I'm not sure what the issue is, I tried another '149 board,
and it worked with it.  Another prototype board with '1232
worked, so I'm not sure what the issue is, perhaps the '149
requires external power (not just from the ISP), and my '1232
ISP header is not wired properly..  I dunno, I got the 1232
prototype board to work, the ADC works with it, I can measure
my battery temp now, wheeeee hooo :)

I'd still like to figure out the slope compare thing for the 121

thanks,
Kelly

Steve Underwood wrote:
Kelly Murray wrote:

My woes continue.  I'm now trying to use a ..F1232 device,
but the gdb-proxy reports it "Could not find device."
It finds the 1121 Ok, and a 123 chip too, but fails on this 1232,
and to double check I tried it with a 149, and that also fails
to be recognized.  Is there a way to get a list of which devices
the gdb-proxy knows about.  I'd assume it knows of them all,
but perhaps not.  BTW, the 1121 and 123 and 149 chips are "dev boards"
from sparkfun.com, the 1232 device I soldered up.

thanks,
Kelly


gdbproxy works OK with the 1232 on both Linux and Windows. That is one of the devices I used during the development of gdbproxy, so it has been very well tested :-)

Are you sure your 1232 is OK? Have you tried it with any other tools? I seem to remember the library has a workaround for a problem in early 1232 silicon, but it should work will all 1232s which have been released to customers.

Regards,
Steve



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