Re: Speaker twiddling [was: Re: Panicking in morse code]

From: Andrew Rodland (arodland@noln.com)
Date: Sat Jul 27 2002 - 10:45:09 EST


On Sat, 27 Jul 2002 07:57:42 -0500
"David D. Hagood" <wowbagger@sktc.net> wrote:

> I don't understand the direction this discussion is taking.
>
> Either you are trying to output the panic information with minimal
> hardware, and in a form a human might be able to decode, in which case
> the Morse option seems to me to be the best, or you are trying to
> panic in a machine readable format - in which case just dump the data
> out /dev/ttyS0 and be done with it!
>
> To my way of thinking, the idea of the Morse option is that if an oops
>
> happens when you are not expecting it, and you haven't set up any
> equipment to help you, you still have a shot at getting the data.

To my way of thinking, this is still 'minimal' -- it's just a different
minimum.

It's the 'minimum' way to get the panic message out digitally, in such
a way that I might be able to recover it using a tape recorder or a
telephone. Actually, morse is probably that, but morse loses data and
doesn't have any redundancy.

And with a setup pretty similar to what acalahan posted, It can be
written with a minimum of complexity (maybe less than morse) and
hardware (still just pc speaker).

Anyway, I don't expect for other people to use most of what I'm going
to be playing with with this, and my (disconnected) vacation next week
provides the perfect opportunity for me to play with it all I want
without bothering the list. And I've got some mighty interesting ideas
now.

Thanks
--hobbs
-
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in
the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org
More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/



This archive was generated by hypermail 2b29 : Tue Jul 30 2002 - 14:00:26 EST