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  • Figuring out the IIS Version for a given OS in .NET Code

    - by Rick Strahl
    Here's an odd requirement: I need to figure out what version of IIS is available on a given machine in order to take specific configuration actions when installing an IIS based application. I build several configuration tools for application configuration and installation and depending on which version of IIS is available on IIS different configuration paths are taken. For example, when dealing with XP machine you can't set up an Application Pool for an application because XP (IIS 5.1) didn't support Application pools. Configuring 32 and 64 bit settings are easy in IIS 7 but this didn't work in prior versions and so on. Along the same lines I saw a question on the AspInsiders list today, regarding a similar issue where somebody needed to know the IIS version as part of an ASP.NET application prior to when the Request object is available. So it's useful to know which version of IIS you can possibly expect. This should be easy right? But it turns there's no real easy way to detect IIS on a machine. There's no registry key that gives you the full version number - you can detect installation but not which version is installed. The easiest way: Request.ServerVariables["SERVER_SOFTWARE"] The easiest way to determine IIS version number is if you are already running inside of ASP.NET and you are inside of an ASP.NET request. You can look at Request.ServerVariables["SERVER_SOFTWARE"] to get a string like Microsoft-IIS/7.5 returned to you. It's a cinch to parse this to retrieve the version number. This works in the limited scenario where you need to know the version number inside of a running ASP.NET application. Unfortunately this is not a likely use case, since most times when you need to know a specific version of IIS when you are configuring or installing your application. The messy way: Match Windows OS Versions to IIS Versions Since Version 5.x of IIS versions of IIS have always been tied very closely to the Operating System. Meaning the only way to get a specific version of IIS was through the OS - you couldn't install another version of IIS on the given OS. Microsoft has a page that describes the OS version to IIS version relationship here: http://support.microsoft.com/kb/224609 In .NET you can then sniff the OS version and based on that return the IIS version. The following is a small utility function that accomplishes the task of returning an IIS version number for a given OS: /// <summary> /// Returns the IIS version for the given Operating System. /// Note this routine doesn't check to see if IIS is installed /// it just returns the version of IIS that should run on the OS. /// /// Returns the value from Request.ServerVariables["Server_Software"] /// if available. Otherwise uses OS sniffing to determine OS version /// and returns IIS version instead. /// </summary> /// <returns>version number or -1 </returns> public static decimal GetIisVersion() { // if running inside of IIS parse the SERVER_SOFTWARE key // This would be most reliable if (HttpContext.Current != null && HttpContext.Current.Request != null) { string os = HttpContext.Current.Request.ServerVariables["SERVER_SOFTWARE"]; if (!string.IsNullOrEmpty(os)) { //Microsoft-IIS/7.5 int dash = os.LastIndexOf("/"); if (dash > 0) { decimal iisVer = 0M; if (Decimal.TryParse(os.Substring(dash + 1), out iisVer)) return iisVer; } } } decimal osVer = (decimal) Environment.OSVersion.Version.Major + ((decimal) Environment.OSVersion.Version.MajorRevision / 10); // Windows 7 and Win2008 R2 if (osVer == 6.1M) return 7.5M; // Windows Vista and Windows 2008 else if (osVer == 6.0M) return 7.0M; // Windows 2003 and XP 64 bit else if (osVer == 5.2M) return 6.0M; // Windows XP else if (osVer == 5.1M) return 5.1M; // Windows 2000 else if (osVer == 5.0M) return 5.0M; // error result return -1M; } } Talk about a brute force apporach, but it works. This code goes only back to IIS 5 - anything before that is not something you possibly would want to have running. :-) Note that this is updated through Windows 7/Windows Server 2008 R2. Later versions will need to be added as needed. Anybody know what the Windows Version number of Windows 8 is?© Rick Strahl, West Wind Technologies, 2005-2011Posted in ASP.NET  IIS   Tweet (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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  • Get the currently saved object in a view in Django

    - by mridang
    Hi, I has a Django view which is accessed through an AJAX call. It's a pretty simple one — all it does is simply pass the request to a form object and save the data. Here's a snippet from my view: form = AddSiteForm(request.user, request.POST) if form.is_valid(): obj = form.save(commit=False) obj.user = request.user obj.save() data['status'] = 'success' data['html'] = render_to_string('site.html', locals(), context_instance=RequestContext(request)) return HttpResponse(simplejson.dumps(data), mimetype='application/json') How do I get the currently saved object (including the internally generated id column) and pass it to the template? Any help guys? Mridang

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  • ASP.NET Web API and Simple Value Parameters from POSTed data

    - by Rick Strahl
    In testing out various features of Web API I've found a few oddities in the way that the serialization is handled. These are probably not super common but they may throw you for a loop. Here's what I found. Simple Parameters from Xml or JSON Content Web API makes it very easy to create action methods that accept parameters that are automatically parsed from XML or JSON request bodies. For example, you can send a JavaScript JSON object to the server and Web API happily deserializes it for you. This works just fine:public string ReturnAlbumInfo(Album album) { return album.AlbumName + " (" + album.YearReleased.ToString() + ")"; } However, if you have methods that accept simple parameter types like strings, dates, number etc., those methods don't receive their parameters from XML or JSON body by default and you may end up with failures. Take the following two very simple methods:public string ReturnString(string message) { return message; } public HttpResponseMessage ReturnDateTime(DateTime time) { return Request.CreateResponse<DateTime>(HttpStatusCode.OK, time); } The first one accepts a string and if called with a JSON string from the client like this:var client = new HttpClient(); var result = client.PostAsJsonAsync<string>(http://rasxps/AspNetWebApi/albums/rpc/ReturnString, "Hello World").Result; which results in a trace like this: POST http://rasxps/AspNetWebApi/albums/rpc/ReturnString HTTP/1.1Content-Type: application/json; charset=utf-8Host: rasxpsContent-Length: 13Expect: 100-continueConnection: Keep-Alive "Hello World" produces… wait for it: null. Sending a date in the same fashion:var client = new HttpClient(); var result = client.PostAsJsonAsync<DateTime>(http://rasxps/AspNetWebApi/albums/rpc/ReturnDateTime, new DateTime(2012, 1, 1)).Result; results in this trace: POST http://rasxps/AspNetWebApi/albums/rpc/ReturnDateTime HTTP/1.1Content-Type: application/json; charset=utf-8Host: rasxpsContent-Length: 30Expect: 100-continueConnection: Keep-Alive "\/Date(1325412000000-1000)\/" (yes still the ugly MS AJAX date, yuk! This will supposedly change by RTM with Json.net used for client serialization) produces an error response: The parameters dictionary contains a null entry for parameter 'time' of non-nullable type 'System.DateTime' for method 'System.Net.Http.HttpResponseMessage ReturnDateTime(System.DateTime)' in 'AspNetWebApi.Controllers.AlbumApiController'. An optional parameter must be a reference type, a nullable type, or be declared as an optional parameter. Basically any simple parameters are not parsed properly resulting in null being sent to the method. For the string the call doesn't fail, but for the non-nullable date it produces an error because the method can't handle a null value. This behavior is a bit unexpected to say the least, but there's a simple solution to make this work using an explicit [FromBody] attribute:public string ReturnString([FromBody] string message) andpublic HttpResponseMessage ReturnDateTime([FromBody] DateTime time) which explicitly instructs Web API to read the value from the body. UrlEncoded Form Variable Parsing Another similar issue I ran into is with POST Form Variable binding. Web API can retrieve parameters from the QueryString and Route Values but it doesn't explicitly map parameters from POST values either. Taking our same ReturnString function from earlier and posting a message POST variable like this:var formVars = new Dictionary<string,string>(); formVars.Add("message", "Some Value"); var content = new FormUrlEncodedContent(formVars); var client = new HttpClient(); var result = client.PostAsync(http://rasxps/AspNetWebApi/albums/rpc/ReturnString, content).Result; which produces this trace: POST http://rasxps/AspNetWebApi/albums/rpc/ReturnString HTTP/1.1Content-Type: application/x-www-form-urlencodedHost: rasxpsContent-Length: 18Expect: 100-continue message=Some+Value When calling ReturnString:public string ReturnString(string message) { return message; } unfortunately it does not map the message value to the message parameter. This sort of mapping unfortunately is not available in Web API. Web API does support binding to form variables but only as part of model binding, which binds object properties to the POST variables. Sending the same message as in the previous example you can use the following code to pick up POST variable data:public string ReturnMessageModel(MessageModel model) { return model.Message; } public class MessageModel { public string Message { get; set; }} Note that the model is bound and the message form variable is mapped to the Message property as would other variables to properties if there were more. This works but it's not very dynamic. There's no real easy way to retrieve form variables (or query string values for that matter) in Web API's Request object as far as I can discern. Well only if you consider this easy:public string ReturnString() { var formData = Request.Content.ReadAsAsync<FormDataCollection>().Result; return formData.Get("message"); } Oddly FormDataCollection does not allow for indexers to work so you have to use the .Get() method which is rather odd. If you're running under IIS/Cassini you can always resort to the old and trusty HttpContext access for request data:public string ReturnString() { return HttpContext.Current.Request.Form["message"]; } which works fine and is easier. It's kind of a bummer that HttpRequestMessage doesn't expose some sort of raw Request object that has access to dynamic data - given that it's meant to serve as a generic REST/HTTP API that seems like a crucial missing piece. I don't see any way to read query string values either. To me personally HttpContext works, since I don't see myself using self-hosted code much.© Rick Strahl, West Wind Technologies, 2005-2012Posted in Web Api   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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  • Simple-Talk development: a quick history lesson

    - by Michael Williamson
    Up until a few months ago, Simple-Talk ran on a pure .NET stack, with IIS as the web server and SQL Server as the database. Unfortunately, the platform for the site hadn’t quite gotten the love and attention it deserved. On the one hand, in the words of our esteemed editor Tony “I’d consider the current platform to be a “success”; it cost $10K, has lasted for 6 years, was finished, end to end in 6 months, and although we moan about it has got us quite a long way.” On the other hand, it was becoming increasingly clear that it needed some serious work. Among other issues, we had authors that wouldn’t blog because our current blogging platform, Community Server, was too painful for them to use. Forgetting about Simple-Talk for a moment, if you ask somebody what blogging platform they’d choose, the odds are they’d say WordPress. Regardless of its technical merits, it’s probably the most popular blogging platform, and it certainly seemed easier to use than Community Server. The issue was that WordPress is normally hosted on a Linux stack running PHP, Apache and MySQL — quite a difference from our Microsoft technology stack. We certainly didn’t want to rewrite the entire site — we just wanted a better blogging platform, with the rest of the existing, legacy site left as is. At a very high level, Simple-Talk’s technical design was originally very straightforward: when your browser sends an HTTP request to Simple-Talk, IIS (the web server) takes the request, does some work, and sends back a response. In order to keep the legacy site running, except with WordPress running the blogs, a different design is called for. We now use nginx as a reverse-proxy, which can then delegate requests to the appropriate application: So, when your browser sends a request to Simple-Talk, nginx takes that request and checks which part of the site you’re trying to access. Most of the time, it just passes the request along to IIS, which can then respond in much the same way it always has. However, if your request is for the blogs, then nginx delegates the request to WordPress. Unfortunately, as simple as that diagram looks, it hides an awful lot of complexity. In particular, the legacy site running on IIS was made up of four .NET applications. I’ve already mentioned one of these applications, Community Server, which handled the old blogs as well as managing membership and the forums. We have a couple of other applications to manage both our newsletters and our articles, and our own custom application to do some of the rendering on the site, such as the front page and the articles. When I say that it was made up of four .NET applications, this might conjure up an image in your mind of how they fit together: You might imagine four .NET applications, each with their own database, communicating over well-defined APIs. Sadly, reality was a little disappointing: We had four .NET applications that all ran on the same database. Worse still, there were many queries that happily joined across tables from multiple applications, meaning that each application was heavily dependent on the exact data schema that each other application used. Add to this that many of the queries were at least dozens of lines long, and practically identical to other queries except in a few key spots, and we can see that attempting to replace one component of the system would be more than a little tricky. However, the problems with the old system do give us a good place to start thinking about desirable qualities from any changes to the platform. Specifically: Maintainability — the tight coupling between each .NET application made it difficult to update any one application without also having to make changes elsewhere Replaceability — the tight coupling also meant that replacing one component wouldn’t be straightforward, especially if it wasn’t on a similar Microsoft stack. We’d like to be able to replace different parts without having to modify the existing codebase extensively Reusability — we’d like to be able to combine the different pieces of the system in different ways for different sites Repeatable deployments — rather than having to deploy the site manually with a long list of instructions, we should be able to deploy the entire site with a single command, allowing you to create a new instance of the site easily whether on production, staging servers, test servers or your own local machine Testability — if we can deploy the site with a single command, and each part of the site is no longer dependent on the specifics of how every other part of the site works, we can begin to run automated tests against the site, and against individual parts, both to prevent regressions and to do a little test-driven development In the next part, I’ll describe the high-level architecture we now have that hopefully brings us a little closer to these five traits.

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  • client ip address in ASP.NET (.asmx) webservices

    - by Zain Shaikh
    I am using ASP.Net (.asmx) web services with Silverlight. since there is no way to find client ip address in Silverlight, therefore I had to log this on service end. these are some methods I have tried: Request.ServerVariables(”REMOTE_HOST”) HttpContext.Current.Request.ServerVariables["REMOTE_ADDR"] HttpContext.Current.Request.ServerVariables["HTTP_X_FORWARDED_FOR"]; Request.UserHostAddress() Request.UserHostName() string strHostName = System.Net.Dns.GetHostName(); string clientIPAddress = System.Net.Dns.GetHostAddresses(strHostName).GetValue(0).ToString(); All the above methods work fine on my local system, but when I publish my service on production server. it starts giving errors. Error: Object reference not set to an instance of an object. StackTrace: at System.Web.Hosting.ISAPIWorkerRequestInProc.GetAdditionalServerVar(Int32 index) at System.Web.Hosting.ISAPIWorkerRequestInProc.GetServerVariable(String name) at System.Web.Hosting.ISAPIWorkerRequest.GetRemoteAddress() at System.Web.HttpRequest.get_UserHostAddress()

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  • Upload Image with Django Model Form

    - by jmitchel3
    I'm having difficulty uploading the following model with model form. I can upload fine in the admin but that's not all that useful for a project that limits admin access. #Models.py class Profile(models.Model): name = models.CharField(max_length=128) user = models.ForeignKey(User) profile_pic = models.ImageField(upload_to='img/profile/%Y/%m/') #views.py def create_profile(request): try: profile = Profile.objects.get(user=request.user) except: pass form = CreateProfileForm(request.POST or None, instance=profile) if form.is_valid(): new = form.save(commit=False) new.user = request.user new.save() return render_to_response('profile.html', locals(), context_instance=RequestContext(request)) #Profile.html <form enctype="multipart/form-data" method="post">{% csrf_token %} <tr><td>{{ form.as_p }}</td></tr> <tr><td><button type="submit" class="btn">Submit</button></td></tr> </form> Note: All the other data in the form saves perfectly well, the photo does not upload at all. Thank you for your help!

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  • GIgya Native Login without using Facebook and Twitter Account

    - by Wodjefer
    Following code that i am using to login but i am getting a Null response - (IBAction) signInPressed : (id)sender { [super signInPressed:sender]; NSLog(@"ACCLoginViewController_iPhone Sign-IN Pressed"); //Load the Gigya login UI component, passing this View Controller as a delegate. GSRequest *request = [GSRequest requestForMethod:@"accounts.login"]; [request.parameters setObject:self.emailField.text forKey:@"loginID"]; [request.parameters setObject:self.passwordField.text forKey:@"password"]; request.parameters[@"loginID"] = @"email"; [request sendWithResponseHandler:^(GSResponse *response, NSError *error) { if (!error) { NSLog(@"the resposne = %@",response); } else { // Check the error code according to the GSErrorCode enum, and handle it. NSLog(@"the Error = %@",error.description); } }]; // [self loadTabbar]; }

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  • Django: Prefill a ManytoManyField

    - by Emile Petrone
    I have a ManyToManyField on a settings page that isn't rendering. The data was filled when the user registered, and I am trying to prefill that data when the user tries to change it. Thanks in advance for the help! The HTML: {{form.types.label}} {% if add %} {{form.types}} {% else %} {% for type in form.types.all %} {{type.description}} {% endfor %} {% endif %} The View: @csrf_protect @login_required def edit_host(request, host_id, template_name="host/newhost.html"): host = get_object_or_404(Host, id=host_id) if request.user != host.user: return HttpResponseForbidden() form = HostForm(request.POST) if form.is_valid(): if request.method == 'POST': if form.cleaned_data.get('about') is not None: host.about = form.cleaned_data.get('about') if form.cleaned_data.get('types') is not None: host.types = form.cleaned_data.get('types') host.save() form.save_m2m() return HttpResponseRedirect('/users/%d/' % host.user.id) else: form = HostForm(initial={ "about":host.about, "types":host.types, }) data = { "host":host, "form":form } return render_to_response(template_name, data, context_instance=RequestContext(request)) Form: class HostForm(forms.ModelForm): class Meta: model = Host fields = ('types', 'about', ) types = forms.ModelMultipleChoiceField( widget=forms.CheckboxSelectMultiple, queryset=Type.objects.all(), required=True) about = forms.CharField( widget=forms.Textarea(), required=True) def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs): super(HostForm, self).__init__(*args, **kwargs) self.fields['about'].widget.attrs = { 'placeholder':'Hello!'}

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  • asp.net client/browser url

    - by Marcus King
    I'm wondering how I can get the url from the browser in asp.net. I have a page that I use globalization/localization for and I am redirecting (via server not code) from www.spanishversion.com to www.englishversion.com but the url is masked to still say www.spanishversion.com. I want to get what the browser's url is but when I try things like Request.Url.ToString() Request.Url.OriginalUrl Request.Path Request.RawUrl Request.ServerVariables["SERVER_NAME"] it always comes back as www.englishversion.com. Is there a way that I can explicitly read the url from the browser? Thanks.

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  • Quick question about PayPal IPN Security

    - by Alix Axel
    PayPal IPN sends a POST request with a variable number of fields to the notify URL, in order to confirm that the POST request is legit we need to resubmit the same request along with a additional cmd=_notify-validate field to PayPal, which then replies SUCCESS or FAILURE. My question is, why do we need to resend the request to PayPal? Wouldn't something like this work? if (preg_match('~^(?:.+[.])?paypal[.]com$~i', gethostbyaddr($_SERVER['REQUEST_ADDR'])) > 0) { // request came from PayPal, it's legit. } Iff we can trust the server to correctly resolve IPs, I assume we can trust PayPal POST requests, no?

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  • Compare two String with MySQL

    - by Scorpi0
    Hi, I wan't to compare two strings in a SQL request so I can retrieve the best match, the aim is to propose to an operator the best zip code possible. For example, in France, we have Integer Zip code, so I made an easy request : SELECT * FROM myTable ORDER BY abs(zip_code - 75000) This request returns first the data closest of Paris. Unfortunatelly, United Kingdom have zip code like AB421RS, so my request can't do it. I see in SQL Server a function 'Difference' : http://www.java2s.com/Code/SQLServer/String-Functions/DIFFERENCEworkoutwhenonestringsoundssimilartoanotherstring.htm But I use MySQL.. Is there anyone who have a good idea to do the trick in one simple request ? PS : the Levenshtein Distance will not do it, as I really wan't to compare string like if they were number. ABCDEF have to be closer to AWXYZ than to ZBCDEF.

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  • How do I make "simple" throughput servlet-filter?

    - by Tommy
    I'm looking to create a filter that can give me two things: number of request pr minute, and average responsetime pr minute. I already got the individual readings, I'm just not sure how to add them up. My filter captures every request, and it records the time each request takes: public void doFilter(ServletRequest request, ...() { long start = System.currentTimeMillis(); chain.doFilter(request, response); long stop = System.currentTimeMillis(); String time = Util.getTimeDifferenceInSec(start, stop); } This information will be used to create some pretty Google Chart charts. I don't want to store the data in any database. Just a way to get current numbers out when requested As this is a high volume application; low overhead is essential. I'm assuming my applicationserver doesn't provide this information.

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  • Multi choice form field in Django

    - by Dingo
    Hi! I'am developing application on app-engine-path. I would like to make form with multichoice (acceptably languages for user). Code look like this: Language settings: settings.LANGUAGES = ((u"cs", u"Ceština"), (u"en", u"English")) Form model: class UserForm(forms.ModelForm): first_name = forms.CharField(max_length=100) last_name = forms.CharField(max_length=100) languages = forms.MultipleChoiceField(widget=forms.CheckboxSelectMultiple, choices=settings.LANGUAGES) The form is rendered o.k. (all languages have checkbox. IDs, NAMEs is ok.) But if I save some languages for user, those languages don't check checkboxes. User model look like this class User(User): #... languages = db.StringListProperty() #... and view: def edit_profile(request): user = request.user if request.method == 'POST': form = UserForm(request.POST) if form.is_valid(): # ... else: form = UserForm(instance=user) data = {"user":user, "form": form} return render_to_response(request, 'user_profile/user_profile.html', data)

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  • Django view function design

    - by dragoon
    Hi, I have the view function in django that written like a dispatcher calling other functions depending on the variable in request.GET, like this: action = '' for act in ('view1', 'view2', 'view3', 'view4', ... ): if act in request.GET: action = act break ... if action == '': response = view0(request, ...) elif action == 'view1': response = view1(request, ...) elif action == 'view2': response = view2(request, ...) ... The global dispatcher function contains many variable initialization routines and these variables are then used in viewXX functions. So I feed that this is bad view design but I don't know how I can rewrite it?

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  • Django blog reply system

    - by dana
    hello, i'm trying to build a mini reply system, based on the user's posts on a mini blog. Every post has a link named reply. if one presses reply, the reply form appears, and one edits the reply, and submits the form.The problem is that i don't know how to take the id of the post i want to reply to. In the view, if i use as a parameter one number (as an id of the blog post),it inserts the reply to the database. But how can i do it by not hardcoding? The view is: def save_reply(request): if request.method == 'POST': form = ReplyForm(request.POST) if form.is_valid(): new_obj = form.save(commit=False) new_obj.creator = request.user new_post = New(1) #it works only hardcoded new_obj.reply_to = new_post new_obj.save() return HttpResponseRedirect('.') else: form = ReplyForm() return render_to_response('replies/replies.html', { 'form': form, }, context_instance=RequestContext(request)) i have in forms.py: class ReplyForm(ModelForm): class Meta: model = Reply fields = ['reply'] and in models: class Reply(models.Model): reply_to = models.ForeignKey(New) creator = models.ForeignKey(User) reply = models.CharField(max_length=140,blank=False) objects = NewManager() mentioning that New is the micro blog class thanks

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  • c# HTTPListener encoding issue

    - by Rob Griffin
    I have a Java application sending HTTP requests to a C# application. The C# app uses HTTPListener to listen for requests and respond. On the Java side I'm encoding the URL using UTF-8. When I send a \ character it gets encoded as %5C as expected but on the C# side it becomes a / character. The encoding for the request object is Windows-1252 which I think may be causing the problem. How do I set the default encoding to UTF-8? Currently I'm doing this to convert the encoding: foreach (string key in request.QueryString.Keys) { if (key != null) { byte[] sourceBytes =request.ContentEncoding.GetBytes(request.QueryString[key]); string value = Encoding.UTF8.GetString(sourceBytes)); } } This handles the non ASCII characters I'm also sending but doesn't fix the slash problem. Examining request.QueryString[key] in the debugger shows that the / is already there.

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  • productsRequest response method is not calling

    - by jeeva
    Hi i am implementing in app purchase i am sending request to apple store through - (void) requestProductData { SKProductsRequest *request= [[SKProductsRequest alloc] initWithProductIdentifiers: [NSSet setWithObjects: featureAId,featureBId,nil]]; // add any other product here request.delegate = self; [request start]; } the response method - (void)productsRequest:(SKProductsRequest *)request didReceiveResponse:(SKProductsResponse *)response { [purchasableObjects addObjectsFromArray:response.products]; } is not getting call at all. only once it called out of ten attempts i tried. any idea regarding this..? thanks in advance

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  • symfony save submitted form to database

    - by Sejanus
    Maybe I am missing something, but in symfony examples, in form submission action there's nothing which indicates form data is saved to database. (link). How can I save everything to db? Example from the link: public function executeSubmit($request) { $this->forward404Unless($request->isMethod('post')); $params = array( 'name' => $request->getParameter('name'), 'email' => $request->getParameter('email'), 'message' => $request->getParameter('message'), ); $this->redirect('contact/thankyou?'.http_build_query($params)); }

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  • Writing file from HttpWebRequest periodically vs. after download finishes?

    - by WB3000
    Right now I am using this code to download files (with a Range header). Most of the files are large, and it is running 99% of CPU currently as the file downloads. Is there any way that the file can be written periodically so that it does not remain in RAM constantly? private byte[] GetWebPageContent(string url, long start, long finish) { byte[] result = new byte[finish]; HttpWebRequest request; request = WebRequest.Create(url) as HttpWebRequest; //request.Headers.Add("Range", "bytes=" + start + "-" + finish); request.AddRange((int)start, (int)finish); using (WebResponse response = request.GetResponse()) { return ReadFully(response.GetResponseStream()); } } public static byte[] ReadFully(Stream stream) { byte[] buffer = new byte[32768]; using (MemoryStream ms = new MemoryStream()) { while (true) { int read = stream.Read(buffer, 0, buffer.Length); if (read <= 0) return ms.ToArray(); ms.Write(buffer, 0, read); } } }

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  • How can something like BOSH be implemented using Java Servlets

    - by John
    BOSH (Bidirectional-streams Over Synchronous HTTP) is a sneaky way of implementing 2-way client-server communication in situations where true server-push is not allowed, most obviously to let a server push data to a browser client without having to use client polling. It works by the client sending a request to the server, and the server doesn't respond immediately... rather it remembers the request but only responds when it has some data to send. When this happens the client immediately sends another request so there is virtually always a 'stored request' sitting on the server ready to push data to the client. At least, that's how I think it works! My question is how you can do this using a Java EE stack i.e standard servlets. I'm rusty with them, is it allowed to send no response and cache the request somehow? If anyone could share (pseudo) code what a servlet class for handling BOSH might look like, I'd be real grateful.

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  • xsl key - multiple levels for an element

    - by user1004770
    My previous post was not very meaningful. reposting here. What i am looking for is the QueueManager element, under SORRegion name="default"(which is the parent), within inan.xml. I have used xsl key. In my xsl the value 'default' is hardcoded. here is the xsl i used <xsl:stylesheet version="1.0" xmlns:xsl="http://www.w3.org/1999/XSL/Transform" > <xsl:output omit-xml-declaration="yes" indent="yes" method="xml" /> <xsl:key name="CR-lookup" match="Service" use="concat(@ServiceName, '+', SOR/@SORname, '+', */CountryCode/@Ctrycd, '+', */*/SORRegion/@name, '+', */*/*/ConsumerName/@name)"/> <xsl:variable name="CRTable" select="document('inan.xml')"/> <xsl:template match="/"> <Contributor> <ContributorRole> <xsl:for-each select="$CRTable"> <!-- change context document --> <xsl:for-each select="key('CR-lookup', concat('StatementIndicatorsService', '+', 'Globestar', '+', '124', '+', 'default', '+', 'MYCA'))"> <a> <xsl:value-of select="*/*/*/*/QueueManager"/> </a> </xsl:for-each> </xsl:for-each> </ContributorRole> </Contributor> </xsl:template> </xsl:stylesheet> any input xml file is fine. here is my actual output <Contributor> <ContributorRole /> </Contributor> expected output <Contributor> <ContributorRole> <a>MAO1</a> </ContributorRole> </Contributor> inan.xml document <RoutingDetails> <Service ServiceName="StatementIndicatorsService"> <SOR SORname="Globestar"> <CountryCode Ctrycd="124"> <SORRegion name="Test"> <ConsumerName name="MYCA"> <AutomationIds> <PreAutoId> <AutomationId>XA1146A</AutomationId> <AutomationId>XA1146B</AutomationId> </PreAutoId> <DefaultAutoId> <AutomationId>XA1146C</AutomationId> </DefaultAutoId> </AutomationIds> </ConsumerName> <QueueDetails> <QueueManager>MAO1</QueueManager> <ReplyQueueManager>MAO1</ReplyQueueManager> <RequestQueue>GSTAR.ICS.DP.DHIPO211.REQUEST</RequestQueue> <ReplyQueue>ICS.DP.REPLY</ReplyQueue> </QueueDetails> </SORRegion> <SORRegion name="default"> <ConsumerName name="MYCA"> <AutomationIds> <PreAutoId> <AutomationId>XA1146A</AutomationId> <AutomationId>XA1146A</AutomationId> </PreAutoId> <DefaultAutoId> <AutomationId>XA1146A</AutomationId> </DefaultAutoId> </AutomationIds> </ConsumerName> <QueueDetails> <QueueManager>MAO1</QueueManager> <ReplyQueueManager>MAO1</ReplyQueueManager> <RequestQueue>GSTAR.ICS.DP.DHIPO211.REQUEST</RequestQueue> <ReplyQueue>ICS.DP.REPLY</ReplyQueue> </QueueDetails> </SORRegion> <SORRegion name="CICDKBX1"> <ConsumerName name="MYCA"> <AutomationIds> <PreAutoId> <AutomationId>XA1146A</AutomationId> <AutomationId>XA1146A</AutomationId> </PreAutoId> <DefaultAutoId> <AutomationId>XA1146A</AutomationId> </DefaultAutoId> </AutomationIds> </ConsumerName> <QueueDetails> <QueueManager>MAO1</QueueManager> <ReplyQueueManager>MAO1</ReplyQueueManager> <RequestQueue>GSTAR.ICS.DP.DHIPO211.REQUEST</RequestQueue> <ReplyQueue>ICS.DP.REPLY</ReplyQueue> </QueueDetails> </SORRegion> <SORRegion name="CICDKAX4"> <ConsumerName name="MYCA"> <AutomationIds> <PreAutoId> <AutomationId>XA1146A</AutomationId> <AutomationId>XA1146A</AutomationId> </PreAutoId> <DefaultAutoId> <AutomationId>XA1146A</AutomationId> </DefaultAutoId> </AutomationIds> </ConsumerName> <QueueDetails> <QueueManager>MAO1</QueueManager> <ReplyQueueManager>MAO1</ReplyQueueManager> <RequestQueue>GSTAR.GDAS.DHIPO204.REQUEST</RequestQueue> <ReplyQueue>ICS.DP.REPLY</ReplyQueue> </QueueDetails> </SORRegion> <SORRegion name="CICDKEX7"> <ConsumerName name="MYCA"> <AutomationIds> <PreAutoId> <AutomationId>XA1146A</AutomationId> <AutomationId>XA1146A</AutomationId> </PreAutoId> <DefaultAutoId> <AutomationId>XA1146A</AutomationId> </DefaultAutoId> </AutomationIds> </ConsumerName> <QueueDetails> <QueueManager>MAO1</QueueManager> <ReplyQueueManager>MAO1</ReplyQueueManager> <RequestQueue>GSTAR.ICS.DP.DHIPO247.REQUEST</RequestQueue> <ReplyQueue>ICS.DP.REPLY</ReplyQueue> </QueueDetails> </SORRegion> </CountryCode> <CountryCode Ctrycd="826"> <SORRegion name="Test"> <ConsumerName name="MYCA"> <AutomationIds> <PreAutoId> <AutomationId>XA1146A</AutomationId> <AutomationId>XA1146A</AutomationId> </PreAutoId> <DefaultAutoId> <AutomationId>XA1146A</AutomationId> </DefaultAutoId> </AutomationIds> </ConsumerName> <QueueDetails> <QueueManager>MAO1</QueueManager> <ReplyQueueManager>MAO1</ReplyQueueManager> <RequestQueue>GSTAR.ICS.DP.DHIPO211.REQUEST</RequestQueue> <ReplyQueue>ICS.DP.REPLY</ReplyQueue> </QueueDetails> </SORRegion> <SORRegion name="default"> <ConsumerName name="MYCA"> <AutomationIds> <PreAutoId> <AutomationId>XA1146A</AutomationId> <AutomationId>XA1146A</AutomationId> </PreAutoId> <DefaultAutoId> <AutomationId>XA1146A</AutomationId> </DefaultAutoId> </AutomationIds> </ConsumerName> <QueueDetails> <QueueManager>MAO1</QueueManager> <ReplyQueueManager>MAO1</ReplyQueueManager> <RequestQueue>GSTAR.ICS.DP.DHIPO211.REQUEST</RequestQueue> <ReplyQueue>ICS.DP.REPLY</ReplyQueue> </QueueDetails> </SORRegion> <SORRegion name="CICDKBX1"> <ConsumerName name="MYCA"> <AutomationIds> <PreAutoId> <AutomationId>XA1146A</AutomationId> <AutomationId>XA1146A</AutomationId> </PreAutoId> <DefaultAutoId> <AutomationId>XA1146A</AutomationId> </DefaultAutoId> </AutomationIds> </ConsumerName> <QueueDetails> <QueueManager>MAO1</QueueManager> <ReplyQueueManager>MAO1</ReplyQueueManager> <RequestQueue>GSTAR.ICS.DP.DHIPO211.REQUEST</RequestQueue> <ReplyQueue>ICS.DP.REPLY</ReplyQueue> </QueueDetails> </SORRegion> <SORRegion name="CICDKAX4"> <ConsumerName name="MYCA"> <AutomationIds> <PreAutoId> <AutomationId>XA1146A</AutomationId> <AutomationId>XA1146A</AutomationId> </PreAutoId> <DefaultAutoId> <AutomationId>XA1146A</AutomationId> </DefaultAutoId> </AutomationIds> </ConsumerName> <QueueDetails> <QueueManager>MAO1</QueueManager> <ReplyQueueManager>MAO1</ReplyQueueManager> <RequestQueue>GSTAR.GDAS.DHIPO204.REQUEST</RequestQueue> <ReplyQueue>ICS.DP.REPLY</ReplyQueue> </QueueDetails> </SORRegion> <SORRegion name="CICDKEX7"> <ConsumerName name="MYCA"> <AutomationIds> <PreAutoId> <AutomationId>XA1146A</AutomationId> <AutomationId>XA1146A</AutomationId> </PreAutoId> <DefaultAutoId> <AutomationId>XA1146A</AutomationId> </DefaultAutoId> </AutomationIds> </ConsumerName> <QueueDetails> <QueueManager>MAO1</QueueManager> <ReplyQueueManager>MAO1</ReplyQueueManager> <RequestQueue>GSTAR.GDAS.DHIPO247.REQUEST</RequestQueue> <ReplyQueue>ICS.DP.REPLY</ReplyQueue> </QueueDetails> </SORRegion> </CountryCode> <CountryCode Ctrycd="724"> <SORRegion name="Test"> <ConsumerName name="MYCA"> <AutomationIds> <PreAutoId> <AutomationId>XA4248A</AutomationId> <AutomationId>XA1146A</AutomationId> </PreAutoId> <DefaultAutoId> <AutomationId>XA4248A</AutomationId> </DefaultAutoId> </AutomationIds> </ConsumerName> <QueueDetails> <QueueManager>MAO1</QueueManager> <ReplyQueueManager>MAO1</ReplyQueueManager> <RequestQueue>GSTAR.GDAS.DHIPO239.REQUEST</RequestQueue> <ReplyQueue>ICS.DP.REPLY</ReplyQueue> </QueueDetails> </SORRegion> <SORRegion name="default"> <ConsumerName name="MYCA"> <AutomationIds> <PreAutoId> <AutomationId>XA4248A</AutomationId> <AutomationId>XA1146A</AutomationId> </PreAutoId> <DefaultAutoId> <AutomationId>XA4248A</AutomationId> </DefaultAutoId> </AutomationIds> </ConsumerName> <QueueDetails> <QueueManager>MAO1</QueueManager> <ReplyQueueManager>MAO1</ReplyQueueManager> <RequestQueue>GSTAR.GDAS.DHIPO239.REQUEST</RequestQueue> <ReplyQueue>ICS.DP.REPLY</ReplyQueue> </QueueDetails> </SORRegion> <SORRegion name="CICDKBX1"> <ConsumerName name="MYCA"> <AutomationIds> <PreAutoId> <AutomationId>XA4248A</AutomationId> <AutomationId>XA1146A</AutomationId> </PreAutoId> <DefaultAutoId> <AutomationId>XA4248A</AutomationId> </DefaultAutoId> </AutomationIds> </ConsumerName> <QueueDetails> <QueueManager>MAO1</QueueManager> <ReplyQueueManager>MAO1</ReplyQueueManager> <RequestQueue>GSTAR.ICS.DP.DHIPO211.REQUEST</RequestQueue> <ReplyQueue>ICS.DP.REPLY</ReplyQueue> </QueueDetails> </SORRegion> <SORRegion name="CICDKAX4"> <ConsumerName name="MYCA"> <AutomationIds> <PreAutoId> <AutomationId>XA4248A</AutomationId> <AutomationId>XA1146A</AutomationId> </PreAutoId> <DefaultAutoId> <AutomationId>XA4248A</AutomationId> </DefaultAutoId> </AutomationIds> </ConsumerName> <QueueDetails> <QueueManager>MAO1</QueueManager> <ReplyQueueManager>MAO1</ReplyQueueManager> <RequestQueue>GSTAR.GDAS.DHIPO204.REQUEST</RequestQueue> <ReplyQueue>ICS.DP.REPLY</ReplyQueue> </QueueDetails> </SORRegion> <SORRegion name="CICDKEX7"> <ConsumerName name="MYCA"> <AutomationIds> <PreAutoId> <AutomationId>XA4248A</AutomationId> <AutomationId>XA1146A</AutomationId> </PreAutoId> <DefaultAutoId> <AutomationId>XA4248A</AutomationId> </DefaultAutoId> </AutomationIds> </ConsumerName> <QueueDetails> <QueueManager>MAO1</QueueManager> <ReplyQueueManager>MAO1</ReplyQueueManager> <RequestQueue>GSTAR.GDAS.DHIPO247.REQUEST</RequestQueue> <ReplyQueue>ICS.DP.REPLY</ReplyQueue> </QueueDetails> </SORRegion> </CountryCode> </SOR> </Service> </RoutingDetails>

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  • Drupal: Two-way communication between unregistered customer and admin

    - by Bryan Folds
    I need to setup a system where customers can choose to Request a Quote for a specific holiday package, where they will enter their personal details as well as their holiday requirements (number of rooms, etc.) and will then allow them to view a page which will have a threaded conversation between them and the admin (so the admin can reply to their quote request on the website). The problem is that most customers won't be registered when they want to request a quote, so I was thinking that the Request a Quote page could silently register the customer as a user (using their personal details) on the same page where it asks for their holiday requirements. The other option I can think of would be to not register them and just email them a unique URL where they can view their quote request and reply to the admin. Could you point me in the right direction on how to do either of those?

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  • Python and Plone help

    - by Grenko
    Im using the plone cms and am having trouble with a python script. I get a name error "the global name 'open' is not defined". When i put the code in a seperate python script it works fine and the information is being passed to the python script becuase i can print the query. Code is below: #Import a standard function, and get the HTML request and response objects. from Products.PythonScripts.standard import html_quote request = container.REQUEST RESPONSE = request.RESPONSE # Insert data that was passed from the form query=request.query #print query f = open("blast_query.txt","w") for i in query: f.write(i) return printed I also have a second question, can i tell python to open a file in in a certain directory for example, If the script is in a certain loaction i.e. home folder, but i want the script to open a file at home/some_directory/some_directory can it be done?

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  • Mixing Forms and Token Authentication in a single ASP.NET Application (the Details)

    - by Your DisplayName here!
    The scenario described in my last post works because of the design around HTTP modules in ASP.NET. Authentication related modules (like Forms authentication and WIF WS-Fed/Sessions) typically subscribe to three events in the pipeline – AuthenticateRequest/PostAuthenticateRequest for pre-processing and EndRequest for post-processing (like making redirects to a login page). In the pre-processing stage it is the modules’ job to determine the identity of the client based on incoming HTTP details (like a header, cookie, form post) and set HttpContext.User and Thread.CurrentPrincipal. The actual page (in the ExecuteHandler event) “sees” the identity that the last module has set. So in our case there are three modules in effect: FormsAuthenticationModule (AuthenticateRequest, EndRequest) WSFederationAuthenticationModule (AuthenticateRequest, PostAuthenticateRequest, EndRequest) SessionAuthenticationModule (AuthenticateRequest, PostAuthenticateRequest) So let’s have a look at the different scenario we have when mixing Forms auth and WS-Federation. Anoymous request to unprotected resource This is the easiest case. Since there is no WIF session cookie or a FormsAuth cookie, these modules do nothing. The WSFed module creates an anonymous ClaimsPrincipal and calls the registered ClaimsAuthenticationManager (if any) to transform it. The result (by default an anonymous ClaimsPrincipal) gets set. Anonymous request to FormsAuth protected resource This is the scenario where an anonymous user tries to access a FormsAuth protected resource for the first time. The principal is anonymous and before the page gets rendered, the Authorize attribute kicks in. The attribute determines that the user needs authentication and therefor sets a 401 status code and ends the request. Now execution jumps to the EndRequest event, where the FormsAuth module takes over. The module then converts the 401 to a redirect (302) to the forms login page. If authentication is successful, the login page sets the FormsAuth cookie.   FormsAuth authenticated request to a FormsAuth protected resource Now a FormsAuth cookie is present, which gets validated by the FormsAuth module. This cookie gets turned into a GenericPrincipal/FormsIdentity combination. The WS-Fed module turns the principal into a ClaimsPrincipal and calls the registered ClaimsAuthenticationManager. The outcome of that gets set on the context. Anonymous request to STS protected resource This time the anonymous user tries to access an STS protected resource (a controller decorated with the RequireTokenAuthentication attribute). The attribute determines that the user needs STS authentication by checking the authentication type on the current principal. If this is not Federation, the redirect to the STS will be made. After successful authentication at the STS, the STS posts the token back to the application (using WS-Federation syntax). Postback from STS authentication After the postback, the WS-Fed module finds the token response and validates the contained token. If successful, the token gets transformed by the ClaimsAuthenticationManager, and the outcome is a) stored in a session cookie, and b) set on the context. STS authenticated request to an STS protected resource This time the WIF Session authentication module kicks in because it can find the previously issued session cookie. The module re-hydrates the ClaimsPrincipal from the cookie and sets it.     FormsAuth and STS authenticated request to a protected resource This is kind of an odd case – e.g. the user first authenticated using Forms and after that using the STS. This time the FormsAuth module does its work, and then afterwards the session module stomps over the context with the session principal. In other words, the STS identity wins.   What about roles? A common way to set roles in ASP.NET is to use the role manager feature. There is a corresponding HTTP module for that (RoleManagerModule) that handles PostAuthenticateRequest. Does this collide with the above combinations? No it doesn’t! When the WS-Fed module turns existing principals into a ClaimsPrincipal (like it did with the FormsIdentity), it also checks for RolePrincipal (which is the principal type created by role manager), and turns the roles in role claims. Nice! But as you can see in the last scenario above, this might result in unnecessary work, so I would rather recommend consolidating all role work (and other claims transformations) into the ClaimsAuthenticationManager. In there you can check for the authentication type of the incoming principal and act accordingly. HTH

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  • Django Initial for a ManyToMany Field

    - by gramware
    I have a form that edits an instance of my model. I would like to use the form to pass all the values as hidden with an inital values of username defaulting to the logged in user so that it becomes a subscribe form. The problem is that the normal initial={'field':value} doesn't seem to work for manytomany fields. how do i go about it? my views.py @login_required def event_view(request,eventID): user = UserProfile.objects.get(pk=request.session['_auth_user_id']) event = events.objects.get(eventID = eventID) if request.method == 'POST': form = eventsSusbcribeForm( request.POST,instance=event) if form.is_valid(): form.save() return HttpResponseRedirect('/events/') else: form = eventsSusbcribeForm(instance=event) return render_to_response('event_view.html', {'user':user,'event':event, 'form':form},context_instance = RequestContext( request )) my forms.py class eventsSusbcribeForm(forms.ModelForm): eventposter = forms.ModelChoiceField(queryset=UserProfile.objects.all(), widget=forms.HiddenInput()) details = forms.CharField(widget=forms.Textarea(attrs={'cols':'50', 'rows':'5'}),label='Enter Event Description here') date = forms.DateField(widget=SelectDateWidget()) class Meta: model = events exclude = ('deleted') def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs): super(eventsSusbcribeForm, self).__init__(*args, **kwargs) self.fields['username'].initial = (user.id for user in UserProfile.objects.filter())

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