Silly me. On Debian systems (and on my Gentoo system) you can just do this: ls -l /dev/serial/by-id This directory has a file whose name is the ID string of each serial device , linkte to the tty filename. With this approach you do not need to unplug and re-plug your cable.
On Wed, Apr 3, 2019 at 9:51 PM Dan Clemmensen danclemmensen@gmail.com wrote:
I'm a bit surprised that it's /dev/ttyACM0. on my (non-Debian) Linux, that would be assigned to a modem a fake modem such as an OTG-connect3d phone or something like that. Check this by first unplugging the cable from the comouter and then doing: ls /dev/tty* Then plug the cable back into the computer and repeat the command. a new device should have appeared. That's the device for your cable. on my computer, USB serial dongles get addresses like /dev/ttyUSB0
On Wed, Apr 3, 2019 at 9:35 PM Dennis Carr dennisthetiger@chez-vrolet.net wrote:
Howdy!
Running a Yaesu Ft-70DR that just arrived today. First thing's first: download to Chirp! Running daily 20190221 on Debian current stable, using the builds from the website.
Just one problem - it didn't download.
After following instructions (battery off, DC and USB in (specifically the USB cable that came with), hold AMS key while powering on, select Download option, set the right options (/dev/ttyACM0, Yaesu FT-70D)), hit the BAND button so it says TX, and...
...no activity. It times out, radio shows ERROR.
Long and short, I'm not sure if I'm doing something wrong here. So in short:
- What am I missing?
- What other information is needed from me to properly answer?
-Dennis KE7KIF
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