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Programming Serial Device Installation

Note

This topic describes programming traditional COM ports. For information on USB attached serial ports, see USB serial driver (Usbser.sys).

This section includes the following topics about programming installation for serial devices:

Programming Serial Ports and COM Port Installation

Programming Installation for Plug and Play Serial Ports and COM Ports

Create an Advanced Properties Page for a COM Port

There are no other serial-specific requirements for installing serial devices.

For general information about installing devices, see the Device Installation Design Guide section.

For more information about serial devices, see Serial Devices and Drivers.## In This Topic

This topic includes the following legacy COM port topics.

Programming Installation for Serial Devices that Use a 16550 UART-Compatible Interface

Programming Installation for Serenum Devices

Programming Installation for Legacy COM Ports

Programming Installation for Serial Devices that Use a 16550 UART-Compatible Interface

To install a Plug and Play device that uses Serial as a lower-level device filter driver, do the following:

Programming Installation for Serenum Devices

To install a device that is enumerated by Serenum, use the following hardware ID format for the device:

Serenum\XxxxYyyy

Where: Xxxx is a field of four ASCII characters that specify the EISA Manufacturing ID; Yyyy is a field of four ASCII characters that specify the Product ID. Serenum IDs are documented in the Plug and Play External COM Device Specification

Programming Installation for Legacy COM Ports

The Serial function driver always configures a legacy serial port as a COM port.

Serial detects the presence of legacy ports by reading corresponding COM port subkeys under the ..\Services\Serial\Parameters key. To install a legacy COM port, you must set a legacy COM port subkey for the device under this key. The COM port subkey contains the registry settings for a legacy COM port.

When Serial is loaded it determines which legacy ports were not previously detected by checking the LegacyDiscovered entry value for a legacy port. If this entry value does not exist or is zero, Serial performs the following tasks:

  1. Calls IoReportDetectedDevice to report the device to the Plug and Play manager.

  2. Sets the LegacyDiscovered entry value for the port to 0x00000001, which indicates that the port has been reported.

  3. Copies some of the entry values under the COM port subkey to the Plug and Play device key for the physical device object (PDO) that is returned by IoReportDetectedDevice.

  4. Serial sets the PortName entry value under the Plug and Play device key to the value of the DosDevices entry value under the legacy COM port subkey. For all other entry values that Serial copies, it retains the same entry value name. For more information about which entry values that Serial copies, see the Serial sample code provided in the Microsoft Windows Driver Kit (WDK).

The IoReportDetectedDevice call marks the port as a root-enumerated device. On subsequent system boots, the Plug and Play manager automatically configures the device based on the information in its INF file.

The Plug and Play manager creates the following compatible IDs for a legacy COM port: DETECTEDInternal\Serial and DETECTED\Serial.