Book Image

BeagleBone Black Cookbook

Book Image

BeagleBone Black Cookbook

Overview of this book

There are many single-board controllers and computers such as Arduino, Udoo, or Raspberry Pi, which can be used to create electronic prototypes on circuit boards. However, when it comes to creating more advanced projects, BeagleBone Black provides a sophisticated alternative. Mastering the BeagleBone Black enables you to combine it with sensors and LEDs, add buttons, and marry it to a variety of add-on boards. You can transform this tiny device into the brain for an embedded application or an endless variety of electronic inventions and prototypes. With dozens of how-tos, this book kicks off with the basic steps for setting up and running the BeagleBone Black for the first time, from connecting the necessary hardware and using the command line with Linux commands to installing new software and controlling your system remotely. Following these recipes, more advanced examples take you through scripting, debugging, and working with software source files, eventually working with the Linux kernel. Subsequently, you will learn how to exploit the board's real-time functions. We will then discover exciting methods for using sound and video with the system before marching forward into an exploration of recipes for building Internet of Things projects. Finally, the book finishes with a dramatic arc upward into outer space, when you explore ways to build projects for tracking and monitoring satellites.
Table of Contents (16 chapters)
BeagleBone Black Cookbook
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Debug an application remotely from Eclipse and GDB server


You are about to dive into the arcane, but necessary world of remote debugging/cross-compiling. In this chapter, we will specifically take a look at a recipe for setting up remote debugging using the GDB server.

We will set up a specific kind of environment on your client desktop, another kind of environment on your BBB, and use an IDE as a way to ease the potential collision between these two worlds.

Wait a minute! Didn't we just do a debug recipe directly on BeagleBone Black using GDB? And can't we just develop and compile right on BeagleBone Black? Yes and yes.

But your BeagleBone Black is not quite powerful enough to serve as a serious development box. Ideally, what we want to do is hand off that work to a fancier, faster, desktop box. Otherwise, you will spend many unnecessary hours testing, compiling, debugging, and watching reruns of Doctor Who while waiting for the BBB to complete its tasks.

Why don't we just make something on...