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  • TestDriven.Net 3.0 – All Systems Go

    - by Jamie Cansdale
    I’m pleased to announce that TestDriven.Net 3.0 is now available. Finally! I know many of you will already be using the Beta and RC versions, but if you look at the release notes you’ll see there’s been many refinements since then, so I highly recommend you install the RTM version. Here is a quick summary of a few new features: Visual Studio 2010 supports targeting multiple versions of the .NET framework (multi-targeting). This means you can easily upgrade your Visual Studio 2005/2008 solutions without necessarily converting them to use .NET 4.0. TestDriven.Net will execute your tests using the .NET version your test project is targeting (see ‘Properties > Application > Target framework’). There is now first class support for MSTest when using Visual Studio 2008 & 2010. Previous versions of TestDriven.Net had support for a limited number of MSTest attributes. This version supports virtually all MSTest unit testing related attributes, including support for deployment item and data driven test attributes. You should also find this test runner is quick. ;) There is a new ‘Go To Test/Code’ command on the code context menu. You can think of this as Ctrl-Tab for test driven developers; it will quickly flip back and forth between your tests and code under test. I recommend assigning a keyboard shortcut to the ‘TestDriven.NET.GoToTestOrCode’ command. NCover can now be used for code coverage on .NET 4.0. This is only officially supported since NCover 3.2 (your mileage may vary if you’re using the 1.5.8 version). Rather than clutter the ‘Output’ window, ignored or skipped tests will be placed on the ‘Task List’. You can double-click on these items to navigate to the offending test (or assign a keyboard shortcut to ‘View.NextTask’). If you’re using a Team, Premium or Ultimate edition of Visual Studio 2005-2010, a new ‘Test With > Performance’ command will be available. This command will perform instrumented performance profiling on your target code. A particular focus of this version has been to make it more keyboard friendly. Here’s a list of commands you will probably want to assign keyboard shortcuts to: Name Default What I use TestDriven.NET.RunTests Run tests in context   Alt + T TestDriven.NET.RerunTests Repeat test run   Alt + R TestDriven.NET.GoToTestOrCode Flip between tests and code   Alt + G TestDriven.NET.Debugger Run tests with debugger   Alt + D View.Output Show the ‘Output’ window Ctrl+ Alt + O   Edit.BreakLine Edit code in stack trace Enter   View.NextError Jump to next failed test Ctrl + Shift + F12   View.NextTask Jump to next skipped test   Alt + S   By default the ‘Output’ window will automatically activate when there is test output or a failed test (this is an option). The cursor will be positioned on the stack trace of the last failed test, ready for you to hit ‘Enter’ to jump to the fail point or ‘Esc’ to return to your source (assuming your ‘Output’ window is set to auto-hide).  If your ‘Output’ window isn’t set to auto-hide, you’ll need to hit ‘Ctrl + Alt + O’ then ‘Enter’. Alternatively you can use ‘Ctrl + Shift + F12’ (View.NextError) to navigate between all failed tests.   For more frequent updates or to give feedback, you can find me on twitter here. I hope you enjoy this version. Let me know how you get on. :)

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  • My ASP.NET news sources

    - by Jon Galloway
    I just posted about the ASP.NET Daily Community Spotlight. I was going to list a bunch of my news sources at the end, but figured this deserves a separate post. I've been following a lot of development blogs for a long time - for a while I subscribed to over 1500 feeds and read them all. That doesn't scale very well, though, and it's really time consuming. Since the community spotlight requires an interesting ASP.NET post every day of the year, I've come up with a few sources of ASP.NET news. Top Link Blogs Chris Alcock's The Morning Brew is a must-read blog which highlights each day's best blog posts across the .NET community. He covers the entire Microsoft development, but generally any of the top ASP.NET posts I see either have already been listed on The Morning Brew or will be there soon. Elijah Manor posts a lot of great content, which is available in his Twitter feed at @elijahmanor, on his Delicious feed, and on a dedicated website - Web Dev Tweets. While not 100% ASP.NET focused, I've been appreciating Joe Stagner's Weekly Links series, partly since he includes a lot of links that don't show up on my other lists. Twitter Over the past few years, I've been getting more and more of my information from my Twitter network (as opposed to RSS or other means). Twitter is as good as your network, so if getting good information off Twitter sounds crazy, you're probably not following the right people. I already mentioned Elijah Manor (@elijahmanor). I follow over a thousand people on Twitter, so I'm not going to try to pick and choose a list, but one good way to get started building out a Twitter network is to follow active Twitter users on the ASP.NET team at Microsoft: @scottgu (well, not on the ASP.NET team, but their great grand boss, and always a great source of ASP.NET info) @shanselman @haacked @bradwilson @davidfowl @InfinitiesLoop @davidebbo @marcind @DamianEdwards @stevensanderson @bleroy @humancompiler @osbornm @anurse I'm sure I'm missing a few, and I'll update the list. Building a Twitter network that follows topics you're interested in allows you to use other tools like Cadmus to automatically summarize top content by leveraging the collective input of many users. Twitter Search with Topsy You can search Twitter for hashtags (like #aspnet, #aspnetmvc, and #webmatrix) to get a raw view of what people are talking about on Twitter. Twitter's search is pretty poor; I prefer Topsy. Here's an example search for the #aspnetmvc hashtag: http://topsy.com/s?q=%23aspnetmvc You can also do combined queries for several tags: http://topsy.com/s?q=%23aspnetmvc+OR+%23aspnet+OR+%23webmatrix Paper.li Paper.li is a handy service that builds a custom daily newspaper based on your social network. They've turned a lot of people off by automatically tweeting "The SuperDevFoo Daily is out!!!" messages (which can be turned off), but if you're ignoring them because of those message, you're missing out on a handy, free service. My paper.li page includes content across a lot of interests, including ASP.NET: http://paper.li/jongalloway When I want to drill into a specific tag, though, I'll just look at the Paper.li post for that hashtag. For example, here's the #aspnetmvc paper.li page: http://paper.li/tag/aspnetmvc Delicious I mentioned previously that I use Delicious for managing site links. I also use their network and search features. The tag based search is pretty good: Even better, though, is that I can see who's bookmarked these links, and add them to my Delicious network. After having built out a network, I can optimize by doing less searching and more leaching leveraging of collective intelligence. Community Sites I scan DotNetKicks, the weblogs.asp.net combined feed, and the ASP.NET Community page, CodeBetter, Los Techies,  CodeProject,  and DotNetSlackers from time to time. They're hit and miss, but they do offer more of an opportunity for finding original content which others may have missed. Terms of Enrampagement When someone's on a tear, I just manually check their sites more often. I could use RSS for that, but it changes pretty often. I just keep a mental note of people who are cranking out a lot of good content and check their sites more often. What works for you?

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  • Tips on Migrating from AquaLogic .NET Accelerator to WebCenter WSRP Producer for .NET

    - by user647124
    This year I embarked on a journey to migrate a group of ASP.NET web applications developed to integrate with WebLogic Portal 9.2 via the AquaLogic® Interaction .NET Application Accelerator 1.0 to instead use the Oracle WebCenter WSRP Producer for .NET and integrated with WebLogic Portal 10.3.4. It has been a very winding path and this blog entry is intended to share both the lessons learned and relevant approaches that led to those learnings. Like most journeys of discovery, it was not a direct path, and there are notes to let you know when it is practical to skip a section if you are in a hurry to get from here to there. For the Curious From the perspective of necessity, this section would be better at the end. If it were there, though, it would probably be read by far fewer people, including those that are actually interested in these types of sections. Those in a hurry may skip past and be none the worst for it in dealing with the hands-on bits of performing a migration from .NET Accelerator to WSRP Producer. For others who want to talk about why they did what they did after they did it, or just want to know for themselves, enjoy. A Brief (and edited) History of the WSRP for .NET Technologies (as Relevant to the this Post) Note: This section is for those who are curious about why the migration path is not as simple as many other Oracle technologies. You can skip this section in its entirety and still be just as competent in performing a migration as if you had read it. The currently deployed architecture that was to be migrated and upgraded achieved initial integration between .NET and J2EE over the WSRP protocol through the use of The AquaLogic Interaction .NET Application Accelerator. The .NET Accelerator allowed the applications that were written in ASP.NET and deployed on a Microsoft Internet Information Server (IIS) to interact with a WebLogic Portal application deployed on a WebLogic (J2EE application) Server (both version 9.2, the state of the art at the time of its creation). At the time this architectural decision for the application was made, both the AquaLogic and WebLogic brands were owned by BEA Systems. The AquaLogic brand included products acquired by BEA through the acquisition of Plumtree, whose flagship product was a portal platform available in both J2EE and .NET versions. As part of this dual technology support an adaptor was created to facilitate the use of WSRP as a communication protocol where customers wished to integrate components from both versions of the Plumtree portal. The adapter evolved over several product generations to include a broad array of both standard and proprietary WSRP integration capabilities. Later, BEA Systems was acquired by Oracle. Over the course of several years Oracle has acquired a large number of portal applications and has taken the strategic direction to migrate users of these myriad (and formerly competitive) products to the Oracle WebCenter technology stack. As part of Oracle’s strategic technology roadmap, older portal products are being schedule for end of life, including the portal products that were part of the BEA acquisition. The .NET Accelerator has been modified over a very long period of time with features driven by users of that product and developed under three different vendors (each a direct competitor in the same solution space prior to merger). The Oracle WebCenter WSRP Producer for .NET was introduced much more recently with the key objective to specifically address the needs of the WebCenter customers developing solutions accessible through both J2EE and .NET platforms utilizing the WSRP specifications. The Oracle Product Development Team also provides these insights on the drivers for developing the WSRP Producer: ***************************************** Support for ASP.NET AJAX. Controls using the ASP.NET AJAX script manager do not function properly in the Application Accelerator for .NET. Support 2 way SSL in WLP. This was not possible with the proxy/bridge set up in the existing Application Accelerator for .NET. Allow developers to code portlets (Web Parts) using the .NET framework rather than a proprietary framework. Developers had to use the Application Accelerator for .NET plug-ins to Visual Studio to manage preferences and profile data. This is now replaced with the .NET Framework Personalization (for preferences) and Profile providers. The WSRP Producer for .NET was created as a new way of developing .NET portlets. It was never designed to be an upgrade path for the Application Accelerator for .NET. .NET developers would create new .NET portlets with the WSRP Producer for .NET and leave any existing .NET portlets running in the Application Accelerator for .NET. ***************************************** The advantage to creating a new solution for WSRP is a product that is far easier for Oracle to maintain and support which in turn improves quality, reliability and maintainability for their customers. No changes to J2EE applications consuming the WSRP portlets previously rendered by the.NET Accelerator is required to migrate from the Aqualogic WSRP solution. For some customers using the .NET Accelerator the challenge is adapting their current .NET applications to work with the WSRP Producer (or any other WSRP adapter as they are proprietary by nature). Part of this adaptation is the need to deploy the .NET applications as a child to the WSRP producer web application as root. Differences between .NET Accelerator and WSRP Producer Note: This section is for those who are curious about why the migration is not as pluggable as something such as changing security providers in WebLogic Server. You can skip this section in its entirety and still be just as competent in performing a migration as if you had read it. The basic terminology used to describe the participating applications in a WSRP environment are the same when applied to either the .NET Accelerator or the WSRP Producer: Producer and Consumer. In both cases the .NET application serves as what is referred to as a WSRP environment as the Producer. The difference lies in how the two adapters create the WSRP translation of the .NET application. The .NET Accelerator, as the name implies, is meant to serve as a quick way of adding WSRP capability to a .NET application. As such, at a high level, the .NET Accelerator behaves as a proxy for requests between the .NET application and the WSRP Consumer. A WSRP request is sent from the consumer to the .NET Accelerator, the.NET Accelerator transforms this request into an ASP.NET request, receives the response, then transforms the response into a WSRP response. The .NET Accelerator is deployed as a stand-alone application on IIS. The WSRP Producer is deployed as a parent application on IIS and all ASP.NET modules that will be made available over WSRP are deployed as children of the WSRP Producer application. In this manner, the WSRP Producer acts more as a Request Filter than a proxy in the WSRP transactions between Producer and Consumer. Highly Recommended Enabling Logging Note: You can skip this section now, but you will most likely want to come back to it later, so why not just read it now? Logging is very helpful in tracking down the causes of any anomalies during testing of migrated portlets. To enable the WSRP Producer logging, update the Application_Start method in the Global.asax.cs for your .NET application by adding log4net.Config.XmlConfigurator.Configure(); IIS logs will usually (in a standard configuration) be in a sub folder under C:\WINDOWS\system32\LogFiles\W3SVC. WSRP Producer logs will be found at C:\Oracle\Middleware\WSRPProducerForDotNet\wsrpdefault\Logs\WSRPProducer.log InputTrace.webinfo and OutputTrace.webinfo are located under C:\Oracle\Middleware\WSRPProducerForDotNet\wsrpdefault and can be useful in debugging issues related to markup transformations. Things You Must Do Merge Web.Config Note: If you have been skipping all the sections that you can, now is the time to stop and pay attention J Because the existing .NET application will become a sub-application to the WSRP Producer, you will want to merge required settings from the existing Web.Config to the one in the WSRP Producer. Use the WSRP Producer Master Page The Master Page installed for the WSRP Producer provides common, hiddenform fields and JavaScripts to facilitate portlet instance management and display configuration when the child page is being rendered over WSRP. You add the Master Page by including it in the <@ Page declaration with MasterPageFile="~/portlets/Resources/MasterPages/WSRP.Master" . You then replace: <!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.0 Transitional//EN" > <HTML> <HEAD> With <asp:Content ID="ContentHead1" ContentPlaceHolderID="wsrphead" Runat="Server"> And </HEAD> <body> <form id="theForm" method="post" runat="server"> With </asp:Content> <asp:Content ID="ContentBody1" ContentPlaceHolderID="Main" Runat="Server"> And finally </form> </body> </HTML> With </asp:Content> In the event you already use Master Pages, adapt your existing Master Pages to be sub masters. See Nested ASP.NET Master Pages for a detailed reference of how to do this. It Happened to Me, It Might Happen to You…Or Not Watch for Use of Session or Request in OnInit In the event the .NET application being modified has pages developed to assume the user has been authenticated in an earlier page request there may be direct or indirect references in the OnInit method to request or session objects that may not have been created yet. This will vary from application to application, so the recommended approach is to test first. If there is an issue with a page running as a WSRP portlet then check for potential references in the OnInit method (including references by methods called within OnInit) to session or request objects. If there are, the simplest solution is to create a new method and then call that method once the necessary object(s) is fully available. I find doing this at the start of the Page_Load method to be the simplest solution. Case Sensitivity .NET languages are not case sensitive, but Java is. This means it is possible to have many variations of SRC= and src= or .JPG and .jpg. The preferred solution is to make these mark up instances all lower case in your .NET application. This will allow the default Rewriter rules in wsrp-producer.xml to work as is. If this is not practical, then make duplicates of any rules where an issue is occurring due to upper or mixed case usage in the .NET application markup and match the case in use with the duplicate rule. For example: <RewriterRule> <LookFor>(href=\"([^\"]+)</LookFor> <ChangeToAbsolute>true</ChangeToAbsolute> <ApplyTo>.axd,.css</ApplyTo> <MakeResource>true</MakeResource> </RewriterRule> May need to be duplicated as: <RewriterRule> <LookFor>(HREF=\"([^\"]+)</LookFor> <ChangeToAbsolute>true</ChangeToAbsolute> <ApplyTo>.axd,.css</ApplyTo> <MakeResource>true</MakeResource> </RewriterRule> While it is possible to write a regular expression that will handle mixed case usage, it would be long and strenous to test and maintain, so the recommendation is to use duplicate rules. Is it Still Relative? Some .NET applications base relative paths with a fixed root location. With the introduction of the WSRP Producer, the root has moved up one level. References to ~/ will need to be updated to ~/portlets and many ../ paths will need another ../ in front. I Can See You But I Can’t Find You This issue was first discovered while debugging modules with code that referenced the form on a page from the code-behind by name and/or id. The initial error presented itself as run-time error that was difficult to interpret over WSRP but seemed clear when run as straight ASP.NET as it indicated that the object with the form name did not exist. Since the form name was no longer valid after implementing the WSRP Master Page, the likely fix seemed to simply update the references in the code. However, as the WSRP Master Page is external to the code, a compile time error resulted: Error      155         The name 'form1' does not exist in the current context                C:\Oracle\Middleware\WSRPProducerForDotNet\wsrpdefault\portlets\legacywebsite\module\Screens \Reporting.aspx.cs                51           52           legacywebsite.module Much hair-pulling research later it was discovered that it was the use of the FindControl method causing the issue. FindControl doesn’t work quite as expected once a Master Page has been introduced as the controls become embedded in controls, require a recursion to find them that is not part of the FindControl method. In code where the page form is referenced by name, there are two steps to the solution. First, the form needs to be referenced in code generically with Page.Form. For example, this: ToggleControl ctrl = new ToggleControl(frmManualEntry, FunctionLibrary.ParseArrayLst(userObj.Roles)); Becomes this: ToggleControl ctrl = new ToggleControl(Page.Form, FunctionLibrary.ParseArrayLst(userObj.Roles)); Generally the form id is referenced in most ASP.NET applications as a path to a control on the form. To reach the control once a MasterPage has been added requires an additional method to recurse through the controls collections within the form and find the control ID. The following method (found at Rick Strahl's Web Log) corrects this very nicely: public static Control FindControlRecursive(Control Root, string Id) { if (Root.ID == Id) return Root; foreach (Control Ctl in Root.Controls) { Control FoundCtl = FindControlRecursive(Ctl, Id); if (FoundCtl != null) return FoundCtl; } return null; } Where the form name is not referenced, simply using the FindControlRecursive method in place of FindControl will be all that is necessary. Following the second part of the example referenced earlier, the method called with Page.Form changes its value extraction code block from this: Label lblErrMsg = (Label)frmRef.FindControl("lblBRMsg" To this: Label lblErrMsg = (Label) FunctionLibrary.FindControlRecursive(frmRef, "lblBRMsg" The Master That Won’t Step Aside In most migrations it is preferable to make as few changes as possible. In one case I ran across an existing Master Page that would not function as a sub-Master Page. While it would probably have been educational to trace down why, the expedient process of updating it to take the place of the WSRP Master Page is the route I took. The changes are highlighted below: … <asp:ContentPlaceHolder ID="wsrphead" runat="server"></asp:ContentPlaceHolder> </head> <body leftMargin="0" topMargin="0"> <form id="TheForm" runat="server"> <input type="hidden" name="key" id="key" value="" /> <input type="hidden" name="formactionurl" id="formactionurl" value="" /> <input type="hidden" name="handle" id="handle" value="" /> <asp:ScriptManager ID="ScriptManager1" runat="server" EnablePartialRendering="true" > </asp:ScriptManager> This approach did not work for all existing Master Pages, but fortunately all of the other existing Master Pages I have run across worked fine as a sub-Master to the WSRP Master Page. Moving On In Enterprise Portals, even after you get everything working, the work is not finished. Next you need to get it where everyone will work with it. Migration Planning Providing that the server where IIS is running is adequately sized, it is possible to run both the .NET Accelerator and the WSRP Producer on the same server during the upgrade process. The upgrade can be performed incrementally, i.e., one portlet at a time, if server administration processes support it. Those processes would include the ability to manage a second producer in the consuming portal and to change over individual portlet instances from one provider to the other. If processes or requirements demand that all portlets be cut over at the same time, it needs to be determined if this cut over should include a new producer, updating all of the portlets in the consumer, or if the WSRP Producer portlet configuration must maintain the naming conventions used by the .NET Accelerator and simply change the WSRP end point configured in the consumer. In some enterprises it may even be necessary to maintain the same WSDL end point, at which point the IIS configuration will be where the updates occur. The downside to such a requirement is that it makes rolling back very difficult, should the need arise. Location, Location, Location Not everyone wants the web application to have the descriptively obvious wsrpdefault location, or needs to create a second WSRP site on the same server. The instructions below are from the product team and, while targeted towards making a second site, will work for creating a site with a different name and then remove the old site. You can also change just the name in IIS. Manually Creating a WSRP Producer Site Instructions (NOTE: all executables used are the same ones used by the installer and “wsrpdev” will be the name of the new instance): 1. Copy C:\Oracle\Middleware\WSRPProducerForDotNet\wsrpdefault to C:\Oracle\Middleware\WSRPProducerForDotNet\wsrpdev. 2. Bring up a command window as an administrator 3. Run C:\Oracle\Middleware\WSRPProducerForDotNet\uninstall_resources\IISAppAccelSiteCreator.exe install WSRPProducers wsrpdev "C:\Oracle\Middleware\WSRPProducerForDotNet\wsrpdev" 8678 2.0.50727 4. Run C:\Oracle\Middleware\WSRPProducerForDotNet\uninstall_resources\PermManage.exe add FileSystem C:\Oracle\Middleware\WSRPProducerForDotNet\wsrpdev "NETWORK SERVICE" 3 1 5. Run C:\Oracle\Middleware\WSRPProducerForDotNet\uninstall_resources\PermManage.exe add FileSystem C:\Oracle\Middleware\WSRPProducerForDotNet\wsrpdev EVERYONE 1 1 6. Open up C:\Oracle\Middleware\WSRPProducerForDotNet\wsdl\1.0\WSRPService.wsdl and replace wsrpdefault with wsrpdev 7. Open up C:\Oracle\Middleware\WSRPProducerForDotNet\wsdl\2.0\WSRPService.wsdl and replace wsrpdefault with wsrpdev Tests: 1. Bring up a browser on the host itself and go to http://localhost:8678/wsrpdev/wsdl/1.0/WSRPService.wsdl and make sure that the URLs in the XML returned include the wsrpdev changes you made in step 6. 2. Bring up a browser on the host itself and see if the default sample comes up: http://localhost:8678/wsrpdev/portlets/ASPNET_AJAX_sample/default.aspx 3. Register the producer in WLP and test the portlet. Changing the Port used by WSRP Producer The pre-configured port for the WSRP Producer is 8678. You can change this port by updating both the IIS configuration and C:\Oracle\Middleware\WSRPProducerForDotNet\[WSRP_APP_NAME]\wsdl\1.0\WSRPService.wsdl. Do You Need to Migrate? Oracle Premier Support ended in November of 2010 for AquaLogic Interaction .NET Application Accelerator 1.x and Extended Support ends in November 2012 (see http://www.oracle.com/us/support/lifetime-support/lifetime-support-software-342730.html for other related dates). This means that integration with products released after November of 2010 is not supported. If having such support is the policy within your enterprise, you do indeed need to migrate. If changes in your enterprise cause your current solution with the .NET Accelerator to no longer function properly, you may need to migrate. Migration is a choice, and if the goals of your enterprise are to take full advantage of newer technologies then migration is certainly one activity you should be planning for.

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  • Daily tech links for .net and related technologies - Apr 15-18, 2010

    - by SanjeevAgarwal
    Daily tech links for .net and related technologies - Apr 15-18, 2010 Web Development Guarding against CSRF Attacks in ASP.NET MVC2 - Scott Kirkland Same Markup: Writing Cross-Browser Code - Tony Ross Introducing Machine.Specifications.Mvc - James Broome ASP.NET 4 - Breaking Changes and Stuff to be Aware of - Scott Hanselman JSON Hijacking in ASP.NET MVC 2 - Matt Easy And Safe Model Binding In ASP.NET MVC - Justin Etheredge MVC Portable Areas Enhancement - Embedded Resource Controller - Steve Michelotti...(read more)

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  • asp.NET Dynamic Data Site and asp.NET MVC-2 site together

    - by loviji
    Hi, I have created firstly ASP.NET MVC 2. and write more functionality. After I create asp.NET Dynamic Data Site. now, when I click on run button in Visual Studio, mvc app. opened in browser as http://localhost:50062. and asp.NET Dynamic Data Site as http://localhost:58395/cms/. but i want to merge this app. in one. can I use asp.NET Dynamic Data Site and asp.NET MVC-2 at the same time?

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  • .Net Compact Framework Tips, Tricks, and Gotchas

    - by Mat Nadrofsky
    Hey everyone, We work extensively in the .Net Compact Framework and Windows Mobile. I've seen plenty of questions come up regarding specifics to development of ASP.Net apps or other .Net based desktop apps but nothing CF specific. Anyone else a mobile developer out there that can share some things to start doing, stop doing, and avoid doing when developing in the Compact Framework?

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  • Upgrading ASP.NET AJAX 1.0 Websites to .NET 4.5

    - by Lijo
    I have an existing website in ASP.Net 2.0 that uses ASP.Net Ajax 1.0. This is developed using Visual Studio 2005. Now, we are planning to upgrade this to .Net 4.5 and VS2013. When I made a search, I could see that there are blogs about upgrading projects with Ajax 1.0 to .Net 3.5 version. However I could not find useful links for upgrading to .Net 4.5. Do we have any useful links for that? Or is it an unworkable approach? Note: As of now we have not purchased VS2013 and servers for this. Purchase depends on the feasibility study. Hence I cannot test it myself, at present. Upgrading ASP.NET AJAX 1.0 Websites and Web Applications to .NET Framework 3.5 How To: Upgrade an ASP.NET AJAX 1.0 Web Project to .NET Framework 3.5

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  • Does 'Web Pages' use the same syntax as 'MVC'?

    - by Laberto
    I see that there is a new model in ASP.NET development which called 'ASP.NET Web Pages'. I would like to know if this model resembles the ASP.NET MVC Model. The point is that I found it difficult to learn ASP.NET MVC and someone told me: OK, if you learn ASP.NET Web Pages at first then learning ASP.NET MVC will be easier because of the Razor syntax in both models. Could you please tell me the truth if you have tried both?

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  • What’s new in ASP.NET 4.0: Core Features

    - by Rick Strahl
    Microsoft released the .NET Runtime 4.0 and with it comes a brand spanking new version of ASP.NET – version 4.0 – which provides an incremental set of improvements to an already powerful platform. .NET 4.0 is a full release of the .NET Framework, unlike version 3.5, which was merely a set of library updates on top of the .NET Framework version 2.0. Because of this full framework revision, there has been a welcome bit of consolidation of assemblies and configuration settings. The full runtime version change to 4.0 also means that you have to explicitly pick version 4.0 of the runtime when you create a new Application Pool in IIS, unlike .NET 3.5, which actually requires version 2.0 of the runtime. In this first of two parts I'll take a look at some of the changes in the core ASP.NET runtime. In the next edition I'll go over improvements in Web Forms and Visual Studio. Core Engine Features Most of the high profile improvements in ASP.NET have to do with Web Forms, but there are a few gems in the core runtime that should make life easier for ASP.NET developers. The following list describes some of the things I've found useful among the new features. Clean web.config Files Are Back! If you've been using ASP.NET 3.5, you probably have noticed that the web.config file has turned into quite a mess of configuration settings between all the custom handler and module mappings for the various web server versions. Part of the reason for this mess is that .NET 3.5 is a collection of add-on components running on top of the .NET Runtime 2.0 and so almost all of the new features of .NET 3.5 where essentially introduced as custom modules and handlers that had to be explicitly configured in the config file. Because the core runtime didn't rev with 3.5, all those configuration options couldn't be moved up to other configuration files in the system chain. With version 4.0 a consolidation was possible, and the result is a much simpler web.config file by default. A default empty ASP.NET 4.0 Web Forms project looks like this: <?xml version="1.0"?> <configuration> <system.web> <compilation debug="true" targetFramework="4.0" /> </system.web> </configuration> Need I say more? Configuration Transformation Files to Manage Configurations and Application Packaging ASP.NET 4.0 introduces the ability to create multi-target configuration files. This means it's possible to create a single configuration file that can be transformed based on relatively simple replacement rules using a Visual Studio and WebDeploy provided XSLT syntax. The idea is that you can create a 'master' configuration file and then create customized versions of this master configuration file by applying some relatively simplistic search and replace, add or remove logic to specific elements and attributes in the original file. To give you an idea, here's the example code that Visual Studio creates for a default web.Release.config file, which replaces a connection string, removes the debug attribute and replaces the CustomErrors section: <?xml version="1.0"?> <configuration xmlns:xdt="http://schemas.microsoft.com/XML-Document-Transform"> <connectionStrings> <add name="MyDB" connectionString="Data Source=ReleaseSQLServer;Initial Catalog=MyReleaseDB;Integrated Security=True" xdt:Transform="SetAttributes" xdt:Locator="Match(name)"/> </connectionStrings> <system.web> <compilation xdt:Transform="RemoveAttributes(debug)" /> <customErrors defaultRedirect="GenericError.htm" mode="RemoteOnly" xdt:Transform="Replace"> <error statusCode="500" redirect="InternalError.htm"/> </customErrors> </system.web> </configuration> You can see the XSL transform syntax that drives this functionality. Basically, only the elements listed in the override file are matched and updated – all the rest of the original web.config file stays intact. Visual Studio 2010 supports this functionality directly in the project system so it's easy to create and maintain these customized configurations in the project tree. Once you're ready to publish your application, you can then use the Publish <yourWebApplication> option on the Build menu which allows publishing to disk, via FTP or to a Web Server using Web Deploy. You can also create a deployment package as a .zip file which can be used by the WebDeploy tool to configure and install the application. You can manually run the Web Deploy tool or use the IIS Manager to install the package on the server or other machine. You can find out more about WebDeploy and Packaging here: http://tinyurl.com/2anxcje. Improved Routing Routing provides a relatively simple way to create clean URLs with ASP.NET by associating a template URL path and routing it to a specific ASP.NET HttpHandler. Microsoft first introduced routing with ASP.NET MVC and then they integrated routing with a basic implementation in the core ASP.NET engine via a separate ASP.NET routing assembly. In ASP.NET 4.0, the process of using routing functionality gets a bit easier. First, routing is now rolled directly into System.Web, so no extra assembly reference is required in your projects to use routing. The RouteCollection class now includes a MapPageRoute() method that makes it easy to route to any ASP.NET Page requests without first having to implement an IRouteHandler implementation. It would have been nice if this could have been extended to serve *any* handler implementation, but unfortunately for anything but a Page derived handlers you still will have to implement a custom IRouteHandler implementation. ASP.NET Pages now include a RouteData collection that will contain route information. Retrieving route data is now a lot easier by simply using this.RouteData.Values["routeKey"] where the routeKey is the value specified in the route template (i.e., "users/{userId}" would use Values["userId"]). The Page class also has a GetRouteUrl() method that you can use to create URLs with route data values rather than hardcoding the URL: <%= this.GetRouteUrl("users",new { userId="ricks" }) %> You can also use the new Expression syntax using <%$RouteUrl %> to accomplish something similar, which can be easier to embed into Page or MVC View code: <a runat="server" href='<%$RouteUrl:RouteName=user, id=ricks %>'>Visit User</a> Finally, the Response object also includes a new RedirectToRoute() method to build a route url for redirection without hardcoding the URL. Response.RedirectToRoute("users", new { userId = "ricks" }); All of these routines are helpers that have been integrated into the core ASP.NET engine to make it easier to create routes and retrieve route data, which hopefully will result in more people taking advantage of routing in ASP.NET. To find out more about the routing improvements you can check out Dan Maharry's blog which has a couple of nice blog entries on this subject: http://tinyurl.com/37trutj and http://tinyurl.com/39tt5w5. Session State Improvements Session state is an often used and abused feature in ASP.NET and version 4.0 introduces a few enhancements geared towards making session state more efficient and to minimize at least some of the ill effects of overuse. The first improvement affects out of process session state, which is typically used in web farm environments or for sites that store application sensitive data that must survive AppDomain restarts (which in my opinion is just about any application). When using OutOfProc session state, ASP.NET serializes all the data in the session statebag into a blob that gets carried over the network and stored either in the State server or SQL Server via the Session provider. Version 4.0 provides some improvement in this serialization of the session data by offering an enableCompression option on the web.Config <Session> section, which forces the serialized session state to be compressed. Depending on the type of data that is being serialized, this compression can reduce the size of the data travelling over the wire by as much as a third. It works best on string data, but can also reduce the size of binary data. In addition, ASP.NET 4.0 now offers a way to programmatically turn session state on or off as part of the request processing queue. In prior versions, the only way to specify whether session state is available is by implementing a marker interface on the HTTP handler implementation. In ASP.NET 4.0, you can now turn session state on and off programmatically via HttpContext.Current.SetSessionStateBehavior() as part of the ASP.NET module pipeline processing as long as it occurs before the AquireRequestState pipeline event. Output Cache Provider Output caching in ASP.NET has been a very useful but potentially memory intensive feature. The default OutputCache mechanism works through in-memory storage that persists generated output based on various lifetime related parameters. While this works well enough for many intended scenarios, it also can quickly cause runaway memory consumption as the cache fills up and serves many variations of pages on your site. ASP.NET 4.0 introduces a provider model for the OutputCache module so it becomes possible to plug-in custom storage strategies for cached pages. One of the goals also appears to be to consolidate some of the different cache storage mechanisms used in .NET in general to a generic Windows AppFabric framework in the future, so various different mechanisms like OutputCache, the non-Page specific ASP.NET cache and possibly even session state eventually can use the same caching engine for storage of persisted data both in memory and out of process scenarios. For developers, the OutputCache provider feature means that you can now extend caching on your own by implementing a custom Cache provider based on the System.Web.Caching.OutputCacheProvider class. You can find more info on creating an Output Cache provider in Gunnar Peipman's blog at: http://tinyurl.com/2vt6g7l. Response.RedirectPermanent ASP.NET 4.0 includes features to issue a permanent redirect that issues as an HTTP 301 Moved Permanently response rather than the standard 302 Redirect respond. In pre-4.0 versions you had to manually create your permanent redirect by setting the Status and Status code properties – Response.RedirectPermanent() makes this operation more obvious and discoverable. There's also a Response.RedirectToRoutePermanent() which provides permanent redirection of route Urls. Preloading of Applications ASP.NET 4.0 provides a new feature to preload ASP.NET applications on startup, which is meant to provide a more consistent startup experience. If your application has a lengthy startup cycle it can appear very slow to serve data to clients while the application is warming up and loading initial resources. So rather than serve these startup requests slowly in ASP.NET 4.0, you can force the application to initialize itself first before even accepting requests for processing. This feature works only on IIS 7.5 (Windows 7 and Windows Server 2008 R2) and works in combination with IIS. You can set up a worker process in IIS 7.5 to always be running, which starts the Application Pool worker process immediately. ASP.NET 4.0 then allows you to specify site-specific settings by setting the serverAutoStartEnabled on a particular site along with an optional serviceAutoStartProvider class that can be used to receive "startup events" when the application starts up. This event in turn can be used to configure the application and optionally pre-load cache data and other information required by the app on startup.  The configuration settings need to be made in applicationhost.config: <sites> <site name="WebApplication2" id="1"> <application path="/" serviceAutoStartEnabled="true" serviceAutoStartProvider="PreWarmup" /> </site> </sites> <serviceAutoStartProviders> <add name="PreWarmup" type="PreWarmupProvider,MyAssembly" /> </serviceAutoStartProviders> Hooking up a warm up provider is optional so you can omit the provider definition and reference. If you do define it here's what it looks like: public class PreWarmupProvider System.Web.Hosting.IProcessHostPreloadClient { public void Preload(string[] parameters) { // initialization for app } } This code fires and while it's running, ASP.NET/IIS will hold requests from hitting the pipeline. So until this code completes the application will not start taking requests. The idea is that you can perform any pre-loading of resources and cache values so that the first request will be ready to perform at optimal performance level without lag. Runtime Performance Improvements According to Microsoft, there have also been a number of invisible performance improvements in the internals of the ASP.NET runtime that should make ASP.NET 4.0 applications run more efficiently and use less resources. These features come without any change requirements in applications and are virtually transparent, except that you get the benefits by updating to ASP.NET 4.0. Summary The core feature set changes are minimal which continues a tradition of small incremental changes to the ASP.NET runtime. ASP.NET has been proven as a solid platform and I'm actually rather happy to see that most of the effort in this release went into stability, performance and usability improvements rather than a massive amount of new features. The new functionality added in 4.0 is minimal but very useful. A lot of people are still running pure .NET 2.0 applications these days and have stayed off of .NET 3.5 for some time now. I think that version 4.0 with its full .NET runtime rev and assembly and configuration consolidation will make an attractive platform for developers to update to. If you're a Web Forms developer in particular, ASP.NET 4.0 includes a host of new features in the Web Forms engine that are significant enough to warrant a quick move to .NET 4.0. I'll cover those changes in my next column. Until then, I suggest you give ASP.NET 4.0 a spin and see for yourself how the new features can help you out. © Rick Strahl, West Wind Technologies, 2005-2010Posted in ASP.NET  

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  • Just released: a new SEO extension for the ASP.NET MVC routing engine

    - by efran.cobisi
    Dear users,after several months of hard work, we are proud to announce to the world that Cobisi's new SEO routing engine for ASP.NET MVC has been officially released! We even provide a free edition which comes at no cost, so this is something you can't really miss if you are a serious ASP.NET developer. ;)SEO routes for ASP.NET MVCCobisi SEO Extensions - this is the name of the product - is an advanced tool for software developers that allows to optimize ASP.NET MVC web applications and sites for search engines. It comes with a powerful routing engine, which extends the standard ASP.NET routing module to provide a much more flexible way to define search optimized routes, and a complete set of classes that make customizing the entire routing infrastructure very easy and cool.In its simplest form, defining a route for an MVC action is just a matter of decorating the method with the [Route("...")] attribute and specifying the desired URL. The library will take care of the rest and set up the route accordingly; while coding routes this way, Cobisi SEO Extensions also shows how the final routes will be, without leaving the Visual Studio IDE!Manage MVC routes with easeIn fact, Cobisi SEO Extensions integrates with the Visual Studio IDE to offer a large set of time-saving improvements targeted at ASP.NET developers. A new tool window, for example, allows to easily browse among the routes exposed by your applications, being them standard ASP.NET routes, MVC specific routes or SEO routes. The routes can be easily filtered on the fly, to ease finding the ones you are interested in. Double clicking a SEO route will even open the related ASP.NET MVC controller, at the beginning of the specified action method.In addition to that, Cobisi SEO Extensions allows to easily understand how each SEO route is composed by showing the routing model details directly in the IDE, beneath each MVC action route.Furthermore, Cobisi SEO Extensions helps developers to easily recognize which class is an MVC controller and which methods is an MVC action by drawing a special dashed underline mark under each items of these categories.Developers, developers, developers, ...We are really eager to receive your feedback and suggestions - please feel free to ping us with your comments! Thank you! Cheers! -- Efran Cobisi Cobisi lead developer Microsoft MVP, MCSD, MCAD, MCTS: SQL Server 2005, MCP

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  • Writing Unit Tests for an ASP.NET MVC Action Method that handles Ajax Request and Normal Request

    - by shiju
    In this blog post, I will demonstrate how to write unit tests for an ASP.NET MVC action method, which handles both Ajax request and normal HTTP Request. I will write a unit test for specifying the behavior of an Ajax request and will write another unit test for specifying the behavior of a normal HTTP request. Both Ajax request and normal request will be handled by a single action method. So the ASP.NET MVC action method will be execute HTTP Request object’s IsAjaxRequest method for identifying whether it is an Ajax request or not. So we have to create mock object for Request object and also have to make as a Ajax request from the unit test for verifying the behavior of an Ajax request. I have used NUnit and Moq for writing unit tests. Let me write a unit test for a Ajax request Code Snippet [Test] public void Index_AjaxRequest_Returns_Partial_With_Expense_List() {     // Arrange       Mock<HttpRequestBase> request = new Mock<HttpRequestBase>();     Mock<HttpResponseBase> response = new Mock<HttpResponseBase>();     Mock<HttpContextBase> context = new Mock<HttpContextBase>();       context.Setup(c => c.Request).Returns(request.Object);     context.Setup(c => c.Response).Returns(response.Object);     //Add XMLHttpRequest request header     request.Setup(req => req["X-Requested-With"]).         Returns("XMLHttpRequest");       IEnumerable<Expense> fakeExpenses = GetMockExpenses();     expenseRepository.Setup(x => x.GetMany(It.         IsAny<Expression<Func<Expense, bool>>>())).         Returns(fakeExpenses);     ExpenseController controller = new ExpenseController(         commandBus.Object, categoryRepository.Object,         expenseRepository.Object);     controller.ControllerContext = new ControllerContext(         context.Object, new RouteData(), controller);     // Act     var result = controller.Index(null, null) as PartialViewResult;     // Assert     Assert.AreEqual("_ExpenseList", result.ViewName);     Assert.IsNotNull(result, "View Result is null");     Assert.IsInstanceOf(typeof(IEnumerable<Expense>),             result.ViewData.Model, "Wrong View Model");     var expenses = result.ViewData.Model as IEnumerable<Expense>;     Assert.AreEqual(3, expenses.Count(),         "Got wrong number of Categories");         }   In the above unit test, we are calling Index action method of a controller named ExpenseController, which will returns a PartialView named _ExpenseList, if it is an Ajax request. We have created mock object for HTTPContextBase and setup XMLHttpRequest request header for Request object’s X-Requested-With for making it as a Ajax request. We have specified the ControllerContext property of the controller with mocked object HTTPContextBase. Code Snippet controller.ControllerContext = new ControllerContext(         context.Object, new RouteData(), controller); Let me write a unit test for a normal HTTP method Code Snippet [Test] public void Index_NormalRequest_Returns_Index_With_Expense_List() {     // Arrange               Mock<HttpRequestBase> request = new Mock<HttpRequestBase>();     Mock<HttpResponseBase> response = new Mock<HttpResponseBase>();     Mock<HttpContextBase> context = new Mock<HttpContextBase>();       context.Setup(c => c.Request).Returns(request.Object);     context.Setup(c => c.Response).Returns(response.Object);       IEnumerable<Expense> fakeExpenses = GetMockExpenses();       expenseRepository.Setup(x => x.GetMany(It.         IsAny<Expression<Func<Expense, bool>>>())).         Returns(fakeExpenses);     ExpenseController controller = new ExpenseController(         commandBus.Object, categoryRepository.Object,         expenseRepository.Object);     controller.ControllerContext = new ControllerContext(         context.Object, new RouteData(), controller);     // Act     var result = controller.Index(null, null) as ViewResult;     // Assert     Assert.AreEqual("Index", result.ViewName);     Assert.IsNotNull(result, "View Result is null");     Assert.IsInstanceOf(typeof(IEnumerable<Expense>),             result.ViewData.Model, "Wrong View Model");     var expenses = result.ViewData.Model         as IEnumerable<Expense>;     Assert.AreEqual(3, expenses.Count(),         "Got wrong number of Categories"); }   In the above unit test, we are not specifying the XMLHttpRequest request header for Request object’s X-Requested-With, so that it will be normal HTTP Request. If this is a normal request, the action method will return a ViewResult with a view template named Index. The below is the implementation of Index action method Code Snippet public ActionResult Index(DateTime? startDate, DateTime? endDate) {     //If date is not passed, take current month's first and last date     DateTime dtNow;     dtNow = DateTime.Today;     if (!startDate.HasValue)     {         startDate = new DateTime(dtNow.Year, dtNow.Month, 1);         endDate = startDate.Value.AddMonths(1).AddDays(-1);     }     //take last date of start date's month, if end date is not passed     if (startDate.HasValue && !endDate.HasValue)     {         endDate = (new DateTime(startDate.Value.Year,             startDate.Value.Month, 1)).AddMonths(1).AddDays(-1);     }     var expenses = expenseRepository.GetMany(         exp => exp.Date >= startDate && exp.Date <= endDate);     //if request is Ajax will return partial view     if (Request.IsAjaxRequest())     {         return PartialView("_ExpenseList", expenses);     }     //set start date and end date to ViewBag dictionary     ViewBag.StartDate = startDate.Value.ToShortDateString();     ViewBag.EndDate = endDate.Value.ToShortDateString();     //if request is not ajax     return View("Index",expenses); }   The index action method will returns a PartialView named _ExpenseList, if it is an Ajax request and will returns a View named Index if it is a normal request. Source Code The source code has been taken from my EFMVC app which can download from here

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  • J2EE or .Net Framework [closed]

    - by Kevino
    I want to learn JAVA or C#... tell me the strength and weakness of each platforms J2EE and .Net Framework today in 2012 and which is safer for the future jobs wise? I tend to prefer Java because here (Montreal, Toronto) there is like 6 Java jobs for each C# jobs and some experienced programmers advised me to go with Java because they say JVM languages are winning in the cloud and the rise of Android can't do anything except help Java in the long run. Is that true today with the release of windows 8 soon and ios devices? On the other side 1 of these programmers told me that corporation love Asp.Net Mvc3 for intranet and web dev and that tomcat/apache java jsp adoption is slowing down compared to Asp.net and ruby on rails & html5 etc. He told me too since I have a good background in system admins & networking C# would be better for me because I'll be able to do more things in the microsoft world with powershell automation and creating my own apps for all the networking stuffs (windows server, dns,dhcp, active directory, sharepoint etc). But what if windows 8 flop java and android aren't safer in the long run? because he told me mono was a joke compared to Java/android or native objective-c on ios devices. (I plan to do a full time study of 10hr's / 15hr's a day for the next 9 months of either Java or C# that's why I ask this)

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  • How to learn ASP.NET MVC without learning ASP.NET Web forms

    - by Naif
    First of all, I am not a web developer but I can say that I understand in general the difference between PHP, ASP.NET, etc. I have played a little with ASP.NET and C# as well, however, I didn't continue the learning path. Now I'd like to learn ASP.NET MVC but there is no a book for a beginner in ASP.NET MVC so I had a look at the tutorials but it seems that I need to learn C# first and SQL Server and HTML, am I right? So please tell me how can I learn ASP.NET MVC directly (I mean without learning ASP.NET Web forms). What do I need to learn (You can assume that I am an absolute beginner). Update: It is true that i can find ASP.NET MVC tutorial that explain ASP.NET MVC, but I used to find ASP.NET web forms books that explain SQL and C# at the same time and take you step by step. In ASP.NET MVC I don't know how can I start! How can I learn SQL in its own and C# in its own and then combine them with ASP.NET MVC!

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  • Implementing google dashboard type interface in asp.net

    - by Sam_Cogan
    I'm looking at implementing a Google IG type dashboard in a .net app. There are a number of options I've found to do this, and i'm trying to establish what is going to be the best to use, in terms of speed, versatility etc. So far the options I am looking at are either to use asp.net webparts and .net Ajax, this would make it quicker to build, but I'm concerned this is going to make the application bulky and slow, or using JQuery, and either .net MVC or Webforms, to custom build an interface. Does anyone have any thoughts on what the best option may be, or any options I may have missed? All I want to do here is to allow users to customise a dashboard with a number of components (which will be user controls). I do also have access to Telerik controls, but I'm not sure if they would be any use here.

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  • Validation framework for .NET Compact Framework 3.5.

    - by Michal Drozdowicz
    Do you know of a fast and simple entity validation framework that could be used in a Compact Framework project? I've done some experiments with FluentValidation (using db4o System.Linq.Expressions, but it's rather slow) and EViL (but it seems a bit half-baked). Can you suggest any other or maybe point me to some resources on how to design such a framework so that it's both easy to use and performant?

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  • What is the Oracle Utilities Application Framework?

    - by Anthony Shorten
    The Oracle Utilities Application Framework is a reusable, scalable and flexible java based framework which allows other products to be built, configured and implemented in a standard way. Note: Even though the Framework is built in java it can be integrated with COBOL based extensions for backward compatibility. When Oracle Utilities Customer Care & Billing was migrated from V1 to V2, it was decided that the technical aspects of that product be separated to allow for reuse and independence from technical issues. The idea was that all the technical aspects would be concentrated in this separate product (i.e. a framework) and allow all products using the framework to concentrate on delivering superior functionality. The product was named the Oracle Utilities Application Framework (oufw is the product code). The technical components are contained in the Oracle Utilities Application Framework which can be summarized as follows: Metadata - The Oracle Utilities Application Framework is responsible for defining and using the metadata to define the runtime behavior of the product. All the metadata definition and management is contained within the Oracle Utilities Application Framework. UI Management - The Oracle Utilities Application Framework is responsible for defining and rendering the pages and responsible for ensuring the pages are in the appropriate format for the locale. Integration - The Oracle Utilities Application Framework is responsible for providing the integration points to the architecture. Refer to the Oracle Utilities Application Framework Integration Overview for more details Tools - The Oracle Utilities Application Framework provides a common set of facilities and tools that can be used across all products. Technology - The Oracle Utilities Application Framework is responsible for all technology standards compliance, platform support and integration. There are a number of products from the Tax and Utilities Global Business Unit as well as from the Financial Services Global Business Unit that are built upon the Oracle Utilities Application Framework. These products require the Oracle Utilities Application Framework to be installed first and then the product itself installed onto the framework to complete the installation process. There are a number of key benefits that the Oracle Utilities Application Framework provides to these products: Common facilities - The Oracle Utilities Application Framework provides a standard set of technical facilities that mean that products can concentrate in the unique aspects of their markets rather than making technical decisions. Common methods of configuration - The Oracle Utilities Application Framework standardizes the technical configuration process for a product. Customers can effectively reuse the configuration process across products. Multi-lingual and Multi-platform - The Oracle Utilities Application Framework allows the products to be offered in more markets and across multiple platforms for maximized flexibility. Common methods of implementation - The Oracle Utilities Application Framework standardizes the technical aspects of a product implementation. Customers can effectively reuse the technical implementation process across products. Quicker adoption of new technologies - As new technologies and standards are identified as being important for the product line, they can be integrated centrally benefiting multiple products. Cross product reuse - As enhancements to the Oracle Utilities Application Framework are identified by a particular product, all products can potentially benefit from the enhancement. Note: Use of the Oracle Utilities Application Framework does not preclude the introduction of product specific technologies or facilities to satisfy market needs. The framework minimizes the need and assists in the quick integration of a new product specific piece of technology (if necessary). The Framework is not available as a product itself and is bundled with Tax and Utilities Global Business Unit prodicts. At the present time the following products are on the Framework: Oracle Utilities Customer Care And Billing (V2 and above) Oracle Enterprise Taxation Management (V2 and above) Oracle Utilities Business Intelligence (V2 and above) Oracle Utilities Mobile Workforice Management (V2 and above)

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  • .NET Reflector 7.2 Early Access Build 2 Released: Performance Critical

    - by Bart Read
    I've just posted a write-up of some of the performance tuning I've done to improve .NET Reflector 7.2's start-up time here: http://www.reflector.net/2011/05/net-reflector-7-start-up-time-running-out-of-gas-or-pedal-to-the-metal/ You can get the new build from the .NET Reflector homepage at http://www.reflector.net/. Please remember to give us your feedback in the forum, at http://forums.reflector.net/, using the tags #7.2 and #eap. Technorati Tags: reflector,early access,7.2

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  • .NET Reflector 7.2 Early Access Build 1 Released

    - by Bart Read
    I've just posted up full details of this release on the .NET Reflector blog at http://www.reflector.net/2011/05/life-is-a-journey-not-a-destination-net-reflector-7-2-ea-1-has-been-released/ and, breaking with previous tradition, this includes a fairly extensive changelog. You can download this EA build from the .NET Reflector homepage at http://www.reflector.net/. Enjoy! (And please don't forget to tell us what you think on the forum, http://forums.reflector.net/, using the tags #7.2 and #eap.)...(read more)

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  • How to profile LINQ to Entities queries in your asp.net applications - part 3

    - by nikolaosk
    In this post I will continue exploring ways on how to profile database activity when using the Entity Framework as the data access layer in our applications. If you want to read the first post of the series click here . If you want to read the second post of the series click here . In this post I will use the excellent (best tool for EF profiling) which is called Entity Framework Profiler. You can download the trial - fully functional edition of this tool from here . I will use the previous example...(read more)

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  • How to profile LINQ to Entities queries in your asp.net applications - part 2

    - by nikolaosk
    In this post I will continue exploring ways on how to profile database activity when using the Entity Framework as the data access layer in our applications. I will use a simple asp.net web site and EF to demonstrate this. If you want to read the first post of the series click here . In this post I will use the Tracing Provider Wrappers which extend the Entity framework. You can download the whole solutions/samples project from here .The providers were developed from Jaroslaw Kowalski . 1) Unzip...(read more)

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  • Redmine on Apache2 with Passenger issue

    - by nkr1pt
    I installed Redmine and run it in Apache2 with the Passenger module. Apache2 boots, Passenger module gets loaded and the Redmine welcome page is shown, however when trying to login or navigate to other parts of the Redmine site, the browser keeps loading and loading and loading forever, although the Redmine production.log indicates redirects and HTTP 200 codes in the header, so everything seems to work correctly according to the log. I tested in various browsers. Does anyone have an idea what could be wrong? I will add apache configuration and some relevant log snippets from both apache and redmine hereafter. Apache2 Redmine configuration: DocumentRoot /var/www <Directory /var/www/redmine> RailsEnv production AllowOverride all RailsBaseURI /redmine PassengerResolveSymLinksInDocumentRoot on </Directory> Apache2 error log after booting Apache: [Wed Feb 09 19:59:58 2011] [notice] Apache/2.2.14 (Ubuntu) Phusion_Passenger/3.0.2 DAV/2 SVN/1.6.6 configured -- resuming normal operations Redmine production log after logging in: Logfile created on Wed Feb 09 20:01:40 +0100 2011 Processing WelcomeController#index (for 192.168.1.55 at 2011-02-09 20:01:48) [GET] Parameters: {"action"=>"index", "controller"=>"welcome"} Rendering template within layouts/base Rendering welcome/index Completed in 220ms (View: 96, DB: 16) | 200 OK [http://sirius/redmine] Processing AccountController#login (for 192.168.1.55 at 2011-02-09 20:03:17) [GET] Parameters: {"action"=>"login", "controller"=>"account"} Rendering template within layouts/base Rendering account/login Completed in 85ms (View: 63, DB: 1) | 200 OK [http://sirius/redmine/login] Processing AccountController#login (for 192.168.1.55 at 2011-02-09 20:03:20) [POST] Parameters: {"back_url"=>"http%3A%2F%2Fsirius%2Fredmine", "action"=>"login", "authenticity_token"=>"cEMUZHhRKJU8w3p6d+xQQhJTk4/pnnzUdg5g5fwhxDU=", "username"=>"admin", "controller"=>"account", "password"=>"[FILTERED]", "login"=>"Login \302\273"} Redirected to http://sirius/redmine Completed in 37ms (DB: 6) | 302 Found [http://sirius/redmine/login] Processing WelcomeController#index (for 192.168.1.55 at 2011-02-09 20:03:20) [GET] Parameters: {"action"=>"index", "controller"=>"welcome"} Rendering template within layouts/base Rendering welcome/index Completed in 100ms (View: 77, DB: 6) | 200 OK [http://sirius/redmine] Apache2 error log afterwards: [Wed Feb 09 20:03:17 2011] [notice] [0209/200317:INFO:net/instaweb/apache/mod_instaweb.cc(247)] ModPagespeed OutputFilter called for request /redmine/login [Wed Feb 09 20:03:17 2011] [notice] [0209/200317:INFO:net/instaweb/apache/mod_instaweb.cc(272)] unparsed=/redmine/login, absolute_url=http://sirius/redmine/login [Wed Feb 09 20:03:17 2011] [notice] [0209/200317:INFO:net/instaweb/util/google_message_handler.cc(48)] http://sirius/redmine/login:1: HtmlParse::StartParse [Wed Feb 09 20:03:17 2011] [notice] [0209/200317:INFO:net/instaweb/apache/mod_instaweb.cc(299)] Request headers:\nHTTP/1.1 0 Internal Server Error\r\nHost: sirius\r\nUser-Agent: Mozilla/5.0 (X11; U; Linux x86_64; en-US; rv:1.9.2.8) Gecko/20100723 Ubuntu/10.04 (lucid) Firefox/3.6.8\r\nAccept: text/html,application/xhtml+xml,application/xml;q=0.9,/;q=0.8\r\nAccept-Language: en-us,en;q=0.5\r\nAccept-Encoding: gzip,deflate\r\nAccept-Charset: ISO-8859-1,utf-8;q=0.7,*;q=0.7\r\nKeep-Alive: 115\r\nConnection: keep-alive\r\nReferer: http://sirius/redmine\r\nCookie: _redmine_session=BAh7BjoPc2Vzc2lvbl9pZCIlNmVlMzFiMDc4MWQxZDU5ZTI5MTk2NjU0NGY3MzJmYzQ%3D--ea4b7adbc35551051632b5544faaad138ae08d90\r\n\r\n [Wed Feb 09 20:03:17 2011] [notice] [0209/200317:INFO:net/instaweb/apache/mod_instaweb.cc(302)] request-filename=/var/www/redmine/login, uri=/redmine/login [Wed Feb 09 20:03:17 2011] [notice] [0209/200317:INFO:net/instaweb/apache/mod_instaweb.cc(319)] ModPagespeed Response headers:\nHTTP/1.1 200 OK\r\nStatus: 200\r\nX-Mod-Pagespeed: 0.9.0.0-128\r\n\r\n [Wed Feb 09 20:03:17 2011] [notice] [0209/200317:INFO:net/instaweb/util/google_message_handler.cc(48)] http://sirius/redmine/login:1: 2157us: HtmlParse::Flush [Wed Feb 09 20:03:17 2011] [notice] [0209/200317:INFO:net/instaweb/util/google_message_handler.cc(48)] http://sirius/redmine/login:1: 2272us: HtmlParse::CoalesceAdjacentCharactersNodes [Wed Feb 09 20:03:17 2011] [notice] [0209/200317:INFO:net/instaweb/util/google_message_handler.cc(48)] http://sirius/redmine/login:1: 2342us: HtmlParse::ApplyFilter:AddHead [Wed Feb 09 20:03:17 2011] [notice] [0209/200317:INFO:net/instaweb/util/google_message_handler.cc(48)] http://sirius/redmine/login:1: 2407us: HtmlParse::SanityCheck [Wed Feb 09 20:03:17 2011] [notice] [0209/200317:INFO:net/instaweb/util/google_message_handler.cc(48)] http://sirius/redmine/login:1: 2504us: HtmlParse::ApplyFilter:CssCombine [Wed Feb 09 20:03:17 2011] [notice] [0209/200317:INFO:net/instaweb/apache/serf_url_async_fetcher.cc(632)] Initiating async fetch for http://sirius/redmine/stylesheets/application.css?1296181549 [Wed Feb 09 20:03:17 2011] [warn] [0209/200317:WARNING:net/instaweb/util/google_message_handler.cc(32)] Failed to create or read input resource /redmine/stylesheets/application.css?1296181549 [Wed Feb 09 20:03:17 2011] [notice] [0209/200317:INFO:net/instaweb/apache/serf_url_async_fetcher.cc(632)] Initiating async fetch for http://sirius/redmine/stylesheets/jstoolbar.css?1296181549 [Wed Feb 09 20:03:17 2011] [warn] [0209/200317:WARNING:net/instaweb/util/google_message_handler.cc(32)] Failed to create or read input resource /redmine/stylesheets/jstoolbar.css?1296181549 [Wed Feb 09 20:03:17 2011] [notice] [0209/200317:INFO:net/instaweb/util/google_message_handler.cc(48)] http://sirius/redmine/login:1: 3642us: HtmlParse::ApplyFilter:CssFilter [Wed Feb 09 20:03:17 2011] [error] [0209/200317:ERROR:net/instaweb/util/google_message_handler.cc(54)] net/instaweb/apache/serf_url_async_fetcher.cc:506: Creating connection [Wed Feb 09 20:03:17 2011] [notice] [0209/200317:INFO:net/instaweb/apache/serf_url_async_fetcher.cc(632)] Initiating async fetch for http://sirius/redmine/stylesheets/application.css?1296181549 [Wed Feb 09 20:03:17 2011] [error] [0209/200317:ERROR:net/instaweb/util/google_message_handler.cc(54)] http://sirius/redmine/login:9: Failed to load resource http://sirius/redmine/stylesheets/application.css?1296181549 [Wed Feb 09 20:03:17 2011] [notice] [0209/200317:INFO:net/instaweb/apache/serf_url_async_fetcher.cc(632)] Initiating async fetch for http://sirius/redmine/stylesheets/jstoolbar.css?1296181549 [Wed Feb 09 20:03:17 2011] [error] [0209/200317:ERROR:net/instaweb/util/google_message_handler.cc(54)] http://sirius/redmine/login:17: Failed to load resource http://sirius/redmine/stylesheets/jstoolbar.css?1296181549 [Wed Feb 09 20:03:17 2011] [error] [0209/200317:ERROR:net/instaweb/util/google_message_handler.cc(54)] net/instaweb/apache/serf_url_async_fetcher.cc:506: Failed to load resource http://sirius/redmine/stylesheets/jstoolbar.css?1296181549 [Wed Feb 09 20:03:17 2011] [notice] [0209/200317:INFO:net/instaweb/util/google_message_handler.cc(48)] http://sirius/redmine/login:1: 4863us: HtmlParse::ApplyFilter:Javascript [Wed Feb 09 20:03:17 2011] [notice] [0209/200317:INFO:net/instaweb/util/google_message_handler.cc(48)] http://sirius/redmine/login:11: Found script with src /redmine/javascripts/prototype.js?1296181549 [Wed Feb 09 20:03:17 2011] [notice] [0209/200317:INFO:net/instaweb/apache/serf_url_async_fetcher.cc(632)] Initiating async fetch for http://sirius/redmine/javascripts/prototype.js?1296181549 [Wed Feb 09 20:03:17 2011] [error] [0209/200317:ERROR:net/instaweb/util/google_message_handler.cc(54)] net/instaweb/apache/serf_url_async_fetcher.cc:506: Creating connection [Wed Feb 09 20:03:17 2011] [notice] [0209/200317:INFO:net/instaweb/util/google_message_handler.cc(29)] http://sirius/redmine/login: Couldn't fetch resource /redmine/javascripts/prototype.js?1296181549 to rewrite. [Wed Feb 09 20:03:17 2011] [notice] [0209/200317:INFO:net/instaweb/util/google_message_handler.cc(48)] http://sirius/redmine/login:12: Found script with src /redmine/javascripts/effects.js?1296181549 [Wed Feb 09 20:03:17 2011] [notice] [0209/200317:INFO:net/instaweb/apache/serf_url_async_fetcher.cc(632)] Initiating async fetch for http://sirius/redmine/javascripts/effects.js?1296181549 [Wed Feb 09 20:03:17 2011] [notice] [0209/200317:INFO:net/instaweb/util/google_message_handler.cc(29)] http://sirius/redmine/login: Couldn't fetch resource /redmine/javascripts/effects.js?1296181549 to rewrite. [Wed Feb 09 20:03:17 2011] [error] [0209/200317:ERROR:net/instaweb/util/google_message_handler.cc(54)] net/instaweb/apache/serf_url_async_fetcher.cc:506: http://sirius/redmine/login: Couldn't fetch resource /redmine/javascripts/effects.js?1296181549 to rewrite. [Wed Feb 09 20:03:17 2011] [notice] [0209/200317:INFO:net/instaweb/util/google_message_handler.cc(48)] http://sirius/redmine/login:13: Found script with src /redmine/javascripts/dragdrop.js?1296181549 [Wed Feb 09 20:03:17 2011] [notice] [0209/200317:INFO:net/instaweb/apache/serf_url_async_fetcher.cc(632)] Initiating async fetch for http://sirius/redmine/javascripts/dragdrop.js?1296181549 [Wed Feb 09 20:03:17 2011] [notice] [0209/200317:INFO:net/instaweb/util/google_message_handler.cc(29)] Creating connection [Wed Feb 09 20:03:17 2011] [error] [0209/200317:ERROR:net/instaweb/util/google_message_handler.cc(54)] net/instaweb/apache/serf_url_async_fetcher.cc:506: Creating connection [Wed Feb 09 20:03:17 2011] [notice] [0209/200317:INFO:net/instaweb/util/google_message_handler.cc(48)] http://sirius/redmine/login:14: Found script with src /redmine/javascripts/controls.js?1296181549 [Wed Feb 09 20:03:17 2011] [notice] [0209/200317:INFO:net/instaweb/apache/serf_url_async_fetcher.cc(632)] Initiating async fetch for http://sirius/redmine/javascripts/controls.js?1296181549 [Wed Feb 09 20:03:17 2011] [notice] [0209/200317:INFO:net/instaweb/util/google_message_handler.cc(29)] http://sirius/redmine/login: Couldn't fetch resource /redmine/javascripts/controls.js?1296181549 to rewrite. [Wed Feb 09 20:03:17 2011] [error] [0209/200317:ERROR:net/instaweb/util/google_message_handler.cc(54)] net/instaweb/apache/serf_url_async_fetcher.cc:506: Creating connection [Wed Feb 09 20:03:17 2011] [notice] [0209/200317:INFO:net/instaweb/util/google_message_handler.cc(48)] http://sirius/redmine/login:15: Found script with src /redmine/javascripts/application.js?1296181549 [Wed Feb 09 20:03:17 2011] [notice] [0209/200317:INFO:net/instaweb/apache/serf_url_async_fetcher.cc(632)] Initiating async fetch for http://sirius/redmine/javascripts/application.js?1296181549 [Wed Feb 09 20:03:17 2011] [notice] [0209/200317:INFO:net/instaweb/util/google_message_handler.cc(29)] Creating connection [Wed Feb 09 20:03:17 2011] [error] [0209/200317:ERROR:net/instaweb/util/google_message_handler.cc(54)] net/instaweb/apache/serf_url_async_fetcher.cc:506: Creating connection [Wed Feb 09 20:03:17 2011] [notice] [0209/200317:INFO:net/instaweb/util/google_message_handler.cc(48)] http://sirius/redmine/login:1: 8389us: HtmlParse::SanityCheck [Wed Feb 09 20:03:17 2011] [notice] [0209/200317:INFO:net/instaweb/util/google_message_handler.cc(48)] http://sirius/redmine/login:1: 8588us: HtmlParse::CoalesceAdjacentCharactersNodes [Wed Feb 09 20:03:17 2011] [notice] [0209/200317:INFO:net/instaweb/util/google_message_handler.cc(48)] http://sirius/redmine/login:1: 8701us: HtmlParse::ApplyFilter:InlineCss [Wed Feb 09 20:03:17 2011] [error] [0209/200317:ERROR:net/instaweb/util/google_message_handler.cc(54)] net/instaweb/apache/serf_url_async_fetcher.cc:506: 8701us: HtmlParse::ApplyFilter:InlineCss [Wed Feb 09 20:03:17 2011] [notice] [0209/200317:INFO:net/instaweb/apache/serf_url_async_fetcher.cc(632)] Initiating async fetch for http://sirius/redmine/stylesheets/application.css?1296181549 [Wed Feb 09 20:03:17 2011] [notice] [0209/200317:INFO:net/instaweb/util/google_message_handler.cc(29)] http://sirius/redmine/login: Couldn't fetch resource /redmine/stylesheets/application.css?1296181549 to rewrite. [Wed Feb 09 20:03:17 2011] [notice] [0209/200317:INFO:net/instaweb/util/google_message_handler.cc(48)] http://sirius/redmine/login:1: 9199us: HtmlParse::ApplyFilter:InlineJs [Wed Feb 09 20:03:17 2011] [error] [0209/200317:ERROR:net/instaweb/util/google_message_handler.cc(54)] net/instaweb/apache/serf_url_async_fetcher.cc:506: Creating connection [Wed Feb 09 20:03:17 2011] [notice] [0209/200317:INFO:net/instaweb/apache/serf_url_async_fetcher.cc(632)] Initiating async fetch for http://sirius/redmine/javascripts/prototype.js?1296181549 [Wed Feb 09 20:03:17 2011] [notice] [0209/200317:INFO:net/instaweb/util/google_message_handler.cc(29)] http://sirius/redmine/login: Couldn't fetch resource /redmine/javascripts/prototype.js?1296181549 to rewrite. [Wed Feb 09 20:03:17 2011] [notice] [0209/200317:INFO:net/instaweb/apache/serf_url_async_fetcher.cc(632)] Initiating async fetch for http://sirius/redmine/javascripts/effects.js?1296181549 [Wed Feb 09 20:03:17 2011] [notice] [0209/200317:INFO:net/instaweb/util/google_message_handler.cc(29)] Creating connectionhttp://sirius/redmine/login: Couldn't fetch resource /redmine/javascripts/effects.js?1296181549 to rewrite. [Wed Feb 09 20:03:17 2011] [error] [0209/200317:ERROR:net/instaweb/util/google_message_handler.cc(54)] net/instaweb/apache/serf_url_async_fetcher.cc:506: Creating connectionhttp://sirius/redmine/login: Couldn't fetch resource /redmine/javascripts/effects.js?1296181549 to rewrite. [Wed Feb 09 20:03:17 2011] [notice] [0209/200317:INFO:net/instaweb/apache/serf_url_async_fetcher.cc(632)] Initiating async fetch for http://sirius/redmine/javascripts/dragdrop.js?1296181549 [Wed Feb 09 20:03:17 2011] [notice] [0209/200317:INFO:net/instaweb/util/google_message_handler.cc(29)] http://sirius/redmine/login: Couldn't fetch resource /redmine/javascripts/dragdrop.js?1296181549 to rewrite. [Wed Feb 09 20:03:17 2011] [error] [0209/200317:ERROR:net/instaweb/util/google_message_handler.cc(54)] net/instaweb/apache/serf_url_async_fetcher.cc:506: Creating connection [Wed Feb 09 20:03:17 2011] [notice] [0209/200317:INFO:net/instaweb/apache/serf_url_async_fetcher.cc(632)] Initiating async fetch for http://sirius/redmine/javascripts/controls.js?1296181549 [Wed Feb 09 20:03:17 2011] [notice] [0209/200317:INFO:net/instaweb/util/google_message_handler.cc(29)] http://sirius/redmine/login: Couldn't fetch resource /redmine/javascripts/controls.js?1296181549 to rewrite. [Wed Feb 09 20:03:17 2011] [notice] [0209/200317:INFO:net/instaweb/apache/serf_url_async_fetcher.cc(632)] Initiating async fetch for http://sirius/redmine/javascripts/application.js?1296181549 [Wed Feb 09 20:03:17 2011] [notice] [0209/200317:INFO:net/instaweb/util/google_message_handler.cc(29)] http://sirius/redmine/login: Couldn't fetch resource /redmine/javascripts/application.js?1296181549 to rewrite. [Wed Feb 09 20:03:17 2011] [error] [0209/200317:ERROR:net/instaweb/util/google_message_handler.cc(54)] net/instaweb/apache/serf_url_async_fetcher.cc:506: Creating connection [Wed Feb 09 20:03:17 2011] [notice] [0209/200317:INFO:net/instaweb/util/google_message_handler.cc(48)] http://sirius/redmine/login:1: 11398us: HtmlParse::ApplyFilter:ImgRewrite [Wed Feb 09 20:03:17 2011] [notice] [0209/200317:INFO:net/instaweb/util/google_message_handler.cc(48)] http://sirius/redmine/login:1: 11506us: HtmlParse::ApplyFilter:CacheExtender [Wed Feb 09 20:03:17 2011] [notice] [0209/200317:INFO:net/instaweb/apache/serf_url_async_fetcher.cc(632)] Initiating async fetch for http://sirius/redmine/stylesheets/application.css?1296181549 [Wed Feb 09 20:03:17 2011] [notice] [0209/200317:INFO:net/instaweb/util/google_message_handler.cc(29)] http://sirius/redmine/login: Couldn't fetch resource /redmine/stylesheets/application.css?1296181549 to rewrite. [Wed Feb 09 20:03:17 2011] [error] [0209/200317:ERROR:net/instaweb/util/google_message_handler.cc(54)] net/instaweb/apache/serf_url_async_fetcher.cc:506: Creating connection [Wed Feb 09 20:03:17 2011] [notice] [0209/200317:INFO:net/instaweb/apache/serf_url_async_fetcher.cc(632)] Initiating async fetch for http://sirius/redmine/javascripts/prototype.js?1296181549 [Wed Feb 09 20:03:17 2011] [notice] [0209/200317:INFO:net/instaweb/util/google_message_handler.cc(29)] http://sirius/redmine/login: Couldn't fetch resource /redmine/javascripts/prototype.js?1296181549 to rewrite. [Wed Feb 09 20:03:17 2011] [notice] [0209/200317:INFO:net/instaweb/apache/serf_url_async_fetcher.cc(632)] Initiating async fetch for http://sirius/redmine/javascripts/effects.js?1296181549 [Wed Feb 09 20:03:17 2011] [error] [0209/200317:ERROR:net/instaweb/util/google_message_handler.cc(54)] net/instaweb/apache/serf_url_async_fetcher.cc:506: Creating connection [Wed Feb 09 20:03:17 2011] [notice] [0209/200317:INFO:net/instaweb/util/google_message_handler.cc(29)] http://sirius/redmine/login: Couldn't fetch resource /redmine/javascripts/effects.js?1296181549 to rewrite. [Wed Feb 09 20:03:17 2011] [notice] [0209/200317:INFO:net/instaweb/apache/serf_url_async_fetcher.cc(632)] Initiating async fetch for http://sirius/redmine/javascripts/dragdrop.js?1296181549 [Wed Feb 09 20:03:17 2011] [notice] [0209/200317:INFO:net/instaweb/util/google_message_handler.cc(29)] http://sirius/redmine/login: Couldn't fetch resource /redmine/javascripts/dragdrop.js?1296181549 to rewrite. [Wed Feb 09 20:03:17 2011] [error] [0209/200317:ERROR:net/instaweb/util/google_message_handler.cc(54)] net/instaweb/apache/serf_url_async_fetcher.cc:506: Creating connection [Wed Feb 09 20:03:17 2011] [notice] [0209/200317:INFO:net/instaweb/apache/serf_url_async_fetcher.cc(632)] Initiating async fetch for http://sirius/redmine/javascripts/controls.js?1296181549 [Wed Feb 09 20:03:17 2011] [notice] [0209/200317:INFO:net/instaweb/util/google_message_handler.cc(29)] http://sirius/redmine/login: Couldn't fetch resource /redmine/javascripts/controls.js?1296181549 to rewrite. [Wed Feb 09 20:03:17 2011] [notice] [0209/200317:INFO:net/instaweb/apache/serf_url_async_fetcher.cc(632)] Initiating async fetch for http://sirius/redmine/javascripts/application.js?1296181549 [Wed Feb 09 20:03:17 2011] [notice] [0209/200317:INFO:net/instaweb/util/google_message_handler.cc(29)] http://sirius/redmine/login: Couldn't fetch resource /redmine/javascripts/application.js?1296181549 to rewrite. [Wed Feb 09 20:03:17 2011] [error] [0209/200317:ERROR:net/instaweb/util/google_message_handler.cc(54)] net/instaweb/apache/serf_url_async_fetcher.cc:506: Creating connection [Wed Feb 09 20:03:17 2011] [notice] [0209/200317:INFO:net/instaweb/apache/serf_url_async_fetcher.cc(632)] Initiating async fetch for http://sirius/redmine/stylesheets/jstoolbar.css?1296181549 [Wed Feb 09 20:03:17 2011] [notice] [0209/200317:INFO:net/instaweb/util/google_message_handler.cc(29)] http://sirius/redmine/login: Couldn't fetch resource /redmine/stylesheets/jstoolbar.css?1296181549 to rewrite. [Wed Feb 09 20:03:17 2011] [notice] [0209/200317:INFO:net/instaweb/util/google_message_handler.cc(48)] http://sirius/redmine/login:1: 14401us: HtmlParse::ApplyFilter:HtmlWriter [Wed Feb 09 20:03:17 2011] [error] [0209/200317:ERROR:net/instaweb/util/google_message_handler.cc(54)] net/instaweb/apache/serf_url_async_fetcher.cc:506: Creating connection [Wed Feb 09 20:03:17 2011] [error] [0209/200317:ERROR:net/instaweb/util/google_message_handler.cc(54)] net/instaweb/apache/serf_url_async_fetcher.cc:506: Creating connection [Wed Feb 09 20:03:17 2011] [notice] [0209/200317:INFO:net/instaweb/util/google_message_handler.cc(48)] http://sirius/redmine/login:1: 15218us: HtmlParse::FinishParse [Wed Feb 09 20:03:17 2011] [error] [0209/200317:ERROR:net/instaweb/util/google_message_handler.cc(54)] net/instaweb/apache/serf_url_async_fetcher.cc:506: Creating connection [Wed Feb 09 20:03:17 2011] [error] [0209/200317:ERROR:net/instaweb/util/google_message_handler.cc(54)] net/instaweb/apache/serf_url_async_fetcher.cc:506: Creating connection [Wed Feb 09 20:03:17 2011] [error] [0209/200317:ERROR:net/instaweb/util/google_message_handler.cc(54)] net/instaweb/apache/serf_url_async_fetcher.cc:506: Creating connection [Wed Feb 09 20:03:17 2011] [error] [0209/200317:ERROR:net/instaweb/util/google_message_handler.cc(54)] net/instaweb/apache/serf_url_async_fetcher.cc:506: Creating connection [Wed Feb 09 20:03:20 2011] [warn] [client 192.168.1.55] Not GET request: 2., referer: http://sirius/redmine/login [Wed Feb 09 20:03:20 2011] [notice] [0209/200320:INFO:net/instaweb/apache/mod_instaweb.cc(247)] ModPagespeed OutputFilter called for request /redmine/login [Wed Feb 09 20:03:20 2011] [notice] [0209/200320:INFO:net/instaweb/apache/mod_instaweb.cc(272)] unparsed=/redmine/login, absolute_url=http://sirius/redmine/login [Wed Feb 09 20:03:20 2011] [notice] [0209/200320:INFO:net/instaweb/util/google_message_handler.cc(48)] http://sirius/redmine/login:1: HtmlParse::StartParse [Wed Feb 09 20:03:20 2011] [notice] [0209/200320:INFO:net/instaweb/apache/mod_instaweb.cc(299)] Request headers:\nHTTP/1.1 0 Internal Server Error\r\nHost: sirius\r\nUser-Agent: Mozilla/5.0 (X11; U; Linux x86_64; en-US; rv:1.9.2.8) Gecko/20100723 Ubuntu/10.04 (lucid) Firefox/3.6.8\r\nAccept: text/html,application/xhtml+xml,application/xml;q=0.9,/;q=0.8\r\nAccept-Language: en-us,en;q=0.5\r\nAccept-Encoding: gzip,deflate\r\nAccept-Charset: ISO-8859-1,utf-8;q=0.7,*;q=0.7\r\nKeep-Alive: 115\r\nConnection: keep-alive\r\nReferer: http://sirius/redmine/login\r\nCookie: _redmine_session=BAh7BzoPc2Vzc2lvbl9pZCIlNmVlMzFiMDc4MWQxZDU5ZTI5MTk2NjU0NGY3MzJmYzQ6EF9jc3JmX3Rva2VuIjFjRU1VWkhoUktKVTh3M3A2ZCt4UVFoSlRrNC9wbm56VWRnNWc1ZndoeERVPQ%3D%3D--8b195ac3cab88b5a1f408e3f18aaddc70782140e\r\nContent-Type: application/x-www-form-urlencoded\r\nContent-Length: 165\r\n\r\n [Wed Feb 09 20:03:20 2011] [notice] [0209/200320:INFO:net/instaweb/apache/mod_instaweb.cc(302)] request-filename=/var/www/redmine/login, uri=/redmine/login [Wed Feb 09 20:03:20 2011] [notice] [0209/200320:INFO:net/instaweb/apache/mod_instaweb.cc(319)] ModPagespeed Response headers:\nHTTP/1.1 302 Found\r\nLocation: http://sirius/redmine\r\nStatus: 302\r\nX-Mod-Pagespeed: 0.9.0.0-128\r\n\r\n [Wed Feb 09 20:03:20 2011] [notice] [0209/200320:INFO:net/instaweb/util/google_message_handler.cc(48)] http://sirius/redmine/login:1: 604us: HtmlParse::Flush [Wed Feb 09 20:03:20 2011] [notice] [0209/200320:INFO:net/instaweb/util/google_message_handler.cc(48)] http://sirius/redmine/login:1: 697us: HtmlParse::CoalesceAdjacentCharactersNodes [Wed Feb 09 20:03:20 2011] [notice] [0209/200320:INFO:net/instaweb/util/google_message_handler.cc(48)] http://sirius/redmine/login:1: 758us: HtmlParse::ApplyFilter:AddHead [Wed Feb 09 20:03:20 2011] [notice] [0209/200320:INFO:net/instaweb/util/google_message_handler.cc(48)] http://sirius/redmine/login:1: 813us: HtmlParse::SanityCheck [Wed Feb 09 20:03:20 2011] [notice] [0209/200320:INFO:net/instaweb/util/google_message_handler.cc(48)] http://sirius/redmine/login:1: 912us: HtmlParse::CoalesceAdjacentCharactersNodes [Wed Feb 09 20:03:20 2011] [notice] [0209/200320:INFO:net/instaweb/util/google_message_handler.cc(48)] http://sirius/redmine/login:1: 965us: HtmlParse::ApplyFilter:CssCombine [Wed Feb 09 20:03:20 2011] [notice] [0209/200320:INFO:net/instaweb/util/google_message_handler.cc(48)] http://sirius/redmine/login:1: 1020us: HtmlParse::ApplyFilter:CssFilter [Wed Feb 09 20:03:20 2011] [notice] [0209/200320:INFO:net/instaweb/util/google_message_handler.cc(48)] http://sirius/redmine/login:1: 1073us: HtmlParse::ApplyFilter:Javascript [Wed Feb 09 20:03:20 2011] [notice] [0209/200320:INFO:net/instaweb/util/google_message_handler.cc(48)] http://sirius/redmine/login:1: 1125us: HtmlParse::ApplyFilter:InlineCss [Wed Feb 09 20:03:20 2011] [notice] [0209/200320:INFO:net/instaweb/util/google_message_handler.cc(48)] http://sirius/redmine/login:1: 1179us: HtmlParse::ApplyFilter:InlineJs [Wed Feb 09 20:03:20 2011] [notice] [0209/200320:INFO:net/instaweb/util/google_message_handler.cc(48)] http://sirius/redmine/login:1: 1233us: HtmlParse::ApplyFilter:ImgRewrite [Wed Feb 09 20:03:20 2011] [notice] [0209/200320:INFO:net/instaweb/util/google_message_handler.cc(48)] http://sirius/redmine/login:1: 1285us: HtmlParse::ApplyFilter:CacheExtender [Wed Feb 09 20:03:20 2011] [notice] [0209/200320:INFO:net/instaweb/util/google_message_handler.cc(48)] http://sirius/redmine/login:1: 1338us: HtmlParse::ApplyFilter:HtmlWriter [Wed Feb 09 20:03:20 2011] [notice] [0209/200320:INFO:net/instaweb/util/google_message_handler.cc(48)] http://sirius/redmine/login:1: 1415us: HtmlParse::FinishParse [Wed Feb 09 20:03:20 2011] [notice] [0209/200320:INFO:net/instaweb/apache/mod_instaweb.cc(247)] ModPagespeed OutputFilter called for request /redmine [Wed Feb 09 20:03:20 2011] [notice] [0209/200320:INFO:net/instaweb/apache/mod_instaweb.cc(272)] unparsed=/redmine, absolute_url=http://sirius/redmine [Wed Feb 09 20:03:20 2011] [notice] [0209/200320:INFO:net/instaweb/util/google_message_handler.cc(48)] http://sirius/redmine:1: HtmlParse::StartParse [Wed Feb 09 20:03:20 2011] [notice] [0209/200320:INFO:net/instaweb/apache/mod_instaweb.cc(299)] Request headers:\nHTTP/1.1 0 Internal Server Error\r\nHost: sirius\r\nUser-Agent: Mozilla/5.0 (X11; U; Linux x86_64; en-US; rv:1.9.2.8) Gecko/20100723 Ubuntu/10.04 (lucid) Firefox/3.6.8\r\nAccept: text/html,application/xhtml+xml,application/xml;q=0.9,/;q=0.8\r\nAccept-Language: en-us,en;q=0.5\r\nAccept-Encoding: gzip,deflate\r\nAccept-Charset: ISO-8859-1,utf-8;q=0.7,*;q=0.7\r\nKeep-Alive: 115\r\nConnection: keep-alive\r\nReferer: http://sirius/redmine/login\r\nCookie: _redmine_session=BAh7BzoMdXNlcl9pZGkGOg9zZXNzaW9uX2lkIiVlYjNmYTY5NmZjNzMwYTdhMjA5ZDJmZmM4MTM0MzcyMw%3D%3D--57a4931aae681664d2a6ff6c039ac84b6ebc9e55\r\nIf-None-Match: "76628aff953f11fbdefb77ce3d575718"\r\n\r\n [Wed Feb 09 20:03:20 2011] [notice] [0209/200320:INFO:net/instaweb/apache/mod_instaweb.cc(302)] request-filename=/var/www/redmine, uri=/redmine [Wed Feb 09 20:03:20 2011] [notice] [0209/200320:INFO:net/instaweb/apache/mod_instaweb.cc(319)] ModPagespeed Response headers:\nHTTP/1.1 200 OK\r\nStatus: 200\r\nX-Mod-Pagespeed: 0.9.0.0-128\r\n\r\n [Wed Feb 09 20:03:20 2011] [notice] [0209/200320:INFO:net/instaweb/util/google_message_handler.cc(48)] http://sirius/redmine:1: 1870us: HtmlParse::Flush [Wed Feb 09 20:03:20 2011] [notice] [0209/200320:INFO:net/instaweb/util/google_message_handler.cc(48)] http://sirius/redmine:1: 1973us: HtmlParse::CoalesceAdjacentCharactersNodes [Wed Feb 09 20:03:20 2011] [notice] [0209/200320:INFO:net/instaweb/util/google_message_handler.cc(48)] http://sirius/redmine:1: 2040us: HtmlParse::ApplyFilter:AddHead [Wed Feb 09 20:03:20 2011] [notice] [0209/200320:INFO:net/instaweb/util/google_message_handler.cc(48)] http://sirius/redmine:1: 2101us: HtmlParse::SanityCheck [Wed Feb 09 20:03:20 2011] [notice] [0209/200320:INFO:net/instaweb/util/google_message_handler.cc(48)] http://sirius/redmine:1: 2231us: HtmlParse::ApplyFilter:CssCombine [Wed Feb 09 20:03:20 2011] [notice] [0209/200320:INFO:net/instaweb/apache/serf_url_async_fetcher.cc(632)] Initiating async fetch for http://sirius/redmine/stylesheets/application.css?1296181549

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  • Using SocialCounter.NET with ASP.NET MVC

    - by DigiMortal
    I found small library called SocialCounter.NET that is able to display some data from popular social sites. Although it is possible to use widgets offered by social networks there are also scenarios when you don’t want or can’t use these JavaScript based widgets. In this posting I will show you how to use SocialCounter.NET. Start with downloading SocialCounter.NET. You can also use NuGet package manager to download SocialCounter.NET. Using SocialCounter.NET is very easy as you can see from this example view: @using SocialCounter.NET; @{      ViewBag.Title = "Home Page"; } <h2>Social</h2> <p>     Twitter followers: @Counter.GetTwitterFollowersCount("gpeipman")<br />     Facebook friends: @Counter.GetFacebookFriendsCount("gpeipman")<br />     Facebook likes: @Counter.GetFacebookLikes("http://www.eindhovenmetalmeeting.nl/")<br />     Delicious saves count: @Counter.GetDeliciousSaveCount("http://youreffectiveleadership.com/")<br /> </p> And the result is shown on image on right. You can use SocialCounter.NET by example on user profile pages and on your content pages where you want to show how many people have saved current page as bookmark. SocialCounter.NET supports also LinkedIn, RSS-feeds and Google Plus accounts. In future – I hope – they will add support for more social networks to their library.

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  • Using MVC2 to update an Entity Framework v4 object with foreign keys fails

    - by jbjon
    With the following simple relational database structure: An Order has one or more OrderItems, and each OrderItem has one OrderItemStatus. Entity Framework v4 is used to communicate with the database and entities have been generated from this schema. The Entities connection happens to be called EnumTestEntities in the example. The trimmed down version of the Order Repository class looks like this: public class OrderRepository { private EnumTestEntities entities = new EnumTestEntities(); // Query Methods public Order Get(int id) { return entities.Orders.SingleOrDefault(d => d.OrderID == id); } // Persistence public void Save() { entities.SaveChanges(); } } An MVC2 app uses Entity Framework models to drive the views. I'm using the EditorFor feature of MVC2 to drive the Edit view. When it comes to POSTing back any changes to the model, the following code is called: [HttpPost] public ActionResult Edit(int id, FormCollection formValues) { // Get the current Order out of the database by ID Order order = orderRepository.Get(id); var orderItems = order.OrderItems; try { // Update the Order from the values posted from the View UpdateModel(order, ""); // Without the ValueProvider suffix it does not attempt to update the order items UpdateModel(order.OrderItems, "OrderItems.OrderItems"); // All the Save() does is call SaveChanges() on the database context orderRepository.Save(); return RedirectToAction("Details", new { id = order.OrderID }); } catch (Exception e) { return View(order); // Inserted while debugging } } The second call to UpdateModel has a ValueProvider suffix which matches the auto-generated HTML input name prefixes that MVC2 has generated for the foreign key collection of OrderItems within the View. The call to SaveChanges() on the database context after updating the OrderItems collection of an Order using UpdateModel generates the following exception: "The operation failed: The relationship could not be changed because one or more of the foreign-key properties is non-nullable. When a change is made to a relationship, the related foreign-key property is set to a null value. If the foreign-key does not support null values, a new relationship must be defined, the foreign-key property must be assigned another non-null value, or the unrelated object must be deleted." When debugging through this code, I can still see that the EntityKeys are not null and seem to be the same value as they should be. This still happens when you are not changing any of the extracted Order details from the database. Also the entity connection to the database doesn't change between the act of Getting and the SaveChanges so it doesn't appear to be a Context issue either. Any ideas what might be causing this problem? I know EF4 has done work on foreign key properties but can anyone shed any light on how to use EF4 and MVC2 to make things easy to update; rather than having to populate each property manually. I had hoped the simplicity of EditorFor and DisplayFor would also extend to Controllers updating data. Thanks

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  • ASP.NET Charting Control no longer working with .NET 4

    - by Moose Factory
    I've just upgraded to .NET 4 and my ASP.NET Chart Control no longer displays. For .NET 3.5, the HTML produced by the control used to look like this: <img id="20_Chart" src="/ChartImg.axd?i=chart_5f6a8fd179a246a5a0f4f44fcd7d5e03_0.png&amp;g=16eb7881335e47dcba16fdfd8339ba1a" alt="" style="height:300px;width:300px;border-width:0px;" /> and now, for .NET 4, it looks like this (note the change in the source path): <img id="20_Chart" src="/Statistics/Summary/ChartImg.axd?i=chart_5f6a8fd179a246a5a0f4f44fcd7d5e03_0.png&amp;g=16eb7881335e47dcba16fdfd8339ba1a" alt="" style="height:300px;width:300px;border-width:0px;" /> The chart is in an MVC partial view that is in an MVC Area folder called "Statistics" and a MVC Views folder called "Summary" (i.e. "/Areas/Statistics/Views/Summary"), so this is obviously where the change of path is coming from. All I've done is to switch the System.Web.DataVisualization assembly from, 3.5 to 4.0. Any help greatly appreciated.

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  • Best practice for structuring a new large ASP.NET MVC2 plus EF4 VS2010 solution?

    - by Nick
    Hi, we are building a new web application using Microsoft ASP.NET MVC2 and Entity Framework 4. Although I am sure there is not one right answer to my question, we are struggling to agree a VS2010 solution structure. The application will use SQL Server 2008 with a possible future Azure cloud version. We are using EF4 with T4 POCOs (model-first) and accessing a number of third-party web-services. We will also be connecting to a number of external messaging systems. UI is based on standard ASP.NET (MVC) with jQuery. In future we may deliver a Silverlight/WPF version - as well as mobile. So put simply, we start with a VS2010 blank solution - then what? I have suggested 4 folders Data (the EF edmx file etc), Domain (entities, repositories), Services (web-services access), Presentation (web ui etc). However under Presentation, creating the ASP.NET MVC2 project obviously creates it's own Models folder etc and it just doesn't seem to fit too well in this proposed structure. I'm also missing a business layer (or does this sit in the domain?). Again I am sure there is no one right way to do it, but I'd really appreciate your views on this. Thanks

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