Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: regd.sunblade 100
Operating Systems Solaris regd.sunblade 100 Post 43700 by kduffin on Thursday 20th of November 2003 11:37:57 PM
Old 11-21-2003
Correct me if I'm wrong, but I believe that Sun machines on powerup look at the keyboard port. If something is plugged in it assumes the console is a keyboard and monitor locally connected. If it doesn't see any keyboard, it redirects console input/output to serial port "A".

In order to use a console connection, I believe you'll have to unplug your keyboard.

Cheers,

Keith
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX Desktop Questions & Answers

regd explorer

hiii i want to know how to install explorer in sparc e-250 OS solaris 8 iam able to install the software iam able to install the explorer,i use to run #./explorer -q -e other than this what all i should run to get all details.but iam just getting some thing which not related to o/s or h/w... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: solaris8in
3 Replies

2. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

regd:-sunblade1000

hii alll i have sunblade 1000 i get a error all of sudden cpu panic error this comes twice a day is this because of patches not installed in the system or its regarding memory or cpu can any one helpme out thanks in advance solaris (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: solaris8in
2 Replies

3. Solaris

NIC cards for sunblade 100

I need to add a PCI NIC to a sunblade 100 running solaris 8. Im new to this and was hoping someone could give me some card names and models which will work for this system and has a driver for this sparc system. thanks (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: meyersp
3 Replies

4. Debian

How to install Debian on a SUNBLADE 100?

I have tried to install the Debian distribution for SPARC processor, but is a pian in the neck trying to boot from cdrom or floppy. Please can somebody to help me to know the easiest way to boot and install Debian on a SUNBLADE 100 system? or wich is the best way to installed on this system, I... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: GEIER
2 Replies

5. Solaris

Solaris 9 Installation on Sunblade 100

I have a sunblade 100. It is preloaded with Solaris 8 but I do not have root password. I want to erase and install Solaris 9 on it. What are my options? I have a CD ROM. Could any one help me in getting started to install in from CDs? Appreciate your help guyz. (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: stevelrf
3 Replies

6. Solaris

Adding memory to a SunBlade 100

Question, when adding memory to a SunBlade 100, are you required to add it in matched pairs? My current box has 2 x 256mb sticks of PC-133 ram. I tried adding 1 512mb sticks and the system failed to come up. I saw at Sunsolve that you can mix and match different sized memory. (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: stocksj
5 Replies

7. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

Regd: rcp

Hi, The B machine is using rcp method to copy a file to A machine. But it is not getting copied. Its giving the error as: remshd: Login incorrect. On A machine rhosts file has details about the B machine. Could anyone tell what could be done to make this work? Any help is appreciated.... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: nehak
1 Replies

8. Solaris

Help! Trying to install Solaris 10 on a Sunblade 100

I recently bought a sunblade 100 for $150 from a guy that posted it on craigslist. I'm trying to learn Solaris 10. Prior to giving me the system he had Ubuntu installed. He removed it for before giving it to me. I basically have a hard disk that has nothing installed in it. I tried installing... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: haloy
6 Replies

9. Solaris

PC133 for sunblade 100

Greetings, I was in the mood of upgrading my sunblade100 in my bedroom, since I recuperated some RAM from intel servers, and found myself with what seems to not work (I was hoping to pass from 256Mb to 2GB... and then upgrading to solaris 10...) after this failure I tried with just one 512 MB,... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: vbe
2 Replies

10. Solaris

Connect from Dell Laptop to SunBlade 100

Hi All I connect to my SunBlade using the keyboard/mouse provided by the sun. Now I would like to connect to it using my dell laptop running on Windows 7. I have connected the laptop to the SunBlade using just a one crossover 9-pin connector using the free/basic version of the terminal... (24 Replies)
Discussion started by: tomicmanka
24 Replies
SETUPCON(1)						    Console-setup User's Manual 					       SETUPCON(1)

NAME
setupcon - sets up the font and the keyboard on the console SYNOPSIS
setupcon [OPTION]... [VARIANT] DESCRIPTION
setupcon is a program for fast and easy setup of the font and the keyboard on the console. Most of the time you invoke setupcon without arguments. The keyboard configuration is specified in ~/.keyboard or /etc/default/keyboard. The font configuration is specified in ~/.console-setup or /etc/default/console-setup. Consult keyboard(5) and console-setup(5) for instructions how to configure these two files. If you have to switch often between different encodings, keyboards or languages, you can prepare several alternative configuration files for setupcon. Suppose that most of the time you will use Greek language with Greek keyboard layout, but sometimes you need to type in Ger- man with German keyboard layout. In this situation you should customize the main configuration files (keyboard and console-setup) for Greek. Also, create alternative configuration files for German named keyboard.german and console-setup.german. Then in order to configure the console for Greek you will simply run the command with no arguments: setupcon and in order to configure the console for German you will use setupcon german. OPTIONS
VARIANT Specifies which configuration file to use. With no variant, the configuration files of setupcon are named console-setup and key- board. On the other hand, if you use e.g. chukchi as VARIANT then the configuration files are console-setup.chukchi and key- board.chukchi. In this way you can have easy access to several different configurations - for example one for the Chukchi language and another for the default configuration. -v, --verbose Be more verbose. Use this option if something goes wrong or while experimenting with the configuration files. -k, --keyboard-only Setup the keyboard only, do not setup the font or the terminal. On Linux it is enough to do this configuration only once. -f, --font-only Setup the font only, do not setup the keyboard or the terminal. On Linux this configuration should be repeated each time a new con- sole driver is activated (for example when the frame buffer becomes active). -t, --terminal-only Setup the terminal only, do not setup the keyboard or the font. --current-tty Setup the only the current virtual terminal. --force Do not check whether we are on the console. Notice that you can be forced to hard-reboot your computer if you run setupcon with this option and the screen is controlled by a X server. --save This option can be useful if you want to use setupcon early in the boot process while /usr is not yet mounted and the required data are not available. This option will make setupcon copy the required files in /etc/console-setup/ in order to make them available before /usr is mounted. If you use setupcon early in the boot process, then you should run it with this option after every change of the console configuration. --save-only The same as --save, but does not setup anything. This option can be useful if you want to save the required files while the screen is controlled by a X server. --save-keyboard FILE For use by initrd builders. Do not configure anything. Save an usable keyboard layout in FILE. --setup-dir DIR For use by initrd builders. Do not configure anything. Arrange in the directory DIR everything necessary in order to configure the console. The file DIR/morefiles lists all binaries the initrd builder has to install in the initrd image. All other files in DIR have to be copied unchanged in the initrd. In order to configure the console one has to run the script DIR/bin/setupcon. -h, --help Display usage information. FILES
~/.console-setup ~/.keyboard /etc/default/console-setup /etc/default/keyboard /etc/default/console-setup.VARIANT /etc/default/keyboard.VARIANT /etc/console-setup/ SEE ALSO
keyboard(5), console-setup(5) console-setup 2011-03-17 SETUPCON(1)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 04:34 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy