Serial port - command syntax, 7 serial port - command syntax, Able – Wegener Communications 4422 User Manual

Page 34: Erial, Evice, Ombinations, Ettings

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Page 34

UTY4422-002

Page 34 of 72

3.7

SERIAL PORT - COMMAND SYNTAX

The UNITY4422 contains two serial ports. These are labeled Serial Port 1 and Serial Port 2.
Each can support a printer, a terminal, a modem, or an auxiliary data device. However, there are
restrictions as to what device combinations can be used at one time. There are only 2 rules for
this, and they are shown below. (Also, see

Table 13

, below.)

1. The same device type (Printer, terminal/modem, or aux. data) cannot be configured

on both ports at the same time. (Terminals and modems are considered the same
device type. See Rule 2.)

2. The combination of a terminal on one port and a modem on the other is not allowed.

The statements on the second line of Table 16 tell which devices can be connected to Serial Port
2 when the device on the top line is connected to Serial Port 1.

Table 13. Serial Port Device Combinations

Serial Port 1 Printer

Aux. Data

Terminal

Modem

Serial Port 2 Any but Printer Any but Aux. Data

Any but Terminal
or Modem

Any but Terminal
or Modem

Port Communication is fixed at 1 stop bit and 8 data bits, and there is no handshaking. The
serial port’s behavior for each of its device types is shown in the following table.

Table 14. Serial Port Settings

Device

Serial Port Behavior

Printer

Configured to B, N, 8, 1 (* see note 1 below.).

Aux. Data

Configured to B, N (* See note 2 below.).

Terminal

Configured to 19200, N, 8, 1. The unit responds to the terminal/modem
commands described in Sections

3.6.1

&

3.6.3

, and

APPENDIX A

.

Modem

Configured to B, N, 8, 1 (* see note 3 below.). The unit responds to the
terminal/modem commands described in Sections

3.6.1

,

3.6.3

, and

APPENDIX A

.

Note 1. For Printer: ‘B’ may be 1200, 2400, 4800, 9600, or 19.2k baud; ‘P’ may be ‘O’ for Odd, ‘E’ for

Even, or ‘N’ for No parity.

Note 2. For Aux Data: ‘B’ may be 1200, 2400, 4800, 9600, 19.2k, or 38.4k baud. ‘P’ may be ‘O’ for

Odd, ‘E’ for Even, or ‘N’ for No parity.

Note 3. For Modem: ‘B’ may be 9600 or 19.2k baud; parity is always ‘N’ for No parity.

* Note: Baud rate and parity are configurable for the Printer, but the serial ports do not
support parity for modem applications.
Supported baud rates are 1200, 2400, 4800, 9600, 19200, and 38400, while supported parity
types are None, Odd, and Even. When a serial port configuration command is received from any

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