<?xml version="1.0"?>
<article><articleinfo><title>Serial Programming HOWTO</title><author><firstname>Gary</firstname><surname>Frerking</surname><affiliation><address format="linespecific">        <email>gary@frerking.org</email>
      </address></affiliation></author><author><firstname>Peter</firstname><surname>Baumann</surname></author><revhistory><revision><revnumber>1.01</revnumber><date>2001-08-26</date><authorinitials>glf</authorinitials><revremark>        New maintainer, converted to DocBook
      </revremark></revision><revision><revnumber>1.0</revnumber><date>1998-01-22</date><authorinitials>phb</authorinitials><revremark>        Initial document release
      </revremark></revision></revhistory><abstract><para>  This document describes how to program communications with devices
  over a serial port on a Linux box.
  </para></abstract></articleinfo><sect1 id="intro"><title>Introduction</title><para>    This is the Linux Serial Programming HOWTO.  All about how to program
    communications with other devices / computers over a serial line under
    Linux. Different techniques are explained: Canonical I/O (only
    complete lines are transmitted/received), asyncronous I/O, and waiting
    for input from multiple sources.
  </para><para>    This is the first update to the initial release of the Linux Serial
    Programming HOWTO. The primary purpose of this update is to change the
    author information and convert the document to DocBook format. In terms
    of technical content, very little if anything has changed at this time.
    Sweeping changes to the technical content aren't going to happen 
    overnight, but I'll work on it as much as time allows.
  </para><para>    If you've been waiting in the wings for someone to take over this HOWTO,
    you've gotten your wish. Please send me any and all feedback you have,
    it'd be very much appreciated.
  </para><para>    All examples were tested using a i386 Linux Kernel 2.0.29.
  </para><sect2 id="copyright"><title>Copyright Information</title><para>      This document is copyrighted (c) 1997 Peter Baumann, 
      (c) 2001 Gary Frerking and is distributed under the terms of 
      the Linux Documentation Project (LDP) license, stated below.
    </para><para>      Unless otherwise stated, Linux HOWTO documents are copyrighted 
      by their respective authors. Linux HOWTO documents may be 
      reproduced and distributed in whole or in part, in any medium
      physical or electronic, as long as this copyright notice is
      retained on all copies. Commercial redistribution is allowed and
      encouraged; however, the author would like to be notified of any
      such distributions.
    </para><para>      All translations, derivative works, or aggregate works
      incorporating any Linux HOWTO documents must be covered under this
      copyright notice. That is, you may not produce a derivative work
      from a HOWTO and impose additional restrictions on its
      distribution. Exceptions to these rules may be granted under
      certain conditions; please contact the Linux HOWTO coordinator at
      the address given below.
    </para><para>      In short, we wish to promote dissemination of this
      information through as many channels as possible. However, we do
      wish to retain copyright on the HOWTO documents, and would like to
      be notified of any plans to redistribute the HOWTOs.
    </para><para>      If you have any questions, please contact 
      <email>linux-howto@metalab.unc.edu</email>
    </para></sect2><sect2 id="disclaimer"><title>Disclaimer</title><para>      No liability for the contents of this documents can be accepted.
      Use the concepts, examples and other content at your own risk.
      As this is a new edition of this document, there may be errors
      and inaccuracies, that may of course be damaging to your system.
      Proceed with caution, and although this is highly unlikely,
      the author(s) do not take any responsibility for that.
    </para><para>      All copyrights are held by their by their respective owners, unless
      specifically noted otherwise.  Use of a term in this document
      should not be regarded as affecting the validity of any trademark
      or service mark.
    </para><para>      Naming of particular products or brands should not be seen 
      as endorsements.
    </para><para>      You are strongly recommended to take a backup of your system 
      before major installation and backups at regular intervals.
    </para></sect2><sect2 id="newversions"><title>New Versions</title><para>      As previously mentioned, not much is new in terms of technical
      content yet.
    </para></sect2><sect2 id="credits"><title>Credits</title><para>      The original author thanked Mr. Strudthoff, Michael Carter, Peter Waltenberg,
      Antonino Ianella, Greg Hankins, Dave Pfaltzgraff, Sean Lincolne, Michael Wiedmann,
      and Adrey Bonar.
    </para></sect2><sect2 id="feedback"><title>Feedback</title><para>      Feedback is most certainly welcome for this document. Without
      your submissions and input, this document wouldn't exist. Please
      send your additions, comments and criticisms to the following
      email address : <email>gary@frerking.org</email>.
    </para></sect2></sect1><sect1><title>Getting started</title><sect2><title>Debugging</title><para>      The best way to debug your code is to set up another Linux box, and
      connect the two computers via a null-modem cable. Use miniterm
      (available from the LDP programmers guide
      (<literal moreinfo="none" remap="tt">ftp://sunsite.unc.edu/pub/Linux/docs/LDP/programmers-guide/lpg-0.4.tar.gz</literal>
      in the examples directory) to transmit characters to your Linux
      box. Miniterm can be compiled very easily and will transmit all
      keyboard input raw over the serial port. Only the define statement
      <literal moreinfo="none" remap="tt">entdefine MODEMDEVICE "/dev/ttyS0"</literal> has to be checked. Set it to
      <literal moreinfo="none" remap="tt">ttyS0</literal> for COM1, <literal moreinfo="none" remap="tt">ttyS1</literal> for COM2, etc.. It is
      essential for testing, that <emphasis>all</emphasis> characters are transmitted raw
      (without output processing) over the line. To test your connection,
      start miniterm on both computers and just type away. The characters
      input on one computer should appear on the other computer and vice
      versa. The input will not be echoed to the attached screen.
    </para><para>      To make a null-modem cable you have to cross the TxD (transmit) and
      RxD (receive) lines. For a description of a cable see sect. 7 of the
      Serial-HOWTO. 
    </para><para>      It is also possible to perform this testing with only one computer, if
      you have two unused serial ports. You can then run two miniterms off
      two virtual consoles. If you free a serial port by disconnecting the
      mouse, remember to redirect <literal moreinfo="none" remap="tt">/dev/mouse</literal> if it exists. If you
      use a multiport serial card, be sure to configure it correctly. I had
      mine configured wrong and everything worked fine as long as I was
      testing only on my computer. When I connected to another computer, the port
      started loosing characters. Executing two programs on one computer
      just isn't fully asynchronous.
    </para></sect2><sect2><title>Port Settings</title><para>      The devices <literal moreinfo="none" remap="tt">/dev/ttyS*</literal> are intended to hook up terminals to
      your Linux box, and are configured for this use after startup. This
      has to be kept in mind when programming communication with a raw
      device. E.g. the ports are configured to echo characters sent from the
      device back to it, which normally has to be changed for data
      transmission.
    </para><para>      All parameters can be easily configured from within a program. The
      configuration is stored in a structure <literal moreinfo="none" remap="tt">struct termios</literal>, which
      is defined in <literal moreinfo="none" remap="tt">entasm/termbits.hent</literal>:

      <screen format="linespecific">        #define NCCS 19
        struct termios {
                tcflag_t c_iflag;		/* input mode flags */
	        tcflag_t c_oflag;		/* output mode flags */
	        tcflag_t c_cflag;		/* control mode flags */
	        tcflag_t c_lflag;		/* local mode flags */
	        cc_t c_line;			/* line discipline */
	        cc_t c_cc[NCCS];		/* control characters */
        };
      </screen>
    </para><para>      This file also includes all flag definitions. The input mode flags in
      <literal moreinfo="none" remap="tt">centiflag</literal> handle all input processing, which means that the
      characters sent from the device can be processed before they are read
      with <literal moreinfo="none" remap="tt">read</literal>. Similarly <literal moreinfo="none" remap="tt">centoflag</literal> handles the output
      processing. <literal moreinfo="none" remap="tt">centcflag</literal> contains the settings for the port, as
      the baudrate, bits per character, stop bits, etc.. The local mode
      flags stored in <literal moreinfo="none" remap="tt">centlflag</literal> determine if characters are echoed,
      signals are sent to your program, etc.. Finally the array
      <literal moreinfo="none" remap="tt">centcc</literal> defines the control characters for end of file, stop,
      etc..  Default values for the control characters are defined in
      <literal moreinfo="none" remap="tt">entasm/termios.hent</literal>. The flags are described in the manual
      page <literal moreinfo="none" remap="tt">termios(3)</literal>. The structure <literal moreinfo="none" remap="tt">termios</literal> contains the
      <literal moreinfo="none" remap="tt">centline</literal> (line discipline) element, which is not used in POSIX compliant systems.
    </para></sect2><sect2><title>Input Concepts for Serial Devices</title><para>    Here three different input concepts will be presented. The appropriate
    concept has to be chosen for the intended application. Whenever
    possible, do not loop reading single characters to get a complete
    string. When I did this, I lost characters, whereas a <literal moreinfo="none" remap="tt">read</literal> for
    the whole string did not show any errors.
  </para><sect3><title>Canonical Input Processing</title><para>      This is the normal processing mode for terminals, but can also be
      useful for communicating with other dl input is processed in
      units of lines, which means that a <literal moreinfo="none" remap="tt">read</literal> will only return a
      full line of input. A line is by default terminated by a <literal moreinfo="none" remap="tt">NL</literal>
      (ASCII <literal moreinfo="none" remap="tt">LF</literal>), an end of file, or an end of line character. A
      <literal moreinfo="none" remap="tt">CR</literal> (the DOS/Windows default end-of-line) will not terminate a
      line with the default settings.
    </para><para>      Canonical input processing can also handle the erase, delete word, and
      reprint characters, translate <literal moreinfo="none" remap="tt">CR</literal> to <literal moreinfo="none" remap="tt">NL</literal>, etc..
    </para></sect3><sect3><title>Non-Canonical Input Processing</title><para>      Non-Canonical Input Processing will handle a fixed amount of
      characters per read, and allows for a character timer. This mode
      should be used if your application will always read a fixed number of
      characters, or if the connected device sends bursts of characters.
    </para></sect3><sect3><title>Asynchronous Input</title><para>      The two modes described above can be used in synchronous and asynchronous
      mode. Synchronous is the default, where a <literal moreinfo="none" remap="tt">read</literal> statement will
      block, until the read is satisfied. In asynchronous mode the
      <literal moreinfo="none" remap="tt">read</literal> statement will return immediatly and send a signal to the
      calling program upon completion. This signal can be received by a
      signal handler.
    </para></sect3><sect3><title>Waiting for Input from Multiple Sources</title><para>      This is not a different input mode, but might be useful, if you are
      handling multiple devices. In my application I was handling input over
      a TCP/IP socket and input over a serial connection from another computer
      quasi-simultaneously. The program example given below will wait for
      input from two different input sources. If input from one source
      becomes available, it will be processed, and the program will then
      wait for new input.
    </para><para>      The approach presented below seems rather complex, but it is important
      to keep in mind that Linux is a multi-processing operating system. The
      <literal moreinfo="none" remap="tt">select</literal> system call will not load the CPU while waiting for
      input, whereas looping until input becomes available would slow down
      other processes executing at the same time.
    </para></sect3></sect2></sect1><sect1><title>Program Examples</title><para>    All examples have been derived from <literal moreinfo="none" remap="tt">miniterm.c</literal>. The type
    ahead buffer is limited to 255 characters, just like the maximum
    string length for canonical input processing
    (<literal moreinfo="none" remap="tt">entlinux/limits.hent</literal> or <literal moreinfo="none" remap="tt">entposix1entlim.hent</literal>).
  </para><para>    See the comments in the code for explanation of the use of the
    different input modes. I hope that the code is understandable. The
    example for canonical input is commented best, the other examples are
    commented only where they differ from the example for canonical input
    to emphasize the differences.
  </para><para>    The descriptions are not complete, but you are encouraged to
    experiment with the examples to derive the best solution for your
    application.
  </para><para>    Don't forget to give the appropriate serial ports the right
    permissions (e. g.: <literal moreinfo="none" remap="tt">chmod a+rw /dev/ttyS1</literal>)!
  </para><sect2><title>Canonical Input Processing</title><para>
      <screen format="linespecific">        #include entsys/types.hent
        #include entsys/stat.hent
        #include entfcntl.hent
        #include enttermios.hent
        #include entstdio.hent

        /* baudrate settings are defined in entasm/termbits.hent, which is
        included by enttermios.hent */
        #define BAUDRATE B38400            
        /* change this definition for the correct port */
        #define MODEMDEVICE "/dev/ttyS1"
        #define _POSIX_SOURCE 1 /* POSIX compliant source */

        #define FALSE 0
        #define TRUE 1

        volatile int STOP=FALSE; 

        main()
        {
          int fd,c, res;
          struct termios oldtio,newtio;
          char buf[255];
        /* 
          Open modem device for reading and writing and not as controlling tty
          because we don't want to get killed if linenoise sends CTRL-C.
        */
         fd = open(MODEMDEVICE, O_RDWR | O_NOCTTY ); 
         if (fd ent0) {perror(MODEMDEVICE); exit(-1); }
        
         tcgetattr(fd,entoldtio); /* save current serial port settings */
         bzero(entnewtio, sizeof(newtio)); /* clear struct for new port settings */
        
        /* 
          BAUDRATE: Set bps rate. You could also use cfsetispeed and cfsetospeed.
          CRTSCTS : output hardware flow control (only used if the cable has
                    all necessary lines. See sect. 7 of Serial-HOWTO)
          CS8     : 8n1 (8bit,no parity,1 stopbit)
          CLOCAL  : local connection, no modem contol
          CREAD   : enable receiving characters
        */
         newtio.c_cflag = BAUDRATE | CRTSCTS | CS8 | CLOCAL | CREAD;
         
        /*
          IGNPAR  : ignore bytes with parity errors
          ICRNL   : map CR to NL (otherwise a CR input on the other computer
                    will not terminate input)
          otherwise make device raw (no other input processing)
        */
         newtio.c_iflag = IGNPAR | ICRNL;
         
        /*
         Raw output.
        */
         newtio.c_oflag = 0;
         
        /*
          ICANON  : enable canonical input
          disable all echo functionality, and don't send signals to calling program
        */
         newtio.c_lflag = ICANON;
         
        /* 
          initialize all control characters 
          default values can be found in /usr/include/termios.h, and are given
          in the comments, but we don't need them here
        */
         newtio.c_cc[VINTR]    = 0;     /* Ctrl-c */ 
         newtio.c_cc[VQUIT]    = 0;     /* Ctrl-\ */
         newtio.c_cc[VERASE]   = 0;     /* del */
         newtio.c_cc[VKILL]    = 0;     /* @ */
         newtio.c_cc[VEOF]     = 4;     /* Ctrl-d */
         newtio.c_cc[VTIME]    = 0;     /* inter-character timer unused */
         newtio.c_cc[VMIN]     = 1;     /* blocking read until 1 character arrives */
         newtio.c_cc[VSWTC]    = 0;     /* '\0' */
         newtio.c_cc[VSTART]   = 0;     /* Ctrl-q */ 
         newtio.c_cc[VSTOP]    = 0;     /* Ctrl-s */
         newtio.c_cc[VSUSP]    = 0;     /* Ctrl-z */
         newtio.c_cc[VEOL]     = 0;     /* '\0' */
         newtio.c_cc[VREPRINT] = 0;     /* Ctrl-r */
         newtio.c_cc[VDISCARD] = 0;     /* Ctrl-u */
         newtio.c_cc[VWERASE]  = 0;     /* Ctrl-w */
         newtio.c_cc[VLNEXT]   = 0;     /* Ctrl-v */
         newtio.c_cc[VEOL2]    = 0;     /* '\0' */
        
        /* 
          now clean the modem line and activate the settings for the port
        */
         tcflush(fd, TCIFLUSH);
         tcsetattr(fd,TCSANOW,entnewtio);
        
        /*
          terminal settings done, now handle input
          In this example, inputting a 'z' at the beginning of a line will 
          exit the program.
        */
         while (STOP==FALSE) {     /* loop until we have a terminating condition */
         /* read blocks program execution until a line terminating character is 
            input, even if more than 255 chars are input. If the number
            of characters read is smaller than the number of chars available,
            subsequent reads will return the remaining chars. res will be set
            to the actual number of characters actually read */
            res = read(fd,buf,255); 
            buf[res]=0;             /* set end of string, so we can printf */
            printf(":%s:%d\n", buf, res);
            if (buf[0]=='z') STOP=TRUE;
         }
         /* restore the old port settings */
         tcsetattr(fd,TCSANOW,entoldtio);
        }

      </screen>
    </para></sect2><sect2><title>Non-Canonical Input Processing</title><para>      In non-canonical input processing mode, input is not assembled into
      lines and input processing (erase, kill, delete, etc.) does not
      occur. Two parameters control the behavior of this mode:
      <literal moreinfo="none" remap="tt">centcc[VTIME]</literal> sets the character timer, and <literal moreinfo="none" remap="tt">centcc[VMIN]</literal>
      sets the minimum number of characters to receive before satisfying the
      read.
    </para><para>      If MIN ent 0 and TIME = 0, MIN sets the number of characters to receive
      before the read is satisfied. As TIME is zero, the timer is not used.
    </para><para>      If MIN = 0 and TIME ent 0, TIME serves as a timeout value. The read
      will be satisfied if a single character is read, or TIME is exceeded (t =
      TIME *0.1 s). If TIME is exceeded, no character will be returned.
    </para><para>      If MIN ent 0 and TIME ent 0, TIME serves as an inter-character
      timer. The read will be satisfied if MIN characters are received, or
      the time between two characters exceeds TIME. The timer is restarted
      every time a character is received and only becomes active after the
      first character has been received.
    </para><para>      If MIN = 0 and TIME = 0, read will be satisfied immediately. The
      number of characters currently available, or the number of characters
      requested will be returned. According to Antonino (see contributions),
      you could issue a <literal moreinfo="none" remap="tt">fcntl(fd, FentSETFL, FNDELAY);</literal> before reading
      to get the same result.
    </para><para>      By modifying <literal moreinfo="none" remap="tt">newtio.centcc[VTIME]</literal> and
      <literal moreinfo="none" remap="tt">newtio.centcc[VMIN]</literal> all modes described above can be tested.
    </para><para>
    <screen format="linespecific">      #include entsys/types.hent
      #include entsys/stat.hent
      #include entfcntl.hent
      #include enttermios.hent
      #include entstdio.hent
        
      #define BAUDRATE B38400
      #define MODEMDEVICE "/dev/ttyS1"
      #define _POSIX_SOURCE 1 /* POSIX compliant source */
      #define FALSE 0
      #define TRUE 1
        
      volatile int STOP=FALSE; 
       
      main()
      {
        int fd,c, res;
        struct termios oldtio,newtio;
        char buf[255];
        
        fd = open(MODEMDEVICE, O_RDWR | O_NOCTTY ); 
        if (fd ent0) {perror(MODEMDEVICE); exit(-1); }
        
        tcgetattr(fd,entoldtio); /* save current port settings */
        
        bzero(entnewtio, sizeof(newtio));
        newtio.c_cflag = BAUDRATE | CRTSCTS | CS8 | CLOCAL | CREAD;
        newtio.c_iflag = IGNPAR;
        newtio.c_oflag = 0;
        
        /* set input mode (non-canonical, no echo,...) */
        newtio.c_lflag = 0;
         
        newtio.c_cc[VTIME]    = 0;   /* inter-character timer unused */
        newtio.c_cc[VMIN]     = 5;   /* blocking read until 5 chars received */
        
        tcflush(fd, TCIFLUSH);
        tcsetattr(fd,TCSANOW,entnewtio);
        
        
        while (STOP==FALSE) {       /* loop for input */
          res = read(fd,buf,255);   /* returns after 5 chars have been input */
          buf[res]=0;               /* so we can printf... */
          printf(":%s:%d\n", buf, res);
          if (buf[0]=='z') STOP=TRUE;
        }
        tcsetattr(fd,TCSANOW,entoldtio);
      }
    </screen>

    </para></sect2><sect2><title>Asynchronous Input</title><para>
    <screen format="linespecific">      #include enttermios.hent
      #include entstdio.hent
      #include entunistd.hent
      #include entfcntl.hent
      #include entsys/signal.hent
      #include entsys/types.hent
        
      #define BAUDRATE B38400
      #define MODEMDEVICE "/dev/ttyS1"
      #define _POSIX_SOURCE 1 /* POSIX compliant source */
      #define FALSE 0
      #define TRUE 1
        
      volatile int STOP=FALSE; 
        
      void signal_handler_IO (int status);   /* definition of signal handler */
      int wait_flag=TRUE;                    /* TRUE while no signal received */
        
      main()
      {
        int fd,c, res;
        struct termios oldtio,newtio;
        struct sigaction saio;           /* definition of signal action */
        char buf[255];
        
        /* open the device to be non-blocking (read will return immediatly) */
        fd = open(MODEMDEVICE, O_RDWR | O_NOCTTY | O_NONBLOCK);
        if (fd ent0) {perror(MODEMDEVICE); exit(-1); }
        
        /* install the signal handler before making the device asynchronous */
        saio.sa_handler = signal_handler_IO;
        saio.sa_mask = 0;
        saio.sa_flags = 0;
        saio.sa_restorer = NULL;
        sigaction(SIGIO,entsaio,NULL);
          
        /* allow the process to receive SIGIO */
        fcntl(fd, F_SETOWN, getpid());
        /* Make the file descriptor asynchronous (the manual page says only 
           O_APPEND and O_NONBLOCK, will work with F_SETFL...) */
        fcntl(fd, F_SETFL, FASYNC);
        
        tcgetattr(fd,entoldtio); /* save current port settings */
        /* set new port settings for canonical input processing */
        newtio.c_cflag = BAUDRATE | CRTSCTS | CS8 | CLOCAL | CREAD;
        newtio.c_iflag = IGNPAR | ICRNL;
        newtio.c_oflag = 0;
        newtio.c_lflag = ICANON;
        newtio.c_cc[VMIN]=1;
        newtio.c_cc[VTIME]=0;
        tcflush(fd, TCIFLUSH);
        tcsetattr(fd,TCSANOW,entnewtio);
         
        /* loop while waiting for input. normally we would do something
           useful here */ 
        while (STOP==FALSE) {
          printf(".\n");usleep(100000);
          /* after receiving SIGIO, wait_flag = FALSE, input is available
             and can be read */
          if (wait_flag==FALSE) { 
            res = read(fd,buf,255);
            buf[res]=0;
            printf(":%s:%d\n", buf, res);
            if (res==1) STOP=TRUE; /* stop loop if only a CR was input */
            wait_flag = TRUE;      /* wait for new input */
          }
        }
        /* restore old port settings */
        tcsetattr(fd,TCSANOW,entoldtio);
      }
        
      /***************************************************************************
      * signal handler. sets wait_flag to FALSE, to indicate above loop that     *
      * characters have been received.                                           *
      ***************************************************************************/
        
      void signal_handler_IO (int status)
      {
        printf("received SIGIO signal.\n");
        wait_flag = FALSE;
      }
    </screen>

    </para></sect2><sect2><title>Waiting for Input from Multiple Sources</title><para>      This section is kept to a minimum. It is just intended to be a hint,
      and therefore the example code is kept short. This will not only work
      with serial ports, but with any set of file descriptors.
    </para><para>      The select call and accompanying macros use a <literal moreinfo="none" remap="tt">fdentset</literal>. This is a
      bit array, which has a bit entry for every valid file descriptor
      number. <literal moreinfo="none" remap="tt">select</literal> will accept a <literal moreinfo="none" remap="tt">fdentset</literal> with the bits set
      for the relevant file descriptors and returns a <literal moreinfo="none" remap="tt">fdentset</literal>, in which
      the bits for the file descriptors are set where input, output, or an exception
      occurred. All handling of <literal moreinfo="none" remap="tt">fdentset</literal> is done with the provided
      macros. See also the manual page <literal moreinfo="none" remap="tt">select(2)</literal>.
    </para><para>
    <screen format="linespecific">      #include entsys/time.hent
      #include entsys/types.hent
      #include entunistd.hent
        
      main()
      {
        int    fd1, fd2;  /* input sources 1 and 2 */
        fd_set readfs;    /* file descriptor set */
        int    maxfd;     /* maximum file desciptor used */
        int    loop=1;    /* loop while TRUE */ 
        
        /* open_input_source opens a device, sets the port correctly, and
           returns a file descriptor */
        fd1 = open_input_source("/dev/ttyS1");   /* COM2 */
        if (fd1ent0) exit(0);
        fd2 = open_input_source("/dev/ttyS2");   /* COM3 */
        if (fd2ent0) exit(0);
        maxfd = MAX (fd1, fd2)+1;  /* maximum bit entry (fd) to test */
        
        /* loop for input */
        while (loop) {
          FD_SET(fd1, entreadfs);  /* set testing for source 1 */
          FD_SET(fd2, entreadfs);  /* set testing for source 2 */
          /* block until input becomes available */
          select(maxfd, entreadfs, NULL, NULL, NULL);
          if (FD_ISSET(fd1))         /* input from source 1 available */
            handle_input_from_source1();
          if (FD_ISSET(fd2))         /* input from source 2 available */
            handle_input_from_source2();
        }
      }   
    </screen>
    </para><para>      The given example blocks indefinitely, until input from one of
      the sources becomes available. If you need to timeout on input, just
      replace the select call by:

      <screen format="linespecific">        int res;
        struct timeval Timeout;

        /* set timeout value within input loop */
        Timeout.tv_usec = 0;  /* milliseconds */
        Timeout.tv_sec  = 1;  /* seconds */
        res = select(maxfd, entreadfs, NULL, NULL, entTimeout);
        if (res==0)
        /* number of file descriptors with input = 0, timeout occurred. */ 
      </screen>
    </para><para>      This example will timeout after 1 second. If a timeout occurs, select
      will return 0, but beware that <literal moreinfo="none" remap="tt">Timeout</literal> is decremented by the
      time actually waited for input by <literal moreinfo="none" remap="tt">select</literal>. If the timeout
      value is zero, select will return immediatly.
    </para></sect2></sect1><sect1><title>Other Sources of Information</title><para>
    <itemizedlist><listitem><para>          The Linux Serial-HOWTO describes how to set up serial ports and
          contains hardware information.
        </para></listitem><listitem><para>          <ulink url="http://www.easysw.com/~mike/serial">          Serial Programming Guide for POSIX Compliant Operating Systems</ulink>,
          by Michael Sweet.
        </para></listitem><listitem><para>          The manual page <literal moreinfo="none" remap="tt">termios(3)</literal> describes all flags for the
          <literal moreinfo="none" remap="tt">termios</literal> structure.
        </para></listitem></itemizedlist>

  </para></sect1></article>

