On Thu, Dec 12, 2013 at 12:28 AM, Jean Dubois <jeandubois...@gmail.com> wrote: > On Thursday, December 12, 2013 12:20:36 AM UTC+1, Dan Stromberg wrote: >> On Wed, Dec 11, 2013 at 3:08 PM, Jean Dubois <jeandu...@gmail.com> wrote: >> >> I have an ethernet-rs232 adapter which allows me to connect to a measurement >> instrument by means of netcat on a linux system. >> >> >> e.g. entering nc 10.128.59.63 7000 >> >> allows me to enter e.g. >> >> *IDN? >> >> after which I get an identification string of the measurement instrument >> back. >> >> I thought I could accomplish the same using the python module "socket" >> >> and tried out the sample program below which doesn't work however: >> >> >> >> Sockets reserve the right to split one socket.send() into multiple >> socket.recv()'s on the other end of the communication, or to aggregate >> multiple socket.send()'s into a single socket.recv() - pretty much any way >> the relevant IP stacks and communications equipment feel like for the sake >> of performance or reliability. >> >> >> The confusing thing about this is, it won't be done on every transmission - >> in fact, it'll probably happen rather seldom unless you're on a heavy loaded >> network or have some MTU issues (see Path MTU Discovery, and bear in mind >> that paths can change during a TCP session). But writing your code assuming >> it will never happen is a bad idea. >> >> >> >> For this reason, I wrote >> http://stromberg.dnsalias.org/~strombrg/bufsock.html , which abstracts away >> these complications, and actually makes things pretty simple. There are >> examples on the web page. >> >> >> >> HTH > > Dear Dan, > Could you copy paste here the code for your function I have to add to my > "program"?
This is untested, but it should be something like the following: #!/usr/bin/env python """ A simple echo client """ import socket as socket_mod import bufsock as bufsock_mod host = '10.128.59.63' port = 7000 size = 10 socket = socket_mod.socket(socket.AF_INET, socket.SOCK_STREAM) socket.connect((host,port)) bufsock = bufsock_mod.bufsock(socket) bufsock.send('*IDN?') data = bufsock.recv(size) bufsock.close() print 'Received:', data You might look over http://stackoverflow.com/questions/19918307/retrieve-file-information-located-on-a-different-application-server-using-python/19918706#19918706 for a more complete example. -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list