Perhaps you could clarify this question a bit.
Why would minicom care what interrupt is being used? It communicates to a
/dev entry (I think the default is /dev/modem, which is normally a symlink
to the real modem dev), not directly to the modem/serial port hardware. It's
been several years since I used a non-standard interrupt, but Iseem to
recall using minicom to test modem ports on a multiport card that used INT 12.
Assuming you have a /dev/ttyS* entry for the IRQ/IOPort pair you use (and
for that you invoke mknod &/or setserial, not minicom), you should be set.
If not, why not tell us what problem you're experiencing in a bit more detail?
At 04:54 PM 1/21/99 -4, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>I wonder if anyone knows if there is a terminal program for linux that is
>capable of using double digit irq's. The version of Minicom that I have
>appears to not be able to do this. I use IRQ 10 for all my port and can't
>find an appropriate terminal program to do the job.
------------------------------------"Never tell me the odds!"---
Ray Olszewski -- Han Solo
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