> > I found this in my logs, a huge amount: > > May 18 07:52:40 localhost modem-manager[1998]: > mm_serial_port_queue_process: (ttyUSB2) response array is not empty when > using cached reply, cleaning up 26 bytes > May 18 07:52:56 localhost modem-manager[1998]: > mm_serial_port_queue_process: (ttyUSB2) response array is not empty when > using cached reply, cleaning up 26 bytes > May 18 07:53:08 localhost modem-manager[1998]: > mm_serial_port_queue_process: (ttyUSB2) response array is not empty when > using cached reply, cleaning up 13 bytes > May 18 07:53:13 localhost modem-manager[1998]: > mm_serial_port_queue_process: (ttyUSB2) response array is not empty when > using cached reply, cleaning up 26 bytes > May 18 07:53:19 localhost modem-manager[1998]: > mm_serial_port_queue_process: (ttyUSB2) response array is not empty when > using cached reply, cleaning up 13 bytes > May 18 07:53:24 localhost modem-manager[1998]: > mm_serial_port_queue_process: (ttyUSB2) response array is not empty when > using cached reply, cleaning up 13 bytes > May 18 07:53:30 localhost modem-manager[1998]: > mm_serial_port_queue_process: (ttyUSB2) response array is not empty when > using cached reply, cleaning up 26 bytes > May 18 07:53:41 localhost modem-manager[1998]: > mm_serial_port_queue_process: (ttyUSB2) response array is not empty when > using cached reply, cleaning up 65 bytes > May 18 07:53:52 localhost modem-manager[1998]: > mm_serial_port_queue_process: (ttyUSB2) response array is not empty when > usingcached reply, cleaning up 13 bytes > > > What does it mean? I did not find any useful on the net. >
It means that array used to store the responses wasn't empty when an AT command was requested and a previously cached reply used instead of firing the new command. Whenever an AT command is sent, we expect the response array to be empty; if it is not, it may be a leftover (e.g. previously sent command timed out and response arrived afterwards), or maybe some unexpected unsolicited indication not properly parsed. Could you get debug logs to see exactly where this is happening? -- Aleksander _______________________________________________ networkmanager-list mailing list [email protected] http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/networkmanager-list
