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Home/ Questions/Q 8828045
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 14, 20262026-06-14T07:31:03+00:00 2026-06-14T07:31:03+00:00

I’m implementing a protocol over serial ports on Linux. The protocol is based on

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I’m implementing a protocol over serial ports on Linux. The protocol is based on a request answer scheme so the throughput is limited by the time it takes to send a packet to a device and get an answer. The devices are mostly arm based and run Linux >= 3.0. I’m having troubles reducing the round trip time below 10ms (115200 baud, 8 data bit, no parity, 7 byte per message).

What IO interfaces will give me the lowest latency: select, poll, epoll or polling by hand with ioctl? Does blocking or non blocking IO impact latency?

I tried setting the low_latency flag with setserial. But it seemed like it had no effect.

Are there any other things I can try to reduce latency? Since I control all devices it would even be possible to patch the kernel, but its preferred not to.

—- Edit —-

The serial controller uses is an 16550A.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-14T07:31:04+00:00Added an answer on June 14, 2026 at 7:31 am

    Having talked to to some more engineers about the topic I came to the conclusion that this problem is not solvable in user space. Since we need to cross the bridge into kernel land, we plan to implement an kernel module which talks our protocol and gives us latencies < 1ms.

    — edit —

    Turns out I was completely wrong. All that was necessary was to increase the kernel tick rate. The default 100 ticks added the 10ms delay. 1000Hz and a negative nice value for the serial process gives me the time behavior I wanted to reach.

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