Reputation: 2538
I'm trying to understand IOKit and how it allows me to access serial ports in a Swift program.
The class I'm manipulating at the moment is as follows:
import Foundation
import Cocoa
import IOKit.serial.IOSerialKeys
class Serial {
init() {
}
@IBOutlet var serialListPullDown : NSPopUpButton!
func refreshSerialList(defaultprompt: String) {
// remove everything from the pull down list
serialListPullDown?.removeAllItems()
// ask for all the serial ports
IOServiceGetMatchingServices(kIOMasterPortDefault, IOServiceMatching(kIOSerialBSDServiceValue), io_iterator_t)
}
}
Based on what I've read I think I've setup IOServiceMatchingServices correctly but I'm getting several errors such as "Expected member name or constructor call after type name" and "'o_iterator_t.Type' is not convertible to 'UnsafeMutualPointer'"
What does this mean?
Upvotes: 1
Views: 5237
Reputation: 93276
A few different issues going on in there -- let's get your imports squared away first. It looks like you need these two:
import IOKit
import IOKit.serial
For the parameters, it'll be easier to see what we're working with if we define them as local variables, like so:
// this one's easy, just grabbing a constant from IOKit.serial
let masterPort: mach_port_t = kIOMasterPortDefault
// here we get back an Unmanaged<CFMutableDictionary> and need to convert it to
// a CFDictionary using takeRetainedValue()
let classesToMatch: CFDictionary = IOServiceMatching(kIOSerialBSDServiceValue).takeRetainedValue()
// the iterator that will contain the results of IOServiceGetMatchingServices
var matchingServices: io_iterator_t = 0
And lastly, you call the method:
// note that the last parameter is an UnsafeMutablePointer<io_iterator_t>
// so we need to prefix matchingServices with an ampersand (&)
let kernResult = IOServiceGetMatchingServices(masterPort, classesToMatch, &matchingServices)
if kernResult == KERN_SUCCESS {
// success
} else {
// error
}
This feels pretty near the edge of what Swift can handle right now -- definitely read these two pages well before going further:
Lastly, make sure you can get into the converted Swift declarations for the IOKit
framework. There are a lot of useful comments and you'll be able to see which parameters and return values are unmanaged or pointers (since I don't think this framework's official documentation has been updated yet).
Upvotes: 4