> > > I am trying to set up a serial port to > > > read data from a weather station. I > > > have some C code that will set up the > > > allow the port to listen, but I can't > > > find any information on how to get > > > the code "into" dev/ttyS0 or ttyS1. > > > Do I compile it into that directory > > > with the name ttyS1 and replace it, > > > or something else? > > > > Well, first off, you have to realize that all of the files in the /dev > > directory correspond directly to each device installed in your system. If > > you want to send data to a device, you have to open() it like a file, and > > write() to it. The same procedure goes for reading: open() it and then > > read() from it. > > > > What do you mean "get the code 'into' dev/ttyS0 or ttyS1"? Do you mean > > upload the actual program into the device? > > Sorry for the vague language. I understand that the > serial port interface is a file (ttyS0, etc.), and I > know which device I'm dealing with (ttyS1). What > I don't get is how to change the serial interface > to a driver for a particular device, in this case a > weather station. > > I have the code that interfaces with the port, but I > don't know what file to compile into. Does it get > compiled into a file with name 'ttyS1', replacing > the existing 'ttyS1'? Again, sorry for the clumsy > language, this is new territory for me. Your code will be compiled into an executable, the name of it doesn't really matter just put it in a place like /usr/bin. Inside your code you have it perform an open operation on the /dev/ttys0 or s1 file to perform reads and writes to it. Those reads and writes get transmitted to the device on that serial port.