use Win32; require 5.003; use Win32::SerialPort qw( :STAT 0.15 );
$PortObj = new Win32::SerialPort ($PortName, $quiet) || die "Can't open $PortName: $^E\n"; # $quiet is optional
$PortObj = start Win32::SerialPort ($Configuration_File_Name) || die "Can't start $Configuration_File_Name: $^E\n";
$PortObj = tie (*FH, 'Win32::SerialPort', $Configuration_File_Name) || die "Can't tie using $Configuration_File_Name: $^E\n";
$PortObj->alias("MODEM1");
# before using start, restart, or tie $PortObj->save($Configuration_File_Name) || warn "Can't save $Configuration_File_Name: $^E\n";
# after new, must check for failure $PortObj->write_settings || undef $PortObj; print "Can't change Device_Control_Block: $^E\n" unless ($PortObj);
# rereads file to either return open port to a known state # or switch to a different configuration on the same port $PortObj->restart($Configuration_File_Name) || warn "Can't reread $Configuration_File_Name: $^E\n";
# specials for test suite only @necessary_param = Win32::SerialPort->set_test_mode_active(1); $PortObj->lookclear("loopback to next 'input' method");
# most methods can be called three ways: $PortObj->handshake("xoff"); # set parameter $flowcontrol = $PortObj->handshake; # current value (scalar) @handshake_opts = $PortObj->handshake; # permitted choices (list)
# similar $PortObj->baudrate(9600); $PortObj->parity("odd"); $PortObj->databits(8); $PortObj->stopbits(1); $PortObj->debug(0);
# range parameters return (minimum, maximum) in list context $PortObj->xon_limit(100); # bytes left in buffer $PortObj->xoff_limit(100); # space left in buffer $PortObj->xon_char(0x11); $PortObj->xoff_char(0x13); $PortObj->eof_char(0x0); $PortObj->event_char(0x0); $PortObj->error_char(0); # for parity errors
$PortObj->buffers(4096, 4096); # read, write # returns current in list context
$PortObj->read_interval(100); # max time between read char (milliseconds) $PortObj->read_char_time(5); # avg time between read char $PortObj->read_const_time(100); # total = (avg * bytes) + const $PortObj->write_char_time(5); $PortObj->write_const_time(100);
# true/false parameters (return scalar context only)
$PortObj->binary(T); # just say Yes (Win 3.x option)
$PortObj->parity_enable(F); # faults during input
($BlockingFlags, $InBytes, $OutBytes, $LatchErrorFlags) = $PortObj->status || warn "could not get port status\n";
if ($BlockingFlags) { warn "Port is blocked"; } if ($BlockingFlags & BM_fCtsHold) { warn "Waiting for CTS"; } if ($LatchErrorFlags & CE_FRAME) { warn "Framing Error"; } # The API resets errors when reading status, $LatchErrorFlags # is all $ErrorFlags seen since the last reset_error
Additional useful constants may be exported eventually. If the only fault action desired is a message, status provides Built-In BitMask processing:
$PortObj->error_msg(1); # prints hardware messages like "Framing Error" $PortObj->user_msg(1); # prints function messages like "Waiting for CTS"
($count_in, $string_in) = $PortObj->read($InBytes); warn "read unsuccessful\n" unless ($count_in == $InBytes);
$count_out = $PortObj->write($output_string); warn "write failed\n" unless ($count_out); warn "write incomplete\n" if ( $count_out != length($output_string) );
if ($string_in = $PortObj->input) { PortObj->write($string_in); } # simple echo with no control character processing
$PortObj->transmit_char(0x03); # bypass buffer (and suspend)
$ModemStatus = $PortObj->modemlines; if ($ModemStatus & $PortObj->MS_RLSD_ON) { print "carrier detected"; }
$PortObj = tie (*FH, 'Win32::SerialPort', $Configuration_File_Name) || die "Can't tie: $^E\n"; ## TIEHANDLE ##
print FH "text"; ## PRINT ## $char = getc FH; ## GETC ## syswrite FH, $out, length($out), 0; ## WRITE ## $line = <FH>; ## READLINE ## @lines = <FH>; ## READLINE ## printf FH "received: %s", $line; ## PRINTF ## read (FH, $in, 5, 0) or die "$^E"; ## READ ## sysread (FH, $in, 5, 0) or die "$^E"; ## READ ## close FH || warn "close failed"; ## CLOSE ## undef $PortObj; untie *FH; ## DESTROY ##
$PortObj->linesize(10); # with READLINE $PortObj->lastline("_GOT_ME_"); # with READLINE, list only
$PortObj->close || warn "close failed"; # passed to CommPort to release port to OS - needed to reopen # close will not usually DESTROY the object # also called as: close FH || warn "close failed";
undef $PortObj; # preferred unless reopen expected since it triggers DESTROY # calls $PortObj->close but does not confirm success # MUST precede untie - do all three IN THIS SEQUENCE before re-tie.
untie *FH;
$PortObj->are_match("text", "\n"); # possible end strings $PortObj->lookclear; # empty buffers $PortObj->write("Feed Me:"); # initial prompt $PortObj->is_prompt("More Food:"); # new prompt after "kill" char
my $gotit = ""; my $match1 = ""; until ("" ne $gotit) { $gotit = $PortObj->lookfor; # poll until data ready die "Aborted without match\n" unless (defined $gotit); last if ($gotit); $match1 = $PortObj->matchclear; # match is first thing received last if ($match1); sleep 1; # polling sample time }
printf "gotit = %s\n", $gotit; # input BEFORE the match my ($match, $after, $pattern, $instead) = $PortObj->lastlook; # input that MATCHED, input AFTER the match, PATTERN that matched # input received INSTEAD when timeout without match
if ($match1) { $match = $match1; } printf "lastlook-match = %s -after = %s -pattern = %s\n", $match, $after, $pattern;
$gotit = $PortObj->lookfor($count); # block until $count chars received
$PortObj->are_match("-re", "pattern", "text"); # possible match strings: "pattern" is a regular expression, # "text" is a literal string
$gotit = $PortObj->streamline; # poll until data ready $gotit = $PortObj->streamline($count);# block until $count chars received # fast alternatives to lookfor with no character processing
$PortObj->stty_intr("\cC"); # char to abort lookfor method $PortObj->stty_quit("\cD"); # char to abort perl $PortObj->stty_eof("\cZ"); # end_of_file char $PortObj->stty_eol("\cJ"); # end_of_line char $PortObj->stty_erase("\cH"); # delete one character from buffer (backspace) $PortObj->stty_kill("\cU"); # clear line buffer
$PortObj->is_stty_intr(3); # ord(char) to abort lookfor method $qc = $PortObj->is_stty_quit; # ($qc == 4) for "\cD" $PortObj->is_stty_eof(26); $PortObj->is_stty_eol(10); $PortObj->is_stty_erase(8); $PortObj->is_stty_kill(21);
my $air = " "x76; $PortObj->stty_clear("\r$air\r"); # written after kill character $PortObj->is_stty_clear; # internal version for config file $PortObj->stty_bsdel("\cH \cH"); # written after erase character
$PortObj->stty_echo(0); # echo every character $PortObj->stty_echoe(1); # if echo erase character with bsdel string $PortObj->stty_echok(1); # if echo \n after kill character $PortObj->stty_echonl(0); # if echo \n $PortObj->stty_echoke(1); # if echo clear string after kill character $PortObj->stty_echoctl(0); # if echo "^Char" for control chars $PortObj->stty_istrip(0); # strip input to 7-bits $PortObj->stty_icrnl(0); # map \r to \n on input $PortObj->stty_ocrnl(0); # map \r to \n on output $PortObj->stty_igncr(0); # ignore \r on input $PortObj->stty_inlcr(0); # map \n to \r on input $PortObj->stty_onlcr(1); # map \n to \r\n on output $PortObj->stty_opost(0); # enable output mapping $PortObj->stty_isig(0); # enable quit and intr characters $PortObj->stty_icanon(0); # enable erase and kill characters
$PortObj->stty("-icanon"); # disable erase and kill char, Unix-style @stty_all = $PortObj->stty(); # get all the parameters, Perl-style
can_baud can_databits can_stopbits can_dtrdsr can_handshake can_parity_check can_parity_config can_parity_enable can_rlsd can_16bitmode is_rs232 is_modem can_rtscts can_xonxoff can_xon_char can_spec_char can_interval_timeout can_total_timeout buffer_max can_rlsd_config
write_bg write_done read_bg read_done reset_error suspend_tx resume_tx dtr_active rts_active break_active xoff_active xon_active purge_all purge_rx purge_tx
$PortObj->ignore_null(No); $PortObj->ignore_no_dsr(No); $PortObj->abort_on_error("no"); $PortObj->subst_pe_char("no");
$PortObj->accept_xoff(F); # hold during output $PortObj->accept_dsr(F); $PortObj->accept_cts(F); $PortObj->send_xoff(N); $PortObj->tx_on_xoff(Y);
Uses features of the Win32 API to implement non-blocking I/O, serial parameter setting, event-loop operation, and enhanced error handling.
To pass in NULL
as the pointer to an optional buffer, pass in $null=0
. This is expected to change to an empty list reference, []
, when Perl supports that form in this usage.
undef
on failure. Ports are opened for binary transfers. A separate binmode
is not needed. The USER must release the object if write_settings does not succeed.
Version 0.15 adds an optional $quiet
parameter to new. Failure to open a port prints a error message to STDOUT by default. Since
only one application at a time can ``own'' the port, one source of failure
was ``port in use''. There was previously no way to check this without
getting a ``fail message''. Setting $quiet
disables this built-in message. It also returns 0 instead of undef
if the port is unavailable (still FALSE, used for testing this condition -
other faults may still return undef
). Use of $quiet
only applies to new.
Certain parameters MUST be set before executing write_settings. Others will attempt to deduce defaults from the hardware or from other parameters. The Required parameters are:
Some individual parameters (eg. baudrate) can be changed after the initialization is completed. These will be validated and will update the Device Control Block as required. The save method will write the current parameters to a file that start, tie, and restart can use to reestablish a functional setup.
$PortObj = new Win32::SerialPort ($PortName, $quiet) || die "Can't open $PortName: $^E\n"; # $quiet is optional
$PortObj->user_msg(ON); $PortObj->databits(8); $PortObj->baudrate(9600); $PortObj->parity("none"); $PortObj->stopbits(1); $PortObj->handshake("rts"); $PortObj->buffers(4096, 4096);
$PortObj->write_settings || undef $PortObj;
$PortObj->save($Configuration_File_Name);
$PortObj->baudrate(300);
undef $PortObj; # closes port AND frees memory back to perl
The PortName maps to both the Registry Device Name and the Properties associated with that device. A single Physical port can be accessed using two or more Device Names. But the options and setup data will differ significantly in the two cases. A typical example is a Modem on port ``COM2''. Both of these PortNames open the same Physical hardware:
$P1 = new Win32::SerialPort ("COM2");
$P2 = new Win32::SerialPort ("\\\\.\\Nanohertz Modem model K-9");
$P1
is a ``generic'' serial port. $P2
includes
all of $P1
plus a variety of modem-specific added options and
features. The ``raw'' API calls return different size configuration
structures in the two cases. Win32 uses the ``\\.\'' prefix to identify
``named'' devices. Since both names use the same
Physical hardware, they can not both be used at the same time. The OS will complain.
Consider this A Good Thing. Use alias to convert the name used by ``built-in'' messages.
$P2->alias("FIDO");
The second constructor, start is intended to simplify scripts which need a constant setup. It executes
all the steps from new to
write_settings based on a previously saved configuration. This constructor will return undef
on a bad configuration file or failure of a validity check. The returned
object is ready for access.
$PortObj2 = start Win32::SerialPort ($Configuration_File_Name) || die;
The third constructor, tie, combines the start with Perl's support for tied FileHandles (see perltie). Win32::SerialPort implements the complete set of methods: TIEHANDLE, PRINT, PRINTF, WRITE, READ, GETC, READLINE, CLOSE, and DESTROY. Tied FileHandle support was new with Version 0.14. The implementation attempts to mimic STDIN/STDOUT behaviour as closely as possible: calls block until done, data strings that exceed internal buffers are divided transparently into multiple calls, and stty_onlcr is applied to output data (WRITE, PRINT, PRINTF) when stty_opost.
$PortObj2 = tie (*FH, 'Win32::SerialPort', $Configuration_File_Name) || die;
The tied FileHandle methods may be combined with the Win32::SerialPort
methods for read, input, and write as well as other methods. The typical restrictions against mixing print with syswrite do not apply. Since both (tied) read and sysread call the same $ob->READ
method, and since a separate $ob->read
method has existed for some time in Win32::SerialPort, you should always
use sysread with the tied interface. Because all the tied methods block, they should
ALWAYS be used with timeout settings and are not suitable for background
operations and polled loops.
Binary selections will accept as true any of the following:
("YES", "Y", "ON", "TRUE", "T", "1", 1)
(upper/lower/mixed case) Anything else is false.
There are a large number of possible configuration and option parameters. To facilitate checking option validity in scripts, most configuration methods can be used in three different ways:
(minimum, maximum)
for parameters which can be set to a range of values. Binary selections
have no need to call this way - but will get (0,1)
if they do. The null list
(undef)
will be returned for failed calls in list context (e.g. for an invalid or
unexpected argument).
Setting read_interval to 0xffffffff
will do a non-blocking read. The ReadFile returns immediately whether or not any characters are actually read. This
replicates the behavior of the API.
The other model defines the total time allowed to complete the operation. A fixed overhead time is added to the product of bytes and per_byte_time. A wide variety of timeout options can be defined by selecting the three parameters: fixed, each, and size.
Read_total = read_const_time + (read_char_time * bytes_to_read)
Write_total = write_const_time + (write_char_time * bytes_to_write)
LONGsize SHORTsize nocarp yes_true OS_Error internal_buffer
BM_fCtsHold BM_fDsrHold BM_fRlsdHold BM_fXoffHold BM_fXoffSent BM_fEof BM_fTxim BM_AllBits
Which incoming bits are active:
MS_CTS_ON MS_DSR_ON MS_RING_ON MS_RLSD_ON
What hardware errors have been detected:
CE_RXOVER CE_OVERRUN CE_RXPARITY CE_FRAME CE_BREAK CE_TXFULL CE_MODE
Offsets into the array returned by status:
ST_BLOCK ST_INPUT ST_OUTPUT ST_ERROR
$ok = $PortObj->stty("-icanon"); # equivalent to stty_icanon(0) @stty_all = $PortObj->stty(); # get all the parameters, Perl-style $ok = $PortObj->stty("cs7",19200); # multiple parameters $ok = $PortObj->stty(@stty_save); # many parameters
The distribution includes a demo script, stty.plx, which gives details of
usage. Not all Unix parameters are currently supported. But the array will
contain all those which can be set. The order in @stty_all
will match the following pattern:
baud, # numeric, always first "intr", character, # the parameters which set special characters "name", character, ... "stop", character, # "stop" will always be the last "pair" "parameter", # the on/off settings "-parameter", ...
Version 0.13 added the primitive functions required to implement this feature. A number of methods named stty_xxx do what an experienced stty user would expect. Unlike stty on Unix, the stty_xxx operations apply only to I/O processed via the lookfor method or the tied FileHandle methods. The read, input, read_done, write methods all treat data as ``raw''.
The following stty functions have related SerialPort functions: --------------------------------------------------------------- stty (control) SerialPort Default Value ---------------- ------------------ ------------- parenb inpck parity_enable from port parodd parity from port cs5 cs6 cs7 cs8 databits from port cstopb stopbits from port clocal crtscts handshake from port ixon ixoff handshake from port
time read_const_time from port 110 300 600 1200 2400 baudrate from port 4800 9600 19200 38400 baudrate 75 134.5 150 1800 fixed baud only - not selectable g, "stty < /dev/x" start, save none sane restart none
stty (input) SerialPort Default Value ---------------- ------------------ ------------- istrip stty_istrip off igncr stty_igncr off inlcr stty_inlcr off icrnl stty_icrnl on parmrk error_char from port (off typ)
stty (output) SerialPort Default Value ---------------- ------------------ ------------- ocrnl stty_ocrnl off if opost onlcr stty_onlcr on if opost opost stty_opost off
stty (local) SerialPort Default Value ---------------- ------------------ ------------- raw read, write, input none cooked lookfor none echo stty_echo off echoe stty_echoe on if echo echok stty_echok on if echo echonl stty_echonl off echoke stty_echoke on if echo echoctl stty_echoctl off
isig stty_isig off
icanon stty_icanon off stty (char) SerialPort Default Value ---------------- ------------------ ------------- intr stty_intr "\cC" is_stty_intr 3
quit stty_quit "\cD" is_stty_quit 4
erase stty_erase "\cH" is_stty_erase 8
(erase echo) stty_bsdel "\cH \cH"
kill stty_kill "\cU" is_stty_kill 21
(kill echo) stty_clear "\r {76}\r" is_stty_clear "-@{76}-"
eof stty_eof "\cZ" is_stty_eof 26
eol stty_eol "\cJ" is_stty_eol 10
start xon_char from port ("\cQ" typ) is_xon_char 17 stop xoff_char from port ("\cS" typ) is_xoff_char 19 The following stty functions have no equivalent in SerialPort: -------------------------------------------------------------- [-]hup [-]ignbrk [-]brkint [-]ignpar [-]tostop susp 0 50 134 200 exta extb [-]cread [-]hupcl
The stty function list is taken from the documentation for IO::Stty by Austin Schutz.
Some communications programs have a different but related need - to collect (or discard) input until a specific pattern is detected. For lines, the pattern is a line-termination. But there are also requirements to search for other strings in the input such as ``username:'' and ``password:''. The lookfor method provides a consistant mechanism for solving this problem. It searches input character-by-character looking for a match to any of the elements of an array set using the are_match method. It returns the entire input up to the match pattern if a match is found. If no match is found, it returns ``'' unless an input error or abort is detected (which returns undef).
The actual match and the characters after it (if any) may also be viewed
using the lastlook method. In Version 0.13, the match test included a s/$pattern//s
test which worked fine for literal text but returned the Regular Expression that matched when $pattern
contained any Perl metacharacters. That was probably a bug - although no
one reported it.
In Version 0.14, lastlook returns both the input and the pattern from the match test. It also adopts
the convention from Expect.pm that match strings are literal text (tested
using index) unless preceeded in the
are_match list by a "-re", entry. The default are_match list is ("\n")
, which matches complete lines.
my ($match, $after, $pattern, $instead) = $PortObj->lastlook; # input that MATCHED, input AFTER the match, PATTERN that matched # input received INSTEAD when timeout without match ("" if match)
$PortObj->are_match("text1", "-re", "pattern", "text2"); # possible match strings: "pattern" is a regular expression, # "text1" and "text2" are literal strings
The Regular Expression handling in lookfor is still experimental. Please let me know if you use it (or can't use it),
so I can confirm bug fixes don't break your code. For literal strings,
$match
and $pattern
should be identical. The $instead
value returns the internal buffer tested by the match logic. A successful
match or a lookclear resets it to ``'' - so it is only useful for error handling such as timeout
processing or reporting unexpected responses.
The lookfor method is designed to be sampled periodically (polled). Any characters
after the match pattern are saved for a subsequent lookfor. Internally, lookfor is implemented using the nonblocking input method when called with no parameter. If called with a count, lookfor calls
$PortObj->read(count)
which blocks until the read is Complete or a Timeout occurs. The blocking alternative should not be used unless a fault time has
been defined using read_interval, read_const_time, and
read_char_time. It exists mostly to support the tied FileHandle
functions sysread, getc, and <FH>.
The internal buffers used by lookfor may be purged by the lookclear
method (which also clears the last match). For testing, lookclear can accept a string which is ``looped back'' to the next input. This feature is enabled only when set_test_mode_active(1)
. Normally, lookclear
will return undef
if given parameters. It still purges the buffers and last_match in that
case (but nothing is ``looped back''). You will want
stty_echo(0) when exercising loopback.
Version 0.15 adds a matchclear method. It is designed to handle the ``special case'' where the match
string is the first character(s)
received by lookfor. In this case, $lookfor_return == ""
, lookfor does not provide a clear indication that a match was found. The matchclear
returns the same $match
that would be returned by lastlook and resets it to ``'' without resetting any of the other buffers. Since the
lookfor already searched through the match, matchclear is used to both detect and step-over ``blank'' lines.
The character-by-character processing used by lookfor to support the stty emulation is fine for interactive activities and tasks which expect short responses. But it has too much ``overhead'' to handle fast data streams. Version 0.15 adds a streamline method which is a fast, line-oriented alternative with no echo support or input handling except for pattern searching. Exact benchmarks will vary with input data and patterns, but my tests indicate streamline is 10-20 times faster then lookfor when uploading files averaging 25-50 characters per line. Since streamline uses the same internal buffers, the lookclear, lastlook, are_match, and matchclear methods act the same in both cases. In fact, calls to streamline and lookfor can be interleaved if desired (e.g. an interactive task that starts an upload and returns to interactive activity when it is complete).
Beginning in Version 0.15, the READLINE method supports ``list context''. A tied FileHandle can slurp in a whole
file with an ``@lines = <FH>`` construct. In ''scalar context``, READLINE calls lookfor. But it calls
streamline in ``list context''. Both contexts also call matchclear
to detect ``empty'' lines and reset_error to detect hardware problems. The existance of a hardware fault is reported
with $^E
, although the specific fault is only reported when error_msg is true.
There are two additional methods for supporting ``list context'' input: lastline sets an ``end_of_file'' Regular Expression, and linesize permits changing the ``packet size'' in the blocking read operation to allow tuning performance to data characteristics. These two only apply during READLINE. The default for linesize is 1. There is no default for the lastline method.
In Version 0.15, Regular Expressions set by are_match and lastline will be pre-compiled using the qr// construct on Perl 5.005 and higher. This doubled lookfor and streamline speed in my tests with Regular Expressions - but actual improvements depend on both patterns and input data.
The functionality of lookfor includes a limited subset of the capabilities found in Austin Schutz's Expect.pm for Unix (and Tcl's expect which it resembles). The $before, $match, $pattern, and $after
return values are available if someone needs to create an ``expect''
subroutine for porting a script. When using multiple patterns, there is one
important functional difference: Expect.pm looks at each pattern in turn and returns the first match found; lookfor and streamline test all patterns and return the one found earliest in the input if more than one matches.
Because lookfor can be used to manage a command-line environment much like a Unix serial login, a number of ``stty-like'' methods are included to handle the issues raised by serial logins. One issue is dissimilar line terminations. This is addressed by the following methods:
$PortObj->stty_icrnl; # map \r to \n on input $PortObj->stty_igncr; # ignore \r on input $PortObj->stty_inlcr; # map \n to \r on input $PortObj->stty_ocrnl; # map \r to \n on output $PortObj->stty_onlcr; # map \n to \r\n on output $PortObj->stty_opost; # enable output mapping
The default specifies a raw device with no input or output processing. In Version 0.14, the default was a device which sends ``\r'' at the end of a line, requires ``\r\n'' to terminate incoming lines, and expects the ``host'' to echo every keystroke. Many ``dumb terminals'' act this way and the defaults were similar to Unix defaults. But some users found this ackward and confusing.
Sometimes, you want perl to echo input characters back to the serial device (and other times you don't want that).
$PortObj->stty_echo; # echo every character $PortObj->stty_echoe; # if echo erase with bsdel string (default) $PortObj->stty_echok; # if echo \n after kill character (default) $PortObj->stty_echonl; # echo \n even if stty_echo(0) $PortObj->stty_echoke; # if echo clear string after kill (default) $PortObj->stty_echoctl; # if echo "^Char" for control chars
$PortObj->stty_istrip; # strip input to 7-bits
my $air = " "x76; # overwrite entire line with spaces $PortObj->stty_clear("\r$air\r"); # written after kill character $PortObj->is_prompt("PROMPT:"); # need to write after kill $PortObj->stty_bsdel("\cH \cH"); # written after erase character
# internal method that permits clear string with \r in config file my $plus32 = "@"x76; # overwrite line with spaces (ord += 32) $PortObj->is_stty_clear("-$plus32-"); # equivalent to stty_clear
e.g. the following is WRONG!!____print $PortObj "some text";
You need something like this (Perl 5.005):
# construct $tie_ob = tie(*FOO,'Win32::SerialPort', $cfgfile) or die "Can't start $cfgfile\n";
print FOO "enter char: "; # destination is FileHandle, not Object my $in = getc FOO; syswrite FOO, "$in\n", 2, 0; print FOO "enter line: "; $in = <FOO>; printf FOO "received: %s\n", $in; print FOO "enter 5 char: "; sysread (FOO, $in, 5, 0) or die; printf FOO "received: %s\n", $in;
# destruct close FOO || print "close failed\n"; undef $tie_ob; # Don't forget this one!! untie *FOO;
Always include the undef $tie_ob
before the untie. See the Gotcha
description in perltie.
The Perl 5.004 implementation of tied FileHandles is missing close and syswrite. The Perl 5.003 version is essentially unusable. If you need these functions, consider Perl 5.005 seriously.
An important note about Win32 filenames. The reserved device names such as
can NOT be used as filenames. Hence
"COM2.cfg" would not be usable for $Configuration_File_Name.
COM1, AUX, LPT1, CON, PRN
Thanks to Ken White for testing on NT.
There exists a linux clone of this module implemented using POSIX.pm. It will probably run on other POSIX systems as well. It does not currently support the complete set of methods - although portability of user programs is excellent for the calls it does support.
The lookfor, stty_xxx, and Tied FileHandle mechanisms should be considered experimental. They have only been tested on a small subset of possible applications. While ``\r'' characters may be included in the clear string using is_stty_clear internally, ``\n'' characters may NOT be included in multi-character strings if you plan to save the strings in a configuration file (which uses ``\n'' as an internal terminator).
Version 0.13 made several changes to the configuration file. You should rewrite any earlier files.
On NT, a read_done or write_done returns False if a background operation is aborted by a purge. Win95 returns True.
EXTENDED_OS_ERROR ($^E) is not supported by the binary ports before 5.005. It ``sort-of-tracks'' $! in 5.003 and 5.004, but YMMV.
A few NT systems seem to set can_parity_enable true, but do not actually support setting parity_enable. This may be a characteristic of certain third-party serial drivers.
__Please send comments and bug reports to wcbirthisel@alum.mit.edu.
Tye McQueen, tye@metronet.com, http://www.metronet.com/~tye/.
Win32API::File when available
Win32::API - Aldo Calpini's ``Magic'', http://www.divinf.it/dada/perl/
Perltoot.xxx - Tom (Christiansen)'s Object-Oriented Tutorial
Expect.pm - Austin Schutz's adaptation of TCL's ``expect'' for Unix Perls
This module is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.