The following provides an outline of the incremental approach to upgrading a Mainframe Express application to
Enterprise Developer where you use both development products to maintain the application while gradually moving the sources to the new IDE.
Tasks to perform in
Mainframe Express
- Review your
Mainframe Express application using the following guidelines:
- Create an inventory of the sources it uses, the copybook dependencies, data files, SQL, JCL and IMS files, third party utilities,
integrated preprocessors.
- Check what workgroups are used and what the workflow processes are, what repositories are used to store the sources, what
the build scripts and command line parameters are, how the application accesses the mainframe.
Note: Use the MFECL command-line utility of
Mainframe Express to export the project details to an .xml file which will include all project details at a glance - files in use, workgroups,
output and dependency folders, Compiler directives, project and file options. The command to use is:
mfecl /exportxml project-name.mvp [ xml-filename.xml]
- Review the XML file to see what information it includes:
The file provides details about the project and file settings, as well as of the workgroup levels. You are going to use this
information when you are configuring the new projects in
Enterprise Developer.
- Analyze the strengths and weaknesses of your application in the Mainframe Express environment and to what extent it meets
the business requirements. The application might be a good candidate for being modernized by upgrading it to
Enterprise Developer.
- Select a subset of source files. Initially, we recommend that you identify a small group of source files from a larger
Mainframe Express application to move over to
Enterprise Developer. For example, select the source files responsible for a single operation of an application. As you become familiar with this
process, you can more readily identify appropriate file groupings regardless of size.
- Prepare your original application as follows:
- Replace any hard-coded paths in your
Mainframe Express project with concatenated ones – to do this, in
Mainframe Express, click
Project > Convert Paths to Relative.
- Back up the sources.
Tasks to perform in
Enterprise Developer
- Create a Mainframe COBOL Project for your initial subset of source files as follows: You can add projects y
Note: After this initial step, you can add projects to continue to populate your Mainframe Express sources intoEnterprise Developer.
- Make sure that the Team Developer Perspective is the active Eclipse perspective, and that the
Enterprise Development Projects application appears in the
Application Explorer view; if the
Enterprise Development Projects application is not displayed in the
Application Explorer view, see the
Integrated Enterprise Development Project Application topic for further instructions.
- In the
Application Explorer view, right-click
Enterprise Development Projects and select
New COBOL Project >
Mainframe COBOL Project.
- Type a name for the project into the
Project name field; then click
Finish.
Tip: To emulate workgrouping behavior in Eclipse, you can use copybook projects to define the copybook paths for each level, and
you can add these projects as dependency projects to the ones for the source files. See
Emulating workgroups in Eclipse for details.
- Configure the project in
Enterprise Developer:
- In the Application Explorer view, right-click the project; then select
Properties from the context menu.
- In the left pane, expand
Micro Focus.
- Using the entries under
Micro Focus, specify the same project properties as are specified for the original Mainframe Express project, listed in that project's
xml-filename.xml file.
- Click
Apply and Close.
- Import the source files by linking them to the new project. This enables you to keep the source files in their original location,
and does not create copies of the files in the
Enterprise Developer project directory.
- In the Application Explorer view, right-click the project; then select one of the following:
- New > Folder - to add all sources in a single folder
- New > File - to add a single source file
- Click
Advanced; then, based on your selection in step
1, click one of the following:
- Link to alternate location (Linked Folder) - to link to a single folder containing multiple source files
- Link to File in the file system - to link to a single source file
- Browse to the folder in your Mainframe Express project that includes the files or file you want to add.
- Select the folder or the file to add; then click
Finish.
- Set individual file properties:
- In the Application Explorer view, right-click a file in your project; then select
Properties from the context menu.
- Set the properties for the selected file as specified in the
xml-filename.xml file.
- Click
Apply and Close.
- Set
Enterprise Server options:
- From the Eclipse menu, click
Window > Preferences, expand
Micro Focus, and then click
Enterprise Server.
All options are set to
Prompt, which means that Eclipse prompts you before executing the option behavior.
- To set these options to execute automatically, change the following options to
Always:
- Automatically start the associated server
- Automatically restart the server when project output locations change
- Automatically enable dynamic debugging
- Click
Save and Apply.
- If the Preference Recorder dialog box appears, click
OK to record your preferences.
- Verify
Rumba+ Desktop options. For CICS and IMS applications, you use the
Micro Focus
Rumba+ Desktop TN3270 emulator to connect to and run your application.
Rumba+ Desktop is provided with
Enterprise Developer. To ensure that Eclipse is configured to use the embedded
Rumba+ Desktop emulator:
- In Eclipse, click
Window > Preferences.
- Expand
Micro Focus > Enterprise Server, and click
TN3270.
- Ensure that
Enable display,
Rumba (Embedded) and
Connect automatically are all selected.
- Click
Apply and Close.
- Build the project. By default, Eclipse performs a build automatically as add source files and update configurations. Be sure
to check the
Console view for any build errors.
Tasks to perform in Enterprise Server
- Using the Server Explorer in the IDE, create an
enterprise server region on which to run compiled applications. Select the template most appropriate for your CICS, IMS, or JCL application. Associate
the new
enterprise server region with your project. See
To create a new enterprise server for details.
- Configure the
enterprise server region to match the configuration provided in the
xml-filename.xml file. See
Configuring the Server Instance Environment
for details.
Run the application
Run the application from
Enterprise Developer in debug mode. To do this:
JCL applications
- Right-click the JCL file in your project; then select
Submit to Enterprise Server from the context menu.
This starts the
enterprise server region and submits your JCL.
- Debug the application to thoroughly test it.
CICS and IMS applications
- On the Server Explorer view, right-click your
enterprise server region; then select
Show TN3270 Display from the context menu.
This starts the
enterprise server region, starts the
Rumba Mainframe Display view, and connects to your application running on theenterprise server region.
- Debug the application to thoroughly test it.
Configure Mainframe Access (MFA)
If your application uses sources on the mainframe, configure MFA to access them. See the
Mainframe Access Installation Guide and the
Working with Mainframe Files topic for details.
Distribution tasks
Once you have an application running smoothly in all areas, you can distribute it to your development and QA teams, making
it available for others to import into
Enterprise Developer.
Distributing a project
In your workspace, copy the project folder with all the files. You can store this on a shared network location. Users need
to import the existing project and sources locally in their workspaces.
Distributing an
enterprise server region
You can export an existing
enterprise server region to make it available for import into another
%ProgramFiles(x86)%\Micro Focus\Enterprise Developer\etc\ServerTemplates environment. To do this, see
To export an enterprise server instance
and
To import an enterprise server
.