I have tty device in /dev , where I send AT commands. I wan开发者_JS百科t to read line by line and stop reading file after timeout.
You can use the program stty
to configure the tty device. To see the settings for terminal /dev/ttyS0, try
stty -a -F /dev/ttyS0
The default settings regarding timeout are min = 1; time = 0
, which means that the reading program will read until at least one character has been read and there is no timeout. Using e.g.
stty -F /dev/ttyS0 min 0 time 10
the reading program (e.g. cat
) will finish reading after one second whether anything has been read or not. The unit for the parameter time
is tenths of a second; you can check out man stty
for more information.
Compiling some info from here, you can have a script in the sorts of:
#!/bin/bash
#SPECIFYING THE SERIAL PORT
SERIAL=ttyS0
#SETTING UP AN ERROR FLAG
FLAG="GO"
#OPENING SERIAL PORT FOR READING
exec 99</dev/${SERIAL}
#READING FROM SERIAL
while ["${FLAG}" == "GO" ]
do
#IF NO INPUT IS READ AFTER 5 SECONDS, AN ERROR FLAG IS RAISED
read -t 5 INPUT <&99
STATUS=$?
if test $STATUS -ne 0;
then
FLAG="ERROR"
fi
done
#CLOSING SERIAL PORT
exec 99>&-
While FLAG==GO, the script will read one line at a time from the serial port. The STATUS variable gets the return of READ command. According to the manual READ will return anything different than 0 if the specified timeout is reached; when that happens, FLAG is updated, exiting the read loop.
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