Pro Applications: Entering serial number after migrating causes the application to stop responding
After using Migration Assistant in Mac OS X v10.6.x to migrate data and applications, you may be prompted to enter the serial number when opening a migrated application from any of the following products: Aperture 3 Final Cut Studio (2009) Logic Studio (2009) Logic Express 9 After entering the serial number and clicking OK, the application may not respond.
Hi Experts.
i have been stuck up with an issue.
i have connected my Solaris 8 , Sun fire V445 on serial port by using Teraterm.
Initially i was able to login and executed some tasks.
After executing some commands (mainly Control +c), i am not able to type any key or not able to do anything at... (2 Replies)
Hi Experts.
i have been stuck up with an issue.
i have connected my Solaris 8 , Sun fire V445 on serial port by using Teraterm.
Initially i was able to login and executed some tasks.
After executing some commands (mainly Control +c), i am not able to type any key or not able to do anything at... (2 Replies)
Hello!
I am working on an application which reads environmental instruments which have serial ports. The application requires a serial port to be present to talk to the device (i.e. /dev/ttyS0 ). In some instances the environmental devices will be 100's of yards away from the computer, so a... (5 Replies)
Hi All,
I am currently facing new problem of migrating C(c language) application from AIX machine to Linux machine. We are using GCC to compile the source code..
But facing with the compilation issues, with lot of GCC C libs differing between AIX box to Linux box...
Pls help me... (3 Replies)
hi everybody, this is my first visit here.
i have a sco unixware 7.1 box. terminals are connected thru digi multiserial devices. some users are also connected over the lan from pc stations running terminal emulation programs.
in few last weeks periodically ( almost every other day ) happens... (2 Replies)
LDATTACH(8) System Administration LDATTACH(8)NAME
ldattach - attach a line discipline to a serial line
SYNOPSIS
ldattach [-dhV78neo12] [-s speed] [-i iflag] ldisc device
DESCRIPTION
The ldattach daemon opens the specified device file (which should refer to a serial device) and attaches the line discipline ldisc to it
for processing of the sent and/or received data. It then goes into the background keeping the device open so that the line discipline
stays loaded.
The line discipline ldisc may be specified either by name or by number.
In order to detach the line discipline, kill(1) the ldattach process.
With no arguments, ldattach prints usage information.
LINE DISCIPLINES
Depending on the kernel release, the following line disciplines are supported:
TTY(0) The default line discipline, providing transparent operation (raw mode) as well as the habitual terminal line editing capabilities
(cooked mode).
SLIP(1)
Serial Line IP (SLIP) protocol processor for transmitting TCP/IP packets over serial lines.
MOUSE(2)
Device driver for RS232 connected pointing devices (serial mice).
PPP(3) Point to Point Protocol (PPP) processor for transmitting network packets over serial lines.
STRIP(4)AX25(5)X25(6) Line driver for transmitting X.25 packets over asynchronous serial lines.
6PACK(7)R3964(9)
Driver for Simatic R3964 module.
IRDA(11)
Linux IrDa (infrared data transmission) driver - see http://irda.sourceforge.net/
HDLC(13)
Synchronous HDLC driver.
SYNC_PPP(14)
Synchronous PPP driver.
HCI(15)
Bluetooth HCI UART driver.
GIGASET_M101(16)
Driver for Siemens Gigaset M101 serial DECT adapter.
PPS(18)
Driver for serial line Pulse Per Second (PPS) source.
OPTIONS -d | --debug
Causes ldattach to stay in the foreground so that it can be interrupted or debugged, and to print verbose messages about its
progress to the standard error output.
-h | --help
Prints a usage message and exits.
-V | --version
Prints the program version.
-s value | --speed value
Set the speed of the serial line to the specified value.
-7 | --sevenbits
Sets the character size of the serial line to 7 bits.
-8 | --eightbits
Sets the character size of the serial line to 8 bits.
-n | --noparity
Sets the parity of the serial line to none.
-e | --evenparity
Sets the parity of the serial line to even.
-o | --oddparity
Sets the parity of the serial line to odd.
-1 | --onestopbit
Sets the number of stop bits of the serial line to one.
-2 | --twostopbits
Sets the number of stop bits of the serial line to two.
-i value | --iflag [-]value{,...}
Sets the specified bits in the c_iflag word of the serial line. Value may be a number or a symbolic name. If value is prefixed by
a minus sign, clear the specified bits instead. Several comma separated values may be given in order to set and clear multiple
bits.
SEE ALSO inputattach(1), ttys(4)AUTHOR
Tilman Schmidt (tilman@imap.cc)
AVAILABILITY
The ldattach command is part of the util-linux package and is available from ftp://ftp.kernel.org/pub/linux/utils/util-linux/.
util-linux February 2010 LDATTACH(8)