I have a problem reading data from an RFID-reader. I connect to the reader by tcp and wait for DataAvailable to be true, then reading the data until I got a end of data character. Then I just go back and waiting for a new DataAvailable. This is done in a own thread for the function.
There seems to be some kind of timeout, If I don't got any data in a couple of minutes, then it just sits there in the do/loop waiting for DataAvailable. I hold the card to the RFID reader, it beeps, but there is no data available. I don't get any exeptions, and the information says that the clientsocket is still connected. Are there anything more I can check?
If I put the card to the reader in a minute-interval it seems as this will never occur. So 2-3 minutes idle:ing seems to do this.
Here are my code to read data from the socket, I have taken away some irrelevant code:
Sub test(ByVal ip As String, ByVal port As Integer)
' this sub is meant to run forever
Try
Dim clientSocket As New System.Net.Sockets.TcpClient()
clientSocket.Connect(ip, port)
Using serverStream As NetworkStream = clientSocket.GetStream()
Do 'loop forever or until error occur
'Every new dataentry starts here
Dim inStream(0) As Byte
Dim returndata As String = ""
Do 'loop forever
Do Until serverStream.DataAvailable 'loop until data exists to read
If clientSocket.Connected = False Then
'this will never happend.
'but if there are more than 5 minutes between data then
'it never got data again as if no data was sent.
Exit Sub
End If
Application.DoEvents()
Loop
'there is data to read, read first byte and
serverStream.Read(inStream, 0, 1)
If inStream(0) = 13 Then
'got end of data
'exit loop if reading chr 13.
returndata &= System.Text.Encoding.ASCII.GetString(inStream)
Exit Do
End If
Loop
GotData(returndata)
Loop
End Using
Catch ex As Exception
' handle error
Finally
'close connection if open
End Try
End Sub
Thread.Sleep(int)in there before your closing outer loop. Maybe set it for100or250. Otherwise you're spinning in a very tight circle wasting CPU cycles. That outer loop might actually run at hundreds per millisecond. – Chris Haas Mar 24 '11 at 13:12