So I know many of you will advise against this but I want to send floats via TCP/IP to a TCP Server running on a SoC (Zynq7020, with the server on the Arm A9). I want to get this working as a simple proof of concept before moving onto using UDP which is probably more suited to sending raw data. I am having trouble converting the float into a char array on the client side and back again on the server. Although I am not sure this is the best approach.
I am using the WinSocket API, and am sending the data as so (although I am not sure this is correct or efficient!):
char * sendbuf;
sendbuf = reinterpret_cast<char *>(f);
iResult = send(ConnectSocket, sendbuf, (int) strlen(sendbuf), 0);
Basically is this correct, and without using UDP, what is the best way to floats via TCP. I guess decoding will essentially be reverse engineering the method used to send the float as char*.
---Below is a complete working example of sending floats via WinSock to a Zynq ARM cpu LwIP--
Host Windows 7 (htonf maybe used, but I am on x86 so there are no endian issues):
int FPGA_Accelerator::sendFloat(float* f) {
char *sendbuf;
int iResult;
char arr[4];
*(float*)arr= *f;
printf("Sending "); printf(arr); printf("\n");
iResult = send(connection, arr, (int) sizeof(arr), 0);
if (iResult == SOCKET_ERROR) {
printf("send failed: %d\n", WSAGetLastError());
closesocket(connection);
WSACleanup();
return -1;
}
printf("Bytes Sent: %ld\n", iResult);
return 1;
};
Zynq code. Where in the recv_callback I call the function parse_input(p->payload)
void parse_input(char* input){
xil_printf("Input : ");
xil_printf(input);
xil_printf("\n\r");
u32 d = *(u32*)input;
union v{
float f;
u32 u;
};
union v val;
val.u = d;
printf("Value u32 = %i \n\r",val.u);
printf("Value float = %f \n\r",val.f);
}