Re: Pyserial example program error: win32file.SetupComm reports 'Incorrect function.'
Ron Jackson wrote: Dennis Lee Bieber wrote: On Wed, 07 Feb 2007 11:14:39 -0800, Ron Jackson [EMAIL PROTECTED] declaimed the following in comp.lang.python: I am using Python 2.5 on Windows XP. I have installed Pyserial and win32all extensions. 2.4 on XP Pro SP2... When I try to run the example program scan.py (included below), or any other program using pyserial, as soon as it hits the statement: s = serial.Serial(i) import serial for i in range(256): ... try: ... print i, ... s = serial.Serial(i) ... print s.portstr ... s.close() ... except serial.SerialException: ... print ... 0 COM1 1 2 COM3 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 and on and on... What do I need to do to fix this? Thanks for the help! Does the serial port module require a compile for use with 2.5? Well, with only one download since Python 2.2, guess not... Something glitched in win32? Sorry, I don't know... However, since those are Python source files, you could always plug in some debugging lines around that win32 call to see what actually is there. Do you have any unnatural serial ports on the machine? (Like a USBserial converter?) Trying your program, I get the same error 'Incorrect function.': Traceback (most recent call last): File pyshell#9, line 4, in module s = serial.Serial(i) File C:\Python25\Lib\site-packages\serial\serialutil.py, line 156, in __init__ self.open() File C:\Python25\lib\site-packages\serial\serialwin32.py, line 57, in open win32file.SetupComm(self.hComPort, 4096, 4096) error: (1, 'SetupComm', 'Incorrect function.') I tried PySerial on a laptop, also running XP Home SP2, and both the example program and the program you suggested work fine on the laptop. The desktop computer that is giving me the error doesn't have any unnatural serial ports on it currently. The laptop worked fine, either with a USB device emulating COMM6 present or with the USB device disconnected. I checked and both machines are running the same version of win32file, which is site-packages\win32\win32file.pyd, 88 KB dated 9/22/2006. So my question is: Why would the statement win32file.SetupComm(self.hComPort, 4096, 4096) work just fine on one machine and not the other? win32file.pyd can't be opened like a .py file, and I don't know what the rather cryptic error 'Incorrect function.' is trying to tell me. Does anyone who is familiar with win32file have an idea what the problem is? Thanks for the help! -- Ron I am now facing your problem ... on a machine that used to work fine. Have you figured it out ? Could it be a conflict between pyserial and pywin32 ? hg -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Re: Pyserial example program error: win32file.SetupComm reports 'Incorrect function.'
Dennis Lee Bieber wrote: On Sat, 07 Apr 2007 11:36:05 +0200, hg [EMAIL PROTECTED] declaimed the following in comp.lang.python: I am now facing your problem ... on a machine that used to work fine. Have you figured it out ? Could it be a conflict between pyserial and pywin32 ? The test still runs on my system -- which is still running the ActiveState 2.4.3 build*... So that probably clears M$ of any malfeasance (via various and sundry patches). The closest a google search came up with was someone trying to control a serial port printer getting failures on setupcomm (and /not/ via Python). I think the gist was that any port except the one the printer was connected to was okay. So... Is there some device connected to the port in question? Possibly a device that has a system level driver (ie, a Windows printer entry) that might be preventing changes... * Too many 3rd-party modules still aren't available in 2.5 versions for my tastes... -- Wulfraed Dennis Lee Bieber KD6MOG [EMAIL PROTECTED] [EMAIL PROTECTED] HTTP://wlfraed.home.netcom.com/ (Bestiaria Support Staff: [EMAIL PROTECTED]) HTTP://www.bestiaria.com/ My fault, I actually _had_ the issue with python 2.4 I removed everything and reinstalled python 2.4.4, pywin( lastest) and pyserial (latest) ... the problem is gone. hg -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Re: Pyserial example program error: win32file.SetupComm reports 'Incorrect function.'
Dennis Lee Bieber wrote: On Wed, 07 Feb 2007 11:14:39 -0800, Ron Jackson [EMAIL PROTECTED] declaimed the following in comp.lang.python: I am using Python 2.5 on Windows XP. I have installed Pyserial and win32all extensions. 2.4 on XP Pro SP2... When I try to run the example program scan.py (included below), or any other program using pyserial, as soon as it hits the statement: s = serial.Serial(i) import serial for i in range(256): ... try: ... print i, ... s = serial.Serial(i) ... print s.portstr ... s.close() ... except serial.SerialException: ... print ... 0 COM1 1 2 COM3 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 and on and on... What do I need to do to fix this? Thanks for the help! Does the serial port module require a compile for use with 2.5? Well, with only one download since Python 2.2, guess not... Something glitched in win32? Sorry, I don't know... However, since those are Python source files, you could always plug in some debugging lines around that win32 call to see what actually is there. Do you have any unnatural serial ports on the machine? (Like a USBserial converter?) Trying your program, I get the same error 'Incorrect function.': Traceback (most recent call last): File pyshell#9, line 4, in module s = serial.Serial(i) File C:\Python25\Lib\site-packages\serial\serialutil.py, line 156, in __init__ self.open() File C:\Python25\lib\site-packages\serial\serialwin32.py, line 57, in open win32file.SetupComm(self.hComPort, 4096, 4096) error: (1, 'SetupComm', 'Incorrect function.') I tried PySerial on a laptop, also running XP Home SP2, and both the example program and the program you suggested work fine on the laptop. The desktop computer that is giving me the error doesn't have any unnatural serial ports on it currently. The laptop worked fine, either with a USB device emulating COMM6 present or with the USB device disconnected. I checked and both machines are running the same version of win32file, which is site-packages\win32\win32file.pyd, 88 KB dated 9/22/2006. So my question is: Why would the statement win32file.SetupComm(self.hComPort, 4096, 4096) work just fine on one machine and not the other? win32file.pyd can't be opened like a .py file, and I don't know what the rather cryptic error 'Incorrect function.' is trying to tell me. Does anyone who is familiar with win32file have an idea what the problem is? Thanks for the help! -- Ron -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Pyserial example program error: win32file.SetupComm reports 'Incorrect function.'
I am using Python 2.5 on Windows XP. I have installed Pyserial and win32all extensions. When I try to run the example program scan.py (included below), or any other program using pyserial, as soon as it hits the statement: s = serial.Serial(i) I get the error: Traceback (most recent call last): File C:\Python25\Doc\PySerial Examples\scan.py, line 26, in module for n,s in scan(): File C:\Python25\Doc\PySerial Examples\scan.py, line 17, in scan s = serial.Serial(i) File C:\Python25\Lib\site-packages\serial\serialutil.py, line 156, in __init__ self.open() File C:\Python25\lib\site-packages\serial\serialwin32.py, line 57, in open win32file.SetupComm(self.hComPort, 4096, 4096) error: (1, 'SetupComm', 'Incorrect function.') What do I need to do to fix this? Thanks for the help! -- Ron The example program scan.py (from the pyserial examples folder): --- #!/usr/bin/env python Scan for serial ports. Part of pySerial (http://pyserial.sf.net) (C)2002-2003 [EMAIL PROTECTED] The scan function of this module tries to open each port number from 0 to 255 and it builds a list of those ports where this was successful. import serial def scan(): scan for available ports. return a list of tuples (num, name) available = [] for i in range(256): try: s = serial.Serial(i) available.append( (i, s.portstr)) s.close() #explicit close 'cause of delayed GC in java except serial.SerialException: pass return available if __name__=='__main__': print Found ports: for n,s in scan(): print (%d) %s % (n,s) -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list