter case for
    binkd to match both upper-case and lower-case letters, e.g. both *.REQ and *.req):

    exec "\\ftn\\allfix\\allfix.exe RP -SRIF *S" *.req

    exec "/ftn/bin/tmafreq-srif *S" *.[rR][eE][qQ]

    A bash script "srifreq" is delivered with binkd starting with version 1.1a19.
    The following file request processors are also compatible with binkd
    (but they are not the only ones, any other one supporting SRIF will do):

    Allfix by Harms Software Engineering: it is a fileecho processor with built-in file request processor and it has versions for DOS and OS/2;

    ViReq by Michael Haase (2:2432/280): a specialized FREQ processor for Windows, it is distributed by Michael Massenberg (2:2411/505) via modem,
    ISDN and Fido-over-IP.

    tmafreq by Maxim Timofeyev <tmahome@mail.tma.spb.ru>: the FREQ processor
    is created for a unix-like OS and ported into Windows. One may obtain tmafreq from different BBS and FTP with fileecho archives, or may get tmafreq sources from anonymous CVS :pserver:anoncvs@tma.spb.ru:/cvsroot, module "tmafreq".

    VIREQ/x by Volker Imre <volker@imre.dyndns.org> (2:246/2098): the FREQ processor is created for a unix-like OS but can be compiled in the OS/2, Windows and maybe other operating systems. Now it is included into "ftnapps" project on Sourceforge and may be downloaded from http://ftnapps.sourceforge.net/vireq.html.
    Binaries built for Win32 and OS/2 may be downloaded from http://download.binkd.org and
    https://sites.google.com/view/vasilyevmax/


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    18. How Can I Add binkd To a Fidonet Box Working With a Modem?

    You must configure your modem mailer and tosser for BSO (binkley-style outbound) mode so that all of them including binkd would have the same
    inbound directories (and also the same outbound directories). For example,
    one may put the following line to T-Mail mailer configuration file:

    BinkStyle_Pack_For All

    If your mailer can work with AMA (arcmail-attach) only you may try to
    use fileboxes and/or find programs that can convert your mailer's queue to
    BSO or fileboxes. For example, Mail2dir utility allows using fileboxes with FrontDoor. Such a means disables a possibility of sending your mail to the
    same link both by IP and by modem (for instance, when one of the channels failed). There is another more radical but more flexible way: you may change your mailer.
    See also question 35.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    19. Flags Are Not Created On Receiving a File, Programs Do Not Start

    For sure you have a wrong template in the configuration file. You have to use it this way (the first two lines are for Windows and OS/2, the rest are
    for the Unix-like OS):

    flag m:\\ftn\\flg\\pntseg.flg m:\\\\ftn\\\\inbound\\\\sec\\\\pntstr*.*
    flag m:\\ftn\\flg\\toss.flg *.su? *.mo? *.tu? *.we? *.th? *.fr? *.sa? *.pkt

    exec "/usr/local/bin/ftrack -c /fido/conf/ftrack" *.[Pp][Kk][Tt]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ss][Uu][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Mm][Oo][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Uu][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ww][Ee][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Hh][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ff][Rr][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ss][Aa][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/fech-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Ii][Cc]

    You must use the full path with four slashes for the file to receive or
    the template should start with an asterisk character. You must use two
    slashes for the flag file.

    You must use the full path because using a filename without path means
    the event of receiving the file in the current directory and not in the
    inbound directory. If a template begins with "*" then it means "any
    directory" (and since all the files are received in one of the inbound directories it works for both password protected and for unprotected
    sessions).

    In a UNIX-like OS you should take into account that filenames are case sensitive. Please use regular expressions in templates.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    20. 'skipmask' Keyword Does Not Work

    A filename is compared without path and the comparison is case
    sensitive when 'skipmask' is used.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    21. binkd Under Windows 3.x

    Sergey Zharsky (zharik@usa.net) ported binkd 0.9.2 and binkd 0.9.5 for Windows 3.x. They work using IP stacks Trumpet Winsock ver. 3.0 revision D
    and Novell TCP/IP Client for Win 3.11 (see the answer to the question
    'binkd Under DOS', the section "The DOS version has the feature...").


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    22. Different FTN Domains in binkd And a Tosser Without 5D Support

    Suppose there are two domains (with different zone numbers though it
    does not matter). Mail can be successfully sent to the first domain but
    not to the second one. This situation may arise if the tosser, the tracker
    and the other your FTN programs do not support 5D BSO.

    This is a typical binkd configuration for two FTN domains and 5D
    outbound:

    domain fidonet c:\\ftn\\outbound\\fidonet 2
    domain omeganet c:\\ftn\\outbound\\omeganet 11
    address 2:5070/222@fidonet 11:58/6@omeganet

    One must configure not the zone of your own address for 'domain'
    keyword as one might think but the zone that should not be appended to the outbound name (i.e. the outbound subdirectory extensions are not processed
    for the zone denoted in the 'domain' line).

    If your tosser would create bundles for omeganet in the omeganet
    directory then you should write as indicated above. But since it does not
    --- hpt/lnx 1.9 2024-02-05
    * Origin: Moscow, Russia (2:5020/1042)
  • From binkd Team@2:5020/1042 to All on Sat Apr 6 22:15:04 2024
    31 Mar 16:48:43 [40423] trying 195.209.235.3, port 24554...
    31 Mar 16:48:43 [40423] connected to proxy.osu.ru:24554
    31 Mar 16:48:44 [40423] Connection rejected by proxy (HTTP/1.0 403 Forbidden)
    ? 31 Mar 16:48:44 [40423] unable to connect: {13} Permission denied

    In such a case you may try to use http tunnelling for instance with the help of httport, HTTPTunnel (http://http-tunnel.sourceforge.net/), stunnel (https://www.stunnel.org/) or you may find a node receiving binkp
    connections at port 443.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    07. How Can binkd Work via SOCKS-proxy?

    It is not a rare case when users go out to the internet from their corporate LAN exclusively via the proxy server based at the only computer connected to the internet. Thus binkd cannot make a direct connection to
    the remote node and one must use the proxy server. Proxy servers support
    was included in version 0.9.4 and the later ones.

    binkd works with a SOCKS proxy version 4 and 5. The first one does not demand an authorization (no login and password), the second one demands it
    as a rule.

    Suppose the connected to the Internet computer has the IP address 192.168.0.1 in its LAN and the SOCKS server at the computer responds on
    port 1080. Here is the line in binkd configuration file necessary for
    working via the SOCKS proxy.

    1. A SOCKS server without user authorization (no login and password are demanded):

    socks 192.168.0.1:1080

    2. A proxy server with user authorization (it is necessary to type login and password, e.g. login "user", password "password"):

    socks 192.168.0.1:1080/user/password


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    08. IP-Point: How Can I Make binkd to Get My Mail From My Bossnode (Uplink)?

    Make a poll using the command line option -P:

    binkd -P1:2/3 binkd.cfg

    Usually they want binkd to exit after the session is finished. One can
    use the command line option -p:

    binkd -p -P1:2/3 binkd.cfg

    If binkd does not exit for a long time after the session has been
    finished then decrease the value of rescan-delay (and sometimes the value
    of timeout).

    If binkd works permanently (e.g. as a Windows service) and you want to
    get your mail regularly then you need some additional program or a script.
    As an example in DOS, Windows or OS/2 it is enough to execute the command:

    cd . >> %outbound%\NNNNMMMM.ilo

    where NNNN is the hex net number,
    MMMM is the hex node number,
    %outbound% is the path to the necessary zone outbound.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    09. "start_file_transfer: .: Permission denied" Error

    You get the message when binkd cannot open a file for sending indicated
    in some *.?lo file. Most likely the file has a line containing only "."
    because the poll has been made by a command of the type

    echo . >> xxxxyyyy.flo

    you should change it to "cd . >> xxxxyyyy.flo"


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    10. binkd/win and Dial-up: Dialing-up and Disconnecting Automatically

    The problem is to configure the fidonet box in such a way that binkd
    would initiate a telephone call to your Internet provider, get your mail
    and disconnect.

    The solutions:

    1st Solution

    Configure automatic connection and timeout in the dial-up connection properties (idle time before hanging up). It is convinient to use a non-standard software for dialing-up (Advanced Dialer and others). You
    should start binkd with a command line option -p periodically (and possibly -Paddress for binkd to make a poll to the address).

    binkd -p -P1:2/3.4 binkd.cfg


    2nd Solution

    Use the command line option -p and the batch file where first Remote
    Access Service (RAS) is started then binkd is started and after binkd exits
    RAS is stopped.

    Two variants, for Windows NT and for Windows 2000:
    === binkdpoll1.cmd
    rasdial Connection
    binkd -p binkd.cfg
    rasdial Connection /disconnect
    ===

    === binkdpoll2.cmd
    net start "remote access service"
    net start "remote access auto service"
    binkd -p binkd.cfg
    net stop "remote access auto service"
    net stop "remote access service"
    ===

    3rd Solution (The Best One For Win9x)

    Use the command line options -p and -Paddress and control connection
    with a non-standard dial-up software (for example dialerp). This solution
    is the most reliable one (especially if the modem connection to your
    Internet provider is bad) due to the fact that dialerp can start some
    indicated programs at setting the connection. Here is the batch file you should start in the 'Execute' parameter of the dialerp configuration file:

    ====
    binkd -p -P1:2/3.4 binkd.cfg
    dialerp BREAK *
    ====

    The question you may now ask: Where can I take dialerp? The answer is:
    Ask the author (Alexander Vedjakin, 2:5020/540) or look for it in fileecho archives and in ftp/http.


    In any case you should set a small value for 'rescan-delay' parameter in the binkd configuration file. binkd would exit faster.

    === binkd.cfg
    # Outbound rescans period (sec)
    rescan-delay 2
    ===


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    11. I Have Changed binkd Configuration File On-The-Fly. When Will It Be Reloaded?

    Starting with the version 0.9.1 binkd could feel that its configuration file changed. It exited with code 3 if it had been started with option -C. Modification time was checked after each ingoing session. Here is the batch file for starting binkd versions 0.9.1-0.9.3 and 0.9.4-0.9.6/w32:

    ====
    :aaa
    binkd -C binkd.cfg
    if errorlevel 4 goto end
    if errorlevel 3 goto aaa
    :end
    ====

    In the versions 0.9.4/unix and /os2-emx (and in these ones only) binkd restarts automatically if it is started with -C command line option.
    Besides that starting with version 0.9.4 the files included into the configuration file with the help of 'include' keyword are tested not only
    on incoming sessions but also in every 'rescan-delay' seconds.

    If you install binkd 0.9.4/w32 as a Windows NT service you should use it with -C command line option. Then binkd re-reads its configuration file.

    Before version 0.9.4 changes in the configuration file were not tested if binkd was started in client-only mode (-c command line option).

    In the unix versions configuration file is re-read on SIGHUP signal
    by the command
    kill -HUP `cat /var/run/binkd.pid`

    In the version 1.0 configuration file is re-read automatically if
    changed. binkd tests on changes at every 'rescan-delay' seconds.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    12. How Can binkd Work With T-mail/IP?

    There is no way to do it. The protocols differ in essence: binkd uses
    binkp protocol whereas T-mail/IP uses EMSI etc.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    13. Is There At Least One Log Analyzer Under Unix?

    There exist many Perl scripts and several win32 binaries. For example here:

    binkdstat 0.1 beta4 Christmas version 6.01.2002
    Statistics generator for binkd
    (c) Dmitry Sergienko, 2:464/910@fidonet, dmitry@trifle.net 14.08.2000
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/binkdstat-ds.0.1_beta4_Christmas

    There also exists BndStat program:
    BNDST101.ZIP 34812 14-Aug-01 (AREA:AFTNMISC)
    BndStat 1.01. With sources. binkd statistics generator. Compiled for all
    platforms. Included win32 binaries. (C) Dmitry Rusov, 2:5090/94

    Log analyzer by val khokhlov (perl):
    http://www.vk.kiev.ua/create/soft.html#bnkds
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/stat-binkd.pl.gz

    binkdstat (c) val khokhlov, Dmitry Kolvakh, updated at April 2006
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/binkdstat.zip

    T-Hist (c) Michael Markowsky, 2:5020/378 (KLUG's BBS)
    Binary log file analyzer for various mailers including binkd.
    Works in DOS, Windows NT (2000, XP, 2003) and OS/2.
    ftp://ftp.grumbler.org/pub/binkd/hist30a7.zip

    Kleine Statistiker/BINKD for DOS v0.60a, Russian version
    A small statistics generator for posting statistics to an echo conference.
    ftp://ftp.grumbler.org/pub/binkd/statddos.rar


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    14. binkd Connects Too Slowly (~20 Seconds) Though I Have a High-Speed LAN

    It is possible that 'backresolv' parameter is on (for logging the remote host domain name) and DNS is not configured.

    The simplest solution is to comment the 'backresolv' out in the configuration file. Configuring DNS is a more complex solution.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    15. Why Does binkd Not Understand Command Line Options When I Start It From inetd?

    You should use the program name as the first parameter in inetd.conf (it may be any string for binkd), the second and the following parameters
    are the command line options (-iqs etc.) and the last parameter is the configuration file full path:

    binkp stream tcp nowait root /usr/fido/binkd binkd -isq /usr/fido/binkd.cfg

    If you do not use -q option then you should switch console output off (comment 'printq', 'percents', 'conlog' out).


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    16. Can One Make a File Request From binkd?

    It's a piece of cake! binkd supports WAZOO FREQ with an external helper.

    To request files from a remote system it is necessary to create a file
    of type nnnnmmmm.REQ and to put it in the outbound directory next to *.?ut
    and *.?lo files. But *.REQ files do not initiate binkd to call a link so
    to make a FREQ it is necessary to make a poll. The contents of a .REQ file
    is described in the "!SRIF.TXT" file which is a copy of FSC-0086.001 from http://ftsc.org


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    17. How Can my binkd Respond to a File Request?

    One can configure binkd for calling an external file request processor supporting SRIF (FSC-0086) for receiving and handling FREQs in binkd. Please read the "!SRIF.TXT" file and the comment to 'exec' in the configuration
    file.

    Here are the examples of lines in configuration file for DOS-based OS
    and for *nix (you should use regular expressions in the latter case for
    binkd to match both upper-case and lower-case letters, e.g. both *.REQ and *.req):

    exec "\\ftn\\allfix\\allfix.exe RP -SRIF *S" *.req

    exec "/ftn/bin/tmafreq-srif *S" *.[rR][eE][qQ]

    A bash script "srifreq" is delivered with binkd starting with version 1.1a19.
    The following file request processors are also compatible with binkd
    (but they are not the only ones, any other one supporting SRIF will do):

    Allfix by Harms Software Engineering: it is a fileecho processor with built-in file request processor and it has versions for DOS and OS/2;

    ViReq by Michael Haase (2:2432/280): a specialized FREQ processor for Windows, it is distributed by Michael Massenberg (2:2411/505) via modem,
    ISDN and Fido-over-IP.

    tmafreq by Maxim Timofeyev <tmahome@mail.tma.spb.ru>: the FREQ processor
    is created for a unix-like OS and ported into Windows. One may obtain tmafreq from different BBS and FTP with fileecho archives, or may get tmafreq sources from anonymous CVS :pserver:anoncvs@tma.spb.ru:/cvsroot, module "tmafreq".

    VIREQ/x by Volker Imre <volker@imre.dyndns.org> (2:246/2098): the FREQ processor is created for a unix-like OS but can be compiled in the OS/2, Windows and maybe other operating systems. Now it is included into "ftnapps" project on Sourceforge and may be downloaded from http://ftnapps.sourceforge.net/vireq.html.
    Binaries built for Win32 and OS/2 may be downloaded from http://download.binkd.org and
    https://sites.google.com/view/vasilyevmax/


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    18. How Can I Add binkd To a Fidonet Box Working With a Modem?

    You must configure your modem mailer and tosser for BSO (binkley-style outbound) mode so that all of them including binkd would have the same
    inbound directories (and also the same outbound directories). For example,
    one may put the following line to T-Mail mailer configuration file:

    BinkStyle_Pack_For All

    If your mailer can work with AMA (arcmail-attach) only you may try to
    use fileboxes and/or find programs that can convert your mailer's queue to
    BSO or fileboxes. For example, Mail2dir utility allows using fileboxes with FrontDoor. Such a means disables a possibility of sending your mail to the
    same link both by IP and by modem (for instance, when one of the channels failed). There is another more radical but more flexible way: you may change your mailer.
    See also question 35.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    19. Flags Are Not Created On Receiving a File, Programs Do Not Start

    For sure you have a wrong template in the configuration file. You have to use it this way (the first two lines are for Windows and OS/2, the rest are
    for the Unix-like OS):

    flag m:\\ftn\\flg\\pntseg.flg m:\\\\ftn\\\\inbound\\\\sec\\\\pntstr*.*
    flag m:\\ftn\\flg\\toss.flg *.su? *.mo? *.tu? *.we? *.th? *.fr? *.sa? *.pkt

    exec "/usr/local/bin/ftrack -c /fido/conf/ftrack" *.[Pp][Kk][Tt]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ss][Uu][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Mm][Oo][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Uu][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ww][Ee][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Hh][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ff][Rr][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ss][Aa][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/fech-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Ii][Cc]

    You must use the full path with four slashes for the file to receive or
    the template should start with an asterisk character. You must use two
    slashes for the flag file.

    You must use the full path because using a filename without path means
    the event of receiving the file in the current directory and not in the
    inbound directory. If a template begins with "*" then it means "any
    directory" (and since all the files are received in one of the inbound directories it works for both password protected and for unprotected
    sessions).

    In a UNIX-like OS you should take into account that filenames are case sensitive. Please use regular expressions in templates.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    20. 'skipmask' Keyword Does Not Work

    A filename is compared without path and the comparison is case
    sensitive when 'skipmask' is used.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    21. binkd Under Windows 3.x

    Sergey Zharsky (zharik@usa.net) ported binkd 0.9.2 and binkd 0.9.5 for Windows 3.x. They work using IP stacks Trumpet Winsock ver. 3.0 revision D
    and Novell TCP/IP Client for Win 3.11 (see the answer to the question
    'binkd Under DOS', the section "The DOS version has the feature...").


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    22. Different FTN Domains in binkd And a Tosser Without 5D Support

    Suppose there are two domains (with different zone numbers though it
    does not matter). Mail can be successfully sent to the first domain but
    not to the second one. This situation may arise if the tosser, the tracker
    and the other your FTN programs do not support 5D BSO.

    This is a typical binkd configuration for two FTN domains and 5D
    outbound:

    domain fidonet c:\\ftn\\outbound\\fidonet 2
    domain omeganet c:\\ftn\\outbound\\omeganet 11
    address 2:5070/222@fidonet 11:58/6@omeganet

    One must configure not the zone of your own address for 'domain'
    keyword as one might think but the zone that should not be appended to the outbound name (i.e. the outbound subdirectory extensions are not processed
    for the zone denoted in the 'domain' line).

    If your tosser would create bundles for omeganet in the omeganet
    directory then you should write as indicated above. But since it does not
    --- hpt/lnx 1.9 2024-02-05
    * Origin: Moscow, Russia (2:5020/1042)
  • From binkd Team@2:5020/1042 to All on Sat Apr 13 22:15:02 2024
    31 Mar 16:48:43 [40423] trying 195.209.235.3, port 24554...
    31 Mar 16:48:43 [40423] connected to proxy.osu.ru:24554
    31 Mar 16:48:44 [40423] Connection rejected by proxy (HTTP/1.0 403 Forbidden)
    ? 31 Mar 16:48:44 [40423] unable to connect: {13} Permission denied

    In such a case you may try to use http tunnelling for instance with the help of httport, HTTPTunnel (http://http-tunnel.sourceforge.net/), stunnel (https://www.stunnel.org/) or you may find a node receiving binkp
    connections at port 443.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    07. How Can binkd Work via SOCKS-proxy?

    It is not a rare case when users go out to the internet from their corporate LAN exclusively via the proxy server based at the only computer connected to the internet. Thus binkd cannot make a direct connection to
    the remote node and one must use the proxy server. Proxy servers support
    was included in version 0.9.4 and the later ones.

    binkd works with a SOCKS proxy version 4 and 5. The first one does not demand an authorization (no login and password), the second one demands it
    as a rule.

    Suppose the connected to the Internet computer has the IP address 192.168.0.1 in its LAN and the SOCKS server at the computer responds on
    port 1080. Here is the line in binkd configuration file necessary for
    working via the SOCKS proxy.

    1. A SOCKS server without user authorization (no login and password are demanded):

    socks 192.168.0.1:1080

    2. A proxy server with user authorization (it is necessary to type login and password, e.g. login "user", password "password"):

    socks 192.168.0.1:1080/user/password


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    08. IP-Point: How Can I Make binkd to Get My Mail From My Bossnode (Uplink)?

    Make a poll using the command line option -P:

    binkd -P1:2/3 binkd.cfg

    Usually they want binkd to exit after the session is finished. One can
    use the command line option -p:

    binkd -p -P1:2/3 binkd.cfg

    If binkd does not exit for a long time after the session has been
    finished then decrease the value of rescan-delay (and sometimes the value
    of timeout).

    If binkd works permanently (e.g. as a Windows service) and you want to
    get your mail regularly then you need some additional program or a script.
    As an example in DOS, Windows or OS/2 it is enough to execute the command:

    cd . >> %outbound%\NNNNMMMM.ilo

    where NNNN is the hex net number,
    MMMM is the hex node number,
    %outbound% is the path to the necessary zone outbound.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    09. "start_file_transfer: .: Permission denied" Error

    You get the message when binkd cannot open a file for sending indicated
    in some *.?lo file. Most likely the file has a line containing only "."
    because the poll has been made by a command of the type

    echo . >> xxxxyyyy.flo

    you should change it to "cd . >> xxxxyyyy.flo"


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    10. binkd/win and Dial-up: Dialing-up and Disconnecting Automatically

    The problem is to configure the fidonet box in such a way that binkd
    would initiate a telephone call to your Internet provider, get your mail
    and disconnect.

    The solutions:

    1st Solution

    Configure automatic connection and timeout in the dial-up connection properties (idle time before hanging up). It is convinient to use a non-standard software for dialing-up (Advanced Dialer and others). You
    should start binkd with a command line option -p periodically (and possibly -Paddress for binkd to make a poll to the address).

    binkd -p -P1:2/3.4 binkd.cfg


    2nd Solution

    Use the command line option -p and the batch file where first Remote
    Access Service (RAS) is started then binkd is started and after binkd exits
    RAS is stopped.

    Two variants, for Windows NT and for Windows 2000:
    === binkdpoll1.cmd
    rasdial Connection
    binkd -p binkd.cfg
    rasdial Connection /disconnect
    ===

    === binkdpoll2.cmd
    net start "remote access service"
    net start "remote access auto service"
    binkd -p binkd.cfg
    net stop "remote access auto service"
    net stop "remote access service"
    ===

    3rd Solution (The Best One For Win9x)

    Use the command line options -p and -Paddress and control connection
    with a non-standard dial-up software (for example dialerp). This solution
    is the most reliable one (especially if the modem connection to your
    Internet provider is bad) due to the fact that dialerp can start some
    indicated programs at setting the connection. Here is the batch file you should start in the 'Execute' parameter of the dialerp configuration file:

    ====
    binkd -p -P1:2/3.4 binkd.cfg
    dialerp BREAK *
    ====

    The question you may now ask: Where can I take dialerp? The answer is:
    Ask the author (Alexander Vedjakin, 2:5020/540) or look for it in fileecho archives and in ftp/http.


    In any case you should set a small value for 'rescan-delay' parameter in the binkd configuration file. binkd would exit faster.

    === binkd.cfg
    # Outbound rescans period (sec)
    rescan-delay 2
    ===


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    11. I Have Changed binkd Configuration File On-The-Fly. When Will It Be Reloaded?

    Starting with the version 0.9.1 binkd could feel that its configuration file changed. It exited with code 3 if it had been started with option -C. Modification time was checked after each ingoing session. Here is the batch file for starting binkd versions 0.9.1-0.9.3 and 0.9.4-0.9.6/w32:

    ====
    :aaa
    binkd -C binkd.cfg
    if errorlevel 4 goto end
    if errorlevel 3 goto aaa
    :end
    ====

    In the versions 0.9.4/unix and /os2-emx (and in these ones only) binkd restarts automatically if it is started with -C command line option.
    Besides that starting with version 0.9.4 the files included into the configuration file with the help of 'include' keyword are tested not only
    on incoming sessions but also in every 'rescan-delay' seconds.

    If you install binkd 0.9.4/w32 as a Windows NT service you should use it with -C command line option. Then binkd re-reads its configuration file.

    Before version 0.9.4 changes in the configuration file were not tested if binkd was started in client-only mode (-c command line option).

    In the unix versions configuration file is re-read on SIGHUP signal
    by the command
    kill -HUP `cat /var/run/binkd.pid`

    In the version 1.0 configuration file is re-read automatically if
    changed. binkd tests on changes at every 'rescan-delay' seconds.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    12. How Can binkd Work With T-mail/IP?

    There is no way to do it. The protocols differ in essence: binkd uses
    binkp protocol whereas T-mail/IP uses EMSI etc.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    13. Is There At Least One Log Analyzer Under Unix?

    There exist many Perl scripts and several win32 binaries. For example here:

    binkdstat 0.1 beta4 Christmas version 6.01.2002
    Statistics generator for binkd
    (c) Dmitry Sergienko, 2:464/910@fidonet, dmitry@trifle.net 14.08.2000
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/binkdstat-ds.0.1_beta4_Christmas

    There also exists BndStat program:
    BNDST101.ZIP 34812 14-Aug-01 (AREA:AFTNMISC)
    BndStat 1.01. With sources. binkd statistics generator. Compiled for all
    platforms. Included win32 binaries. (C) Dmitry Rusov, 2:5090/94

    Log analyzer by val khokhlov (perl):
    http://www.vk.kiev.ua/create/soft.html#bnkds
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/stat-binkd.pl.gz

    binkdstat (c) val khokhlov, Dmitry Kolvakh, updated at April 2006
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/binkdstat.zip

    T-Hist (c) Michael Markowsky, 2:5020/378 (KLUG's BBS)
    Binary log file analyzer for various mailers including binkd.
    Works in DOS, Windows NT (2000, XP, 2003) and OS/2.
    ftp://ftp.grumbler.org/pub/binkd/hist30a7.zip

    Kleine Statistiker/BINKD for DOS v0.60a, Russian version
    A small statistics generator for posting statistics to an echo conference.
    ftp://ftp.grumbler.org/pub/binkd/statddos.rar


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    14. binkd Connects Too Slowly (~20 Seconds) Though I Have a High-Speed LAN

    It is possible that 'backresolv' parameter is on (for logging the remote host domain name) and DNS is not configured.

    The simplest solution is to comment the 'backresolv' out in the configuration file. Configuring DNS is a more complex solution.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    15. Why Does binkd Not Understand Command Line Options When I Start It From inetd?

    You should use the program name as the first parameter in inetd.conf (it may be any string for binkd), the second and the following parameters
    are the command line options (-iqs etc.) and the last parameter is the configuration file full path:

    binkp stream tcp nowait root /usr/fido/binkd binkd -isq /usr/fido/binkd.cfg

    If you do not use -q option then you should switch console output off (comment 'printq', 'percents', 'conlog' out).


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    16. Can One Make a File Request From binkd?

    It's a piece of cake! binkd supports WAZOO FREQ with an external helper.

    To request files from a remote system it is necessary to create a file
    of type nnnnmmmm.REQ and to put it in the outbound directory next to *.?ut
    and *.?lo files. But *.REQ files do not initiate binkd to call a link so
    to make a FREQ it is necessary to make a poll. The contents of a .REQ file
    is described in the "!SRIF.TXT" file which is a copy of FSC-0086.001 from http://ftsc.org


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    17. How Can my binkd Respond to a File Request?

    One can configure binkd for calling an external file request processor supporting SRIF (FSC-0086) for receiving and handling FREQs in binkd. Please read the "!SRIF.TXT" file and the comment to 'exec' in the configuration
    file.

    Here are the examples of lines in configuration file for DOS-based OS
    and for *nix (you should use regular expressions in the latter case for
    binkd to match both upper-case and lower-case letters, e.g. both *.REQ and *.req):

    exec "\\ftn\\allfix\\allfix.exe RP -SRIF *S" *.req

    exec "/ftn/bin/tmafreq-srif *S" *.[rR][eE][qQ]

    A bash script "srifreq" is delivered with binkd starting with version 1.1a19.
    The following file request processors are also compatible with binkd
    (but they are not the only ones, any other one supporting SRIF will do):

    Allfix by Harms Software Engineering: it is a fileecho processor with built-in file request processor and it has versions for DOS and OS/2;

    ViReq by Michael Haase (2:2432/280): a specialized FREQ processor for Windows, it is distributed by Michael Massenberg (2:2411/505) via modem,
    ISDN and Fido-over-IP.

    tmafreq by Maxim Timofeyev <tmahome@mail.tma.spb.ru>: the FREQ processor
    is created for a unix-like OS and ported into Windows. One may obtain tmafreq from different BBS and FTP with fileecho archives, or may get tmafreq sources from anonymous CVS :pserver:anoncvs@tma.spb.ru:/cvsroot, module "tmafreq".

    VIREQ/x by Volker Imre <volker@imre.dyndns.org> (2:246/2098): the FREQ processor is created for a unix-like OS but can be compiled in the OS/2, Windows and maybe other operating systems. Now it is included into "ftnapps" project on Sourceforge and may be downloaded from http://ftnapps.sourceforge.net/vireq.html.
    Binaries built for Win32 and OS/2 may be downloaded from http://download.binkd.org and
    https://sites.google.com/view/vasilyevmax/


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    18. How Can I Add binkd To a Fidonet Box Working With a Modem?

    You must configure your modem mailer and tosser for BSO (binkley-style outbound) mode so that all of them including binkd would have the same
    inbound directories (and also the same outbound directories). For example,
    one may put the following line to T-Mail mailer configuration file:

    BinkStyle_Pack_For All

    If your mailer can work with AMA (arcmail-attach) only you may try to
    use fileboxes and/or find programs that can convert your mailer's queue to
    BSO or fileboxes. For example, Mail2dir utility allows using fileboxes with FrontDoor. Such a means disables a possibility of sending your mail to the
    same link both by IP and by modem (for instance, when one of the channels failed). There is another more radical but more flexible way: you may change your mailer.
    See also question 35.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    19. Flags Are Not Created On Receiving a File, Programs Do Not Start

    For sure you have a wrong template in the configuration file. You have to use it this way (the first two lines are for Windows and OS/2, the rest are
    for the Unix-like OS):

    flag m:\\ftn\\flg\\pntseg.flg m:\\\\ftn\\\\inbound\\\\sec\\\\pntstr*.*
    flag m:\\ftn\\flg\\toss.flg *.su? *.mo? *.tu? *.we? *.th? *.fr? *.sa? *.pkt

    exec "/usr/local/bin/ftrack -c /fido/conf/ftrack" *.[Pp][Kk][Tt]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ss][Uu][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Mm][Oo][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Uu][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ww][Ee][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Hh][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ff][Rr][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ss][Aa][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/fech-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Ii][Cc]

    You must use the full path with four slashes for the file to receive or
    the template should start with an asterisk character. You must use two
    slashes for the flag file.

    You must use the full path because using a filename without path means
    the event of receiving the file in the current directory and not in the
    inbound directory. If a template begins with "*" then it means "any
    directory" (and since all the files are received in one of the inbound directories it works for both password protected and for unprotected
    sessions).

    In a UNIX-like OS you should take into account that filenames are case sensitive. Please use regular expressions in templates.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    20. 'skipmask' Keyword Does Not Work

    A filename is compared without path and the comparison is case
    sensitive when 'skipmask' is used.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    21. binkd Under Windows 3.x

    Sergey Zharsky (zharik@usa.net) ported binkd 0.9.2 and binkd 0.9.5 for Windows 3.x. They work using IP stacks Trumpet Winsock ver. 3.0 revision D
    and Novell TCP/IP Client for Win 3.11 (see the answer to the question
    'binkd Under DOS', the section "The DOS version has the feature...").


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    22. Different FTN Domains in binkd And a Tosser Without 5D Support

    Suppose there are two domains (with different zone numbers though it
    does not matter). Mail can be successfully sent to the first domain but
    not to the second one. This situation may arise if the tosser, the tracker
    and the other your FTN programs do not support 5D BSO.

    This is a typical binkd configuration for two FTN domains and 5D
    outbound:

    domain fidonet c:\\ftn\\outbound\\fidonet 2
    domain omeganet c:\\ftn\\outbound\\omeganet 11
    address 2:5070/222@fidonet 11:58/6@omeganet

    One must configure not the zone of your own address for 'domain'
    keyword as one might think but the zone that should not be appended to the outbound name (i.e. the outbound subdirectory extensions are not processed
    for the zone denoted in the 'domain' line).

    If your tosser would create bundles for omeganet in the omeganet
    directory then you should write as indicated above. But since it does not
    --- hpt/lnx 1.9 2024-02-05
    * Origin: Moscow, Russia (2:5020/1042)
  • From binkd Team@2:5020/1042 to All on Sat Apr 20 22:15:04 2024
    31 Mar 16:48:43 [40423] trying 195.209.235.3, port 24554...
    31 Mar 16:48:43 [40423] connected to proxy.osu.ru:24554
    31 Mar 16:48:44 [40423] Connection rejected by proxy (HTTP/1.0 403 Forbidden)
    ? 31 Mar 16:48:44 [40423] unable to connect: {13} Permission denied

    In such a case you may try to use http tunnelling for instance with the help of httport, HTTPTunnel (http://http-tunnel.sourceforge.net/), stunnel (https://www.stunnel.org/) or you may find a node receiving binkp
    connections at port 443.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    07. How Can binkd Work via SOCKS-proxy?

    It is not a rare case when users go out to the internet from their corporate LAN exclusively via the proxy server based at the only computer connected to the internet. Thus binkd cannot make a direct connection to
    the remote node and one must use the proxy server. Proxy servers support
    was included in version 0.9.4 and the later ones.

    binkd works with a SOCKS proxy version 4 and 5. The first one does not demand an authorization (no login and password), the second one demands it
    as a rule.

    Suppose the connected to the Internet computer has the IP address 192.168.0.1 in its LAN and the SOCKS server at the computer responds on
    port 1080. Here is the line in binkd configuration file necessary for
    working via the SOCKS proxy.

    1. A SOCKS server without user authorization (no login and password are demanded):

    socks 192.168.0.1:1080

    2. A proxy server with user authorization (it is necessary to type login and password, e.g. login "user", password "password"):

    socks 192.168.0.1:1080/user/password


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    08. IP-Point: How Can I Make binkd to Get My Mail From My Bossnode (Uplink)?

    Make a poll using the command line option -P:

    binkd -P1:2/3 binkd.cfg

    Usually they want binkd to exit after the session is finished. One can
    use the command line option -p:

    binkd -p -P1:2/3 binkd.cfg

    If binkd does not exit for a long time after the session has been
    finished then decrease the value of rescan-delay (and sometimes the value
    of timeout).

    If binkd works permanently (e.g. as a Windows service) and you want to
    get your mail regularly then you need some additional program or a script.
    As an example in DOS, Windows or OS/2 it is enough to execute the command:

    cd . >> %outbound%\NNNNMMMM.ilo

    where NNNN is the hex net number,
    MMMM is the hex node number,
    %outbound% is the path to the necessary zone outbound.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    09. "start_file_transfer: .: Permission denied" Error

    You get the message when binkd cannot open a file for sending indicated
    in some *.?lo file. Most likely the file has a line containing only "."
    because the poll has been made by a command of the type

    echo . >> xxxxyyyy.flo

    you should change it to "cd . >> xxxxyyyy.flo"


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    10. binkd/win and Dial-up: Dialing-up and Disconnecting Automatically

    The problem is to configure the fidonet box in such a way that binkd
    would initiate a telephone call to your Internet provider, get your mail
    and disconnect.

    The solutions:

    1st Solution

    Configure automatic connection and timeout in the dial-up connection properties (idle time before hanging up). It is convinient to use a non-standard software for dialing-up (Advanced Dialer and others). You
    should start binkd with a command line option -p periodically (and possibly -Paddress for binkd to make a poll to the address).

    binkd -p -P1:2/3.4 binkd.cfg


    2nd Solution

    Use the command line option -p and the batch file where first Remote
    Access Service (RAS) is started then binkd is started and after binkd exits
    RAS is stopped.

    Two variants, for Windows NT and for Windows 2000:
    === binkdpoll1.cmd
    rasdial Connection
    binkd -p binkd.cfg
    rasdial Connection /disconnect
    ===

    === binkdpoll2.cmd
    net start "remote access service"
    net start "remote access auto service"
    binkd -p binkd.cfg
    net stop "remote access auto service"
    net stop "remote access service"
    ===

    3rd Solution (The Best One For Win9x)

    Use the command line options -p and -Paddress and control connection
    with a non-standard dial-up software (for example dialerp). This solution
    is the most reliable one (especially if the modem connection to your
    Internet provider is bad) due to the fact that dialerp can start some
    indicated programs at setting the connection. Here is the batch file you should start in the 'Execute' parameter of the dialerp configuration file:

    ====
    binkd -p -P1:2/3.4 binkd.cfg
    dialerp BREAK *
    ====

    The question you may now ask: Where can I take dialerp? The answer is:
    Ask the author (Alexander Vedjakin, 2:5020/540) or look for it in fileecho archives and in ftp/http.


    In any case you should set a small value for 'rescan-delay' parameter in the binkd configuration file. binkd would exit faster.

    === binkd.cfg
    # Outbound rescans period (sec)
    rescan-delay 2
    ===


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    11. I Have Changed binkd Configuration File On-The-Fly. When Will It Be Reloaded?

    Starting with the version 0.9.1 binkd could feel that its configuration file changed. It exited with code 3 if it had been started with option -C. Modification time was checked after each ingoing session. Here is the batch file for starting binkd versions 0.9.1-0.9.3 and 0.9.4-0.9.6/w32:

    ====
    :aaa
    binkd -C binkd.cfg
    if errorlevel 4 goto end
    if errorlevel 3 goto aaa
    :end
    ====

    In the versions 0.9.4/unix and /os2-emx (and in these ones only) binkd restarts automatically if it is started with -C command line option.
    Besides that starting with version 0.9.4 the files included into the configuration file with the help of 'include' keyword are tested not only
    on incoming sessions but also in every 'rescan-delay' seconds.

    If you install binkd 0.9.4/w32 as a Windows NT service you should use it with -C command line option. Then binkd re-reads its configuration file.

    Before version 0.9.4 changes in the configuration file were not tested if binkd was started in client-only mode (-c command line option).

    In the unix versions configuration file is re-read on SIGHUP signal
    by the command
    kill -HUP `cat /var/run/binkd.pid`

    In the version 1.0 configuration file is re-read automatically if
    changed. binkd tests on changes at every 'rescan-delay' seconds.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    12. How Can binkd Work With T-mail/IP?

    There is no way to do it. The protocols differ in essence: binkd uses
    binkp protocol whereas T-mail/IP uses EMSI etc.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    13. Is There At Least One Log Analyzer Under Unix?

    There exist many Perl scripts and several win32 binaries. For example here:

    binkdstat 0.1 beta4 Christmas version 6.01.2002
    Statistics generator for binkd
    (c) Dmitry Sergienko, 2:464/910@fidonet, dmitry@trifle.net 14.08.2000
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/binkdstat-ds.0.1_beta4_Christmas

    There also exists BndStat program:
    BNDST101.ZIP 34812 14-Aug-01 (AREA:AFTNMISC)
    BndStat 1.01. With sources. binkd statistics generator. Compiled for all
    platforms. Included win32 binaries. (C) Dmitry Rusov, 2:5090/94

    Log analyzer by val khokhlov (perl):
    http://www.vk.kiev.ua/create/soft.html#bnkds
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/stat-binkd.pl.gz

    binkdstat (c) val khokhlov, Dmitry Kolvakh, updated at April 2006
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/binkdstat.zip

    T-Hist (c) Michael Markowsky, 2:5020/378 (KLUG's BBS)
    Binary log file analyzer for various mailers including binkd.
    Works in DOS, Windows NT (2000, XP, 2003) and OS/2.
    ftp://ftp.grumbler.org/pub/binkd/hist30a7.zip

    Kleine Statistiker/BINKD for DOS v0.60a, Russian version
    A small statistics generator for posting statistics to an echo conference.
    ftp://ftp.grumbler.org/pub/binkd/statddos.rar


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    14. binkd Connects Too Slowly (~20 Seconds) Though I Have a High-Speed LAN

    It is possible that 'backresolv' parameter is on (for logging the remote host domain name) and DNS is not configured.

    The simplest solution is to comment the 'backresolv' out in the configuration file. Configuring DNS is a more complex solution.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    15. Why Does binkd Not Understand Command Line Options When I Start It From inetd?

    You should use the program name as the first parameter in inetd.conf (it may be any string for binkd), the second and the following parameters
    are the command line options (-iqs etc.) and the last parameter is the configuration file full path:

    binkp stream tcp nowait root /usr/fido/binkd binkd -isq /usr/fido/binkd.cfg

    If you do not use -q option then you should switch console output off (comment 'printq', 'percents', 'conlog' out).


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    16. Can One Make a File Request From binkd?

    It's a piece of cake! binkd supports WAZOO FREQ with an external helper.

    To request files from a remote system it is necessary to create a file
    of type nnnnmmmm.REQ and to put it in the outbound directory next to *.?ut
    and *.?lo files. But *.REQ files do not initiate binkd to call a link so
    to make a FREQ it is necessary to make a poll. The contents of a .REQ file
    is described in the "!SRIF.TXT" file which is a copy of FSC-0086.001 from http://ftsc.org


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    17. How Can my binkd Respond to a File Request?

    One can configure binkd for calling an external file request processor supporting SRIF (FSC-0086) for receiving and handling FREQs in binkd. Please read the "!SRIF.TXT" file and the comment to 'exec' in the configuration
    file.

    Here are the examples of lines in configuration file for DOS-based OS
    and for *nix (you should use regular expressions in the latter case for
    binkd to match both upper-case and lower-case letters, e.g. both *.REQ and *.req):

    exec "\\ftn\\allfix\\allfix.exe RP -SRIF *S" *.req

    exec "/ftn/bin/tmafreq-srif *S" *.[rR][eE][qQ]

    A bash script "srifreq" is delivered with binkd starting with version 1.1a19.
    The following file request processors are also compatible with binkd
    (but they are not the only ones, any other one supporting SRIF will do):

    Allfix by Harms Software Engineering: it is a fileecho processor with built-in file request processor and it has versions for DOS and OS/2;

    ViReq by Michael Haase (2:2432/280): a specialized FREQ processor for Windows, it is distributed by Michael Massenberg (2:2411/505) via modem,
    ISDN and Fido-over-IP.

    tmafreq by Maxim Timofeyev <tmahome@mail.tma.spb.ru>: the FREQ processor
    is created for a unix-like OS and ported into Windows. One may obtain tmafreq from different BBS and FTP with fileecho archives, or may get tmafreq sources from anonymous CVS :pserver:anoncvs@tma.spb.ru:/cvsroot, module "tmafreq".

    VIREQ/x by Volker Imre <volker@imre.dyndns.org> (2:246/2098): the FREQ processor is created for a unix-like OS but can be compiled in the OS/2, Windows and maybe other operating systems. Now it is included into "ftnapps" project on Sourceforge and may be downloaded from http://ftnapps.sourceforge.net/vireq.html.
    Binaries built for Win32 and OS/2 may be downloaded from http://download.binkd.org and
    https://sites.google.com/view/vasilyevmax/


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    18. How Can I Add binkd To a Fidonet Box Working With a Modem?

    You must configure your modem mailer and tosser for BSO (binkley-style outbound) mode so that all of them including binkd would have the same
    inbound directories (and also the same outbound directories). For example,
    one may put the following line to T-Mail mailer configuration file:

    BinkStyle_Pack_For All

    If your mailer can work with AMA (arcmail-attach) only you may try to
    use fileboxes and/or find programs that can convert your mailer's queue to
    BSO or fileboxes. For example, Mail2dir utility allows using fileboxes with FrontDoor. Such a means disables a possibility of sending your mail to the
    same link both by IP and by modem (for instance, when one of the channels failed). There is another more radical but more flexible way: you may change your mailer.
    See also question 35.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    19. Flags Are Not Created On Receiving a File, Programs Do Not Start

    For sure you have a wrong template in the configuration file. You have to use it this way (the first two lines are for Windows and OS/2, the rest are
    for the Unix-like OS):

    flag m:\\ftn\\flg\\pntseg.flg m:\\\\ftn\\\\inbound\\\\sec\\\\pntstr*.*
    flag m:\\ftn\\flg\\toss.flg *.su? *.mo? *.tu? *.we? *.th? *.fr? *.sa? *.pkt

    exec "/usr/local/bin/ftrack -c /fido/conf/ftrack" *.[Pp][Kk][Tt]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ss][Uu][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Mm][Oo][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Uu][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ww][Ee][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Hh][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ff][Rr][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ss][Aa][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/fech-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Ii][Cc]

    You must use the full path with four slashes for the file to receive or
    the template should start with an asterisk character. You must use two
    slashes for the flag file.

    You must use the full path because using a filename without path means
    the event of receiving the file in the current directory and not in the
    inbound directory. If a template begins with "*" then it means "any
    directory" (and since all the files are received in one of the inbound directories it works for both password protected and for unprotected
    sessions).

    In a UNIX-like OS you should take into account that filenames are case sensitive. Please use regular expressions in templates.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    20. 'skipmask' Keyword Does Not Work

    A filename is compared without path and the comparison is case
    sensitive when 'skipmask' is used.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    21. binkd Under Windows 3.x

    Sergey Zharsky (zharik@usa.net) ported binkd 0.9.2 and binkd 0.9.5 for Windows 3.x. They work using IP stacks Trumpet Winsock ver. 3.0 revision D
    and Novell TCP/IP Client for Win 3.11 (see the answer to the question
    'binkd Under DOS', the section "The DOS version has the feature...").


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    22. Different FTN Domains in binkd And a Tosser Without 5D Support

    Suppose there are two domains (with different zone numbers though it
    does not matter). Mail can be successfully sent to the first domain but
    not to the second one. This situation may arise if the tosser, the tracker
    and the other your FTN programs do not support 5D BSO.

    This is a typical binkd configuration for two FTN domains and 5D
    outbound:

    domain fidonet c:\\ftn\\outbound\\fidonet 2
    domain omeganet c:\\ftn\\outbound\\omeganet 11
    address 2:5070/222@fidonet 11:58/6@omeganet

    One must configure not the zone of your own address for 'domain'
    keyword as one might think but the zone that should not be appended to the outbound name (i.e. the outbound subdirectory extensions are not processed
    for the zone denoted in the 'domain' line).

    If your tosser would create bundles for omeganet in the omeganet
    directory then you should write as indicated above. But since it does not
    --- hpt/lnx 1.9 2024-02-05
    * Origin: Moscow, Russia (2:5020/1042)
  • From binkd Team@2:5020/1042 to All on Sat Apr 27 22:15:02 2024
    31 Mar 16:48:43 [40423] trying 195.209.235.3, port 24554...
    31 Mar 16:48:43 [40423] connected to proxy.osu.ru:24554
    31 Mar 16:48:44 [40423] Connection rejected by proxy (HTTP/1.0 403 Forbidden)
    ? 31 Mar 16:48:44 [40423] unable to connect: {13} Permission denied

    In such a case you may try to use http tunnelling for instance with the help of httport, HTTPTunnel (http://http-tunnel.sourceforge.net/), stunnel (https://www.stunnel.org/) or you may find a node receiving binkp
    connections at port 443.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    07. How Can binkd Work via SOCKS-proxy?

    It is not a rare case when users go out to the internet from their corporate LAN exclusively via the proxy server based at the only computer connected to the internet. Thus binkd cannot make a direct connection to
    the remote node and one must use the proxy server. Proxy servers support
    was included in version 0.9.4 and the later ones.

    binkd works with a SOCKS proxy version 4 and 5. The first one does not demand an authorization (no login and password), the second one demands it
    as a rule.

    Suppose the connected to the Internet computer has the IP address 192.168.0.1 in its LAN and the SOCKS server at the computer responds on
    port 1080. Here is the line in binkd configuration file necessary for
    working via the SOCKS proxy.

    1. A SOCKS server without user authorization (no login and password are demanded):

    socks 192.168.0.1:1080

    2. A proxy server with user authorization (it is necessary to type login and password, e.g. login "user", password "password"):

    socks 192.168.0.1:1080/user/password


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    08. IP-Point: How Can I Make binkd to Get My Mail From My Bossnode (Uplink)?

    Make a poll using the command line option -P:

    binkd -P1:2/3 binkd.cfg

    Usually they want binkd to exit after the session is finished. One can
    use the command line option -p:

    binkd -p -P1:2/3 binkd.cfg

    If binkd does not exit for a long time after the session has been
    finished then decrease the value of rescan-delay (and sometimes the value
    of timeout).

    If binkd works permanently (e.g. as a Windows service) and you want to
    get your mail regularly then you need some additional program or a script.
    As an example in DOS, Windows or OS/2 it is enough to execute the command:

    cd . >> %outbound%\NNNNMMMM.ilo

    where NNNN is the hex net number,
    MMMM is the hex node number,
    %outbound% is the path to the necessary zone outbound.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    09. "start_file_transfer: .: Permission denied" Error

    You get the message when binkd cannot open a file for sending indicated
    in some *.?lo file. Most likely the file has a line containing only "."
    because the poll has been made by a command of the type

    echo . >> xxxxyyyy.flo

    you should change it to "cd . >> xxxxyyyy.flo"


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    10. binkd/win and Dial-up: Dialing-up and Disconnecting Automatically

    The problem is to configure the fidonet box in such a way that binkd
    would initiate a telephone call to your Internet provider, get your mail
    and disconnect.

    The solutions:

    1st Solution

    Configure automatic connection and timeout in the dial-up connection properties (idle time before hanging up). It is convinient to use a non-standard software for dialing-up (Advanced Dialer and others). You
    should start binkd with a command line option -p periodically (and possibly -Paddress for binkd to make a poll to the address).

    binkd -p -P1:2/3.4 binkd.cfg


    2nd Solution

    Use the command line option -p and the batch file where first Remote
    Access Service (RAS) is started then binkd is started and after binkd exits
    RAS is stopped.

    Two variants, for Windows NT and for Windows 2000:
    === binkdpoll1.cmd
    rasdial Connection
    binkd -p binkd.cfg
    rasdial Connection /disconnect
    ===

    === binkdpoll2.cmd
    net start "remote access service"
    net start "remote access auto service"
    binkd -p binkd.cfg
    net stop "remote access auto service"
    net stop "remote access service"
    ===

    3rd Solution (The Best One For Win9x)

    Use the command line options -p and -Paddress and control connection
    with a non-standard dial-up software (for example dialerp). This solution
    is the most reliable one (especially if the modem connection to your
    Internet provider is bad) due to the fact that dialerp can start some
    indicated programs at setting the connection. Here is the batch file you should start in the 'Execute' parameter of the dialerp configuration file:

    ====
    binkd -p -P1:2/3.4 binkd.cfg
    dialerp BREAK *
    ====

    The question you may now ask: Where can I take dialerp? The answer is:
    Ask the author (Alexander Vedjakin, 2:5020/540) or look for it in fileecho archives and in ftp/http.


    In any case you should set a small value for 'rescan-delay' parameter in the binkd configuration file. binkd would exit faster.

    === binkd.cfg
    # Outbound rescans period (sec)
    rescan-delay 2
    ===


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    11. I Have Changed binkd Configuration File On-The-Fly. When Will It Be Reloaded?

    Starting with the version 0.9.1 binkd could feel that its configuration file changed. It exited with code 3 if it had been started with option -C. Modification time was checked after each ingoing session. Here is the batch file for starting binkd versions 0.9.1-0.9.3 and 0.9.4-0.9.6/w32:

    ====
    :aaa
    binkd -C binkd.cfg
    if errorlevel 4 goto end
    if errorlevel 3 goto aaa
    :end
    ====

    In the versions 0.9.4/unix and /os2-emx (and in these ones only) binkd restarts automatically if it is started with -C command line option.
    Besides that starting with version 0.9.4 the files included into the configuration file with the help of 'include' keyword are tested not only
    on incoming sessions but also in every 'rescan-delay' seconds.

    If you install binkd 0.9.4/w32 as a Windows NT service you should use it with -C command line option. Then binkd re-reads its configuration file.

    Before version 0.9.4 changes in the configuration file were not tested if binkd was started in client-only mode (-c command line option).

    In the unix versions configuration file is re-read on SIGHUP signal
    by the command
    kill -HUP `cat /var/run/binkd.pid`

    In the version 1.0 configuration file is re-read automatically if
    changed. binkd tests on changes at every 'rescan-delay' seconds.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    12. How Can binkd Work With T-mail/IP?

    There is no way to do it. The protocols differ in essence: binkd uses
    binkp protocol whereas T-mail/IP uses EMSI etc.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    13. Is There At Least One Log Analyzer Under Unix?

    There exist many Perl scripts and several win32 binaries. For example here:

    binkdstat 0.1 beta4 Christmas version 6.01.2002
    Statistics generator for binkd
    (c) Dmitry Sergienko, 2:464/910@fidonet, dmitry@trifle.net 14.08.2000
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/binkdstat-ds.0.1_beta4_Christmas

    There also exists BndStat program:
    BNDST101.ZIP 34812 14-Aug-01 (AREA:AFTNMISC)
    BndStat 1.01. With sources. binkd statistics generator. Compiled for all
    platforms. Included win32 binaries. (C) Dmitry Rusov, 2:5090/94

    Log analyzer by val khokhlov (perl):
    http://www.vk.kiev.ua/create/soft.html#bnkds
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/stat-binkd.pl.gz

    binkdstat (c) val khokhlov, Dmitry Kolvakh, updated at April 2006
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/binkdstat.zip

    T-Hist (c) Michael Markowsky, 2:5020/378 (KLUG's BBS)
    Binary log file analyzer for various mailers including binkd.
    Works in DOS, Windows NT (2000, XP, 2003) and OS/2.
    ftp://ftp.grumbler.org/pub/binkd/hist30a7.zip

    Kleine Statistiker/BINKD for DOS v0.60a, Russian version
    A small statistics generator for posting statistics to an echo conference.
    ftp://ftp.grumbler.org/pub/binkd/statddos.rar


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    14. binkd Connects Too Slowly (~20 Seconds) Though I Have a High-Speed LAN

    It is possible that 'backresolv' parameter is on (for logging the remote host domain name) and DNS is not configured.

    The simplest solution is to comment the 'backresolv' out in the configuration file. Configuring DNS is a more complex solution.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    15. Why Does binkd Not Understand Command Line Options When I Start It From inetd?

    You should use the program name as the first parameter in inetd.conf (it may be any string for binkd), the second and the following parameters
    are the command line options (-iqs etc.) and the last parameter is the configuration file full path:

    binkp stream tcp nowait root /usr/fido/binkd binkd -isq /usr/fido/binkd.cfg

    If you do not use -q option then you should switch console output off (comment 'printq', 'percents', 'conlog' out).


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    16. Can One Make a File Request From binkd?

    It's a piece of cake! binkd supports WAZOO FREQ with an external helper.

    To request files from a remote system it is necessary to create a file
    of type nnnnmmmm.REQ and to put it in the outbound directory next to *.?ut
    and *.?lo files. But *.REQ files do not initiate binkd to call a link so
    to make a FREQ it is necessary to make a poll. The contents of a .REQ file
    is described in the "!SRIF.TXT" file which is a copy of FSC-0086.001 from http://ftsc.org


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    17. How Can my binkd Respond to a File Request?

    One can configure binkd for calling an external file request processor supporting SRIF (FSC-0086) for receiving and handling FREQs in binkd. Please read the "!SRIF.TXT" file and the comment to 'exec' in the configuration
    file.

    Here are the examples of lines in configuration file for DOS-based OS
    and for *nix (you should use regular expressions in the latter case for
    binkd to match both upper-case and lower-case letters, e.g. both *.REQ and *.req):

    exec "\\ftn\\allfix\\allfix.exe RP -SRIF *S" *.req

    exec "/ftn/bin/tmafreq-srif *S" *.[rR][eE][qQ]

    A bash script "srifreq" is delivered with binkd starting with version 1.1a19.
    The following file request processors are also compatible with binkd
    (but they are not the only ones, any other one supporting SRIF will do):

    Allfix by Harms Software Engineering: it is a fileecho processor with built-in file request processor and it has versions for DOS and OS/2;

    ViReq by Michael Haase (2:2432/280): a specialized FREQ processor for Windows, it is distributed by Michael Massenberg (2:2411/505) via modem,
    ISDN and Fido-over-IP.

    tmafreq by Maxim Timofeyev <tmahome@mail.tma.spb.ru>: the FREQ processor
    is created for a unix-like OS and ported into Windows. One may obtain tmafreq from different BBS and FTP with fileecho archives, or may get tmafreq sources from anonymous CVS :pserver:anoncvs@tma.spb.ru:/cvsroot, module "tmafreq".

    VIREQ/x by Volker Imre <volker@imre.dyndns.org> (2:246/2098): the FREQ processor is created for a unix-like OS but can be compiled in the OS/2, Windows and maybe other operating systems. Now it is included into "ftnapps" project on Sourceforge and may be downloaded from http://ftnapps.sourceforge.net/vireq.html.
    Binaries built for Win32 and OS/2 may be downloaded from http://download.binkd.org and
    https://sites.google.com/view/vasilyevmax/


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    18. How Can I Add binkd To a Fidonet Box Working With a Modem?

    You must configure your modem mailer and tosser for BSO (binkley-style outbound) mode so that all of them including binkd would have the same
    inbound directories (and also the same outbound directories). For example,
    one may put the following line to T-Mail mailer configuration file:

    BinkStyle_Pack_For All

    If your mailer can work with AMA (arcmail-attach) only you may try to
    use fileboxes and/or find programs that can convert your mailer's queue to
    BSO or fileboxes. For example, Mail2dir utility allows using fileboxes with FrontDoor. Such a means disables a possibility of sending your mail to the
    same link both by IP and by modem (for instance, when one of the channels failed). There is another more radical but more flexible way: you may change your mailer.
    See also question 35.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    19. Flags Are Not Created On Receiving a File, Programs Do Not Start

    For sure you have a wrong template in the configuration file. You have to use it this way (the first two lines are for Windows and OS/2, the rest are
    for the Unix-like OS):

    flag m:\\ftn\\flg\\pntseg.flg m:\\\\ftn\\\\inbound\\\\sec\\\\pntstr*.*
    flag m:\\ftn\\flg\\toss.flg *.su? *.mo? *.tu? *.we? *.th? *.fr? *.sa? *.pkt

    exec "/usr/local/bin/ftrack -c /fido/conf/ftrack" *.[Pp][Kk][Tt]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ss][Uu][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Mm][Oo][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Uu][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ww][Ee][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Hh][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ff][Rr][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ss][Aa][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/fech-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Ii][Cc]

    You must use the full path with four slashes for the file to receive or
    the template should start with an asterisk character. You must use two
    slashes for the flag file.

    You must use the full path because using a filename without path means
    the event of receiving the file in the current directory and not in the
    inbound directory. If a template begins with "*" then it means "any
    directory" (and since all the files are received in one of the inbound directories it works for both password protected and for unprotected
    sessions).

    In a UNIX-like OS you should take into account that filenames are case sensitive. Please use regular expressions in templates.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    20. 'skipmask' Keyword Does Not Work

    A filename is compared without path and the comparison is case
    sensitive when 'skipmask' is used.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    21. binkd Under Windows 3.x

    Sergey Zharsky (zharik@usa.net) ported binkd 0.9.2 and binkd 0.9.5 for Windows 3.x. They work using IP stacks Trumpet Winsock ver. 3.0 revision D
    and Novell TCP/IP Client for Win 3.11 (see the answer to the question
    'binkd Under DOS', the section "The DOS version has the feature...").


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    22. Different FTN Domains in binkd And a Tosser Without 5D Support

    Suppose there are two domains (with different zone numbers though it
    does not matter). Mail can be successfully sent to the first domain but
    not to the second one. This situation may arise if the tosser, the tracker
    and the other your FTN programs do not support 5D BSO.

    This is a typical binkd configuration for two FTN domains and 5D
    outbound:

    domain fidonet c:\\ftn\\outbound\\fidonet 2
    domain omeganet c:\\ftn\\outbound\\omeganet 11
    address 2:5070/222@fidonet 11:58/6@omeganet

    One must configure not the zone of your own address for 'domain'
    keyword as one might think but the zone that should not be appended to the outbound name (i.e. the outbound subdirectory extensions are not processed
    for the zone denoted in the 'domain' line).

    If your tosser would create bundles for omeganet in the omeganet
    directory then you should write as indicated above. But since it does not
    --- hpt/lnx 1.9 2024-02-05
    * Origin: Moscow, Russia (2:5020/1042)
  • From binkd Team@2:5020/1042 to All on Sat May 4 22:15:04 2024
    31 Mar 16:48:43 [40423] trying 195.209.235.3, port 24554...
    31 Mar 16:48:43 [40423] connected to proxy.osu.ru:24554
    31 Mar 16:48:44 [40423] Connection rejected by proxy (HTTP/1.0 403 Forbidden)
    ? 31 Mar 16:48:44 [40423] unable to connect: {13} Permission denied

    In such a case you may try to use http tunnelling for instance with the help of httport, HTTPTunnel (http://http-tunnel.sourceforge.net/), stunnel (https://www.stunnel.org/) or you may find a node receiving binkp
    connections at port 443.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    07. How Can binkd Work via SOCKS-proxy?

    It is not a rare case when users go out to the internet from their corporate LAN exclusively via the proxy server based at the only computer connected to the internet. Thus binkd cannot make a direct connection to
    the remote node and one must use the proxy server. Proxy servers support
    was included in version 0.9.4 and the later ones.

    binkd works with a SOCKS proxy version 4 and 5. The first one does not demand an authorization (no login and password), the second one demands it
    as a rule.

    Suppose the connected to the Internet computer has the IP address 192.168.0.1 in its LAN and the SOCKS server at the computer responds on
    port 1080. Here is the line in binkd configuration file necessary for
    working via the SOCKS proxy.

    1. A SOCKS server without user authorization (no login and password are demanded):

    socks 192.168.0.1:1080

    2. A proxy server with user authorization (it is necessary to type login and password, e.g. login "user", password "password"):

    socks 192.168.0.1:1080/user/password


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    08. IP-Point: How Can I Make binkd to Get My Mail From My Bossnode (Uplink)?

    Make a poll using the command line option -P:

    binkd -P1:2/3 binkd.cfg

    Usually they want binkd to exit after the session is finished. One can
    use the command line option -p:

    binkd -p -P1:2/3 binkd.cfg

    If binkd does not exit for a long time after the session has been
    finished then decrease the value of rescan-delay (and sometimes the value
    of timeout).

    If binkd works permanently (e.g. as a Windows service) and you want to
    get your mail regularly then you need some additional program or a script.
    As an example in DOS, Windows or OS/2 it is enough to execute the command:

    cd . >> %outbound%\NNNNMMMM.ilo

    where NNNN is the hex net number,
    MMMM is the hex node number,
    %outbound% is the path to the necessary zone outbound.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    09. "start_file_transfer: .: Permission denied" Error

    You get the message when binkd cannot open a file for sending indicated
    in some *.?lo file. Most likely the file has a line containing only "."
    because the poll has been made by a command of the type

    echo . >> xxxxyyyy.flo

    you should change it to "cd . >> xxxxyyyy.flo"


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    10. binkd/win and Dial-up: Dialing-up and Disconnecting Automatically

    The problem is to configure the fidonet box in such a way that binkd
    would initiate a telephone call to your Internet provider, get your mail
    and disconnect.

    The solutions:

    1st Solution

    Configure automatic connection and timeout in the dial-up connection properties (idle time before hanging up). It is convinient to use a non-standard software for dialing-up (Advanced Dialer and others). You
    should start binkd with a command line option -p periodically (and possibly -Paddress for binkd to make a poll to the address).

    binkd -p -P1:2/3.4 binkd.cfg


    2nd Solution

    Use the command line option -p and the batch file where first Remote
    Access Service (RAS) is started then binkd is started and after binkd exits
    RAS is stopped.

    Two variants, for Windows NT and for Windows 2000:
    === binkdpoll1.cmd
    rasdial Connection
    binkd -p binkd.cfg
    rasdial Connection /disconnect
    ===

    === binkdpoll2.cmd
    net start "remote access service"
    net start "remote access auto service"
    binkd -p binkd.cfg
    net stop "remote access auto service"
    net stop "remote access service"
    ===

    3rd Solution (The Best One For Win9x)

    Use the command line options -p and -Paddress and control connection
    with a non-standard dial-up software (for example dialerp). This solution
    is the most reliable one (especially if the modem connection to your
    Internet provider is bad) due to the fact that dialerp can start some
    indicated programs at setting the connection. Here is the batch file you should start in the 'Execute' parameter of the dialerp configuration file:

    ====
    binkd -p -P1:2/3.4 binkd.cfg
    dialerp BREAK *
    ====

    The question you may now ask: Where can I take dialerp? The answer is:
    Ask the author (Alexander Vedjakin, 2:5020/540) or look for it in fileecho archives and in ftp/http.


    In any case you should set a small value for 'rescan-delay' parameter in the binkd configuration file. binkd would exit faster.

    === binkd.cfg
    # Outbound rescans period (sec)
    rescan-delay 2
    ===


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    11. I Have Changed binkd Configuration File On-The-Fly. When Will It Be Reloaded?

    Starting with the version 0.9.1 binkd could feel that its configuration file changed. It exited with code 3 if it had been started with option -C. Modification time was checked after each ingoing session. Here is the batch file for starting binkd versions 0.9.1-0.9.3 and 0.9.4-0.9.6/w32:

    ====
    :aaa
    binkd -C binkd.cfg
    if errorlevel 4 goto end
    if errorlevel 3 goto aaa
    :end
    ====

    In the versions 0.9.4/unix and /os2-emx (and in these ones only) binkd restarts automatically if it is started with -C command line option.
    Besides that starting with version 0.9.4 the files included into the configuration file with the help of 'include' keyword are tested not only
    on incoming sessions but also in every 'rescan-delay' seconds.

    If you install binkd 0.9.4/w32 as a Windows NT service you should use it with -C command line option. Then binkd re-reads its configuration file.

    Before version 0.9.4 changes in the configuration file were not tested if binkd was started in client-only mode (-c command line option).

    In the unix versions configuration file is re-read on SIGHUP signal
    by the command
    kill -HUP `cat /var/run/binkd.pid`

    In the version 1.0 configuration file is re-read automatically if
    changed. binkd tests on changes at every 'rescan-delay' seconds.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    12. How Can binkd Work With T-mail/IP?

    There is no way to do it. The protocols differ in essence: binkd uses
    binkp protocol whereas T-mail/IP uses EMSI etc.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    13. Is There At Least One Log Analyzer Under Unix?

    There exist many Perl scripts and several win32 binaries. For example here:

    binkdstat 0.1 beta4 Christmas version 6.01.2002
    Statistics generator for binkd
    (c) Dmitry Sergienko, 2:464/910@fidonet, dmitry@trifle.net 14.08.2000
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/binkdstat-ds.0.1_beta4_Christmas

    There also exists BndStat program:
    BNDST101.ZIP 34812 14-Aug-01 (AREA:AFTNMISC)
    BndStat 1.01. With sources. binkd statistics generator. Compiled for all
    platforms. Included win32 binaries. (C) Dmitry Rusov, 2:5090/94

    Log analyzer by val khokhlov (perl):
    http://www.vk.kiev.ua/create/soft.html#bnkds
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/stat-binkd.pl.gz

    binkdstat (c) val khokhlov, Dmitry Kolvakh, updated at April 2006
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/binkdstat.zip

    T-Hist (c) Michael Markowsky, 2:5020/378 (KLUG's BBS)
    Binary log file analyzer for various mailers including binkd.
    Works in DOS, Windows NT (2000, XP, 2003) and OS/2.
    ftp://ftp.grumbler.org/pub/binkd/hist30a7.zip

    Kleine Statistiker/BINKD for DOS v0.60a, Russian version
    A small statistics generator for posting statistics to an echo conference.
    ftp://ftp.grumbler.org/pub/binkd/statddos.rar


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    14. binkd Connects Too Slowly (~20 Seconds) Though I Have a High-Speed LAN

    It is possible that 'backresolv' parameter is on (for logging the remote host domain name) and DNS is not configured.

    The simplest solution is to comment the 'backresolv' out in the configuration file. Configuring DNS is a more complex solution.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    15. Why Does binkd Not Understand Command Line Options When I Start It From inetd?

    You should use the program name as the first parameter in inetd.conf (it may be any string for binkd), the second and the following parameters
    are the command line options (-iqs etc.) and the last parameter is the configuration file full path:

    binkp stream tcp nowait root /usr/fido/binkd binkd -isq /usr/fido/binkd.cfg

    If you do not use -q option then you should switch console output off (comment 'printq', 'percents', 'conlog' out).


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    16. Can One Make a File Request From binkd?

    It's a piece of cake! binkd supports WAZOO FREQ with an external helper.

    To request files from a remote system it is necessary to create a file
    of type nnnnmmmm.REQ and to put it in the outbound directory next to *.?ut
    and *.?lo files. But *.REQ files do not initiate binkd to call a link so
    to make a FREQ it is necessary to make a poll. The contents of a .REQ file
    is described in the "!SRIF.TXT" file which is a copy of FSC-0086.001 from http://ftsc.org


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    17. How Can my binkd Respond to a File Request?

    One can configure binkd for calling an external file request processor supporting SRIF (FSC-0086) for receiving and handling FREQs in binkd. Please read the "!SRIF.TXT" file and the comment to 'exec' in the configuration
    file.

    Here are the examples of lines in configuration file for DOS-based OS
    and for *nix (you should use regular expressions in the latter case for
    binkd to match both upper-case and lower-case letters, e.g. both *.REQ and *.req):

    exec "\\ftn\\allfix\\allfix.exe RP -SRIF *S" *.req

    exec "/ftn/bin/tmafreq-srif *S" *.[rR][eE][qQ]

    A bash script "srifreq" is delivered with binkd starting with version 1.1a19.
    The following file request processors are also compatible with binkd
    (but they are not the only ones, any other one supporting SRIF will do):

    Allfix by Harms Software Engineering: it is a fileecho processor with built-in file request processor and it has versions for DOS and OS/2;

    ViReq by Michael Haase (2:2432/280): a specialized FREQ processor for Windows, it is distributed by Michael Massenberg (2:2411/505) via modem,
    ISDN and Fido-over-IP.

    tmafreq by Maxim Timofeyev <tmahome@mail.tma.spb.ru>: the FREQ processor
    is created for a unix-like OS and ported into Windows. One may obtain tmafreq from different BBS and FTP with fileecho archives, or may get tmafreq sources from anonymous CVS :pserver:anoncvs@tma.spb.ru:/cvsroot, module "tmafreq".

    VIREQ/x by Volker Imre <volker@imre.dyndns.org> (2:246/2098): the FREQ processor is created for a unix-like OS but can be compiled in the OS/2, Windows and maybe other operating systems. Now it is included into "ftnapps" project on Sourceforge and may be downloaded from http://ftnapps.sourceforge.net/vireq.html.
    Binaries built for Win32 and OS/2 may be downloaded from http://download.binkd.org and
    https://sites.google.com/view/vasilyevmax/


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    18. How Can I Add binkd To a Fidonet Box Working With a Modem?

    You must configure your modem mailer and tosser for BSO (binkley-style outbound) mode so that all of them including binkd would have the same
    inbound directories (and also the same outbound directories). For example,
    one may put the following line to T-Mail mailer configuration file:

    BinkStyle_Pack_For All

    If your mailer can work with AMA (arcmail-attach) only you may try to
    use fileboxes and/or find programs that can convert your mailer's queue to
    BSO or fileboxes. For example, Mail2dir utility allows using fileboxes with FrontDoor. Such a means disables a possibility of sending your mail to the
    same link both by IP and by modem (for instance, when one of the channels failed). There is another more radical but more flexible way: you may change your mailer.
    See also question 35.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    19. Flags Are Not Created On Receiving a File, Programs Do Not Start

    For sure you have a wrong template in the configuration file. You have to use it this way (the first two lines are for Windows and OS/2, the rest are
    for the Unix-like OS):

    flag m:\\ftn\\flg\\pntseg.flg m:\\\\ftn\\\\inbound\\\\sec\\\\pntstr*.*
    flag m:\\ftn\\flg\\toss.flg *.su? *.mo? *.tu? *.we? *.th? *.fr? *.sa? *.pkt

    exec "/usr/local/bin/ftrack -c /fido/conf/ftrack" *.[Pp][Kk][Tt]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ss][Uu][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Mm][Oo][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Uu][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ww][Ee][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Hh][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ff][Rr][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ss][Aa][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/fech-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Ii][Cc]

    You must use the full path with four slashes for the file to receive or
    the template should start with an asterisk character. You must use two
    slashes for the flag file.

    You must use the full path because using a filename without path means
    the event of receiving the file in the current directory and not in the
    inbound directory. If a template begins with "*" then it means "any
    directory" (and since all the files are received in one of the inbound directories it works for both password protected and for unprotected
    sessions).

    In a UNIX-like OS you should take into account that filenames are case sensitive. Please use regular expressions in templates.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    20. 'skipmask' Keyword Does Not Work

    A filename is compared without path and the comparison is case
    sensitive when 'skipmask' is used.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    21. binkd Under Windows 3.x

    Sergey Zharsky (zharik@usa.net) ported binkd 0.9.2 and binkd 0.9.5 for Windows 3.x. They work using IP stacks Trumpet Winsock ver. 3.0 revision D
    and Novell TCP/IP Client for Win 3.11 (see the answer to the question
    'binkd Under DOS', the section "The DOS version has the feature...").


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    22. Different FTN Domains in binkd And a Tosser Without 5D Support

    Suppose there are two domains (with different zone numbers though it
    does not matter). Mail can be successfully sent to the first domain but
    not to the second one. This situation may arise if the tosser, the tracker
    and the other your FTN programs do not support 5D BSO.

    This is a typical binkd configuration for two FTN domains and 5D
    outbound:

    domain fidonet c:\\ftn\\outbound\\fidonet 2
    domain omeganet c:\\ftn\\outbound\\omeganet 11
    address 2:5070/222@fidonet 11:58/6@omeganet

    One must configure not the zone of your own address for 'domain'
    keyword as one might think but the zone that should not be appended to the outbound name (i.e. the outbound subdirectory extensions are not processed
    for the zone denoted in the 'domain' line).

    If your tosser would create bundles for omeganet in the omeganet
    directory then you should write as indicated above. But since it does not
    --- hpt/lnx 1.9 2024-02-05
    * Origin: Moscow, Russia (2:5020/1042)
  • From binkd Team@2:5020/1042 to All on Sat May 11 22:15:02 2024
    31 Mar 16:48:43 [40423] trying 195.209.235.3, port 24554...
    31 Mar 16:48:43 [40423] connected to proxy.osu.ru:24554
    31 Mar 16:48:44 [40423] Connection rejected by proxy (HTTP/1.0 403 Forbidden)
    ? 31 Mar 16:48:44 [40423] unable to connect: {13} Permission denied

    In such a case you may try to use http tunnelling for instance with the help of httport, HTTPTunnel (http://http-tunnel.sourceforge.net/), stunnel (https://www.stunnel.org/) or you may find a node receiving binkp
    connections at port 443.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    07. How Can binkd Work via SOCKS-proxy?

    It is not a rare case when users go out to the internet from their corporate LAN exclusively via the proxy server based at the only computer connected to the internet. Thus binkd cannot make a direct connection to
    the remote node and one must use the proxy server. Proxy servers support
    was included in version 0.9.4 and the later ones.

    binkd works with a SOCKS proxy version 4 and 5. The first one does not demand an authorization (no login and password), the second one demands it
    as a rule.

    Suppose the connected to the Internet computer has the IP address 192.168.0.1 in its LAN and the SOCKS server at the computer responds on
    port 1080. Here is the line in binkd configuration file necessary for
    working via the SOCKS proxy.

    1. A SOCKS server without user authorization (no login and password are demanded):

    socks 192.168.0.1:1080

    2. A proxy server with user authorization (it is necessary to type login and password, e.g. login "user", password "password"):

    socks 192.168.0.1:1080/user/password


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    08. IP-Point: How Can I Make binkd to Get My Mail From My Bossnode (Uplink)?

    Make a poll using the command line option -P:

    binkd -P1:2/3 binkd.cfg

    Usually they want binkd to exit after the session is finished. One can
    use the command line option -p:

    binkd -p -P1:2/3 binkd.cfg

    If binkd does not exit for a long time after the session has been
    finished then decrease the value of rescan-delay (and sometimes the value
    of timeout).

    If binkd works permanently (e.g. as a Windows service) and you want to
    get your mail regularly then you need some additional program or a script.
    As an example in DOS, Windows or OS/2 it is enough to execute the command:

    cd . >> %outbound%\NNNNMMMM.ilo

    where NNNN is the hex net number,
    MMMM is the hex node number,
    %outbound% is the path to the necessary zone outbound.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    09. "start_file_transfer: .: Permission denied" Error

    You get the message when binkd cannot open a file for sending indicated
    in some *.?lo file. Most likely the file has a line containing only "."
    because the poll has been made by a command of the type

    echo . >> xxxxyyyy.flo

    you should change it to "cd . >> xxxxyyyy.flo"


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    10. binkd/win and Dial-up: Dialing-up and Disconnecting Automatically

    The problem is to configure the fidonet box in such a way that binkd
    would initiate a telephone call to your Internet provider, get your mail
    and disconnect.

    The solutions:

    1st Solution

    Configure automatic connection and timeout in the dial-up connection properties (idle time before hanging up). It is convinient to use a non-standard software for dialing-up (Advanced Dialer and others). You
    should start binkd with a command line option -p periodically (and possibly -Paddress for binkd to make a poll to the address).

    binkd -p -P1:2/3.4 binkd.cfg


    2nd Solution

    Use the command line option -p and the batch file where first Remote
    Access Service (RAS) is started then binkd is started and after binkd exits
    RAS is stopped.

    Two variants, for Windows NT and for Windows 2000:
    === binkdpoll1.cmd
    rasdial Connection
    binkd -p binkd.cfg
    rasdial Connection /disconnect
    ===

    === binkdpoll2.cmd
    net start "remote access service"
    net start "remote access auto service"
    binkd -p binkd.cfg
    net stop "remote access auto service"
    net stop "remote access service"
    ===

    3rd Solution (The Best One For Win9x)

    Use the command line options -p and -Paddress and control connection
    with a non-standard dial-up software (for example dialerp). This solution
    is the most reliable one (especially if the modem connection to your
    Internet provider is bad) due to the fact that dialerp can start some
    indicated programs at setting the connection. Here is the batch file you should start in the 'Execute' parameter of the dialerp configuration file:

    ====
    binkd -p -P1:2/3.4 binkd.cfg
    dialerp BREAK *
    ====

    The question you may now ask: Where can I take dialerp? The answer is:
    Ask the author (Alexander Vedjakin, 2:5020/540) or look for it in fileecho archives and in ftp/http.


    In any case you should set a small value for 'rescan-delay' parameter in the binkd configuration file. binkd would exit faster.

    === binkd.cfg
    # Outbound rescans period (sec)
    rescan-delay 2
    ===


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    11. I Have Changed binkd Configuration File On-The-Fly. When Will It Be Reloaded?

    Starting with the version 0.9.1 binkd could feel that its configuration file changed. It exited with code 3 if it had been started with option -C. Modification time was checked after each ingoing session. Here is the batch file for starting binkd versions 0.9.1-0.9.3 and 0.9.4-0.9.6/w32:

    ====
    :aaa
    binkd -C binkd.cfg
    if errorlevel 4 goto end
    if errorlevel 3 goto aaa
    :end
    ====

    In the versions 0.9.4/unix and /os2-emx (and in these ones only) binkd restarts automatically if it is started with -C command line option.
    Besides that starting with version 0.9.4 the files included into the configuration file with the help of 'include' keyword are tested not only
    on incoming sessions but also in every 'rescan-delay' seconds.

    If you install binkd 0.9.4/w32 as a Windows NT service you should use it with -C command line option. Then binkd re-reads its configuration file.

    Before version 0.9.4 changes in the configuration file were not tested if binkd was started in client-only mode (-c command line option).

    In the unix versions configuration file is re-read on SIGHUP signal
    by the command
    kill -HUP `cat /var/run/binkd.pid`

    In the version 1.0 configuration file is re-read automatically if
    changed. binkd tests on changes at every 'rescan-delay' seconds.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    12. How Can binkd Work With T-mail/IP?

    There is no way to do it. The protocols differ in essence: binkd uses
    binkp protocol whereas T-mail/IP uses EMSI etc.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    13. Is There At Least One Log Analyzer Under Unix?

    There exist many Perl scripts and several win32 binaries. For example here:

    binkdstat 0.1 beta4 Christmas version 6.01.2002
    Statistics generator for binkd
    (c) Dmitry Sergienko, 2:464/910@fidonet, dmitry@trifle.net 14.08.2000
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/binkdstat-ds.0.1_beta4_Christmas

    There also exists BndStat program:
    BNDST101.ZIP 34812 14-Aug-01 (AREA:AFTNMISC)
    BndStat 1.01. With sources. binkd statistics generator. Compiled for all
    platforms. Included win32 binaries. (C) Dmitry Rusov, 2:5090/94

    Log analyzer by val khokhlov (perl):
    http://www.vk.kiev.ua/create/soft.html#bnkds
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/stat-binkd.pl.gz

    binkdstat (c) val khokhlov, Dmitry Kolvakh, updated at April 2006
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/binkdstat.zip

    T-Hist (c) Michael Markowsky, 2:5020/378 (KLUG's BBS)
    Binary log file analyzer for various mailers including binkd.
    Works in DOS, Windows NT (2000, XP, 2003) and OS/2.
    ftp://ftp.grumbler.org/pub/binkd/hist30a7.zip

    Kleine Statistiker/BINKD for DOS v0.60a, Russian version
    A small statistics generator for posting statistics to an echo conference.
    ftp://ftp.grumbler.org/pub/binkd/statddos.rar


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    14. binkd Connects Too Slowly (~20 Seconds) Though I Have a High-Speed LAN

    It is possible that 'backresolv' parameter is on (for logging the remote host domain name) and DNS is not configured.

    The simplest solution is to comment the 'backresolv' out in the configuration file. Configuring DNS is a more complex solution.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    15. Why Does binkd Not Understand Command Line Options When I Start It From inetd?

    You should use the program name as the first parameter in inetd.conf (it may be any string for binkd), the second and the following parameters
    are the command line options (-iqs etc.) and the last parameter is the configuration file full path:

    binkp stream tcp nowait root /usr/fido/binkd binkd -isq /usr/fido/binkd.cfg

    If you do not use -q option then you should switch console output off (comment 'printq', 'percents', 'conlog' out).


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    16. Can One Make a File Request From binkd?

    It's a piece of cake! binkd supports WAZOO FREQ with an external helper.

    To request files from a remote system it is necessary to create a file
    of type nnnnmmmm.REQ and to put it in the outbound directory next to *.?ut
    and *.?lo files. But *.REQ files do not initiate binkd to call a link so
    to make a FREQ it is necessary to make a poll. The contents of a .REQ file
    is described in the "!SRIF.TXT" file which is a copy of FSC-0086.001 from http://ftsc.org


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    17. How Can my binkd Respond to a File Request?

    One can configure binkd for calling an external file request processor supporting SRIF (FSC-0086) for receiving and handling FREQs in binkd. Please read the "!SRIF.TXT" file and the comment to 'exec' in the configuration
    file.

    Here are the examples of lines in configuration file for DOS-based OS
    and for *nix (you should use regular expressions in the latter case for
    binkd to match both upper-case and lower-case letters, e.g. both *.REQ and *.req):

    exec "\\ftn\\allfix\\allfix.exe RP -SRIF *S" *.req

    exec "/ftn/bin/tmafreq-srif *S" *.[rR][eE][qQ]

    A bash script "srifreq" is delivered with binkd starting with version 1.1a19.
    The following file request processors are also compatible with binkd
    (but they are not the only ones, any other one supporting SRIF will do):

    Allfix by Harms Software Engineering: it is a fileecho processor with built-in file request processor and it has versions for DOS and OS/2;

    ViReq by Michael Haase (2:2432/280): a specialized FREQ processor for Windows, it is distributed by Michael Massenberg (2:2411/505) via modem,
    ISDN and Fido-over-IP.

    tmafreq by Maxim Timofeyev <tmahome@mail.tma.spb.ru>: the FREQ processor
    is created for a unix-like OS and ported into Windows. One may obtain tmafreq from different BBS and FTP with fileecho archives, or may get tmafreq sources from anonymous CVS :pserver:anoncvs@tma.spb.ru:/cvsroot, module "tmafreq".

    VIREQ/x by Volker Imre <volker@imre.dyndns.org> (2:246/2098): the FREQ processor is created for a unix-like OS but can be compiled in the OS/2, Windows and maybe other operating systems. Now it is included into "ftnapps" project on Sourceforge and may be downloaded from http://ftnapps.sourceforge.net/vireq.html.
    Binaries built for Win32 and OS/2 may be downloaded from http://download.binkd.org and
    https://sites.google.com/view/vasilyevmax/


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    18. How Can I Add binkd To a Fidonet Box Working With a Modem?

    You must configure your modem mailer and tosser for BSO (binkley-style outbound) mode so that all of them including binkd would have the same
    inbound directories (and also the same outbound directories). For example,
    one may put the following line to T-Mail mailer configuration file:

    BinkStyle_Pack_For All

    If your mailer can work with AMA (arcmail-attach) only you may try to
    use fileboxes and/or find programs that can convert your mailer's queue to
    BSO or fileboxes. For example, Mail2dir utility allows using fileboxes with FrontDoor. Such a means disables a possibility of sending your mail to the
    same link both by IP and by modem (for instance, when one of the channels failed). There is another more radical but more flexible way: you may change your mailer.
    See also question 35.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    19. Flags Are Not Created On Receiving a File, Programs Do Not Start

    For sure you have a wrong template in the configuration file. You have to use it this way (the first two lines are for Windows and OS/2, the rest are
    for the Unix-like OS):

    flag m:\\ftn\\flg\\pntseg.flg m:\\\\ftn\\\\inbound\\\\sec\\\\pntstr*.*
    flag m:\\ftn\\flg\\toss.flg *.su? *.mo? *.tu? *.we? *.th? *.fr? *.sa? *.pkt

    exec "/usr/local/bin/ftrack -c /fido/conf/ftrack" *.[Pp][Kk][Tt]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ss][Uu][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Mm][Oo][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Uu][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ww][Ee][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Hh][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ff][Rr][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ss][Aa][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/fech-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Ii][Cc]

    You must use the full path with four slashes for the file to receive or
    the template should start with an asterisk character. You must use two
    slashes for the flag file.

    You must use the full path because using a filename without path means
    the event of receiving the file in the current directory and not in the
    inbound directory. If a template begins with "*" then it means "any
    directory" (and since all the files are received in one of the inbound directories it works for both password protected and for unprotected
    sessions).

    In a UNIX-like OS you should take into account that filenames are case sensitive. Please use regular expressions in templates.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    20. 'skipmask' Keyword Does Not Work

    A filename is compared without path and the comparison is case
    sensitive when 'skipmask' is used.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    21. binkd Under Windows 3.x

    Sergey Zharsky (zharik@usa.net) ported binkd 0.9.2 and binkd 0.9.5 for Windows 3.x. They work using IP stacks Trumpet Winsock ver. 3.0 revision D
    and Novell TCP/IP Client for Win 3.11 (see the answer to the question
    'binkd Under DOS', the section "The DOS version has the feature...").


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    22. Different FTN Domains in binkd And a Tosser Without 5D Support

    Suppose there are two domains (with different zone numbers though it
    does not matter). Mail can be successfully sent to the first domain but
    not to the second one. This situation may arise if the tosser, the tracker
    and the other your FTN programs do not support 5D BSO.

    This is a typical binkd configuration for two FTN domains and 5D
    outbound:

    domain fidonet c:\\ftn\\outbound\\fidonet 2
    domain omeganet c:\\ftn\\outbound\\omeganet 11
    address 2:5070/222@fidonet 11:58/6@omeganet

    One must configure not the zone of your own address for 'domain'
    keyword as one might think but the zone that should not be appended to the outbound name (i.e. the outbound subdirectory extensions are not processed
    for the zone denoted in the 'domain' line).

    If your tosser would create bundles for omeganet in the omeganet
    directory then you should write as indicated above. But since it does not
    --- hpt/lnx 1.9 2024-02-05
    * Origin: Moscow, Russia (2:5020/1042)
  • From binkd Team@2:5020/1042 to All on Sat May 18 22:15:02 2024
    31 Mar 16:48:43 [40423] trying 195.209.235.3, port 24554...
    31 Mar 16:48:43 [40423] connected to proxy.osu.ru:24554
    31 Mar 16:48:44 [40423] Connection rejected by proxy (HTTP/1.0 403 Forbidden)
    ? 31 Mar 16:48:44 [40423] unable to connect: {13} Permission denied

    In such a case you may try to use http tunnelling for instance with the help of httport, HTTPTunnel (http://http-tunnel.sourceforge.net/), stunnel (https://www.stunnel.org/) or you may find a node receiving binkp
    connections at port 443.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    07. How Can binkd Work via SOCKS-proxy?

    It is not a rare case when users go out to the internet from their corporate LAN exclusively via the proxy server based at the only computer connected to the internet. Thus binkd cannot make a direct connection to
    the remote node and one must use the proxy server. Proxy servers support
    was included in version 0.9.4 and the later ones.

    binkd works with a SOCKS proxy version 4 and 5. The first one does not demand an authorization (no login and password), the second one demands it
    as a rule.

    Suppose the connected to the Internet computer has the IP address 192.168.0.1 in its LAN and the SOCKS server at the computer responds on
    port 1080. Here is the line in binkd configuration file necessary for
    working via the SOCKS proxy.

    1. A SOCKS server without user authorization (no login and password are demanded):

    socks 192.168.0.1:1080

    2. A proxy server with user authorization (it is necessary to type login and password, e.g. login "user", password "password"):

    socks 192.168.0.1:1080/user/password


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    08. IP-Point: How Can I Make binkd to Get My Mail From My Bossnode (Uplink)?

    Make a poll using the command line option -P:

    binkd -P1:2/3 binkd.cfg

    Usually they want binkd to exit after the session is finished. One can
    use the command line option -p:

    binkd -p -P1:2/3 binkd.cfg

    If binkd does not exit for a long time after the session has been
    finished then decrease the value of rescan-delay (and sometimes the value
    of timeout).

    If binkd works permanently (e.g. as a Windows service) and you want to
    get your mail regularly then you need some additional program or a script.
    As an example in DOS, Windows or OS/2 it is enough to execute the command:

    cd . >> %outbound%\NNNNMMMM.ilo

    where NNNN is the hex net number,
    MMMM is the hex node number,
    %outbound% is the path to the necessary zone outbound.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    09. "start_file_transfer: .: Permission denied" Error

    You get the message when binkd cannot open a file for sending indicated
    in some *.?lo file. Most likely the file has a line containing only "."
    because the poll has been made by a command of the type

    echo . >> xxxxyyyy.flo

    you should change it to "cd . >> xxxxyyyy.flo"


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    10. binkd/win and Dial-up: Dialing-up and Disconnecting Automatically

    The problem is to configure the fidonet box in such a way that binkd
    would initiate a telephone call to your Internet provider, get your mail
    and disconnect.

    The solutions:

    1st Solution

    Configure automatic connection and timeout in the dial-up connection properties (idle time before hanging up). It is convinient to use a non-standard software for dialing-up (Advanced Dialer and others). You
    should start binkd with a command line option -p periodically (and possibly -Paddress for binkd to make a poll to the address).

    binkd -p -P1:2/3.4 binkd.cfg


    2nd Solution

    Use the command line option -p and the batch file where first Remote
    Access Service (RAS) is started then binkd is started and after binkd exits
    RAS is stopped.

    Two variants, for Windows NT and for Windows 2000:
    === binkdpoll1.cmd
    rasdial Connection
    binkd -p binkd.cfg
    rasdial Connection /disconnect
    ===

    === binkdpoll2.cmd
    net start "remote access service"
    net start "remote access auto service"
    binkd -p binkd.cfg
    net stop "remote access auto service"
    net stop "remote access service"
    ===

    3rd Solution (The Best One For Win9x)

    Use the command line options -p and -Paddress and control connection
    with a non-standard dial-up software (for example dialerp). This solution
    is the most reliable one (especially if the modem connection to your
    Internet provider is bad) due to the fact that dialerp can start some
    indicated programs at setting the connection. Here is the batch file you should start in the 'Execute' parameter of the dialerp configuration file:

    ====
    binkd -p -P1:2/3.4 binkd.cfg
    dialerp BREAK *
    ====

    The question you may now ask: Where can I take dialerp? The answer is:
    Ask the author (Alexander Vedjakin, 2:5020/540) or look for it in fileecho archives and in ftp/http.


    In any case you should set a small value for 'rescan-delay' parameter in the binkd configuration file. binkd would exit faster.

    === binkd.cfg
    # Outbound rescans period (sec)
    rescan-delay 2
    ===


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    11. I Have Changed binkd Configuration File On-The-Fly. When Will It Be Reloaded?

    Starting with the version 0.9.1 binkd could feel that its configuration file changed. It exited with code 3 if it had been started with option -C. Modification time was checked after each ingoing session. Here is the batch file for starting binkd versions 0.9.1-0.9.3 and 0.9.4-0.9.6/w32:

    ====
    :aaa
    binkd -C binkd.cfg
    if errorlevel 4 goto end
    if errorlevel 3 goto aaa
    :end
    ====

    In the versions 0.9.4/unix and /os2-emx (and in these ones only) binkd restarts automatically if it is started with -C command line option.
    Besides that starting with version 0.9.4 the files included into the configuration file with the help of 'include' keyword are tested not only
    on incoming sessions but also in every 'rescan-delay' seconds.

    If you install binkd 0.9.4/w32 as a Windows NT service you should use it with -C command line option. Then binkd re-reads its configuration file.

    Before version 0.9.4 changes in the configuration file were not tested if binkd was started in client-only mode (-c command line option).

    In the unix versions configuration file is re-read on SIGHUP signal
    by the command
    kill -HUP `cat /var/run/binkd.pid`

    In the version 1.0 configuration file is re-read automatically if
    changed. binkd tests on changes at every 'rescan-delay' seconds.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    12. How Can binkd Work With T-mail/IP?

    There is no way to do it. The protocols differ in essence: binkd uses
    binkp protocol whereas T-mail/IP uses EMSI etc.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    13. Is There At Least One Log Analyzer Under Unix?

    There exist many Perl scripts and several win32 binaries. For example here:

    binkdstat 0.1 beta4 Christmas version 6.01.2002
    Statistics generator for binkd
    (c) Dmitry Sergienko, 2:464/910@fidonet, dmitry@trifle.net 14.08.2000
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/binkdstat-ds.0.1_beta4_Christmas

    There also exists BndStat program:
    BNDST101.ZIP 34812 14-Aug-01 (AREA:AFTNMISC)
    BndStat 1.01. With sources. binkd statistics generator. Compiled for all
    platforms. Included win32 binaries. (C) Dmitry Rusov, 2:5090/94

    Log analyzer by val khokhlov (perl):
    http://www.vk.kiev.ua/create/soft.html#bnkds
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/stat-binkd.pl.gz

    binkdstat (c) val khokhlov, Dmitry Kolvakh, updated at April 2006
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/binkdstat.zip

    T-Hist (c) Michael Markowsky, 2:5020/378 (KLUG's BBS)
    Binary log file analyzer for various mailers including binkd.
    Works in DOS, Windows NT (2000, XP, 2003) and OS/2.
    ftp://ftp.grumbler.org/pub/binkd/hist30a7.zip

    Kleine Statistiker/BINKD for DOS v0.60a, Russian version
    A small statistics generator for posting statistics to an echo conference.
    ftp://ftp.grumbler.org/pub/binkd/statddos.rar


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    14. binkd Connects Too Slowly (~20 Seconds) Though I Have a High-Speed LAN

    It is possible that 'backresolv' parameter is on (for logging the remote host domain name) and DNS is not configured.

    The simplest solution is to comment the 'backresolv' out in the configuration file. Configuring DNS is a more complex solution.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    15. Why Does binkd Not Understand Command Line Options When I Start It From inetd?

    You should use the program name as the first parameter in inetd.conf (it may be any string for binkd), the second and the following parameters
    are the command line options (-iqs etc.) and the last parameter is the configuration file full path:

    binkp stream tcp nowait root /usr/fido/binkd binkd -isq /usr/fido/binkd.cfg

    If you do not use -q option then you should switch console output off (comment 'printq', 'percents', 'conlog' out).


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    16. Can One Make a File Request From binkd?

    It's a piece of cake! binkd supports WAZOO FREQ with an external helper.

    To request files from a remote system it is necessary to create a file
    of type nnnnmmmm.REQ and to put it in the outbound directory next to *.?ut
    and *.?lo files. But *.REQ files do not initiate binkd to call a link so
    to make a FREQ it is necessary to make a poll. The contents of a .REQ file
    is described in the "!SRIF.TXT" file which is a copy of FSC-0086.001 from http://ftsc.org


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    17. How Can my binkd Respond to a File Request?

    One can configure binkd for calling an external file request processor supporting SRIF (FSC-0086) for receiving and handling FREQs in binkd. Please read the "!SRIF.TXT" file and the comment to 'exec' in the configuration
    file.

    Here are the examples of lines in configuration file for DOS-based OS
    and for *nix (you should use regular expressions in the latter case for
    binkd to match both upper-case and lower-case letters, e.g. both *.REQ and *.req):

    exec "\\ftn\\allfix\\allfix.exe RP -SRIF *S" *.req

    exec "/ftn/bin/tmafreq-srif *S" *.[rR][eE][qQ]

    A bash script "srifreq" is delivered with binkd starting with version 1.1a19.
    The following file request processors are also compatible with binkd
    (but they are not the only ones, any other one supporting SRIF will do):

    Allfix by Harms Software Engineering: it is a fileecho processor with built-in file request processor and it has versions for DOS and OS/2;

    ViReq by Michael Haase (2:2432/280): a specialized FREQ processor for Windows, it is distributed by Michael Massenberg (2:2411/505) via modem,
    ISDN and Fido-over-IP.

    tmafreq by Maxim Timofeyev <tmahome@mail.tma.spb.ru>: the FREQ processor
    is created for a unix-like OS and ported into Windows. One may obtain tmafreq from different BBS and FTP with fileecho archives, or may get tmafreq sources from anonymous CVS :pserver:anoncvs@tma.spb.ru:/cvsroot, module "tmafreq".

    VIREQ/x by Volker Imre <volker@imre.dyndns.org> (2:246/2098): the FREQ processor is created for a unix-like OS but can be compiled in the OS/2, Windows and maybe other operating systems. Now it is included into "ftnapps" project on Sourceforge and may be downloaded from http://ftnapps.sourceforge.net/vireq.html.
    Binaries built for Win32 and OS/2 may be downloaded from http://download.binkd.org and
    https://sites.google.com/view/vasilyevmax/


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    18. How Can I Add binkd To a Fidonet Box Working With a Modem?

    You must configure your modem mailer and tosser for BSO (binkley-style outbound) mode so that all of them including binkd would have the same
    inbound directories (and also the same outbound directories). For example,
    one may put the following line to T-Mail mailer configuration file:

    BinkStyle_Pack_For All

    If your mailer can work with AMA (arcmail-attach) only you may try to
    use fileboxes and/or find programs that can convert your mailer's queue to
    BSO or fileboxes. For example, Mail2dir utility allows using fileboxes with FrontDoor. Such a means disables a possibility of sending your mail to the
    same link both by IP and by modem (for instance, when one of the channels failed). There is another more radical but more flexible way: you may change your mailer.
    See also question 35.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    19. Flags Are Not Created On Receiving a File, Programs Do Not Start

    For sure you have a wrong template in the configuration file. You have to use it this way (the first two lines are for Windows and OS/2, the rest are
    for the Unix-like OS):

    flag m:\\ftn\\flg\\pntseg.flg m:\\\\ftn\\\\inbound\\\\sec\\\\pntstr*.*
    flag m:\\ftn\\flg\\toss.flg *.su? *.mo? *.tu? *.we? *.th? *.fr? *.sa? *.pkt

    exec "/usr/local/bin/ftrack -c /fido/conf/ftrack" *.[Pp][Kk][Tt]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ss][Uu][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Mm][Oo][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Uu][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ww][Ee][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Hh][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ff][Rr][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ss][Aa][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/fech-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Ii][Cc]

    You must use the full path with four slashes for the file to receive or
    the template should start with an asterisk character. You must use two
    slashes for the flag file.

    You must use the full path because using a filename without path means
    the event of receiving the file in the current directory and not in the
    inbound directory. If a template begins with "*" then it means "any
    directory" (and since all the files are received in one of the inbound directories it works for both password protected and for unprotected
    sessions).

    In a UNIX-like OS you should take into account that filenames are case sensitive. Please use regular expressions in templates.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    20. 'skipmask' Keyword Does Not Work

    A filename is compared without path and the comparison is case
    sensitive when 'skipmask' is used.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    21. binkd Under Windows 3.x

    Sergey Zharsky (zharik@usa.net) ported binkd 0.9.2 and binkd 0.9.5 for Windows 3.x. They work using IP stacks Trumpet Winsock ver. 3.0 revision D
    and Novell TCP/IP Client for Win 3.11 (see the answer to the question
    'binkd Under DOS', the section "The DOS version has the feature...").


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    22. Different FTN Domains in binkd And a Tosser Without 5D Support

    Suppose there are two domains (with different zone numbers though it
    does not matter). Mail can be successfully sent to the first domain but
    not to the second one. This situation may arise if the tosser, the tracker
    and the other your FTN programs do not support 5D BSO.

    This is a typical binkd configuration for two FTN domains and 5D
    outbound:

    domain fidonet c:\\ftn\\outbound\\fidonet 2
    domain omeganet c:\\ftn\\outbound\\omeganet 11
    address 2:5070/222@fidonet 11:58/6@omeganet

    One must configure not the zone of your own address for 'domain'
    keyword as one might think but the zone that should not be appended to the outbound name (i.e. the outbound subdirectory extensions are not processed
    for the zone denoted in the 'domain' line).

    If your tosser would create bundles for omeganet in the omeganet
    directory then you should write as indicated above. But since it does not
    --- hpt/lnx 1.9 2024-02-05
    * Origin: Moscow, Russia (2:5020/1042)
  • From binkd Team@2:5020/1042 to All on Sat May 25 22:15:02 2024
    31 Mar 16:48:43 [40423] trying 195.209.235.3, port 24554...
    31 Mar 16:48:43 [40423] connected to proxy.osu.ru:24554
    31 Mar 16:48:44 [40423] Connection rejected by proxy (HTTP/1.0 403 Forbidden)
    ? 31 Mar 16:48:44 [40423] unable to connect: {13} Permission denied

    In such a case you may try to use http tunnelling for instance with the help of httport, HTTPTunnel (http://http-tunnel.sourceforge.net/), stunnel (https://www.stunnel.org/) or you may find a node receiving binkp
    connections at port 443.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    07. How Can binkd Work via SOCKS-proxy?

    It is not a rare case when users go out to the internet from their corporate LAN exclusively via the proxy server based at the only computer connected to the internet. Thus binkd cannot make a direct connection to
    the remote node and one must use the proxy server. Proxy servers support
    was included in version 0.9.4 and the later ones.

    binkd works with a SOCKS proxy version 4 and 5. The first one does not demand an authorization (no login and password), the second one demands it
    as a rule.

    Suppose the connected to the Internet computer has the IP address 192.168.0.1 in its LAN and the SOCKS server at the computer responds on
    port 1080. Here is the line in binkd configuration file necessary for
    working via the SOCKS proxy.

    1. A SOCKS server without user authorization (no login and password are demanded):

    socks 192.168.0.1:1080

    2. A proxy server with user authorization (it is necessary to type login and password, e.g. login "user", password "password"):

    socks 192.168.0.1:1080/user/password


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    08. IP-Point: How Can I Make binkd to Get My Mail From My Bossnode (Uplink)?

    Make a poll using the command line option -P:

    binkd -P1:2/3 binkd.cfg

    Usually they want binkd to exit after the session is finished. One can
    use the command line option -p:

    binkd -p -P1:2/3 binkd.cfg

    If binkd does not exit for a long time after the session has been
    finished then decrease the value of rescan-delay (and sometimes the value
    of timeout).

    If binkd works permanently (e.g. as a Windows service) and you want to
    get your mail regularly then you need some additional program or a script.
    As an example in DOS, Windows or OS/2 it is enough to execute the command:

    cd . >> %outbound%\NNNNMMMM.ilo

    where NNNN is the hex net number,
    MMMM is the hex node number,
    %outbound% is the path to the necessary zone outbound.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    09. "start_file_transfer: .: Permission denied" Error

    You get the message when binkd cannot open a file for sending indicated
    in some *.?lo file. Most likely the file has a line containing only "."
    because the poll has been made by a command of the type

    echo . >> xxxxyyyy.flo

    you should change it to "cd . >> xxxxyyyy.flo"


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    10. binkd/win and Dial-up: Dialing-up and Disconnecting Automatically

    The problem is to configure the fidonet box in such a way that binkd
    would initiate a telephone call to your Internet provider, get your mail
    and disconnect.

    The solutions:

    1st Solution

    Configure automatic connection and timeout in the dial-up connection properties (idle time before hanging up). It is convinient to use a non-standard software for dialing-up (Advanced Dialer and others). You
    should start binkd with a command line option -p periodically (and possibly -Paddress for binkd to make a poll to the address).

    binkd -p -P1:2/3.4 binkd.cfg


    2nd Solution

    Use the command line option -p and the batch file where first Remote
    Access Service (RAS) is started then binkd is started and after binkd exits
    RAS is stopped.

    Two variants, for Windows NT and for Windows 2000:
    === binkdpoll1.cmd
    rasdial Connection
    binkd -p binkd.cfg
    rasdial Connection /disconnect
    ===

    === binkdpoll2.cmd
    net start "remote access service"
    net start "remote access auto service"
    binkd -p binkd.cfg
    net stop "remote access auto service"
    net stop "remote access service"
    ===

    3rd Solution (The Best One For Win9x)

    Use the command line options -p and -Paddress and control connection
    with a non-standard dial-up software (for example dialerp). This solution
    is the most reliable one (especially if the modem connection to your
    Internet provider is bad) due to the fact that dialerp can start some
    indicated programs at setting the connection. Here is the batch file you should start in the 'Execute' parameter of the dialerp configuration file:

    ====
    binkd -p -P1:2/3.4 binkd.cfg
    dialerp BREAK *
    ====

    The question you may now ask: Where can I take dialerp? The answer is:
    Ask the author (Alexander Vedjakin, 2:5020/540) or look for it in fileecho archives and in ftp/http.


    In any case you should set a small value for 'rescan-delay' parameter in the binkd configuration file. binkd would exit faster.

    === binkd.cfg
    # Outbound rescans period (sec)
    rescan-delay 2
    ===


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    11. I Have Changed binkd Configuration File On-The-Fly. When Will It Be Reloaded?

    Starting with the version 0.9.1 binkd could feel that its configuration file changed. It exited with code 3 if it had been started with option -C. Modification time was checked after each ingoing session. Here is the batch file for starting binkd versions 0.9.1-0.9.3 and 0.9.4-0.9.6/w32:

    ====
    :aaa
    binkd -C binkd.cfg
    if errorlevel 4 goto end
    if errorlevel 3 goto aaa
    :end
    ====

    In the versions 0.9.4/unix and /os2-emx (and in these ones only) binkd restarts automatically if it is started with -C command line option.
    Besides that starting with version 0.9.4 the files included into the configuration file with the help of 'include' keyword are tested not only
    on incoming sessions but also in every 'rescan-delay' seconds.

    If you install binkd 0.9.4/w32 as a Windows NT service you should use it with -C command line option. Then binkd re-reads its configuration file.

    Before version 0.9.4 changes in the configuration file were not tested if binkd was started in client-only mode (-c command line option).

    In the unix versions configuration file is re-read on SIGHUP signal
    by the command
    kill -HUP `cat /var/run/binkd.pid`

    In the version 1.0 configuration file is re-read automatically if
    changed. binkd tests on changes at every 'rescan-delay' seconds.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    12. How Can binkd Work With T-mail/IP?

    There is no way to do it. The protocols differ in essence: binkd uses
    binkp protocol whereas T-mail/IP uses EMSI etc.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    13. Is There At Least One Log Analyzer Under Unix?

    There exist many Perl scripts and several win32 binaries. For example here:

    binkdstat 0.1 beta4 Christmas version 6.01.2002
    Statistics generator for binkd
    (c) Dmitry Sergienko, 2:464/910@fidonet, dmitry@trifle.net 14.08.2000
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/binkdstat-ds.0.1_beta4_Christmas

    There also exists BndStat program:
    BNDST101.ZIP 34812 14-Aug-01 (AREA:AFTNMISC)
    BndStat 1.01. With sources. binkd statistics generator. Compiled for all
    platforms. Included win32 binaries. (C) Dmitry Rusov, 2:5090/94

    Log analyzer by val khokhlov (perl):
    http://www.vk.kiev.ua/create/soft.html#bnkds
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/stat-binkd.pl.gz

    binkdstat (c) val khokhlov, Dmitry Kolvakh, updated at April 2006
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/binkdstat.zip

    T-Hist (c) Michael Markowsky, 2:5020/378 (KLUG's BBS)
    Binary log file analyzer for various mailers including binkd.
    Works in DOS, Windows NT (2000, XP, 2003) and OS/2.
    ftp://ftp.grumbler.org/pub/binkd/hist30a7.zip

    Kleine Statistiker/BINKD for DOS v0.60a, Russian version
    A small statistics generator for posting statistics to an echo conference.
    ftp://ftp.grumbler.org/pub/binkd/statddos.rar


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    14. binkd Connects Too Slowly (~20 Seconds) Though I Have a High-Speed LAN

    It is possible that 'backresolv' parameter is on (for logging the remote host domain name) and DNS is not configured.

    The simplest solution is to comment the 'backresolv' out in the configuration file. Configuring DNS is a more complex solution.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    15. Why Does binkd Not Understand Command Line Options When I Start It From inetd?

    You should use the program name as the first parameter in inetd.conf (it may be any string for binkd), the second and the following parameters
    are the command line options (-iqs etc.) and the last parameter is the configuration file full path:

    binkp stream tcp nowait root /usr/fido/binkd binkd -isq /usr/fido/binkd.cfg

    If you do not use -q option then you should switch console output off (comment 'printq', 'percents', 'conlog' out).


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    16. Can One Make a File Request From binkd?

    It's a piece of cake! binkd supports WAZOO FREQ with an external helper.

    To request files from a remote system it is necessary to create a file
    of type nnnnmmmm.REQ and to put it in the outbound directory next to *.?ut
    and *.?lo files. But *.REQ files do not initiate binkd to call a link so
    to make a FREQ it is necessary to make a poll. The contents of a .REQ file
    is described in the "!SRIF.TXT" file which is a copy of FSC-0086.001 from http://ftsc.org


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    17. How Can my binkd Respond to a File Request?

    One can configure binkd for calling an external file request processor supporting SRIF (FSC-0086) for receiving and handling FREQs in binkd. Please read the "!SRIF.TXT" file and the comment to 'exec' in the configuration
    file.

    Here are the examples of lines in configuration file for DOS-based OS
    and for *nix (you should use regular expressions in the latter case for
    binkd to match both upper-case and lower-case letters, e.g. both *.REQ and *.req):

    exec "\\ftn\\allfix\\allfix.exe RP -SRIF *S" *.req

    exec "/ftn/bin/tmafreq-srif *S" *.[rR][eE][qQ]

    A bash script "srifreq" is delivered with binkd starting with version 1.1a19.
    The following file request processors are also compatible with binkd
    (but they are not the only ones, any other one supporting SRIF will do):

    Allfix by Harms Software Engineering: it is a fileecho processor with built-in file request processor and it has versions for DOS and OS/2;

    ViReq by Michael Haase (2:2432/280): a specialized FREQ processor for Windows, it is distributed by Michael Massenberg (2:2411/505) via modem,
    ISDN and Fido-over-IP.

    tmafreq by Maxim Timofeyev <tmahome@mail.tma.spb.ru>: the FREQ processor
    is created for a unix-like OS and ported into Windows. One may obtain tmafreq from different BBS and FTP with fileecho archives, or may get tmafreq sources from anonymous CVS :pserver:anoncvs@tma.spb.ru:/cvsroot, module "tmafreq".

    VIREQ/x by Volker Imre <volker@imre.dyndns.org> (2:246/2098): the FREQ processor is created for a unix-like OS but can be compiled in the OS/2, Windows and maybe other operating systems. Now it is included into "ftnapps" project on Sourceforge and may be downloaded from http://ftnapps.sourceforge.net/vireq.html.
    Binaries built for Win32 and OS/2 may be downloaded from http://download.binkd.org and
    https://sites.google.com/view/vasilyevmax/


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    18. How Can I Add binkd To a Fidonet Box Working With a Modem?

    You must configure your modem mailer and tosser for BSO (binkley-style outbound) mode so that all of them including binkd would have the same
    inbound directories (and also the same outbound directories). For example,
    one may put the following line to T-Mail mailer configuration file:

    BinkStyle_Pack_For All

    If your mailer can work with AMA (arcmail-attach) only you may try to
    use fileboxes and/or find programs that can convert your mailer's queue to
    BSO or fileboxes. For example, Mail2dir utility allows using fileboxes with FrontDoor. Such a means disables a possibility of sending your mail to the
    same link both by IP and by modem (for instance, when one of the channels failed). There is another more radical but more flexible way: you may change your mailer.
    See also question 35.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    19. Flags Are Not Created On Receiving a File, Programs Do Not Start

    For sure you have a wrong template in the configuration file. You have to use it this way (the first two lines are for Windows and OS/2, the rest are
    for the Unix-like OS):

    flag m:\\ftn\\flg\\pntseg.flg m:\\\\ftn\\\\inbound\\\\sec\\\\pntstr*.*
    flag m:\\ftn\\flg\\toss.flg *.su? *.mo? *.tu? *.we? *.th? *.fr? *.sa? *.pkt

    exec "/usr/local/bin/ftrack -c /fido/conf/ftrack" *.[Pp][Kk][Tt]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ss][Uu][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Mm][Oo][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Uu][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ww][Ee][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Hh][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ff][Rr][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ss][Aa][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/fech-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Ii][Cc]

    You must use the full path with four slashes for the file to receive or
    the template should start with an asterisk character. You must use two
    slashes for the flag file.

    You must use the full path because using a filename without path means
    the event of receiving the file in the current directory and not in the
    inbound directory. If a template begins with "*" then it means "any
    directory" (and since all the files are received in one of the inbound directories it works for both password protected and for unprotected
    sessions).

    In a UNIX-like OS you should take into account that filenames are case sensitive. Please use regular expressions in templates.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    20. 'skipmask' Keyword Does Not Work

    A filename is compared without path and the comparison is case
    sensitive when 'skipmask' is used.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    21. binkd Under Windows 3.x

    Sergey Zharsky (zharik@usa.net) ported binkd 0.9.2 and binkd 0.9.5 for Windows 3.x. They work using IP stacks Trumpet Winsock ver. 3.0 revision D
    and Novell TCP/IP Client for Win 3.11 (see the answer to the question
    'binkd Under DOS', the section "The DOS version has the feature...").


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    22. Different FTN Domains in binkd And a Tosser Without 5D Support

    Suppose there are two domains (with different zone numbers though it
    does not matter). Mail can be successfully sent to the first domain but
    not to the second one. This situation may arise if the tosser, the tracker
    and the other your FTN programs do not support 5D BSO.

    This is a typical binkd configuration for two FTN domains and 5D
    outbound:

    domain fidonet c:\\ftn\\outbound\\fidonet 2
    domain omeganet c:\\ftn\\outbound\\omeganet 11
    address 2:5070/222@fidonet 11:58/6@omeganet

    One must configure not the zone of your own address for 'domain'
    keyword as one might think but the zone that should not be appended to the outbound name (i.e. the outbound subdirectory extensions are not processed
    for the zone denoted in the 'domain' line).

    If your tosser would create bundles for omeganet in the omeganet
    directory then you should write as indicated above. But since it does not
    --- hpt/lnx 1.9 2024-02-05
    * Origin: Moscow, Russia (2:5020/1042)
  • From binkd Team@2:5020/1042 to All on Sat Jun 1 22:15:02 2024
    31 Mar 16:48:43 [40423] trying 195.209.235.3, port 24554...
    31 Mar 16:48:43 [40423] connected to proxy.osu.ru:24554
    31 Mar 16:48:44 [40423] Connection rejected by proxy (HTTP/1.0 403 Forbidden)
    ? 31 Mar 16:48:44 [40423] unable to connect: {13} Permission denied

    In such a case you may try to use http tunnelling for instance with the help of httport, HTTPTunnel (http://http-tunnel.sourceforge.net/), stunnel (https://www.stunnel.org/) or you may find a node receiving binkp
    connections at port 443.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    07. How Can binkd Work via SOCKS-proxy?

    It is not a rare case when users go out to the internet from their corporate LAN exclusively via the proxy server based at the only computer connected to the internet. Thus binkd cannot make a direct connection to
    the remote node and one must use the proxy server. Proxy servers support
    was included in version 0.9.4 and the later ones.

    binkd works with a SOCKS proxy version 4 and 5. The first one does not demand an authorization (no login and password), the second one demands it
    as a rule.

    Suppose the connected to the Internet computer has the IP address 192.168.0.1 in its LAN and the SOCKS server at the computer responds on
    port 1080. Here is the line in binkd configuration file necessary for
    working via the SOCKS proxy.

    1. A SOCKS server without user authorization (no login and password are demanded):

    socks 192.168.0.1:1080

    2. A proxy server with user authorization (it is necessary to type login and password, e.g. login "user", password "password"):

    socks 192.168.0.1:1080/user/password


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    08. IP-Point: How Can I Make binkd to Get My Mail From My Bossnode (Uplink)?

    Make a poll using the command line option -P:

    binkd -P1:2/3 binkd.cfg

    Usually they want binkd to exit after the session is finished. One can
    use the command line option -p:

    binkd -p -P1:2/3 binkd.cfg

    If binkd does not exit for a long time after the session has been
    finished then decrease the value of rescan-delay (and sometimes the value
    of timeout).

    If binkd works permanently (e.g. as a Windows service) and you want to
    get your mail regularly then you need some additional program or a script.
    As an example in DOS, Windows or OS/2 it is enough to execute the command:

    cd . >> %outbound%\NNNNMMMM.ilo

    where NNNN is the hex net number,
    MMMM is the hex node number,
    %outbound% is the path to the necessary zone outbound.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    09. "start_file_transfer: .: Permission denied" Error

    You get the message when binkd cannot open a file for sending indicated
    in some *.?lo file. Most likely the file has a line containing only "."
    because the poll has been made by a command of the type

    echo . >> xxxxyyyy.flo

    you should change it to "cd . >> xxxxyyyy.flo"


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    10. binkd/win and Dial-up: Dialing-up and Disconnecting Automatically

    The problem is to configure the fidonet box in such a way that binkd
    would initiate a telephone call to your Internet provider, get your mail
    and disconnect.

    The solutions:

    1st Solution

    Configure automatic connection and timeout in the dial-up connection properties (idle time before hanging up). It is convinient to use a non-standard software for dialing-up (Advanced Dialer and others). You
    should start binkd with a command line option -p periodically (and possibly -Paddress for binkd to make a poll to the address).

    binkd -p -P1:2/3.4 binkd.cfg


    2nd Solution

    Use the command line option -p and the batch file where first Remote
    Access Service (RAS) is started then binkd is started and after binkd exits
    RAS is stopped.

    Two variants, for Windows NT and for Windows 2000:
    === binkdpoll1.cmd
    rasdial Connection
    binkd -p binkd.cfg
    rasdial Connection /disconnect
    ===

    === binkdpoll2.cmd
    net start "remote access service"
    net start "remote access auto service"
    binkd -p binkd.cfg
    net stop "remote access auto service"
    net stop "remote access service"
    ===

    3rd Solution (The Best One For Win9x)

    Use the command line options -p and -Paddress and control connection
    with a non-standard dial-up software (for example dialerp). This solution
    is the most reliable one (especially if the modem connection to your
    Internet provider is bad) due to the fact that dialerp can start some
    indicated programs at setting the connection. Here is the batch file you should start in the 'Execute' parameter of the dialerp configuration file:

    ====
    binkd -p -P1:2/3.4 binkd.cfg
    dialerp BREAK *
    ====

    The question you may now ask: Where can I take dialerp? The answer is:
    Ask the author (Alexander Vedjakin, 2:5020/540) or look for it in fileecho archives and in ftp/http.


    In any case you should set a small value for 'rescan-delay' parameter in the binkd configuration file. binkd would exit faster.

    === binkd.cfg
    # Outbound rescans period (sec)
    rescan-delay 2
    ===


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    11. I Have Changed binkd Configuration File On-The-Fly. When Will It Be Reloaded?

    Starting with the version 0.9.1 binkd could feel that its configuration file changed. It exited with code 3 if it had been started with option -C. Modification time was checked after each ingoing session. Here is the batch file for starting binkd versions 0.9.1-0.9.3 and 0.9.4-0.9.6/w32:

    ====
    :aaa
    binkd -C binkd.cfg
    if errorlevel 4 goto end
    if errorlevel 3 goto aaa
    :end
    ====

    In the versions 0.9.4/unix and /os2-emx (and in these ones only) binkd restarts automatically if it is started with -C command line option.
    Besides that starting with version 0.9.4 the files included into the configuration file with the help of 'include' keyword are tested not only
    on incoming sessions but also in every 'rescan-delay' seconds.

    If you install binkd 0.9.4/w32 as a Windows NT service you should use it with -C command line option. Then binkd re-reads its configuration file.

    Before version 0.9.4 changes in the configuration file were not tested if binkd was started in client-only mode (-c command line option).

    In the unix versions configuration file is re-read on SIGHUP signal
    by the command
    kill -HUP `cat /var/run/binkd.pid`

    In the version 1.0 configuration file is re-read automatically if
    changed. binkd tests on changes at every 'rescan-delay' seconds.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    12. How Can binkd Work With T-mail/IP?

    There is no way to do it. The protocols differ in essence: binkd uses
    binkp protocol whereas T-mail/IP uses EMSI etc.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    13. Is There At Least One Log Analyzer Under Unix?

    There exist many Perl scripts and several win32 binaries. For example here:

    binkdstat 0.1 beta4 Christmas version 6.01.2002
    Statistics generator for binkd
    (c) Dmitry Sergienko, 2:464/910@fidonet, dmitry@trifle.net 14.08.2000
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/binkdstat-ds.0.1_beta4_Christmas

    There also exists BndStat program:
    BNDST101.ZIP 34812 14-Aug-01 (AREA:AFTNMISC)
    BndStat 1.01. With sources. binkd statistics generator. Compiled for all
    platforms. Included win32 binaries. (C) Dmitry Rusov, 2:5090/94

    Log analyzer by val khokhlov (perl):
    http://www.vk.kiev.ua/create/soft.html#bnkds
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/stat-binkd.pl.gz

    binkdstat (c) val khokhlov, Dmitry Kolvakh, updated at April 2006
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/binkdstat.zip

    T-Hist (c) Michael Markowsky, 2:5020/378 (KLUG's BBS)
    Binary log file analyzer for various mailers including binkd.
    Works in DOS, Windows NT (2000, XP, 2003) and OS/2.
    ftp://ftp.grumbler.org/pub/binkd/hist30a7.zip

    Kleine Statistiker/BINKD for DOS v0.60a, Russian version
    A small statistics generator for posting statistics to an echo conference.
    ftp://ftp.grumbler.org/pub/binkd/statddos.rar


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    14. binkd Connects Too Slowly (~20 Seconds) Though I Have a High-Speed LAN

    It is possible that 'backresolv' parameter is on (for logging the remote host domain name) and DNS is not configured.

    The simplest solution is to comment the 'backresolv' out in the configuration file. Configuring DNS is a more complex solution.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    15. Why Does binkd Not Understand Command Line Options When I Start It From inetd?

    You should use the program name as the first parameter in inetd.conf (it may be any string for binkd), the second and the following parameters
    are the command line options (-iqs etc.) and the last parameter is the configuration file full path:

    binkp stream tcp nowait root /usr/fido/binkd binkd -isq /usr/fido/binkd.cfg

    If you do not use -q option then you should switch console output off (comment 'printq', 'percents', 'conlog' out).


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    16. Can One Make a File Request From binkd?

    It's a piece of cake! binkd supports WAZOO FREQ with an external helper.

    To request files from a remote system it is necessary to create a file
    of type nnnnmmmm.REQ and to put it in the outbound directory next to *.?ut
    and *.?lo files. But *.REQ files do not initiate binkd to call a link so
    to make a FREQ it is necessary to make a poll. The contents of a .REQ file
    is described in the "!SRIF.TXT" file which is a copy of FSC-0086.001 from http://ftsc.org


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    17. How Can my binkd Respond to a File Request?

    One can configure binkd for calling an external file request processor supporting SRIF (FSC-0086) for receiving and handling FREQs in binkd. Please read the "!SRIF.TXT" file and the comment to 'exec' in the configuration
    file.

    Here are the examples of lines in configuration file for DOS-based OS
    and for *nix (you should use regular expressions in the latter case for
    binkd to match both upper-case and lower-case letters, e.g. both *.REQ and *.req):

    exec "\\ftn\\allfix\\allfix.exe RP -SRIF *S" *.req

    exec "/ftn/bin/tmafreq-srif *S" *.[rR][eE][qQ]

    A bash script "srifreq" is delivered with binkd starting with version 1.1a19.
    The following file request processors are also compatible with binkd
    (but they are not the only ones, any other one supporting SRIF will do):

    Allfix by Harms Software Engineering: it is a fileecho processor with built-in file request processor and it has versions for DOS and OS/2;

    ViReq by Michael Haase (2:2432/280): a specialized FREQ processor for Windows, it is distributed by Michael Massenberg (2:2411/505) via modem,
    ISDN and Fido-over-IP.

    tmafreq by Maxim Timofeyev <tmahome@mail.tma.spb.ru>: the FREQ processor
    is created for a unix-like OS and ported into Windows. One may obtain tmafreq from different BBS and FTP with fileecho archives, or may get tmafreq sources from anonymous CVS :pserver:anoncvs@tma.spb.ru:/cvsroot, module "tmafreq".

    VIREQ/x by Volker Imre <volker@imre.dyndns.org> (2:246/2098): the FREQ processor is created for a unix-like OS but can be compiled in the OS/2, Windows and maybe other operating systems. Now it is included into "ftnapps" project on Sourceforge and may be downloaded from http://ftnapps.sourceforge.net/vireq.html.
    Binaries built for Win32 and OS/2 may be downloaded from http://download.binkd.org and
    https://sites.google.com/view/vasilyevmax/


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    18. How Can I Add binkd To a Fidonet Box Working With a Modem?

    You must configure your modem mailer and tosser for BSO (binkley-style outbound) mode so that all of them including binkd would have the same
    inbound directories (and also the same outbound directories). For example,
    one may put the following line to T-Mail mailer configuration file:

    BinkStyle_Pack_For All

    If your mailer can work with AMA (arcmail-attach) only you may try to
    use fileboxes and/or find programs that can convert your mailer's queue to
    BSO or fileboxes. For example, Mail2dir utility allows using fileboxes with FrontDoor. Such a means disables a possibility of sending your mail to the
    same link both by IP and by modem (for instance, when one of the channels failed). There is another more radical but more flexible way: you may change your mailer.
    See also question 35.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    19. Flags Are Not Created On Receiving a File, Programs Do Not Start

    For sure you have a wrong template in the configuration file. You have to use it this way (the first two lines are for Windows and OS/2, the rest are
    for the Unix-like OS):

    flag m:\\ftn\\flg\\pntseg.flg m:\\\\ftn\\\\inbound\\\\sec\\\\pntstr*.*
    flag m:\\ftn\\flg\\toss.flg *.su? *.mo? *.tu? *.we? *.th? *.fr? *.sa? *.pkt

    exec "/usr/local/bin/ftrack -c /fido/conf/ftrack" *.[Pp][Kk][Tt]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ss][Uu][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Mm][Oo][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Uu][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ww][Ee][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Hh][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ff][Rr][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ss][Aa][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/fech-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Ii][Cc]

    You must use the full path with four slashes for the file to receive or
    the template should start with an asterisk character. You must use two
    slashes for the flag file.

    You must use the full path because using a filename without path means
    the event of receiving the file in the current directory and not in the
    inbound directory. If a template begins with "*" then it means "any
    directory" (and since all the files are received in one of the inbound directories it works for both password protected and for unprotected
    sessions).

    In a UNIX-like OS you should take into account that filenames are case sensitive. Please use regular expressions in templates.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    20. 'skipmask' Keyword Does Not Work

    A filename is compared without path and the comparison is case
    sensitive when 'skipmask' is used.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    21. binkd Under Windows 3.x

    Sergey Zharsky (zharik@usa.net) ported binkd 0.9.2 and binkd 0.9.5 for Windows 3.x. They work using IP stacks Trumpet Winsock ver. 3.0 revision D
    and Novell TCP/IP Client for Win 3.11 (see the answer to the question
    'binkd Under DOS', the section "The DOS version has the feature...").


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    22. Different FTN Domains in binkd And a Tosser Without 5D Support

    Suppose there are two domains (with different zone numbers though it
    does not matter). Mail can be successfully sent to the first domain but
    not to the second one. This situation may arise if the tosser, the tracker
    and the other your FTN programs do not support 5D BSO.

    This is a typical binkd configuration for two FTN domains and 5D
    outbound:

    domain fidonet c:\\ftn\\outbound\\fidonet 2
    domain omeganet c:\\ftn\\outbound\\omeganet 11
    address 2:5070/222@fidonet 11:58/6@omeganet

    One must configure not the zone of your own address for 'domain'
    keyword as one might think but the zone that should not be appended to the outbound name (i.e. the outbound subdirectory extensions are not processed
    for the zone denoted in the 'domain' line).

    If your tosser would create bundles for omeganet in the omeganet
    directory then you should write as indicated above. But since it does not
    --- hpt/lnx 1.9 2024-02-05
    * Origin: Moscow, Russia (2:5020/1042)
  • From binkd Team@2:5020/1042 to All on Sat Jun 8 22:15:04 2024
    31 Mar 16:48:43 [40423] trying 195.209.235.3, port 24554...
    31 Mar 16:48:43 [40423] connected to proxy.osu.ru:24554
    31 Mar 16:48:44 [40423] Connection rejected by proxy (HTTP/1.0 403 Forbidden)
    ? 31 Mar 16:48:44 [40423] unable to connect: {13} Permission denied

    In such a case you may try to use http tunnelling for instance with the help of httport, HTTPTunnel (http://http-tunnel.sourceforge.net/), stunnel (https://www.stunnel.org/) or you may find a node receiving binkp
    connections at port 443.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    07. How Can binkd Work via SOCKS-proxy?

    It is not a rare case when users go out to the internet from their corporate LAN exclusively via the proxy server based at the only computer connected to the internet. Thus binkd cannot make a direct connection to
    the remote node and one must use the proxy server. Proxy servers support
    was included in version 0.9.4 and the later ones.

    binkd works with a SOCKS proxy version 4 and 5. The first one does not demand an authorization (no login and password), the second one demands it
    as a rule.

    Suppose the connected to the Internet computer has the IP address 192.168.0.1 in its LAN and the SOCKS server at the computer responds on
    port 1080. Here is the line in binkd configuration file necessary for
    working via the SOCKS proxy.

    1. A SOCKS server without user authorization (no login and password are demanded):

    socks 192.168.0.1:1080

    2. A proxy server with user authorization (it is necessary to type login and password, e.g. login "user", password "password"):

    socks 192.168.0.1:1080/user/password


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    08. IP-Point: How Can I Make binkd to Get My Mail From My Bossnode (Uplink)?

    Make a poll using the command line option -P:

    binkd -P1:2/3 binkd.cfg

    Usually they want binkd to exit after the session is finished. One can
    use the command line option -p:

    binkd -p -P1:2/3 binkd.cfg

    If binkd does not exit for a long time after the session has been
    finished then decrease the value of rescan-delay (and sometimes the value
    of timeout).

    If binkd works permanently (e.g. as a Windows service) and you want to
    get your mail regularly then you need some additional program or a script.
    As an example in DOS, Windows or OS/2 it is enough to execute the command:

    cd . >> %outbound%\NNNNMMMM.ilo

    where NNNN is the hex net number,
    MMMM is the hex node number,
    %outbound% is the path to the necessary zone outbound.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    09. "start_file_transfer: .: Permission denied" Error

    You get the message when binkd cannot open a file for sending indicated
    in some *.?lo file. Most likely the file has a line containing only "."
    because the poll has been made by a command of the type

    echo . >> xxxxyyyy.flo

    you should change it to "cd . >> xxxxyyyy.flo"


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    10. binkd/win and Dial-up: Dialing-up and Disconnecting Automatically

    The problem is to configure the fidonet box in such a way that binkd
    would initiate a telephone call to your Internet provider, get your mail
    and disconnect.

    The solutions:

    1st Solution

    Configure automatic connection and timeout in the dial-up connection properties (idle time before hanging up). It is convinient to use a non-standard software for dialing-up (Advanced Dialer and others). You
    should start binkd with a command line option -p periodically (and possibly -Paddress for binkd to make a poll to the address).

    binkd -p -P1:2/3.4 binkd.cfg


    2nd Solution

    Use the command line option -p and the batch file where first Remote
    Access Service (RAS) is started then binkd is started and after binkd exits
    RAS is stopped.

    Two variants, for Windows NT and for Windows 2000:
    === binkdpoll1.cmd
    rasdial Connection
    binkd -p binkd.cfg
    rasdial Connection /disconnect
    ===

    === binkdpoll2.cmd
    net start "remote access service"
    net start "remote access auto service"
    binkd -p binkd.cfg
    net stop "remote access auto service"
    net stop "remote access service"
    ===

    3rd Solution (The Best One For Win9x)

    Use the command line options -p and -Paddress and control connection
    with a non-standard dial-up software (for example dialerp). This solution
    is the most reliable one (especially if the modem connection to your
    Internet provider is bad) due to the fact that dialerp can start some
    indicated programs at setting the connection. Here is the batch file you should start in the 'Execute' parameter of the dialerp configuration file:

    ====
    binkd -p -P1:2/3.4 binkd.cfg
    dialerp BREAK *
    ====

    The question you may now ask: Where can I take dialerp? The answer is:
    Ask the author (Alexander Vedjakin, 2:5020/540) or look for it in fileecho archives and in ftp/http.


    In any case you should set a small value for 'rescan-delay' parameter in the binkd configuration file. binkd would exit faster.

    === binkd.cfg
    # Outbound rescans period (sec)
    rescan-delay 2
    ===


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    11. I Have Changed binkd Configuration File On-The-Fly. When Will It Be Reloaded?

    Starting with the version 0.9.1 binkd could feel that its configuration file changed. It exited with code 3 if it had been started with option -C. Modification time was checked after each ingoing session. Here is the batch file for starting binkd versions 0.9.1-0.9.3 and 0.9.4-0.9.6/w32:

    ====
    :aaa
    binkd -C binkd.cfg
    if errorlevel 4 goto end
    if errorlevel 3 goto aaa
    :end
    ====

    In the versions 0.9.4/unix and /os2-emx (and in these ones only) binkd restarts automatically if it is started with -C command line option.
    Besides that starting with version 0.9.4 the files included into the configuration file with the help of 'include' keyword are tested not only
    on incoming sessions but also in every 'rescan-delay' seconds.

    If you install binkd 0.9.4/w32 as a Windows NT service you should use it with -C command line option. Then binkd re-reads its configuration file.

    Before version 0.9.4 changes in the configuration file were not tested if binkd was started in client-only mode (-c command line option).

    In the unix versions configuration file is re-read on SIGHUP signal
    by the command
    kill -HUP `cat /var/run/binkd.pid`

    In the version 1.0 configuration file is re-read automatically if
    changed. binkd tests on changes at every 'rescan-delay' seconds.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    12. How Can binkd Work With T-mail/IP?

    There is no way to do it. The protocols differ in essence: binkd uses
    binkp protocol whereas T-mail/IP uses EMSI etc.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    13. Is There At Least One Log Analyzer Under Unix?

    There exist many Perl scripts and several win32 binaries. For example here:

    binkdstat 0.1 beta4 Christmas version 6.01.2002
    Statistics generator for binkd
    (c) Dmitry Sergienko, 2:464/910@fidonet, dmitry@trifle.net 14.08.2000
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/binkdstat-ds.0.1_beta4_Christmas

    There also exists BndStat program:
    BNDST101.ZIP 34812 14-Aug-01 (AREA:AFTNMISC)
    BndStat 1.01. With sources. binkd statistics generator. Compiled for all
    platforms. Included win32 binaries. (C) Dmitry Rusov, 2:5090/94

    Log analyzer by val khokhlov (perl):
    http://www.vk.kiev.ua/create/soft.html#bnkds
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/stat-binkd.pl.gz

    binkdstat (c) val khokhlov, Dmitry Kolvakh, updated at April 2006
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/binkdstat.zip

    T-Hist (c) Michael Markowsky, 2:5020/378 (KLUG's BBS)
    Binary log file analyzer for various mailers including binkd.
    Works in DOS, Windows NT (2000, XP, 2003) and OS/2.
    ftp://ftp.grumbler.org/pub/binkd/hist30a7.zip

    Kleine Statistiker/BINKD for DOS v0.60a, Russian version
    A small statistics generator for posting statistics to an echo conference.
    ftp://ftp.grumbler.org/pub/binkd/statddos.rar


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    14. binkd Connects Too Slowly (~20 Seconds) Though I Have a High-Speed LAN

    It is possible that 'backresolv' parameter is on (for logging the remote host domain name) and DNS is not configured.

    The simplest solution is to comment the 'backresolv' out in the configuration file. Configuring DNS is a more complex solution.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    15. Why Does binkd Not Understand Command Line Options When I Start It From inetd?

    You should use the program name as the first parameter in inetd.conf (it may be any string for binkd), the second and the following parameters
    are the command line options (-iqs etc.) and the last parameter is the configuration file full path:

    binkp stream tcp nowait root /usr/fido/binkd binkd -isq /usr/fido/binkd.cfg

    If you do not use -q option then you should switch console output off (comment 'printq', 'percents', 'conlog' out).


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    16. Can One Make a File Request From binkd?

    It's a piece of cake! binkd supports WAZOO FREQ with an external helper.

    To request files from a remote system it is necessary to create a file
    of type nnnnmmmm.REQ and to put it in the outbound directory next to *.?ut
    and *.?lo files. But *.REQ files do not initiate binkd to call a link so
    to make a FREQ it is necessary to make a poll. The contents of a .REQ file
    is described in the "!SRIF.TXT" file which is a copy of FSC-0086.001 from http://ftsc.org


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    17. How Can my binkd Respond to a File Request?

    One can configure binkd for calling an external file request processor supporting SRIF (FSC-0086) for receiving and handling FREQs in binkd. Please read the "!SRIF.TXT" file and the comment to 'exec' in the configuration
    file.

    Here are the examples of lines in configuration file for DOS-based OS
    and for *nix (you should use regular expressions in the latter case for
    binkd to match both upper-case and lower-case letters, e.g. both *.REQ and *.req):

    exec "\\ftn\\allfix\\allfix.exe RP -SRIF *S" *.req

    exec "/ftn/bin/tmafreq-srif *S" *.[rR][eE][qQ]

    A bash script "srifreq" is delivered with binkd starting with version 1.1a19.
    The following file request processors are also compatible with binkd
    (but they are not the only ones, any other one supporting SRIF will do):

    Allfix by Harms Software Engineering: it is a fileecho processor with built-in file request processor and it has versions for DOS and OS/2;

    ViReq by Michael Haase (2:2432/280): a specialized FREQ processor for Windows, it is distributed by Michael Massenberg (2:2411/505) via modem,
    ISDN and Fido-over-IP.

    tmafreq by Maxim Timofeyev <tmahome@mail.tma.spb.ru>: the FREQ processor
    is created for a unix-like OS and ported into Windows. One may obtain tmafreq from different BBS and FTP with fileecho archives, or may get tmafreq sources from anonymous CVS :pserver:anoncvs@tma.spb.ru:/cvsroot, module "tmafreq".

    VIREQ/x by Volker Imre <volker@imre.dyndns.org> (2:246/2098): the FREQ processor is created for a unix-like OS but can be compiled in the OS/2, Windows and maybe other operating systems. Now it is included into "ftnapps" project on Sourceforge and may be downloaded from http://ftnapps.sourceforge.net/vireq.html.
    Binaries built for Win32 and OS/2 may be downloaded from http://download.binkd.org and
    https://sites.google.com/view/vasilyevmax/


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    18. How Can I Add binkd To a Fidonet Box Working With a Modem?

    You must configure your modem mailer and tosser for BSO (binkley-style outbound) mode so that all of them including binkd would have the same
    inbound directories (and also the same outbound directories). For example,
    one may put the following line to T-Mail mailer configuration file:

    BinkStyle_Pack_For All

    If your mailer can work with AMA (arcmail-attach) only you may try to
    use fileboxes and/or find programs that can convert your mailer's queue to
    BSO or fileboxes. For example, Mail2dir utility allows using fileboxes with FrontDoor. Such a means disables a possibility of sending your mail to the
    same link both by IP and by modem (for instance, when one of the channels failed). There is another more radical but more flexible way: you may change your mailer.
    See also question 35.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    19. Flags Are Not Created On Receiving a File, Programs Do Not Start

    For sure you have a wrong template in the configuration file. You have to use it this way (the first two lines are for Windows and OS/2, the rest are
    for the Unix-like OS):

    flag m:\\ftn\\flg\\pntseg.flg m:\\\\ftn\\\\inbound\\\\sec\\\\pntstr*.*
    flag m:\\ftn\\flg\\toss.flg *.su? *.mo? *.tu? *.we? *.th? *.fr? *.sa? *.pkt

    exec "/usr/local/bin/ftrack -c /fido/conf/ftrack" *.[Pp][Kk][Tt]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ss][Uu][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Mm][Oo][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Uu][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ww][Ee][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Hh][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ff][Rr][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ss][Aa][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/fech-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Ii][Cc]

    You must use the full path with four slashes for the file to receive or
    the template should start with an asterisk character. You must use two
    slashes for the flag file.

    You must use the full path because using a filename without path means
    the event of receiving the file in the current directory and not in the
    inbound directory. If a template begins with "*" then it means "any
    directory" (and since all the files are received in one of the inbound directories it works for both password protected and for unprotected
    sessions).

    In a UNIX-like OS you should take into account that filenames are case sensitive. Please use regular expressions in templates.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    20. 'skipmask' Keyword Does Not Work

    A filename is compared without path and the comparison is case
    sensitive when 'skipmask' is used.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    21. binkd Under Windows 3.x

    Sergey Zharsky (zharik@usa.net) ported binkd 0.9.2 and binkd 0.9.5 for Windows 3.x. They work using IP stacks Trumpet Winsock ver. 3.0 revision D
    and Novell TCP/IP Client for Win 3.11 (see the answer to the question
    'binkd Under DOS', the section "The DOS version has the feature...").


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    22. Different FTN Domains in binkd And a Tosser Without 5D Support

    Suppose there are two domains (with different zone numbers though it
    does not matter). Mail can be successfully sent to the first domain but
    not to the second one. This situation may arise if the tosser, the tracker
    and the other your FTN programs do not support 5D BSO.

    This is a typical binkd configuration for two FTN domains and 5D
    outbound:

    domain fidonet c:\\ftn\\outbound\\fidonet 2
    domain omeganet c:\\ftn\\outbound\\omeganet 11
    address 2:5070/222@fidonet 11:58/6@omeganet

    One must configure not the zone of your own address for 'domain'
    keyword as one might think but the zone that should not be appended to the outbound name (i.e. the outbound subdirectory extensions are not processed
    for the zone denoted in the 'domain' line).

    If your tosser would create bundles for omeganet in the omeganet
    directory then you should write as indicated above. But since it does not
    --- hpt/lnx 1.9 2024-02-05
    * Origin: Moscow, Russia (2:5020/1042)
  • From binkd Team@2:5020/1042 to All on Sat Jun 15 22:15:04 2024
    31 Mar 16:48:43 [40423] trying 195.209.235.3, port 24554...
    31 Mar 16:48:43 [40423] connected to proxy.osu.ru:24554
    31 Mar 16:48:44 [40423] Connection rejected by proxy (HTTP/1.0 403 Forbidden)
    ? 31 Mar 16:48:44 [40423] unable to connect: {13} Permission denied

    In such a case you may try to use http tunnelling for instance with the help of httport, HTTPTunnel (http://http-tunnel.sourceforge.net/), stunnel (https://www.stunnel.org/) or you may find a node receiving binkp
    connections at port 443.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    07. How Can binkd Work via SOCKS-proxy?

    It is not a rare case when users go out to the internet from their corporate LAN exclusively via the proxy server based at the only computer connected to the internet. Thus binkd cannot make a direct connection to
    the remote node and one must use the proxy server. Proxy servers support
    was included in version 0.9.4 and the later ones.

    binkd works with a SOCKS proxy version 4 and 5. The first one does not demand an authorization (no login and password), the second one demands it
    as a rule.

    Suppose the connected to the Internet computer has the IP address 192.168.0.1 in its LAN and the SOCKS server at the computer responds on
    port 1080. Here is the line in binkd configuration file necessary for
    working via the SOCKS proxy.

    1. A SOCKS server without user authorization (no login and password are demanded):

    socks 192.168.0.1:1080

    2. A proxy server with user authorization (it is necessary to type login and password, e.g. login "user", password "password"):

    socks 192.168.0.1:1080/user/password


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    08. IP-Point: How Can I Make binkd to Get My Mail From My Bossnode (Uplink)?

    Make a poll using the command line option -P:

    binkd -P1:2/3 binkd.cfg

    Usually they want binkd to exit after the session is finished. One can
    use the command line option -p:

    binkd -p -P1:2/3 binkd.cfg

    If binkd does not exit for a long time after the session has been
    finished then decrease the value of rescan-delay (and sometimes the value
    of timeout).

    If binkd works permanently (e.g. as a Windows service) and you want to
    get your mail regularly then you need some additional program or a script.
    As an example in DOS, Windows or OS/2 it is enough to execute the command:

    cd . >> %outbound%\NNNNMMMM.ilo

    where NNNN is the hex net number,
    MMMM is the hex node number,
    %outbound% is the path to the necessary zone outbound.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    09. "start_file_transfer: .: Permission denied" Error

    You get the message when binkd cannot open a file for sending indicated
    in some *.?lo file. Most likely the file has a line containing only "."
    because the poll has been made by a command of the type

    echo . >> xxxxyyyy.flo

    you should change it to "cd . >> xxxxyyyy.flo"


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    10. binkd/win and Dial-up: Dialing-up and Disconnecting Automatically

    The problem is to configure the fidonet box in such a way that binkd
    would initiate a telephone call to your Internet provider, get your mail
    and disconnect.

    The solutions:

    1st Solution

    Configure automatic connection and timeout in the dial-up connection properties (idle time before hanging up). It is convinient to use a non-standard software for dialing-up (Advanced Dialer and others). You
    should start binkd with a command line option -p periodically (and possibly -Paddress for binkd to make a poll to the address).

    binkd -p -P1:2/3.4 binkd.cfg


    2nd Solution

    Use the command line option -p and the batch file where first Remote
    Access Service (RAS) is started then binkd is started and after binkd exits
    RAS is stopped.

    Two variants, for Windows NT and for Windows 2000:
    === binkdpoll1.cmd
    rasdial Connection
    binkd -p binkd.cfg
    rasdial Connection /disconnect
    ===

    === binkdpoll2.cmd
    net start "remote access service"
    net start "remote access auto service"
    binkd -p binkd.cfg
    net stop "remote access auto service"
    net stop "remote access service"
    ===

    3rd Solution (The Best One For Win9x)

    Use the command line options -p and -Paddress and control connection
    with a non-standard dial-up software (for example dialerp). This solution
    is the most reliable one (especially if the modem connection to your
    Internet provider is bad) due to the fact that dialerp can start some
    indicated programs at setting the connection. Here is the batch file you should start in the 'Execute' parameter of the dialerp configuration file:

    ====
    binkd -p -P1:2/3.4 binkd.cfg
    dialerp BREAK *
    ====

    The question you may now ask: Where can I take dialerp? The answer is:
    Ask the author (Alexander Vedjakin, 2:5020/540) or look for it in fileecho archives and in ftp/http.


    In any case you should set a small value for 'rescan-delay' parameter in the binkd configuration file. binkd would exit faster.

    === binkd.cfg
    # Outbound rescans period (sec)
    rescan-delay 2
    ===


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    11. I Have Changed binkd Configuration File On-The-Fly. When Will It Be Reloaded?

    Starting with the version 0.9.1 binkd could feel that its configuration file changed. It exited with code 3 if it had been started with option -C. Modification time was checked after each ingoing session. Here is the batch file for starting binkd versions 0.9.1-0.9.3 and 0.9.4-0.9.6/w32:

    ====
    :aaa
    binkd -C binkd.cfg
    if errorlevel 4 goto end
    if errorlevel 3 goto aaa
    :end
    ====

    In the versions 0.9.4/unix and /os2-emx (and in these ones only) binkd restarts automatically if it is started with -C command line option.
    Besides that starting with version 0.9.4 the files included into the configuration file with the help of 'include' keyword are tested not only
    on incoming sessions but also in every 'rescan-delay' seconds.

    If you install binkd 0.9.4/w32 as a Windows NT service you should use it with -C command line option. Then binkd re-reads its configuration file.

    Before version 0.9.4 changes in the configuration file were not tested if binkd was started in client-only mode (-c command line option).

    In the unix versions configuration file is re-read on SIGHUP signal
    by the command
    kill -HUP `cat /var/run/binkd.pid`

    In the version 1.0 configuration file is re-read automatically if
    changed. binkd tests on changes at every 'rescan-delay' seconds.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    12. How Can binkd Work With T-mail/IP?

    There is no way to do it. The protocols differ in essence: binkd uses
    binkp protocol whereas T-mail/IP uses EMSI etc.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    13. Is There At Least One Log Analyzer Under Unix?

    There exist many Perl scripts and several win32 binaries. For example here:

    binkdstat 0.1 beta4 Christmas version 6.01.2002
    Statistics generator for binkd
    (c) Dmitry Sergienko, 2:464/910@fidonet, dmitry@trifle.net 14.08.2000
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/binkdstat-ds.0.1_beta4_Christmas

    There also exists BndStat program:
    BNDST101.ZIP 34812 14-Aug-01 (AREA:AFTNMISC)
    BndStat 1.01. With sources. binkd statistics generator. Compiled for all
    platforms. Included win32 binaries. (C) Dmitry Rusov, 2:5090/94

    Log analyzer by val khokhlov (perl):
    http://www.vk.kiev.ua/create/soft.html#bnkds
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/stat-binkd.pl.gz

    binkdstat (c) val khokhlov, Dmitry Kolvakh, updated at April 2006
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/binkdstat.zip

    T-Hist (c) Michael Markowsky, 2:5020/378 (KLUG's BBS)
    Binary log file analyzer for various mailers including binkd.
    Works in DOS, Windows NT (2000, XP, 2003) and OS/2.
    ftp://ftp.grumbler.org/pub/binkd/hist30a7.zip

    Kleine Statistiker/BINKD for DOS v0.60a, Russian version
    A small statistics generator for posting statistics to an echo conference.
    ftp://ftp.grumbler.org/pub/binkd/statddos.rar


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    14. binkd Connects Too Slowly (~20 Seconds) Though I Have a High-Speed LAN

    It is possible that 'backresolv' parameter is on (for logging the remote host domain name) and DNS is not configured.

    The simplest solution is to comment the 'backresolv' out in the configuration file. Configuring DNS is a more complex solution.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    15. Why Does binkd Not Understand Command Line Options When I Start It From inetd?

    You should use the program name as the first parameter in inetd.conf (it may be any string for binkd), the second and the following parameters
    are the command line options (-iqs etc.) and the last parameter is the configuration file full path:

    binkp stream tcp nowait root /usr/fido/binkd binkd -isq /usr/fido/binkd.cfg

    If you do not use -q option then you should switch console output off (comment 'printq', 'percents', 'conlog' out).


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    16. Can One Make a File Request From binkd?

    It's a piece of cake! binkd supports WAZOO FREQ with an external helper.

    To request files from a remote system it is necessary to create a file
    of type nnnnmmmm.REQ and to put it in the outbound directory next to *.?ut
    and *.?lo files. But *.REQ files do not initiate binkd to call a link so
    to make a FREQ it is necessary to make a poll. The contents of a .REQ file
    is described in the "!SRIF.TXT" file which is a copy of FSC-0086.001 from http://ftsc.org


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    17. How Can my binkd Respond to a File Request?

    One can configure binkd for calling an external file request processor supporting SRIF (FSC-0086) for receiving and handling FREQs in binkd. Please read the "!SRIF.TXT" file and the comment to 'exec' in the configuration
    file.

    Here are the examples of lines in configuration file for DOS-based OS
    and for *nix (you should use regular expressions in the latter case for
    binkd to match both upper-case and lower-case letters, e.g. both *.REQ and *.req):

    exec "\\ftn\\allfix\\allfix.exe RP -SRIF *S" *.req

    exec "/ftn/bin/tmafreq-srif *S" *.[rR][eE][qQ]

    A bash script "srifreq" is delivered with binkd starting with version 1.1a19.
    The following file request processors are also compatible with binkd
    (but they are not the only ones, any other one supporting SRIF will do):

    Allfix by Harms Software Engineering: it is a fileecho processor with built-in file request processor and it has versions for DOS and OS/2;

    ViReq by Michael Haase (2:2432/280): a specialized FREQ processor for Windows, it is distributed by Michael Massenberg (2:2411/505) via modem,
    ISDN and Fido-over-IP.

    tmafreq by Maxim Timofeyev <tmahome@mail.tma.spb.ru>: the FREQ processor
    is created for a unix-like OS and ported into Windows. One may obtain tmafreq from different BBS and FTP with fileecho archives, or may get tmafreq sources from anonymous CVS :pserver:anoncvs@tma.spb.ru:/cvsroot, module "tmafreq".

    VIREQ/x by Volker Imre <volker@imre.dyndns.org> (2:246/2098): the FREQ processor is created for a unix-like OS but can be compiled in the OS/2, Windows and maybe other operating systems. Now it is included into "ftnapps" project on Sourceforge and may be downloaded from http://ftnapps.sourceforge.net/vireq.html.
    Binaries built for Win32 and OS/2 may be downloaded from http://download.binkd.org and
    https://sites.google.com/view/vasilyevmax/


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    18. How Can I Add binkd To a Fidonet Box Working With a Modem?

    You must configure your modem mailer and tosser for BSO (binkley-style outbound) mode so that all of them including binkd would have the same
    inbound directories (and also the same outbound directories). For example,
    one may put the following line to T-Mail mailer configuration file:

    BinkStyle_Pack_For All

    If your mailer can work with AMA (arcmail-attach) only you may try to
    use fileboxes and/or find programs that can convert your mailer's queue to
    BSO or fileboxes. For example, Mail2dir utility allows using fileboxes with FrontDoor. Such a means disables a possibility of sending your mail to the
    same link both by IP and by modem (for instance, when one of the channels failed). There is another more radical but more flexible way: you may change your mailer.
    See also question 35.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    19. Flags Are Not Created On Receiving a File, Programs Do Not Start

    For sure you have a wrong template in the configuration file. You have to use it this way (the first two lines are for Windows and OS/2, the rest are
    for the Unix-like OS):

    flag m:\\ftn\\flg\\pntseg.flg m:\\\\ftn\\\\inbound\\\\sec\\\\pntstr*.*
    flag m:\\ftn\\flg\\toss.flg *.su? *.mo? *.tu? *.we? *.th? *.fr? *.sa? *.pkt

    exec "/usr/local/bin/ftrack -c /fido/conf/ftrack" *.[Pp][Kk][Tt]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ss][Uu][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Mm][Oo][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Uu][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ww][Ee][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Hh][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ff][Rr][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ss][Aa][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/fech-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Ii][Cc]

    You must use the full path with four slashes for the file to receive or
    the template should start with an asterisk character. You must use two
    slashes for the flag file.

    You must use the full path because using a filename without path means
    the event of receiving the file in the current directory and not in the
    inbound directory. If a template begins with "*" then it means "any
    directory" (and since all the files are received in one of the inbound directories it works for both password protected and for unprotected
    sessions).

    In a UNIX-like OS you should take into account that filenames are case sensitive. Please use regular expressions in templates.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    20. 'skipmask' Keyword Does Not Work

    A filename is compared without path and the comparison is case
    sensitive when 'skipmask' is used.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    21. binkd Under Windows 3.x

    Sergey Zharsky (zharik@usa.net) ported binkd 0.9.2 and binkd 0.9.5 for Windows 3.x. They work using IP stacks Trumpet Winsock ver. 3.0 revision D
    and Novell TCP/IP Client for Win 3.11 (see the answer to the question
    'binkd Under DOS', the section "The DOS version has the feature...").


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    22. Different FTN Domains in binkd And a Tosser Without 5D Support

    Suppose there are two domains (with different zone numbers though it
    does not matter). Mail can be successfully sent to the first domain but
    not to the second one. This situation may arise if the tosser, the tracker
    and the other your FTN programs do not support 5D BSO.

    This is a typical binkd configuration for two FTN domains and 5D
    outbound:

    domain fidonet c:\\ftn\\outbound\\fidonet 2
    domain omeganet c:\\ftn\\outbound\\omeganet 11
    address 2:5070/222@fidonet 11:58/6@omeganet

    One must configure not the zone of your own address for 'domain'
    keyword as one might think but the zone that should not be appended to the outbound name (i.e. the outbound subdirectory extensions are not processed
    for the zone denoted in the 'domain' line).

    If your tosser would create bundles for omeganet in the omeganet
    directory then you should write as indicated above. But since it does not
    --- hpt/lnx 1.9 2024-02-05
    * Origin: Moscow, Russia (2:5020/1042)
  • From binkd Team@2:5020/1042 to All on Sat Jun 22 22:15:02 2024
    31 Mar 16:48:43 [40423] trying 195.209.235.3, port 24554...
    31 Mar 16:48:43 [40423] connected to proxy.osu.ru:24554
    31 Mar 16:48:44 [40423] Connection rejected by proxy (HTTP/1.0 403 Forbidden)
    ? 31 Mar 16:48:44 [40423] unable to connect: {13} Permission denied

    In such a case you may try to use http tunnelling for instance with the help of httport, HTTPTunnel (http://http-tunnel.sourceforge.net/), stunnel (https://www.stunnel.org/) or you may find a node receiving binkp
    connections at port 443.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    07. How Can binkd Work via SOCKS-proxy?

    It is not a rare case when users go out to the internet from their corporate LAN exclusively via the proxy server based at the only computer connected to the internet. Thus binkd cannot make a direct connection to
    the remote node and one must use the proxy server. Proxy servers support
    was included in version 0.9.4 and the later ones.

    binkd works with a SOCKS proxy version 4 and 5. The first one does not demand an authorization (no login and password), the second one demands it
    as a rule.

    Suppose the connected to the Internet computer has the IP address 192.168.0.1 in its LAN and the SOCKS server at the computer responds on
    port 1080. Here is the line in binkd configuration file necessary for
    working via the SOCKS proxy.

    1. A SOCKS server without user authorization (no login and password are demanded):

    socks 192.168.0.1:1080

    2. A proxy server with user authorization (it is necessary to type login and password, e.g. login "user", password "password"):

    socks 192.168.0.1:1080/user/password


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    08. IP-Point: How Can I Make binkd to Get My Mail From My Bossnode (Uplink)?

    Make a poll using the command line option -P:

    binkd -P1:2/3 binkd.cfg

    Usually they want binkd to exit after the session is finished. One can
    use the command line option -p:

    binkd -p -P1:2/3 binkd.cfg

    If binkd does not exit for a long time after the session has been
    finished then decrease the value of rescan-delay (and sometimes the value
    of timeout).

    If binkd works permanently (e.g. as a Windows service) and you want to
    get your mail regularly then you need some additional program or a script.
    As an example in DOS, Windows or OS/2 it is enough to execute the command:

    cd . >> %outbound%\NNNNMMMM.ilo

    where NNNN is the hex net number,
    MMMM is the hex node number,
    %outbound% is the path to the necessary zone outbound.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    09. "start_file_transfer: .: Permission denied" Error

    You get the message when binkd cannot open a file for sending indicated
    in some *.?lo file. Most likely the file has a line containing only "."
    because the poll has been made by a command of the type

    echo . >> xxxxyyyy.flo

    you should change it to "cd . >> xxxxyyyy.flo"


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    10. binkd/win and Dial-up: Dialing-up and Disconnecting Automatically

    The problem is to configure the fidonet box in such a way that binkd
    would initiate a telephone call to your Internet provider, get your mail
    and disconnect.

    The solutions:

    1st Solution

    Configure automatic connection and timeout in the dial-up connection properties (idle time before hanging up). It is convinient to use a non-standard software for dialing-up (Advanced Dialer and others). You
    should start binkd with a command line option -p periodically (and possibly -Paddress for binkd to make a poll to the address).

    binkd -p -P1:2/3.4 binkd.cfg


    2nd Solution

    Use the command line option -p and the batch file where first Remote
    Access Service (RAS) is started then binkd is started and after binkd exits
    RAS is stopped.

    Two variants, for Windows NT and for Windows 2000:
    === binkdpoll1.cmd
    rasdial Connection
    binkd -p binkd.cfg
    rasdial Connection /disconnect
    ===

    === binkdpoll2.cmd
    net start "remote access service"
    net start "remote access auto service"
    binkd -p binkd.cfg
    net stop "remote access auto service"
    net stop "remote access service"
    ===

    3rd Solution (The Best One For Win9x)

    Use the command line options -p and -Paddress and control connection
    with a non-standard dial-up software (for example dialerp). This solution
    is the most reliable one (especially if the modem connection to your
    Internet provider is bad) due to the fact that dialerp can start some
    indicated programs at setting the connection. Here is the batch file you should start in the 'Execute' parameter of the dialerp configuration file:

    ====
    binkd -p -P1:2/3.4 binkd.cfg
    dialerp BREAK *
    ====

    The question you may now ask: Where can I take dialerp? The answer is:
    Ask the author (Alexander Vedjakin, 2:5020/540) or look for it in fileecho archives and in ftp/http.


    In any case you should set a small value for 'rescan-delay' parameter in the binkd configuration file. binkd would exit faster.

    === binkd.cfg
    # Outbound rescans period (sec)
    rescan-delay 2
    ===


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    11. I Have Changed binkd Configuration File On-The-Fly. When Will It Be Reloaded?

    Starting with the version 0.9.1 binkd could feel that its configuration file changed. It exited with code 3 if it had been started with option -C. Modification time was checked after each ingoing session. Here is the batch file for starting binkd versions 0.9.1-0.9.3 and 0.9.4-0.9.6/w32:

    ====
    :aaa
    binkd -C binkd.cfg
    if errorlevel 4 goto end
    if errorlevel 3 goto aaa
    :end
    ====

    In the versions 0.9.4/unix and /os2-emx (and in these ones only) binkd restarts automatically if it is started with -C command line option.
    Besides that starting with version 0.9.4 the files included into the configuration file with the help of 'include' keyword are tested not only
    on incoming sessions but also in every 'rescan-delay' seconds.

    If you install binkd 0.9.4/w32 as a Windows NT service you should use it with -C command line option. Then binkd re-reads its configuration file.

    Before version 0.9.4 changes in the configuration file were not tested if binkd was started in client-only mode (-c command line option).

    In the unix versions configuration file is re-read on SIGHUP signal
    by the command
    kill -HUP `cat /var/run/binkd.pid`

    In the version 1.0 configuration file is re-read automatically if
    changed. binkd tests on changes at every 'rescan-delay' seconds.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    12. How Can binkd Work With T-mail/IP?

    There is no way to do it. The protocols differ in essence: binkd uses
    binkp protocol whereas T-mail/IP uses EMSI etc.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    13. Is There At Least One Log Analyzer Under Unix?

    There exist many Perl scripts and several win32 binaries. For example here:

    binkdstat 0.1 beta4 Christmas version 6.01.2002
    Statistics generator for binkd
    (c) Dmitry Sergienko, 2:464/910@fidonet, dmitry@trifle.net 14.08.2000
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/binkdstat-ds.0.1_beta4_Christmas

    There also exists BndStat program:
    BNDST101.ZIP 34812 14-Aug-01 (AREA:AFTNMISC)
    BndStat 1.01. With sources. binkd statistics generator. Compiled for all
    platforms. Included win32 binaries. (C) Dmitry Rusov, 2:5090/94

    Log analyzer by val khokhlov (perl):
    http://www.vk.kiev.ua/create/soft.html#bnkds
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/stat-binkd.pl.gz

    binkdstat (c) val khokhlov, Dmitry Kolvakh, updated at April 2006
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/binkdstat.zip

    T-Hist (c) Michael Markowsky, 2:5020/378 (KLUG's BBS)
    Binary log file analyzer for various mailers including binkd.
    Works in DOS, Windows NT (2000, XP, 2003) and OS/2.
    ftp://ftp.grumbler.org/pub/binkd/hist30a7.zip

    Kleine Statistiker/BINKD for DOS v0.60a, Russian version
    A small statistics generator for posting statistics to an echo conference.
    ftp://ftp.grumbler.org/pub/binkd/statddos.rar


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    14. binkd Connects Too Slowly (~20 Seconds) Though I Have a High-Speed LAN

    It is possible that 'backresolv' parameter is on (for logging the remote host domain name) and DNS is not configured.

    The simplest solution is to comment the 'backresolv' out in the configuration file. Configuring DNS is a more complex solution.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    15. Why Does binkd Not Understand Command Line Options When I Start It From inetd?

    You should use the program name as the first parameter in inetd.conf (it may be any string for binkd), the second and the following parameters
    are the command line options (-iqs etc.) and the last parameter is the configuration file full path:

    binkp stream tcp nowait root /usr/fido/binkd binkd -isq /usr/fido/binkd.cfg

    If you do not use -q option then you should switch console output off (comment 'printq', 'percents', 'conlog' out).


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    16. Can One Make a File Request From binkd?

    It's a piece of cake! binkd supports WAZOO FREQ with an external helper.

    To request files from a remote system it is necessary to create a file
    of type nnnnmmmm.REQ and to put it in the outbound directory next to *.?ut
    and *.?lo files. But *.REQ files do not initiate binkd to call a link so
    to make a FREQ it is necessary to make a poll. The contents of a .REQ file
    is described in the "!SRIF.TXT" file which is a copy of FSC-0086.001 from http://ftsc.org


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    17. How Can my binkd Respond to a File Request?

    One can configure binkd for calling an external file request processor supporting SRIF (FSC-0086) for receiving and handling FREQs in binkd. Please read the "!SRIF.TXT" file and the comment to 'exec' in the configuration
    file.

    Here are the examples of lines in configuration file for DOS-based OS
    and for *nix (you should use regular expressions in the latter case for
    binkd to match both upper-case and lower-case letters, e.g. both *.REQ and *.req):

    exec "\\ftn\\allfix\\allfix.exe RP -SRIF *S" *.req

    exec "/ftn/bin/tmafreq-srif *S" *.[rR][eE][qQ]

    A bash script "srifreq" is delivered with binkd starting with version 1.1a19.
    The following file request processors are also compatible with binkd
    (but they are not the only ones, any other one supporting SRIF will do):

    Allfix by Harms Software Engineering: it is a fileecho processor with built-in file request processor and it has versions for DOS and OS/2;

    ViReq by Michael Haase (2:2432/280): a specialized FREQ processor for Windows, it is distributed by Michael Massenberg (2:2411/505) via modem,
    ISDN and Fido-over-IP.

    tmafreq by Maxim Timofeyev <tmahome@mail.tma.spb.ru>: the FREQ processor
    is created for a unix-like OS and ported into Windows. One may obtain tmafreq from different BBS and FTP with fileecho archives, or may get tmafreq sources from anonymous CVS :pserver:anoncvs@tma.spb.ru:/cvsroot, module "tmafreq".

    VIREQ/x by Volker Imre <volker@imre.dyndns.org> (2:246/2098): the FREQ processor is created for a unix-like OS but can be compiled in the OS/2, Windows and maybe other operating systems. Now it is included into "ftnapps" project on Sourceforge and may be downloaded from http://ftnapps.sourceforge.net/vireq.html.
    Binaries built for Win32 and OS/2 may be downloaded from http://download.binkd.org and
    https://sites.google.com/view/vasilyevmax/


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    18. How Can I Add binkd To a Fidonet Box Working With a Modem?

    You must configure your modem mailer and tosser for BSO (binkley-style outbound) mode so that all of them including binkd would have the same
    inbound directories (and also the same outbound directories). For example,
    one may put the following line to T-Mail mailer configuration file:

    BinkStyle_Pack_For All

    If your mailer can work with AMA (arcmail-attach) only you may try to
    use fileboxes and/or find programs that can convert your mailer's queue to
    BSO or fileboxes. For example, Mail2dir utility allows using fileboxes with FrontDoor. Such a means disables a possibility of sending your mail to the
    same link both by IP and by modem (for instance, when one of the channels failed). There is another more radical but more flexible way: you may change your mailer.
    See also question 35.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    19. Flags Are Not Created On Receiving a File, Programs Do Not Start

    For sure you have a wrong template in the configuration file. You have to use it this way (the first two lines are for Windows and OS/2, the rest are
    for the Unix-like OS):

    flag m:\\ftn\\flg\\pntseg.flg m:\\\\ftn\\\\inbound\\\\sec\\\\pntstr*.*
    flag m:\\ftn\\flg\\toss.flg *.su? *.mo? *.tu? *.we? *.th? *.fr? *.sa? *.pkt

    exec "/usr/local/bin/ftrack -c /fido/conf/ftrack" *.[Pp][Kk][Tt]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ss][Uu][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Mm][Oo][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Uu][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ww][Ee][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Hh][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ff][Rr][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ss][Aa][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/fech-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Ii][Cc]

    You must use the full path with four slashes for the file to receive or
    the template should start with an asterisk character. You must use two
    slashes for the flag file.

    You must use the full path because using a filename without path means
    the event of receiving the file in the current directory and not in the
    inbound directory. If a template begins with "*" then it means "any
    directory" (and since all the files are received in one of the inbound directories it works for both password protected and for unprotected
    sessions).

    In a UNIX-like OS you should take into account that filenames are case sensitive. Please use regular expressions in templates.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    20. 'skipmask' Keyword Does Not Work

    A filename is compared without path and the comparison is case
    sensitive when 'skipmask' is used.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    21. binkd Under Windows 3.x

    Sergey Zharsky (zharik@usa.net) ported binkd 0.9.2 and binkd 0.9.5 for Windows 3.x. They work using IP stacks Trumpet Winsock ver. 3.0 revision D
    and Novell TCP/IP Client for Win 3.11 (see the answer to the question
    'binkd Under DOS', the section "The DOS version has the feature...").


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    22. Different FTN Domains in binkd And a Tosser Without 5D Support

    Suppose there are two domains (with different zone numbers though it
    does not matter). Mail can be successfully sent to the first domain but
    not to the second one. This situation may arise if the tosser, the tracker
    and the other your FTN programs do not support 5D BSO.

    This is a typical binkd configuration for two FTN domains and 5D
    outbound:

    domain fidonet c:\\ftn\\outbound\\fidonet 2
    domain omeganet c:\\ftn\\outbound\\omeganet 11
    address 2:5070/222@fidonet 11:58/6@omeganet

    One must configure not the zone of your own address for 'domain'
    keyword as one might think but the zone that should not be appended to the outbound name (i.e. the outbound subdirectory extensions are not processed
    for the zone denoted in the 'domain' line).

    If your tosser would create bundles for omeganet in the omeganet
    directory then you should write as indicated above. But since it does not
    --- hpt/lnx 1.9 2024-02-05
    * Origin: Moscow, Russia (2:5020/1042)
  • From binkd Team@2:5020/1042 to All on Sat Jun 29 22:15:04 2024
    31 Mar 16:48:43 [40423] trying 195.209.235.3, port 24554...
    31 Mar 16:48:43 [40423] connected to proxy.osu.ru:24554
    31 Mar 16:48:44 [40423] Connection rejected by proxy (HTTP/1.0 403 Forbidden)
    ? 31 Mar 16:48:44 [40423] unable to connect: {13} Permission denied

    In such a case you may try to use http tunnelling for instance with the help of httport, HTTPTunnel (http://http-tunnel.sourceforge.net/), stunnel (https://www.stunnel.org/) or you may find a node receiving binkp
    connections at port 443.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    07. How Can binkd Work via SOCKS-proxy?

    It is not a rare case when users go out to the internet from their corporate LAN exclusively via the proxy server based at the only computer connected to the internet. Thus binkd cannot make a direct connection to
    the remote node and one must use the proxy server. Proxy servers support
    was included in version 0.9.4 and the later ones.

    binkd works with a SOCKS proxy version 4 and 5. The first one does not demand an authorization (no login and password), the second one demands it
    as a rule.

    Suppose the connected to the Internet computer has the IP address 192.168.0.1 in its LAN and the SOCKS server at the computer responds on
    port 1080. Here is the line in binkd configuration file necessary for
    working via the SOCKS proxy.

    1. A SOCKS server without user authorization (no login and password are demanded):

    socks 192.168.0.1:1080

    2. A proxy server with user authorization (it is necessary to type login and password, e.g. login "user", password "password"):

    socks 192.168.0.1:1080/user/password


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    08. IP-Point: How Can I Make binkd to Get My Mail From My Bossnode (Uplink)?

    Make a poll using the command line option -P:

    binkd -P1:2/3 binkd.cfg

    Usually they want binkd to exit after the session is finished. One can
    use the command line option -p:

    binkd -p -P1:2/3 binkd.cfg

    If binkd does not exit for a long time after the session has been
    finished then decrease the value of rescan-delay (and sometimes the value
    of timeout).

    If binkd works permanently (e.g. as a Windows service) and you want to
    get your mail regularly then you need some additional program or a script.
    As an example in DOS, Windows or OS/2 it is enough to execute the command:

    cd . >> %outbound%\NNNNMMMM.ilo

    where NNNN is the hex net number,
    MMMM is the hex node number,
    %outbound% is the path to the necessary zone outbound.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    09. "start_file_transfer: .: Permission denied" Error

    You get the message when binkd cannot open a file for sending indicated
    in some *.?lo file. Most likely the file has a line containing only "."
    because the poll has been made by a command of the type

    echo . >> xxxxyyyy.flo

    you should change it to "cd . >> xxxxyyyy.flo"


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    10. binkd/win and Dial-up: Dialing-up and Disconnecting Automatically

    The problem is to configure the fidonet box in such a way that binkd
    would initiate a telephone call to your Internet provider, get your mail
    and disconnect.

    The solutions:

    1st Solution

    Configure automatic connection and timeout in the dial-up connection properties (idle time before hanging up). It is convinient to use a non-standard software for dialing-up (Advanced Dialer and others). You
    should start binkd with a command line option -p periodically (and possibly -Paddress for binkd to make a poll to the address).

    binkd -p -P1:2/3.4 binkd.cfg


    2nd Solution

    Use the command line option -p and the batch file where first Remote
    Access Service (RAS) is started then binkd is started and after binkd exits
    RAS is stopped.

    Two variants, for Windows NT and for Windows 2000:
    === binkdpoll1.cmd
    rasdial Connection
    binkd -p binkd.cfg
    rasdial Connection /disconnect
    ===

    === binkdpoll2.cmd
    net start "remote access service"
    net start "remote access auto service"
    binkd -p binkd.cfg
    net stop "remote access auto service"
    net stop "remote access service"
    ===

    3rd Solution (The Best One For Win9x)

    Use the command line options -p and -Paddress and control connection
    with a non-standard dial-up software (for example dialerp). This solution
    is the most reliable one (especially if the modem connection to your
    Internet provider is bad) due to the fact that dialerp can start some
    indicated programs at setting the connection. Here is the batch file you should start in the 'Execute' parameter of the dialerp configuration file:

    ====
    binkd -p -P1:2/3.4 binkd.cfg
    dialerp BREAK *
    ====

    The question you may now ask: Where can I take dialerp? The answer is:
    Ask the author (Alexander Vedjakin, 2:5020/540) or look for it in fileecho archives and in ftp/http.


    In any case you should set a small value for 'rescan-delay' parameter in the binkd configuration file. binkd would exit faster.

    === binkd.cfg
    # Outbound rescans period (sec)
    rescan-delay 2
    ===


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    11. I Have Changed binkd Configuration File On-The-Fly. When Will It Be Reloaded?

    Starting with the version 0.9.1 binkd could feel that its configuration file changed. It exited with code 3 if it had been started with option -C. Modification time was checked after each ingoing session. Here is the batch file for starting binkd versions 0.9.1-0.9.3 and 0.9.4-0.9.6/w32:

    ====
    :aaa
    binkd -C binkd.cfg
    if errorlevel 4 goto end
    if errorlevel 3 goto aaa
    :end
    ====

    In the versions 0.9.4/unix and /os2-emx (and in these ones only) binkd restarts automatically if it is started with -C command line option.
    Besides that starting with version 0.9.4 the files included into the configuration file with the help of 'include' keyword are tested not only
    on incoming sessions but also in every 'rescan-delay' seconds.

    If you install binkd 0.9.4/w32 as a Windows NT service you should use it with -C command line option. Then binkd re-reads its configuration file.

    Before version 0.9.4 changes in the configuration file were not tested if binkd was started in client-only mode (-c command line option).

    In the unix versions configuration file is re-read on SIGHUP signal
    by the command
    kill -HUP `cat /var/run/binkd.pid`

    In the version 1.0 configuration file is re-read automatically if
    changed. binkd tests on changes at every 'rescan-delay' seconds.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    12. How Can binkd Work With T-mail/IP?

    There is no way to do it. The protocols differ in essence: binkd uses
    binkp protocol whereas T-mail/IP uses EMSI etc.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    13. Is There At Least One Log Analyzer Under Unix?

    There exist many Perl scripts and several win32 binaries. For example here:

    binkdstat 0.1 beta4 Christmas version 6.01.2002
    Statistics generator for binkd
    (c) Dmitry Sergienko, 2:464/910@fidonet, dmitry@trifle.net 14.08.2000
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/binkdstat-ds.0.1_beta4_Christmas

    There also exists BndStat program:
    BNDST101.ZIP 34812 14-Aug-01 (AREA:AFTNMISC)
    BndStat 1.01. With sources. binkd statistics generator. Compiled for all
    platforms. Included win32 binaries. (C) Dmitry Rusov, 2:5090/94

    Log analyzer by val khokhlov (perl):
    http://www.vk.kiev.ua/create/soft.html#bnkds
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/stat-binkd.pl.gz

    binkdstat (c) val khokhlov, Dmitry Kolvakh, updated at April 2006
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/binkdstat.zip

    T-Hist (c) Michael Markowsky, 2:5020/378 (KLUG's BBS)
    Binary log file analyzer for various mailers including binkd.
    Works in DOS, Windows NT (2000, XP, 2003) and OS/2.
    ftp://ftp.grumbler.org/pub/binkd/hist30a7.zip

    Kleine Statistiker/BINKD for DOS v0.60a, Russian version
    A small statistics generator for posting statistics to an echo conference.
    ftp://ftp.grumbler.org/pub/binkd/statddos.rar


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    14. binkd Connects Too Slowly (~20 Seconds) Though I Have a High-Speed LAN

    It is possible that 'backresolv' parameter is on (for logging the remote host domain name) and DNS is not configured.

    The simplest solution is to comment the 'backresolv' out in the configuration file. Configuring DNS is a more complex solution.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    15. Why Does binkd Not Understand Command Line Options When I Start It From inetd?

    You should use the program name as the first parameter in inetd.conf (it may be any string for binkd), the second and the following parameters
    are the command line options (-iqs etc.) and the last parameter is the configuration file full path:

    binkp stream tcp nowait root /usr/fido/binkd binkd -isq /usr/fido/binkd.cfg

    If you do not use -q option then you should switch console output off (comment 'printq', 'percents', 'conlog' out).


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    16. Can One Make a File Request From binkd?

    It's a piece of cake! binkd supports WAZOO FREQ with an external helper.

    To request files from a remote system it is necessary to create a file
    of type nnnnmmmm.REQ and to put it in the outbound directory next to *.?ut
    and *.?lo files. But *.REQ files do not initiate binkd to call a link so
    to make a FREQ it is necessary to make a poll. The contents of a .REQ file
    is described in the "!SRIF.TXT" file which is a copy of FSC-0086.001 from http://ftsc.org


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    17. How Can my binkd Respond to a File Request?

    One can configure binkd for calling an external file request processor supporting SRIF (FSC-0086) for receiving and handling FREQs in binkd. Please read the "!SRIF.TXT" file and the comment to 'exec' in the configuration
    file.

    Here are the examples of lines in configuration file for DOS-based OS
    and for *nix (you should use regular expressions in the latter case for
    binkd to match both upper-case and lower-case letters, e.g. both *.REQ and *.req):

    exec "\\ftn\\allfix\\allfix.exe RP -SRIF *S" *.req

    exec "/ftn/bin/tmafreq-srif *S" *.[rR][eE][qQ]

    A bash script "srifreq" is delivered with binkd starting with version 1.1a19.
    The following file request processors are also compatible with binkd
    (but they are not the only ones, any other one supporting SRIF will do):

    Allfix by Harms Software Engineering: it is a fileecho processor with built-in file request processor and it has versions for DOS and OS/2;

    ViReq by Michael Haase (2:2432/280): a specialized FREQ processor for Windows, it is distributed by Michael Massenberg (2:2411/505) via modem,
    ISDN and Fido-over-IP.

    tmafreq by Maxim Timofeyev <tmahome@mail.tma.spb.ru>: the FREQ processor
    is created for a unix-like OS and ported into Windows. One may obtain tmafreq from different BBS and FTP with fileecho archives, or may get tmafreq sources from anonymous CVS :pserver:anoncvs@tma.spb.ru:/cvsroot, module "tmafreq".

    VIREQ/x by Volker Imre <volker@imre.dyndns.org> (2:246/2098): the FREQ processor is created for a unix-like OS but can be compiled in the OS/2, Windows and maybe other operating systems. Now it is included into "ftnapps" project on Sourceforge and may be downloaded from http://ftnapps.sourceforge.net/vireq.html.
    Binaries built for Win32 and OS/2 may be downloaded from http://download.binkd.org and
    https://sites.google.com/view/vasilyevmax/


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    18. How Can I Add binkd To a Fidonet Box Working With a Modem?

    You must configure your modem mailer and tosser for BSO (binkley-style outbound) mode so that all of them including binkd would have the same
    inbound directories (and also the same outbound directories). For example,
    one may put the following line to T-Mail mailer configuration file:

    BinkStyle_Pack_For All

    If your mailer can work with AMA (arcmail-attach) only you may try to
    use fileboxes and/or find programs that can convert your mailer's queue to
    BSO or fileboxes. For example, Mail2dir utility allows using fileboxes with FrontDoor. Such a means disables a possibility of sending your mail to the
    same link both by IP and by modem (for instance, when one of the channels failed). There is another more radical but more flexible way: you may change your mailer.
    See also question 35.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    19. Flags Are Not Created On Receiving a File, Programs Do Not Start

    For sure you have a wrong template in the configuration file. You have to use it this way (the first two lines are for Windows and OS/2, the rest are
    for the Unix-like OS):

    flag m:\\ftn\\flg\\pntseg.flg m:\\\\ftn\\\\inbound\\\\sec\\\\pntstr*.*
    flag m:\\ftn\\flg\\toss.flg *.su? *.mo? *.tu? *.we? *.th? *.fr? *.sa? *.pkt

    exec "/usr/local/bin/ftrack -c /fido/conf/ftrack" *.[Pp][Kk][Tt]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ss][Uu][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Mm][Oo][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Uu][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ww][Ee][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Hh][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ff][Rr][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ss][Aa][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/fech-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Ii][Cc]

    You must use the full path with four slashes for the file to receive or
    the template should start with an asterisk character. You must use two
    slashes for the flag file.

    You must use the full path because using a filename without path means
    the event of receiving the file in the current directory and not in the
    inbound directory. If a template begins with "*" then it means "any
    directory" (and since all the files are received in one of the inbound directories it works for both password protected and for unprotected
    sessions).

    In a UNIX-like OS you should take into account that filenames are case sensitive. Please use regular expressions in templates.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    20. 'skipmask' Keyword Does Not Work

    A filename is compared without path and the comparison is case
    sensitive when 'skipmask' is used.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    21. binkd Under Windows 3.x

    Sergey Zharsky (zharik@usa.net) ported binkd 0.9.2 and binkd 0.9.5 for Windows 3.x. They work using IP stacks Trumpet Winsock ver. 3.0 revision D
    and Novell TCP/IP Client for Win 3.11 (see the answer to the question
    'binkd Under DOS', the section "The DOS version has the feature...").


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    22. Different FTN Domains in binkd And a Tosser Without 5D Support

    Suppose there are two domains (with different zone numbers though it
    does not matter). Mail can be successfully sent to the first domain but
    not to the second one. This situation may arise if the tosser, the tracker
    and the other your FTN programs do not support 5D BSO.

    This is a typical binkd configuration for two FTN domains and 5D
    outbound:

    domain fidonet c:\\ftn\\outbound\\fidonet 2
    domain omeganet c:\\ftn\\outbound\\omeganet 11
    address 2:5070/222@fidonet 11:58/6@omeganet

    One must configure not the zone of your own address for 'domain'
    keyword as one might think but the zone that should not be appended to the outbound name (i.e. the outbound subdirectory extensions are not processed
    for the zone denoted in the 'domain' line).

    If your tosser would create bundles for omeganet in the omeganet
    directory then you should write as indicated above. But since it does not
    --- hpt/lnx 1.9 2024-02-05
    * Origin: Moscow, Russia (2:5020/1042)
  • From binkd Team@2:5020/1042 to All on Sat Jul 6 22:15:04 2024
    31 Mar 16:48:43 [40423] trying 195.209.235.3, port 24554...
    31 Mar 16:48:43 [40423] connected to proxy.osu.ru:24554
    31 Mar 16:48:44 [40423] Connection rejected by proxy (HTTP/1.0 403 Forbidden)
    ? 31 Mar 16:48:44 [40423] unable to connect: {13} Permission denied

    In such a case you may try to use http tunnelling for instance with the help of httport, HTTPTunnel (http://http-tunnel.sourceforge.net/), stunnel (https://www.stunnel.org/) or you may find a node receiving binkp
    connections at port 443.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    07. How Can binkd Work via SOCKS-proxy?

    It is not a rare case when users go out to the internet from their corporate LAN exclusively via the proxy server based at the only computer connected to the internet. Thus binkd cannot make a direct connection to
    the remote node and one must use the proxy server. Proxy servers support
    was included in version 0.9.4 and the later ones.

    binkd works with a SOCKS proxy version 4 and 5. The first one does not demand an authorization (no login and password), the second one demands it
    as a rule.

    Suppose the connected to the Internet computer has the IP address 192.168.0.1 in its LAN and the SOCKS server at the computer responds on
    port 1080. Here is the line in binkd configuration file necessary for
    working via the SOCKS proxy.

    1. A SOCKS server without user authorization (no login and password are demanded):

    socks 192.168.0.1:1080

    2. A proxy server with user authorization (it is necessary to type login and password, e.g. login "user", password "password"):

    socks 192.168.0.1:1080/user/password


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    08. IP-Point: How Can I Make binkd to Get My Mail From My Bossnode (Uplink)?

    Make a poll using the command line option -P:

    binkd -P1:2/3 binkd.cfg

    Usually they want binkd to exit after the session is finished. One can
    use the command line option -p:

    binkd -p -P1:2/3 binkd.cfg

    If binkd does not exit for a long time after the session has been
    finished then decrease the value of rescan-delay (and sometimes the value
    of timeout).

    If binkd works permanently (e.g. as a Windows service) and you want to
    get your mail regularly then you need some additional program or a script.
    As an example in DOS, Windows or OS/2 it is enough to execute the command:

    cd . >> %outbound%\NNNNMMMM.ilo

    where NNNN is the hex net number,
    MMMM is the hex node number,
    %outbound% is the path to the necessary zone outbound.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    09. "start_file_transfer: .: Permission denied" Error

    You get the message when binkd cannot open a file for sending indicated
    in some *.?lo file. Most likely the file has a line containing only "."
    because the poll has been made by a command of the type

    echo . >> xxxxyyyy.flo

    you should change it to "cd . >> xxxxyyyy.flo"


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    10. binkd/win and Dial-up: Dialing-up and Disconnecting Automatically

    The problem is to configure the fidonet box in such a way that binkd
    would initiate a telephone call to your Internet provider, get your mail
    and disconnect.

    The solutions:

    1st Solution

    Configure automatic connection and timeout in the dial-up connection properties (idle time before hanging up). It is convinient to use a non-standard software for dialing-up (Advanced Dialer and others). You
    should start binkd with a command line option -p periodically (and possibly -Paddress for binkd to make a poll to the address).

    binkd -p -P1:2/3.4 binkd.cfg


    2nd Solution

    Use the command line option -p and the batch file where first Remote
    Access Service (RAS) is started then binkd is started and after binkd exits
    RAS is stopped.

    Two variants, for Windows NT and for Windows 2000:
    === binkdpoll1.cmd
    rasdial Connection
    binkd -p binkd.cfg
    rasdial Connection /disconnect
    ===

    === binkdpoll2.cmd
    net start "remote access service"
    net start "remote access auto service"
    binkd -p binkd.cfg
    net stop "remote access auto service"
    net stop "remote access service"
    ===

    3rd Solution (The Best One For Win9x)

    Use the command line options -p and -Paddress and control connection
    with a non-standard dial-up software (for example dialerp). This solution
    is the most reliable one (especially if the modem connection to your
    Internet provider is bad) due to the fact that dialerp can start some
    indicated programs at setting the connection. Here is the batch file you should start in the 'Execute' parameter of the dialerp configuration file:

    ====
    binkd -p -P1:2/3.4 binkd.cfg
    dialerp BREAK *
    ====

    The question you may now ask: Where can I take dialerp? The answer is:
    Ask the author (Alexander Vedjakin, 2:5020/540) or look for it in fileecho archives and in ftp/http.


    In any case you should set a small value for 'rescan-delay' parameter in the binkd configuration file. binkd would exit faster.

    === binkd.cfg
    # Outbound rescans period (sec)
    rescan-delay 2
    ===


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    11. I Have Changed binkd Configuration File On-The-Fly. When Will It Be Reloaded?

    Starting with the version 0.9.1 binkd could feel that its configuration file changed. It exited with code 3 if it had been started with option -C. Modification time was checked after each ingoing session. Here is the batch file for starting binkd versions 0.9.1-0.9.3 and 0.9.4-0.9.6/w32:

    ====
    :aaa
    binkd -C binkd.cfg
    if errorlevel 4 goto end
    if errorlevel 3 goto aaa
    :end
    ====

    In the versions 0.9.4/unix and /os2-emx (and in these ones only) binkd restarts automatically if it is started with -C command line option.
    Besides that starting with version 0.9.4 the files included into the configuration file with the help of 'include' keyword are tested not only
    on incoming sessions but also in every 'rescan-delay' seconds.

    If you install binkd 0.9.4/w32 as a Windows NT service you should use it with -C command line option. Then binkd re-reads its configuration file.

    Before version 0.9.4 changes in the configuration file were not tested if binkd was started in client-only mode (-c command line option).

    In the unix versions configuration file is re-read on SIGHUP signal
    by the command
    kill -HUP `cat /var/run/binkd.pid`

    In the version 1.0 configuration file is re-read automatically if
    changed. binkd tests on changes at every 'rescan-delay' seconds.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    12. How Can binkd Work With T-mail/IP?

    There is no way to do it. The protocols differ in essence: binkd uses
    binkp protocol whereas T-mail/IP uses EMSI etc.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    13. Is There At Least One Log Analyzer Under Unix?

    There exist many Perl scripts and several win32 binaries. For example here:

    binkdstat 0.1 beta4 Christmas version 6.01.2002
    Statistics generator for binkd
    (c) Dmitry Sergienko, 2:464/910@fidonet, dmitry@trifle.net 14.08.2000
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/binkdstat-ds.0.1_beta4_Christmas

    There also exists BndStat program:
    BNDST101.ZIP 34812 14-Aug-01 (AREA:AFTNMISC)
    BndStat 1.01. With sources. binkd statistics generator. Compiled for all
    platforms. Included win32 binaries. (C) Dmitry Rusov, 2:5090/94

    Log analyzer by val khokhlov (perl):
    http://www.vk.kiev.ua/create/soft.html#bnkds
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/stat-binkd.pl.gz

    binkdstat (c) val khokhlov, Dmitry Kolvakh, updated at April 2006
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/binkdstat.zip

    T-Hist (c) Michael Markowsky, 2:5020/378 (KLUG's BBS)
    Binary log file analyzer for various mailers including binkd.
    Works in DOS, Windows NT (2000, XP, 2003) and OS/2.
    ftp://ftp.grumbler.org/pub/binkd/hist30a7.zip

    Kleine Statistiker/BINKD for DOS v0.60a, Russian version
    A small statistics generator for posting statistics to an echo conference.
    ftp://ftp.grumbler.org/pub/binkd/statddos.rar


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    14. binkd Connects Too Slowly (~20 Seconds) Though I Have a High-Speed LAN

    It is possible that 'backresolv' parameter is on (for logging the remote host domain name) and DNS is not configured.

    The simplest solution is to comment the 'backresolv' out in the configuration file. Configuring DNS is a more complex solution.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    15. Why Does binkd Not Understand Command Line Options When I Start It From inetd?

    You should use the program name as the first parameter in inetd.conf (it may be any string for binkd), the second and the following parameters
    are the command line options (-iqs etc.) and the last parameter is the configuration file full path:

    binkp stream tcp nowait root /usr/fido/binkd binkd -isq /usr/fido/binkd.cfg

    If you do not use -q option then you should switch console output off (comment 'printq', 'percents', 'conlog' out).


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    16. Can One Make a File Request From binkd?

    It's a piece of cake! binkd supports WAZOO FREQ with an external helper.

    To request files from a remote system it is necessary to create a file
    of type nnnnmmmm.REQ and to put it in the outbound directory next to *.?ut
    and *.?lo files. But *.REQ files do not initiate binkd to call a link so
    to make a FREQ it is necessary to make a poll. The contents of a .REQ file
    is described in the "!SRIF.TXT" file which is a copy of FSC-0086.001 from http://ftsc.org


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    17. How Can my binkd Respond to a File Request?

    One can configure binkd for calling an external file request processor supporting SRIF (FSC-0086) for receiving and handling FREQs in binkd. Please read the "!SRIF.TXT" file and the comment to 'exec' in the configuration
    file.

    Here are the examples of lines in configuration file for DOS-based OS
    and for *nix (you should use regular expressions in the latter case for
    binkd to match both upper-case and lower-case letters, e.g. both *.REQ and *.req):

    exec "\\ftn\\allfix\\allfix.exe RP -SRIF *S" *.req

    exec "/ftn/bin/tmafreq-srif *S" *.[rR][eE][qQ]

    A bash script "srifreq" is delivered with binkd starting with version 1.1a19.
    The following file request processors are also compatible with binkd
    (but they are not the only ones, any other one supporting SRIF will do):

    Allfix by Harms Software Engineering: it is a fileecho processor with built-in file request processor and it has versions for DOS and OS/2;

    ViReq by Michael Haase (2:2432/280): a specialized FREQ processor for Windows, it is distributed by Michael Massenberg (2:2411/505) via modem,
    ISDN and Fido-over-IP.

    tmafreq by Maxim Timofeyev <tmahome@mail.tma.spb.ru>: the FREQ processor
    is created for a unix-like OS and ported into Windows. One may obtain tmafreq from different BBS and FTP with fileecho archives, or may get tmafreq sources from anonymous CVS :pserver:anoncvs@tma.spb.ru:/cvsroot, module "tmafreq".

    VIREQ/x by Volker Imre <volker@imre.dyndns.org> (2:246/2098): the FREQ processor is created for a unix-like OS but can be compiled in the OS/2, Windows and maybe other operating systems. Now it is included into "ftnapps" project on Sourceforge and may be downloaded from http://ftnapps.sourceforge.net/vireq.html.
    Binaries built for Win32 and OS/2 may be downloaded from http://download.binkd.org and
    https://sites.google.com/view/vasilyevmax/


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    18. How Can I Add binkd To a Fidonet Box Working With a Modem?

    You must configure your modem mailer and tosser for BSO (binkley-style outbound) mode so that all of them including binkd would have the same
    inbound directories (and also the same outbound directories). For example,
    one may put the following line to T-Mail mailer configuration file:

    BinkStyle_Pack_For All

    If your mailer can work with AMA (arcmail-attach) only you may try to
    use fileboxes and/or find programs that can convert your mailer's queue to
    BSO or fileboxes. For example, Mail2dir utility allows using fileboxes with FrontDoor. Such a means disables a possibility of sending your mail to the
    same link both by IP and by modem (for instance, when one of the channels failed). There is another more radical but more flexible way: you may change your mailer.
    See also question 35.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    19. Flags Are Not Created On Receiving a File, Programs Do Not Start

    For sure you have a wrong template in the configuration file. You have to use it this way (the first two lines are for Windows and OS/2, the rest are
    for the Unix-like OS):

    flag m:\\ftn\\flg\\pntseg.flg m:\\\\ftn\\\\inbound\\\\sec\\\\pntstr*.*
    flag m:\\ftn\\flg\\toss.flg *.su? *.mo? *.tu? *.we? *.th? *.fr? *.sa? *.pkt

    exec "/usr/local/bin/ftrack -c /fido/conf/ftrack" *.[Pp][Kk][Tt]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ss][Uu][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Mm][Oo][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Uu][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ww][Ee][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Hh][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ff][Rr][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ss][Aa][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/fech-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Ii][Cc]

    You must use the full path with four slashes for the file to receive or
    the template should start with an asterisk character. You must use two
    slashes for the flag file.

    You must use the full path because using a filename without path means
    the event of receiving the file in the current directory and not in the
    inbound directory. If a template begins with "*" then it means "any
    directory" (and since all the files are received in one of the inbound directories it works for both password protected and for unprotected
    sessions).

    In a UNIX-like OS you should take into account that filenames are case sensitive. Please use regular expressions in templates.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    20. 'skipmask' Keyword Does Not Work

    A filename is compared without path and the comparison is case
    sensitive when 'skipmask' is used.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    21. binkd Under Windows 3.x

    Sergey Zharsky (zharik@usa.net) ported binkd 0.9.2 and binkd 0.9.5 for Windows 3.x. They work using IP stacks Trumpet Winsock ver. 3.0 revision D
    and Novell TCP/IP Client for Win 3.11 (see the answer to the question
    'binkd Under DOS', the section "The DOS version has the feature...").


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    22. Different FTN Domains in binkd And a Tosser Without 5D Support

    Suppose there are two domains (with different zone numbers though it
    does not matter). Mail can be successfully sent to the first domain but
    not to the second one. This situation may arise if the tosser, the tracker
    and the other your FTN programs do not support 5D BSO.

    This is a typical binkd configuration for two FTN domains and 5D
    outbound:

    domain fidonet c:\\ftn\\outbound\\fidonet 2
    domain omeganet c:\\ftn\\outbound\\omeganet 11
    address 2:5070/222@fidonet 11:58/6@omeganet

    One must configure not the zone of your own address for 'domain'
    keyword as one might think but the zone that should not be appended to the outbound name (i.e. the outbound subdirectory extensions are not processed
    for the zone denoted in the 'domain' line).

    If your tosser would create bundles for omeganet in the omeganet
    directory then you should write as indicated above. But since it does not
    --- hpt/lnx 1.9 2024-02-05
    * Origin: Moscow, Russia (2:5020/1042)
  • From binkd Team@2:5020/1042 to All on Sat Jul 13 22:15:04 2024
    31 Mar 16:48:43 [40423] trying 195.209.235.3, port 24554...
    31 Mar 16:48:43 [40423] connected to proxy.osu.ru:24554
    31 Mar 16:48:44 [40423] Connection rejected by proxy (HTTP/1.0 403 Forbidden)
    ? 31 Mar 16:48:44 [40423] unable to connect: {13} Permission denied

    In such a case you may try to use http tunnelling for instance with the help of httport, HTTPTunnel (http://http-tunnel.sourceforge.net/), stunnel (https://www.stunnel.org/) or you may find a node receiving binkp
    connections at port 443.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    07. How Can binkd Work via SOCKS-proxy?

    It is not a rare case when users go out to the internet from their corporate LAN exclusively via the proxy server based at the only computer connected to the internet. Thus binkd cannot make a direct connection to
    the remote node and one must use the proxy server. Proxy servers support
    was included in version 0.9.4 and the later ones.

    binkd works with a SOCKS proxy version 4 and 5. The first one does not demand an authorization (no login and password), the second one demands it
    as a rule.

    Suppose the connected to the Internet computer has the IP address 192.168.0.1 in its LAN and the SOCKS server at the computer responds on
    port 1080. Here is the line in binkd configuration file necessary for
    working via the SOCKS proxy.

    1. A SOCKS server without user authorization (no login and password are demanded):

    socks 192.168.0.1:1080

    2. A proxy server with user authorization (it is necessary to type login and password, e.g. login "user", password "password"):

    socks 192.168.0.1:1080/user/password


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    08. IP-Point: How Can I Make binkd to Get My Mail From My Bossnode (Uplink)?

    Make a poll using the command line option -P:

    binkd -P1:2/3 binkd.cfg

    Usually they want binkd to exit after the session is finished. One can
    use the command line option -p:

    binkd -p -P1:2/3 binkd.cfg

    If binkd does not exit for a long time after the session has been
    finished then decrease the value of rescan-delay (and sometimes the value
    of timeout).

    If binkd works permanently (e.g. as a Windows service) and you want to
    get your mail regularly then you need some additional program or a script.
    As an example in DOS, Windows or OS/2 it is enough to execute the command:

    cd . >> %outbound%\NNNNMMMM.ilo

    where NNNN is the hex net number,
    MMMM is the hex node number,
    %outbound% is the path to the necessary zone outbound.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    09. "start_file_transfer: .: Permission denied" Error

    You get the message when binkd cannot open a file for sending indicated
    in some *.?lo file. Most likely the file has a line containing only "."
    because the poll has been made by a command of the type

    echo . >> xxxxyyyy.flo

    you should change it to "cd . >> xxxxyyyy.flo"


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    10. binkd/win and Dial-up: Dialing-up and Disconnecting Automatically

    The problem is to configure the fidonet box in such a way that binkd
    would initiate a telephone call to your Internet provider, get your mail
    and disconnect.

    The solutions:

    1st Solution

    Configure automatic connection and timeout in the dial-up connection properties (idle time before hanging up). It is convinient to use a non-standard software for dialing-up (Advanced Dialer and others). You
    should start binkd with a command line option -p periodically (and possibly -Paddress for binkd to make a poll to the address).

    binkd -p -P1:2/3.4 binkd.cfg


    2nd Solution

    Use the command line option -p and the batch file where first Remote
    Access Service (RAS) is started then binkd is started and after binkd exits
    RAS is stopped.

    Two variants, for Windows NT and for Windows 2000:
    === binkdpoll1.cmd
    rasdial Connection
    binkd -p binkd.cfg
    rasdial Connection /disconnect
    ===

    === binkdpoll2.cmd
    net start "remote access service"
    net start "remote access auto service"
    binkd -p binkd.cfg
    net stop "remote access auto service"
    net stop "remote access service"
    ===

    3rd Solution (The Best One For Win9x)

    Use the command line options -p and -Paddress and control connection
    with a non-standard dial-up software (for example dialerp). This solution
    is the most reliable one (especially if the modem connection to your
    Internet provider is bad) due to the fact that dialerp can start some
    indicated programs at setting the connection. Here is the batch file you should start in the 'Execute' parameter of the dialerp configuration file:

    ====
    binkd -p -P1:2/3.4 binkd.cfg
    dialerp BREAK *
    ====

    The question you may now ask: Where can I take dialerp? The answer is:
    Ask the author (Alexander Vedjakin, 2:5020/540) or look for it in fileecho archives and in ftp/http.


    In any case you should set a small value for 'rescan-delay' parameter in the binkd configuration file. binkd would exit faster.

    === binkd.cfg
    # Outbound rescans period (sec)
    rescan-delay 2
    ===


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    11. I Have Changed binkd Configuration File On-The-Fly. When Will It Be Reloaded?

    Starting with the version 0.9.1 binkd could feel that its configuration file changed. It exited with code 3 if it had been started with option -C. Modification time was checked after each ingoing session. Here is the batch file for starting binkd versions 0.9.1-0.9.3 and 0.9.4-0.9.6/w32:

    ====
    :aaa
    binkd -C binkd.cfg
    if errorlevel 4 goto end
    if errorlevel 3 goto aaa
    :end
    ====

    In the versions 0.9.4/unix and /os2-emx (and in these ones only) binkd restarts automatically if it is started with -C command line option.
    Besides that starting with version 0.9.4 the files included into the configuration file with the help of 'include' keyword are tested not only
    on incoming sessions but also in every 'rescan-delay' seconds.

    If you install binkd 0.9.4/w32 as a Windows NT service you should use it with -C command line option. Then binkd re-reads its configuration file.

    Before version 0.9.4 changes in the configuration file were not tested if binkd was started in client-only mode (-c command line option).

    In the unix versions configuration file is re-read on SIGHUP signal
    by the command
    kill -HUP `cat /var/run/binkd.pid`

    In the version 1.0 configuration file is re-read automatically if
    changed. binkd tests on changes at every 'rescan-delay' seconds.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    12. How Can binkd Work With T-mail/IP?

    There is no way to do it. The protocols differ in essence: binkd uses
    binkp protocol whereas T-mail/IP uses EMSI etc.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    13. Is There At Least One Log Analyzer Under Unix?

    There exist many Perl scripts and several win32 binaries. For example here:

    binkdstat 0.1 beta4 Christmas version 6.01.2002
    Statistics generator for binkd
    (c) Dmitry Sergienko, 2:464/910@fidonet, dmitry@trifle.net 14.08.2000
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/binkdstat-ds.0.1_beta4_Christmas

    There also exists BndStat program:
    BNDST101.ZIP 34812 14-Aug-01 (AREA:AFTNMISC)
    BndStat 1.01. With sources. binkd statistics generator. Compiled for all
    platforms. Included win32 binaries. (C) Dmitry Rusov, 2:5090/94

    Log analyzer by val khokhlov (perl):
    http://www.vk.kiev.ua/create/soft.html#bnkds
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/stat-binkd.pl.gz

    binkdstat (c) val khokhlov, Dmitry Kolvakh, updated at April 2006
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/binkdstat.zip

    T-Hist (c) Michael Markowsky, 2:5020/378 (KLUG's BBS)
    Binary log file analyzer for various mailers including binkd.
    Works in DOS, Windows NT (2000, XP, 2003) and OS/2.
    ftp://ftp.grumbler.org/pub/binkd/hist30a7.zip

    Kleine Statistiker/BINKD for DOS v0.60a, Russian version
    A small statistics generator for posting statistics to an echo conference.
    ftp://ftp.grumbler.org/pub/binkd/statddos.rar


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    14. binkd Connects Too Slowly (~20 Seconds) Though I Have a High-Speed LAN

    It is possible that 'backresolv' parameter is on (for logging the remote host domain name) and DNS is not configured.

    The simplest solution is to comment the 'backresolv' out in the configuration file. Configuring DNS is a more complex solution.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    15. Why Does binkd Not Understand Command Line Options When I Start It From inetd?

    You should use the program name as the first parameter in inetd.conf (it may be any string for binkd), the second and the following parameters
    are the command line options (-iqs etc.) and the last parameter is the configuration file full path:

    binkp stream tcp nowait root /usr/fido/binkd binkd -isq /usr/fido/binkd.cfg

    If you do not use -q option then you should switch console output off (comment 'printq', 'percents', 'conlog' out).


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    16. Can One Make a File Request From binkd?

    It's a piece of cake! binkd supports WAZOO FREQ with an external helper.

    To request files from a remote system it is necessary to create a file
    of type nnnnmmmm.REQ and to put it in the outbound directory next to *.?ut
    and *.?lo files. But *.REQ files do not initiate binkd to call a link so
    to make a FREQ it is necessary to make a poll. The contents of a .REQ file
    is described in the "!SRIF.TXT" file which is a copy of FSC-0086.001 from http://ftsc.org


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    17. How Can my binkd Respond to a File Request?

    One can configure binkd for calling an external file request processor supporting SRIF (FSC-0086) for receiving and handling FREQs in binkd. Please read the "!SRIF.TXT" file and the comment to 'exec' in the configuration
    file.

    Here are the examples of lines in configuration file for DOS-based OS
    and for *nix (you should use regular expressions in the latter case for
    binkd to match both upper-case and lower-case letters, e.g. both *.REQ and *.req):

    exec "\\ftn\\allfix\\allfix.exe RP -SRIF *S" *.req

    exec "/ftn/bin/tmafreq-srif *S" *.[rR][eE][qQ]

    A bash script "srifreq" is delivered with binkd starting with version 1.1a19.
    The following file request processors are also compatible with binkd
    (but they are not the only ones, any other one supporting SRIF will do):

    Allfix by Harms Software Engineering: it is a fileecho processor with built-in file request processor and it has versions for DOS and OS/2;

    ViReq by Michael Haase (2:2432/280): a specialized FREQ processor for Windows, it is distributed by Michael Massenberg (2:2411/505) via modem,
    ISDN and Fido-over-IP.

    tmafreq by Maxim Timofeyev <tmahome@mail.tma.spb.ru>: the FREQ processor
    is created for a unix-like OS and ported into Windows. One may obtain tmafreq from different BBS and FTP with fileecho archives, or may get tmafreq sources from anonymous CVS :pserver:anoncvs@tma.spb.ru:/cvsroot, module "tmafreq".

    VIREQ/x by Volker Imre <volker@imre.dyndns.org> (2:246/2098): the FREQ processor is created for a unix-like OS but can be compiled in the OS/2, Windows and maybe other operating systems. Now it is included into "ftnapps" project on Sourceforge and may be downloaded from http://ftnapps.sourceforge.net/vireq.html.
    Binaries built for Win32 and OS/2 may be downloaded from http://download.binkd.org and
    https://sites.google.com/view/vasilyevmax/


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    18. How Can I Add binkd To a Fidonet Box Working With a Modem?

    You must configure your modem mailer and tosser for BSO (binkley-style outbound) mode so that all of them including binkd would have the same
    inbound directories (and also the same outbound directories). For example,
    one may put the following line to T-Mail mailer configuration file:

    BinkStyle_Pack_For All

    If your mailer can work with AMA (arcmail-attach) only you may try to
    use fileboxes and/or find programs that can convert your mailer's queue to
    BSO or fileboxes. For example, Mail2dir utility allows using fileboxes with FrontDoor. Such a means disables a possibility of sending your mail to the
    same link both by IP and by modem (for instance, when one of the channels failed). There is another more radical but more flexible way: you may change your mailer.
    See also question 35.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    19. Flags Are Not Created On Receiving a File, Programs Do Not Start

    For sure you have a wrong template in the configuration file. You have to use it this way (the first two lines are for Windows and OS/2, the rest are
    for the Unix-like OS):

    flag m:\\ftn\\flg\\pntseg.flg m:\\\\ftn\\\\inbound\\\\sec\\\\pntstr*.*
    flag m:\\ftn\\flg\\toss.flg *.su? *.mo? *.tu? *.we? *.th? *.fr? *.sa? *.pkt

    exec "/usr/local/bin/ftrack -c /fido/conf/ftrack" *.[Pp][Kk][Tt]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ss][Uu][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Mm][Oo][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Uu][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ww][Ee][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Hh][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ff][Rr][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ss][Aa][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/fech-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Ii][Cc]

    You must use the full path with four slashes for the file to receive or
    the template should start with an asterisk character. You must use two
    slashes for the flag file.

    You must use the full path because using a filename without path means
    the event of receiving the file in the current directory and not in the
    inbound directory. If a template begins with "*" then it means "any
    directory" (and since all the files are received in one of the inbound directories it works for both password protected and for unprotected
    sessions).

    In a UNIX-like OS you should take into account that filenames are case sensitive. Please use regular expressions in templates.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    20. 'skipmask' Keyword Does Not Work

    A filename is compared without path and the comparison is case
    sensitive when 'skipmask' is used.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    21. binkd Under Windows 3.x

    Sergey Zharsky (zharik@usa.net) ported binkd 0.9.2 and binkd 0.9.5 for Windows 3.x. They work using IP stacks Trumpet Winsock ver. 3.0 revision D
    and Novell TCP/IP Client for Win 3.11 (see the answer to the question
    'binkd Under DOS', the section "The DOS version has the feature...").


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    22. Different FTN Domains in binkd And a Tosser Without 5D Support

    Suppose there are two domains (with different zone numbers though it
    does not matter). Mail can be successfully sent to the first domain but
    not to the second one. This situation may arise if the tosser, the tracker
    and the other your FTN programs do not support 5D BSO.

    This is a typical binkd configuration for two FTN domains and 5D
    outbound:

    domain fidonet c:\\ftn\\outbound\\fidonet 2
    domain omeganet c:\\ftn\\outbound\\omeganet 11
    address 2:5070/222@fidonet 11:58/6@omeganet

    One must configure not the zone of your own address for 'domain'
    keyword as one might think but the zone that should not be appended to the outbound name (i.e. the outbound subdirectory extensions are not processed
    for the zone denoted in the 'domain' line).

    If your tosser would create bundles for omeganet in the omeganet
    directory then you should write as indicated above. But since it does not
    --- hpt/lnx 1.9 2024-02-05
    * Origin: Moscow, Russia (2:5020/1042)
  • From binkd Team@2:5020/1042 to All on Sat Jul 20 22:15:02 2024
    31 Mar 16:48:43 [40423] trying 195.209.235.3, port 24554...
    31 Mar 16:48:43 [40423] connected to proxy.osu.ru:24554
    31 Mar 16:48:44 [40423] Connection rejected by proxy (HTTP/1.0 403 Forbidden)
    ? 31 Mar 16:48:44 [40423] unable to connect: {13} Permission denied

    In such a case you may try to use http tunnelling for instance with the help of httport, HTTPTunnel (http://http-tunnel.sourceforge.net/), stunnel (https://www.stunnel.org/) or you may find a node receiving binkp
    connections at port 443.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    07. How Can binkd Work via SOCKS-proxy?

    It is not a rare case when users go out to the internet from their corporate LAN exclusively via the proxy server based at the only computer connected to the internet. Thus binkd cannot make a direct connection to
    the remote node and one must use the proxy server. Proxy servers support
    was included in version 0.9.4 and the later ones.

    binkd works with a SOCKS proxy version 4 and 5. The first one does not demand an authorization (no login and password), the second one demands it
    as a rule.

    Suppose the connected to the Internet computer has the IP address 192.168.0.1 in its LAN and the SOCKS server at the computer responds on
    port 1080. Here is the line in binkd configuration file necessary for
    working via the SOCKS proxy.

    1. A SOCKS server without user authorization (no login and password are demanded):

    socks 192.168.0.1:1080

    2. A proxy server with user authorization (it is necessary to type login and password, e.g. login "user", password "password"):

    socks 192.168.0.1:1080/user/password


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    08. IP-Point: How Can I Make binkd to Get My Mail From My Bossnode (Uplink)?

    Make a poll using the command line option -P:

    binkd -P1:2/3 binkd.cfg

    Usually they want binkd to exit after the session is finished. One can
    use the command line option -p:

    binkd -p -P1:2/3 binkd.cfg

    If binkd does not exit for a long time after the session has been
    finished then decrease the value of rescan-delay (and sometimes the value
    of timeout).

    If binkd works permanently (e.g. as a Windows service) and you want to
    get your mail regularly then you need some additional program or a script.
    As an example in DOS, Windows or OS/2 it is enough to execute the command:

    cd . >> %outbound%\NNNNMMMM.ilo

    where NNNN is the hex net number,
    MMMM is the hex node number,
    %outbound% is the path to the necessary zone outbound.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    09. "start_file_transfer: .: Permission denied" Error

    You get the message when binkd cannot open a file for sending indicated
    in some *.?lo file. Most likely the file has a line containing only "."
    because the poll has been made by a command of the type

    echo . >> xxxxyyyy.flo

    you should change it to "cd . >> xxxxyyyy.flo"


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    10. binkd/win and Dial-up: Dialing-up and Disconnecting Automatically

    The problem is to configure the fidonet box in such a way that binkd
    would initiate a telephone call to your Internet provider, get your mail
    and disconnect.

    The solutions:

    1st Solution

    Configure automatic connection and timeout in the dial-up connection properties (idle time before hanging up). It is convinient to use a non-standard software for dialing-up (Advanced Dialer and others). You
    should start binkd with a command line option -p periodically (and possibly -Paddress for binkd to make a poll to the address).

    binkd -p -P1:2/3.4 binkd.cfg


    2nd Solution

    Use the command line option -p and the batch file where first Remote
    Access Service (RAS) is started then binkd is started and after binkd exits
    RAS is stopped.

    Two variants, for Windows NT and for Windows 2000:
    === binkdpoll1.cmd
    rasdial Connection
    binkd -p binkd.cfg
    rasdial Connection /disconnect
    ===

    === binkdpoll2.cmd
    net start "remote access service"
    net start "remote access auto service"
    binkd -p binkd.cfg
    net stop "remote access auto service"
    net stop "remote access service"
    ===

    3rd Solution (The Best One For Win9x)

    Use the command line options -p and -Paddress and control connection
    with a non-standard dial-up software (for example dialerp). This solution
    is the most reliable one (especially if the modem connection to your
    Internet provider is bad) due to the fact that dialerp can start some
    indicated programs at setting the connection. Here is the batch file you should start in the 'Execute' parameter of the dialerp configuration file:

    ====
    binkd -p -P1:2/3.4 binkd.cfg
    dialerp BREAK *
    ====

    The question you may now ask: Where can I take dialerp? The answer is:
    Ask the author (Alexander Vedjakin, 2:5020/540) or look for it in fileecho archives and in ftp/http.


    In any case you should set a small value for 'rescan-delay' parameter in the binkd configuration file. binkd would exit faster.

    === binkd.cfg
    # Outbound rescans period (sec)
    rescan-delay 2
    ===


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    11. I Have Changed binkd Configuration File On-The-Fly. When Will It Be Reloaded?

    Starting with the version 0.9.1 binkd could feel that its configuration file changed. It exited with code 3 if it had been started with option -C. Modification time was checked after each ingoing session. Here is the batch file for starting binkd versions 0.9.1-0.9.3 and 0.9.4-0.9.6/w32:

    ====
    :aaa
    binkd -C binkd.cfg
    if errorlevel 4 goto end
    if errorlevel 3 goto aaa
    :end
    ====

    In the versions 0.9.4/unix and /os2-emx (and in these ones only) binkd restarts automatically if it is started with -C command line option.
    Besides that starting with version 0.9.4 the files included into the configuration file with the help of 'include' keyword are tested not only
    on incoming sessions but also in every 'rescan-delay' seconds.

    If you install binkd 0.9.4/w32 as a Windows NT service you should use it with -C command line option. Then binkd re-reads its configuration file.

    Before version 0.9.4 changes in the configuration file were not tested if binkd was started in client-only mode (-c command line option).

    In the unix versions configuration file is re-read on SIGHUP signal
    by the command
    kill -HUP `cat /var/run/binkd.pid`

    In the version 1.0 configuration file is re-read automatically if
    changed. binkd tests on changes at every 'rescan-delay' seconds.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    12. How Can binkd Work With T-mail/IP?

    There is no way to do it. The protocols differ in essence: binkd uses
    binkp protocol whereas T-mail/IP uses EMSI etc.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    13. Is There At Least One Log Analyzer Under Unix?

    There exist many Perl scripts and several win32 binaries. For example here:

    binkdstat 0.1 beta4 Christmas version 6.01.2002
    Statistics generator for binkd
    (c) Dmitry Sergienko, 2:464/910@fidonet, dmitry@trifle.net 14.08.2000
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/binkdstat-ds.0.1_beta4_Christmas

    There also exists BndStat program:
    BNDST101.ZIP 34812 14-Aug-01 (AREA:AFTNMISC)
    BndStat 1.01. With sources. binkd statistics generator. Compiled for all
    platforms. Included win32 binaries. (C) Dmitry Rusov, 2:5090/94

    Log analyzer by val khokhlov (perl):
    http://www.vk.kiev.ua/create/soft.html#bnkds
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/stat-binkd.pl.gz

    binkdstat (c) val khokhlov, Dmitry Kolvakh, updated at April 2006
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/binkdstat.zip

    T-Hist (c) Michael Markowsky, 2:5020/378 (KLUG's BBS)
    Binary log file analyzer for various mailers including binkd.
    Works in DOS, Windows NT (2000, XP, 2003) and OS/2.
    ftp://ftp.grumbler.org/pub/binkd/hist30a7.zip

    Kleine Statistiker/BINKD for DOS v0.60a, Russian version
    A small statistics generator for posting statistics to an echo conference.
    ftp://ftp.grumbler.org/pub/binkd/statddos.rar


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    14. binkd Connects Too Slowly (~20 Seconds) Though I Have a High-Speed LAN

    It is possible that 'backresolv' parameter is on (for logging the remote host domain name) and DNS is not configured.

    The simplest solution is to comment the 'backresolv' out in the configuration file. Configuring DNS is a more complex solution.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    15. Why Does binkd Not Understand Command Line Options When I Start It From inetd?

    You should use the program name as the first parameter in inetd.conf (it may be any string for binkd), the second and the following parameters
    are the command line options (-iqs etc.) and the last parameter is the configuration file full path:

    binkp stream tcp nowait root /usr/fido/binkd binkd -isq /usr/fido/binkd.cfg

    If you do not use -q option then you should switch console output off (comment 'printq', 'percents', 'conlog' out).


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    16. Can One Make a File Request From binkd?

    It's a piece of cake! binkd supports WAZOO FREQ with an external helper.

    To request files from a remote system it is necessary to create a file
    of type nnnnmmmm.REQ and to put it in the outbound directory next to *.?ut
    and *.?lo files. But *.REQ files do not initiate binkd to call a link so
    to make a FREQ it is necessary to make a poll. The contents of a .REQ file
    is described in the "!SRIF.TXT" file which is a copy of FSC-0086.001 from http://ftsc.org


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    17. How Can my binkd Respond to a File Request?

    One can configure binkd for calling an external file request processor supporting SRIF (FSC-0086) for receiving and handling FREQs in binkd. Please read the "!SRIF.TXT" file and the comment to 'exec' in the configuration
    file.

    Here are the examples of lines in configuration file for DOS-based OS
    and for *nix (you should use regular expressions in the latter case for
    binkd to match both upper-case and lower-case letters, e.g. both *.REQ and *.req):

    exec "\\ftn\\allfix\\allfix.exe RP -SRIF *S" *.req

    exec "/ftn/bin/tmafreq-srif *S" *.[rR][eE][qQ]

    A bash script "srifreq" is delivered with binkd starting with version 1.1a19.
    The following file request processors are also compatible with binkd
    (but they are not the only ones, any other one supporting SRIF will do):

    Allfix by Harms Software Engineering: it is a fileecho processor with built-in file request processor and it has versions for DOS and OS/2;

    ViReq by Michael Haase (2:2432/280): a specialized FREQ processor for Windows, it is distributed by Michael Massenberg (2:2411/505) via modem,
    ISDN and Fido-over-IP.

    tmafreq by Maxim Timofeyev <tmahome@mail.tma.spb.ru>: the FREQ processor
    is created for a unix-like OS and ported into Windows. One may obtain tmafreq from different BBS and FTP with fileecho archives, or may get tmafreq sources from anonymous CVS :pserver:anoncvs@tma.spb.ru:/cvsroot, module "tmafreq".

    VIREQ/x by Volker Imre <volker@imre.dyndns.org> (2:246/2098): the FREQ processor is created for a unix-like OS but can be compiled in the OS/2, Windows and maybe other operating systems. Now it is included into "ftnapps" project on Sourceforge and may be downloaded from http://ftnapps.sourceforge.net/vireq.html.
    Binaries built for Win32 and OS/2 may be downloaded from http://download.binkd.org and
    https://sites.google.com/view/vasilyevmax/


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    18. How Can I Add binkd To a Fidonet Box Working With a Modem?

    You must configure your modem mailer and tosser for BSO (binkley-style outbound) mode so that all of them including binkd would have the same
    inbound directories (and also the same outbound directories). For example,
    one may put the following line to T-Mail mailer configuration file:

    BinkStyle_Pack_For All

    If your mailer can work with AMA (arcmail-attach) only you may try to
    use fileboxes and/or find programs that can convert your mailer's queue to
    BSO or fileboxes. For example, Mail2dir utility allows using fileboxes with FrontDoor. Such a means disables a possibility of sending your mail to the
    same link both by IP and by modem (for instance, when one of the channels failed). There is another more radical but more flexible way: you may change your mailer.
    See also question 35.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    19. Flags Are Not Created On Receiving a File, Programs Do Not Start

    For sure you have a wrong template in the configuration file. You have to use it this way (the first two lines are for Windows and OS/2, the rest are
    for the Unix-like OS):

    flag m:\\ftn\\flg\\pntseg.flg m:\\\\ftn\\\\inbound\\\\sec\\\\pntstr*.*
    flag m:\\ftn\\flg\\toss.flg *.su? *.mo? *.tu? *.we? *.th? *.fr? *.sa? *.pkt

    exec "/usr/local/bin/ftrack -c /fido/conf/ftrack" *.[Pp][Kk][Tt]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ss][Uu][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Mm][Oo][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Uu][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ww][Ee][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Hh][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ff][Rr][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ss][Aa][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/fech-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Ii][Cc]

    You must use the full path with four slashes for the file to receive or
    the template should start with an asterisk character. You must use two
    slashes for the flag file.

    You must use the full path because using a filename without path means
    the event of receiving the file in the current directory and not in the
    inbound directory. If a template begins with "*" then it means "any
    directory" (and since all the files are received in one of the inbound directories it works for both password protected and for unprotected
    sessions).

    In a UNIX-like OS you should take into account that filenames are case sensitive. Please use regular expressions in templates.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    20. 'skipmask' Keyword Does Not Work

    A filename is compared without path and the comparison is case
    sensitive when 'skipmask' is used.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    21. binkd Under Windows 3.x

    Sergey Zharsky (zharik@usa.net) ported binkd 0.9.2 and binkd 0.9.5 for Windows 3.x. They work using IP stacks Trumpet Winsock ver. 3.0 revision D
    and Novell TCP/IP Client for Win 3.11 (see the answer to the question
    'binkd Under DOS', the section "The DOS version has the feature...").


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    22. Different FTN Domains in binkd And a Tosser Without 5D Support

    Suppose there are two domains (with different zone numbers though it
    does not matter). Mail can be successfully sent to the first domain but
    not to the second one. This situation may arise if the tosser, the tracker
    and the other your FTN programs do not support 5D BSO.

    This is a typical binkd configuration for two FTN domains and 5D
    outbound:

    domain fidonet c:\\ftn\\outbound\\fidonet 2
    domain omeganet c:\\ftn\\outbound\\omeganet 11
    address 2:5070/222@fidonet 11:58/6@omeganet

    One must configure not the zone of your own address for 'domain'
    keyword as one might think but the zone that should not be appended to the outbound name (i.e. the outbound subdirectory extensions are not processed
    for the zone denoted in the 'domain' line).

    If your tosser would create bundles for omeganet in the omeganet
    directory then you should write as indicated above. But since it does not
    --- hpt/lnx 1.9 2024-02-05
    * Origin: Moscow, Russia (2:5020/1042)
  • From binkd Team@2:5020/1042 to All on Sat Jul 27 22:15:02 2024
    31 Mar 16:48:43 [40423] trying 195.209.235.3, port 24554...
    31 Mar 16:48:43 [40423] connected to proxy.osu.ru:24554
    31 Mar 16:48:44 [40423] Connection rejected by proxy (HTTP/1.0 403 Forbidden)
    ? 31 Mar 16:48:44 [40423] unable to connect: {13} Permission denied

    In such a case you may try to use http tunnelling for instance with the help of httport, HTTPTunnel (http://http-tunnel.sourceforge.net/), stunnel (https://www.stunnel.org/) or you may find a node receiving binkp
    connections at port 443.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    07. How Can binkd Work via SOCKS-proxy?

    It is not a rare case when users go out to the internet from their corporate LAN exclusively via the proxy server based at the only computer connected to the internet. Thus binkd cannot make a direct connection to
    the remote node and one must use the proxy server. Proxy servers support
    was included in version 0.9.4 and the later ones.

    binkd works with a SOCKS proxy version 4 and 5. The first one does not demand an authorization (no login and password), the second one demands it
    as a rule.

    Suppose the connected to the Internet computer has the IP address 192.168.0.1 in its LAN and the SOCKS server at the computer responds on
    port 1080. Here is the line in binkd configuration file necessary for
    working via the SOCKS proxy.

    1. A SOCKS server without user authorization (no login and password are demanded):

    socks 192.168.0.1:1080

    2. A proxy server with user authorization (it is necessary to type login and password, e.g. login "user", password "password"):

    socks 192.168.0.1:1080/user/password


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    08. IP-Point: How Can I Make binkd to Get My Mail From My Bossnode (Uplink)?

    Make a poll using the command line option -P:

    binkd -P1:2/3 binkd.cfg

    Usually they want binkd to exit after the session is finished. One can
    use the command line option -p:

    binkd -p -P1:2/3 binkd.cfg

    If binkd does not exit for a long time after the session has been
    finished then decrease the value of rescan-delay (and sometimes the value
    of timeout).

    If binkd works permanently (e.g. as a Windows service) and you want to
    get your mail regularly then you need some additional program or a script.
    As an example in DOS, Windows or OS/2 it is enough to execute the command:

    cd . >> %outbound%\NNNNMMMM.ilo

    where NNNN is the hex net number,
    MMMM is the hex node number,
    %outbound% is the path to the necessary zone outbound.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    09. "start_file_transfer: .: Permission denied" Error

    You get the message when binkd cannot open a file for sending indicated
    in some *.?lo file. Most likely the file has a line containing only "."
    because the poll has been made by a command of the type

    echo . >> xxxxyyyy.flo

    you should change it to "cd . >> xxxxyyyy.flo"


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    10. binkd/win and Dial-up: Dialing-up and Disconnecting Automatically

    The problem is to configure the fidonet box in such a way that binkd
    would initiate a telephone call to your Internet provider, get your mail
    and disconnect.

    The solutions:

    1st Solution

    Configure automatic connection and timeout in the dial-up connection properties (idle time before hanging up). It is convinient to use a non-standard software for dialing-up (Advanced Dialer and others). You
    should start binkd with a command line option -p periodically (and possibly -Paddress for binkd to make a poll to the address).

    binkd -p -P1:2/3.4 binkd.cfg


    2nd Solution

    Use the command line option -p and the batch file where first Remote
    Access Service (RAS) is started then binkd is started and after binkd exits
    RAS is stopped.

    Two variants, for Windows NT and for Windows 2000:
    === binkdpoll1.cmd
    rasdial Connection
    binkd -p binkd.cfg
    rasdial Connection /disconnect
    ===

    === binkdpoll2.cmd
    net start "remote access service"
    net start "remote access auto service"
    binkd -p binkd.cfg
    net stop "remote access auto service"
    net stop "remote access service"
    ===

    3rd Solution (The Best One For Win9x)

    Use the command line options -p and -Paddress and control connection
    with a non-standard dial-up software (for example dialerp). This solution
    is the most reliable one (especially if the modem connection to your
    Internet provider is bad) due to the fact that dialerp can start some
    indicated programs at setting the connection. Here is the batch file you should start in the 'Execute' parameter of the dialerp configuration file:

    ====
    binkd -p -P1:2/3.4 binkd.cfg
    dialerp BREAK *
    ====

    The question you may now ask: Where can I take dialerp? The answer is:
    Ask the author (Alexander Vedjakin, 2:5020/540) or look for it in fileecho archives and in ftp/http.


    In any case you should set a small value for 'rescan-delay' parameter in the binkd configuration file. binkd would exit faster.

    === binkd.cfg
    # Outbound rescans period (sec)
    rescan-delay 2
    ===


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    11. I Have Changed binkd Configuration File On-The-Fly. When Will It Be Reloaded?

    Starting with the version 0.9.1 binkd could feel that its configuration file changed. It exited with code 3 if it had been started with option -C. Modification time was checked after each ingoing session. Here is the batch file for starting binkd versions 0.9.1-0.9.3 and 0.9.4-0.9.6/w32:

    ====
    :aaa
    binkd -C binkd.cfg
    if errorlevel 4 goto end
    if errorlevel 3 goto aaa
    :end
    ====

    In the versions 0.9.4/unix and /os2-emx (and in these ones only) binkd restarts automatically if it is started with -C command line option.
    Besides that starting with version 0.9.4 the files included into the configuration file with the help of 'include' keyword are tested not only
    on incoming sessions but also in every 'rescan-delay' seconds.

    If you install binkd 0.9.4/w32 as a Windows NT service you should use it with -C command line option. Then binkd re-reads its configuration file.

    Before version 0.9.4 changes in the configuration file were not tested if binkd was started in client-only mode (-c command line option).

    In the unix versions configuration file is re-read on SIGHUP signal
    by the command
    kill -HUP `cat /var/run/binkd.pid`

    In the version 1.0 configuration file is re-read automatically if
    changed. binkd tests on changes at every 'rescan-delay' seconds.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    12. How Can binkd Work With T-mail/IP?

    There is no way to do it. The protocols differ in essence: binkd uses
    binkp protocol whereas T-mail/IP uses EMSI etc.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    13. Is There At Least One Log Analyzer Under Unix?

    There exist many Perl scripts and several win32 binaries. For example here:

    binkdstat 0.1 beta4 Christmas version 6.01.2002
    Statistics generator for binkd
    (c) Dmitry Sergienko, 2:464/910@fidonet, dmitry@trifle.net 14.08.2000
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/binkdstat-ds.0.1_beta4_Christmas

    There also exists BndStat program:
    BNDST101.ZIP 34812 14-Aug-01 (AREA:AFTNMISC)
    BndStat 1.01. With sources. binkd statistics generator. Compiled for all
    platforms. Included win32 binaries. (C) Dmitry Rusov, 2:5090/94

    Log analyzer by val khokhlov (perl):
    http://www.vk.kiev.ua/create/soft.html#bnkds
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/stat-binkd.pl.gz

    binkdstat (c) val khokhlov, Dmitry Kolvakh, updated at April 2006
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/binkdstat.zip

    T-Hist (c) Michael Markowsky, 2:5020/378 (KLUG's BBS)
    Binary log file analyzer for various mailers including binkd.
    Works in DOS, Windows NT (2000, XP, 2003) and OS/2.
    ftp://ftp.grumbler.org/pub/binkd/hist30a7.zip

    Kleine Statistiker/BINKD for DOS v0.60a, Russian version
    A small statistics generator for posting statistics to an echo conference.
    ftp://ftp.grumbler.org/pub/binkd/statddos.rar


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    14. binkd Connects Too Slowly (~20 Seconds) Though I Have a High-Speed LAN

    It is possible that 'backresolv' parameter is on (for logging the remote host domain name) and DNS is not configured.

    The simplest solution is to comment the 'backresolv' out in the configuration file. Configuring DNS is a more complex solution.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    15. Why Does binkd Not Understand Command Line Options When I Start It From inetd?

    You should use the program name as the first parameter in inetd.conf (it may be any string for binkd), the second and the following parameters
    are the command line options (-iqs etc.) and the last parameter is the configuration file full path:

    binkp stream tcp nowait root /usr/fido/binkd binkd -isq /usr/fido/binkd.cfg

    If you do not use -q option then you should switch console output off (comment 'printq', 'percents', 'conlog' out).


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    16. Can One Make a File Request From binkd?

    It's a piece of cake! binkd supports WAZOO FREQ with an external helper.

    To request files from a remote system it is necessary to create a file
    of type nnnnmmmm.REQ and to put it in the outbound directory next to *.?ut
    and *.?lo files. But *.REQ files do not initiate binkd to call a link so
    to make a FREQ it is necessary to make a poll. The contents of a .REQ file
    is described in the "!SRIF.TXT" file which is a copy of FSC-0086.001 from http://ftsc.org


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    17. How Can my binkd Respond to a File Request?

    One can configure binkd for calling an external file request processor supporting SRIF (FSC-0086) for receiving and handling FREQs in binkd. Please read the "!SRIF.TXT" file and the comment to 'exec' in the configuration
    file.

    Here are the examples of lines in configuration file for DOS-based OS
    and for *nix (you should use regular expressions in the latter case for
    binkd to match both upper-case and lower-case letters, e.g. both *.REQ and *.req):

    exec "\\ftn\\allfix\\allfix.exe RP -SRIF *S" *.req

    exec "/ftn/bin/tmafreq-srif *S" *.[rR][eE][qQ]

    A bash script "srifreq" is delivered with binkd starting with version 1.1a19.
    The following file request processors are also compatible with binkd
    (but they are not the only ones, any other one supporting SRIF will do):

    Allfix by Harms Software Engineering: it is a fileecho processor with built-in file request processor and it has versions for DOS and OS/2;

    ViReq by Michael Haase (2:2432/280): a specialized FREQ processor for Windows, it is distributed by Michael Massenberg (2:2411/505) via modem,
    ISDN and Fido-over-IP.

    tmafreq by Maxim Timofeyev <tmahome@mail.tma.spb.ru>: the FREQ processor
    is created for a unix-like OS and ported into Windows. One may obtain tmafreq from different BBS and FTP with fileecho archives, or may get tmafreq sources from anonymous CVS :pserver:anoncvs@tma.spb.ru:/cvsroot, module "tmafreq".

    VIREQ/x by Volker Imre <volker@imre.dyndns.org> (2:246/2098): the FREQ processor is created for a unix-like OS but can be compiled in the OS/2, Windows and maybe other operating systems. Now it is included into "ftnapps" project on Sourceforge and may be downloaded from http://ftnapps.sourceforge.net/vireq.html.
    Binaries built for Win32 and OS/2 may be downloaded from http://download.binkd.org and
    https://sites.google.com/view/vasilyevmax/


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    18. How Can I Add binkd To a Fidonet Box Working With a Modem?

    You must configure your modem mailer and tosser for BSO (binkley-style outbound) mode so that all of them including binkd would have the same
    inbound directories (and also the same outbound directories). For example,
    one may put the following line to T-Mail mailer configuration file:

    BinkStyle_Pack_For All

    If your mailer can work with AMA (arcmail-attach) only you may try to
    use fileboxes and/or find programs that can convert your mailer's queue to
    BSO or fileboxes. For example, Mail2dir utility allows using fileboxes with FrontDoor. Such a means disables a possibility of sending your mail to the
    same link both by IP and by modem (for instance, when one of the channels failed). There is another more radical but more flexible way: you may change your mailer.
    See also question 35.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    19. Flags Are Not Created On Receiving a File, Programs Do Not Start

    For sure you have a wrong template in the configuration file. You have to use it this way (the first two lines are for Windows and OS/2, the rest are
    for the Unix-like OS):

    flag m:\\ftn\\flg\\pntseg.flg m:\\\\ftn\\\\inbound\\\\sec\\\\pntstr*.*
    flag m:\\ftn\\flg\\toss.flg *.su? *.mo? *.tu? *.we? *.th? *.fr? *.sa? *.pkt

    exec "/usr/local/bin/ftrack -c /fido/conf/ftrack" *.[Pp][Kk][Tt]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ss][Uu][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Mm][Oo][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Uu][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ww][Ee][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Hh][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ff][Rr][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ss][Aa][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/fech-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Ii][Cc]

    You must use the full path with four slashes for the file to receive or
    the template should start with an asterisk character. You must use two
    slashes for the flag file.

    You must use the full path because using a filename without path means
    the event of receiving the file in the current directory and not in the
    inbound directory. If a template begins with "*" then it means "any
    directory" (and since all the files are received in one of the inbound directories it works for both password protected and for unprotected
    sessions).

    In a UNIX-like OS you should take into account that filenames are case sensitive. Please use regular expressions in templates.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    20. 'skipmask' Keyword Does Not Work

    A filename is compared without path and the comparison is case
    sensitive when 'skipmask' is used.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    21. binkd Under Windows 3.x

    Sergey Zharsky (zharik@usa.net) ported binkd 0.9.2 and binkd 0.9.5 for Windows 3.x. They work using IP stacks Trumpet Winsock ver. 3.0 revision D
    and Novell TCP/IP Client for Win 3.11 (see the answer to the question
    'binkd Under DOS', the section "The DOS version has the feature...").


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    22. Different FTN Domains in binkd And a Tosser Without 5D Support

    Suppose there are two domains (with different zone numbers though it
    does not matter). Mail can be successfully sent to the first domain but
    not to the second one. This situation may arise if the tosser, the tracker
    and the other your FTN programs do not support 5D BSO.

    This is a typical binkd configuration for two FTN domains and 5D
    outbound:

    domain fidonet c:\\ftn\\outbound\\fidonet 2
    domain omeganet c:\\ftn\\outbound\\omeganet 11
    address 2:5070/222@fidonet 11:58/6@omeganet

    One must configure not the zone of your own address for 'domain'
    keyword as one might think but the zone that should not be appended to the outbound name (i.e. the outbound subdirectory extensions are not processed
    for the zone denoted in the 'domain' line).

    If your tosser would create bundles for omeganet in the omeganet
    directory then you should write as indicated above. But since it does not
    --- hpt/lnx 1.9 2024-02-05
    * Origin: Moscow, Russia (2:5020/1042)
  • From binkd Team@2:5020/1042 to All on Sat Aug 3 22:15:04 2024
    31 Mar 16:48:43 [40423] trying 195.209.235.3, port 24554...
    31 Mar 16:48:43 [40423] connected to proxy.osu.ru:24554
    31 Mar 16:48:44 [40423] Connection rejected by proxy (HTTP/1.0 403 Forbidden)
    ? 31 Mar 16:48:44 [40423] unable to connect: {13} Permission denied

    In such a case you may try to use http tunnelling for instance with the help of httport, HTTPTunnel (http://http-tunnel.sourceforge.net/), stunnel (https://www.stunnel.org/) or you may find a node receiving binkp
    connections at port 443.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    07. How Can binkd Work via SOCKS-proxy?

    It is not a rare case when users go out to the internet from their corporate LAN exclusively via the proxy server based at the only computer connected to the internet. Thus binkd cannot make a direct connection to
    the remote node and one must use the proxy server. Proxy servers support
    was included in version 0.9.4 and the later ones.

    binkd works with a SOCKS proxy version 4 and 5. The first one does not demand an authorization (no login and password), the second one demands it
    as a rule.

    Suppose the connected to the Internet computer has the IP address 192.168.0.1 in its LAN and the SOCKS server at the computer responds on
    port 1080. Here is the line in binkd configuration file necessary for
    working via the SOCKS proxy.

    1. A SOCKS server without user authorization (no login and password are demanded):

    socks 192.168.0.1:1080

    2. A proxy server with user authorization (it is necessary to type login and password, e.g. login "user", password "password"):

    socks 192.168.0.1:1080/user/password


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    08. IP-Point: How Can I Make binkd to Get My Mail From My Bossnode (Uplink)?

    Make a poll using the command line option -P:

    binkd -P1:2/3 binkd.cfg

    Usually they want binkd to exit after the session is finished. One can
    use the command line option -p:

    binkd -p -P1:2/3 binkd.cfg

    If binkd does not exit for a long time after the session has been
    finished then decrease the value of rescan-delay (and sometimes the value
    of timeout).

    If binkd works permanently (e.g. as a Windows service) and you want to
    get your mail regularly then you need some additional program or a script.
    As an example in DOS, Windows or OS/2 it is enough to execute the command:

    cd . >> %outbound%\NNNNMMMM.ilo

    where NNNN is the hex net number,
    MMMM is the hex node number,
    %outbound% is the path to the necessary zone outbound.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    09. "start_file_transfer: .: Permission denied" Error

    You get the message when binkd cannot open a file for sending indicated
    in some *.?lo file. Most likely the file has a line containing only "."
    because the poll has been made by a command of the type

    echo . >> xxxxyyyy.flo

    you should change it to "cd . >> xxxxyyyy.flo"


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    10. binkd/win and Dial-up: Dialing-up and Disconnecting Automatically

    The problem is to configure the fidonet box in such a way that binkd
    would initiate a telephone call to your Internet provider, get your mail
    and disconnect.

    The solutions:

    1st Solution

    Configure automatic connection and timeout in the dial-up connection properties (idle time before hanging up). It is convinient to use a non-standard software for dialing-up (Advanced Dialer and others). You
    should start binkd with a command line option -p periodically (and possibly -Paddress for binkd to make a poll to the address).

    binkd -p -P1:2/3.4 binkd.cfg


    2nd Solution

    Use the command line option -p and the batch file where first Remote
    Access Service (RAS) is started then binkd is started and after binkd exits
    RAS is stopped.

    Two variants, for Windows NT and for Windows 2000:
    === binkdpoll1.cmd
    rasdial Connection
    binkd -p binkd.cfg
    rasdial Connection /disconnect
    ===

    === binkdpoll2.cmd
    net start "remote access service"
    net start "remote access auto service"
    binkd -p binkd.cfg
    net stop "remote access auto service"
    net stop "remote access service"
    ===

    3rd Solution (The Best One For Win9x)

    Use the command line options -p and -Paddress and control connection
    with a non-standard dial-up software (for example dialerp). This solution
    is the most reliable one (especially if the modem connection to your
    Internet provider is bad) due to the fact that dialerp can start some
    indicated programs at setting the connection. Here is the batch file you should start in the 'Execute' parameter of the dialerp configuration file:

    ====
    binkd -p -P1:2/3.4 binkd.cfg
    dialerp BREAK *
    ====

    The question you may now ask: Where can I take dialerp? The answer is:
    Ask the author (Alexander Vedjakin, 2:5020/540) or look for it in fileecho archives and in ftp/http.


    In any case you should set a small value for 'rescan-delay' parameter in the binkd configuration file. binkd would exit faster.

    === binkd.cfg
    # Outbound rescans period (sec)
    rescan-delay 2
    ===


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    11. I Have Changed binkd Configuration File On-The-Fly. When Will It Be Reloaded?

    Starting with the version 0.9.1 binkd could feel that its configuration file changed. It exited with code 3 if it had been started with option -C. Modification time was checked after each ingoing session. Here is the batch file for starting binkd versions 0.9.1-0.9.3 and 0.9.4-0.9.6/w32:

    ====
    :aaa
    binkd -C binkd.cfg
    if errorlevel 4 goto end
    if errorlevel 3 goto aaa
    :end
    ====

    In the versions 0.9.4/unix and /os2-emx (and in these ones only) binkd restarts automatically if it is started with -C command line option.
    Besides that starting with version 0.9.4 the files included into the configuration file with the help of 'include' keyword are tested not only
    on incoming sessions but also in every 'rescan-delay' seconds.

    If you install binkd 0.9.4/w32 as a Windows NT service you should use it with -C command line option. Then binkd re-reads its configuration file.

    Before version 0.9.4 changes in the configuration file were not tested if binkd was started in client-only mode (-c command line option).

    In the unix versions configuration file is re-read on SIGHUP signal
    by the command
    kill -HUP `cat /var/run/binkd.pid`

    In the version 1.0 configuration file is re-read automatically if
    changed. binkd tests on changes at every 'rescan-delay' seconds.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    12. How Can binkd Work With T-mail/IP?

    There is no way to do it. The protocols differ in essence: binkd uses
    binkp protocol whereas T-mail/IP uses EMSI etc.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    13. Is There At Least One Log Analyzer Under Unix?

    There exist many Perl scripts and several win32 binaries. For example here:

    binkdstat 0.1 beta4 Christmas version 6.01.2002
    Statistics generator for binkd
    (c) Dmitry Sergienko, 2:464/910@fidonet, dmitry@trifle.net 14.08.2000
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/binkdstat-ds.0.1_beta4_Christmas

    There also exists BndStat program:
    BNDST101.ZIP 34812 14-Aug-01 (AREA:AFTNMISC)
    BndStat 1.01. With sources. binkd statistics generator. Compiled for all
    platforms. Included win32 binaries. (C) Dmitry Rusov, 2:5090/94

    Log analyzer by val khokhlov (perl):
    http://www.vk.kiev.ua/create/soft.html#bnkds
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/stat-binkd.pl.gz

    binkdstat (c) val khokhlov, Dmitry Kolvakh, updated at April 2006
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/binkdstat.zip

    T-Hist (c) Michael Markowsky, 2:5020/378 (KLUG's BBS)
    Binary log file analyzer for various mailers including binkd.
    Works in DOS, Windows NT (2000, XP, 2003) and OS/2.
    ftp://ftp.grumbler.org/pub/binkd/hist30a7.zip

    Kleine Statistiker/BINKD for DOS v0.60a, Russian version
    A small statistics generator for posting statistics to an echo conference.
    ftp://ftp.grumbler.org/pub/binkd/statddos.rar


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    14. binkd Connects Too Slowly (~20 Seconds) Though I Have a High-Speed LAN

    It is possible that 'backresolv' parameter is on (for logging the remote host domain name) and DNS is not configured.

    The simplest solution is to comment the 'backresolv' out in the configuration file. Configuring DNS is a more complex solution.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    15. Why Does binkd Not Understand Command Line Options When I Start It From inetd?

    You should use the program name as the first parameter in inetd.conf (it may be any string for binkd), the second and the following parameters
    are the command line options (-iqs etc.) and the last parameter is the configuration file full path:

    binkp stream tcp nowait root /usr/fido/binkd binkd -isq /usr/fido/binkd.cfg

    If you do not use -q option then you should switch console output off (comment 'printq', 'percents', 'conlog' out).


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    16. Can One Make a File Request From binkd?

    It's a piece of cake! binkd supports WAZOO FREQ with an external helper.

    To request files from a remote system it is necessary to create a file
    of type nnnnmmmm.REQ and to put it in the outbound directory next to *.?ut
    and *.?lo files. But *.REQ files do not initiate binkd to call a link so
    to make a FREQ it is necessary to make a poll. The contents of a .REQ file
    is described in the "!SRIF.TXT" file which is a copy of FSC-0086.001 from http://ftsc.org


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    17. How Can my binkd Respond to a File Request?

    One can configure binkd for calling an external file request processor supporting SRIF (FSC-0086) for receiving and handling FREQs in binkd. Please read the "!SRIF.TXT" file and the comment to 'exec' in the configuration
    file.

    Here are the examples of lines in configuration file for DOS-based OS
    and for *nix (you should use regular expressions in the latter case for
    binkd to match both upper-case and lower-case letters, e.g. both *.REQ and *.req):

    exec "\\ftn\\allfix\\allfix.exe RP -SRIF *S" *.req

    exec "/ftn/bin/tmafreq-srif *S" *.[rR][eE][qQ]

    A bash script "srifreq" is delivered with binkd starting with version 1.1a19.
    The following file request processors are also compatible with binkd
    (but they are not the only ones, any other one supporting SRIF will do):

    Allfix by Harms Software Engineering: it is a fileecho processor with built-in file request processor and it has versions for DOS and OS/2;

    ViReq by Michael Haase (2:2432/280): a specialized FREQ processor for Windows, it is distributed by Michael Massenberg (2:2411/505) via modem,
    ISDN and Fido-over-IP.

    tmafreq by Maxim Timofeyev <tmahome@mail.tma.spb.ru>: the FREQ processor
    is created for a unix-like OS and ported into Windows. One may obtain tmafreq from different BBS and FTP with fileecho archives, or may get tmafreq sources from anonymous CVS :pserver:anoncvs@tma.spb.ru:/cvsroot, module "tmafreq".

    VIREQ/x by Volker Imre <volker@imre.dyndns.org> (2:246/2098): the FREQ processor is created for a unix-like OS but can be compiled in the OS/2, Windows and maybe other operating systems. Now it is included into "ftnapps" project on Sourceforge and may be downloaded from http://ftnapps.sourceforge.net/vireq.html.
    Binaries built for Win32 and OS/2 may be downloaded from http://download.binkd.org and
    https://sites.google.com/view/vasilyevmax/


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    18. How Can I Add binkd To a Fidonet Box Working With a Modem?

    You must configure your modem mailer and tosser for BSO (binkley-style outbound) mode so that all of them including binkd would have the same
    inbound directories (and also the same outbound directories). For example,
    one may put the following line to T-Mail mailer configuration file:

    BinkStyle_Pack_For All

    If your mailer can work with AMA (arcmail-attach) only you may try to
    use fileboxes and/or find programs that can convert your mailer's queue to
    BSO or fileboxes. For example, Mail2dir utility allows using fileboxes with FrontDoor. Such a means disables a possibility of sending your mail to the
    same link both by IP and by modem (for instance, when one of the channels failed). There is another more radical but more flexible way: you may change your mailer.
    See also question 35.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    19. Flags Are Not Created On Receiving a File, Programs Do Not Start

    For sure you have a wrong template in the configuration file. You have to use it this way (the first two lines are for Windows and OS/2, the rest are
    for the Unix-like OS):

    flag m:\\ftn\\flg\\pntseg.flg m:\\\\ftn\\\\inbound\\\\sec\\\\pntstr*.*
    flag m:\\ftn\\flg\\toss.flg *.su? *.mo? *.tu? *.we? *.th? *.fr? *.sa? *.pkt

    exec "/usr/local/bin/ftrack -c /fido/conf/ftrack" *.[Pp][Kk][Tt]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ss][Uu][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Mm][Oo][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Uu][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ww][Ee][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Hh][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ff][Rr][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ss][Aa][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/fech-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Ii][Cc]

    You must use the full path with four slashes for the file to receive or
    the template should start with an asterisk character. You must use two
    slashes for the flag file.

    You must use the full path because using a filename without path means
    the event of receiving the file in the current directory and not in the
    inbound directory. If a template begins with "*" then it means "any
    directory" (and since all the files are received in one of the inbound directories it works for both password protected and for unprotected
    sessions).

    In a UNIX-like OS you should take into account that filenames are case sensitive. Please use regular expressions in templates.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    20. 'skipmask' Keyword Does Not Work

    A filename is compared without path and the comparison is case
    sensitive when 'skipmask' is used.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    21. binkd Under Windows 3.x

    Sergey Zharsky (zharik@usa.net) ported binkd 0.9.2 and binkd 0.9.5 for Windows 3.x. They work using IP stacks Trumpet Winsock ver. 3.0 revision D
    and Novell TCP/IP Client for Win 3.11 (see the answer to the question
    'binkd Under DOS', the section "The DOS version has the feature...").


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    22. Different FTN Domains in binkd And a Tosser Without 5D Support

    Suppose there are two domains (with different zone numbers though it
    does not matter). Mail can be successfully sent to the first domain but
    not to the second one. This situation may arise if the tosser, the tracker
    and the other your FTN programs do not support 5D BSO.

    This is a typical binkd configuration for two FTN domains and 5D
    outbound:

    domain fidonet c:\\ftn\\outbound\\fidonet 2
    domain omeganet c:\\ftn\\outbound\\omeganet 11
    address 2:5070/222@fidonet 11:58/6@omeganet

    One must configure not the zone of your own address for 'domain'
    keyword as one might think but the zone that should not be appended to the outbound name (i.e. the outbound subdirectory extensions are not processed
    for the zone denoted in the 'domain' line).

    If your tosser would create bundles for omeganet in the omeganet
    directory then you should write as indicated above. But since it does not
    --- hpt/lnx 1.9 2024-02-05
    * Origin: Moscow, Russia (2:5020/1042)
  • From binkd Team@2:5020/1042 to All on Sat Aug 10 22:15:04 2024
    31 Mar 16:48:43 [40423] trying 195.209.235.3, port 24554...
    31 Mar 16:48:43 [40423] connected to proxy.osu.ru:24554
    31 Mar 16:48:44 [40423] Connection rejected by proxy (HTTP/1.0 403 Forbidden)
    ? 31 Mar 16:48:44 [40423] unable to connect: {13} Permission denied

    In such a case you may try to use http tunnelling for instance with the help of httport, HTTPTunnel (http://http-tunnel.sourceforge.net/), stunnel (https://www.stunnel.org/) or you may find a node receiving binkp
    connections at port 443.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    07. How Can binkd Work via SOCKS-proxy?

    It is not a rare case when users go out to the internet from their corporate LAN exclusively via the proxy server based at the only computer connected to the internet. Thus binkd cannot make a direct connection to
    the remote node and one must use the proxy server. Proxy servers support
    was included in version 0.9.4 and the later ones.

    binkd works with a SOCKS proxy version 4 and 5. The first one does not demand an authorization (no login and password), the second one demands it
    as a rule.

    Suppose the connected to the Internet computer has the IP address 192.168.0.1 in its LAN and the SOCKS server at the computer responds on
    port 1080. Here is the line in binkd configuration file necessary for
    working via the SOCKS proxy.

    1. A SOCKS server without user authorization (no login and password are demanded):

    socks 192.168.0.1:1080

    2. A proxy server with user authorization (it is necessary to type login and password, e.g. login "user", password "password"):

    socks 192.168.0.1:1080/user/password


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    08. IP-Point: How Can I Make binkd to Get My Mail From My Bossnode (Uplink)?

    Make a poll using the command line option -P:

    binkd -P1:2/3 binkd.cfg

    Usually they want binkd to exit after the session is finished. One can
    use the command line option -p:

    binkd -p -P1:2/3 binkd.cfg

    If binkd does not exit for a long time after the session has been
    finished then decrease the value of rescan-delay (and sometimes the value
    of timeout).

    If binkd works permanently (e.g. as a Windows service) and you want to
    get your mail regularly then you need some additional program or a script.
    As an example in DOS, Windows or OS/2 it is enough to execute the command:

    cd . >> %outbound%\NNNNMMMM.ilo

    where NNNN is the hex net number,
    MMMM is the hex node number,
    %outbound% is the path to the necessary zone outbound.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    09. "start_file_transfer: .: Permission denied" Error

    You get the message when binkd cannot open a file for sending indicated
    in some *.?lo file. Most likely the file has a line containing only "."
    because the poll has been made by a command of the type

    echo . >> xxxxyyyy.flo

    you should change it to "cd . >> xxxxyyyy.flo"


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    10. binkd/win and Dial-up: Dialing-up and Disconnecting Automatically

    The problem is to configure the fidonet box in such a way that binkd
    would initiate a telephone call to your Internet provider, get your mail
    and disconnect.

    The solutions:

    1st Solution

    Configure automatic connection and timeout in the dial-up connection properties (idle time before hanging up). It is convinient to use a non-standard software for dialing-up (Advanced Dialer and others). You
    should start binkd with a command line option -p periodically (and possibly -Paddress for binkd to make a poll to the address).

    binkd -p -P1:2/3.4 binkd.cfg


    2nd Solution

    Use the command line option -p and the batch file where first Remote
    Access Service (RAS) is started then binkd is started and after binkd exits
    RAS is stopped.

    Two variants, for Windows NT and for Windows 2000:
    === binkdpoll1.cmd
    rasdial Connection
    binkd -p binkd.cfg
    rasdial Connection /disconnect
    ===

    === binkdpoll2.cmd
    net start "remote access service"
    net start "remote access auto service"
    binkd -p binkd.cfg
    net stop "remote access auto service"
    net stop "remote access service"
    ===

    3rd Solution (The Best One For Win9x)

    Use the command line options -p and -Paddress and control connection
    with a non-standard dial-up software (for example dialerp). This solution
    is the most reliable one (especially if the modem connection to your
    Internet provider is bad) due to the fact that dialerp can start some
    indicated programs at setting the connection. Here is the batch file you should start in the 'Execute' parameter of the dialerp configuration file:

    ====
    binkd -p -P1:2/3.4 binkd.cfg
    dialerp BREAK *
    ====

    The question you may now ask: Where can I take dialerp? The answer is:
    Ask the author (Alexander Vedjakin, 2:5020/540) or look for it in fileecho archives and in ftp/http.


    In any case you should set a small value for 'rescan-delay' parameter in the binkd configuration file. binkd would exit faster.

    === binkd.cfg
    # Outbound rescans period (sec)
    rescan-delay 2
    ===


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    11. I Have Changed binkd Configuration File On-The-Fly. When Will It Be Reloaded?

    Starting with the version 0.9.1 binkd could feel that its configuration file changed. It exited with code 3 if it had been started with option -C. Modification time was checked after each ingoing session. Here is the batch file for starting binkd versions 0.9.1-0.9.3 and 0.9.4-0.9.6/w32:

    ====
    :aaa
    binkd -C binkd.cfg
    if errorlevel 4 goto end
    if errorlevel 3 goto aaa
    :end
    ====

    In the versions 0.9.4/unix and /os2-emx (and in these ones only) binkd restarts automatically if it is started with -C command line option.
    Besides that starting with version 0.9.4 the files included into the configuration file with the help of 'include' keyword are tested not only
    on incoming sessions but also in every 'rescan-delay' seconds.

    If you install binkd 0.9.4/w32 as a Windows NT service you should use it with -C command line option. Then binkd re-reads its configuration file.

    Before version 0.9.4 changes in the configuration file were not tested if binkd was started in client-only mode (-c command line option).

    In the unix versions configuration file is re-read on SIGHUP signal
    by the command
    kill -HUP `cat /var/run/binkd.pid`

    In the version 1.0 configuration file is re-read automatically if
    changed. binkd tests on changes at every 'rescan-delay' seconds.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    12. How Can binkd Work With T-mail/IP?

    There is no way to do it. The protocols differ in essence: binkd uses
    binkp protocol whereas T-mail/IP uses EMSI etc.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    13. Is There At Least One Log Analyzer Under Unix?

    There exist many Perl scripts and several win32 binaries. For example here:

    binkdstat 0.1 beta4 Christmas version 6.01.2002
    Statistics generator for binkd
    (c) Dmitry Sergienko, 2:464/910@fidonet, dmitry@trifle.net 14.08.2000
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/binkdstat-ds.0.1_beta4_Christmas

    There also exists BndStat program:
    BNDST101.ZIP 34812 14-Aug-01 (AREA:AFTNMISC)
    BndStat 1.01. With sources. binkd statistics generator. Compiled for all
    platforms. Included win32 binaries. (C) Dmitry Rusov, 2:5090/94

    Log analyzer by val khokhlov (perl):
    http://www.vk.kiev.ua/create/soft.html#bnkds
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/stat-binkd.pl.gz

    binkdstat (c) val khokhlov, Dmitry Kolvakh, updated at April 2006
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/binkdstat.zip

    T-Hist (c) Michael Markowsky, 2:5020/378 (KLUG's BBS)
    Binary log file analyzer for various mailers including binkd.
    Works in DOS, Windows NT (2000, XP, 2003) and OS/2.
    ftp://ftp.grumbler.org/pub/binkd/hist30a7.zip

    Kleine Statistiker/BINKD for DOS v0.60a, Russian version
    A small statistics generator for posting statistics to an echo conference.
    ftp://ftp.grumbler.org/pub/binkd/statddos.rar


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    14. binkd Connects Too Slowly (~20 Seconds) Though I Have a High-Speed LAN

    It is possible that 'backresolv' parameter is on (for logging the remote host domain name) and DNS is not configured.

    The simplest solution is to comment the 'backresolv' out in the configuration file. Configuring DNS is a more complex solution.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    15. Why Does binkd Not Understand Command Line Options When I Start It From inetd?

    You should use the program name as the first parameter in inetd.conf (it may be any string for binkd), the second and the following parameters
    are the command line options (-iqs etc.) and the last parameter is the configuration file full path:

    binkp stream tcp nowait root /usr/fido/binkd binkd -isq /usr/fido/binkd.cfg

    If you do not use -q option then you should switch console output off (comment 'printq', 'percents', 'conlog' out).


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    16. Can One Make a File Request From binkd?

    It's a piece of cake! binkd supports WAZOO FREQ with an external helper.

    To request files from a remote system it is necessary to create a file
    of type nnnnmmmm.REQ and to put it in the outbound directory next to *.?ut
    and *.?lo files. But *.REQ files do not initiate binkd to call a link so
    to make a FREQ it is necessary to make a poll. The contents of a .REQ file
    is described in the "!SRIF.TXT" file which is a copy of FSC-0086.001 from http://ftsc.org


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    17. How Can my binkd Respond to a File Request?

    One can configure binkd for calling an external file request processor supporting SRIF (FSC-0086) for receiving and handling FREQs in binkd. Please read the "!SRIF.TXT" file and the comment to 'exec' in the configuration
    file.

    Here are the examples of lines in configuration file for DOS-based OS
    and for *nix (you should use regular expressions in the latter case for
    binkd to match both upper-case and lower-case letters, e.g. both *.REQ and *.req):

    exec "\\ftn\\allfix\\allfix.exe RP -SRIF *S" *.req

    exec "/ftn/bin/tmafreq-srif *S" *.[rR][eE][qQ]

    A bash script "srifreq" is delivered with binkd starting with version 1.1a19.
    The following file request processors are also compatible with binkd
    (but they are not the only ones, any other one supporting SRIF will do):

    Allfix by Harms Software Engineering: it is a fileecho processor with built-in file request processor and it has versions for DOS and OS/2;

    ViReq by Michael Haase (2:2432/280): a specialized FREQ processor for Windows, it is distributed by Michael Massenberg (2:2411/505) via modem,
    ISDN and Fido-over-IP.

    tmafreq by Maxim Timofeyev <tmahome@mail.tma.spb.ru>: the FREQ processor
    is created for a unix-like OS and ported into Windows. One may obtain tmafreq from different BBS and FTP with fileecho archives, or may get tmafreq sources from anonymous CVS :pserver:anoncvs@tma.spb.ru:/cvsroot, module "tmafreq".

    VIREQ/x by Volker Imre <volker@imre.dyndns.org> (2:246/2098): the FREQ processor is created for a unix-like OS but can be compiled in the OS/2, Windows and maybe other operating systems. Now it is included into "ftnapps" project on Sourceforge and may be downloaded from http://ftnapps.sourceforge.net/vireq.html.
    Binaries built for Win32 and OS/2 may be downloaded from http://download.binkd.org and
    https://sites.google.com/view/vasilyevmax/


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    18. How Can I Add binkd To a Fidonet Box Working With a Modem?

    You must configure your modem mailer and tosser for BSO (binkley-style outbound) mode so that all of them including binkd would have the same
    inbound directories (and also the same outbound directories). For example,
    one may put the following line to T-Mail mailer configuration file:

    BinkStyle_Pack_For All

    If your mailer can work with AMA (arcmail-attach) only you may try to
    use fileboxes and/or find programs that can convert your mailer's queue to
    BSO or fileboxes. For example, Mail2dir utility allows using fileboxes with FrontDoor. Such a means disables a possibility of sending your mail to the
    same link both by IP and by modem (for instance, when one of the channels failed). There is another more radical but more flexible way: you may change your mailer.
    See also question 35.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    19. Flags Are Not Created On Receiving a File, Programs Do Not Start

    For sure you have a wrong template in the configuration file. You have to use it this way (the first two lines are for Windows and OS/2, the rest are
    for the Unix-like OS):

    flag m:\\ftn\\flg\\pntseg.flg m:\\\\ftn\\\\inbound\\\\sec\\\\pntstr*.*
    flag m:\\ftn\\flg\\toss.flg *.su? *.mo? *.tu? *.we? *.th? *.fr? *.sa? *.pkt

    exec "/usr/local/bin/ftrack -c /fido/conf/ftrack" *.[Pp][Kk][Tt]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ss][Uu][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Mm][Oo][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Uu][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ww][Ee][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Hh][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ff][Rr][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ss][Aa][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/fech-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Ii][Cc]

    You must use the full path with four slashes for the file to receive or
    the template should start with an asterisk character. You must use two
    slashes for the flag file.

    You must use the full path because using a filename without path means
    the event of receiving the file in the current directory and not in the
    inbound directory. If a template begins with "*" then it means "any
    directory" (and since all the files are received in one of the inbound directories it works for both password protected and for unprotected
    sessions).

    In a UNIX-like OS you should take into account that filenames are case sensitive. Please use regular expressions in templates.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    20. 'skipmask' Keyword Does Not Work

    A filename is compared without path and the comparison is case
    sensitive when 'skipmask' is used.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    21. binkd Under Windows 3.x

    Sergey Zharsky (zharik@usa.net) ported binkd 0.9.2 and binkd 0.9.5 for Windows 3.x. They work using IP stacks Trumpet Winsock ver. 3.0 revision D
    and Novell TCP/IP Client for Win 3.11 (see the answer to the question
    'binkd Under DOS', the section "The DOS version has the feature...").


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    22. Different FTN Domains in binkd And a Tosser Without 5D Support

    Suppose there are two domains (with different zone numbers though it
    does not matter). Mail can be successfully sent to the first domain but
    not to the second one. This situation may arise if the tosser, the tracker
    and the other your FTN programs do not support 5D BSO.

    This is a typical binkd configuration for two FTN domains and 5D
    outbound:

    domain fidonet c:\\ftn\\outbound\\fidonet 2
    domain omeganet c:\\ftn\\outbound\\omeganet 11
    address 2:5070/222@fidonet 11:58/6@omeganet

    One must configure not the zone of your own address for 'domain'
    keyword as one might think but the zone that should not be appended to the outbound name (i.e. the outbound subdirectory extensions are not processed
    for the zone denoted in the 'domain' line).

    If your tosser would create bundles for omeganet in the omeganet
    directory then you should write as indicated above. But since it does not
    --- hpt/lnx 1.9 2024-02-05
    * Origin: Moscow, Russia (2:5020/1042)
  • From binkd Team@2:5020/1042 to All on Sat Aug 17 22:15:02 2024
    31 Mar 16:48:43 [40423] trying 195.209.235.3, port 24554...
    31 Mar 16:48:43 [40423] connected to proxy.osu.ru:24554
    31 Mar 16:48:44 [40423] Connection rejected by proxy (HTTP/1.0 403 Forbidden)
    ? 31 Mar 16:48:44 [40423] unable to connect: {13} Permission denied

    In such a case you may try to use http tunnelling for instance with the help of httport, HTTPTunnel (http://http-tunnel.sourceforge.net/), stunnel (https://www.stunnel.org/) or you may find a node receiving binkp
    connections at port 443.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    07. How Can binkd Work via SOCKS-proxy?

    It is not a rare case when users go out to the internet from their corporate LAN exclusively via the proxy server based at the only computer connected to the internet. Thus binkd cannot make a direct connection to
    the remote node and one must use the proxy server. Proxy servers support
    was included in version 0.9.4 and the later ones.

    binkd works with a SOCKS proxy version 4 and 5. The first one does not demand an authorization (no login and password), the second one demands it
    as a rule.

    Suppose the connected to the Internet computer has the IP address 192.168.0.1 in its LAN and the SOCKS server at the computer responds on
    port 1080. Here is the line in binkd configuration file necessary for
    working via the SOCKS proxy.

    1. A SOCKS server without user authorization (no login and password are demanded):

    socks 192.168.0.1:1080

    2. A proxy server with user authorization (it is necessary to type login and password, e.g. login "user", password "password"):

    socks 192.168.0.1:1080/user/password


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    08. IP-Point: How Can I Make binkd to Get My Mail From My Bossnode (Uplink)?

    Make a poll using the command line option -P:

    binkd -P1:2/3 binkd.cfg

    Usually they want binkd to exit after the session is finished. One can
    use the command line option -p:

    binkd -p -P1:2/3 binkd.cfg

    If binkd does not exit for a long time after the session has been
    finished then decrease the value of rescan-delay (and sometimes the value
    of timeout).

    If binkd works permanently (e.g. as a Windows service) and you want to
    get your mail regularly then you need some additional program or a script.
    As an example in DOS, Windows or OS/2 it is enough to execute the command:

    cd . >> %outbound%\NNNNMMMM.ilo

    where NNNN is the hex net number,
    MMMM is the hex node number,
    %outbound% is the path to the necessary zone outbound.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    09. "start_file_transfer: .: Permission denied" Error

    You get the message when binkd cannot open a file for sending indicated
    in some *.?lo file. Most likely the file has a line containing only "."
    because the poll has been made by a command of the type

    echo . >> xxxxyyyy.flo

    you should change it to "cd . >> xxxxyyyy.flo"


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    10. binkd/win and Dial-up: Dialing-up and Disconnecting Automatically

    The problem is to configure the fidonet box in such a way that binkd
    would initiate a telephone call to your Internet provider, get your mail
    and disconnect.

    The solutions:

    1st Solution

    Configure automatic connection and timeout in the dial-up connection properties (idle time before hanging up). It is convinient to use a non-standard software for dialing-up (Advanced Dialer and others). You
    should start binkd with a command line option -p periodically (and possibly -Paddress for binkd to make a poll to the address).

    binkd -p -P1:2/3.4 binkd.cfg


    2nd Solution

    Use the command line option -p and the batch file where first Remote
    Access Service (RAS) is started then binkd is started and after binkd exits
    RAS is stopped.

    Two variants, for Windows NT and for Windows 2000:
    === binkdpoll1.cmd
    rasdial Connection
    binkd -p binkd.cfg
    rasdial Connection /disconnect
    ===

    === binkdpoll2.cmd
    net start "remote access service"
    net start "remote access auto service"
    binkd -p binkd.cfg
    net stop "remote access auto service"
    net stop "remote access service"
    ===

    3rd Solution (The Best One For Win9x)

    Use the command line options -p and -Paddress and control connection
    with a non-standard dial-up software (for example dialerp). This solution
    is the most reliable one (especially if the modem connection to your
    Internet provider is bad) due to the fact that dialerp can start some
    indicated programs at setting the connection. Here is the batch file you should start in the 'Execute' parameter of the dialerp configuration file:

    ====
    binkd -p -P1:2/3.4 binkd.cfg
    dialerp BREAK *
    ====

    The question you may now ask: Where can I take dialerp? The answer is:
    Ask the author (Alexander Vedjakin, 2:5020/540) or look for it in fileecho archives and in ftp/http.


    In any case you should set a small value for 'rescan-delay' parameter in the binkd configuration file. binkd would exit faster.

    === binkd.cfg
    # Outbound rescans period (sec)
    rescan-delay 2
    ===


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    11. I Have Changed binkd Configuration File On-The-Fly. When Will It Be Reloaded?

    Starting with the version 0.9.1 binkd could feel that its configuration file changed. It exited with code 3 if it had been started with option -C. Modification time was checked after each ingoing session. Here is the batch file for starting binkd versions 0.9.1-0.9.3 and 0.9.4-0.9.6/w32:

    ====
    :aaa
    binkd -C binkd.cfg
    if errorlevel 4 goto end
    if errorlevel 3 goto aaa
    :end
    ====

    In the versions 0.9.4/unix and /os2-emx (and in these ones only) binkd restarts automatically if it is started with -C command line option.
    Besides that starting with version 0.9.4 the files included into the configuration file with the help of 'include' keyword are tested not only
    on incoming sessions but also in every 'rescan-delay' seconds.

    If you install binkd 0.9.4/w32 as a Windows NT service you should use it with -C command line option. Then binkd re-reads its configuration file.

    Before version 0.9.4 changes in the configuration file were not tested if binkd was started in client-only mode (-c command line option).

    In the unix versions configuration file is re-read on SIGHUP signal
    by the command
    kill -HUP `cat /var/run/binkd.pid`

    In the version 1.0 configuration file is re-read automatically if
    changed. binkd tests on changes at every 'rescan-delay' seconds.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    12. How Can binkd Work With T-mail/IP?

    There is no way to do it. The protocols differ in essence: binkd uses
    binkp protocol whereas T-mail/IP uses EMSI etc.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    13. Is There At Least One Log Analyzer Under Unix?

    There exist many Perl scripts and several win32 binaries. For example here:

    binkdstat 0.1 beta4 Christmas version 6.01.2002
    Statistics generator for binkd
    (c) Dmitry Sergienko, 2:464/910@fidonet, dmitry@trifle.net 14.08.2000
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/binkdstat-ds.0.1_beta4_Christmas

    There also exists BndStat program:
    BNDST101.ZIP 34812 14-Aug-01 (AREA:AFTNMISC)
    BndStat 1.01. With sources. binkd statistics generator. Compiled for all
    platforms. Included win32 binaries. (C) Dmitry Rusov, 2:5090/94

    Log analyzer by val khokhlov (perl):
    http://www.vk.kiev.ua/create/soft.html#bnkds
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/stat-binkd.pl.gz

    binkdstat (c) val khokhlov, Dmitry Kolvakh, updated at April 2006
    http://binkd.grumbler.org/loganalisers/binkdstat.zip

    T-Hist (c) Michael Markowsky, 2:5020/378 (KLUG's BBS)
    Binary log file analyzer for various mailers including binkd.
    Works in DOS, Windows NT (2000, XP, 2003) and OS/2.
    ftp://ftp.grumbler.org/pub/binkd/hist30a7.zip

    Kleine Statistiker/BINKD for DOS v0.60a, Russian version
    A small statistics generator for posting statistics to an echo conference.
    ftp://ftp.grumbler.org/pub/binkd/statddos.rar


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    14. binkd Connects Too Slowly (~20 Seconds) Though I Have a High-Speed LAN

    It is possible that 'backresolv' parameter is on (for logging the remote host domain name) and DNS is not configured.

    The simplest solution is to comment the 'backresolv' out in the configuration file. Configuring DNS is a more complex solution.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    15. Why Does binkd Not Understand Command Line Options When I Start It From inetd?

    You should use the program name as the first parameter in inetd.conf (it may be any string for binkd), the second and the following parameters
    are the command line options (-iqs etc.) and the last parameter is the configuration file full path:

    binkp stream tcp nowait root /usr/fido/binkd binkd -isq /usr/fido/binkd.cfg

    If you do not use -q option then you should switch console output off (comment 'printq', 'percents', 'conlog' out).


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    16. Can One Make a File Request From binkd?

    It's a piece of cake! binkd supports WAZOO FREQ with an external helper.

    To request files from a remote system it is necessary to create a file
    of type nnnnmmmm.REQ and to put it in the outbound directory next to *.?ut
    and *.?lo files. But *.REQ files do not initiate binkd to call a link so
    to make a FREQ it is necessary to make a poll. The contents of a .REQ file
    is described in the "!SRIF.TXT" file which is a copy of FSC-0086.001 from http://ftsc.org


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    17. How Can my binkd Respond to a File Request?

    One can configure binkd for calling an external file request processor supporting SRIF (FSC-0086) for receiving and handling FREQs in binkd. Please read the "!SRIF.TXT" file and the comment to 'exec' in the configuration
    file.

    Here are the examples of lines in configuration file for DOS-based OS
    and for *nix (you should use regular expressions in the latter case for
    binkd to match both upper-case and lower-case letters, e.g. both *.REQ and *.req):

    exec "\\ftn\\allfix\\allfix.exe RP -SRIF *S" *.req

    exec "/ftn/bin/tmafreq-srif *S" *.[rR][eE][qQ]

    A bash script "srifreq" is delivered with binkd starting with version 1.1a19.
    The following file request processors are also compatible with binkd
    (but they are not the only ones, any other one supporting SRIF will do):

    Allfix by Harms Software Engineering: it is a fileecho processor with built-in file request processor and it has versions for DOS and OS/2;

    ViReq by Michael Haase (2:2432/280): a specialized FREQ processor for Windows, it is distributed by Michael Massenberg (2:2411/505) via modem,
    ISDN and Fido-over-IP.

    tmafreq by Maxim Timofeyev <tmahome@mail.tma.spb.ru>: the FREQ processor
    is created for a unix-like OS and ported into Windows. One may obtain tmafreq from different BBS and FTP with fileecho archives, or may get tmafreq sources from anonymous CVS :pserver:anoncvs@tma.spb.ru:/cvsroot, module "tmafreq".

    VIREQ/x by Volker Imre <volker@imre.dyndns.org> (2:246/2098): the FREQ processor is created for a unix-like OS but can be compiled in the OS/2, Windows and maybe other operating systems. Now it is included into "ftnapps" project on Sourceforge and may be downloaded from http://ftnapps.sourceforge.net/vireq.html.
    Binaries built for Win32 and OS/2 may be downloaded from http://download.binkd.org and
    https://sites.google.com/view/vasilyevmax/


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    18. How Can I Add binkd To a Fidonet Box Working With a Modem?

    You must configure your modem mailer and tosser for BSO (binkley-style outbound) mode so that all of them including binkd would have the same
    inbound directories (and also the same outbound directories). For example,
    one may put the following line to T-Mail mailer configuration file:

    BinkStyle_Pack_For All

    If your mailer can work with AMA (arcmail-attach) only you may try to
    use fileboxes and/or find programs that can convert your mailer's queue to
    BSO or fileboxes. For example, Mail2dir utility allows using fileboxes with FrontDoor. Such a means disables a possibility of sending your mail to the
    same link both by IP and by modem (for instance, when one of the channels failed). There is another more radical but more flexible way: you may change your mailer.
    See also question 35.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    19. Flags Are Not Created On Receiving a File, Programs Do Not Start

    For sure you have a wrong template in the configuration file. You have to use it this way (the first two lines are for Windows and OS/2, the rest are
    for the Unix-like OS):

    flag m:\\ftn\\flg\\pntseg.flg m:\\\\ftn\\\\inbound\\\\sec\\\\pntstr*.*
    flag m:\\ftn\\flg\\toss.flg *.su? *.mo? *.tu? *.we? *.th? *.fr? *.sa? *.pkt

    exec "/usr/local/bin/ftrack -c /fido/conf/ftrack" *.[Pp][Kk][Tt]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ss][Uu][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Mm][Oo][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Uu][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ww][Ee][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Hh][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ff][Rr][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/echo-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Ss][Aa][0-9A-Za-z]
    flag "/ftn/flg/fech-in" /ftn/inboundsec/*.[Tt][Ii][Cc]

    You must use the full path with four slashes for the file to receive or
    the template should start with an asterisk character. You must use two
    slashes for the flag file.

    You must use the full path because using a filename without path means
    the event of receiving the file in the current directory and not in the
    inbound directory. If a template begins with "*" then it means "any
    directory" (and since all the files are received in one of the inbound directories it works for both password protected and for unprotected
    sessions).

    In a UNIX-like OS you should take into account that filenames are case sensitive. Please use regular expressions in templates.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    20. 'skipmask' Keyword Does Not Work

    A filename is compared without path and the comparison is case
    sensitive when 'skipmask' is used.


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    21. binkd Under Windows 3.x

    Sergey Zharsky (zharik@usa.net) ported binkd 0.9.2 and binkd 0.9.5 for Windows 3.x. They work using IP stacks Trumpet Winsock ver. 3.0 revision D
    and Novell TCP/IP Client for Win 3.11 (see the answer to the question
    'binkd Under DOS', the section "The DOS version has the feature...").


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------


    22. Different FTN Domains in binkd And a Tosser Without 5D Support

    Suppose there are two domains (with different zone numbers though it
    does not matter). Mail can be successfully sent to the first domain but
    not to the second one. This situation may arise if the tosser, the tracker
    and the other your FTN programs do not support 5D BSO.

    This is a typical binkd configuration for two FTN domains and 5D
    outbound:

    domain fidonet c:\\ftn\\outbound\\fidonet 2
    domain omeganet c:\\ftn\\outbound\\omeganet 11
    address 2:5070/222@fidonet 11:58/6@omeganet

    One must configure not the zone of your own address for 'domain'
    keyword as one might think but the zone that should not be appended to the outbound name (i.e. the outbound subdirectory extensions are not processed
    for the zone denoted in the 'domain' line).

    If your tosser would create bundles for omeganet in the omeganet
    directory then you should write as indicated above. But since it does not
    --- hpt/lnx 1.9 2024-02-05
    * Origin: Moscow, Russia (2:5020/1042)