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Sources ======= The sources are located in mozilla/java/dom. Subdirectories classes jni src tests contain Java sources, Java native methods implementation, native c++ code and Java DOM API tests respectively. Note: Sources that work with mozilla PR1 and earlier versions should be checked out using DOM_PR1 tag. No tags are needed for the sources that work with the latest mozilla tree. Building ======== Requirenments: -------------- Current mozilla build JDK1.2 or JDK1.3 Perl 5 must be in your path JDKHOME environment variable set to your JDK dir CLASSPATH environment cvariable set to contain org.w3c.dom classes. The sources can be found at http://www.w3.org/TR/2000/CR-DOM-Level-2-20000307/java-binding.html (for mozilla PR1 and earlie versions) http://www.w3.org/TR/2000/CR-DOM-Level-2-20000510/java-binding.html (for the latest mozilla) Solaris specific ---------------- Add following directories to LD_LIBRARY_PATH environment variable: $MOZILLA_FIVE_HOME $JDKHOME/jre/lib/$HOSTTYPE/native_threads $JDKHOME/jre/lib/$HOSTTYPE/classic $JDKHOME/jre/lib/$HOSTTYPE/ goto mozilla/java/dom directory and type "gmake" Windows NT specific ------------------- To enable OJI usage set environment variable JAVA_DOM_OJI_ENABLE=1 Add following directories to PATH environment variable: %MOZILLA_FIVE_HOME% %JDKHOME%\jre\bin\classic (only in case you don't use OJI) goto mozilla/java/dom directory and type "nmake /f makefile.win" Using the Java DOM API ====================== A Java component obtains a org.w3c.dom.Document by registering for Document load notifications. The Document is passed in along with the notifications. The preferred way for a Java component to register for Document load notifications is to register via the DOMAccessor class. However, this is possible only if OJI usage is enabled. This works on Windows NT platform. On Solaris currently the nsJavaDOM component instantiates its own JVM. When an OJI-compatible JVM is available, we will move over to using it. So, one has to apply two patches to mozilla/webshell/src/nsWebShell.cpp mozilla/java/dom/classes/org/mozilla/dom/DOMAccessor.java They can be found at mozilla/java/dom directory. The first one inits nsJavaDOM component and adds it as a document load observer listener. The second one registers a document load listener via DOMAccessor. Note: any class that implements the DocumentLoadListener interface may stand for GenericDocLoadListener. After applying a patch to nsWebShell.cpp edit mozilla/webshell/src/Makefile.in to add -DJAVA_DOM to the list of defines. Then do a gmake in this directory. After applying a patch to DOMAccessor.java go to mozilla/java/dom/classes and do a gmake. No changes in makefiles are needed. You can find examples of Java DOM API usage in mozilla/java/dom/classes/org/mozilla/dom/util mozilla/java/dom/tests/src/applets DOM2 events ------------ At the moment all DOM2 event-related interfaces are present however they are not fully implemented yet because Mozilla's core DOM does not support DOM2 events fully. Consequences: - some methods throws OperationUnsupportedException() The basic implementation architecture is following: - NodeImpl is extended to support EventTarget interface - for every addEventListener call special NativeDOMProxyListener object is created and is registered with Mozilla's DOM It's task is to propagate event notifications from Mozilla's DOM to target Java EventListener - In order to sucessfully unregister EventListeners we need to save association between java EventListener and corresponding NativeDOMProxyListener object. This is done by storing such associations Vector at NodeImpl - javaDOMEventsGlobals class is used much like javaDOMGlobals for caching (this code may be moved to javaDOMGlobals) NSPR Logging ------------ The NSPR Log module name is javadom. For instructions on how to enable logging, see dist/include/prlog.h Debug output ------------ The debug build of the Java DOM API creates the JVM with the verbose and the verboseGC options turned on, to help in debugging. It also creates two files in the current working directory, dom-java.txt and dom-cpp.txt, which are simple dumps of the DOM, as printed from C++ and from Java. The two should be identical. The code to write these files is, essentially, my regression test. Feel free to add to it. Dependencies ------------ Currently tested on Solaris 7 only with Java 2 SDK 1.2.1. egcs-2.91.66, Sun Workshop C++ 4.2 and 5.0 have been know to compile this code fine. gcc-2.8.1 does *not* work. I have not used anything Java2-specific, and it works with JDK1.1.x too (I have been using JDK 1.1.6 too). References ---------- I highly recommend reading Sheng Liang's new JNI book.