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Normally i connect to the console port with a RJ45 -> Serial cable. (Using a SerialtoUSB adapter if im in my notebook).

But for curiosity... Is there any way to connect to a console port using a RJ45-RJ45 cable pluging it in my Ethernet Port, instead of the USB one?

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  • What about serial port servers? Jul 23, 2010 at 5:37

4 Answers 4

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Short answer: No.

Longer answer: It's an RS-232 serial interface, not an Ethernet interface.

Side note: I've just checked a Cisco serial cable and confirmed that it's an 8P8C connector; but RJ45 is a different beast entirely.

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No

Console cables are rollover cables. Pin 1 goes to pin 8. Pin 2 goes to pin 7. Etc. Regular network cables are straight through. Pin 1 goes to pin 1. Pin 2 goes to pin 2. etc.

Also, the communication is completely different. The console port uses serial communication. Ethernet ports use ethernet communication. I'm sure somebody smarter than me will come along and explain the difference.

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No.

I'm not smarter than Jason, but I can say that the signals used for serial communication and for ethernet are drastically different. Serial over RJ45 uses one line for sent data, one for received, 4 for flow control, one for ground... For 10/100BaseT, one pair of wires is used for sent data, one for received, and the other 4 aren't used at all.

Here's a link that shows RS232 on various connectors including RJ45.

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  • I would call that smarter than me :-)
    – Jason Berg
    Jul 23, 2010 at 5:48
  • Different set of voltages, too. Ethernet over twisted pair uses differential signalling, RS-232 uses common ground with multiple data wires.
    – Andrew
    Jul 23, 2010 at 6:07
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I know this is super old, but since this was still the top search result I thought I would throw in what I found. As everyone else said you can't just directly connect a cable. But there are adapters available. Here's the first one I found.

http://gridconnect.com/net232-plus-cc-serial-ethernet-cisco-console-cable-adapter.html

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  • 1
    There wasn't need for these back in 2010. Nowadays it's almost impossible to find a laptop with an RS-232 serial port. The commonly used (and a lot cheaper) adapter would be USB to RS-232. Still, quite good addition for a first post. Thank you and welcome to Serverfault! May 9, 2017 at 16:53

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