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| | | | Building Xerces-C++ on iSeries (AS/400) | | | | |
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The following addresses the requirements and build of
Xerces-C++ natively on the iSeries.
| | | | Building Xerces-C++ library | | | | |
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Requirements:
- OS/400
QSHELL interpreter installed (install base option 30, operating system)
- OS/400 - Portable App Solutions Environment (PASE) installed (install base option 33, operating system)
- iSeries Tools for Developers, PRPQ 5799-PTL (these are the gnu utilities)
- For v5: WebSphere Development ToolsSet, 5722-WDS ( installed option 52, Compiler - ILE C++)
Recommendation:
- There is one option when building the XML4C parser on iSeries.
For code page translation, you can use the iSeries
native
Iconv400 support or icu as the transcoder plug in. If you choose ICU, follow the instructions
to build the ICU service program with the ICU download. Those instructions
are not included here. We recommend the use of Iconv400 .
Setup Instructions:
- Make sure that you have the requirements installed on your iSeries.
We highly recommend that you read the write up that accompanies the
iSeries Tools for Developers PRPQ. There are install instructions as well as
information about how modules, programs and service programs can be
created in Unix-like fashion using gnu utilities. Note that symbolic
links are use in the file system to point to actual iSeries
*module ,
*pgm and *srvpgm objects in libraries.
- Download the source zip file (NT version) directly to an iSeries IFS directory
after creating a directory (eg. /XML4Cxxx) and then extract
the source using a mapped drive. To do this, from Windows Explorer,
select Tools -> Map Network Drive. Then select an available drive (e.g. F:) and
specify an iSeries system you want to extract the zip file to
(e.g. \\<your iSeries name>\root). Click on Finish. Then find the .zip file
and right click on it and select Extract To ...
Then select the files you want to extract to the iSeries system.
- Create iSeries target library. This library will be the target
for the resulting modules and Xerces-C++ service program. You will
specify this library on the OUTPUTDIR environment variable
in step 4.
- Set up the following environment variables in your build process
(use
ADDENVVAR or WRKENVVAR CL commands):
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XERCESCROOT - <the full path up to the Xerces-C++ src directory, but not including 'src'>
MAKE - '/qibm/proddata/developertools/qsh/bin/gmake'
OUTPUTDIR - <identifies target iSeries library for *module, *pgm and *srvpgm objects>
PATH - '/usr/bin:/qibm/proddata/developertools/qsh/bin'
ICUROOT - (if using ICU) <the path of your ICU installation>
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- For v4r5m0 systems, add QCXXN, to your build process library list.
This results in the resolution of CRTCPPMOD used by the icc compiler.
You may want to put the environment variables and library list
setup instructions in a CL program so you will not forget these steps
during your build.
Configure
To configure the make files for an iSeries build do the following under Qsh:
| | | | qsh:
cd <full path to Xerces-C++>/src/xercesc
edit runConfigure and comment out the line:
getoptErr=`getopt p:c:x:dm:n:t:r:b:l:z:P:C:h $*`
runConfigure -p os400 -x icc -c icc -m inmem -t Iconv400 -r none | | | | |
Troubleshooting:
| | | | error: configure: error: installation or configuration problem:
C compiler cannot create executables. | | | | |
If during runConfigure you see the above error message, it
can mean one of a few things. Either QCXXN is not on your library
list OR the runConfigure cannot create the temporary
modules (CONFTest1 , etc) it uses to test out the compiler
options or PASE is not installed. The second reason happens because the test modules already exist
from a previous run of runConfigure . To correct the problem,
do the following:
| | | | CL:
DLTMOD <OUTPUTDIR library>/CONFT* and
DLTPGM <OUTPUTDIR library>/CONFT* | | | | |
Build
If runConfigure runs fine then do the following under Qsh to actually build the modules:
| | | | qsh:
cd <full path to Xerces-C++>/src/xercesc
gmake | | | | |
The above gmake should result in a service program being created
in your specified library and a symbolic link to that service program
placed in <path to Xerces-C++/lib>. It is highly possible that the
service program will not create however due to number of modules and path names,
see trouble shooting for the workaround.
After the service program has successfully been created and a link established,
you can either bind your XML application programs directly to the parser's service program
via the BNDSRVPGM option on the CRTPGM or
CRTSRVPGM command or you can specify a binding directory
on your icc command. To specify an archive file to bind to,
use the -L, -l binding options on icc. An archive file
on iSeries is a binding directory. To create an archive file, use
qar command. (see the iSeries Tools for Developers write up).
After building the Xerces-C service program, create a binding directory
by doing the following (note, this binding directory is used when building
the samples. Also, note that the .a file below can have a different
name based on the parser version (using apache xerces versioning)):
| | | | qsh:
cd <full path to Xerces-C++>/lib
qar -cuv libxerces-c26.0.so *.o
will results in
command = CRTBNDDIR BNDDIR(yourlib/libxercesc) TEXT('/yourlib/Xerces-C++/lib/libxerces-c26.0.so')
command = ADDBNDDIRE BNDDIR(yourlib/libxercesc) OBJ((yourlib/LIBXERCESC *SRVPGM) ) | | | | |
Troubleshooting gmake problem:
Due to the number of modules (the .o symbolic links) that make up the
service program and the path to get to those modules, the qshell ld request
to create the service program will likely fail because the request is too large,
you may get a message like the following at the end of the gmake request:
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FAILURE: spawnp() with errno = 3491
GMAKE: vfork: Argument list too long.
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If this is the case, you can manually create the service program by doing the following:
| | | | CL:
CRTSRVPGM (<OUTPUTDIR-library>/libxercesc) MODULE(<OUTPUTDIR-library>/*ALL) EXPORT(*ALL) TEXT('XML4C parser version xxx')
OPTION(*DUPPROC *DUPVAR *NOWARN) AUT(*USE)
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Note that if you manually create the service program you want to make sure that
you do not include any CONFT* modules or samples modules in the OUTPUTDIR library.
After the service program is manually created you can add a symbolic link to the
service program into the appropriate /lib directory by qsh:
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qsh:
cd <full path to Xerces-C++>/lib
ln -s /qsys.lib/<outputdir>.lib/libxercesc.srvpgm libxerces-c26.0.so
qar -cuv libxerces-c26.0.so *.o
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If you are on a v4 system using the ILE C++ PRPQ compiler (which is referred
to as the 'old' compiler) you will get compiler errors requiring a few manual changes
to the source:
- src/xercesc/dom/impl/DOMDocumentImpl.cpp
- src/xercesc/dom/impl/DOMDocumentImpl.hpp
- src/xercesc/dom/deprecated/DocumentImpl.cpp
- src/xercesc/dom/deprecated/DocumentImpl.hpp
- src/xercesc/validators/common/ContentSpecNode.hpp
Update the following routines in src/xercesc/dom/deprecated/DocumentImpl.cpp as follows:
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void DocumentImpl::setUserData(NodeImpl* n, void* data)
{
if (!userData && data)
#ifdef __OS400__
userData = new RefHashTableOf<char>(29, false, new HashPtr());
#else
userData = new RefHashTableOf<void>(29, false, new HashPtr());
#endif
if (!data && userData)
userData->removeKey((void*)n);
else
#ifdef __OS400__
userData->put((void*)n,(char*)data);
#else
userData->put((void*)n,data);
#endif
}
void* DocumentImpl::getUserData(NodeImpl* n)
{
if (userData)
#ifdef __OS400__
return (void*)userData->get((void*)n);
#else
return userData->get((void*)n);
#endif
else
return null;
}
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To update src/xercesc/dom/deprecated/DoumentImpl.hpp as follows:
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#ifdef __OS400__
RefHashTableOf<char> *userData;
#else
RefHashTableOf<void> *userData;
#endif
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Update the following routines in src/xercesc/dom/impl/DOMDocumentImpl.cpp as follows:
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void DOMDocumentImpl::setUserData(DOMNode* n, void* data)
{
if (!fUserData && data)
#ifdef __OS400__
fUserData = new (this) RefHashTableOf<char>(29, false, new (this) HashPtr());
#else
fUserData = new (this) RefHashTableOf<void>(29, false, new (this) HashPtr());
#endif
if (!data && fUserData)
fUserData->removeKey((void*)n);
else
#ifdef __OS400__
fUserData->put((void*)n,(char*)data);
#else
fUserData->put((void*)n,data);
#endif
}
void* DOMDocumentImpl::getUserData(const DOMNode* n) const
{
if (fUserData)
#ifdef __OS400__
return (void*) fUserData->get((void*)n);
#else
return fUserData->get((void*)n);
#endif
else
return 0;
}
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To update src/xercesc/dom/impl/DOMDocumentImpl.hpp:
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#ifdef __OS400__
RefHashTableOf<char> *fUserData;
#else
RefHashTableOf<void> *fUserData;
#endif
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Update validators/common/ContentSpecNode.hpp removing the following:
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#ifndef __OS400__
inline
#endif
ContentSpecNode::~ContentSpecNode()
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To build for transcoder ICU:
- Make sure you have an
ICUROOT path set up so that you can
find the ICU header files (usually /usr/local )
- Make sure you have created a binding directory (symbolic link)
in the file system so that you can bind the Xerces-C++ service program
to the ICU service program and specify that on the
EXTRA_LINK_OPTIONS
in src/xercesc/Makefile.incl (usually the default is a link
in /usr/local/lib ).
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| | | | Building Xerces-C++ on Macintosh | | | | |
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The Xerces-C++ Mac port has the key following attributes:
- Built atop CoreServices APIs and a limited number of Carbon APIs;
supports builds for both Mac OS Classic, Carbon, and Mac OS X systems.
- Has a Mac OS native transcoder that utilizes the built-in Mac OS Unicode
converter [MacOSUnicodeConverter].
- Has two Mac OS native netaccessor classes. The first is based on Carbon and
classic supported URLAccess and may be used in the broadest variety of
configurations [MacOSURLAccess]. The second [MacOSURLAccessCF] is based on
CFURLAccess, which requires either Carbon or Mac OS X CoreServices.framework.
This second NetAccessor is useful in Mac OS X configurations where reliance on
the full Carbon.framework would prohibit execution of the Xerces code in a
remote context that has no access to the GUI.
- Supports builds from Metroworks CodeWarrior, Apple Xcode,
and Mac OS X shell. Projects for Apple Project Builder are still included,
but may not be up to date (you may need to revise the projects to accomodate
recent file additions, deletions, or other changes in Xerces-C++).
| | | | Using Xerces-C++ with CodeWarrior | | | | |
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Xerces-C++ and CodeWarrior:
Xerces-C++ may be built with CodeWarrior under Mac OS Classic or Mac OS X. Since
the Xerces-C++ code contains some files with very long names, and earlier versions
of Mac OS, as well as earlier versions of CodeWarrior, did not support file names
longer than 32 characters, CodeWarrior 8.0 is required. If you are building Xerces-C++
on a Mac OS 9 system, be extremely carefull in how to unpack and/or transfer the Xerces-C++
files to that system, to ensure that their file names are not trancated in the process.
Installing Xerces-C++ for use with CodeWarrior:
Note: versions of CodeWarrior prior to 8.0 did not support HFS+ long file names,
and thus required special steps to alter the file names prior to use. This restriction
has been removed for CodeWarrior 8.0, and the projects now directly reference the unaltered
source tree. The project files in this release require CodeWarrior v8.0 or higher.
It is extemely important to ensure that you retrieve and unpack the sources
with a tool that does not truncate file names. The command line gnutar utility on Mac
OS X will do the right thing; older versions of StuffIt truncate names to 31 characters as
they unpack tar archives, though versions >= 7.0.1 seem to work, at least on Mac OS X.
The command line tool tar will truncate path names that get too long; gnutar should be
used instead. Failure to heed these warnings will result in broken projects.
Building Xerces-C++ with CodeWarrior:
- Run CodeWarrior (requires CodeWarrior 8.0 with support for long file names).
- Import the project Projects/MacOS/CodeWarrior/XercesLib/XercesLib.mcp.xml,
saving it back out to the same directory as XercesLib.mcp.
- This project contains five build targets that build all combinations of
classic, carbon, debug, and release versions, with an all target that
builds all of these. Build any or all of these.
Building Xerces-C++ Samples with CodeWarrior:
A CodeWarrior project is included that builds the DOMPrint sample. This may
be used as an example from which to build additional sample projects. Please
read the following important notes:
- Once again, it is required that you import the .xml version of the project
file, and save it back out.
- The Xerces-C++ sample programs are written to assume a command line interface.
To avoid making Macintosh-specific changes to these command line programs,
we have opted to instead require that you make a small extension to your
CodeWarrior runtime that supports such command line programs. Please read
and follow the usage notes in XercesSampleSupport/XercesSampleStartupFragment.c.
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| | | | Special usage information for Xerces-C++ on the Macintosh | | | | |
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Unpacking the tar archive
It is extemely important to ensure that you retrieve and unpack the sources
with a tool that does not truncate file names. The command line gnutar utility on Mac
OS X will do the right thing; older versions of StuffIt truncate names to 31 characters as
they unpack tar archives, though versions >= 7.0.1 seem to work, at least on Mac OS X.
The command line tool tar will truncate path names that get too long; gnutar should be
used instead. Failure to heed these warnings will result in broken projects.
File Path Specification
Apart from the build instructions, above, the most important note
about use of Xerces-C++ on the Macintosh is that Xerces-C++ expects
all filename paths to be specified in unix syntax. If running natively
under a Mac OS X system, this path will be the standard posix path as
expected by the shell. The easiest means of creating and interpreting these
paths will be through the routines XMLCreateFullPathFromFSRef
and XMLParsePathToFSRef as declared in the file
MacOSPlatformUtils.hpp . FSSpec variants of these
routines are also supplied.
Mac OS Version Compatibility
Xerces-C++ requires that several key components of the Mac OS
be relatively up to date. It should be readily compatible with any system
above Mac OS 9.0. Compatibility with earlier systems may perhaps be achieved
if you can install appropriate components.
Required components are:
- Unicode Converter and Text Encoding Converter. These provide the base
transcoding service used to support Xerces-C++ transcoding requirements.
Optional components are:
- URLAccess. Provides NetAccessor support to Xerces-C++ for use in
fetching network referenced entities. If URLAccess is not installed, any
such references will fail; the absence of URLAccess, however, will not
in itself prevent Xerces-C++ from running. If Xerces-C++ is
configured to use MacOSURLAccessCF, then URLAccess (and thus Carbon)
is not required, but CoreServices.framework is required for Mac OS X.
- Multiprocessing library. Provides mutual exclusion support. Once again,
the routines will back down gracefully if Multiprocessing support is not
available.
- HFS+ APIs. If HFS+ APIs are available, all file access is performed
using the HFS+ fork APIs to support long file access, and to support
long unicode compliant file names. In the absence of HFS+ APIs, classic
HFS APIs are used instead.
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