On Mon 03 Jan 2022 at 04:33:53 (-0500), gene heskett wrote: > On Sunday, January 2, 2022 10:47:08 PM EST David Wright wrote: > > On Sun 02 Jan 2022 at 22:31:27 (-0500), gene heskett wrote: > > > On Sunday, January 2, 2022 9:54:29 PM EST David Wright wrote: > > > > On Sun 02 Jan 2022 at 17:53:19 (-0500), gene heskett wrote: > > > > > Without any conscious prompting by me, te debian 11.1 netinstall for > > > > > x86-64 systems installed and setup whatever was needed to bring the > > > > > screen reader to life. > > > > > > > > I think it's happened to you before, in May 2019. Was something > > > > plugged in when you installed your OS, that was misidentified? > > > > > > That is a possibility I suppose as there are, and were then too at least > > > 10 usb devices plugged in 100% of the time, keyboard & mouse both > > > wireless, 2 printers then, 1 left is an MFC so its a scanner too, a > > > ups, a CM11a, two cameras (one is a movie w/firewire) and 7 other > > > machines on net cables. That lis is incomplete so who knows what might > > > be miss-id'd. > > > > ISTR there was some sort of fast serial device involved, and the > > log you posted showed that it was fighting brltty, so that would > > appear to be the most likely candidate. > > > Hmmm, that triggers old memories, as it might be a 10 meter usb2 cable with > booster hubs in both ends, which formerly connected the minicom program to a > trs-80 color computer 3 in the basement via an rs232 card plugged into its > multipack interface expander. But it wasn't very fast, the uart chip in it > was all tapped out at 9600 baud, and rzsz was limited to about 7200 baud due > to its loop size being one byte, I was always going to rewrite it to fully > use the table lookup version of the crc calcs but never found a round tuit. > it was highly dependent on flow control working, something that early uart > chip did not do well. Prolific who made the rs232<>usb convertor on the end > of that cable, never did quite get that right. > > But that 2 megs of ram "coco" has now died, 35 yo electroytics developing > high ESR so its dead now, and despite my being a CET, I'm too lazy in my > dotage to shotgun all the caps it it, but I believe that cable is still > plugged in to one of several multiport usb 2 or 3 hubs on this machine. > > Do we still have a working usbtree like utility that might discover this? > Such useful stuff seems to be falling off the edge in later versions of > linux.
I hadn't noticed that. I got a tree from lsusb -t and lsusb -v gave me ~1000 lines despite saying that there were several devices it couldn't open, so information would be missing. Cheers, David.

