Enable Serial Console on Boot: Difference between revisions
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Notice, if you want to use this for a Xen VM, | Notice, if you want to use this for a Xen VM, | ||
you need to configure the speed at '''115200''' bps and enable the | you need to configure the speed at '''115200''' bps and enable the | ||
<pre>serial="pty" | <pre>serial="pty"</pre> | ||
setting in the VM config file. | |||
---- | |||
Xen can be configured to use and log to a serial console by editing /etc/update-extlinux.conf to include the following lines: | |||
<pre> | |||
default_kernel_opts="console=hvc0 earlyprintk=xen nomodeset" | |||
xen_opts="dom0_mem=256M com1=115200,8n1 console=com1" | |||
</pre> | </pre> | ||
See the [http://wiki.xen.org/wiki/Xen_Serial_Console Xen wiki] for more details. | |||
=== Example /boot/extlinux.conf === | === Example /boot/extlinux.conf === |
Revision as of 06:23, 11 November 2015
How to Enable the Serial Console on Boot (1.10.x)
When using syslinux to boot, you'll need to modify the syslinux.cfg file in the root directory of the boot device. If using a disk-based Alpine, modify the /boot/extlinux.cfg file.
Add the following:
- serial 0 9600
- add console=ttyS0,9600 to the append parameter
- optionally, remove quiet from the append parameter
Example syslinux.cfg
serial 0 9600 timeout 20 prompt 1 default grsec label grsec kernel /boot/grsec append initrd=/boot/grsec.gz alpine_dev=sda1:vfat modules=sd-mod,usb-storage console=ttyS0,9600
extlinux.conf (3.0+)
The /etc/update-extlinux.conf is read by the update-extlinux utility.
To do so, change the default entry:
default_kernel_opts="quiet"
to read like this:
default_kernel_opts="console=ttys0,9600 quiet"
Set the serial port and baud rate to match the default_kernel_opts line above:
serial_port=0 serial_baud=9600
Xen
Notice, if you want to use this for a Xen VM, you need to configure the speed at 115200 bps and enable the
serial="pty"
setting in the VM config file.
Xen can be configured to use and log to a serial console by editing /etc/update-extlinux.conf to include the following lines:
default_kernel_opts="console=hvc0 earlyprintk=xen nomodeset" xen_opts="dom0_mem=256M com1=115200,8n1 console=com1"
See the Xen wiki for more details.
Example /boot/extlinux.conf
This is a complete file, written by the update-extlinux command.
DEFAULT menu.c32 PROMPT 0 MENU TITLE Alpine/Linux Boot Menu MENU AUTOBOOT Alpine will be booted automatically in # seconds. SERIAL 0 9600 TIMEOUT 100 LABEL grsec MENU DEFAULT MENU LABEL Linux 3.10.33-0-grsec LINUX vmlinuz-3.10.33-0-grsec INITRD initramfs-3.10.33-0-grsec APPEND root=UUID=re-mov-ed-uu-id modules=sd-mod,usb-storage,ext4 console=ttyS0,9600 MENU SEPARATOR
Please: adjust the tty speed to 115200 if needed (Xen!!).
The timeout is given in centiseconds, so this would be a 10 second timeout.
If the file is read by pygrub, the same value is interpreted as seconds, resulting in a 100s bootup delay per VM.
Enabling a login console
This is done in /etc/inittab. There is commented entry for ttyS0. Just enable it.
# Put a getty on the serial port ttyS0::respawn:/sbin/getty -L ttyS0 115200 vt100
I don't know how to restart init on Alpine, so I reboot. Probably there is a a rebootless way for this?