by modular i mean that i want to create libraries with configuration that can be plugged in my application and interact with it via good old DI and Eventbus or what have you
in 1% i just want to ship the client updated and new libraries that conform to an already existent api in the main application and the application loads them at runtime
otherwise it's deployment hell with multiple versions for multiple clients
when I want to update it, I close the plugin, calling some events and cleaning up memory and stuff, then I drop the resources and replace the ones that are installed with the ones from the server
then, I reload the plugin so it will be activated again
If you're not, you're just assuming .NET will handle it for you, then no, as long as you separate "things you want to unload later" into their separate application domains then it shouldn't cause any issue.
basically loading jars (dlls in c# case) at runtime and accessing code from there is bad because it bypasses security and you have to do it with reflection, or that is what i know
@RaduStefanPopescu How/why would it bypass security? What security?
@Wietlol If you have specific issues you're seeing then stop asking "can this cause any issues" and start asking "this specific issue X we're seeing, why is this?".
@Wietlol If you load an assembly into the main application domain it can obviously "reach" into whatever it is this domain is storing/doing. Not sure what the issue is here though.
Get lost. ignored. If you're going to be stupid, and stubborn I have no patience. Let your site have an SQL injection attack later and you justify it by "BUT IT WAS SUPPOSED TO BE FAILSAFE!!!!!1111"
Hello. I'm trying to get a thread safe collection but I need one with only a Key, not a value, just to store a list of class instances. Would I be okay if I used HashSet and did lock on each call, or is there a better alternative? I guess what I'm asking is will locking a hashset make it as thread-safe as a ConcurrentDictionary or would I need to go for something else?
@milleniumbug I did look at that, It seems ConcurrentBag would be my best option, but I wanted to knock if HashSet would be okay if I locked on each call?
@VoiDHD If you're locking on every access a HashSet<T> is completely safe, though there are some concurrent collections in the .NET runtime you should definitely profile them before switching. Some of them are very good in high-traffic scenarios but ultra-slow compared to a normal lock in some other cases.
As long as you have an if-statement first checking if there's a lock, before obtaining the lock, then yes, it seems to me you would have a race condition.
Sorry, I looked at the wrong tab. Your code is just broken, I'm not going to spend more time on that, it contains both a race condition (as already stated) and does not release the lock.
@LasseV.Karlsen thank you for MEF i think i will learn C# today and implement my solution using it. Running on linux isn't a requirement. I just need client desktop application with plugins
I am accessing excel spreadsheet data via OleDb. In C# Interactive window everything works without a hitch. In execution, it comes time to execute a command and it can't find the sheet that I specified (This is the same code executed in both cases).
Interestingly, the var sheetTable = Connection.GetOleDbSchemaTable(OleDbSchemaGuid.Tables, null); returns an empty datatable as in there is no data in it, only column headers.
WinForms is the oldest one and it's mostly meh, WPF is quite nice (and IME one of the nicest GUI frameworks out there), but it seems a bit neglected by MS, UWP is supposed to be the "next new thing", but it targets Windows 10 and so you won't run it on Windows 7, so I prefer WPF over that one
output should be: Foo is available, body called. Foo is locked, body ignored. Foo is available, body called. Foo is locked, body ignored. Foo is available, body called. Foo is locked, body ignored.