I am currently stuck at a problem which I cant find any answer for. I am controlling a device that is attached to the computer via a Virtual-ComPort (USB). For this communication I use the SerialPort class in System.IO.Ports.
This is how I initialize the port:
SerialPort SerialPort = new SerialPort();
SerialPort.BaudRate = BaudRate;
SerialPort.DataBits = 8;
SerialPort.Parity = Parity.None;
SerialPort.PortName = SerialPortName;
SerialPort.StopBits = StopBits.One;
SerialPort.ReceivedBytesThreshold = 9;
SerialPort.WriteTimeout = 1500;
SerialPort.ReadTimeout = 1500;
SerialPort.DataReceived += dataReceivedHandler;
SerialPort.Open();
I set the received Threshold to 9 because I know that all the data I can receive is 9 bytes long and I want to minimize the number of callbacks. Can this cause any harm?
This does work really well in 99,99% of all cases. But after a random amount of time/commands (typically after several thousand operations) I don't get a callback when data is send to the PC. The DataReceived handler is just not called in these cases. I checked this by adding a Debug.WriteLine("Callback received!") at the very beginning of the dataReceivedHandler.
I am sure the data is send by the device I like to control. What is the cause of this seemingly "random" behavior and how can I fix it?
I am grateful for any suggestions.
Best Nano
dataReceivedHandler
is fast and doesn't hang from some reason.dataReceivedHandler
does nothing but write the debug line and set anManualResetEvent
that allows the program to keep running (as it is waiting for the callback to occur). This should be fast enough any day! Thanks for the tipp with the real com-port. I can control the device via RS485 as well (at least for testing purposes).