site_archiver@lists.apple.com Delivered-To: darwin-kernel@lists.apple.com 6-to-6 No. No. The kernel on the debugging machine is irrelevant. Yes. See my comment above. S+E -- Quinn "The Eskimo!" <http://www.apple.com/developer/> Apple Developer Relations, Developer Technical Support, Core OS/Hardware _______________________________________________ Do not post admin requests to the list. They will be ignored. Darwin-kernel mailing list (Darwin-kernel@lists.apple.com) Help/Unsubscribe/Update your Subscription: http://lists.apple.com/mailman/options/darwin-kernel/site_archiver%40lists.a... At 9:29 +0100 19/7/07, Arvind Dalvi wrote: a. FireWire : Any specific make-model or pin layout cable ? On the Apple store, i found few FireWire cables (4-to-6 pin, 6-to-6 pin) b. USB : Is this option available ? c. Ethernet : I hope a standard cross-cable should work...correct ? Either cross over or straight cables will work. All modern Macs have autosensing Ethernet PHYs. Do i need specific kernel versions to exist on both end ? And how about the Kernel Debug Kit ? You should get the KDK that matches the system software on the target machine. It's best if you update the target machine to the latest system software (that is, 10.4.10) and use the KDK for that. Sometimes the system software that's HappyMac'd at the factory is a little weird (-: I read somewhere on the mailing list, that the kernel version shipped with the Apple Mac has a little version difference to adjust to different hardware.... than compared to the open-source version available on the Apple site. Yes, there is a difference between the source used to build Mac OS X kernels and the Darwin source. However, the changes a very small and it is generally the case that you can build a kernel from the Darwin source, slide it under a full Mac OS X, and everything will work just fine. Folks do this every day. This email sent to site_archiver@lists.apple.com