I have functional, which open google maps with route but with one point of destination. I want add several points of stop. How I can do it? See my code:
public Command OpenMap
{
get
{
return _openMap ?? (_openMap = new Command(async () =>
{
await Xamarin.Essentials.Map.OpenAsync(Position.Latitude, Position.Longitude, new MapLaunchOptions
{
Name = Address.Name,
NavigationMode = NavigationMode.Driving
});
}));
}
}
I use Xamarin.Essentials.Map maybe exists another way?
In the end, I want that after btn click have been open google maps with navigation route which consists of several destination.
This is my first time playing with K8s api/client. I am trying to watch for events in all namespaces.
Below is the method, on running it prints:
Exception : Object reference not set to an instance of an object.
Closed
There aren't enough docs on how to use the C# client library. Can someone help me in understanding what I am doing wrong?
This is the method:
public async Task Temp() {
var config = KubernetesClientConfiguration.BuildConfigFromConfigFile();
IKubernetes client = new Kubernetes(config);
var resourceVersion = client.ListEventForAllNamespaces().ResourceVersion();
var path = $"api/v1/events";
// wait for events
while (true)
{
var eventsWatcher = await client.WatchObjectAsync<V1EventList>(
timeoutSeconds: int.MaxValue,
path: path,
resourceVersion: resourceVersion,
onEvent: new Action<WatchEventType, V1EventList>((x, y) =>
{
Console.WriteLine(x.ToString());
}),
onClosed: new Action(() =>
{
Console.WriteLine("Closed");
}),
onError: new Action<Exception>((e) =>
{
Console.WriteLine($"Exception : {e.Message}");
}));
Thread.Sleep(1000);
}
}
On a side note, I am able to watch locally using http://localhost:8080/api/v1/events?watch=1&resourceVersion=27958468 after kubectl proxy
Found the issue. I was using the wrong "path". Instead of api/v1/events it should be api/v1/watch/events. The NullReferenceException was happening within the library's watcher.cs line 149
I'm new to ReactiveUI. I have the following simple setup: a path to a csv can be specified and the containing datapoints will be displayed to the user (using oxyplot).
Now I'm trying to test the following subscription:
public GraphViewModel(IScreen hostScreen)
{
HostScreen = hostScreen;
setupGraphFormatting();
// Data Loading if path is valid
this.WhenAnyValue(viewModel => viewModel.PathToDataCsv)
.ObserveOn(RxApp.MainThreadScheduler)
.Throttle(TimeSpan.FromMilliseconds(500), RxApp.TaskpoolScheduler)
.Select(csvPath => csvPath?.Trim('"'))
.Where(csvPath => !string.IsNullOrEmpty(csvPath) && File.Exists(csvPath))
.Subscribe(csvPath =>
{
csvPath = csvPath?.Trim('"');
updatePlotModel(csvPath);
}, exception => {});
/* additional Code*/
}
And that's the corresponding UnitTest:
[Test]
public void If_PathToDataCsv_has_a_valid_value()
{
new TestScheduler().With(scheduler =>
{
string pathToValidCsvFile = "data.log";
var viewModel = new GraphViewModel(null);
scheduler.AdvanceByMs(1000);
viewModel.PathToDataCsv = pathToValidCsvFile;
scheduler.AdvanceByMs(1000);
viewModel.PlotModel.Series.Count.Should().Be(6);
});
}
My first implementation of WhenAnyValue didn't set any of the Schedulers specifically ( in Throttle and lacking any ObserverOn ):
public GraphViewModel(IScreen hostScreen)
{
HostScreen = hostScreen;
setupGraphFormatting();
// Data Loading if path is valid
this.WhenAnyValue(viewModel => viewModel.PathToDataCsv)
.Throttle(TimeSpan.FromMilliseconds(500))
.Select(csvPath => csvPath?.Trim('"'))
.Where(csvPath => !string.IsNullOrEmpty(csvPath) && File.Exists(csvPath))
.Subscribe(csvPath =>
{
csvPath = csvPath?.Trim('"');
updatePlotModel(csvPath);
}, exception => {});
/* additional Code*/
}
But then my Unittest failed. My assumption was that TestScheduler was being used for Throttle behind the scenes and I didn't have to do anything. Am I doing something wrong or is this the right way: If I want to use TestScheduler/TimeTravelâ„¢ I have to specify the schedulers the way I did?
Edit in response to Glenn Watsons answer:
Ok, now it's clear: The methods in question (Throttle, ObserverOn) of course do not use ReactiveUI's Schedulers, because these are methods from the Reactive Extensions Framework. So they can't be replaced implicitly by ReactiveUI in case of a UnitTest except I tell the methods to use the RxApp Schedulers...
RxApp provides the ThreadPoolScheduler when you are in release mode, and the testing scheduler when you are in unit test mode.
By default the reactive extensions (separate to ReactiveUI) will use their own default schedulers which are unaware of unit tests.
I have a service with multiple instances with different parameters for each instance, at the moment I'm setting these parameters manually (in another code to be exact) to Image Path of the service in Registry (e.g. HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\services\MyService$i00). so our service installation is done in two steps.
I'm really interested to merge these steps in Topshelf installation for example like
MyService.exe install -instance "i00" -config "C:\i00Config.json"
First Try
I tried AddCommandLineDefinition from TopShelf but it seems it only works during installation and running through console not the service itself (will not add anything to service Image Path).
Second Try
I tried to see if its possible to do this with AfterInstall from Topshelf without any luck. here is a test code to see if it going to work or not (but unfortunately Topshelf overwrites the registry after AfterInstall call).
HostFactory.Run(x =>
{
x.UseNLog();
x.Service<MyService>(sc =>
{
sc.ConstructUsing(hs => new MyService(hs));
sc.WhenStarted((s, h) => s.Start(h));
sc.WhenStopped((s, h) => s.Stop(h));
});
x.AfterInstall(s =>
{
using (var system = Registry.LocalMachine.OpenSubKey("SYSTEM"))
using (var controlSet = system.OpenSubKey("CurrentControlSet"))
using (var services = controlSet.OpenSubKey("services"))
using (var service = services.OpenSubKey(string.IsNullOrEmpty(s.InstanceName)
? s.ServiceName
: s.ServiceName + "$" + s.InstanceName, true))
{
if (service == null)
return;
var imagePath = service.GetValue("ImagePath") as string;
if (string.IsNullOrEmpty(imagePath))
return;
var appendix = string.Format(" -{0} \"{1}\"", "config", "C:\i00config.json"); //only a test to see if it is possible at all or not
imagePath = imagePath + appendix;
service.SetValue("ImagePath", imagePath);
}
});
x.SetServiceName("MyService");
x.SetDisplayName("My Service");
x.SetDescription("My Service Sample");
x.StartAutomatically();
x.RunAsLocalSystem();
x.EnableServiceRecovery(r =>
{
r.OnCrashOnly();
r.RestartService(1); //first
r.RestartService(1); //second
r.RestartService(1); //subsequents
r.SetResetPeriod(0);
});
});
I couldn't find any relevant information about how it can be done using TopShelf so the question is, is it possible to do this with TopShelf?
Ok, as Travis mentioned, It seems there is no built-in feature or simple workaround for this problem. so I wrote a little extension for Topshelf based on a Custom Environment Builder (most of the code is borrowed form Topshelf project itself).
I posted the code on Github, in case others may find it useful, here is the Topshelf.StartParameters extension.
based on the extension my code would be like:
HostFactory.Run(x =>
{
x.EnableStartParameters();
x.UseNLog();
x.Service<MyService>(sc =>
{
sc.ConstructUsing(hs => new MyService(hs));
sc.WhenStarted((s, h) => s.Start(h));
sc.WhenStopped((s, h) => s.Stop(h));
});
x.WithStartParameter("config",a =>{/*we can use parameter here*/});
x.SetServiceName("MyService");
x.SetDisplayName("My Service");
x.SetDescription("My Service Sample");
x.StartAutomatically();
x.RunAsLocalSystem();
x.EnableServiceRecovery(r =>
{
r.OnCrashOnly();
r.RestartService(1); //first
r.RestartService(1); //second
r.RestartService(1); //subsequents
r.SetResetPeriod(0);
});
});
and I can simply set it with:
MyService.exe install -instance "i00" -config "C:\i00Config.json"
To answer you question, no this isn't possible with Topshelf. I am excited you figured out how to manage the ImagePath. But that's the crux of the problem, there's been some discussion on the mailing list (https://groups.google.com/d/msg/topshelf-discuss/Xu4XR6wGWxw/8mAtyJFATq8J) on this topic and issues about it in the past.
The big problem is that managing expectations of behavior when applying custom arguments to the ImagePath will be unintuitive. For example, what happens when you call start with custom command line arguments? I'm open to implementing this or accepting a PR if we get something that doesn't confuse me just thinking about it, let alone trying to use. Right now, I strongly encourage you to use configuration, not command line arguments, to manage this, even if it means duplicating code on disk.
The following work-around is nothing more than a registry update. The update operation expects the privileges the installer requires in order to write our extended arguments.
Basically, we're responding to the AfterInstall() event. As of Topshelf v4.0.3, calling the AppendImageArgs() work-around from within the event will cause your args to appear before the TS args. If the call is deferred, your args will appear after the TS args.
The work-around
private static void AppendImageArgs(string serviceName, IEnumerable<Tuple<string, object>> args)
{
try
{
using (var service = Registry.LocalMachine.OpenSubKey($#"System\CurrentControlSet\Services\{serviceName}", true))
{
const string imagePath = "ImagePath";
var value = service?.GetValue(imagePath) as string;
if (value == null)
return;
foreach (var arg in args)
if (arg.Item2 == null)
value += $" -{arg.Item1}";
else
value += $" -{arg.Item1} \"{arg.Item2}\"";
service.SetValue(imagePath, value);
}
}
catch (Exception e)
{
Log.Error(e);
}
}
An example call
private static void AppendImageArgs(string serviceName)
{
var args = new[]
{
new Tuple<string, object>("param1", "Hello"),
new Tuple<string, object>("param2", 1),
new Tuple<string, object>("Color", ConsoleColor.Cyan),
};
AppendImageArgs(serviceName, args);
}
And the resulting args that would appear in the ImagePath:
-displayname "MyService Display Name" -servicename "MyServiceName" -param1 "Hello" -param2 "1" -Color "Cyan"
Notice the args appeared after the TS args, -displayname & -servicename. In this example, the AppendImageArgs() call was invoked after TS finished its installation business.
Command line args can be specified normally using Topshelf methods such as AddCommandLineDefinition(). To force processing of the args, call ApplyCommandLine().
I've made a topshelf windows service that starts three tasks. But since it might happen that one of those task might crash (yes, I know about EnableServiceRecovery), it would be better to use one program to create 3 services with different names and install them using command line parameters.
So in theory the code would look like:
static void Main(string[] args)
{
// *********************Below is a TopShelf code*****************************//
HostFactory.Run(hostConfigurator =>
{
hostConfigurator.Service<MyService>(serviceConfigurator =>
{
serviceConfigurator.ConstructUsing(() => new MyService(args[0])); //what service we are using
serviceConfigurator.WhenStarted(myService => myService.Start()); //what to run on start
serviceConfigurator.WhenStopped(myService => myService.Stop()); // and on stop
});
hostConfigurator.RunAsLocalSystem();
//****************Change those names for other services*******************************************//
hostConfigurator.SetDisplayName("CallForwardService"+args[0]);
hostConfigurator.SetDescription("CallForward using Topshelf"+args[0]);
hostConfigurator.SetServiceName("CallForwardService"+args[0]);
hostConfigurator.SetInstanceName(args[0]);
});
}
But of course it won't, because (from what I've read) you can't simply use args[] but apparently you can use something like
Callforward.exe install --servicename:CallForward --instancename:Workshop
I am still not sure how to pass the parameter to be used later in the program (in example above you can see it in new MyService(args[0]))
Can I use single parameter to set up all three elements (name, instance and internal use)?
Solved using help from How can I use CommandLine Arguments that is not recognized by TopShelf?
string department = null;
// *********************Below is a TopShelf code*****************************//
HostFactory.Run(hostConfigurator =>
{
hostConfigurator.AddCommandLineDefinition("department", f => { department = f; });
hostConfigurator.ApplyCommandLine();
hostConfigurator.Service<MyService>(serviceConfigurator =>
{
serviceConfigurator.ConstructUsing(() => new MyService(department)); //what service we are using
serviceConfigurator.WhenStarted(myService => myService.Start()); //what to run on start
serviceConfigurator.WhenStopped(myService => myService.Stop()); // and on stop
});
hostConfigurator.EnableServiceRecovery(r => //What to do when service crashes
{
r.RestartService(0); //First, second and consecutive times
r.RestartService(1);
r.RestartService(1);
r.SetResetPeriod(1); //Reset counter after 1 day
});
hostConfigurator.RunAsLocalSystem();
//****************Change those names for other services*******************************************//
string d = "CallForwardService_" + department;
hostConfigurator.SetDisplayName(d);
hostConfigurator.SetDescription("CallForward using Topshelf");
hostConfigurator.SetServiceName(d);
});
This answer was posted as an edit to the question Single command line parameter to control Topshelf windows service by the OP Yasskier under CC BY-SA 3.0.