Date: Sun, 7 Jul 1996 09:35:05 +0200 (MET DST) From: grog@lemis.de (Greg Lehey) To: skrishna@cisco.com (Sridhar Krishnan) Cc: questions@freebsd.org (FreeBSD Questions) Subject: Re: FreeBSD 2.1 Help Message-ID: <199607070735.JAA15158@allegro.lemis.de> In-Reply-To: <Pine.HPP.3.91.960706140634.13790A-100000@lint.cisco.com> from "Sridhar Krishnan" at Jul 6, 96 02:15:21 pm
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Sridhar Krishnan writes:
>
>
> Thanks taking the time to respond.
>
> 1. cu -l cuaa0
> says "connected". Then when I type "ATDTE1Q0", I am expecting "OK".
> Nothing happens. When I quit out with ~. it takes a minute to disconnect.
This looks familiar. It's really a bug of sorts in cu. From another
window (or virtual terminal), do:
# stty -f /dev/cuaa0 -a
speed 9600 baud; 0 rows; 0 columns;
lflags: -icanon -isig -iexten -echo -echoe -echok -echoke -echonl
-echoctl -echoprt -altwerase -noflsh -tostop -flusho -pendin
-nokerninfo -extproc
iflags: -istrip -icrnl -inlcr -igncr -ixon -ixoff -ixany -imaxbel -ignbrk
-brkint -inpck -ignpar -parmrk
oflags: -opost -onlcr -oxtabs
cflags: cread cs8 -parenb -parodd hupcl -clocal -cstopb -crtscts -dsrflow
*******
-dtrflow -mdmbuf
cchars: discard = ^O; dsusp = ^Y; eof = ^D; eol = <undef>;
eol2 = <undef>; erase = ^?; intr = ^C; kill = ^U; lnext = ^V;
min = 1; quit = ^\; reprint = ^R; start = ^Q; status = <undef>;
stop = ^S; susp = ^Z; time = 0; werase = ^W;
This shows the complete state of the line. You will probably find
-clocal (i.e. local communications reset, device waiting for an
incoming connection). Next enter:
# stty -f /dev/cuaa0 clocal
This sets clocal (in the display you see 'clocal' instead of
'-clocal'). After that, things should work.
> Yet another person aksed me disable PnP (plug and Play) option. I do not
> know how-to. I'll give it a try.
I very much doubt that that has anything to do with it. Does it have
a PnP option?
> 2. On fvwm, I am little confused. I start xdm as explained in the book
> (via init - ttys. Ofcourse I cannot use because a wm is already running.
I wouldn't have said 'of course'. If you have a window manager
running, you don't need another one. Check your .xinitrc file. Maybe
it already invokes a window manager. You can also enter:
$ ps aux | grep wm
root 15152 1.0 0.3 224 176 p5 S+ 9:33AM 0:00.03 grep wm
grog 201 0.0 0.8 384 520 co S Fri06PM 0:08.53 fvwm
You will probably see some other window manager, but it might be that
you already have fvwm.
> If I do startx, then whole bunch of X sessions start
That sounds like fvwm.
> but I am unable to bring up fvwm.
I wouldn't be so sure :-)
Greg
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