Includes tutorials that teach you how to use the Interface Mapping Toolkit (IMTK) using a demonstration COBOL application
to create and access both SOAP and REST Web services,
and
a Java EJB service interface.
Restriction: This topic applies to Windows environments only.
Assumptions
These tutorials are written from the perspective that all of the following is true. Specific instructions for setting up your
environment to adhere to these assumptions is found in the
Before you begin a tutorial section that follows:
- Windows File Explorer is set to show file names and extensions.
- You are running the latest version of
Micro Focus
Enterprise Developer, which has been installed on your local machine using default installation settings.
- Enterprise Developer is started on your local machine, and the appropriate
Perspective and
View are open..
- Eclipse options are set to build projects automatically.
- You have addressed all of the items in the
Before you begin a tutorial section below.
Before you begin a tutorial
- Set Windows File Explorer options
- These tutorials assume that your Windows File Explorer options are set to use the Details layout, and to show file name extensions.
See your Windows documentation for more information.
- Start
Enterprise Developer
- Start
Enterprise Developer using the default workspace, which is
c:\users\username\workspace where
username is your operating system login ID.
If you need instructions to get
Enterprise Developer started on your local machine, see
To start
Enterprise Developer.
- Set Interface Mapper preferences
- Before you begin the tutorials, you need to set the properties for the Interface Mapper to show both the
Reusable Fields and
COBOL Assignments panes. You use one or both of these panes while working through the tutorials.
- From the Main Menu in Eclipse, click
Window > Preferences.
- Expand
Micro Focus > Service Interfaces; then click
Interface Mapper.
- Check both
Show Reusable Fields pane and
Show COBOL Assignments pane; then click
Apply and Close.
Note: If a
Preference Synchronization dialog box appears, click
No - Preferences will be saved locally.; then click
OK.
- Open the appropriate Perspective and View in Eclipse
- When you start
Enterprise Developer for the first time, the
Team Developer perspective starts automatically by default, and shows the
Application
Explorer view. If this is not the case, open the
Team Developer perspective as follows:
- From the Eclipse IDE, click
Open Perspective
.
- On the
Open Perspective dialog box, select
Team Developer (default), and then click
OK.
In addition, the
Enterprise Development Projects system should be loaded in the
Application Explorer view. To confirm this:
- In the
Application Explorer view, you should see the
Enterprise Developer system. If the system is not shown, to load it:
- Right-click in the
Application Explorer view, and then click
Add System(s).
- In the
Add System(s) dialog box, select
ED System and click
OK.
- Expand the top-level
Enterprise Developer entry in the
Application Explorer view.
- Right-click
Enterprise Developer Projects; then click
Load Application.
- Otherwise, expand the
Enterprise Developer system. An entry titled
Enterprise Development Projects should appear indicating that the system is loaded.
- Set Eclipse to build automatically
- By default, the Eclipse
Build Automatically option is turned on, which means that Eclipse builds a project automatically each time a change is made. To ensure that this
Build Automatically is turned on:
- From the Eclipse Main Menu, click
Project.
- Do one of the following:
- If the
Build Automatically menu option has a check mark to its left, it is already turned on. No further action is required.
- If the
Build Automatically menu option does not have a check mark to its left, click the option to turn it on.
Sequence
You may do these IMTK tutorials in any order. They are not interdependent.