This appendix contains an alphabetic listing of the AT commands
to which the modem will respond. Default settings are bold.
Command
|
Function |
$
|
Display help for the Basic command set. |
+++
|
Escape code. Once your modem is online
with another device, the only command it recognises is an escape code
of three typed plus signs, which forces the modem back to Command
mode. Do the following when issuing the command:
1 Wait 1 second after sending the last item of data.
2 Type +++
3 Wait 1 second before typing any data.
When you type +++, the modem will either hang up or stay on line,
depending on how you set S14. |
>
|
Repeat command. If you include the repeat command
in the Dial string, the modem will dial the number and wait 60 seconds
for a carrier.
If the line is busy, the modem will pause for 2
seconds and then redial. The modem makes a maximum of 10 attempts.
|
A/
|
Reexecute the last-issued command. DO
NOT type AT or press Enter. |
A>
|
Repeat the last-issued command until
canceled by pressing any key. DO NOT type AT or press Enter. |
AT
|
Attention prefix: informs a modem that
a command is coming. AT must precede all commands except A/, A>,
and +++. |
A
|
Force a modem to answer when it is not
receiving an incoming call. |
Bn
|
Set handshaking options. |
|
B0
|
ITU-T V.25 answer sequence; required
to answer all V.34-type and overseas calls. |
B1
|
Bell answer tone. This setting selects
HST modulation, but use it only if the modem is not required to answer
V.34-type calls. |
Cn
|
Enable or disable the transmitter.
|
|
C0
|
Transmitter disabled; for receiving only. |
C1
|
Transmitter enabled. |
With the exception of the Dial
options, modem ignores any commands issued after D in the same command
string.
|
Dn
|
Dial a phone number and issue other optional commands.
The numbers 0-9 are accepted. The maximum number of characters allowed
is 36, including the AT prefix, punctuation, and spaces.
|
Optional parameters: |
|
P
|
Dial using pulses. |
T
|
Dial using tones. |
,
|
(Comma) Pause for 2 seconds (or the time
in S-Register 8). |
;
|
(Semicolon) Remain in Command mode after
dialing. |
"
|
Dial the letters that follow. Example,
ATDT1800"DIAL USR" same as ATDT18002425877. |
W
|
Wait for a second dial tone before continuing
to dial (with X3 or higher). |
@
|
Wait for an answer (with X3, X4, or X7). |
/
|
Pause for 125 milliseconds. |
R
|
Reverse frequencies. Use this command
when calling an originate-only modem. It forces the modem to dial
out at the answer frequency. |
!
|
Flash the switchhook (off hook 0.5 seconds,
on hook 0.5 seconds, then off hook). Use ! when other modems share
the line. |
L?
|
Display the last-dialed number. |
L
|
Dial the last-dialed number. |
Sn
|
Dial the number stored in memory at position
n, where n = 0-79. Store the number in memory using the &Z command.
|
$
|
Display help for the dial commands. ATD$
|
En
|
Command mode echo. Enables or disables
the display of your typed commands. |
|
E0
|
Command mode echo OFF. Your typing will
not appear on the screen. |
E1
|
Command mode echo ON. Your typing will
appear on the screen. |
If double characters appear on
the screen, both the modem's local echo and your software's local
echo are on.
|
Fn
|
Online local echo. If ON,
a modem displays on your screen the data that it is transmitting to
another modem. |
|
F0
|
Online echo ON. (Sometimes called half
duplex.) |
F1
|
Online echo OFF. (Sometimes called full
duplex.) |
Hn
|
Go on or off hook. |
|
H0
|
Go on hook (hang up). |
H1
|
Go off hook (pick up). |
In
|
Query the modem. |
|
I0 |
Displays the product code. |
I1 |
Displays checksum. |
I2 |
Displays RAM TEST. |
I3
|
Displays the banner (product name). |
I4
|
Display current modem settings. |
I5
|
Display settings stored in NVRAM. |
I6
|
Display statistics for the last call. |
I7
|
Display product configuration. |
I8
|
Lists phone numbers with redial restrictions. |
I9
|
Displays modems Plug and Play ID. |
I10
|
Display dial security account status
information. |
I11
|
Display link diagnostics report. |
I15
|
Display caller ID information. |
I16
|
Display channel probe report. |
I17
|
Display training signature report. |
Kn
|
Control the modem clock. ATI6 displays
the time. |
|
K0
|
If online, display current call duration.
If offline, display last calls duration. |
K1
|
Display the actual time. Set the clock
using ATI3=HH:MM:SS K1. |
Ln
|
Internal modems only: Controls the speakers
volume. |
|
L0
|
Quietest |
L1
|
Low |
L2
|
Medium |
L3
|
Loudest |
Mn
|
Control when the speaker sounds |
|
M0
|
The speaker is always off. |
M1
|
The speaker is on until the call is negotiated. |
M2
|
The speaker is always on. |
M3
|
The speaker turns on after the last digit
is dialed and stays on until the call is negotiated.
|
On
|
Return online. Use with the escape code
(+++) to toggle between command and online modes. |
|
O0
|
Return online (normal). |
O1
|
Return online and retrain. Use O1 if
there were errors in a non-ARQ data transfer. |
O2 |
Return online and speed shift. |
Qn
|
Enable or disable the display of result
codes. |
|
Q0
|
Display result codes. |
Q1
|
Suppress result codes (quiet). |
Q1
|
Suppress result codes when answering. |
S$
|
Display help screens for the S-Registers.
|
Sr=n
|
Set S-Register value: r is any S-Register; n must be a decimal number
between 0 and 255. |
Sr.b=n
|
Set a bit-mapped register: r is the S-register,
b is the bit, and n is 0 (off) or 1 (on). |
Sr?
|
Query contents of S-register r. |
Refer to the S-Registers chapter of the Appendixes
section for a listing of all the S-Registers. |
Vn
|
Display result codes in words or numbers. |
|
V0
|
Display result codes in numeric form. |
V1
|
Display result codes in verbal form. |
Xn
|
Control the amount of information displayed in the
result codes. The default is X7 (all codes except 12/VOICE). The
modem doesnt try to detect signals if it isnt set to
report them.
For result codes in synchronous
operations, refer to the Dedicated/Lease Line and Synchronous Applications
chapter of the Contents section. For more detailed information,
refer to the Result Code Meanings and Sets chapter of the
Appendices section.
|
|
X3
|
Ignore Dial Tone |
X4
|
Microsoft default |
X7
|
Courier 56K Business Modem default |
Z
|
Software reset. If DIP Switch 10 is OFF
(factory setting), revert to the settings in NVRAM. If DIP switch
10 is ON, reset to the &F0 configuration template (no flow control). |
Z!
|
Complete hardware reset |
Command
|
Function
|
&$
|
Display help for the ampersand
(&) command set. |
&An
|
Enable or disable the display of additional
result code subsets. (Also, see the Xn command.) |
|
&A0
|
Do not display ARQ result codes. |
&A1
|
Display ARQ result codes. |
&A2
|
In addition to ARQ result codes, display
HST, V.32, V.FC, V.34, V.90, or V.92 modulation indicator. |
&A3
|
In addition to ARQ and modulation indicators,
display an error control indicator (LAPM, HST, MNP, SYNC, or NONE)
and a data compression type (V42 bis or MNP5). |
&Bn
|
Set the serial port rate to variable
or fixed. |
|
&B0
|
Variable: The serial port rate adapts
to match the speed of the connection. |
&B1
|
Fixed: The modem always communicates
with your computer at the rate at which you have set, regardless of
the connection rate. |
&B2
|
When answering calls, use the fixed rate
for ARQ calls and variable rates for non-ARQ calls. |
The serial port rate should be
equal to or higher than the &Nn rate.
|
&Cn
|
Controls how the modem sends a Carrier Detect (CD) signal to your
computer. |
|
&C0
|
CD always ON, even if the modem is not
on line. |
&C1
|
Normal operations. The modem sends a
CD signal when it connects with another modem and drops the CD when
it disconnects. |
&Dn
|
Control how the modem responds to Data Terminal Ready (DTR) signals. |
|
&D0
|
DTR is always ON (ignored). |
&D1
|
If issued before connecting with another device,
the Courier 56K Business Modem can enter online Command mode during
a call by dropping DTR.
&D1 functions similarly to the escape code (+++).
Return online with the On command, or hang up with
the Hn command.
|
&D2
|
Normal DTR operations. The modem will
not accept commands unless your computer sends a DTR signal. Dropping
DTR ends a call. |
&D3
|
Modem resets with DTR toggle. |
&Fn
|
Load one of the three configuration templates that
are stored permanently in read-only memory. Refer to the Flow Control
Template chapter of the Appendixes section for the settings for
each template.
To load a template into current memory, enter AT&Fn.
To write a template to NVRAM, enter AT&Fn&W.
If DIP switch 1 is OFF, &F0 is always loaded
into memory at power-on or reset.
|
|
&F0
|
Load No Flow Control template settings. |
&F1
|
Load Hardware Flow Control template settings. |
&F2
|
Load Software Flow Control template settings. |
&Gn
|
Set guard tones for international calls. |
|
&G0
|
No guard tone. Use this in the United States and Canada. |
&G1
|
This sets a 550 Hz guard tone, and is
used in some European countries. |
&G2
|
This sets an 1800 Hz guard tone, and
is used in the U.K. and some Commonwealth countries. &G2 requires
the B0 setting. |
&Hn
|
Transmit data flow control. Prevents
the modems buffer for data transmitted to the modem by its attached
computer from overflowing. |
|
&H0
|
Disable transmit data flow control. |
&H1
|
Use hardware flow control. Requires that
your computer and software support Clear to Send (CTS) at the EIA-232
interface. |
&H2
|
Use software flow control. Requires that
your software support XON/XOFF signaling |
&H3
|
Use both hardware and software flow control.
If you are unsure about what your equipment supports, select this
option. |
&In
|
Received data software flow (XON/OFF)
control. |
|
&I0
|
Disables XON/XOFF flow control of received
data. |
&I1
|
The modem acts on your typed XON/XOFF
commands, Ctrl-S or Ctrl-Q, and passes them to the remote device.
|
&I2
|
The modem acts on your XON/XOFF commands,
but removes them from the data stream instead of passing them to the
remote device. This is the recommended setting for ARQ mode. |
&I3
|
Hewlett Packard-Host mode. Applies only
to modems attached to an HP mainframe that uses the ENQ/ACK protocol.
Use in ARQ mode only. |
&I4
|
Hewlett Packard-Terminal mode. Applies only to modems attached to
terminals in an HP system that uses the ENQ/ACK protocol. Use in ARQ
mode only. |
&I5
|
This setting is designed to enable flow
control on the phone link when the connection is not under error control.
For this to work, the remote device must have &I5 capability.
|
&Kn
|
Enable or disable data compression. |
|
&K0
|
Disable data compression. |
&K1
|
Use auto-enable/disable. The modem enables
compression if the serial port rate is fixed (&B1) and disables
compression if the serial port rate follows the connection rate (&B0)
because compression offers no throughput advantage when the serial
port and connection rates are equal; in fact, compression may degrade
throughput. |
&K2
|
Always enable data compression. |
&K3
|
Selective data compression. The modem
negotiates only for V.42 bis compression, and disables MNP Level 5
(MNP5) compression. Use this setting to transfer compressed files. |
&Ln
|
Line type. |
|
&L0
|
Normal. |
&L1
|
Dedicated or leased line. This refers
to a special kind of phone line (at extra cost); not just a phone
used only for a modem. |
&Mn
|
Enable ARQ (error control) or synchronous
protocols. Both your modem and the remote device must use the same
protocol. |
|
&M0
|
Normal mode, no error control. Due to
the nature of phone line channels, this is never recommended for calls
above 2400 bps. |
&M1
|
Use for online synchronous mode without
V.25 bis. This setting is exclusive of the modems' error control. |
&M4
|
Normal/ARQ mode. If an ARQ connection
isn't made, the modem operates in Normal mode as though it were set
to &M0. |
&M5
|
ARQ asynchronous mode. The modem hangs
up if an ARQ connection cannot be made. |
&M6
|
V.25 bis synchronous mode using a character-oriented
link protocol similar to BISYNC. |
&M7
|
V.25 bis synchronous mode using the HDLC
link protocol. |
&Nn
|
Sets highest fixed link speed. |
&Un
|
Sets lowest fixed link speed. |
|
n=0
|
Variable rate. The modem negotiates with
the remote device for the highest possible connection rate, depending
on the capabilities of the remote device. |
n=1-38
|
Fixed rate. The modem connects only if the remote
device is operating at the same rate or higher.
The connection rate should be lower than or equal
to the serial port rate.
|
|
n=1
|
300 bps |
n=2
|
1200 bps |
n=3
|
2400 bps |
n=4
|
4800 bps |
n=5
|
7200 bps |
n=6
|
9600 bps |
n=7
|
12000 bps |
n=8
|
14400 bps |
n=9
|
16800 bps |
n=10
|
19200 bps |
n=11
|
21600 bps |
n=12
|
24000 bps |
n=13
|
26400 bps |
n=14
|
28800 bps |
n=15
|
31200 bps |
n=16
|
33600 bps |
n=17
|
28000 bps |
n=18
|
29333 bps |
n=19
|
30666 bps |
n=20
|
32000 bps |
n=21
|
33333 bps |
n=22
|
34666 bps |
n=23
|
36000 bps |
n=24
|
37333 bps |
n=25
|
38666 bps |
n=26
|
40000 bps |
n=27
|
41333 bps |
n=28
|
42666 bps |
n=29
|
44000 bps |
n=30
|
45333 bps |
n=31
|
46666 bps |
n=32
|
48000 bps |
n=33
|
49333 bps |
n=34
|
50666 bps |
n=35
|
52000 bps |
n=36
|
53333 bps |
n=37
|
54666 bps |
n=38
|
56000 bps |
&P
|
Enable pulse dial. |
|
n=0
|
Pulse dial enabled |
n=1
|
Austria, Czechoslovakia, Denmark, Finland,
Germany, Italy, Netherlands, South Africa (Second option for Asia,
France, Korea, Norway, South Africa) |
n=2
|
Australia, Asia, Belgium, France, Ireland,
Korea, Portugal, South Africa, Spain |
n=3
|
Norway |
n=5
|
Japan |
n=6
|
Sweden |
n=7
|
(Second option for Australia) |
&Rn
|
Received data (RTS) hardware flow control.
|
|
&R0
|
Delay Clear to Send (CTS) response after
Request to Send (RTS). |
&R1
|
Ignore RTS. This setting is required
if your computer or terminal or software does not support RTS. |
&R2
|
Enable hardware flow control of received
data. The modem sends data to the computer only upon receipt of the
RTS signal. |
&Sn
|
Send the computer a Data Set Ready (DSR)
signal via the EIA-232 interface. |
|
&S0
|
DSR is always ON (override). |
&S1
|
In Originate mode: Send DSR after dialing,
on detection of the remote devices answer tone. In Answer mode:
Send DSR after sending an answer tone. |
&S2
|
When Carrier is lost, send a pulsed DSR
signal with Clear to Send (CTS) following Carrier Detect (CD). This
option is for specialised equipment such as automatic callback units.
|
&S3
|
Same as &S2, but without the CTS
signal. |
&S4
|
Send the computer DSR at the same time
as CD. |
&S5
|
Send DSR normally, and follow CTS with
CD. |
&Tn
|
Test the modem. |
|
&T0
|
End testing. |
&T1
|
Local analogue loopback |
&T2
|
Local digital loopback |
|
|
&T4
|
Grant Remote Digital Loopback request |
&T5
|
Deny Remote Digital Loopback request |
&T6
|
Request Remote Digital Loopback |
|
|
&T8
|
Local analogue loopback with test pattern |
&T9
|
Local digital loopback with test pattern
|
&W
|
Write the current settings to NVRAM.
|
&Xn
|
External modems only: Designate the source
of synchronous transmit clock timing signals. |
|
&X0
|
The Courier 56K Business Modem sends
transmit clock timing signals to the DTE over the serial interface.
DTE rate follows the connection rate. |
&X1
|
The DTE sends transmit clock timing signals
to the modem over the serial interface. Typical use: multiplexed leased
lines. |
&X2
|
The Courier 56K Business Modem sends
receiver clock timing signals, which are looped to the transmit clock
and sent to the DTE over the serial interface. Typical Use: Systems
that require synchronisation of data flowing in both directions. |
&Yn
|
Break handling. This command lets you
send a break to stop data transfer without disconnecting. |
|
&Y0
|
Destructive, don't send break. |
&Y1
|
Destructive, expedited. |
&Y2
|
Nondestructive, expedited. |
&Y3
|
Nondestructive, unexpedited; the modem
sends a break-in-sequence with data received from your computer or
terminal. |
If the call is under data compression,
destructive breaks cause both modems to reset their data compression
tables. When transmission resumes, the modems build new tables,
and the result is temporary lower-than- normal throughput.
|
&Zn=s
|
Store up to 79 numbers in NVRAM, where n is the
position 0-79 in NVRAM, and s is the phone number string. The number
string may be up to 36 characters long, including any Dial command
options.
Example: AT&Z2=555-6789
In the following example, &M0 (no error control)
is inserted before the Dial command. Example: AT&M0 DS2
|
This command functions differently
when Dial Security is enabled.
Also, do not include modem settings in the &Zn string. If the
call requires a special setting, insert it in the command string
before the DSn command.
|
&Zn=L
|
Stores the last-dialed number in position
n. |
&Zn?
|
Display the phone number stored in NVRAM
at position n (where n = 0-9). |
&ZC=s
|
Store command string s in NVRAM. The
command string can be up to 30 characters long; spaced do not count.
This command is used so you can call another modem without loading
your communications software. |
&ZC?
|
Display the stored command string. |
Command
|
Function |
%$
|
Display the help panels for the percent
(%) command set. |
%An
|
Create and configure security accounts.
|
%Bn
|
Remotely configure a modem's serial port
rate. |
|
%B0
|
110 bps |
|
%B1
|
300 bps |
|
%B2
|
600 bps |
|
%B3
|
1200 bps |
|
%B4
|
2400 bps |
|
%B5
|
4800 bps |
|
%B6
|
9600 bps |
|
%B7
|
19200 bps |
|
%B8
|
38400 bps |
|
%B9
|
57600 bps |
|
%B10
|
76800 bps |
|
%B11
|
115200 bps |
|
%B12
|
230400 bps |
%Cn
|
Remote configuration control. |
|
%C0
|
Defer configuration changes until the
call is ended. Changes take effect for ensuing connections. |
|
%C1
|
Cancel configuration changes and restore
the original configuration.
|
Using%C1 will not reverse any
changes that you wrote to NVRAM (with &W) or forced (with%C2).
|
|
%C2
|
Force configuration changes to take effect
immediately. |
We recommend against forcing configuration
changes unless it is absolutely necessary. An unreliable connection,
or loss of connection, may result.
|
%D=
|
Set a DTMF password. |
%E=n
|
Erase security settings. |
|
%E=1
|
Erase local-access password. |
|
%E=2
|
Erase Autopass password. |
|
%E=3
|
Erase passwords in accounts 0-79. |
|
%E=4
|
Erase phone numbers in accounts 0-79. |
|
%E=5
|
Disable Account, Dialback, and New Number
fields in accounts 0-79. |
%Fn
|
Remotely configure another devices
data format. |
|
%F0
|
No parity, 8 data bits. |
|
%F1
|
Mark parity, 7 data bits. |
|
%F2
|
Odd parity, 7 data bits. |
|
%F3
|
Even parity, 7 data bits. |
%L=
|
Set a local-access password. |
%Nn
|
Set the offline clock speed for synchronous
mode. |
|
%N0
|
Reserved |
|
%N1
|
Reserved |
|
%N2
|
1200 bps |
|
%N3
|
2400 bps |
|
%N4
|
4800 bps |
|
%N5
|
7200 bps |
|
%N6
|
9600 bps |
|
%N7
|
12000 bps |
|
%N8
|
14400 bps |
|
%N9
|
16800 bps |
|
%N10
|
19200 bps |
%Pn=
|
Disable password security (n=0 or n=1)
when no character follows the equal sign. |
%Pn=s
|
Set the following password (s) for viewing
privileges only (n = 0), or view and configuration privileges (n=
1). |
%Pn?
|
Display password n. |
%S=n
|
Access the security accounts.
Does not disable security. |
%T
|
Enable the recognition of tone frequencies of analogue
dialing devices.%T is meant primarily for use with network applications,
but may also be integrated into certain software programs. For example,
%T could be used in a security program to identify incoming tone
security codes.
To return the modem to Command mode, press any key
or drop the computer's or terminal's DTR signal. The modem responds
OK.
|
%V=PWn
|
Assign the password in account n in your
modems security account as your Autopass password |