Assume the following situation under Linux:
A process is continuously reading from an USB-serial converter device (/dev/ttyUSB0
). That device is suddenly unplugged and plugged in again (or is resetting itself for some reason). The process continues to have a valid file handle for /dev/ttyUSB0
but won't receive any data from the device unless the process re-opens the device (because udev has deleted and re-created the device node).
Is there a direct way to detect such a situation (ie. not indirectly by detecting a timeout in data flow) so that the process knows it has to re-open the device? Would it be reliable to monitor the modification time of /dev/ttyUSB0
using stat()
?
Additional details:
The process opens the device file by using the standard open()
function.
/dev
is a tmpfs
controlled by udev
.
Note: I do not want to use any udev rules for this and prefer a solution implemented directly in the process.