On Mon, May 23, 2011 at 12:04 AM, David Parker <dpar...@utica.edu> wrote:

Was your onboard serial port disabled in the BIOS at the time you installed
> Debian?  If it was, then the first port on your serial card should be mapped
> to /dev/ttyS0.  If not, then udev may have picked up the onboard port as
> /dev/ttyS0 and made your card /dev/ttyS1 (or another number).
>

No, originally the on-board serial device was enabled in the BIOS when I
plopped the card in, I've since disabled it in the BIOS and sometimes now
when I reboot this box, and run setserial, I will see either one or two
serial devices listed. The on-board device always showed up with a low IRQ
and the Serial card is IRQ16, so I was able to tell which device I was
using. During my troubleshooting, before sending my initial email), I had
set everything up to use ttyS0 and ttyS1 anyway, just to cover all my bases,
but I still got no login when I tried to connect via serial.


>
> I have two Debian 4 boxes with the serial console working.  It has been
> quite a while since I set this up, but I'm pretty sure that I just added
> this line to /etc/inittab and then restarted init:
>
> co:2345:respawn:/sbin/getty -L ttyS0 9600 vt102
>

>
I think the "co" may have something to do with it.  Sorry I can't be more
> help, I'm really rusty on this.  I did this 5 years ago and I've never had
> to do it again.
>

What does co do vs TO? Admittidly, I don't know much about how this works,
so like a smart monkey, I did what I saw wrote about the most. Also, how are
you restarting init w/o rebooting?

-- 
> A: Yes.
> >Q: Are you sure?
> >>A: Because it reverses the logical flow of conversation.
> >>>Q: Why is top posting frowned upon?

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