To write an java application to communicate with serial port devices on windows environment , browsed in google seem to be divert to many directions also fond some of the th
If the linked example fails it means that RXTX hasn't detected any serial ports on your machine. You may have a serial port on your machine but one of the reasons it isn't recognized by your OS might be because it is actually a serial-to-USB adapter, and is being recognized as an USB port.
If you are on Linux, serial ports usually look like this:
ls /dev/ttyS*
outputs:
/dev/ttyS0
/dev/ttyS1
/dev/ttyS2
the adapted port might look like this:
/dev/ttyUSB0
If you can see some output on your serial attached device (e.g. POS printer or LCD display) you can test it like this:
echo 'hello' > /dev/ttyUSB0
and the device should show the 'hello' string if it is attached to that port and everything is working properly.
However, I would definitely recommend Java simple serial connector library over RxTx. We have tried both in an commercial POS application (>1M tickets at this time).
RxTx is being used for sequential printing successfully. In the print scenario the RxTx library was called upon sequentially and used only to send the data to the port. Only some serial flags were red the detect to buissiness of the device.
But because of its limitations we simply could not use it for reading input from a serially connected IButton. In the iButton scenario the data is expected to be received asynchronously from the port. There were constant bugs and hangs when we tried to implement it with RxTx, but with JSSC it was implemented almost immediatley.