

and that default user can use sudo, but is not in the group "dialout" (even though the device WILL come up with group rw permissions for dialout).
#Minicom pi install
If the user is on Ubuntu, you'd normally be asked the username at install time (not sure if that's the case on pi, but whatever). Added an account for him/herself? Without adding that account to all the groups that pi user is part of? Happened to me before. DESCRIPTION top minicom is a communication program which somewhat resembles the shareware program TELIX but is free with source code and runs under most Unices. In that case, try installing it in devmode. in strict mode on all platforms due to missing serial port support. This port is optimized for the Snap system.

But I just checked (I actually thought I had a similar permission problem in my own project, but that ended up being something else), and the pi user is standard in that group. Install Minicom is a friendly menu-driven serial communications program. I'd say that having the user be in group dialout and the device coming up in group "dialout" as on raspberrypi_os would be a reasonable solution. There are a number of ways to do this, using cat, Minicom or Screen and specifying the serial device. So then what do you recommend that people do that "always works". Minicom is a tool for serial debugging over Linux environment. for the Adafruit Feather RP2040 you should pass -DPICOBOARDadafruitfeatherrp2040. Here boardname is the name of your board, e.g. People might install something else than raspberrypi_os and have a different configuration. If you are building applications with the C/C++ SDK and targeting boards other than the Raspberry Pi Pico, you will need to pass -DPICOBOARDboardname to CMake.
