Not work ( Program itself: package main import( "flag" "fmt" "os" ) func main() { var color = flag.Int("color", 0x00000000, "Color value") flag.Parse() var hexColor uint32 = uint32(*color) var rgb [3]byte; rgb[2] = byte(hexColor & 0x000000ff) rgb[1] = byte((hexColor & 0x0000ff00) >> 8) rgb[0] = byte((hexColor & 0x00ff0000) >> 16) usbControl, controlErr := os.Open("/dev/eiaU5/eiaUctl") if controlErr != nil { fmt.Println(controlErr) os.Exit(1) } defer usbControl.Close() usbControl.WriteString("b9600") usbControl.Sync() usbFile, usbErr := os.Open("/dev/eiaU5/eiaU") if usbErr != nil { fmt.Println(usbErr) os.Exit(1) } defer usbFile.Close() fmt.Print(rgb[0]) fmt.Print(rgb[1]) fmt.Print(rgb[2]) usbFile.Write(rgb[:]) } 2018-08-16 14:26 GMT+03:00 Richard Miller <9fans@hamnavoe.com>: > > I encountered some problem: there is a trivial program on Go that > > writes to the files / dev / eiaU4 / eiaUctl and / dev / eiaU the > > I hope you meant /dev/eiaU4/eiaU, not /dev/eiaU > > Unless you do a "bind -a /dev/eiaU4 /dev" after starting the usb > serial driver, which allows you to reference the device files > as /dev/eiaUctl and /dev/eiaU and not have to remember the unit number. > > >