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Full Discussion: character I/O basics
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers character I/O basics Post 44785 by starless on Wednesday 10th of December 2003 06:29:38 PM
Old 12-10-2003
Hi again! Sorry for the delay...
Well, the comm driver is setup prior to use. I thought that serial communication would be the same with UNIX as it is with QNX. My mistake... I do:
---------------
fd=open("/dev/ser1", O_RDONLY);
read(fd, buffer, len);
close(fd);
---------------
So I'm not aware of the tty interface.

But that's not the heart of the problem anyway.
Here's what I need help on:
I tried using a fifo as suggested and it does what I need. That's the bridge I was thinking of ;-)
Here is a portion of the code to "test from user input":
Code:
// test_app
char key;
while(1)
{
   cin >> key;
   switch(key)
   {
       // issue various commands to the device
       // and read back answer from it
   }
}

So I can start the program and feed it from the keyboard to test all the cases. That simple.
Now I start it with "fifo_file" redirected as input, and I
start a shell script "feeder" with output redirected to "fifo_file".
This script loops forever: "echo" 1 sequence of character (a "word") and then sleeps a bit. This way I can automate testing.
This works very good and fills my need.

Just curious what I should do to avoid this: if I stop feeding the fifo_file, the test_app that uses it as input keeps on getting the last character it got (and very fast)!

Thanks everybody for taking the time to share your knowledge!

added code tags for readability --oombera

Last edited by oombera; 02-19-2004 at 05:04 PM..
 

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CONS(9) 						   BSD Kernel Developer's Manual						   CONS(9)

NAME
cnbell, cnflush, cngetc, cngetsn, cnhalt, cnpollc, cnputc -- console access interface SYNOPSIS
#include <dev/cons.h> void cnbell(u_int pitch, u_int period, u_int volume); void cnflush(void); int cngetc(void); int cngetsn(char *cp, int size); void cnhalt(void); void cnpollc(int on); void cnputc(int c); DESCRIPTION
These functions operate over the current console device. The console must be initialized before these functions can be used. Console input polling functions cngetc(), cngetsn() and cnpollc() are only to be used during initial system boot, e.g., when asking for root and dump device or to get necessary user input within mountroothooks. Once the system boots, user input is read via standard tty(4) facili- ties. The following is a brief description of each function: cnbell() Ring a bell at appropriate pitch, for duration of period milliseconds at given volume. Note that the volume value is ignored com- monly. cnflush() Waits for all pending output to finish. cngetc() Poll (busy wait) for an input and return the input key. Returns 0 if there is no console input device. cnpollc() must be called before cngetc() could be used. cngetc() should be used during kernel startup only. cngetsn() Read one line of user input, stop reading once the newline key is input. Input is echoed back. This uses cnpollc() and cngetc(). Number of read characters is size at maximum, user is notified by console bell when the end of input buffer is reached. <Backspace> key works as expected. <@> or <CTRL>-u make cngetsn() discard input read so far, print newline and wait for next input. cngetsn() returns number of characters actually read, excluding the final newline. cp is not zero-ended before return. cngetsn() should be used during kernel startup only. cnhalt() Terminates the console device (i.e. cleanly shuts down the console hardware.) cnpollc() Switch the console driver to polling mode if on is nonzero, or back to interrupt driven mode if on is zero. cnpollc() should be used during kernel startup only. cnputc() Console kernel output character routine. Commonly, kernel code uses printf(9) rather than using this low-level interface. EXAMPLES
This waits until a <Enter> key is pressed: int c; cnpollc(1); for(;;) { c = cngetc(); if ((c == ' ' || (c == ' ')) { printf(" "); break; } } cnpollc(0); SEE ALSO
pckbd(4), pcppi(4), tty(4), wscons(4), wskbd(4), printf(9), spl(9), wscons(9) BSD
June 8, 2010 BSD
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