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Why does the following code print ‘read(): Resource temporarily unavailable’ 80% of the time? That is the EAGAIN code, which is the same as WOULD BLOCK which means there is no data waiting to be read, but select is returning 1 saying there is data (tested in Linux):

#include <time.h>
#include <unistd.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <sys/stat.h>
#include <fcntl.h>
#include <sys/errno.h>

int main(int argc, char** argv)
{
    int fd = open("/dev/lp0", O_RDWR | O_NONBLOCK);
    int ret = 0;
    int status = 0;
    char buffer[1024];
    char teststr[] = "This is a test\n";
    char XMIT_STATUS_OFFLINE[] = {0x10,0x04,0x02};
    char XMIT_STATUS_ERROR[] = {0x10,0x04,0x03};
    char XMIT_STATUS_ROLL[] = {0x10,0x04,0x04};
    char XMIT_STATUS_SLIP[] = {0x10,0x04,0x05};
    fd_set rfds;
    FD_ZERO( &rfds );
    FD_SET( fd, &rfds );
    struct timeval sleep;
    sleep.tv_sec = 5;
    sleep.tv_usec = 0;

    /* Offline status */
    ret = write(fd, XMIT_STATUS_OFFLINE, sizeof(XMIT_STATUS_OFFLINE));
    //printf("write() returned %d\n", ret);

    do {
    	ret = select( fd + 1, &rfds, NULL, NULL, &sleep );
    } while (ret < 0 && (errno == EINTR));

    ret = read(fd, buffer, 1024);
if(ret == -1) {
    	perror("read(): ");
    } else {
    	status = buffer[0];
    	if((status & 0x04) != 0)
    	{
    		printf("The cover is open.\n");
    	} else {
    		printf("OFFLINE is good.\n");
    	}
    }
        close(fd);
        return 0;
}
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1 Answer

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Your select call will return 0 after the 5 second timeout elapses if no data is available. Your code will ignore this and try to read from the device anyways. Check for ret == 0 and that will fix your problem.

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Actually I checked for that and ret was always = 1. Someone else told me that what is happening is select is returning that there is data, but that read is blocking because checksums or some data error occurred – mindwarpx Dec 11 '08 at 22:56
So at this point I am going to see if it is possible to switch it to blocking mode. This is actually a subset of code I converted to C from java that used rxtx libs and javax.comm to do this, but always opens in non-blocking form. – mindwarpx Dec 11 '08 at 22:57

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