#!/bin/sh #$Id$ #Description: Launch a dectalk server on a remote host. #Copyright (C) 1995 -- 2003, T. V. Raman # {{{ documentation # Running TTS Server remotely. # This will have to be polished up, but I've beaten on it and it appears to # work like a charm. # Appended below is a simple shell script that you should save as remote-tcl in # the emacspeak directory. # Having done so, when you launch a terminal and log in to another machine, # a) Make sure the other machine can rsh to your desktop machine. # (you may have to create a .rhosts appropriately depending on your network # configuration) # b) For now edit script remote-tcl and replace labrador by the name of your # desktop machine. (eventually we'll get this from the environment) # Also, make sure the pathname to tcl is correct for your environment. # c) set the environment variable DTK_TCL to the complete pathname of the script # remote-tcl. # d) Make sure remote-tcl is executable --for safety just run it by hand first. # e) If all goes well, launch emacs with emacspeak loaded on the remote machine, # and turn off speech locally on the local emacspeak sesion in the terminal # buffer by pressing C-e d q. # Now, the remote emacspeak session will talk as if it were running locally. # Note: when you switch buffers in the local emacspeak you'll get speech back # since we only turned it off in the local eterm buffer. # All of this works, but you'll have to think "local" and "remote" carefully. # Also, remember that you will have to send C-e C-e twice for the remote # emacspeak to see it once. # Once all this gets robust I'll provide a way for you to switch the C-e prefix # on a running emacspeak to something else e.g. C-r for the remote guy. # Now for the script-- # }}} remote=labrador tcl=/usr/local/bin/tcl rsh $remote $tcl $1