Hi, I am getting "The request for the Windows Remote Shell with ShellId failed because the shell was not found on the server" for getmailbox powershell command in C# .
@AlexL it's entirely possible that in IISExpress it does one thing, it doesn't mean Azure will do the same, and it doesn't mean it'll do the same next week. So really I can't "just test it"
It sneaks up on you gradually. You need to return a list of results from several queries, but each returns a different entity, so that's fine. Then you want to return metadata results, like "MoreResultsAvailable" or statistical distribution data, so you add a wrapper QueryResults with the list as the generic payload. Then you want to return it from an async method... before you know it, you're deep down the rabbithole.
@BenjaminGruenbaum It just runs actions on threads from the thread pool; there is no queue nor any kind of intelligent logic there. You would have to make your own queue, but even then, I recommend against doing so. Running something on a background thread in ASP.NET does not guarantee it can finish its job; your ASP environment can be teared down at any given point whenever your management process thinks it's a good idea.
@RoelvanUden the point of that method is from what I've just read, to provide the strongest guarantee possible given the hosting architecture that the item does get executed. Are you saying you don't think that guarantee is strong enough?
@BenjaminGruenbaum @TomW To the guarantee there are a lot of "if"s and "but's; like a limited time to complete work and all that. If you have a bit of a queue, or say, a mailing server failing, your ASP.NET environment will not wait for that and just tear down the pool regardless of the state of your tasks or queue
@PleaseTeach what do you want? Linq isn't designed to mutate objects and if you read the designers' views they state they made design decisions in places that discourage using it to do that e.g. not including enumerable.ForEach in the main library
@BenjaminGruenbaum You specifically stated "We're running an ASP.NET WebAPI 2 service and we want to log some requests with our logger to email/database.". Logging to file is fast enough, you have to be logging like mad to have that be too slow, but it's not at all surprising for your database/email server to have hickups that would cause you to miss reports/logs. I assume that would be a bad thing.
@BenjaminGruenbaum 30s is in IIS by default, check if Azure is different before relying on that
@RoelvanUden well then maybe the handoff from the asp.net hosting process to the background process takes an unacceptably long time and that gets killed. It's no more reliable, you still can't guarantee that whatever you're trying to do survives a process shutdown
I know. Still, it's good to differentiate between doing guaranteed fast things and potentially slow things on the background in an ASP environment. It's very important to think about that before you get into trouble
@RoelvanUden If you wanted it "guaranteed" wouldnt you just use some sort of out of memory queue like a redis server or some cloud equiv then just have a process run a background task to deal with the queue. although then you have problems with scaling out i admit
@Ganesh what sort of processing are you doing on these records? Aggregating? Just generating statistics? Or is the output text file also going to be millions of records?
I'm getting the impression it's far more performant to hit the database 3m times for 1 record each time than to hit it 300 times for 10k records each time?
It's faster to hit it once for all the records, and iterate over them using a cursor from C#. Don't try to materialize everything into memory, that'll be bad.
In computer science, a database cursor is a control structure that enables traversal over the records in a database. Cursors facilitate subsequent processing in conjunction with the traversal, such as retrieval, addition and removal of database records. The database cursor characteristic of traversal makes cursors akin to the programming language concept of iterator.
Cursors are used by database programmers to process individual rows returned by database system queries. Cursors enable manipulation of whole result sets at once. In this scenario, a cursor enables the rows in a result set to b...