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About building PowerBuilder targets – PB Docs 115 – PowerBuilder Library

About building PowerBuilder targets – PB Docs 115

About building PowerBuilder targets

You can build many types of targets with PowerBuilder. For
traditional client/server applications, you need to create
an executable version of your target that you can deploy to users’ computers.
If you are building a distributed application with PowerBuilder,
you typically build a client executable file and a server component
that you can deploy to a transaction server. For some types of distributed
applications, you need to build proxy objects.

Using the Project painter

You use the Project painter to create and maintain PowerBuilder
projects that build all these different objects. The Project painter
allows you to streamline the generation of the files your target
needs and to rebuild easily when you make changes. There is a wizard
to help you set up each project type.

Table 34-1 lists
the types of projects you can create and what you can build using
the project.

Table 34-1: Project types
Project What it builds
Application An executable file and optional dynamic
libraries.
Application Server Component One or more application server components
based on custom class user objects that are deployed to a J2EE-compliant
application server and can be used with any application server client
or component.
Application Server Proxy One or more proxy objects (stubs) that
can be used by a PowerBuilder client to access functions in application
server components. The application server components can be built
with PowerBuilder or another development tool.
EAServer Component One or more EAServer components
based on custom class user objects that are deployed to EAServer and can be used with
any EAServer client or component.
EAServer Proxy One or more proxy objects (stubs) that
can be used by a PowerBuilder client to access functions in EAServer components. The EAServer components can be built
with PowerBuilder or another development tool.
EJB Client Proxy One or more proxy objects (stubs) that
can be used by a PowerBuilder client to access functions in an EJB component
on an application server.
.NET Assembly A .NET assembly containing one or more
custom class user objects.
.NET Web Forms Application An application that can be deployed to
ASP.NET.
.NET Web Service A .NET Web service containing one or
more custom class user objects.
.NET Windows Forms Application An application that can be deployed to
.NET as a Windows Forms application and optionally published to
a Web, file, or FTP server as a smart client application.
Web DW Container An EAServer component
that contains your DataWindow definitions and is deployed to EAServer. It uses the interface of
the generic Web DataWindow server component.
Web Service Proxy A proxy object that can be used by a
PowerBuilder client to invoke a Web service defined in a WSDL (Web
Services Description Language) file.

For how to create a new project, see “Creating a project”. For more
information about .NET projects, see Deploying Applications
and Components to .NET

.

Building executable files

If you are building an executable file, there are two basic
ways to package the application:

  • As one standalone executable file that contains all the objects
    in the application
  • As an executable file and one or more dynamic libraries
    that contain objects that are linked at runtime

Read the chapter on packaging your application for deployment
in Application Techniques
to get an understanding
of the best way for you to package the application. Then follow
the procedures in “Defining an executable application
project”
to implement your strategy.

Building other types of targets

For an overview of how you use the Project painter to build
different types of components, see “Building components, proxies,
and .NET targets”
.

Providing other resources

You might need to provide additional resources that your target
uses, such as bitmaps and icons. There are two ways to provide resources:

  • Distribute them separately
  • Include them in a PowerBuilder resource file (PBR)
    and build an executable, a dynamic library, or a component using
    the resource file

For more information, see “Distributing resources “.

Building the workspace

You can build and deploy all the targets in your workspace
using buttons on the PowerBar, pop-up menus in the System Tree,
or a command line. For more information, see “Building workspaces”.


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