freeswitch/libs/xmlrpc-c/Windows/UsingCURLinWin32.txt

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Background:
Lets say you need to have a Xmlrpc-c client running as a service.
In this situation you cannot use WinInet. Details of the restriction
can be found on the libcurl website or various Microsoft KB articles.
The alternative is to use libcurl. This document describes the steps
required to use libcurl as your client XML transport mechanism.
Overview:
The default projects in Xmlrpc-c create standalone executables that do
not require other DLLs (release mode). While the case can be made
for this behavior pro and con, it is beyond this document to justify
it. Therefore, we need to create static link libraries for libcurl
that mimics this behavior. Once the link libraries are created, we
can then add them (plus the requisite curl headers) into the Xmlrpc-c
project. Finally, we enable the compilation of the curl transport
file and tell Xmlrpc-c that we will be using curl. Lastly, we build
and test the project.
Steps to use CURL with Win32 Xmlrpc-c:
1. Download the CURL source. In the “include” folder of the
CURL distribution, copy the curl directory to the “lib”
directory of xmlrpc-c. When you are done with this step, you should
have a curl.h file located in the directory xmlrpc-c\lib\curl\. The
xmlrpc project looks in this relative path for the necessary headers.
2. In the CURL distribution, lib directory, is a file called
Makefile.vc6. Edit this file. The line starting with CCNODBG should
be changed to:
CCNODBG = cl.exe /MT /O2 /DNDEBUG
The /MT option links with the Multithreaded non-dll version of the c
runtime. If this change is not made, the project will not link, as
this is the default setting for the Xmlrpc-c projects.
3. Open a command prompt window and run the vcvars32.bat file in your
Visual C++ distribution. If you are using Studio 2002 or 2003, use
the “Visual Studio Command Prompt” from the Start menu to open
the console.
4. Compile release and debug mode libraries. For the purposes of this
tutorial, we are going to build only the curl library without ssl or
zlib compression capability. In the command prompt, navigate to the
curl\lib directory and execute the following commands:
nmake -f Makefile.vc6 CFG=debug RTLIBCFG=static
nmake -f Makefile.vc6 CFG=release RTLIBCFG=static
5. The above step should have generated two static link libraries in
the curl\lib directory: libcurl.lib and libcurld.lib. Copy these
files into the root of the xmlrpc-c\lib\ directory. This step ends
our involvement with the actual CURL distribution. The remainder of
the steps are for Xmlrpc-c.
6. Open the Xmlrpc-c Visual Studio workspace (Instructions for VC++ 6,
other versions are slightly different). In File View, expand the
xmlrpc project. Under "Source Files" there is an entry for
xmlrpc_curl_transport.c This is not included in any build paths by
default. To enable it for compilation, right click the file to change
the settings. In the dropdown, select "All Configurations." Pick the
General tab and uncheck the "Exclude File From Build" setting. Press
OK to save your changes to the project.
7. In the "Header Files" section of the xmlrpc project is a file
called "transport_config.h". Edit this file to set the
MUST_BUILD_CURL_CLIENT to 1, and if you wish to change the default
transport to curl, change the XMLRPC_DEFAULT_TRANSPORT to "curl".
8. Compile and test one or more of the sample client projects.
USING MSVC8 - 2007/11/25
========================
This is for MSVC8, but most will apply to all version of Microsoft
Visual Studio.
Download the CURL source. Run the buildconf.bat to generate some
additional files. This builds a 'dummy' hugehelp.c, but it can also
be built using the src\mkhelp.pl Perl script. You may have to build
you own VCPROJ file for CURL, if you want to use MSVC. It does
provide a Makefile.vc6 as mentioned above.
To build all the CURL library variations, use
> nmake /nologo vc-all
but note this will use the /MD[d] DLL runtime. Only by adding
RTCFGLIB=static to each of the makefile commands will /MT[d] be
used.
Essentially, for building the static Debug or Release CURL libraries,
it is all the sources in the curl\lib folder. Make sure you choose /MT
and /MTd for the runtime, and build both using say the name libcurl.lib.
When you have Debug\libcurl.lib and Release\libcurl.lib built, you
are ready to build and link them with Xmlrpc-c.
After running xmlrpc-c\Windows\configurewin32.bat, loading xmlrpc.dsw
will convert all the projects to VCPROJ files. In the File View, in
the xmlrpc project, in the properties of xmlrpc_curl_transport.c,
change 'Exclude file from build' from 'yes' to 'no', for Debug
and Release.
In the 'Header Files' section, open the "transport_config.h" file,
and change MUST_BUILD_CURL_CLIENT to 1, and the XMLRPC_DEFAULT_TRANSPORT
to "curl", if desired.
As usual, for each of the 'client' projects, and rpctest, in the properties,
Linker section, you can add the library libcurl.lib on the Input tab, and
the relative path to the library in the General tab to something like -
..\..\curl\Debug and ..\..\curl\Release, or where ever you built or
copied these static libraries too.
Or you can adjust the Windows/curlink.h, to directly point to your
respective Debug and Release static CURL libraries, either where you
built them, or where you copied them too.
Now, Xmlrpc-c should build using the CURL transport.
Note, for the final linking, all RUNTIME libraries MUST be the SAME.
A mixture of /MD and /MT will give big linkage problems. Any one project
built with the alterate RUNTIME will show many items defined more than
once. And of course, you can also NOT mix Debug with Release. That is
/MDd with /MD, nor /MTd with /MT, or else there will be unresolved
debug items.
EOF