I use screen on bsd and debian through putty.  On the freebsd system (which
is quite old), I can use the scroll bar in the window.  On the debian
system, screen itself seems to manage the lines off the top of the putty
window, I can't use the scrollbar.

In other words, if I cat out a large file, there's not much nothing if I
scroll up with the scrollbar in putty.  Yet on the bsd system, if I do the
same thing, the file is all there as if it was printed out on one long roll
of paper (up to the limit of the number of lines I told putty to save).

Why is this different in linux and how can I change it?

This brings up another question which I've had for a while.  When you
switch screens, the scroll buffer in putty above contains leftover stuff
from the other window.  Might it be possible to somehow fill or use some
alternate page in putty so that the scrollbar worked across screens to
scroll back whatever screen you were in?  One possible way to do this might
be to just dump the entire screen and it's history lines to fill up the
putty buffer each time you switch screens.

Michael Grant
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