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05:58
Yo.
@RonaldMunodawafa It's not an issue of law. You're taking the English words "open" and "source", and saying "I know what they mean, so I know what Open Source means, too". That's like taking "rock and roll" and saying "Ah, I know what those words mean, so obviously it's music that's performed with stones and bread".
But "open source" is more than the sum of its component words. It's a specific term with its own meaning, just like "rock and roll" means something specific.
ohayou
06:16
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan Bread?
ohh... roll. I gotcha ;)
I always interpreted "roll" as in the action "to roll on the ground"
Yeah, that's where it comes from. I was going for maximum ludicrousity.
Ludicrous speed! Go!
Goood morning squirrels and other sharperinos!
I'm back in action, and NOT SICK anymore :D
06:34
@Avner wait so open source doesn't just mean the source is open for the public to see?
@Squirrelkiller Not necessarily. The common usages are that OS means you can not only see, but also reuse the code. "Open" here isn't just "accessible".
Open source usually describes an ideological action to allow source to be seen, learned from and reused. Similar to the tenets of Remix Culture.
I'm addicting reading questions and answering them (if I can), and at the end of the work day I have to reimburse the time I spent, and in home I'm on the questions page, until I sleep.
@MohamedElshawaf you're an addict
Stop.
HAMMERTIME!
06:46
@RoelvanUden I'll give it some time at least , I feel shame of my questions more than my answers :D
Shame really shouldn't factor in it.
@MohamedElshawaf Ask enough questions, and eventually you'll hit questions which nobody can answer
Until then, we're here :)
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan aesthetic problem in my profile not shame exactly!
07:19
Hi Guys.
This is mostly an architecture question:
- I have to design an intermediate web server (IS) which forwards incoming requests to a third party server (TPS) based on some business logic.
- IS logs each incoming request in the DB with a request status.
- There are two background jobs, one which reads the datatbase and based on the status forwards it to TPS
- The second background job picks all the jobs from database which have completed and deletes them
- First background job would also update the db with the updated status from TPS
I lost your train of thought. You're calling everything a job. What is a job in your context?
There are 3 components: Webserver which receives the request and logs to db, 2 background services which read the database
Why does your IS forward the incoming request, and then a background job does it too?
IS won't forward the job. Only background service will do that
Basically your web service simply puts the request in a queue (the db, in this case), and there's a background job that takes it out of the queue and sends it to TPS?
07:22
IS will only insert entries into DB
Yes
And also a cleanup job.
Ok. So what's the question?
These background jobs need to run every X minutes. What would be the best way about it? Windows services?
Or maybe keep this as part of the webserver?
And how do these things interconnect. My first foray into architecture
07:24
I can see three options - have them as background timer threads on the web-server, have them as Windows services, or have them as scheduled tasks.
The first option is what I would want, because then it would not have the hassle of installing the windows services.
I would argue they should run when a change comes in? Instead of polling? In which case, I would suggest you put every change into a MQ and subscribe to the events. One listener can persist to a DB (if you really want that), one listener can start the jobs, and one listener can clean up.
According to the architecture you mentioned, the three services are separate. Their only connection is the shared storage, which can be some sort of persistent queue like RabbitMQ, or a DB table (which you will have to handle synchronization yourself)
I can explore the option of RabbitMQ or DB, although the client has suggested using SQL Server
SQL Server Express is free if you stay under 2 GB (if I'm not mistaken)
07:28
You could use MSSQL, sure. But as Avner mentioned, you'll have to handle synchronization yourself. It's a bit of a hassle, but it can be done, and you can subscribe to events too. It makes life easier if you do that.
So I can subscribe to events in MSSQL, right?
SQL Server is very intrusive I've found
you almost have to dedicate a computer to it
Yeah, you can. It's not very friendly, but it can be done.
I recommend you to look into RabbitMQ though
Sure, will also look into Rabbit MQ
Subscribing to events would make you database dependent though (if you wanted to switch databases at a later date, you'd have a harder time of it)
you can't just poll the database instead?
07:30
Yuck, polling.
Yes. Polling after every N minutes is what is suggested as the requirement
Good morning.
It's much more efficient if you expect to deal with several at a time
Not ideal though in the opposite case of course.. polling when nothing changes is not "nice"
The load would not be that much. Currently there are only around 5000 clients which will do intermittent requests
there are ways of polling less frequently if that were an important consideration
like polling once every second, then once every 2, then once every 4, then once every 8.. until you hit a limit minimum polling time
once you find something to handle, you jump back down to once a second
07:34
Oh, that is interesting.
morning
So background threads in the webserver for update/cleanup job and a foreground thread for creating DB records for incoming requests.
This should be good?
as good as any I suppose
better to not have to perform cleanup at all
RabbitMQ would be event-based I suppose?
but I can see that you may need to do so anyway
07:37
It's a requirement. Although I would prefer deactivate instead of removing, but that's not a hard thing
good morning
I agree, I tend to prefer to flag records rather than delete them
@TusharTyagi In a queue scenario, handled items are often moved to a "handled messages" queue. That's equivalent to the deactivation method in an RDBMS.
A good reason to put the background jobs in a different process is for robustness. What if the web server crashes, or even if shut down for maintenance? These are decoupled processes that should continue even without the web server. They might even be running on a different machine.
You don't want to couple them.
That means an I need 2 queues: active queue and a completed queue?
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan That makes sense -- to make them separate processes.
But what would be the best way of having these? Some exes which are started by webserver or windows services?
The latter will have the trouble of installing it on the machien
If you're going for polling - a scheduled task that runs every X minutes.
If not, a windows service. It's really not hard to install.
07:41
Or a windows service that performs the polling..
You can have the same windows service also run as a console app if run directly (check out the Topshelf library)
I wouldn't really depend on windows scheduler for that..
@Neil Yeah, but you can simplify things even more to have a dumb "run and handle" processor.
It gives you no control over when to run the polling
If the previous failed, it'll continue polling just the same
It gives you control in the scheduler settings.
07:43
Well we're talking about "poll every n seconds". Not a lot to control in that regard
minutes.
But yeah.
But "run if previous failed" is part of the settings.
So maybe you want to try three times then fail.. then wait 2 hours and try again
What, like this? :)
I can't see images thanks to my proxy
Use an existing task scheduler instead of, you know, writing your own task scheduler.
07:45
Wietlol wouldn't agree
It has a "If this task fails, restart every <min>. Attempted to restart up to <num> times" feature.
You mean the one that comes with windows :)
The type of control I'd want to grant a systems administrator would be "On/Off"
@TusharTyagi Yesyes.
I don't like giving systems administrator full control over when it polls.. a lot could go wrong
07:47
If you're running on their server, they'll want control. It's their server, not yours.
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan This only works in theory.. in practice this is a bad idea
Especially if your company is paid to give support for your software
As both a developer and a former sysadmin, I disagree. I want software to let me configure things like where it logs, where it puts backups, how often, etc.
Because if something goes wrong thanks to meddling by systems administrator, guaranteed half an hour of time you'l have to spend figuring out what he changed. Half a day if he's not there, and several days if you don't even know that he changed anything
So sell them a dedicated appliance.
All to prove it isn't your software but the systems administrator that messed with the settings, despite knowing it to be the case
07:49
Or a virtual appliance.
That isn't your call. You're just the guy that's supposed to look into these problems
It's a bad idea, I tell you :) I speak from personal experience
Systems administrator would likely never touch it, or mess with it too much for comfort. I've never met a systems administrator that knew how to properly manage such a service
Better "On/Off". Period.
It makes your life harder, yes, but if you want to run on a client's machines, you can't block them from deciding how they run, or they'll just kick you out. That's why (virtual) appliances work well.
It's your machine now and you can lock it down however you want.
If they want more control, you make a configuration file available for them to change
including exactly the types of controls they require to change.. no more no less
Hand them a docker image and tell them to run it.
Voila! They now only have an on/off switch.
@RoelvanUden Bingo. This guy gets it ;)
07:53
@Neil A docker image is the same as a virtual appliance. It's running your app on your infrastructure (hosted on the client's infrastructure).
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan And so you're complicating it to the point where a systems administrator would only be able to turn it on or off
How is that any different?
But if you run it on a client's server, and suddenly find out that their security policy disables HTTPS access using a certain cypher combination, you can't tell them "disable that policy, I need it"
Guys, I interject but thanks for all the help. Might come back to ask a few more arch questions
:)
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan How would that change if you still relied on that HTTPS being disabled for your polling to work?
@TusharTyagi We'll surely be here, arguing about this several hours later ;)
@Neil I'm not talking about a network/fw policy, but a local Windows security policy that disabled some cypher combinations in the registry. If you were running on your own virtual appliance, you wouldn't be affected by the policy settings (which applies to the org's domain).
(yes, this is something that happened. :)
07:57
If it were up to me, I would prefer running in a Docker container or virtual machine, but as these things usually go, it's not up to me
Besides, SQL Server shouldn't be installed in a virtual machine for a number of reasons
You'd still have to do some tweaking to make it work with your application
> SQL Server shouldn't be installed in a virtual machine for a number of reasons
what are these reasons?
not saying you're wrong, but I'm curious
The fact that local storage in a VM isn't considered 'persistent', and that you'd need to do read/write over a network?
other performance penalties? licensing issues?
Well you'd have to dedicate all CPUs towards the virtual machine for one
Then it's getting only a fraction of the memory
It would also require a lot of disk space, with the possibility of growth, so there's that to handle as well
And even taking all these things into consideration, it could never be as fast as just installing it on the server itself
SQL server would be an awful choice for this imho
if you used MySQL, I'd say it'd be a little different, but SQL Server is kind of awful for this
Of course you wouldn't use a virtual machine for speed, you'd do it for avoiding problems with other systems
Hm. I think our SQL cluster is a bunch of VMs cobbled together.
Pretty sure that every SQL Server instance I've used in the last 8 years has been on a VM.
08:09
It hasn't been a problem for years, possible decades.
I literally can't believe it was suggested that MySQL might be better in a VM environment
Literally huh.
But I'm gonna email MS anyway and tell them their SQL Server VM offering is useless
LITERALLY
Why not?
LITERALLY
08:10
LITERALLY
I'm really more interested in why you'd say that
Burden of proof is on you. You seem to think SQL Server would be fine but MySQL wouldn't
So why do you think that?
Because when we tested MySQL / SQL Server on the same workload on a baremetal machine the performance difference was evident
Well was it the kind of workload suitable for a light database service like MySQL or was it better suited for a heavy metal database like SQL Server?
@Neil Umm, that's not really how burden of proof works. You're the one who made the claim about MSSQL under VM. I mean yeah, counter-claims would also need proof, but the burden is on you too.
08:13
Because arguably it wouldn't be suitable for MySQL in any circumstance
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan Because MySQL is lighter and less invasive
did I stutter?
Yes
They're both RDBs suited to the same workload, generally one's chosen over the other because of the platform you're running it on
Well there are a number of reasons, not just the platform
Care to elaborate on the real-world reasons of choice
(don't say virtualisation)
08:18
Well cost is a factor for one..
Free vs Free for light workloads, go on
MS SQL has a number of management tools to install.. the installation itself takes a while... MySQL is a bit more straightforward and direct
Cost and licensing is pretty much the most significant factor, IME.
MS SQL tends to be a memory hog as well
They both have their usefulness of course
So for arguments sake, if you were to compare just the enterprise editions of both products - what would be the differences?
I thought we were talking real world differences (as developers / implementors) rather than a burden of corporateness
08:21
Cost is not some abstract concept, it's very real world
MySQL has an enterprise version?
@RudiVisser For what concerns the differences, I'm sure you could tell me just fine.
I doubt you were asking because you were unaware
Sorry I genuinely am
I'm not trying to discount your opinion I'm trying to understand
Hmm, it would seem to be the contrary, actually. You've made your mind up that MS SQL is superior, correct me if I'm wrong
Looking at MySQL Enterprise vs SQL Server Standard (something I believe to be comparable) then SQL Server is marginally cheaper. If you compare true MSSQLEnt then it's a different story, but 90% of workloads wouldn't require that either
I hate SQL Server, the functionality that T-SQL misses and MySQL's syntax has pisses me off daily
08:25
That doesn't answer the question. The fact that you'd use MS SQL is a clear indicator that you think it is superior just the same
Nothing wrong with that, we all are entitled to our own opinions afterall
But when it comes to the practicalities of running a system on it, SQL Server has won out for us
and I certainly don't understand in the slightest the argument regarding virtualisation. You clearly think that there are more core differences that would allow this to be true, I'm trying to see what they are
Not with that mindset you won't
It's less of a mindset when you haven't actually presented a single argument
You're approaching it from the angle that there's no possible reason why you'd use MySQL over MS SQL. So anything to the contrary is automatically rejected.
9 mins ago, by Neil
Well cost is a factor for one..
8 mins ago, by Neil
MS SQL has a number of management tools to install.. the installation itself takes a while... MySQL is a bit more straightforward and direct
8 mins ago, by Neil
MS SQL tends to be a memory hog as well
Ah yes they are to do with virtualisation for sure
Sorry, must have missed that
I forget VMs aren't allowed to use hardware memory
08:29
Frankly I'm not interested in arguing. I was hoping for discussion and was met with animosity instead
You were met with an invitation to present why you believe MySQL virtualises better than SQL Server
But alright :)
@RudiVisser you might wanna check on how you initiate conversations.
@Default It's no problem, really.
not to be rude but I have experienced similar from you.
Ah it's pre-covfefe time, chill out
20 mins ago, by Rudi Visser
I'm really more interested in why you'd say that
08:31
We all have hard heads in this field
Fun fact: According to colleagues, it's better to invent a word's meaning and pretend it means what you want than having an actual name.
@HéctorÁlvarez do you have an example?
From now on, we'll say voucher and mean "Transport pass"
Uhhh that's not how words work
08:33
@HéctorÁlvarez Sounds logical.
and by "that's not how words work" I mean "that's not how dogs walk"
and by "dogs" I really mean "bacon"
They can be used interchangeably. So you can win a €50 Transport pass for Burguer king, and travel using a transport pass.
interchangeably, you mean?
As a software engineer, words are really important
I love dogs. Especially with hot sauce
08:34
Hey! No offense to dogs. Take your words back right now mister.
That moment when you're complaining about linguistic licenses and make a mistake yourself.
we translate words into functions. If the meaning of a specification is ambiguous, then your code is gonna be wrong.
@Neil No ketchup? Just sauce? Raw sauce?
No quack.
@HéctorÁlvarez Why ketchup? Dogs.. you know.. go great with eggs
08:36
yo yo
I thought we established that "dogs" were interchangeable with "bacon"
Now you're inconsistent!
That's jsut because eggs go with everything though
Hey whats that law called where you state something really vague and it will probably fit because it fit for most cases somehow? The one that explains why horoscopes are right so often?
The law of vague bullshitting?
08:41
T.R.s law? P.R.s law? Something like that?
LoVB
I don't have enough google fu in that direction to find it, I just get "science" about astrology...
Godwin's Law? No.. that was about Hitler..
Ahoy Cap'n o7
08:46
Confirmation Bias.
Not a law
But yeah, part of it
But they don't mention the actual law :(
ALso I just visited reddit on my work PC...
does anyone wanna do my coursework for me x
08:55
If you pay me enough
I've got too much actual work to do
they dont pay me enough to do it either
They do give a certificate in the end, don't they?
yes
That piece of paper is "valuable"
08:57
else i wouldnt bother
@Neil Google it, if you haven't watched it it's definitely worth a shot.
@Harry is it just repetetive "work" or do you have to think to finish your work?
i have to read
09:11
It's interesting to think that once upon a time, certifications were actually very useful
they could allow someone to switch towns and find work as being an expert of a given trade
I don't think certifications have had anything other than symbolic meaning for the past 70 years or so
Anyone else uses ReSharpers feature "string concatenation to interpolation"? It doesn't seem to appear in my ctrl+..
@Neil i dont lknow where you live but im not sure thats the case here boss man
I'm german. If I take my german certifications to asia, people bow to me.
I am having doubt regarding support charges from envato market? shall i ask in this place?
is it a c# question
09:15
No general question
@Harry
Doubt about support charges? Should probably ask the company charing.
I am having doubt regarding support charges, whether we will charged $11.25 for every sales for next 6 months or only $11.25 for the next 6 months. @Squirrelkiller
ask them
who? @Harry
09:17
The company who will be charging you for support...?
okay @Squiggle
oh dear
I like how we're basically an extension of other people's brains sometimes.
"I can't do a brain. Gonna ask other people to think for me"
maybe we should put that in the description
We're the collective Rubber Duck
Rubber Duck Collective?
09:21
Sounds legit
The Rubber Duck Collective - We solve your everyday problems
I don't have a duck here so I might need to enlist the service sometimes of the RDC
RDC#
room topic changed to C#: General discussions about the c# language, Squirrels and meme archaeology | gist.github.com - For Easy Code Pasting | stackoverflow.com/help/privileges/flag-posts - Please read the flagging rules before flagging a post as spam | We are not rubber ducks | Do not place panini in... questionable places [.net] [asp.net] [asp.net-mvc] [c#] [coreclr] [entity-framework] [linq] [visual-studio] [wcf] [wpf]
room topic changed to C#: General discussions about the c# language, Squirrels and meme archaeology | gist.github.com - For Easy Code Pasting | stackoverflow.com/help/privileges/flag-posts - Please read the flagging rules before flagging a post as spam | Often mistaken for rubber ducks | Do not place panini in... questionable places [.net] [asp.net] [asp.net-mvc] [c#] [coreclr] [entity-framework] [linq] [visual-studio] [wcf] [wpf]
there you go.
...but rubber squirrels?
09:24
Rubber Squirrels are something completed different.
Do not google at work.
Bing tho
What if I use my azure vm in the netherlands though
fuck bing
Bing bing bing!
09:25
bing is for the unintelligent
@Squirrelkiller what about it?
About what? The Azure VM? Or...the thing up there where I talked about something you wouldn't agree on?
Scheduler, it was the scheduler.
I would disagree on everything
but what is the issue if you use your azure vm in the netherlands?
Not an issue, btu a solution
Company doesn't have access to the vm or its traffic
just to the traffic of my local machine
So on the vm, I can gogle anything without anyone noticing
GOGLE
09:29
(anyone but the NSA of course)
lads
whats the alternative to geodetic data? its geocentric right?
isnt geocentric == earth is the center of the universe?
geocentric theology maybe
im more getting at the datum used in javascript if im being honest
09:33
what kind of data? coordinates?
i did google it lmao but i cant find it cause i cant remember what its called
i know what it is just not its name
@Harry Have you had to bring a certification to an interview before?
...you don't send all your certificates with the job application pdf?
09:38
i dont send bring the actual certificates
i bring my CV saying what certificates i have
Yeah but everyone lies on their CV
I've never sent a job application with a pdf of my certifications
I once got asked what GCSEs I had
That made me sad
If they really wanted to confirm, they could check with the institution
09:39
^
Supplying proof without making them ask might sway them. Or it might make them hate you. Applying for a job is as much RNG as car insurance
maybe that's weird, but that's how it worked for me
@Squirrelkiller Liar!
@Squirrelkiller yeah i dont either
i just dont put my grades on all the time
i just say i have a levels
I had a heck of a time filling my CV to the full page when I applied for my first job
And for my second job, I had a heck of a time restricting my CV to two pages
I don't have an Education section on mine
It's unimportant after X years of experience
imo
09:53
I'm starting to grow tired of the universal excuse of "We didn't have time".
if you dont have the experience tho its essential
Every piece of shit I come across because someone didn't have time to do it right.
Aaaargh.
@HéctorÁlvarez can be directly translated to we couldnt be bothered
make shit untolerable
Yeah in beginning you don't have time to make it right, so after the fact you need twice the time to fix shit
09:54
Exactly.
Or worse.
I'm talking about 2 hours to understand what the hell is going on to do something that takes 5 minutes.
Literally inserting 2 rows took 2 hours.
that is called obfuscation
That is called incompetence.
4 different languages mixed in the same code file.
What the jesus.
4 programming languages?
or speech languages?
Actual languages.
I often mix C# and English in code files
09:56
Speech languages.
i feel really bad
thats normally because c# is written in english surely
One of them is Catalan.
I guess those 4 are English, German, Spanish and whatever the hell you are from
Literally spent 2 hours on the phone with our consultant last week to figure out that in one method call I have to change one parameter to another one.
09:57
youre spanish arent you @HéctorÁlvarez?
Well clearly the solution is to add Japanese
Japanese, Korean and Chinese
Obviously you have to translate verything to klingon
people wont see the difference anyway
@Wietlol preferably intertwined
09:58
so you can write your code in your favorite language
ill write in daedric if thats ok
I once programmed in Tengwar

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