cygwin error device or resource busy

Hello!!!
My problem is: i'm trying to send At commands from Pc to mobile phone using bluetooth and cygwin and i would like to read the device's answers on the shell bash. And so, i open two terminals in this way:

xterm &

In the first i write:

cat /dev/ttyS2

because the device is connected at com3.
In the second one i write the instruction with the AT commands:

echo "AT">/dev/ttyS2
However i'm facing with this error:

/dev/ttyS2: Device or resource busy

Is there anyone that can help me??HELPPPPPP
SORRY FOR MY BAD ENGLISH!!!!!!!!!

Remember, Cygwin is still subject to silly Windows limitations like two programs not being able to open one port. bash can't open a file for reading and writing simultaneously, so bash can't do it by itself. I'm trying to think of a common shell utility to do this or some way to trick bash into it but so far I'm coming up empty... There's things like minicom, but I'm guessing you want to automate something.

You could use putty if just typing in raw commands is what you want. It's what I use for raw serial port communication in UNIX, and there's a native Windows version with precisely the same functionality.

Or... It's entirely possible your phone doesn't have the control signals to tell it when the connection's broken, so that closing the device file doesn't lose anything. You might be able to

echo "AT" > /dev/ttyS0
cat /dev/ttyS0

if you set it up with stty correctly first. There's a setting in stty somewhere to define the amount of time to wait before closing the connection. Set it to zero(or just something small) and it gives you only what's in the buffer, which lets you just keep reopening and reclosing it whenever you want to read or write. I've used this feature in actual UNIX, but I don't know if Windows will do this properly -- it might just discard everything while the file's closed.

---------- Post updated at 02:41 PM ---------- Previous update was at 02:11 PM ----------

I finally figured it out, maybe. Try this:

# Open ttyS2 for reading and writing as FD 5
exec 5<>/dev/ttyS2
# Leave this running in the background
cat <&5 &
# Write a command to FD 5
echo "AT" >&5

Windows may still complain. I'm not sure.

Using puTTy it works but my aim was to automate the process.
So I try:

# Open ttyS2 for reading and writing as FD 5
exec 5<>/dev/ttyS2
# Leave this running in the background
cat <&5 &
# Write a command to FD 5
echo "AT" >&5

and I think that it's a good idea!! But now, there is another problem: when I try to send an SMS through At commands I have to communicate the control character [ctrl+z] ^Z to serial port...and I have some troubles to do this.

echo "\032">&5
echo "^Z" >&5

They don't work probably because I had to set up some features with stty but when I try:

stty -F /dev/ttyS2 isig

I face with this error:
stty: /dev/ttyS3: unable to perform all requested operations

Any idea to send control char??
Thank you!!!

echo doesn't try to translate anything unless you tell it to. You can send arbitrary ASCII characters with echo like

# ctrl-Z
echo -en "\x1a" >&5

The -e part tells it to convert \x codes into ASCII characters. -n tells it not to apppend a newline.

I also have a suspicion this fd-opening thing is only working because 'echo' is a bash builtin so doesn't need to launch a new process. Try to avoid pipes and such to avoid unexpected problems writing to the serial device..

---------- Post updated at 02:06 PM ---------- Previous update was at 01:59 PM ----------

stty: /dev/ttyS3: unable to perform all requested operations

Did you make a typo? That's not the device you were using before.

Yes I have made a mistake...the error was:

stty: /dev/ttyS2: unable to perform all requested operations

I have a doubt: ^Z in ASCII code is \032 so I have to write echo -en "\0321a">&5 or echo -en "\032">&5?

Thank you so much for your advices!!!

...or you could do what I suggested, \x1a. That defines it in hex. For octal, \032 will do it.

Thank you...I still have some problems.. i try this code:

#!/usr/bin/env bash
stty -F /dev/ttyS2 speed 9600
sleep 3
echo "AT">/dev/ttyS2
sleep 3
echo "AT+CMGF=1">/dev/ttyS2
sleep 3
echo "AT+CMGS=\"333xxxxxxx\"">/dev/ttyS2
sleep 3
echo -n "ciao">/dev/ttyS2
sleep 3
echo -en "\1A">/dev/ttyS2

on my pc it doesn't work...if you have some idea I'm very glad to read it..thanks for your help!!!!

Hm.

For one thing, you're not reading anything, how can you even tell if the device answers? It might be waiting for data to get read from it before it'll do anything else.

For another thing, maybe it needs carriage returns, which UNIX usually doesn't provide or use. You can force echo to produce them of course...

# Open ttyS2 for reading and writing as FD 5
exec 5<>/dev/ttyS2
# Leave this running in the background
cat <&5 &
# Write a command to FD 5
echo -en "AT\r\n" >&5
sleep 3
echo -en "AT+CMGF=1\r\n" >&5
sleep 3
echo -en "AT+CMGS=\"333xxxxxxx\"\r\n" >&5
sleep 3
# Is this supposed to have a carriage return + linefeed?  Not sure.
echo -en "ciao\x1a\r\n" >&5

It'd be good to know if the serial device is producing any response at all, working or not... Does it print anything when you type in the AT command in PuTTY? I'd start with that, just get that working, and add other bits once I know I have that.

Sorry...the last line was:
echo -en "\x1A">/dev/ttyS2

---------- Post updated at 12:11 PM ---------- Previous update was at 12:02 PM ----------

It workssssssssssss!!!!!!! Thank you so muchhh!!!!!!!!!!!
:slight_smile: :slight_smile: :slight_smile: :slight_smile: :slight_smile: :slight_smile: :slight_smile:
thanks thanks thanks thanks thanks thanks thanks thanks

You are welcome. I'd love to see your complete script.