I have the latest 9.1-RELEASE memstick image burned to a USB drive.
I boot from that and connect to my device with a serial console. At some
point, the installer asks me what terminal emulation I am using - I choose
vt100.
But then things go to hell ...
I am not complaining that the screen
Hello
While installing FreeBSD 9.0 i386 on a Soekris net6501 I ran into some
problems regarding the serial console. Those problems and their
workarounds are described below -- for the archives, in case someone
runs into them as well.
After having read section 27.6 "Setting Up the Serial Co
Hello all,
I had a working serial console setup on Freebsd 9.0 for remote access via my HP
server's BMC serial console. I recently built and installed 9.1-RC2 on a
separate dataset on this machine's ZFS pool and merged in my existing
configuration from 9.0.
On 9.1-RC2 I no lo
Hi all. I am in desperate need of some help with ZFS (maybe GPT) and
serial consoles. I use 19200 for my console speed for everything, so I
recompiled the boot blocks using "BOOT_COMCONSOLE_SPEED="19200" " in
/etc/make.conf. I then ran this to install new blocks to my two drives in
the mirror pa
Greetings,
Ι have followed the guide about setting up the serial console:
http://www.freebsd.org/doc/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/ppp-and-slip.html
Ι have done this many times with no problems to other servers.
For the first time I have a very strange problem in this particular server
I'm having difficulty gaining serial console access to an 8.2-RELEASE
box running ZFS on its root partition. I would appreciate pointers to
help determine if this is a FreeBSD issue, or something external like
BIOS or cabling.
The server is a vanilla 1U Supermicro motherboard with AMI BIOS
Quoth Fritz Wuehler on Monday, 28 November 2011:
>
> I don't know but I do know a real VT100 won't run at 115,200 unless you drop
> it out of an airplane. Are you using a physical terminal or an emulator? If
> an emulator you often have to match up the emulator speed and parity
> settings etc. to
follows:
> ttyu0"/usr/libexec/getty std.115200"vt100on secure
>
> none of the above methods worked and only changing /etc/makefile had an
> effect on serial console speed which is not appropriate.
> Is there anything else should be take in to consideration in
On 11/27/2011 12:07 AM, h bagade wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> I want to change serial console speed on freebsd 8.2. I've found out
> different way of doing so but none was successful! I've tried the following
> ways:
>
> 1- change /boot.config: add -S*speed
>
&
Hi,
So basically you need the following:
1) Set the baud rate and the com interface in BIOS (ex: com1 and baud rate
19200)
2) /boot/loader.conf:
ipmi_load="YES"
3) reboot
4)
- use "dmesg | grep uart" and you will something like this:
uart0: <16550 or compatible> port 0x3f8-0x3ff irq 4 flags 0x1
Hi all,
I want to change serial console speed on freebsd 8.2. I've found out
different way of doing so but none was successful! I've tried the following
ways:
1- change /boot.config: add -S*speed
*2- change /boot/loader.conf: add following lines
boot_multicons="YES&qu
On Wed, November 16, 2011 14:52, J65nko wrote:
> You can stop ping with :
> $ pkill -TERM ping
>
>>From the ping man page:
>
> -c count
>Stop after sending (and receiving) count ECHO_RESPONSE packets.
>If this option is not specified, ping will operate until inter-
>
On Wed, Nov 16, 2011 at 3:52 PM, James Edwards wrote:
> Hi All,
>
> I have two servers currently colocated, one running FreeBSD 8.2/amd64 ,
> and the other is a Sun Netra T1 that I am attempting to install FreeBSD
> 8.2 on, over serial.
>
> When the system booted up, I was presented with a list of
Hi All,
I have two servers currently colocated, one running FreeBSD 8.2/amd64 ,
and the other is a Sun Netra T1 that I am attempting to install FreeBSD
8.2 on, over serial.
When the system booted up, I was presented with a list of console options
and I chose the first option, I believe to be ANSI
I have a collocated server which had serial console access. The server centre
re-located the server and left off the serial console.
The server worked fine for a few hours, but then access got slower and slower
and eventually died.
Could it be that the lack of a console is causing that? I
On 28/04/2011 23:25, Paul Macdonald wrote:
> (the DC sees the installer over vga when they shoudn't, same ISO!!)
>
> any suggestions?
>
It's frequently a BIOS option to redirect the console to a serial device
or not.
Cheers,
Matthew
--
Dr Matthew J Seaman MA, D.Phil.
EDIUM ERROR asc=0x11 ascq=0x00
Trying to mount root from ufs:/dev/md0
serial stops there and doesn't get to the bsd install screen.
---
on my working local install i see the additional stages of:
Trying to mount root from ufs:/dev/md0
/stand/sysinstall running as init on serial cons
FreeBSD 8 uses the uart system to handle serial consoles, I changed mine
over and I've been running into problems since.
I have serial console access during the loader and boot process, but it
freezes right after boot and posting of the date:
Mon Mar 22 22:18:08 EDT 2010
Well, the kernel
tarting. The problem is that the console is VGA, even though I have
> "console=comconsole" AND boot.config containing "-h" AND sio.0.flags
> 0x30.
>
> Has anyone actually gotten a serial console to work with FreeBSD
> 7.2-release? I'm having the same problems with
ve
"console=comconsole" AND boot.config containing "-h" AND sio.0.flags
0x30.
Has anyone actually gotten a serial console to work with FreeBSD
7.2-release? I'm having the same problems with 7-STABLE.
Sven
___
freebsd-que
Sven Hazejager writes:
> I'm having trouble getting 7.2-p4 to run. I'm using nanoBSD, either
> under VMware using a virtual serial null-modem or on an Alix
> Soekris-like serial-only CF-based device, both show this problem: my
> serial console does not display kernel messag
All,
I'm having trouble getting 7.2-p4 to run. I'm using nanoBSD, either
under VMware using a virtual serial null-modem or on an Alix
Soekris-like serial-only CF-based device, both show this problem: my
serial console does not display kernel messages, they all go to the
VGA console!
Gary Gatten wrote:
Ahh A Null modem cable? Or, perhaps BSD will allow you to
configure the serial interface in the software - make one end a DCE type
and the other by default will remain a DTE.
He has to use a null-modem cable. The wires sending and receiving data
are fixed, so one cannot
Behalf Of Frederique
Rijsdijk
Sent: Tuesday, October 20, 2009 9:06 AM
To: FreeBSD-Questions
Subject: cross-link serial console
If I have 2 machines, could I connect the machines to each other via
serial cable, in order to be able to reach each others' console in case
of out of band issues?
I
If I have 2 machines, could I connect the machines to each other via
serial cable, in order to be able to reach each others' console in case
of out of band issues?
I know how to config it, I was just wondering if it would not bite each
other.
-- FR
__
Hi,
I have to come back to this problem. When I boot over the serial
console, input works all fine until I come to the loader menu. There,
input from the serial console is just ignored, I can not interrupt the
autoboot and e.g. choose a different kernel. I have partitioned with
GPT and
On Aug 26, 2009, at 18:16, Mike Tancsa wrote:
Or, if you want to use loader.conf, try
hw.uart.console="io:0x3f8"
---Mike
That solved it! Thanks a lot!! :)
Regards,
Thomas
___
freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list
http://lists.freebsd.org
At 12:10 PM 8/26/2009, Thomas Backman wrote:
danny
I already tried that (in /boot/loader.conf); it shows up in dmesg (and
didn't before), but still no luck.
Try adding it to /boot/device.hints
eg
hint.uart.0.at="isa"
hint.uart.0.port="0x3F8"
hint.uart.0.flags="0x10"
hint.uart.0.irq="4"
hin
On Aug 26, 2009, at 18:04, Danny Braniss wrote:
you need to set
hint.uart.0.flags="0x10"
danny
I already tried that (in /boot/loader.conf); it shows up in dmesg (and
didn't before), but still no luck.
Regards/thanks,
Thomas
___
freebsd-que
yu0 "/usr/libexec/getty std.115200" vt100 on secure
/boot.config (which is read properly):
-Dh -S115200
Anything wrong in the above?
Hyperterminal is set to 115200 bps, 8 bits, no parity, 1 stop bit,
and no flow control (if that's the correct translation to English).
On the serial c
stop
bit, and
no flow control (if that's the correct translation to English).
On the serial console, I go from the screen with the FreeBSD logo,
with single-user options etc. (which works fine), and then nothing,
until a login tty pops up (which also works fine). The main, if not
only, reaso
ot;/usr/libexec/getty std.115200" vt100 on secure
>>>
>>> /boot.config (which is read properly):
>>> -Dh -S115200
>>>
>>> Anything wrong in the above?
>>> Hyperterminal is set to 115200 bps, 8 bits, no parity, 1 stop bit, and
>>&
in, fingerd etc.
ttyu0 "/usr/libexec/getty std.115200" vt100 on secure
/boot.config (which is read properly):
-Dh -S115200
Anything wrong in the above?
Hyperterminal is set to 115200 bps, 8 bits, no parity, 1 stop bit,
and
no flow control (if that's the correct translation to E
identifies dialin lines to login, fingerd etc.
> ttyu0 "/usr/libexec/getty std.115200" vt100 on secure
>
> /boot.config (which is read properly):
> -Dh -S115200
>
> Anything wrong in the above?
> Hyperterminal is set to 115200 bps, 8 bits, no parity, 1 stop bit, an
re
/boot.config (which is read properly):
-Dh -S115200
Anything wrong in the above?
Hyperterminal is set to 115200 bps, 8 bits, no parity, 1 stop bit, and
no flow control (if that's the correct translation to English).
On the serial console, I go from the screen with the FreeBSD logo
I need to have access to the console on my server, so that I can do
stuff like grab the output of a crash or, if it halts whilst booting
up, to take remedial action. I had planned on doing this from a much
older machine whose sole function is to provide that capability. This
older machine will be r
On Thursday 04 June 2009 17:28:56 Tim Judd wrote:
> On 6/4/09, Wojciech Puchar wrote:
> >> Hello list,
> >>
> >> Is it possible to boot into the serial console from the installation
> >> CD, or must boot.flp be used as per
> >
> > make your own
On 6/4/09, Wojciech Puchar wrote:
>> Hello list,
>>
>> Is it possible to boot into the serial console from the installation
>> CD, or must boot.flp be used as per
>
> make your own CD
>
> add file boot.config containing just one line:
>
> -P
>
>
>
f the boot process
hangs for some reason? no console output either by your solution.
why?
Enabling a serial console on a typical install means editing 3 files.
/boot/loader.conf
/boot.config
/etc/ttys
loader.conf needs to know the COM port speed (default 9600), and what
device to output the co
Hi,
Thanks everyone, I know what to do now :D
--
John
___
freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list
http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions
To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-questions-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"
On Thursday 04 June 2009 15:46:11 John . wrote:
> Hello list,
>
> Is it possible to boot into the serial console from the installation
> CD, or must boot.flp be used as per
> http://www.freebsd.org/doc/en/books/handbook/install-advanced.html ?
> (the machine has no floppy
Hello list,
Is it possible to boot into the serial console from the installation
CD, or must boot.flp be used as per
make your own CD
add file boot.config containing just one line:
-P
to existing, make sure you it's bootable (mkisofs -b boot/cdboot
-no-emul-boot) and record
ref
Hello list,
Is it possible to boot into the serial console from the installation
CD, or must boot.flp be used as per
http://www.freebsd.org/doc/en/books/handbook/install-advanced.html ?
(the machine has no floppy drive (yet)
thanks
--
John
___
freebsd
I'm setting up serial console access to our machines.
One of them isn't giving a login prompt, and I noticed a difference in
dmesg output:
> sio0: <16550A-compatible COM port> port 0x3f8-0x3ff irq 4 flags 0x10 on acpi0
> sio0: type 16550A
> sio0: [FILTER]
The last
== dmesg without enabling serial console ===
Copyright (c) 1992-2008 The FreeBSD Project.
Copyright (c) 1979, 1980, 1983, 1986, 1988, 1989, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994
The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved.
FreeBSD is a registered trad
is the ata
> > controller that controls your disk.
> >
> Thank you for your reply, Mel.
>
> There must be something wrong. What confused me is why the booting
> problem does not appear every time I reboot the computer and the
> serial console does work fine if it can b
Thank you for your reply, Mel.
There must be something wrong. What confused me is why the booting
problem does not appear every time I reboot the computer and the
serial console does work fine if it can boot.
And I will really appreciate if you can specify my problem. Thanks a lot.
Jim
On Mon
On Tuesday 02 December 2008 07:41:17 Ji wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> I ran into a weird problem when enabling serial console on the FreeBSD
> 7.0. Your help is really appreciated.
> I installed FreeBSD 7.0 amd64 (from the CD) on a Dell R200, and then
> enabled the serial console by addin
Hi all,
I ran into a weird problem when enabling serial console on the FreeBSD
7.0. Your help is really appreciated.
I installed FreeBSD 7.0 amd64 (from the CD) on a Dell R200, and then
enabled the serial console by adding the following to
/boot/loader.conf
hint.sio.0.flags="0x30&quo
boot_multicons="NO"
> boot_serial="YES"
> comconsole_speed="115200"
> console="comconsole"
>
>> I then ran
>>
>> mkisofs -J -r -b boot/cdboot -no-emul-boot -o serialcd.iso serialcd
>>
>> and got an ISO image, serial.
e a little different from my original procedure, so this
time I used yours.
The only drawback with this method is that the serial console only cuts in
just before the boot menu. I suspect that if you wanted to have a serial
console for every stage of the boot you would need to mess about with t
On Wednesday 01 October 2008 22:25:21 Carl wrote:
> Jeremy Chadwick wrote:
> > On Wed, Oct 01, 2008 at 02:41:03AM -0700, Carl wrote:
> >> I've been trying to create a modified FreeBSD 7.0 install CD that will
> >> allow me to do installations entirely via the s
Jeremy Chadwick wrote:
On Wed, Oct 01, 2008 at 02:41:03AM -0700, Carl wrote:
I've been trying to create a modified FreeBSD 7.0 install CD that will
allow me to do installations entirely via the serial console on a
headless system. Lots of digging on the Internet, reading the handbook,
On Wed, Oct 01, 2008 at 02:41:03AM -0700, Carl wrote:
> I've been trying to create a modified FreeBSD 7.0 install CD that will
> allow me to do installations entirely via the serial console on a
> headless system. Lots of digging on the Internet, reading the handbook,
>
I've been trying to create a modified FreeBSD 7.0 install CD that will
allow me to do installations entirely via the serial console on a
headless system. Lots of digging on the Internet, reading the handbook,
and I've gotten nowhere fast. The following process was my best hope,
bu
I've got DELL PowerEdge 1750 with 7.0-RELEASE-p4. I'm running
the serial port to a serial console server. I thought I had
the right adapter, DB-9 to RJ45, but it's being weird. When I
specify,
ttyd0 "/usr/libexec/getty std.9600" vt100 on secure
In the /etc/ttys
On Wed, 2008-08-27 at 10:43 +0200, Wojciech Puchar wrote:
> >>
> >> what i do wrong?
> >>
> > Have you checked flag setting on sio?
> >
> ># dmesg | grep "sio.*flags"
> >sio0: <16550A-compatible COM port> port 0x3f8-0x3ff irq 4 flags 0x10
> > on acpi0
>
> yes. i then tried to chan
what i do wrong?
Have you checked flag setting on sio?
# dmesg | grep "sio.*flags"
sio0: <16550A-compatible COM port> port 0x3f8-0x3ff irq 4 flags 0x10 on
acpi0
yes. i then tried to change flags to 0x20 (force console) - still doesn't
work
sio0: configured irq 4 not in bitm
On Tue, 2008-08-26 at 22:00 +0200, Wojciech Puchar wrote:
> i put -h in /boot.config
>
> FreeBSD loaders starts with serial console fine, load kernel, boots and...
> kernel uses VGA as console.
>
> what i do wrong?
>
Have you checked flag setting on sio?
# dme
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I have some servers with IPMI that allow me to have a serial console.
I have setup a serial console config on my servers and it seems to
work reasonably well in remote emergencies, but causes serious
problems if I ever have to use the real console.
It means that I
i put -h in /boot.config
FreeBSD loaders starts with serial console fine, load kernel, boots and...
kernel uses VGA as console.
what i do wrong?
___
freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list
http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd
I have some servers with IPMI that allow me to have a serial console. I have
setup a serial console config on my servers and it seems to work reasonably
well in remote emergencies, but causes serious problems if I ever have to use
the real console.
It means that I can't use single user
I have some servers with IPMI that allow me to have a serial console. I
have setup a serial console config on my servers and it seems to work
reasonably well in remote emergencies, but causes serious problems if I
ever have to use the real console.
It means that I can't use single user
On Jun 28, 2008, at 13:15 , Anselm Strauss wrote:
Hi,
I have a small router that has no video output, it only supports a
serial console. I configured the serial console in /boot/
boot.config, /boot/loader.conf and /etc/ttys. It's working in the
BIOS, on the boot prompt before the l
Coud you put here the related entries of /boot/loader.conf and /etc/
tty ?
/boot/loader.conf:
console="comconsole"
comconsole_speed="38400"
/boot/boot.config:
-h
-S38400
/etc/ttys (disabled all ttyv*):
ttyd0 "/usr/libexec/getty std.38400" vt100 on secure
_
Le Sat, 28 Jun 2008 13:15:11 +0200,
Anselm Strauss <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> a écrit :
> Hi,
Hello,
> I have a small router that has no video output, it only supports a
> serial console. I configured the serial console
> in /boot/boot.config, / boot/loader.conf and /etc/ttys. It&
Hi,
I have a small router that has no video output, it only supports a
serial console. I configured the serial console in /boot/boot.config, /
boot/loader.conf and /etc/ttys. It's working in the BIOS, on the boot
prompt before the loader starts, and when logging in on the getty. The
On Tue, Mar 04, 2008 at 02:13:21PM -0500, Simon Chang wrote:
> Hi,
>
> > Not sure whether Dell hardware has any special management features, but on
> > generic server hardware, I always make sure BIOS console redirection is
> > enabled (gives you BIOS access), and that it's set to stop redirect
Hi,
> Not sure whether Dell hardware has any special management features, but on
> generic server hardware, I always make sure BIOS console redirection is
> enabled (gives you BIOS access), and that it's set to stop redirecting once
> the OS boots.
If it is one of the newer Dells, there is a
On Tuesday 04 March 2008 17:37, Jesse Sheidlower wrote:
> I'm getting a new Dell server delivered to our corporate
> datacenter. There is a serial console available there.
>
> What is the process for installing FreeBSD remotely by logging
> in to the serial console? I'm
much better method - install via livecd, let someone start livecd, set UP
IP, gateway, resolv.conf and start sshd
then you do the rest
On Tue, 4 Mar 2008, Jesse Sheidlower wrote:
I'm getting a new Dell server delivered to our corporate
datacenter. There is a serial console available
On Tue, Mar 04, 2008 at 10:37:00AM -0500, Jesse Sheidlower wrote:
>
> I'm getting a new Dell server delivered to our corporate
> datacenter. There is a serial console available there.
>
> What is the process for installing FreeBSD remotely by logging
> in to the serial
I'm getting a new Dell server delivered to our corporate
datacenter. There is a serial console available there.
What is the process for installing FreeBSD remotely by logging
in to the serial console? I'm assuming that I can get a tech
in the datacenter to put a FreeBSD install disc i
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Matthias Kellermann wrote:
| Hi list,
|
| I'm trying to install a FreeBSD system on a remote server I can only
| access via a serial console with 57600 baud.
|
| There is a Linux rescue system that I use for copying a FreeBSD HDD
| image via
Hi list,
I'm trying to install a FreeBSD system on a remote server I can only
access via a serial console with 57600 baud.
There is a Linux rescue system that I use for copying a FreeBSD HDD
image via dd to the harddisk.
To access the FreeBSD installation via remote serial console I'v
,--[ On Sunday 20 Jan 2008, WATANABE Kazuhiro wrote:
| Hello.
[...]
| loader.conf(5) says:
| | comconsole_speed
| | (``9600'' or the value of the BOOT_COMCONSOLE_SPEED vari-
| | able when loader(8) was compiled). Sets the speed of the
| | serial consol
der(8) was compiled). Sets the speed of
the
WATANABE> | serial console. If the previous boot loader stage
speci-
WATANABE> | fied that a serial console is in use then the default
WATANABE> | speed is determined from the current serial port speed
Hello.
At Sat, 19 Jan 2008 02:17:42 +0530,
? Ashish Shukla wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I'm trying to setup serial console on my FreeBSD 7.0-BETA4, I'm facing
> some issues.
>
> 8<8<
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] ~]$ cat /boot.config
> -DP
>
Hi,
I'm trying to setup serial console on my FreeBSD 7.0-BETA4, I'm facing
some issues.
8<8<
[EMAIL PROTECTED] ~]$ cat /boot.config
-DP
[EMAIL PROTECTED] ~]$ cat /boot/loader.conf
sound_load="YES"# Digital sound subsystem
snd_hda_load="
Hi, my helpful supplier says
"If you connect to the serial console and then turn on the machine from
the power cycler the machine should boot up to a syslinux boot prompt,
which will let you fire up the FreeBSD installer."
and when this syslinux thing boots up I see the possibility to
gt; So is there someone who can give me a hand-held walk-through
> of just what I need to do to make this work?
What you need to do will vary with your system and what
capabilities/bugs it has.
For my system,
firmware:
advanced cmos setup page:
Scott I. Remick wrote:
Hello... I'm trying to set up a serial console for watching console error
messages while in X, but am having a real hard time getting my head around
the concepts of what I need to do (and don't need to).
I've seen http://www.freebsd.org/doc/handboo
On Sun, 29 Jan 2006 12:32:46 -0500, Michael P. Soulier wrote:
> Can't you just run xconsole?
Doesn't help me if xconsole is hidden by another window at the time of the
halt.
___
freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list
http://lists.freebsd.org/mailma
nfo.
>
> Reboot (you might be able to just restart syslogd).
Interesting. I will try that, but I think I'll be running into the same
problem before where the HALT occurs before anything can be written to
disk, so nothing gets logged. I think I'd still like to figure o
On Sun, 29 Jan 2006 10:21:23 +, Robert Slade wrote:
> I can't help you directly, but have you looked at the error logs? they
> should give you a clue, especially Xorg.log
Last few times I remember looking, there was nothing logged. This lead me
to believe that the lockup happened too fast for
On 29/01/06 Scott I. Remick said:
> Hello... I'm trying to set up a serial console for watching console error
> messages while in X, but am having a real hard time getting my head around
> the concepts of what I need to do (and don't need to).
Can't you just run xconso
Scott I. Remick wrote:
Hello... I'm trying to set up a serial console for watching console error
messages while in X, but am having a real hard time getting my head around
the concepts of what I need to do (and don't need to).
I've seen http://www.freebsd.org/doc/handboo
On Sun, 2006-01-29 at 08:39, Scott I. Remick wrote:
> Hello... I'm trying to set up a serial console for watching console error
> messages while in X, but am having a real hard time getting my head around
> the concepts of what I need to do (and don't need to).
Hello... I'm trying to set up a serial console for watching console error
messages while in X, but am having a real hard time getting my head around
the concepts of what I need to do (and don't need to).
I've seen http://www.freebsd.org/doc/handbook/serialconsole-setup.html bu
the very first line add set console="comconsole"
After doing this on the second machine and rebooting, I am not able to get
to the serial console, video console, or SSH. There are not errors on the
screen, just a blinking curser after "FreeBSD/i386 bootstrap loader,
Revision 1.1"
the very first line add set console="comconsole"
After doing this on the second machine and rebooting, I am not able to get
to the serial console, video console, or SSH. There are not errors on the
screen, just a blinking curser after "FreeBSD/i386 bootstrap loader,
Revision 1.1"
d.org
Subject: sysinstall full install remotely with no serial console,
possible?
Hey guys.
Basically in my situation I have a broken server in colo with no
serial
console. It works for the most part but write access to / is gone, and
all attempts at repair are not coming about.
Hey guys.
Basically in my situation I have a broken server in colo with no serial
console. It works for the most part but write access to / is gone, and
all attempts at repair are not coming about.
I'd like to reinstall all but /home (has a seperate slice), however I
would have to
On 11/28/05, Jay <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On 11/29/05, Brian McCann <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > Hi all. I'm having a heck of a time trying to get a serial console
> > setup on 5.4. I've recompiled the boot blocks to set the speed to
> > 19200,
On 11/28/05, Jay <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On 11/29/05, Brian McCann <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > Hi all. I'm having a heck of a time trying to get a serial console
> > setup on 5.4. I've recompiled the boot blocks to set the speed to
> > 19200,
On 11/29/05, Brian McCann <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi all. I'm having a heck of a time trying to get a serial console
> setup on 5.4. I've recompiled the boot blocks to set the speed to
> 19200, added "set console="comconsole" " to /boot/loader
Hi all. I'm having a heck of a time trying to get a serial console
setup on 5.4. I've recompiled the boot blocks to set the speed to
19200, added "set console="comconsole" " to /boot/loader.rc, turned on
/dev/ttyd0 and ttyd1 in /etc/ttys, and added -P to /boot
Hello Arden,
On 11/24/05, arden <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> has this ever worked? If its a new box could be a hardware prob could try a
> loop-back test if you have the wrap plugs
Yes, on Solaris 10 before I wiped it today. I just can't see what I am
doing wrong. During the boot up sequence I ca
On Thu, 24 Nov 2005 15:28:54 +0100
Freminlins <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I have a dual amd64 machine on which serial console is not working
> properly. I've configured dozens of Intel machines without a problem.
>
> I have set up boot.config and /et
Hello,
I have a dual amd64 machine on which serial console is not working
properly. I've configured dozens of Intel machines without a problem.
I have set up boot.config and /etc/ttys. If I boot the machine some
data is printed to console. Rather than paste the whole lot here,
here'
1 - 100 of 186 matches
Mail list logo