Re: TCP/IP over USB
- From: PaulH <paul.heil@xxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Thu, 06 Sep 2007 18:17:32 -0000
On Sep 6, 11:55 am, "Paul G. Tobey [eMVP]" <p space tobey no spam AT
no instrument no spam DOT com> wrote:
If you plug just one in, does *that* show up? If not, you don't have the
RNDIS driver installed, I would think, or maybe you have Advanced Network
Functionality turned off on the device (my device doesn't have that switch).
How about answering the question that I've asked three times now?
Anyway, why can't you just use WiFi for all of your communication?
Paul T.
"PaulH" <paul.h...@xxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:1189096725.278286.137580@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
On Sep 6, 11:07 am, "Paul G. Tobey [eMVP]" <p space tobey no spam AT
no instrument no spam DOT com> wrote:
When you have those devices plugged in, what does the Network Connections
applet under Settings in the Start menu on the PC show? 10 adapters, one
for each device?
Anyway, why can't you just use WiFi for all of your communication?
Paul T.
"PaulH" <paul.h...@xxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:1189087742.900352.228760@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
On Sep 6, 8:58 am, "<ctacke/>" <ctacke[at]opennetcf[dot]com> wrote:
ActiveSync cannot handle that - it's a single-client-only model.
--
Chris Tacke, Embedded MVP
OpenNETCF Consulting
Managed Code in an Embedded Worldwww.OpenNETCF.com
"PaulH" <paul.h...@xxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:1189086276.261493.98060@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
On Sep 5, 5:34 pm, "Paul G. Tobey [eMVP]" <p space tobey no spam AT
no
instrument no spam DOT com> wrote:
I'm not talking about ultimately, but whether the underlying
network
implementation actually works. Use the ActiveSync connection and
write
your
server and client code. They don't know how they are
communicating,
anyway.
If that works, then you have your communication channel. All you
have
to
do
is work around the fact that ActiveSync is dropping the WiFi
connection
(or
just communicate with the PC over WiFi -- you can't do that?).
There
was
a
recent thread in microsoft.public.pocketpc.activesync where a guy
came
up
with a means of preventing WM5 from dropping the WiFi connection
(he's
using
an NDIS intermediate driver to ignore unbind requests from
ActiveSync
to
the
WiFi connection; not my favorite way to do it, but it should work).
Here's
a thread link:
http://groups.google.com/group/microsoft.public.pocketpc.activesync/b...
Paul T.
"PaulH" <paul.h...@xxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:1189031101.632679.90860@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
On Sep 5, 5:01 pm, "Paul G. Tobey [eMVP]" <p space tobey no spam
AT
no
instrument no spam DOT com> wrote:
It sounds like what you want is to use the network connectivity
that
ActiveSync 4.x already provides, but without popping up
ActiveSync.
Can
you
do what you want right now with the device connected as an
ActiveSync
guest?
Seems to me like you should be able to. If I understand
correctly,
if
that's the case, you should be able to remove ActiveSync from
the
PC
side,
leaving the USB RNDIS driver for the mobile device installed.
Paul T.
"PaulH" <paul.h...@xxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:1189029112.158735.71760@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
On Sep 5, 4:39 pm, "Paul G. Tobey [eMVP]" <p space tobey no
spam
AT
no
instrument no spam DOT com> wrote:
There's nothing built in to do that, other than what
ActiveSync
is
based
on.
Are you the host or the device on USB? If you're the host
and
you
can
make
the external device look like a network device, you could do
what
ActiveSync
does, except in reverse, I guess. If you're the client, you
could,
in
theory at least, use what ActiveSync does, without ActiveSync
itself.
You
look like a USB RNDIS adapter and, as long as the suitable
PC-side
driver
for USB RNDIS is installed, everything should work just like
when
ActiveSync
is running, but you don't have to sync.
I think you're going to have to tell us what sort of a device
this
is,
whether you are the device OEM and are in control of the OS
development
or
not, who is the host and who is the device on the USB
connection,
etc.
Paul T.
"PaulH" <paul.h...@xxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:1189027014.772712.232320@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Is there a way to do TCP/IP communications over a USB
connection?
Preferably one that does not involve active-sync.
If anybody has any samples or can point me to the proper
API
calls,
I
would appreciate it.
Thanks,
PaulH
What I'm looking for is a way to communicate with a group of
WM2005
and WM2006 devices over USB. The PC would be the server and
the
WM2005
devices the clients, in this case.
I looked up RNDIS as a possibility, but haven't seen a whole
lot
in
the way of examples for using that online. Are there any?
I have access to all of the OS development libraries.
Thanks,
PaulH
I'd ultimately like to be able to control the 802.11 connection,
so
I
can't actually use active-sync even as a guest since it
does...unfortunate things to the 802.11 radio in some versions of
WM2005. But, uninstalling it from the host PC side, should be
okay.
So, what do I need to do to communicate with the device over USB?
Thanks,
PaulH
If I have 10 WM2005 devices attached to a PC by a USB hub, how do I
address them individually? Can ActiveSync support more than one
device
at a time?
Thanks,
Paul
Exactly my problem. So, how do I use the USB connection as a TCP/IP
network device?
All that shows is the 2 network cards I have in my system normally. I
don't see the WM2005 devices at all.
-PaulH
I can't use the 802.11 radio for the communications because I intend
to use this connection to modify the state of the 802.11 radio. If I
modified it in a way that caused it to lose connection, then I would
be stuck and unable communicate with the device.
It doesn't show up if I plug just one device in, either. So, I need an
RNDIS driver. Is that something I can get from MS, or will I have to
write my own? Do I need one on both the device and the PC side? Does
MS provide a sample one in the XP DDK?
I don't know if Advanced Network functionality is enabled or not. Is
there a way to tell? There isn't an option on the device UI to do
that.
.
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