Assume that your environment is•A is you development machine •B is your first emulator instance, running on A •C is your second emulator instance, running on A too and you want to run a server on B, to which C will connect, here is how you could set it up: 1.Set up the server on B, listening to 10.0.2.15:<serverPort> 2.On B's console, set up a redirection from A:localhost:<localPort> to B:10.0.2.15:<serverPort> 3.On C, have the client connect to 10.0.2.2:<localPort> For example, if you wanted to run an HTTP server, you can select <serverPort> as 80 and <localPort> as 8080:•B listens on 10.0.2.15:80 •On B's console, issue redir add tcp:8080:80 •C connects to 10.0.2.2:8080
•B is your first emulator instance, running on A
•C is your second emulator instance, running on A too
and you want to run a server on B, to which C will connect, here is how you could set it up: 1.Set up the server on B, listening to 10.0.2.15:<serverPort>
2.On B's console, set up a redirection from A:localhost:<localPort> to B:10.0.2.15:<serverPort>
3.On C, have the client connect to 10.0.2.2:<localPort>
For example, if you wanted to run an HTTP server, you can select <serverPort> as 80 and <localPort> as 8080:•B listens on 10.0.2.15:80
•On B's console, issue redir add tcp:8080:80
•C connects to 10.0.2.2:8080