bc the ThreadPool is in the standard library. furhtermore, im pretty sure that a large number of tasks can be run on the 16 threads seeing as how the TCP version can sustain 100 Tasks for its client handlers
the innermost task is the actual TestSocketClient method
i await that instead of the outermost Task, which represents the spawning of TestSocketClient on the ThreadPool
see above that, where i await Task.Factory.StartNew(TestSocketServer)? that call passes right down to the next line, because i dont explicitly await the innermost Task
that cancellationToken represent when the client handler must exit (i.e. when the server must be shut down). so i check whether the cancellation has been requested by the user, and if so i stop responding to requests
List<string> accountList = new List<string> {"123872", "987653" , "7625019", "762401", "7625011"};
int i = accountList.FindIndex(3, x => x.StartsWith("762"));
Morning all, I could use some advice because I don't want to waste anymore time running in circles. I have an entity called "Task" in a productivity application. Users may take a lunch while they have an active "Task", but an active task is not required to start their lunch. Obviously this means that a separate entity is required, but I have to ensure a relationship exists between the task and the lunch in the event that the user starts their lunch with an active task.
I figured a 0..1 to 0..1 relationship would be ideal, but entityframework doesn't make that easy.
@MikołajLenczewski I mean, a single loop that breaks down all the client details and assign them each Task to handle that request. The Task does not need to have an infinite loop
while (!token.IsCancellationRequested) {
// perhaps, add a wait & notify logic here as to avoid overheating the CPU
var client = ...
var request = ...
processClientRequest(request)
}
processClientRequest(request) {
var response = ...
socket.send(response)
}
@MikołajLenczewski something like that ^
make the processClientRequest asyncronous to have a concurrency
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Well Windows' Winsock has an internal queue for UDP packets that your program needs to read out. It has a max size, so if you're not fast enough reading them out, Windows drops em.
You'll probably see different behavior on Linux tho.
So you have to minimize the amount of time spent of spooning them out.
I don't look at the performance of my code all that much. I just make sure it uses appropriate theory and is very readable, even at the cost of some performance.
Well, if you're just toying around, it's all fine. But if you've got a product to build, obsessing over performance is not a very good thing to do. I just wanted to point that out.
Hey All, my company is starting to develop some applications using asp.net core. Most of our web servers are IIS, and more of our servers are Microsoft Windows Servers.
However, may I please know if we should start investigating whether or Not we should look into deploying to Kestrel webservers(regardless of whether they are hosted on Microsoft Windows Servers or Linux Servers)? Basically, would there be application speed improvements if we used Kestrel webservers for our ASP.NET core applications (as opposed to deploying them on IIS )?
if you use kestrel, it is mostly just cross platform. its a basic web server. put it behind a suitably configured nginx reverse-proxy and you should be good to go. im not sure how cross platform IIS is (i assume its windows only)
in fact theres docs on how to do this on microsofts asp.net docs
If there is No huge application speed performance improvement, and if my company Only really deploys ASP.NET applications in Microsoft Windows Servers with IIS then maybe I should just stick with IIS on Windows Servers?
I have code I just wanted to check for the swagger /docs path and now it is magically returning a favicon path first. How do I approach so my middleware does not auth against the /docs path?
if (context.Request.Path == "/docs")
{
context.Response.StatusCode = 200;
return;
}
in .net core how would you allow AllowAnonymous to the swagger /docs route?