ZOC is a professional, modern and well-established terminal emulator and telnet client and it is known for its configurability and outstanding user interface. The purpose of the program is to let you access character based hosts using Secure Shell (SSH), telnet (rfc854), RS232/serial and many other means of communication.
Feb 04, 2017 It depends on whether you mean a network terminal or a serial terminal. For a network terminal, you’ve got you basic console window, which IS a unix terminal window. Or you could go all the way and install X-windows. Now if you mean a serial termi.
Serial Tools for OS X, includes a Terminal Emulator, a Protocol Analyzer, and a serial port monitor to watch for connections and removals of serial ports. Serial Tools is completely free, and available from the Mac App Store.
This is a list of notable terminal emulators. Most used terminal emulators on Linux and Unix-like systems are GNOME Terminal on GNOME and GTK-based environments, Konsole on KDE, and xfce4-terminal on Xfce as well as xterm.
1Character-oriented terminal emulators
1.1Unix-like
1.1.2Graphical
2Block-oriented terminal emulators
Character-oriented terminal emulators[edit]
Unix-like[edit]
Command-line interface[edit]
Linux console – implements a large subset of the VT102 and ECMA-48/ISO 6429/ANSI X3.64 escape sequences.
The following terminal emulators run inside of other terminals, utilizing libraries such as Curses and Termcap:
GNU Screen – Terminal multiplexer with VT100/ANSI terminal emulation
Minicom – text-based modem control and terminal emulation program for Unix-like operating systems
tmux – Terminal multiplexer with a feature set similar to GNU Screen
Graphical[edit]
X/Wayland[edit]
Terminal emulators used in combination with X Window System and Wayland Brain rules pdf.
xterm – standard terminal for X11
GNOME Terminal – default terminal for GNOME with native Wayland support
guake – drop-down terminal for GNOME
konsole – default terminal for KDE
xfce4-terminal – default terminal for Xfce with drop-down support
mrxvt – rxvt clone with additional features (latest version is 2008-09-10)
Terminology – enhanced terminal supportive of multimedia and text manipulation for X11 and Linux framebuffer
Tilda – A drop down terminal
Yakuake – (Yet Another Kuake), a dropdown terminal for KDE
Apple macOS[edit]
Terminal emulators used on macOS
Terminal – default macOS terminal
iTerm2 – open-source terminal specifically for macOS
xterm – default terminal when X11.app starts
SyncTERM – includes serial line terminal
ZTerm – serial line terminal
Apple Classic Mac OS[edit]
Microsoft Windows[edit]
ConEmu – local terminal window that can host console application developed either for WinAPI (cmd, powershell, far) or Unix PTY (cygwin, msys, wsl bash)
HyperACCESS (commercial) and HyperTerminal (included free with Windows XP and earlier, but not included with Windows Vista and later)
mintty – Cygwin terminal
Windows Console – Windows command line terminal
Microsoft MS-DOS[edit]
Qmodem and Qmodem Pro
IBM OS/2[edit]
ZOC – discontinued support for OS/2
Commodore Amiga[edit]
Commodore 64[edit]
Block-oriented terminal emulators[edit]
Emulators for block-oriented terminals, primarily IBM 3270, but also IBM 5250 and other non-IBM terminals.
Coax/Twinax connected[edit]
These terminal emulators are used to replace terminals attached to a host or terminal controller via a coaxial cable (coax) or twinaxial cabling (twinax). They require that the computer on which they run have a hardware adapter to support such an attachment.
Free Terminal Emulator
RUMBA 3270 and 5250
tn3270/tn5250[edit]
These terminal emulators connect to a host using the tn3270 or tn5250 protocols, which run over a Transmission Control Protocol (TCP) connection.
x3270 – IBM 3270 emulator for X11 and most Unix-like systems[1]
c3270 – IBM 3270 emulator for running inside a vt100/curses emulator for most Unix-like systems[1]
See also[edit]
Mac Os X Terminal Emulator Serial Port
References[edit]
External links[edit]
Mac Serial Terminal Emulator Free
The Grumpy Editor's guide to terminal emulators, 2004
Comprehensive Linux Terminal Performance Comparison, 2007
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=List_of_terminal_emulators&oldid=915808863'
Version 1.6.0.3.708:
New/Changed Features:
Added 'Open Recent' menu item. Recent items are saved between sessions.
Added 'Close All' menu to close all open window.
Added capability to restore the previous sessions. If enabled via the Preferences, the current session is saved if CoolTerm is quit via File/Quit (macOS/Linux) or File/Exit (Windows). CoolTerm will attempt to restore all the open terminal windows from the previous session at the next start.
Added context menu for Copy/Paste operations to plain text display.
Replaced option to stop Autoscrolling with option to pause the display instead. When enabled, the display contents are not updated until pausing the display is disabled again. Opening and closing the port automatically un-pauses the display.
Added baud rate selector in the connections to allow setting a custom baudrate. The custom baudrate can be saved as part of the connection settings.
The font size for text input fields (line mode input field 'Send String' input field) can now be set independently via the preferences.
Added preferences option to automatically refresh the list of serial ports when opening the connection options.
Added preferences option to check for development releases when checking for updates.
[Mac] Added the following AppleScript commands:
WindowIDfromName(WindowName as string) as integer
SaveSetting(ID as integer, FilePath as String) as boolean
CoolTermVersion as string
RescanSerialPorts
SerialPortCount as integer
SerialPortName(SerialPortIndex as integer) as string
GetCurrentSerialPort(ID as integer) as integer
SetCurrentSerialPort(ID as integer, SerialPortIndex as integer) as boolean
GetParameter(ID as integer, ParameterName as string) as string
SetParameter(ID as integer, ParameterName as string, Value as string) as boolean
GetAllParameters(ID as integer) as string
Added support for dark mode on platforms that support it (such as macOS Mojave).
Supporting Raspberry Pi
Default is now 64-bit for all platforms (except Raspberry Pi)
Improvements:
File/Save menu item is now permanently enabled. Selecting File/Save when settings have not previously been saved will present the user with a 'Save As..' dialog.
Connection Settings saved as default no longer contain the selected serial port and window position. New windows using the default settings will select the first available port rather than trying to force a port that may or may not be available.
The text and background color settings for the text display are now also applied ot the line mode input text field.
Bug Fixes and Stability Improvements:
Fixed bug where the receive buffer size wouldn't be set upon loading of connection settings.
Fixed bug that causes setting to not be properly loaded on Mac when starting CoolTerm for the command line with a settings file as argument or when starting CoolTerm by double-clicking a settings file or dragging it onto the CoolTerm icon.
[Mac] Disabled splash window for macOS Sierra and newer.