On 7/31/22 11:05 AM, Ali via cctalk wrote:
Well after looking around a bit last night and my Google fu failing to provide anything worthwhile

:-/

Grant may be right i.e. there is no device that make a shell or a telnet client available to a terminal and I will have to roll my own.

I somewhat glossed over the /exact/ specifics desired in the first email because I'm quite confident that any Linux / Unix (like) OS can do whatever it is you are trying to do with a serial port. The Raspberry Pi being a quintessential small form factor system. The question becomes more what specifically do you want to do so as to use that as information on how to configure the system. There is effectively no difference between a Raspberry Pi and a generic 486 and a SPARC Station 5. They are all acting as a tiny system to gateway between a serial port and the network in one way or another.

Re-reading your original post (germane comment copied below for convenience) it seems like any Linux / Unix (like) OS would do the following:

1) Provide a shell prompt -- likely without login -- on a serial port for the physically connected terminal (emulating) device. 2) Issue telnet / rsh / rlogin / ssh / et al. commands to connect as a client to remote systems across the network. -- Which command is simply a matter of what /client/ software is installed on the system.

I have absolutely no experience with Raspberry Pi (or any of these mini embedded devices).

My personal opinion is that the Raspberry Pi /physical/ aspect of this is actually a minor part of the puzzle.

Looking around it looks like a box would set me back about $130 even if I can get all the parts:

I'm gobsmacked.

I would have assumed that you could get into something sufficient for your needs for about a third of that (< $50).

Now I am guessing the Pi 4 is overkill for what I need (text based shell running telnet or another telnet client). So nay advice and guidance is appreciated. Thanks.

I strongly believe that any Raspberry Pi, even the 1st generation, can handle a single serial port at full speed with no problem.

You /can/ do new if you want to deal with stocking issues. Or you can do used equipment for much less.

To whit, I believe I have an old 1st generation Raspberry Pi that I'm not using in a case. I paid $10 for it. Add a USB to RS-232 serial adapter to it, configure some software, and you're off to the races at serial speeds.

I'd even be willing to help configure the software and ship it to you.

My wife would be happy to have some small amount of equipment leave the house.

I'd be happy to see the system being used again.

If you're interested, email me directly to discuss the particulars. Cover costs and effectively buy me a milk shake. ;-)



--
Grant. . . .
unix || die

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