Commands – Elo TouchSystems 1525L User Manual

Page 93

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MagTek Device Drivers for Windows

90

COMMANDS

Like properties, commands are identified by a string name and have string arguments. All
commands are terminated by line feed <LF> or a carriage return. To invoke a command, an
application simply writes it to the driver in the same manner as writing to a file or serial port. If
the command has a response defined for it, the application reads it from the driver using the same
I/O handle as in the write.

Four types of commands are defined by the device control language:

Non-interactive – These commands manipulate the device without requiring any
interaction with the user. The property commands

get

and

set

,

reset

and

ver

are

examples of this type.

Interactive – These commands interact with the user. They do not necessarily require the
user to do anything but may only prompt the user to do something.

display

is an

example of such a command. Others, such as

read

or

write

, however, require user

interaction to complete. For example, the user must either swipe a card or cancel the
operation in order to complete a read command.

Device-specific – These commands give access to device-specific features. For example,
the

load_key

command is available for MagTek devices that use keys to encrypt data

before sending it to the host.

Raw – These are effectively escape commands. They allow the application to bypass the
driver to perform device-specific operations that are not included in the driver syntax and
not supported elsewhere. With these commands, an application has no limitations on the
amount of control it has over a device. The raw commands can be formatted exactly as
specified in the device documentation. The command bracketing will be inserted by the
driver if required (e.g., <stx> and <etx> will be inserted for certain devices). Three
commands are defined for this type:

rawsend

and

rawrecv

, used to send and receive

data directly to the device, and

rawxact

, a transactional version that is a combination of

the first two.


A small set of interactive and non-interactive commands is all that is required for an application
to perform the most common tasks with these devices. Device-specific or raw commands should
rarely ever be needed.

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