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1. Introduction

This HOWTO covers basic info on the Serial Port and multiport serial cards. Information specific to modems and text-terminals has been moved to Modem-HOWTO and Text-Terminal-HOWTO. Info on getty (the program that runs the login process or the like) has been also moved to these HOWTOs since mgetty and uugetty are best for modems while agetty is best for text-terminals. If you are dealing with a modem, text terminal, or printer, then you may not need to consult this HOWTO. But if you are using the serial port for some other device, using a multiport serial card, trouble-shooting the serial port itself, or want to understand more technical details of the serial port, then you may want to use this HOWTO as well as some of the other HOWTOs. (See Related HOWTO's) This HOWTO lists info on various multiport serial cards since they may be used for either modems or text-terminals. This HOWTO addresses Linux running on PCs (ISA or PCI buses), although it might be valid for other architectures.

1.1 Copyright, Disclaimer, & Credits

Copyright

Copyright (c) 1993-1997 by Greg Hankins, (c) 1998-2001 by David S. Lawyer mailto:dave@lafn.org

Please freely copy and distribute (sell or give away) this document in any format. Send any corrections and comments to the document maintainer. You may create a derivative work and distribute it provided that you:

  1. If it's not a translation: Email a copy of your derivative work (in a format LDP accepts) to the author(s) and maintainer (could be the same person). If you don't get a response then email the LDP (Linux Documentation Project): submit@linuxdoc.org.
  2. License the derivative work in the spirit of this license or use GPL. Include a copyright notice and at least a pointer to the license used.
  3. Give due credit to previous authors and major contributors.

If you're considering making a derived work other than a translation, it's requested that you discuss your plans with the current maintainer.

Disclaimer

While I haven't intentionally tried to mislead you, there are likely a number of errors in this document. Please let me know about them. Since this is free documentation, it should be obvious that I cannot be held legally responsible for any errors.

Trademarks.

Any brand names (starts with a capital letter) should be assumed to be a trademark). Such trademarks belong to their respective owners.

Credits

Most of the original Serial-HOWTO was written by Greg Hankins. mailto:gregh@twoguys.org He also rewrote many contributions by others in order to maintain continuity in the writing style and flow. He wrote: ``Thanks to everyone who has contributed or commented, the list of people has gotten too long to list (somewhere over one hundred). Special thanks to Ted Ts'o for answering questions about the serial drivers.'' Approximately half of v2.00 was from Greg Hankins HOWTO and the other half is by David Lawyer. Ted Ts'o has continued to be helpful.

1.2 New Versions of this Serial-HOWTO

New versions of the Serial-HOWTO will be available to browse and/or download at LDP mirror sites. For a list of mirror sites see: http://metalab.unc.edu/LDP/mirrors.html. Various formats are available. If you only want to quickly check the date of the latest version look at http://www.linuxdoc.org/HOWTO/Serial-HOWTO.html and compare it to this version: v2.13 August 2001 . New in recent versions:
v.2.13 August 2001: fixed typos: done->down and "is is", USRT chip, synchronous defined better v2.12 July 2001: serial printing under LPRng
v2.11 May 2001: stty 0 => hangup (was ok in v2.08. ) v2.10 EIA-485, frame errors on networks, gkermit, firewire

1.3 Related HOWTO's re the Serial Port

Modems, Text-Terminals, some printers, and other peripherals often use the serial port. Get these HOWTOs from the nearest mirror site as explained above.

1.4 Feedback

Please send me any questions, comments, suggestions, or additional material. I'm always eager to hear about what you think about this HOWTO. I'm also always on the lookout for improvements! Tell me exactly what you don't understand, or what could be clearer. You can reach me via email at mailto:dave@lafn.org (David Lawyer).

1.5 What is a Serial Port?

The conventional serial port (not the newer USB port, or HSSI port) is a very old I/O port. Almost all PC's have them. But Macs (Apple Computer) after mid 1998 (with colored cases) only have the USB port. It's possible, however, to put a conventional serial port device on the USB.

The common specification for the conventional serial port is RS-232 (or EIA-232). The connector for the serial port is often seen as one or two 9-pin connectors (in some cases 25-pin) on the back of a PC. But the serial port is more than just that. It includes the associated electronics which must produce signals conforming to the EIA-232 specification. See Voltage Waveshapes. One pin is used to send out data bytes and another to receive data bytes. Another pin is a common signal ground. The other "useful" pins are used mainly for signalling purposes with a steady negative voltage meaning "off" and a steady positive voltage meaning "on".

The UART (Universal Asynchronous Receiver-Transmitter) chip does most of the work. Today, the functionality of this chip is usually built into another chip. See What Are UARTs? These have improved over time and old models (several years old) are now obsolete.

The serial port was originally designed for connecting modems but it's used to connect many other devices also such as mice, text-terminals, some printers, etc. to a computer. You just plug these devices into the serial port using the correct cable. Many internal modem cards have a built-in serial port so when you install one inside your PC it's as if you just installed another serial port in your PC.


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