On Saturday 07 February 2009 05:27:13, Brad and Tracy Riensche wrote: > > >> I don't think I can use gdb on my hardware, unless someone has a magic > >> trick to show me. > >> > > > > Sounds like it would be useful to teach gdbserver how to talk through the > > serial > > port on windows platforms. Currently, that's only possible on the linux > > gdbserver ports. That is assuming you have some way to talk serial > > through usb on your device (some COMx mapped to usb). > > > > > Sounds useful, but possibly just as hard as getting activesync working.
If activesync gives the device an ip address over which you can make gdbserver talk, you're done. > The device does have a secret menu that has an option to enable > activesync. I think my big problem is getting activesync to recognize > my device as a valid activesync target. > If anyone has some good > pointers for getting activesync to work for an arbitrary set of product > and vendor ID's, that might get me closer to a solution. Or even just a > tutorial on the mechanics of activesync might help. The details of how to get your device talking through activesync seem more like questions for the device manufacturer or to Microsoft, not cegcc... -- Pedro Alves ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Create and Deploy Rich Internet Apps outside the browser with Adobe(R)AIR(TM) software. With Adobe AIR, Ajax developers can use existing skills and code to build responsive, highly engaging applications that combine the power of local resources and data with the reach of the web. Download the Adobe AIR SDK and Ajax docs to start building applications today-http://p.sf.net/sfu/adobe-com _______________________________________________ Cegcc-devel mailing list Cegcc-devel@lists.sourceforge.net https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/cegcc-devel