The way charles works is that is configures the browser's proxy settings, pointing them to a port that Charles opens for proxying. For PC and Mac, the proxy settings that the system uses are shared by IE/Safari. So activating Charles essentially sends AIR requests through that proxy.
In Linux, you would probably have to manually configure the proxy settings at the network card level to point it at the Charles proxy port. Kinda a pain, b/c when you close Charles, you have to go back and reset your proxy for web requests to work again. On Wed, Jul 29, 2009 at 3:58 PM, John Mason <[email protected]> wrote: > Well I'm on Linux but I think I may be able to make this work some how. > > John > > > > Cameron Childress wrote: > >> You can configure Charles to monitor Windows traffic or Browser >> Traffic. Check out "Proxy > Windows Proxy" I think. Also check >> "Proxy > Proxy Settings > Windows". I didn't crank up an AIR app to >> confirm, but I know I have used Charles before to debug AIR apps. >> >> You can also turn on logging to a file, but it's not going to be a >> nice pretty clicky tree of data. >> >> -Cameron >> >> On Wed, Jul 29, 2009 at 2:31 PM, John Mason<[email protected]> wrote: >> >> >>> I use Charles with my Flex development, but I can't find a way to >>> introspect >>> remoting traffic when working on an AIR project. Are there any ways to >>> get >>> either Charles or Service Capture with an AIR app? >>> >>> >> >> >> >> > > > > ------------------------------------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from this list, simply email the list with unsubscribe in > the subject line > > For more info, see http://www.affug.com > Archive @ http://www.mail-archive.com/discussion%40affug.com/ > List hosted by http://www.fusionlink.com > ------------------------------------------------------------- > > > -- Scott Talsma CTO, echoEleven
