Can anyone please help with the programming the minipov3 ???
I followed the instructions on the website.I am using a USB-serial converter and I looked under device manager and my com port is com29.I changed it in the "makefile" i typed in make program-minipov and tis is the error displayed -
avrdude -p attiny2313 -P com29 -c dasa -U flash:w:minipov.hex
avrdude: ser_open() : can't open device "com29": The system could not find the file
specified.
avrdude done. Thank you.
make: ***[program-minipov] Error 1
programming error
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Please be positive and constructive with your questions and comments.
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Re: programming error
i think i'd reboot to get rid of some of those com devices, then plug the minipov back in see what device it gets assigned to and edit the Makefile again. seems like windows users have had trouble with really high com port numbers in the past.
i also think there's a way to go into the device manager and delete some of the older ones if you'd rather not reboot.
i also think there's a way to go into the device manager and delete some of the older ones if you'd rather not reboot.
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Re: programming error
Well, I only have these ports -
Communications Port(COM1)
ECP printer port(LPT1)
Intel active management technology - SOL (COM3)
USB - SERIAL CH340 (COM29)
Communications Port(COM1)
ECP printer port(LPT1)
Intel active management technology - SOL (COM3)
USB - SERIAL CH340 (COM29)
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- Posts: 22
- Joined: Thu Apr 29, 2010 8:44 am
Re: programming error
Well, I only have these ports -
Communications Port(COM1)
ECP printer port(LPT1)
Intel active management technology - SOL (COM3)
USB - SERIAL CH340 (COM29)
Communications Port(COM1)
ECP printer port(LPT1)
Intel active management technology - SOL (COM3)
USB - SERIAL CH340 (COM29)
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- Joined: Thu Apr 06, 2006 4:21 pm
Re: programming error
you cannot use a CH340 type converter, it should be PL2303 or FT232
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Re: programming error
well......I guess I have to buy a new one........
- tastewar
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- Joined: Thu Mar 17, 2011 10:16 am
Re: programming error
re: high COM port numbers in Windows.
The actual Windows API call to open a COM port is CreateFile, and while normally you just call CreateFile passing a name like COM1 or COM3 or COM9, once you get past 9, that method doesn't work. You must prepend a special string to the name, \\.\, so that for COM29, you'd pass \\.\COM29 to create file. And of course, if you're writing this in C source, you must double your backslashes, so it becomes \\\\.\\COM29.
Don't know if that's what's in play here (sounds like NOT if you don't have the "correct" type of adapter), but since someone mentioned a problem with high com port numbers and Windows, I thought I'd pass along one piece of information. And of course, if that were the problem, whoever wrote (or maintains) the software would have to fix it, it wouldn't be an end-user fixable problem.
Finally, in my experience, once you plug something in, Windows wants to keep it at whatever COM port number it originally assigned. I don't know how to "reset" this, but probably only because I've never had to.
The actual Windows API call to open a COM port is CreateFile, and while normally you just call CreateFile passing a name like COM1 or COM3 or COM9, once you get past 9, that method doesn't work. You must prepend a special string to the name, \\.\, so that for COM29, you'd pass \\.\COM29 to create file. And of course, if you're writing this in C source, you must double your backslashes, so it becomes \\\\.\\COM29.
Don't know if that's what's in play here (sounds like NOT if you don't have the "correct" type of adapter), but since someone mentioned a problem with high com port numbers and Windows, I thought I'd pass along one piece of information. And of course, if that were the problem, whoever wrote (or maintains) the software would have to fix it, it wouldn't be an end-user fixable problem.
Finally, in my experience, once you plug something in, Windows wants to keep it at whatever COM port number it originally assigned. I don't know how to "reset" this, but probably only because I've never had to.
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Re: programming error
I remembered buying those CH340 type adapters. I think I got mine *almost* working, because sometimes it can read my AVRs, but with the wrong signature, sometimes it just can't read the chip.
Please be positive and constructive with your questions and comments.