Device support is not returning 2 (do not convert) for ai records when it should. This means that the VAL field is being set back to 0 by the record after device support writes to it.
The record sometimes does not read the current input and output EOS values from the driver when it connects.
If read reads maxchars, it forces the last character to be 0 and returns asynOverflow if it wasn't.
These do not properly set an error message in asynUser.errorMessage when they return asynError.
This calls setOption for clocal. This only works on vxWorks because vxWorks uses the name CLOCAL for what POSIX calls CRTSCTS.
If a call to a low level driver, which registered itself as canBlock, completes without blocking then the asynchronous completion may never occur. This will be fixed in the next release.
The problem reported for version 4 about segmentation faults on cygwin-x86 has been fixed.
asynRecord (and other code) use epicsStrSnPrintEscaped. In EPICS 3.14.6 the files epicsVsnprintf on vxWorks (which gets called by several other epicsXXXprintf routines) and epicsStrSnPrintEscaped each have a bug could cause buffer overflow. These bugs are guaranteed to lead to corruption in asynRecord if the received string is longer than 40 characters.
static const struct asynOctet drvAsynSerialPortAsynOctet = {must be changed to
static struct asynOctet drvAsynSerialPortAsynOctet = {i.e. remove the const keyword.
static const struct asynOctet drvAsynIPPortAsynOctet = {must be changed to
static struct asynOctet drvAsynIPPortAsynOctet = {i.e. remove the const keyword.
John Sinclair (ONRL) reported that the IOC crashed if an E5810 was power cycled. This could not be reproduced at APS. We will have to see if it is still a problem.
Attempts to provide support for the serial port of a E5810 have not been successful
If vxiName is specified as "inst" then the driver incorrectly says that it does not block.
If asynRecord is attached to a port that does not implement asynOctet, then asynRecord crashes of it attempt to send/receive a message.
The next release gaurantees that when queueRequest is called:
The RPC library on Mac OS X 10.3.3 does not handle device timeouts properly and may cause core dumps. A bug report has been filed with Apple. A workaround is to use the GNU glibc RPC/XDR routines.
Attempting to change the trace file to "stdout" does not work becuase vxWorks has per-task standard output streams.
When building with EPICS Base R3.14.6 or greater, comment out the epicsInterruptibleSyscall.h and epicsInterruptibleSyscall.c lines in asyn/Makefile:
@@ -19,10 +19,10 @@ SRC_DIRS += $(ASYN)/asynDriver INC += asynDriver.h INC += epicsInterruptibleSyscall.h -INC += epicsString1.h +#INC += epicsString1.h asyn_SRCS += asynManager.c asyn_SRCS += epicsInterruptibleSyscall.c -asyn_SRCS += epicsString1.c +#asyn_SRCS += epicsString1.c SRC_DIRS += $(ASYN)/asynGpib INC += asynGpibDriver.h
The RPC library on Mac OSD 10.3.3 does not handle device timeouts properly and may cause core dumps. A bug report has been filed with Apple. A workaround is to use the GNU glibc RPC/XDR routines.
If a user callback calls a low level driver with an infinite or very long timeout, there is no way to make the call terminate. Is there a generic way to abort the call?
Does not support GPIB specific functions.
This needs to be implemented for asynDriver.
Think about creating generic support for connecting to EPICS records.
Consider generic support for various network protocals: Modbus, etherIP, etc.