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Find Arduino Port on Windows, Mac, and Linux

Use arduinolist to identify the port number to which your Arduino® board is connected. If you are still not able to identify the port follow the steps mentioned below.

Find Port Number on Windows

  1. Connect the Arduino board to one of the USB ports on your computer running MATLAB® Support Package for Arduino Hardware.

    If you are connecting the board for the first time, ensure that the driver installation is also complete.

  2. Open Device Manager (In the search box on the Windows Taskbar, type Device Manager).

  3. In the Device Manager window, expand the Ports (COM & LPT) list.

  4. Note the port name (COM#) that displays the Arduino board's name.

    You will be using this name (for example, COM3) as the value of Port input argument while creating the arduino object.

Find Port Number on Macintosh

  1. Connect the Arduino board to one of the USB ports on your Mac running MATLAB Support Package for Arduino Hardware.

    If you are connecting the board for the first time, ensure that the driver installation is also complete.

  2. Open Terminal in macOS. To do this, you can either use Spotlight Search (search for Terminal) or use the Finder window (launch Finder, click Go > Utilities, and double-click Terminal).

  3. At the command prompt in the Terminal, go to the root directory (run this command: cd /).

  4. In the root directory, run this command: ls /dev/*.

  5. Note the port name /dev/tty.usbmodem* or /dev/tty.usbserial*.

    You will be using this name (for example, /dev/tty.usbmodem1421) as the value of Port input argument while creating the arduino object.

Find Port Number on Linux

  1. Connect the Arduino board to one of the USB ports on your computer running MATLAB Support Package for Arduino Hardware.

    Note

    If you are connecting any Arduino board over USB, make sure that the respective COM port has the read, write, and execute permissions.

    If you are connecting the board for the first time, ensure that the driver installation is also complete.

  2. Open a Terminal in Linux.

  3. At the command prompt in the Terminal, go to the root directory (run this command: cd /).

  4. In the root directory, run this command: ls /dev/tty*.

  5. Note the port name /dev/ttyUSB* or /dev/ttyACM*.

    You will be using this name (for example, /dev/ttyUSB0) as the value of Port input argument while creating the arduino object.