On Sun, Jan 21, 2007 at 04:10:58PM +0100, Grzegorz JaĆkiewicz wrote: > you're right, I used wrong term to describe. > But the problem still exists. Nowadays it should be possible to run many > serial ports fully accurate "at the same time". It is also true that the > same problem exists in windows, and bsd worlds. So it is not only Linux > problem.
It's not so much a "problem", but rather, most people aren't particularly interested in using the millions and millions of transisters of a modern CPU to generate a square wave. So OS's aren't optimized to do that. Linux has no problems running many serial ports; but in their normal designed function, which is to send and receive characters, using the UART's FIFO's and interrupts to do so. The question of manually toggling DTR/CTS RS-232 lines to generate a tone is something that you *can* do, but you won't be doing anything else --- and that's simply because fundamentally that's a very silly thing to do. Most people will use a tiny amount of dedicated hardware --- like the sound care that is built into every single modern PC --- rather than manually waggling the RS-232 lines in order to generate a tone. > Like I said previously, 30$ board (usb+avr+max232) would do it accurately + > over 300$ PC to control it :D funny... You *can* do it, and we've described how to do it. It won't be efficient (you won't be doing much else), but that's because a PC and Linux is optimized for different set of tasks. Sometimes dedicated hardware is the far superior option to a general purpose OS and a general-purpose hardware. This should not at all be surprising. - Ted - To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in the body of a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED] More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/