02.03.2014 Views

Tornado

Tornado

Tornado

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

Create successful ePaper yourself

Turn your PDF publications into a flip-book with our unique Google optimized e-Paper software.

3<br />

Launcher<br />

CPU<br />

A string identifying the CPU architecture (and possibly other related<br />

information, such as whether this is a real target or a simulated one).<br />

BSP<br />

The name and version number of the Board Support Package linked into the<br />

run-time.<br />

Memory<br />

The total number of bytes of RAM available on this target.<br />

Link<br />

The physical connection mechanism to the target.<br />

User<br />

The user ID of the developer who launched this target server, or of the user<br />

who reserved it most recently.<br />

Start<br />

A timestamp showing when this target server was launched.<br />

Last<br />

The last time this target server received any transaction request.<br />

Attached Tools<br />

A list of all the tools currently attached to this target server. The list includes<br />

all <strong>Tornado</strong> tools attached to this target by any user on the network, not just<br />

your own tools.<br />

3<br />

3.4.2 Launching a Tool<br />

Once you have selected a target server, click once on any button in the toolbar to<br />

launch a tool on that target. You can launch as many instances of a tool as you like,<br />

even attached to the same target. For instance, you may find it convenient to have<br />

one instance per application task of CrossWind, or to run different shells for<br />

different kinds of interaction.<br />

You can also launch many of the <strong>Tornado</strong> tools from a UNIX shell (or shell script),<br />

specifying the target name as an argument. See the chapter that describes each tool<br />

for more information.<br />

71

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!