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sems/apps/xmlrpc2di/xmlrpc++
Peter Lemenkov 08a5a3bfce
Added workarounfd for weird behaviour of CMake 2.4 while handling
16 years ago
..
src Added workarounfd for weird behaviour of CMake 2.4 while handling 16 years ago
test added xmlrpc++ library source, as xmlrpc++ is not any more in debian testing and unfortunately had gentoo eol as well. 18 years ago
.cvsignore added xmlrpc++ library source, as xmlrpc++ is not any more in debian testing and unfortunately had gentoo eol as well. 18 years ago
CMakeLists.txt initial commit of cmake files 17 years ago
COPYING added xmlrpc++ library source, as xmlrpc++ is not any more in debian testing and unfortunately had gentoo eol as well. 18 years ago
Makefile added xmlrpc++ library source, as xmlrpc++ is not any more in debian testing and unfortunately had gentoo eol as well. 18 years ago
README.html added xmlrpc++ library source, as xmlrpc++ is not any more in debian testing and unfortunately had gentoo eol as well. 18 years ago
XmlRpc.sln added xmlrpc++ library source, as xmlrpc++ is not any more in debian testing and unfortunately had gentoo eol as well. 18 years ago
XmlRpc.vcproj added xmlrpc++ library source, as xmlrpc++ is not any more in debian testing and unfortunately had gentoo eol as well. 18 years ago
xmlrpc.dsp added xmlrpc++ library source, as xmlrpc++ is not any more in debian testing and unfortunately had gentoo eol as well. 18 years ago
xmlrpc.dsw added xmlrpc++ library source, as xmlrpc++ is not any more in debian testing and unfortunately had gentoo eol as well. 18 years ago

README.html

<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN">
<html>
	<head>
		<title>XmlRpc++ Library</title>
		<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=iso-8859-1">
		<meta http-equiv="Content-language" content="en-US">
		<meta name="author" content="Chris Morley">
		<meta name="copyright" content="Copyright © 2003 by Chris Morley">
	</head>
	<body>
		<H3>XmlRpc++ Library</H3>
		<P>This is version 0.7 of XmlRpc++, an implementation of the <A HREF="http://www.xmlrpc.org">
				XmlRpc protocol</A> written in C++, based upon Shilad Sen's excellent <A HREF="http://py-xmlrpc.sourceforge.net">
				py-xmlrpc library</A>. XmlRpc++ is designed to make it easy to incorporate 
			XmlRpc client and server support into C++ applications. Or use both client and 
			server objects in your app for easy peer-to-peer support.
		</P>
		<H3>Features</H3>
		<UL>
			<li>
				<STRONG>Easy</STRONG> &nbsp; This library is easy to incorporate into C++ 
				applications. No other libraries are required, other than your system's socket 
				libraries. Simple XML parsing and HTTP support are built in.<br>
			<li>
				<STRONG>Fast</STRONG> &nbsp; All IO is non-blocking, so a slow client or 
				network will not slow down the server.<br>
			<li>
				<STRONG>Portable</STRONG> Written in standard C++ to the POSIX and Windows 
				sockets APIs. You do need a fairly recent compiler (g++ 3.1 or MSVC++ .Net or 
				MSVC++ 6 with the <A href="http://www.dinkumware.com/vc_fixes.html">STL patches</A>.)
			</li>
			<li>
				<STRONG>Free</STRONG> &nbsp; This library is released under the <a href="http://www.gnu.org/">
					GNU</a> <a href="http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/lesser.html">LGPL</a>.<br>
				<br>
			</li>
		</UL>
		<P>&nbsp;</P>
		<h3>Changes</h3>
		<UL>
			<li>
				Better handling of fault responses: server methods can throw an 
				XmlRpcException to return a fault and XmlRpcClient has a new method to 
				test whether the last response was a fault.</li>
			<li>
				Support for system.listMethods and system.methodHelp from the introspection 
				API.</li>
			<li>
				Support for system.multicall to process multiple requests in a single transaction.</li>
			<li>
				Fixed a problem in the XmlRpcServer destructor (it should not have been deleting the methods).</li>
			<li>
				The server ensures a valid result value is returned even if the method does not
				set the result. The default result is an empty string.</li>
			<li>
				Doxygen comments in header files and a doc target in the makefile.</li>
		</UL>
		<P>
		<P>&nbsp;</P>
		<h3>Installation</h3>
		<P>
			There are VC++ 6 and VC++ .Net project files building on Windows. If you are 
			using VC++ 6, you should apply SP3 and the fixes at <A href="http://www.dinkumware.com/vc_fixes.html">
				http://www.dinkumware.com/vc_fixes.html</A>. Be sure to set the appropriate 
			code generation switches. In particular, ensure that the runtime library 
			(single/multi-threaded, static library/DLL) used is the same for the XmlRpc++ 
			code and whatever application it will be linked to.</P>
		<P>
			For Linux, Solaris, and other Unix-like platforms there is a GNU Makefile which 
			can be edited to suit your system. Specify your C++ compiler, compiler flags, 
			and your system's socket libraries.
		</P>
		<p>In the test directory there are various test programs that are built by default. 
			To verify that the library built correctly, you can start the HelloServer 
			example:<br>
			<pre>HelloServer 8000
			</pre>
			and the HelloClient example in another terminal window:<br>
			<pre>HelloClient localhost 8000
			</pre>
		<P>
			You should see two Hello messages and a sum displayed (amongst a bunch of debug 
			output). You can also try the XML server validator program (eg, "Validator 80") 
			and then attempt to connect to it from <A href="http://validator.xmlrpc.com">http://validator.xmlrpc.com</A>
			(if you have access to the internet and are not behind a firewall etc).
		</P>
		<H3>Author</H3>
		<P><A href="mailto:cmorley@users.sourceforge.net">Chris Morley</A>
		</P>
		<P>Although no code was re-used, the design and structure of the library is based 
			upon the py-xmlrpc library implementation.<BR>
			The base64 decoder/encoder is by <A href="mailto:lostd@ukr.net">Konstantin 
				Pilipchuk</A>.</P>
		<P></P>
		<H3>License</H3>
		<p>A full copy of the LGPL license is included in the file COPYING. The source code 
			is Copyright (c) 2002-2003 by Chris Morley. This library is free software; you 
			can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General 
			Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2.1 
			of the License, or (at your option) any later version. This library is 
			distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; 
			without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A 
			PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU Lesser General Public License for more details. 
			You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public License along 
			with this library; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59 
			Temple Place, Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307 USA
		</p>
	</body>
</html>