Transcript Beyond RPG

Beyond RPG
Don Denoncourt
[email protected]
RPG a Half-Century Old
• Time to consider what comes after RPG.
• Maybe beyond RPG might be
– A better RPG
• We need to move beyond RPG status quo
Perception of RPG as Antiquated
• Whether right or wrong…
• RPG does have issues
– But the biggest are:
• Old code
• Old programmers
• Antiquated coders
– Don't get or use modern concepts
• Modules and Component-based Design (CBD)
• Variable scoping
RPG is Not Popular
• Job sites:
– 10X more Java than RPG jobs
– 5X more PHP that RPG jobs
Language Adoption
• Spurred by revolutionary changes in IT
But no revolutionary change driving
CBD, OOP, or Declarative
Programming
• Component-based Design
– Black box process that is able to communicate
with other components with well defined
arguments and return value
• Object-oriented Programming
– Components built with encapsulation,
modularity, polymorphism, and inheritance
• Declarative Programming
CBD Works Well with RPG
• But CBD and ILE RPG
– not widely embraced
Why Haven't RPGers
Embraced Java?
• Green-screen apps work so darn well
• Dot-com failure put off app-starts
indefinitely
• "IBM has fostered GUI inertia"
– Chris Maxcer in his Maxed Out blog
IBM's Roadmap to the Web
• First IBM said the solution was Java
• Then WebFacing
• Then Host Access Transformation Services
(HATS)
• Now it seems to be EGL
– Or is it PHP?
"It's Not Easy Being Green"
• Quote by Randall Munson and Kermit the
Frog
• "The green screen makes the system look
old and creates a visual barrier to the
acceptance of the System i."
• Even if you believe beyond RPG is a better
RPG
– Still need a web enablement solution
Ask the Experts
• Mike Otey and Craig Pelkie
– Microsoft .Net
• Scott Klement, Susan Gantner, and John Paris
– ILE RPG and CGI
• Joe Pluta and Dan Darnell
– EGL
• Scott Steinacher and Paul Conte
– Application Generators (such as Lansa)
• Trevor Perry, Susan Gantner, and John Paris
– PHP
• Don Denoncourt
– Groovy and Grails
Beyond RPG III
Great Things About RPG
• It works, it has always worked, and it will
continue to work.
• ILE RPG has integrated modular API support
• Existing staff knows RPG.
• Wealth of 3rd party and in-house RPG apps.
• Ancient code works in new OS releases without
recompilation.
• Deep integration with DB and OS.
• It has arguably the best job log in the industry.
18th on Tiobe Index
Tiobe Index
www.tiobe.com
RPG is the Sybil
of Programming Languages
RPG
RPG II
RPG III
RPG IV
ILE RPG
/free
Dissociative Identity Disorder
• A side-effect of a 50-year old language
– Adapt syntax to support new technologies
• Older languages often morph past their
original purpose
• RPG is more complex than younger
languages
Becomes a problem of
"What Not to Use?"
• Propagate use of out-dated syntax
– Subroutines
– Entry parameter lists
– Non-named indicators
– Global variables
• Even highly paid RPG developers
– Often don't use the language well
RPG is Difficult to Refactor
• Few common facilities for formalizing the
refactoring process.
• Refactoring definition
– Modify code without changing its behavior.
• Refactoring requirements include:
– Unit and integration testing frameworks
– Source control
– Automated builds
• Lack of tooling caused the proliferation of
duplicate code
Field Name Collision Bug
• RPG uses the same memory location for file
fields with the same name
– Standard 2-digit file id prefix
• Which left 4 significant digits
• RPG now supports 10 char field names
– And qualified fields
• But tables have those 4-char field names
– Causing a negative perception of DB2/400
Comparing RPG
with Younger Languages
RPG C-API
• ASCII I/O, XML manipulation, e-mail, Web
Services, and TCP/IP processing
– Requires C-API
• And you pretty much have to be a C programmer
• RPG C-APIs more complex than integrating
Java/PHP/.NET
• Hats off to Scott Klement (and others)
– For providing open-source RPG utilities to make this
easier
• HTTP API
WDSc and RDi
• WDSc/RDi is much better than a few years
ago
• But not as good as developing with other
languages
– Slow to open and save files
– Edit/compilation cycle is slow
– Still visualize punch cards when prompting for
F- and D-specs
Some General Complaints
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Inconsistent syntax
Platform specific
Static linking
Consumption of SQL result sets
Prototypes klunky and C-like
Modern Development Practices
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
Modern IDE
Modular Programming
Take Control of Your Source
Test First, Code Later
Use Multiple Test Environments
•
Development, Test, and Production
6. Log, Don’t Debug
Modern IDE
Modular Programming
• Separation of Concerns
– Model-view-controller (MVC)
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Service programs
No global variables
No subroutines
No *ENTRY PLIST
Take Control of Your Source
• Start using source control software
– Commercial or otherwise
• Free source control tools
– CVS or Subversion
– Host on any system
• Hosting sites available
– For RPG use iSeries Projects
Test First, Code Later
• Manual testing
– Time-consuming and expensive
– Not always possible to visually prove code worked as
expected
– Not repeatable
• Automated testing
– Unit tests
• Which become regression tests
• Utilities:
– jUnit, jsUnit, PHPUnit, iUnit
Test Infected Programmers
• Create the skeleton of your service program
– the API
• Write unit tests for each sub-procedure.
• Run the unit tests
– which will all fail
• because you haven’t yet fleshed out the skeleton of
that code.
• Flesh out the sub-procedures
– Iteratively run tests
• Revising the code until all tests pass
Multiple Test Environments
• Development, Test, & Production
• Younger languages provide flexibility
– Local database
– Off-line development and testing
Log, Don’t Debug
• Set up time for visual debugging
– Lost when you complete the session
• Log statements stay in the code
– Globally set logging level determines if a
statement is logged
• EMERG, ALERT, CRIT, ERR, WARN, NOTICE,
INFO, DEBUG
• Log4i, Log4j, Log4js, etc.
Web Front-End Languages
Java
• The Most Obvious Pick
– Pushed by IBM for 10 years
– Top on TIOBE index
• Huge amount of APIs, Frameworks, and utilities
• Revolutionized application development
• Incomparable thread architecture
• "Java for multiple reasons has failed to deliver."
– Paul Touhy
Java
• "The answer to why java is failing: It is a systems
programming language, just like C++. It is not a
good choice for business application
programming."
– Carson Soule
• Regardless…
– Java is a powerful, flexible, cross-platform systems
programming language
• that has been proven to work well
• in the development of highly scalable web applications.
Java Recommendations
• Frameworks
– Spring
– Hibernate
• Utilities
– Log4j
– JUnit
PHP
• Java written as a better C++
– PHP written to solve the problem of web
development
• Personal Home Page
– Hacked to getter Perl scripts
– Rewritten and recast as PHP: Hypertext
Processor
• Most approachable Web language
• Issues:
– Requires selection of frameworks
– Scaling, performance, and use in no-web apps
Eclipse PDT Plugin
PHP Recommendations
• Zend Frameworks
– framework.zend.com
• IDE
– Eclipse PDT
– Zend
• Utilities
– PHPDoc (www.phpdoc.org)
– PHPUnit
• Dev/Test/Prod Environments
– Dev should have a local DB
.NET
• Platform hosts a variety of languages.
– Microsoft's answer J2EE.
• Maybe a better J2EE.
• C# and Visual Basic high on TIOBE index
– C# is very similar to Java
• but with features that I wish Java had.
• Vendor and platform-specific solution
EGL
• Well-crafted language with a
straightforward syntax
– Easy for RPG coders to learn
• Record structures similar to Cobol
– Use structs to communicate with DB and RPG
• EGL code generated in to Java
• EGL is a platform, not just a language
– IDE with the EGL compiler
EGL Issues
• Vendor specific, commercial IBM product
– Consider Lansa and BCD
• Documentation and training
– Java/.NET/PHP has books, articles, seminars,
conferences, blog and so forth
– "If you can't Google a solution to a technology, you
shouldn't use that technology"
• Tied to Java Server Faces (JSF)
– Over-engineered solution to HTML development
– EGL easy to learn but JSF, once you get past what dragand-drop can do, is complex
Groovy and Ruby
• Declarative languages
– Like PHP, Perl, Prolog, Python, and JavaScript
– "Imperative programs explicitly specify an
algorithm to achieve a goal, while declarative
programs explicitly specify the goal and leave the
implementation of the algorithm to the support
software."
• Ruby on Rails and Groovy's Grails
– Amazing how quickly you can develop an
application with Rails or Grails
• I've experienced productivity improvements of 200 to
500 percent with Grails
Groovy and Grails
• Rails does not work well with legacy
databases
• Groovy is a superset of Java
– RPGers: Simplifies Java syntax
– Java coders: Provides powerful new options
• Grails uses industry-standard Java
frameworks
– Hibernate and Spring
• Philosophy:
– “convention over configuration”
RPG-Java-Grails Comparison
• Read a customer record by key
• RPG:
chain 23 custrec;
• Grails:
def cust = Customer.get(23);
Java Version
Connection con = null;
Customer cust = new Customer();
try {
Connection con=dataSource.getConnection();
Statement stmt = con.createStatement();
ResultSet rs = stmt.executeQuery(
"SELECT * FROM CUSTDB"+
" WHERE CUSNUM = 23");
rs.next();
cust.setName(rs.getString("NAME"));
cust.setAddress(rs.getString("ADDR"));
} catch (SQLException e) {
/*handle error*/
} finally {
con.close();
}
Build and process a list of Virginia
customers

RPG
dou %eof(custrec);
reade 'VA' custrec;
if not %eof(custrec);
// process a customer
endif;
enddo;

Grails
Customer.findAllByState('VA').each {
// process a customer
}
Build and process a list of Virginia
customers

RPG
dou %eof(custrec);
reade 'VA' custrec;
if not %eof(custrec);
// process a customer
endif;
enddo;

Grails
Customer.findAllByState('VA').each {
// process a customer
}
Java
ResultSet rs = stmt.executeQuery(
"SELECT * FROM CUSTDB WHERE STATE = 'VA');
while (rs.next()) {
Customer cust = new Customer();
cust.setName(rs.getString("NAM"));
cust.setAddress(rs.getString("ADDR"));
// and set all the other fields as well
// process the customer
}
DDS versus Grails Validation
R CUSTREC
NAME 40A I 4 10
ADDR 50A I 5 10
class Customer {
String name
STATE 2A I 6 20VALUES('VA' 'CO' 'AK')
AGE
String addr
3S OI 6 25RANGE(21 65)
COMP(NE 33)
String state
String age
static constraints = {
name(length:2..40)
addr(maxSize:50)
state(inList:["VA", "CO", "AK"])
age(range:21..65, notEqual:33)
}
}
Constraints
checked on
insert, update,
or validate
Grails Recommendations
• Frameworks
– All required are bundled
– Others installable in seconds as plugins
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•
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Use integrated testing facilities
Use logging heavily
Separate business logic into service classes
Consider DB refactoring before launch
Post-modern Language
• "RPG is what academics call a post-modern
language: a classic with a lifeline that
debunks the myth of obsolescence."
– Tomas Stockwell
RPG Here to Stay
• But keep looking beyond…
– A better RPG
– Consider the future is about languages (plural)
• You already know several languages
– CL, DDS, SQL
• Dave Thomas
– "The Pragmatic Programmer: From Journeyman to
Master"
– A journeyman programmer should learn one new
language a year.
Beyond RPG: ILE
• Use SQL
– Embedded SQL
– DDS to DDL
• Move RI and constraint logic to DDL
– Stored Procedure Language (SPL)
• Follow Klement's "RPG Rules"
– RPG has modern language capabilities
• But do you take advantage of them?
Not Sure What New Language
to Learn?
• JavaScript, SQL, and CSS
• JavaScript
– Browser-based, client-side language, that is the core of
AJAX
• SQL
– You should already be familiar with but ramp it up
• Cascading Style Sheets (CSS)
– And browser user interface development in general
Look Beyond
• What your shop(s) have been doing for the
last few decades
• Take advantage of new language features
• Use CBD
• Put on a Web front-end
• Use the latest development tools
– WDSc/RDi
• Learn a new language
Find Out More
• "Exploiting RPG’s V5 Power Features"
– Jon Paris and Susan Gantner
– www.asugcle.com/LUG/AMCUAIM/articles/Exploitin
gV5_NoXML.pdf
• "PHP May Be for i, but Is It for Me?"
– Don Denoncourt
– SystemiNetwork.com, Article ID 20796
• "RPG: Anchoring Your Team"
– Jon Paris and Susan Gantner
– www.ibmsystemsmag.com/i5/april07/coverstory/12342
p1.aspx
Find Out More
• "RPG Rules"
– Scott Klement
– SystemiNetwork.com, Article ID 21050
• "The Search for the Holy Web Dev Grail(s)"
– Don Denoncourt
– SystemiNetwork.com, Article ID 21061
• "What Gems Does Ruby on Rails Offer?"
– Tim Massaro
– SystemiNetwork, Article ID 21076
• "Go Beyond RPG -- With Modern RPG"
– SystemiNetwork.com, Article ID 60198