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gbser.h
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gbser.h
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/*
OS Abstraction for serial interface.
Copyright (C) 2006-2014 Robert Lipe, robertlipe+source@gpsbabel.org
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
(at your option) any later version.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
GNU General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301, USA.
*/
#ifndef GBSER_H_INCLUDED_
#define GBSER_H_INCLUDED_
#include <cstddef> // for size_t
#define gbser_OK 0
#define gbser_NOTHING -1
#define gbser_TIMEOUT -2
#define gbser_ERROR -3
#if defined(__WIN32__) || defined(__CYGWIN__)
#define WINSERIAL 1
#else
#define POSIXSERIAL 1
#endif
/* Open a serial port. |port_name| is the (platform specific) name
* of the serial device to open. Under WIN32 familiar DOS port names
* ('com1:') are translated into the equivalent name required by
* WIN32
*/
void* gbser_init(const char* port_name);
/* Close a serial port
*/
void gbser_deinit(void* handle);
/* Set the serial port speed.
*/
int gbser_set_speed(void* handle, unsigned speed);
/* Set the serial port speed, start, parity and stop bits */
int gbser_set_port(void* handle, unsigned speed,
unsigned bits,
unsigned parity,
unsigned stop);
/* Return true if there are characters available on the serial port
*/
int gbser_avail(void* handle);
/* Read as many bytes as are available without blocking. At most |len|
* bytes will be read. Returns the number of bytes read or gbser_ERROR if an
* error occurs.
*/
int gbser_read(void* handle, void* buf, unsigned len);
/* Read the specified number of bytes. Block until the requested number
* of bytes have been read or the timeout (in ms) is exceeded.
*/
int gbser_read_wait(void* handle, void* buf, unsigned len, unsigned ms);
/* Read from the serial port until the specified |eol| character is
* found. Any character matching |discard| will be discarded. To
* read lines terminated by 0x0A0x0D discarding linefeeds use
* gbser_read_line(h, buf, len, 1000, 0x0D, 0x0A);
*/
int gbser_read_line(void* handle, void* buf,
unsigned len, unsigned ms,
int eol, int discard);
/* Read a single character from the port, returning immediately if
* none are available. TODO: Define return values
*/
int gbser_readc(void* handle);
/* Read a single character from the port, waiting up to |ms|
* milliseconds for a character to be available.
*/
int gbser_readc_wait(void* handle, unsigned ms);
/* Discard any pending input on the serial port.
*/
int gbser_flush(void* handle);
/* Write |len| bytes from |buf| to the serial port.
*/
int gbser_write(void* handle, const void* buf, unsigned len);
/* Write a null terminated string in |str| to the serial
* port.
*/
int gbser_print(void* handle, const char* str);
/* Write a single character to the serial port.
*/
int gbser_writec(void* handle, int c);
/* Return true if a port name seems to refer to a serial port.
* On Windows this tests the filename (against the regex
* /^(\\\\\.\\\\)?com\d+:?$/i). On Posix it returns the value of
* isatty()
*/
int gbser_is_serial(const char* port_name);
/* This isn't part of the above abstraction; it's just a helper for
* the other serial modules in the tree.
*
* Windows does a weird thing with serial ports.
* COM ports 1 - 9 are "COM1:" through "COM9:"
* The one after that is \\.\\com10 - this function tries to plaster over
* that.
* It returns a pointer to a statically allocated buffer and is therefore not
* thread safe. The buffer pointed to remains valid only until the next
* call to this function.
*/
const char* fix_win_serial_name_r(const char* comname, char* obuf, size_t len);
const char* fix_win_serial_name(const char* comname);
#endif /* GBSER_H_INCLUDED_ */