On Tue, 9 Mar 2004, Bevan C. Bennett wrote:
fred smith wrote:
On Tue, Mar 09, 2004 at 11:58:36AM -0800, Bevan C. Bennett wrote:
Ben Steeves wrote:
On Tue, 2004-03-09 at 15:41, Colin Burgess wrote:
What are people using to access a serial port?
Kermit. The be-all-end-all of serial comms packages. I use it to talk to the Lights-Out-Management consoles on our Sun boxes and the L1 on our SGI box (it's a cheapie... no L2).
They have kermit again?! Yay! I thought I was stuck with minicom... Sweet familiar kermit... the serial port's long lost friend.
When have we ever been without it? One could always go to the kermit web site and grab the source for c-kermit, which has pretty much always built on Linux. (and nearly every other unix-like box, too!)
There was a period of time that (to my knowledge) it just vanished from Redhat. I tried keeping up with compiling it for a little while, but then I had a number of years during which I didn't need it. When I did need it again, I couldn't find it and all the docs said to use minicom, so I (erroneously, it appears) wrote it off and consigned myself to minicom.
Suns have (and still do) use 'tip' instead.
$ whichcd kermit You appear to be running Fedora Core 1. I'll search for rpms for that version. Searching for kermit...
CD-3:ckermit-8.0.209-4.i386.rpm SOURCE-CD-3:ckermit-8.0.209-4.src.rpm
Yes, I know that now (it's even installed), but it wasn't to my knowledge part of RH7 or RH8. It looks like it got added in RH9, but without some announcement (or carefully reading through the entire package list in my 'copious spare time') it went unnoticed (by me at least) until now.
I wanted to make a point of it because 1) I find minicom slightly frustrating to use 2) Others may have also not known of it's return