WSJT-X/ptt.c
Diane Bruce ad643f3353 - This imports the freebsd branch modifications
- This gets rid of the need to configure for parallel or serial port
- The code picks up the device name from WSJT.INI for ComPort (misnamed now)
  which is actually a device name for either a serial port or parallel port.
  ptt_unix.c then uses the appropriate code to "talk" to a parallel or serial
  port.
- audio in/audio out should work the same way on windows as it did before,
  however it is actually now a string name value, which can be used to open
  the appropriate /dev/dsp on OSS or in future, be passed to the ALSA init
  routines or other audio routines as needed. 



git-svn-id: svn+ssh://svn.code.sf.net/p/wsjt/wsjt/trunk@185 ab8295b8-cf94-4d9e-aec4-7959e3be5d79
2006-07-05 03:49:02 +00:00

43 lines
813 B
C

#include <windows.h>
#include <stdio.h>
int ptt_(int *nport, char *unused, int *ntx, int *iptt)
{
static HANDLE hFile;
static int open=0;
char s[10];
int i3,i4,i5,i6,i9,i00;
if(*nport==0) {
*iptt=*ntx;
return(0);
}
if(*ntx && (!open)) {
sprintf(s,"COM%d",*nport);
hFile=CreateFile(TEXT(s),GENERIC_WRITE,0,NULL,OPEN_EXISTING,
FILE_ATTRIBUTE_NORMAL,NULL);
if(hFile==INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE) {
printf("PTT: Cannot open COM port %d.\n",*nport);
return(1);
}
open=1;
}
if(*ntx && open) {
EscapeCommFunction(hFile,3);
EscapeCommFunction(hFile,5);
*iptt=1;
}
else {
EscapeCommFunction(hFile,4);
EscapeCommFunction(hFile,6);
EscapeCommFunction(hFile,9);
i00=CloseHandle(hFile);
*iptt=0;
open=0;
}
return(0);
}