englere wrote:
I said it because it's true. Nothing I said is wrong. D-bug12 is NOT a BDM capable debugger unless you buy extra hardware
Okay well, I see what you mean. The serial monitor mentioned can be better if one insists on having only one device (the target). This is what I've also said before.
You did not mean what I thought you meant, but the statement you are making is still incorrect, although does not matter in this thread. So I feel the urge to reenforce this: D-Bug12
is a
capable BDM debugger
without buying more hardware. The board that rdelljh has
is the BDM debugger hardware and software when set to POD mode. This is of course a problem only because it cannot also be the target simultaneously. Another board would be needed for a target.
What I am suggesting probably goes against your recent development on your IDE features... FWIW I appologize, but I'm saying that it is not worth getting the resident serial monitor working. I say if you don't have a few bucks for another simple board, then work a few hours flipping burgers and I think that would cost less than the trouble of switching between serial monitor and real world. Mind you, I'm still talking about practical use,
not for the "student-only" types who don't plan to ever do anything but get a grade (what the heck for?).
It would be great of course to have another board laying around, and rdelljh did not even give the impression that there was
not. However if not, I don't think it hard to find other low-cost (less than $99) boards that would work for at least a target.
What I want is to find or design a generic blank PCB, and I could make D-Bug12 BDM pods or development targets for much cheaper. Anybody seen or want to see more options like that?
It might still be worth while to get the
DragonBDM from Wytec, but now the price went up to $89 for hobby. The advantages: Smaller than the
technologicalarts BDM Pod, easy to handle cables, ASCII interface, and is D-Bug12 (worth being familiar with).
I'm still interrested in TBDML which is my kind of do-it-yourself project, but some developers need to get together and make it work better using the faster version of HC08. I think it won't be real practical for a while.
The bottom line is that when you want to start a new or debug a real-world project, it is important
and now less expensive to use a BDM pod. New parts ordered (or samples) do not already have the serial monitor preloaded--Freescale dropped that idea.