I have done serial port RS-232 connection in C++ using 16-bit compiler (I was using Turbo C++ IDE). It included header file bios.h
which contain all the required functions for reading values from the port. Now I want to read value from serial port using C++ 32-bit Mingw compiler. I am using Dev CPP as my IDE. Here I could not find bios.h
. Are there any special header files available for this purpose in Mingw? I am using 32-bit compiler now because in my college project I got to use Exception handling which I guess is not supported in Turbo C. Please help me out.
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I think you won't be available to work from user-mode with COM directly as it was in <bios.h>. If you want to use old connection, you should continue using 16-bit compiler and run your app in some dos emulator, i.e. dosbox. It will forward physical COM to the bios.h interfaces.– zabulusApr 3, 2013 at 17:53
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I could not understand completely what you meant to say? Can I run my .exe file of my program which has been developed in Mingw in DosBox? If yes how?– iammurtazaApr 3, 2013 at 18:03
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In your question you told about <bios.h>. Looks like this file was used in dos environment to communicate with COM port. This way of communicating on modern windows now isn't available. I assume you want the compile exe to be run in windows environment. In this case you should use another API. i.e. google for "CreateFile COM1"– zabulusApr 3, 2013 at 18:06
3 Answers
Please take a look here:
- RS-232 for Linux and Windows 1)
- Windows Serial Port Programming 2)
- Using the Serial Ports in Visual C++ 3)
- Serial Communication in Windows
1) You can use this with Windows (incl. MinGW) as well as Linux. Alternative you can only use the code as an example.
2) Step-by-step tutorial how to use serial ports on windows
3) You can use this literally on MinGW
Here's some very, very simple code (without any error handling or settings):
#include <windows.h>
/* ... */
// Open serial port
HANDLE serialHandle;
serialHandle = CreateFile("\\\\.\\COM1", GENERIC_READ | GENERIC_WRITE, 0, 0, OPEN_EXISTING, FILE_ATTRIBUTE_NORMAL, 0);
// Do some basic settings
DCB serialParams = { 0 };
serialParams.DCBlength = sizeof(serialParams);
GetCommState(serialHandle, &serialParams);
serialParams.BaudRate = baudrate;
serialParams.ByteSize = byteSize;
serialParams.StopBits = stopBits;
serialParams.Parity = parity;
SetCommState(serialHandle, &serialParams);
// Set timeouts
COMMTIMEOUTS timeout = { 0 };
timeout.ReadIntervalTimeout = 50;
timeout.ReadTotalTimeoutConstant = 50;
timeout.ReadTotalTimeoutMultiplier = 50;
timeout.WriteTotalTimeoutConstant = 50;
timeout.WriteTotalTimeoutMultiplier = 10;
SetCommTimeouts(serialHandle, &timeout);
Now you can use WriteFile()
/ ReadFile()
to write / read bytes.
Don't forget to close your connection:
CloseHandle(serialHandle);
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You tell you can also use it on Linux, but you '#include <windows.h>'? I'm unsure if it will/won't work on Linux/OSX.– PaulFeb 15, 2017 at 11:00
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2No, you can use the information / code from the link on both systems. The code from my answer is Windows only.– olloMar 12, 2017 at 16:48
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1The second link is dead but another copy (going off of file name here) is at bd.eduweb.hhs.nl/micprg/pdf/serial-win.pdf May 6, 2019 at 19:36
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For the answer above, the default serial port is
serialParams.BaudRate = 9600;
serialParams.ByteSize = 8;
serialParams.StopBits = TWOSTOPBITS;
serialParams.Parity = NOPARITY;