How to find /dev/ name of USB Device for Serial Reading on Mac OS?

42,610

Solution 1

So, I actually found the answer.

To find out what the device name is, I did an ls of the /dev/ directory with the device plugged in and then with it disconnected.

ls -lha /dev/tty* > plugged.txt
ls -lha /dev/tty* > np.txt

Then I compared the files using

vimdiff plugged.txt np.txt

And saw the line

crw-rw-rw- 1 root wheel 19, 30 Jan 16 15:24 /dev/tty.usbmodem145222

Sure enough, the device is named tty.usbmodem145222!

Solution 2

Please try

ls /dev/tty* | grep usb
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M.S.
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M.S.

Updated on August 21, 2021

Comments

  • M.S.
    M.S. almost 3 years

    I am trying to plug in a device into my Macbook and connect to it to read it's serial port. I know the device connects on baudrate 115200.

    Currently, I run the command

    ioreg -p IOUSB -l -b | grep -E "@|PortNum|USB Serial Number"

    I can see the embedded device plugged in

    +-o Root Hub Simulation Simulation@14000000
    | +-o iBridge@14200000
    | |     "PortNum" = 2
    | +-o USB2.0 Hub@14100000
    |   |   "PortNum" = 1
    |   +-o 4-Port USB 2.0 Hub@14120000 
    |   | |   "PortNum" = 2
    |   | +-o MBED CMSIS-DAP@14122000
    |   |       "PortNum" = 2
    |   |       "USB Serial Number" = "024002267822ce0a00000000000000000000000085fb33b2"
    |   +-o USB Keyboard           @14110000 
    |         "PortNum" = 1
    |         "USB Serial Number" = "0000000000000001"
    

    note: There's a tag close to

    <class AppleUSBDevice, id 0x100014343, registered, matched, active, busy 0 (363 ms), retain 33>

    next to every device's name above, but I removed them for formatting issues (as I don't think they're related to the question). In the event they are, that is the tag for my embedded device).

    The Question

    How would I find out the MBED device's association in /dev/?

    I am trying to find the device MBED CMSIS-DAP@14122000 inside the /dev/ directory, so that I can read its serial output. This is where I am lost.

    The end goal is that I could use screen or putty or something similar to:

    screen /dev/ttyTHIS_MBED_DEVICE 115200