Connection Information

To perform the requested action, WordPress needs to access your web server. Please enter your FTP credentials to proceed. If you do not remember your credentials, you should contact your web host.

Connection Type

Building a client/server application with commands – PB Docs 2022 – PowerBuilder Library

Building a client/server application with commands – PB Docs 2022

Building a client/server application with commands

Instead of building the Application project from the
PowerBuilder IDE, you can also build the project using the PBAutoBuild220.exe tool.

PBAutoBuild220.exe is a
standalone tool that can compile and deploy Application projects using
DOS commands on Windows. It can automate the entire build and deploy
process without requiring PowerBuilder IDE installed or any
PowerBuilder license running; it is free for use! But it requires
PowerBuilder Runtime to run, so it must be installed to a machine
where PowerBuilder Runtime will also be installed. To install
PBAutoBuild220.exe, run the PowerBuilder Installer and select PowerBuilder Utilities in the Programs tab.

For step-by-step guidance, refer to Tutorial:
Building your client/server application with commands
. The
PBAutoBuild220 command can also
integrate with Jenkins to automate the
build process for Application projects. Refer to the Jenkins user
documentations
for how to use Jenkins.

To build the Application project with commands:

  1. Export the configurations of the Application project to the
    JSON file.

    1. Click the Export Build
      File
      button (export.png) in the toolbar if the Application
      project painter opens, or right click the Application project
      object (or target or workspace) and then select Export Build File.

    2. In the Export Build
      File
      dialog box, specify where to save the exported
      file and how to overwrite the settings if the file already
      exists. Click Export.

      If you right click the workspace and then select
      Export Build File, you can
      select one or more targets to export the build file for, and
      then select one or more project types to export if there are
      more than one type of project objects in the selected
      target(s). If you select more than one project type, the
      corresponding project objects will be exported to the build
      file > “Projects” > [project object name]. If the
      selected targets contain project objects with the same name,
      only the object listed last will be added to the build
      file.

      Select “Export the Git/SVN SourceControl settings (if
      exists) from the project” if you want to export the Git/SVN
      source control settings (such as login username, password,
      source code path etc.) to the build file. The password will be
      encrypted automatically.

      Specify how to overwrite the source code settings if the
      build file already contains such settings. Existing settings
      will be kept by default. If you want to export the current
      settings, such as login username, password (encrypted), source
      code path etc. to the build file, you should select “Clear
      existing settings”. If you have selected “Clear existing
      settings”, while have not selected “Export the Git/SVN
      SourceControl settings (if exists) from the project”, then
      existing settings will be removed and no settings will be
      stored.

      Specify how to overwrite the build job settings and
      project settings if the build file already contains such
      settings. Such settings will be cleared by default.

      export_build_file_exe.png

    3. Click Export.

    The exported JSON file includes every single setting that is
    required for compiling, packaging and deploying the Application
    project. It also contains a “BuildPlan” block which provides
    additional configurations. For more, see About the build
    file
    .

  2. Execute the PBAutoBuild220.exe file and the JSON file
    in a command line to automatically build the project. For
    example,

    The PBAutoBuild220.exe file
    supports the following parameters:

    • /f — specify the configuration file. The configuration
      file (in JSON format) can be directly exported from the
      PowerBuilder IDE, as described in step 1.

    • /l — write the logging information to a file.

    • /le — write the error information to a file. For
      example,

      The relative path specified in the parameter is relative
      to the path of the configuration file. In the above example,
      the log files will be generated under the same path as the
      configuration file.

    • /p — specify the password for logging into SVN or Git.
      This will generate an encrypted value based on the password.
      If the password contains the double quotation mark (“), use
      the escape character ” to replace “.

    • /v — specify the product version (property displayed
      for executable).

      /fv — specify the file version (property displayed for
      executable).

      /vn — specify the product version (executable version
      used by installer).

      /fvn — specify the file version (executable version
      used by installer).

      You can specify for multiple projects at the same time,
      in this format:
      “[projectname1]:1.0.0.1;[projectname2]:1.2.3.4”. Projects are
      separated with semicolons (“;”). For example,

      If no project name is specified, the version number will
      be used by all projects. For example,

      The version numbers specified by parameters take
      precedence over those specified in the build file.

    • /h or /? — display the help information. For
      example,

  3. Check if PBAutoBuild220 command is successful via
    errorlevel. For more information, refer to
    Verifying
    if PBAutoBuild is successful
    .

Note

The handling of PB.INI is the same in PBAutoBuild and
OrcaScript:

If the application relies on a property in PB.INI to run, for
example, [RichText] PageSizeAsControlSize=1, the user needs to copy
the PB.INI file to the directory where the application executable
resides.

If the compilation of PBAutoBuild or OrcaScript relies on a
property in PB.INI, for example, [PB] DashInIdentifiers=0, the user
needs to copy the PB.INI file to the directory where
PBAutoBuild220.exe or pbc220.exe resides.


Document get from Powerbuilder help
Thank you for watching.
Was this article helpful?
Subscribe
Notify of
guest
0 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x