Due to work needs, I often need to log on to the vro. So I looked for it under Ubuntu. Fortunately, the usb-to-serial line on my laptop was identified without a driver. Unexpectedly, haha. If you use the con port to log on to the vrousb, you need a usb-to-serial line. In Ubuntu, it is identified as/dev/ttyUSB0. You can use the command dmesg | tail to view the port. Install the gtkterm software and set the device port to be recognized in the port:/dev/ttyUSB0. The default value is OK. Just
Due to work needs, I often need to log on to the vro. So I looked for it under Ubuntu. Fortunately, the usb-to-serial line on my laptop was identified without a driver. Unexpectedly, haha.
If you use the con port to log on to the vrousb, you need a usb-to-serial line. In Ubuntu, it is identified as/dev/ttyUSB0. You can use the command dmesg | tail to view the port.
Install the gtkterm software and set the device port to/dev/ttyUSB0.
Others are OK by default, which is very convenient.
There is a small problem. When saving the log records, the block garbled characters are displayed at the end of -- more, but this has little impact and is also too lazy to manage.
If you use telnet to log on to the vrotelnet, you can use a terminal. If you want to be lazy, install Qterm to save the device's login connection, which is convenient, the only pity is that there is no option to record the operation log and it is not found on the Internet. It seems that you only need to manually copy and paste it.
At present, in addition to the OA Office System, Ubuntu can finally soar, haha.