RPi Serial Connection
Back to RPi Advanced Setup.
The Serial Port is a low-level way to connect to the Raspberry Pi. The communication depends on byte wise data transmission and is generally available even before boot time.
First interaction with the board
Note that the Raspberry has no PREBUILT COM port. Soldering/protoyping and technical knowledge is required !
(It's on the GPIOs but you need a board or cable to convert 3.3V UART signals to RS-232 or USB).
Connect the serial cable to your COM circuitry , and connect the other end to the COM port or USB Serial Adapter in the computer.
(Place link to HowTo here)
You may also use a USB to Serial Adaptor as second option.
What about USB debugging (KBD) ?
Serial Parameters
The following parameters are needed to connect to the Raspberry. All parameters except Port_Name and Speed are default values and may not need to be set.
- Port_Name: Linux automatically assigns different names for different types of serial connectors. Choose your option:
- Standard Serial Port: ttyS0 ... ttySn
- USB Serial Port Adapter: ttyUSB0 ... ttyUSBn
- Speed: 115200
- Bits: 8
- Parity: None
- Stop Bits: 1
- Flow Control: None
The Serial Port is generally usable by the users in the group dialout. To add oneself to the group dialout the the following command needs to be executed with root privileges:
$useradd -G {dialout} your_name
- Super Easy Way Using GNU Screen
Enter the command below into a terminal window
screen Port_Name 115200
- Super Easy Way Using Minicom
Run minicom with the following parameters:
minicom -b 115200 -o -D Port_Name
- Tedious Old-Fashioned Way Using Minicom
Another method to setup minicom is described in the Tincantools Minicom Tutorial
- GUI method with GtkTerm
Start GtkTerm, select Configuration->Port and enter the values above in the labeled fields.
- Windows Users
Windows Users above Windows XP must download putty or a comparable terminal program. Users of XP and below can choose between using putty and Hyperterminal.
First Dialog
If you get the prompt below, you are connected to the Raspberry Pi shell!
prompt> #
First command you might want try is "help":
prompt> # help
If you get some output, you are correctly connected to the Raspberry Pi! Congratulations!
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