Hi Bob, Ah, forgot to ask the obvious, does this file exist: e:\IBM\UV\bin\magci.dll
As Windows error 126 means missing file or registry entry is invalid. I see you said you ran "Make a GCI Library from a GCI Definition File" from the GCI Admin menu. I don't see you saying you ran "Install a GCI Library" from the GCI Admin menu. Quote: "This option does the following: - Copies the DLL file from the gcidir directory to the bin directory in the UV account directory - Adds the name of the copied file to the GCI library list held in the Windows Registry The DLL is now ready for use." Note it also states you can use the UVGCIDLLS variable to test your DLL, before committing to updating your UV GCI configuration. Probably a wise thing to do in a production or live environment! :) Regards, David -----Original Message----- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Bob Little Sent: Friday, 7 November 2008 1:41 PM To: [email protected] Subject: {Blocked Content} RE: [U2] Need help with GCI system Warning: This message has had one or more attachments removed Warning: (not named). Warning: Please read the "AngelicHost-Attachment-Warning.txt" attachment(s) for more information. ________________________________ From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] on behalf of Hona, David S Sent: Thu 11/6/2008 7:53 PM To: [email protected] Subject: RE: [U2] Need help with GCI system Isn't your module called "magci" and not "test"? As your error indicates it's looking for "TEST" in your GCI library. From the GCI documentation: Hi Davd, Thanks for the reply. The library is indeed called test.lib built from test.c/test.obj. In it is the function "getSum()" I am trying to integrate. The GCI definition file I've created on UV is called MAGCI. UniVerse creates all the magci.* items in the gcidir when I take GCI.ADMIN menu option "5. Make a GCI Library from a GCI Definition File". The way I thought it worked was: The subroutine visible to UV would be getSum and the external subroutine name is the same and the module (.lib) is test because the function is in test.lib. What's odd is that the *hello example and it's accompanying BP GCI1 calling program don't run either. I'm using straight out of the box IBM examples and using the default GCI definition file: GCI. -bob This is a message from the MailScanner E-Mail Virus Protection Service ---------------------------------------------------------------------- The original e-mail attachment "winmail.dat" was believed to be infected by a virus and has been replaced by this warning message. If you wish to receive a copy of the *infected* attachment, please e-mail helpdesk and include the whole of this message in your request. Alternatively, you can call them, with the contents of this message to hand when you call. At Thu Nov 6 18:40:48 2008 the virus scanner said: Could not parse Outlook Rich Text attachment Note to Help Desk: Look on the AngelicHost MailScanner in /home/virtual/site2/fst/var/spool/mail.quarantine/20081106 (message mA72ejno008182). -- Postmaster ------- u2-users mailing list [email protected] To unsubscribe please visit http://listserver.u2ug.org/ ------- u2-users mailing list [email protected] To unsubscribe please visit http://listserver.u2ug.org/
