The Terminal bean provides a traditional emulator GUI and is sometimes referred to as a "green screen" emulator. The Terminal bean requires the Host On-Demand Toolkit to compile and run. See Building Host Access Beans Applets for more information on the packages to import.
The following explains each statement or group of statements used in this sample program:
import com.ibm.eNetwork.beans.HOD.*; // Get the Host Access Beans import com.ibm.eNetwork.ECL.ECLSession; // Get the ECLSession constants import com.ibm.eNetwork.HOD.common.*; // Get the Environment class import java.applet.*; // Get the Applet class import java.awt.*; // Get Frame and Color classes import java.util.*; // Get the Properties class
public class TermTest extends Applet {
Terminal myTerm; KeyPad myPad;
public void init() { super.init(); setLayout(new BorderLayout());
Environment env = new Environment(this);
try { Properties p = new Properties(); // Add some Terminal bean properties
You can set the host name to a valid telnet server and start the host connection. In this next statement, you would replace "myHost" with the name of your telnet server.
p.put(Session.HOST, "myHost"); p.put(Session.SESSION_TYPE, ECLSession.SESSION_TYPE_3270_STR); p.put(Session.CODE_PAGE, ECLSession.SESSION_CODE_PAGE_DEFAULT); p.put(Screen.SCREEN_3D, "false");
// Add some KeyPad bean properties p.put(KeyPad.SHAPE, KeyPad.S2X11);
myTerm = new Terminal(p); // Build a Terminal bean myPad = new KeyPad(p); // Build a KeyPad bean
myPad.addSendKeyListener(myTerm);
myTerm.addPropertyChangeListener(myPad);
add("Center", myTerm); add("South", myPad); System.out.println("Starting communications to myhost..."); myTerm.startCommunication();
validate(); } catch (Exception e) { e.printStackTrace(); } } }
Here is the whole program, without the editorial comments:
import com.ibm.eNetwork.beans.HOD.*; // Get the Host Access Beans import com.ibm.eNetwork.ECL.ECLSession; // Get the ECLSession constants import com.ibm.eNetwork.HOD.common.*; // Get the Environment class import java.applet.*; // Get Applet class import java.awt.*; // Get the Color and Frame classes import java.util.*; // Get Properties public class TermTest extends Applet { Terminal myTerm; KeyPad myPad;
public void init() { super.init(); // Call init on the super class setLayout(new BorderLayout());
// Set up HOD Environment with applet instance Environment env = new Environment(this); // These constructors also accept a properties object that // contains all the configuration data for each bean. // Customization can also be done at runtime through each // bean's customizer class. try { Properties p = new Properties(); // Instead of "myHost" you would put the name of your telnet server p.put(Session.HOST, "myHost"); p.put(Session.SESSION_TYPE, ECLSession.SESSION_TYPE_3270_STR); p.put(Session.CODE_PAGE, ECLSession.SESSION_CODE_PAGE_DEFAULT); p.put(Screen.SCREEN_3D, "false"); // Add some KeyPad bean properties p.put(KeyPad.SHAPE, KeyPad.S2X11); myTerm = new Terminal(p); // Build a Terminal bean myPad = new KeyPad(p); // Build a KeyPad bean // Add the Terminal bean as a SendKeyEvent listener on the KeyPad bean. // This means that any SendKeyEvents generated by the KeyPad bean will // be sent to the Terminal bean's SendKey method for processing. A // SendKeyEvent is generated by the keypad whenever the user clicks on // a KeyPad button. myPad.addSendKeyListener(myTerm); // Add KeyPad as PropertyChangeListener on Terminal. This notifies the // KeyPad bean of changes to Terminal properties. KeyPad will change // the buttons displayed based on the Terminal session type and codepage. myTerm.addPropertyChangeListener(myPad); add("Center", myTerm); add("South", myPad); System.out.println("Starting communications to myhost..."); myTerm.startCommunication(); validate(); } catch (Exception e) { e.printStackTrace(); } } // end init method } // end TermTest class
Finally, here's a simple HTML file to run the applet you created:
<HTML> <HEAD> <TITLE>First Host Access Beans Applet</TITLE> </HEAD> <BODY> <APPLET CODE="TermTest.class" WIDTH=600 HEIGHT=700> </APPLET> </BODY> </HTML>
To run TermTest, save the sample program in a file called TermTest.java and compile it. Ensure that your CLASSPATH environment variable is set correctly (see Building Host Access Beans Applets). You can run the TermTest applet by executing the following command:
appletviewer TermTest.html
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