I'm attempting to connect two Oracle VirtualBox guests (Both CentOS 8 running on Windows 10) and have one guest connect to the serial port (/dev/ttyS0) of the other guest and have to go through the login process.... Unfortunately I've been unable to do this
I've configured the serial ports for both guests to use "COM1"... Set their Port Mode to "Host Pipe"... named the pipe on both machines "\\.\pipe\serial1"... I selected "Connect to existing pipe/socket" on the slave guest
and then reloaded the daemon and started the service
I've tried to use putty/cu/minicom to connect from the slave to the master... Unfortunately a login prompt never appears... If it matters both VM guests have their network adapters set to "bridge adapter" and can connect to the internet and LAN fine
If someone can offer me any guidance on this I would appreciate it!
I have a modem connect it to ttyS0 , in unix sco i know i can disable and enable the port , how can i do this , is there a command that will allow me to do this.
**** I'm running Redhat 9
*****External Usrobotics 56k
Thanks a lot guys (1 Reply)
Hi, Anyone can help
My solaris 8 system has the following
/dev/null , /dev/tty and /dev/console
All permission are lrwxrwxrwx
Can this be change to a non-world write ??
any impact ?? (12 Replies)
hello to everybody
I have Ubuntu Lucid 10.04 installed on my Desktop and I have a PCI serial card in my computer and it has only one serial port.
Actually I want to use this serial port for the serial communication and for that I executed this command :
$ setserial -g /dev/ttyS
and I... (0 Replies)
So, we removed a LUN from the SAN and the system is refusing to remove the references to it in the /dev folder. I've done the following:
devfsadm -Cv
powermt -q
luxadm -e offline <drive path>
luxadm probe
All those commands failed to remove the path. The drive stills shows up as <drive... (13 Replies)
Hi,
How can i check that i am using RAW devices for storage in my AIX machine...
Also after adding a LUN from storage to a aix host, when i check /dev in the host, i can see both rhdisk and hdisk with same number
eg:
dcback1(root):/dev>ls -lrt | grep disk12
crw------- 1 root ... (4 Replies)
Objective: To recreate the partitioning setup of /dev/sda on /dev/sdc
How would I parse the below information and initialize variables
(an array?) that can be used to build sgdisk commands in a script, regardless of the number of partitions?
Something along the lines of:
sgdisk -n... (12 Replies)
HI everyone,
Nice to meet you all.
I recently rebooted Slackware 12.1 running on a Dell PowerEdge 2400. after 240 days of continuous run-time, and discovered it gets stuck in a sbin/agetty loop. We were rebooting because trying to mount root in webmin broke a bunch of things. Couldn't even get... (3 Replies)
Hi,
In our HP-UX B.11.11. I could not find dev/urandom and dev/random
Are all pseudo-devices implemented as device drivers, or in need to run /configure some package to install the package to have dev/urandom.
Please help (4 Replies)
I got an issue in a RH6.3 VM host , the issue is ttyS0 is always respawning and piling up /var/log/messages with errors.The customer is OK to have tty0 as the serial terminal but ttyS0 needs to be disabled.
Below is the mention of lines that contain 'serial' string from the xml file . How can I... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Paras Pandey
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT OSF1
ports
ports(7) Miscellaneous Information Manual ports(7)NAME
ports, port_names - Device (tty and lp) names for serial and parallel ports
SYNOPSIS
Default Serial Ports:
/dev/tty00
/dev/tty01 (not present on a single-port system)
Parallel Port:
/dev/lp0
DESCRIPTION
AlphaStation and AlphaServer systems provide one or two 9-pin serial communication ports. These ports are usually labelled 1 (COMM1) and 2
(COMM2), but they may be identified by different icons. Using the appropriate serial cable and terminator, you can connect a serial
printer, external modem, or character-cell terminal to a serial port. Most AlphaStation and AlphaServer systems also provide one parallel
port, for use with a parallel printer.
When you add a device to your system, the installation documentation may instruct you to map the device pathname to the port. These
devices are located in the /dev directory.
For serial-line ports, the two default device pathnames are: This pathname always maps to 1, COMM1, the lowest port number, an icon for a
terminal console, or the only serial port (on a single-port system). This pathname always maps to 2, COMM2, the next numbered port, or (if
one serial port is labeled with an icon for a terminal console) the remaining serial port.
If your system hardware has been extended to include additional serial ports, the pathnames /dev/tty02, /dev/tty03, and so forth, may also
be available to you. However, most systems have only /dev/tty00 and /dev/tty01 as the device pathnames for serial ports.
The one parallel port on an AlphaStation or AlphaServer may be labeled with the word printer or a printer icon. On some systems, the paral-
lel port may not be labeled. The device pathname for the parallel port is /dev/lp0. Currently, Tru64 UNIX does not fully support parallel
printers, so fewer devices are connected to this port as compared to serial ports.
If you are connecting a terminal console to your system, it must be connected to the serial port mapped to /dev/tty00. For other serial
devices, it does not matter which of the serial ports you choose for the connection. For example, suppose you are setting up a system that
has two serial ports, labeled 1 and 2. You intend to use a serial-line terminal rather than a workstation monitor as the system console and
also want to connect a serial-line printer to the system. In this case, you must connect the terminal to the port labeled 1 (with the
device pathname /dev/tty00). Therefore, you must connect the printer to the remaining port labeled 2 (with the device pathname /dev/tty01).
If, for the same type of system, you intend to use a workstation monitor as the system console, it does not matter which serial port you
use for a serial-line printer or modem. In other words, you can connect the printer to either port 1 (with pathname /dev/tty00) or port 2
(with pathname /dev/tty01). When prompted to enter a /dev/tty** pathname by the lprsetup script or the Print configuration tool in the CDE
Application Manager, you would specify /dev/tty00 if you connected the printer to port 1 or /dev/tty01 if you connected the printer to port
2.
See the System Administration manual for more information on setting up consoles (including remote consoles) and printers. See the
modem(7) reference page for more information on setting up modems.
SEE ALSO
Commands: lprsetup(8)
Devices: ace(7), modem(7)
System Administration delim off
ports(7)