
All the communication is ASCII characters, and I have a nice thick manual describing which character sequences correspond to which commands, and what the units response should be. I am trying to snoop on the serial communication to get some insight on the communication between the software and the hardware unit, and using a psuedoterminal to send the communication through and teeing it off so I can view it on my screen seems most logical.

the older Mac software has an extremely low timeout length when it pings the device, and the latency between the program though the emulator software, through the USB-serial device, causes the program to time-out, either repeatedly, or as low as 10% of the time, depending on a variety of other factors. It works, but unreliably, and I have a feeling it is because of timing problems, i.e. I am trying to get a specialty program to talk to a hardware device, an old audio multi-effect unit, via RS-232.
#BASILISK II LATENCY MAC OS#
Now here's the boarder picture of what I am doing: I have an emulator program (Basilisk II) emulating a Macintosh machine running Mac OS 7.5.3. What am I doing wrong? I am running OSX 10.8.4 by the way. I thought maybe I'd try teeing it off into a file to make sure I was using tee correctly: cat -v /dev/ptyp0 | tee file.txtīut still nothing at all. It is also based on the same wireless tech as the Basilisk Ultimate and Viper Ultimate, delivering virtually latency-free performance on par with a wired gaming mouse. I was thinking it would work to run cat -v /dev/ptyp0 | tee /dev/tty.USA19H62P1.1īut the result of that is no output whatsoever - on my screen nor the device. Great, just what I wanted.īut now I want to display those characters AND tee it to another device (a serial port - via a USB to serial adapter).

I can see the ASCII characters the program is outputting as it runs. I have a serial program writing to and reading from /dev/ttyp0, and if I run cat -v /dev/ptyp0 I'll start out with the specific question: A 3 mouse is more reliable at the moment than my 75 Basilisk. Thanks in advance for either answering my specific question OR letting me know if there is a better way to accomplish what I am trying to do altogether. To have a corded commercial grade headset solution you will need two items.
