Honeywell 8.x Dolphin Power Tools User’s With Windows Embedded Handheld 6.5 Guide User Manual To The C41a89df 8277 4f96 9102 F188f02da2be

User Manual: Honeywell 8.x to the manual

Open the PDF directly: View PDF PDF.
Page Count: 94

DownloadHoneywell 8.x Dolphin Power Tools User’s With Windows Embedded Handheld 6.5 Guide User Manual  To The C41a89df-8277-4f96-9102-f188f02da2be
Open PDF In BrowserView PDF
Dolphin™ Power Tools 8.x
for Mobile Devices with Windows® Embedded Handheld

User’s Guide

Disclaimer
Honeywell International Inc. (“HII”) reserves the right to make changes in specifications and other
information contained in this document without prior notice, and the reader should in all cases consult HII
to determine whether any such changes have been made. The information in this publication does not
represent a commitment on the part of HII.
HII shall not be liable for technical or editorial errors or omissions contained herein; nor for incidental or
consequential damages resulting from the furnishing, performance, or use of this material. HII disclaims
any and all responsibility and liability for the selection and use of software and/or hardware to achieve
intended results.
This document contains proprietary information that is protected by copyright. All rights are reserved. No
part of this document may be photocopied, reproduced, or translated into another language without the
prior written consent of HII.
Web Address: www.honeywellaidc.com

Trademarks
Microsoft, Windows, Windows Mobile, Windows Phone, Windows Embedded Handheld, Windows NT,
Windows 2000, Windows XP, Windows 7, Windows 8, Windows Vista, ActiveSync, Word Mobile, Excel
Mobile and the Windows logo are either a registered trademark or registered trademark of Microsoft
Corporation in the United States and/or other countries.
The Bluetooth trademarks are owned by Bluetooth SIG, Inc., U.S.A. and licensed to Honeywell.
Other product names mentioned in this manual may be trademarks or registered trademarks of their
respective companies and are the property of their respective owners.

Patents
For patent information, please refer to www.hsmpats.com.
2013-2014 Honeywell International Inc. All rights reserved.

Table of Contents
Chapter 1 - Introduction
Dolphin Power Tools Overview ............................................................................................1-1
Software Requirements..................................................................................................1-1
Power Tools Main Window ..................................................................................................1-1
About the EZMenu Tool .................................................................................................1-2
Upgrading the Power Tools .................................................................................................1-3
File Storage Locations .........................................................................................................1-3

Chapter 2 - EZConfig Utilities
Overview ..............................................................................................................................2-1
Accessing the EZConfig Utilities on the Terminal ..........................................................2-1
EZConfig Editor....................................................................................................................2-1
Workstation EZConfig Editor..........................................................................................2-1
Terminal EZConfig Editor...............................................................................................2-1
EZConfig Client ....................................................................................................................2-2
EXM Files.............................................................................................................................2-2
EXM File Descriptions....................................................................................................2-2

Chapter 3 - EZConfig Editor on the Dolphin Terminal
Overview ..............................................................................................................................3-1
EXM File Structure .........................................................................................................3-1
Opening the EZConfig Editor on the Terminal .....................................................................3-1
Opening EXM Files ..............................................................................................................3-1
Viewing the EXM File Structure in the EZConfig Editor .......................................................3-1
Menu Options.......................................................................................................................3-2
File Menu .......................................................................................................................3-2
Edit Menu .......................................................................................................................3-2
View Menu .....................................................................................................................3-2
Tools Menu ....................................................................................................................3-2
Editing Sections and Keys ...................................................................................................3-3
Modifying Section Name and Description ......................................................................3-3
Modifying a Key Name, Value, or Description................................................................3-3
Moving a Section or Key ................................................................................................3-3
Enabling a Section .........................................................................................................3-3
Disabling a Section ........................................................................................................3-4
Adding a Section or Child Section..................................................................................3-4
Associating an Application to an EXM File ..........................................................................3-4
Launching.......................................................................................................................3-4
Viewing...........................................................................................................................3-4
Adding or Editing............................................................................................................3-4
Command Line Arguments ............................................................................................3-5

iii

Chapter 4 - EZConfig Editor on the Workstation (PC)
Overview.............................................................................................................................. 4-1
EXM File Structure......................................................................................................... 4-1
Installing EZConfig for Mobility on the Workstation ............................................................. 4-1
Upgrades ....................................................................................................................... 4-1
Opening the EZConfig Editor on the Workstation................................................................ 4-1
Menus and Toolbar Options ................................................................................................ 4-1
File Menu ....................................................................................................................... 4-2
Edit Menu....................................................................................................................... 4-2
View Menu ..................................................................................................................... 4-2
Tools Menu .................................................................................................................... 4-3
Opening EXM Files.............................................................................................................. 4-3
Opening EXM Files Stored on the Workstation ............................................................. 4-3
Opening Remote EXM Files .......................................................................................... 4-3
Working with Open EXM Files............................................................................................. 4-4
Status Bar ...................................................................................................................... 4-4
Working with Sections ................................................................................................... 4-4
Working with Keys ......................................................................................................... 4-7
Saving to the Device...................................................................................................... 4-9
Configuration Documents .................................................................................................. 4-10
Creating New Configuration Documents ..................................................................... 4-10
Associating Applications .............................................................................................. 4-11
Registry Documents .......................................................................................................... 4-11
Creating Registry Documents...................................................................................... 4-12
Adding Registry Keys .................................................................................................. 4-12
Default Application Association for Registry Documents............................................. 4-13
Updating the Registry on the Terminal ........................................................................ 4-13
Processing Registry Documents on the Terminal........................................................ 4-13
Create EZConfig Bar Code................................................................................................ 4-13
Document Types.......................................................................................................... 4-14
Bar Code Type, Size and Number............................................................................... 4-14
Bar Code Sheet ........................................................................................................... 4-14
Generating Bar Codes ................................................................................................. 4-14

Chapter 5 - EZConfig Client
Overview.............................................................................................................................. 5-1
Accessing EZConfig Client .................................................................................................. 5-1
The EZConfig Client Screen................................................................................................ 5-1
Using EZConfig Client ......................................................................................................... 5-2
Scanning Bar Codes Directly from the Power Tools or Demos Main Window .............. 5-2
EXM File Processing ........................................................................................................... 5-2

Chapter 6 - Autorun and AutoInstall
Overview.............................................................................................................................. 6-1

iv

Autorun ................................................................................................................................ 6-1
Autorun.exm File............................................................................................................ 6-1
Programs Section and the Launch Sequence ............................................................... 6-1
Enabling and Disabling Sections ................................................................................... 6-1
Programs’ Subsections.................................................................................................. 6-1
Editing the Autorun.exm File.......................................................................................... 6-2
Adding a Program Subsection ....................................................................................... 6-2
Copying a File................................................................................................................ 6-2
Start Options.................................................................................................................. 6-2
Applying Startup Options to the Autorun.exm File......................................................... 6-3
AutoInstall............................................................................................................................ 6-4
Program Install Locations .............................................................................................. 6-4
AutoInstall.exm .............................................................................................................. 6-4
Command Line Arguments ............................................................................................ 6-4

Chapter 7 - DeviceConfig
Overview.............................................................................................................................. 7-1
DeviceConfig.exm File......................................................................................................... 7-1
Enabling DeviceConfig Functionality ............................................................................. 7-1
Autorun .......................................................................................................................... 7-1
Bar Code Delivery.......................................................................................................... 7-1
Settings in the WLAN Supplicant................................................................................... 7-1
DeviceConfig.exm Sections and Keys................................................................................. 7-1
Connections Section...................................................................................................... 7-1
System Section.............................................................................................................. 7-5
Applications Section ...................................................................................................... 7-6
Launching DeviceConfig.exe Manually ............................................................................... 7-6
Temporary Option for Bar Code Deployment ...................................................................... 7-6

Chapter 8 - Network Utilities
Accessing Network Utilities ................................................................................................. 8-1
Network Utilities Main Window ........................................................................................... 8-1
IP Config.............................................................................................................................. 8-1
Displaying the Terminal’s IP Configuration.................................................................... 8-2
Ping ..................................................................................................................................... 8-2
Route ................................................................................................................................... 8-3
Print ............................................................................................................................... 8-3
Add ................................................................................................................................ 8-4
Delete ............................................................................................................................ 8-4
Clear .............................................................................................................................. 8-4
Backup Settings (Radio)...................................................................................................... 8-5
............................................................................................................................................. 8-6

Chapter 9 - Registry Power Tools
Overview.............................................................................................................................. 9-1

v

Editing the Registry ............................................................................................................. 9-1
File Menu ....................................................................................................................... 9-2
Edit Menu....................................................................................................................... 9-3
Importing Registry Files ................................................................................................. 9-3
Exporting Specific Registry Settings.............................................................................. 9-3
Backing Up the Entire Registry............................................................................................ 9-3
Restoring the Registry ................................................................................................... 9-4
RegBackup.exm ............................................................................................................ 9-4
Command Line Arguments.................................................................................................. 9-6
Registry Edit Options in EZConfig ....................................................................................... 9-6

Chapter 10 - ScanWedge
Overview............................................................................................................................ 10-1
Enabling, Disabling, and Exiting ScanWedge ................................................................... 10-1
Enabling ScanWedge .................................................................................................. 10-1
Exiting ScanWedge ..................................................................................................... 10-1
Disabling ScanWedge without Exiting the Application................................................. 10-1
Modifying the ScanWedge Configuration File ................................................................... 10-1
ScanWedge.exm Sections ................................................................................................ 10-2
Data Formatting Reference Charts.................................................................................... 10-2
ASCII Conversion Chart (Code Page 1252) ................................................................ 10-2
Symbology Chart ......................................................................................................... 10-4
Symbology Section ...................................................................................................... 10-6
OCR............................................................................................................................. 10-7
VK (Virtual Key) Mapping Section ............................................................................... 10-7
Virtual Key Codes Table .............................................................................................. 10-8
Command Line Arguments ........................................................................................ 10-12

Chapter 11 - EZ Pairing
Hardware Requirements.............................................................................................. 11-1
Using EZ Pairing to Establish a Connection...................................................................... 11-1
Modifying the ScanWedge Configuration File to Support EZ Pairing ................................ 11-1
Accessing the EZ Pairing Menu ........................................................................................ 11-2
Menu Options .............................................................................................................. 11-2
Modifying the EZ Pairing Configuration File ...................................................................... 11-2
EZPairing.exm Service Settings Section .................................................................... 11-2
Command Line Arguments .......................................................................................... 11-3

Chapter 12 - Additional Power Tools
BattMon ............................................................................................................................. 12-1
To Enable BattMon ...................................................................................................... 12-1
To Disable BattMon ..................................................................................................... 12-1
Keyboard Status ................................................................................................................ 12-1
To Enable Keyboard Status......................................................................................... 12-1
To Disable Keyboard Status ........................................................................................ 12-2

vi

NoSIP ................................................................................................................................ 12-2
To Enable NoSIP ......................................................................................................... 12-2
To Disable NoSIP ........................................................................................................ 12-2
Reboot ............................................................................................................................... 12-2

Chapter 13 - SysInfo
Overview............................................................................................................................ 13-1

Chapter 14 - EZMenu
Overview............................................................................................................................ 14-1
Creating Menu Configuration Files .................................................................................... 14-1
Modifying Menu Configuration Files .................................................................................. 14-1
Menu Configuration File Sections...................................................................................... 14-1
Settings........................................................................................................................ 14-1
MenuEntries................................................................................................................. 14-1
Including an Exit Application Icon ................................................................................ 14-1
Start Options................................................................................................................ 14-2
Programming the Terminal to Boot to an Application Window .......................................... 14-3

Chapter 15 - Printing
Overview............................................................................................................................ 15-1
BTPrint......................................................................................................................... 15-1
Print Demo................................................................................................................... 15-1

Chapter 16 - Customer Support
Technical Assistance......................................................................................................... 16-1

vii

viii

1
Introduction

Dolphin Power Tools Overview
Note: Screen captures and icons in this user’s guide may differ from what appears on your device.
Power Tools are used to create custom launch menus and to control your application environment. Once you have created a
custom environment, the terminal displays only the applications you wish the user to see. Dolphin™ Power Tools are installed
on every Dolphin terminal. Different versions of Power Tools apply to different Dolphin terminals depending on the model or
operating system.

Software Requirements
Dolphin Terminal
Dolphin Power Tools 8.x is designed to work with Microsoft® Windows® Embedded Handheld 6.x.

Workstation (PC)
The Power Tools installer and the workstation version of EZConfig Editor are designed to work with the following operating systems and applications:
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•

Microsoft Windows XP
Microsoft Windows 2000
Microsoft Windows NT
Microsoft Windows Vista®
Microsoft Windows 7
Microsoft Windows 8
Microsoft .NET Framework 2.0
Microsoft ActiveSync® (version 4.5 or higher)
Microsoft Windows Mobile Device Center

Power Tools Main Window
Tap Start
> Power Tools
to access the Power Tools main window. The content of the window varies by Dolphin
model. To modify how the content is displayed, tap Menu > View, and then select either Small Icon, Large Icon, List, or Detail.
Icon

Description

Page

SysInfo displays system information including firmware versions, DLL versions, system
parameters, network information, and radio information.

11-3

BattMon programs the LEDs on the terminal to monitor battery power.

11-1

Note: BattMon is model dependent and may not be present on your device. Refer to the
terminal User’s Guide for battery status indicators specific to your Dolphin model.
EZConfig Utilities provides access to EZConfig Client, EZConfig Editor, and a series of
EXM configuration files.

3-1

EZ Pairing connects the terminal to a ring scanner using Bluetooth wireless technology.

11-1

Note: EZ Pairing is model dependent and may not be present on your device.

1-1

Icon

Description

Page

Keyboard Status places an icon on the status/notification bar at the top of the screen that
indicates the alpha-numeric status of the keyboard.

11-1

Note: Keyboard Status is model dependent and may not be present on your device. Refer
to the terminal User’s Guide for keyboard information specific to your Dolphin model.
Network Utilities provides access to the Network Utilities (i.e., IP Config, Ping, Route,
Backup Settings).

8-1

NoSIP turns off the Soft Input Panel (SIP) in every application window.

11-2

Reboot performs a reboot.

11-2

RegBackup backs up the registry.

9-3

RegRestore loads the RegBackup file.

9-4

RegEdit allows you to edit the registry and import and export registry keys.

9-1

ScanWedge allows you to send bar code data to your application.

10-1

Suspend places the terminal in Suspend mode until the Power button is pressed.

11-3

Exit Power Tools.

About the EZMenu Tool
EZMenu is an additional Power Tool that does not appear in the main window. EZMenu formats application windows to display and launch software programs on the terminal. For further information, see EZMenu beginning on page 14-1.

1-2

Upgrading the Power Tools
Upgrades for the Power Tools on the Dolphin terminal come in the form of an executable file that installs the upgrade files onto a
workstation (PC). Once the workstation installation is complete, transfer the appropriate upgrade files to the Dolphin terminal to
upgrade the Power Tools.
Upgrades are available from Customer Support (see page 16-1) or www.honeywellaidc.com.
Note: An active Microsoft ActiveSync, Windows Mobile Device Center or Windows Phone app connection between a host
workstation and the Dolphin terminal is required to upgrade your Power Tools software.

File Storage Locations
Two folders or paths are used to denote where your files are stored. One path is for permanent storage( \IPSM\Honeywell )
and one is for active files ( \Honeywell ).
\IPSM\Honeywell
The IPSM folder is the only partition on the terminal that persists across a kernel upgrade (*.UPG file extension).
During a kernel upgrade, files are automatically copied from the \IPSM\Honeywell folder and then installed in the
\Honeywell (root file system) folder as part of the upgrade process.
\IPSM\Honeywell\AutoInstall
The files in the IPSM\Honeywell\AutoInstall folder are only installed when a factory reset or kernel upgrade
occurs. Once the files are installed, they persist through hard and soft resets. If a file is added to the folder and a
hard or soft reset is performed, it will have no effect.
\Honeywell
The Honeywell partition or root file system partition is persistent over a hard reset, soft reset, and the removal of the
battery pack or the removal of AC power. However, during a kernel upgrade, the root file system is reformatted so all
data in the folder is deleted and replaced by any files in the \IPSM\Honeywell folder as part of the upgrade process.

!

To prevent data loss, back up all user data to an SD card or external memory device before performing an
upgrade.

\Honeywell\AutoInstall
If you run a CAB file from within the \Honeywell\AutoInstall (user store) folder, after the program has been
installed, the CAB file will be deleted from the User Store but the program remains installed through all successive
Hard and Soft resets.
If you want the program to be part of the Autoinstall that occurs after a factory reset or software upgrade, paste the
program file(s) in both the \IPSM\Honeywell\Autoinstall folder and the \Honeywell\Autoinstall.

1-3

1-4

2
EZConfig Utilities

Overview
EZConfig Utilities is made up of the EZConfig Editor, the EZConfig Client, and a series of EXM files.
EZConfig Editor is the tool used to open and edit EXM files. EXM files are the building blocks for creating the Power Tools
screens you see on your terminal. Some EXM files (e.g., AutoInstall, Autorun, and DeviceConfig) are used to display and run
your applications. Other EXM files are used to build your own customized screens and applications for the Dolphin terminal.
There are two versions of the EZConfig Editor. One that runs on the Dolphin terminal, and one that can run on your workstation
(PC). The EZConfig Editor that runs on your workstation is also capable of generating configuration bar codes from EXM files.
EZConfig Client decodes the bar codes generated by the workstation EZConfig Editor.

Accessing the EZConfig Utilities on the Terminal
Tap Start

> Power Tools

> EZConfig Utilities

.

EZConfig Editor
You can use the EZConfig Editor tool to create and edit configuration files in the EXM file format for Dolphin terminals. There are
two versions of the EZConfig Editor: one for the Dolphin terminal, and one for your workstation (PC).

Workstation EZConfig Editor
The workstation editor is used to:
• Create and modify EXM files that are transferred to the Dolphin terminal.
• Generate bar codes from EXM files.
For details about the workstation editor, see EZConfig Editor on the Workstation (PC), beginning on page 4-1.

Terminal EZConfig Editor
The terminal editor is used to modify and save EXM files right on the terminal.
For details about the terminal editor, see EZConfig Editor on the Dolphin Terminal, beginning on page 3-1.

2-1

EZConfig Client
You can use the EZConfig Client tool to scan and decode bar codes generated by EZConfig Editor on the workstation.
For details on scanning configuration bar codes, see EZConfig Client beginning on page 5-1.

EXM Files
The EXM file format is an XML format customized for Dolphin terminals that is comprised of sections that may include child
sections and keys. Keys contain the values that configure the terminal. The EXM file format supports a multi-level, hierarchical,
tree structure. The terminal reads the highest-level section first and then reads the key values in each section. EXM files replace
INI files for Power Tools and terminal configuration settings. If both an INI file and an EXM file are present for the same
application, a warning message displays at startup and the terminal uses the EXM. Remove the INI file from the terminal to
avoid the warning message.

EXM File Descriptions

2-2

Icon Name (File Name)

Description

Page

AutoInstall
(AutoInstall.exm)

Installs cab files in the AutoInstall folder, ensuring they persist
through hard resets.

6-4

Autorun
(Autorun.exm)

Specifies the software applications to be launched after each hard
reset.

6-1

CameraDemo.exm

Specifies the configuration settings for the Camera Demo.

DemosMenu
(DemosMenu.exm)

Specifies the menu for the Honeywell Demos window.

Demo RF Settings.exm
(DemoRfSettings.exm)

Specifies the IP Address and TCP Port used by the Imaging Demo,
Scan Demo, IQ Imaging Demo and the Signature Capture Demo.

DeviceConfig
(DeviceConfig.exm)

Contains terminal configuration settings.

EZConfig Menu
(EZConfigMenu.exm)

Specifies the menu for the Honeywell EZConfig Utilities window.

EZ Pairing
(EZPairing.exm)

Specifies the configuration settings for EZ Pairing.

ImageDemo
(ImageDemo.exe.config.exm)

Specifies the configuration settings for the Imaging Demo.

ImagingProfiles.exm

Specifies imager configuration profile used for custom application
development. For detailed information, refer to the Honeywell SDK for
Windows Embedded Handheld available for download from
www.honeywellaidc.com.

IQImageDemo
(IQImageDemo.exe.config.exm)

Specifies the configuration settings for the IQ Imaging Demo.

Network Menu
(NetworkMenu.exm)

Specifies the menu for the Honeywell Network Utilities window.

7-1

11-2

Icon Name (File Name)

Description

Power Tools Menu
(PowerToolsMenu.exm)

Specifies the menu for the Honeywell Power Tools window.

PrintDemo Menu
(PrintDemo Menu.exm)

Specifies the menu for the Print Demo window.

RegBackup
(RegBackup.exm)

Specifies the exclusion or inclusion of registry key sections and
values during an export.

Scandemo
(ScanDemo.exe.config.exm)

Specifies the configuration settings for the Scan Demo.

Scanwedge
(ScanWedge.exm)

Sends data from the decoder or serial port to the foreground
application as keystrokes.

SignatureCapture.exm

Specifies the configuration settings for the Signature Capture demo.

Page

9-1

10-1

2-3

2-4

3
EZConfig Editor on the Dolphin Terminal

Overview
EZConfig Editor creates, edits, and manages EXM files for Dolphin terminals. There are two versions of the EZConfig Editor:
one for the Dolphin terminal and one for the workstation. In the workstation editor, EXM files are edited, saved, and then
transferred to the Dolphin terminal. In the terminal editor, EXM files are edited and saved right on the terminal.
This chapter details the terminal version of the EZConfig Editor. For information about using the workstation version of the
EZConfig Editor, see EZConfig Editor on the Workstation (PC) beginning on page 4-1.

EXM File Structure
The EXM file format supports a multi-level, hierarchical, tree structure. The terminal reads the highest level section first and
then reads the key values in each child section. The key values configure the terminal. EXM files replace INI files for Power
Tools and terminal configuration settings. If both an INI file and an EXM file are present for the same application, the terminal defaults to the EXM file and a warning message is displayed at startup.
There are two types of configuration files in the EXM file format:
• Configuration Documents program and configure the terminal. See Configuration Documents on page 4-10.
• Registry Documents update and modify the registry. See Registry Documents on page 4-11.

Opening the EZConfig Editor on the Terminal
Tap Start

> Power Tools

> EZConfig Utilities

> EZConfig Editor

.

Opening EXM Files
To open an EXM file, do one of the following:
• Open EZConfig Utilities and tap once on the EXM file.
• Open the EZConfig Editor on the terminal and select File > Open. Browse to the file location and tap once on the EXM file.
• Open File Explorer on the terminal, browse to the file location and then tap once on the EXM file.

Viewing the EXM File Structure in the EZConfig Editor
Sections appear in the top half of the editor window. Select the + sign next to a section folder to view any associated child
sections. If a section folder is gray, the section is disabled. Keys appear in the bottom half of the window when a section is
selected. When a key is enabled for editing the value, the box contains a check mark. Menu selections are displayed at the
bottom of the screen.

Sections

Swipe left to view the full description for
the key.

Keys

Menu Bar

Tap the keyboard icon,
or
to turn
the virtual keyboard display on or off.

3-1

Menu Options
File Menu
Menu Item

Description

New

Creates a new document. There are two options:
• Config Doc - Creates a configuration file.
See Configuration Documents (page 4-10).
• Registry Doc - Creates a registry file in the EXM file format.
See Registry Documents (page 4-11).

Open

Opens an EXM file.

Save

Saves the open file to the location you select on the terminal. This option is disabled for
new and imported files.

Save As

Saves the open file with a new name to the location you select on the terminal.

Properties

Associates the EXM file with an application on the terminal. See Registry Documents on
page 4-11.

Exit

Closes EZConfig Editor.

Edit Menu
For editing options, see Editing Sections and Keys, beginning on page 3-3.

View Menu
Menu Item

Description
Shows or hides the icons indicating if a subsection or key is locked.

Show Locks

The key icon means that the
section’s keys are locked.

The lock icon means the section’s
subsections are locked.

For additional information on locks on subsections and keys, see Status Bar on page 4-4.

Tools Menu

3-2

Menu Item

Description

Launch Associated App

For information on this item menu, see Launching on page 3-4.

Simplify Document
Note: You cannot undo
this action!

Reduces the EXM file size by permanently removing:
• Disabled sections and keys
• Descriptions

Warm Boot

Reboots the terminal.

Editing Sections and Keys
Modifying Section Name and Description
You can only edit the name and description of a section if it is unlocked or enabled. To edit a section name or description:
1. Access the Edit Section window by doing one of the following:
• Select the section and tap Edit > Modify.
• Tap and hold on the section name, and then select Modify from the Edit menu.
2. Tap inside the Name or description fields to edit the text.

Description Field

Tap the keyboard icon,
or
to turn the virtual
keyboard display on or off.

3. Tap OK or Enter on the virtual keyboard to save your changes. To close without saving your changes, tap Cancel.

Modifying a Key Name, Value, or Description
You can only edit the name and description of a section if it is unlocked or enabled. To edit a key name, value, or description:
1. Access the Edit Key window by doing one of the following:
• Select the key and then tap Edit > Modify.
• Double-tap the key.
• Tap and hold on the key name, and then select Modify from the Edit menu.
2. Tap inside the Name, Value, or Description fields to edit the text.
3. Tap OK or Enter on the virtual keyboard to save your changes. To discard your changes, tap Cancel.
Note: You cannot edit the key name or description if the key is locked.

Moving a Section or Key
To move a section or key, use the Cut, Copy, Past, or Paste as Child commands on the Edit menu. Drag and drop is not
supported.
Note: By default, the Paste function pastes sections at the same level they were cut.

Enabling a Section
Sections are enabled by default. If a section was previously disabled, you can re-enable by selecting Enable from the Edit
menu. You can enable a child section only if its parent section is enabled.

3-3

Disabling a Section
To disable a section and all of its keys, select Disable All from the Edit menu. Disabled sections remain in the file and are
indicated with a gray folder. If you disable a section that has child sections, all of its child sections (and the child section
keys) are disabled automatically. The child section folders are also change to gray to indicate they are disabled.
When reading the EXM file, the terminal behaves as though disabled sections are not there and moves on to read the next
enabled section.
A disabled section can be removed from the EXM file permanently by using the Delete option on the Edit menu when the
section is selected. If you want all disabled section permanently removed, use the Simplify Document option on the Tools
menu.

Adding a Section or Child Section
Select Insert Section from the Edit menu.
Select Append Child Section from the Edit menu to insert a new child section to the selected section. The new child section is inserted below the previous section.

Associating an Application to an EXM File
Launching
To launch an application associated to an EXM file, open the EXM file in EZConfig editor, and then tap
Tools > Launch Associated App. The open EXM file automatically saves, and the associated application launches while
the EXM file remains open.

Viewing
To see if an open EXM file has an associated application, open the EXM file in EZ Config editor, and tap File > Properties.
The Path field contains the launch location of the application and the Args field contains any command line arguments to
execute when the application launches.

Adding or Editing
To add or edit an application association to an EXM file:
1. Open the EXM file in EZ Config editor on the terminal.
2. Tap File > Properties.
3. In the Path field, enter or edit the location of the application executable (.exe) file on the terminal.
When an application is entered in the Path field, the following occurs:
• the command line /exm %filename appears in the Args (argument) field.
• the Execute box is automatically selected.
Execute must be selected for Configuration documents. You can deselect Execute for registry documents; however,
EZConfig Client cannot update the registry unless Execute is selected. For more information, see Creating Registry
Documents (page 4-12).
4. In the Args field, enter additional command line arguments next to the command line/exm %filename. For more
information, see Command Line Arguments.
5. If the EXM should wait until the associated application has exited before continuing, select Wait Until Finished.
6. Tap OK.
7. To save your changes to the EXM file, tap File > Save or Save As.

3-4

Command Line Arguments
/exm %filename executes the EXM file; this is the default entry
/q

quiet mode

/s

full screen

/o

no menu

/e

exit if first scan fails to deliver a valid bar code

/u

accept (decode) unsecured bar codes

3-5

3-6

4
EZConfig Editor on the Workstation (PC)

Overview
EZConfig Editor creates, edits, and manages EXM files for Dolphin terminals. There are two versions of the EZConfig Editor:
one for the Dolphin terminal and one for the workstation. In the workstation editor, EXM files are edited, saved, and then transferred to the Dolphin terminal. In the terminal editor, EXM files are edited and saved right on the terminal.
This chapter details the workstation (PC) version of the EZConfig Editor. For information about using the terminal version of the
EZConfig Editor, see EZConfig Editor on the Dolphin Terminal beginning on page 3-1.

EXM File Structure
The EXM file format supports a multi-level, hierarchical, tree structure. The terminal reads the highest level section first and
then reads the key values in each child section. The key values configure the terminal. EXM files replace INI files for Power
Tools and terminal configuration settings. If both an INI file and an EXM file are present for the same application, the terminal defaults to the EXM file and a warning message is displayed at startup.
There are two types of configuration files in the EXM file format:
• Configuration Documents program and configure the terminal. See Configuration Documents on page 4-10.
• Registry Documents update and modify the registry. See Registry Documents on page 4-11.

Installing EZConfig for Mobility on the Workstation
1. Access the Honeywell web site at www.honeywellaidc.com, and then locate the product page for your Dolphin model.
2. Select the Software tab.
3. Under the Tools and Utilities heading, click on the listing for Honeywell EZConfig for Mobility Setup.
4. Follow the security directions as prompted on the screen and then click on Download.
5. When prompted, select Save, and then select a location on your workstation (e.g., your desktop).
6. Double click on the downloaded EZConfig for Mobility Setup.zip file.
7. Double click on the Setup.exe file. Select OK.
8. Follow the screen prompts to install the EZConfig for Mobility program.

Upgrades
Upgrades for EZConfig Editor on the workstation are available from Customer Support (see page 16-1) or
www.honeywellaidc.com.

Opening the EZConfig Editor on the Workstation
After you complete the software installation, EZConfig Editor is available on the workstation from the Start menu.
Click Start > All Programs > Honeywell > EZConfig for Mobility > EZConfig for Mobility to open the EZConfig Editor.

Menus and Toolbar Options
When you open the EZConfig Editor, menu selections are displayed across the top of the screen, and icons for actions are
shown below the menu bar.

Note: Some menu selections and Toolbar icons will be grayed out until an EXM file is opened.

4-1

File Menu
Menu Item

Description

New

Creates a new document. There are two options:
• Configuration Document - Creates a configuration file in the EXM file format.
See Configuration Documents (page 4-10).
• Registry Document - Creates a registry file in the EXM file format.
See Registry Documents (page 4-11).

Open

Opens an EXM file located on the workstation.

Open Recent

Opens an EXM file selected from a list of recent files opened.

Open from Device

Opens an EXM file located on the terminal. The location of the file appears on the title bar with
the word “[Remote]” to identify that the open file is located on the terminal.
Note: This option requires an active connection between the workstation and the terminal
(e.g., ActiveSync, Windows Device Mobile).

Save

Saves the open file to the location you select on the workstation.
This option is disabled for new and imported files; use the Save As option instead.

Save As

Saves the open file with a new name to the location you select on the workstation.

Save to Device As

Saves an open file to the Dolphin terminal.
Note: This option requires an active connection between the workstation and the terminal.

Create EZConfig
Bar Code

Embeds the open EXM file in an Aztec bar code.

Properties

Associates the EXM file with an application on the terminal.
See Registry Documents on page 4-11.

Exit

Closes EZConfig Editor.

Edit Menu
For Section Edit menu options, see Working with Sections on page 4-4.
For Key Edit menu options, see Working with Keys on page 4-7.

View Menu
Menu Item

Description
Shows or hides the icons that indicate if a subsection or key has been locked against editing.

Show Locks

The key icon means that the
section’s keys are locked.

The lock icon means the section’s
subsections are locked.

For additional information on locks on subsections and keys, see Status Bar on page 4-4.

4-2

Tools Menu
Menu Item

Simplify Document
Note: You cannot
undo this
action!

Description
Simplifies the EXM file, which makes it smaller. Simplifying a document permanently
removes:
• disabled sections and keys.
• descriptions.
• bar code settings.
Note: When you create a bar code, you can simplify the file embedded in the bar code without
affecting the open EXM file. This reduces the size of the bar code package yet keeps
the disabled sections, descriptions, and bar code settings in the open EXM file for future
reference.

Because the following menu items execute commands on the terminal, there must be an active connection between the
workstation and the terminal (e.g., ActiveSync, Windows Mobile Device Center, or Windows Phone app).
Launch Associated
App

If the open EXM file is associated with an application on the terminal, this item appears active
on the Tools menu and when selected launches the associated application on the terminal.
You would use this option after saving the EXM file to the terminal; see Saving to the Device
on page 4-9.

Warm Boot

Soft Reset (Warm Reboot) the terminal.

Factory Reset
Device

Factory Reset the terminal.

Opening EXM Files
EZConfig Editor opens EXM files either stored on the workstation or on the Dolphin terminal if an active connection has been
established between the terminal and workstation (e.g., ActiveSync, Windows Mobile Device Center, or Windows Phone app).

Opening EXM Files Stored on the Workstation
Click File > Open or the Open toolbar icon

and select the EXM file.

Opening Remote EXM Files
To open and edit an EXM file located on the Dolphin terminal using EZConfig
Editor on the workstation:
1. Establish an active connection between the terminal and workstation.
2. Open EZConfig Editor on the workstation.
3. Click File > Open From Device.
4. Select the file, and then OK.

Note: You can also open EXM files in the editor on the terminal. See EZConfig
Editor on the Dolphin Terminal beginning on page 3-1.

4-3

Working with Open EXM Files
When you open an EXM file, EZConfig Editor displays the content in four different sections of the window.
Displays the file name.
If the file is on the
terminal, the title bar
displays the remote path.
Displays the root node
and sections.
Select a section and the
details appear in the other
portions of the window.
The folders appear in
different colors to indicate
their status.

Displays the keys in the
selected section.
Text that appears in blue
can be edited.

Displays the section
name and description.

Displays the selected
key’s name and
description.

Status Bar

Status Bar
The Status Bar appears at the bottom of the window and displays information about selected sections and keys.

Selected Section

Section
Name

Merge
Mode

Locks on subsections and keys

See Section Locks on page 4-6.

Selected Key
Key Name

Enabled or
Disabled

Read Only

Encrypted

Key locked by section

See Key Types on page 4-9.

Working with Sections
The EXM file format supports a multi-level tree structure. The section tree appears in the top left quadrant of the window
when a file is open. When selected, the root node identifies the EXM file and includes the word “Root” in the description displayed in the lower left quadrant.
Sections have a name and description and contain keys that appear in the upper right quadrant when you select the section
name. Select a section by clicking on it. You can select only one section at a time.

4-4

Edit Menu Options
Select a section and click Edit to see the available options.
Menu Item

Description

Rename

Allows you to rename the section name. You can also double click on the description to bring
up the Modify screen.
Note: You cannot modify the name if the section is locked or disabled; see Section Locks
(page 4-6).

Cut

Cuts a selected section.

Copy

Copies a selected section.

Paste

Pastes the section that was just cut or copied at the same level as the selected section.

Paste as Child

Pastes the section that was just cut or copied as a child of the selected section.
Note: You can cut, copy and paste sections within an EXM file or across EXM files.

Delete

Deletes a selected section.
Note: Because you cannot undo a delete, consider disabling rather than deleting.

Enable

Sections are enabled by default. This menu item enables sections that were previously
disabled. You can enable a section only if its parent section is enabled.
To enable all the keys inside a section you are enabling, SHIFT + right-click and select
Enable All.
Sections are enabled by default. This menu item disables a selected section and all of its
keys. Disabled sections remain in the file with a gray folder .

Disable All

If you disable a section that has child sections, all of its child sections (and the child section
keys) are disabled automatically. The child section folders are also in gray.
When reading the EXM file, the terminal behaves as though disabled sections are not there
and moves on to read the next enabled section.
Disabled sections can be removed from the EXM file permanently using the Simplify
Document (see page 4-3) option. If you want to keep disabled sections in the EXM file on the
workstation but not in the file deployed to the terminal, use the Simplified option (see page 43).

Insert Section

This menu item inserts a new section.

Append Child
Section

This menu item adds a new child section to a selected section. The new child section is
inserted below the previous section.

Moving Sections
To move sections within an EXM file, use the drag and drop method. By default, sections are dropped at the same level
in the tree.
For additional functionality when dragging and dropping, hold:
• ALT to drop a section as a child section.

4-5

• CTRL to copy a section and drop the copy at the same level in the tree.
• CTRL + ALT to copy a section and drop the copy as a child section.
Note: You can select only one section at a time; you cannot use SHIFT+Click or CTRL+Click to select more than one
section.
To move sections between EXM files, open two instances of EZConfig Editor and drag and drop sections between the
session windows. When dragging, a copy of the section is dragged to the new file. When dropping, drop the section
directly on top of the section where you want the child section to appear.
Note: To drop the first section into a new file, press and hold the ALT key and drop the section on the root node. All
sections must be child sections of the root node.

Section Locks
There are different types of locks on sections. The status bar indicates what type of lock is applied to a selected section.

Lock Type

Status Bar
Indicator

Name Lock

Description

Effect

The section name is
locked.

Section Name and Description cannot be
modified.

All keys are locked.

Key Names and Descriptions cannot be
modified. Keys cannot be added, moved, or
deleted within the section.

All immediate subsections
are locked.

Immediate subsection Names and
Descriptions cannot be modified. Immediate
subsections cannot be added, moved, or
deleted.

Key Lock

Subsection
Lock

Note: All locks are applied to each individual section and are not recursive. Only text that appears in blue can be
modified.

Section-Level Merge Modes
EXM files ship with section-level merge modes already defined according to section content. Merge modes determine
how section information is handled when an updated EXM file is deployed to the terminal where an existing version of
that EXM file is stored.
Merge modes are indicated by folder icons and in the Status bar.

Mode

4-6

Description

Delete + Add

Deletes non-common children elements (i.e., subsections, and keys) in the
target file, then adds the new information from the exm file. Basically, the
new section replaces the old section.
This is the default merge mode for new sections.

Disable +
Add

Disables non-common children elements (i.e., subsections, and keys) in the
target file, then adds the new information from the bar code.
Note: Disabled sections and keys end up as disabled in the target file.

Add Only

Adds new information (sections and keys) to the existing section. If this is a
brand new section, the new section is added to the existing EXM file.
Note: Disabled sections are not modified in the target file.

Merge
Effect
Exclusive

Inclusive

To change section-level merge modes, select a section and right click.

The folder colors change immediately after selection.

Working with Keys
Keys have a Name, a Description, and a Value and reside inside sections. For specific key values, consult the chapters of
this User’s Guide that describe the EXM file you are editing.

Edit Menu Options
Select a key and right-click or click Edit to see the available options.

The same options
appear on both
menus.

Menu Item

Description

Rename

Activates the key name so that you can rename the key. Rename is disabled if the key is
locked or disabled; see Key Types (page 4-9).

Cut

Cuts a selected key.

Copy

Copies a selected key.

Paste

Disabled; keys can be pasted only as children of a section.

4-7

Menu Item

Description

Paste as Child

Pastes the key just cut or copied in the selected section. Keys are not multi-level; all keys
paste at the same level within a section.
You can cut, copy and paste keys within an EXM file or across EXM files.

Delete

Deletes a selected key.
Note: You cannot undo a delete; you might want to consider disabling rather than deleting.

Enable

Enables keys that were disabled. When a key is enabled, the client application can read
and apply its value. When you enable a key, make sure to specify a value for that key; do
not leave it blank.
To enable a key, its parent section must be enabled.
Disables keys.
Disabled keys have key values in black. Enabled keys have key values in blue.

Disable
The terminal does not read disabled keys and disabled keys are removed if the file is
simplified. See Simplify Document on page 4-3.
Because many key values are 1 for enable and 0 for disable, remember that disabling a key
means that the terminal behaves as if the key is not there when reading the file, NOT that
the key’s value is set to disabled. The terminal simply moves on to read the next enabled
key.
Insert Key

This menu item inserts a new key above the selected key.
Note: You can also press the Insert key (INS) on your keyboard.

Modifying Key Names
To modify key names, double-click on the key name or select Rename on the Edit menu. Type in the new name and
press ENTER or TAB.
Note: You cannot modify the description if the key is locked, see Key Types (page 4-9). Only text that appears in blue
can be modified.

Modifying Key Values
You can modify a key value only if its text appears in blue. In that case, double-click on the value or select the key and
press ENTER. Type in the new value and press ENTER or TAB to save.

Modifying Key Descriptions
Descriptions are not required to process key values but do help document the EXM file and often contain valuable
information. To modify a key’s description, click on the key, then click in the key description area. When the cursor is
active, you can type in the text.
Note: You cannot modify the description if the key is locked; see Key Types (page 4-9).

Moving Keys
To move keys within an EXM file, use the drag and drop method. Press and hold the CTRL key to drag and drop a copy
of the key to the new location.
Note: You cannot move a key if it is locked by its section.

4-8

To move keys between EXM files, open two instances of EZConfig Editor and drag and drop keys between the windows. When you select the key and drag, a copy of the key is dragged to the new file. In the new file, drop the key in the
key area of a selected section; keys are always dropped at the same level within a section.

Key Types
When a key is selected, its properties display in the Status bar.

Lock Type

Status Bar
Indicator

Description

Effect

Keys are locked by the section.

• Name and Description cannot be
modified.
• Keys cannot be added, moved, or
deleted within the section.

The key name is locked
individually.

• Name and Description cannot be
modified.
• These keys can be moved.

Read-only keys cannot be
modified in any way. They
appear in red.

• Name, Description, and Value cannot
be modified.
• Keys cannot be added, moved, or
deleted within the section.

Key’s value appears as asterisks
(*) for added security.

Note: Encrypted keys are also stored
encrypted in the EXM file. If you
open the EXM file in a text editor,
you won't see the data as clear
text.

Name Lock

Read Only

Encrypted

Note: Locked and Read Only properties are not recursive. Properties are applied to each individual key. Only text that
appears in blue can be modified.

Saving to the Device
You can save EXM files directly to the terminal when there is an active connection between the terminal and the workstation
(e.g., ActiveSync, Windows Mobile Device Center, or Windows Phone app).
1. Select File > Save to the Device As.
2. From the Save Remote File window, select the location on the terminal where you want to store the file.
3. Click OK. The file is downloaded directly to the terminal via the active connection.

4-9

Configuration Documents
EZConfig Editor creates configuration documents in the EXM file format to use for programming and configuring terminals.

Creating New Configuration Documents
To create new EXM files that are configuration documents, you can open an existing EXM file and save it with a new name
or create an EXM file from scratch.
1. Click File > New > Configuration Document. The root node is created and appears as the top level section. All sections must be at least one level down from the root node. The name of the root node is always the same as the filename.

The terminal reads
root node first.

Key Value
Area

The Description
says “Root” to
indicate that this is
the root section.

2. To create the first subsection, select the root node, right-click, and select Append Child Section.
Insert Section is disabled because you cannot insert sections at the same level as the root node.
3. Enter a Name and a Description and click OK. The name is required, the description is optional.
4. To add a new section at the same level, right-click and select Insert Section.
To add a new section one level down, right-click and select Append Child Section.
5. To add keys, select a section, right-click in the key value area, and select Append Key.
6. After the first key is added under a section, right click and select Insert Key for additional entries.
7. Input the Name of the new key then double click under the Value column heading to enter a value.
8. Right-click in the key description area to add a Description for the new key.
9. The name is required, the description is optional.
10. Continue adding sections and keys.
11. If necessary, associate this EXM file with an application; see Registry Documents (page 4-11).
12. Click File > Save As to save the file.
Note: Save is disabled so that you save the document with a name other than “NewDocument.exm.”

4 - 10

Key
Description
Area

Associating Applications
The Properties function associates an EXM file with an application on the terminal. The associated application launches
after EZConfig Client decodes the bar code containing the EXM file. While the EXM file is open, click File > Properties or
the Document Properties toolbar button

.

Field

Description

Path

Enter the location of the EXE on the terminal.
Enter the command line argument you want applied when the application launches.
When an application is entered in the Path field, the following command line appears as the
argument: /exm %filename.
Enter additional command line arguments next to /exm %filename in this field.

Arguments

“%filename” means that the value immediately after the “%” is variable. Type in the location and
file name where the EXM file should be deployed on the terminal. For example,
\Honeywell\deviceconfig.exm.
Command Line Arguments
/exm %filename Executes the EXM file; this is the default entry.
/q
Quiet mode
/s
Full screen
/o
No menu
/e
Exit if first scan fails to deliver a valid bar code
/u
Accept (decode) unsecured bar codes
If selected, EZConfig Client launches the application after decoding the bar code. Execute is
enabled automatically when an application is entered in the Path field.

Execute

You cannot de-select Execute for configuration documents.
You can de-select Execute for registry documents, however, the registry is not updated unless
Execute is selected. For more information, see Creating Registry Documents (page 4-12).

Wait Until Finished

If selected, EZConfig Client waits until the associated application is finished processing before
finalizing.

Registry Documents
EZConfig Editor creates registry documents in the EXM file format and also opens existing REG files and converts them to the
EXM file format. EZConfig Editor cannot save registry documents in the REG file format.

4 - 11

Creating Registry Documents
1. In EZConfig Editor, click File > New > Registry Document.

The new document contains the three top-level sections in a registry. These sections are locked and cannot be
changed. You can add subsections to each section and then add keys to those subsections.
2. Click File > Save As.
3. Choose the name and location and click Save.
You cannot save the document as a .reg file; you must save it as an EXM file.
4. To add sections, select one of the registry levels, right-click, and select Append Child Section.
Enter the section information, and click OK.

For more information about adding sections, see Working with Sections on page 4-4.
5. To add keys to the new section, select the section, and right-click in the key value area.
For details, see Adding Registry Keys on page 4-12.
6. Continue adding sections and keys.
7. Save the file.

Adding Registry Keys
1. Select a section, right-click in the key value area and select Append Key.
Note: After the first key is added under a section, right click and select Insert Key for additional entries.
2. Input the Name of the new registry key then double click under each column heading to input the key Type and Value.
3. Right-click in the key description area of the screen to add a description for the new key.

Key Value
Area

Key
Description
Area

4 - 12

Default Application Association for Registry Documents
While a registry document is open, click File > Properties. By default, registry documents are associated with EZConfig
Client with Execute enabled.
Note: Execute must remain selected for the registry to be updated. If Execute is not selected, the registry document is
deployed, but the registry is not updated.

Updating the Registry on the Terminal
To update the terminal’s registry using an active connection between the terminal and PC:
1. Create an EXM file that is a registry document; see Creating Registry Documents on page 4-12.
2. Save the EXM to the terminal; see Saving to the Device on page 4-9.
3. On the terminal open the EZConfig Editor, open the EXM, tap Tools > Launch Associated App to update the
registry.
To update the terminal’s registry using a EZConfig bar code:
1. Create an EXM file that is a registry document; see Creating Registry Documents on page 4-12.
2. Create a bar code package from that EXM file; see Create EZConfig Bar Code, below.
3. Scan the bar code with the terminal.

Processing Registry Documents on the Terminal
After EZConfig Client updates the registry, the EXM file itself is deployed to the location entered in the Remote Path (page
4-15) field on the Bar Codes Tab.
Note: EXM files are identified with an

icon.

If you do not want to store the registry EXM file on the terminal after updating the registry, select the Temporary (page 4-17)
option on the Bar Codes Tab.

Persistent Registry Documents
If you want to update the registry during every Hard Reset (Cold Reboot), create a registry document in the EXM format, save it to the terminal in the active storage folder, then perform a Hard Reset. The registry settings in the EXM file
will load during startup.
If you want to save a registry file but not load it every startup, store the registry EXM file in the permanent storage
folder where it will only be loaded if a Factory Reset or kernel upgrade is performed.
See File Storage Locations on page 1-3 for further information on active and permanent file storage locations.

Create EZConfig Bar Code
EZConfig Editor embeds EXM files in Aztec bar codes. The EZConfig Client on the terminal decodes the bar code and deploys
the data. Using bar codes quickly and easily configures Dolphin terminals without an ActiveSync or network connection to a
workstation.

4 - 13

Document Types
EZConfig Editor produces two kinds of EXM files: Configuration Documents (page 4-10) and Registry Documents (page 411). Both can be embedded in bar codes and processed by EZConfig Client on the terminal.
Note: EXM files are stamped with the time and date the moment EZConfig Editor creates the bar code.

Bar Code Type, Size and Number
EZConfig Editor creates an Aztec bar code. The amount of data in the EXM file determines how many bar codes are generated and the physical size of each bar code. More data means more bar codes and larger bar codes.
EZConfig Editor offers four ways to control how many bar codes are produced and adjust the size of each bar code:
•
•
•
•

Set the byte size limits on how much data each bar code can contain (see page 4-16).
Split the data across a specified number of bar codes (see page 4-15).
Simplify the EXM file in the bar code(see page 4-15).
Scale the bar codes on the bar code sheet (see page 4-18).

Bar Code Sheet
EZConfig Editor produces a bar code sheet that contains the generated bar codes. Bar code sheets can be printed from a
laser printer, copied to the clipboard, and saved as an HTML file. See Printing and Saving Options on page 4-18.
In addition, individual bar codes can be saved as TIF or PNG graphic files that can then be emailed and printed. See Bar
Codes Tab on page 4-15.

Generating Bar Codes
When creating a bar code, EZConfig Editor automatically encrypts and compresses the data in the EXM file. EXM files are
stamped with the time and date the moment EZConfig Editor creates the barcode.
Note: The number of bar codes produced depends on the amount of data present in the EXM file. The more data present,
the more bar codes generated. You must scan all bar codes to deploy the package!
To generate a bar code(s):
1. Click File > Create EZConfig Bar Code OR Generate Bar Code

while the EXM file is open.

2. The EZconfig Bar Code Bar window opens displaying the details of the bar code package generated.
3. You can make adjustments using the options on the Bar Codes Tab (page 4-15) and the Advanced Tab (page 4-16) or
use one of the options provided to output the package.
Note: The number of bar codes produced depends on the amount of data present in the EXM file. The more data present,
the more bar codes generated. You must scan all bar codes to deploy the package!

4 - 14

Bar Codes Tab
The Bar Codes tab previews and customizes generated bar code(s).

Field/Option

Description

Display

Indicates which bar code is displayed in the preview area; the default is “1,” the first bar code
in the package. If more than one bar code was generated, you can use the up and down
arrows to scroll through the bar codes.

(___ bytes)

Displays the exact byte size of the bar code displayed in the preview area.
Total Package Size (page 4-18) is displayed at the bottom of the window.
The sum of bar code size is typically larger than the package size.
Type in the active storage location and filename where the EXM file should be deployed on
the terminal. For example:\Honeywell\deviceconfig.exm

Remote Path

Tap the browse button
to navigate to the location on the terminal. An active connection
between the terminal and workstation is required (e.g., ActiveSync, Windows Mobile Device
Center, or Windows Phone app).
You may want to copy this file into permanent storage (page 1-3) if you want it to persist after
a factory reset or kernel upgrade.

Full Contents

Includes the full content of the EXM file in the bar code, without simplifying.

Simplified

Simplifies the EXM file in the bar code, which removes disabled sections, description
information, and bar code settings (if any), which decreases the size of the bar code.
The open EXM file is not simplified.
Simplified is selected by default. The differences in total package size are displayed in the
Package Size (page 4-18) field. Individual bar code size can be seen in the Display (page 415) field.

# Bar codes to
generate

This is active only if the Always use minimum # bar codes (see page 4-16) is not selected.
When this slider is active, you can move the slider toward minimum or maximum to change
the number of bar codes generated. As you move the slider, you’ll see the number of bar
codes in the counter at the bottom of the window and you’ll notice the graphic of the bar code
in the preview area change.

Copy to Clipboard

Copies the bar code displayed in the preview area to the clipboard.
Use this option to paste the bar code into another application.

4 - 15

Field/Option

Description

Save

Saves the bar code displayed in the preview area as a graphic file as a .png or .tiff.
By default, the name of the graphic file is the same as the name of the open EXM file. You
can enter a different name when saving.

Save All

Saves all bar codes in the package as individual graphic files.
By default, the graphic files are saved with the same name as the open EXM file with a
number at the end to distinguish the individual graphic files from each other.

Print

Opens the printing window where you can select print options and print the bar code
package. For details, see Printing and Saving Options on page 4-18.

Advanced Tab
The Options tab contains settings that tell EZConfig Client how to process the EXM file on the terminal.

Field

Description

Bar Code Options – This section determines some of the basic bar code parameters.
Max Barcode Size

Set the maximum amount of data (in bytes) one bar code can contain. The lower the
number of bytes, the smaller the bar code.
On the Bar Codes tab, bar code size appears in the Display field (see page 4-15).
The total number of bar codes created as a result of the maximum bar code size limit
appears at the bottom of the Advanced window; see Bar Codes (page 4-18).

Always use
minimum # bar
codes

This option is selected by default. It calibrates the data so that the minimum number of bar
codes are used. When this option is selected, the number of bar codes slider on the Bar
Codes tab is disabled.

Use custom
password

This option enables you to password-protect the bar code you’re creating.
Select this option, then enter the password in the field provided. You will be able to see the
password when you enter it; however, you will not be able to see the password again once
you close the window because the password will be encrypted.
If you password-protect the bar code, EZConfig Client on the terminal will prompt you to
enter that same password on decoding.

4 - 16

Field

Description

Full screen
progress dialog

This option runs the deployment progress dialog box on the terminal in full screen mode so
that the user cannot open another application while the bar codes are being deployed on
the terminal.

Warm boot after
finished

This option automatically launches a warm boot on the terminal after the bar code is
deployed. Use this options with EXM files that contain application information requiring a
warm boot to take effect, such as registry settings.

Deployment Options – These options determine how to deploy the EXM file on the terminal.
Merge each
section…
(Default selection)

Deploys information according to the section-level merge mode settings; see Section-Level
Merge Modes on page 4-6.
If already exists, deploy:
Always–Select to always use the section-level merge mode settings.
Only if newer–Select to use the section-level merge mode settings only if the sections are
newer than the existing file.

Temporary

Deploys the EXM file temporarily. The settings in the EXM file are applied, but the file does
not remain in the system after EZConfig Client is done.
If the terminal contains a previous EXM file with the same name, the previous EXM file is
preserved.

Replacement EXM Options – This section determines how the EXM file will be deployed if there exists on the
terminal an EXM file of the same name in the same location.
Replace remote file

Replaces the existing file; no section-level merge modes are applied.
If already exists, deploy:
Always–Select to always replace the existing file.
Only if newer–Select to replace the existing file only if the file in the bar code is newer than
the existing.
Never—Do not deploy the new file; this preserves the existing file.
Prompt—EZConfig Client asks the user if they want to overwrite the existing file during
deployment.

Persist Bar Code Settings
Stores the settings from the Options, Bar Codes, and Web Page tabs within the EXM file so that the same bar code
settings are applied the next time a bar code is created. This increases the size of both the EXM file and the bar
code(s).
If the Simplify option is selected, bar code setting information is not included in the bar code but remains in the
open EXM file.

4 - 17

Information at the Bottom of Tab Windows
Field

Description

Package Size

Displays the total size of the bar code package. This number changes with simplifying.

Compression On

Notifies you that compression and encryption are both on.
Compression and encryption are always on by default. EZConfig Editor uses 128-bit
encryption automatically.

Encryption On
Bar Codes

Displays the total number of bar codes generated. This number changes as you move
the slider on the Bar Codes tab.

Printing and Saving Options
On the Bar Codes tab, when you click Print, a bar code printing window opens offering you a number of printing
options.

4 - 18

Field/Option

Description

Preview Area

This is the largest section of the tab window and displays a preview of the bar code
sheet. Use the scroll bars to see all the bar codes.

Header

Type in a custom header for the page.

Footer

Type in a custom footer for the page.

Bar Code Scaling
Factor

Adjusts the size of each bar code by scaling all of them up or down, which determines
how many bar codes can fit on each page. This does not change the amount of data in
each bar code, just the size of the bar code on the page.

Save

Saves the bar code sheet as an HTML file.

Preview

Click to see a print preview. Click Print on this window to print your bar codes.

5
EZConfig Client

Overview
EZConfig Client decodes bar codes created in EZConfig Editor and deploys the data in the terminal. In addition, if the EXM file
in the bar code is associated with an application, EZConfig Client launches that application, which then processes the decoded
data.
EZConfig Client decodes bar codes with 40-bit and 128-bit encryption.

Accessing EZConfig Client

On the Dolphin terminal, tap Start

> Power Tools

> EZConfig Utilities

> EZConfig Client

.

The EZConfig Client Screen

Field

Description

Package ID

Displays the package ID assigned by the EZConfig Editor

Status

Indicates the decode status of the bar codes scanned. If there is more than one bar code in the
package, the field acts as a decode counter indicating; how many bar codes have been scanned
and how many codes are in the package.

Read # Box

Displays a list of the bar codes scanned and decoded.

Accept Unsecured

If enabled (checked) the EZConfig Client scans bar codes that are not encrypted.
Note: By default, all bar codes created in EZConfig Editor are encrypted.

Note: Bar code decoding in EZConfig Client is compatible with ScanWedge. You can set ScanWedge to pass bar code
information to EZConfig Client for further processing.

5-1

Using EZConfig Client
1. On the Dolphin terminal, tap Start

> Power Tools.

2. Tap EZConfig Utilities > EZConfig Client.
3. Point the terminal at the first EZConfig Editor bar code, then press the Scan key.
4. EZConfig Client decodes the bar code.
• If there is only one bar code in the package, EZConfig Client deploys the package.
• If there is more than one bar code in the package, EZConfig Client decodes the bar code, records that one bar code has
been read, and waits for the next scan.
5. Scan all the bar codes in the package. Bar codes can be scanned in any order.
6. When all bar codes in the package have been scanned, the EZConfig client deploys the data.
Note: If the EXM file is programmed to launch an application such as ScanWedge, a window pops up informing you of
initialization.

Scanning Bar Codes Directly from the Power Tools or Demos Main Window
When the Power Tools or Demos main windows are open, press the Scan key and:
• If there is only one bar code in the package, EZConfig Client decodes and deploys the bar code without opening the
EZConfig Client window.
• If there are multiple bar codes in the package, EZConfig Client decodes the first bar code and opens the EZConfig Client
window showing that one bar code in the package has been scanned.

EXM File Processing
After decoding, EZConfig Client saves EXM files to the location in the terminal specified in the Remote Path (page 4-15) field on
the Bar Codes Tab (page 4-15).
Note: If the Temporary (page 4-17), option is selected in the bar code, EZConfig Client does not save the EXM file.)
There are two types of EXM files: configuration documents and registry documents. EZConfig Client processes each type of file
differently.
Configuration Documents: If the EXM file was associated with an application, EZConfig Client launches and deploys the
data to that application for processing.
Note: DeviceConfig.exm must be associated with DeviceConfig.exe to be processed on the terminal appropriately. After
decoding the bar code, EZConfig Client deploys the data to DeviceConfig.exe, which applies the settings to the
terminal.
Registry Documents: Registry documents are always associated with EZConfig Client. The Execute option
(Execute, page 4-11) determines whether the registry is updated or not. If Execute is selected, EZConfig Client updates
the registry immediately after decoding the bar code.
Note: Some EXM files generate more than one bar code. If multiple bar codes were generated, EZConfig Client recognizes that
there is more than one bar code in the package and tracks each bar code scanned and decoded. Bar codes can be
scanned in any order, but EZConfig Client does not deploy the data until all the bar codes in the package have been
scanned.

5-2

6
Autorun and AutoInstall

Overview
Startup is the launch sequence when a Dolphin terminal is booted. There are two startup Power Tools: Autorun and AutoInstall.

Autorun
Autorun specifies the software applications to launch after each hard reset (cold reboot). Autorun is located in the
\Honeywell folder. Autorun consists of an Autorun.exe that is programmed by the Autorun.exm file (see below).
During startup, after a soft (warm) or hard (cold) reset, the operating system looks for and launches \Autorun.exe. If the
Autorun.exe is configured (by Autorun.exm) to launch an application, that application launches when Autorun.exe launches.
Autorun can launch up to 32 applications or utility programs after each hard reset.
Note: The Autorun.exm file allows applications to be launched based on conditional situations, including the return code of
another application launched previously and specific characteristics of the Dolphin terminal itself.

Autorun.exm File
The Autorun.exm file has a multi-level tree structure. There are two top level sections: Settings and Programs.

Settings Section
The Settings section stores general Autorun settings.

Programs Section
The Programs section contains many child sections and determines the sequence of events at startup, including which
programs launch and when.

Programs Section and the Launch Sequence
Under the Programs Section, each child section is a program to launch at startup. The sequence of child sections determines the launch sequence on the terminal; the terminal reads this file consecutively. To change the launch sequence,
move the child section up or down in the list. See Working with Sections (page 4-4).

Enabling and Disabling Sections
If you do not want the application to launch at startup, you can delete the child section. However, program child sections
contain settings you’ll want to keep when adding that same application back into the startup sequence. To keep the program child section in the file for future reference, use disable instead of delete. Disabled child sections appear in gray.
When processing files, the terminal behaves as though disabled sections are not there and moves on to the next enabled
section.

Programs’ Subsections
Each Programs’ subsection (child section) contains or can contain the following keys:
Key

Function

Required Keys—These keys must be present in each Program subsection (child section).
Program

Specifies the command line to execute. This is the location of the program’s executable. If
you want a Power Tool to launch at startup, enter the location of that tool’s EXE here.

Args

Specifies the command line arguments to execute at startup.

Wait

Determines if Autorun should wait for the program to complete and close before continuing to
the next program in the sequence.
• 0=Continue to the next program immediately
• 1=Wait enabled

6-1

Key

Function

StartOption

Specifies the startup options for the program. Autorun launches the program only if the
startup options entered here are met.
• Blank= Always run the program.
• X=See "Start Options" on page 6-2

Optional Keys—These are keys you can add.
PNPID

Specifies a card description. This option needs to be entered only when PNPID or
NONPNPID values are specified in the StartOption key.

DependIndex

Specifies the index of a dependent program.

DependExitCode

Specifies the required result of the dependent program. If the result of the dependent
program does not equal the DependExitCode entered here, the current program will not be
executed at startup.

Editing the Autorun.exm File
Edit Autorun.exm in EZConfig Editor. For details, see Working with Open EXM Files on page 4-4.

Adding a Program Subsection
To launch at startup, a new program must be a child section of the Programs section.
1. In EZConfig Editor on your workstation, right-click on the Programs section and select Append Child Section. A “New
Section” folder is added to the bottom of the list.
2. Enter the Name. Click in the section description area (lower left area of the screen) to add a Description.
3. Use the click and drag method to move the section to the desired launch sequence.
Press and hold the ALT key to make sure that you move the section at the same level. Do not append the section to an
existing section!
4. Right-click in the key area (upper right area of the screen) and select Append Key. You must add all the required
Autorun keys; see Programs’ Subsections on page 6-1.
5. Save the file and transfer it to the terminal.

Copying a File
If you want to copy a file and move it to another location, use AutoInstall and the /copy command line argument. For
details, see Command Line Arguments on page 6-4.

Start Options
Start Options define the required system parameters for a software application to launch. The following values can be
entered for the StartOption key, wherever it appears:
Option Name

The program launches if …

Category

DISABLED

Never, regardless of other startup options specified.

None

COLDBOOT

The terminal has performed a Hard Reset (Cold Reboot).

WARMBOOT

The terminal has performed a Soft Reset (Warm Reboot).

TOUCH

The terminal has a touch screen display installed.

NONTOUCH

The terminal doesn’t have a touch screen display installed.

Boot type

Touch Screen

6-2

Option Name

The program launches if …

BATCH

The terminal is a batch unit (no RF or internal modem cards installed).

RF

The terminal has an RF card installed (e.g., Cisco 802.11b).

GSM

The terminal has a GSM radio.

BT

The terminal has a Bluetooth radio.

MODEM

The terminal has an internal modem card installed.

IMAGER

The terminal has an imager installed.

LASER

The terminal has a laser scanner installed.

BLIND

The terminal has no laser or imager installed.

ANYSCAN

The terminal has either an imager or a laser scanner installed.

RFON

The RF radio is Enabled.

GSMON

The GSM radio is enabled.

BTON

The Bluetooth radio is enabled.

RFGSMBTOFF

The RF, GSM, & Bluetooth radios are disabled.

xxKEY

The terminal has a xx-key keyboard.
Note: Input the key quantity in place of “xx” in xxKey (e.g., 29KEY, 56KEY
or 30KEY).

Category

Mobility

Scanner

Radio

NO_KEY

The terminal has no keyboard.

PNPID

The terminal has a card installed whose identification contains ALL of the
strings specified in the PNPID setting.

NONPNPID

The terminal doesn’t have a card installed whose identification contains
ALL of the strings specified in the PNPID setting.

Keyboard

Expansion Card

Multiple options can be specified for each category. For example, you can specify both 35KEY and 43KEY options to
request that the program run in either a 35- or 43-key keyboard terminal. Separate multiple options with commas.
To ignore a category, do not specify any of its options.

Applying Startup Options to the Autorun.exm File
For each category, Autorun validates each startup option specified in the StartOption key. If no specified option is valid in a
category, Autorun does not execute the program. If at least one of the specified options is valid in each category evaluated,
the program is executed.
To always execute a program, specify no options in the StartOption key.

6-3

AutoInstall
AutoInstall consists of an AutoInstall.exe program file and an AutoInstall.exm file located in the root \Honeywell folder on
the terminal. The AutoInstall.exe program runs according to the settings in the AutoInstall.exm file. During a hard reset (cold
reboot), the AutoInstall program is launched and any cab files placed in the active storage folder (\Honeywell\AutoInstall)
are installed. See File Storage Locations on page 1-3 for additional information on permanent and active file storage locations.

Program Install Locations
When triggered by a reset, the CAB file installs the applications to the directories established in the CAB file. For most
applications, this means that an EXE for the software application is placed in the \Program Files folder.

AutoInstall.exm
The AutoInstall.exm file controls the behavior and appearance of the AutoInstall window and install process.
Note: The Autorun.exm file determines the programs and install sequence, not AutoInstall.exm.

Command Line Arguments
Add /copy to the Autorun.exm file to automatically move a file from one location to another.
Usage: autoinstall /copy  
Example: autoinstall /copy "/windows/data.mdf" "/storage card/data.mdf"

6-4

7
DeviceConfig

Overview
DeviceConfig configures the Dolphin terminal. DeviceConfig consists of the DeviceConfig.exe and the DeviceConfig.exm file.
DeviceConfig.exe looks for and applies the settings in the DeviceConfig.exm file.

DeviceConfig.exm File
The DeviceConfig.exm file contains terminal configuration settings. This file’s configuration settings persist through reboots and
should be considered system defaults.

Enabling DeviceConfig Functionality
By default, all sections except the About Section (see page 7-5) are disabled, which means that the key values are not
applied to the terminal. To use the DeviceConfig.exm file to configure the terminal, enable the sections and keys required
by your configuration.

Autorun
Autorun (see page 6-1) launches DeviceConfig.exe, which applies the DeviceConfig.exm settings, then launches a reboot.
The DeviceConfig.exm file must be associated with DeviceConfig.exe. The associated application path must be
\Honeywell\deviceconfig.exe
For more information, see Registry Documents, page 4-11.

Bar Code Delivery
When the DeviceConfig.exm file is delivered to the terminal via bar code, EZConfig Client launches DeviceConfig.exe automatically after decoding. DeviceConfig.exe then applies the settings in theDeviceConfig.exm file in the terminal. For more
information, see Creating Bar Codes (page 2-17) and EZConfig Client (page 2-26).
The DeviceConfig.exm file must be associated with DeviceConfig.exe for EZConfig Client to launch DeviceConfig.exe after
decoding the bar code. The associated application path must be \Honeywell\deviceconfig.exe
For more information, see Registry Documents, page 4-11.

Settings in the WLAN Supplicant
Many settings in the DeviceConfig.exm file match the settings in the WLAN Supplicant on the terminal that allow the user to
enter and save the same values. If you change a setting in the WLAN Supplicant, that setting is applied. During the next
reboot, Autorun launches DeviceConfig, which then re-applies the settings in the DeviceConfig.exm file.

DeviceConfig.exm Sections and Keys
The sections and keys in the DeviceConfig.exm file are locked, which means that you can change values but not names or
descriptions.
Section Name

Description

See Page

Connections

Configures communication parameters. There are child sections that
configure the on-board radios and the ActiveSync connection.

7-1

System

Configures basic system settings.

7-5

Applications

Configures software applications.

7-6

Connections Section
The Connections section contains child sections that set communication parameters on the terminal.

7-1

ActiveSync Section
The ActiveSync Section configures the terminal’s ActiveSync connection parameters. Double tap or click on any Key to
get full information or to edit the settings.
Note: The Connection values must be typed exactly as they appear in the Description field, e.g., ‘115200@Desktop.

Beam Section
The Beam section enables and disables the IrDA port.
Note: Not all Dolphin products/models are equipped IrDA capabilities. Consult the User’s Guide for to see if your
terminal is equipped with an IrDA port.

Radio Manager Section
In the Radio Manager, typically, you would enable the radio in the WiFi section, enable DHCP in the TCPIP section,
then configure the radio settings in the Security\Supplicant\Profile section.

Bluetooth Section
The keys in this section enable the Bluetooth radio and configure a Bluetooth printer as a Favorite. Double tap or
click on any Key to get full information or to edit the settings. If there is no Bluetooth radio installed in the terminal,
disable this section.

Bluetooth Default Printer Values
In general, to establish a printer as a Bluetooth Favorite Device, you must establish the printer as a Bluetooth
Favorite on the terminal. The Default Printer section stores these settings permanently in the DeviceConfig.exm
file so the printer remains a Favorite.
You can distribute a DeviceConfig.exm file with the printer settings to multiple terminals. After DeviceConfig.exe
applies the settings in the DeviceConfig.exm file (launched manually or after a reboot), the printer is set up as a
Favorite automatically, without any special configuration to each terminal.
After you have established a printer as a Bluetooth Favorite Device on an individual terminal, obtain the value for
the Address key from the registry in RegEdit.

Obtaining the MAC Address
After you have set up the Bluetooth printer on the terminal, use RegEdit to find the printer values.
1. Tap Start

> Power Tools > RegEdit.

2. Navigate to HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE > Software> Microsoft > Bluetooth > Device > [MAC Address].
3. Copy the name of the subsection; this is the MAC address of the printer.
4. Enter this address in the Address key in the Bluetooth > DefaultPrinter section of the DeviceConfig.exm
file.

WiFi Section
The keys in the WiFi section control the settings of the WLAN radio. Double tap or click on any Key to get full information or to edit the settings.

TCPIP Section
The keys in the TCPIP section determine how the radio handles IP addresses. Double tap or click on any Key
to get full information or to edit the settings.

Security Section
The Security section has no keys and one child section named “Supplicant,” which contains several profile
subsections.

Supplicant Section
The Supplicant section consists of a number of child sections. The default child section is named Profile1 and
contains all the keys necessary to create a configuration profile for the WLAN radio.

7-2

To create multiple radio configurations, copy the Profile1 section and paste it at the root level of the Supplicant section. Then, rename that profile and configure the keys according the desired network configuration.
Each child section name is arbitrary, but each name must be different.
The Supplicant section contains one key named ActiveProfile. Type in the Value equal to name of one of the
desired profile child sections.

When DeviceConfig is activated on the terminal, the terminal will apply the settings in the profile specified in
the ActiveProfile key. If the ActiveProfile key does not have a matching profile, the radio will be enabled by
DeviceConfig but no specific radio configuration will be activated, which means that the radio will not connect
to your network.

Profile Subsections
Each Profile subsection contains the keys that configure the radio connection from the terminal to the network.
Key

Description

Available Values

The service set identifier used to connect to
network; usually the network name of the access
point or peer station.

X=Your network’s SSID
Any=Connect to any network

The radio mode.

0 = Infrastructure
1 = IBSS (Adhoc)

The radio band.

0 = Auto
1 = 802.11b/g/n
2 = 802.11 a/n

The general association mode (sometimes called
“authentication”) of the radio.

• None (no authentication or
encryption)
• WEP
• IEEE 802.1X (WEP)
• WPA-Personal (PSK)
• WPA-Enterprise (EAP)
• WPA2-Personal (PSK)
• WPA2-Enterprise (EAP)

The encryption mode available for the
association mode.

•
•
•
•
•

Name

SSID

Mode

Band

Assoc. Mode

Encryption

Open
Shared
TKIP
AES-CCMP
TKIP

7-3

Key

Description

Available Values

Available EAP methods for IEEE 802.1X and
WPA(2)-Enterprise (EAP) association modes.

•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•

PSK

Enter the private share key for the WEP
association mode.

User-defined

This is the 802.1X identity supplied to the
authenticator. The identity value can be up to 63
ASCII characters and is case-sensitive.

User-defined

Identity

User-defined

Password

This is the password used for MD5-Challenge or
LEAP authentication. It may contain up to 63
ASCII characters and is case-sensitive. Asterisks
appear instead of characters for enhanced
security.

User-defined

Anonymous ID

Enter the anonymous ID. This ID creates a tunnel
through which the real ID (as entered in the
Identity field) can pass.
For additional security, make this ID different than
the one entered in the Identity field.

Tunnel PAC
Machine PAC

For EAP-FAST, a one-time provisioning
exchange establishes a shared secret, called a
Protected Access Credential (PAC) Key. That
PAC Key is used for all subsequent
authentications.

Enter the address on the
Dolphin terminal of either PAC
(tunnel or machine).
Note: The PACs must be
located on the Dolphin
terminal!

Provisioning

Provisioning refers to service activation and
involves programming various network
databases with the customer's information.

•
•
•
•

CA and/or Client
Certificate

CA certificates are any certificates created by a
certified authority (CA).
Client certificates contain information that
identifies the user, as well as information about
the organization that issued the certificate. This
ensures that you can encrypt data end-to-end.

Enter the address on the
Dolphin terminal of either
certificate (CA or Client).

Private keys are used with certain types of EAP
authentication.

Enter the address on the
Dolphin terminal of the private
key.
The private key must be located
on the Dolphin terminal!

EAP Method

Private Key

7-4

LEAP
PEAPv0-MSCHAPV2
PEAPv1-MSCHAPV2
PEAPv1-GTC
PEAPv1-TLS
FAST-MSCHAPV2
FAST-GTC
FAST-TLS
TLS
TTLS-MD5
TTLS-MSCHAPV2
TTLS-GTC

No Provisioning
Anonymous
Authenticated
Anonymous + Authenticated

The certificates must be located
on the Dolphin terminal!

Key

Description

Available Values

Priv Key
Password

Private keys can be locked by passwords.

Enter the password that unlocks
the private key.

Mode being used by the WEP keys (in Key1–
Key4 keys).

ASCII uses all alpha numeric
characters.
HEX uses only numerics and AF.

WEP Key Mode

Key validation occurs when DeviceConfig is
loaded on the terminal (often during AutoInstall),
not when you save the DeviceConfig.exm file.

User-defined

WEP Key1–Key4

In fields Key 1—Key 4, enter the specific key.
The format of each key must match the key
length type selected in the WEP Key Mode key.
To use dynamic keys in your configuration, leave
all the key fields blank.

Active Key

Enter the number of the key that you want to be
active in this configuration.

1, 2, 3, or 4

Valid lengths are as follows:
• 64-bit ASCII=5
• 128-bit ASCII=13
• 64-bit HEX=10
• 128-bit HEX=26

GSM Section
If there is no GSM radio installed in the terminal, disable this section. Double tap or click on any Key to get full
information or to edit the settings.

System Section
The System section contains child sections that configure various system settings. Double tap or click on any Key to get full
information or to edit the settings.

About Section
The About section sets a unique device name and description for the terminal. By default, this section is enabled and
applied to the terminal after each reboot.

DeviceName Restrictions
• The DeviceName must begin with a letter.
• The DeviceName cannot exceed 15 characters in length.
• Any text outside brackets (“[xxxx]”) will appear as text in the Device name field.
The following appears in the Device name field:
[SERIALNUMBER]
[MODELNUMBER]

The terminal’s serial number pulled dynamically from the kernel.
This is the serial number that appears in SysInfo (see page 13-1).
The terminal’s model number pulled dynamically from the kernel.
This is the serial number that appears in SysInfo (see page 13-1).

Power Management Section
The Power Management section contains child sections that configure various Backlight and Power Timeout settings
by power source (i.e., Battery, External or USB) and enabling or disabling the Power Button. Double tap or click on any
Key to get full information or to edit the settings.

7-5

Keyboard
The Keyboard section contains the Default SIP child section, which enables or disables the enhanced Honeywell virtual keyboard as the default virtual keyboard.
Note: Not all Dolphin models come equipped with the enhanced Honeywell virtual keyboard. A license fee is required
to run the enhanced keyboard on all mobile devices except the Dolphin 70e Black. Contact a Honeywell sales
representative to purchase a license for your Dolphin device.

Honeywell Virtual Keypad Creator
The enhanced Honeywell virtual keyboard is fully customizable using the Honeywell Virtual Keypad Creator software available for download at www.honeywellaidc.com. The user-friendly utility allows you to personalize multiple
keyboard features including key position, size, quantity, color, and the keyboard skin. In addition, you can make
language changes, create alternate or function keys for special character sets, and add application launch keys to
streamline common business tasks. Refer to the terminal User’s Guide for additional information on the Honeywell
Virtual Keypad Creator.

Applications Section
The Applications section configures specific software applications installed on the terminal. Double tap or click on any Key
to get full information or to edit the settings.

Internet Explorer Section
The Internet Explorer section defines the home page for Pocket® Internet Explorer and enables or disables Clear Type
text in Internet Explorer.

ReM Section
If the terminal includes the MobiControl Bootstrap Agent (MCBootstrapAgent.exe), then DeviceConfig can be used to
configure the terminal to connect to a MobiControl Server and download the appropriate agent to the device.
This section is disabled by default and should only be enabled when configuring the device to connect to the MobiControl Server for the first time.
The root level of the ReM section contains the main ConfigPath.

Command Line Arguments
/q

Quits the program; this command line in the Args field of the Associated Application window stops the confirmation
message from appearing after DeviceConfig.exe finishes processing.

Launching DeviceConfig.exe Manually
DeviceConfig.exe launches automatically after each reboot. However, if you make changes to the DeviceConfig.exm file that
you want applied in the terminal immediately, manually launch DeviceConfig.exe.
1. Tap Start

> Power Tools > EZConfig Utilities > DeviceConfig.exm.

2. Tap Tools > Launch Associated App.
3. The settings in the DeviceConfig.exm file are saved and applied to the terminal configuration by DeviceConfig.exe.

Temporary Option for Bar Code Deployment
Enable the Temporary option on the Advanced Tab (see page 4-16) during bar code creation in the EZConfig Editor on the
Workstation (PC) if you want to establish a temporary configuration in the Dolphin terminal (e.g., access to a specific network in
a facility) without changing the default configuration. When the bar code is scanned, EZConfig Client launches DeviceConfig.exe, which applies the settings in the temporary DeviceConfig.exm file on the terminal. After processing, the temporary
DeviceConfig.exm file is deleted and the original DeviceConfig.exm file settings are restored during the next Hard Reset (Cold
Reboot).

7-6

8
Network Utilities

Accessing Network Utilities

Tap Start

> Power Tools

> Network Utilities. The Network Utilities window opens.

Network Utilities Main Window
Icon

Description

Page

IP Config displays, releases, and renews IP parameters for on-board network adapters.

8-1

Ping sends out an echo request to a specific computer on the network.

8-2

Route determines how packets are routed to subnets.

8-3

Backup Settings backs up the radio settings.

8-5

Return takes you back to the Power Tools menu.

IP Config

IPConfig is a kernel utility that displays, releases, and renews IP parameters for on-board network adapters. IP Config contains
three tab windows: Input, Output, and About.
The following fields appear on the Input tab:
Field

Description

Adapter

This drop-down list contains the network adapters currently installed in the Dolphin terminal.
Every field and button on this screen pertains to the adapter selected in this drop-down list.

8-1

Field

Description

MAC Addr

Displays the MAC (Media Access Control) address of the selected Adapter. This is the serial
number burned into the adapter that uniquely identifies it.

IP Addr

Displays the IP address.

Subnet Mask

Displays the adapter’s subnet mask. The subnet mask determines the subnet upon which the
adapter resides.

Gateway

Displays the adapter’s gateway information.

Release the IP address

Tap this button to release the IP address.

Renew the IP address

Tap this button to renew the IP address.

Display full
configuration

Tap this button to retrieve and review the full configuration of the terminal’s IP setup. For more
information, see below.

Displaying the Terminal’s IP Configuration
On the Input tab, tap the Display full configuration button. The Dolphin terminal retrieves and displays the IP configuration for the entire terminal. The results display on the Output tab.

Ping

Ping provides a GUI-based version of the traditional command line ping utility. Pinging sends out an echo request to a specific
computer on the network. Use Ping to verify communication links or to make sure a specific IP address is working.
Ping contains three tab windows: Input, Output, and About. Enter and send packet information to a specified remote host on
the Input tab, and see the result on the Output tab. The following fields appear on the Input tab:
Field

Description

Note: You do not need to complete all the fields on the Ping window to successfully execute. Just enter the Destination IP
address.
Destination

Enter the IP address. This field is required.

Timeout (milliseconds)

Enter the timeout time in millisecond intervals; 1000 is the default.

Send buffer size

Indicate the buffer size for sending; 32 is the default.

Send count

Indicate the count for sending; 4 is the default. Check Infinite to make the send count infinite.

TTL

Short for Time To Live (TTL), this is the maximum amount of time a packet is allowed to travel
through the network before it is discarded.

TOS

Enter the Type of Service (TOS); it should be eight bits broken into five subfields.

8-2

Field

Description

Rec route for count hops

Enter the number of hops to record in the IP header; 1–9.
This field traces the route of the packets for each hop. The hop count is the number of network
devices between the starting node and the destination node that an IP packet hits while
traveling over a network. The number of hops is recorded in the IP header.

Timestamp route

Enter the number of timestamps to record for each hop; 1–4
The timestamp is the packet’s arrival time at each hop.

Don’t fragment

Check this box if you don’t want the packet to fragment during routing.

DNS address required

Check this box if you want the domain name server to be part of the route path.

Execute

Tap Execute to send the ping. The Output tab displays the response.

Reading the Output Tab
After you enter the IP information on the Input tab and click Execute, the Output tab appears and begins displaying the ping
results.
You can click the Stop button at any time to stop the ping. Any errors encountered display on the screen.

Route

Route is a kernel utility that allows the user to view and edit the rules that govern how packets destined for various subnets are
routed. These rules tell the device which gateways on a given interface's subnet may be used to route packets to hosts on other
subnets.
On the Network Utilities menu window, tap the Route icon once. The Route screen opens to the Input tab. Route contains three
tab windows: Input, Output, and About. Enter and execute a command on the Input tab and review the results on the Output
tab.

Print
This selection prints network routing tables to the Output tab.

8-3

On the Input tab, select PRINT from the drop-down list and tap Execute. The Output tab appears displaying the network
routing table.

Add
This selection adds a route.
1. On the Input tab, select ADD from the drop-down menu.
2. Specify the range of IP addresses to which this rule will apply using the Destination and Netmask fields.
For example, the settings below specify an address range from 300.300.0.1 to 300.300.255.254.

3. Enter the Gateway.
4. Enter the Metric (not required).
5. Enter the Interface (not required).
6. Tap Execute. The system verifies your results and the Output tab lets you know if your entry was added successfully.

Delete
You can delete active routes.
1. On the Input tab, tap DELETE.
2. Enter the IP address in the Destination field.
3. Tap Execute. The system processes the request and displays how many routes were deleted.

Clear
Executing this command clears routing tables of all gateway entries.
On the Input tab, tap CLEAR and tap Execute. The system processes your request and the number of entries deleted
appears on the Output tab.

8-4

Backup Settings (Radio)

The registry contains configuration settings for the terminal radios. You can use the Backup Settings option on the Network
Utilities window, to export the radio settings into a RadioSettings.reg file.
Note: The RegBackup.exm file determines the content of the RadioSettings.reg file; see RegBackup.exm on page 9-4.
1. On the Network Utilities (page 8-1) window, tap the Backup Settings icon.
2. A pop-up window notifies you where the RadioSettings.reg file will be saved on the terminal. Tap Yes verify the export.
By default, the settings in the RadioSettings.reg file are added to the registry during the next Hard Reset (Cold Reboot) automatically configuring the radios when the boot process is complete.

8-5

8-6

9
Registry Power Tools

Overview
The registry is the configuration database in all 32-bit versions of Windows that contains settings for the hardware and software,
consisting of the SYSTEM.DAT and USER.DAT files. Many settings previously stored in the WIN.ini and SYSTEM.ini files in 16bit Windows (Windows 3.x) are in the registry.
The RegEdit Power Tool enables you to edit the registry through an easy-to-use application window. You can also import and
export specific registry keys.

Editing the Registry

1. On the Power Tools Main Window (see page 1-1), tap the RegEdit icon once. RegEdit opens to a split-pane window with a
collapsible menu in the top half.
Note: The top level of the registry cannot be edited, copied, pasted, or renamed.

2. Click the + sign to expand the menu options.
3. RegEdit offers the following registry categories:
• HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT
• HKEY_CURRENT_USER
• HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE
4. Expand the appropriate menu by clicking on the + sign next to the category.

9-1

5. Drill-down to the appropriate registry entry. When you click on registry entry in the top half of the screen, the data appears in
the lower half of the screen. The two columns in the bottom half of the window show the Value Name and the Value Data of
the selected entry.

6. Double tap Value Name. The Edit Value window pops up.
7. In the Value Data field, type the new value.
8. Tap OK. The new data appears in the list.
9. After all your edits are complete, Warm Reboot (see page 12-2) the terminal to save your changes to the registry.
Note: If you want your edits to persist through the next Hard Reset (Cold Reboot), run RegBackup after saving your changes;
see RegBackup.exm on page 9-4.

File Menu
Tap the File menu button at the bottom of the RegEdit window to access the following options:

9-2

Menu Item

Description

New

Creates a new Key, String, or DWORD Value.

Edit

Edits existing registry entries; see Edit Menu on page 9-3.

View

Shift focus between the Keys Panel and the Values Panel.

Import

Imports a registry file; see Importing Registry Files on page 9-3.

Export

Exports the current registry; see RegBackup.exm on page 9-4.

Exit

Closes RegEdit.

Edit Menu
The Edit menu allows you to edit existing registry entries.
Menu Item

Description

Copy

Copies a selected item.

Paste

Pastes a copied item within RegEdit.

Rename

Renames a registry entry.
Enter the new name then tap OK.

Delete

Deletes a selected registry entry.

Find

Searches for registry entries within a selected section. (Select an item in the top half of the window
before tapping Edit > Find.)
Enter the search criteria and tap OK. RegEdit notifies you if the selected section contains data
matching the entered criteria.

Find Next

Launches another search for the criteria entered in Find.

Importing Registry Files
The Registry file must be loaded on the terminal and have a *.reg extension.
1. Tap the File menu button at the bottom of the RegEdit window.
2. Select Import. By default, the import function searches for Registry files on the terminal and displays the results in the
lower half of the window.
3. Tap once on the Registry file (*.reg) you want to load.

Exporting Specific Registry Settings
To export specific registry settings:
1. In RegEdit, select the section you would like to export.
2. Tap File > Export.
3. Input the parameters (i.e., Name, Folder, Type, and Location) for the Registry file that will contain the exported settings.

Backing Up the Entire Registry

To back up the entire registry:
1. On the Power Tools main window, tap the RegBackup icon once to export the current registry.
2. A pop-up window notifies you where the _RegBackup.reg file will be stored on the terminal. Tap Yes to verify the export.
Note: The next time a Hard Reset (Cold Reboot) is performed, the _RegBackup.reg is installed.

9-3

Restoring the Registry
Once the entire registry is backed up to the _RegBackup.reg file using the RegBackup application, you can use any of the
following methods to restore the registry:
• On the Power Tools Main Window (see page 1-1), tap the RegBackup icon once, then tap Yes to verify you want to
import the information in the _RegBackup.reg to the registry.
• Tap the _RegBackup.reg file
• Perform a Hard Reset (Cold Reboot).

RegBackup.exm
The RegBackup.exm file is located in the root \Honeywell folder and determines the content of the _RegBackup.reg file
and the RadioBackup.reg file (see page 8-5).
Note: The RegBackup.exm file does NOT contain registry settings! Only *.reg files contain registry settings.

Sections
_TEMPLATE_ Section
The _TEMPLATE_ section is a template of the basic registry sections. This section is not used when creating the
_RegBackup.reg file. Use these subsections as a basis for modifications and additions to the file.

Backup Section
This default section should never be removed as it contains default “excludes” specified by Honeywell. You can,
however, add to the section. Do NOT change the Mode (page 9-5)!

Radio Section
The Radio section determines the content of the RadioBackup.reg file when the Backup Settings (page 8-5) app
is used on Network Utilities (page 8-1) screen.

Modifying
Modifying the RegBackup.exm file allows you to include or exclude registry key sections and values during an export.
Multiple subsections can be created. All should be copied from the Template section which should not be modified.
To specify keys and values in the RegBackup.exm file, re-create the registry keys as sections and subsections in the
tree structure just as they appear in the registry. The same rules that apply to copying directories apply here; if you recreate a key from the registry, all the key’s values and subkey’s values will be copied unless there are values in the toplevel key.
Note: Only the key or value name is needed in the EXM file and not the associated value data. The EXM file is a
structure used to define the backup file and not the actual registry data.

These registry values will
be included in the
_RegBackup.reg file.

9-4

Mode and Kernel Check
In each Subsection root in the tree, there should be two key-value pairs: Mode and KernelCheck.

If these keys are not present, the following defaults will be applied:
• Mode = Exclude
• KernelCheck = Enabled

Mode
The Mode key specifies export behavior of the values in the section.
Include

Only the values that follow will be included.

Exclude

Everything but the values that follow will be included.

KernelCheck
KernelCheck forces kernel version and service pack validation when a previously exported REG file is imported on a
Dolphin terminal. This means that if you attempt to load a _RegBackup.reg file (during AutoInstall, for example), RegBackup.exm verifies that the REG file matches the kernel installed on the terminal. If yes, then the REG file loads. If
not, you’ll receive a warning message and the REG file will not load.
Disabled

No kernel validation occurs on importing. In general (especially for radio settings), KernelCheck should
be enabled. If the registry does not match the kernel, the terminal will not function properly.

Enabled

Kernel validation occurs on importing.

9-5

Command Line Arguments
/export 

Export registry to .
The  part is optional. If no filename is entered, the file will default to
\Honeywell\AutoInstall\_RegBackup.reg.

/import 

Import  to registry.
The  part is optional. If no filename is entered, the file will default to
\Honeywell\AutoInstall\_RegBackup.reg.

/exm 

Specify the non-default backup EXM file . Filenames with spaces must be
wrapped in quotes. If omitted, the filename defaults to \Honeywell\RegBackup.exm.
This argument is only valid when used with /export.

/section  Specify the non-default section in the EXM file for exclude or include export, depending on
the mode setting in that section. If omitted, this defaults to the Backup section of whatever
EXM file is specified. This argument is only valid when used with /export.
/key 

Specify the top level of the registry key structure to export.
This argument is not valid when using /export or /import.

/silent

Displays no dialogs.

Registry Edit Options in EZConfig
You can also use EZConfig Editor to create registry documents on the workstation, create a bar code, then use EZConfig Client
to decode the bar code and update the registry on the terminal. See EZConfig Editor on the Workstation (PC) (page 4-1).

9-6

10
ScanWedge

Overview
ScanWedge sends bar code data from the decoder to the foreground application as keystrokes (as if the data were entered via
the keyboard). The foreground application is the open software application whose window is currently active on the display. You
can review input data in Windows Mobile applications such as Word Mobile and Excel Mobile without having to load third-party
applications.

Enabling, Disabling, and Exiting ScanWedge

Enabling ScanWedge
To enable ScanWedge from the Power Tools Main Window (see page 1-1), tap the ScanWedge icon once.

Enabling ScanWedge at Startup
To run ScanWedge automatically when the Dolphin terminal boots up, either:
• add a link to the ScanWedge.exe in the \Windows\Startup folder, or
• enable the ScanWedge section of the Autorun.exm File (see page 6-1).

Exiting ScanWedge
To exit the ScanWedge application:
1. Tap the ScanWedge icon once from the Power Tools Main Window (see page 1-1).
2. Tap Yes to exit the application.
OR
1. Select the ScanWedge icon near the bottom of the Home screen. The icon is only available if the Windows Default
screen configuration has been disabled (not selected) under Start > Settings > Home > Items.
ScanWedge Icon

2. Tap Exit.

Disabling ScanWedge without Exiting the Application
To disable ScanWedge but not exit the application:
1. Select the ScanWedge icon near the bottom of the Home screen. This icon is only available if the Windows Default
screen configuration has been disabled (not selected) under Start > Settings > Home > Items.
2. Tap Enable once. No check mark next to “Enable” indicates ScanWedge has been disabled.

Modifying the ScanWedge Configuration File
A ScanWedge.exm file is inserted in the \Honeywell folder when ScanWedge is installed. This file specifies configuration
parameters for ScanWedge and must not be moved.
Either use EZConfig Editor on your workstation or terminal to modify the ScanWedge.exm configuration file. For more information, see EZConfig Editor on the Workstation (PC) on page 4-1 or EZConfig Editor on the Dolphin Terminal on page 3-1.

10 - 1

ScanWedge.exm Sections
Section

Description

Settings

Programs general settings for ScanWede (e.g., sound, leds, prefix and suffix keys, prefix and suffix ID,
EZConfig Client compatibility)

Comm

Specifies serial port settings.

Decode

Specifies how the decoder/scanner interfaces with ScanWedge.

Centering

Defines the centering window for scanning bar codes when ScanWedge is interfacing with the decoder.

Formatting

Defines data formatting functionality.

Symbology

Defines the symbologies that the scanner can decode and send to ScanWedge.

VKMapping

Defines the virtual key sent to ScanWedge for any decoded ASCII character.

Blacklist

Specifies applications where ScanWedge will be disabled.

Select the Section then click or double tap on any Key to view the key’s full information or to edit the key values in the
ScanWedge.exm.

Data Formatting Reference Charts
ASCII Conversion Chart (Code Page 1252)
Note: This table applies to U.S. style keyboards. Certain characters may differ depending on your Country Code/PC
regional settings.
Non-Printable Characters
DEC HEX Character (Code)

0
1

0
1

2
3
4

2
3
4

5

DEC HEX Character (Code)

16
17

10
11

DATA LINK ESCAPE (DLE)
DEVICE CONTROL 1 (DC1)

18
19
20

12
13
14

DEVICE CONTROL 2 (DC2)
DEVICE CONTROL 3 (DC3)
DEVICE CONTROL 4 (DC4)

5

NULL
START OF HEADING
(SOH)
START OF TEXT (STX)
END OF TEXT (ETX)
END OF TRANSMISSION
(EOT)
END OF QUERY (ENQ)

21

15

6
7

6
7

ACKNOWLEDGE (ACK)
BEEP (BEL)

22
23

16
17

8
9
10
11
12

8
9
A
B
C

BACKSPACE (BS)
HORIZONTAL TAB (HT)
LINE FEED (LF)
VERTICAL TAB (VT)
FF (FORM FEED)

24
25
26
27
28

18
19
1A
1B
1C

13

D

CR (CARRIAGE RETURN) 29

1D

NEGATIVE ACKNOWLEDGEMENT (NAK)
SYNCHRONIZE (SYN)
END OF TRANSMISSION
BLOCK (ETB)
CANCEL (CAN)
END OF MEDIUM (EM)
SUBSTITUTE (SUB)
ESCAPE (ESC)
FILE SEPARATOR (FS)
RIGHT ARROW
GROUP SEPARATOR (GS)
LEFT ARROW

10 - 2

14

E

SO (SHIFT OUT)

30

1E

15

F

SI (SHIFT IN)

31

1F

DEC

HEX

Character

32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63

20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
2A
2B
2C
2D
2E
2F
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
3A
3B
3C
3D
3E
3F

RECORD SEPARATOR (RS)
UP ARROW
UNIT SEPARATOR (US)
DOWN ARROW

Printable Characters

!
"
#
$
%
&
'
(
)
*
+
,
.
/
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
:
;
<
=
>
?

DEC

HEX

64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95

40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
4A
4B
4C
4D
4E
4F
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
5A
5B
5C
5D
5E
5F

Character

DEC

HEX

Character

96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127

60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
6A
6B
6C
6D
6E
6F
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
7A
7B
7C
7D
7E
7F

`
a
b
c
d
e
f
g
h
i
j
k
l
m
n
o
p
q
r
s
t
u
v
w
x
y
z
{
|
}
~


@
A
B
C
D
E
F
G
H
I
J
K
L
M
N
O
P
Q
R
S
T
U
V
W
X
Y
Z
[
\
]
^
_

Extended ASCII Characters
DEC HEX

128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138

80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
8A

Character

€
‚
ƒ
„
…
†
‡
ˆ
‰
Š

DEC HEX

171
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
181

AB
AC
AD
AE
AF
B0
B1
B2
B3
B4
B5

Character

«
¬
®
¯
°
±
²
³
´
µ

DEC HEX

214
215
216
217
218
219
220
221
222
223
224

D6
D7
D8
D9
DA
DB
DC
DD
DE
DF
E0

Character

Ö
×
Ø
Ù
Ú
Û
Ü
Ý
Þ
ß
à

10 - 3

Extended ASCII Characters (Continued)
DEC HEX

139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170

Character

8B
8C
8D
8E
8F
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
9A
9B
9C
9D
9E
9F
A0
A1
A2
A3
A4
A5
A6
A7
A8
A9
AA

‹
Œ
Ž

‘
’
“
”
•
–
—
˜
™
š
›
œ
ž
Ÿ
¡
¢
£
¤
¥
¦
§
¨
©
ª

DEC HEX

182
183
184
185
186
187
188
189
190
191
192
193
194
195
196
197
198
199
200
201
202
203
204
205
206
207
208
209
210
211
212
213

B6
B7
B8
B9
BA
BB
BC
BD
BE
BF
C0
C1
C2
C3
C4
C5
C6
C7
C8
C9
CA
CB
CC
CD
CE
CF
D0
D1
D2
D3
D4
D5

Character

¶
·
¸
¹
º
»
¼
½
¾
¿
À
Á
Â
Ã
Ä
Å
Æ
Ç
È
É
Ê
Ë
Ì
Í
Î
Ï
Ð
Ñ
Ò
Ó
Ô
Õ

DEC HEX

225
226
227
228
229
230
231
232
233
234
235
236
237
238
239
240
241
242
243
244
245
246
247
248
249
250
251
252
253
254
255

E1
E2
E3
E4
E5
E6
E7
E8
E9
EA
EB
EC
ED
EE
EF
F0
F1
F2
F3
F4
F5
F6
F7
F8
F9
FA
FB
FC
FD
FE
FF

Character

á
â
ã
ä
å
æ
ç
è
é
ê
ë
ì
í
î
ï
ð
ñ
ò
ó
ô
õ
ö
÷
ø
ù
ú
û
ü
ý
þ
ÿ

Symbology Chart
Symbology

Code ID (hex)

All Symbologies
Australian Post

A

(0x41)

Aztec Code

z

(0x7A)

British Post

B

(0x42)

Canadian Post

C

(0x43)

China Post

Q

(0x51)

Chinese Sensible Code (Han Xin Code)

H

(0x48)

Codabar

a

(0x61)

Codablock A

V

(0x56)

Codablock F

q

(0x71)

Code 11

h

(0x68)

Code 128

j

(0x6A)

I

(0x49)

GS1-128

10 - 4

(0x99)

Symbology

Code ID (hex)

Code 32 Pharmaceutical (PARAF)

<

(0x3C)

Code 39 (supports Full ASCII mode)

b

(0x62)

Code 49

l

(0x6C)

Code 93 and 93i

i

(0x69)

Data Matrix

w

(0x77)

EAN-13 (including Bookland EAN)

d

(0x64)

EAN-13 with Add-On

d

(0x64)

EAN-13 with Extended Coupon Code

d

(0x64)

D

(0x44)

D

(0x44)

GS1 Composite

y

(0x79)

GS1 DataBar

y

(0x79)

GS1 DataBar Limited

{

(0x7B)

GS1 DataBar Omnidirectional

y

(0x79)

GS1 DataBar Expanded

}

(0x7D)

EAN-8
EAN-8 with Add-On

InfoMail

,

(0x2c)

Intelligent Mail Bar Code

M

(0x4D)

Interleaved 2 of 5

e

(0x65)

Japanese Post

J

(0x4A)

KIX (Netherlands) Post

K

(0x4B)

Korea Post

?

(0x3F)

Matrix 2 of 5

m

(0x6D)

MaxiCode

x

(0x78)

MicroPDF417

R

(0x52)

MSI

g

(0x67)

NEC 2 of 5

Y

(0x59)

OCR MICR (E 13 B)

O

(0x4F)

OCR SEMI Font

O

(0x4F)

OCR-A

O

(0x4F)

OCR-B

O

(0x4F)

PDF417

r

(0x72)

Planet Code

L

(0x4C)

Postal-4i

N

(0x4E)

Postnet

P

(0x50)

QR Code and Micro QR Code

s

(0x73)

Straight 2 of 5 IATA

f

(0x66)

Straight 2 of 5 Industrial

f

(0x66)

TCIF Linked Code 39 (TLC39)

T

(0x54)

Telepen

t

(0x54)

UPC-A

c

(0x63)

c

(0x63)

UPC-A with Add-On

10 - 5

Symbology

Code ID (hex)

UPC-A with Extended Coupon Code

c

(0x63)

E

(0x45)

UPC-E with Add-On

E

(0x45)

UPC-E1

E

(0x45)

UPC-E

Symbology Section
The Symbology section specifies the settings for each of the symbologies supported by the decoder. 1D symbologies are
available in ScanWedge.exm. Tap on the symbology child section name to display the default value, and the settings for
that symbology.

Viewing/Editing the ScanWedge.exm File on the Terminal
Tap Start

> Power Tools > EZConfig Utilities > Scanwedge.
Displays the file name.

Symbology Section

Tap a symbology name to
view/edit the key values for
the symbology type.

Tap the box next to the
key to enable (check) or
disable (uncheck) the
key.

Displays the keys in the
selected section.
Double tap on the key to edit
the value.
Note: To edit a key value the
key must be enabled.

Viewing/Editing the ScanWedge.exm File on the Workstation (PC)
To open the ScanWedge.exm file stored on the workstation:
1. Open EZConfig for Mobility on your workstation; see Opening the EZConfig Editor on the Workstation on page 4-1.
2. Click File > Open or the Open toolbar button

10 - 6

and select the ScanWedge.exm file.

To open the Scanwedge.exm file stored on the terminal:
1. Click File > Open From Device. This option requires an active connection between the terminal and workstation
(e.g., ActiveSync, Windows Mobile Device Center, or Windows Phone app).
2. Expand the \Honwyewell root folder. Select ScanWedge.exm, then click OK.
ScanWedge.exm
If the file is on the terminal, the title bar displays the remote path.

Symbology Section

Tap a symbology
name to view/edit
the key values for
the symbology
type.

Displays the
keys in the
selected section.
Double click on
the key value to
edit the setting.

Displays a
description of the
selected Key.

For more information regarding the individual settings for each of the symbologies, refer to the Honeywell Decode API documentation in the SDK documentation.

OCR
For comprehensive information about using OCR, refer to the OCR Programming User’s Guide available on our website at
www.honeywellaidc.com.

VK (Virtual Key) Mapping Section
The virtual key map settings are located in the VKMapping section in the ScanWedge configuration file. The virtual key map
settings define the virtual key that will be sent to ScanWedge for any decoded ASCII character.
The settings are in the form: ASCII Key = Virtual Key, ShiftMode, Modifier
Where:
• ASCII Key is an ASCII value between 0 an 255 (decimal)
• Virtual Key is the virtual key to be sent when the specified ASCII key is decoded
• ShiftMode can have the following values:
• 0 = the virtual key is never shifted
• 1 = the virtual key must be shifted
• 2 = the virtual key needs to be shifted if Caps Lock is off
• 3 = the virtual key needs to be shifted if Caps Lock is on
• Modifier

10 - 7

Virtual Key Codes Table
The following table shows the symbolic constant names, hexadecimal values, and keyboard equivalents for the virtual-key
codes used by Windows Embedded Handheld 6.5. The codes are listed in numeric order.
Note: To use these codes in the VKMapping section, the hexadecimal values need to be converted to decimals.

Symbolic Constant Name

Decimal Value

Hexadecimal
Value

Touch Screen or Keyboard Equivalent

VK_LBUTTON

1

01

Touch screen

VK_CANCEL

3

03

Control-break processing

——

5-7

05-07

Undefined

VK_BACK

8

08

BACKSPACE key

VK_TAB

9

09

TAB key

——

10-11

0A-0B

Undefined

VK_CLEAR

12

0C

CLEAR key

VK_RETURN

13

0D

ENTER key

——

14-15

0E-0F

Undefined

VK_SHIFT

16

10

SHIFT key

VK_CONTROL

17

11

CTRL key

VK_MENU

18

12

ALT key

VK_CAPITAL

20

14

CAPS LOCK key

——

21-25

15-19

Reserved for Kanji systems

——

26

1A

Undefined

VK_CLEAR

12

0C

CLEAR key

VK_RETURN

13

0D

ENTER key

——

14-15

0E-0F

Undefined

VK_SHIFT

16

10

SHIFT key

VK_CONTROL

17

11

CTRL key

VK_MENU

18

12

ALT key

VK_CAPITAL

20

14

CAPS LOCK key

——

21-25

15-19

Reserved for Kanji systems

——

26

1A

Undefined

VK_ESCAPE

27

1B

ESC key

——

28-31

1C-1F

Reserved for Kanji systems

VK_SPACE

32

20

SPACEBAR key

VK_PRIOR

33

21

PAGE UP key

10 - 8

Symbolic Constant Name

Decimal Value

Hexadecimal
Value

Touch Screen or Keyboard Equivalent

VK_NEXT

34

22

PAGE DOWN key

VK_END

35

23

END key

VK_HOME

36

24

HOME key

VK_LEFT

37

25

LEFT ARROW key

VK_UP

38

26

UP ARROW key

VK_RIGHT

39

27

RIGHT ARROW key

VK_DOWN

40

28

DOWN ARROW key

VK_SELECT

41

29

SELECT key

——

42

2A

Original equipment manufacturer
(OEM)– specific

VK_EXECUTE

43

2B

EXECUTE key

VK_SNAPSHOT

44

2C

PRINT SCREEN key for Windows 3.0 and later

VK_HELP

47

2F

HELP key

VK_0

48

30

0 key

VK_1

49

31

1 key

VK_2

50

32

2 key

VK_3

51

33

3 key

VK_4

52

34

4 key

VK_5

53

35

5 key

VK_6

54

36

6 key

VK_7

55

37

7 key

VK_8

56

38

8 key

VK_9

57

39

9 key

——

58-64

3A-40

Undefined

VK_A

65

41

A key

VK_B

66

42

B key

VK_C

67

43

C key

VK_D

68

44

D key

VK_E

69

45

E key

VK_F

70

46

F key

VK_G

71

47

G key

VK_H

72

48

H key

10 - 9

Symbolic Constant Name

Decimal Value

Hexadecimal
Value

Touch Screen or Keyboard Equivalent

VK_I

73

49

I key

VK_J

74

4A

J key

VK_K

75

4B

K key

VK_L

76

4C

L key

VK_M

77

4D

M key

VK_N

78

4E

N key

VK_O

79

4F

O key

VK_P

80

50

P key

VK_Q

81

51

Q key

VK_R

82

52

R key

VK_S

83

53

S key

VK_T

84

54

T key

VK_U

85

55

U key

VK_V

86

56

V key

VK_W

87

57

W key

VK_X

88

58

X key

VK_Y

89

59

Y key

VK_Z

90

5A

Z key

——

91-95

5B-5F

Undefined

VK_NUMPAD0

96

60

Numeric keypad 0 key

VK_NUMPAD1

97

61

Numeric keypad 1 key

VK_NUMPAD2

98

62

Numeric keypad 2 key

VK_NUMPAD3

99

63

Numeric keypad 3 key

VK_NUMPAD4

100

64

Numeric keypad 4 key

VK_NUMPAD5

101

65

Numeric keypad 5 key

VK_NUMPAD6

102

66

Numeric keypad 6 key

VK_NUMPAD7

103

67

Numeric keypad 7 key

VK_NUMPAD8

104

68

Numeric keypad 8 key

VK_NUMPAD9

105

69

Numeric keypad 9 key

VK_MULTIPLY

106

6A

Asterisk (*) key

VK_ADD

107

6B

Plus sign (+) key

10 - 10

Symbolic Constant Name

Decimal Value

Hexadecimal
Value

Touch Screen or Keyboard Equivalent

VK_SEPARATOR

108

6C

Separator key

VK_SUBTRACT

109

6D

Minus sign (–) key

VK_DECIMAL

110

6E

Period (.) key

VK_DIVIDE

111

6F

Slash mark (/) key

——

88

88-8F

Unassigned

——

146-185

92-B9

Unassigned

——

186-192

BA-C0

OEM-specific

——

193-218

C1-DA

Unassigned

——

219-228

DB-E4

OEM-specific

——

229

E5

Unassigned

——

230

E6

OEM-specific

——

231-232

E7-E8

Unassigned

——

233-245

E9-F5

OEM-specific

VK_ATTN

246

F6

VK_CRSEL

247

F7

VK_EXSEL

248

F8

VK_EREOF

249

F9

VK_PLAY

250

FA

VK_ZOOM

251

FB

VK_NONAME

252

FC

VK_PA1

253

FD

VK_EM_CLEAR

254

FE

VK_LWIN

91

5B

VK_RWIN

92

5C

VK_APPS

93

5D

VK_LSHIFT

160

A0

VK_RSHIFT

161

A1

VK_LCONTROL

162

A2

VK_RCONTROL

163

A3

VK_LMENU

164

A4

VK_RMENU

165

A5

10 - 11

Command Line Arguments
/restart

Forces ScanWedge to process its configuration file (ScanWedge.exm) again, which applies
changes immediately. If the SoundConnect setting is enabled (set to 1), an ascending
connect sound is played on restart.

/quit

Shuts down ScanWedge.

10 - 12

11
EZ Pairing

Overview

The EZ Pairing Power Tool provides a quick and easy way to connect a ring scanner to the Dolphin terminal using Bluetooth
wireless technology.
Note: EZ Pairing is a model dependent and may not appear on the Power Tools Main Window (page 1-1) of your terminal.

Hardware Requirements
EZ Pairing is compatible with the following ring scanner models:
• Honeywell 8650 Wireless Ring Scanner
• Motorola RS507 Wireless Ring Scanner

Using EZ Pairing to Establish a Connection
1. Open the EZPairing.exm file in EZConfig on the terminal.
2. Under the Service Settings, set the Device key to the correct ring scanner type (i.e., Honeywell or Motorola).
For more information on how to use the EZConfig Editor on the Dolphin Terminal to modify EXM files, see page 3-1.
3. Select File > Save.
4. Select File > Exit, and then tap Return.
5. On the Power Tools main screen, tap EZ Pairing.
When EZ Pairing launches:
• the Bluetooth wireless radio turns on,
• the EZ Pairing service initiates, and
• an EZ Pairing bar code appears on the terminal screen.
6. Scan the bar code with the ring scanner to pair the devices. The terminal emits a tone when a successful connection has
been made.
If your device does not support scanning the bar code from the terminal screen, capture an image of the terminal screen,
print the image, and then scan the bar code.

Modifying the ScanWedge Configuration File to Support EZ Pairing
1. If ScanWedge is not enabled, open the Power Tools main screen and tap ScanWedge once.
2. Open the ScanWedge.exm file in EZConfig on the terminal.
3. Select Comm from the sections.
4. Under the Key column, double-tap on Enable. Set the value to Yes and then tap OK.
5. Double-tap on LinkEZPairing. Set the value to Enable and then tap OK.
6. Select File > Save.
7. Select File > Tools > Launch Associated Application to restart ScanWedge.
8. Select File > Exit.
9. Open an application (e.g., Word Mobile) and scan a bar code with the ring scanner to test the pairing. The bar code
information should display on the terminal screen.

11 - 1

Accessing the EZ Pairing Menu
To access the application menu, tap the EZ Pairing icon near the bottom right corner of the Home screen. This icon is only
available if:
• the EZ Pairing application has been enabled (Start > Power Tools > EZ Pairing) and
• the Windows Default screen configuration on the terminal has been disabled (not selected) under Start > Settings >
Home > Items.
EZ Pairing Icon

Menu Options
Menu Item

Description

Launch Barcode

Displays the Mac Address bar code on the screen so you can re-initiate a pairing if the
connection was lost or initiate a pairing with a different device.

Start Service

Starts the service connection between the terminal and paired device without exiting the
EZ Pairing application.

Stop Service

Stops the service connection between the terminal and paired device without exiting the
EZ Pairing application.

About

Displays version and copyright information about EZ Pairing.

Exit

Exits the EZ Pairing application.

Modifying the EZ Pairing Configuration File
The EZPairing.exm configuration file is stored in the \Honeywell root folder of the terminal. This file specifies configuration
parameters for EZ Pairing and must not be moved. You can use the EZConfig Editor on your workstation or terminal to modify
the EZ Pairing service settings.
For more information on how to use the EZConfig Editor, see EZConfig Editor on the Workstation (PC) on page 4-1 or EZConfig
Editor on the Dolphin Terminal on page 3-1.

EZPairing.exm Service Settings Section
Key

Description

Debug

Enable or disable the creation of a EZ Pairing debug log. When enabled, information is
saved to /IPSM/EZPAIRING.LOG.

Device

Specify the type of ring scanner (e.g., Honeywell) to be paired with the Dolphin terminal.
The device type determines the required header for the EZ Pairing bar code.

COMPort

Specify the COM Port to use for data transmission. Auto Select enables or disables the
automatic selection of the COM Port. Refer to the terminal user's guide for additional
information on available ports.

Security

Select authentication and encryption security levels for connecting and communicating
with the remote device (ring scanner).

11 - 2

Key

Description

Passcode

Set the passcode for the remote device.

ShowStatus

Enable or disable status dialogs.

ShowError

Enable or disable error messages.

SoundConnect

Enable or disable audio notification when EZ Pairing connects or disconnects. Sounds are
set through the Connect and Disconnect entries in the Sound & Notification control panel
applet.

ScanWedgeOnConnect

Enable or disable automatic launching of ScanWedge on connect.

BarcodeOnDisconnect

Enable or disable automatic display of EZ Pairing bar code on disconnect.

BarcodeText

Set the user text displayed when the connection bar code is generated.
Enable or disable bar code rotation. The barcode text and the Close Barcode button do not
show when BarcodeRotate is enabled.
BarcodeRotate Disabled

BarcodeRotate Enabled

BarcodeRotate

BarcodeResident

Enable or disable keeping the EZ pairing bar code resident to improve performance. If
enabled, the bar code settings are not refreshed until the EZ Pairing applet is closed and
reloaded.

BarcodeType

Select the bar code type to be generated for initiating EZ Pairing.

AcceptOrDeny

Enable or disable the prompt to accept or deny incoming Bluetooth connections.

Command Line Arguments
The following command line arguments can be used in the CommandArgs key of the EZPairing section of the
PowerToolsMenu.exm file.
/quit

Initiates a shutdown of the application.

11 - 3

/start

Starts the Bluetooth service.

/stop

Stops the Bluetooth service.

/barcode

Generates an EZ Pairing connection bar code

/closebarcode

Closes an existing bar code.

/silent

Suppress the start up dialog messages.

11 - 4

12
Additional Power Tools

BattMon

When the BattMon application is enabled, the terminal LED indicates the charge status of the battery. The LED indicators are
located on the top, front panel of Dolphin terminals. Refer to the terminal User’s Guide for additional LED status information
applicable for your Dolphin model.
Note: The BattMon application is model dependent and may not appear on the Power Tools Main Window (see page 1-1) of
your terminal. Refer to the terminal User’s Guide for information on battery charge indicators applicable for your specific
Dolphin model.

To Enable BattMon
Tap the BattMon icon once. After initialization, the terminal LED indicates the charge status of the battery.
When the battery is at 100%, the LED lights solid green.
When the battery is charging the LED solid red.
Note: To start BattMon automatically after each Hard Reset (Cold Reboot), enable the BattMon Program section of the
Autorun.exm File (see page 6-1).

To Disable BattMon
Navigate to the Power Tools Main Window (see page 1-1), then tap the BattMon icon. Select Yes to close the application.

Keyboard Status

On Dolphin terminals equipped with physical keyboards, you can switch between alpha and numeric keyboard modes using key
combinations. When enabled, the Keyboard Status application displays a status icon in the Title bar at the top of the screen,
which indicates the active keyboard mode (e.g., alpha mode or numeric mode). Refer to the terminal User's Guide for additional
information on keyboard modes and key combinations applicable for your Dolphin model.
Note: The Keyboard Status application is model dependent and may not appear on the Power Tools Main Window (see page
1-1) of your terminal.
Indicator

Keyboard is in …
Alpha mode, lower case (CAPS lock off).
Alpha mode, upper case (CAPS lock on).
Numeric mode.

Note: The background color of the icon indicates if a modifier key (e.g., blue
or red
) is enabled. Refer to the terminal
User's Guide for additional information on modifier keys applicable for your Dolphin model.

To Enable Keyboard Status
Tap the Keyboard Status icon once.

12 - 1

To Disable Keyboard Status
Navigate to the Power Tools Main Window (see page 1-1), then tap the Keyboard Status icon once.

NoSIP

NoSIP toggles the Soft Input Panel (SIP) between enabled (on) or disabled (off). When NoSIP is enabled, the SIP (virtual keyboard) does not automatically pop-up over application windows and the SIP icon,
the terminal screen.

or

does not appear in the Tile bar on

To Enable NoSIP
Tap the NoSIP icon once to initialize NoSIP.
Note: To disable the SIP automatically after each hard reset, enable the NoSIP Program section of the Autorun.exm File
(see page 6-1).

To Disable NoSIP
Navigate to the Power Tools Main Window (see page 1-1), then tap the NoSIP icon. Select Yes to close the application.

Reboot

Tap the Reboot icon and then select Warm Boot to perform a Soft reset when:
• the terminal fails to respond,
• after installing software applications that require a re-boot, or
• after making changes to certain system settings, such as network cards.
Note: Refer to the terminal User’s Guide for additional information on the methods and types of resets supported by your Dolphin
model.

12 - 2

13
SysInfo

Overview

SysInfo provides a read-out of important system information including firmware versions, DLL versions, system parameters, as
well as network and radio information.

To See System Information
Tap the SysInfo icon once. SysInfo queries the system, compiles the data, and displays a read-only file on the SysInfo screen.
This information is gathered from the Dolphin terminal and changes only when the terminal’s configuration has changed. To
refresh the system information, go to File > Refresh. The system re-compiles system information.

To Save the System Information to a Text File
Tap File > Save to File. A file named “SYSINFO.txt” is generated and saved to the folder specified in the prompt.
To open the file, tap Start > File Explorer. Navigate to the \Honeywell folder. The SysInfo.txt file appears in the list. If you tap
on the SysInfo.txt file, the file opens in Word® Mobile. You cannot change system information by editing the text.

To Upload SYSINFO.txt to a Workstation
You can upload the SysInfo.txt file to a workstation via ActiveSync.
1. On the workstation, open Windows Explorer.
2. Navigate to the Mobile Device folder.
3. Double click My Windows Mobile-Based Device and navigate to the \Honeywell folder. The SysInfo.txt file appears
here.
4. Copy this file to your workstation.

13 - 1

13 - 2

14
EZMenu

Overview
EZMenu formats application windows to display and launch software programs on the terminal. For example, the Power Tools
Main Window is managed by the EZMenu application.
EZMenu consists of an EZMenu.exe
file located under \Program Files\Power Tools and EXM menu configuration
files (*Menu.exm). When you access an application window that has an associated menu configuration file, the EZMenu.exe file
uses the application window settings contained in the menu file (*Menu.exm) to format the window. By default, the EZMenu.exe
file is launched during AutoInstall.

Creating Menu Configuration Files
Samples of default menu configuration files are included when you download and install EZConfig for Mobility on your workstation. To create menu configuration files using the samples:
1. On the workstation click Start > Program Files > Honeywell Power Tools and Demos > EZConfig EXM Files.
2. Open a sample menu configuration file in EZConfig Editor.
3. Click on File > Save As and save the file with a new name ending in “Menu.exm.”
4. Modify the file. Refer to Menu Configuration File Sections.
5. Save or transfer the file to the terminal.

Modifying Menu Configuration Files
Menu configuration files
end in “*Menu.exm” and are located under the root \Honeywell folder. The files can be modified
in EZConfig Editor on the workstation or the terminal. If modified on the workstation, the *Menu.exm file must be deployed to the
terminal after editing.
For details about modifying EXM files in EZConfig Editor:
• See EZConfig Editor on the Workstation (PC) on page 4-1.
• See EZConfig Editor on the Dolphin Terminal on page 3-1.

Menu Configuration File Sections
Menu configuration files contain two basic sections: Settings and MenuEntries.
Both sections are locked, which means only their Values can be changed, not their
section names.

Settings
The Settings section defines general EZMenu settings. Click on each Key in
EZConfig Editor to display the available values.

MenuEntries
The MenuEntries section determines which programs appear on the application window. The MenuEntries section is locked, which means that you cannot
change its name or description; however, its child sections are not locked and
can have any name and description. Each child section is a program that
launches from the application window and must be at the same level underneath the MenuEntries section. The order of child sections from top to bottom
determines the order that the programs appear on the application window.

Child
Sections

14 - 1

Including an Exit Application Icon
Default EZMenu configuration files contain a child section named Exit under the MenuEntries section.
Enabling the Exit section places the Exit icon
on the application window. If you do not want an Exit application icon to
show, disable or delete the Exit child section under the MenuEntries section.

Start Options
Start Options define the required system parameters for a software application to launch. The following values can be
entered for the StartOption key, wherever it appears:
Option Name

The program launches if …

Category

DISABLED

Never, regardless of other startup options specified.

None

COLDBOOT

The terminal has performed a cold restart (hard reboot).

WARMBOOT

The terminal has performed a warm restart (soft reboot).

TOUCH

The terminal has a touch screen display installed.

NONTOUCH

The terminal doesn’t have a touch screen display installed.

BATCH

The terminal is a batch unit (no RF or internal modem cards installed).

RF

The terminal has an RF card installed (e.g., Cisco 802.11b).

GSM

The terminal has a GSM radio.

BT

The terminal has a Bluetooth radio.

UPHONE

The terminal has a UPHONE installed.

NOUPHONE

The terminal does not have a UPHONE installed.

MODEM

The terminal has an internal modem card installed.

CAMERA

The terminal has a camera installed

IMAGER

The terminal has an imager installed.

LASER

The terminal has a laser scanner installed.

BLIND

The terminal has no laser or imager installed.

ANYSCAN

The terminal has either an imager or a laser scanner installed.

Boot type

Touch Screen

Mobility

Scanner

14 - 2

Option Name

The program launches if …

RFON

The RF radio is Enabled.

GSMON

The GSM radio is enabled.

BTON

The Bluetooth radio is enabled.

RFGSMBTOFF

The RF, GSM, & Bluetooth radios are disabled.

xxKEY

The terminal has a xx-key keyboard.
Note: Input the key quantity in place of “xx” in xxKey (e.g., 35KEY, 43KEY
or 56KEY).

Category

Radio

NO_KEY

The terminal has no keyboard.

PNPID

The terminal has a card installed whose identification contains ALL of the
strings specified in the PNPID setting.

NONPNPID

The terminal doesn’t have a card installed whose identification contains
ALL of the strings specified in the PNPID setting.

Keyboard

Expansion Card

Multiple options can be specified for each category. For example, you can specify both 35KEY and 43KEY options to
request that the program run in either a 35- or 43-key keyboard terminal. Separate multiple options with commas.
To ignore a category, don’t specify any of its options.

Programming the Terminal to Boot to an Application Window
You can program the terminal to boot to a specific application window by modifying the Autorun.exm File (see page 6-1).
1. In EZConfig Editor, open Autorun.exm.
2. Open the Programs section and enable the EasyMenu section.
3. In the EasyMenu section, modify the Args key to call the EXM file of the application window. This is the path to the menu
configuration file.
By default, the Args key calls \honeywell\demosmenu.exm
4. Warm boot the terminal and verify that startup finishes on the application window.

14 - 3

14 - 4

15
Printing

Overview
Dolphin terminals contain two print utilities, BTPrint and Print Demo.

BTPrint
BTPrint allows you to print to a Bluetooth printer wirelessly via the command line, provided that the Bluetooth printer is set
up as a Bluetooth Favorite on the Dolphin terminal.
Call BTPrint.exe from the command line \Program Files\Power Tools\BTPrint.exe – with the path of the document as the command line argument.

Print Demo
All Dolphin terminals contain a Print Demo (Start > Demos > Print Demo) that prints a sample receipt or bar code to a
Bluetooth printer. The Print Demo calls the BTPrint.exe when printing to a Bluetooth device.
Note: You can also call EXE to print to a Bluetooth printer via command line.

15 - 1

15 - 2

16
Customer Support

Technical Assistance
If you need assistance installing or troubleshooting your device, please contact us by using one of the methods below:
Knowledge Base: www.hsmknowledgebase.com
Our Knowledge Base provides thousands of immediate solutions. If the Knowledge Base cannot help, our Technical Support
Portal (see below) provides an easy way to report your problem or ask your question.
Technical Support Portal: www.hsmsupportportal.com
The Technical Support Portal not only allows you to report your problem, but it also provides immediate solutions to your technical issues by searching our Knowledge Base. With the Portal, you can submit and track your questions online and send and
receive attachments.
Web form: www.hsmcontactsupport.com
You can contact our technical support team directly by filling out our online support form. Enter your contact details and the
description of the question/problem.
Telephone: www.honeywellaidc.com/locations
For our latest contact information, please check our website at the link above.

16 - 1

16 - 2

Honeywell Scanning & Mobility
9680 Old Bailes Road
Fort Mill, SC 29707
www.honeywellaidc.com

™

PWRTLS-8xW-UG Rev B
12/14



Source Exif Data:
File Type                       : PDF
File Type Extension             : pdf
MIME Type                       : application/pdf
PDF Version                     : 1.6
Linearized                      : No
Encryption                      : Standard V4.4 (128-bit)
User Access                     : Print, Extract, Print high-res
Author                          : Honeywell Scanning & Mobility
Create Date                     : 2014:12:11 16:44:08Z
Keywords                        : Windows Embedded Handheld 6.5, Dolphin, Power Tools, Honeywell
Modify Date                     : 2014:12:18 15:25:37-05:00
Subject                         : User’s Guide for Dolphin Power Tools with Windows Embedded Handheld 6.5
XMP Toolkit                     : Adobe XMP Core 5.4-c005 78.147326, 2012/08/23-13:03:03
Creator Tool                    : FrameMaker 12.0.3
Metadata Date                   : 2014:12:18 15:25:37-05:00
Format                          : application/pdf
Title                           : Dolphin Power Tools User’s with Windows Embedded Handheld 6.5 User’s Guide
Creator                         : Honeywell Scanning & Mobility
Description                     : User’s Guide for Dolphin Power Tools with Windows Embedded Handheld 6.5
Producer                        : Acrobat Distiller 11.0 (Windows)
Document ID                     : uuid:bcbbcbbc-24a6-4c43-b31f-4c45d610ce35
Instance ID                     : uuid:87f7fa7a-d6e5-43a0-835c-2d2e333dbbce
Page Mode                       : UseOutlines
Page Count                      : 94
EXIF Metadata provided by EXIF.tools

Navigation menu