The .VS Code folder contains configuration files for developing InfiniTime with VS Code. Effort was made to have these rely on Environment variables instead of hardcoded paths.
Cortex-Debug is only required for interactive debugging using VS Codes built in GDB support.
## VS Code/Docker DevContainer
The .devcontainer folder contains the configuration and scripts for using a Docker dev container for building InfiniTime
Using the [Remote-Containers](https://marketplace.visualstudio.com/items?itemName=ms-vscode-remote.remote-containers) extension is recommended. It will handle configuring the Docker virtual machine and setting everything up.
More documentation is available in the [readme in .devcontainer](.devcontainer/readme.md)
To use the DevContainer configuration on Ubuntu based systems two changes need to be made:
1. Modify the file ``.devcontainer/devcontainer.json`` and add the argument ``"--net=host"`` to the ``"runArgs"`` parameter making the line look like this:
2. Modify the file ``.vscode/launch.json`` and change the argument of ``"gdbTarget"`` to ``"127.0.0.1:3333"``, making the line look like:
``"gdbTarget": "127.0.0.1:3333",``
3. To start debugging launch openocd on your host system with the appropriate configuration, for example with a stlink-v2 the command is:
``openocd -f interface/stlink.cfg -f target/nrf52.cfg``. This launches openocd with the default ports ``3333``, ``4444`` and ``6666``.
4. In VsCode go to the Debug pane on the left of the screen and select the configuration ``Debug - Openocd docker Remote`` and hit the play button on the left.