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  • How do I get my Intel HD graphics to work alongside my HD7850, as my second(HDMI out) monitor?

    - by AlexTes
    Title says it all. Further info: Motherboard: http://www.asrock.com/mb/Intel/Z77%20Pro3/ Processor: http://ark.intel.com/products/65520/Intel-Core-i5-3570K-Processor-%286M-Cache-up-to-3_80-GHz%29 So currently my main screen is running on my HD7850. Got drivers from the amd website. I have looked through dozens of questions here. I'm about to try booting Ubuntu from a stick and seeing if the xorg-edgers drivers might help. When booting, all action goes down on the very screen I'm trying to get to work.*EDIT never mind this. Seems to be special boot magic. As the screen only displays whiteline errors once the gui of ubuntu has kicked in and everything graphic is happening through my graphics card again. Connected through HDMI(motherboard)-DVI. So unless having multiple displays is a huge deal the solution hopefully isn't that complicated. I just feel I'm missing something simple. If this really is complicated, I should probably just hook up the display to my graphics card. My CPU is usually the one chilling out though so I'd like to try to get that to work. Also just because I don't want to buy an extra cable and this set up makes me feel warm and fuzzy inside. Tell me what to try or look up, I'll be most appreciative. Thank you! **UPDATE The x-swat ppa installed some intel stuff. Booting with one monitor plugged into the motherboard gives nothing. Doing it with the pc already on gives the purple "Ubuntu" with 5 dots boot/shutdown screen.

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  • Is it okay to just add a page or two PHP page to add some functionality to a Drupal site?

    - by Zaemz
    I'm not familiar with Drupal, really. I can dig around the admin interface and navigate the directories and find the files that I need to just fine as well. What I'm really not familiar with is adding modules or extending modules. The site currently takes an order and sets up recurring payments through Ubercart and uses Authorize.net as a gateway. Right now, when a payment fails, a single e-mail gets sent out to the admin. We'd like to extend it to send an e-mail to the user and let them change their payment information through another page on the site. Authorize has a service called Silent Post URL that basically just posts a carbon copy in XML to whatever URL you give it. We'd like to accept that XML, deserialize it, parse the data, send a notice to the user and give them the page for updating their information. So, I guess it'll be two PHP pages. One for the XML API call from Authorize.net, and then one for the page for the users' to update their payment information. Could I just create two simple pages each handling their own tasks, or should I check out properly extending a module? If it's appropriate for me to write up the pages and not have to hook them into the module, what would be the best way to handle setting up what needs to get done? (The most experience I've had with extending a PHP site has been hacking away at someone else' poorly constructed, custom framework, so if anyone has any good resources perhaps on PHP best practices that they could share through a PM or a comment, I'd appreciate It) (Also, I'm still getting the hang of Stack Exchange, so if this isn't appropriate please let me know. I'll delete it.)

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  • What is the worst source control you have used? [closed]

    - by David Liddle
    There are many discussions about what people's favourite source control is (subversion, mercurial ...). But what source control systems have you used that you certainly wouldn't recommend? And more beneficial, how would you go about promoting change in the business to a new source control system? A few years ago I developed using a source control system called Synergy. There were two Synergy experts in the company that constantly had to help the developers do check-ins/outs and merges were especially difficult. What would be your steps of migrating to a better source control. Would you host everything internally or pay for services such as github?

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  • Distributed version control for HUGE projects - is it feasible?

    - by Vilx-
    We're pretty happy with SVN right now, but Joel's tutorial intrigued me. So I was wondering - would it be feasible in our situation too? The thing is - our SVN repository is HUGE. The software itself has a 15 years old legacy and has survived several different source control systems already. There are over 68,000 revisions (changesets), the source itself takes up over 100MB and I cant even begin to guess how many GB the whole repository consumes. The problem then is simple - a clone of the whole repository would probably take ages to make, and would consume far more space on the drive that is remotely sane. And since the very point of distributed version control is to have a as many repositories as needed, I'm starting to get doubts. How does Mercurial (or any other distributed version control) deal with this? Or are they unusable for such huge projects?

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  • What are the merits of using the various VCS (Version Control Systems) that exist to track Drupal pr

    - by ZoFreX
    I'm trying to find the best version control strategy for my workflow with Drupal. I have multiple sites per install and I'm pretty sure I'll have a separate repository for each website. As far as I know, the VCSs worth considering are: SVN Bazaar (bzr) Git Mercurial (hg) I know how these compare to each other in general, but want to learn their merits/demerits for Drupal. If you're using (or have used) any of these for Drupal: What is your setup? What about the VCS you chose works well for managing Drupal projects? What doesn't?

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  • Undefined symbols after installing new xcode 3.2.3 build

    - by toofah
    I want to move to the new XCode 3.2.3 GM Seed build for development, but when I bring up my project I get 'base sdk missing' because my project is set to use iPhone SDK 3.0. If I change 'base SDK' to iPhone 3.2 or 4.0 and then compile I get a lot of errors that I don't understand. I dumped a few of them below. Can anyone tell me what I am missing? Also, can someone confirm that if I choose 'base sdk' of iPhone 3.2 or 4.0 that I can still choose 'target device' of iPhone 3.0 and not force my customers to install the new SDK. I really don't want to be the app that forces my customers to upgrade their OS. Thanks! Undefined symbols: ".objc_class_name_NSObject", referenced from: .objc_class_name_FlurryAPI in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) .objc_class_name_FlurrySession in libFlurry.a(FlurrySession.o) .objc_class_name_FlurryHTTPEater in libFlurry.a(FlurryHTTPEater.o) .objc_class_name_FlurryHTTPResponse in libFlurry.a(FlurryHTTPResponse.o) .objc_class_name_FlurryConnectionDelegate in libFlurry.a(FlurryConnectionDelegate.o) .objc_class_name_FlurryAd in libFlurry.a(FlurryAd.o) .objc_class_name_FlurryAdParser in libFlurry.a(FlurryAdParser.o) literal-pointer@_OBJC@_cls_refs@NSObject in libFlurry.a(FlurryAdView.o) .objc_class_name_FlurryAdImage in libFlurry.a(FlurryAdImage.o) .objc_class_name_FlurryAdImpression in libFlurry.a(FlurryAdImpression.o) .objc_class_name_FlurryPageViewDelegate in libFlurry.a(FlurryPageViewDelegate.o) .objc_class_name_FlurryAdTheme in libFlurry.a(FlurryAdTheme.o) .objc_class_name_FlurryAdHook in libFlurry.a(FlurryAdHook.o) .objc_class_name_FlurryAdProperties in libFlurry.a(FlurryAdProperties.o) .objc_class_name_FlurryFileCache in libFlurry.a(FlurryFileCache.o) .objc_class_name_FlurryEvent in libFlurry.a(FlurryEvent.o) .objc_class_name_FlurryProtocolData in libFlurry.a(FlurryProtocolData.o) .objc_class_name_FlurryAdAssignment in libFlurry.a(FlurryAdAssignment.o) .objc_class_name_FlurryAdAppStoreConnectionDelegate in libFlurry.a(FlurryAdAppStoreConnectionDelegate.o) .objc_class_name_FlurryHeartBeater in libFlurry.a(FlurryHeartBeater.o) .objc_class_name_FlurryImageCache in libFlurry.a(FlurryImageCache.o) .objc_class_name_FlurryUtil in libFlurry.a(FlurryUtil.o) .objc_class_name_FlurryAdNavigationDelegate in libFlurry.a(FlurryAdNavigationDelegate.o) .objc_class_name_FlurryAdLocation in libFlurry.a(FlurryAdLocation.o) .objc_class_name_FlurryAdDimension in libFlurry.a(FlurryAdDimension.o) .objc_class_name_FlurryAdTextStyle in libFlurry.a(FlurryAdTextStyle.o) ".objc_class_name_NSFileManager", referenced from: literal-pointer@_OBJC@_cls_refs@NSFileManager in libFlurry.a(FlurrySession.o) literal-pointer@_OBJC@_cls_refs@NSFileManager in libFlurry.a(FlurryFileCache.o) ".objc_class_name_NSString", referenced from: literal-pointer@_OBJC@_cls_refs@NSString in libFlurry.a(FlurrySession.o) literal-pointer@_OBJC@_cls_refs@NSString in libFlurry.a(FlurryHTTPEater.o) literal-pointer@_OBJC@_cls_refs@NSString in libFlurry.a(FlurryHTTPResponse.o) literal-pointer@_OBJC@_cls_refs@NSString in libFlurry.a(FlurryAd.o) literal-pointer@_OBJC@_cls_refs@NSString in libFlurry.a(FlurryAdParser.o) literal-pointer@_OBJC@_cls_refs@NSString in libFlurry.a(FlurryAdCanvasViewController.o) literal-pointer@_OBJC@_cls_refs@NSString in libFlurry.a(FlurryFileCache.o) literal-pointer@_OBJC@_cls_refs@NSString in libFlurry.a(FlurryImageCache.o) ".objc_class_name_NSError", referenced from: literal-pointer@_OBJC@_cls_refs@NSError in libFlurry.a(FlurryUtil.o) "_OBJC_METACLASS_$_FlurryAPI", referenced from: _OBJC_METACLASS_$_NFlurryAPI in NFlurryAPI.o ".objc_class_name_UIWindow", referenced from: literal-pointer@_OBJC@_cls_refs@UIWindow in libFlurry.a(FlurryAdCanvasViewController.o) ".objc_class_name_NSException", referenced from: literal-pointer@_OBJC@_cls_refs@NSException in libFlurry.a(FlurrySession.o) literal-pointer@_OBJC@_cls_refs@NSException in libFlurry.a(FlurryUtil.o) ".objc_class_name_UIColor", referenced from: literal-pointer@_OBJC@_cls_refs@UIColor in libFlurry.a(FlurryAdParser.o) literal-pointer@_OBJC@_cls_refs@UIColor in libFlurry.a(FlurryAdView.o) literal-pointer@_OBJC@_cls_refs@UIColor in libFlurry.a(FlurryAdCanvasViewController.o) literal-pointer@_OBJC@_cls_refs@UIColor in libFlurry.a(FlurryAdCanvasView.o) "_OBJC_CLASS_$_FlurryAPI", referenced from: _OBJC_CLASS_$_NFlurryAPI in NFlurryAPI.o ".objc_class_name_NSMutableSet", referenced from: literal-pointer@_OBJC@_cls_refs@NSMutableSet in libFlurry.a(FlurryAdAssignment.o) ".objc_class_name_UIFont", referenced from: literal-pointer@_OBJC@_cls_refs@UIFont in libFlurry.a(FlurryAdView.o) literal-pointer@_OBJC@_cls_refs@UIFont in libFlurry.a(FlurryAdCanvasView.o) ".objc_class_name_UIImage", referenced from: literal-pointer@_OBJC@_cls_refs@UIImage in libFlurry.a(FlurryAdParser.o) literal-pointer@_OBJC@_cls_refs@UIImage in libFlurry.a(FlurryAdImage.o) ".objc_class_name_UIApplication", referenced from: literal-pointer@_OBJC@_cls_refs@UIApplication in libFlurry.a(FlurryAdView.o) literal-pointer@_OBJC@_cls_refs@UIApplication in libFlurry.a(FlurryAdCanvasViewController.o) literal-pointer@_OBJC@_cls_refs@UIApplication in libFlurry.a(FlurryAdAppStoreConnectionDelegate.o) ".objc_class_name_UILabel", referenced from: literal-pointer@_OBJC@_cls_refs@UILabel in libFlurry.a(FlurryAdView.o) literal-pointer@_OBJC@_cls_refs@UILabel in libFlurry.a(FlurryAdCanvasViewController.o) literal-pointer@_OBJC@_cls_refs@UILabel in libFlurry.a(FlurryAdCanvasView.o) ".objc_class_name_UIView", referenced from: literal-pointer@_OBJC@_cls_refs@UIView in libFlurry.a(FlurryAdView.o) .objc_class_name_FlurryAdView in libFlurry.a(FlurryAdView.o) literal-pointer@_OBJC@_cls_refs@UIView in libFlurry.a(FlurryAdCanvasViewController.o) .objc_class_name_FlurryAdListView in libFlurry.a(FlurryAdListView.o) ".objc_class_name_NSMutableString", referenced from: literal-pointer@_OBJC@_cls_refs@NSMutableString in libFlurry.a(FlurrySession.o) literal-pointer@_OBJC@_cls_refs@NSMutableString in libFlurry.a(FlurryHTTPEater.o) literal-pointer@_OBJC@_cls_refs@NSMutableString in libFlurry.a(FlurryAdView.o) ".objc_class_name_NSTimer", referenced from: literal-pointer@_OBJC@_cls_refs@NSTimer in libFlurry.a(FlurryHeartBeater.o) ".objc_class_name_NSMutableData", referenced from: literal-pointer@_OBJC@_cls_refs@NSMutableData in libFlurry.a(FlurrySession.o) literal-pointer@_OBJC@_cls_refs@NSMutableData in libFlurry.a(FlurryConnectionDelegate.o) literal-pointer@_OBJC@_cls_refs@NSMutableData in libFlurry.a(FlurryAdImpression.o) literal-pointer@_OBJC@_cls_refs@NSMutableData in libFlurry.a(FlurryEvent.o) ".objc_class_name_NSNumber", referenced from: literal-pointer@_OBJC@_cls_refs@NSNumber in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) literal-pointer@_OBJC@_cls_refs@NSNumber in libFlurry.a(FlurrySession.o) literal-pointer@_OBJC@_cls_refs@NSNumber in libFlurry.a(FlurryAdParser.o) literal-pointer@_OBJC@_cls_refs@NSNumber in libFlurry.a(FlurryAdView.o) literal-pointer@_OBJC@_cls_refs@NSNumber in libFlurry.a(FlurryAdImpression.o) literal-pointer@_OBJC@_cls_refs@NSNumber in libFlurry.a(FlurryAdCanvasViewController.o) "_objc_exception_match", referenced from: +[FlurrySession createActiveFlurrySession:] in libFlurry.a(FlurrySession.o) +[FlurrySession dataForSessions:requestAds:] in libFlurry.a(FlurrySession.o) +[FlurrySession initialTimestamp] in libFlurry.a(FlurrySession.o) ".objc_class_name_UINavigationItem", referenced from: literal-pointer@_OBJC@_cls_refs@UINavigationItem in libFlurry.a(FlurryAdCanvasViewController.o) ".objc_class_name_UIViewController", referenced from: literal-pointer@_OBJC@_cls_refs@UIViewController in libFlurry.a(FlurryAdView.o) .objc_class_name_FlurryAdCanvasViewController in libFlurry.a(FlurryAdCanvasViewController.o) ".objc_class_name_NSMutableArray", referenced from: literal-pointer@_OBJC@_cls_refs@NSMutableArray in libFlurry.a(FlurrySession.o) literal-pointer@_OBJC@_cls_refs@NSMutableArray in libFlurry.a(FlurryHTTPEater.o) literal-pointer@_OBJC@_cls_refs@NSMutableArray in libFlurry.a(FlurryAdParser.o) literal-pointer@_OBJC@_cls_refs@NSMutableArray in libFlurry.a(FlurryImageCache.o) literal-pointer@_OBJC@_cls_refs@NSMutableArray in libFlurry.a(FlurryAdNavigationDelegate.o) ".objc_class_name_UIScreen", referenced from: literal-pointer@_OBJC@_cls_refs@UIScreen in libFlurry.a(FlurryAdCanvasViewController.o) ".objc_class_name_NSURLCache", referenced from: literal-pointer@_OBJC@_cls_refs@NSURLCache in libFlurry.a(FlurryHTTPEater.o) ".objc_class_name_NSNotificationCenter", referenced from: literal-pointer@_OBJC@_cls_refs@NSNotificationCenter in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) literal-pointer@_OBJC@_cls_refs@NSNotificationCenter in libFlurry.a(FlurryAdParser.o) literal-pointer@_OBJC@_cls_refs@NSNotificationCenter in libFlurry.a(FlurryAdView.o) literal-pointer@_OBJC@_cls_refs@NSNotificationCenter in libFlurry.a(FlurryHeartBeater.o) ".objc_class_name_NSInvocation", referenced from: literal-pointer@_OBJC@_cls_refs@NSInvocation in libFlurry.a(FlurryPageViewDelegate.o) ".objc_class_name_NSURL", referenced from: literal-pointer@_OBJC@_cls_refs@NSURL in libFlurry.a(FlurrySession.o) literal-pointer@_OBJC@_cls_refs@NSURL in libFlurry.a(FlurryHTTPEater.o) literal-pointer@_OBJC@_cls_refs@NSURL in libFlurry.a(FlurryAdView.o) literal-pointer@_OBJC@_cls_refs@NSURL in libFlurry.a(FlurryAdCanvasViewController.o) "_objc_exception_extract", referenced from: +[FlurryAPI startSession:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI startSession:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI endSession] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI endSession] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI pauseSession] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI pauseSession] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI resumeSession] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI resumeSession] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI logEvent:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI logEvent:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI logEvent:withParameters:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI logEvent:withParameters:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI logEvent:timed:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI logEvent:timed:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI logEvent:withParameters:timed:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI logEvent:withParameters:timed:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI endTimedEvent:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI endTimedEvent:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI logError:message:exception:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI logError:message:exception:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI logError:message:error:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI logError:message:error:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI countPageViews:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI countPageViews:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI countPageView] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI countPageView] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI setUserID:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI setUserID:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI setEventLoggingEnabled:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI setEventLoggingEnabled:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI setServerURL:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI setServerURL:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI setCanvasURL:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI setCanvasURL:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI setLandscapeCanvasURL:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI setLandscapeCanvasURL:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI setAppStoreURL:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI setAppStoreURL:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI setSessionReportsOnCloseEnabled:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI setSessionReportsOnCloseEnabled:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI setAppVersion:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI setAppVersion:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI setGender:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI setGender:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI setAge:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI setAge:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI getHook:xLoc:yLoc:view:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI getHook:xLoc:yLoc:view:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI getHook:xLoc:yLoc:view:attachToView:orientation:canvasOrientation:autoRefresh:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI getHook:xLoc:yLoc:view:attachToView:orientation:canvasOrientation:autoRefresh:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI updateHook:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI updateHook:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI removeHook:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI removeHook:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI openCatalog:canvasOrientation:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI openCatalog:canvasOrientation:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI setAppCircleDelegate:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI setAppCircleDelegate:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurrySession createActiveFlurrySession:] in libFlurry.a(FlurrySession.o) +[FlurrySession createActiveFlurrySession:] in libFlurry.a(FlurrySession.o) +[FlurrySession sendSessionsToServerWithTimeout:useWebView:requestAds:] in libFlurry.a(FlurrySession.o) +[FlurrySession sendSessionsToServerWithTimeout:useWebView:requestAds:] in libFlurry.a(FlurrySession.o) +[FlurrySession dataForSessions:requestAds:] in libFlurry.a(FlurrySession.o) +[FlurrySession dataForSessions:requestAds:] in libFlurry.a(FlurrySession.o) +[FlurrySession initialTimestamp] in libFlurry.a(FlurrySession.o) +[FlurrySession initialTimestamp] in libFlurry.a(FlurrySession.o) +[FlurryAdParser oldInstance] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAdParser.o) +[FlurryAdParser instance] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAdParser.o) -[FlurryAdView initWithAd:hook:xLoc:yLoc:parent:attachToView:orientation:canvasOrientation:autoRefresh:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAdView.o) -[FlurryAdView initWithAd:hook:xLoc:yLoc:parent:attachToView:orientation:canvasOrientation:autoRefresh:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAdView.o) -[FlurryAdView refreshWithAd] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAdView.o) -[FlurryAdView refreshWithAd] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAdView.o) -[FlurryAdView updateToOrientation] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAdView.o) -[FlurryAdView updateToOrientation] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAdView.o) -[FlurryAdView touchesEnded:withEvent:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAdView.o) -[FlurryAdView touchesEnded:withEvent:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAdView.o) -[FlurryAdView alertView:clickedButtonAtIndex:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAdView.o) -[FlurryAdView alertView:clickedButtonAtIndex:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAdView.o) -[FlurryAdView checkBannerLocation] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAdView.o) -[FlurryAdView checkBannerLocation] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAdView.o) -[FlurryAdView dealloc] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAdView.o) -[FlurryAdView dealloc] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAdView.o) -[FlurryPageViewDelegate navigationController:didShowViewController:animated:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryPageViewDelegate.o) -[FlurryPageViewDelegate navigationController:didShowViewController:animated:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryPageViewDelegate.o) -[FlurryPageViewDelegate navigationController:willShowViewController:animated:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryPageViewDelegate.o) -[FlurryPageViewDelegate navigationController:willShowViewController:animated:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryPageViewDelegate.o) -[FlurryPageViewDelegate tabBarController:shouldSelectViewController:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryPageViewDelegate.o) -[FlurryPageViewDelegate tabBarController:shouldSelectViewController:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryPageViewDelegate.o) -[FlurryPageViewDelegate tabBarController:didSelectViewController:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryPageViewDelegate.o) -[FlurryPageViewDelegate tabBarController:didSelectViewController:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryPageViewDelegate.o) -[FlurryPageViewDelegate tabBarController:willBeginCustomizingViewControllers:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryPageViewDelegate.o) -[FlurryPageViewDelegate tabBarController:willBeginCustomizingViewControllers:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryPageViewDelegate.o) -[FlurryPageViewDelegate tabBarController:willEndCustomizingViewControllers:changed:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryPageViewDelegate.o) -[FlurryPageViewDelegate tabBarController:willEndCustomizingViewControllers:changed:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryPageViewDelegate.o) -[FlurryPageViewDelegate tabBarController:didEndCustomizingViewControllers:changed:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryPageViewDelegate.o) -[FlurryPageViewDelegate tabBarController:didEndCustomizingViewControllers:changed:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryPageViewDelegate.o) -[FlurryAdCanvasViewController dealloc] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAdCanvasViewController.o) -[FlurryAdCanvasViewController dealloc] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAdCanvasViewController.o) +[FlurryFileCache createInstanceWithApiKey:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryFileCache.o) +[FlurryAdAssignment createInstance] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAdAssignment.o) +[FlurryHeartBeater createAndStartInstance:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryHeartBeater.o) +[FlurryImageCache createInstanceWithFileCache:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryImageCache.o) ".objc_class_name_NSMutableURLRequest", referenced from: literal-pointer@_OBJC@_cls_refs@NSMutableURLRequest in libFlurry.a(FlurryHTTPEater.o) ".objc_class_name_NSRunLoop", referenced from: literal-pointer@_OBJC@_cls_refs@NSRunLoop in libFlurry.a(FlurryHTTPEater.o) ".objc_class_name_NSKeyedUnarchiver", referenced from: literal-pointer@_OBJC@_cls_refs@NSKeyedUnarchiver in libFlurry.a(FlurrySession.o) literal-pointer@_OBJC@_cls_refs@NSKeyedUnarchiver in libFlurry.a(FlurryFileCache.o) ".objc_class_name_NSData", referenced from: literal-pointer@_OBJC@_cls_refs@NSData in libFlurry.a(FlurrySession.o) literal-pointer@_OBJC@_cls_refs@NSData in libFlurry.a(FlurryAdParser.o) ".objc_class_name_NSDate", referenced from: literal-pointer@_OBJC@_cls_refs@NSDate in libFlurry.a(FlurrySession.o) literal-pointer@_OBJC@_cls_refs@NSDate in libFlurry.a(FlurryHTTPEater.o) literal-pointer@_OBJC@_cls_refs@NSDate in libFlurry.a(FlurryAdView.o) literal-pointer@_OBJC@_cls_refs@NSDate in libFlurry.a(FlurryAdImpression.o) literal-pointer@_OBJC@_cls_refs@NSDate in libFlurry.a(FlurryEvent.o) ".objc_class_name_UIBarButtonItem", referenced from: literal-pointer@_OBJC@_cls_refs@UIBarButtonItem in libFlurry.a(FlurryAdCanvasViewController.o) ".objc_class_name_NSURLRequest", referenced from: literal-pointer@_OBJC@_cls_refs@NSURLRequest in libFlurry.a(FlurryAdCanvasViewController.o) literal-pointer@_OBJC@_cls_refs@NSURLRequest in libFlurry.a(FlurryAdAppStoreConnectionDelegate.o) ".objc_class_name_UIDevice", referenced from: literal-pointer@_OBJC@_cls_refs@UIDevice in libFlurry.a(FlurrySession.o) literal-pointer@_OBJC@_cls_refs@UIDevice in libFlurry.a(FlurryAdView.o) ".objc_class_name_UIImageView", referenced from: literal-pointer@_OBJC@_cls_refs@UIImageView in libFlurry.a(FlurryAdView.o) literal-pointer@_OBJC@_cls_refs@UIImageView in libFlurry.a(FlurryAdCanvasViewController.o) literal-pointer@_OBJC@_cls_refs@UIImageView in libFlurry.a(FlurryAdCanvasView.o) "_objc_exception_try_exit", referenced from: +[FlurryAPI startSession:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI endSession] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI pauseSession] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI resumeSession] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI logEvent:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI logEvent:withParameters:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI logEvent:timed:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI logEvent:withParameters:timed:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI endTimedEvent:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI logError:message:exception:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI logError:message:error:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI countPageViews:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI countPageView] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI setUserID:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI setEventLoggingEnabled:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI setServerURL:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI setCanvasURL:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI setLandscapeCanvasURL:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI setAppStoreURL:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI setSessionReportsOnCloseEnabled:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI setAppVersion:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI setGender:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI setAge:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI getHook:xLoc:yLoc:view:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI getHook:xLoc:yLoc:view:attachToView:orientation:canvasOrientation:autoRefresh:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI updateHook:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI removeHook:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI openCatalog:canvasOrientation:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI setAppCircleDelegate:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurrySession createActiveFlurrySession:] in libFlurry.a(FlurrySession.o) +[FlurrySession createActiveFlurrySession:] in libFlurry.a(FlurrySession.o) +[FlurrySession sendSessionsToServerWithTimeout:useWebView:requestAds:] in libFlurry.a(FlurrySession.o) +[FlurrySession dataForSessions:requestAds:] in libFlurry.a(FlurrySession.o) +[FlurrySession dataForSessions:requestAds:] in libFlurry.a(FlurrySession.o) +[FlurrySession initialTimestamp] in libFlurry.a(FlurrySession.o) +[FlurrySession initialTimestamp] in libFlurry.a(FlurrySession.o) +[FlurrySession initialTimestamp] in libFlurry.a(FlurrySession.o) +[FlurryAdParser oldInstance] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAdParser.o) +[FlurryAdParser instance] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAdParser.o) -[FlurryAdView initWithAd:hook:xLoc:yLoc:parent:attachToView:orientation:canvasOrientation:autoRefresh:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAdView.o) -[FlurryAdView refreshWithAd] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAdView.o) -[FlurryAdView updateToOrientation] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAdView.o) -[FlurryAdView touchesEnded:withEvent:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAdView.o) -[FlurryAdView alertView:clickedButtonAtIndex:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAdView.o) -[FlurryAdView checkBannerLocation] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAdView.o) -[FlurryAdView dealloc] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAdView.o) -[FlurryPageViewDelegate navigationController:didShowViewController:animated:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryPageViewDelegate.o) -[FlurryPageViewDelegate navigationController:willShowViewController:animated:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryPageViewDelegate.o) -[FlurryPageViewDelegate tabBarController:shouldSelectViewController:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryPageViewDelegate.o) -[FlurryPageViewDelegate tabBarController:didSelectViewController:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryPageViewDelegate.o) -[FlurryPageViewDelegate tabBarController:willBeginCustomizingViewControllers:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryPageViewDelegate.o) -[FlurryPageViewDelegate tabBarController:willEndCustomizingViewControllers:changed:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryPageViewDelegate.o) -[FlurryPageViewDelegate tabBarController:didEndCustomizingViewControllers:changed:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryPageViewDelegate.o) -[FlurryAdCanvasViewController dealloc] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAdCanvasViewController.o) +[FlurryFileCache createInstanceWithApiKey:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryFileCache.o) +[FlurryAdAssignment createInstance] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAdAssignment.o) +[FlurryHeartBeater createAndStartInstance:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryHeartBeater.o) +[FlurryImageCache createInstanceWithFileCache:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryImageCache.o) ".objc_class_name_NSDateFormatter", referenced from: literal-pointer@_OBJC@_cls_refs@NSDateFormatter in libFlurry.a(FlurrySession.o) "_objc_exception_try_enter", referenced from: +[FlurryAPI startSession:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI startSession:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI endSession] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI endSession] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI pauseSession] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI pauseSession] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI resumeSession] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI resumeSession] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI logEvent:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI logEvent:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI logEvent:withParameters:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI logEvent:withParameters:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI logEvent:timed:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI logEvent:timed:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI logEvent:withParameters:timed:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI logEvent:withParameters:timed:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI endTimedEvent:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI endTimedEvent:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI logError:message:exception:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI logError:message:exception:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI logError:message:error:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI logError:message:error:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI countPageViews:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI countPageViews:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI countPageView] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI countPageView] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI setUserID:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI setUserID:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI setEventLoggingEnabled:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI setEventLoggingEnabled:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI setServerURL:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI setServerURL:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI setCanvasURL:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI setCanvasURL:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI setLandscapeCanvasURL:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI setLandscapeCanvasURL:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI setAppStoreURL:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI setAppStoreURL:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI setSessionReportsOnCloseEnabled:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI setSessionReportsOnCloseEnabled:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI setAppVersion:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI setAppVersion:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI setGender:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI setGender:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI setAge:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI setAge:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI getHook:xLoc:yLoc:view:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI getHook:xLoc:yLoc:view:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI getHook:xLoc:yLoc:view:attachToView:orientation:canvasOrientation:autoRefresh:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI getHook:xLoc:yLoc:view:attachToView:orientation:canvasOrientation:autoRefresh:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI updateHook:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI updateHook:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI removeHook:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI removeHook:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI openCatalog:canvasOrientation:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI openCatalog:canvasOrientation:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI setAppCircleDelegate:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurryAPI setAppCircleDelegate:] in libFlurry.a(FlurryAPI.o) +[FlurrySession createActiveFlurrySession:] in libFlurry.a(FlurrySession.o) +[FlurrySession createActiveFlurrySession:] in libFlurry.a(FlurrySession.o) +[FlurrySession sendSessionsToServerWithTimeout:useWebView:requestAds:] in libFlurry.a(FlurrySession.o)

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  • .NET WebRequest.PreAuthenticate not quite what it sounds like

    - by Rick Strahl
    I’ve run into the  problem a few times now: How to pre-authenticate .NET WebRequest calls doing an HTTP call to the server – essentially send authentication credentials on the very first request instead of waiting for a server challenge first? At first glance this sound like it should be easy: The .NET WebRequest object has a PreAuthenticate property which sounds like it should force authentication credentials to be sent on the first request. Looking at the MSDN example certainly looks like it does: http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/system.net.webrequest.preauthenticate.aspx Unfortunately the MSDN sample is wrong. As is the text of the Help topic which incorrectly leads you to believe that PreAuthenticate… wait for it - pre-authenticates. But it doesn’t allow you to set credentials that are sent on the first request. What this property actually does is quite different. It doesn’t send credentials on the first request but rather caches the credentials ONCE you have already authenticated once. Http Authentication is based on a challenge response mechanism typically where the client sends a request and the server responds with a 401 header requesting authentication. So the client sends a request like this: GET /wconnect/admin/wc.wc?_maintain~ShowStatus HTTP/1.1 Host: rasnote User-Agent: Mozilla/5.0 (Windows; U; Windows NT 6.1; en-US; rv:1.9.1.3) Gecko/20090824 Firefox/3.5.3 (.NET CLR 4.0.20506) Accept: text/html,application/xhtml+xml,application/xml;q=0.9,*/*;q=0.8 Accept-Language: en,de;q=0.7,en-us;q=0.3 Accept-Encoding: gzip,deflate Accept-Charset: ISO-8859-1,utf-8;q=0.7,*;q=0.7 Keep-Alive: 300 Connection: keep-alive and the server responds with: HTTP/1.1 401 Unauthorized Cache-Control: private Content-Type: text/html; charset=utf-8 Server: Microsoft-IIS/7.5 WWW-Authenticate: basic realm=rasnote" X-AspNet-Version: 2.0.50727 WWW-Authenticate: Negotiate WWW-Authenticate: NTLM WWW-Authenticate: Basic realm="rasnote" X-Powered-By: ASP.NET Date: Tue, 27 Oct 2009 00:58:20 GMT Content-Length: 5163 plus the actual error message body. The client then is responsible for re-sending the current request with the authentication token information provided (in this case Basic Auth): GET /wconnect/admin/wc.wc?_maintain~ShowStatus HTTP/1.1 Host: rasnote User-Agent: Mozilla/5.0 (Windows; U; Windows NT 6.1; en-US; rv:1.9.1.3) Gecko/20090824 Firefox/3.5.3 (.NET CLR 4.0.20506) Accept: text/html,application/xhtml+xml,application/xml;q=0.9,*/*;q=0.8 Accept-Language: en,de;q=0.7,en-us;q=0.3 Accept-Encoding: gzip,deflate Accept-Charset: ISO-8859-1,utf-8;q=0.7,*;q=0.7 Keep-Alive: 300 Connection: keep-alive Cookie: TimeTrakker=2HJ1998WH06696; WebLogCommentUser=Rick Strahl|http://www.west-wind.com/|[email protected]; WebStoreUser=b8bd0ed9 Authorization: Basic cgsf12aDpkc2ZhZG1zMA== Once the authorization info is sent the server responds with the actual page result. Now if you use WebRequest (or WebClient) the default behavior is to re-authenticate on every request that requires authorization. This means if you look in  Fiddler or some other HTTP client Proxy that captures requests you’ll see that each request re-authenticates: Here are two requests fired back to back: and you can see the 401 challenge, the 200 response for both requests. If you watch this same conversation between a browser and a server you’ll notice that the first 401 is also there but the subsequent 401 requests are not present. WebRequest.PreAuthenticate And this is precisely what the WebRequest.PreAuthenticate property does: It’s a caching mechanism that caches the connection credentials for a given domain in the active process and resends it on subsequent requests. It does not send credentials on the first request but it will cache credentials on subsequent requests after authentication has succeeded: string url = "http://rasnote/wconnect/admin/wc.wc?_maintain~ShowStatus"; HttpWebRequest req = HttpWebRequest.Create(url) as HttpWebRequest; req.PreAuthenticate = true; req.Credentials = new NetworkCredential("rick", "secret", "rasnote"); req.AuthenticationLevel = System.Net.Security.AuthenticationLevel.MutualAuthRequested; req.UserAgent = ": Mozilla/5.0 (Windows; U; Windows NT 6.1; en-US; rv:1.9.1.3) Gecko/20090824 Firefox/3.5.3 (.NET CLR 4.0.20506)"; WebResponse resp = req.GetResponse(); resp.Close(); req = HttpWebRequest.Create(url) as HttpWebRequest; req.PreAuthenticate = true; req.Credentials = new NetworkCredential("rstrahl", "secret", "rasnote"); req.AuthenticationLevel = System.Net.Security.AuthenticationLevel.MutualAuthRequested; req.UserAgent = ": Mozilla/5.0 (Windows; U; Windows NT 6.1; en-US; rv:1.9.1.3) Gecko/20090824 Firefox/3.5.3 (.NET CLR 4.0.20506)"; resp = req.GetResponse(); which results in the desired sequence: where only the first request doesn’t send credentials. This is quite useful as it saves quite a few round trips to the server – bascially it saves one auth request request for every authenticated request you make. In most scenarios I think you’d want to send these credentials this way but one downside to this is that there’s no way to log out the client. Since the client always sends the credentials once authenticated only an explicit operation ON THE SERVER can undo the credentials by forcing another login explicitly (ie. re-challenging with a forced 401 request). Forcing Basic Authentication Credentials on the first Request On a few occasions I’ve needed to send credentials on a first request – mainly to some oddball third party Web Services (why you’d want to use Basic Auth on a Web Service is beyond me – don’t ask but it’s not uncommon in my experience). This is true of certain services that are using Basic Authentication (especially some Apache based Web Services) and REQUIRE that the authentication is sent right from the first request. No challenge first. Ugly but there it is. Now the following works only with Basic Authentication because it’s pretty straight forward to create the Basic Authorization ‘token’ in code since it’s just an unencrypted encoding of the user name and password into base64. As you might guess this is totally unsecure and should only be used when using HTTPS/SSL connections (i’m not in this example so I can capture the Fiddler trace and my local machine doesn’t have a cert installed, but for production apps ALWAYS use SSL with basic auth). The idea is that you simply add the required Authorization header to the request on your own along with the authorization string that encodes the username and password: string url = "http://rasnote/wconnect/admin/wc.wc?_maintain~ShowStatus"; HttpWebRequest req = HttpWebRequest.Create(url) as HttpWebRequest; string user = "rick"; string pwd = "secret"; string domain = "www.west-wind.com"; string auth = "Basic " + Convert.ToBase64String(System.Text.Encoding.Default.GetBytes(user + ":" + pwd)); req.PreAuthenticate = true; req.AuthenticationLevel = System.Net.Security.AuthenticationLevel.MutualAuthRequested;req.Headers.Add("Authorization", auth); req.UserAgent = ": Mozilla/5.0 (Windows; U; Windows NT 6.1; en-US; rv:1.9.1.3) Gecko/20090824 Firefox/3.5.3 (.NET CLR 4.0.20506)"; WebResponse resp = req.GetResponse(); resp.Close(); This works and causes the request to immediately send auth information to the server. However, this only works with Basic Auth because you can actually create the authentication credentials easily on the client because it’s essentially clear text. The same doesn’t work for Windows or Digest authentication since you can’t easily create the authentication token on the client and send it to the server. Another issue with this approach is that PreAuthenticate has no effect when you manually force the authentication. As far as Web Request is concerned it never sent the authentication information so it’s not actually caching the value any longer. If you run 3 requests in a row like this: string url = "http://rasnote/wconnect/admin/wc.wc?_maintain~ShowStatus"; HttpWebRequest req = HttpWebRequest.Create(url) as HttpWebRequest; string user = "ricks"; string pwd = "secret"; string domain = "www.west-wind.com"; string auth = "Basic " + Convert.ToBase64String(System.Text.Encoding.Default.GetBytes(user + ":" + pwd)); req.PreAuthenticate = true; req.Headers.Add("Authorization", auth); req.UserAgent = ": Mozilla/5.0 (Windows; U; Windows NT 6.1; en-US; rv:1.9.1.3) Gecko/20090824 Firefox/3.5.3 (.NET CLR 4.0.20506)"; WebResponse resp = req.GetResponse(); resp.Close(); req = HttpWebRequest.Create(url) as HttpWebRequest; req.PreAuthenticate = true; req.Credentials = new NetworkCredential(user, pwd, domain); req.UserAgent = ": Mozilla/5.0 (Windows; U; Windows NT 6.1; en-US; rv:1.9.1.3) Gecko/20090824 Firefox/3.5.3 (.NET CLR 4.0.20506)"; resp = req.GetResponse(); resp.Close(); req = HttpWebRequest.Create(url) as HttpWebRequest; req.PreAuthenticate = true; req.Credentials = new NetworkCredential(user, pwd, domain); req.UserAgent = ": Mozilla/5.0 (Windows; U; Windows NT 6.1; en-US; rv:1.9.1.3) Gecko/20090824 Firefox/3.5.3 (.NET CLR 4.0.20506)"; resp = req.GetResponse(); you’ll find the trace looking like this: where the first request (the one we explicitly add the header to) authenticates, the second challenges, and any subsequent ones then use the PreAuthenticate credential caching. In effect you’ll end up with one extra 401 request in this scenario, which is still better than 401 challenges on each request. Getting Access to WebRequest in Classic .NET Web Service Clients If you’re running a classic .NET Web Service client (non-WCF) one issue with the above is how do you get access to the WebRequest to actually add the custom headers to do the custom Authentication described above? One easy way is to implement a partial class that allows you add headers with something like this: public partial class TaxService { protected NameValueCollection Headers = new NameValueCollection(); public void AddHttpHeader(string key, string value) { this.Headers.Add(key,value); } public void ClearHttpHeaders() { this.Headers.Clear(); } protected override WebRequest GetWebRequest(Uri uri) { HttpWebRequest request = (HttpWebRequest) base.GetWebRequest(uri); request.Headers.Add(this.Headers); return request; } } where TaxService is the name of the .NET generated proxy class. In code you can then call AddHttpHeader() anywhere to add additional headers which are sent as part of the GetWebRequest override. Nice and simple once you know where to hook it. For WCF there’s a bit more work involved by creating a message extension as described here: http://weblogs.asp.net/avnerk/archive/2006/04/26/Adding-custom-headers-to-every-WCF-call-_2D00_-a-solution.aspx. FWIW, I think that HTTP header manipulation should be readily available on any HTTP based Web Service client DIRECTLY without having to subclass or implement a special interface hook. But alas a little extra work is required in .NET to make this happen Not a Common Problem, but when it happens… This has been one of those issues that is really rare, but it’s bitten me on several occasions when dealing with oddball Web services – a couple of times in my own work interacting with various Web Services and a few times on customer projects that required interaction with credentials-first services. Since the servers determine the protocol, we don’t have a choice but to follow the protocol. Lovely following standards that implementers decide to ignore, isn’t it? :-}© Rick Strahl, West Wind Technologies, 2005-2010Posted in .NET  CSharp  Web Services  

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  • Silverlight Tree View with Multiple Levels

    - by psheriff
    There are many examples of the Silverlight Tree View that you will find on the web, however, most of them only show you how to go to two levels. What if you have more than two levels? This is where understanding exactly how the Hierarchical Data Templates works is vital. In this blog post, I am going to break down how these templates work so you can really understand what is going on underneath the hood. To start, let’s look at the typical two-level Silverlight Tree View that has been hard coded with the values shown below: <sdk:TreeView>  <sdk:TreeViewItem Header="Managers">    <TextBlock Text="Michael" />    <TextBlock Text="Paul" />  </sdk:TreeViewItem>  <sdk:TreeViewItem Header="Supervisors">    <TextBlock Text="John" />    <TextBlock Text="Tim" />    <TextBlock Text="David" />  </sdk:TreeViewItem></sdk:TreeView> Figure 1 shows you how this tree view looks when you run the Silverlight application. Figure 1: A hard-coded, two level Tree View. Next, let’s create three classes to mimic the hard-coded Tree View shown above. First, you need an Employee class and an EmployeeType class. The Employee class simply has one property called Name. The constructor is created to accept a “name” argument that you can use to set the Name property when you create an Employee object. public class Employee{  public Employee(string name)  {    Name = name;  }   public string Name { get; set; }} Finally you create an EmployeeType class. This class has one property called EmpType and contains a generic List<> collection of Employee objects. The property that holds the collection is called Employees. public class EmployeeType{  public EmployeeType(string empType)  {    EmpType = empType;    Employees = new List<Employee>();  }   public string EmpType { get; set; }  public List<Employee> Employees { get; set; }} Finally we have a collection class called EmployeeTypes created using the generic List<> class. It is in the constructor for this class where you will build the collection of EmployeeTypes and fill it with Employee objects: public class EmployeeTypes : List<EmployeeType>{  public EmployeeTypes()  {    EmployeeType type;            type = new EmployeeType("Manager");    type.Employees.Add(new Employee("Michael"));    type.Employees.Add(new Employee("Paul"));    this.Add(type);     type = new EmployeeType("Project Managers");    type.Employees.Add(new Employee("Tim"));    type.Employees.Add(new Employee("John"));    type.Employees.Add(new Employee("David"));    this.Add(type);  }} You now have a data hierarchy in memory (Figure 2) which is what the Tree View control expects to receive as its data source. Figure 2: A hierachial data structure of Employee Types containing a collection of Employee objects. To connect up this hierarchy of data to your Tree View you create an instance of the EmployeeTypes class in XAML as shown in line 13 of Figure 3. The key assigned to this object is “empTypes”. This key is used as the source of data to the entire Tree View by setting the ItemsSource property as shown in Figure 3, Callout #1. Figure 3: You need to start from the bottom up when laying out your templates for a Tree View. The ItemsSource property of the Tree View control is used as the data source in the Hierarchical Data Template with the key of employeeTypeTemplate. In this case there is only one Hierarchical Data Template, so any data you wish to display within that template comes from the collection of Employee Types. The TextBlock control in line 20 uses the EmpType property of the EmployeeType class. You specify the name of the Hierarchical Data Template to use in the ItemTemplate property of the Tree View (Callout #2). For the second (and last) level of the Tree View control you use a normal <DataTemplate> with the name of employeeTemplate (line 14). The Hierarchical Data Template in lines 17-21 sets its ItemTemplate property to the key name of employeeTemplate (Line 19 connects to Line 14). The source of the data for the <DataTemplate> needs to be a property of the EmployeeTypes collection used in the Hierarchical Data Template. In this case that is the Employees property. In the Employees property there is a “Name” property of the Employee class that is used to display the employee name in the second level of the Tree View (Line 15). What is important here is that your lowest level in your Tree View is expressed in a <DataTemplate> and should be listed first in your Resources section. The next level up in your Tree View should be a <HierarchicalDataTemplate> which has its ItemTemplate property set to the key name of the <DataTemplate> and the ItemsSource property set to the data you wish to display in the <DataTemplate>. The Tree View control should have its ItemsSource property set to the data you wish to display in the <HierarchicalDataTemplate> and its ItemTemplate property set to the key name of the <HierarchicalDataTemplate> object. It is in this way that you get the Tree View to display all levels of your hierarchical data structure. Three Levels in a Tree View Now let’s expand upon this concept and use three levels in our Tree View (Figure 4). This Tree View shows that you now have EmployeeTypes at the top of the tree, followed by a small set of employees that themselves manage employees. This means that the EmployeeType class has a collection of Employee objects. Each Employee class has a collection of Employee objects as well. Figure 4: When using 3 levels in your TreeView you will have 2 Hierarchical Data Templates and 1 Data Template. The EmployeeType class has not changed at all from our previous example. However, the Employee class now has one additional property as shown below: public class Employee{  public Employee(string name)  {    Name = name;    ManagedEmployees = new List<Employee>();  }   public string Name { get; set; }  public List<Employee> ManagedEmployees { get; set; }} The next thing that changes in our code is the EmployeeTypes class. The constructor now needs additional code to create a list of managed employees. Below is the new code. public class EmployeeTypes : List<EmployeeType>{  public EmployeeTypes()  {    EmployeeType type;    Employee emp;    Employee managed;     type = new EmployeeType("Manager");    emp = new Employee("Michael");    managed = new Employee("John");    emp.ManagedEmployees.Add(managed);    managed = new Employee("Tim");    emp.ManagedEmployees.Add(managed);    type.Employees.Add(emp);     emp = new Employee("Paul");    managed = new Employee("Michael");    emp.ManagedEmployees.Add(managed);    managed = new Employee("Sara");    emp.ManagedEmployees.Add(managed);    type.Employees.Add(emp);    this.Add(type);     type = new EmployeeType("Project Managers");    type.Employees.Add(new Employee("Tim"));    type.Employees.Add(new Employee("John"));    type.Employees.Add(new Employee("David"));    this.Add(type);  }} Now that you have all of the data built in your classes, you are now ready to hook up this three-level structure to your Tree View. Figure 5 shows the complete XAML needed to hook up your three-level Tree View. You can see in the XAML that there are now two Hierarchical Data Templates and one Data Template. Again you list the Data Template first since that is the lowest level in your Tree View. The next Hierarchical Data Template listed is the next level up from the lowest level, and finally you have a Hierarchical Data Template for the first level in your tree. You need to work your way from the bottom up when creating your Tree View hierarchy. XAML is processed from the top down, so if you attempt to reference a XAML key name that is below where you are referencing it from, you will get a runtime error. Figure 5: For three levels in a Tree View you will need two Hierarchical Data Templates and one Data Template. Each Hierarchical Data Template uses the previous template as its ItemTemplate. The ItemsSource of each Hierarchical Data Template is used to feed the data to the previous template. This is probably the most confusing part about working with the Tree View control. You are expecting the content of the current Hierarchical Data Template to use the properties set in the ItemsSource property of that template. But you need to look to the template lower down in the XAML to see the source of the data as shown in Figure 6. Figure 6: The properties you use within the Content of a template come from the ItemsSource of the next template in the resources section. Summary Understanding how to put together your hierarchy in a Tree View is simple once you understand that you need to work from the bottom up. Start with the bottom node in your Tree View and determine what that will look like and where the data will come from. You then build the next Hierarchical Data Template to feed the data to the previous template you created. You keep doing this for each level in your Tree View until you get to the last level. The data for that last Hierarchical Data Template comes from the ItemsSource in the Tree View itself. NOTE: You can download the sample code for this article by visiting my website at http://www.pdsa.com/downloads. Select “Tips & Tricks”, then select “Silverlight TreeView with Multiple Levels” from the drop down list.

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  • Silverlight Cream for November 08, 2011 -- #1165

    - by Dave Campbell
    In this Issue: Brian Noyes, Michael Crump, WindowsPhoneGeek, Erno de Weerd, Jesse Liberty, Derik Whittaker, Sumit Dutta, Asim Sajjad, Dhananjay Kumar, Kunal Chowdhury, and Beth Massi. Above the Fold: Silverlight: "Working with Prism 4 Part 1: Getting Started" Brian Noyes WP7: "Getting Started with the Coding4Fun toolkit Tile Control" WindowsPhoneGeek LightSwitch: "How to Connect to and Diagram your SQL Express Database in Visual Studio LightSwitch" Beth Massi Shoutouts: Michael Palermo's latest Desert Mountain Developers is up Michael Washington's latest Visual Studio #LightSwitch Daily is up From SilverlightCream.com: Working with Prism 4 Part 1: Getting Started Brian Noyes has a series starting at SilverlightShow about Prism 4 ... this is the first one, so a good time to jump in and pick up on an intro and basic info about Prism plus building your first Prism app. 10 Laps around Silverlight 5 (Part 5 of 10) Michael Crump has Part 5 of his 10-part Silverlight 5 investigation up at SilverlightShow talking about all the various text features added in Silverlight 5 Beta: Text Tracking and Leading, Linked and MultiColumn, OpenType, etc. Getting Started with the Coding4Fun toolkit Tile Control WindowsPhoneGeek takes on the Tile control from the Coding4Fun toolkit... as usual, great tutorial... diagrams, code, explanation Using AppHarbor, Bitbucket and Mercurial with ASP.NET and Silverlight – Part 2 CouchDB, Cloudant and Hammock Erno de Weerd has Part 2 of his trilogy and he's trying to beat David Anson for the long title record :) ... in this episode, he's adding in cloud storage to the mix in a 35-step tutorial. Background Audio Jesse Liberty's talking about background Audio... and no not the Muzak in the elevator (do they still have that?) ... he's tlking about the WP7.1 BackgroundAudioPlayer Using the ToggleSwitch in WinRT/Metro (for C#) Derik Whittaker shows off the ToggleSwitch for WinRT/Metro... not a lot to be said about it, but he says it all :) Part 19 - Windows Phone 7 - Access Phone Contacts Sumit Dutta has Part 19! of his WP7 series up... talking today about getting a phone number from the directory using the PhoneNumberChooserTask ContextMenu using MVVM Asim Sajjad shows how to make the Context Menu ViewModel friendly in this short tutorial. Code to make call in Windows Phone 7 Dhananjay Kumar's latest WP7 post is explaining how to make a call programmatically using the PhoneCallTask launcher. Silverlight Page Navigation Framework - Basic Concept Kunal Chowdhury has a 3-part tutorial series on Silverlight Navigation up. This is the first in the series, and he hits the basics... what constitutes a Page, and how to get started with the navigation framework. How to Connect to and Diagram your SQL Express Database in Visual Studio LightSwitch Beth Massi's latest LightSwitch post is on using the Data Designer to easily crete and model database tables... during development this is in SQL Express, but can be deployed to most SQL server db you like Stay in the 'Light! Twitter SilverlightNews | Twitter WynApse | WynApse.com | Tagged Posts | SilverlightCream Join me @ SilverlightCream | Phoenix Silverlight User Group Technorati Tags: Silverlight    Silverlight 3    Silverlight 4    Windows Phone MIX10

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  • What micro web-framework has the lowest overhead but includes templating

    - by Simon Martin
    I want to rewrite a simple small (10 page) website and besides a contact form it could be written in pure html. It is currently built with classic asp and Dreamweaver templates. The reason I'm not simply writing 10 html pages is that I want to keep the layout all in 1 place so would need either includes or a masterpage. I don't want to use Dreamweaver templates, or batch processing (like org-mode) because I want to be able to edit using notepad (or Visual Studio) because occasionally I might need to edit a file on the server (Go Daddy's IIS admin interface will let me edit text). I don't want to use ASP.NET MVC or WebForms (which I use in my day job) because I don't need all the overhead they bring with them when essentially I'm serving up 9 static files, 1 contact form and 1 list of clubs (that I aim to use jQuery to filter). The shared hosting package I have on Go Daddy seems to take a long time to spin up when serving aspx files. Currently the clubs page is driven from an MS SQL database that I try to keep up to date by manually checking the dojo locator on the main HQ pages and editing the entries myself, this is again way over the top. I aim to get a text file with the club details (probably in JSON or xml format) and use that as the source for the clubs page. There will need to be a bit of programming for this as the HQ site is unable to provide an extract / feed so something will have to scrape the site periodically to update my clubs persistence file. I'd like that to be automated - but I'm happy to have that triggered on a visit to the clubs page so I don't need to worry about scheduling a job. I would probably have a separate process that updates the persistence that has nothing to do with the rest of the site. Ideally I'd like to use Mercurial (or git) to publish, I know Bitbucket (and github) both serve static page sites so they wouldn't work in this scenario (dynamic pages and a contact form) but that's the model I'd like to use if there is such a thing. My requirements are: Simple templating system, 1 place to define header, footers, menu etc., that can be edited using just notepad. Very minimal / lightweight framework. I don't need a monster for 10 pages Must run either on IIS7 (shared Go Daddy Windows hosting) or other free host

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  • How do I Integrate Production Database Hot Fixes into Shared Database Development model?

    - by TetonSig
    We are using SQL Source Control 3, SQL Compare, SQL Data Compare from RedGate, Mercurial repositories, TeamCity and a set of 4 environments including production. I am working on getting us to a dedicated environment per developer, but for at least the next 6 months we are stuck with a shared model. To summarize our current system, we have a DEV SQL server where developers first make changes/additions. They commit their changes through SQL Source Control to a local hgdev repository. When they execute an hg push to the main repository, TeamCity listens for that and then (among other things) pushes hgdev repository to hgrc. Another TeamCity process listens for that and does a pull from hgrc and deploys the latest to a QA SQL Server where regression and integration tests are run. When those are passed a push from hgrc to hgprod occurs. We do a compare of hgprod to our PREPROD SQL Server and generate deployment/rollback scripts for our production release. Separate from the above we have database Hot Fixes that will need to be applied in between releases. The process there is for our Operations team make changes on the PreProd database, and then after testing, to use SQL Source Control to commit their hot fix changes to hgprod from the PREPROD database, and then do a compare from hgprod to PRODUCTION, create deployment scripts and run them on PRODUCTION. If we were in a dedicated database per developer model, we could simply automatically push hgprod back to hgdev and merge in the hot fix change (through TeamCity monitoring for hgprod checkins) and then developers would pick it up and merge it to their local repository and database periodically. However, given that with a shared model the DEV database itself is the source of all changes, this won't work. Pushing hotfixes back to hgdev will show up in SQL Source Control as being different than DEV SQL Server and therefore we need to overwrite the reposistory with the "change" from the DEV SQL Server. My only workaround so far is to just have OPS assign a developer the hotfix ticket with a script attached and then we run their hotfixes against DEV ourselves to merge them back in. I'm not happy with that solution. Other than working faster to get to dedicated environment, are they other ways to keep this loop going automatically?

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  • CodePlex Daily Summary for Wednesday, November 02, 2011

    CodePlex Daily Summary for Wednesday, November 02, 2011Popular ReleasesWYGIWYS Driver: 1.1.2.0 release: Win32, x86, kernel mode driver.Reset IPv6: 1.0.0.0: First release. Only works for Spanish and English operating system editions.BExplorer (Better Explorer): Better Explorer 2.0.0.631 Alpha: Changelog: Added: Some new functions in ribbon Added: Possibility to choose displayed columns Added: Basic Search Fixed: Some bugs after navigation Fixed: Attempt to fix slow navigation and slow start Known issues: - BreadcrumbBar fails on some situations - Basic search not work quite well in some situations Please if anyone find bugs be kind and report them at the Issue Tracker! Thanks!DotNetNuke® Community Edition: 05.06.04: Major Highlights Fixed issue with upgrades on systems that had upgraded the Telerik library to 6.0.0 Fixed issue with Razor Host upgrade to 5.6.3 The logic for module administration checks contains incorrect logic in 1 place, opening the possibility of a user with edit permissions gaining access to functionality they should not have through a particularly crafted url Security FixesBrowsers support the ability to remember common strings such as usernames/addresses etc. Code was adde...Terminals: Version 2.0 - Beta 2 Release: The team has finally put the nail into the official release date for version 2.0. As bugs are winding down on the 2.0 Roadmap we decided to push out another build - the first 2.0 Beta build. Please take time to use and abuse this release. We left logging in place, and this is a debug build so be sure to submit your logs on each bug reported, and please do report all bugs! Check the source code page on the site, this beta includes all commits since (and including) the 90428 check-in back i...iTuner - The iTunes Companion: iTuner 1.4.4322: Added German (unverified, apologies if incorrect) Properly source invariant resources with correct resIDs Replaced obsolete lyric providers with working providers Fix Pseudolater to correctly morph every third char Fix null reference in CatalogBaseTrack Folder Changes: Track Folder Changes 1.0: Track Folder Changes 1.0 (binary)Windows Workflow Foundation on Codeplex: Microsoft.Activities v1.8.8: Microsoft.Activities Overview How do I install Microsoft.Activities? Updates in this release9318Technical Analysis Engine for .NET: Technical Analysis Engine 1.25: What's new in the 1.25 release (2011-11-01): - Added Williams %R indicator - Added Moving Average Envelopes indicatorBF3Rcon.NET: BF3Rcon 3.0: This release is targeted for RCON documentation based on R3. Everything should be beta stable, but it's alpha because I haven't been able to fully test it. When a stable release is ready, a proper changelog will be kept. Important Edit: There's one method that will keep this from working in Mono. GeneratePasswordHash uses void HashAlgorithm.Dispose(), which isn't in Mono. This will have to be changed to Clear() in the next release. If anyone needs a Mono version of this immediately, you can...BoxWorld: BoxWorld_2011.10.30: BoxWorld - 8.0.1110.30 This is the initial release of BoxWorld. I'd recommend downloading the installer as it contains the compiled code and everything all nicely contained. By default, you end up with this directory structure: C:\Program Files\ViperWorks\BoxWorld C:\Program Files\ViperWorks\BoxWorld\Data C:\Program Files\ViperWorks\BoxWorld\Interface C:\Program Files\ViperWorks\BoxWorld\Source In the root you have the compiled EXE files, one for the main release, one for the LITE release ...VidCoder: 1.2.1: Fixed a couple regressions: video encoder was blank in queue and crashes with the High Profile preset when opening the Settings window. Fixed problem with auto-update introduced in 1.2.0. If you have 1.2.0 you will need to update manually to get this.Koober: Koober - The Ebook Creator 0.2: The official release of Koober as Open source. Koober is a ebook creator for Windows, and Koob Reader is the reader.patterns & practices: Enterprise Library Contrib: Enterprise Library Contrib - 5.0 (Oct 2011): This release of Enterprise Library Contrib is based on the Microsoft patterns & practices Enterprise Library 5.0 core and contains the following: Common extensionsTypeConfigurationElement<T> - A Polymorphic Configuration Element without having to be part of a PolymorphicConfigurationElementCollection. AnonymousConfigurationElement - A Configuration element that can be uniquely identified without having to define its name explicitly. Data Access Application Block extensionsMySql Provider - ...Network Monitor Open Source Parsers: Network Monitor Parsers 3.4.2748: The Network Monitor Parsers packages contain parsers for more than 400 network protocols, including RFC based public protocols and protocols for Microsoft products defined in the Microsoft Open Specifications for Windows and SQL Server. NetworkMonitor_Parsers.msi is the base parser package which defines parsers for commonly used public protocols and protocols for Microsoft Windows. In this release, NetowrkMonitor_Parsers.msi continues to improve quality and fix bugs. It has included the fo...Media Companion: MC 3.420b Weekly: Ensure .NET 4.0 Full Framework is installed. (Available from http://www.microsoft.com/download/en/details.aspx?id=17718) Ensure the NFO ID fix is applied when transitioning from versions prior to 3.416b. (Details here) Movies Fixed: Fanart and poster scraping issues TV Shows (Re)Added: Rebuild single show Fixed: Issue when shows are moved from original location Ability to handle " for actor nicknames Crash when episode name contains "<" (does not scrape yet) Clears fanart when switch...patterns & practices - Unity: Unity 3.0 for .NET4.5 Preview: The Unity 3.0.1026.0 Preview enables Unity to work on .NET 4.5 with both the WinRT and desktop profiles. The major changes include: Unity projects updated to target .NET 4.5. Dynamic build plans modified to use compiled lambda expressions instead of Reflection.Emit Converting reflection to use the new TypeInfo for reflection. Projects updated to work with the Microsoft Visual Studio 2011 Preview Notes/Known Issues: The Microsoft.Practices.Unity.UnityServiceLocator class cannot be use...Managed Extensibility Framework: MEF 2 Preview 4: Detailed information on this release is available on the BCL team blog.AcDown????? - Anime&Comic Downloader: AcDown????? v3.6: ?? ● AcDown??????????、??????,??????????????????????,???????Acfun、Bilibili、???、???、???、Tucao.cc、SF???、?????80????,???????????、?????????。 ● AcDown???????????????????????????,???,???????????????????。 ● AcDown???????C#??,????.NET Framework 2.0??。?????"Acfun?????"。 ????32??64? Windows XP/Vista/7 ????????????? ??:????????Windows XP???,?????????.NET Framework 2.0???(x86)?.NET Framework 2.0???(x64),?????"?????????"??? ??????????????,??????????: ??"AcDown?????"????????? ?? v3.6?? ??“????”...Microsoft Ajax Minifier: Microsoft Ajax Minifier 4.33: Add JSParser.ParseExpression method to parse JavaScript expressions rather than source-elements. Add -strict switch (CodeSettings.StrictMode) to force input code to ECMA5 Strict-mode (extra error-checking, "use strict" at top). Fixed bug when MinifyCode setting was set to false but RemoveUnneededCode was left it's default value of true.New ProjectsAlgorithms: algorithms, ACM C++ programs, Electronic design automation algorithmsAll-In-One: Ein Programm - Alle Funktionen Einfach Komponente erstellen - und schon gibt es eine Funktion mehr!Bar Code File Copy: Bar Code File Copy is a mobile app that allows user to initiate file transfer from a PC to another with the help of barcodes and Windows Phone 7.BlekBoox: Google Books API CF-Soft: this is my workspace to study C# programming.CodePaste.NET Tray Application: A simple tray application to create snippets on CodePaste.NET. Right click the app and select New Snippet. A snippet will be created, the contents of your clipboard will be pasted and your clipboard will be replaced with the URL after the code snippet is successfully posted.Common libs of fanthos: Fanthos.Libs.Controls provides panel and button with special draw and special events. Fanthos.Libs.Network provides class that you can use the method likes Async WCF in dotNet 2.0.Database Filesystem: The DBFS project implements a filesystem paradigm to the storage of objects in a database. The primary development language is Visual Basic .NET.Destructible Texture2D: The project shows how to create a destructible texture2D in XNA. This project is developed using the XNA framework and C# programming languageEject and Close CD Tray: For some reason i cannot seem to find any command line program to eject or close the cd tray. So i've created my own version and sharing it for everyone to use. It is an extremely simplistic program with the sole aim of ejecting or closing the cd tray and nothing else.Excel add-in for pricing options: Price options using various distributions.FDFToolkit .NET: FDFToolkit .NET makes it easier to read, write, create, populate, merge FDF, XDP, XFDF, and XML data with Acrobat and LiveCycle PDF forms. FDFToolkit.net utilizes iTextSharp 4.x technologies, under MPL license.Fiction Catalog: A catalog project designed to store information about fictional literature.Gangbee Software: This is customized version of Nopcommerce 1.9Guess Number: This simple program is letting you to guess number from 1 to 20. H? th?ng Khách s?n: H? th?ng qu?n lí khách s?nHelloTipi Photo Downloader: Permet de télécharger les photos en qualité original de votre site de famille [url:HelloTipi|http://www.hellotipi.com].Image Tagger & Resizer: Resize, and text in the lower right of picture with i.e. copyright information.Kinect Sensor Controller: A project using kinect sensor to control objectsKJFramework.Dynamic ??????: KJFramework.Dynamic ???????? KJFramework????????????????????,?????????: KJFramework.Dynamic(??????). ???????????????????????,???????????????,?????????, ????????????????????,????,???????????????,??????????(??,???????)。 ????,?????????????????????(Component), ??????DynamicDomainComponent??。 ??,????????????,???????????DynamicDomainService??。 ??????,???????????? ???????DynamicDomainService。 ??DynamicDomainService??,????????????????。 ?????, ????????????(Tunnel)???,??????(Tunnel)...Lan ETS Player Registration Software: This is the custom software that the Lan ETS staff uses to register people when they arrive at the LAN party.LINQ to Calil: LINQ to Calil ????? (http://calil.jp/) ???????? API ? LINQ ????????。???????????? LINQ ???????????????。.NET Framework 4 ???????、Silverlight ??????????。 LINQ to Calil ??????????????????????????????????????。Login Form in VB: <project name> makes it easier for <target user group> to <activity>. You'll no longer have to <activity>. It's developed in <programming language>.MbpGpsTester: MbpGpsTester is a gps test tool.Mi proyecto: Mi proyectoMy NuGET Packages: This project contains a custom program that allows you to quickly update NuGET packages from multiple sources and package feeds. It also contains set-up of some packages that are used by HydroDesktop.MyyoutubeforWp7: MyyoutubeforWp7 is a youtube application where users can search and view the videoNERO'S TOOLS: NEROS TOOLS will be an area of programming tools and resources for the automation control industry and the everyday usage of major control systems software.NetWebScript: NetWebScript is a IL to JavaScript compiler. It allow to write complex web application in C# or any other .Net language. It provide Visual Studio integration to debug into orginial sources. It allow to share code with server.Northern Lights WP7 Toolkit: Northern Lights WP7 Toolkit contains some common tools for WP7 Developers.SccmBoundaryHealthTool: .NET application that will search the AD forest for SCCM boundary configurations and report the following: * Overlapping boundaries, including those inter-boundary type, e.g. IP subnet overlaps with AD site. * Unassigned AD sites * Orphaned AD sites in SCCMSeven: Seven is a set of tools for programs development using the Oberon 07 language. SOAP Test Application (with EWS Tools): Application that allows testing of SOAP implementations, in particular Exchange Web Services.SocialCastDotNet: C# library for accessing the SocialCast APISosyal: Sosyal as.sqlce_perfDemo: just a bit of code to demonstrate sqlce insert performance on the desktop. I'm using sqlce on the desktop to persist data as its the fastest thing I can find. Insert perfromance seems to top out at around 65,000records/sec on my laptop but it also seems to limited at this point by my hard drive speeds. The sample code should be able to accept a dataTable, dataReader or dataset and persit to a sqlce database. Also in the code is a small wrapper on the sqlce connectionstring (localconne...SqlMon for OracleClient: This is a project to doing a tool just like Quest SQL Monitor that capture sql sentence in client side.So it's so cool that juect join in and user it. It's developed in C# and Visual Studio 2010 and bases on the EasyHook that is a powerfull .NET hook library.It injects in oci.dll and hook the "OCIStmtPrepare" function which excute before sql excuting,through the parameter "stms" we can get the sqltext and display itStackOverflow Offline Reader using a pdf reader: Using one or more keywords and number of questions to download, the app creates and displays a single pdf file of the questions and answers pertaining to the keyword(s). This enables the user to read questions in an offline manner or to read in a top/down fashion. std::streambuf wrapper for COM IStream: This provides a subclass of std::streambuf that wraps a COM IStream, so you can use an IStream with any C++ code that uses iostreams or the STL algorithms with a streambuf_iterator. It does no internal buffering whatsoever (I'd be happy to change this if someone needs it).step out ring signatures .net: Simple program to demonstrate how srs works in real world of .net.System Center Service Manager 2010 SP1 WCF and Web Service: Simple WCF Service and Web Service for SCSM 2010 SP1.System32 - SDK de componentes y acceso a datos para .NET: System32 - SDK de componentes y acceso a datos para .NET Taha Mail: A Java Web Based MailTest TDS: Test TFS - 1Track Folder Changes: Displays in real time a tree with the list of created/deleted/changed files in a specific directory and its subdirectoriesumbTrafficCentral: A plugin for Umbraco that adds robust and scalable handling of redirects, storing the data in the media library. WebDAV Test Application: Application to test WebDAV functionality.XnaXaml: XnaXaml allows you to add a XAML file to your Content Pipeline in XNA and edit straight from Visual Studio. It then takes the XAML file and parses through it to create mock objects that can be used to render controls to the screen in XNA. These mock objects can also be used to pass data to any GUI system you choose.???-?????????? ?? ????????????? ????????? ??????????? ??????? ???: Under construction

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  • Advice Needed: Developers blocked by waiting on code to merge from another branch using GitFlow

    - by fogwolf
    Our team just made the switch from FogBugz & Kiln/Mercurial to Jira & Stash/Git. We are using the Git Flow model for branching, adding subtask branches off of feature branches (relating to Jira subtasks of Jira features). We are using Stash to assign a reviewer when we create a pull request to merge back into the parent branch (usually develop but for subtasks back into the feature branch). The problem we're finding is that even with the best planning and breakdown of feature cases, when multiple developers are working together on the same feature, say on the front-end and back-end, if they are working on interdependent code that is in separate branches one developer ends up blocking the other. We've tried pulling between each others' branches as we develop. We've also tried creating local integration branches each developer can pull from multiple branches to test the integration as they develop. Finally, and this seems to work possibly the best for us so far, though with a bit more overhead, we have tried creating an integration branch off of the feature branch right off the bat. When a subtask branch (off of the feature branch) is ready for a pull request and code review, we also manually merge those change sets into this feature integration branch. Then all interested developers are able to pull from that integration branch into other dependent subtask branches. This prevents anyone from waiting for any branch they are dependent upon to pass code review. I know this isn't necessarily a Git issue - it has to do with working on interdependent code in multiple branches, mixed with our own work process and culture. If we didn't have the strict code-review policy for develop (true integration branch) then developer 1 could merge to develop for developer 2 to pull from. Another complication is that we are also required to do some preliminary testing as part of the code review process before handing the feature off to QA.This means that even if front-end developer 1 is pulling directly from back-end developer 2's branch as they go, if back-end developer 2 finishes and his/her pull request is sitting in code review for a week, then front-end developer 2 technically can't create his pull request/code review because his/her code reviewer can't test because back-end developer 2's code hasn't been merged into develop yet. Bottom line is we're finding ourselves in a much more serial rather than parallel approach in these instance, depending on which route we go, and would like to find a process to use to avoid this. Last thing I'll mention is we realize by sharing code across branches that haven't been code reviewed and finalized yet we are in essence using the beta code of others. To a certain extent I don't think we can avoid that and are willing to accept that to a degree. Anyway, any ideas, input, etc... greatly appreciated. Thanks!

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  • DevConnections Session Slides, Samples and Links

    - by Rick Strahl
    Finally coming up for air this week, after catching up with being on the road for the better part of three weeks. Here are my slides, samples and links for my four DevConnections Session two weeks ago in Vegas. I ended up doing one extra un-prepared for session on WebAPI and AJAX, as some of the speakers were either delayed or unable to make it at all to Vegas due to Sandy's mayhem. It was pretty hectic in the speaker room as Erik (our event coordinator extrodinaire) was scrambling to fill session slots with speakers :-). Surprisingly it didn't feel like the storm affected attendance drastically though, but I guess it's hard to tell without actual numbers. The conference was a lot of fun - it's been a while since I've been speaking at one of these larger conferences. I'd been taking a hiatus, and I forgot how much I enjoy actually giving talks. Preparing - well not  quite so much, especially since I ended up essentially preparing or completely rewriting for all three of these talks and I was stressing out a bit as I was sick the week before the conference and didn't get as much time to prepare as I wanted to. But - as always seems to be the case - it all worked out, but I guess those that attended have to be the judge of that… It was great to catch up with my speaker friends as well - man I feel out of touch. I got to spend a bunch of time with Dan Wahlin, Ward Bell, Julie Lerman and for about 10 minutes even got to catch up with the ever so busy Michele Bustamante. Lots of great technical discussions including a fun and heated REST controversy with Ward and Howard Dierking. There were also a number of great discussions with attendees, describing how they're using the technologies touched in my talks in live applications. I got some great ideas from some of these and I wish there would have been more opportunities for these kinds of discussions. One thing I miss at these Vegas events though is some sort of coherent event where attendees and speakers get to mingle. These Vegas conferences are just like "go to sessions, then go out and PARTY on the town" - it's Vegas after all! But I think that it's always nice to have at least one evening event where everybody gets to hang out together and trade stories and geek talk. Overall there didn't seem to be much opportunity for that beyond lunch or the small and short exhibit hall events which it seemed not many people actually went to. Anyways, a good time was had. I hope those of you that came to my sessions learned something useful. There were lots of great questions and discussions after the sessions - always appreciate hearing the real life scenarios that people deal with in relation to the abstracted scenarios in sessions. Here are the Session abstracts, a few comments and the links for downloading slides and  samples. It's not quite like being there, but I hope this stuff turns out to be useful to some of you. I'll be following up a couple of these sessions with white papers in the following weeks. Enjoy. ASP.NET Architecture: How ASP.NET Works at the Low Level Abstract:Interested in how ASP.NET works at a low level? ASP.NET is extremely powerful and flexible technology, but it's easy to forget about the core framework that underlies the higher level technologies like ASP.NET MVC, WebForms, WebPages, Web Services that we deal with on a day to day basis. The ASP.NET core drives all the higher level handlers and frameworks layered on top of it and with the core power comes some complexity in the form of a very rich object model that controls the flow of a request through the ASP.NET pipeline from Windows HTTP services down to the application level. To take full advantage of it, it helps to understand the underlying architecture and model. This session discusses the architecture of ASP.NET along with a number of useful tidbits that you can use for building and debugging your ASP.NET applications more efficiently. We look at overall architecture, how requests flow from the IIS (7 and later) Web Server to the ASP.NET runtime into HTTP handlers, modules and filters and finally into high-level handlers like MVC, Web Forms or Web API. Focus of this session is on the low-level aspects on the ASP.NET runtime, with examples that demonstrate the bootstrapping of ASP.NET, threading models, how Application Domains are used, startup bootstrapping, how configuration files are applied and how all of this relates to the applications you write either using low-level tools like HTTP handlers and modules or high-level pages or services sitting at the top of the ASP.NET runtime processing chain. Comments:I was surprised to see so many people show up for this session - especially since it was the last session on the last day and a short 1 hour session to boot. The room was packed and it was to see so many people interested the abstracts of architecture of ASP.NET beyond the immediate high level application needs. Lots of great questions in this talk as well - I only wish this session would have been the full hour 15 minutes as we just a little short of getting through the main material (didn't make it to Filters and Error handling). I haven't done this session in a long time and I had to pretty much re-figure all the system internals having to do with the ASP.NET bootstrapping in light for the changes that came with IIS 7 and later. The last time I did this talk was with IIS6, I guess it's been a while. I love doing this session, mainly because in my mind the core of ASP.NET overall is so cleanly designed to provide maximum flexibility without compromising performance that has clearly stood the test of time in the 10 years or so that .NET has been around. While there are a lot of moving parts, the technology is easy to manage once you understand the core components and the core model hasn't changed much even while the underlying architecture that drives has been almost completely revamped especially with the introduction of IIS 7 and later. Download Samples and Slides   Introduction to using jQuery with ASP.NET Abstract:In this session you'll learn how to take advantage of jQuery in your ASP.NET applications. Starting with an overview of jQuery client features via many short and fun examples, you'll find out about core features like the power of selectors for document element selection, manipulating these elements with jQuery's wrapped set methods in a browser independent way, how to hook up and handle events easily and generally apply concepts of unobtrusive JavaScript principles to client scripting. The second half of the session then delves into jQuery's AJAX features and several different ways how you can interact with ASP.NET on the server. You'll see examples of using ASP.NET MVC for serving HTML and JSON AJAX content, as well as using the new ASP.NET Web API to serve JSON and hypermedia content. You'll also see examples of client side templating/databinding with Handlebars and Knockout. Comments:This session was in a monster of a room and to my surprise it was nearly packed, given that this was a 100 level session. I can see that it's a good idea to continue to do intro sessions to jQuery as there appeared to be quite a number of folks who had not worked much with jQuery yet and who most likely could greatly benefit from using it. Seemed seemed to me the session got more than a few people excited to going if they hadn't yet :-).  Anyway I just love doing this session because it's mostly live coding and highly interactive - not many sessions that I can build things up from scratch and iterate on in an hour. jQuery makes that easy though. Resources: Slides and Code Samples Introduction to jQuery White Paper Introduction to ASP.NET Web API   Hosting the Razor Scripting Engine in Your Own Applications Abstract:The Razor Engine used in ASP.NET MVC and ASP.NET Web Pages is a free-standing scripting engine that can be disassociated from these Web-specific implementations and can be used in your own applications. Razor allows for a powerful mix of code and text rendering that makes it a wonderful tool for any sort of text generation, from creating HTML output in non-Web applications, to rendering mail merge-like functionality, to code generation for developer tools and even as a plug-in scripting engine. In this session, we'll look at the components that make up the Razor engine and how you can bootstrap it in your own applications to hook up templating. You'll find out how to create custom templates and manage Razor requests that can be pre-compiled, detecting page changes and act in ways similar to a full runtime. We look at ways that you can pass data into the engine and retrieve both the rendered output as well as result values in a package that makes it easy to plug Razor into your own applications. Comments:That this session was picked was a bit of a surprise to me, since it's a bit of a niche topic. Even more of a surprise was that during the session quite a few people who attended had actually used Razor externally and were there to find out more about how the process works and how to extend it. In the session I talk a bit about a custom Razor hosting implementation (Westwind.RazorHosting) and drilled into the various components required to build a custom Razor Hosting engine and a runtime around it. This sessions was a bit of a chore to prepare for as there are lots of technical implementation details that needed to be dealt with and squeezing that into an hour 15 is a bit tight (and that aren't addressed even by some of the wrapper libraries that exist). Found out though that there's quite a bit of interest in using a templating engine outside of web applications, or often side by side with the HTML output generated by frameworks like MVC or WebForms. An extra fun part of this session was that this was my first session and when I went to set up I realized I forgot my mini-DVI to VGA adapter cable to plug into the projector in my room - 6 minutes before the session was about to start. So I ended up sprinting the half a mile + back to my room - and back at a full sprint. I managed to be back only a couple of minutes late, but when I started I was out of breath for the first 10 minutes or so, while trying to talk. Musta sounded a bit funny as I was trying to not gasp too much :-) Resources: Slides and Code Samples Westwind.RazorHosting GitHub Project Original RazorHosting Blog Post   Introduction to ASP.NET Web API for AJAX Applications Abstract:WebAPI provides a new framework for creating REST based APIs, but it can also act as a backend to typical AJAX operations. This session covers the core features of Web API as it relates to typical AJAX application development. We’ll cover content-negotiation, routing and a variety of output generation options as well as managing data updates from the client in the context of a small Single Page Application style Web app. Finally we’ll look at some of the extensibility features in WebAPI to customize and extend Web API in a number and useful useful ways. Comments:This session was a fill in for session slots not filled due MIA speakers stranded by Sandy. I had samples from my previous Web API article so decided to go ahead and put together a session from it. Given that I spent only a couple of hours preparing and putting slides together I was glad it turned out as it did - kind of just ran itself by way of the examples I guess as well as nice audience interactions and questions. Lots of interest - and also some confusion about when Web API makes sense. Both this session and the jQuery session ended up getting a ton of questions about when to use Web API vs. MVC, whether it would make sense to switch to Web API for all AJAX backend work etc. In my opinion there's no need to jump to Web API for existing applications that already have a good AJAX foundation. Web API is awesome for real externally consumed APIs and clearly defined application AJAX APIs. For typical application level AJAX calls, it's still a good idea, but ASP.NET MVC can serve most if not all of that functionality just as well. There's no need to abandon MVC (or even ASP.NET AJAX or third party AJAX backends) just to move to Web API. For new projects Web API probably makes good sense for isolation of AJAX calls, but it really depends on how the application is set up. In some cases sharing business logic between the HTML and AJAX interfaces with a single MVC API can be cleaner than creating two completely separate code paths to serve essentially the same business logic. Resources: Slides and Code Samples Sample Code on GitHub Introduction to ASP.NET Web API White Paper© Rick Strahl, West Wind Technologies, 2005-2012Posted in Conferences  ASP.NET   Tweet !function(d,s,id){var js,fjs=d.getElementsByTagName(s)[0];if(!d.getElementById(id)){js=d.createElement(s);js.id=id;js.src="//platform.twitter.com/widgets.js";fjs.parentNode.insertBefore(js,fjs);}}(document,"script","twitter-wjs"); (function() { var po = document.createElement('script'); po.type = 'text/javascript'; po.async = true; po.src = 'https://apis.google.com/js/plusone.js'; var s = document.getElementsByTagName('script')[0]; s.parentNode.insertBefore(po, s); })();

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  • What is a resonable workflow for designing webapps?

    - by Evan Plaice
    It has been a while since I have done any substantial web development and I'd like to take advantage of the latest practices but I'm struggling to visualize the workflow to incorporate everything. Here's what I'm looking to use: CakePHP framework jsmin (JavaScript Minify) SASS (Synctactically Awesome StyleSheets) Git CakePHP: Pretty self explanatory, make modifications and update the source. jsmin: When you modify a script, do you manually run jsmin to output the new minified code, or would it be better to run a pre-commit hook that automatically generates jsmin outputs of javascript files that have changed. Assume that I have no knowledge of implementing commit hooks. SASS: I really like what SASS has to offer but I'm also aware that SASS code isn't supported by browsers by default so, at some point, the SASS code needs to be transformed to normal CSS. At what point in the workflow is this done. Git I'm terrified to admit it but, the last time I did any substantial web development, I didn't use SCM source control (IE, I did use source control but it consisted of a very detailed change log with backups). I have since had plenty of experience using Git (as well as mercurial and SVN) for desktop development but I'm wondering how to best implement it for web development). Is it common practice to implement a remote repository on the web host so I can push the changes directly to the production server, or is there some cross platform (windows/linux) tool that makes it easy to upload only changed files to the production server. Are there web hosting companies that make it eas to implement a remote repository, do I need SSH access, etc... I know how to accomplish this on my own testing server with a remote repository with a separate remote tracking branch already but I've never done it on a remote production web hosting server before so I'm not aware of the options yet. Extra: I was considering implementing a javascript framework where separate javascript files used on a page are compiled into a single file for each page on the production server to limit the number of file downloads needed per page. Does something like this already exist? Is there already an open source project out in the wild that implements something similar that I could use and contribute to? Considering how paranoid web devs are about performance (and the fact that the number of file requests on a website is a big hit to performance) I'm guessing that there is some wizard hacker on the net who has already addressed this issue.

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  • Curating projects of deceased friends

    - by Ant
    A very good friend of mine, and an avid programmer, recently passed away. He left nearly 40 projects on BitBucket. Most of them are public, but a few of them are marked as private. I've decided to take on curation duties for the projects rather than leave his work to disappear. If you have been in the same situation, what did you do? Did you open-source everything? Continue development? Delete it all? I'm very interested to hear other people's experiences. There are a few reasons why some of the projects are marked as private (private projects on BitBucket are visible only to invited users and the original creator): One of them is an iOS web app that was free in the app store. I've had to remove the app from the store as I'm shutting down his web sites as a favour to his widow. However, I've already made the app public under the GPL v3 (he was a big GPL supporter). One of them contains proprietary code. It can't be open-sourced. Others are very much work-in-progress. I don't know if he intended to make them into hosted, paid services or if he wanted to give the code away under an open-source licence when they were finished. Here's a list of the private projects: Some kind of living cell simulator that uses SBML along with Runge-Kutta and Euler algorithms to do... something. There's a fair amount of code here but I don't know what it does or how far along it is. No docs. An accountacy application; it seems to have a solid DB design behind it but there's little code on top of that. A website whose purpose is to suggest good restaurants. Built on yii. Seems to have a lot of code but I'd need to set up a WAMP stack to see how far along it is. A website intended to host memorials to people who suffered from the same problem he was. Built on Joomla. I'm not sure how much of the code is just Joomla and how much is custom; again, I'd need to get Joomla running to find out. I'd just introduced him to Mercurial and BitBucket. All of the private projects are single commits of codebases he wasn't using version control with/was previously using SVN. I don't have the SVN repositories so I can't see the commit logs.

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  • Summary of our Recent Pull Request Enhancements on CodePlex

    Over the past several weeks, we’ve been incrementally rolling out a bunch of enhancements around our pull request workflow for Git and Mercurial projects. Our goal is to make contributing to open source projects a simple and rewarding experience, and we’ll continue to invest in this area. Here’s a summary of the changes so far, in case you’ve missed them. As always, if you have any feedback, please let us know, whether on our ideas page or via Twitter. Support for branches You can now pick the source and destination branches for your pull request, whether you’re sending one from your fork, or using it within a project to collaborate with your other trusted contributors. A redesigned creation experience Our old pull request creation form was rather lacking. It asked for a title and comment in a small modal dialog, but that was about it. We knew we could do better, so we rethought the experience. Now, when you create a pull request, you’re taken to a new page that let’s you select the source and destination, and gives you information on the diffs and commits that you’re sending, so you can confirm that you’re sending the right set of changes. Inline code snippets in discussion If users comment on code in your pull request, we now display a preview of the snippet of relevant code inline with their comment on the discussion. Subsequent replies on that line are combined in a single thread to preserve your context. No more clicking and hunting to find where the comments are. And you can add another inline comment right from the discussion area. Comment notifications You can now elect receive an e-mail notification if a user comments on your pull request. If it’s on a line of code, we’ll display the relevant code snippet in the e-mail. Redesigned diff viewer Our old diff viewer hadn’t been touched in a while, and was in need of an update. We started with a visual facelift to use standard red/green colors for additions/deletions and remove the noisy “dots” that represented spaces and that littered the diff viewer. Based on feedback that the viewable region for diffs was too small, especially for smaller screen resolutions, we revamped the way the viewport for the code is sized, and now expand it to fill the majority of the browser height when scrolling down. The set of improvements we implemented here also apply anywhere diffs are viewed, not just for pull requests.

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  • How to add another application to apache?

    - by Jader Dias
    I was following the Zabbix installation tutorial for Ubuntu and it requested that I added a file /etc/apache2/sites-enabled/000-default containing Alias /zabbix /home/zabbix/public_html/ <Directory /home/zabbix/public_html> AllowOverride FileInfo AuthConfig Limit Indexes Options MultiViews Indexes SymLinksIfOwnerMatch IncludesNoExec <Limit GET POST OPTIONS PROPFIND> Order allow,deny Allow from all </Limit> <LimitExcept GET POST OPTIONS PROPFIND> Order deny,allow Deny from all </LimitExcept> </Directory> But I already have /etc/apache2/sites-enabled/railsapp NameVirtualHost *:80 NameVirtualHost *:443 <VirtualHost *:80> UseCanonicalName Off Include /etc/apache2/conf/railsapp.conf </VirtualHost> <VirtualHost *:443> SSLEngine on SSLCertificateFile /etc/ssl/certs/cert.pem Include /etc/apache2/conf/railsapp.conf RequestHeader set X_FORWARDED_PROTO 'https' </VirtualHost> and /etc/apache2/sites-enabled/mercurial NameVirtualHost *:8080 <VirtualHost *:8080> UseCanonicalName Off ServerAdmin webmaster@localhost AddHandler cgi-script .cgi ScriptAliasMatch ^(.*) /usr/lib/cgi-bin/hgwebdir.cgi/$1 </VirtualHost> I think that it is because of the already existing virtual hosts that my I can't access the zabbix page. How to circumvent this?

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  • How can I use the Homebrew Python with Homebrew MacVim on Mountain Lion?

    - by Stephen Jennings
    I originally asked and answered this question: How can I use the Homebrew Python version with Homebrew MacVim? These instructions worked on Snow Leopard using Xcode 4.0.1 and associated developer tools. However, they no longer seem to work on Mountain Lion with Xcode 4.4.1. My goal is to leave the system's version of Python completely untouched, and to only install PyPI packages into Homebrew's site-packages directory. I want to use the vim_bridge package in MacVim, so I need to compile MacVim against the Homebrew version of Python. I've edited the MacVim formula to add these to the arguments: --enable-pythoninterp=dynamic --with-python-config-dir=/usr/local/Cellar/python/2.7.3/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/Current/lib/python2.7/config Then I install with the command: brew install macvim --override-system-vim --custom-icons --with-cscope --with-lua However, it still seems to be somehow using Python 2.7.2 from the system. This seems strange to me because it also seems to be using the correct executable. :python print(sys.version) 2.7.2 (default, Jun 20 2012, 16:23:33) [GCC 4.2.1 Compatible Apple Clang 4.0 (tags/Apple/clang-418.0.60)] :python print(sys.executable) /usr/local/bin/python $ /usr/local/bin/python --version Python 2.7.3 $ /usr/local/bin/python -c "import sys; print(sys.version)" 2.7.3 (default, Aug 12 2012, 21:17:22) [GCC 4.2.1 Compatible Apple Clang 4.0 ((tags/Apple/clang-421.0.60))] $ readlink /usr/local/lib/python2.7/config /usr/local/Cellar/python/2.7.3/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/Current/lib/python2.7/config I've removed everything in /usr/local and reinstalled Homebrew by running these commands: $ ruby <(curl -fsSkL raw.github.com/mxcl/homebrew/go) $ brew install git mercurial python ruby $ brew install macvim (nope, still broken) $ brew remove macvim $ ln -s /usr/local/Cellar/python/..../python2.7/config /usr/local/lib/python2.7/config $ brew install macvim

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  • Rsync: General file/folder synchronization

    - by Rey Leonard Amorato
    I have a file server, which is in-charge of pulling a folder tree from multiple workstations on a daily basis. My current method for this is by using rsync, (which works pretty well provided directory names and/or files remain the same) however, when files are renamed or moved about within subdir1, rsync will copy them over to the server, creating duplicates. I have to manually find and delete extraneous files/folders that had been left on the server during previous syncs. Note that I cannot use rsync's --delete flag because any sync from a workstation will then mirror that particular folder tree, instead of merging them to the server. Visual diagram: Server: Workstation1 Workstation2 Workstation(n) Folder* Folder* Folder* Folder* -subdir1 -subdir1 -subdir1 -subdir(n) -file1 -file1 -file2 -file(n) -file2 -file(n) Is there a simple script (preferably in bash, nothing fancy) that can accomplish the deletion of the extraneous files/folders in the event a file is renamed or moved to a different subdir? Is there a different program, much like rsync that can accomplish this task autonomously and in a much simpler manner? I have looked at unison, but I did not like the fact that it keeps a local database for the syncing info. Any tips at all as to how I am supposed to tackle this? Thank you in advanced for your help. EDIT: I have tried unison just recently and I can safely say it is out of the question now. unison is a bi-directional synchronization tool and from my testing, it mirrors the files existing on the server to all workstations. - This is unwanted. preferably, i would want files/folders to stay within their respective workstations and just merge to the server. AKA uni-directional sync; but with renames/moves propagated to the server. I might have to look into Git/Mercurial/Bazaar as mentioned by kyle, but still unsure if they are fit for the job.

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  • Jenkins CI - Cannot allocate memory

    - by Programmieraffe
    I tested jenkins-ci successfully on a ubuntu 10.4 (with vmware fusion) on my local computer. Now I want to install and use it on my virtual server at hosteurope. The basic installation was no problem, but now I have problems with my build project. After pulling an mercurial update from a repository, ant is invoked and throws the following error in my build project: "Buildfile: /var/lib/jenkins/workspace/concrete5-seed-clean/build.xml [property] java.io.IOException: Cannot run program "/usr/bin/env": java.io.IOException: error=12, Cannot allocate memory" There is a known problem with heap size at virtual servers at hosteurope (http://faq.hosteurope.de/index.php?cpid=13918), so I tried to set the heap size manually: # for ant export ANT_OPTS="-Xms512m -Xmx512m" # jenkins # edited /etc/default/jenkins, added line JAVA_ARGS="-Xms512m -Xmx512m" # restarted jenkins via /etc/init.d/jenkins restart After setting this for ant, the command "ant -diagnostics" runs through and does not cause an error, but the error still occurs when I try to build the project. Server-Details: - http://www.hosteurope.de/produkt/Virtual-Server-Linux-L Ubuntu 10.4 LTS RAM: 1GB / Dynamic 2GB My questions: - Is 1GB enough for Jenkins or do I have to upgrade the server? - Is this error caused by ant or jenkins? Update: I got it running with ant options -Xmx128m -Xms128m, but sometimes the error occurs again. (this freaks me out, cause i can not reproduce it by now :/ ) Help much appreciated! Cheers, Matthias

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  • Which revision control system for single user

    - by G. Bach
    I'm looking to set up a revision control system with me as a single user. I'd like to have access (read and write) protected using SSL, little overhead, and preferrably a simple setup. I'm looking to do this on my own server, so I don't want to use the option of registering with some professional provider of such a service (I like having direct control over my data; also, I'd like to know how to set up something like that). As far as I'm aware, what kind of project I want to subject to revision control doesn't really matter, but just for completeness' sake, I'm planning on using this for Java project, some html/css/php stuff, and in the future possibly as a synchronizing tool for small data bases (ignore that later one if it doesn't fit in with the paradigm of revision control). My questions primarily arise from the fact that I only ever used Subversion from Eclipse, so I don't have thorough knowledge of what's out there, what fits better for which needs, etc. So far I've heard of Subversion, Git, Mercurial, but I'm open to any system that's widely used and well supported. My server is running Ubuntu 11.10. Which system should I choose, what are the advantages of the respective systems, and if you know of any particularly useful ones, are there tutorials regarding the setup of the system I should choose that you could recommend?

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  • Non Blocking Keyboard on WinCE accessing the virtual keyboard

    - by Jan H.
    Hello Guys, I am desperately looking for a solution that enables me to read keyboard events in a non blocking way. These Keyboard events are generated by a VIRTUAL KEYBOARD that comes with the WinCE device. I have a console application running in C++, where the user is asked to navigate via 'ESC', 'U' and other characters through the menu. I first tried to use fread and stdin and realised that it is blocking call and waits for a carriage return. Then I tried to hook up to the windows message WM_KEYUP, but I never recieve this windows message. Furthermore I tried to use QtGUI together with the event QKeyEvent, but I never recieve any event. I wonder if it is in general possible to recieve non-blocking keyboard events on a WinCE device. I would be glad if you have any suggestions! Cheers, Jan

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  • ErrorListProvider in VS2010 throws InvalidOperationException about IVsTaskList

    - by Ben Hall
    I'm trying to hook into the ErrorListProvider in VS2010 to provide some more feedback from my VS2010 extension addin. The code is as follows: try { ErrorListProvider errorProvider = new ErrorListProvider(ServiceProvider); ErrorTask error = new ErrorTask(); error.Category = TaskCategory.BuildCompile; error.Text = "ERROR!"; errorProvider.Tasks.Add(error); } catch (InvalidOperationException) { } However the following exception is thrown: System.InvalidOperationException was caught Message=The service 'Microsoft.VisualStudio.Shell.Interop.IVsTaskList' must be installed for this feature to work. Ensure that this service is available. Source=Microsoft.VisualStudio.Shell.10.0 StackTrace: at Microsoft.VisualStudio.Shell.TaskProvider.get_VsTaskList() at Microsoft.VisualStudio.Shell.TaskProvider.Refresh() at Microsoft.VisualStudio.Shell.TaskProvider.TaskCollection.Add(Task task) Does anyone have any ideas why?

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  • Shell extension installation not recognized by Windows 7 64-bit shell

    - by Avalanchis
    I have a Copy Hook Handler shell extension that I'm trying to install on Windows 7 64-bit. The shell extension DLL is compiled in two separate versions for 32-bit and 64-bit Windows. The DLL implements DLLRegisterServer which adds the necessary registry entries. After adding the registry entries, it calls the following line of code to nofity the Windows shell: SHChangeNotify(SHCNE_ASSOCCHANGED, SHCNF_IDLIST, NULL, NULL); Everything works great on Windows7 32-bit. The shell recognizes the extension immediately. On 64-bit, the shell extension is only recognized after the shell is restarted. Is there anything I can do to cause the extension to be recognized without restarting the 64-bit shell?

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