This is because you are running in a DOS box locally, and the remote app
is using (a remote version of) ncurses. The DOS box ain't linux. What
you want to do is set TERM=cygwin, but then you need to instruct the
remote machine in what "cygwin" means
. Download the following file:
http://www.neuro.gatech.edu/users/cwilson/cygutils/cygwin.terminfo
which is an excerpt from the ncurses-5.2-4-src.tar.gz terminfo.src. Put
cygwin.terminfo on the remote machine, and run 'tic cygwin.terminfo' on
that machine. This should create a partial terminfo database in
~/.terminfo/* on the remote machine, "teaching" it about TERM=cygwin.
--Chuck
Seth Delackner wrote:
>
> Whenever I ssh into a remote linux box and run 'mutt' or 'vi' and press ':' to enter
>a special command, my terminal goes ballistic sending the characters '6' and 'c'
>endlessly.
>
> I am running Bash 2.04.5(12) and OpenSSH version 2.3.0p1. I have TERM=linux,
>CYGIN='ntsec tty'. I've just gotten through a few hours of searching the mailing
>list archive getting sshd to run as a service, so I really don't want to delve back
>in to debug this. Any help would be appreciated.
>
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