Micro Focus supports the compatibility of callable objects (such as .int, .gnt which are loaded or called by a standalone executable) built with one version of Enterprise Developer but deployed and executed on a newer version of Enterprise Developer on the same platform, unless explicitly specified in the release notes.
However, when the callable objects are built into a standalone executable, the compatibility of the executable or of a .dll file with newer releases of Enterprise Developer depends on the associated Microsoft C run-time system.
If the two releases of Enterprise Developer share a common C run-time system, the standalone executable or the .dll is compatible with the newer release. However, if the two releases use different C run-time system, then the executable or the .dll is not fully compatible when executed with the newer release.
In such situations, you should produce a new executable or a .dll that supports the newer release of the product. To do this you typically need to recompile the application from the sources.
Starting with release 4.0, you can configure Enterprise Developer to check whether applications created with older releases must be relinked. If the application uses an older version of the C run-time system, Enterprise Developer can automatically relink the existing executable or .dll to the new version of the C run-time system without the need to recompile the application first. You need the original object code (.obj) for this.
By default , the relink functionality is disabled in Enterprise Developer. In order to enable it:
In order to relink any projects created with an earlier release of Enterprise Developer:
If the project contains older C libraries, Visual Studio displays an information bar suggesting that you can relink the projects.
Visual Studio automatically links the objects to the newer C run-time system libraries.
You can use the command line to relink a project (but not a solution) created with an earlier release of Enterprise Developer. This will relink the executable or the .dll with the latest C run-time system libraries.
msbuild /Property:Relink=true [<project name>]