Creating SCA Components in Tuscany SCA C++ ========================================== This document describes how to create and run SCA components in Tuscany SCA C++ milestone release 1. Creating and deploying an SCA C++ Component =========================================== Each SCA C++ component needs: o A service header file that defines the operations that can be invoked on the component o An implementation header file that defines the implementation and extends the service header file o A C++ implementation of the service that implements the operations defined in the service header file o Proxy and wrapper header and implementation files generated by the Tuscany C++ SCAGEN tool o A component definition in the module sca.module file o A service definition in a .componentType file o A module component definition in a sca.subsystem file In this section we will use the Calculator sample as a worked example. The Calculator code and files can be found at samples/Calculator and has been developed further than the details specified below. In the interests of readability, the example used below takes the simplest path. 1. Create the service header file that defines the operations your component will implement. E.g. Calculator.h contains the following: #ifndef CALCULATOR_H #define CALCULATOR_H class Calculator { public: virtual float add(float arg1, float arg2) = 0; virtual float sub(float arg1, float arg2) = 0; virtual float mul(float arg1, float arg2) = 0; virtual float div(float arg1, float arg2) = 0; }; #endif 2. Create the implementation header file that extends the service header file. E.g. CalculatorImpl.h contains the following: #ifndef CALCULATORIMPL_H #define CALCULATORIMPL_H #include "Calculator.h" class CalculatorImpl : public Calculator { public: CalculatorImpl(); virtual ~CalculatorImpl(); // Calculator interface virtual float add(float arg1, float arg2); virtual float sub(float arg1, float arg2); virtual float mul(float arg1, float arg2); virtual float div(float arg1, float arg2); }; #endif 3. Create the implementation for the component based on the implementation header file. E.g. CalculatorImpl.cpp contains the following code: #include "CalculatorImpl.h" #include CalculatorImpl::CalculatorImpl() { } CalculatorImpl::~CalculatorImpl() { } // Calculator interface float CalculatorImpl::add(float arg1, float arg2) { float result = arg1 + arg2; printf("CalculatorImpl::add %f + %f = %f\n", arg1, arg2, result); return result; } float CalculatorImpl::sub(float arg1, float arg2) { float result = arg1 - arg2; printf("CalculatorImpl::sub %f - %f = %f\n", arg1, arg2, result); return result; } float CalculatorImpl::div(float arg1, float arg2) { float result = arg1 / arg2; printf("CalculatorImpl::div %f / %f = %f\n", arg1, arg2, result); return result; } float CalculatorImpl::mul(float arg1, float arg2) { float result = arg1 * arg2; printf("CalculatorImpl::mul %f * %f = %f\n", arg1, arg2, result); return result; } 4. Create the componentType file for your component to define the service that your component provides. The file must be named after your implementation class and specifies the name of the service and the service header file (which describes the service operations). E.g. CalculatorImpl.componentType contains the following XML: 5. Create the sca.module file for your module and define your component within it. The component definition specifies the implementation library to use (a .dll file on Windows and a .so file on Linux) and the implementation header file (which describes the implementation class). Component properties and references to other services can also be specified here. E.g. the Calculator sca.module file contains the following XML: 6. Generate the proxy and wrapper classes and header files using the SCAGEN tool. These classes are used by the Tuscany SCA C++ runtime to enable service implementations to be invoked from a client or another component. Run the SCAGEN tool, specifying the directory where your header files, sca.module and componentType file are and the directory where you want the generated files to be placed. E.g. on Windows, the following command is run from the directory where Tuscany SCA is deployed: bin/scagen.cmd -dir samples/Calculator/CalculatorModule -output samples/Calculator/CalculatorModule which produces the following files: CalculatorImpl_CalculatorService_Proxy.h CalculatorImpl_CalculatorService_Proxy.cpp CalculatorImpl_CalculatorService_Wrapper.h CalculatorImpl_CalculatorService_Wrapper.cpp 7. Compile and link the code that has been written and generated. This will produce a .dll or .so library file. The name should match the library name specified in the sca.module file. 8. Create the sca.subsystem file and define your module component within it. The module component definition should specify the service name used in the componentType file and the module name used in the sca.module file. E.g. the Calculator sca.subsystem file contains the following XML: 9. Deploy the various files into the SCA directory structure, as follows: /modules/ModuleName/ServiceHeader.h /modules/ModuleName/ImplementationHeader.h /modules/ModuleName/sca.module /modules/ModuleName/Implementation.componentType /modules/ModuleName/Implementation.dll (or .so on Linux) /subsystems/SubsystemName/sca.subsystem E.g. for the Calculator sample the structure is: samples/Calculator/deploy/modules/CalculatorModule/Calculator.h samples/Calculator/deploy/modules/CalculatorModule/CalculatorImpl.h samples/Calculator/deploy/modules/CalculatorModule/sca.module samples/Calculator/deploy/modules/CalculatorModule/CalculatorImpl.componentType samples/Calculator/deploy/modules/CalculatorModule/Calculator.dll samples/Calculator/deploy/subsystems/CalculatorSubsystem/sca.subsystem 10. Your component, module and subsystem are now ready to be invoked. Create a client that will call the service. E.g. the Calculator client (in the Calc.cpp file) contains code similar to the following: try { // Define and start the Tuscany runtime: // Set the system root path that contains the SCA directory structure, set // the default module component that will be used based on the format // / and then start the runtime TuscanyRuntime rt; rt.setSystemRoot("C:/tuscany_sca/samples/Calculator/deploy"); rt.setDefaultModuleComponent("CalculatorSubsystem/CalculatorService"); rt.start(); // Locate the service ModuleContext myContext = ModuleContext::getCurrent(); Calculator *calcService = (Calculator*) myContext.locateService("CalculatorServiceComponent"); if (calcService == 0) { cout << "MyCalculatorClient.exe: Unable to find Calculator service" << endl; } else { result = calcService->add(arg1, arg2); cout << "Calculator: add(" << arg1 << "," << arg2 << ") = " << result << endl; } } catch (ServiceRuntimeException& ex) { cout << "MyCalculatorClient.exe: Error whilst starting or invoking Tuscany: " << ex.getMessageText() << endl; } 11. Compile, link and run the client that has been created. You should (hopefully!) see your component invoked. Remember you will need to have the TUSCANY_SCACPP, TUSCANY_SDOCPP and AXIS2C_HOME environment variables set, as well as the SCA and SDO bin directories and the Axis2C lib directory on your PATH (or LD_LIBRARY_PATH on Linux). E.g. on Windows run the following commands: set TUSCANY_SCACPP=C:/tuscany_sca set TUSCANY_SDOCPP=C:/tuscany_sdo set AXIS2C_HOME=C:/axis2c-bin-0.92-win32 set PATH=%PATH%;C:/tuscany_sca/bin;C:/tuscany_sdo/bin;C:/axis2c-bin-0.92-win32/lib ./MyCalculatorClient.exe 12. Optionally, enable Tuscany logging by setting the TUSCANY_SCACPP_LOGGING environment variable with the level you wish to log at (0 for minimal logging, up to 9 for more detailed logging) and the TUSCANY_SCACPP_LOG environment variable to define the file to log to (if this is not set, logging will go to the console). E.g. on Windows run the following commands: set TUSCANY_SCACPP_LOGGING=5 set TUSCANY_SCACPP_LOG=C:/tuscany/mylogfile.txt Further Steps ------------- The Calculator sample has been developed further than the details specified above. In particular, it demonstrates how two services can be wired together such that one references and invokes the other. It also demonstrates how to expose the Calculator component service as an Axis2C Web Service. See the WSEntrypoint.txt document for more details on exposing components as Web Services.