This sounds WONDERFUL. Any idea of the proposed release date?

midrange-l@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx 10/20/2009 4:48:36 PM >>>
Nathan,

To the best of my knowledge, Mr. Jarman did not give out copies of his

slides to anyone at the conference.

I would've had better coverage myself, except that he kept droning on
about things that were irrelevant to my life and I was running out of
tape in my camcorder... I didn't know the point at which he was going

to suddenly jump into Open I/O... if I had known, I would've done a
much
better job capturing it.

Ian actually didn't spend much time on it (to my frustration), so I
don't know how useful his slides would be to you, anyway.

Like all RPG enhancements, you can count on the fact that it won't
break
any backward compatibility. Your existing files will continue to work

the way they always have.

The enhancement basically lets you write "handlers" that are routines
that get run when a setll/chainread/write/update/delete is done to a
file. It's very similar to the existing SPECIAL file support, except
that it will externally defined files, and can use ILE concepts (i.e.
call procedures in a service program) in addition to calling a
program.

The expectation is that people will use this support to write code that

interfaces RPG with modern devices like browsers, iPhones (and other
phones), etc, and that it'll be usable as an ordinary file object from

RPG, so no special knowledge is needed to call it.

Personally, I visualize it much like the Windows support for printer
drivers. If you make a printer and want it to be used from Windows,
you
write software (a driver) that contains the code to interface between
Windows GDI and the language the printer uses. Therefore, all programs

can write to GDI, and take advantage of your printer.

RPG Open I/O gives that capability to RPG programs. It provides
support
wherein you you can write a "driver" (if you follow me) that will be
invoked when using record i/o operations. So an RPG programmer can
take
advantage of your particular device (or I/O method of some sort) just
by
interacting with it as a regular file.

Hope that makes sense.

Nathan Andelin wrote:
Ian Jarman evidently announced this at the RPG & DB 2 Summit last
week, and details are still sketchy, but it appears that this could
unleash development of several new types of IBM i applications.

I happened to come across the announcement at
http://www.itjungle.com, which referred to a video produced by
Scott Klement and published at
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z_SRCYgr9cA&feature=related (beginning
late in the video at segment 7:40) - Jon Paris and Susan Gantner also
referenced Open I/O in their blog at
http://ibmsystemsmag.blogs.com/idevelop/2009/10/memories.html ...

Did attendees receive a copy of Ian's slides? If so, I wonder if
anyone would be good enough to post a hyperlink to the slide which
introduced Open I/O? It was barely visible in Scott's video.

I gather that RPG programmers will still be able to reference display
files and record formats via "F" specs and Read/Write opcodes, but have
custom I/O handlers intercept the I/O just prior to the point where the
5250 data stream would be generated or parsed ...

The ultimate goal would be to enable native applications to more
easily interface with more types of clients - browsers & so forth ...

-Nathan.






As an Amazon Associate we earn from qualifying purchases.

This thread ...

Follow-Ups:
Replies:

Follow On AppleNews
Return to Archive home page | Return to MIDRANGE.COM home page

This mailing list archive is Copyright 1997-2024 by midrange.com and David Gibbs as a compilation work. Use of the archive is restricted to research of a business or technical nature. Any other uses are prohibited. Full details are available on our policy page. If you have questions about this, please contact [javascript protected email address].

Operating expenses for this site are earned using the Amazon Associate program and Google Adsense.