I have just started experimenting with Serproxy and Arduino to get some serial data into Flash Builder/Flex. Serproxy seems to work fine and seems to connect to whatever port is specified. However, I am not able to see or read any data from the serial port using ActionScript. This is odd, because the Arduino should be printing data on a loop.
Serial Port Terminal is a perfect tool to ease the routine of developers' everyday work. It features everything a professional developer needs for debugging, testing and troubleshooting serial. The Serial Interface is about 1/3 the size of the Portfolio and gives you a standard 9-pin RS-232C serial port capable of 110 to 9600 baud. You can change the parameters of the serial port by accessing the Portfolio’s setup menu with Atari-S. The Serial Port Monitor by Eltima Software has the ability to sniff communication from another program (without requiring a special cable) and the ability to monitor multiple serial ports at the same time. Serial Port Monitor handles RS485/422 as well as RS232, and supports Modbus RTU and Modbus ASCII protocols. Connect to the USB serial device using the Terminal screen utility by entering the command: screen /dev/xx.usbserial-XXXXXXXX 115200 –L where /dev/xx.usbserial-XXXXXXXX is replaced by your device unique name. Use Serial Port Terminal to connect to remote computer using null-modem, send or receive various types of data over serial line, redirect data into specified file, monitor data exchange between serial devices, troubleshoot modem settings and more.
Best free photo editing software for mac. ioreg -p IOUSB -l -b | grep -E '@|PortNum|USB Serial Number'
Nadi HassanNadi Hassan
I was able to screen using the device's name anyway so that wasn't the issue. I was actually just trying to find the port number, i.e. 5331, 5332 etc. I managed to find this by a trial and error process using an app called TCP2Serial from the app store on Mac OS X. It isn't free but that's fine as long as I know it works!