1 The SA1100 serial port had its major/minor numbers officially assigned:
3 > Date: Sun, 24 Sep 2000 21:40:27 -0700
4 > From: H. Peter Anvin <hpa@transmeta.com>
5 > To: Nicolas Pitre <nico@CAM.ORG>
6 > Cc: Device List Maintainer <device@lanana.org>
9 > Okay. Note that device numbers 204 and 205 are used for "low density
10 > serial devices", so you will have a range of minors on those majors (the
11 > tty device layer handles this just fine, so you don't have to worry about
12 > doing anything special.)
14 > So your assignments are:
16 > 204 char Low-density serial ports
17 > 5 = /dev/ttySA0 SA1100 builtin serial port 0
18 > 6 = /dev/ttySA1 SA1100 builtin serial port 1
19 > 7 = /dev/ttySA2 SA1100 builtin serial port 2
21 > 205 char Low-density serial ports (alternate device)
22 > 5 = /dev/cusa0 Callout device for ttySA0
23 > 6 = /dev/cusa1 Callout device for ttySA1
24 > 7 = /dev/cusa2 Callout device for ttySA2
27 If you're not using devfs, you must create those inodes in /dev
28 on the root filesystem used by your SA1100-based device:
37 In addition to the creation of the appropriate device nodes above, you
38 must ensure your user space applications make use of the correct device
39 name. The classic example is the content of the /etc/inittab file where
40 you might have a getty process started on ttyS0. In this case:
42 - replace occurrences of ttyS0 with ttySA0, ttyS1 with ttySA1, etc.
44 - don't forget to add 'ttySA0', 'console', or the appropriate tty name
45 in /etc/securetty for root to be allowed to login as well.