/* Software serial multple 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 2, RX to pin 3 * Second serial device's TX attached to digital pin 4, RX to pin 5 created 18 Apr. 2011 by Tom Igoe based on Mikal Hart's twoPortRXExample This example code is in the public domain. */ #include // software serial #1: TX = digital pin 2, RX = digital pin 3 SoftwareSerial portOne(2, 3); // software serial #2: TX = digital pin 4, RX = digital pin 5 SoftwareSerial portTwo(4, 5); void setup() { // Start the hardware serial port Serial.begin(9600); // Start each software serial port portOne.begin(9600); portTwo.begin(9600); } void loop() { // By default, the last intialized 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(); }