Mirror of CollapseOS
選択できるのは25トピックまでです。 トピックは、先頭が英数字で、英数字とダッシュ('-')を使用した35文字以内のものにしてください。
Virgil Dupras 0d172cc2c4 tools: add smsrom 3年前
..
.gitignore tools: add smsrom 3年前
Makefile tools: add smsrom 3年前
README.md tools: improve stty-related advices in README 3年前
blkpack.c tools/blkpack: support multiple dirname arguments 3年前
blkunpack.c blkunpack: don't include trailing empty lines 4年前
blkup.c tools: improve usability on OpenBSD 3年前
common.c tools: improve reliability of ttyopen() 3年前
common.h Add arduinouno/at28 recipe 3年前
exec.c tools/exec: exec specified file instead of hardcoding on stdin 3年前
memdump.c tools: improve usability on OpenBSD 3年前
pingpong.c Add arduinouno/at28 recipe 3年前
smsrom.c tools: add smsrom 3年前
ttysafe.c Reverse ttysafe escaping order 4年前
upload.c tools/upload: use A! instead of C! to write 3年前

README.md

Tools

This folder contains tools to communicate to Collapse OS machines from a modern environment or to manipulate a blkfs.

Communication tools all take a device path as a first argument. That device is the serial device that connects you to your machine. It's often a USB-to-TTL dongle. When - is specified, stdin is used as the device.

Note that for these tools to work well, you need the serial device to be properly set up, TTY-wise. You'll probably want to do that with stty. The tool itself takes care of setting the regular stuff (cs8, -parenb, etc), but you need to set the speed. Here's an example working on OpenBSD:

$ ( stty 115200 raw ; sleep 2 ; ./upload - a000 os.bin ) <> /dev/cuaU0

To be honest, I'm having a bit of troubles making these tools work as well on OpenBSD as they do in Linux. But it does work. Here are some advices:

  • Use cuaXX instead of ttyXX.
  • Run cu -l /dev/cuaXX before running your tool and run a dummy command to make sure that the output buffer is flushed.
  • Use the “raw” option to avoid TTY-processing options to mess with data.
  • If you experience random failures in your command, try inserting a “sleep 2” between your “stty” invocation and the command. In my experience, these tend to help.

On Linux, it's generally easier:

  • Run screen on the device (often /dev/ttyUSBX)
  • Quit with CTRL+A :quit
  • Run the tool on the same device