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Full Discussion: Serial Lines Explained
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Serial Lines Explained Post 302930455 by sreyan32 on Sunday 4th of January 2015 11:15:36 AM
Old 01-04-2015
Okay from what I have read in this thread I can understand that in the older days you would have a monitor and a keyboard with a serial port connecting to the central CPU. You would communicate with the CPU using signals sent via the serial port. I know this is an over simplification but is it correct ?

Can someone explain how serial ports can be used for session control in a little more detail ?

What baffles me is that is why still use serial ports ? Why not remove them ? On a normal desktop or laptop serial ports are not used the way they were used back in the olden days, so keep them ?

For example as Corona688 mentioned in a earlier thread
stty still gives the baud rate. This is not required so why still keep it.

Why adopt an old standard forcefully when it is not required is my point
 

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STATSERIAL(1)							   User Commands						     STATSERIAL(1)

NAME
statserial - display serial port modem status lines SYNOPSIS
statserial [-n | -d | -x] <device-name> DESCRIPTION
Statserial displays a table of the signals on a standard 9-pin or 25-pin serial port, and indicates the status of the handshaking lines. It can be useful for debugging problems with serial ports or modems. The optional device-name parameter is the full name of the device file for the serial port in question. If not specified, the default is taken from the environment variable MODEM if set, otherwise /dev/cua1. COMMAND-LINE OPTIONS Each of the command line options is mutually exclusive. -n Normally statserial will loop continuously, updating the status at one second intervals; you can exit using Control-C. The -n option disables looping. -d With this option the status of the modem is printed as a decimal number. The bits are encoded as follows (XXX indicates unused bits): +---+---+---+---+---+---+---+---+---+ | 8 | 7 | 6 | 5 | 4 | 3 | 2 | 1 | 0 | +---+---+---+---+---+---+---+---+---+ |DSR|RI |DCD|CTS|XXX|XXX|RTS|DTR|XXX| +---+---+---+---+---+---+---+---+---+ -x This option is the same as -d, except that the output is in hexadecimal. BUGS
/LIMITATIONS Statserial only works with devices that support the TIOCMGET ioctl. You need permission to read the device file. The device file may be locked if other applications are using it. AUTHOR
Statserial was written by Jeff Tranter (Jeff_Tranter@Mitel.COM), later updated by Frank Baumgart (godot@uni-paderborn.de) and is released under the conditions of the GNU General Public License. See the file COPYING and notes in the source code for details. SEE ALSO
setserial(8) stty(1) /usr/src/linux/drivers/char/serial.c /usr/include/linux/termios.h Linux 17 December 1994 STATSERIAL(1)
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