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📄 readme.serial

📁 freebsd v4.4内核源码
💻 SERIAL
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                         SERIAL CONSOLE USAGE NOTES				Written by                      Bill Paul <wpaul@ctr.columbia.edu>                          	Revised by            Kazutaka Yokota <yokota@zodiac.mech.utsunomiya-u.ac.jp>The FreeBSD boot block can now be used to boot FreeBSD on a system withonly a dumb terminal on a serial port as a console. This featureis provided for the benefit of people who wish to install FreeBSD ondedicated file/compute/terminal server machines that have no keyboard(or monitor) attached, just as is possible with Sun workstations andservers. People who don't need this extra functionality shouldn't noticethe changes at all (unless I've screwed something up horribly).To boot FreeBSD in serial console mode, you must do the following:- UNPLUG YOUR KEYBOARD. Most PC systems probe for the keyboard during the  Power-On Self-Test (POST) and will generate an error if the keyboard  isn't detected. Some BIOSes may be set to ignore this error.  Many other   machines will pause the boot process and wait for you to reattach the   keyboard and press a key before proceeding any further. Consult the manual  of your motherboard to see how it responds to the error and how to  set the BIOS to ignore the error. If your computer complains about   the lack of a keyboard but boots anyway, then you don't have to do   anything special. (One machine with a PHOENIX BIOS that I have here   merely says 'Keyboard failed' then continues to boot normally.) If your   machine complains loudly about the lack of a keyboard and won't continue   to boot until you plug it back in, you'll have to go into your CMOS   configuration menu and change the 'Keyboard' setting to 'Not installed'   in order to bypass the keyboard probe.  NOTE #1:  Setting the keyboard to 'Not installed' in the CMOS configuration  does *NOT* mean that you won't be able to use your keyboard. All this   does is tell the BIOS not to probe for a keyboard at power-on so that  it won't bitch and moan if the keyboard isn't plugged in. You can leave the  keyboard plugged in even with this flag set to 'Not installed' and the  keyboard will still work. I repeat: changing the CMOS 'keyboard' setting  to 'Not installed' only disables the BIOS's keyboard probe; it does   *NOT* actually disable the keyboard.  NOTE #2:  If your system has a PS/2 mouse, chances are very good that you will  need to unplug your mouse as well as your keyboard. This is because  PS/2 mice share some hardware with the keyboard, and leaving the mouse  plugged in can fool the keyboard probe into thinking the keyboard is  still there. I have access to a Gateway 2000 Pentium 90Mhz system with  an AMI BIOS that behaves this way. In general this is not a problem  since the mouse isn't much good without the keyboard anyway.- PLUG A DUMB TERMINAL INTO COM1. If you don't have a dumb terminal, you  can use an old PC/XT with a modem program, or the serial port on  another UNIX box. If you don't have a COM1, get one. At this time,  there is no way to select a port other than COM1 for the boot blocks  without recompiling the boot blocks. If you're already using COM1 for  another device, you'll have to temporarily remove that device and  install a new boot block and kernel once you get FreeBSD up and running.  (It is assumed that COM1 will be available on a file/compute/terminal  server anyway; if you really need COM1 for something else (and you can't  switch that something else to COM2), then you probably shouldn't even  be bothering with all this in the first place.)  NOTE #1:  The serial port settings are hardcoded to 9600 baud, 8 bits, no parity,  1 stop bit, by default. If you wish to change the speed, you need to   recompile the boot blocks and the kernel.  Add the following line to  /etc/make.conf and compile new boot blocks:	BOOT_COMCONSOLE_SPEED=115200  Then add the following option to the kernel configuration file and   compile a new kernel:        options	CONSPEED=115200  NOTE #2:  In addition to a serial cable, you will need a null modem adapter  in order to connect the terminal to the PC's serial port. If you don't  have one, go to Radio Shack and buy one: they're cheap.  NOTE #3:  If you wish to drop into the kernel debugger from the serial console  (useful for remote diagnostics, but also dangerous if you generate a  spurious BREAK on the serial port!) then you should compile your kernel  with the following options:	options BREAK_TO_DEBUGGER	options DDB- CREATE THE FILE "boot.config" IN THE ROOT DIRECTORY of the `a' partition  on the boot drive.  Put the kernel name and options in one line.   The  kernel name is optional.  Options are subset of those described in boot(8):   -h	toggle internal and serial consoles. You can use this to switch 	console devices. For instance, if you boot from the VGA console, 	you can use -h to force the kernel to use the serial port as its 	console device. Alternatively, if you boot from the serial port, 	you can use the -h to force the kernel to use the VGA display 	as the console instead. (Can you say 'toggle' boys and girls?   	I knew you could. :)  -D	toggle single and dual console configurations. In the single	configuration the console will be either the VGA display (internal 	console) or the serial port, depending on the state of the -h option	above. In the dual console configuration, both the VGA display 	and the serial port will become the console at the same time, 	regardless of the state of the -h option.	However, the dual console configuration takes effect only during	the boot prompt. Once the kernel is loaded, the console specified 	by the -h option becomes the only console.  -P	probe the keyboard. If no keyboard is found, the -D and -h options	are automatically set.  Use either the -P option to select the console automatically, or the -h  option to force the serial console.  NOTE #1:  If you want to force the kernel to use the serial console regardless  of the state of the -h option above, compile your kernel with the  following option:	options COMCONSOLE- BOOT THE MACHINE. You'll see a prompt appear on the terminal that looks   something like this:  No keyboard found  >> FreeBSD BOOT @ 0x10000: 640/7168 k of memory, serial console  Boot default: 0:wd(0,a)kernel  boot:  This is identical to the prompt that normally appears on the VGA console,  except for the 'No keyboard found' message that indicates a keyboard  couldn't be detected, if the -P option is in `boot.config'.   From here you can boot the system (or let it autoboot by itself) just  like you can from the VGA console and the kernel will automatically  use COM1 as the console device. This is done by passing a special flag   to the kernel in the 'boothowto' word. (The curious can refer to   <sys/reboot.h> and the sio driver sources for details.)CAVEATS:- The idea here is to allow people to set up dedicated servers that require  no graphics hardware or attached keyboards. Unfortunately, while (most?)  every system will let you boot without a keyboard, there are quite a few  that will not let you boot without a graphics adapter. Machines with  AMI BIOSes can be configured to boot with no graphics adapter installed  simply by changing the 'graphics adapter' setting in the CMOS configuration  to 'Not installed.' However, many machines do not support this option  and will refuse to boot if you have no display hardware in the system. With  these machines, you'll have to leave some kind of graphics card plugged in,  (even if it's just a junky mono board) although you won't have to attach  a monitor into it. You might also try installing an AMI BIOS. :)- Using a port other than COM1 as the console requires some recompiling.  Again, it's usually assumed that COM1 will be available for use as a  console device on a dedicated file/compute/terminal server, so hopefully  you'll never need to do this. But if you feel you must change the console  to a different port, here's how:	o Get the kernel source package.	o Edit /etc/make.conf and set BOOT_COMCONSOLE_PORT to the	  address of the port you want to use (0x3F8, 0x2F8, 0x3E8 or	  0x2E8). Only COM1 through COM4 can be used; multiport serial	  cards will not work. No interrupt setting is needed.	o Create a custom kernel configuration file and add appropriate	  options. For example, if you want to make COM2 the console:	  options "CONUNIT=1"	  options "CONADDR=0x2F8"	o Recompile both the boot blocks and the kernel.	o Install the boot blocks with the disklabel command and boot	  from the new kernel.$FreeBSD: src/sys/pc98/boot/biosboot/README.serial,v 1.1.1.1.2.2 1999/09/05 08:20:03 peter Exp $

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