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Working with ssh's escape character



  I had difficulties getting ssh(1)'s ESCAPE CHARACTERS to be recognized
from within a login shell over ssh.  In particular, sometimes the escape
character was not recognized as such.  I was able to find in gmane a
similar issue for a Gentoo user from a few years ago.  I don't have
that gmane URL handy.
  Do you find the below patch acceptable?

--- a/usr/share/man/man1/ssh.1.gz       2012-04-19 21:47:00.933890166 +0300
+++ b/usr/share/man/man1/ssh.1  2012-04-19 17:20:24.000000000 +0300
@@ -866,6 +866,11 @@ A single tilde character can be sent as
 or by following the tilde by a character other than those described below.
 The escape character must always follow a newline to be interpreted as
 special.
+With a login shell, one might issue a single new line character to prepare
+the correct conditions for ssh to catch the escape character.
+If the escape character is cought by the remote application, perhaps
+it is echoed back by a login shell, then it will not affect the
+underline ssh channel.
 The escape character can be changed in configuration files using the
 .Cm EscapeChar
 configuration directive or on the command line by the
@@ -913,6 +918,8 @@ option is enabled in
 Basic help is available, using the
 .Fl h
 option.
+Pressing the return key twice will close the command line after it
+was started from a login shell.
 .It Cm ~R
 Request rekeying of the connection
 (only useful for SSH protocol version 2 and if the peer supports it).


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