12/16/2023 0 Comments Using uxterm on usb in linux![]() ![]() You switch to another virtual console which has the linux kernel virtual terminal emulator running on it, which is very hard to remove and requires recompiling the kernel with nonstandard options. This is actually very hard to pull off because Say I've accidentally uninstalled every terminal emulator on my system: Is there a way I can get a bash prompt without a terminal emulator?Ĭontinuing with my theme of being pedantic, lets poke some holes in some of the other answers. Sure any script that begins with #!/bin/bash will do that. Is there a way I can access bash without a terminal emulator? Hmm, a lot of other tools (emacs, vim, etc) allow some level of shelling out. So, the above are "what are all the possible ways" questions, not necessarily useful in real life for home, though most server rooms would probably have serial access. If you have a browser window open, you could in theory search for a java terminal emulator but my guess is that you'd have to install ahead of time, and just having a browser window wouldn't let you access the underlying pty's right, but I have no time to test either way. at that point you're better off doing easy commands, like apt-get some-terminal-emulator. You may also have some webmin console that gives you (in effect) shell access, though not techncally interactive shell. you'd need a getty (or whatever tty serial listeners are called now) previously configured before you lost your terminal tho, and you'd need a second computer to talk to the first, so as a home emergency this is not likely to happen. If this is a question from a test, for completeness i'd add normal serial tty's, where you'd connect to your computer with a serial cable. ![]()
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