Hey folks, this may be a weird question but is there a way to "password protect" compiling in Visual Studio? For example, compiling should only be allowed when a password is provided etc? This is for scenarios where code is shared amongst various parties but one would want to control the "compilation rights". Does that makes sense?
I entered "stop others from compiling my code" (LOL) in Google but the results are not even remotely about what I'm wondering about. I am assuming its because you can't control that, but I am wondering just the same.
If you want to make sure only one party distributes binaries, you can have them compile and sign the assembly, while keeping their signing key private. This will prevent any other party from signing their own version of the assembly and look authentic. Of course, others can compile it just fine, but they can't sign it with the same key.
There is absolutely nothing you can do to prevent someone from compiling your code if they have it. Unless "have it" means you only show it to them in a controlled environment (in a different application that gives read-only access to code, printed out on paper, etc.)
@RoelvanUden Yeah, but then it becomes a numbers game. Is it valuable enough for someone to photograph in secret on their phone, screen by screen, class by class, then retype into VS and compile? Maybe.
If its something like your working with a remote team if they dont need access to all code you could split it into difernt repos and then have a server compile and test all commits
@RoelvanUden The code was placed on a repo, I was trying to see if there was a middle ground without having to yank all the code out (somewhat what @AlexL alluded to). I think I'm just going to take the code out and save myself legal headache down the road
I am the principal dev anyway, I choose junior devs or develop the application on my own, I found out the company I'm building the application on is training devs on exactly the same technology I'm using to build their application...me no like that situation so paranoia sets in lol
application for*, not on...
contract says code and application is my property anyway...its just a matter of trust, and I want to avoid having to chase down people half way across the world
So I have a static controller with a method in area A in my solution that's converting HTML to PDF. Is there any difference in performance if I were to call that method from a controller in area B vs duplicating the method in area B and calling that one?
i went to a security conference where one of the speakers, for months, dropped $1 usb drives around his office to see how stupid his coworkers were in terms of security
@tweray phish Real Rock N Roll, not a tatoo and piercing teenage angst band, the real deal, they play instruments, and their concerts are filled with love, not broken bones from the mosh pit. Phish is ROCK N ROLL
.Net related question. I'm evaluating an enterprise application which also has a web interface connected to the core application on the server. With many applications now built around separation between logic and layout, why do companies still build UI tied into the system code
One of the questions we posed to the vendor was whether we could customize and rebrand the UI on the web and they said you can change logos but you can't say upload custom themes like you can on other web platforms
because ppl who don't know how to do SOA programming want to keep their jobs, so they simply threat everybody that "if you get rid of this everything will be broken", and for some reason, their boss somehow believed them
$340k per sale SOUNDS like much, but also includes maintenance, support, etc? Then how much are even sold and how many people are occupied with maintenance/etc?