Re: shell via serial
- From: Brian Fahrlander <brian@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Sun, 22 Apr 2007 16:36:02 -0500
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Carl Karsten wrote:
Brian Fahrlander wrote:
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Carl Karsten wrote:
I boot feisty on Box1 with console=ttyS0,115200 and see all my boot messages inYa see? That's why I don't upgrade from Dapper. :)
minicom on a 2nd box. So my serial ports and null modem are hooked up. what do
I need to do to get a shell login prompt?
In the ol days, I did this in inittab
#1:2345:respawn:/sbin/mgetty /dev/ttyS1 -x 5
now I nave no inittab... what do I do?
It sounds like you're an old-timer like me...I used to *always* have
a serial terminal around, and for about two decades, could tell you the
pinouts you need on various serial devices.
Not to get too off-track, but is there some reason you don't use the
networking? You can direct the 'console' messages five ways from Friday...
I am trying to setup something similar to:
https://help.ubuntu.com/community/Router
What I am really trying to do is make a bridge that will let a normal wifi AP be
the 'remote' side of a bridge. (I should just go buy an AP that will let me
configure it as a bride, but that's no fun :)
Ya know, I did that; I got a Belkin at WalMart for about $40. It
works pretty well, but as always when you buy something they obscure all
the 'goodies' that are possible to make it market-ready.
That's why I want to eventually make a Linux box my router/firewall.
Then I can get a 'logwatch' from it each night, set up QualityOfService
so the Packet8 telephone doesn't get trashed when I'm in a BT download,
that kinda thing.
as I try things that don't work quite right, I keep loosing my ssh session, and
sometimes any/all networking. I tried adding a 2nd nic just for getting the
configuration working, but I would loose my connection to it too.
There's a "keepalive" option in ssh; I'll bet that's not set, and
it's pulling down the connection, 'cause it thinks you've walked away
after an hour or so.
If you really want to have some fun, look into eBay for "pc104
- -keyboard". That's where you'll find some really interesting hardware
that's stackable, perfect for routers/firewalls, including those who can
act as a personal weather station for just another $30.
This PC104 thing is like what the PC would be, if it had to be
designed in an oatmeal box; the boards are something like 3.5"x3.5".
They stack, so you can do all kinds of neat things, including
supercomputing, if you want to.
- --
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Brian Fahrländer Christian, Conservative, and Technomad
Evansville, IN http://Fahrlander.net/brian
ICQ: 5119262 AOL/Yahoo/GoogleTalk: WheelDweller
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- From: Carl Karsten
- Re: shell via serial
- From: Brian Fahrlander
- Re: shell via serial
- From: Carl Karsten
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