| -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| Building the DIAL server |
| -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| 1) Define the TARGET environment variable to point to the CC compiler prefix |
| for your target platform. |
| |
| |
| 2) Run make, passing in your TARGET value. |
| |
| For example: |
| TARGET=/usr/local/i686-DIAL-EXAMPLE/bin/i686-DIAL-EXAMPLE make |
| |
| -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| Running the DIAL server |
| -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| The DIAL server should be started as a service, after the platform's networking |
| has been initialized, and it should remain running at all times (a daemon |
| process in the system). |
| |
| |
| -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| Building the DIAL client |
| -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| The DIAL client is a standalone C++ console application you can use to test |
| a running DIAL server implementation on your device. Unlike the server, which |
| is built for, and meant to run on your device, the client is meant to run on |
| your desktop (development) machine. |
| |
| The DIAL client uses CURL to send HTTP REST commands to the DIAL server, so to |
| build the client, you need to ensure that the CURL dependencies are |
| defined properly. |
| |
| Alternatively, you can build against a different, current version of libcurl. |
| Adjust the INCLUDES and LDFLAGS definitions to point to your actual libcurl |
| header and library locations. In most cases, you can omit the TARGET define. |
| |
| Note: the -rpath argument passed to LDFLAGS specifies the libcurl location |
| to the runtime linker. |
| |
| -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| Running the DIAL client in interactive (menu) mode |
| -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| 1) The DIAL client application must be running in the same subnet as the |
| DIAL server. |
| |
| 2) Start the client: ./dialclient (or ./dialclient -m) |
| The on-screen menu will list all available actions. |
| |
| -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| Running the DIAL client in conformance test (non-interactive) mode |
| -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| 1) The DIAL client application must be running in the same subnet as the |
| DIAL server. |
| |
| 2) Start the client: |
| ./dialclient -i [input-file] [-o output-file] [-a server-IP-addr] |
| |
| In script-driven mode, the client reads in an input-file, executes the |
| instructions in the input-file, and generates a |
| report. The default file locations (which can be overridden) are: |
| ./dialclient_input.txt |
| ./report.html |
| |
| -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| DIAL client Usage |
| -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| When running the DIAL client, you have the following options |
| usage: dialclient <option> |
| |
| Option Parameter Description |
| -h none Usage menu |
| -m none Use menu |
| -o filename Reporter output file (./report.html) |
| -i filename Input File (./dialclient_input.txt) |
| -a ip_address IP addr of DIAL server (used for conformance testing) |
| |
| If you do not provide an ip_address and multiple servers are discovered, the |
| client will prompt you to select a server. |