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  • Skype est-il assez sécurisé ? Privacy International affirme que non

    Skype est-il assez sécurisé ? Privacy International affirme que non Le puissant groupe Privacy International s'est penché sur les paramètres de sécurisation de Skype, et les juge insuffisants. Le service de VoIP ne protégerait pas assez ses utilisateurs, notamment en affichant leur nom complet dans les listes de contact, avance le groupe. Autre reproche fait au logiciel : il serait facile pour les pirates de lui substituer leur propre version, mais infectée d'un Trojan celle-ci, du fait de l'absence de la protection HTTPS sur la page de téléchargement officielle. Privacy International met également en garde contre le VBR, le codec utilisé pour la compression des flux audios. Ce dernier permettrait à 50%, voire 90% de...

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  • La console Xbox 360 s'ouvre au Web, la mise à jour de la Xbox Live introduit Internet Explorer 10

    La console Xbox 360 s'ouvre au Web, la mise à jour de la Xbox Live introduit Internet Explorer 10 Microsoft apporte le Web sur les téléviseurs avec la mise à jour de la Xbox Live. L'éditeur a commencé le déploiement de la nouvelle version du tableau de bord de la console de jeux aux abonnés Xbox Live Gold dans le monde entier. La nouveauté phare de cette mise à jour est l'introduction du navigateur Internet Explorer 10. IE sur Xbox permettra aux utilisateurs de naviguer sur le Web depuis leur téléviseur, épingler leurs favoris et regarder des vidéos HTML5. Grâce à la nouvelle application Xbox Smart Glass qui sortira au même moment que Windows 8 le 26 octobre prochai...

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  • SAP annonce des pré-résultats records pour ses ventes de logiciels au 4ème trimestre 2010

    SAP annonce des pré-résultats records Pour ses ventes de logiciels au 4ème trimestre 2010 Malgré le départ de son PDG pour HP et l'affaire TomorrowNow qui l'oppose à Oracle, l'éditeur allemand de solutions professionnelles SAP se porte bien. La société vient d'annoncer des pré-résultats records pour le le 4ème trimestre de son année fiscale 2010, qui se terminait le 31 décembre 2010. . Ses revenus liés à la vente de logiciels s'élèvent à 1,5 milliards d'Euros, soit une progression de + 34 % (+ 24 à taux de change constant). SAP s'en félicite. « Nous sommes heureux d'annoncer le meilleur trimestre de ventes de logiciels de l'histoire de SAP. Nous avons réalisé une...

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  • La free software foundation présente sa liste des projets open source prioritaires et invite les utilisateurs à contribuer à l'essor du libre

    Le libre a besoin de vous ! La free software foundation invite les utilisateurs à contribuer aux projets libresLe logiciel libre. On l'aime, on l'utilise, on le partage, ou encore on le commercialise. Cependant combien sont ceux qui pensent un temps soit peu à supporter le logiciel libre ? Combien évitent souvent le bouton « Donate » des pages officielles des projets comme « The GIMP » ? Combien sont-ils à consacrer un peu de leur temps pour la promotion du logiciel libre ? Dans la mentalité de...

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  • IE10 apporte un meilleur support du HTML5 sur Windows Phone 8, Microsoft détaille les différences avec la version Windows 8

    IE 10 apporte un meilleur support du HTML 5 sur Windows Phone 8 Microsoft détaille les différences avec la version Windows 8 L'une des principales causes des mauvaises performances du HTML5 sur le mobile serait le niveau de support de ses fonctionnalités par les navigateurs mobiles qui serait très variable par rapport au Desktop. Avec la sortie de Windows Phone 8 qui dispose d'une déclinaison mobile du navigateur Internet Explorer 10, Microsoft a principalement mis l'accent sur le support du HTML5. La société dans un billet de blog, fait le point sur les améliorations du navigateur concernant le standard du Web, ainsi que ses différences avec la version pour Windows 8.

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  • Windows Store compte 2452 applications à 1 mois du lancement de Windows 8, la galerie double de volume en 10 jours

    Windows Store compte 2 452 applications à 1 mois du lancement de Windows 8, la galerie double de volume en 10 jours L'engouement des développeurs pour Windows 8 semble se confirmer. Après un coding marathon qui a enregistré le plus fort taux de participation des développeurs à une compétition de développement, l'OS voit le nombre d'applications dans son store doublé en seulement 10 jours. À un mois de la sortie grand public de Windows 8, sa galerie d'application disposerait déjà de 2452 applications le 26 septembre. La galerie qui proposait 530 applications le 16 août, a franchi le cap des 1000 app...

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  • HTML5 : trop de battage médiatique ? L'équipe du framework Kendo UI répond dans un état des lieux sur l'utilisation du langage

    État des lieux sur l'utilisation du HTML5 par l'équipe de Kendo UI "Le battage médiatique du HTML5 est-il justifié ?" Voici la question que se posent en substance l'équipe de Kendo UI, le framework JavaScript et HTML pour obtenir des interfaces utilisateurs "modernes". Pour y répondre, l'équipe a sondé plus de 4.000 développeurs. Trois questions sont particulièrement intéressantes et portent sur : la tendance d'adoption du HTML5 ; l'importance de HTML5 pour les développeurs ; l'impact des influences extérieures sur le HTML5 (exemple : le fiasco mobile de Facebook). Le résultat comple...

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  • Découvrez les "start-ups de demain" à Epitech, les vendredi 16 et samedi 17 novembre

    Découvrez les start-ups de demain à Epitech Les vendredi 16 et samedi 17 novembre Le vendredi 16 novembre 2012, Epitech, vous invite au « Forum des EIP » sur le campus technologique du Groupe IONIS (Porte d'Italie) pour découvrir les « start-ups de demain ». Un EIP un projet de fin d'études conçu een groupe durant la 4e et la 5e année d'Epitech autour de 5 grands thèmes(améliorer le bien-être, améliorer les outils d'entreprises, mieux diffuser le progrès technique, ouvrir de nouveaux horizons, et prolonger le développement d'un EIP existant). Au final, 15 à 20% des projets aboutissent à la création d'une entreprise à la sortie de l'école voire au cours de la scolarité...

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  • Increasing deadlocks with NoLock

    - by Dave Ballantyne
    One on my personnel pet issues is with inappropriate use of the NOLOCK hint (and read uncommitted) .  Dont get me wrong, I have used it in exceptional circumstances , but as a general statement it is a bad thing.  Mostly , when NOLOCK, is used the discussion is around a single statement,  “it runs faster with nolock for XYZ reason”,  however ,IMO, this is quite a shorted sighted view.  What about the Transaction ? What about other concurrent users ?  What is good for one statement in isolation , does not mean that it is good for the system as a whole.  I have seen on a number of occasions deadlocks happen, when tasks that would of(and should of) be blocked continue to execute, only for a deadlock to occur at a later data writing (INSERT,UPDATE,DELETE) statement.  Writers will block writers regardless of isolation level. By Way of (fairly contrived ) example , lets generate some dummy tables and populate with some data drop table a go drop table b go Create Table a ( col1 integer ) go insert into a values(1) insert into a values(2) go Create Table b ( col1 integer ) go insert into b values(1) insert into b values(2) go   Now make two connections. In connection one execute set transaction isolation level read committed BEGIN TRAN Select * from a Select * from b delete from a In connection two execute set transaction isolation level read committed BEGIN TRAN Select * from a Select * from b delete from b Right now the ‘select from a’ in connection two is being blocked by the ‘delete from a’ in connection one.  This is ,IMO, quite a healthy and natural thing to be happening , some see this as a ‘slow down’, a drop in performance.  So, lets reach for our ‘NOLOCK’ magic pill.  Cancel the blocked query and ROLLBACK both transactions, then in connection one execute set transaction isolation level read uncommitted BEGIN TRAN Select * from a Select * from b delete from b and then in connection two execute set transaction isolation level read uncommitted BEGIN TRAN Select * from a Select * from b delete from a We have now solved out performance problem , no more blocking.  Lets finish the work required by the transaction, in connection one , execute delete from a Oh, ‘ performance problem’ again , its now being blocked. Still, lets complete the work in connection two…. delete from b DEADLOCK!!  It is important to be clear about the role of the select statements.  They do not participate within the deadlock, but are preventing code executing that would of.   Additionally, without the select readers to block, a deadlock would occur on the deletes with READ COMMITTED. Naturally, other isolation levels will exhibit different behaviour as to where and when they will and wont block,  and I would encourage you to read BOL and satisfy yourself that you really do NEED to NOLOCK.

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  • Il CRM è al passo con i tempi?

    - by antonella.buonagurio(at)oracle.com
    Il Social Customer Relationship Management è nato grazie alla rivoluzione portata dal Web 2.0, un cambiamento epocale nelle modalità di comunicazione che ha aggiunto una incredibile ricchezza alle conversazioni tra aziende e consumatori. Le aziende dispongono adesso di strumenti per comprendere il proprio mercato senza precedenti, i consumatori, a loro volta, hanno il potere di utilizzare nuovi canali per esprimere le proprie esigenze e per comunicare e condividere commenti ed esperienze. Ma il Web 2.0 non è il solo fattore che impatta sulle scelte strategiche in ambito CRM  che ogni azienda deve considerare per sostenere  questo nuovo rapporto con i propri consumatori.    Vuoi scoprire quali sono le forze (o fattori) che le aziende devono considerare affinchè i processi di gestione della relazione con i clienti stiano al passo con le mutate condizioni sociali ed economiche?   Per saperne di più:   Il whitepaper realizzato da Oracle, Paul Gillin ed  IT Business Edge  ne delinea alcuni: 1.      Il Business. Come è cambiato in funzione dell'esperienza multicanale ora possible, della centralità del cliente e dei social networking che dominano le relazioni on line? 2.      La tecnologiaLe aziende oggi per guadagnare vantaggio competitivo devono dotarsi delle più innovative tecnologie per dare maggior valore al proprio business e per ridurre al minimo i costi di infrastruttura. Quali sono e quali sono gli effettivi vantaggi?   e altri ancora ...... leggendo il white paper "Is your CRM solution keeping up with the times?"

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  • Lancement du blog Oracle Applications France

    - by user816714
    Le voilà enfin ! Bienvenue sur notre nouveau blog Oracle Applications France. Pourquoi un blog ? Pour être plus proche de vous, chers utilisateurs ! Parce que nous savons qu’un directeur des systèmes d’information, un directeur des ressources humaines ou un chef d’entreprise ne cherchera pas les mêmes solutions, nous mettons en place ce support de communication pour engager un dialogue constructif et ouvert. Pour mener à bien cette mission, notre équipe marketing, sera derrière les commandes et vous proposera conseils, témoignages mais aussi des contenus multimédias en images et vidéos. En suivant le blog Oracle Applications France vous plongerez dans les coulisses des grandes actualités Oracle Applications. Nous tenterons de vous offrir un regard différent sur nos événements, vous serez les premiers à être informés sur nos lancements produits, et vous rencontrez nos experts au travers d’interviews et analyses exclusives. Notre mission ? Nous voulons devenir votre guide et vous accompagner pour mieux appréhender l’offre Oracle Applications. Parmi l’offre extrêmement dense des solutions qu’Oracle propose, nous vous aiderons à trouver plus rapidement votre chemin. N’hésitez donc pas à nous faire part de vos feedbacks et questions ainsi qu’à commenter nos futurs billets sur le blog Oracle Applications France. Nous vous conseillons également de suivre nos meilleurs experts sur les médias sociaux. En voici une première sélection : Vous voulez devenir incollable sur nos solutions CRM ? Suivez ce compte twitter : http://twitter.com/#!/OracleCRM Devenez fan de cette page facebook : http://www.facebook.com/OracleCRM Regardez nos vidéos youtube : http://www.youtube.com/OracleCRM Et pour les anglophones, rendez-vous sur le blog Oracle CRM en anglais : http://blogs.oracle.com/crm Vous ne jurez que par l’innovation produit aka la PLM ? Suivez ce compte twitter : http://twitter.com/#!/agileplm Devenez fan de cette page facebook : https://www.facebook.com/OracleAgilePLM Regardez nos vidéos youtube : http://www.youtube.com/OracleAgilePLM Et pour les anglophones, rendez-vous sur le blog Oracle PLM en anglais : http://blogs.oracle.com/plm/ Vous ne pouvez plus vivre sans la suite d’applications de gestion Oracle Fusion Applications ? Devenez fan de cette page facebook : https://www.facebook.com/OracleApps Ecoutez notre dernier podcast en anglais : http://streaming.oracle.com/ebn/podcasts/media/10118954_Fusions_Applications_061011.mp3 Et pour les anglophones, rendez-vous sur le blog Oracle Applications en anglais : http://blogs.oracle.com/applications/

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  • SQL SERVER – Simple Example of Snapshot Isolation – Reduce the Blocking Transactions

    - by pinaldave
    To learn any technology and move to a more advanced level, it is very important to understand the fundamentals of the subject first. Today, we will be talking about something which has been quite introduced a long time ago but not properly explored when it comes to the isolation level. Snapshot Isolation was introduced in SQL Server in 2005. However, the reality is that there are still many software shops which are using the SQL Server 2000, and therefore cannot be able to maintain the Snapshot Isolation. Many software shops have upgraded to the later version of the SQL Server, but their respective developers have not spend enough time to upgrade themselves with the latest technology. “It works!” is a very common answer of many when they are asked about utilizing the new technology, instead of backward compatibility commands. In one of the recent consultation project, I had same experience when developers have “heard about it” but have no idea about snapshot isolation. They were thinking it is the same as Snapshot Replication – which is plain wrong. This is the same demo I am including here which I have created for them. In Snapshot Isolation, the updated row versions for each transaction are maintained in TempDB. Once a transaction has begun, it ignores all the newer rows inserted or updated in the table. Let us examine this example which shows the simple demonstration. This transaction works on optimistic concurrency model. Since reading a certain transaction does not block writing transaction, it also does not block the reading transaction, which reduced the blocking. First, enable database to work with Snapshot Isolation. Additionally, check the existing values in the table from HumanResources.Shift. ALTER DATABASE AdventureWorks SET ALLOW_SNAPSHOT_ISOLATION ON GO SELECT ModifiedDate FROM HumanResources.Shift GO Now, we will need two different sessions to prove this example. First Session: Set Transaction level isolation to snapshot and begin the transaction. Update the column “ModifiedDate” to today’s date. -- Session 1 SET TRANSACTION ISOLATION LEVEL SNAPSHOT BEGIN TRAN UPDATE HumanResources.Shift SET ModifiedDate = GETDATE() GO Please note that we have not yet been committed to the transaction. Now, open the second session and run the following “SELECT” statement. Then, check the values of the table. Please pay attention on setting the Isolation level for the second one as “Snapshot” at the same time when we already start the transaction using BEGIN TRAN. -- Session 2 SET TRANSACTION ISOLATION LEVEL SNAPSHOT BEGIN TRAN SELECT ModifiedDate FROM HumanResources.Shift GO You will notice that the values in the table are still original values. They have not been modified yet. Once again, go back to session 1 and begin the transaction. -- Session 1 COMMIT After that, go back to Session 2 and see the values of the table. -- Session 2 SELECT ModifiedDate FROM HumanResources.Shift GO You will notice that the values are yet not changed and they are still the same old values which were there right in the beginning of the session. Now, let us commit the transaction in the session 2. Once committed, run the same SELECT statement once more and see what the result is. -- Session 2 COMMIT SELECT ModifiedDate FROM HumanResources.Shift GO You will notice that it now reflects the new updated value. I hope that this example is clear enough as it would give you good idea how the Snapshot Isolation level works. There is much more to write about an extra level, READ_COMMITTED_SNAPSHOT, which we will be discussing in another post soon. If you wish to use this transaction’s Isolation level in your production database, I would appreciate your comments about their performance on your servers. I have included here the complete script used in this example for your quick reference. ALTER DATABASE AdventureWorks SET ALLOW_SNAPSHOT_ISOLATION ON GO SELECT ModifiedDate FROM HumanResources.Shift GO -- Session 1 SET TRANSACTION ISOLATION LEVEL SNAPSHOT BEGIN TRAN UPDATE HumanResources.Shift SET ModifiedDate = GETDATE() GO -- Session 2 SET TRANSACTION ISOLATION LEVEL SNAPSHOT BEGIN TRAN SELECT ModifiedDate FROM HumanResources.Shift GO -- Session 1 COMMIT -- Session 2 SELECT ModifiedDate FROM HumanResources.Shift GO -- Session 2 COMMIT SELECT ModifiedDate FROM HumanResources.Shift GO Reference: Pinal Dave (http://blog.sqlauthority.com) Filed under: Pinal Dave, SQL, SQL Authority, SQL Performance, SQL Query, SQL Scripts, SQL Server, SQL Tips and Tricks, T SQL, Technology Tagged: Transaction Isolation

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  • SQL SERVER – Simple Example of Snapshot Isolation – Reduce the Blocking Transactions

    - by pinaldave
    To learn any technology and move to a more advanced level, it is very important to understand the fundamentals of the subject first. Today, we will be talking about something which has been quite introduced a long time ago but not properly explored when it comes to the isolation level. Snapshot Isolation was introduced in SQL Server in 2005. However, the reality is that there are still many software shops which are using the SQL Server 2000, and therefore cannot be able to maintain the Snapshot Isolation. Many software shops have upgraded to the later version of the SQL Server, but their respective developers have not spend enough time to upgrade themselves with the latest technology. “It works!” is a very common answer of many when they are asked about utilizing the new technology, instead of backward compatibility commands. In one of the recent consultation project, I had same experience when developers have “heard about it” but have no idea about snapshot isolation. They were thinking it is the same as Snapshot Replication – which is plain wrong. This is the same demo I am including here which I have created for them. In Snapshot Isolation, the updated row versions for each transaction are maintained in TempDB. Once a transaction has begun, it ignores all the newer rows inserted or updated in the table. Let us examine this example which shows the simple demonstration. This transaction works on optimistic concurrency model. Since reading a certain transaction does not block writing transaction, it also does not block the reading transaction, which reduced the blocking. First, enable database to work with Snapshot Isolation. Additionally, check the existing values in the table from HumanResources.Shift. ALTER DATABASE AdventureWorks SET ALLOW_SNAPSHOT_ISOLATION ON GO SELECT ModifiedDate FROM HumanResources.Shift GO Now, we will need two different sessions to prove this example. First Session: Set Transaction level isolation to snapshot and begin the transaction. Update the column “ModifiedDate” to today’s date. -- Session 1 SET TRANSACTION ISOLATION LEVEL SNAPSHOT BEGIN TRAN UPDATE HumanResources.Shift SET ModifiedDate = GETDATE() GO Please note that we have not yet been committed to the transaction. Now, open the second session and run the following “SELECT” statement. Then, check the values of the table. Please pay attention on setting the Isolation level for the second one as “Snapshot” at the same time when we already start the transaction using BEGIN TRAN. -- Session 2 SET TRANSACTION ISOLATION LEVEL SNAPSHOT BEGIN TRAN SELECT ModifiedDate FROM HumanResources.Shift GO You will notice that the values in the table are still original values. They have not been modified yet. Once again, go back to session 1 and begin the transaction. -- Session 1 COMMIT After that, go back to Session 2 and see the values of the table. -- Session 2 SELECT ModifiedDate FROM HumanResources.Shift GO You will notice that the values are yet not changed and they are still the same old values which were there right in the beginning of the session. Now, let us commit the transaction in the session 2. Once committed, run the same SELECT statement once more and see what the result is. -- Session 2 COMMIT SELECT ModifiedDate FROM HumanResources.Shift GO You will notice that it now reflects the new updated value. I hope that this example is clear enough as it would give you good idea how the Snapshot Isolation level works. There is much more to write about an extra level, READ_COMMITTED_SNAPSHOT, which we will be discussing in another post soon. If you wish to use this transaction’s Isolation level in your production database, I would appreciate your comments about their performance on your servers. I have included here the complete script used in this example for your quick reference. ALTER DATABASE AdventureWorks SET ALLOW_SNAPSHOT_ISOLATION ON GO SELECT ModifiedDate FROM HumanResources.Shift GO -- Session 1 SET TRANSACTION ISOLATION LEVEL SNAPSHOT BEGIN TRAN UPDATE HumanResources.Shift SET ModifiedDate = GETDATE() GO -- Session 2 SET TRANSACTION ISOLATION LEVEL SNAPSHOT BEGIN TRAN SELECT ModifiedDate FROM HumanResources.Shift GO -- Session 1 COMMIT -- Session 2 SELECT ModifiedDate FROM HumanResources.Shift GO -- Session 2 COMMIT SELECT ModifiedDate FROM HumanResources.Shift GO Reference: Pinal Dave (http://blog.sqlauthority.com) Filed under: Pinal Dave, SQL, SQL Authority, SQL Performance, SQL Query, SQL Scripts, SQL Server, SQL Tips and Tricks, T SQL, Technology Tagged: Transaction Isolation

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  • Xna GS 4 Animation Sample bone transforms not copying correctly

    - by annonymously
    I have a person model that is animated and a suitcase model that is not. The person can pick up the suitcase and it should move to the location of the hand bone of the person model. Unfortunately the suitcase doesn't follow the animation correctly. it moves with the hand's animation but its position is under the ground and way too far to the right. I haven't scaled any of the models myself. Thank you. The source code (forgive the rough prototype code): Matrix[] tran = new Matrix[man.model.Bones.Count];// The absolute transforms from the animation player man.model.CopyAbsoluteBoneTransformsTo(tran); Vector3 suitcasePos, suitcaseScale, tempSuitcasePos = new Vector3();// Place holders for the Matrix Decompose Quaternion suitcaseRot = new Quaternion(); // The transformation of the right hand bone is decomposed tran[man.model.Bones["HPF_RightHand"].Index].Decompose(out suitcaseScale, out suitcaseRot, out tempSuitcasePos); suitcasePos = new Vector3(); suitcasePos.X = tempSuitcasePos.Z;// The axes are inverted for some reason suitcasePos.Y = -tempSuitcasePos.Y; suitcasePos.Z = -tempSuitcasePos.X; suitcase.Position = man.Position + suitcasePos;// The actual Suitcase properties suitcase.Rotation = man.Rotation + new Vector3(suitcaseRot.X, suitcaseRot.Y, suitcaseRot.Z); I am also copying the bone transforms from the animation player in the Person class like so: // The transformations from the AnimationPlayer Matrix[] skinTrans = new Matrix[model.Bones.Count]; skinTrans = player.GetBoneTransforms(); // copy each transformation to its corresponding bone for (int i = 0; i < skinTrans.Length; i++) { model.Bones[i].Transform = skinTrans[i]; }

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  • Opinion : quel avenir pour Firefox ? Le design et la communication l'ont-ils emporté sur les problématiques techniques ?

    Opinion : quel avenir pour Firefox ? Le design et la communication l'ont-ils emporté sur les problématiques techniques ? Historiquement connu comme un grand projet open source, dont la communauté a été secouée à plusieurs reprises (donnant naissance à quelques forks, dont Iceweasel), Firefox fait désormais la une comme un des grands acteurs de la navigation Web. Et ce n'est pas volé ! Outre les problématiques de sécurité, desquelles il s'est occupé très tôt, les innovations y ont été légion et nul doute que les navigateurs ne seraient pas ce qu'ils sont aujourd'hui sans cet acteur légendaire. Pourtant, depuis la version 3, une frénésie de sorties m'appelle à me poser de vraies questions s...

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  • Using old code on new version of Visual Studio [migrated]

    - by Tu Tran
    I have a project which was started from 90s in C/C++. Therefore, it contains many old coding styles such as K&R-style function declaration, obsolete function, ... The project works fine in Visual Studio 2008, but now I want to use it in the new version of Visual Studio (specifically VS 2010) because we have other projects in Visual Studio 2010/2012. I don't want to have too many versions of Visual Studio on my machine. When I try to compile the old project, Visual Studio throws too many errors. I can fix all of them but I am scared to edit the source code and I want other people to be able to pen it in the old version of VS too. I want the project to remain backwards compatible with VS. My question is how to use the old code in Visual Studio 2010/2012 without changing the code. Or if necessary how do I just fix a few lines of code, but make sure it won't cause an error if someone else opens that code in the older version of VS. Is there a way to tell newer Visual Studio versions to use older compiler flags or something like that?

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  • Rewrite in Mediawiki, remove index.php, htaccess

    - by tran cuong
    I've just installed Mediawiki on Apache and I want the url should be localhost/Main_Page/ localhost/Special:Recent_Changes ... instead of localhost/index.php/Main_Page/ localhost/index.php/Special:Recent_Changes I've tried many times and in many ways but it still doesn't work. Any suggest for a "exactly" what to do, step by step. MediaWiki docs didn't talk about .htaccess. It had only nginx and lighttpd.

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  • You don't have permission to access /index.php on this server

    - by Tran Dinh Thoai
    I made a 'login with OpenID' page and I had a error when OpenID provider return to my page: You don't have permission to access /index.php on this server. Additionally, a 404 Not Found error was encountered while trying to use an ErrorDocument to handle the request. If I remove parameters which are returned by OpenID provider, the page run well. How can I fix this problem? The login page that cause error is: http://bryox.com/login

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  • Indexed view deadlocking

    - by Dave Ballantyne
    Deadlocks can be a really tricky thing to track down the root cause of.  There are lots of articles on the subject of tracking down deadlocks, but seldom do I find that in a production system that the cause is as straightforward.  That being said,  deadlocks are always caused by process A needs a resource that process B has locked and process B has a resource that process A needs.  There may be a longer chain of processes involved, but that is the basic premise. Here is one such (much simplified) scenario that was at first non-obvious to its cause: The system has two tables,  Products and Stock.  The Products table holds the description and prices of a product whilst Stock records the current stock level. USE tempdb GO CREATE TABLE Product ( ProductID INTEGER IDENTITY PRIMARY KEY, ProductName VARCHAR(255) NOT NULL, Price MONEY NOT NULL ) GO CREATE TABLE Stock ( ProductId INTEGER PRIMARY KEY, StockLevel INTEGER NOT NULL ) GO INSERT INTO Product SELECT TOP(1000) CAST(NEWID() AS VARCHAR(255)), ABS(CAST(CAST(NEWID() AS VARBINARY(255)) AS INTEGER))%100 FROM sys.columns a CROSS JOIN sys.columns b GO INSERT INTO Stock SELECT ProductID,ABS(CAST(CAST(NEWID() AS VARBINARY(255)) AS INTEGER))%100 FROM Product There is a single stored procedure of GetStock: Create Procedure GetStock as SELECT Product.ProductID,Product.ProductName FROM dbo.Product join dbo.Stock on Stock.ProductId = Product.ProductID where Stock.StockLevel <> 0 Analysis of the system showed that this procedure was causing a performance overhead and as reads of this data was many times more than writes,  an indexed view was created to lower the overhead. CREATE VIEW vwActiveStock With schemabinding AS SELECT Product.ProductID,Product.ProductName FROM dbo.Product join dbo.Stock on Stock.ProductId = Product.ProductID where Stock.StockLevel <> 0 go CREATE UNIQUE CLUSTERED INDEX PKvwActiveStock on vwActiveStock(ProductID) This worked perfectly, performance was improved, the team name was cheered to the rafters and beers all round.  Then, after a while, something else happened… The system updating the data changed,  The update pattern of both the Stock update and the Product update used to be: BEGIN TRAN UPDATE... COMMIT BEGIN TRAN UPDATE... COMMIT BEGIN TRAN UPDATE... COMMIT It changed to: BEGIN TRAN UPDATE... UPDATE... UPDATE... COMMIT Nothing that would raise an eyebrow in even the closest of code reviews.  But after this change we saw deadlocks occuring. You can reproduce this by opening two sessions. In session 1 begin transaction Update Product set ProductName ='Test' where ProductID = 998 Then in session 2 begin transaction Update Stock set Stocklevel = 5 where ProductID = 999 Update Stock set Stocklevel = 5 where ProductID = 998 Hop back to session 1 and.. Update Product set ProductName ='Test' where ProductID = 999 Looking at the deadlock graphs we could see the contention was between two processes, one updating stock and the other updating product, but we knew that all the processes do to the tables is update them.  Period.  There are separate processes that handle the update of stock and product and never the twain shall meet, no reason why one should be requiring data from the other.  Then it struck us,  AH the indexed view. Naturally, when you make an update to any table involved in a indexed view, the view has to be updated.  When this happens, the data in all the tables have to be read, so that explains our deadlocks.  The data from stock is read when you update product and vice-versa. The fix, once you understand the problem fully, is pretty simple, the apps did not guarantee the order in which data was updated.  Luckily it was a relatively simple fix to order the updates and deadlocks went away.  Note, that there is still a *slight* risk of a deadlock occurring, if both a stock update and product update occur at *exactly* the same time.

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  • Return if remote stored procedure fails

    - by njk
    I am in the process of creating a stored procedure. This stored procedure runs local as well as external stored procedures. For simplicity, I'll call the local server [LOCAL] and the remote server [REMOTE]. USE [LOCAL] GO SET ANSI_NULLS ON GO SET QUOTED_IDENTIFIER ON GO ALTER PROCEDURE [dbo].[monthlyRollUp] AS SET NOCOUNT, XACT_ABORT ON BEGIN TRY EXEC [REOMTE].[DB].[table].[sp] --This transaction should only begin if the remote procedure does not fail BEGIN TRAN EXEC [LOCAL].[DB].[table].[sp1] COMMIT BEGIN TRAN EXEC [LOCAL].[DB].[table].[sp2] COMMIT BEGIN TRAN EXEC [LOCAL].[DB].[table].[sp3] COMMIT BEGIN TRAN EXEC [LOCAL].[DB].[table].[sp4] COMMIT END TRY BEGIN CATCH -- Insert error into log table INSERT INTO [dbo].[log_table] (stamp, errorNumber, errorSeverity, errorState, errorProcedure, errorLine, errorMessage) SELECT GETDATE(), ERROR_NUMBER(), ERROR_SEVERITY(), ERROR_STATE(), ERROR_PROCEDURE(), ERROR_LINE(), ERROR_MESSAGE() END CATCH GO When using a transaction on the remote procedure, it throws this error: OLE DB provider ... returned message "The partner transaction manager has disabled its support for remote/network transactions.". I get that I'm unable to run a transaction locally for a remote procedure. How can I ensure that the this procedure will exit and rollback if any part of the procedure fails?

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  • Google dévoile Chrome Webstore et Chrome OS, "l'heure du cloud computing est arrivée" déclare Eric Schmidt

    Google dévoile Chrome Webstore et Chrome OS, "l'heure du cloud computing est arrivée", déclare Eric Schmidt Il y a quelques minutes à peine que vient de s'achever un évènement majeur : Google a tenu une grande conférence, retransmise en direct, concernant Chrome OS et ce qui l'entoure. Ce système d'exploitation est on ne peut plus attendu de par le monde, et les informations qui ont été révélées ce soir en intéresseront plus d'un. Clou de la keynote : la présentation du premier netbook équipé de Chrome OS. Mais commençons par le début, et en l'occurrence, un déballage de chiffres : il y a 120 millions d'utilisateurs actifs de Chrome (le navigateur), sur terre. Et, première nouveauté annoncée : le support de Google Instant...

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  • Sessions De Passage De Tests D’implementation

    - by swalker
    Colombes Exceptionnel pour vos Partenaires : Exemption des frais de passage pour les Examens d'implémentation s'ils participent à l'une des sessions des 3 jours de Test Fest le 28 novembre, le 29 novembre et le 9 décembre (cette dernière session est presque pleine) Pour les inscriptions c’est ici : >> 28 novembre 2011 >> 29 novembre 2011 >> 9 décembre 2011

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  • Gmail : arrivée des « Smart Labels », une nouvelle fonctionnalité de tri automatisé des e-mails

    Gmail : arrivée des « Smart Labels » Une nouvelle fonctionnalité de tri automatisé des e-mails Plusieurs mois après le lancement de la boite aux lettres « prioritaire », Gmail s'essaye aux « libellés automatiques », une fonction intelligente de tri automatisé des messages, destinée à faciliter et réduire le temps de gestion des courriel. L'activation de cette fonctionnalité sur la section « Labs » créée trois libellés : Indésirables, Notifications et Forums. « Notifications » redirigera automatiquement les messages en provenance de Facebook, d'Amazon et ceux pouvant contenir des informations importantes sans venir pour autant de contacts réels. Le li...

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