/* Software serial multiple serial test Receives from the two software serial ports, sends to the hardware serial port. In order to listen on a software port, you call port.listen(). When using two software serial ports, you have to switch ports by listen()ing on each one in turn. Pick a logical time to switch ports, like the end of an expected transmission, or when the buffer is empty. This example switches ports when there is nothing more to read from a port The circuit: Two devices which communicate serially are needed. First serial device's TX attached to digital pin 10(RX), RX to pin 11(TX) Second serial device's TX attached to digital pin 8(RX), RX to pin 9(TX) Note: Not all pins on the Mega and Mega 2560 support change interrupts, so only the following can be used for RX: 10, 11, 12, 13, 50, 51, 52, 53, 62, 63, 64, 65, 66, 67, 68, 69 Not all pins on the Leonardo support change interrupts, so only the following can be used for RX: 8, 9, 10, 11, 14 (MISO), 15 (SCK), 16 (MOSI). created 18 Apr. 2011 modified 19 March 2016 by Tom Igoe based on Mikal Hart's twoPortRXExample This example code is in the public domain. */ #include // software serial #1: RX = digital pin 10, TX = digital pin 11 SoftwareSerial portOne(10, 11); // software serial #2: RX = digital pin 8, TX = digital pin 9 // on the Mega, use other pins instead, since 8 and 9 don't work on the Mega SoftwareSerial portTwo(8, 9); void setup() { // Open serial communications and wait for port to open: Serial.begin(9600); while (!Serial) { ; // wait for serial port to connect. Needed for native USB port only } // Start each software serial port portOne.begin(9600); portTwo.begin(9600); } void loop() { // By default, the last initialized port is listening. // when you want to listen on a port, explicitly select it: portOne.listen(); Serial.println("Data from port one:"); // while there is data coming in, read it // and send to the hardware serial port: while (portOne.available() > 0) { char inByte = portOne.read(); Serial.write(inByte); } // blank line to separate data from the two ports: Serial.println(); // Now listen on the second port portTwo.listen(); // while there is data coming in, read it // and send to the hardware serial port: Serial.println("Data from port two:"); while (portTwo.available() > 0) { char inByte = portTwo.read(); Serial.write(inByte); } // blank line to separate data from the two ports: Serial.println(); }