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This is the source code for XML-RPC for C/C++, called Xmlrpc-c for short. XML-RPC for C/C++ is programming libraries and related tools to help you write an XML-RPC server or client in C or C++. Documentation for the package is at http://xmlrpc-c.sourceforge.net/doc See the Xmlrpc-c website at: http://xmlrpc-c.sourceforge.net/ PREREQUISITES ------------- To build a useful Xmlrpc-c client library, you'll need to have at least one HTTP library. Xmlrpc-c knows how to use W3C Libwww (Version 5.3.2 or newer), Curl, and Wininet. The configurator gives you the option of building libraries that use any or all of these, and defaults to every one you appear to have installed. If you don't appear to have any installed, the configurator causes the build to omit client facilities altogether. Information about W3C Libwww, including how to get it are at <http://www.w3.org/Library>. For Curl, see <http://curl.haxx.se>. Wininet comes with Windows, and isn't available for any other platform. You also need an XML parser/builder library. An old version of Expat is included in the package and used by default, so there's no actual prerequisite here. But if you separately obtain Libxml2, you can configure the build to use that instead. There's no really pressing reason to do that, though. Once you have the prerequisite libraries installed, you can issue these commands: $ ./configure $ make $ make install (There's supposed to be a 'make check' step in there too, to validate that everything built OK, but it's broken right now - 2005.01.07). To see it work, run a simple server like this: $ examples/xmlrpc_sample_add_server 8080 Then run a client that does an RPC to this server: $ examples/xmlrpc_sample_add_client (I don't mean to imply that the above are consecutive shell commands; They can't be, because the server program runs indefinitely). Also try other sample servers and clients, described in examples/README. You may want to pass a '--prefix' argument to 'configure'. See './configure --help' for details. You may also want to disable client XML transports that you won't be using. In particular, the Libwww transport can be inconvenient, because it typically uses about 20 shared libraries. Any XML-RPC client program that uses Xmlrpc-c, whether or not the program uses any of the libwww facilities, must attach all those libraries, and that can take a significant amount of time. See './configure --help' for the options that disable certain transports. WINDOWS ------- All of the above is essentially for Unix-type operating systems. To build and use Xmlrpc-c on Windows, see the file Windows/ReadMeWin32.txt. ADDITIONAL INFORMATION ---------------------- See the doc/ directory of the source tree for information about the source code. User documentation is on the web, as described above.