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  • How to control virtual memory management in linux?

    - by chmike
    I'm writing a program that uses an mmap file to hold a huge buffer organized as an array of 64 MB blocks. The blocks are used to aggregate data received from different hosts through the network. As a consequence the total data size written in each block is not known in advance. Most of the time it is only 2MB but in some cases it can be up to 20MB or more. The data doesn't stay long in the buffer. 90% is deleted after less than a second and the rest is transmitted to another host. I would like to know if there is a way to tell the virtual memory manager that ram pages are not dirty anymore when data is deleted. Should I use mmap and munmap when a block is used and released to control the virtual memory ? What would be the overhead of doing this ? Also, some colleagues expressed concerns about the performance impact of allocating such a big mmap space. I expect it to behave like a swap file so that only dirty pages are to be considered.

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  • C++ Virtual Methods for Class-Specific Attributes or External Structure

    - by acanaday
    I have a set of classes which are all derived from a common base class. I want to use these classes polymorphically. The interface defines a set of getter methods whose return values are constant across a given derived class, but vary from one derived class to another. e.g.: enum AVal { A_VAL_ONE, A_VAL_TWO, A_VAL_THREE }; enum BVal { B_VAL_ONE, B_VAL_TWO, B_VAL_THREE }; class Base { //... virtual AVal getAVal() const = 0; virtual BVal getBVal() const = 0; //... }; class One : public Base { //... AVal getAVal() const { return A_VAL_ONE }; BVal getBVal() const { return B_VAL_ONE }; //... }; class Two : public Base { //... AVal getAVal() const { return A_VAL_TWO }; BVal getBVal() const { return B_VAL_TWO }; //... }; etc. Is this a common way of doing things? If performance is an important consideration, would I be better off pulling the attributes out into an external structure, e.g.: struct Vals { AVal a_val; VBal b_val; }; storing a Vals* in each instance, and rewriting Base as follows? class Base { //... public: AVal getAVal() const { return _vals->a_val; }; BVal getBVal() const { return _vals->b_val; }; //... private: Vals* _vals; }; Is the extra dereference essentially the same as the vtable lookup? What is the established idiom for this type of situation? Are both of these solutions dumb? Any insights are greatly appreciated

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  • Images not shown when publishing MVC application to virtual directory inside default web-site

    - by Michael Sagalovich
    Hi! I am developing an application using ASP.NET MVC 1 and VS2008. When I deploy it to the default web-site in my IIS6 on WinXP, all images are shown correctly, path to any given image is localhost/Content/ImagesUI/[image].[ext] When I deploy it to the virtual directory, created inside the same site, any image request returns IIS standard 404 error page, while the path is localhost/[DirectoryName]/Content/ImagesUI/[image].[ext] - that seems to be correct, true? I am mapping .* to c:\windows\microsoft.net\framework\v2.0.50727\aspnet_isapi.dll in both site and directory configurations. When this mapping is removed, images are shown correctly. However, all other URLs do not work, of course. When I am trying to open an image in browser using the URL to it, aspnet_wp.exe process is not even started (I restarted IIS to test it) - I merely get 404 or the image, depending on the presence of * mapping. Thus, I suppose it has nothing to do neither with routes registered for MVC, nor with ASP. The solution that I found is to make Content folder a virtual directory and remove * mapping from its configuration. While that's OK to some extent, I want a better solution, which will explain and eliminate the cause of the problem, not just workaround it. Thanks for your help!

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  • Remote Desktop to Your Azure Virtual Machine

    - by Shaun
    The Windows Azure Team had just published their new development portal this week and the SDK 1.3. Within this new release there are a lot of cool feature available. The one I’m looking forward to is Remote Desktop Access to your running Windows Azure Virtual Machine.   Configuration Remote Desktop Access It would be very simple to make the azure service enable the remote desktop access. First of all let’s create a new windows azure project from the Visual Studio. In this example I just created a normal MVC 2 web role without any modifications. Then we right-click the azure project node in the solution explorer window and select “Publish”. Then let’s select the “Deploy your Windows Azure project to Windows Azure” on the top radio button. And then select the credential, deployment service/slot, storage and label as susal. You must have the Management API Certificates uploaded to your Windows Azure account, and install the certification on you machine before in order to use this one-click deployment feature. If you are familiar with this dialog you will notice that there’s a linkage named “Configure Remote Desktop connections”. Here is where you need to make this service enable the remote desktop feature. After clicked this link we will set the configuration of the remote desktop access authorization information. There are 4 steps we need to do to configure our access. Certificates: We need either create or select a certificate file in order to encypt the access cerdenticals. In this example I will use the certificate file for my Management API. Username: The remote desktop user name to access the virtual machine. Password: The password for the access. Expiration: The access cerdentals would be expired after 1 month by default but we can amend here. After that we clicked the OK button to back to the publish dialog.   The next step is to back to the new windows azure portal and navigate to the hosted services list. I created a new hosted service and upload the certificate file onto this service. The user name and password access to the azure machine must be encrypted from the local machine, and then send to the windows azure platform, then decrypted on the azure side by the same file. This is why we need to upload the certificate file onto azure. We navigated to the “Hosted Services, Storage Accounts & CDN"” from the left panel and created a new hosted service named “SDK13” and selected the “Certificates” node. Then we clicked the “Add Certificates” button. Then we select the local certificate file and the password to install it into this azure service.   The final step would be back to our Visual Studio and in the pulish dialog just click the OK button. The Visual Studio will upload our package and the configuration into our service with the remote desktop settings.   Remote Desktop Access to Azure Virtual Machine All things had been done, let’s have a look back on the Windows Azure Development Portal. If I selected the web role that I had just published we can see on the toolbar there’s a section named “Remote Access”. In this section the Enable checkbox had been checked which means this role has the Remote Desktop Access feature enabled. If we want to modify the access cerdentals we can simply click the Configure button. Then we can update the user name, password, certificates and the expiration date.   Let’s select the instance node under the web role. In this case I just created one instance for demo. We can see that when we selected the instance node, the Connect button turned enabled. After clicked this button there will be a RDP file downloaded. This is a Remote Desctop configuration file that we can use to access to our azure virtual machine. Let’s download it to our local machine and execute. We input the user name and password we specified when we published our application to azure and then click OK. There might be some certificates warning dislog appeared. This is because the certificates we use to encryption is not signed by a trusted provider. Just select OK in these cases as we know the certificate is safty to us. Finally, the virtual machine of Windows Azure appeared.   A Quick Look into the Azure Virtual Machine Let’s just have a very quick look into our virtual machine. There are 3 disks available for us: C, D and E. Disk C: Store the local resource, diagnosis information, etc. Disk D: System disk which contains the OS, IIS, .NET Frameworks, etc. Disk E: Sotre our application code. The IIS which hosting our webiste on Azure. The IP configuration of the azure virtual machine.   Summary In this post I covered one of the new feature of the Azure SDK 1.3 – Remote Desktop Access. We can set the access per service and all of the instances of this service could be accessed through the remote desktop tool. With this feature we can deep into the virtual machines of our instances to see the inner information such as the system event, IIS log, system information, etc. But we should pay attention to modify the system settings. 2 reasons from what I know for now: 1. If we have more than one instances against our service we should ensure that all system settings we modifed are applied to all instances/virtual machines. Otherwise, as the machines are under the azure load balance proxy our application process may doesn’t work due to the defferent settings between the instances. 2. When the virtual machine encounted some problem and need to be translated to another physical machine all settings we made would be disappeared.   Hope this helps, Shaun All documents and related graphics, codes are provided "AS IS" without warranty of any kind. Copyright © Shaun Ziyan Xu. This work is licensed under the Creative Commons License.

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  • Move "XP Mode" from Windows Virtual PC to VirtualBox?

    - by JoelFan
    I installed "XP Mode" in Windows 7 (which uses Windows Virtual PC to host XP). I have now discovered that VirtualBox, which I have installed on the same Windows 7 machine, refuses to run at the same time as Windows Virtual PC (it gives me an error about not running multiple visualization programs). Is there any way I can convert the "XP Mode" image so that it will run inside VirtualBox instead of Windows Virtual PC? That way I will be able to run XP as well as other VM's at the same time.

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  • How to get Virtual PC to recognize MIDI devices?

    - by bparker
    Hey all. I have an XP Pro virtual machine running inside Virtual PC 2007. My host machine is x64 Windows 7. I have a MIDI keyboard hooked up to my machine via a Turtle Beach USB to MIDI 1x1 cable. I have installed the driver and software on my host machine and ran a soundcheck, and everything appears to be working fine. Playback is sent to the MIDI device with no problems. However, when I attempt to install the driver and run a soundcheck in my XP virtual machine, the device is not found. Other USB devices (mouse, keyboard, flash drives) work fine in the virtual machine, but not they MIDI keyboard. I'm not sure what steps to take in order to troubleshoot the and get the VM to start recognizing the MIDI keyboard. Any help or suggestions would be greatly appreciated. Thanks.

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  • Windows 7 XP Mode - Is it possible to have multiple XP Mode Virtual PCs?

    - by STW
    Windows 7's XP Mode virtual PC supports some features that aren't 'stock' with an XP Virtual PC such as a different start-up dialog, no Shutdown button, etc. Possibly the most significant is that applications installed within the XP Mode VM appear within the Windows 7 start-menu. I have a need for multiple XP Mode VM's--is it possible to have 2 or more XP Mode VM's, or to otherwise enable these extra integration features in an XP Virtual PC?

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  • Windows 7 XP Mode - Is it possible to have multiple XP Mode Virtual PCs?

    - by Yoooder
    Win7's XP Mode virtual PC supports some features that aren't 'stock' with an XP Virtual PC such as a different start-up dialog, no Shutdown button, etc. Possibly the most significant is that applications installed within the XP Mode VM appear within the Windows 7 start-menu. I have a need for multiple XP Mode VM's--is it possible to have 2 or more XP Mode vm's, or to otherwise enable these extra integration features in an XP Virtual PC?

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  • How do UEFI and virtual machines relate to each other?

    - by Iterator
    I am trying to get my head around UEFI (Unified Extensible Firmware Interface) and it's not entirely clear to me how this affects virtual machines. Thus, there are three parts to this question: Is UEFI an advance in hardware support for virtualization? All other things being equal, would a machine with UEFI be more likely to run a virtual machine more efficiently than one without, or does UEFI cause any performance hits that negate any speed improvements from a virtual machine? Would the difference in execution be visible to code running in a virtual machine? (In theory, it shouldn't, but in practice?)

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  • Is there a way to pin a virtual PC VHD to the Windows 7 taskbar?

    - by Corey
    I have a virtual HD for Windows XP mode, and wanted to pin it to the task bar. However, trying to pin the shortcut to the VHD file actually pins the "virtual machines" folder instead. Clicking on it opens the explorer window and I have to click on the VHD to actually open Windows XP. It does know I'm trying to pin the file, and if I right-click the taskbar icon, has the file under "pinned," but the default action is what's under "Task" (which is to open the virtual machines folder in explorer). Is there a way to pin the actual VHD to the taskbar, so it's just one click to restore the virtual machine?

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  • How to prevent response to who-has requests on virtual eth interface?

    - by user42881
    Hi, we use small embedded X86 linux servers equipped with a single physical ethernet port as a gateway for an IP video surveillance application. Each downstream IP cam is mapped to a separate virtual IP address like this: real eth0 IP address= 192.168.1.1, camera 1 (eth0:1) =192.168.1.61, camera 2 (eth0:2) =192.168.1.62, etc. etc. all on the same eth0 physical port. This approach works well, except that a specific third-party windows video recording application running on a separate PC on the same LAN, automatically pings the virtual IPs looking for unique who-has responses on system startup and, when it gets back the same eth0 MAC address for each virtual interface, freaks out and won't allow us to subsequently manually enter those addresses. The windows app doesn't mind, tho, if it receives no answer to the who-has ping. My question - how can we either (a) shut off the who-has responses just for the virtual eth0:x interfaces while keeping them for the primary physical eth0 port, or, in the alternative, spoof a valid but different MAC address for each virtual interface? Thanks!

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  • Now Available: Visual Studio 2010 Release Candidate Virtual Machines with Sample Data and Hands-on-L

    - by John Alexander
    From a message from Brian Keller: “Back in December we posted a set of virtual machines pre-configured with Visual Studio 2010 Beta 2, Visual Studio Team Foundation Server 2010 Beta 2, and 7 hands-on-labs. I am pleased to announce that today we have shipped an updated virtual machine using the Visual Studio 2010 Release Candidate bits, a brand new sample application, and 9 hands-on-labs. This VM is customer-ready and includes everything you need to learn and/or deliver demonstrations of many of my favorite application lifecycle management (ALM) capabilities in Visual Studio 2010. This VM is available in the virtualization platform of your choice (Hyper-V, Virtual PC 2007 SP1, and Windows [7] Virtual PC). Hyper-V is highly recommended because of the performance benefits and snapshotting capabilities. Tailspin Toys The sample application we are using in this virtual machine is a simple ASP.NET MVC 2 storefront called Tailspin Toys. Tailspin Toys sells model airplanes and relies on the application lifecycle management capabilities of Visual Studio 2010 to help them build, test, and maintain their storefront. Major kudos go to Dan Massey for building out this great application for us. Hands-on-Labs / Demo Scripts The 9 hands-on-labs / demo scripts which accompany this virtual machine cover several of the core capabilities of conducting application lifecycle management with Visual Studio 2010. Each document can be used by an individual in a hands-on-lab capacity, to learn how to perform a given set of tasks, or used by a presenter to deliver a demonstration or classroom-style training. Unlike the beta 2 release, 100% of these labs target Tailspin Toys to help ensure a consistent storytelling experience. Software quality: Authoring and Running Manual Tests using Microsoft Test Manager 2010 Introduction to Test Case Management with Microsoft Test Manager 2010 Introduction to Coded UI Tests with Visual Studio 2010 Ultimate Debugging with IntelliTrace using Visual Studio 2010 Ultimate Software architecture: Code Discovery using the architecture tools in Visual Studio 2010 Ultimate Understanding Class Coupling with Visual Studio 2010 Ultimate Using the Architecture Explore in Visual Studio 2010 Ultimate to Analyze Your Code Software Configuration Management: Planning your Projects with Team Foundation Server 2010 Branching and Merging Visualization with Team Foundation Server 2010 “ Check out Brian’s Post for more info including download instructions…

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  • What is a Delphi version of the C++ header for the DVP7010B video card DLL?

    - by grzegorz1
    I need help with converting c++ header file to delphi. I spent several days on this problem without success. Below is the original header file and my Delphi translation. C++ header #if _MSC_VER > 1000 #pragma once #endif // _MSC_VER > 1000 #ifdef DVP7010BDLL_EXPORTS #define DVP7010BDLL_API __declspec(dllexport) #else #define DVP7010BDLL_API __declspec(dllimport) #endif #define MAXBOARDS 4 #define MAXDEVS 4 #define ID_NEW_FRAME 37810 #define ID_MUX0_NEW_FRAME 37800 #define ID_MUX1_NEW_FRAME 37801 #define ID_MUX2_NEW_FRAME 37802 #define ID_MUX3_NEW_FRAME 37803 typedef enum { SUCCEEDED = 1, FAILED = 0, SDKINITFAILED = -1, PARAMERROR = -2, NODEVICES = -3, NOSAMPLE = -4, DEVICENUMERROR = -5, INPUTERROR = -6, // VERIFYHWERROR = -7 } Res; typedef enum tagAnalogVideoFormat { Video_None = 0x00000000, Video_NTSC_M = 0x00000001, Video_NTSC_M_J = 0x00000002, Video_PAL_B = 0x00000010, Video_PAL_M = 0x00000200, Video_PAL_N = 0x00000400, Video_SECAM_B = 0x00001000 } AnalogVideoFormat; typedef enum { SIZEFULLPAL=0, SIZED1, SIZEVGA, SIZEQVGA, SIZESUBQVGA } VideoSize; typedef enum { STOPPED = 1, RUNNING = 2, UNINITIALIZED = -1, UNKNOWNSTATE = -2 } CapState; class IDVP7010BDLL { public: int AdvDVP_CreateSDKInstence(void **pp); virtual int AdvDVP_InitSDK() PURE; virtual int AdvDVP_CloseSDK() PURE; virtual int AdvDVP_GetNoOfDevices(int *pNoOfDevs) PURE; virtual int AdvDVP_Start(int nDevNum, int SwitchingChans, HWND Main, HWND hwndPreview) PURE; virtual int AdvDVP_Stop(int nDevNum) PURE; virtual int AdvDVP_GetCapState(int nDevNum) PURE; virtual int AdvDVP_IsVideoPresent(int nDevNum, BOOL* VPresent) PURE; virtual int AdvDVP_GetCurFrameBuffer(int nDevNum, int VMux, long* bufSize, BYTE* buf) PURE; virtual int AdvDVP_SetNewFrameCallback(int nDevNum, int callback) PURE; virtual int AdvDVP_GetVideoFormat(int nDevNum, AnalogVideoFormat* vFormat) PURE; virtual int AdvDVP_SetVideoFormat(int nDevNum, AnalogVideoFormat vFormat) PURE; virtual int AdvDVP_GetFrameRate(int nDevNum, int *nFrameRate) PURE; virtual int AdvDVP_SetFrameRate(int nDevNum, int SwitchingChans, int nFrameRate) PURE; virtual int AdvDVP_GetResolution(int nDevNum, VideoSize *Size) PURE; virtual int AdvDVP_SetResolution(int nDevNum, VideoSize Size) PURE; virtual int AdvDVP_GetVideoInput(int nDevNum, int* input) PURE; virtual int AdvDVP_SetVideoInput(int nDevNum, int input) PURE; virtual int AdvDVP_GetBrightness(int nDevNum, int input, long *pnValue) PURE; virtual int AdvDVP_SetBrightness(int nDevNum, int input, long nValue) PURE; virtual int AdvDVP_GetContrast(int nDevNum, int input, long *pnValue) PURE; virtual int AdvDVP_SetContrast(int nDevNum, int input, long nValue) PURE; virtual int AdvDVP_GetHue(int nDevNum, int input, long *pnValue) PURE; virtual int AdvDVP_SetHue(int nDevNum, int input, long nValue) PURE; virtual int AdvDVP_GetSaturation(int nDevNum, int input, long *pnValue) PURE; virtual int AdvDVP_SetSaturation(int nDevNum, int input, long nValue) PURE; virtual int AdvDVP_GPIOGetData(int nDevNum, int DINum, BOOL* value) PURE; virtual int AdvDVP_GPIOSetData(int nDevNum, int DONum, BOOL value) PURE; }; Delphi unit IDVP7010BDLL_h; interface uses Windows, Messages, SysUtils, Classes; //{$if _MSC_VER > 1000} //pragma once //{$endif} // _MSC_VER > 1000 {$ifdef DVP7010BDLL_EXPORTS} //const DVP7010BDLL_API = __declspec(dllexport); {$else} //const DVP7010BDLL_API = __declspec(dllimport); {$endif} const MAXDEVS = 4; MAXMUXS = 4; ID_NEW_FRAME = 37810; ID_MUX0_NEW_FRAME = 37800; ID_MUX1_NEW_FRAME = 37801; ID_MUX2_NEW_FRAME = 37802; ID_MUX3_NEW_FRAME = 37803; // TRec SUCCEEDED = 1; FAILED = 0; SDKINITFAILED = -1; PARAMERROR = -2; NODEVICES = -3; NOSAMPLE = -4; DEVICENUMERROR = -5; INPUTERROR = -6; // TRec // TAnalogVideoFormat Video_None = $00000000; Video_NTSC_M = $00000001; Video_NTSC_M_J = $00000002; Video_PAL_B = $00000010; Video_PAL_M = $00000200; Video_PAL_N = $00000400; Video_SECAM_B = $00001000; // TAnalogVideoFormat // TCapState STOPPED = 1; RUNNING = 2; UNINITIALIZED = -1; UNKNOWNSTATE = -2; // TCapState type TCapState = Longint; TRes = Longint; TtagAnalogVideoFormat = DWORD; TAnalogVideoFormat = TtagAnalogVideoFormat; PAnalogVideoFormat = ^TAnalogVideoFormat; TVideoSize = ( SIZEFULLPAL, SIZED1, SIZEVGA, SIZEQVGA, SIZESUBQVGA); PVideoSize = ^TVideoSize; P_Pointer = ^Pointer; TIDVP7010BDLL = class function AdvDVP_CreateSDKInstence(pp: P_Pointer): integer; virtual; stdcall; abstract; function AdvDVP_InitSDK():Integer; virtual; stdcall; abstract; function AdvDVP_CloseSDK():Integer; virtual; stdcall; abstract; function AdvDVP_GetNoOfDevices(pNoOfDevs : PInteger) :Integer; virtual; stdcall; abstract; function AdvDVP_Start(nDevNum : Integer; SwitchingChans : Integer; Main : HWND; hwndPreview: HWND ) :Integer; virtual; stdcall; abstract; function AdvDVP_Stop(nDevNum : Integer ):Integer; virtual; stdcall; abstract; function AdvDVP_GetCapState(nDevNum : Integer ):Integer; virtual; stdcall; abstract; function AdvDVP_IsVideoPresent(nDevNum : Integer; VPresent : PBool) :Integer; virtual; stdcall; abstract; function AdvDVP_GetCurFrameBuffer(nDevNum : Integer; VMux : Integer; bufSize : PLongInt; buf : PByte) :Integer; virtual; stdcall; abstract; function AdvDVP_SetNewFrameCallback(nDevNum : Integer; callback : Integer ) :Integer; virtual; stdcall; abstract; function AdvDVP_GetVideoFormat(nDevNum : Integer; vFormat : PAnalogVideoFormat) :Integer; virtual; stdcall; abstract; function AdvDVP_SetVideoFormat(nDevNum : Integer; vFormat : TAnalogVideoFormat ) :Integer; virtual; stdcall; abstract; function AdvDVP_GetFrameRate(nDevNum : Integer; nFrameRate : Integer) :Integer; virtual; stdcall; abstract; function AdvDVP_SetFrameRate(nDevNum : Integer; SwitchingChans : Integer; nFrameRate : Integer) :Integer; virtual; stdcall; abstract; function AdvDVP_GetResolution(nDevNum : Integer; Size : PVideoSize) :Integer; virtual; stdcall; abstract; function AdvDVP_SetResolution(nDevNum : Integer; Size : TVideoSize ) :Integer; virtual; stdcall; abstract; function AdvDVP_GetVideoInput(nDevNum : Integer; input : PInteger) :Integer; virtual; stdcall; abstract; function AdvDVP_SetVideoInput(nDevNum : Integer; input : Integer) :Integer; virtual; stdcall; abstract; function AdvDVP_GetBrightness(nDevNum : Integer; input: Integer; pnValue : PLongInt) :Integer; virtual; stdcall; abstract; function AdvDVP_SetBrightness(nDevNum : Integer; input: Integer; nValue : LongInt) :Integer; virtual; stdcall; abstract; function AdvDVP_GetContrast(nDevNum : Integer; input: Integer; pnValue : PLongInt) :Integer; virtual; stdcall; abstract; function AdvDVP_SetContrast(nDevNum : Integer; input: Integer; nValue : LongInt) :Integer; virtual; stdcall; abstract; function AdvDVP_GetHue(nDevNum : Integer; input: Integer; pnValue : PLongInt) :Integer; virtual; stdcall; abstract; function AdvDVP_SetHue(nDevNum : Integer; input: Integer; nValue : LongInt) :Integer; virtual; stdcall; abstract; function AdvDVP_GetSaturation(nDevNum : Integer; input: Integer; pnValue : PLongInt) :Integer; virtual; stdcall; abstract; function AdvDVP_SetSaturation(nDevNum : Integer; input: Integer; nValue : LongInt) :Integer; virtual; stdcall; abstract; function AdvDVP_GPIOGetData(nDevNum : Integer; DINum:Integer; value : PBool) :Integer; virtual; stdcall; abstract; function AdvDVP_GPIOSetData(nDevNum : Integer; DONum:Integer; value : Boolean) :Integer; virtual; stdcall; abstract; end; function IDVP7010BDLL : TIDVP7010BDLL ; stdcall; implementation function IDVP7010BDLL; external 'DVP7010B.dll'; end.

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  • Create Virtual Directory and Set Permissions IIS7 - Cannot read configuration file due to insufficie

    - by Nick
    I am trying to create a virtual directory and set it's permissions using IIS7 and C#. Here is a sample of my code: using (ServerManager serverManager = new ServerManager(webSite)) { ConfigurationSection anonymousAuthenticationSection = config.GetSection( @"system.webServer/security/authentication/anonymousAuthentication", webSite); anonymousAuthenticationSection["enabled"] = true; serverManager.CommitChanges(); return "true"; } This throws an exception and the message is: Cannot read configuration file due to insufficient permissions. Can someone help?

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  • Need help converting a C++ header file to delphi

    - by grzegorz1
    I need help with converting c++ header file to delphi. I spent several days on this problem without success. Below is the original header file and my Delphi translation. ///////////////////////// C++ header file //////////////////////////////////// if _MSC_VER 1000 pragma once endif // _MSC_VER 1000 ifdef DVP7010BDLL_EXPORTS define DVP7010BDLL_API __declspec(dllexport) else define DVP7010BDLL_API __declspec(dllimport) endif define MAXBOARDS 4 define MAXDEVS 4 define ID_NEW_FRAME 37810 define ID_MUX0_NEW_FRAME 37800 define ID_MUX1_NEW_FRAME 37801 define ID_MUX2_NEW_FRAME 37802 define ID_MUX3_NEW_FRAME 37803 typedef enum { SUCCEEDED = 1, FAILED = 0, SDKINITFAILED = -1, PARAMERROR = -2, NODEVICES = -3, NOSAMPLE = -4, DEVICENUMERROR = -5, INPUTERROR = -6, // VERIFYHWERROR = -7 } Res; typedef enum tagAnalogVideoFormat { Video_None = 0x00000000, Video_NTSC_M = 0x00000001, Video_NTSC_M_J = 0x00000002, Video_PAL_B = 0x00000010, Video_PAL_M = 0x00000200, Video_PAL_N = 0x00000400, Video_SECAM_B = 0x00001000 } AnalogVideoFormat; typedef enum { SIZEFULLPAL=0, SIZED1, SIZEVGA, SIZEQVGA, SIZESUBQVGA } VideoSize; typedef enum { STOPPED = 1, RUNNING = 2, UNINITIALIZED = -1, UNKNOWNSTATE = -2 } CapState; class IDVP7010BDLL { public: int AdvDVP_CreateSDKInstence(void **pp); virtual int AdvDVP_InitSDK() PURE; virtual int AdvDVP_CloseSDK() PURE; virtual int AdvDVP_GetNoOfDevices(int *pNoOfDevs) PURE; virtual int AdvDVP_Start(int nDevNum, int SwitchingChans, HWND Main, HWND hwndPreview) PURE; virtual int AdvDVP_Stop(int nDevNum) PURE; virtual int AdvDVP_GetCapState(int nDevNum) PURE; virtual int AdvDVP_IsVideoPresent(int nDevNum, BOOL* VPresent) PURE; virtual int AdvDVP_GetCurFrameBuffer(int nDevNum, int VMux, long* bufSize, BYTE* buf) PURE; virtual int AdvDVP_SetNewFrameCallback(int nDevNum, int callback) PURE; virtual int AdvDVP_GetVideoFormat(int nDevNum, AnalogVideoFormat* vFormat) PURE; virtual int AdvDVP_SetVideoFormat(int nDevNum, AnalogVideoFormat vFormat) PURE; virtual int AdvDVP_GetFrameRate(int nDevNum, int *nFrameRate) PURE; virtual int AdvDVP_SetFrameRate(int nDevNum, int SwitchingChans, int nFrameRate) PURE; virtual int AdvDVP_GetResolution(int nDevNum, VideoSize *Size) PURE; virtual int AdvDVP_SetResolution(int nDevNum, VideoSize Size) PURE; virtual int AdvDVP_GetVideoInput(int nDevNum, int* input) PURE; virtual int AdvDVP_SetVideoInput(int nDevNum, int input) PURE; virtual int AdvDVP_GetBrightness(int nDevNum, int input, long *pnValue) PURE; virtual int AdvDVP_SetBrightness(int nDevNum, int input, long nValue) PURE; virtual int AdvDVP_GetContrast(int nDevNum, int input, long *pnValue) PURE; virtual int AdvDVP_SetContrast(int nDevNum, int input, long nValue) PURE; virtual int AdvDVP_GetHue(int nDevNum, int input, long *pnValue) PURE; virtual int AdvDVP_SetHue(int nDevNum, int input, long nValue) PURE; virtual int AdvDVP_GetSaturation(int nDevNum, int input, long *pnValue) PURE; virtual int AdvDVP_SetSaturation(int nDevNum, int input, long nValue) PURE; virtual int AdvDVP_GPIOGetData(int nDevNum, int DINum, BOOL* value) PURE; virtual int AdvDVP_GPIOSetData(int nDevNum, int DONum, BOOL value) PURE; }; /////////////////// delphi /////////////////////////////////////// unit IDVP7010BDLL_h; interface uses Windows, Messages, SysUtils, Classes; //{$if _MSC_VER 1000} //pragma once //{$endif} // _MSC_VER 1000 {$ifdef DVP7010BDLL_EXPORTS} //const DVP7010BDLL_API = __declspec(dllexport); {$else} //const DVP7010BDLL_API = __declspec(dllimport); {$endif} const MAXDEVS = 4; MAXMUXS = 4; ID_NEW_FRAME = 37810; ID_MUX0_NEW_FRAME = 37800; ID_MUX1_NEW_FRAME = 37801; ID_MUX2_NEW_FRAME = 37802; ID_MUX3_NEW_FRAME = 37803; // TRec SUCCEEDED = 1; FAILED = 0; SDKINITFAILED = -1; PARAMERROR = -2; NODEVICES = -3; NOSAMPLE = -4; DEVICENUMERROR = -5; INPUTERROR = -6; // TRec // TAnalogVideoFormat Video_None = $00000000; Video_NTSC_M = $00000001; Video_NTSC_M_J = $00000002; Video_PAL_B = $00000010; Video_PAL_M = $00000200; Video_PAL_N = $00000400; Video_SECAM_B = $00001000; // TAnalogVideoFormat // TCapState STOPPED = 1; RUNNING = 2; UNINITIALIZED = -1; UNKNOWNSTATE = -2; // TCapState type TCapState = Longint; TRes = Longint; TtagAnalogVideoFormat = DWORD; TAnalogVideoFormat = TtagAnalogVideoFormat; PAnalogVideoFormat = ^TAnalogVideoFormat; TVideoSize = ( SIZEFULLPAL, SIZED1, SIZEVGA, SIZEQVGA, SIZESUBQVGA); PVideoSize = ^TVideoSize; P_Pointer = ^Pointer; TIDVP7010BDLL = class function AdvDVP_CreateSDKInstence(pp: P_Pointer): integer; virtual; stdcall; abstract; function AdvDVP_InitSDK():Integer; virtual; stdcall; abstract; function AdvDVP_CloseSDK():Integer; virtual; stdcall; abstract; function AdvDVP_GetNoOfDevices(pNoOfDevs : PInteger) :Integer; virtual; stdcall; abstract; function AdvDVP_Start(nDevNum : Integer; SwitchingChans : Integer; Main : HWND; hwndPreview: HWND ) :Integer; virtual; stdcall; abstract; function AdvDVP_Stop(nDevNum : Integer ):Integer; virtual; stdcall; abstract; function AdvDVP_GetCapState(nDevNum : Integer ):Integer; virtual; stdcall; abstract; function AdvDVP_IsVideoPresent(nDevNum : Integer; VPresent : PBool) :Integer; virtual; stdcall; abstract; function AdvDVP_GetCurFrameBuffer(nDevNum : Integer; VMux : Integer; bufSize : PLongInt; buf : PByte) :Integer; virtual; stdcall; abstract; function AdvDVP_SetNewFrameCallback(nDevNum : Integer; callback : Integer ) :Integer; virtual; stdcall; abstract; function AdvDVP_GetVideoFormat(nDevNum : Integer; vFormat : PAnalogVideoFormat) :Integer; virtual; stdcall; abstract; function AdvDVP_SetVideoFormat(nDevNum : Integer; vFormat : TAnalogVideoFormat ) :Integer; virtual; stdcall; abstract; function AdvDVP_GetFrameRate(nDevNum : Integer; nFrameRate : Integer) :Integer; virtual; stdcall; abstract; function AdvDVP_SetFrameRate(nDevNum : Integer; SwitchingChans : Integer; nFrameRate : Integer) :Integer; virtual; stdcall; abstract; function AdvDVP_GetResolution(nDevNum : Integer; Size : PVideoSize) :Integer; virtual; stdcall; abstract; function AdvDVP_SetResolution(nDevNum : Integer; Size : TVideoSize ) :Integer; virtual; stdcall; abstract; function AdvDVP_GetVideoInput(nDevNum : Integer; input : PInteger) :Integer; virtual; stdcall; abstract; function AdvDVP_SetVideoInput(nDevNum : Integer; input : Integer) :Integer; virtual; stdcall; abstract; function AdvDVP_GetBrightness(nDevNum : Integer; input: Integer; pnValue : PLongInt) :Integer; virtual; stdcall; abstract; function AdvDVP_SetBrightness(nDevNum : Integer; input: Integer; nValue : LongInt) :Integer; virtual; stdcall; abstract; function AdvDVP_GetContrast(nDevNum : Integer; input: Integer; pnValue : PLongInt) :Integer; virtual; stdcall; abstract; function AdvDVP_SetContrast(nDevNum : Integer; input: Integer; nValue : LongInt) :Integer; virtual; stdcall; abstract; function AdvDVP_GetHue(nDevNum : Integer; input: Integer; pnValue : PLongInt) :Integer; virtual; stdcall; abstract; function AdvDVP_SetHue(nDevNum : Integer; input: Integer; nValue : LongInt) :Integer; virtual; stdcall; abstract; function AdvDVP_GetSaturation(nDevNum : Integer; input: Integer; pnValue : PLongInt) :Integer; virtual; stdcall; abstract; function AdvDVP_SetSaturation(nDevNum : Integer; input: Integer; nValue : LongInt) :Integer; virtual; stdcall; abstract; function AdvDVP_GPIOGetData(nDevNum : Integer; DINum:Integer; value : PBool) :Integer; virtual; stdcall; abstract; function AdvDVP_GPIOSetData(nDevNum : Integer; DONum:Integer; value : Boolean) :Integer; virtual; stdcall; abstract; end; function IDVP7010BDLL : TIDVP7010BDLL ; stdcall; implementation function IDVP7010BDLL; external 'DVP7010B.dll'; end.

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