Hi Mustafa, Are you developing the content server too? That is where Kannel comes into play. If this is the case, I would develop and test separately the J2ME app. and the content server app. behind Kannel.
Regards, Rodrigo. On 11/7/06, Mustafa Cayci <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Hi Rodrigo, I am trying to do exactly what has shown in Figure 1-2 Logical position of SMS gateway between a phone and a content server in chapter 1 page 4 in Users Guide. My J2ME application in this case is the "phone" which has been depicted in that figure. As I said since I don't have the actual phone, I am using the emulator. So I am putting functionality as such that I can run that functionalty from the emulator to talk to SMSC. Why are you saying Kannel has nothing to do with this? Thanks, Mustafa On 11/4/06, Rodrigo Cremaschi <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Hi Mustafa: > > Now it is clear what you are trying to do. But Kannel can't help > you because it sits at "the other side of the line" > > Service <-> Kannel <-> SMSC <-> Your phone > > What your application is trying to do (send an SMS from a J2ME > application) unfortunately has nothing to do with Kannel. > > I advise you to post your questiong to forum.java.sun.com. > > Best regards, > > Rodrigo. > > On 11/4/06, Mustafa Cayci <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > >I don't know what you're trying to achieve with that, what is > > >MessageConnection and TextMessage is for and what library they are > > >coming from so I can't speculate on that. > > I am using Java 2 Platform Micro Edition (J2ME) to write and deploy Java > > code in mobile devices. Since I don't have real mobile device, I am using > > Sun Java Wireless ToolKit (WTK) to emulate one. So the code sniplet in my > > previous email is a J2ME code and the libraries are from > > javax.microedition.io.*. Now my goal is to write a simple Java code and > > deploy to the WTK emulator that sends a SMS message to a SMSC. Can I use > > Kannel to do what I explained above? > > > > I don't want to use HTTP interface as shown below to send SMS message. > > That is not what I want to do. > > > > >http://smsbox.host.name:13013/cgi-bin/sendsms?username=foo&password=bar&to=0123456&text=Hello+world > > > > Regards, > > > > Mustafa > > > > > > > > > > On 11/3/06, Enver ALTIN <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > > On Fri, 2006-11-03 at 13:28 -0500, Mustafa Cayci wrote: > > > > Thanks Enver. I was playing with the > > > > http://yourserver:sendsms-port/cgi-bin/sendsms. > > > > > > > > However, J2ME does not like the connection this is returning. I am > > > > getting java.lang.ClassCastException > > > > > > [...] > > > > > > > String address = > > > > > > " http://138.1.117.234:13013/cgi-bin/sendsms?username=tester&password=foobar&to=0123456 > > "; > > > > conn = (MessageConnection)Connector.open(address); > > > > TextMessage txtmessage = > > > > > > > > (TextMessage)conn.newMessage(MessageConnection.TEXT_MESSAGE); > > > > > > I don't know what you're trying to achieve with that, what is > > > MessageConnection and TextMessage is for and what library they are > > > coming from so I can't speculate on that. > > > > > > What I can tell is, if you click on the URL link above, Kannel should > > > receive an HTTP GET request via the sendsms CGI interface and process it > > > appropriately. > > > > > > -HTH > > > -- > > > .O. > > > ..O Enver ALTIN | http://enveraltin.com/ > > > OOO Software developer @ Parkyeri | http://www.parkyeri.com/ > > > > > > > > > > > > > >
