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idlj(1)                                                                                              idlj(1)



NAME
       idlj - The IDL-to-Java Compiler (RMI-IIOP version)

       idlj generates Java bindings from a given IDL file.

SYNOPSIS
       idlj [ options ] idl-file

       where  idl-file  is  the  name  of a file containing Interface Definition Language (IDL) definitions.
       Options may appear in any order, but must precede the idl-file.

DESCRIPTION
       The IDL-to-Java Compiler generates the Java bindings for a given IDL file.  For binding details,  see
       the  OMG  IDL  to Java Language Mapping Specification. Some previous releases of the IDL-to-Java com-piler compiler
       piler were named idltojava.

Emitting Client and Server Bindings
       To generate Java bindings for an IDL file named My.idl:

              idlj My.idl

       This generates the client-side bindings and is equivalent to:

              idlj -fclient My.idl

       The client-side bindings do not include the server-side skeleton. If you want to generate the server-side serverside
       side bindings for the interfaces:

              idlj -fserver My.idl

       Server-side  bindings  include the client-side bindings plus the skeleton, all of which are POA (that
       is, Inheritance Model) classes.  If you want to generate both client and  server-side  bindings,  use
       one of the following (equivalent) commands:

              idlj -fclient -fserver My.idl
              idlj -fall My.idl

       There are two possible server-side models: the Inneritance Model and the Tie Model.

       The  default  server-side  model  is  the  Portable Servant Inheritance Model.  Given an interface My
       defined in My.idl, the file MyPOA.java is generated. You must provide the implementation for  My  and
       it must inherit from MyPOA.

       MyPOA.java  is a stream-based skeleton that extends org.omg.PortableServer.Servant and implements the
       InvokeHandler interface and the operations interface associated with the IDL interface  the  skeleton
       implements.

       The  PortableServer  module for the Portable Object Adapter (POA) defines the native Servant type. In
       the Java programming language, the Servant type is mapped to the Java  org.omg.PortableServer.Servant
       class. It serves as the base class for all POA servant implementations and provides a number of meth-ods methods
       ods that may be invoked by the application programmer, as well as methods which are  invoked  by  the
       POA itself and may be overridden by the user to control aspects of servant behavior.

       Another option for the Inheritance Model is to use the -oldImplBase flag in order to generate server-side serverside
       side bindings that are compatible with older version of the Java programming language (prior to  J2SE
       1.4). To generate server-side bindings that are backwards compatible:

              idlj -fclient -fserver -oldImplBase My.idl
              idlj -fall -oldImplBase My.idl

       Given  an  interface  My defined in My.idl, the file _MyImpleBase.java is generated. You must provide
       the implementation for My and it must inherit from _MyImplBase.

       The other server-side model is called the Tie Model. This is a delegation model. Because  it  is  not
       possible  to  generate  ties  and skeletons at the same time, they must be generated separately.  The
       following commands generate the bindings for the Tie Model:

              idlj -fall My.idl
              idlj -fallTIE My.idl

       For the interface My, the second command generates MyPOATie.java.  The constructor to MyPOATie  takes
       a  delegate.   You must provide the implementation for delegate, but it does not have to inherit from
       any other class, only the interface MyOperations.  But to use it with the ORB,  you  must  wrap  your
       implementation within MyPOATie.  For instance:

              MyImpl myImpl = new MyImpl ();
              My POATie tie = new MyPOATie (myImpl);
              orb.connect (tie);

       You  might  want to use the Tie model instead of the typical Inheritance model if your implementation
       must inherit from some other implementation. Java allows any number  of  interface  inheritance,  but
       there is only one slot for class inheritance. If you the inheritance model, that slot is used up . By
       using the Tie Model, that slot is freed up for your own use. The drawback is  that  it  introduces  a
       level of indirection: one extra method call occurs when invoking a method.

       To generate server-side, Tie model bindings that are compatible with older version of the IDL to Java
       language mapping in versions of J2SE before 1.4.

              idlj -oldImplBase -fall My.idl
              idlj -oldImplBase -fallTIE My.idl

       For the interface My, this will generate My_Tie.java.  The constructor to My_Tie takes a  impl.   You
       must  provide the implementation for impl, but it does not have to inherit from any other class, only
       the interface HelloOperations.  But to use it with the ORB, you must wrap your implementation  within
       My_Tie.  For instance:

              MyImpl myImpl = new MyImpl ();
              My_Tie tie = new My_Tie (myImpl);
              orb.connect (tie);


Specifying Alternate Locations for Emitted Files
       If  you  want to direct the emitted files to a directory other than the current directory, invoke the
       compiler as:

              idlj -td /altdir My.idl

       For the interface My, the bindings will be emitted to /altdir/My.java, etc., instead of ./My.java.

Specifying Alternate Locations for Include Files
       If My.idl included another idl file, MyOther.idl, the compiler assumes that  MyOther.idl  resides  in
       the local directory. If it resides in /includes, for example, then you would invoke the compiler with
       the following command:

              idlj -i /includes My.idl

       If My.idl also included Another.idl that resided in /moreIncludes, for example, then you would invoke
       the compiler with the following command:

              idlj -i /includes -i /moreIncludes My.idl

       Since  this form of include can become irritatingly long, another means of indicating to the compiler
       where to search for included files is provided. This technique is similar to the idea of an  environ-ment environment
       ment variable. Create a file named idl.config in a directory that is listed in your CLASSPATH. Inside
       of idl.config, provide a line with the following form:

              includes=/includes;/moreIncludes

       The compiler will find this file and read in the includes list. Note that in this example the separa-tor separator
       tor  character  between  the two directories is a semicolon (;). This separator character is platform
       dependent. On NT it is a semicolon, on Solaris it is a colon, etc.  For more information on includes,
       read the CLASSPATH documentation.

Emitting Bindings for Include Files
       By default, only those interfaces, structs, etc, that are defined in the idl file on the command line
       have Java bindings generated for them. The types defined in included files are  not  generated.   For
       example, assume the following two idl files:

       My.idl

              #include <MyOther.idl>
              interface My
              {
              };

       MyOther.idl

              interface MyOther
              {
              };

       The following command will only generate the java bindings for My:

              idlj My.idl

       To  generate  all  of  the types in My.idl and all of the types in the files that My.idl includes (in
       this example, MyOther.idl), use the following command:

              idlj -emitAll My.idl

       There is a caveat to the default rule.  #include statements which appear at global scope are  treated
       as  described. These #include statements can be thought of as import statements.  #include statements
       which appear within some enclosing scope are treated as true #include statements,  meaning  that  the
       code  within the included file is treated as if it appeared in the original file and, therefore, Java
       bindings are emitted for it. Here is an example:

       My.idl

              #include <MyOther.idl>
              interface My
              {
                #include <Embedded.idl>
              };

       MyOther.idl

              interface MyOther
              {
              };

       Embedded.idl

              enum E {one, two, three};

       Running the following command:

              idlj My.idl

       will generate the following list of Java files:


       Notice that MyOther.java was not generated because it is defined in  an  import-like  #include.   But
       E.java  was generated because it was defined in a true #include.  Also notice that since Embedded.idl
       was included within the scope of the interface My, it appears within the  scope  of  My  (that  is,in
       MyPackage).

       If  the  -emitAll  flag  had  been used in the previous example, then all types in all included files
       would be emitted.

Inserting Package Prefixes
       Suppose that you work for a company named ABC that has constructed the following IDL file:

       Widgets. idl
              module Widgets
              {
                interface W1 {...};
                interface W2 {...};
              };

       Running this file through the IDL-to-Java compiler will place the Java bindings for W1 and W2  within
       the package Widgets. But there is an industry convention that states that a company's packages should
       reside within a package named com.<companyname>.  The Widgets package is not good enough.  To  follow
       convention, it should be com.abc.Widgets.  To place this package prefix onto the Widgets module, exe-cute execute
       cute the following:

              idlj -pkgPrefix Widgets com.abc Widgets.idl

       If you have an IDL file which includes Widgets.idl, the -pkgPrefix flag must appear in  that  command
       also.  If  it  does  not,  then  your  IDL  file  will be looking for a Widgets package rather than a
       com.abc.Widgets package.

       If you have a number of these packages that require prefixes, it might be easier to place  them  into
       the idl.config file described above. Each package prefix line should be of the form:

              PkgPrefix.<type>=<prefix>

       So the line for the above example would be:

              PkgPrefix.Widgets=com.abc

       The use of this options does not affect the Repository ID.

Defining Symbols Before Compilation
       You  may  need to define a symbol for compilation that is not defined within the IDL file, perhaps to
       include debugging code in the bindings. The command

              idlj -d MYDEF My.idl

       is the equivalent of putting the line #define MYDEF inside My.idl.

Preserving Pre-Existing Bindings
       If the Java binding files already exist, the -keep flag will keep the compiler from overwriting them.
       The  default is to generate all files without considering if they already exist. If you've customized
       those files (which you should not do unless you are very comfortable with their contents),  then  the
       -keep option is very useful. The command

              idlj -keep My.idl

       emit all client-side bindings that do not already exist.

Viewing Progress of Compilation
       The  IDL-to-Java compiler will generate status messages as it progresses through its phases of execu-tion. execution.
       tion. Use the -v option to activate this "verbose" mode:

              idlj -v My.idl

       By default the compiler does not operate in verbose mode.

Displaying Version Information
       To display the build version of the IDL-to-Java compiler, specify the -version option on the command-line: commandline:
       line:

              idlj -version

       Version  information  also  appears  within  the  bindings  generated by the compiler. Any additional
       options appearing on the command-line are ignored.

OPTIONS
       -d symbol
              This is equivalent to the following line in an IDL file:

              #define symbol

       -emitAll
              Emit all types, including those found in #include files.

       -fside Defines what bindings to emit.  side is one of client, server, serverTIE, all,  or  allTIE.The
              -fserverTIEand -fallTIE options cause delegate model skeletons to be emitted. Assumes -fclient
              if the flag is not specified.

       -i include-path
              By default, the current directory is scanned for included  files.  This  option  adds  another
              directory.

       -keep  If  a file to be generated already exists, do not overwrite it.  By default it is overwritten.

       -noWarn
              Supresses warning messages.

       -oldImplBase
              Generates skeletons compatible with old (pre-1.4) JDK ORBs. By default,  the  POA  Inheritance
              Model  server-side  bindings  are  generated. This option provides backward-compatibility with
              older versions of the Java programming language by generating server-side  bindings  that  are
              ImplBase Inheritance Model classes.

       -pkgPrefix type prefix
              Wherever type is encountered at file scope, prefix the generated Java package name with prefix
              for all files generated for that type. The type is the simple name of either a top-level  mod-ule, module,
              ule, or an IDL type defined outside of any module.

       -pkgTranslate type package
              Wherever  the  type or module name type is encountered, replace it in the with package for all
              files in the generated Java package. Note that pkgPrefix changes are made first.  type is  the
              simple  name  of  either a top-level module, or an IDL type defined outside of any module, and
              must match the full package name exactly. Also note that the following package names cannot be
              translated:


               org

               org.omg or any subpackages of org.omg

              Any attempt to translate these packages will result in uncompilable code, and the use of these
              packages as the first argument after -pkgTranslate will be treated as an error.

       -skeletonName xxx%yyy
              Use xxx%yyy as the pattern for naming the skeleton. The defaults are


               %POA for the POA base class (
                -fserver or -fall)

               %ImplBase for the oldImplBase class (
                -oldImplBase and ( -fserver or -fall))

       -td dir
              Use dir for the output directory instead of the current directory.

       -tieName xxx%yyy
              Name the tie according to the pattern. The defaults are:


               %POATie for the POA tie base class (
                -fserverTie or -fallTie)

               %_Tie for the
                oldImplBase tie class ( -oldImplBase and ( -fserverTie or -fallTie))

       -nowarn,-verbose
              Verbose mode.

       -version
              Display version information and terminate.

       See the Description section for more option information.

Restrictions
        Escaped identifiers in the global scope may not have the
         same spelling as IDL primitive types, Object, or ValueBase.  This is because the  symbol  table  is
         pre-loaded  with  these  identifiers;  allowing them to be redefined would overwrite their original
         definitions. (Possible permanent restriction).

        The fixed IDL type is not supported.



                                                10 March 2001                                        idlj(1)

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