Thanks for the suggestions lad. Very appreciated. Most of them I have
already thought of. The code was only written to test that the communication
is working. That's it. But It's good to be confirmed on the issue. Thanks.

However, Michael, what do you mean by "you need to leave the 7E's alone as
well" ? I don't understand. And what is this "bracketed with the sync byte"?
Could you give an example please?

Inderjit

On 4/18/07, Michael Schippling <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

I think you need to leave the 7E's alone as well.
If it's going to GenericComm, the full message
should be bracketed with the sync bytes. If that
doesn't work it may be due to having to swap a
source address or something...

Structure alignment shouldn't be a problem if you
are dealing with a char array that was structured
correctly to start with. You might check that your
pc serial driver is not trying to "help" by adding
line-feeds or something...it should be raw I/O.

Hopefully you've seen the octavetech doc:
http://www.octavetech.com/pubs/TB5-01%20Deciphering%20TinyOS%20Serial%20Packets.pdf


MS

Inderjit Singh wrote:
> Thanks Ben,
>
> I tried something very simple:
>
> 1. I get the byte stream from usb sent from the TMote like:
>   7e 42 xx xx xx xx 7e
>
> 2. I remove the 7e from the stream and send it back as it is (42 xx xx
> xx xx). But I still don't get it. C/C++ should be able to handle this
> no?
>
> Is there any doc on how the serial communication should be
> established. I have gone through the java code for sending but still
> it would help with a doc.
>
> Indy
>
>
> On 4/11/07, Ben Buckner < [EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> > Hi,
>> >
>> > I have trouble sending msg from laptop (using c++) code to tmote.
>> All the
>> > code is at the bottom. I have no problem reading the data from the
>> serial
>> > but sending it back dooesn't seam to work. Anyone knows why? Thanks.
>> >
>> > Indy
>> [...]
>> >     memcpy(output_buffer, &msgOUT, sizeof(msgOUT));
>>
>> Out of the dozens of things that could be wrong, it might be worth
>> pointing
>> out that C does not guarantee that structures can be serialized by
>> copying
>> bytewise out of memory like that. It can work, but you never know. The
>> most
>> usual reason why that would fail is if the compiler tries to align the
>> members of the structure and inserts padding (which it almost always
does
>> with odd-sized byte fields). At any rate, it would be a good idea to
make
>> sure that the code really generates the byte stream that you think it's
>> generating.
>>
>> Ben B.
>>
>>
>>
>> _______________________________________________
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>>
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>>
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