On 2008-03-04, blaine <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: >> It looks like the fastest speed supported by python termios on >> Linux is B460800 (uses a constant of 0x1004). If you look in >> /usr/include/..., baud rates do go up to 921600 (which uses a >> constant of 0x1007). >> >> Try using the appropriate constant from /usr/include/... (for >> the target platform, of course).
> I want to thank you SO MUCH for all your help. Here are my issues > that I overcame (sanity check): > 1. Why did we have to use 0x1007, instead of 0x10007 that our grep > command returns? The number might be different for the host where you did the grep that it is for the target machine (IIRC, you said it was an ARM, right?). Did you do the grep on the include files for the ARM target or on a host of some other architecture? The actual numbers might also be different in different versions of the kernel. > 2. PySerial works beautifully. Thank you for the suggestion. > What I had to do was add this to the PySerial source root > in serialpostix.py, after the import termios: > > termios.B921600 = 0x1007 [...] > ... so now I can pass 921600 as a parameter to PySerial! :) > > So my next question is - I would like to contribute to the > python source tree by updating termios.h to handle the higher > baud rates by default. Is this a good opportunity for me to > submit a patch? I've never done this before but have always > been interested in doing so. Sure! It's been a while since I submitted a patch, and I don't remember what the process is, but hopefully somebody reading the thread does. It could be that the change is already in the development branch... -- Grant Edwards grante Yow! Two LITTLE black at dots and one BIG black visi.com dot...nice 'n' FLUFFY!! -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list