Thanks,
PW
If you open the master sides (/dev/ptyp2 etc.), they will be busied out.
You can do that with a very simple shell script that you could e.g. run
as an rc script. For example,
#!/bin/sh
# Busy out ports ttyp2, 3, 4, 5 because "un-supported dentist program"
# is allergic to them...
sleep 1000000000 < /dev/ptyp2 &
sleep 1000000000 < /dev/ptyp3 &
sleep 1000000000 < /dev/ptyp4 &
sleep 1000000000 < /dev/ptyp5 &
Save as /etc/rc2.d/S99pty-hold or something like that.
You can save a few processes if you wish (but this gets messy if you
want to busy out dozens of ports):
cd /dev
sleep 1000000000 2<ptyp2 3<ptyp3 4<ptyp4 5<ptyp5 &
# Note that shell syntax allows redirecting fd's 0-9, no higher: 10<
# does not work.
>Bela<
I'd look at the permissions & ownership of the master & slave devices
associated with those.
But in any case, sure, to busy them out just open the master side:
cd /dev && sleep 1000000000 <ptyp2 1<ptyp3 2<ptyp4 3<ptyp5 &
John
--
John DuBois spc...@armory.com KC6QKZ/AE http://www.armory.com/~spcecdt/
Thanks, that's just what the doctor ordered!!!
PW