ftp.nice.ch/peanuts/GeneralData/Usenet/news/1989/CSN-89.tar.gz#/comp-sys-next/1989/Aug/Problems-at-1200-Baud...

This is Problems-at-1200-Baud... in view mode; [Up]


Date: Sun 03-Aug-1989 04:13:00 From: Unknown Subject: Problems at 1200 Baud... Hi there,, I'm hoping someone out there can help with an irritating problem thats forcing me to use my next serial ports at 300 baud. I have a usrobotics 1200/300 baud courier modem. I have used it for at least a year with a dumb terminal and it works fine. I've now got it connected to the NeXT. The problem is that when I try establish a serial connection out of /dev/cua using it, I get random garbage instead of output from the computer. The link establishes fine, and echoes my (slowly typed) characters just fine, but seems to drop chars when anything of any magnitude (like a login message (I'm not kidding)) is printed. If i dial up at 300 baud then everything works 95% fine. (ie only occasionally dropped chars). This is with cu/tip. What am I doing wrong here? I notice the defaults in /etc/remote assume hayes modems. Is this a critical factor. I know my cabling should be ok, i'm using a mac cable that works perfectly from the mac. just tested it. The parity/etc should be ok cause the modem works fine with my regular old ascii terminal. and it works fine at 300 baud. But at 1200 baud the world goes to pieces. HELP!! any suggestions gratefully appreciated... Simon Kaplan University of Illinois Computer Science kaplan@cs.uiuc.edu uunet!uiucdcs!kaplan >From: rokicki@polya.Stanford.EDU (Tomas G. Rokicki)
Date: Sun 04-Aug-1989 00:07:14 From: Unknown Subject: Re: Problems at 1200 Baud... In article <61300013@m.cs.uiuc.edu>, kaplan@m.cs.uiuc.edu writes: > The problem is that when I try establish a serial connection > seems to drop chars when anything of any magnitude (like a login message For the other datapoint, I'm running a 9600 baud serial line between a NeXT and an Amiga very happily, although I wish I could go to 38,400 on the cube. -tom >From: jpd00964@uxa.cso.uiuc.edu

These are the contents of the former NiCE NeXT User Group NeXTSTEP/OpenStep software archive, currently hosted by Marcel Waldvogel and Netfuture.ch.