RE: Hello and win32 g_io_channel help needed
Thank you for the reply Rob, I ended up re-structuring to do polling every 250ms with a timeout on my reads of zero. It actually works quite well and fit's in to the scope of the project which is not real-time anyway (it is for debugging a simple IO board). Such a shame since the callbacks would have been so nice, but as they say "Dumb it down for the lowest common denominator" Interesting how windows is always the lowest common denominator. Regards, Burkey -Original Message- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Robert Pearce Sent: Friday, 4 May 2007 18:05 To: gtk-list@gnome.org Subject: Re: Hello and win32 g_io_channel help needed On Fri, 4 May 2007 10:40:30 +1000 "Burke.Daniel" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > I can easily achieve this under Linux with a little > re-organisation to separate out the platform specific > portions. > > Does anyone have a fairly straightforward approach to > do the same under windows? If I cannot add a watch to > the serial port I am afraid I may have to either fake > it with a poll? Short answer - no. Longer answer - the Windows serial port handling is ugly and painful, and really seriously not designed for this. It assumes you'll be using a separate thread for everything. But there is just about provision for it. Polling is even worse, because Windows doesn't support anything equivalent to the Unix "select" call. Here are some extracts from the code I've used on Windows (using Borland C++ Builder) with some sucess: CommsLink::CommsLink ( const char * port, int baud ) { DCB ioDCB; hFile = CreateFile ( port, GENERIC_READ | GENERIC_WRITE, 0, NULL, OPEN_EXISTING, FILE_FLAG_OVERLAPPED, NULL ); sReadOverlap.hEvent = 0; sReadOverlap.Offset = 0; sReadOverlap.OffsetHigh = 0; sWriteOverlap.hEvent = 0; sWriteOverlap.Offset = 0; sWriteOverlap.OffsetHigh = 0; if ( GetCommState ( hFile, &ioDCB ) ) { // Set up appropriate attributes ioDCB.BaudRate = baud; ioDCB.ByteSize = 8; ioDCB.Parity = NOPARITY; ioDCB.StopBits = ONESTOPBIT; ioDCB.fParity = false; ioDCB.fBinary = true; SetCommState ( hFile, &ioDCB ); } else { CloseHandle ( hFile ); hFile = INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE; return; } } VOID CALLBACK HandleAsyncRx ( DWORD error, DWORD NumBytes, LPOVERLAPPED lpOverlapped ) { CommsLink * cml = (CommsLink*)lpOverlapped->hEvent; lpOverlapped->hEvent = 0; cml->HandleRXEvent ( error, NumBytes ); } bool CommsLink::SetRXHandler ( CommsCallback * cb ) { RxCallBack = cb; sReadOverlap.hEvent = (void*)this; ReadFileEx ( hFile, AsyncReadBuffer, 8, &sReadOverlap, HandleAsyncRx ); return true;// Should check something } The problem is, Windows doesn't have the nice clean Gtk "main loop" to poll for that event. So while the above has avoided needing a separate thread, it doesn't work unless you have a timer tick regularly putting your code into a suitable "interruptible sleep state" : void __fastcall TAppWindow::Timer1Timer(TObject *Sender) { if ( SleepEx ( 0, 1 ) != 0 ) { // There was an event, which means we received some data etc.. I had this more-or-less working when my customer decided to use Linux. The port to Gtk was much easier. Cheers, Rob ___ gtk-list mailing list gtk-list@gnome.org http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/gtk-list ___ gtk-list mailing list gtk-list@gnome.org http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/gtk-list
Re: Hello and win32 g_io_channel help needed
On Fri, 4 May 2007 10:40:30 +1000 "Burke.Daniel" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > I can easily achieve this under Linux with a little > re-organisation to separate out the platform specific > portions. > > Does anyone have a fairly straightforward approach to > do the same under windows? If I cannot add a watch to > the serial port I am afraid I may have to either fake > it with a poll? Short answer - no. Longer answer - the Windows serial port handling is ugly and painful, and really seriously not designed for this. It assumes you'll be using a separate thread for everything. But there is just about provision for it. Polling is even worse, because Windows doesn't support anything equivalent to the Unix "select" call. Here are some extracts from the code I've used on Windows (using Borland C++ Builder) with some sucess: CommsLink::CommsLink ( const char * port, int baud ) { DCB ioDCB; hFile = CreateFile ( port, GENERIC_READ | GENERIC_WRITE, 0, NULL, OPEN_EXISTING, FILE_FLAG_OVERLAPPED, NULL ); sReadOverlap.hEvent = 0; sReadOverlap.Offset = 0; sReadOverlap.OffsetHigh = 0; sWriteOverlap.hEvent = 0; sWriteOverlap.Offset = 0; sWriteOverlap.OffsetHigh = 0; if ( GetCommState ( hFile, &ioDCB ) ) { // Set up appropriate attributes ioDCB.BaudRate = baud; ioDCB.ByteSize = 8; ioDCB.Parity = NOPARITY; ioDCB.StopBits = ONESTOPBIT; ioDCB.fParity = false; ioDCB.fBinary = true; SetCommState ( hFile, &ioDCB ); } else { CloseHandle ( hFile ); hFile = INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE; return; } } VOID CALLBACK HandleAsyncRx ( DWORD error, DWORD NumBytes, LPOVERLAPPED lpOverlapped ) { CommsLink * cml = (CommsLink*)lpOverlapped->hEvent; lpOverlapped->hEvent = 0; cml->HandleRXEvent ( error, NumBytes ); } bool CommsLink::SetRXHandler ( CommsCallback * cb ) { RxCallBack = cb; sReadOverlap.hEvent = (void*)this; ReadFileEx ( hFile, AsyncReadBuffer, 8, &sReadOverlap, HandleAsyncRx ); return true;// Should check something } The problem is, Windows doesn't have the nice clean Gtk "main loop" to poll for that event. So while the above has avoided needing a separate thread, it doesn't work unless you have a timer tick regularly putting your code into a suitable "interruptible sleep state" : void __fastcall TAppWindow::Timer1Timer(TObject *Sender) { if ( SleepEx ( 0, 1 ) != 0 ) { // There was an event, which means we received some data etc.. I had this more-or-less working when my customer decided to use Linux. The port to Gtk was much easier. Cheers, Rob ___ gtk-list mailing list gtk-list@gnome.org http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/gtk-list
RE: Hello and win32 g_io_channel help needed
Failing this method I am moving to have my platform specific code handle the send and receiving, however I would still really like to use some kind of a callback like g_io_add_watch. I can easily achieve this under Linux with a little re-organisation to separate out the platform specific portions. Does anyone have a fairly straightforward approach to do the same under windows? If I cannot add a watch to the serial port I am afraid I may have to either fake it with a poll? Regards, Burkey -Original Message- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Burke.Daniel Sent: Friday, 4 May 2007 10:11 To: gtk-list@gnome.org Subject: RE: Hello and win32 g_io_channel help needed Actually I changed it to use the win32 one but it behaves the same. This seems to be a difficult one to answer, so far nobody has been able to even suggest anything. -Original Message- From: Chris Vine [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Thursday, 3 May 2007 20:15 To: Burke.Daniel Cc: gtk-list@gnome.org Subject: Re: Hello and win32 g_io_channel help needed On Thu, 2007-05-03 at 14:04 +1000, Burke.Daniel wrote: > Hail! I am new.. so gday to everyone here. > > I am after some assistance with getting my event-driven serial port > input working on Windows. > > The project is a portable serial tool for internal use within our > company, I am writing it using libglademm since I love C++ and am a > big Gnome/GTK fan (my laptop being Ubuntu Gnome based) > On Linux I am using open and termios to handle the serial port setup, > finally returning a GIOChannel for monitoring and so far.. so good. > However I am now trying to get the evil version of it running and am > not so happy. Here I am using CreateFile to open and configure my > port, then use: > > m_PortDescriptor = _open_osfhandle((long)m_PortHandle, 0); > > channel = g_io_channel_unix_new(m_PortDescriptor); > to get the channel. Later on I use g_io_add_watch to setup a monitor > which seems to compile and run ok, however when I send data using > g_io_channel_write_chars it seems to crash and I also don’t seem to be > receiving data (often resulting another application halt) You mention that you are using Windows, so is there any reason why you are calling g_io_channel_unix_new() instead of the g_io_channel_win32_new*() functions to create the GIOChannel object? Chris ___ gtk-list mailing list gtk-list@gnome.org http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/gtk-list ___ gtk-list mailing list gtk-list@gnome.org http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/gtk-list
RE: Hello and win32 g_io_channel help needed
Actually I changed it to use the win32 one but it behaves the same. This seems to be a difficult one to answer, so far nobody has been able to even suggest anything. -Original Message- From: Chris Vine [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Thursday, 3 May 2007 20:15 To: Burke.Daniel Cc: gtk-list@gnome.org Subject: Re: Hello and win32 g_io_channel help needed On Thu, 2007-05-03 at 14:04 +1000, Burke.Daniel wrote: > Hail! I am new.. so gday to everyone here. > > I am after some assistance with getting my event-driven serial port > input working on Windows. > > The project is a portable serial tool for internal use within our > company, I am writing it using libglademm since I love C++ and am a > big Gnome/GTK fan (my laptop being Ubuntu Gnome based) > On Linux I am using open and termios to handle the serial port setup, > finally returning a GIOChannel for monitoring and so far.. so good. > However I am now trying to get the evil version of it running and am > not so happy. Here I am using CreateFile to open and configure my > port, then use: > > m_PortDescriptor = _open_osfhandle((long)m_PortHandle, 0); > > channel = g_io_channel_unix_new(m_PortDescriptor); > to get the channel. Later on I use g_io_add_watch to setup a monitor > which seems to compile and run ok, however when I send data using > g_io_channel_write_chars it seems to crash and I also don’t seem to be > receiving data (often resulting another application halt) You mention that you are using Windows, so is there any reason why you are calling g_io_channel_unix_new() instead of the g_io_channel_win32_new*() functions to create the GIOChannel object? Chris ___ gtk-list mailing list gtk-list@gnome.org http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/gtk-list
Re: Hello and win32 g_io_channel help needed
On Thu, 2007-05-03 at 14:04 +1000, Burke.Daniel wrote: > Hail! I am new.. so gday to everyone here. > > I am after some assistance with getting my event-driven serial port > input working on Windows. > > The project is a portable serial tool for internal use within our > company, I am writing it using libglademm since I love C++ and am a > big Gnome/GTK fan (my laptop being Ubuntu Gnome based) > On Linux I am using open and termios to handle the serial port setup, > finally returning a GIOChannel for monitoring and so far.. so good. > However I am now trying to get the evil version of it running and am > not so happy. Here I am using CreateFile to open and configure my > port, then use: > > m_PortDescriptor = _open_osfhandle((long)m_PortHandle, 0); > > channel = g_io_channel_unix_new(m_PortDescriptor); > to get the channel. Later on I use g_io_add_watch to setup a monitor > which seems to compile and run ok, however when I send data using > g_io_channel_write_chars it seems to crash and I also don’t seem to be > receiving data (often resulting another application halt) You mention that you are using Windows, so is there any reason why you are calling g_io_channel_unix_new() instead of the g_io_channel_win32_new*() functions to create the GIOChannel object? Chris ___ gtk-list mailing list gtk-list@gnome.org http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/gtk-list
RE: Hello and win32 g_io_channel help needed
Actually.. I have commented out the reading and my callback is called very quickly whenever I drag the window around with my mouse, so I really think there must be something wrong with the way I am getting a file descriptor or something like that? From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Burke.Daniel Sent: Thursday, 3 May 2007 14:04 To: gtk-list@gnome.org Subject: Hello and win32 g_io_channel help needed Hail! I am new.. so gday to everyone here. I am after some assistance with getting my event-driven serial port input working on Windows. The project is a portable serial tool for internal use within our company, I am writing it using libglademm since I love C++ and am a big Gnome/GTK fan (my laptop being Ubuntu Gnome based) On Linux I am using open and termios to handle the serial port setup, finally returning a GIOChannel for monitoring and so far.. so good. However I am now trying to get the evil version of it running and am not so happy. Here I am using CreateFile to open and configure my port, then use: m_PortDescriptor = _open_osfhandle((long)m_PortHandle, 0); channel = g_io_channel_unix_new(m_PortDescriptor); to get the channel. Later on I use g_io_add_watch to setup a monitor which seems to compile and run ok, however when I send data using g_io_channel_write_chars it seems to crash and I also don't seem to be receiving data (often resulting another application halt) I am not a GTK expert (this is my first project in it) and would really appreciate help since I want to promote using this sort of solution internally as much as possible. Kind regards, Burkey ___ gtk-list mailing list gtk-list@gnome.org http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/gtk-list