Re: Reading mouse input with Java comm

From:
Knute Johnson <nospam@rabbitbrush.frazmtn.com>
Newsgroups:
comp.lang.java.programmer
Date:
Tue, 08 Apr 2008 12:13:42 -0700
Message-ID:
<47fbc3e5$0$1632$b9f67a60@news.newsdemon.com>
Steve wrote:

On Apr 5, 11:30 pm, Knute Johnson <nos...@rabbitbrush.frazmtn.com>
wrote:

Steve wrote:

Hi Folks...
I'm trying to get a Java program together to read the input from a
serialmouseconnected to my PC on COM1. This is not the mainmouseso
I don't get a port in use exception when I start the program. The
problem is that I get absolutely nothing.
I've constructed this from scraps I've found all over the internet.
I'm using version 2.1.7 of the RXTXcommAPI hence the 'gnu.io'
package prefixes.
I'd be most grateful if anyone has a suggestion on why this doesn't
work. Or indeed any step I might take to ensure themouseif connected
properly to the PC.
With thanks in advance,
Steve.
import gnu.io.CommPortIdentifier;
import gnu.io.SerialPort;
import gnu.io.SerialPortEvent;
import gnu.io.SerialPortEventListener;
import java.io.IOException;
import java.io.InputStream;
public final class CommServiceManager {
   public void initialise() throws Exception {
           CommPortIdentifier portId =
CommPortIdentifier.getPortIdentifier("COM1");
           SerialPort serialPort = (SerialPort) portId.open("MouseReader",
2000);
           final InputStream inputStream = serialPort.getInputStream();
           serialPort.addEventListener(new SerialPortEventListener() {
                   public void serialEvent(SerialPortEvent evt) {
                           if (evt.getEventType() == SerialPortEvent.DATA_AVAILABLE) {
                                   byte[] readBuffer = new byte[20];
                                   try {
                                           while (inputStream.available() > 0)
                                                   inputStream.read(readBuffer);
                                           System.out.println(">>" + new String(readBuffer));
                                   } catch (IOException ioe) {
                                           ioe.printStackTrace();
                                   }
                           }
                   }
           });
           serialPort.setSerialPortParams(
                           9600,
                           SerialPort.DATABITS_8,
                           SerialPort.STOPBITS_1,
                           SerialPort.PARITY_NONE
                   );
           serialPort.notifyOnDataAvailable(true);
           serialPort.notifyOnCTS(true);
           serialPort.notifyOnDSR(true);
           serialPort.setDTR(true);
           serialPort.setRTS(true);
           int duration = 1000;
           float pulseRate = 1.28f;
           int numOfPulse = (int) (duration * pulseRate);
           int waitingTime = (int) (1000 / (2 * pulseRate));
           for (int i = 1; i <= numOfPulse * 2; i++) {
                   serialPort.setDTR(i % 2 == 1);
                   Thread.sleep(waitingTime);
           }
   }
   public static void main(String[] args) {
           try {
                   CommServiceManager manager = new CommServiceManager();
                   manager.initialise();
                   while (true) {
                           Thread.sleep(2000);
                   }
           } catch (Exception e) {
                   e.printStackTrace();
           }
   }
}

Is this being used on a Windows machine? If it is you need to use Sun's
JavaComm implementation. RXTX on Windows is seriously broken.

As to your code, I don't think you are looking long enough to find anything.

Does aserialmousereturn characters? I've never tried it.

Let me know if you are using Windows, if so I'll scrounge around in my
garage to find one that I think is down there and give it a try.

--

Knute Johnson
email s/nospam/linux/

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Hi..

Crazy as it may seem this is being developed on Windows and deployed
in Linux machines. The details above are relevant to the development
version and so yes this is Windows. I will try it with the Sun comm
implementation. I could use a factory to create an 'impl' class based
on the OS version. Apache commons provides tools to do just that.

Rgds,
Steve.


I went looking for my old serial mouse but apparently I tossed it when I
cleaned up the garage last time.

Post back if you have trouble with the Sun JavaComm package, I am fairly
familiar with it.

--

Knute Johnson
email s/nospam/linux/

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