Hi everybody ! Sorry for the late summary, but I got tons of work to do at the moment (who hasn't ??) Anyway, it doesn't look so unfamiliar that a serial console could hang a whole server. Here is what other people told me: If you have the eeprom settings such that the hardware flow control on the serial port is paid attention to AND the connector either a) has those pins unwired so they float or b) the connector has the hardware flow control pulled down so it is saying "stop sending data" then the machine will appear to hang, waiting for the "go ahead" to send data again. You can set the tty settings in the to ignore CD and DTR, see if that helps. Brett Lymn --- Hello, you (and I) might assume, that if a keyboard and monitor is connected to a machine these should be used as system console and the serial port A should be usable as a general purpose serial IO. But the OBP at least sometimes tries to switch the console to ttya after detecting a BREAK character. The speed is set to 9600 baud, regardless of the eeprom settings, and the port is very sensitive in detecting a BREAK: sending a simple RETURN with a 300 baud or slower terminal will do, and of coarse a malfunctioning terminal. With the eeprom settings shown in the attachment a Blade 1000 is sensitive only during the boot procedure. What are the eeprom settings (especially input-device, output-device) of your machine? The attachment is part of a discussion with SUN (Subject: "Serial port a ist des Teufels") Regards, Martin Huber --- It shouldn't but there are a lot of signals that can be sent via a serial console...one of them being a break signal but that would cause the OK prompt.....I am guessing here but I think that the console is screwed up and sending incorrect signals to the server. Marco Greene --- Hi Gabel, Sun machines are very sensitive in their serial ports for some reason. Odd things like a line buffer connected to a terminal server filling up can cause a machine to halt. Cisco's older version of their 2511/4 terminal servers would send break signals to all Sun machines connected to them when powered down or rebooted and halt all the machines, coming back up when the terminal server comes back up. It's quite madenning but that's how they work. I've seen more then a few issues caused simply from serial port problems/misconfigurations/crossed wires. Tony Bourke --- thanks to everybody !! cu may martin.gabel@ffm3.siemens.de _______________________________________________ sunmanagers mailing list sunmanagers@sunmanagers.org http://www.sunmanagers.org/mailman/listinfo/sunmanagersReceived on Thu Jun 20 06:18:23 2002
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