And where would you connect that RJ45?Modern servers come with RS-232 exists that are RJ-45. As Shaul said, there are RJ-45 to D9 adapters. The theory behind some of them is that connecting a standard twisted pairs cable gives you a serial cable, while connecting a cross cable gives you a NULL modem cable.
This part of the discussion reminds me that back about 7 years ago when I took part in some tiny ISP there was some hub laying around there which could take serial cables and make them available over telnet, (each serial port mapped to a different TCP port) very useful for remote access to serial ports. Is this what you had in mind?
--Amos
The two machines I want to connect are next to each other. One has a standard serial D9, while the other has an RJ45 serial exit.
Shachar
-- Shachar Shemesh Open Source integration consultant Home page & resume - http://www.shemesh.biz/
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