


 LessTif Frequently Asked Questions 


    
      
    

 LessTif FAQ


This article contains the answers to some Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
often seen in the LessTif mailing list and posted to the newsgroup
comp.windows.x.motif.
It is posted to help reduce volume in the LessTif mailing list and to
provide hard-to-find information of general interest.



                Please redistribute this article!





<!--
This article includes answers to the following questions, which are loosely
grouped into categories. Questions marked with a + indicate questions new to
this issue; those with significant changes of content since the last issue are
marked by !:
(really ? ;-)
 -->

Contents


TOPIC: LessTif General Information
   
     What is LessTif ?
     Where can I get LessTif ?
     Who is developing LessTif ?
     Can I use LessTif in my applications ?
     Will LessTif be Motif1.2 Compliant?
     Will LessTif be Motif2.0 Compliant?
    Will LessTif be Motif2.1 Compliant?
     What about CDE?
    Is UIL (User Interface Language) supported?
     Is there a LessTif newsgroup?
     Is there a LessTif mailing list?
     Is there a LessTif mailing list digest?
    Is a LessTif mailing list archive available on FTP or WWW?
    What is LessDox?
    How can I obtain LessDox?
   

TOPIC: LessTif Installation
    
      What Platforms is LessTif on?
      Is there a pre-built library available for My Platform?
      Do I have to have Imake/xmkmf?
      Can I build a Shared Library?
      Can I build a Static Library?
      How do I build the makefiles?
      Why does it say I have X11r5 when I have r6 ?
      The build fails with undefined symbols
    

TOPIC: Running applications with LessTif
    
      Application fails to start
      Application can't load Shared Libraries
      Application doesn't work as expected
    
	
TOPIC: LessTif Development Progress
    
      How complete is LessTif ?
      Is there any Documentation for LessTif ?
      How often is a release made ?
      What if I find a Bug ?
      What currently Works?
      Will Motif _Xm functions be implemented?
      Does LessTif support I18N?
      How to submit a bugfix/patch?
      What about memory leaks ?
    

TOPIC: Compiling Applications With LessTif
    
      I installed LessTif but I can't compile apps with it. Help !
      My application doesn't build. What do I do ?
      This app uses Imake but it won't build right.
      Can I use LessTif with C++ ?
    






TOPIC: LessTif General Information





What is LessTif

LessTif is a clone of the
Motif&reg; toolkit.
Currently LessTif is partially implemented with most of the API in place.
Saying this a lot of the internal functionality is still missing.

Compatibility can have several degrees,
the ultimate one being binary compatibility.
This is the one we're aiming for.
This can be tested even today on most platforms on which shared libraries
are supported :
if you also have Motif&reg; shared libraries,
you can choose which library to use by setting an environment variable
such as LD_LIBRARY_PATH prior to executing an application.

The primary objectives have been to develop the widget code of the
LessTif Toolkit.
Intermittently, the window manager (mwm)
and the combination of UIL compiler and libMrm are being worked on.

Volunteers to advance one or more parts of LessTif development,
or for writing documentation without an OSF, X/Open or The Open Group
copyright on it, are always welcome.




Where can I get LessTif

You can get it over the Internet at several locations.
They're listed on our web site at
http://www.lesstif.org,
which is one of the places to get it.

The same web pages can point you to quite a few CD-ROM manufacturers
which put a version of LessTif on some of their products.
Many free Unix (RedHat, Debian, SuSE, Walnut Creek FreeBSD, ...)
are among them.




Who is developing LessTif?

The hungry programmers and a few Internet based individuals.
Look for an up to date list in the AUTHORS file in the LessTif
distribution.

Keeping a list of developers for each widget is not really possible
mainly because the we're not fanatic about ownership of a widget.
We do keep in touch enough to know who's messing with what
so we don't overlap too much.




Can I use LessTif in my applications?

The odds of your application running fairly well with LessTif are
pretty good.

You should be able to compile and run your code,
how well it works is another matter...
If it doesn't, then we're very interested in hearing about
what doesn't work and why (we can't fix bugs that we don't know about),
and we're even more interested in a fix.

If your favourite application does work,
please tell us so we add it to the list of apps known to work.




Will LessTif be Motif1.2 Compliant?

Yes this is the first major step.

The core developers have had arguments in the past about shooting for
something more ambitious than 1.2, but never decided on starting the effort
until they felt 1.2 compatibility was close.

In early 1997 however,
someone asked whether submissions for 2.0 or CDE widgets would be accepted.

Of course !

Therefore, we expanded the source directory tree to make it easy to
add new stuff, and to build several versions of the library (and the
corresponding tools). So if anybody has a widget, or an application,
to offer which can advance us in the 2.0 or CDE areas, please E-mail us.

Somewhere along 1997 we actually started building 2.0 compliant widgets.
More of them are needed though.




Will LessTif be Motif2.0 Compliant?

Yes, even though we're convinced that this will still take a long time.
Some of the new features in 2.0 are not exactly easy stuff !

Having some of the widgets implemented can make us get away with
a lot of stuff : some applications just need one of the new widgets.
If applications use some of the flashy new features such as renderings,
...

See also in Will LessTif be Motif1.2 Compliant?.




Will LessTif be Motif2.1 Compliant?
[...]

See also in Will LessTif be Motif2.0 Compliant?.




What about CDE?

We've made room for CDE compatible widgets and applications,
and we should probably talk to the people in the eXode project,
who are working on this.
Look up their stuff at
http://www.simplicity.net/exode.

We did talk to them.
They basically don't want to use too much of the 2.* stuff
(some of it is rather buggy in OSF releases);
also they really want the core of eXode to run on top of LessTif.





Is UIL (User Interface Language) supported?

Not really. Though there is some old code in place already
it's unlikely you succeed with a project using it.




Is there a LessTif newsgroup?

No.

Regularly, questions about LessTif (or about any free Motif&reg;)
clone are asked in
comp.windows.x or
comp.windows.x.motif .




Is there a LessTif mailing list?

Yes there is.
How to get on it is described on this
web page.




Is there a LessTif mailing list digest?

Yes.
How to get on it is described in the
web pages.




Is a LessTif mailing list archive available on FTP or WWW?

No, sorry.




What is LessDox?

LessDox is the shortened version of the LessTif Documentation Project.
Any previous reference to &quot;LDP&quot; is now dropped because of the
conflict with the &quot;Linux Documentation Project&quot;.




How can I obtain LessDox?

Currently you can obtain LessDox from the LessTif
website.

Nothing has happened to LessDox in a long time,
we would love some people to write free documentation
describing the LessTif widget set.








TOPIC: LessTif Installation





What Platforms is LessTif on?

A more accurate list is available in an
extraneous file.
Here's an excerpt, with version numbers stripped for brevity :

Linux
FreeBSD, NetBSD, OpenBSD, BSDi (BSD/OS)
Sun (SunOS, Solaris)
MkLinux
OS/2 (requires XFree86)
AIX
Digital UNIX/Compaq Tru64
HP/UX
CygWin 32 (Windows NT, Windows 95 with GNU development environment)





Is there a pre-built library available for My Platform?

Might be, we started doing that as of early March, 1997.
The core team (and some other brave guys) are providing
compiled images.
Currently we don't have a document describing how to install them,
but they're there for Linux, FreeBSD, OS/2.

Note we'll only refresh these binary distributions at
release time, which is about once a month.

The INSTALL file found in the source
distribution and on the web explains how to install it.

Make sure that you do get a binary version,
if that's what you're interested in; not the source distribution.

We also have a list of
CD-ROMs which include LessTif distributions.




Do I need to have imake/xmkmf?

No. LessTif used to work with those,
but they became more of a problem than a solution,
so we switched to GNU autoconf, which has the additional capability
to find out many many things about the target platform while
auto-configuring itself.

Around December 1997 we also started to work with libtool and automake,
two more free tools.
They should solve the portability problems with building shared libraries
on multiple platforms for us.
You'll find this in distributions of LessTif starting with release 0.85.




Can I build a Shared Library?

Yes, you can on many platforms.
They include Linux, FreeBSD, HP-UX, SunOS, Solaris, ... .

We use libtool for keeping the complexities of building and installing
shared libraries out of LessTif.
Therefore, if LessTif doesn't build a working shared library on
some platform, you may want to check whether libtool already supports
this platform.
Contact the libtool mailing list
if you're interested in details about the platforms supported by libtool.
The libtool home page is at

www.gnu.org/software/libtool/libtool.html.




Can I build a Static Library?

Even for this we use libtool;
but yes, you can on all platforms we can think of.

By default buiding these is disabled. Check out the
INSTALL document how to
actually build them (you have use a configure switch)




How do I build the makefiles?

LessTif is now using the GNU configure system so all you need to
do is type

   ./configure
   make


If you're brave, you might actually add stuff to our tree.
In that case you may want to edit configure.in .
After that, you need to run :

	autoheader
	automake -i
	autoconf
	./configure
	make

Autoheader comes with autoconf; automake is a separate utility.
You don't need to go get libtool; it's included with LessTif.

For more information on this topic check out the
INSTALL
document.




Why does it say I need X11r5 or higher when I have r6 ?

Several people have reported build problems;
the configure script looks for an X distribution and then checks whether
it is X11R5 or X11R6.

On some systems the configure script stops, saying

configure: error: You must have X11 Revision 5 or higher to compile LessTif

while the system actually has X11r6.

Apparently this has to do with installations of Linux, in which
the include files (under /usr/include) often contain symbolic links
to the source directories (either on disk or on CD-ROM).

In such a situation, if one either removes the CD-ROM, or cleans up
/usr/src, the effect will be dangling symbolic links under /usr/include
which confuse our configure script.

The solution is obvious : make sure that your include files don't contain
symbolic links to nonexistent files.




The build fails with undefined symbols

We might have screwed up of course.

On the other hand, please make sure that you've built the entire
distribution with the same configuration.

Not clear ?
After running the "configure" command with its options,
you should ideally run "make clean".
Otherwise e.g. clients/Motif-1.2/mwm/Makefile may be configured
such that it looks for stuff that isn't there in lib/Xm/* .









TOPIC: Running applications with LessTif





Application fails to start

Your application fails to start and a &quot;sophisticated&quot;
error message like the following is given:

Error: PANIC: no realize procedure specified for this widget.

or

Error: attempt to add non-widget child "DropSiteManager" to parent
       "xmfoo" which supports only widgets

We've seen this happen when the order of libraries upon linking was incorrect.
The correct order is :

-lXm -lXt -lX11

(see also
Question 5.1)

If you built this application please link it again, otherwise
notify the maintainer.




Application can't load Shared Libraries

If you get a message like

foo: error in loading shared libraries
libXm.so.1: cannot open shared object file: No such file or directory

then you did not tell your system where to look for the
shared libraries you have (hopefully) installed.
The INSTALL file describes how to this.




Application doesn't work as expected

If you build the application make sure you followed
the instructions in section
TOPIC: Compiling Applications With LessTif.
Also you may have discovered a remaining bug or missing feature
in LessTif. See section
4.3 What if I find a Bug ?









TOPIC: LessTif Development Progress





How complete is LessTif ?

Hard to say really. Depends on how much credit you give us.

Actually most LessTif widgets work somewhat.
Many work fairly well.
Things like traversal and focus handling have been worked on,
but probably aren't really all that functional yet.

The menu system is quickly losing its child diseases
(occasionally freezing the X server with grabs).
If you're not in a rush when working the menus,
the odds are low that you'll get in much trouble.
Also dragging in the menus will get you in trouble faster
than clicking.

In short, if something does not work quite right,
tell us at
lesstif@hungry.com
and we'll try to help you as soon as we possibly can.
In fact telling us about your problem is the fastest way to
get your app to work with LessTif. Recommended !





Is there any documentation for LessTif ?

Yes the LessTif Documentation Project (Lessox)
check out the LessDox home page at:

http://www.lesstif.org/Lessdox/lesstif.html




How often is a release made ?

Starting December 1996 we plan to make intermediary releases every
month or so, and "real" releases every three months or so.
The 0.75 release was made available around December 11, 1996.

In between releases, you can always grab lesstif-current,
which is a daily snapshot of the CVS tree which is maintained
by the core developers.
Look at the web site
for more info.




What if I find a Bug ?

Bug reports are very welcome, and we'll do our best to get
the fixes out as quick as possible.

The web site
and all distributions contain a
write-up
on how to submit bug fixes or reports.






What currently runs ?

DDD, Mosaic-2.7, NEdit, ...

Look at
the web site
for a more accurate and timely
list.




Will Motif _Xm functions be implemented?

Sure they will. Many of them are implemented already.

This was not easy though.
The _Xm* functions seem to be undocumented in Motif 1.2 therefore
we will make every effort to implement the functions as best we can.

One of our sources of information was
"Writing Your Own OSF/MOTIF Widgets" by McMinds and Whitty,
kindly donated to us by Linux International.
<!--
  amai: should perhaps point to LesstifInternals.3 ?!

The _Xm functions are implemented in the
Internal Functions
section of the LessTif Documentation project.
-->

Many of the _Xm* functions are exposed in
OSF/Motif&reg; 2.0 where they changed names into Xme*.




Does LessTif support I18N?

Two widgets that accept text input (namely XmText and XmTextField)
do support it, but they don't feature multibyte support.

This means you can use sequences such as Multi_key+c+o to
get &copy;, Multi_key+n+~ to get the &ntilde;, etc..
These work because they're part of the ISO Latin 1 character set,
which is based on one-byte representations.

The XmText and XmTextField widgets can handle input methods, as
described above, but they don't have multibyte support.
This means that Asian input methods which work with a multi-byte
representation of a character will not work (yet).

The XmIm*() API is work in progress,
this is probably not a problem for you as we have yet to
discover an application that uses it.




How to submit a bugfix/patch?

This topic is covered in an extraneous
document
which is also distributed in plain ASCII format (BUG-REPORTING).




What about memory leaks ?
Obviously we don't like memory leaks in LessTif.
A couple of tests have been done with commercial memory analysis
tools, some of the apps in the tests/ tree help tracking some
leaks as well.

We believe we're not doing really bad.

One package which can help you (and us) in tracking memory problems
both in your application and in LessTif, is dmalloc,
a library which can be obtained from
www.dmalloc.com .

You can compile LessTif itself with dmalloc by using the --with-dmalloc
option to the "configure" command.

Dmalloc is freely available software,
but please note the license
which is different from most other free software licenses.







TOPIC: Compiling Applications With LessTif





I installed LessTif but I can't compile apps with it. What's wrong ? 

This probably has to do with your compiler options.
If it's indeed that, there are several possibilities.

In the examples we'll give now,
we'll be using some installation directories
that may differ from your installation.
Please adjust your compilation parameters accordingly,
don't try to fix your installation so it matches our examples.
In our examples, X has been installed in /usr/X11R6 and
LessTif has been installed in /usr/lesstif.

Compilation of applications is really a two-step process :

compiling all sources
linking them together


The compilation phase needs to know where to find include files.
These are files that are referenced in the C (or C++) sources of your
programs as

#include &lt;Xm/Xm.h&gt;

and you should find them on your system in a couple of directories
under /usr/lesstif/Motif1.2/include or
/usr/lesstif/Motif2.0/include.
Specifically the file mentioned above should show up as
/usr/lesstif/Motif1.2/include/Xm/Xm.h or
/usr/lesstif/Motif2.0/include/Xm/Xm.h .

For your compiler to find these files, it needs to be told where to look.
Using the examples above, the flag needed would be -I/usr/lesstif/include .
Note that you need to tell the compiler the same thing about the X Window System
include files, you need to do that by using the -I/usr/X11R6/include flag.
So together this gives

  -I/usr/X11R6/include -I/usr/lesstif/include


The second step, linking all the source files together, requires similar flags.
The linker needs to know where the libraries are,
and additionally you need to tell it which libraries
to include in the link process.

Again, using the example outlined above,
we'd need to use the flags

  -L/usr/X11R6/lib -L/usr/lesstif/lib

for the linker to know where to look, and

  -lMrm -lXm -lXt -lXext -lX11 -lSM -lICE

to know which libraries to use.
Note that the -lMrm library, as well as the -lXext library, aren't
always needed, so you might get away with using flags like

  -L/usr/X11R6/lib -L/usr/lesstif/lib -lXm -lXt -lX11 -lSM -lICE

Note that the order of the libraries is important on some systems,
and less important on others.
This means that an application writer better uses the right order,
or his application won't build on some systems.




My application doesn't build. What do I do ?

If your application doesn't build, this could have several reasons.
If it fails in the compilation process, you probably have an application
that's not error-free; or (more likely) one which needs configuration for
your site, computer platform, etc.

It would be a good idea to consult the compilation and installation
guidelines for that application.

If the linking process fails,
this probably means you didn't specify some library,
or the required libraries aren't present on your system.
Error messages indicating this are a long list of undefined symbols
most of which have a name with an identical prefix, such as Xm.

In the following we list some prefixes and the related library.




prefix

linker command

Xt
-lXt

Xmu
-lXmu

Sm
-lSM

Ice
-lICE

Xdbe, Xext, XShape
-lXext

Xm
-lXm

Mrm
-lMrm



The order in which you should specify these options is

-lMrm -lXm -lXt -lXmu -lXext -lX11 -lSM -lICE

Of course not all of these libraries are always necessary,
but in some cases more libraries may be required
(-lsocket is another candidate here). Also make sure the linker
is able to find the libs, e.g. it may be necessary to add
an -L/usr/lesstif/lib or similar.

Once more, the compilation and installation guidelines for the application
probably tell you which libraries to link with.

Finally, please make sure that you have the X development packages
installed on your system, not only the X user stuff.
Forgetting to install the development system could result in
messages like Xm/Xm.h : cannot open file,
or -lXt: library not found.




This app uses Imake but it won't build right.

Imake is a tool which is included in the X Window System distributions.
It is an extra layer above Makefiles (processed by the make program)
which attempts to make the build process more system independent.

Nowadays more and more applications use GNU autoconf and GNU automake
for the same purpose.

The imake program process an Imakefile and turns it into a Makefile.
Often the Imakefile uses some template file that comes with the application,
to specify additional options.

If you use imake directly to create the Makefile,
then this will probably not work right,
because you need to tell imake to read the LessTif configuration files.
The mxmkmf program calls imake with the right parameters,
so just using this should help.

It is also possible that the Imakefile file or some file used by it
overrides some of LessTif's parameters.
Please check whether EXTRA_INCLUDES, XMLIB, or XmClientLibs
are overruled in these files.
If they are, then this is probably the cause of the problem.




  Can I use LessTif with C++ ?
You sure can.
There really are two ways.
You can use it directly, or through one of the C++ wrappers for Motif.
Much of this is discussed in the Motif FAQ which can be found
at Ken Lee's website at
http://www.rahul.net/~kenton .
We're copying a tiny bit of information from one of the FAQ issues here.

Using LessTif directly with C++ prompts the question on how to use
class member functions as callbacks. Here's part of Ken's answer :


There are three common user problems with C++ callbacks.


First, make sure you use the correct function prototype for
the function declarations.

Second, the callback function must be declared as a static member of the
class.
 Third, when registering it with XtAddCallback(), you must use its full
signature.


Here's an example :

    class MyClass {
      void createWidgets();
      static void myButtonCB(Widget, XtPointer, XtPointer);
    };

    void MyClass::createWidgets() {
      w = XtCreatePushButton(...);
      XtAddCallback(w, XmNactivateCallback, &MyClass::myButtonCB, (XtPointer) this);
    }

    void myButtonCB(Widget w, XtPointer clientData, XtPointer callData) {
      MyClass *myclass = (MyClass *) clientData;
    }

Note that the "this" pointer is used as the client data.
This technique is popular, but not required.

Motif++ has a nice tutorial summarizing mechanisms.


Motif++ is one of the C++ wrappers for Motif/LessTif.











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