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Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Alternatives to minicom During Remote Access? Post 302919324 by Corona688 on Tuesday 30th of September 2014 11:38:30 AM
Old 09-30-2014
I'm afraid I'm not incredibly knowledgeable about either of them, but SLIP looks much simpler than turning your server into a mini one-point ISP... In effect it'd become another ethernet device once connected. You could have a mini private network, with the server on 10.0.0.1 perhaps, and you'd set your other end statically to 10.0.0.2 when you dial in.

That's why I'm concerned about reliability, it seems more complicated and has more points of failure than just dialing into a dumb terminal, as well as more technical things to remember and more possible mistakes. A plain serial terminal might still work when a bunch of daemons (including sshd) fail to start...

I wonder if there's any way to 'crash it' to a raw terminal if SLIP can't negotiate or just warn SLIP somehow with some serial flags or what-how.
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ASCII-XFR(1)							Linux Users Manual						      ASCII-XFR(1)

NAME
ascii-xfr - upload/download files using the ASCII protocol SYNOPSIS
ascii-xfr -s|-r [-ednv] [-l linedelay] [-c characterdelay] filename DESCRIPTION
Ascii-xfr Transfers files in ASCII mode. This means no flow control, no checksumming and no file-name negotiation. It should only be used if the remote system doesn't understand anything else. The ASCII protocol transfers files line-by-line. The EOL (End-Of-Line) character is transmitted as CRLF. When receiving, the CR character is stripped from the incoming file. The Control-Z (ASCII 26) character signals End-Of-File, if option -e is specified (unless you change it to Control-D (ASCII 4) with -d). Ascii-xfr reads from stdin when receiving, and sends data on stdout when sending. Some form of input or output redirection to the modem device is thus needed when downloading or uploading, respectively. OPTIONS
-s Send a file. -r Receive a file. One of -s or -r must be present. -e Send the End-Of-File character (Control-Z, ASCII 26 by default) when uploading has finished. -d Use the Control-D (ASCII 4) as End-Of-File character. -n Do not translate CR to CRLF and vice versa. -v Verbose: show transfer statistics on the stderr output. -l milliseconds When transmitting, pause for this delay after each line. -c milliseconds When transmitting, pause for this delay after each character. file Name of the file to send or receive. When receiving, any existing file by this name will be truncated. USAGE WITH MINICOM
If you want to call this program from minicom(1), start minicom and go to the Options menu. Select File transfer protocols. Add the fol- lowing lines, for example as protocols I and J. I Ascii /usr/bin/ascii-xfr -sv Y U N Y J Ascii /usr/bin/ascii-xfr -rv Y D N Y AUTHOR
Miquel van Smoorenburg, miquels@cistron.nl Jukka Lahtinen, walker@netsonic.fi SEE ALSO
minicom(1) $Date: 2006-10-28 14:35:59 $ ASCII-XFR(1)
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