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To use a Distinct ActiveX control in a Power++ application, the application must include definitions of the actions and errors for the control. These definitions are listed in the D_*.H file (where * represents the control name) shipped with the ActiveX control. For example, the D_FTP.H file contains the definitions for the FTP control. This file must be included in the module that uses the control. Next, the Distinct ActiveX control must be added to the project. This is accomplished by first installing the component. From the Components menu select Add ActiveX Components, and select the ActiveX control of interest from the Library list. Click the Next button. The default settings are OK for the next 2 dialogs. Click Next. Click Finish and the control will be installed. The Distinct ActiveX control can then added to a form.

Note:

If you wish to use more than one Distinct ActiveX Control on a form then you must give the control a prefix when installing it. For example if using the POP and MIME controls together you would install the POP control with a pop prefix, and the MIME control with a mime prefix in the 4th page of the ActiveX Component Wizard. This is necessary as they have methods of the same name that would otherwise conflict.

How To Run the Sample Programs in Power++

To run the samples in the Power++ programming environment follow these instruction. They illustrate how to run the ftp client sample:

  1. Open the Power++ programming environment.
  2. From the Components menu select Add ActiveX Components.
  3. Select Distinct FTP Client ActiveX Control from the Library list and click the Next button.
  4. Accept the default settings for the next two dialog boxes. Click Next.
  5. Click Finish to install the ActiveX control.
  6. From the File menu select Open Project.
  7. Browse for the ..\samples\PowerPlus\ftp\FtpClient.wxp file. Click OK.
  8. To run the sample select Run from the Run menu.

Folder Included Samples
Finger (Finger ActiveX) The finger sample program illustrates how to include Finger functionality into an application using the Finger ActiveX control.
Firewall (Firewall ActiveX) There are two samples in this folder each of which illustrate how to program your application to handle connections through SOCKS firewalls:

Daytime: This shows you how to make a connection to a remote host through a firewall and how to retrieve the hosts reply.

Send: This sample shows how to connect to a host through a firewall server to send a message.

FTP (FTP Client ActiveX) This ftpclnt sample program shows you how to make a connection to the FTP server, send FTP commands and close your FTP connection. It demonstrates much of the functionality of the FTP client ActiveX control, illustrating the functions as menu items to simplify the code breakdown and allow the programmer to quickly find some sample code for a particular method or property. This sample also illustrates how to connect to an FTP server through a SOCKS firewall proxy.
FTPSRV (FTP Server ActiveX) This ftpsrv sample program shows you how to integrate an FTP server that is capable of creating and modifying a client database, servicing several clients (up to 64) simultaneously and providing statistics on client activity. It demonstrates much of the functionality of the FTP server ActiveX control, illustrating the functions through a simple interface, user database structure and menu items to simplify the code breakdown and allow the programmer to quickly find some sample code for a particular method or property. This program illustrates how to write a custom FTP server application using the FTP Server ActiveX control.
MIME (Mime, SMTP and POP ActiveXs) This folder contains three subfolders each with a sample application:

Mime: The Mime program shows how to encode and decode files, and how to create and extract messages with attachments

Smtp: The SmtpMime sample illustrates the combined use of the SMTP and MIME ActiveX controls. It illustrates how to create an SMTP plain text message and attach MIME or UUencoded files. It then emails the messages using SMTP. You need to have a valid SMTP server to run this sample.

PopMime: The SmtpMime sample illustrates the use of the Mime ActiveX in conjunction with the POP ActiveX. It shows you how to connect to a POP3 server, download and extract MIME encoded or UUencoded mail messages.

NNTP (NNTP ActiveX) The nntpclnt sample program illustrates how to access a News server using the NNTP ActiveX control. The NNTP sample shows how to read, post, position and list news articles and how to navigate news groups. It also illustrates how to connect to the remote server through a firewall proxy.
PopClient (POP ActiveX) The popclnt sample program shows you how to make a connection to the POP 2 or POP 3 server, send POP commands, download messages, and close your POP connection. It demonstrates much of the functionality of the POP client ActiveX control, illustrating the functions as menu items to simplify the code breakdown and allow the programmer to quickly find some sample code for a particular method or property.
RAS (RAS ActiveX - this includes SLIP/PPP support) The RAS sample program illustrates how to control the dialup and hang-up process to a remote server using the RAS ActiveX control. It allows RAS, SLIP or PPP connections. This sample also shows how to do phonebook management. It illustrates all the features included in the ActiveX for the creation and updating of new phone book entries.
RCP (RCP ActiveX) The rcpclnt program illustrates how to include remote copy operations into an application using the RCP ActiveX control. This sample shows how to copy files between the local and remote machine, or from one remote machine to another. It also illustrates how to do recursive file copying. The sample also allows you to create a new file and save it to a remote file as well as view the contents of a remote file.
RLIB (RLIB ActiveX) The rlibclnt program illustrates how to include remote command execution into an application using the RLIB ActiveX control. The sample demonstrates the use of remote execution (Rexec), remote shell(rsh) and remote login(rlogin).

Note: In order to be able to connect using RLIB (RSHELL & REXEC) you must make the PC running RLIB client, a trusted host on the Unix machine that you are trying to connect.

Server (TCP Server ActiveX) This folder contains two sub folders one with a client application and one with a server application. They are intended to be run together to illustrate how a server application handles a client call:

Tcpclnt: This is a simple windows sockets application that makes a connection to a TCP server and sends data to the server

Tcpsrv: This is a very simple server application that can be put in listen mode to accept TCP connections and data sent from the tcpclnt application. For simplicity this sample has only two display windows and accepts two concurrent connections. You can modify the sample to accept more connections.

SMTP (SMTP ActiveX) The smtpclnt sample program shows you how to make a connection (including connecting through a SOCKS firewall server) to the SMTP server, send SMTP commands and mail, and close your SMTP connection. It demonstrates much of the functionality of the SMTP client ActiveX control, illustrating the functions as menu items to simplify the code breakdown and allow the programmer to quickly find some sample code for a particular method or property.
Telnet (Telnet ActiveX) The telnet sample program illustrates how to include Telnet type login capabilities into an application. It establishes a telnet connection (with the option of establishing this through a SOCKS firewall), allows you to send telnet commands and disconnects from the server.
TFTP (TFTP ActiveX) The tftpclnt sample program illustrates how to include TFTP file transfer functionality into an application using the TFTP ActiveX control. It demonstrates how to copy files between the local and remote machine, or from one remote machine to another.
VT220 (VT220 ActiveX) The VT220 sample program illustrates how to include complete VT220 terminal emulation into an application using the VT220 ActiveX control. This sample shows how to manage and customize configurations, how to capture data from the remote terminal, and how to map the keyboard.
WhoIs (WhoIs ActiveX) This program illustrates how to include WhoIs functionality into an application.
Windows Sockets (Windows Sockets ActiveX) Daytime: The daytime sample program illustrates how make a UDP or TCP connection to the remote host and retrieve the reply from the host.

Message: This folder contains two programs recv and send that are intended to work together to illustrate how to write the client and server side of a TCP connection using the Windows Sockets control.

Resolve: The resolve program illustrates how to resolve a host name to an internet address, or an internet address to a host name using the Windows Sockets ActiveX control.

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