From: lanas <la...@se...> - 2009-06-26 02:20:35
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Hello, I would like to connect to a UML as if with a plain serial port. No protocol, no telnet, no nothng, simply like a serial port, at any speed, 8N1. I type 'A' in the host's minicom and the minicom in the UML receives 'A'. How would I launch the UML to get that type of connectivity ? What would be the device inside the UML ? What would be the device on the host for minicom to use ? And is there any special config or mknod to be done in both the host and the UML ? Thanks for any suggestions/hints/ideas. |
From: Jeff D. <jd...@ad...> - 2009-06-26 02:54:50
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On Thu, Jun 25, 2009 at 09:46:44PM -0400, lanas wrote: > I would like to connect to a UML as if with a plain serial port. No > protocol, no telnet, no nothng, simply like a serial port, at any > speed, 8N1. I type 'A' in the host's minicom and the minicom in the UML > receives 'A'. > > How would I launch the UML to get that type of connectivity ? What > would be the device inside the UML ? What would be the device on the > host for minicom to use ? And is there any special config or mknod to > be done in both the host and the UML ? > > Thanks for any suggestions/hints/ideas. Untested, but use a pts/tty pair. 'con2=pts' on the command line, see what pts device it got (you probably need to run minicom inside UML in order to make it open the host device), attach minicom on the host to the corresponding tty, and they should communicate. Alternatively, you may need to reverse the pty/tty, not sure. Run minicom on the host on /dev/ptmx, see what device it got, run UML with 'con2=tty:/dev/pts/<n>'. Jeff -- Work email - jdike at linux dot intel dot com |