Serial Console

Mark Hatle fray at mvista.com
Wed Mar 5 02:40:13 EST 2003


Aman wrote:
>  Hi
>
>  In the Redhat 7.0 linux, I was able to enable/disable the serial console
>  using the following command in the inittab
>  " T0:12345:respawn:/sbin/getty ttyS0 9600 vt100"

That is actually not a serial "console", it is a serial "login".  (It's a small
distinction but an important one)

On a workstation system (with say VGA), when the system boots the "console"
comes up and displays your boot messages.  Eventually init executes and starts a
login sesssion on the same device as the default console.  Thus your screen has
both a "console" and "login" active.

>  However in the case of the 440 Linux the serial console is enabled already.
>  I wanted to know how this enabling is done. Can someone add some points to
>  this.

Probably with your configuration, the default system console is on a serial
port.  This means all boot and kernel messages will go there.

Again you will want to start a login process via init in order to do multi-user
logins.

(But in the embedded world, init, getty/login and such aren't required.  You can
just as easily boot right into /bin/sh.)

Now back to your original question.. How is it enabled:

The console is enabled either by the system configuration or by the kernel
command line, "console=".  Look in the "Documentation" directory in the kernel,
something in there explains serial consoles and the cmdline semantics.

--Mark

>
>  Thanking you in advance
>  Regards
>  Aman
>
>
>
>
>


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