Marcus Brinkmann <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > The obvious difference is what happens to data that is available in the > underlying file while CREAD is turned off. Both, devio and ptyio discard > such data, while in your design it would be delayed until CREAD is enabled. > I couldn't find out what is the right thing (the standards just say "enable > receiver" about CREAD).
It shouldn't be delayed, that would be a bug in my pseudocode. On a real serial line, it gets dropped. However, dropping it might involve a CPU spin, so some more thought needs to happen I think. > while (1) > while (output suspended or queue empty) > block until output resumed and queue non-empty > write data -- blocking > > so basically the same, just taking output stopped into consideration. By "data remains to be written" I was including stopped and all such tests. :) > Mmmh. There probably is a way, but I am not aware of it. Note that I was > thinking about using io_select, not the glibc select function. Um, the way is to interrupt it just like you interrupt a read... > Mmmh. Interesting, and I see how term does this to the user. But how > would the underlying node inform the bottom handler about it (in the > transparent model). You'd need to create the process hair, and use term_open_ctty. It will then send signals at your process. _______________________________________________ Bug-hurd mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://mail.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/bug-hurd