Now FSX freezes everytime it loads (right after loading scenery-still on the FSX splash screen).Īssuming you have the correct version of FSUIPC (nothing earlier than version 4.949p is supported for fSX), then there are two usual reasons for that. Installed and ran FSX.Success!!!! Until that is I repowered the computer. I recently installed the fsuipc4 after having issues with my Saitek TPM controller being choppy. I can and will blow off windows10 and reinstall.but in most cases its just a few files that need to be removed. I wish like all things sharper than a butter knife this had a nOOb warning label.never would have installed it.
I need to scrub this install 100% off my computer so I can use my FSX normally again. I noticed after the install ofcourse there is no uninstaller built in and I cannot seem to find it residing in programs to uninstall. I am currently a student pilot and need FSX as a supplemental overindulgent chair flying aid.I have had FSX installed and working normally till this install.ġ.I have uninstalled FSX and reloaded-no effect.Ģ.I have deleted the module folder and reinstalled the fsuipc-no effect Now FSX freezes everytime it loads (right after loading scenery-still on the FSX splash screen).
When connected, all should update to show connection.Check tray tooltip + A: + L: variable descriptions should indicate no connection.
Manual Testing Test with a non-installed BBL zip to flightsim.to with the new changelog. Create a release in GitHub against that tag, and upload BetterBravoLights.zip to it, with an appropriate changelog.Commit and tag the code in Git, and push it.It all together into a BetterBravoLights.zip file in the root directory, ready for release. It will build the projects, assemble the WASM module and package Using PowerShell, run build-and-publish.ps1 from the root directory.If the WASM protocol has changed, change the WASM module version in MSFSWASMProject\PackageDefinitions\better-bravo-lights-lvar-module.xml.Change the version number on the main BravoLights assembly as desired.Run assemble-wasm-for-ide.cmd to assemble the WASM module (note: it uses whichever was last built out of Debug or Release WASM build)Īnd copy it to the IDE output directories.To work on installation/uninstallation you'll need a copy of the assembled WASM module in the BravoLights Debug directory: To iterate with WASM changes, build the project and click 'Build All' again.Develop the BetterBravoLights app against the injected WASM module.
This will assemble the WASM module (locking up MSFS for 10-15 seconds) and inject it into MSFS. In the Project Editor window, click 'Build All'.In the Dev mode File menu, open up the MSFSWASMProject/BetterBravoLightsLVars.xml project.To work on the WASM module, build as above, but also: No unit tests cover simulator interactions yet. The tests are mostly for configuration parsing and expression parsing. Run the unit tests in BravoLights.Tests.Install Visual Studio Community 2019 with C++ and C# support.
If you'd like to work on the code, here's how to get going with it: It replaces the standard Honeycomb Bravo lights utility with a program which is easier to configure, more flexible and more responsive.įull details and documentation are available at: Developer Documentation