Serial Programming Guide
for
POSIX Operating Systems
5th Edition, 6th Revision
Copyright 1994-2005 by Michael R. Sweet
Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.2 or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no Invariant Sections, no Front-Cover Texts, and no Back-Cover Texts. A copy of the license is included in Appendix C, GNU Free Documentation License.
Table of Contents
Introduction Chapter 1, Basics of Serial Communications
- What Are Serial Communications?
- What Is RS-232?
- Asynchronous Communications
- Synchronous Communications
- Accessing Serial Ports
Introduction
The Serial Programming Guide for POSIX Operating Systems will teach you how to successfully, efficiently, and portably program the serial ports on your UNIX® workstation or PC. Each chapter provides programming examples that use the POSIX (Portable Standard for UNIX) terminal control functions and should work with very few modifications under IRIX®, HP-UX, SunOS®, Solaris®, Digital UNIX®, Linux®, and most other UNIX operating systems. The biggest difference between operating systems that you will find is the filenames used for serial port device and lock files.
License
Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.2 or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no Invariant Sections, no Front-Cover Texts, and no Back-Cover Texts. A copy of the license is included in Appendix C, GNU Free Documentation License.
Organization
This guide is organized into the following chapters and appendices:
Chapter 1, Basics of Serial Communications
This chapter introduces serial communications, RS-232 and other standards that are used on most computers as well as how to access a serial port from a C program.
What Are Serial Communications?
Computers transfer information (data) one or more bits at a time. Serial refers to the transfer of data one bit at a time. Serial communications include most network devices, keyboards, mice, MODEMs, and terminals.
When doing serial communications each word (i.e. byte or character) of data you send or receive is sent one bit at a time. Each bit is either on or off. The terms you'll hear sometimes are mark for the on state and space for the off state.
The speed of the serial data is most often expressed as bits-per-second ("bps") or baudot rate ("baud"). This just represents the number of ones and zeroes that can be sent in one second. Back at the dawn of the computer age, 300 baud was considered fast, but today computers can handle RS-232 speeds as high as 430,800 baud! When the baud rate exceeds 1,000, you'll usually see the rate shown in kilo baud, or kbps (e.g. 9.6k, 19.2k, etc). For rates above 1,000,000 that rate is shown in megabaud, or Mbps (e.g. 1.5Mbps).
When referring to serial devices or ports, they are either labeled as Data Communications Equipment ("DCE") or Data Terminal Equipment ("DTE"). The difference between these is simple - every signal pair, like transmit and receive, is swapped. When connecting two DTE or two DCE interfaces together, a serial null-MODEM cable or adapter is used that swaps the signal pairs.
What Is RS-232?
RS-232 is a standard electrical interface for serial communications defined by the Electronic Industries Association ("EIA"). RS-232 actually comes in 3 different flavors (A, B, and C) with each one defining a different voltage range for the on and off levels. The most commonly used variety is RS-232C, which defines a mark (on) bit as a voltage between -3V and -12V and a space (off) bit as a voltage between +3V and +12V. The RS-232C specification says these signals can go about 25 feet (8m) before they become unusable. You can usually send signals a bit farther than this as long as the baud is low enough.
Besides wires for incoming and outgoing data, there are others that provide timing, status, and handshaking:
Pin | Description | Pin | Description | Pin | Description | Pin | Description | Pin | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Earth Ground | 6 | DSR - Data Set Ready | 11 | Unassigned | 16 | Secondary RXD | 21 | Signal Quality Detect |
2 | TXD - Transmitted Data | 7 | GND - Logic Ground | 12 | Secondary DCD | 17 | Receiver Clock | 22 | Ring Detect |
3 | RXD - Received Data | 8 | DCD - Data Carrier Detect | 13 | Secondary CTS | 18 | Unassigned | 23 | Data Rate Select |
4 | RTS - Request To Send | 9 | Reserved | 14 | Secondary TXD | 19 | Secondary RTS | 24 | Transmit Clock |
5 | CTS - Clear To Send | 10 | Reserved | 15 | Transmit Clock | 20 | DTR - Data Terminal Ready | 25 | Unassigned |
Two standards for serial interfaces you may also see are RS-422 and RS-574. RS-422 uses lower voltages and differential signals to allow cable lengths up to about 1000ft (300m). RS-574 defines the 9-pin PC serial connector and voltages.
Signal Definitions
The RS-232 standard defines some 18 different signals for serial communications. Of these, only six are generally available in the UNIX environment.
GND - Logic Ground
Technically the logic ground is not a signal, but without it none of the other signals will operate. Basically, the logic ground acts as a reference voltage so that the electronics know which voltages are positive or negative.
TXD - Transmitted Data
The TXD signal carries data transmitted from your workstation to the computer or device on the other end (like a MODEM). A mark voltage is interpreted as a value of 1, while a space voltage is interpreted as a value of 0.
RXD - Received Data
The RXD signal carries data transmitted from the computer or device on the other end to your workstation. Like TXD, mark and space voltages are interpreted as 1 and 0, respectively.
DCD - Data Carrier Detect
The DCD signal is received from the computer or device on the other end of your serial cable. A space voltage on this signal line indicates that the computer or device is currently connected or on line. DCD is not always used or available.
DTR - Data Terminal Ready
The DTR signal is generated by your workstation and tells the computer or device on the other end that you are ready (a space voltage) or not-ready (a mark voltage). DTR is usually enabled automatically whenever you open the serial interface on the workstation.
CTS - Clear To Send
The CTS signal is received from the other end of the serial cable. A space voltage indicates that it is alright to send more serial data from your workstation.
CTS is usually used to regulate the flow of serial data from your workstation to the other end.
RTS - Request To Send
The RTS signal is set to the space voltage by your workstation to indicate that more data is ready to be sent.
Like CTS, RTS helps to regulate the flow of data between your workstation and the computer or device on the other end of the serial cable. Most workstations leave this signal set to the space voltage all the time.
Asynchronous Communications
For the computer to understand the serial data coming into it, it needs some way to determine where one character ends and the next begins. This guide deals exclusively with asynchronous serial data.
In asynchronous mode the serial data line stays in the mark (1) state until a character is transmitted. A start bit preceeds each character and is followed immediately by each bit in the character, an optional parity bit, and one or more stop bits. The start bit is always a space (0) and tells the computer that new serial data is available. Data can be sent or received at any time, thus the name asynchronous.
Figure 1 - Asynchronous Data Transmission
The optional parity bit is a simple sum of the data bits indicating whether or not the data contains an even or odd number of 1 bits. With even parity, the parity bit is 0 if there is an even number of 1's in the character. With odd parity, the parity bit is 0 if there is an odd number of 1's in the data. You may also hear the terms space parity, mark parity, and no parity. Space parity means that the parity bit is always 0, while mark parity means the bit is always 1. No parity means that no parity bit is present or transmitted.
The remaining bits are called stop bits. There can be 1, 1.5, or 2 stop bits between characters and they always have a value of 1. Stop bits traditionally were used to give the computer time to process the previous character, but now only serve to synchronize the receiving computer to the incoming characters.
Asynchronous data formats are usually expressed as "8N1", "7E1", and so forth. These stand for "8 data bits, no parity, 1 stop bit" and "7 data bits, even parity, 1 stop bit" respectively.
What Are Full Duplex and Half Duplex?
Full duplex means that the computer can send and receive data simultaneously - there are two separate data channels (one coming in, one going out).
Half duplex means that the computer cannot send or receive data at the same time. Usually this means there is only a single data channel to talk over. This does not mean that any of the RS-232 signals are not used. Rather, it usually means that the communications link uses some standard other than RS-232 that does not support full duplex operation.
Flow Control
It is often necessary to regulate the flow of data when transferring data between two serial interfaces. This can be due to limitations in an intermediate serial communications link, one of the serial interfaces, or some storage media. Two methods are commonly used for asynchronous data.
The first method is often called "software" flow control and uses special characters to start (XON or DC1, 021 octal) or stop (XOFF or DC3, 023 octal) the flow of data. These characters are defined in the American Standard Code for Information Interchange ("ASCII"). While these codes are useful when transferring textual information, they cannot be used when transferring other types of information without special programming.
The second method is called "hardware" flow control and uses the RS-232 CTS and RTS signals instead of special characters. The receiver sets CTS to the space voltage when it is ready to receive more data and to the mark voltage when it is not ready. Likewise, the sender sets RTS to the space voltage when it is ready to send more data. Because hardware flow control uses a separate set of signals, it is much faster than software flow control which needs to send or receive multiple bits of information to do the same thing. CTS/RTS flow control is not supported by all hardware or operating systems.
What Is a Break?
Normally a receive or transmit data signal stays at the mark voltage until a new character is transferred. If the signal is dropped to the space voltage for a long period of time, usually 1/4 to 1/2 second, then a break condition is said to exist.
A break is sometimes used to reset a communications line or change the operating mode of communications hardware like a MODEM. Chapter 3, Talking to MODEMs covers these applications in more depth.
Synchronous Communications
Unlike asynchronous data, synchronous data appears as a constant stream of bits. To read the data on the line, the computer must provide or receive a common bit clock so that both the sender and receiver are synchronized.
Even with this synchronization, the computer must mark the beginning of the data somehow. The most common way of doing this is to use a data packet protocol like Serial Data Link Control ("SDLC") or High-Speed Data Link Control ("HDLC").
Each protocol defines certain bit sequences to represent the beginning and end of a data packet. Each also defines a bit sequence that is used when there is no data. These bit sequences allow the computer to see the beginning of a data packet.
Because synchronous protocols do not use per-character synchronization bits they typically provide at least a 25% improvement in performance over asynchronous communications and are suitable for remote networking and configurations with more than two serial interfaces.
Despite the speed advantages of synchronous communications, most RS-232 hardware does not support it due to the extra hardware and software required.
Accessing Serial Ports
Like all devices, UNIX provides access to serial ports via device files. To access a serial port you simply open the corresponding device file.
Serial Port Files
Each serial port on a UNIX system has one or more device files (files in the /dev directory) associated with it:
System | Port 1 | Port 2 |
---|---|---|
IRIX® | /dev/ttyf1 | /dev/ttyf2 |
HP-UX | /dev/tty1p0 | /dev/tty2p0 |
Solaris®/SunOS® | /dev/ttya | /dev/ttyb |
Linux® | /dev/ttyS0 | /dev/ttyS1 |
Digital UNIX® | /dev/tty01 | /dev/tty02 |
Opening a Serial Port
Since a serial port is a file, the open(2) function is used to access it. The one hitch with UNIX is that device files are usually not accessable by normal users. Workarounds include changing the access permissions to the file(s) in question, running your program as the super-user (root), or making your program set-userid so that it runs as the owner of the device file (not recommended for obvious security reasons...)
For now we'll assume that the file is accessable by all users. The code to open serial port 1 on a PC running Linux is show in Listing 1.
Listing 1 - Opening a serial port.
#include <stdio.h> /* Standard input/output definitions */ #include <string.h> /* String function definitions */ #include <unistd.h> /* UNIX standard function definitions */ #include <fcntl.h> /* File control definitions */ #include <errno.h> /* Error number definitions */ #include <termios.h> /* POSIX terminal control definitions */ /* * 'open_port()' - Open serial port 1. * * Returns the file descriptor on success or -1 on error. */ int open_port(void) { int fd; /* File descriptor for the port */ fd = open("/dev/ttyS0", O_RDWR | O_NOCTTY | O_NDELAY); if (fd == -1) { /* * Could not open the port. */ perror("open_port: Unable to open /dev/ttyS0 - "); } else fcntl(fd, F_SETFL, 0); return (fd); }
Other systems would require the corresponding device file name, but otherwise the code is the same.
Open Options
You'll notice that when we opened the device file we used two other flags along with the read+write mode:
fd = open("/dev/ttyS0", O_RDWR | O_NOCTTY | O_NDELAY);
The O_NOCTTY flag tells UNIX that this program doesn't want to be the "controlling terminal" for that port. If you don't specify this then any input (such as keyboard abort signals and so forth) will affect your process. Programs like getty(1M/8) use this feature when starting the login process, but normally a user program does not want this behavior.
The O_NDELAY flag tells UNIX that this program doesn't care what state the DCD signal line is in - whether the other end of the port is up and running. If you do not specify this flag, your process will be put to sleep until the DCD signal line is the space voltage.
Writing Data to the Port
Writing data to the port is easy - just use the write(2) system call to send data it:
n = write(fd, "ATZ\r", 4); if (n < 0) fputs("write() of 4 bytes failed!\n", stderr);
The write function returns the number of bytes sent or -1 if an error occurred. Usually the only error you'll run into is EIO when a MODEM or data link drops the Data Carrier Detect (DCD) line. This condition will persist until you close the port.
Reading Data from the Port
Reading data from a port is a little trickier. When you operate the port in raw data mode, each read(2) system call will return the number of characters that are actually available in the serial input buffers. If no characters are available, the call will block (wait) until characters come in, an interval timer expires, or an error occurs. The read function can be made to return immediately by doing the following:
fcntl(fd, F_SETFL, FNDELAY);
The FNDELAY option causes the read function to return 0 if no characters are available on the port. To restore normal (blocking) behavior, call fcntl() without the FNDELAY option:
fcntl(fd, F_SETFL, 0);
This is also used after opening a serial port with the O_NDELAY option.
Closing a Serial Port
To close the serial port, just use the close system call:
close(fd);
Closing a serial port will also usually set the DTR signal low which causes most MODEMs to hang up.
Chapter 2, Configuring the Serial Port
This chapter discusses how to configure a serial port from C using the POSIX termios interface.
The POSIX Terminal Interface
Most systems support the POSIX terminal (serial) interface for changing parameters such as baud rate, character size, and so on. The first thing you need to do is include the file <termios.h>; this defines the terminal control structure as well as the POSIX control functions.
The two most important POSIX functions are tcgetattr(3) and tcsetattr(3). These get and set terminal attributes, respectively; you provide a pointer to a termios structure that contains all of the serial options available:
Member | Description |
---|---|
c_cflag | Control options |
c_lflag | Line options |
c_iflag | Input options |
c_oflag | Output options |
c_cc | Control characters |
c_ispeed | Input baud (new interface) |
c_ospeed | Output baud (new interface) |
Control Options
The c_cflag member controls the baud rate, number of data bits, parity, stop bits, and hardware flow control. There are constants for all of the supported configurations.Constant | Description |
---|---|
CBAUD | Bit mask for baud rate |
B0 | 0 baud (drop DTR) |
B50 | 50 baud |
B75 | 75 baud |
B110 | 110 baud |
B134 | 134.5 baud |
B150 | 150 baud |
B200 | 200 baud |
B300 | 300 baud |
B600 | 600 baud |
B1200 | 1200 baud |
B1800 | 1800 baud |
B2400 | 2400 baud |
B4800 | 4800 baud |
B9600 | 9600 baud |
B19200 | 19200 baud |
B38400 | 38400 baud |
B57600 | 57,600 baud |
B76800 | 76,800 baud |
B115200 | 115,200 baud |
EXTA | External rate clock |
EXTB | External rate clock |
CSIZE | Bit mask for data bits |
CS5 | 5 data bits |
CS6 | 6 data bits |
CS7 | 7 data bits |
CS8 | 8 data bits |
CSTOPB | 2 stop bits (1 otherwise) |
CREAD | Enable receiver |
PARENB | Enable parity bit |
PARODD | Use odd parity instead of even |
HUPCL | Hangup (drop DTR) on last close |
CLOCAL | Local line - do not change "owner" of port |
LOBLK | Block job control output |
CNEW_RTSCTS CRTSCTS |
Enable hardware flow control (not supported on all platforms) |
The c_cflag member contains two options that should always be enabled, CLOCAL and CREAD. These will ensure that your program does not become the 'owner' of the port subject to sporatic job control and hangup signals, and also that the serial interface driver will read incoming data bytes.
The baud rate constants (CBAUD, B9600, etc.) are used for older interfaces that lack the c_ispeed and c_ospeed members. See the next section for information on the POSIX functions used to set the baud rate.
Never initialize the c_cflag (or any other flag) member directly; you should always use the bitwise AND, OR, and NOT operators to set or clear bits in the members. Different operating system versions (and even patches) can and do use the bits differently, so using the bitwise operators will prevent you from clobbering a bit flag that is needed in a newer serial driver.
Setting the Baud Rate
The baud rate is stored in different places depending on the operating system. Older interfaces store the baud rate in the c_cflag member using one of the baud rate constants in table 4, while newer implementations provide the c_ispeed and c_ospeed members that contain the actual baud rate value.
The cfsetospeed(3) and cfsetispeed(3) functions are provided to set the baud rate in the termios structure regardless of the underlying operating system interface. Typically you'd use the code in Listing 2 to set the baud rate.
Listing 2 - Setting the baud rate.
struct termios options; /* * Get the current options for the port... */ tcgetattr(fd, &options); /* * Set the baud rates to 19200... */ cfsetispeed(&options, B19200); cfsetospeed(&options, B19200); /* * Enable the receiver and set local mode... */ options.c_cflag |= (CLOCAL | CREAD); /* * Set the new options for the port... */ tcsetattr(fd, TCSANOW, &options);
The tcgetattr(3) function fills the termios structure you provide with the current serial port configuration. After we set the baud rates and enable local mode and serial data receipt, we select the new configuration using tcsetattr(3). The TCSANOW constant specifies that all changes should occur immediately without waiting for output data to finish sending or input data to finish receiving. There are other constants to wait for input and output to finish or to flush the input and output buffers.
Most systems do not support different input and output speeds, so be sure to set both to the same value for maximum portability.
Constant | Description |
---|---|
TCSANOW | Make changes now without waiting for data to complete |
TCSADRAIN | Wait until everything has been transmitted |
TCSAFLUSH | Flush input and output buffers and make the change |
Setting the Character Size
Unlike the baud rate, there is no convienience function to set the character size. Instead you must do a little bitmasking to set things up. The character size is specified in bits:
options.c_cflag &= ~CSIZE; /* Mask the character size bits */ options.c_cflag |= CS8; /* Select 8 data bits */
Setting Parity Checking
Like the character size you must manually set the parity enable and parity type bits. UNIX serial drivers support even, odd, and no parity bit generation. Space parity can be simulated with clever coding.
- No parity (8N1):
options.c_cflag &= ~PARENB options.c_cflag &= ~CSTOPB options.c_cflag &= ~CSIZE; options.c_cflag |= CS8;
- Even parity (7E1):
options.c_cflag |= PARENB options.c_cflag &= ~PARODD options.c_cflag &= ~CSTOPB options.c_cflag &= ~CSIZE; options.c_cflag |= CS7;
- Odd parity (7O1):
options.c_cflag |= PARENB options.c_cflag |= PARODD options.c_cflag &= ~CSTOPB options.c_cflag &= ~CSIZE; options.c_cflag |= CS7;
- Space parity is setup the same as no parity (7S1):
options.c_cflag &= ~PARENB options.c_cflag &= ~CSTOPB options.c_cflag &= ~CSIZE; options.c_cflag |= CS8;
Setting Hardware Flow Control
Some versions of UNIX support hardware flow control using the CTS (Clear To Send) and RTS (Request To Send) signal lines. If the CNEW_RTSCTS or CRTSCTS constants are defined on your system then hardware flow control is probably supported. Do the following to enable hardware flow control:
options.c_cflag |= CNEW_RTSCTS; /* Also called CRTSCTS */
Similarly, to disable hardware flow control:
options.c_cflag &= ~CNEW_RTSCTS;
Local Options
The local modes member c_lflag controls how input characters are managed by the serial driver. In general you will configure the c_lflag member for canonical or raw input.
Constant | Description |
---|---|
ISIG | Enable SIGINTR, SIGSUSP, SIGDSUSP, and SIGQUIT signals |
ICANON | Enable canonical input (else raw) |
XCASE | Map uppercase \lowercase (obsolete) |
ECHO | Enable echoing of input characters |
ECHOE | Echo erase character as BS-SP-BS |
ECHOK | Echo NL after kill character |
ECHONL | Echo NL |
NOFLSH | Disable flushing of input buffers after interrupt or quit characters |
IEXTEN | Enable extended functions |
ECHOCTL | Echo control characters as ^char and delete as ~? |
ECHOPRT | Echo erased character as character erased |
ECHOKE | BS-SP-BS entire line on line kill |
FLUSHO | Output being flushed |
PENDIN | Retype pending input at next read or input char |
TOSTOP | Send SIGTTOU for background output |
Choosing Canonical Input
Canonical input is line-oriented. Input characters are put into a buffer which can be edited interactively by the user until a CR (carriage return) or LF (line feed) character is received.
When selecting this mode you normally select the ICANON, ECHO, and ECHOE options:
options.c_lflag |= (ICANON | ECHO | ECHOE);
Choosing Raw Input
Raw input is unprocessed. Input characters are passed through exactly as they are received, when they are received. Generally you'll deselect the ICANON, ECHO, ECHOE, and ISIG options when using raw input:
options.c_lflag &= ~(ICANON | ECHO | ECHOE | ISIG);
A Note About Input Echo
Never enable input echo (ECHO, ECHOE) when sending commands to a MODEM or other computer that is echoing characters, as you will generate a feedback loop between the two serial interfaces!
Input Options
The input modes member c_iflag controls any input processing that is done to characters received on the port. Like the c_cflag field, the final value stored in c_iflag is the bitwise OR of the desired options.
Constant | Description |
---|---|
INPCK | Enable parity check |
IGNPAR | Ignore parity errors |
PARMRK | Mark parity errors |
ISTRIP | Strip parity bits |
IXON | Enable software flow control (outgoing) |
IXOFF | Enable software flow control (incoming) |
IXANY | Allow any character to start flow again |
IGNBRK | Ignore break condition |
BRKINT | Send a SIGINT when a break condition is detected |
INLCR | Map NL to CR |
IGNCR | Ignore CR |
ICRNL | Map CR to NL |
IUCLC | Map uppercase to lowercase |
IMAXBEL | Echo BEL on input line too long |
Setting Input Parity Options
You should enable input parity checking when you have enabled parity in the c_cflag member (PARENB). The revelant constants for input parity checking are INPCK, IGNPAR, PARMRK , and ISTRIP. Generally you will select INPCK and ISTRIP to enable checking and stripping of the parity bit:
options.c_iflag |= (INPCK | ISTRIP);
IGNPAR is a somewhat dangerous option that tells the serial driver to ignore parity errors and pass the incoming data through as if no errors had occurred. This can be useful for testing the quality of a communications link, but in general is not used for practical reasons.
PARMRK causes parity errors to be 'marked' in the input stream using special characters. If IGNPAR is enabled, a NUL character (000 octal) is sent to your program before every character with a parity error. Otherwise, a DEL (177 octal) and NUL character is sent along with the bad character.
Setting Software Flow Control
Software flow control is enabled using the IXON, IXOFF, and IXANY constants:
options.c_iflag |= (IXON | IXOFF | IXANY);
To disable software flow control simply mask those bits:
options.c_iflag &= ~(IXON | IXOFF | IXANY);
The XON (start data) and XOFF (stop data) characters are defined in the c_cc array described below.
Output Options
The c_oflag member contains output filtering options. Like the input modes, you can select processed or raw data output.
Constant | Description |
---|---|
OPOST | Postprocess output (not set = raw output) |
OLCUC | Map lowercase to uppercase |
ONLCR | Map NL to CR-NL |
OCRNL | Map CR to NL |
NOCR | No CR output at column 0 |
ONLRET | NL performs CR function |
OFILL | Use fill characters for delay |
OFDEL | Fill character is DEL |
NLDLY | Mask for delay time needed between lines |
NL0 | No delay for NLs |
NL1 | Delay further output after newline for 100 milliseconds |
CRDLY | Mask for delay time needed to return carriage to left column |
CR0 | No delay for CRs |
CR1 | Delay after CRs depending on current column position |
CR2 | Delay 100 milliseconds after sending CRs |
CR3 | Delay 150 milliseconds after sending CRs |
TABDLY | Mask for delay time needed after TABs |
TAB0 | No delay for TABs |
TAB1 | Delay after TABs depending on current column position |
TAB2 | Delay 100 milliseconds after sending TABs |
TAB3 | Expand TAB characters to spaces |
BSDLY | Mask for delay time needed after BSs |
BS0 | No delay for BSs |
BS1 | Delay 50 milliseconds after sending BSs |
VTDLY | Mask for delay time needed after VTs |
VT0 | No delay for VTs |
VT1 | Delay 2 seconds after sending VTs |
FFDLY | Mask for delay time needed after FFs |
FF0 | No delay for FFs |
FF1 | Delay 2 seconds after sending FFs |
Choosing Processed Output
Processed output is selected by setting the OPOST option in the c_oflag member:
options.c_oflag |= OPOST;
Of all the different options, you will only probably use the ONLCR option which maps newlines into CR-LF pairs. The rest of the output options are primarily historic and date back to the time when line printers and terminals could not keep up with the serial data stream!
Choosing Raw Output
Raw output is selected by resetting the OPOST option in the c_oflag member:
options.c_oflag &= ~OPOST;
When the OPOST option is disabled, all other option bits in c_oflag are ignored.
Control Characters
The c_cc character array contains control character definitions as well as timeout parameters. Constants are defined for every element of this array.
Constant | Description | Key |
---|---|---|
VINTR | Interrupt | CTRL-C |
VQUIT | Quit | CTRL-Z |
VERASE | Erase | Backspace (BS) |
VKILL | Kill-line | CTRL-U |
VEOF | End-of-file | CTRL-D |
VEOL | End-of-line | Carriage return (CR) |
VEOL2 | Second end-of-line | Line feed (LF) |
VMIN | Minimum number of characters to read | - |
VSTART | Start flow | CTRL-Q (XON) |
VSTOP | Stop flow | CTRL-S (XOFF) |
VTIME | Time to wait for data (tenths of seconds) | - |
Setting Software Flow Control Characters
The VSTART and VSTOP elements of the c_cc array contain the characters used for software flow control. Normally they should be set to DC1 (021 octal) and DC3 (023 octal) which represent the ASCII standard XON and XOFF characters.
Setting Read Timeouts
UNIX serial interface drivers provide the ability to specify character and packet timeouts. Two elements of the c_cc array are used for timeouts: VMIN and VTIME. Timeouts are ignored in canonical input mode or when the NDELAY option is set on the file via open or fcntl.
VMIN specifies the minimum number of characters to read. If it is set to 0, then the VTIME value specifies the time to wait for every character read. Note that this does not mean that a read call for N bytes will wait for N characters to come in. Rather, the timeout will apply to the first character and the read call will return the number of characters immediately available (up to the number you request).
If VMIN is non-zero, VTIME specifies the time to wait for the first character read. If a character is read within the time given, any read will block (wait) until all VMIN characters are read. That is, once the first character is read, the serial interface driver expects to receive an entire packet of characters (VMIN bytes total). If no character is read within the time allowed, then the call to read returns 0. This method allows you to tell the serial driver you need exactly N bytes and any read call will return 0 or N bytes. However, the timeout only applies to the first character read, so if for some reason the driver misses one character inside the N byte packet then the read call could block forever waiting for additional input characters.
VTIME specifies the amount of time to wait for incoming characters in tenths of seconds. If VTIME is set to 0 (the default), reads will block (wait) indefinitely unless the NDELAY option is set on the port with open or fcntl.
Chapter 3, MODEM Communications
This chapter covers the basics of dialup telephone Modulator/Demodulator (MODEM) communications. Examples are provided for MODEMs that use the defacto standard "AT" command set.
What Is a MODEM?
MODEMs are devices that modulate serial data into frequencies that can be transferred over an analog data link such as a telephone line or cable TV connection. A standard telephone MODEM converts serial data into tones that can be passed over the phone lines; because of the speed and complexity of the conversion these tones sound more like loud screeching if you listen to them.
Telephone MODEMs are available today that can transfer data across a telephone line at nearly 53,000 bits per second, or 53kbps. In addition, most MODEMs use data compression technology that can increase the bit rate to well over 100kbps on some types of data.
Communicating With a MODEM
The first step in communicating with a MODEM is to open and configure the port for raw input as shown in Listing 3 .
Listing 3 - Configuring the port for raw input.
int fd; struct termios options; /* open the port */ fd = open("/dev/ttyS0", O_RDWR | O_NOCTTY | O_NDELAY); fcntl(fd, F_SETFL, 0); /* get the current options */ tcgetattr(fd, &options); /* set raw input, 1 second timeout */ options.c_cflag |= (CLOCAL | CREAD); options.c_lflag &= ~(ICANON | ECHO | ECHOE | ISIG); options.c_oflag &= ~OPOST; options.c_cc[VMIN] = 0; options.c_cc[VTIME] = 10; /* set the options */ tcsetattr(fd, TCSANOW, &options);
Next you need to establish communications with the MODEM. The best way to do this is by sending the "AT" command to the MODEM. This also allows smart MODEMs to detect the baud you are using. When the MODEM is connected correctly and powered on it will respond with the response "OK".
Listing 4 - Initializing the MODEM.
int /* O - 0 = MODEM ok, -1 = MODEM bad */ init_modem(int fd) /* I - Serial port file */ { char buffer[255]; /* Input buffer */ char *bufptr; /* Current char in buffer */ int nbytes; /* Number of bytes read */ int tries; /* Number of tries so far */ for (tries = 0; tries < 3; tries ++) { /* send an AT command followed by a CR */ if (write(fd, "AT\r", 3) < 3) continue; /* read characters into our string buffer until we get a CR or NL */ bufptr = buffer; while ((nbytes = read(fd, bufptr, buffer + sizeof(buffer) - bufptr - 1)) > 0) { bufptr += nbytes; if (bufptr[-1] == '\n' || bufptr[-1] == '\r') break; } /* nul terminate the string and see if we got an OK response */ *bufptr = '\0'; if (strncmp(buffer, "OK", 2) == 0) return (0); } return (-1); }
Standard MODEM Commands
Most MODEMs support the "AT" command set, so called because each command starts with the "AT" characters. Each command is sent with the "AT" characters starting in the first column followed by the specific command and a carriage return (CR, 015 octal). After processing the command the MODEM will reply with one of several textual messages depending on the command.
ATD - Dial A Number
The ATD command dials the specified number. In addition to numbers and dashes you can specify tone ("T") or pulse ("P") dialing, pause for one second (","), and wait for a dialtone ("W"):
ATDT 555-1212 ATDT 18008008008W1234,1,1234 ATD T555-1212WP1234
The MODEM will reply with one of the following messages:
NO DIALTONE BUSY NO CARRIER CONNECT CONNECT baud
ATH - Hang Up
The ATH command causes the MODEM to hang up. Since the MODEM must be in "command" mode you probably won't use it during a normal phone call.
Most MODEMs will also hang up if DTR is dropped; you can do this by setting the baud to 0 for at least 1 second. Dropping DTR also returns the MODEM to command mode.
After a successful hang up the MODEM will reply with "NO CARRIER". If the MODEM is still connected the "CONNECT" or "CONNECT baud" message will be sent.
ATZ - Reset MODEM
The ATZ command resets the MODEM. The MODEM will reply with the string "OK".Common MODEM Communication Problems
First and foremost, don't forget to disable input echoing. Input echoing will cause a feedback loop between the MODEM and computer.
Second, when sending MODEM commands you must terminate them with a carriage return (CR) and not a newline (NL). The C character constant for CR is "\r".
Finally, when dealing with a MODEM make sure you use a baud that the MODEM supports. While many MODEMs do auto-baud detection, some have limits (19.2kbps is common on older MODEMs) that you must observe.
Chapter 4, Advanced Serial Programming
This chapter covers advanced serial programming techniques using the ioctl(2) and select(2) system calls.
Serial Port IOCTLs
In Chapter 2, Configuring the Serial Port we used the tcgetattr and tcsetattr functions to configure the serial port. Under UNIX these functions use the ioctl(2) system call to do their magic.
The ioctl system call takes three arguments:
int ioctl(int fd, int request, ...);
The fd argument specifies the serial port file descriptor. The request argument is a constant defined in the <termios.h>
header file and is typically one of the constants listed in Table 10.
Request | Description | POSIX Function |
---|---|---|
TCGETS | Gets the current serial port settings. | tcgetattr |
TCSETS | Sets the serial port settings immediately. | tcsetattr(fd, TCSANOW, &options) |
TCSETSF | Sets the serial port settings after flushing the input and output buffers. | tcsetattr(fd, TCSAFLUSH, &options) |
TCSETSW | Sets the serial port settings after allowing the input and output buffers to drain/empty. | tcsetattr(fd, TCSADRAIN, &options) |
TCSBRK | Sends a break for the given time. | tcsendbreak, tcdrain |
TCXONC | Controls software flow control. | tcflow |
TCFLSH | Flushes the input and/or output queue. | tcflush |
TIOCMGET | Returns the state of the "MODEM" bits. | None |
TIOCMSET | Sets the state of the "MODEM" bits. | None |
FIONREAD | Returns the number of bytes in the input buffer. | None |
Getting the Control Signals
The TIOCMGET
ioctl gets the current "MODEM" status bits, which consist of all of the RS-232 signal lines except RXD and TXD, listed in Table 11.
To get the status bits, call ioctl with a pointer to an integer to hold the bits, as shown in Listing 5 .
Listing 5 - Getting the MODEM status bits.
#include <unistd.h> #include <termios.h> int fd; int status; ioctl(fd, TIOCMGET, &status);
Constant | Description |
---|---|
TIOCM_LE | DSR (data set ready/line enable) |
TIOCM_DTR | DTR (data terminal ready) |
TIOCM_RTS | RTS (request to send) |
TIOCM_ST | Secondary TXD (transmit) |
TIOCM_SR | Secondary RXD (receive) |
TIOCM_CTS | CTS (clear to send) |
TIOCM_CAR | DCD (data carrier detect) |
TIOCM_CD | Synonym for TIOCM_CAR |
TIOCM_RNG | RNG (ring) |
TIOCM_RI | Synonym for TIOCM_RNG |
TIOCM_DSR | DSR (data set ready) |
Setting the Control Signals
The TIOCMSET
ioctl sets the "MODEM" status bits defined above. To drop the DTR signal you can use the code in Listing 6.
Listing 6 - Dropping DTR with the TIOCMSET ioctl.
#include <unistd.h> #include <termios.h> int fd; int status; ioctl(fd, TIOCMGET, &status); status &= ~TIOCM_DTR; ioctl(fd, TIOCMSET, &status);
The bits that can be set depend on the operating system, driver, and modes in use. Consult your operating system documentation for more information.
Getting the Number of Bytes Available
The FIONREAD
ioctl gets the number of bytes in the serial port input buffer. As with TIOCMGET
you pass in a pointer to an integer to hold the number of bytes, as shown in Listing 7.
Listing 7 - Getting the number of bytes in the input buffer.
#include <unistd.h> #include <termios.h> int fd; int bytes; ioctl(fd, FIONREAD, &bytes);
This can be useful when polling a serial port for data, as your program can determine the number of bytes in the input buffer before attempting a read.
Selecting Input from a Serial Port
While simple applications can poll or wait on data coming from the serial port, most applications are not simple and need to handle input from multiple sources.
UNIX provides this capability through the select(2) system call. This system call allows your program to check for input, output, or error conditions on one or more file descriptors. The file descriptors can point to serial ports, regular files, other devices, pipes, or sockets. You can poll to check for pending input, wait for input indefinitely, or timeout after a specific amount of time, making the select system call extremely flexible.
Most GUI Toolkits provide an interface to select; we will discuss the X Intrinsics ("Xt") library later in this chapter.
The SELECT System Call
The select system call accepts 5 arguments:
int select(int max_fd, fd_set *input, fd_set *output, fd_set *error, struct timeval *timeout);
The max_fd argument specifies the highest numbered file descriptor in the input, output, and error sets. The input, output, and error arguments specify sets of file descriptors for pending input, output, or error conditions; specify NULL
to disable monitoring for the corresponding condition. These sets are initialized using three macros:
FD_ZERO(&fd_set); FD_SET(fd, &fd_set); FD_CLR(fd, &fd_set);
The FD_ZERO macro clears the set entirely. The FD_SET and FD_CLR macros add and remove a file descriptor from the set, respectively.
The timeout argument specifies a timeout value which consists of seconds (timeout.tv_sec) and microseconds (timeout.tv_usec ). To poll one or more file descriptors, set the seconds and microseconds to zero. To wait indefinitely specify NULL
for the timeout pointer.
The select system call returns the number of file descriptors that have a pending condition, or -1 if there was an error.
Using the SELECT System Call
Suppose we are reading data from a serial port and a socket. We want to check for input from either file descriptor, but want to notify the user if no data is seen within 10 seconds. To do this we'll need to use the select system call, as shown in Listing 8.
Listing 8 - Using SELECT to process input from more than one source.
#include <unistd.h> #include <sys/types.h> #include <sys/time.h> #include <sys/select.h> int n; int socket; int fd; int max_fd; fd_set input; struct timeval timeout; /* Initialize the input set */ FD_ZERO(&input); FD_SET(fd, &input); FD_SET(sock, &input); max_fd = (sock > fd ? sock : fd) + 1; /* Initialize the timeout structure */ timeout.tv_sec = 10; timeout.tv_usec = 0; /* Do the select */ n = select(max_fd, &input, NULL, NULL, &timeout); /* See if there was an error */ if (n < 0) perror("select failed"); else if (n == 0) puts("TIMEOUT"); else { /* We have input */ if (FD_ISSET(fd, &input)) process_fd(); if (FD_ISSET(sock, &input)) process_socket(); }
You'll notice that we first check the return value of the select system call. Values of 0 and -1 yield the appropriate warning and error messages. Values greater than 0 mean that we have data pending on one or more file descriptors.
To determine which file descriptor(s) have pending input, we use the FD_ISSET macro to test the input set for each file descriptor. If the file descriptor flag is set then the condition exists (input pending in this case) and we need to do something.
Using SELECT with the X Intrinsics Library
The X Intrinsics library provides an interface to the select system call via the XtAppAddInput(3x) and XtAppRemoveInput(3x) functions:
int XtAppAddInput(XtAppContext context, int fd, int mask, XtInputProc proc, XtPointer data); void XtAppRemoveInput(XtAppContext context, int input);
The select system call is used internally to implement timeouts, work procedures, and check for input from the X server. These functions can be used with any Xt-based toolkit including Xaw, Lesstif, and Motif.
The proc argument to XtAppAddInput specifies the function to call when the selected condition (e.g. input available) exists on the file descriptor. In the previous example you could specify the process_fd or process_socket functions.
Because Xt limits your access to the select system call, you'll need to implement timeouts through another mechanism, probably via XtAppAddTimeout(3x).
Appendix A, Pinouts
This appendix provides pinout information for many of the common serial ports you will find.
RS-232 Pinouts
RS-232 comes in three flavors (A, B, C) and uses a 25-pin D-Sub connector:
Figure 2 - RS-232 Connector
Pin | Description | Pin | Description |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Earth Ground | 14 | Secondary TXD |
2 | TXD - Transmitted Data | 15 | Transmit Clock |
3 | RXD - Received Data | 16 | Secondary RXD |
4 | RTS - Request To Send | 17 | Receiver Clock |
5 | CTS - Clear To Send | 18 | Unassigned |
6 | DSR - Data Set Ready | 19 | Secondary RTS |
7 | GND - Logic Ground | 20 | DTR - Data Terminal Ready |
8 | DCD - Data Carrier Detect | 21 | Signal Quality Detect |
9 | Reserved | 22 | Ring Detect |
10 | Reserved | 23 | Data Rate Select |
11 | Unassigned | 24 | Transmit Clock |
12 | Secondary DCD | 25 | Unassigned |
13 | Secondary CTS |
RS-422 Pinouts
RS-422 also uses a 25-pin D-Sub connector, but with differential signals:
Figure 3 - RS-422 Connector
Pin | Description | Pin | Description |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Earth Ground | 14 | TXD+ |
2 | TXD- - Transmitted Data | 15 | Transmit Clock- |
3 | RXD- - Received Data | 16 | RXD+ |
4 | RTS- - Request To Send | 17 | Receiver Clock- |
5 | CTS- - Clear To Send | 18 | Unassigned |
6 | DSR - Data Set Ready | 19 | RTS+ |
7 | GND - Logic Ground | 20 | DTR- - Data Terminal Ready |
8 | DCD- - Data Carrier Detect | 21 | Signal Quality Detect |
9 | Reserved | 22 | Unassigned |
10 | Reserved | 23 | DTR+ |
11 | Unassigned | 24 | Transmit Clock+ |
12 | DCD+ | 25 | Receiver Clock+ |
13 | CTS+ |
RS-574 (IBM PC/AT) Pinouts
The RS-574 interface is used exclusively by PC manufacturers and uses a 9-pin male D-Sub connector:
Figure 4 - RS-574 Connector
Pin | Description | Pin | Description |
---|---|---|---|
1 | DCD - Data Carrier Detect | 6 | Data Set Ready |
2 | RXD - Received Data | 7 | RTS - Request To Send |
3 | TXD - Transmitted Data | 8 | CTS - Clear To Send |
4 | DTR - Data Terminal Ready | 9 | Ring Detect |
5 | GND - Logic Ground |
SGI Pinouts
Older SGI equipment uses a 9-pin female D-Sub connector. Unlike RS-574, the SGI pinouts nearly match those of RS-232:
Figure 5 - SGI 9-Pin Connector
Pin | Description | Pin | Description |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Earth Ground | 6 | DSR - Data Set Ready |
2 | TXD - Transmitted Data | 7 | GND - Logic Ground |
3 | RXD - Received Data | 8 | DCD - Data Carrier Detect |
4 | RTS - Request To Send | 9 | DTR - Data Terminal Ready |
5 | CTS - Clear To Send |
The SGI Indigo, Indigo2, and Indy workstations use the Apple 8-pin MiniDIN connector for their serial ports:
Figure 6 - SGI 8-Pin Connector
Pin | Description | Pin | Description |
---|---|---|---|
1 | DTR - Data Terminal Ready | 5 | RXD - Received Data |
2 | CTS - Clear To Send | 6 | RTS - Request To Send |
3 | TXD - Transmitted Data | 7 | DCD - Data Carrier Detect |
4 | GND - Logic Ground | 8 | GND - Logic Ground |
Appendix B, ASCII Control Codes
This chapter lists the ASCII control codes and their names.
Control Codes
The following ASCII characters are used for control purposes:Name | Binary | Octal | Decimal | Hexadecimal |
---|---|---|---|---|
NUL | 00000000 | 000 | 0 | 00 |
SOH | 00000001 | 001 | 1 | 01 |
STX | 00000010 | 002 | 2 | 02 |
ETX | 00000011 | 003 | 3 | 03 |
EOT | 00000100 | 004 | 4 | 04 |
ENQ | 00000101 | 005 | 5 | 05 |
ACK | 00000110 | 006 | 6 | 06 |
BEL | 00000111 | 007 | 7 | 07 |
BS | 00001000 | 010 | 8 | 08 |
HT | 00001001 | 011 | 9 | 09 |
NL | 00001010 | 012 | 10 | 0A |
VT | 00001011 | 013 | 11 | 0B |
NP, FF | 00001100 | 014 | 12 | 0C |
Name | Binary | Octal | Decimal | Hexadecimal |
CR | 00001101 | 015 | 13 | 0D |
SO | 00001110 | 016 | 14 | 0E |
SI | 00001111 | 017 | 15 | 0F |
DLE | 00010000 | 020 | 16 | 10 |
XON, DC1 | 00010001 | 021 | 17 | 11 |
DC2 | 00010010 | 022 | 18 | 12 |
XOFF, DC3 | 00010011 | 023 | 19 | 13 |
DC4 | 00010100 | 024 | 20 | 14 |
NAK | 00010101 | 025 | 21 | 15 |
SYN | 00010110 | 026 | 22 | 16 |
ETB | 00010111 | 027 | 23 | 17 |
CAN | 00011000 | 030 | 24 | 18 |
EM | 00011001 | 031 | 25 | 19 |
SUB | 00011010 | 032 | 26 | 1A |
ESC | 00011011 | 033 | 27 | 1B |
FS | 00011100 | 034 | 28 | 1C |
GS | 00011101 | 035 | 29 | 1D |
RS | 00011110 | 036 | 30 | 1E |
US | 00011111 | 037 | 31 | 1F |
Appendix C, GNU Free Documentation License
Version 1.2, November 2002
Copyright (C) 2000,2001,2002 Free Software Foundation, Inc. 59 Temple Place, Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307 USA Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies of this license document, but changing it is not allowed.
0. PREAMBLE
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This License is a kind of "copyleft", which means that derivative works of the document must themselves be free in the same sense. It complements the GNU General Public License, which is a copyleft license designed for free software.
We have designed this License in order to use it for manuals for free software, because free software needs free documentation: a free program should come with manuals providing the same freedoms that the software does. But this License is not limited to software manuals; it can be used for any textual work, regardless of subject matter or whether it is published as a printed book. We recommend this License principally for works whose purpose is instruction or reference.
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How to use this License for your documents
To use this License in a document you have written, include a copy of the License in the document and put the following copyright and license notices just after the title page:
Copyright (c) YEAR YOUR NAME. Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.2 or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no Invariant Sections, no Front-Cover Texts, and no Back-Cover Texts. A copy of the license is included in the section entitled "GNU Free Documentation License".
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If you have Invariant Sections without Cover Texts, or some other combination of the three, merge those two alternatives to suit the situation.
If your document contains nontrivial examples of program code, we recommend releasing these examples in parallel under your choice of free software license, such as the GNU General Public License, to permit their use in free software.
Appendix D, Change History
This appendix lists the changes that have been made in this edition.
Edition 5, Revision 6
The following changes were made for the 6th revision:
- The select() example did not correctly use the FD macros.
- The title page and this appendix were not properly updated.
Edition 5, Revision 5
The following changes were made for the 5th revision:
- The select() documentation did not correctly describe the FD macros.
- Appendix C was missing the "how to use" part of the GNU FDL.
Edition 5, Revision 4
The following changes were made for the 4th revision:
- Changed the description of the read() system call semantics in chapter 1.
- Added descriptions for VSTART and VSTOP to chapter 2.
Edition 5, Revision 3
The following changes were made for the 3rd revision:
- Now use the GNU Free Documentation License for the guide.
- Changed the examples to use the Linux serial port filenames.
- Put the infrastructure in place to allow for easier translations of the guide.
- The guide text is now fully justified.