[ale] lurkers beware - thar be dragons and ancient IT nightmares here; OT - was - Connecting to r-pi
Jim Kinney
jim.kinney at gmail.com
Fri Oct 26 16:51:12 EDT 2018
That should do it :-)
On Fri, 2018-10-26 at 16:39 -0400, DJ-Pfulio via Ale wrote:
> Any chance that someone would change the subject, so lurkers seeking
> help withtheir raspberry pis don't get confused?
>
> On 10/26/18 11:56 AM, Scott Plante via Ale wrote:
> Actually, lack of good flow control was what inspired me to really
> learn vireally well. I used to program all the time on a dumb
> terminal connected to aUnix box, and if you just held down an arrow
> key to get midway across thescreen, the whole session would become
> jumbled and you'd have to refresh. So Ilearned all the obscure vi
> keys to move around the screen and file instead ofarrow/page keys.
> Once internalized, it made me much more efficient even after Ihad a
> reliable terminal connection or full desktop.
> Scott
> -------------------------------------------------------------------
> -------------*From: *"Jim Kinney" <jim.kinney at gmail.com>*To: *"Chris
> Fowler" <cfowler at outpostsentinel.com>, "Atlanta Linux Enthusiasts"<
> ale at ale.org>, "Chris Fowler via Ale" <ale at ale.org>, "Scott Plante"<
> splante at insightsys.com>*Sent: *Thursday, October 25, 2018 8:12:39
> PM*Subject: *Re: [ale] Connecting to r-pi
> Alcohol cures all flow control memories. I have no idea what you just
> said :-)
> Had to calculate and test timings in early grad school. Signal
> propogation timein wire plus time in detection circuits plus time to
> trigger action on detectionplus actual signal length, etc. Now add in
> the blasted data collection systemwas getting data from multiple
> sources with different timings, yeah. Fun stuff.
> On October 25, 2018 6:26:55 PM EDT, Chris Fowler via Ale <ale at ale.org
> > wrote:
>
>
> -----------------------------------------------------------------
> ---------------
> *From: *"Scott Plante via Ale" <ale at ale.org> *To:
> *"Alex Carver" <agcarver+ale at acarver.net>, "Atlanta
> Linux Enthusiasts" <ale at ale.org> *Sent: *Wednesday,
> October 24, 2018 4:03:34 PM *Subject: *Re: [ale] Connecting to
> r-pi
> If you're inclined to believe Wikipedia, the early teletypes
> would actually perform a carriage return to the left and line
> feed the paper up one row on a LF, but the CR was necessary
> because of timing--it took longer than the gap between
> characters to physically return the print head so they added
> the CR to allow enough time. Apparently they sometimes had to
> add NULs as well. Even some CRT terminals took too long to
> scroll all the text up. Apparently they didn't have flow control
> back then.
> Very small buffers. Very small. I had a similar problem
> automating Nortel Merdian PBX over its console. I wrapped up the
> expect send into a function that put a pause between each
> character. I basically automated the PBX and had to also simulate
> a person typing in the commands. If not, the PBX missed
> characters I had sent. If a T1/PRI failed the program would try
> to bring up and check. If it was still in alarm it would report
> the alarm and create the ticket.
>
> I used to have a TRS-80 and a "Gorilla Banana" printer. I
> could never get the flow control to work with it, and had to
> write a program to print stuff. It would manually pause a
> fraction of a second after each line before sending the next
> one to the port. Those were the days! ha ha
> I was hoping I would never hear about flow control and serial
> printers ever again. And here you are...
> XON/XOFF flow control is software and does have a tendancy to not
> work well with small buffer serial printers.
> Hardware could be either DTS/DSR or CTS/RTS flow on the
> printer. Using that would have made it work better. The problem
> is that you need to know what flow the printer supports or you
> need to set the DIP switches to the flow you want.
> My Okidata days are 20 years behind me. :)
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--
James P. Kinney III
Every time you stop a school, you will have to build a jail. What you
gain at one end you lose at the other. It's like feeding a dog on his
own tail. It won't fatten the dog.
- Speech 11/23/1900 Mark Twain
http://heretothereideas.blogspot.com/
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