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HP OpenVMS Systems

 
Content starts here Distributed NetBeans for OpenVMS Installation Guide and Release Notes

 

 

 

Distributed NetBeans for OpenVMS

Version 6.5.1 Installation Guide and Release Notes

 

June 2010

 

HP-AXPVMS-IDESERVER-V0605--1.PCSI$COMPRESSED (IDE Server Kit on OpenVMS Alpha)

HP-I64VMS-IDESERVER-V0605--1.PCSI$COMPRESSED (IDE Server Kit on OpenVMS I64)

Distnbopenvms65_v65_100.nbm (Distributed NetBeans Client Module for NetBeans 6.5)

 

Contents

 

» 1  Overview of Distributed NetBeans
» 2 
Before Installing Distributed NetBeans

            » Hardware Prerequisites - Client

            » Hardware Prerequisites - IDE Server

            » Software Prerequisites - Client

            » Software Prerequisites - IDE Server on OpenVMS Alpha

            » Software Prerequisites - IDE Server on OpenVMS I64

» 3  Downloading and Installing Distributed NetBeans

            » Downloading the NetBeans Client and IDE Server Kits

            » Installing the Client Kit

            » Installing the IDE Server Kit

» 4  After Installing Distributed NetBeans

            » Importing Settings from NetBeans 5.5

            » IDE Server Startup and Shutdown

            » Accounts, Quotas, and System Parameters

            » Logical Names

» 5  Release Notes

» 6  Known Problems and Restrictions in the IDE Server and Distributed NetBeans Client

» 7  Corrected Problems in the IDE Server and Distributed NetBeans Client

» 8  Software Support

 

1              Overview of Distributed NetBeans

 

Distributed NetBeans comprises two parts:

 

·         Distributed NetBeans Client for OpenVMS, which is a plug-in for NetBeans 6.5 running on your desktop. You can install the NetBeans IDE (from NetBeans.org) and the Distributed NetBeans Client for OpenVMS on your desktop system.

 

·         IDE Server for OpenVMS, which runs on OpenVMS and provides remote services for the client plug-in. You can install the IDE Server on your OpenVMS system. (You need not install the NetBeans for OpenVMS IDE or any additional plug-in modules on your OpenVMS system.)

 

Communication between the client system and the remote server system is encrypted using SSL.

How to use Distributed NetBeans is explained in the online help that is available through the NetBeans JavaHelp system when you install the NetBeans client module.

 

This help is fully integrated with the standard NetBeans JavaHelp and may be opened from the Help menu. (The HelpSet option in the Help menu lists installed module help files.)

JavaHelp texts may be copied and pasted into an external text editor or printed. URL links provided in JavaHelp can be copied and pasted into a browser's address field.

 

In this release, the plug-in of Distributed NetBeans 5.5.1 has been ported to Distributed NetBeans 6.5. All features are the same as Distributed NetBeans 5.5.1.

 

 

2         Before Installing Distributed NetBeans

 

Hardware Prerequisites - Client

 

For NetBeans IDE desktop system hardware and software prerequisites, see the Readme file at http://netbeans.org/community/releases/65/relnotes.html#system_requirements.

 

Hardware Prerequisites - IDE Server

 

The Distributed NetBeans IDE Server requires the following:

 

      » 500MHz minimum Alpha or I64 processor

      » 256MB of memory

      » 2000 blocks minimum free disk space on your system disk

      » ODS-5 or ODS-2 disk (ODS-5 is required to use the Java SDK with Distributed NetBeans)

 

Software Prerequisites - Client

 

      » NetBeans 6.5 (from NetBeans.org) running on your desktop system.

      » Java Standard Edition v jdk1.5.0_17 or higher.

Note: JSE v1.6-04 is not supported from http://developers.sun.com/downloads/ running on your desktop system.

      » (Optional) X Windows Server (such as eXcursion) running on your desktop system.

 

Note: Distributed NetBeans 5.5.1 was the last release that was supported. 

 

An X Windows Server is required to run remote Java applications that use Swing, and to use some of the features of the Distributed NetBeans Client (such as "Use XTerm for Compile" and "Use XTerm for Execution").

 

Software Prerequisites - IDE Server on OpenVMS Alpha

 

      » OpenVMS Alpha Version 8.2 or higher
      »
Software Development Kit (SDK) v 1.4.2-7 (or higher) for OpenVMS Alpha

          for the Java Platform

      » All required ECOs for the Java SDK

      » Required Debug ECOs (See Remote 3GL Debug Notes)

      » HP TCP/IP Services for OpenVMS Version 5.4 ECO 4 or higher

      » FTP Service in TCP/IP Services for OpenVMS enabled and started (see FTP Notes)

      » (Optional) BASIC, C/C++, FORTRAN, COBOL, or PASCAL compiler for OpenVMS

 

Software Prerequisites - IDE Server on OpenVMS I64

 

      » OpenVMS I64 Version 8.2 or higher
      »
Software Development Kit (SDK) v 1.4.2-7 (or higher) for OpenVMS I64

          for the Java Platform

      » All required ECOs for the Java SDK

      » Required Debug ECOs (See Remote 3GL Debug Notes)

      » HP TCP/IP Services for OpenVMS Version 5.5 or higher

      » FTP Service in TCP/IP Services for OpenVMS enabled and started (see FTP Notes)

      » (Optional) BASIC, C/C++, FORTRAN, COBOL, or PASCAL compiler for OpenVMS

 

FTP Notes

 

Before you can use the FTP as your remote file access provider in Distributed NetBeans, the TCP/IP FTP Service must be enabled and started. Enter the following command:

 

$ @SYS$MANAGER:TCPIP$CONFIG

  select 3 - Server components

  select 5 - FTP

  select 2 - Enable and Start

See HP TCP/IP Services for OpenVMS Installation and Configuration for more information.

 

Remote 3GL Debug Notes

 

For Remote 3GL Debug support, the following kits are required:

 

For OpenVMS Alpha:

·         VMS82A_DEBUG-V0200 or later (for V8.2)

·         VMS83A_DEBUG-V0100 or later (for V8.3)

·         ACRTL Facility Patch Kit VMS83A_ACRTL-v0400 (for V8.3)

 

For OpenVMS I64:

·         VMS821I_DEBUG-V0300 or later (for V8.2)

·         VMS83I_DEBUG-V0100 or later (for V8.3)

·         Version 8.3-1H1 does not require an ECO kit.

 

3         Downloading and Installing Distributed NetBeans

 

Downloading the NetBeans Client and IDE Server Kits

 

Point your browser to the Distributed NetBeans for OpenVMS download page.

 

Save the IDE Server file HP-xxxVMS-IDESERVER-V0605--1.PCSI_xxxEXE (where xxx is AXP or I64) to any location accessible to the OpenVMS system on which you will install the IDE Server. If applicable, copy or FTP the file(s) to the OpenVMS system.

 

Expand the IDE Server file by entering:

 

$ RUN HP-AXPVMS-IDESERVER-V0605--1.PCSI_AXPEXE  !  for OpenVMS Alpha

$ RUN HP-I64VMS-IDESERVER-V0605--1.PCSI_I64EXE   !  for OpenVMS I64

 

The file expands to HP-xxxVMS-IDESERVER-V0605--1.PCSI$COMPRESSED.

 

Save the NetBeans client to your desktop system:

 

distnbopenvms65_v65_100.nbm  for NetBeans 6.5.

 

Note: The downloaded .nbm file must have an extension of nbm.  The case must match exactly.  The downloaded file should be named distnbopenvms65_v65_100.nbm.


 

 

Installing the NetBeans Client Kit

 

You must have NetBeans 6.5 (from NetBeans.org) installed on your desktop system before you install the Distributed NetBeans for OpenVMS client.

 

To install the Distributed NetBeans client, perform the following steps.

 

1.  Save the client module to a folder on your desktop system.   (The client module is available from the Distributed NetBeans download page on the Distributed NetBeans web site.)

2.  Start NetBeans on your desktop system.

3.  Open the NetBeans plug-in wizard (choose Plug-in from the Tools menu).

4.  Select the Downloaded tab option. Select “Add Plugin…” button.

5.  Follow the instructions on the wizard for completing the installation.

6.  After clicking Finish, if you are prompted to restart NetBeans, you must choose Restart the IDE to complete installation of the module.

 

The Distributed NetBeans client module contains support for the following features on OpenVMS. 

 

•       Distributed OpenVMS File Access            

•       Distributed BASIC Support for OpenVMS

•       Distributed C/C++ Support for OpenVMS

•       Distributed COBOL Support for OpenVMS

•       Distributed FORTRAN Support for OpenVMS

•       Distributed PASCAL Support for OpenVMS

•       Distributed DCL Support for OpenVMS

•       EDTkeypad Support (disabled by default)

 

To enable EDTkeypad support, from the Tools menu, select Options, the press the keymap button on the left.  Select edtkeypad from the Profile: drop down menu.  The Distributed Client can be disabled or uninstalled, or both, from the Module Manager on the Tools menu.

 

 

Installing the IDE Server Kit

 

$ PRODUCT INSTALL IDESERVER

 

Install the server .PCSI$COMPRESSED file by entering the following command from the SYSTEM account or another privileged account.  (Do not expand the .PCSI$COMPRESSED file before installing it; PCSI installs from the compressed kit directly.)

 

$ PRODUCT INSTALL IDESERVER

 

The IDE Server is installed into SYS$COMMON by default.  To specify a different installation location, use the /DESTINATION qualifier on the PRODUCT INSTALL command line, or set the PCSI$DESTINATION logical name to a different location.

 

Following is a sample installation of the IDE Server on OpenVMS Alpha.

 

$ PRODUCT INSTALL IDESERVER

 

The following product has been selected:

    HP AXPVMS IDESERVER V6.5           Layered Product

 

Do you want to continue? [YES]

Configuration phase starting ...

 

You will be asked to choose options, if any, for each selected product and for

any products that may be installed to satisfy software dependency requirements.

 

HP AXPVMS IDESERVER V6.5: OpenVMS IDE Server

 

The IDE Server includes the JAR files for Jakarta Ant.

You must agree to the terms of the Ant license agreement

in order to use the IDE Server.

 

Press return to display the license

 

/*

 *                                 Apache License

 *                           Version 2.0, January 2004

 *                        http://www.apache.org/licenses/

 *  ...

I have read and accept the above license.

 

[Y = I Accept, N = I Reject]: y

 

* This product does not have any configuration options.

    The installation will now continue without requesting further user input.

 

Execution phase starting ...

 

The following product will be installed to destination:

    HP AXPVMS IDESERVER V6.5           DISK$INT83:[VMS$COMMON.]

 

Portion done: 0%...10%...20%...40%...50%...60%...70%...80%...90%

%PCSI-I-PRCOUTPUT, output from subprocess follows ...

%INSTALL-W-NOPREV, no previous entry exists - new entry created for NTBEAN$DKA100:[SYS0.SYSCOMMON.][IDE$SERVER.SYSLIB]IDE$VMS_AUTH_MOD.EXE;1

%INSTALL-W-NOPREV, no previous entry exists - new entry created for NTBEAN$DKA100:[SYS0.SYSCOMMON.][IDE$SERVER.SYSLIB]IDE$J2VMS_SHR.EXE;1

%INSTALL-W-NOPREV, no previous entry exists - new entry created for NTBEAN$DKA100:[SYS0.SYSCOMMON.][IDE$SERVER.SYSLIB]IDE$DBGLIBSHR.EXE;1

 

Portion done: 100%

 

The following product has been installed:

    HP AXPVMS IDESERVER V6.5           Layered Product

 

HP AXPVMS IDESERVER V6.5: OpenVMS IDE Server

 

 

    Insert the following lines in SYS$MANAGER:SYSTARTUP_VMS.COM:

        @SYS$STARTUP:IDE$STARTUP.COM

    Insert the following lines in SYS$MANAGER:SYSHUTDWN.COM:

        @SYS$STARTUP:IDE$SHUTDOWN.COM

 

    ACCOUNT QUOTAS

 

    The IDE Server requires the modifications to system parameters as follows:

      System parameter CHANNELCNT must be greater than or equal to 2000

   

    USER ACCOUNTS that will use Distributed NetBeans will require quotas as

    follows in order for the IDE$USER server to start:

   

      WSEXTENT greater than or equal to 30000

      JTQUOTA greater than or equal to  60000

      PGFLQUO greater than or equal to  500000

   

    Higher values of other quotas may be required depending on the commands you

    will be executing in your IDE$USER server.

   

     KEYSTORE CONFIGURATION

 

    The keystore for SSL uses a default account and password.  If you would

    like to modify these values, please see the Release Notes for information

    on changing the keystore values.

$

 

4         After Installing Distributed NetBeans

 

Importing Settings from NetBeans 5.5.1 to 6.5

 

When you start NetBeans 6.5 for the first time, NetBeans prompts you to import user settings from NetBeans 5.5.1. If you select “yes”, and the Distributed NetBeans V5.5.1 kit is already installed in NetBeans 5.5.1, the import wizard will not copy the Distributed NetBeans module files into the NetBeans 6.5 new user directory.  In this scenario, errors occur when Distributed NetBeans projects are opened. 

 

The workaround for this problem is to install the Distributed NetBeans V6.5.1 client module into NetBeans 6.5.

 

IDE Server Startup and Shutdown

 

After you install the IDE Server, add the following line to SYS$STARTUP:SYSTARTUP_VMS.COM:

 

$ @SYS$STARTUP:IDE$STARTUP.COM

 

Then add the following line to SYS$MANAGER:SYSHUTDWN.COM:

 

$ @SYS$STARTUP:IDE$SHUTDOWN.COM

 

Important:  Execute the IDE$STARTUP.COM command procedure only from the SYSTEM account.

 

Accounts, Quotas, and System Parameters

 

Following are the quotas for the remote user account.  (This is not the IDE$SERVER account, but the account that you specify when you create a remote server, called IDE$USER, from within the Distributed NetBeans client.)

 

ImportantIf you have DISK QUOTAS enabled on the disk on which IDE Server is installed, you must grant the IDE$SERVER account a disk quota of at least 200,000 blocks.  In addition, you must grant each USER ACCOUNT that will be used by Distributed NetBeans a disk quota of at least 100,000 blocks on the disk on which the IDE Server is installed.

 

Default                Quotas assigned when OpenVMS account is created.

Minimum             Minimum value required for Distributed NetBeans to run.

Recommended   Recommended value for optimal performance of Distributed NetBeans.

 

User Account Quota    Default              Minimum           Recommended  


WSDEF                        2000                 2000                 2000

WSEXTENT *                16,384              30,000              30,000

FILLM                           100                   100                   500

BIOLM                          150                   150                   512

DIOLM                          150                   150                   512

ASTLM                         250                   250                   300

TQELM                         10                     10                     400

BYTLM                         64,000              64,000              64,000

JTQUOTA *                   4096                 60,000              60,000

PGFLQUO *                  50,000              500,000             500,000

 

* Manually increase these quotas.

 

The IDE Server installation creates an account IDE$SERVER and a rights identifier (IDE$SERVERRI). The IDE$SERVER account is created with the following user quotas:

 
  PRIVILEGES=TMPMBX,NETMBX,PRMMBX)

  ASTLM=300

  BIOLM=1024

  BYTLM=2000000

  DIOLM=1024

  ENQLM=2000

  FILLM=512

  JTQUOTA=60000

  PGFLQUOTA=1500000

  PRCLM=10

  TQELM=400

  WSEXTENT=524288 (Be sure SYSGEN parameter WSMAX is large enough to  
                   allow this)

  WSDEF=2000

 

Logical Names

 

Following are the logical names that can be used to control the IDE Server.

 

•       IDE$ALLOW_EXTAUTH – This logical causes the IDE Server to ignore the ExtAuth flag and try local authentication using your password from the SYSUAF file.

 

•       IDE$JDK_VERSION – This logical forces a particular version of the Java SDK to be used by specifying the version number.  For example:

 

  $ DEFINE/SYSTEM IDE$JDK_VERSION 150   ! Use Java 1.5.0

 

Note:  You must restart the IDE Server after changing the IDE$JDK_VERSION logical name.

 

•       IDE$HOST_IPNAME – If you have multiple Ethernet cards on your OpenVMS system, this logical allows you to choose which card the IDE Server uses for registration in the Java RMI registry. Set the logical in the SYSTEM table to the IP address or IP hostname of the card you choose.  If you have multiple cards and you do not set this logical, the results are unpredictable. 

 

For example:

 

$ DEFINE/SYSTEM IDE$HOST_IPNAME bugsy.malone.gangsters.com

 

•       IDE$RMI_PORT – This logical defines the RMI port to be used. By default, 1099 is used. If this logical is defined, the value of the logical will be used as the port number. For example, if you enter the following command, the IDE Server will use port 999 for RMI communications:

 

$ DEFINE IDE$RMI_PORT 999

 

Note:  If you want to redefine the IDE$RMI_PORT logical, it needs to be done in the SYSTEM logical name table.

 

•       IDE$VERBOSE_LOG – This logical turns on verbose logging in the IDE Server.

 

The IDE Server startup procedure creates the following logicals in the system logical name table.

 

 

 

Logical Name

Location

Description

IDE$ROOT

< PCSI installation destination>

Top level IDE Server directory (PCSI installation destination)

IDE$ANT_HOME

IDE$ROOT:[IDE$SERVER.ANT]

Distributed Ant files. The use of this logical name is deprecated.  Please use IDE$JDK_VERSION to set the Java version to be used by the IDE Server.

IDE$ANT_ROOT

IDE$ROOT:[IDE$SERVER.ANT.]

Root directory of Ant files

IDE$CMS       

IDE$ROOT:[IDE$SERVER.CMS]  

Distributed CMS support files

IDE$COM      

IDE$ROOT:[IDE$SERVER.COM]  

Command procedures

IDE$DOC      

IDE$ROOT:[IDE$SERVER.DOC]  

Documentation

IDE$JARS     

IDE$ROOT:[IDE$SERVER.JARS] 

JAR files for the IDE Server

IDE$JARS_ROOT

IDE$ROOT:[IDE$SERVER.JARS.]

Rooted logical for JAR files

IDE$JAVA_ROOT

Varies

Root of Java files

IDE$LIB      

IDE$ROOT:[IDE$SERVER.SYSLIB]

Shareable images used by the IDE Server

IDE$LOGS     

IDE$ROOT:[IDE$SERVER.LOGS]

Logs from the IDE Server processes

IDE$SCRATCH  

IDE$ROOT:[IDE$SERVER.SCRATCH]

Scratch directory

IDE$STORES   

IDE$ROOT:[IDE$SERVER.STORES]

Keystore and truststore files

IDE$SYSTEM   

SYS$SYSTEM

System files

 

The IDE$SERVER process writes log files into the IDE$LOGS directory.

 

5         Release Notes

 

·         Version Renumbered

 

Distributed NetBeans 5.5 for OpenVMS was the last release on which NetBeans 5.5.1 was supported.  The current release, Distributed NetBeans Version 6.5.1, supports NetBeans 6.5 only. Therefore, Distributed NetBeans has been renumbered to Version 6.5.1.

 

·         Support for NetBeans 5.5 Discontinued

 

Distributed NetBeans 5.5 for OpenVMS was the last release in which NetBeans 5.5.1 was supported..

 

·         Supported SMB Products

 

The supported SMB products on the OpenVMS machine are Advanced Server, and HP OpenVMS Common Internet File System (CIFS) Version 1.0, based on Samba V3.0.24.  Earlier versions of Samba are not supported.  The share on the remote OpenVMS machine must be a STREAM_LF share.

 

·         File Extension of .nbm Must Be Lowercase

 

The downloaded .nbm file must have an extension of nbm, and the case must match exactly.  If the extension (nbm) is not in lowercase, the module will not install correctly and NetBeans will get into an installation/update loop.

 

  • Interactions with the NetBeans C/C++ Development Pack

 

The NetBeans C/C++ Development Pack can be installed with the Distributed NetBeans client plug-in.  The NetBeans C/C++ Development Pack takes precedence over the Distributed

NetBeans C/C++/Fortran/Bash support when both plug-ins are installed. 

 

Therefore, the following remote actions are disabled for C/C++/Fortran/Bash files when the NetBeans C/C++ Development Pack is installed: Remote Compile, Remote Execute (from Bash file), Remote Properties.  Remote Execute for DCL command procedures and Ant scripts can be used instead of Remote Compile in these cases.

 

 

  • Java Source Version on Desktop and IDE Server Must Be Compatible

 

When you convert a local Java project to a remote project, Distributed NetBeans checks that the JVM version used on your desktop system and IDE Server are compatible.  You cannot convert your project to a remote project until the Java project and IDE Server are using compatible JVMs. 

 

To change the Source Level for your project, select the project tab.  Right click on your project and select Properties. Set the proper source level from the Source Level dropdown menu.  The Java source level should be less than or equal to the version of Java with which you are running the IDE Server on OpenVMS.

 

  • EDT Keypad Disabled by Default

 

To set the keypad on your keyboard to adopt EDT keypad behavior, you must manually enable it.  From the Tools menu, select Options, the press the keymap button on the left.  Select edtkeypad from the Profile: drop down menu.

 

  • OpenVMS Directory and Filenames Containing Spaces Are Not Supported

 

Do not choose directory names containing spaces on OpenVMS.  Spaces in directory names are not supported in Ant on OpenVMS.  (Distributed NetBeans uses Ant to build projects.)

 

  • Default Java SDK Version

The IDE Server requires Java SDK version 1.4.2-7 (or higher) on OpenVMS Alpha and I64. By default, the IDE Server assumes that Java v 1.4.2 is installed on the system, and the server attempts to use that version of the SDK.

 

To force the server to use a particular version of the SDK, define the logical IDE$JDK_VERSION to a three-digit version number of the SDK you want to use (for example, 150).

 

For example, entering the following command causes the IDE Server to be started using the SDK (in this case, v 1.5.0) contained in the tree whose root is SYS$COMMON:[JAVA$150]:

 

$ DEFINE IDE$JDK_VERSION 150

 

User processes that are started by the IDE Server also use this logical to choose the Java version. You must restart the IDE Server after changing the IDE$JDK_VERSION logical name.

 

  • Define IDE$ALLOW_EXTAUTH Logical for Users with ExtAuth Flag Set in SYSUAF Record

 

The IDE Server does not support external authentication.  If you have the ExtAuth flag set in your SYSUAF user record, you must define the system logical name IDE$ALLOW_EXTAUTH to cause the IDE Server to ignore the ExtAuth flag and try local authentication using your password from the SYSUAF file (these are usually synchronized with Advanced Server).

 

If the logical is defined (with any value) then the check for the ExtAuth flag is disabled.  If the logical is not defined, then the SYSUAF record is checked for the ExtAuth flag and the Remote Server connection will fail from within the Distributed NetBeans client.

 

HP recommends that you define the logical in the SYSTEM table to ensure that it is visible to the IDE Server process.

 

  • JSSE Keystore and Truststore

 

The IDE server uses JSSE (Java Secure Socket Extension) for secure network connections. Configuring the JSSE’s Keystore and Truststore for the IDE server requires running IDE$STORES:IDE$CONFIG.EXE. It will encrypt the user provided information and store it as IDE$STORES:IDE$KEYDATA.

 

The IDE server is shipped with a preconfigured IDE$STORES:IDE$KEYDATA which assumes IDE$STORES:IDE$_KEYSTORE and IDE$STORES:IDE$_TRUSTSTORE as the Keystore and Truststore, respectively.

 

IDE$STORES:IDE$_KEYSTORE and IDE$STORES:IDE$_TRUSTSTORE were created with JDK’s keytool and preconfigured to use with the IDE server. The password to access them is _keystore.

 

  • IDE$SERVER and IDE$USER Processes on OpenVMS

 

At system startup, the SYS$STARTUP:IDE$STARTUP.COM command procedure creates a process named IDE$SERVER, which runs in the IDE$SERVER account. The IDE$SERVER process starts a subprocess named IDE$RMIREG for handling RMI. Both of these processes are detached processes.

 

When you create a remote server inside NetBeans running on your desktop, the NetBeans client contacts the IDE$SERVER process running on the OpenVMS machine. The IDE$SERVER process authenticates the user account login information you supplied, and creates a detached process running in your user account on the OpenVMS machine. This process is named IDE$USER_xxxxxx, where xxxxxx is a unique identifier. The IDE$USER_xxxxx process is then fed DCL commands by the NetBeans client running on your desktop.

 

Because the IDE$USER process is running detached, it may not obtain all of the symbol and logical name definitions that you defined in your SYLOGIN.COM and LOGIN.COM files. A detached process has an F$MODE() of OTHER. SYLOGIN.COM has sections for each different process mode, and a GOTO at the beginning of the file. When a process has an F$MODE() of OTHER, the GOTO may bypass some important DCL commands. This is also a common DCL programming practice in LOGIN.COM.

 

HP recommends that you examine your SYLOGIN.COM and LOGIN.COM procedures to make sure that detached processes obtain the proper symbol and logical name definitions.

 

  • Remote Command Execution and Privileges

 

Remote commands are not executed in a process that has the AUTHORIZED privilege mask from the remote user server.

 

The IDE$SERVER starts a detached user server process logged in to the account you specify when you create the remote server in NetBeans on your Distributed NetBeans desktop machine. This detached process spawns subprocesses to execute commands (at your control) on the OpenVMS machine. The spawned subprocess is given only the privileges that were enabled when the user server spawned the subprocess.

 

If you need extra privileges to execute commands in a DCL file, you must enable them in your user server process. You can do this by modifying your LOGIN.COM file to turn on the required privileges. You can restrict this action by turning on privileges only if your process name begins with IDE$USER_ or by checking the f$mode() of the process. (All Distributed NetBeans servers are detached, so the f$mode() == "OTHER".)

 

  • Using Ant Outside of Distributed NetBeans

 

Apache Ant version 1.6.5 is included with the IDE Server.  This version of Ant has been patched to work on OpenVMS. 

 

The logical IDE$ANT_HOME points to the root directory of the Ant files for OpenVMS. This directory contains the command procedure IDE_ANT.COM.  If you define a symbol that points to this command procedure, you can issue Ant commands to DCL.  For example:

 

$ @sys$manager:java$142_setup fast

$ ant :== @ide$ant_home:ide_ant.com

$ ant "-version"

Apache Ant version 1.6.5 compiled on July 14 2006

$

 

  • Multiple Ethernet Cards on IDE Server

 

If you have multiple Ethernet cards on your OpenVMS system, you must choose which card the IDE Server uses for registration in the Java RMI registry.  Set the IDE$HOST_IPNAME logical in the SYSTEM table to the IP address or IP hostname of the card you choose.  For example:

 

$ DEFINE/SYSTEM IDE$HOST_IPNAME bugsy.malone.gangsters.com

 

If you have multiple cards and you do not set this logical, the results are unpredictable.

 

·         Multiple Ethernet Cards on Desktop Machine

 

Having more than one IP address or hostname on your desktop machine can cause the connection to the IDE Server to fail.  To solve this problem, choose a host name or IP address for your client machine and set the RMI hostname property on the command line used to launch NetBeans as follows:

 

-J-Djava.rmi.server.hostname=<host name or ip address>

 

  • Client Tested on Windows Only

 

The Distributed NetBeans client has been tested on Windows only. However, HP believes that the client software will run on other desktop platforms, such as MAC-OS, Linux, and HP-UX.

 

  • C/C++ Error Marking

 

Errors in C/C++ source files are marked with red underlining and a red x in the margin. These error markings are cleared only if you modify the line they mark.

 

  • Process Termination from Services Tab

 

Explicitly terminating a process from the NetBeans Services tab sometimes does not stop the corresponding remote process on the server.

 

  • Open Files in Editor Delays Subsequent Startup

 

If you exit NetBeans on your desktop with several files from the remote OpenVMS system open in the editor, your startup time when you next invoke NetBeans will be longer than usual. At startup, NetBeans restores the state of the previous editing session, which includes opening all of the files that were open when you last exited NetBeans.

 

6         Known Problems and Restrictions in the IDE Server and Distributed NetBeans Client

 

Following are the known problems and restrictions in Distributed NetBeans Version 6.5.1:.

 

  • CMS support is not provided.

 

  • Error message “package com.sun.crypto.provider does not exist.”

 

If you see this message on OpenVMS I64 or OpenVMS Alpha running Java 1.4.2-23 or higher, rename the jar files in IDE$JAVA_ROOT[JRE.LIB.EXT] to all lowercase.  This is a known OpenVMS Java problem.

 

  • Importing settings from NetBeans 5.5.1 to 6.5 cause errors until the client module is installed.

 

When you start NetBeans 6.5 for the first time, NetBeans prompt you to import user settings from NetBeans 5.5.1.  If you answer “yes”, and the Distributed NetBeans 5.5.1 kit was already installed in NetBeans 5.5.1, the import wizard will not copy the Distributed NetBeans module files into the NetBeans 6.5 new user directory.  Errors will occur when the Distributed NetBeans projects are opened. 

 

The workaround for this problem is to install the Distributed NetBeans V6.5.1 client module into NetBeans 6.5.

 

 

  • A remote project cannot be created in a directory containing an NBPROJECT folder. 

 

Distributed NetBeans will not allow a directory containing this folder to be chosen as the remote FTP root of a remote project.  When this occurs, the Next and Finish buttons will be grayed out in the wizard until a suitable remote root directory is selected. An error message is returned that explains why the remote project cannot be created.

 

  • The SYS$LOGIN directory cannot be chosen as the remote root for a new remote project.  An error message is returned that explains why the remote project cannot be created.

 

  • In the JSP Sample project, after conversion to remote, the project does not build.  The error "Use a fileset to copy directories" is returned from Ant.

 

  • EXE and OBJ files are non-editable in the IDE, but they are not marked as non-editable.

     
  • If you have DISK QUOTAS enabled on the disk on which IDE Server is installed, you must grant the IDE$SERVER account a DISK QUOTA of at least 200,000 blocks.

 

  • Router using NAT times out.

 

If the Distributed NetBeans client initiates the connection to the remote server via a router that uses Network Address Translation (NAT), the connection attempts will time out. This happens because the Java RMI implementation obtains the virtual IP address (private IP address) of the client from the IP packet body, and not from the actual address in the IP packet header.

The workaround for this problem is as follows:

 

Set the java system property and make sure the <server_host_name> is correctly resolvable on both sides of the router. If you do not set this property, or the related java.rmi.server.useLocalHostname property,  the RMI server will by default pick up the server machine's IP address (inside the NAT), which is meaningless to the client.

 

java.rmi.server.hostname="<server_host_name>"

 

See the Java RMI FAQ at http://java.sun.com/j2se/1.4/docs/guide/rmi/faq.html#nethostname

 

This means that you should set this property on both the PC and the OpenVMS machine. On the PC, you can modify the shortcut you use to start NetBeans to add (on the java command line):

 

-Djava.rmi.server.hostname="<your_PC_IP_address>"

 

On the OpenVMS machine, set the logical IDE$HOST_IPNAME as follows, and restart the IDE Server by entering:

 

$ define/system IDE$HOST_IPNAME your_openvms_ip_address

$ set def sys$manager

$ @sys$startup:ide$shutdown

$ @sys$startup:ide$startup

 

See the Sun/Java RMI FAQ http://java.sun.com/j2se/1.4.2/docs/guide/rmi/faq.html

  • Before closing the NetBeans IDE, disconnect it from the IDE server. Otherwise, the IDE server on the VMS machine may need a restart.
  • When you are performing remote operations on files present in a JAVA project, you may get the following error:

"The <delete> type doesn't support nested "files" element".

 

To correct this problem, replace the existing tag with the following in build-impl.xml.

 

                <delete>

                    <files includes="${javac.includes.binary}"/>

                </delete>

To

                <delete>

                    <fileset dir="@{destdir}" includes="${javac.includes.binary}"/>

                </delete>

 

The reason for this is because  ANT Version 1.6.5 does not support <files> tag inside the <delete> tag.

 

  • When a remote project is closed, FTP File System Node still displays the FTP File system. To close the FTP File System, right-click on the FTP File system node and select Exit.
  • In Windows 7 and Windows Vista with real-time protection on the FTP, process will be very slow. This is a known issue of NetBeans. During real-time protection, Windows system resets the FTP connection.
  • A project directory on local as well as on remote cannot have another project inside it.
  • The Remote project icon does not appear on the Remote Java project, when the project is converted using FTP File System in the Projects tab. But, the icon appears in the Files tab.

 

7         Corrected Problems in the IDE Server and Distributed NetBeans Client

 

The following are the corrected problems in this release:

 

  • Project can now recover from an exception during FTP operations. Previously NULLPOINTEREXCEPTION was thrown. Also, the exception handling mechanism has been changed to recover exception occurring in the data connection.

 

  • If the Remote IDE server is not added in the Services Tab, it was not possible to open the project in the Fresh IDE instance and IDE displays the following error message:
    No matching remote server with name "<Server name>" is found. Please go to services tab and add Remote server”.

     
  • Whenever the "Add Remote Watch" action was performed by right-clicking the exe file, an exception, java.lang.IllegalStateException was displayed and this has been rectified.

 

  • To avoid unnecessary logging, add the following argument to the netbeans.conf file (<NetBeans installed dir>/etc/netbeans.conf) under “netbeans_default_options” parameter:

     

-J-Dorg.netbeans.ProxyClassLoader.level=1000

 

  • The procedure for remote Directory selection has been changed for faster file selection.

 

 

 

8         Software Support

 

On OpenVMS Alpha:

 

Support for Distributed NetBeans is provided by HP under OpenVMS Alpha service agreements through standard support channels.

 

Download is an official distribution mechanism for Distributed NetBeans, including updates in addition to the OpenVMS Alpha media kit.

 

Source code kits are provided in the spirit of the open source community, but are not supported by HP.

 

 

On OpenVMS I64:

 

Support for Distributed NetBeans is provided by HP under OpenVMS I64 Foundation Operating Environment (FOE) service agreements through standard support channels.

 

Download is a courtesy distribution mechanism for Distributed NetBeans. Kits or updates other than security patch kits obtained via download are unsupported.

 

The OpenVMS I64 Operating Environments media kit is the official distribution mechanism for Distributed NetBeans. Supported kits and updates must be obtained from this mechanism or from software product update services.

 

A variety of service options are available from HP Support. For more information, contact your local HP account representative or distributor. Information is also available from Software Support Services.

 

General NetBeans support is provided by the NetBeans user group at http://blog.gmane.org/gmane.comp.java.ide.netbeans.user.  You can informally exchange information with other users in the OpenVMS newsgroup comp.os.vms.

 

To contact the NetBeans for OpenVMS engineering team, please send mail to NetBeans@hp.com.