diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'docs/tutorials/005/page06.html')
-rw-r--r-- | docs/tutorials/005/page06.html | 146 |
1 files changed, 0 insertions, 146 deletions
diff --git a/docs/tutorials/005/page06.html b/docs/tutorials/005/page06.html deleted file mode 100644 index 5034104d33f..00000000000 --- a/docs/tutorials/005/page06.html +++ /dev/null @@ -1,146 +0,0 @@ -<!-- $Id$ --> -<HTML> -<HEAD> - <META HTTP-EQUIV="Content-Type" CONTENT="text/html; charset=iso-8859-1"> - <META NAME="GENERATOR" CONTENT="Mozilla/4.04 [en] (X11; I; Linux 2.0.32 i486) [Netscape]"> - <META NAME="Author" CONTENT="Billy Quinn"> - <META NAME="Description" CONTENT="A first step towards using ACE productively"> - <TITLE>ACE Tutorial 005</TITLE> -</HEAD> -<BODY TEXT="#000000" BGCOLOR="#FFFFFF" LINK="#000FFF" VLINK="#FF0F0F"> - -<CENTER><B><FONT SIZE=+2>ACE Tutorial 005</FONT></B></CENTER> - -<CENTER><B><FONT SIZE=+2>On the road to a multithreaded server</FONT></B></CENTER> - - -<P> -<HR WIDTH="100%"> - -<P>Before we go, I wanted you to see the <A HREF="Makefile">Makefile</A>. - -<P> -<HR WIDTH="100%"> -<PRE> -#---------------------------------------------------------------------------- -# $Id$ -#---------------------------------------------------------------------------- - -#---------------------------------------------------------------------------- -# Local macros -#---------------------------------------------------------------------------- - -# You can generally find a Makefile in the ACE examples, tests or the library -# itself that will satisfy our application needs. This one was taken from -# one of the examples. - - # Define the name of the binary we want to create. There has to be - # a CPP file $(BIN).cpp but it doesn't necessarily have to have your - # main() in it. Most of the time, though, it will. -BIN = server - - # Few applications will have a single source file. We use the FILES - # macro to build up a list of additional files to compile. Notice - # that we leave off the extension just as with BIN -FILES = -FILES += client_handler - - # The BUILD macro is used by the ACE makefiles. Basically, it tells - # the system what to build. I don't really know what VBIN is other - # than it is constructed from the value of BIN. Just go with it... -BUILD = $(VBIN) - - # Here we use some GNU make extensions to build the SRC macro. Basically, - # we're just adding .cpp to the value of BIN and for each entry of the - # FILES macro. -SRC = $(addsuffix .cpp,$(BIN)) $(addsuffix .cpp,$(FILES)) - - # This is used by my Indent target below. It's not a part of standard - # ACE and you don't need it yourself. -HDR = *.h - -#---------------------------------------------------------------------------- -# Include macros and targets -#---------------------------------------------------------------------------- - - # This is where the real power lies! These included makefile components - # are similar to the C++ templates in ACE. That is, they do a tremendous - # amount of work for you and all you have to do is include them. - # As a matter of fact, in our project, I created a single file named - # "<font color=green>app.mk</font>" that includes all of these. Our project makefiles then just - # need to include app.mk to get everything they need. - -include $(ACE_ROOT)/include/makeinclude/wrapper_macros.GNU -include $(ACE_ROOT)/include/makeinclude/macros.GNU -include $(ACE_ROOT)/include/makeinclude/rules.common.GNU -include $(ACE_ROOT)/include/makeinclude/rules.nonested.GNU -include $(ACE_ROOT)/include/makeinclude/rules.bin.GNU -include $(ACE_ROOT)/include/makeinclude/rules.local.GNU - -#---------------------------------------------------------------------------- -# Local targets -#---------------------------------------------------------------------------- - - # Sometimes I like to reformat my code to make it more readable. This is - # more useful for the comments than anything else. Unfortunately, the - # "<font color=green>indent</font>" program doesn't quite grok C++ so I have to post-process it's - # output just a bit. -Indent : # - for i in $(SRC) $(HDR) ; do \ - indent -npsl -l80 -fca -fc1 -cli0 -cdb < $$i | \ - sed -e 's/: :/::/g' \ - -e 's/^.*\(public:\)/\1/' \ - -e 's/^.*\(protected:\)/\1/' \ - -e 's/^.*\(private:\)/\1/' \ - -e 's/:\(public\)/ : \1/' \ - -e 's/:\(protected\)/ : \1/' \ - -e 's/:\(private\)/ : \1/' \ - > $$i~ ;\ - mv $$i~ $$i ;\ - done - - # One of the targets in the ACE makefiles is "<font color=green>depend</font>". It will invoke - # your compiler in a way that will generate a list of dependencies for - # you. This is a great thing! Unfortunately, it puts all of that mess - # directly into the Makefile. I prefer my Makefile to stay clean and - # uncluttered. The perl script referenced here pulls the dependency - # stuff back out of the Makefile and into a file "<font color=green>.depend</font>" which we then - <font color=blue># include</font> just like the makefile components above. - # - # NOTE: The 'depend' target expects to have GCC available. - # You can do the same thing with other compilers but the ACE - # makefiles and utilities are only wired up to work with GCC. -Depend : depend - perl ../fix.Makefile - -.depend : # - touch .depend - - -HTML : # - [ -f hdr ] || $(MAKE) UNSHAR - perl ../combine *.pre ; chmod +r *.html - -SHAR : # - [ ! -f combine.shar ] || exit 1 - shar -T hdr bodies *.pre > combine.shar && $(RM) hdr bodies *.pre *.pst - -UNSHAR : # - sh combine.shar - -CLEAN : realclean - $(RM) hdr bodies *.pre *.pst .depend - -#---------------------------------------------------------------------------- -# Dependencies -#---------------------------------------------------------------------------- - - # Don't put anything below here. Between the "<font color=green>depend</font>" target and fix.Makefile - # it's guaranteed to be lost! - - # This is inserted by the fix.Makefile script -include .depend -</PRE> -<P><HR WIDTH="100%"> -<CENTER>[<A HREF="../online-tutorials.html">Tutorial Index</A>] [<A HREF="page07.html">Continue This Tutorial</A>]</CENTER> - |