Hello,
Please find below an interesting trick to work around the fact that Wine / CrossOver is not capable to handle the RS232 or COM ports properly:
the idea is to use Tera Term Pro to connect to a network 'localhost' telnet session (instead of a RS232 serial port) which in turn starts (via inetd)
the Linux application 'microcom' (instead of the expected shell) to finally pipe the Tera Term Pro data connection into the desired RS232 port.
This sounds like a quite complicated way but Linux can handle such a setup very efficiently.
The only draw back is that it is not possible to change the COM parameters from within Tera Term Pro. So this setup can be achieved by:
1) adding the following line to the inetd config file '/etc/inetd.conf':
'2323 stream tcp nowait root /bin/busybox telnetd -i -p 2323 -l /usr/bin/ttpro'
Please note that since the busybox telnet daemon is used there no need to enter any credentials.
2) and create the shell script '/usr/bin/ttpro' which in turn starts microcom with the desired RS232 communication parameters
(in this example 115200 Bauds and the port /dev/ttyUSB0)
'microcom -s 115200 -p /dev/ttyUSB0'
3) Finally after restarting inetd by '/etc/init.d/inetd restart', it is just necessary to launch Tera Term Pro and open a telnet connection
to the host 'localhost' and port '2323' which practically connects automatically to the port ttyUSB0 at a speed of 115200 Bauds.
In all cases this is only a work around and a native Linux version of Tera Term Pro would be a much better deal.
I tested this setup on Knoppix 7.0.5 but it should work the same way on most Linux distributions.
I hope this is helpful. Please provide some feedback.
Best Regards,
Gilles
cf: http://logmett.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=6&t=2470
Please find below an interesting trick to work around the fact that Wine / CrossOver is not capable to handle the RS232 or COM ports properly:
the idea is to use Tera Term Pro to connect to a network 'localhost' telnet session (instead of a RS232 serial port) which in turn starts (via inetd)
the Linux application 'microcom' (instead of the expected shell) to finally pipe the Tera Term Pro data connection into the desired RS232 port.
This sounds like a quite complicated way but Linux can handle such a setup very efficiently.
The only draw back is that it is not possible to change the COM parameters from within Tera Term Pro. So this setup can be achieved by:
1) adding the following line to the inetd config file '/etc/inetd.conf':
'2323 stream tcp nowait root /bin/busybox telnetd -i -p 2323 -l /usr/bin/ttpro'
Please note that since the busybox telnet daemon is used there no need to enter any credentials.
2) and create the shell script '/usr/bin/ttpro' which in turn starts microcom with the desired RS232 communication parameters
(in this example 115200 Bauds and the port /dev/ttyUSB0)
'microcom -s 115200 -p /dev/ttyUSB0'
3) Finally after restarting inetd by '/etc/init.d/inetd restart', it is just necessary to launch Tera Term Pro and open a telnet connection
to the host 'localhost' and port '2323' which practically connects automatically to the port ttyUSB0 at a speed of 115200 Bauds.
In all cases this is only a work around and a native Linux version of Tera Term Pro would be a much better deal.
I tested this setup on Knoppix 7.0.5 but it should work the same way on most Linux distributions.
I hope this is helpful. Please provide some feedback.
Best Regards,
Gilles
cf: http://logmett.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=6&t=2470
Crossover Mac Serial Port Numbers
Crossover Mac Serial Port Terminal
CrossOver can't connect directly to hardware ports or devices on your computer. This can cause problems if the Windows program you're trying to use needs to communicate with a USB device. A potential workaround is to manually map a device entry from the native OS to a symlink in the bottle containing your Windows app, and then hope that the Windows app sees the COM port and can use it to connect to the device.
The first thing you need to do is discover which /dev entry is being created when you connect the USB device to the computer. Disconnect the device from your computer and run the following commands in a Terminal:
Connect the device, wait a moment for your computer to recognize it, and run the command:
Now compare the difference between the two file listings to see what /dev entry was created.
If there is a new device entry listed use that name as (device-entry) in the following steps.
Mac OS:
Linux:
With luck your Windows program should now be able to use COM1 to access the USB device.
Please remember that we don't officially support any programs that use serial ports. If you're still having trouble getting your application to work we may be able to do custom programming for your application to get it connected. Contact [email protected] for more information and mention that you've already tried these steps.
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