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Part I Basic Integration
Chapter 1 Basic Application IntegrationBasic application integration is a set of highly recommended tasks you should perform. Basic integration does not involve extensive use of the desktop application programmer's interface (API). Therefore, it does not provide other interaction with the desktop, such as drag and drop, session management, ToolTalk messaging, and programmatic access to the actions and data-typing database. A few of the integration tasks covered in this chapter require source code modification. They are optional, and are discussed here because they are closely related to basic integration tasks. Basic Integration FeaturesBasic application integration provides these features for end users:
Basic integration provides these advantages to system administrators:
Organization of Basic Integration InformationMost of the tasks involved in basic integration are also performed by system administrators who are integrating an existing application into the desktop. Therefore, most basic integration documentation is located in the chapter "Registering an Application" in the Solaris Common Desktop Environment: Advanced User's and System Administrator's Guide. This chapter guides you to that information and contains additional information specific to application programming. Basic Integration TasksThese are the general tasks involved in basic integration:
Levels of PrintingThe printing functionality available to the user depends on the level of integration you use. There are three levels of print integration:
Complete Print IntegrationTo do complete print integration, your application must:
Desktop Printing Environment VariablesTo have fully integrated printing, your application must use the values of the following four environment variables. The LPDEST variable is particularly important. It provides the ability for the user to choose the print destination by using a particular printer drop zone.
A Fully Integrated Print ActionThe print action is usually defined in a configuration file, app_root/dt/appconfig/types/<language>/name.dt. If your print action starts a program that dereferences the four environment variables indicated in "Desktop Printing Environment Variables", then your data type is fully integrated. The print action must be written to be specific for the application's data type and should accept only a single file. For example, the following print action is specific for a data type named ThisAppData: ACTION Print
{
ARG_TYPE ThisAppData
EXEC_STRING print_command -file %(file)Arg_1%
}
If your application handles the ToolTalk Media message set Print request, then your print action could send a variant of it with the following actions. ACTION Print
{
ARG_TYPE ThisAppData
ARG_CLASS FILE
ARG_COUNT 1
TYPE TT_MSG
TT_CLASS TT_REQUEST
TT_SCOPE TT_SESSION
TT_OPERATION Print
TT_FILE %Arg_1%
TT_ARG0_ MODE TT_IN
TT_ARG0_ VTYPE %Arg_1%
TT_ARG1_ MODE TT_IN
TT_ARG1_ VTYPE LPDEST
TT_ARG1_VALUE $LPDEST
TT_ARG2_MODE TT_IN
TT_ARG2_VTYPE DTPRINTUSERFILENAME
TT_ARG2_VALUE $DTPRINTUSERFILENAME
TT_ARG3_MODE TT_IN
TT_ARG3_VTYPE DTPRINTSILENT
TT_ARG3_VALUE $DTPRINTSILENT
TT_ARG4_MODE TT_IN
TT_ARG4_VTYPE DTPRINTFILEREMOVE
TT_ARG4_VALUE $DTPRINTFILEREMOVE
}
ACTION Print
{
ARG_TYPE ThisAppData
ARG_CLASS BUFFER
ARG_COUNT 1
TYPE TT_MSG
TT_CLASS TT_REQUEST
TT_SCOPE TT_SESSION
TT_OPERATION Print
TT_ARG0_MODE TT_IN
TT_ARG0_VTYPE %Arg_1%
TT_ARG0_VALUE %Arg_1%
TT_ARG1_MODE TT_IN
TT_ARG1_VTYPE LPDEST
TT_ARG1_VALUE $LPDEST
TT_ARG2_MODE TT_IN
TT_ARG2_VTYPE DTPRINTUSERFILENAME
TT_ARG2_VALUE $DTPRINTUSERFILENAME
TT_ARG3_MODE TT_IN
TT_ARG3_VTYPE DTPRINTSILENT
TT_ARG3_VALUE $DTPRINTSILENT
TT_ARG4_MODE TT_IN
TT_ARG4_VTYPE DTPRINTFILEREMOVE
TT_ARG4_VALUE false
}
If any of the four environment variables are not set, the corresponding message argument will be null. When the message argument is null, refer to "Desktop Printing Environment Variables" for the default interpretation. Creating Print Actions for Filtered Data or Data Ready to PrintThe desktop print utility /usr/dt/dtlp provides functionality on top of the lp subsystem. It gathers lp print options and prints the specified file. Your application can use dtlp if either of the following conditions is true:
For more information about dtlp, see the dtlp(1) man page. If the file is ready to print, the Print action runs dtlp in the EXEC_STRING.For example: ACTION Print
{
ARG_TYPE ThisAppData
EXEC_STRING dtlp %Arg_1%
}
If the application provides a conversion filter, the filter must be run before running dtlp. For example: ACTION Print
{
ARG_TYPE MyAppData
EXEC_STRING /bin/sh `cat %Arg_1%| filter_name | dtlp`
}
where filter_name is the name of the print filter. Partial Print IntegrationTo do partial print integration, your application must provide a print action. The extent to which printing is integrated depends on which, if any, of the printing environment variables are handled by the action Providing the Print Command for Partial IntegrationTo provide partial print integration, your application must provide a print command line of the form: print_command[options]-filefilename where options provides a mechanism for dereferencing none, some, or all of the printing environment variables (see "Desktop Printing Environment Variables" ). The simplest form of this print command line omits options. print_command -filefilename This command line lets users print your application's data files using the desktop printer drop zones. However, printing destination is not set by the drop zone. In addition, other print behaviors set by the environment variables are not implemented. For example, the desktop may not be able to direct silent printing or remove temporary files. If your print command line provides additional command-line options that correspond to the desktop printing environment variables, you can provide additional integration. For example, the following command line provides the ability to dereference LPDEST: print_command [-d destination] [-filefilename] where: destination is the destination printer. The next print command line provides options for dereferencing all four variables: print_command [-d destination] [-u user_file_name] [-s] [-e] -filefilename where:
The dereferencing occurs in the action definition. See the section, "Desktop Printing Environment Variables" for more information. Turning Environment Variables into Command-Line SwitchesIf your action is not capable of dereferencing the four environment variables, but it is capable of taking corresponding command-line options, this subsection explains how to turn the environment variable values into command-line options. For example, this is a simple print action that deferences LPDEST: ACTION Print
{
ARG_TYPE data_type
EXEC_STRING print_command -d $LPDEST -file %(file)Arg_1%
}
However, this print action may create unpredictable behavior if LPDEST is not set. One way to create a Print action that provides proper behavior when variables are not set is to create a shell script that is used by the Print action. For example, the following action and the script it uses properly handle all four environment variables: ACTION Print
{
ARG_TYPE data_type
EXEC_STRING app_root/bin/envprint %(File)Arg_1%
}
The contents of the envprint script follow: #!/bin/sh # envprint - sample print script DEST="" USERFILENAME="" REMOVE="" SILENT="" if [ $LPDEST ] ; then DEST="-d $LPDEST" fi if [ $DTPRINTUSERFILENAME ] ; then USERFILENAME="-u $DTPRINTUSERFILENAME" fi DTPRINTFILEREMOVE=echo $DTPRINTFILEREMOVE | tr "[:upper:]" "[:lower:]"` if [ "$DTPRINTFILEREMOVE" = "true" ] ; then REMOVE="-e" fi DTPRINTSILENT=`echo $DTPRINTSILENT | tr "[:upper:]" "[:lower:]"` if [ "$DTPRINTSILENT" = "true" ] ; then SILENT="-s" fi print_command $DEST $USERFILENAME $REMOVE $SILENT -file $1 Nonintegrated PrintingIf your application does not integrate printing with the desktop, users must open your application to properly print data files. Nevertheless, you should provide a print action that runs when users drop your application's data files on a printer drop zone. Otherwise, the desktop may assume that the file contains text data, and the print output will be garbled. The desktop provides a print action for this purpose named NoPrint. The NoPrint action displays a dialog box telling users that the data files cannot be printed using the printer drop zones. The NoPrint action displays the Unable to Print dialog box. To use the Unable to Print dialog box, create a print action specific to your data type that maps to the NoPrint action. For example, suppose the data type for your application is: DATA_ATTRIBUTES MySpreadSheet_Data1
{
--
}
The following Print action maps to the NoPrint for this data type: ACTION Print
{
ARG_TYPE MySpreadSheet_Data1
TYPE MAP
MAP_ACTION NoPrint
}
Creating a Registration Package for Your ApplicationThe desktop registration package you create for an application should become part of the application's installation package. The procedures for creating a registration package are also performed by system administrators integrating existing applications into the desktop. These procedures and a detailed example are documented in the chapter "Registering an Application" in the Solaris Common Desktop Environment: Advanced User's and System Administrator's Guide. |
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