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  • Checking lazy loaded properties have been instantiated

    - by PaulG
    In a class which has a lazy loaded property, such as: private Collection<int> someInts; public Collection<int> SomeInts { get { if (this.someInts == null) this.someInts = new Collection<int>(); return this.someInts; } } Is it worth also having a property such as: public bool SomeIntsExist { get { return (this.someInts != null && this.someInts.Count > 0); } } And then using that property.. eg: if (thatClass.SomeIntsExist) { // do something with thatClass.SomeInts collection } or is this premature optimisation. Its certainly easier to roll with something like below, but it will instantiate the collection needlessly: if (thatClass.SomeInts.Count > 0) { // do something with thatClass.SomeInts collection } Is the compiler smart enough to figure things like this out? Is there a better way?

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  • Binding Navigation Property with Entity Framework

    - by JSmaga
    Hi, I have another question about binding using C# and the entity framework. Here, I'm looking to bind a navigation property to a listbox or a listview. I saw on different posts that if I update the collection using code behind the list would not be notified because the collection does not handle notification (it's always the same problem anyway). People suggested to use an ObservableCollection for example, but, and here is my question, this comes down to basically duplicate the collection and hence, if I modify it, I'd have to handle in code-behind the fact that the change has also to be applied to the "original" navigation property right? If that's the case, I was thinking: why not create a custom property called, say, MyObservableNavigationProperty in a partial class. I could then interact only with this collection, catch the event when the collection is changed and apply the change to the "original" collection. Is that a nice way to do the trick? or am I getting all confused here....

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  • jQuery Running a function in a context and adding to a variable

    - by Mark
    For this question I'm going to give a simplified example of what I want to do, and the function I want to learn to write. var collection = ''; <div id='container'> <span>1</span> <span>2</span> <span>3</span> </div> What I want to do this, for every span in the div, take its text, add it to the collection. So ideally it would look like: $('#container').addtoCollection(collection); The method would be something like: $(this).find('span').each(function () { collection = collection + $(this).text(); }). Where the first this would equal #container. So in the end you can do: console.log(collection); and get: 123 How do I write the function that does this? Thanks!

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  • Marionette js itemview not defined: then on browser refresh it is defined and all works well - race condition?

    - by Robert
    Yeah it's just the initial browser load or two after a cache clear. Subsequent refreshes clear the problem up. I'm thinking the item views just aren't fully constructed in time to be used in the collection views on the first load. But then they are on a refresh? Don't know. There must be something about the code sequence or loading or the load time itself. Not sure. I'm loading via require.js. Have two collections - users and messages. Each renders in its own list view. Each works, just not the first time or two the browser loads. The first time you load after clearing browser cache the console reports, for instance: "Uncaught ReferenceError: MessageItemView is not defined" A simple browser refresh clears it up. Same goes for the user collection. It's collection view says it doesn't know anything about its item view. But a simple browser refresh and all is well. My views (item and collection) are in separate files. Is that the problem? For instance, here is my message collection view in its own file: messagelistview.js var MessageListView = Marionette.CollectionView.extend({ itemView: MessageItemView, el: $("#messages") }); And the message item view is in a separate file: messageview.js var MessageItemView = Marionette.ItemView.extend({ tagName: "div", template: Handlebars.compile( '<div>{{fromUserName}}:</div>' + '<div>{{message}}</div>' + ) }); Then in my main module file, which references each of those files, the collection view is constructed and displayed: main.js //Define a model MessageModel = Backbone.Model.extend(); //Make an instance of MessageItemView - code in separate file, messagelistview.js MessageView = new MessageItemView(); //Define a message collection var MessageCollection = Backbone.Collection.extend({ model: MessageModel }); //Make an instance of MessageCollection var collMessages = new MessageCollection(); //Make an instance of a MessageListView - code in separate file, messagelistview.js var messageListView = new MessageListView({ collection: collMessages }); App.messageListRegion.show(messageListView); Do I just have things sequenced wrong? I'm thinking it's some kind of race condition only because over 3G to an iPad the item views are always undefined. They never seem to get constructed in time. PC on a hard wired connection does see success after a browser refresh or two.

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  • backbonejs remove anomaly concept

    - by user1537158
    I was building a small app for adding and deleting li from ul using Backbonejs.One of the SO members cymen helped me code it, using that i tailored the code a little.currently if i add one element and delete , it works , but the second time i add an element (to ul) and go to delete it , i get Uncaught TypeError: Cannot call method 'remove' of undefined Pasting my code here , HTML : <input type="text" id="name"> <button id="add">Add</button> <ul id="mylist"></ul> JS: $(function(){ var myCollection = Backbone.Collection.extend(); var myView = Backbone.View.extend({ el:$('body'), tagName:'li', initialize : function(e){ this.collection.bind("add",this.render,this); this.collection.bind("remove",this.render,this); }, events:{ 'click #add' : 'addfoo' }, addfoo : function(){ var myname= $('#name').val(); $('#name').val(''); this.collection.add({name:myname}); }, render : function(){ $('#mylist').empty(); this.collection.each(function(model){ console.log("myView"); var remove = new myRemoveView({model:model}); remove.render(); }); } }); var myRemoveView = Backbone.View.extend({ el:$('body'), events:{ 'click .button':'removeFoo' }, removeFoo : function(){ console.log("here"); this.model.collection.remove(this.model); }, render : function(){ console.log("second view"); $('#mylist').append('<li>'+this.model.get('name') + "<button class='button'>"+"delete"+"</button></li>"); return; } }); var view = new myView({collection: new myCollection()}); }); Two things i did not understand : i) in the removeFoo function , we write this.model.collection.remove(this.model) shouldnt this have been this.collection.model.remove , something of that sort ? ii) i add a li to ul , then i delete it , when i add another li (appending to ul works perfect) but this time when i go to delete it throws me the above error : Uncaught TypeError :cannot call method 'remove' of undefined can you please help me figure out these 2 doubts in my code , btw SO member cymen's code works like a charm only my tailored code (above) is giving me errors. SO member cymen's code : JS Fiddle for his code Thank you

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  • best way to pick a random subset from a collection?

    - by Tom
    I have a set of objects in a Vector from which I'd like to select a random subset (e.g. 100 items coming back; pick 5 randomly). In my first (very hasty) pass I did an extremely simple and perhaps overly clever solution: Vector itemsVector = getItems(); Collections.shuffle(itemsVector); itemsVector.setSize(5); While this has the advantage of being nice and simple, I suspect it's not going to scale very well, i.e. Collections.shuffle() must be O(n) at least. My less clever alternative is Vector itemsVector = getItems(); Random rand = new Random(System.currentTimeMillis()); // would make this static to the class List subsetList = new ArrayList(5); for (int i = 0; i < 5; i++) { // be sure to use Vector.remove() or you may get the same item twice subsetList.add(itemsVector.remove(rand.nextInt(itemsVector.size()))); } Any suggestions on better ways to draw out a random subset from a Collection?

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  • How do I get the collection of Model State Errors in ASP.NET MVC?

    - by Ryan Montgomery
    How do I get the collection of errors in a view? I don't want to use the Html Helper Validation Summary or Validation Message. Instead I want to check for errors and if any display them in specific format. Also on the input controls I want to check for a specific property error and add a class to the input. P.S. I'm using the Spark View Engine but the idea should be the same. So I figured I could do something like... <if condition="${ModelState.Errors.Count > 0}"> DispalyErrorSummary() </if> ....and also... <input type="text" value="${Model.Name}" class="?{ModelState.Errors["Name"] != string.empty} error" /> .... Or something like that. UPDATE My final solution looked like this: <input type="text" value="${ViewData.Model.Name}" class="text error?{!ViewData.ModelState.IsValid && ViewData.ModelState["Name"].Errors.Count() > 0}" id="Name" name="Name" /> This only adds the error css class if this property has an error.

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  • Criteria API - How to get records based on collection count?

    - by Cosmo
    Hello Guys! I have a Question class in ActiveRecord with following fields: [ActiveRecord("`Question`")] public class Question : ObcykaniDb<Question> { private long id; private IList<Question> relatedQuestions; [PrimaryKey("`Id`")] private long Id { get { return this.id; } set { this.id = value; } } [HasAndBelongsToMany(typeof(Question), ColumnRef = "ChildId", ColumnKey = "ParentId", Table = "RelatedQuestion")] private IList<Question> RelatedQuestions { get { return this.relatedQuestions; } set { this.relatedQuestions = value; } } } How do I write a DetachedCriteria query to get all Questions that have at least 5 related questions (count) in the RelatedQuestions collection? For now this gives me strange results: DetachedCriteria dCriteria = DetachedCriteria.For<Question>() .CreateCriteria("RelatedQuestions") .SetProjection(Projections.Count("Id")) .Add(Restrictions.EqProperty(Projections.Id(), "alias.Id")); DetachedCriteria dc = DetachedCriteria.For<Question>("alias").Add(Subqueries.Le(5, dCriteria)); IList<Question> results = Question.FindAll(dc); Any ideas what I'm doing wrong?

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  • how to implement class with collection of string/object pairs so that an object can be returned with

    - by matti
    The values in a file are read as string and can be double, string or int or maybe even lists. An example file: DatabaseName=SomeBase Classes=11;12;13 IntValue=3 //this is required! DoubleValue=4.0 I was thinking something like this: public static T GetConfigValue(string cfgName) { // here we just return for example the value which could // be List[int] if parameter cfgName='Classes' // and LoadConfig was called with Dictionary containing // keyvaluepair 'Classes' / typeof(List[int]) } public static bool LoadConfig(Dictionary reqSettings, Dictionary optSettings) { foreach (KeyValuePair kvPair in reqSettings) { if (ReadCheckAndStore(kVPair, true)) return false; } foreach (KeyValuePair kvPair in reqSettings) { if (ReadCheckAndStore(kVPair, false)) return false; } return true; } private static bool ReadCheckAndStore(KeyValuePair kVPair, bool isRequired) { if (!ReadValue(kVPair.Key, out confValue) && isRequired) //req. IntValue !found return false; //here also have to test if read value is wanted type. //and if yes store to collection. } Thanks a lot & BR! -Matti PS. Additional issue is default values for optional settings. It's not elegant to pass them to LoadConfig in separate Dictionary, but that is an other issue...

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  • How to add validation errors in the validation collection asp.net mvc?

    - by johndoe
    Inside my controller's action I have the following code: public ActionResult GridAction(string id) { if (String.IsNullOrEmpty(id)) { // add errors to the errors collection and then return the view saying that you cannot select the dropdownlist value with the "Please Select" option } return View(); UPDATE: if (String.IsNullOrEmpty(id)) { // add error ModelState.AddModelError("GridActionDropDownList", "Please select an option"); return RedirectToAction("Orders"); } } UPDATE 2: Here is my updated code: @Html.DropDownListFor(x => x.SelectedGridAction, Model.GridActions,"Please Select") @Html.ValidationMessageFor(x => x.SelectedGridAction) The Model looks like the following: public class MyInvoicesViewModel { private List<SelectListItem> _gridActions; public int CurrentGridAction { get; set; } [Required(ErrorMessage = "Please select an option")] public string SelectedGridAction { get; set; } public List<SelectListItem> GridActions { get { _gridActions = new List<SelectListItem>(); _gridActions.Add(new SelectListItem() { Text = "Export to Excel", Value = "1"}); return _gridActions; } } } And here is my controller action: public ActionResult GridAction(string id) { if (String.IsNullOrEmpty(id)) { // add error ModelState.AddModelError("SelectedGridAction", "Please select an option"); return RedirectToAction("Orders"); } return View(); } Nothing happens! I am totally lost on this one! UPDATE 3: I am now using the following code but still the validation is not firing: public ActionResult GridAction(string id) { var myViewModel= new MyViewModel(); myViewModel.SelectedGridAction = id; // id is passed as null if (!ModelState.IsValid) { return View("Orders"); }

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  • HTML converted to jQuery collection not searchable with selectors?

    - by jimp
    I am trying to dynamically load a page using $.get(), parse the return with var $content = $(data), and ultimately use selectors to find only certain parts of the document. Only I cannot figure out why the jQuery collection returned from $(data) does not find some very basic selectors. I set up a jsFiddle to illustrate the problem using a very small string of HTML. <html> <head> <title>See Our Events</title> </head> <body><div id="content">testing</div></body> </html> I want to find the <title> node. var html = "<html>\n"+ "<head>\n"+ " <title>See Our Events</title>\n"+ "</head>\n"+ "<body><div id=\"content\">testing</div></body>\n"+ "</html>"; var $content = $(html); console.log($content.find('title').length); // Logs 0. Why? If I wrap a <div> around the HTML, then the selector works. (But if you look at the jsFiddle, other variations of the selector still do not work!) var html = "<div><html>\n"+ "<head>\n"+ " <title>See Our Events</title>\n"+ "</head>\n"+ "<body><div id=\"content\">testing</div></body>\n"+ "</html></div>"; var $content = $(html); console.log($content.find('title').length); // Logs 1. Please look at the jsFiddle, too. It contains more examples than my code here to keep the post easier to read. Why does my otherwise very basic selector not return the title node?

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  • Initial capacity of collection types, i.e. Dictionary, List

    - by Neil N
    Certain collection types in .Net have an optional "Initial Capacity" constructor param. i.e. Dictionary<string, string> something = new Dictionary<string,string>(20); List<string> anything = new List<string>(50); I can't seem to find what the default initial capacity is for these objects on MSDN. If I know I will only be storing 12 or so items in a dictionary, doesn't it make sense to set the initial capacity to something like 20? My reasoning is, assuming the capacity grows like it does for a StringBuiler, which doubles each time the capacity is hit, and each re-allocation is costly, why not pre-set the size to something you know will hold your data, with some extra room just in case? If the initial capacity is 100, and I know I will only need a dozen or so, it seems as though the rest of that allocated RAM is allocated for nothing. Please spare me the "premature optimization" speil for the O(n^n)th time. I know it won't make my apps any faster or save any meaningful amount of memory, this is mostly out of curiosity.

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  • best practices question: How to save a collection of images and a java object in a single file? File

    - by Richard
    Hi all, I am making a java program that has a collection of flash-card like objects. I store the objects in a jtree composed of defaultmutabletreenodes. Each node has a user object attached to it with has a few string/native data type parameters. However, i also want each of these objects to have an image (typical formats, jpg, png etc). I would like to be able to store all of this information, including the images and the tree data to the disk in a single file so the file can be transferred between users and the entire tree, including the images and parameters for each object, can be reconstructed. I had not approached a problem like this before so I was not sure what the best practices were. I found XLMEncoder (http://java.sun.com/j2se/1.4.2/docs/api/java/beans/XMLEncoder.html) to be a very effective way of storing my tree and the native data type information. However I couldn't figure out how to save the image data itself inside of the XML file, and I'm not sure it is possible since the data is binary (so restricted characters would be invalid). My next thought was to associate a hash string instead of an image within each user object, and then gzip together all of the images, with the hash strings as the names and the XMLencoded tree in the same compmressed file. That seemed really contrived though. Does anyone know a good approach for this type of issue? THanks! Thanks!

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  • Forms blank when rendering a partial when using a collection of objects. Help!

    - by dustmoo
    Alright, I know my title is a little obscure but it best describes the problem I am having. Essentially, I have a list of users, and want to be able to edit their information in-line using AJAX. Since the users are showing up in rows, I am using a partial to render the data and the forms (which will be hidden initially by the ajax), however, when the rows are rendered currently only the last item has it's form's fields populated. I suspect this has something to do with the fact that all the form fields have the same id's and it is confusing the DOM. But I don't know how to make sure the id's are unique. Here is a small example: In my view: <%= render :partial => 'shared/user', :collection => @users %> My partial (broke down to just the form) note that I am using the local variable "user" <% form_for user, :html => {:multipart => true} do |f| -%> <%= f.label :name, "Name*" %> <%= f.text_field :title, :class => "input" %> <%= f.label :Address, "Address" %> <%= f.text_field :address, :class => "input" %> <%= f.label :description, "Description*" %> <%= f.text_area :description, :class => "input" %> <% end -%> When the html is rendered each form has a unique id (for the id of the user) but the elements themselves all have the same id, and only the last user form is actually getting populated with values. Does anyone have any ideas?? :) Thanks in advance!

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  • What's a good way to organize a large collection of personal scripts using git?

    - by spooky note
    I have a large collection of my personal scripts that I would like to start versioning using Git. I've previously organized my code as follows: ~/code/python/projects/ (for large stuff, each project contained in an individual folder) ~/code/python/scripts/ (single file scripts all contained in this directory) ~/code/python/sandbox/ (my testing area) ~/code/python/docs/ (downloaded documentation) ~/code/java/... (as above) Now i'm going to start versioning my code using git, so that I can have history and backup all my code to a remote server. I know if I were using SVN I would just keep my entire "~/code/" directory in a large repository, but I understand this is not a good way to do things with Git. Most info I've seen online suggests keeping all my project folders in a single place (as in, no separate directories for python or java) with each project containing it's own git repository, and simply having a "snippets" directory containing all single-file scripts/experiments that can be converted into projects at a later date. But I'm not sure how I feel about consolidating all of my code directories into one area. Is there a good way to keep my separate code directories intact, or is it not worth the effort? Maybe I'm just attached to the separate code directories because I've never known anything else... Also (as a side note), I'd like to quickly be able to see a chronological history of all my projects and scripts. So I can see which projects I created most recently. I used to do this by keeping a number at the beginning of all my projects, 002project, 003project. Is there automatic or easy way to do this in git without having to add a number to all of the project names? I'm open to any practical or philosophical code organizing advice you have. Thanks!!!

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  • Magento, NGINX, PHP-FPM, APC, MEMCACHED, 16gb Ram CentOS, Spiking PHP-FPM to 100% CPU

    - by Terry Dunford
    I have been trying to resolve my issue of spiking cpu caused by php-fpm processes. I've reduced the php-fpm config settings to: pm = ondemand pm.max_children = 12 pm.start_servers = 2 pm.min_spare_servers = 2 pm.max_spare_servers = 10 pm.max_requests = 500 php_admin_value[memory_limit] = 128M Problem still exists. I'm running a Joomla main site (which is having no problems) and a Magento store in a sub-directory. My server is a Linux CentOS, running NGINX, APC, Memcached, Full Page Cache and php-fpm. My server has 8 cores and 16gb dedicated ram. My host has shut down my server several times the past week because my php-fpm processes are consuming the entire network. A lot of the individual php-fpm processes are getting over 50% cpu. I've hired several "professionals" and none of them was able to help me, so now broke and stumped, I'm turning to you guys for help. So any suggestions would be greatly appreciated. I turned on slow php logs and here are some of the latest results: [01-Apr-2012 14:26:12] [pool magento] pid 21537 script_filename = /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/index.php [0x0000000011a394f8] _renderStraightjoin() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/lib/Varien/Db/Select.php:397 [0x0000000011a39158] _renderStraightjoin() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/lib/Zend/Db/Select.php:705 [0x0000000011a38f30] assemble() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/lib/Zend/Db/Select.php:1343 [0x00007fffbb6d6e50] __toString() unknown:0 [0x0000000011a38630] _prepareQuery() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/lib/Varien/Db/Adapter/Pdo/Mysql.php:409 [0x0000000011a38270] _prepareQuery() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/lib/Varien/Db/Adapter/Pdo/Mysql.php:388 [0x0000000011a38008] query() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/lib/Zend/Db/Adapter/Abstract.php:734 [0x0000000011a375c8] fetchAll() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/app/code/core/Mage/Catalog/Model/Resource/Product/Type/Configurable/Attribute/Collection.php:196 [0x0000000011a370e0] _loadLabels() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/app/code/core/Mage/Catalog/Model/Resource/Product/Type/Configurable/Attribute/Collection.php:129 [0x0000000011a369a0] _afterLoad() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/lib/Varien/Data/Collection/Db.php:536 [0x0000000011a364a8] load() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/app/code/core/Mage/Catalog/Model/Product/Type/Configurable.php:253 [0x0000000011a35968] getConfigurableAttributes() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/app/code/core/Mage/Catalog/Model/Product/Type/Configurable.php:330 [0x0000000011a35590] getUsedProducts() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/app/code/core/Mage/Catalog/Model/Product/Type/Configurable.php:458 [0x0000000011a35410] isSalable() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/app/code/core/Mage/Catalog/Model/Product.php:1264 [0x0000000011a35098] isAvailable() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/app/code/core/Mage/Catalog/Model/Product.php:1244 [0x0000000011a34fa8] isSalable() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/app/code/core/Mage/Catalog/Model/Product.php:1308 [0x0000000011a33998] isSaleable() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/app/design/frontend/moxy/default/template/rokmagemodules/rokmage-categoryview/rokmage-categoryview.phtml:122 [0x0000000011a331f0] +++ dump failed [01-Apr-2012 14:26:44] [pool magento] pid 21531 script_filename = /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/index.php [0x0000000011a37768] _loadPrices() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/app/code/core/Mage/Catalog/Model/Resource/Product/Type/Configurable/Attribute/Collection.php:251 [0x0000000011a37280] _loadPrices() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/app/code/core/Mage/Catalog/Model/Resource/Product/Type/Configurable/Attribute/Collection.php:132 [0x0000000011a36b40] _afterLoad() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/lib/Varien/Data/Collection/Db.php:536 [0x0000000011a36648] load() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/app/code/core/Mage/Catalog/Model/Product/Type/Configurable.php:253 [0x0000000011a35b08] getConfigurableAttributes() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/app/code/core/Mage/Catalog/Model/Product/Type/Configurable.php:330 [0x0000000011a35730] getUsedProducts() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/app/code/core/Mage/Catalog/Model/Product/Type/Configurable.php:458 [0x0000000011a355b0] isSalable() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/app/code/core/Mage/Catalog/Model/Product.php:1264 [0x0000000011a35238] isAvailable() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/app/code/core/Mage/Catalog/Model/Product.php:1244 [0x0000000011a35148] isSalable() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/app/code/core/Mage/Catalog/Model/Product.php:1308 [0x0000000011a33b38] isSaleable() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/app/design/frontend/moxy/default/template/rokmagemodules/rokmage-categoryview/rokmage-categoryview.phtml:122 [0x0000000011a33390] +++ dump failed [01-Apr-2012 14:27:01] [pool magento] pid 21528 script_filename = /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/index.php [0x0000000011ff67a8] execute() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/lib/Zend/Db/Statement/Pdo.php:228 [0x0000000011ff6518] _execute() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/lib/Varien/Db/Statement/Pdo/Mysql.php:110 [0x0000000011ff5e90] _execute() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/lib/Zend/Db/Statement.php:300 [0x0000000011ff5a20] execute() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/lib/Zend/Db/Adapter/Abstract.php:479 [0x0000000011ff5438] query() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/lib/Zend/Db/Adapter/Pdo/Abstract.php:238 [0x0000000011ff5078] query() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/lib/Varien/Db/Adapter/Pdo/Mysql.php:389 [0x0000000011ff4e98] query() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/lib/Zend/Db/Adapter/Abstract.php:825 [0x0000000011ff4948] fetchOne() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/app/code/core/Mage/Catalog/Model/Resource/Category/Flat.php:1161 [0x0000000011ff4678] getProductCount() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/app/code/core/Mage/Catalog/Model/Category.php:801 [0x0000000011ff33e0] getProductCount() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/app/code/local/Extendware/EWLayeredNav/Model/Library/Plugin/Catalog/Layer/Filter/Category.php:54 [0x0000000011ff2da0] _initItemsData() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/app/code/local/Extendware/EWLayeredNav/Model/Library/Plugin/Catalog/Layer/Filter/Category.php:23 [0x0000000011ff2818] _getItemsData() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/app/code/local/Extendware/EWLayeredNav/Model/Library/Plugin/Catalog/Layer/Filter/Category.php:119 [0x0000000011ff26b0] _initItems() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/app/code/core/Mage/Catalog/Model/Layer/Filter/Abstract.php:120 [0x0000000011ff2598] getItems() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/app/code/core/Mage/Catalog/Model/Layer/Filter/Abstract.php:109 [0x0000000011ff2480] getItemsCount() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/app/code/core/Mage/Catalog/Block/Layer/Filter/Abstract.php:126 [0x0000000011ff22b8] getItemsCount() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/var/cache/extendware/ewcore/overrides/Mage/Catalog/Block/Layer/View/67dcc5dfa9c44bd3a205b75a08193105.php:218 [0x0000000011ff2088] canShowOptions() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/var/cache/extendware/ewcore/overrides/Mage/Catalog/Block/Layer/View/67dcc5dfa9c44bd3a205b75a08193105.php:233 [0x0000000011ff14f8] canShowBlock() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/app/design/frontend/moxy/default/template/extendware/ewlayerednav/catalog/layer/view.phtml:6 [0x0000000011ff0d50] +++ dump failed [01-Apr-2012 14:27:04] [pool magento] pid 21529 script_filename = /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/index.php [0x0000000012468ff8] execute() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/lib/Zend/Db/Statement/Pdo.php:228 [0x0000000012468d68] _execute() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/lib/Varien/Db/Statement/Pdo/Mysql.php:110 [0x00000000124686e0] _execute() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/lib/Zend/Db/Statement.php:300 [0x0000000012468270] execute() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/lib/Zend/Db/Adapter/Abstract.php:479 [0x0000000012467c88] query() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/lib/Zend/Db/Adapter/Pdo/Abstract.php:238 [0x00000000124678c8] query() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/lib/Varien/Db/Adapter/Pdo/Mysql.php:389 [0x0000000012467660] query() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/lib/Zend/Db/Adapter/Abstract.php:734 [0x0000000012467248] fetchAll() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/lib/Varien/Data/Collection/Db.php:687 [0x00000000124668f0] _fetchAll() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/app/code/core/Mage/Eav/Model/Entity/Collection/Abstract.php:1045 [0x0000000012466288] _loadEntities() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/app/code/core/Mage/Eav/Model/Entity/Collection/Abstract.php:869 [0x0000000012465fb0] load() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/app/code/core/Mage/Review/Model/Observer.php:78 [0x0000000012465d10] catalogBlockProductCollectionBeforeToHtml() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/app/code/core/Mage/Core/Model/App.php:1303 [0x0000000012464c28] _callObserverMethod() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/app/code/core/Mage/Core/Model/App.php:1278 [0x00000000124649e0] dispatchEvent() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/app/Mage.php:416 [0x0000000012464290] dispatchEvent() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/app/code/core/Mage/Catalog/Block/Product/List.php:163 [0x0000000012463760] _beforeToHtml() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/var/ait_rewrite/6bfe16ca572eea47db567910902c6209.php:864 [0x00000000124633b0] toHtml() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/var/ait_rewrite/6bfe16ca572eea47db567910902c6209.php:584 [0x0000000012462e30] _getChildHtml() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/var/ait_rewrite/6bfe16ca572eea47db567910902c6209.php:528 [0x0000000012462d38] getChildHtml() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/var/cache/extendware/ewcore/overrides/Mage/Catalog/Block/Category/View/6362e7526f5dcb27e7f8b0b414b59004.php:85 [0x00000000124629f0] getProductListHtml() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/app/code/local/Extendware/EWLayeredNav/Block/Override/Mage/Catalog/Category/View.php:20 [01-Apr-2012 14:27:55] [pool magento] pid 21536 script_filename = /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/index.php [0x0000000011a35010] execute() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/lib/Zend/Db/Statement/Pdo.php:228 [0x0000000011a34d80] _execute() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/lib/Varien/Db/Statement/Pdo/Mysql.php:110 [0x0000000011a346f8] _execute() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/lib/Zend/Db/Statement.php:300 [0x0000000011a34288] execute() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/lib/Zend/Db/Adapter/Abstract.php:479 [0x0000000011a33ca0] query() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/lib/Zend/Db/Adapter/Pdo/Abstract.php:238 [0x0000000011a338e0] query() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/lib/Varien/Db/Adapter/Pdo/Mysql.php:389 [0x0000000011a33700] query() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/lib/Zend/Db/Adapter/Abstract.php:825 [0x0000000011a33368] fetchOne() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/app/code/core/Mage/Eav/Model/Resource/Entity/Type.php:71 [0x0000000011a33238] getAdditionalAttributeTable() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/app/code/core/Mage/Eav/Model/Resource/Entity/Attribute.php:483 [0x0000000011a32be8] getAdditionalAttributeTable() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/app/code/core/Mage/Eav/Model/Resource/Entity/Attribute.php:500 [0x0000000011a32860] _afterLoad() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/app/code/core/Mage/Eav/Model/Resource/Entity/Attribute.php:108 [0x0000000011a32330] loadByCode() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/app/code/core/Mage/Eav/Model/Entity/Attribute/Abstract.php:118 [0x0000000011a31350] loadByCode() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/app/code/core/Mage/Eav/Model/Config.php:423 [0x0000000011a30ce8] getAttribute() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/app/code/core/Mage/Catalog/Helper/Output.php:156 [0x0000000011a30208] categoryAttribute() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/app/design/frontend/base/default/template/catalog/category/view.phtml:47 [0x0000000011a2fa60] +++ dump failed [01-Apr-2012 14:27:56] [pool magento] pid 21530 script_filename = /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/index.php [0x0000000011a35b10] updateParamDefaults() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/var/ait_rewrite/78778b0d1ad4bf93e846365bd2fbf33f.php:276 [0x0000000011a35750] updateParamDefaults() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/var/ait_rewrite/78778b0d1ad4bf93e846365bd2fbf33f.php:326 [0x0000000011a351f0] getSkinBaseUrl() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/var/ait_rewrite/78778b0d1ad4bf93e846365bd2fbf33f.php:482 [0x0000000011a350a8] getSkinUrl() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/var/ait_rewrite/6bfe16ca572eea47db567910902c6209.php:981 [0x0000000011a32468] getSkinUrl() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/app/code/local/Extendware/EWMinify/Block/Override/Mage/Page/Html/Head.php:126 [0x0000000011a30ca8] getCssJsHtml() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/app/code/local/Extendware/EWCore/Block/Override/Mage/Page/Html/Head.php:55 [0x0000000011a30978] getCssJsHtml() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/app/code/local/MageWorx/SeoSuite/Block/Page/Html/Head.php:41 [0x0000000011a2fd10] getCssJsHtml() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/app/design/frontend/moxy/default/template/rokmagemodules/rokmage-modalheader/rokmage-head.phtml:26 [0x0000000011a2f568] +++ dump failed [01-Apr-2012 14:28:28] [pool magento] pid 21527 script_filename = /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/index.php [0x0000000010c7bba0] execute() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/lib/Zend/Db/Statement/Pdo.php:228 [0x0000000010c7b910] _execute() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/lib/Varien/Db/Statement/Pdo/Mysql.php:110 [0x0000000010c7b288] _execute() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/lib/Zend/Db/Statement.php:300 [0x0000000010c7ae18] execute() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/lib/Zend/Db/Adapter/Abstract.php:479 [0x0000000010c7a830] query() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/lib/Zend/Db/Adapter/Pdo/Abstract.php:238 [0x0000000010c7a470] query() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/lib/Varien/Db/Adapter/Pdo/Mysql.php:389 [0x0000000010c7a168] query() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/lib/Zend/Db/Adapter/Abstract.php:808 [0x0000000010c79558] fetchPairs() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/app/code/core/Mage/Catalog/Model/Resource/Product/Collection.php:840 [0x0000000010c79240] addCountToCategories() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/app/code/community/Mage/Catalog/Block/Navigation.php:133 [0x0000000010c71d48] getCurrentChildCategories() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/app/design/frontend/base/default/template/rokmagemodules/rokmage-magemenus/rokmage-magemenu-left.phtml:139 [0x0000000010c715a0] +++ dump failed [01-Apr-2012 14:28:28] [pool magento] pid 21577 script_filename = /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/index.php [0x0000000011a3a8d8] execute() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/lib/Zend/Db/Statement/Pdo.php:228 [0x0000000011a3a648] _execute() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/lib/Varien/Db/Statement/Pdo/Mysql.php:110 [0x0000000011a39fc0] _execute() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/lib/Zend/Db/Statement.php:300 [0x0000000011a39b50] execute() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/lib/Zend/Db/Adapter/Abstract.php:479 [0x0000000011a39568] query() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/lib/Zend/Db/Adapter/Pdo/Abstract.php:238 [0x0000000011a391a8] query() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/lib/Varien/Db/Adapter/Pdo/Mysql.php:389 [0x0000000011a38f40] query() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/lib/Zend/Db/Adapter/Abstract.php:734 [0x0000000011a37cc0] fetchAll() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/app/code/core/Mage/Catalog/Model/Resource/Category/Flat.php:276 [0x0000000011a37b20] _loadNodes() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/app/code/core/Mage/Catalog/Model/Resource/Category/Flat.php:1229 [0x0000000011a379a0] getChildrenCategories() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/app/code/core/Mage/Catalog/Model/Category.php:841 [0x0000000011a37690] getChildrenCategories() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/app/code/community/Mage/Catalog/Block/Navigation.php:130 [0x0000000011a30198] getCurrentChildCategories() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/app/design/frontend/base/default/template/rokmagemodules/rokmage-magemenus/rokmage-magemenu-left.phtml:139 [0x0000000011a2f9f0] +++ dump failed [01-Apr-2012 14:28:48] [pool magento] pid 21629 script_filename = /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/index.php [0x00002ac987e2cb48] _loadPrices() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/app/code/core/Mage/Catalog/Model/Resource/Product/Type/Configurable/Attribute/Collection.php:252 [0x00002ac987e2c660] _loadPrices() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/app/code/core/Mage/Catalog/Model/Resource/Product/Type/Configurable/Attribute/Collection.php:132 [0x00002ac987e2bf20] _afterLoad() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/lib/Varien/Data/Collection/Db.php:536 [0x00002ac987e2ba28] load() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/app/code/core/Mage/Catalog/Model/Product/Type/Configurable.php:253 [0x00002ac987e2aee8] getConfigurableAttributes() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/app/code/core/Mage/Catalog/Model/Product/Type/Configurable.php:330 [0x00002ac987e2ab10] getUsedProducts() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/app/code/core/Mage/Catalog/Model/Product/Type/Configurable.php:458 [0x00002ac987e2a990] isSalable() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/app/code/core/Mage/Catalog/Model/Product.php:1264 [0x00002ac987e2a618] isAvailable() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/app/code/core/Mage/Catalog/Model/Product.php:1244 [0x00002ac987e2a528] isSalable() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/app/code/core/Mage/Catalog/Model/Product.php:1308 [0x00002ac987e28f18] isSaleable() /home/flyfish/www/flyshop/app/design/frontend/moxy/default/template/rokmagemodules/rokmage-categoryview/rokmage-categoryview.phtml:122 [0x00002ac987e28770] +++ dump failed ___________________________________________ A snippet of the Latest php-fpm error log: [01-Apr-2012 14:26:12] WARNING: [pool magento] child 21537, script '/home/flyfish/www/flyshop/index.php' (request: "GET /flyshop/index.php") executing too slow (5.265105 sec), logging [01-Apr-2012 14:26:12] ERROR: failed to ptrace(PEEKDATA) pid 21537: Input/output error (5) [01-Apr-2012 14:26:44] WARNING: [pool magento] child 21531, script '/home/flyfish/www/flyshop/index.php' (request: "GET /flyshop/index.php") executing too slow (5.268434 sec), logging [01-Apr-2012 14:26:44] ERROR: failed to ptrace(PEEKDATA) pid 21531: Input/output error (5) [01-Apr-2012 14:27:01] WARNING: [pool magento] child 21528, script '/home/flyfish/www/flyshop/index.php' (request: "GET /flyshop/index.php") executing too slow (6.656633 sec), logging [01-Apr-2012 14:27:01] ERROR: failed to ptrace(PEEKDATA) pid 21528: Input/output error (5) [01-Apr-2012 14:27:04] WARNING: [pool magento] child 21529, script '/home/flyfish/www/flyshop/index.php' (request: "GET /flyshop/index.php") executing too slow (5.211136 sec), logging [01-Apr-2012 14:27:55] WARNING: [pool magento] child 21536, script '/home/flyfish/www/flyshop/index.php' (request: "GET /flyshop/index.php") executing too slow (5.207001 sec), logging [01-Apr-2012 14:27:55] ERROR: failed to ptrace(PEEKDATA) pid 21536: Input/output error (5) [01-Apr-2012 14:27:56] WARNING: [pool magento] child 21530, script '/home/flyfish/www/flyshop/index.php' (request: "GET /flyshop/index.php") executing too slow (5.503186 sec), logging [01-Apr-2012 14:27:56] ERROR: failed to ptrace(PEEKDATA) pid 21530: Input/output error (5) [01-Apr-2012 14:28:28] WARNING: [pool magento] child 21577, script '/home/flyfish/www/flyshop/index.php' (request: "GET /flyshop/index.php") executing too slow (5.722625 sec), logging [01-Apr-2012 14:28:28] WARNING: [pool magento] child 21527, script '/home/flyfish/www/flyshop/index.php' (request: "GET /flyshop/index.php") executing too slow (5.122326 sec), logging [01-Apr-2012 14:28:28] ERROR: failed to ptrace(PEEKDATA) pid 21527: Input/output error (5) [01-Apr-2012 14:28:28] ERROR: failed to ptrace(PEEKDATA) pid 21577: Input/output error (5) [01-Apr-2012 14:28:48] WARNING: [pool magento] child 21629, script '/home/flyfish/www/flyshop/index.php' (request: "GET /flyshop/index.php") executing too slow (5.446961 sec), logging [01-Apr-2012 14:28:48] ERROR: failed to ptrace(PEEKDATA) pid 21629: Input/output error (5) _____________________________________________ I also noticed that the server is not using much memory: Mem: 16777216k total, 1204040k used, 15573176k free My.conf settings: query_cache_size = 128M innodb_buffer_pool_size = 512M open-files-limit = 8192 table_cache=4096 I just noticed that someone changed my innodb_buffer_pool_size to 512M. Shouldn't this be set to 80% of available ram? So I have 16gb ram so it should be set at 12G; however, I set it at 10G. What do you think? I made that change and restart everything. Php-fpm is still spiking cpu. Here is just 1 php-fpm process: 23942 user 17 0 507m 99m 27m R 90.9%CPU 0.6 0:03.46 php-fpm I'm sure there may be more information you will need to help, so just let me know what you guys need to help me figure this out. Thank you.

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  • I have a collection of dead consumer grade routers, should I buy a real one?

    - by Ex Networking Guy
    Am I crazy for considering purchasing a Cisco 2621 for the house? I am familiar enough with IOS to set up a simple gateway router, I don't really need the experience. At this point, I'm a developer so my days of crawling through CO's and under desks are long past me. But I am really sick of crappy consumer grade networking gear. Maybe I have lousy luck and this stack of WRTG54s is just because I have lousy power, or whatever.

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  • Requiring multithreading/concurrency for implementation of scripting language

    - by Ricky Stewart
    Here's the deal: I'm looking at designing my own scripting/interpreted language for fun. I'm only in the planning stages right now; I want to make sure I have a very strong hold on exactly how I will implement everything before I start coding. What I'm currently struggling with is concurrency. It seems to me like an easy way to avoid the unpredictable performance that comes with garbage collection would be to put the garbage collector in its own thread, and have it run concurrently with the interpreter itself. (To be clear, I don't plan to allow the scripts to be multithreaded themselves; I would simply put a garbage collector to work in a different thread than the interpreter.) This doesn't seem to be a common strategy for many popular scripting languages, probably for portability reasons; I would probably write the interpreter in the UNIX/POSIX threading framework initially and then port it to other platforms (Windows, etc.) if need be. Does anyone have any thoughts in this issue? Would whatever gains I receive by exploiting concurrency be nullified by the portability issues that will inevitably arise? (On that note, am I really correct in my assumption that I would experience great performance gains with a concurrent garbage collector?) Should I move forward with this strategy or step away from it?

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  • What is the most elegant way to implement a business rule relating to a child collection in LINQ?

    - by AaronSieb
    I have two tables in my database: Wiki WikiId ... WikiUser WikiUserId (PK) WikiId UserId IsOwner ... These tables have a one (Wiki) to Many (WikiUser) relationship. How would I implement the following business rule in my LINQ entity classes: "A Wiki must have exactly one owner?" I've tried updating the tables as follows: Wiki WikiId (PK) OwnerId (FK to WikiUser) ... WikiUser WikiUserId (PK) WikiId UserId ... This enforces the constraint, but if I remove the owner's WikiUser record from the Wiki's WikiUser collection, I recieve an ugly SqlException. This seems like it would be difficult to catch and handle in the UI. Is there a way to perform this check before the SqlException is generated? A better way to structure my database? A way to catch and translate the SqlException to something more useful? Edit: I would prefer to keep the validation rules within the LINQ entity classes if possible. Edit 2: Some more details about my specific situation. In my application, the user should be able to remove users from the Wiki. They should be able to remove any user, except the user who is currently flagged as the "owner" of the Wiki (a Wiki must have exactly one owner at all times). In my control logic, I'd like to use something like this: wiki.WikiUsers.Remove(wikiUser); mRepository.Save(); And have any broken rules transferred to the UI layer. What I DON'T want to have to do is this: if(wikiUser.WikiUserId != wiki.OwnerId) { wiki.WikiUsers.Remove(wikiUser); mRepository.Save(); } else { //Handle errors. } I also don't particularly want to move the code to my repository (because there is nothing to indicate not to use the native Remove functions), so I also DON'T want code like this: mRepository.RemoveWikiUser(wiki, wikiUser) mRepository.Save(); This WOULD be acceptable: try { wiki.WikiUsers.Remove(wikiUser); mRepository.Save(); } catch(ValidationException ve) { //Display ve.Message } But this catches too many errors: try { wiki.WikiUsers.Remove(wikiUser); mRepository.Save(); } catch(SqlException se) { //Display se.Message } I would also PREFER NOT to explicitly call a business rule check (although it may become necessary): wiki.WIkiUsers.Remove(wikiUser); if(wiki.CheckRules()) { mRepository.Save(); } else { //Display broken rules }

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  • How can I iterate over a collection of objects returned by a LINQ-to-XML query?

    - by billmaya
    I've got this XML: <BillingLog> <BillingItem> <date-and-time>2003-11-04</date-and-time> <application-name>Billing Service</application-name> <severity>Warning</severity> <process-id>123</process-id> <description>Timed out on a connection</description> <detail>Timed out after three retries.</detail> </BillingItem> <BillingItem> <date-and-time>2010-05-15</date-and-time> <application-name>Callback Service</application-name> <severity>Error</severity> <process-id>456</process-id> <description>Unable to process callback</description> <detail>Reconciliation timed out after two retries.</detail> </BillingItem> </BillingLog> That I want to project using LINQ-to-XML into a collection of BillingItem objects contained in a single BillingLog object. public class BillingLog { public IEnumerable<BillingItem> items { get; set; } } public class BillingItem { public string Date { get; set; } public string ApplicationName { get; set; } public string Severity { get; set; } public int ProcessId { get; set; } public string Description { get; set; } public string Detail { get; set;} } This is the LINQ query that I'm using to project the XML (which is contained in the string variable source). XDocument xdoc = XDocument.Parse(source); var log = from i in xdoc.Elements("BillingLog") select new BillingLog { items = from j in i.Descendants("BillingItem") select new BillingItem { Date = (string)j.Element("date-and-time"), ApplicationName = (string)j.Element("application-name"), Severity = (string)j.Element("severity"), ProcessId = (int)j.Element("process-id"), Description = (string)j.Element("description"), Detail = (string)j.Element("detail") } }; When I try and iterate over the objects in log using foreach. foreach (BillingItem item in log) { Console.WriteLine ("{0} | {1} | {2} | {3} | {4} | {5}", item.Date, item.ApplicationName, item.Severity, item.ProcessId.ToString(), item.Description, item.Detail); } I get the following error message from LINQPad. Cannot convert type 'UserQuery.BillingLog' to 'UserQuery.BillingItem' Thanks in advance.

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  • Using a WPF ListView as a DataGrid

    - by psheriff
    Many people like to view data in a grid format of rows and columns. WPF did not come with a data grid control that automatically creates rows and columns for you based on the object you pass it. However, the WPF Toolkit can be downloaded from CodePlex.com that does contain a DataGrid control. This DataGrid gives you the ability to pass it a DataTable or a Collection class and it will automatically figure out the columns or properties and create all the columns for you and display the data.The DataGrid control also supports editing and many other features that you might not always need. This means that the DataGrid does take a little more time to render the data. If you want to just display data (see Figure 1) in a grid format, then a ListView works quite well for this task. Of course, you will need to create the columns for the ListView, but with just a little generic code, you can create the columns on the fly just like the WPF Toolkit’s DataGrid. Figure 1: A List of Data using a ListView A Simple ListView ControlThe XAML below is what you would use to create the ListView shown in Figure 1. However, the problem with using XAML is you have to pre-define the columns. You cannot re-use this ListView except for “Product” data. <ListView x:Name="lstData"          ItemsSource="{Binding}">  <ListView.View>    <GridView>      <GridViewColumn Header="Product ID"                      Width="Auto"               DisplayMemberBinding="{Binding Path=ProductId}" />      <GridViewColumn Header="Product Name"                      Width="Auto"               DisplayMemberBinding="{Binding Path=ProductName}" />      <GridViewColumn Header="Price"                      Width="Auto"               DisplayMemberBinding="{Binding Path=Price}" />    </GridView>  </ListView.View></ListView> So, instead of creating the GridViewColumn’s in XAML, let’s learn to create them in code to create any amount of columns in a ListView. Create GridViewColumn’s From Data TableTo display multiple columns in a ListView control you need to set its View property to a GridView collection object. You add GridViewColumn objects to the GridView collection and assign the GridView to the View property. Each GridViewColumn object needs to be bound to a column or property name of the object that the ListView will be bound to. An ADO.NET DataTable object contains a collection of columns, and these columns have a ColumnName property which you use to bind to the GridViewColumn objects. Listing 1 shows a sample of reading and XML file into a DataSet object. After reading the data a GridView object is created. You can then loop through the DataTable columns collection and create a GridViewColumn object for each column in the DataTable. Notice the DisplayMemberBinding property is set to a new Binding to the ColumnName in the DataTable. C#private void FirstSample(){  // Read the data  DataSet ds = new DataSet();  ds.ReadXml(GetCurrentDirectory() + @"\Xml\Product.xml");    // Create the GridView  GridView gv = new GridView();   // Create the GridView Columns  foreach (DataColumn item in ds.Tables[0].Columns)  {    GridViewColumn gvc = new GridViewColumn();    gvc.DisplayMemberBinding = new Binding(item.ColumnName);    gvc.Header = item.ColumnName;    gvc.Width = Double.NaN;    gv.Columns.Add(gvc);  }   // Setup the GridView Columns  lstData.View = gv;  // Display the Data  lstData.DataContext = ds.Tables[0];} VB.NETPrivate Sub FirstSample()  ' Read the data  Dim ds As New DataSet()  ds.ReadXml(GetCurrentDirectory() & "\Xml\Product.xml")   ' Create the GridView  Dim gv As New GridView()   ' Create the GridView Columns  For Each item As DataColumn In ds.Tables(0).Columns    Dim gvc As New GridViewColumn()    gvc.DisplayMemberBinding = New Binding(item.ColumnName)    gvc.Header = item.ColumnName    gvc.Width = [Double].NaN    gv.Columns.Add(gvc)  Next   ' Setup the GridView Columns  lstData.View = gv  ' Display the Data  lstData.DataContext = ds.Tables(0)End SubListing 1: Loop through the DataTable columns collection to create GridViewColumn objects A Generic Method for Creating a GridViewInstead of having to write the code shown in Listing 1 for each ListView you wish to create, you can create a generic method that given any DataTable will return a GridView column collection. Listing 2 shows how you can simplify the code in Listing 1 by setting up a class called WPFListViewCommon and create a method called CreateGridViewColumns that returns your GridView. C#private void DataTableSample(){  // Read the data  DataSet ds = new DataSet();  ds.ReadXml(GetCurrentDirectory() + @"\Xml\Product.xml");   // Setup the GridView Columns  lstData.View =      WPFListViewCommon.CreateGridViewColumns(ds.Tables[0]);  lstData.DataContext = ds.Tables[0];} VB.NETPrivate Sub DataTableSample()  ' Read the data  Dim ds As New DataSet()  ds.ReadXml(GetCurrentDirectory() & "\Xml\Product.xml")   ' Setup the GridView Columns  lstData.View = _      WPFListViewCommon.CreateGridViewColumns(ds.Tables(0))  lstData.DataContext = ds.Tables(0)End SubListing 2: Call a generic method to create GridViewColumns. The CreateGridViewColumns MethodThe CreateGridViewColumns method will take a DataTable as a parameter and create a GridView object with a GridViewColumn object in its collection for each column in your DataTable. C#public static GridView CreateGridViewColumns(DataTable dt){  // Create the GridView  GridView gv = new GridView();  gv.AllowsColumnReorder = true;   // Create the GridView Columns  foreach (DataColumn item in dt.Columns)  {    GridViewColumn gvc = new GridViewColumn();    gvc.DisplayMemberBinding = new Binding(item.ColumnName);    gvc.Header = item.ColumnName;    gvc.Width = Double.NaN;    gv.Columns.Add(gvc);  }   return gv;} VB.NETPublic Shared Function CreateGridViewColumns _  (ByVal dt As DataTable) As GridView  ' Create the GridView  Dim gv As New GridView()  gv.AllowsColumnReorder = True   ' Create the GridView Columns  For Each item As DataColumn In dt.Columns    Dim gvc As New GridViewColumn()    gvc.DisplayMemberBinding = New Binding(item.ColumnName)    gvc.Header = item.ColumnName    gvc.Width = [Double].NaN    gv.Columns.Add(gvc)  Next   Return gvEnd FunctionListing 3: The CreateGridViewColumns method takes a DataTable and creates GridViewColumn objects in a GridView. By separating this method out into a class you can call this method anytime you want to create a ListView with a collection of columns from a DataTable. SummaryIn this blog you learned how to create a ListView that acts like a DataGrid. You are able to use a DataTable as both the source of the data, and for creating the columns for the ListView. In the next blog entry you will learn how to use the same technique, but for Collection classes. NOTE: You can download the complete sample code (in both VB and C#) at my website. http://www.pdsa.com/downloads. Choose Tips & Tricks, then "WPF ListView as a DataGrid" from the drop-down. Good Luck with your Coding,Paul Sheriff ** SPECIAL OFFER FOR MY BLOG READERS **Visit http://www.pdsa.com/Event/Blog for a free eBook on "Fundamentals of N-Tier".

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  • Parallelism in .NET – Part 9, Configuration in PLINQ and TPL

    - by Reed
    Parallel LINQ and the Task Parallel Library contain many options for configuration.  Although the default configuration options are often ideal, there are times when customizing the behavior is desirable.  Both frameworks provide full configuration support. When working with Data Parallelism, there is one primary configuration option we often need to control – the number of threads we want the system to use when parallelizing our routine.  By default, PLINQ and the TPL both use the ThreadPool to schedule tasks.  Given the major improvements in the ThreadPool in CLR 4, this default behavior is often ideal.  However, there are times that the default behavior is not appropriate.  For example, if you are working on multiple threads simultaneously, and want to schedule parallel operations from within both threads, you might want to consider restricting each parallel operation to using a subset of the processing cores of the system.  Not doing this might over-parallelize your routine, which leads to inefficiencies from having too many context switches. In the Task Parallel Library, configuration is handled via the ParallelOptions class.  All of the methods of the Parallel class have an overload which accepts a ParallelOptions argument. We configure the Parallel class by setting the ParallelOptions.MaxDegreeOfParallelism property.  For example, let’s revisit one of the simple data parallel examples from Part 2: Parallel.For(0, pixelData.GetUpperBound(0), row => { for (int col=0; col < pixelData.GetUpperBound(1); ++col) { pixelData[row, col] = AdjustContrast(pixelData[row, col], minPixel, maxPixel); } }); .csharpcode, .csharpcode pre { font-size: small; color: black; font-family: consolas, "Courier New", courier, monospace; background-color: #ffffff; /*white-space: pre;*/ } .csharpcode pre { margin: 0em; } .csharpcode .rem { color: #008000; } .csharpcode .kwrd { color: #0000ff; } .csharpcode .str { color: #006080; } .csharpcode .op { color: #0000c0; } .csharpcode .preproc { color: #cc6633; } .csharpcode .asp { background-color: #ffff00; } .csharpcode .html { color: #800000; } .csharpcode .attr { color: #ff0000; } .csharpcode .alt { background-color: #f4f4f4; width: 100%; margin: 0em; } .csharpcode .lnum { color: #606060; } Here, we’re looping through an image, and calling a method on each pixel in the image.  If this was being done on a separate thread, and we knew another thread within our system was going to be doing a similar operation, we likely would want to restrict this to using half of the cores on the system.  This could be accomplished easily by doing: var options = new ParallelOptions(); options.MaxDegreeOfParallelism = Math.Max(Environment.ProcessorCount / 2, 1); Parallel.For(0, pixelData.GetUpperBound(0), options, row => { for (int col=0; col < pixelData.GetUpperBound(1); ++col) { pixelData[row, col] = AdjustContrast(pixelData[row, col], minPixel, maxPixel); } }); Now, we’re restricting this routine to using no more than half the cores in our system.  Note that I included a check to prevent a single core system from supplying zero; without this check, we’d potentially cause an exception.  I also did not hard code a specific value for the MaxDegreeOfParallelism property.  One of our goals when parallelizing a routine is allowing it to scale on better hardware.  Specifying a hard-coded value would contradict that goal. Parallel LINQ also supports configuration, and in fact, has quite a few more options for configuring the system.  The main configuration option we most often need is the same as our TPL option: we need to supply the maximum number of processing threads.  In PLINQ, this is done via a new extension method on ParallelQuery<T>: ParallelEnumerable.WithDegreeOfParallelism. Let’s revisit our declarative data parallelism sample from Part 6: double min = collection.AsParallel().Min(item => item.PerformComputation()); Here, we’re performing a computation on each element in the collection, and saving the minimum value of this operation.  If we wanted to restrict this to a limited number of threads, we would add our new extension method: int maxThreads = Math.Max(Environment.ProcessorCount / 2, 1); double min = collection .AsParallel() .WithDegreeOfParallelism(maxThreads) .Min(item => item.PerformComputation()); This automatically restricts the PLINQ query to half of the threads on the system. PLINQ provides some additional configuration options.  By default, PLINQ will occasionally revert to processing a query in parallel.  This occurs because many queries, if parallelized, typically actually cause an overall slowdown compared to a serial processing equivalent.  By analyzing the “shape” of the query, PLINQ often decides to run a query serially instead of in parallel.  This can occur for (taken from MSDN): Queries that contain a Select, indexed Where, indexed SelectMany, or ElementAt clause after an ordering or filtering operator that has removed or rearranged original indices. Queries that contain a Take, TakeWhile, Skip, SkipWhile operator and where indices in the source sequence are not in the original order. Queries that contain Zip or SequenceEquals, unless one of the data sources has an originally ordered index and the other data source is indexable (i.e. an array or IList(T)). Queries that contain Concat, unless it is applied to indexable data sources. Queries that contain Reverse, unless applied to an indexable data source. If the specific query follows these rules, PLINQ will run the query on a single thread.  However, none of these rules look at the specific work being done in the delegates, only at the “shape” of the query.  There are cases where running in parallel may still be beneficial, even if the shape is one where it typically parallelizes poorly.  In these cases, you can override the default behavior by using the WithExecutionMode extension method.  This would be done like so: var reversed = collection .AsParallel() .WithExecutionMode(ParallelExecutionMode.ForceParallelism) .Select(i => i.PerformComputation()) .Reverse(); Here, the default behavior would be to not parallelize the query unless collection implemented IList<T>.  We can force this to run in parallel by adding the WithExecutionMode extension method in the method chain. Finally, PLINQ has the ability to configure how results are returned.  When a query is filtering or selecting an input collection, the results will need to be streamed back into a single IEnumerable<T> result.  For example, the method above returns a new, reversed collection.  In this case, the processing of the collection will be done in parallel, but the results need to be streamed back to the caller serially, so they can be enumerated on a single thread. This streaming introduces overhead.  IEnumerable<T> isn’t designed with thread safety in mind, so the system needs to handle merging the parallel processes back into a single stream, which introduces synchronization issues.  There are two extremes of how this could be accomplished, but both extremes have disadvantages. The system could watch each thread, and whenever a thread produces a result, take that result and send it back to the caller.  This would mean that the calling thread would have access to the data as soon as data is available, which is the benefit of this approach.  However, it also means that every item is introducing synchronization overhead, since each item needs to be merged individually. On the other extreme, the system could wait until all of the results from all of the threads were ready, then push all of the results back to the calling thread in one shot.  The advantage here is that the least amount of synchronization is added to the system, which means the query will, on a whole, run the fastest.  However, the calling thread will have to wait for all elements to be processed, so this could introduce a long delay between when a parallel query begins and when results are returned. The default behavior in PLINQ is actually between these two extremes.  By default, PLINQ maintains an internal buffer, and chooses an optimal buffer size to maintain.  Query results are accumulated into the buffer, then returned in the IEnumerable<T> result in chunks.  This provides reasonably fast access to the results, as well as good overall throughput, in most scenarios. However, if we know the nature of our algorithm, we may decide we would prefer one of the other extremes.  This can be done by using the WithMergeOptions extension method.  For example, if we know that our PerformComputation() routine is very slow, but also variable in runtime, we may want to retrieve results as they are available, with no bufferring.  This can be done by changing our above routine to: var reversed = collection .AsParallel() .WithExecutionMode(ParallelExecutionMode.ForceParallelism) .WithMergeOptions(ParallelMergeOptions.NotBuffered) .Select(i => i.PerformComputation()) .Reverse(); On the other hand, if are already on a background thread, and we want to allow the system to maximize its speed, we might want to allow the system to fully buffer the results: var reversed = collection .AsParallel() .WithExecutionMode(ParallelExecutionMode.ForceParallelism) .WithMergeOptions(ParallelMergeOptions.FullyBuffered) .Select(i => i.PerformComputation()) .Reverse(); Notice, also, that you can specify multiple configuration options in a parallel query.  By chaining these extension methods together, we generate a query that will always run in parallel, and will always complete before making the results available in our IEnumerable<T>.

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  • C# powershell output reader iterator getting modified when pipeline closed and disposed.

    - by scope-creep
    Hello, I'm calling a powershell script from C#. The script is pretty small and is "gps;$host.SetShouldExit(9)", which list process, and then send back an exit code to be captured by the PSHost object. The problem I have is when the pipeline has been stopped and disposed, the output reader PSHost collection still seems to be written to, and is filling up. So when I try and copy it to my own output object, it craps out with a OutOfMemoryException when I try to iterate over it. Sometimes it will except with a Collection was modified message. Here is the code. private void ProcessAndExecuteBlock(ScriptBlock Block) { Collection<PSObject> PSCollection = new Collection<PSObject>(); Collection<Object> PSErrorCollection = new Collection<Object>(); Boolean Error = false; int ExitCode=0; //Send for exection. ExecuteScript(Block.Script); // Process the waithandles. while (PExecutor.PLine.PipelineStateInfo.State == PipelineState.Running) { // Wait for either error or data waithandle. switch (WaitHandle.WaitAny(PExecutor.Hand)) { // Data case 0: Collection<PSObject> data = PExecutor.PLine.Output.NonBlockingRead(); if (data.Count > 0) { for (int cnt = 0; cnt <= (data.Count-1); cnt++) { PSCollection.Add(data[cnt]); } } // Check to see if the pipeline has been closed. if (PExecutor.PLine.Output.EndOfPipeline) { // Bring back the exit code. ExitCode = RHost.ExitCode; } break; case 1: Collection<object> Errordata = PExecutor.PLine.Error.NonBlockingRead(); if (Errordata.Count > 0) { Error = true; for (int count = 0; count <= (Errordata.Count - 1); count++) { PSErrorCollection.Add(Errordata[count]); } } break; } } PExecutor.Stop(); // Create the Execution Return block ExecutionResults ER = new ExecutionResults(Block.RuleGuid,Block.SubRuleGuid, Block.MessageIdentfier); ER.ExitCode = ExitCode; // Add in the data results. lock (ReadSync) { if (PSCollection.Count > 0) { ER.DataAdd(PSCollection); } } // Add in the error data if any. if (Error) { if (PSErrorCollection.Count > 0) { ER.ErrorAdd(PSErrorCollection); } else { ER.InError = true; } } // We have finished, so enque the block back. EnQueueOutput(ER); } and this is the PipelineExecutor class which setups the pipeline for execution. public class PipelineExecutor { private Pipeline pipeline; private WaitHandle[] Handles; public Pipeline PLine { get { return pipeline; } } public WaitHandle[] Hand { get { return Handles; } } public PipelineExecutor(Runspace runSpace, string command) { pipeline = runSpace.CreatePipeline(command); Handles = new WaitHandle[2]; Handles[0] = pipeline.Output.WaitHandle; Handles[1] = pipeline.Error.WaitHandle; } public void Start() { if (pipeline.PipelineStateInfo.State == PipelineState.NotStarted) { pipeline.Input.Close(); pipeline.InvokeAsync(); } } public void Stop() { pipeline.StopAsync(); } } An this is the DataAdd method, where the exception arises. public void DataAdd(Collection<PSObject> Data) { foreach (PSObject Ps in Data) { Data.Add(Ps); } } I put a for loop around the Data.Add, and the Collection filled up with 600k+ so feels like the gps command is still running, but why. Any ideas. Thanks in advance.

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  • Copy Content from Sharepoint2007 to another Sharepoint2007

    - by Beuy
    Hi There, I have a Sharepoint 2007 web farm installation with two site collections, one is a blank site and the other is a migrated Sharepoint 2003 site collection. I want to move some specific content from the migrated 2003 collection to the 2007 collection, however I also want to change the path of where it exists, an example is that in the migrated 2003 collection HR is under Admin HR, in the 2007 collection I want HR to appear before Admin. I've looked around but haven't found a lot of information regarding how to move specific content between sites, any advice or help is greatly appreciated.

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