In this protocol, you'd need to say “Hey, I am REQUESTING-TO-SEND (RTS), here is the START OF TEXT (STX), here is some message, and here is the END-OF-TEXT (ETX).” Then in the early 1990s sockets started to be more available as computer networks became more ubiquitous. So, the vendors said “Awesome, that’s like a faster, more reliable, version of a serial network” and just ported their protocol over to sockets. That had a nice run. But that is coming to an end. In the WCS/WES space, a lot of the system’s communication approaches are pretty old-school. They were developed back in the day when we did RS232/RS422 serial communication to PLCs and scanners. But on a modern network, these techniques are going to be more and more problematic.Ī little back story. Certainly, there are actual serial communication use-cases for which these protocols were designed. There are some things best left in the 1980s. Duran Duran, my MagnumPI-style mustache, and network communication involving STX/ETX are at the top of my list. For those not familiar with STX/ETX, they are ASCII characters for serial protocols.
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