On May 24 2007 12:45, Lars K.W. Gohlke wrote: >Date: Thu, 24 May 2007 12:45:06 +0200 >From: Lars K.W. Gohlke <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> >To: Jan Engelhardt <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> >Cc: Tilman Schmidt <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org >Subject: Re: How to access correctly serial port inside module? > > -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- > Hash: SHA1 > > Jan Engelhardt schrieb: >> On May 24 2007 12:22, Lars K.W. Gohlke wrote: >> > ok, I have read everything and also have read the chapters about >> > tty_drivers. However I'm not really understand, how to ... . >> > >> > I will summarize the concrete scenario, which will lead to the >> > understanding and further solution of deadling with serial driver. >> > >> > [scenario] >> > >> > 1. in userspace I'm doing: > date > /dev/ttyS0 >> > 2. in kernelspace I want to print out this date. >> > >> > [/scenario] >> > >> > I'm really new to kernel coding, that's why I maybe understand some >> > functions not the proper way. >> > >> > I'm a bit confused. >> >> So am I. Usually, you connect two different machines with a serial cable. >> (Leaving out the special case of connecting ttyS0-ttyS1 on the same >> machine.) >> >> This poses the first question: whose kernelspace? the sender or >> the receiver side? And by "this date" do you perhaps mean >> "whatever was sent", or specifically a date? And print to _where_? >> >> Up to now, it looks like you want to do "cat </dev/ttyS0" in-kernel. >> >> >> Jan > > date is an example > > and you got it, I want to do "cat </dev/ttyS0" in-kernel. > -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- > Version: GnuPG v1.4.3 (MingW32) - GPGrelay v0.959 > > iD8DBQFGVWy0AAomYJ1taN8RAu7/AJ9+1irJURFy5KFy/wzHqSXXD5sRgACfSi49 > ec5AnOQoTz2nCt//siaiTNs= > =uj4G > -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- >
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