Hi SP,

Thanks for your quick response.... Though AIX hardware is up and 
running at client end so that wouldn't be an issue.. Here we are 
using Java components to communicate with the backend.

Actually this needs to be test at the client end so I need to tell 
them some instruction to follow. I have made 2 scenarios to do the 
same, which I have given below:

First of all you need to figure out whether Server is AIX and 
Clients are Windows or Server is AIX and Clients are AIX as well.
If the first scenario is implanted at ING, you need to configure FDS 
with the swallowtech application on AIX and no need to compile MXML 
file. If the second scenario is there, you will have to do both the 
task:

1. Configure FDS with SwallowTech application on AIX
2. Compile MXML using Flex builder on AIX.


The steps to compile the file:

Once you through these steps:

1 Make a fresh project using FlexBuilder. 
2 Place all the enclosed files in the same project folder.
3 Place the "assets" folder also from the existing 
4 path "swallowtech.war\jsp\work"
5 Open enclosed workFlowmonitor.mxml.

Since you have much experience in AIX and much expertise in AIX, 
kindly suggest more scenarios or correct me if I am wrong somewhere.

It would be a great help from your side.....

Thanks in Advance,
SS



--- In [email protected], "simonjpalmer" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
wrote:
>
> I should start by saying that I have not done this with flex, but I
> have both lead and been involved in many projects where we have 
had to
> retro-fit to IBM.  The experience has been chastening and it is 
never
> a straighforward task.  Have you got your AIX hardware up and 
running
> with the IBM software actually operating yet?  Have you identified 
any
> expertise either internally or externally who has experience in 
AIX? 
> Have you teased out of your client (or whoever is requesting this
> step) whether it stops at AIX or whether you need to go to DB2 and
> WebSphere?  If not then go and do that first.
> 
> I'm not sure why you would need to compile any flex code under 
AIX. 
> The only reason to do that would be if your clients were running 
their
> browsers on AIX.  Is that the case?  The swf and html you generate 
in
> flex is piped across to the client machine and run there inside the
> FlashPlayer, not on the server.  So I don't think you need the Flex
> Builder anywhere other than Windows (or maybe Mac if you prefer to
> work on a Mac) because your clients are probably running IE on 
Windows.
> 
> As for the server, how you should do it and how hard your job will 
be
> will depend upon the language you have implemented your server side
> components in, the application server you are using and the 
features
> of your app.  If you have a database my bet is the next question
> you'll get asked is to put it on DB2 and WebSphere, it's part of 
the
> IBM religious canon.
> 
> If you have a C++ back end then you'll need to get familiar with 
the
> AIX compiler and get ready to have to change all your code.  If you
> are C# I have no clue how you would go about it, although I bet 
there
> is a story.  If you are Java you are in better shape, but watch out
> for differences in XML parsers and compliance to "standard" 
interfaces
> like SQL/JDBC.  IBM are as bad as Microsoft for implementing their 
own
> versions of standards.
> 
> You have done the right thing by downloading the AIX server 
components
> from Adobe.  Now you need to assemble your server in whatever AIX
> technology is available.  Get AIX releases of your app server,
> database etc. and get it all that stood up and running and 
delivering
> pages of any kind.  You will probably find all sorts of challenges
> with that alone if this is your first time with IBM.
> 
> Once you have done that, and presuming you have been reasonably 
well
> behaved, then in theory you should be able to recompile your Java 
code
> under AIX and it should run (in theory you should be able to just
> deploy the same Java component, but that is very unlikely to 
work).  I
> think you have enough work just to get there.  I suspect your
> situation will either change or become clearer once you have got to
> that point.
> 
> Best of luck
> SP
> 
> Unrequested editorial comment:  If it wasn't for IBM strong-arming 
its
> partners, AIX/DB2/WebSphere would have been consigned to the 
dustbin
> years ago.  It's not that they are really that bad - although DB2 
is a
> bit of a nightmare - it's not even because they are very difficult 
and
> subtle and the skills are not widely available - although that is 
all
> true too, the real kicker is that there are better things out there
> which are either free or lower cost.  The IBM "blue stack" only 
exists
> because IBM would look very silly taking anything else into its
> clients and it forces its partners and customers to comply because 
of
> its size and because it wants license revenue from its software
> products which it would otherwise never get.  Eventually this 
rigging
> of the market will have to stop and I thought they had seen sense 
with
> their investment in Linux, but the AIX dinosaur rolls on.
> 
> --- In [email protected], "sanjaypmg" <sanjaypmg@> wrote:
> >
> > Hi All,
> > 
> > I have developed an application for windows... Its working fine 
> > everywhere but now I have to make the whole application running 
on 
> > AIX too... 
> > 
> > Can anyone tell me, how can I do it?
> > 
> > I mean What are the steps or some installation guidelines to 
compile 
> > the MXMLs for AIX..
> > 
> > I have already downloaded "Flex Data Services 2 Express" for AIX 
> > from ADOBE.com.
> > 
> > I have already "Flex Build for Windows", Do I need to 
download "Flex 
> > Builder 2" for MAC or other OS?
> > 
> > Once I get these sofwares, which steps do I need to follow to 
make 
> > my application working on AIX?
> > 
> > Please help to do the same.....
> > 
> > Thanks in Advance....
> > SS
> >
>


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