Robert Hancock wrote:
Lee Howard wrote:
Hello.
I have fax modems that will, in their proper behavior with certain
features, send up to 64 kilobytes of data to the host DTE all at
once. (So, the fax modem handles an incoming fax and periodically
will send between 256 bytes and 64 kilobytes of data in bursts.)
When the DCE-DTE (modem-to-host) communication rate is established at
115200 bps data loss occurs systems using at least Linux kernels
2.6.5 and 2.6.18 (and probably everything in-beween and then some
more). This is because the modem overflows the host's buffer. This
is evidenced in kernel logging:
Jul 23 14:01:30 gollum kernel: ttyS1: 1 input overrun(s)
Jul 23 17:09:45 gollum kernel: ttyS1: 1 input overrun(s)
Normally I would blame the modem itself for not honoring the host's
flow control signals. However, I have worked with the modem
manufacturer closely on this matter for over three months now. In
that process they have improved the responsiveness of the modem and
have fixed other problems, but the end result is that it truly does
appear that the serial tty driver is not using flow control. Whether
software flow control (XON/XOFF) or hardware flow control (RTS/CTS)
is used the result is the same.
This is evidenced in hardware flow control by a little LED labeled
"RTS" that is on the external modem. This LED lights up when pin 7
of the DB9 serial connection is given +12Vdc current (signalling
"RTS" is on - that the host can accept data). The LED goes dark when
the current is removed (signalling that the host cannot accept
data). This "RTS" LED never flickers at all, as it should, when
receiving these bursts of data - the LED stays lit as long as the
serial cable is connected to the host... and yet I will see those
"input overrun" messages. Thus, it seems quite clear that the Linux
serial tty driver is not deasserting RTS as it should in hardware
flow control. (And probably the analogous problem exists in software
flow control, too.)
Please tell me what I can do to help you resove and/or remedy this
matter. Also, please let me know if I have contacted the wrong
people. (I have cross-posted to linux-kernel as a catch-all. I am
not subscribed to either linux-serial or linux-kernel mailing lists.
So please CC me in any list responses.)
If it is of any value to know (perhaps they have common code?), the
same error occurs on FreeBSD 6.2 as well. The problem does not
occur on Windows. The problem does not occur on RedHat 6.0 (kernel
2.2.5).
What kind of serial port and machine is this on? From what I can see,
a standard 16550 UART (not a special variant) just doesn't have any
support for clearing RTS on its own when its input FIFO gets too full.
The kernel would have to do it in that case. I'm not seeing where it
would be controlling that automatically (as opposed to manually from
the application with TIOCM_RTS). I'm also not sure if the UART gives
the kernel enough information for it to even be able to control this
line properly automatically.
That's assuming it actually is a 16550 or similar with a 16-byte FIFO
at all, which assuming it's a non-ancient PC it should be, but who knows.
Serial: 8250/16550 driver $Revision: 1.90 $ 8 ports, IRQ sharing enabled
ttyS0 at I/O 0x3f8 (irq = 4) is a 16550A
ttyS1 at I/O 0x2f8 (irq = 3) is a 16550A
It's a Shuttle HOT-661 motherboard (VIA Apollo Pro Plus mainboard
chipset). Both FreeBSD and Linux identify the serial chipset type as
16550A.
If the application were to use TIOCM_RTS how would it know when to apply
it or not? Is there some approach that the application could take to
manage flow control on the serial port? What about software flow
control? Does the application (and not the driver) need to be managing
the DC1/DC3 signalling on the host-side?
Thanks,
Lee.
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