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Re: serial to IP adapter?



Is

http://www.monoprice.com/products/product.asp?c_id=103&cp_id=10311&cs_id=1031104&p_id=2067&seq=1&format=2

a stupid suggestion for this? And with hubs you could essentially have 127 comm ports per root hub. Or do the extra hubs count as devices? Can't remember, but you'd still be able to connect a lot. By the original mail it sounded like you just needed a way to manage multiple switches (or other network appliances) and these would make sense to me.


----- Original Message ----- From: "..I'd rather be coding ASM!" <uridium%deviate.fi@localhost>
To: "Kenneth P. Persing" <ken%bigbadapple.com@localhost>
Cc: "Brian" <brian-list%comcast.net@localhost>; "list NetBSD Cobalt" <port-cobalt%netbsd.org@localhost>
Sent: Tuesday, August 04, 2009 11:20 PM
Subject: Re: serial to IP adapter?




I suspect by the sound of it, he wants a central machine with multiple serial ports hanging off it to control 'n' machines. But, perhaps I've mis-understood also.

--
 --
 Al Boyanich
 adb -w -P "world> " -k /dev/meta/galaxy/ksyms /dev/god/brain


On Tue, 4 Aug 2009, Kenneth P. Persing wrote:

What exactly are we trying to do here?  if you are troubleshooting boot
issues, why don't you just run a null modem...  if you want network
connectivity via the serial port, set up a ppp server over the null
modem post boot.

am i missing something?



On Tue, 2009-08-04 at 19:04 -0400, Brian wrote:

Does anyone have recommendations for inexpensive  IP/ serial adapters
that would work to troubleshoot occasional boot issues?  A way to put
some old Cisco gear to use perhaps, although I do not see any way to
do that at the moment-

Thank you-

Brian








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