Date: Mon, 3 Sep 2012 16:52:13 +0400 From: Peter Vereshagin <peter@vereshagin.org> To: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org Subject: Re: Sharing COM ports to Windows hosts Message-ID: <20120903125210.GA5387@external.screwed.box> In-Reply-To: <20120903072920.GB92658@admin.sibptus.tomsk.ru> References: <20120903030217.GA79339@admin.sibptus.tomsk.ru> <86wr0binyc.fsf@srvbsdfenssv.interne.associated-bears.org> <20120903072920.GB92658@admin.sibptus.tomsk.ru>
next in thread | previous in thread | raw e-mail | index | archive | help
Hello. 2012/09/03 14:29:20 +0700 Victor Sudakov <vas@mpeks.tomsk.su> => To freebsd-questions@freebsd.org : VS> > > There is a FreeBSD box with several RS232 ports. Can those ports be VS> > > accessed by Windows hosts over the network? Actually, does anyone VS> > > have a success story for such a scenario? VS> At least it has an example of an RFC 2217 client (COM port to TCP VS> redirector) in its README file. Thanks again, will look at it. >From what I remember the os/2 smb protocol implementation could share COM ports as easily as LPT ports for printers. I can't remind though if this was for 'printer-only' purposes e. g. output-only, supplied with a mandatory queueing facilities, etc., or not. Who knows if modern smb protocol implementations could do this, too. Depending on a task I think the most interactive user-friendly solution here is a minicom(s) each in its own ssh'ed jail(s). -- Peter Vereshagin <peter@vereshagin.org> (http://vereshagin.org) pgp: A0E26627
Want to link to this message? Use this URL: <https://mail-archive.FreeBSD.org/cgi/mid.cgi?20120903125210.GA5387>