The PET Transfer Protocol, also known as Punter or Old Punter, was developed by Steve Punter for use with his PETBBS and BBS64bulletin board system software. The "PET" in the name comes from the CommodorePET computer. Compared to other contemporary protocols, PTP is slower than YMODEM and ZMODEM but faster and more reliable than XMODEM. The earliest version of Punter supports only 7-bit transfers and uses a back-correction algorithm involving two checksums for failsafes. One of the two checksums is additive, and the other is Boolean in nature, making for an easy to understand algorithm for other programmers to understand and emulate. Having two checksums--both of them being 16 bits wide--makes it significantly more accurate than the single-byte checksum used by XMODEM, its major competitor in the early 1980s. Regardless of the potential for errors to creep in, in comparison to the YMODEM protocol of the late 1980s, which is arguably superior, it has been widely used on Commodore PET and Commodore 64 based bulletin boards.
Terminal output
Not all of the transmission is visible to the user. The most noticeable part of the transmission is the report of status codes like ACK, GOO, BAD, and SYN for handshaking results. A typical transmission might look like "ACKGOOGOOGOOGOOBADGOOGOOGOOBADGOO," with bad blocks reported to the user just as frequently as they occurred. This allows users to record the error rate according to hour and day of the week, and determine which hours of the day and which days of the week had cleaner phone lines. Unlike modern computers, the C64 and C128 can poll the User Port at slightly different baud rates and connection speeds. For instance, a transmission at 1200 baud on Sunday evening might actually produce fewer errors than 2400 baud on Tuesday afternoon. By choosing slower baud rates, files can actually be transmitted faster, since there are fewer resends.
C1
In 1984, Steve Punter released a successor to PTP called C1, or New Punter. C1 was the standard protocol for use on Commodore BBSes, and was rarely supported by terminal or BBS software for other operating systems. The C1 specification was rife with inaccuracies and ambiguities, making it difficult to implement from scratch. Nevertheless, the protocol came into widespread use because Punter released the source code for the original implementation into the public domain. C1 could transmit block sizes up to 255 bytes with a recommended minimum of 40 bytes and an overhead of 7 bytes per block. It is optimized for transferring files stored by 8-bit Commodore computers, whose DOS treats executable and sequential files identically.
Multi-Punter
The term Multi-Punter can refer to any one of three or four mutually incompatible third-party variants of C1 which permit batch-file transfers, as opposed to C1, which was designed for single-file transfers. One such variant, C2, also known simply as Punter, was developed by Punter. As with C1, it is optimized for transferring files stored by 8-bit Commodore computers. Another variant was developed by Alan Peters.