"A practical guide to RS-232 interfacing" - читать интересную книгу автора (Hughes L.E.)A Practical Guide to RS-232 Interfacing by Lawrence E. Hughes. Mycroft Labs, Inc. P.O. Box 6045, Tallahassee, FL 32301 The following information is intended to collect together in one place, and explain in relatively simple terms, enough of the details of the RS-232 standard to allow a technician to construct and/or debug interfaces between any two "RS-232 Compatible" devices. A more detailed coverage of the subject may be found in the book "Technical Aspects of Data Communication" by John E. McNamara (1977, Digital Press). This guide is necessary due to the casual way that vendors implement "RS-232" interfaces, sometimes omitting required sig- nals, requiring optional ones, or worse, implementing signals incorrectly. Due to this, and a lack of readily available information about the real EIA standard, there is often consid- erable confusion involved in trying to interface two RS-232 devices. BACKGROUND Industry Association) standard for low speed serial data commu- nication. It defines a number of parameters concerning voltage levels, loading characteristics and timing relationships. The actual connectors which are almost universally used (DB-25P and DB-25S, sometimes called "EIA connectors") are recommended, but not mandatory. Typical practice requires mounting the female (DB-25S) connector on the chassis of communication equipment, and male (DB-25P) connectors on the cable connecting two such devices. There are two main classes of RS-232 devices, namely DTE (Data Terminal Equipment), such as terminals, and DCE (Data Communication Equipment), such as modems. Typically, one only interfaces a DTE to a DCE, as opposed to one DTE to another DTE, or one DCE to another DCE, although there are ways to do the later two by building non-standard cables. Rarely if ever are more than two devices involved in a given interface (multidrop is not supported). A serial port on a computer may be implemented as either DTE or DCE, depending on what type of device it is intended to support. RS-232 is intended for relatively short (50 feet or less), relatively low speed (19,200 bits per second or less) serial (as opposed to parallel) communications. Both asynchronous and |
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