Network Working Group                                          J. Postel
Request for Comments: 857                                    J. Reynolds
                                                                    ISI
Obsoletes: NIC 15390                                            May 1983

                          TELNET ECHO OPTION


This RFC specifies a standard for the ARPA Internet community.  Hosts on
the ARPA Internet are expected to adopt and implement this standard.

1. Command Name and Code

  ECHO       1

2. Command Meanings

  IAC WILL ECHO

     The sender of this command REQUESTS to begin, or confirms that it
     will now begin, echoing data characters it receives over the
     TELNET connection back to the sender of the data characters.

  IAC WON'T ECHO

     The sender of this command DEMANDS to stop, or refuses to start,
     echoing the data characters it receives over the TELNET connection
     back to the sender of the data characters.

  IAC DO ECHO

     The sender of this command REQUESTS that the receiver of this
     command begin echoing, or confirms that the receiver of this
     command is expected to echo, data characters it receives over the
     TELNET connection back to the sender.

  IAC DON'T ECHO

     The sender of this command DEMANDS the receiver of this command
     stop, or not start, echoing data characters it receives over the
     TELNET connection.

3. Default

  WON'T ECHO

  DON'T ECHO

     No echoing is done over the TELNET connection.

4. Motivation for the Option


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RFC 857                                                         May 1983


  The NVT has a printer and a keyboard which are nominally
  interconnected so that "echoes" need never traverse the network; that
  is to say, the NVT nominally operates in a mode where characters
  typed on the keyboard are (by some means) locally turned around and
  printed on the printer.  In highly interactive situations it is
  appropriate for the remote process (command language interpreter,
  etc.) to which the characters are being sent to control the way they
  are echoed on the printer.  In order to support such interactive
  situations, it is necessary that there be a TELNET option to allow
  the parties at the two ends of the TELNET connection to agree that
  characters typed on an NVT keyboard are to be echoed by the party at
  the other end of the TELNET connection.

5. Description of the Option

  When the echoing option is in effect, the party at the end performing
  the echoing is expected to transmit (echo) data characters it
  receives back to the sender of the data characters.  The option does
  not require that the characters echoed be exactly the characters
  received (for example, a number of systems echo the ASCII ESC
  character with something other than the ESC character).  When the
  echoing option is not in effect, the receiver of data characters
  should not echo them back to the sender; this, of course, does not
  prevent the receiver from responding to data characters received.

  The normal TELNET connection is two way.  That is, data flows in each
  direction on the connection independently; and neither, either, or
  both directions may be operating simultaneously in echo mode.  There
  are five reasonable modes of operation for echoing on a connection
  pair:


               <----------------

     Process 1                   Process 2
               ---------------->
                Neither end echoes


               <----------------
                  \
     Process 1    /              Process 2
               ---------------->
            One end echoes for itself






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RFC 857                                                         May 1983



               <----------------
                            \
     Process 1              /    Process 2
               ---------------->
         One end echoes for the other


               <----------------
                  \         /
     Process 1    /         \    Process 2
               ---------------->
         Both ends echo for themselves


               <----------------
                  \ /
     Process 1    / \            Process 2
               ---------------->
          One end echoes for both ends

  This option provides the capability to decide on whether or not
  either end will echo for the other.  It does not, however, provide
  any control over whether or not an end echoes for itself;  this
  decision must be left to the sole discretion of the systems at each
  end (although they may use information regarding the state of
  "remote" echoing negotiations in making this decision).

  It should be noted that if BOTH hosts enter the mode of echoing
  characters transmitted by the other host, then any character
  transmitted in either direction will be "echoed" back and forth
  indefinitely.  Therefore, care should be taken in each implementation
  that if one site is echoing, echoing is not permitted to be turned on
  at the other.

  As discussed in the TELNET Protocol Specification, both parties to a
  full-duplex TELNET connection initially assume each direction of the
  connection is being operated in the default mode which is non-echo
  (non-echo is not using this option, and the same as DON'T ECHO, WON'T
  ECHO).

  If either party desires himself to echo characters to the other party
  or for the other party to echo characters to him, that party gives
  the appropriate command (WILL ECHO or DO ECHO) and waits (and hopes)
  for acceptance of the option.  If the request to operate the
  connection in echo mode is refused, then the connection continues to
  operate in non-echo mode.  If the request to operate the connection
  in echo mode is accepted, the connection is operated in echo mode.


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RFC 857                                                         May 1983


  After a connection has been changed to echo mode, either party may
  demand that it revert to non-echo mode by giving the appropriate
  DON'T ECHO or WON'T ECHO command (which the other party must confirm
  thereby allowing the connection to operate in non-echo mode).  Just
  as each direction of the TELNET connection may be put in remote
  echoing mode independently, each direction of the TELNET connection
  must be removed from remote echoing mode separately.

  Implementations of the echo option, as implementations of all other
  TELNET options, must follow the loop preventing rules given in the
  General Considerations section of the TELNET Protocol Specification.
  Also, so that switches between echo and non-echo mode can be made
  with minimal confusion (momentary double echoing, etc.), switches in
  mode of operation should be made at times precisely coordinated with
  the reception and transmission of echo requests and demands.  For
  instance, if one party responds to a DO ECHO with a WILL ECHO, all
  data characters received after the DO ECHO should be echoed and the
  WILL ECHO should immediately precede the first of the echoed
  characters.

  The echoing option alone will normally not be sufficient to effect
  what is commonly understood to be remote computer echoing of
  characters typed on a terminal keyboard--the SUPPRESS-GO AHEAD option
  will normally have to be invoked in conjunction with the ECHO option
  to effect character-at-a-time remote echoing.

6. A Sample Implementation of the Option

  The following is a description of a possible implementation for a
  simple user system called "UHOST".

  A possible implementation could be that for each user terminal, the
  UHOST would keep three state bits: whether the terminal echoes for
  itself (UHOST ECHO always) or not (ECHO mode possible), whether the
  (human) user prefers to operate in ECHO mode or in non-ECHO mode, and
  whether the connection from this terminal to the server is in ECHO or
  non-ECHO mode.  We will call these three bits P(hysical), D(esired),
  and A(ctual).

  When a terminal dials up the UHOST the P-bit is set appropriately,
  the D-bit is set equal to it, and the A-bit is set to non-ECHO.  The
  P-bit and D-bit may be manually reset by direct commands if the user
  so desires.  For example, a user in Hawaii on a "full-duplex"
  terminal, would choose not to operate in ECHO mode, regardless of the
  preference of a mainland server.  He should direct the UHOST to
  change his D-bit from ECHO to non-ECHO.

  When a connection is opened from the UHOST terminal to a server, the


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RFC 857                                                         May 1983


  UHOST would send the server a DO ECHO command if the MIN (with
  non-ECHO less than ECHO) of the P- and D-bits is different from the
  A-bit.  If a WON'T ECHO or WILL ECHO arrives from the server, the
  UHOST will set the A-bit to the MIN of the received request, the
  P-bit, and the D-bit.  If this changes the state of the A-bit, the
  UHOST will send off the appropriate acknowledgment; if it does not,
  then the UHOST will send off the appropriate refusal if not changing
  meant that it had to deny the request (i.e., the MIN of the P-and
  D-bits was less than the received A-request).

  If while a connection is open, the UHOST terminal user changes either
  the P-bit or D-bit, the UHOST will repeat the above tests and send
  off a DO ECHO or DON'T ECHO, if necessary.  When the connection is
  closed, the UHOST would reset the A-bit to indicate UHOST echoing.

  While the UHOST's implementation would not involve DO ECHO or DON'T
  ECHO commands being sent to the server except when the connection is
  opened or the user explicitly changes his echoing mode, bigger hosts
  might invoke such mode switches quite frequently.  For instance,
  while a line-at-a-time system were running, the server might attempt
  to put the user in local echo mode by sending the WON'T ECHO command
  to the user; but while a character-at-a-time system were running, the
  server might attempt to invoke remote echoing for the user by sending
  the WILL ECHO command to the user.  Furthermore, while the UHOST will
  never send a WILL ECHO command and will only send a WON'T ECHO to
  refuse a server sent DO ECHO command, a server host might often send
  the WILL and WON'T ECHO commands.























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