From 02e36a99a9739e660a17243fc442380284a81d99 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Remi Collet Date: Wed, 28 Dec 2011 07:44:11 +0100 Subject: ice: import from f16 --- Ice-README.Fedora | 283 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 283 insertions(+) create mode 100644 Ice-README.Fedora (limited to 'Ice-README.Fedora') diff --git a/Ice-README.Fedora b/Ice-README.Fedora new file mode 100644 index 0000000..f50106d --- /dev/null +++ b/Ice-README.Fedora @@ -0,0 +1,283 @@ +====================================================================== +The Internet Communications Engine +====================================================================== + +Ice is a modern alternative to object middleware such as CORBA or +COM/DCOM/COM+. It is easy to learn, yet provides a powerful network +infrastructure for demanding technical applications. It features an +object-oriented specification language, easy to use C++, C#, Java, +Python, Ruby, PHP, and Visual Basic mappings, a highly efficient +protocol, asynchronous method invocation and dispatch, dynamic +transport plug-ins, TCP/IP and UDP/IP support, SSL-based security, a +firewall solution, and much more. + +Ice is available under the terms of the GNU General Public License +(GPL) (see LICENSE file). Commercial licenses are available for +customers who wish to use Ice with proprietary products. Please +contact sales@zeroc.com for more information about licensing Ice. + + +====================================================================== +About this distribution +====================================================================== + +This distribution is an RPM release of the Ice 3.3.1 run time for +Fedora and includes executables for the Ice services, HTML +documentation, Slice files, and the C++ runtime libraries. It has been +modified from the RPM distribution provided through +http://www.zeroc.com/download.html to meet Fedora packaging standards. + +Additional Ice components are provided in separate RPM packages: + +- Run time libraries for Java, Python, PHP, Ruby and C# (Mono). These + libraries enable you to execute Ice applications. (ice-java, + ice-python, ice-php, ice-ruby, ice-csharp) + +- Development kits for C++, Java, Python, Ruby, and C# (Mono). A + development kit is required for building Ice applications using a + supported language mapping. (ice-devel, ice-java-devel, + ice-python-devel, ice-ruby-devel, ice-csharp-devel) + +- Sample /etc/init.d scripts. (ice-servers) + +- The graphical IceGrid administrative tool. (icegrid-gui) + +These RPMS can all also be installed through yum. + + +====================================================================== +Setting up your environment to use Ice +====================================================================== + + +C++ +--- + +No additional compiler or linker options are required for an RPM +installation of the Ice for C++ development kit. + + +Java +---- + +To use Ice for Java with Java5 or Java6, add Ice.jar to your CLASSPATH, +as shown in the following bash command: + +$ export CLASSPATH=`build-classpath Ice`:$CLASSPATH + +Note that the Freeze component of Ice for Java requires Berkeley DB. +In order to use Freeze, you must add db.jar to your CLASSPATH. In +addition, the JVM requires the directory containing the Berkeley DB +libraries to be listed in java.library.path, therefore you must add +this directory to your LD_LIBRARY_PATH. Assuming you are using the RPM +installation of Berkeley DB, the bash command is shown below: + +$ export LD_LIBRARY_PATH=/usr/lib:$LD_LIBRARY_PATH + +On a x86_64 system with a 64-bit JVM, the 64-bit Berkeley DB libraries +are installed in /usr/lib64, so use instead: + +$ export LD_LIBRARY_PATH=/usr/lib64:$LD_LIBRARY_PATH + +When using the Ice for Java SSL plugin (IceSSL), you may experience +occasional hangs. The most likely reason is that your system's entropy +pool is empty. If you have sufficient system privileges, you can solve +this issue by editing the following file + +/jre/lib/security/java.security + +and changing it to use /dev/urandom instead of /dev/random. If you do +not have permission to modify the security file, you can also use the +command-line option shown below: + +$ java -Djava.security.egd=file:/dev/urandom MyClass ... + +On SuSE Linux Enterprise Server, you may experience occasional hangs +the first time an Ice object adapter is activated within a JVM. A +work-around is to disable IPv6 support by setting the Java property +java.net.preferIPv4Stack to true. For example: + +$ java -Djava.net.preferIPv4Stack=true MyClass ... + +For more information on this issue, refer to Sun's bug database: + + http://bugs.sun.com/bugdatabase/view_bug.do?bug_id=6483406 + + +Python +------ + +The RPM installation puts the Python libraries into the correct +sitelib directories; there is no need for any additional configuration +to use them. + + +C#/Mono +------- + +The RPM installation adds the C# runtime libraries to the global +assembly cache (GAC), so that no changes to your environment are +necessary to locate the assemblies. + +The instructions for running the demos assume that you have configured +your kernel to automatically execute the Mono interpreter. To do this, +run the following commands as root (replace /usr/bin/mono with the +location of your mono interpreter): + + if [ ! -e /proc/sys/fs/binfmt_misc/register ]; then + /sbin/modprobe binfmt_misc + mount -t binfmt_misc none /proc/sys/fs/binfmt_misc + fi + if [ -e /proc/sys/fs/binfmt_misc/register ]; then + echo ':CLR:M::MZ::/usr/bin/mono:' > /proc/sys/fs/binfmt_misc/register + else + echo "No binfmt_misc support" exit 1 + fi + +If you don't want to do this you need to run the executable with +mono. For example, + +$ mono server.exe + + +Ruby +---- + +The RPM installation puts the Ruby libraries into the correct +sitelib directories; there is no need for any additional configuration +to use them. + + +PHP +--- + +The Ice extension for PHP is loaded automatically when the interpreter +loads the contents of the file /etc/php.d/ice.ini. + +extension=IcePHP.so + +You can modify this file to include additional configuration +directives, such as those used by the Ice extension. + +At run time, the PHP interpreter requires the Ice shared libraries as +well as the Slice preprocessor (icecpp). + +You can verify that the Ice extension is installed properly by +examining the output of the "php -m" command, or by calling the +phpinfo() function from a script. + + +SELinux Notes +-------------------------------------------------- + +SELinux augments the traditional Unix permissions with a number of +new features. In particular, SELinux can prevent the httpd daemon from +opening network connections and reading files without the proper +SELinux types. + +If you suspect that your IcePHP application does not work due to +SELinux restrictions, we recommend that you first try it with SELinux +disabled. As root, run: + +# setenforce 0 + +to disable SELinux until the next reboot of your computer. + +If you want to run httpd with IcePHP and SELinux enabled, you must do +the following: + +- Allow httpd to open network connections: + + # setsebool httpd_can_network_connect=1 + + (add the -P option to make this setting persistent across reboots) + +- Make sure any .ice file used by your PHP scripts can be read by + httpd. The enclosing directory also needs to be accessible. For + example: + + # chcon -R -t httpd_sys_content_t /opt/MyApp/slice + +For more information on SELinux, refer to the link below: + + http://www.redhat.com/docs/manuals/enterprise/RHEL-4-Manual/selinux-guide/ + + +====================================================================== +/etc/init.d scripts +====================================================================== + +The ice-servers includes the following sample /etc/init.d scripts and +associated configuration files: + +- /etc/init.d/icegridregistry and /etc/icegridregistry.conf +- /etc/init.d/icegridnode and /etc/icegridnode.conf +- /etc/init.d/glacier2router and /etc/glacier2router.conf + +This RPM also creates an "iceuser" account to run the services. + +None of these services are enabled during the RPM installation; you +need to manually enable the desired service(s) using the chkconfig +command, for example: + +# chkconfig --add icegridregistry + +Before doing so, please review the script itself and its associated +configuration file. For icegridregistry and icegridnode, you also need +to create 'data' directories with the proper permissions (refer to the +.conf files). + + +====================================================================== +Using the IceGrid Administrative Console +====================================================================== + +The Java-based graphical tool for administering IceGrid applications +can be run as follows: + +$ icegridgui + +Full documentation of this tool is at the following URL: + + http://www.zeroc.com/doc/latest/IceGridAdmin/ + + +====================================================================== +Demos and documentation +====================================================================== + +Sample programs are provided in the Ice-3.3.1-demos.tar.gz package, +which can be downloaded from the ZeroC web site at + + http://www.zeroc.com/download.html + +Please refer to the README.DEMOS file included in that package for +more information. + +See doc/README.html for information on the documentation included with +this distribution. + + +====================================================================== +Binary compatibility +====================================================================== + +Patch releases of Ice are binary compatible. For example, version +..1 is compatible with ..0, so you can run applications +compiled with ..0 with the ..1 runtime without having to +recompile. + +With the binary installers, simply uninstall the previous version of +Ice and install the new one. Already deployed applications that were +compiled against the ..0 runtime will automatically use the +..1 runtime. + +Note: Under Mono, binary compatibility currently does not work due to + issues with Mono. Until this problem in Mono is fixed, you + cannot run applications compiled with previous minor versions of + Ice against a newer version of the Ice assemblies. For example, + an application compiled with version ..0 of Ice cannot run + with the ..1 Ice assemblies. + +[ This file was modified by Mary Ellen Foster from the original +README.Linux-RPM distributed by ZeroC. ] -- cgit