I have this problem that in my program I set dynamically server address and try to connect to my database and it works fine if the address that I provided was correct, if not it doesn't connect and that's normal. After that I would like to change this address, but even though I change it in code and try to connect with my database again, it stills remembers old configuration and still doesn't connect. What should I do to change it?
I set my configuration like this:
XmlDocument xmlDoc = new XmlDocument();
xmlDoc.Load(AppDomain.CurrentDomain.SetupInformation.ConfigurationFile);
foreach (XmlElement element in xmlDoc.DocumentElement)
{
if (element.Name.Equals("ideablade.configuration"))
{
foreach (XmlNode ele in element.ChildNodes)
{
if (ele.Name == "objectServer")
{
var node = ele;
node.Attributes["remoteBaseURL"].Value = remoteBaseURL;
node.Attributes["serverPort"].Value = serverPort;
node.Attributes["serviceName"].Value = serviceName;
}
}
}
}
xmlDoc.Save(AppDomain.CurrentDomain.SetupInformation.ConfigurationFile);
ConfigurationManager.RefreshSection("ideablade.configuration");
and I try to connect to my databse like this
if (BeczkaModel!= null)
{
BeczkaModel.Disconnect();
BeczkaModel= null;
}
IdeaBladeConfig.Instance.ObjectServer.RemoteBaseUrl = remoteBaseURL;
IdeaBladeConfig.Instance.ObjectServer.ServerPort = (int)double.Parse(serverPort);
IdeaBladeConfig.Instance.ObjectServer.ServiceName = serviceName;
IdeaBladeConfig.Instance.ObjectServer.ClientSettings.IsDistributed=true;
BeczkaModel= new BeczkaContainer();
BeczkaModel.AuthorizedThreadId = null;
BeczkaModel.Connect();
Data source key extensions and/or a custom IDataSourceKeyResolver are the way to handle different database connections. It's important to realize that the EntityManager.Connect call is not connecting to a specific data source; it's actually connecting to a specific EntityService. The way to connect to differing EntityService URLs is to use a ServiceKey. More info here: http://drc.ideablade.com/devforce-2012/bin/view/Documentation/connect-to-multiple-entityservers.
You will be able to determine which database to connect to by implementing a custom DataSourceKeyResolver.
You will find additional information at http://drc.ideablade.com/devforce-2012/bin/view/Documentation/data-sources and a sample at http://drc.ideablade.com/devforce-2012/bin/view/Documentation/code-sample-custom-datasourcekeyresolver.
To clarify sbellini's post, there are two ways to dynamically determine the database connection. The first and easier approach is to use Data Source Extensions. This is useful if you have a static list of database connections and want to select among the list at runtime. The second approach is to implement an IDataSourceKeyResolver. This allows you to determine the connection string entirely at runtime.
http://drc.ideablade.com/devforce-2012/bin/view/Documentation/data-sources
http://drc.ideablade.com/devforce-2012/bin/view/Documentation/code-sample-data-source-extensions
http://drc.ideablade.com/devforce-2012/bin/view/Documentation/code-sample-custom-datasourcekeyresolver
Related
Nice framework... but I am trying to establish a connection to an available network. I have connected manually, and made a snapshot of the XML. Then removed the connection.
I am able to find the network,
I pass in the SSID I want to connect to (yes, it is found..). I also pass the profileSecurity to use... but not really sure what to put there. From my XML I tried bot AES as well as WPA2PSK. But, SetProfile always returns false. And not sure how to extract an error message about what went wrong. That would be nice.
As the profile fails, the ConnectNetwork also fails, but that would be expected I think.
Any pointer would be nice. And a bit more documentation on these points would make the tool a lot better.
// get the network to connect to
var availableNetwork = NativeWifi.EnumerateAvailableNetworks()
.FirstOrDefault(x => x.Ssid.ToString() == ssid);
if (availableNetwork is null)
return;
var profile = NativeWifi.EnumerateProfiles().FirstOrDefault(x => x.Name == ssid);
if (profile is null)
{
// build XML
string profileName = ssid;
string mac = StringToHex(profileName);
string profileXml = string.Format("<?xml version=\"1.0\"?><WLANProfile xmlns = \"http://www.microsoft.com/networking/WLAN/profile/v1\"><name>{0}</name><SSIDConfig><SSID><hex>{1}</hex><name>{0}</name></SSID></SSIDConfig><connectionType>ESS</connectionType><connectionMode>auto</connectionMode><MSM><security><authEncryption><authentication>WPA2PSK</authentication><encryption>AES</encryption><useOneX>false</useOneX></authEncryption><sharedKey><keyType>passPhrase</keyType><protected>true</protected><keyMaterial>... key removed for security...</keyMaterial></sharedKey></security></MSM><MacRandomization xmlns=\"http://www.microsoft.com/networking/WLAN/profile/v3\"><enableRandomization>false</enableRandomization><randomizationSeed>153878511</randomizationSeed></MacRandomization></WLANProfile>", ssid, mac);
// create a profile
var profileResult = NativeWifi.SetProfile(availableNetwork.Interface.Id, ProfileType.AllUser, profileXml, encryption, true);
}
else
{
//todo: log here
}
var wasConnected = NativeWifi.ConnectNetwork(availableNetwork.Interface.Id, ssid, availableNetwork.BssType);
I am using stripe connect(destination payment) with the help of stripe.net library from Jaymedavis.
The problem that I am facing is that I am not able to retrieve the destination payment ID to update the metadata in the connected account. The following line returns a null preventing me from updating meta data on the connected account. But the strange thing is that when I log in to the dashboard the destination payment ID exists. I am not sure why I am not able to retreive it in code.
Is the charge creation asynchronous?. I am not sure. Stripe's connect documentation does not help either. The following line returns a null. My code is down below. Seeking help.
String deschargeID = result.Transfer.DestinationPayment;
Here is the code that I am using
var service = new StripeChargeService(ZambreroSecretKey);
var result = (Stripe.StripeCharge) null;
try {
result = service.Create(newCharge);
if (result.Paid) {
//get the chargeID on the newgen account and update the metadata.
//Returns null even though it exists in the dashboard
String deschargeID = result.Transfer.DestinationPayment;
var chargeService = new StripeChargeService(newgenSecretKey);
StripeCharge charge = chargeService.Get(deschargeID);
charge.Metadata = myDict;
Response.Redirect("PgeCustSuccess.aspx?OrderID=" + OrderID);
}
} catch (StripeException stripeException) {
Debug.WriteLine(stripeException.Message);
stripe.Text = stripeException.Message;
}
The charge object's transfer attribute is not expanded by default, meaning it's just a string with the ID of the transfer object ("tr_..."), not a full transfer object.
According to Stripe.net's documentation, you can expand the transfer attribute by adding this line:
service.ExpandTransfer = True
before sending the charge creation request.
Hello I recently got into development around EWS. One of the issue came up to me is that a client ask me to import emails into database and he wants to detect the duplicate based on InternetMessageID this way he doesn't have to import the duplicate emails and my code came up to this point.
private static string GetInternetMessageID(Microsoft.Exchange.WebServices.Data.Item email)
{
EmailMessage emailMsg = email as EmailMessage;
string returnId = string.Empty;
if ((emailMsg != null)) {
try {
emailMsg.Load();
//loads additional info, without calling this ToRecipients (and more) is empty
} catch (ArgumentException ex) {
//retry
email.Load();
}
returnId = emailMsg.InternetMessageId;
} else {
//what to do?
}
return returnId;
}
I can handle regular emails, but for special exchange objects such as contact, Calendar, Posts etc it does not work because it could not cast it to an EmailMessage object.
And I know you can extract the internetMessageId from those objects. Because the client used to have another software that extract this ID for them, maybe the property is not called internetMessageID, I think I probally have to extract it from the internetMessageHeader. However when ever I try to get it from the item object it just throws me an error. How do I get the internet messageID from these "Special" exchange items?
PS i am aware of item.id.UniqueID however that is not what I want as this id changes if I move items from folder to another folder in exchange
Only objects that have been sent via the Transport service will have an InternetMessageId so things like Contacts and Tasks because they aren't messages and have never been routed via the Transport service will never have an Internet MessageId. You probably want to look at using a few properties to do this InternetMessageId can be useful for messages PidTagSearchKey https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/office/cc815908.aspx is one that can be used (if you good this there are various examples of using this property).
If your going to use it in Code don't use the method your using to load the property on each item this is very inefficient as it will make a separate call for each object. Because these I'd's are under 256 Kb just retrieve then when using FindItems. eg
ExtendedPropertyDefinition PidTagSearchKey = new ExtendedPropertyDefinition(0x300B, MapiPropertyType.Binary);
ExtendedPropertyDefinition PidTagInternetMessageId = new ExtendedPropertyDefinition(0x1035, MapiPropertyType.String);
PropertySet psPropSet = new PropertySet(BasePropertySet.IdOnly);
psPropSet.Add(PidTagSearchKey);
psPropSet.Add(PidTagInternetMessageId);
ItemView ItemVeiwSet = new ItemView(1000);
ItemVeiwSet.PropertySet = psPropSet;
FindItemsResults<Item> fiRess = null;
do
{
fiRess = service.FindItems(WellKnownFolderName.Inbox, ItemVeiwSet);
foreach (Item itItem in fiRess)
{
Object SearchKeyVal = null;
if (itItem.TryGetProperty(PidTagSearchKey, out SearchKeyVal))
{
Console.WriteLine(BitConverter.ToString((Byte[])SearchKeyVal));
}
Object InternetMessageIdVal = null;
if (itItem.TryGetProperty(PidTagInternetMessageId, out InternetMessageIdVal))
{
Console.WriteLine(InternetMessageIdVal);
}
}
ItemVeiwSet.Offset += fiRess.Items.Count;
} while (fiRess.MoreAvailable);
If you need larger properties like the Body using the LoadPropertiesForItems Method https://blogs.msdn.microsoft.com/exchangedev/2010/03/16/loading-properties-for-multiple-items-with-one-call-to-exchange-web-services/
I have an EF5 ASP.NET MVC 3 (Razor) web site, running under IIS7. Now I want to be able to change the connection string to the MSSQL database depending on the subdomain of the URL, e.g. foo.mydomain.com should connect to my "Foo" database, and bar.mydomain.com should connect to the "Bar" database.
Obviously the DNS records are set up so that they all point to the same web site.
What's the most efficient way of achieving this?
why don't you start passing your own SqlConnection to your YourDbContext?
var partialConString = ConfigurationManager.ConnectionStrings["DBConnectionStringName"].ConnectionString;
var connection = new SqlConnection("Initial Catalog=" + Request.Url.Host + ";" + partialConString);
var context = new MyDbContext(connection, true);
You can also change database in the DBContext:
context.Database.Connection.ChangeDatabase("newDbname");
It's not very easy...
You should change the constructor of object context to dynamically change the connection string.
Take the subdomain name using System.Web.HttpContext.Current.Request.Url.Host. Then use it to compute the proper connection string.
You should do this in the designer generated code. Of course this is not a good place.. to make it work use the T4 templating. Open your model and right click on the blank designer surface, then select "Add code generation item" -> Ado.net entity object generation. This will create a .tt file. Open it and look for the constructor syntax. Add your logic there.
Good luck!
I've come up with what I feel is a better solution than all those proposed to date. I'm using the default EntityModelCodeGenerator, so perhaps there are other, better, solutions for other templates - but this works for me:
Create the other half of the partial class MyEntities.
Override OnContextCreated(), which is called from within the class constructor.
Change the store connection string using a regex.
This comes out as follows:
partial void OnContextCreated()
{
// change connection string, depending on subdomain
if (HttpContext.Current == null) return;
var host = HttpContext.Current.Request.Url.Host;
var subdomain = host.Split('.')[0];
switch (subdomain)
{
case "foo":
ChangeDB("Foo");
break;
case "bar":
ChangeDB("Bar");
break;
}
}
private void ChangeDB(string dbName)
{
var ec = Connection as EntityConnection;
if (ec == null) return;
var match = Regex.Match(ec.StoreConnection.ConnectionString, #"Initial Catalog\s*=.*?;", RegexOptions.IgnoreCase);
if (!match.Success) return;
var newDbString = "initial catalog={0};".Fmt(dbName);
ec.StoreConnection.ConnectionString = ec.StoreConnection.ConnectionString.Replace(match.Value, newDbString);
}
Either use different connection strings in the web.config. Maybe research a bit if you can have conditional XSL transformations, that way, when you publish on a specific configuration the web.Release.config will change your Web.Config to be what you need it to be.
Or, use |DataDirectory| string substitution - http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/cc716756.aspx
more on DataDirectory string substitution here:
http://forums.asp.net/t/1835930.aspx/1?Problem+With+Database+Connection
I guess, if you want to be by the book, create build configurations for each of your separate releases and put the connection string in the respective web..config and when you publish, that XSL transformation will put the connection string in the resulting web.config and voila.
I've done something like that recently by adding some custom configuration, which uses the host header to determine the connectionStringName, which has to be used.
EF5 has a constructor, which can handle this name
var context = new MyDbContex("name=<DBConnectionStringName>");
I just did for a project
public partial class admpDBcontext : DbContext
{
public static string name
{
get
{
if (System.Web.HttpContext.Current.Request.Url.GetLeftPart(UriPartial.Authority).ToString() == "http://fcoutl.vogmtl.com")
{
return "name=admpDBcontext";
}
else { return "name=admpNyDBcontext"; }
}
}
public admpDBcontext()
: base(name)
{
}
}
And in the web.config I add the connectionString.
I'd like to create a small application that can collect system information (Win32_blablabla) using WinRM as opposed to WMI. How can i do that from C#?
The main goal is to use WS-Man (WinRm) as opposed to DCOM (WMI).
I guess the easiest way would be to use WSMAN automation. Reference wsmauto.dll from windwos\system32 in your project:
then, code below should work for you. API description is here: msdn: WinRM C++ API
IWSMan wsman = new WSManClass();
IWSManConnectionOptions options = (IWSManConnectionOptions)wsman.CreateConnectionOptions();
if (options != null)
{
try
{
// options.UserName = ???;
// options.Password = ???;
IWSManSession session = (IWSManSession)wsman.CreateSession("http://<your_server_name>/wsman", 0, options);
if (session != null)
{
try
{
// retrieve the Win32_Service xml representation
var reply = session.Get("http://schemas.microsoft.com/wbem/wsman/1/wmi/root/cimv2/Win32_Service?Name=winmgmt", 0);
// parse xml and dump service name and description
var doc = new XmlDocument();
doc.LoadXml(reply);
foreach (var elementName in new string[] { "p:Caption", "p:Description" })
{
var node = doc.GetElementsByTagName(elementName)[0];
if (node != null) Console.WriteLine(node.InnerText);
}
}
finally
{
Marshal.ReleaseComObject(session);
}
}
}
finally
{
Marshal.ReleaseComObject(options);
}
}
hope this helps, regards
I've got an article that describes an easy way to run Powershell through WinRM from .NET at http://getthinktank.com/2015/06/22/naos-winrm-windows-remote-management-through-net/.
The code is in a single file if you want to just copy it and it's also a NuGet package that includes the reference to System.Management.Automation.
It auto manages trusted hosts, can run script blocks, and also send files (which isn't really supported but I created a work around). The returns are always the raw objects from Powershell.
// this is the entrypoint to interact with the system (interfaced for testing).
var machineManager = new MachineManager(
"10.0.0.1",
"Administrator",
MachineManager.ConvertStringToSecureString("xxx"),
true);
// will perform a user initiated reboot.
machineManager.Reboot();
// can run random script blocks WITH parameters.
var fileObjects = machineManager.RunScript(
"{ param($path) ls $path }",
new[] { #"C:\PathToList" });
// can transfer files to the remote server (over WinRM's protocol!).
var localFilePath = #"D:\Temp\BigFileLocal.nupkg";
var fileBytes = File.ReadAllBytes(localFilePath);
var remoteFilePath = #"D:\Temp\BigFileRemote.nupkg";
machineManager.SendFile(remoteFilePath, fileBytes);
Hope this helps, I've been using this for a while with my automated deployments. Please leave comments if you find issues.
I would like to note that this shows an interop error by default in Visual Studio 2010.
c.f. http://blogs.msdn.com/b/mshneer/archive/2009/12/07/interop-type-xxx-cannot-be-embedded-use-the-applicable-interface-instead.aspx
There appear to be two ways to solve this. This first is documented in the article listed above and appears to be the correct way to handle the problem. The pertinent changes for this example is:
WSMan wsManObject = new WSMan();
This is in lieu of IWSMan wsman = new WSManClass(); which will throw the error.
The second resolution is to go to the VS2010—>Solution Explorer—>Solution—>Project—>References and select WSManAutomation. Right click or hit Alt-Enter to access the properties. Change the value of the "Embed Interop Types" property of the wsmauto reference.