That's also an issue because I have 600 Mbps at home, so in order to compensate you need at least 12 people without internet at home to compensate for me
Yeah, the US extremely unbalanced. Very fast connections in San Francisco and other large cities connected to tech hubs, but terrible speeds in small rural areas, because it's a lot more expensive to cover large rural areas with cables.
Fun fact though, I get the ads of what other coworkers are browsing thanks to the power of the Romanian proxy, lipstick and car brakes are on my screen at the moment.
I follow John Scalzi, the SF author, on twitter, and he occasionally complains that where he lives, in rural Ohio, the only internet he can get is with a crappy ISP that offers 6Mb DSL connections, tops.
I've got a 40Mbps DSL connection, but that's because I'm in a relatively old part of town with older infrastructure. I'm waiting for fiber to come my way.
Hey, today was my first time using TypeDescriptor to dynamically emit a type at runtime. That's pretty nice, though the API isn't as straightforward as I'd like it to be.
Basically, we have some infrastructure that generates a logger class from an interface. A module might define IMyModuleLogger with app-specific logging calls, and then the infrastructure creates an ad-hoc class that implements that interface, with a method implementation that forwards the logging call to our logging infrastructure.
But we aren't actually hooked up to the infrastructure yet, so I just wrote a method that takes an interface and creates a null implementation for it that does nothing.
@Default Nah, it's about 10 lines of code, but that's because I don't actually do anything in my type, just have empty method to implement the interface.
@Default As I mentioned above - every module defines a logger interface, but it's a waste of time and a lot of boilerplate to actually implement that interface with nothing but calls to MyLoggingProvider.GetLogger(loggerName).Log(severity, message). So we simply dynamically create a class that implements the interface, fill every method with that boilerplate code, and register it in our DI container as the interface.
That way my class simply gets IMyModuleLogger injected to it and can call _logger.ActionStarted("blah") and it gets logged, and no-one cares about the implementation.
It's a templating system built into Visual Studio that lets you write T4 templates that have C# code mixed with template placeholders, and convert those templates to code at compile-time.
We had one T4 template in our last project, I think, which dynamically inserted some machine-specific data into a constant in a code file and compile-time.
Marc Gravell seems to have had a specific and very low-level reason to use it here, one I don't know so can't comment on, but it's clearly commented as an exception to the general rule.
Another important difference is that Hashtable is thread safe. Hashtable has built in multiple reader/single writer (MR/SW) thread safety which means Hashtable allows ONE writer together with multiple readers without locking. In the case of Dictionary there is no thread safety, if you need thread...
Ok, I've finished importing our non-trivial Event Sourcing framework from the previous project, embedding it in the new project, removing unused dependencies, updating the CosmosDB SDK from v2 to v3 and replacing all the DI hooks to use ASP.NET Core's DI rather than AutoFac. And then I ran all the unit tests.
@mr5 We're a running microservices on Kubernetes. The service that writes events isn't necessarily the one who reads them. The DB is the central repository.
For instance, our configuration service has a UpdateConfiguration endpoint which (eventually) creates a new ConfigurationUpdated event in the event store.
We have (for now) two different places that listen to that event store - the configuration service itself which listens for the events, reads the new data, and updates the in-memory cached copy of the configuration (this happens separately on each container in the cluster), and the data service, which needs to know about updated configurations to know how to process incoming data.
Both services use CosmosDB's change feed notifications to get notified when a new event is added, read it from the DB, and process it.
@mr5 Canonical, meaning it's the "true" state of data. You can have cached copies of calculated entities, but if someone were to ask "what's the current state of entity X in the system", the real, actual state would be the one calculated by all events for entity X. If you were to delete some events, the state would be different.
(Which is why you never delete events in an event sourced system. At most, you migrate them to a colder storage for archived entities)
I think these things are orthogonal. Event sourcing is about how you store your data in the backend (whether you persist only the deltas for each event, or whether you store the latest state of each entity).
In our previous app, we had a first version which wasn't event-source, and a second version where we moved to event-sourcing. But that didn't change the front-end connection.
Our software architecture told me we could use it to sync data. Let's say the user's are offline and he does a lot of things while waiting to be online.
Syncing of events would be just a matter of reading the events and executing it.
There's a similar concept in frontend-backend communications which you might be talking about, where instead of having the front-end work in a pull model (client calls server to pull data when it needs it), you work with a push model, where the server constantly pushes events with updates to all entities, and the client keeps track of local entities and updates them.
@mr5 Yeah, those two approaches can play well together - if you need to "backfill" the client with everything that happened since last time they were online, the fact that your data is event sourced makes it easier to create a list of update messages.
also, he also tells me we could just check of the last event id, compare it against the server. If unequal, means there's need a synchronization, if not, no API request should be done since everything is in sync.
But they're not linked. You can have a pull model client to a back-end that uses event sourcing (the controller would build the entities requested from cache or directly from events, and send them to the client), and you can have a push model without it.
@mr5 Again, you don't need event sourcing to do ETag/version based caching optimization.
Even if you simply store your entities in a DB without event sourcing, you can store a timestamp/version field for each entity, and the client can avoid pulling the data if the version they have matches.
@mr5 Not necessarily. When you make a REST call to get your entity, you either get the version as a field, or as part of the ETag HTTP header. You store it locally, and the next time you request the data, send the version as part of your request (say, using the HTTP header If-None-Match: <etag>. The service receives the etag/version, checks if there's a newer version, and if not simply returns a 204 No Content response, or something like that.
Fun fact: Did you know that elephants are born at 100Kg? That makes them the 2nd biggest babies in the world, only after Wietlol arguing other languages. :)
!~>class A { public static string Run(){ return JsonConvert.SerializeObject(new Vm{Name="nyconing", Address="Mimikkyu", Time=DateTime.Now}); } class Vm{ public string Name; public string Address; public DateTime Time; } }
Is there a way to declare that a variable should never be null? I want the program to refuse to compile if I try to assign literal null to it, and/or crash at runtime if my_never_null_value = function_that_sometimes_returns_null() tries to assign null.
"That sounds dumb. What would that accomplish?" you ask. The static code analysis tool we're using marks the code if (x != null){console.log(x.y);} as "possible null reference exception` and customer support says "just deal with it lol" so I'm looking for a nuclear option. If x is a nevernull, surely the analysis tool will stop wasting my time.
Few years ago I deal with nullable data, Im thinking null was bad and I make a ext method to deal with it and after few months suddenly DBNull jumps in.....