Virtual Serial Device in Python?

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粉色の甜心
粉色の甜心 2020-12-12 14:58

I know that I can use e.g. pySerial to talk to serial devices, but what if I don\'t have a device right now but still need to write a client for it? How can I write a \"virt

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  • 2020-12-12 15:31

    this is something I did and worked out for me so far:

    import os, pty, serial
    
    master, slave = pty.openpty()
    s_name = os.ttyname(slave)
    
    ser = serial.Serial(s_name)
    
    # To Write to the device
    ser.write('Your text')
    
    # To read from the device
    os.read(master,1000)
    

    If you create more virtual ports you will have no problems as the different masters get different file descriptors even if they have the same name.

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  • 2020-12-12 15:33

    It may be easier to using something like com0com (if you're on Windows) to set up a virtual serial port, and develop on that.

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  • 2020-12-12 15:33

    If you are running Linux you can use the socat command for this, like so:

    socat -d -d pty,raw,echo=0 pty,raw,echo=0
    

    When the command runs, it will inform you of which serial ports it has created. On my machine this looks like:

    2014/04/23 15:47:49 socat[31711] N PTY is /dev/pts/12
    2014/04/23 15:47:49 socat[31711] N PTY is /dev/pts/13
    2014/04/23 15:47:49 socat[31711] N starting data transfer loop with FDs [3,3] and [5,5]
    

    Now I can write to /dev/pts/13 and receive on /dev/pts/12, and vice versa.

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  • 2020-12-12 15:33

    Maybe a loop device will do the job if you need to test your application without access to a device. It's included in pySerial 2.5 https://pythonhosted.org/pyserial/url_handlers.html#loop

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  • 2020-12-12 15:41

    I was able to emulate an arbitrary serial port ./foo using this code:

    SerialEmulator.py

    import os, subprocess, serial, time
    
    # this script lets you emulate a serial device
    # the client program should use the serial port file specifed by client_port
    
    # if the port is a location that the user can't access (ex: /dev/ttyUSB0 often),
    # sudo is required
    
    class SerialEmulator(object):
        def __init__(self, device_port='./ttydevice', client_port='./ttyclient'):
            self.device_port = device_port
            self.client_port = client_port
            cmd=['/usr/bin/socat','-d','-d','PTY,link=%s,raw,echo=0' %
                    self.device_port, 'PTY,link=%s,raw,echo=0' % self.client_port]
            self.proc = subprocess.Popen(cmd, stdout=subprocess.PIPE, stderr=subprocess.PIPE)
            time.sleep(1)
            self.serial = serial.Serial(self.device_port, 9600, rtscts=True, dsrdtr=True)
            self.err = ''
            self.out = ''
    
        def write(self, out):
            self.serial.write(out)
    
        def read(self):
            line = ''
            while self.serial.inWaiting() > 0:
                line += self.serial.read(1)
            print line
    
        def __del__(self):
            self.stop()
    
        def stop(self):
            self.proc.kill()
            self.out, self.err = self.proc.communicate()
    

    socat needs to be installed (sudo apt-get install socat), as well as the pyserial python package (pip install pyserial).

    Open the python interpreter and import SerialEmulator:

    >>> from SerialEmulator import SerialEmulator
    >>> emulator = SerialEmulator('./ttydevice','./ttyclient') 
    >>> emulator.write('foo')
    >>> emulator.read()
    

    Your client program can then wrap ./ttyclient with pyserial, creating the virtual serial port. You could also make client_port /dev/ttyUSB0 or similar if you can't modify client code, but might need sudo.

    Also be aware of this issue: Pyserial does not play well with virtual port

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  • 2020-12-12 15:47

    It depends a bit on what you're trying to accomplish now...

    You could wrap access to the serial port in a class and write an implementation to use socket I/O or file I/O. Then write your serial I/O class to use the same interface and plug it in when the device is available. (This is actually a good design for testing functionality without requiring external hardware.)

    Or, if you are going to use the serial port for a command line interface, you could use stdin/stdout.

    Or, there's this other answer about virtual serial devices for linux.

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