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How-To Tutorials

7019 Articles
article-image-moving-database-sql-server-2005-sql-server-2008-three-steps
Packt
23 Oct 2009
3 min read
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Moving a Database from SQL Server 2005 to SQL Server 2008 in Three Steps

Packt
23 Oct 2009
3 min read
(For more resources on Microsoft, see here.) Introduction There are several options if one wishes to move a database from a SQL Server 2005 to SQL 2008 Server. First of all there is a 'Copy Database Wizard' in SQL 2008 Server which is meant for transferring a database from any version of SQL Server 2000 and above to 2008 version. This Wizard can operate in two ways. In the first option it can attach a database (even one on the network) and uses the SQL 2008 SQL Server agent. The Copying of the database is implemented by an Integration Services package to run as a SQL Server Agent job that is scheduled to run immediately or according to some configurable schedule. This will therefore depend on correctly configuring the SQL Server Agent. In order to use the attach / detach process, the remote server will be stopped and if the database / log files are on a shared drive they are correctly brought in by the wizard. In the other option the database will be copied using the SQL Server Management Program for which the source database need not be stopped. However this is slower than the previous method and would also require the SQL Server Agent since a package has to be run. An option which works without too much hassles is manually detaching and attaching the database/log files. In this step-by-step (really two steps) tutorial, this simple procedure is described. If you are just interested in taking a small database from 2005 to 2008 server the author strongly recommends this procedure. Interested readers may also want to read my other popular article Moving Data from SQL Server 2000 to SQL Server 2005 Step 1: Detaching the Database Highlight the database you want to transfer in the Databases node in the SQL Server Management Studio as shown in the next figure. Right click this database as shown and click on Detach... Make sure the database is running (notice the green arrow for HodentekSQL Express which is a junior version of SQL 2005). This brings up the Detach Database window as shown. Place a check mark for 'Drop' as shown and click on OK. This removes the 'Pubs' node from the Databases folder in the SQL Server Management Studio (You may need to attach it again). With this accomplished you can physically move the files or do what you want with them. Step 2: Copy the DATA / LOG Files Copy the pubs.mdf and pubs.ldf files to a location on the C: drive of the machine on which SQL 2008 Server is installed.
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article-image-password-strength-checker-google-web-toolkit-and-ajax
Packt
23 Oct 2009
8 min read
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Password Strength Checker in Google Web Toolkit and AJAX

Packt
23 Oct 2009
8 min read
Password Strength Checker Visual cues are great way to inform the user of the status of things in the application. Message boxes and alerts are used much too often for this purpose, but they usually end up irritating the user. A much smoother and enjoyable user experience is provided by subtly indicating to the user the status as an application is used. In this section, we are going to create an application that indicates the strength of a typed password to the user by the use of colors and checkboxes. We are going to use check-boxes very differently than their normal usage. This is an example of using GWT widgets in new and different ways, and mixing and matching them to provide a great user experience. Time for Action—Creating the Checker In the current day and age, passwords are required for almost everything, and choosing secure passwords is very important. There are numerous criteria suggested for creating a password that is secure from most common password cracking exploits. These criteria run the gamut from creating 15 letter passwords with a certain number of lower case and numeric digits to creating passwords using random password generators. In our example application, we are going to create a password strength checker that is very simple, and only checks the number of letters in the password. A password string that contains less than five letters will be considered weak, while a password that contains between five and seven letters will be considered to be of medium strength. Any password containing more than seven letters will be considered as strong. The criteria were deliberately kept simple so that we can focus on creating the application without getting all tangled up in the actual password strength criteria. This will help us to understand the concepts and then you can extend it to use any password strength criteria that your application warrants. This example uses a service to get the password strength, but this could also be done all on the client without needing to use a server. 1. Create a new Java file named PasswordStrengthService.java in the com.packtpub.gwtbook.samples.client package. Define a PasswordStrengthService interface with one method to retrieve the strength of a password string provided as a parameter to the method: public interface PasswordStrengthService extends RemoteService{public int checkStrength(String password);} 2. Create the asynchronous version of this service definition interface in a new Java file named PasswordStrengthServiceAsync.java in the com.packtpub.gwtbook.samples.client package : public interface PasswordStrengthServiceAsync{public void checkStrength(String password, AsyncCallback callback);} 3. Create the implementation of our password strength service in a new Java file named PasswordStrengthServiceImpl.java in the com.packtpub.gwtbook.samples.server package. public class PasswordStrengthServiceImpl extendsRemoteServiceServlet implements PasswordStrengthService{private int STRONG = 9;private int MEDIUM = 6;private int WEAK = 3;public int checkStrength(String password){if (password.length() <= 4){return WEAK;}else if (password.length() < 8){return MEDIUM;}else{return STRONG;}}} 4. Now let's create the user interface for this application. Create a new Java file named PasswordStrengthPanel.java in the com.packtpub.gwtbook.samples.client.panels package that extends the com.packtpub.gwtbook.samples.client.panels.SamplePanel class. Create a text box for entering the password string an ArrayList named strengthPanel for holding the checkboxes that we will use for displaying the strength of the password. Also create the PasswordStrengthService object. public TextBox passwordText = new TextBox();final PasswordStrengthServiceAsync pwStrengthService =(PasswordStrengthServiceAsync)GWT.create(PasswordStrengthService.class);public ArrayList strength = new ArrayList(); 5. Add a private method for clearing all the checkboxes by setting their style to the default style. private void clearStrengthPanel(){for (Iterator iter = strength.iterator(); iter.hasNext();){((CheckBox) iter.next()).setStyleName(getPasswordStrengthStyle(0));}} 6. Add a private method that will return the CSS name, based on the password strength. This is a nice way for us to dynamically set the style for the checkbox, based on the strength. private String getPasswordStrengthStyle(int passwordStrength){if (passwordStrength == 3){return "pwStrength-Weak";}else if (passwordStrength == 6){return "pwStrength-Medium";}else if (passwordStrength == 9){return "pwStrength-Strong";}else{return "";}} 7. In the constructor for the PasswordStrengthPanel class, create a HorizontalPanel named strengthPanel, add nine checkboxes to it, and set its style. As mentioned before, the styles that we are using in the sample applications in this book are available in the file Samples.css, which is part of the source code distribution for this book. We also add these same checkboxes to the strength object, so that we can retrieve them later to set their state. These checkboxes will be used for displaying the password strength visually. Create a new VerticalPanel that we will use as the container for the widgets that we are adding to the user interface. Finally, create the service target and set its entry point. HorizontalPanel strengthPanel = new HorizontalPanel();strengthPanel.setStyleName("pwStrength-Panel");for (int i = 0; i < 9; i++){CheckBox singleBox = new CheckBox();strengthPanel.add(singleBox);strength.add(singleBox);}VerticalPanel workPanel = new VerticalPanel();ServiceDefTarget endpoint=(ServiceDefTarget) pwStrengthService;endpoint.setServiceEntryPoint(GWT.getModuleBaseURL() +"pwstrength"); 8. In the same constructor, set the style for the password text box, and add an event handler to listen for changes to the password box. passwordText.setStyleName("pwStrength-Textbox");passwordText.addKeyboardListener(new KeyboardListener(){public void onKeyDown(Widget sender, char keyCode, int modifiers){}public void onKeyPress(Widget sender, char keyCode, int modifiers){}public void onKeyUp(Widget sender, char keyCode,int modifiers){if (passwordText.getText().length() > 0){AsyncCallback callback = new AsyncCallback(){public void onSuccess(Object result){clearStrengthPanel();int checkedStrength = ((Integer) result).intValue();for (int i = 0; i < checkedStrength; i++){((CheckBox) strength.get(i)).setStyleName(getPasswordStrengthStyle(checkedStrength));}}public void onFailure(Throwable caught){Window.alert("Error calling the password strengthservice." + caught.getMessage());}};pwStrengthService.checkStrength(passwordText.getText(), callback);}else{clearStrengthPanel();}}}); 9. Finally, in the constructor, add the password text box and the strength panel to the work panel. Create a little info panel that displays descriptive text about this application, so that we can display this text when this sample is selected in the list of available samples in our Samples application. Add the info panel and the work panel to a dock panel, and initialize the widget. HorizontalPanel infoPanel = new HorizontalPanel();infoPanel.add(new HTML("<div class='infoProse'>Start typing a passwordstring. The strength of the password will bechecked and displayed below. Red indicates that thepassword is Weak, Orange indicates a Mediumstrength password and Green indicates a Strongpassword. The algorithm for checking the strengthis very basic and checks the length of the passwordstring.</div>"));workPanel.add(passwordText);workPanel.add(infoPanel);workPanel.add(strengthPanel);DockPanel workPane = new DockPanel();workPane.add(infoPanel, DockPanel.NORTH);workPane.add(workPanel, DockPanel.CENTER);workPane.setCellHeight(workPanel, "100%");workPane.setCellWidth(workPanel, "100%");initWidget(workPane); 10. Add the service to the module file for the Samples application—Samples.gwt.xml in the com.packtpub.gwtbook.samples package. <servlet path="/pwstrength" class="com.packtpub.gwtbook.samples.server.PasswordStrengthServiceImpl"/> Here is the user interface for the password strength checking application: Now start typing a password string to check its strength. Here is the password strength when you type a password string that is less than five characters: What Just Happened? The password strength service checks the size of the provided string and returns an integer value of three, six, or nine based on whether it is weak, medium, or strong. It makes this determination by using the criteria that if the password string is less than five characters in length, it is weak, and if it is more than five characters but not greater than seven characters, it is considered a medium strength password. Anything over seven characters is considered to be a strong password. The user interface consists of a text box for entering a password string and a panel containing nine checkboxes that visually displays the strength of the typed string as a password. An event handler is registered to listen for keyboard events generated by the password text box. Whenever the password text changes, which happens when we type into the field or change a character in the field, we communicate asynchronously with the password strength service and retrieve the strength of the given string as a password. The returned strength is displayed to the user in a visual fashion by the use of colors to symbolize the three different password strengths. The password strength is displayed in a compound widget that is created by adding nine checkboxes to a HorizontalPanel. The color of the checkboxes is changed using CSS depending on the strength of the password string. This process of combining the basic widgets provided by GWT into more complex widgets to build user interfaces is a common pattern in building GWT applications. It is possible to build quite intricate user interfaces in this way by utilizing the power of the GWT framework. Summary In the current day and age, passwords are required for almost everything, and choosing secure passwords is very important. In this article, we implemented a password strength checker in Google Web Toolkit (GWT) and AJAX. By going through the article, the reader can also get a general idea of implementing other interactive user forms.
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23 Oct 2009
7 min read
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Fundamentals of XHTML MP in Mobile Web Development

Packt
23 Oct 2009
7 min read
Fundamentals of XHTML MP Since XHTML MP is based on XHTML, certain syntactical rules must be followed. Making syntactical errors is a good way to learn a programming language, but so that you don't get frustrated with them, here are some rules you must follow with XHTML MP! Remember, HTML is very forgiving in terms of syntax, but make a small syntax error in XHTML MP and the browser may refuse to show your page! Overall, XHTML elements consist of a start tag—element name and its attributes, element content, and closing tag. The format is like: <element attribute="value">element content</element> XHTML Documents Must be Well Formed Since XHTML is based on XML, all XHTML documents must adhere to thebasic XML syntax and be well formed. The document must also have a DOCTYPE declaration. Tags Must be Closed! All open tags must be closed. Even if it is an empty tag like "<br>", it must be used in the self-closed form like "<br />". Note the extra space before the slash. It's not mandatory, but makes things work with some older browsers. If you can validate within your editor, make it a practice to do that. Also cultivate the habit of closing a tag that you start immediately—even before you put in the content. That will ensure you don't miss closing it later on! Elements Must be Properly Nested You cannot start a new paragraph until you complete the previous one. You must close tags to ensure correct nesting. Overlapping is not allowed. So the following is not valid in XHTML MP: <p><b>Pizzas are <i>good</b>.</i></p> It should be written as: <p><b>Pizzas are <i>good</i>.</b></p> Elements and Attributes Must be in Lowercase XHTML MP is case sensitive. And you must keep all the element tags and all their attributes in lowercase, although values and content can be in any case. Attribute Values Must be Enclosed within Quotes HTML allowed skipping the quotation marks around attribute values. This will not work with XHTML MP as all attribute values must be enclosed within quotes—either single or double. So this will not work: <div align=center>Let things be centered!</div> It must be written as: <div align="center">Let things be centered!</div> Attributes Cannot be Minimized Consider how you would do a drop down in HTML: <select> <option value="none">No toppings</option> <option value="cheese" selected>Extra Cheese</option> <option value="olive">Olive</option> <option value="capsicum">Capsicum</option> </select> The same drop down in XHTML is done as: <select> <option value="none">No toppings</option> <option value="cheese" selected="selected">Extra Cheese</option> <option value="olive">Olive</option> <option value="capsicum">Capsicum</option> </select> The "selected" attribute of the "option" element has only one possible value and, with HTML, you can minimize the attribute and specify only the attribute without its value. This is not allowed in XHTML, so you must specify the attribute as well as its value, enclosed in quotes. Another similar case is the "checked" attribute in check boxes. XHTML Entities Must be Handled Properly If you want to use an ampersand in your XHTML code, you must use it as &amp; and not just &. & is used as a starting character for HTML entities—e.g. &nbsp;, &quot;, &lt;, &gt; etc. Just using & to denote an ampersand confuses the XML parser and breaks it. Similarly, use proper HTML Entities instead of quotation marks, less than/greater than signs, and other such characters. You can refer to http://www.webstandards.org/learn/reference/charts/entities/ for more information on XHTML entities. Most Common HTML Elements are Supported The following table lists different modules in HTML and the elements within them that are supported in XHTML MP version 1.2. You can use this as a quick reference to check what's supported. Module Element Structure body, head, html, title Text abbr, acronym, address, blockquote, br, cite, code, dfn, div, em, h1, h2, h3, h4, h5, h6, kbd, p, pre, q, samp, span, strong, var Presentation b, big, hr, i, small Style Sheet style element and style attribute Hypertext a List dl, dt, dd, ol, ul, li Basic Forms form, input, label, select, option, textarea, fieldset, optgroup Basic Tables caption, table, td, th, tr Image img Object object, param Meta Information meta Link link Base base Legacy start attribute on ol, value attribute on li Most of these elements and their attributes work as in HTML. Table support in mobile browsers is flaky, so you should avoid tables or use them minimally. We will discuss specific issues of individual elements as we go further. XHTML MP Does Not Support Many WML Features If you have developed WAP applications, you would be interested in finding the differences between WML (Wireless Markup Language—the predecessor of XHTML MP) and XHTML MP; apart from the obvious syntactical differences. You need to understand this also while porting an existing WML-based application to XHTML MP. Most of WML is easily portable to XHTML MP, but some features require workarounds. Some features are not supported at all, so if you need them, you should use WML instead of XHTML MP. WML 1.x will be supported in any mobile device that conforms to XHTML MP standards. Here is a list of important WML features that are not available in XHTML MP: There is no metaphor of decks and cards. Everything is a page. This means you cannot pre-fetch content in different cards and show a card based on some action. With XHTML MP, you either have to make a new server request for getting new content, or use named anchors and link within the page. You could use the <do> tag in WML to program the left and right softkeys on the mobile device. Programming softkeys is not supported in XHTML MP; the alternative is to use accesskey attribute in the anchor tag (<a>) to specify a key shortcut for a link. WML also supports client-side scripting using WMLScript—a language similar to JavaScript. This is not supported in XHTML MP yet, but will come in near future in the form of ECMA Script Mobile Profile (ECMP). WML also supported client-side variables. This made it easier to process form data, validate them on the client side, and to reuse user-filled data across cards. This is not supported in XHTML MP. With XHTML MP, you have to submit a form with a submit button. WML allowed this on a link. WML also had a format attribute on the input tag—specifying the format in which input should be accepted. You need to use CSS to achieve this with XHTML MP. There are no timers in XHTML MP. This was a useful WML feature making it easier to activate certain things based on a timer. You can achieve a similar effect in XHTML MP using a meta refresh tag. The WML events ontimer, onenterbackward, onenterforward, and onpick are not available in XHTML MP. You can do a workaround for the ontimer event, but if you need others, you have to stick to using WML for development. XHTML MP also does not support the <u> tag, or align attribute on the <p> tag, and some other formatting options. All these effects can be achieved using CSS though. Summary In this article, we had a look at the fundamentals of XHTML MP and also at the grammar that must be followed for development with it. Next, we listed different modules in HTML and the elements within them that are supported in XHTML MP version 1.2. We finished the article by listing the important WML features that are not available in XHTML MP.
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article-image-comparing-cursor-and-set-approaches-processing-relational-data
Packt
23 Oct 2009
5 min read
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Comparing Cursor and Set Approaches in Processing Relational Data

Packt
23 Oct 2009
5 min read
To give you an idea about cursor, the following DECLARE statement creates a cursor (named zero_bal_crs), which gives you access to the rows of a payment table, rows that have 100 or less balances. DECLARE zero_bal_crs CURSOR FOR SELECT * FROM payment WHERE payment_bal < 100 You then fetch and process each of the rows sequentially; the process can be, for example, summing up rows by product group and loading the sums into a summary table. You develop the process outside of the cursor, for example, in a stored procedure. (You’ll see in the examples that the cursor-based process is procedural). Instead of processing row-by-row sequentially, you can process relational data set-by-set, without a cursor. For example, to sum all payment rows with 100 or less balances and load it into a table (named payment_100orless_bal in the following SQL statement), you can use the following SQL statement. This single SQL statement completely processes the rows that meet the condition, all at once, as a set. INSERT INTO payment_100orless_bal SELECT SUM(payment_bal) FROM payment WHERE payment_bal < 100 The following three examples, which are among those I most frequently encountered, further compare cursor-based processing with set processing. Example 1: Sequential Loop cf. One SQL Statement Our process in the first example is to summarize sales transactions by product. Listing 1 shows the DDLs for creating the sales transaction table and sales product table that stores the summary. Listing 1.1: DDLs of the Example 1 Tables CREATE TABLE sales_transactions( product_code INT, sales_amount DEC(8,2), discount INT);CREATE TABLE sales_product(product_code INT, sales_amount DEC(8,2)); Listing 1.2 shows a cursor-based stored procedure that implements the process. In this example, what the cursor (sales_crs) does is simply putting all rows in ascending order by their product codes. As you might have expected, this stored procedure applies loop with if-then-else programming construct to process the data row-by-row. Listing 1.2 Cursor Procedural solution DELIMITER $$DROP PROCEDURE IF EXISTS ex1_cursor $$USE sales $$CREATE PROCEDURE ex1_cursor()BEGINDECLARE p INT DEFAULT 0;DECLARE s DECIMAL(8,2) DEFAULT 0;DECLARE d INT DEFAULT 0;DECLARE done INT DEFAULT 0;DECLARE first_row INT DEFAULT 0;DECLARE px INT DEFAULT 0;DECLARE sx DECIMAL(8,2) DEFAULT 0;DECLARE sales_crs CURSOR FOR SELECT * FROM sales_transactions ORDER BY product_code;DECLARE CONTINUE HANDLER FOR NOT FOUND SET done = 1;OPEN sales_crs; REPEAT FETCH sales_crs INTO p, s, d;IF first_row = 0 THEN SET first_row = 1; SET px = p; SET sx = s * (100 - d)/100; ELSEIF NOT done THEN IF p <> px THEN INSERT INTO sales_product VALUES(px, sx); SET sx = s * (100 - d)/100; SET px = p; ELSE SET sx = sx + s * (100 - d)/100; END IF; ELSE INSERT INTO sales_product VALUES(px, sx); END IF; UNTIL done END REPEAT;CLOSE sales_crs;END $$DELIMITER ; The stored procedure in Listing 1.3 implements a set, processing to accomplish the same purpose as its foregoing cursor-based processing. You can see that this stored procedure is simpler than its cursor-based counterpart. Listing 1.3 Set Operation solution DELIMITER //USE sales //DROP PROCEDURE IF EXISTS ex1_sql //CREATE PROCEDURE ex1_sql ()BEGIN INSERT INTO sales_product SELECT product_code , SUM(sales_amount * (100 - discount)/100) FROM sales_transactions GROUP BY product_code;END //DELIMITER ; Example 2: Nested Cursor cf. Join Our 2nd example is to consolidate order by customer. While example 1 has one table, example 2 has two: order and item. The DDLs of the two tables are shown in Listing 2. To process two tables, our cursor implementation uses a nested loop (Listing 2.2) which makes it even more complex than example 1. Listing 2.1: DDL’s of the Example 2 Tables CREATE TABLE order ( , order_number INT , order_date DATE , customer_number INT);CREATE TABLE item ( , order_number INT , product_code INT , quantity INT , unit_price DEC(8,2)); Listing 2.2: Nested Cursor DELIMITER $$DROP PROCEDURE IF EXISTS ex2_cursor $$CREATE PROCEDURE ex2_cursor()BEGINDECLARE so INT;DECLARE sc INT;DECLARE io INT;DECLARE iq INT;DECLARE iu DEC(10,2);DECLARE done1 VARCHAR(5) DEFAULT 'START' ;DECLARE done2 VARCHAR(5) DEFAULT 'START' ;DECLARE sales_crs CURSOR FOR SELECT customer_number, order_number FROM sales_order ORDER BY customer_number, order_number;DECLARE order_crs CURSOR FOR SELECT order_number, quantity, unit_price FROM item WHERE order_number = so ORDER BY order_number;DECLARE CONTINUE HANDLER FOR NOT FOUND SET done1 = 'END';OPEN sales_crs; WHILE done1 <> 'END' DO FETCH sales_crs INTO sc, so; IF done1 <> 'END' THEN/* inner cursor */ OPEN oorder_crs; SET done2 = done1; WHILE done1 <> 'END' DO FETCH order_crs INTO io, iq, iu; IF done1 <> 'END' THEN INSERT INTO customer_order VALUES (sc, iq * iu); END IF;END WHILE; CLOSE order_crs; SET done1 = done2; END IF; END WHILE;CLOSE sales_crs;END $$DELIMITER ; Listing 2.3 is the set solution. We apply join in this 2nd example which makes it just a single SQL statement. You can see that this set stored procedure is again simpler than its cursor-based equivalent.    
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article-image-layouts-ext-js
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23 Oct 2009
9 min read
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Layouts in Ext JS

Packt
23 Oct 2009
9 min read
What are layouts, regions, and viewports? Ext uses Panels, which are the basis of most layouts. We have used some of these, such as FormPanel and GridPanel, already. A viewport is a special panel-like component that encloses the entire layout, fitting it into the whole visible area of our browser. For our first example, we are going to use a viewport with a border layout that will encapsulate many panels. A viewport has regions that are laid out in the same way as a compass, with North,South, East and West regions—the Center region represents what's left over in the middle. These directions tell the panels where to align themselves within the viewport and, if you use them, where the resizable borders are to be placed: The example we're creating will look like the following image, and combines many of the previous examples we have created: This layout is what's called a 'border' layout, which means that each region is separated by a somewhat three dimensional border bar that can be dragged to resize the regions. This example contains four panel regions: North: The toolbar West: A form Center: Grid in a tab panel East: A plain panel containing text Note that there is no 'South' panel in this example—not every region needs to be used in every layout. Our first layout Before we create our layout that uses only four regions let's go ahead and create a layout that utilizes all the regions, and then remove the South panel. We are going to create all of the regions as 'panels', which can be thought of as blank canvases to which we will add text, HTML, images, or even Ext JS widgets. var viewport = new Ext.Viewport({ layout: 'border', renderTo: Ext.getBody(), items: [{ region: 'north', xtype: 'panel', html: 'North' },{ region: 'west', xtype: 'panel', split: true, width: 200, html: 'West' },{ region: 'center', xtype: 'panel', html: 'Center' },{ region: 'east', xtype: 'panel', split: true, width: 200, html: 'East' },{ region: 'south', xtype: 'panel', html: 'South' }]}); Each region is defined as one of the four compass directions—East, West, North, and South. The remainder in the middle is called the center region, which will expand to fill all of the remaining space. Just to take up some blank space in each region and to give a visual indicator as to where the panels are, we defined an 'HTML' config that has just text. (This could also contain complex HTML if needed, but there are better ways to set the contents of panels which we will learn about soon). Ext JS provides an easy, cross-browser compatible, speedy way to get a reference to the body element, by using Ext.getBody(). If everything works out ok, you should see a browser that looks like this: Now we have a layout with all five regions defined. These regions can have other text widgets added into them, seamlessly, by using the xtype config. Alternatively they can be divided up separately into more nested regions—for instance, the center could be split horizontally to have its own South section. A 'Center' region must always be defined. If one is not defined, the layout will produce errors and appear as a jumbled set of boxes in the browser. Splitting the regions The dividers are set up for each panel by setting the split flag—the positioning of the dividers is determined automatically based on the region the panel is in. split: true For this page, we have set the West and East regions as 'split' regions. This, by default, makes the border into a resizing element for the user to change the size of that panel. I want options Typically, when a split is used, it's combined with a few other options that make the section more useful, such as width, minSize, and collapseMode. Here are some of the more commonly-used options: Option Value Description split true/false Boolean value that places a resizable bar between the sections collapsible true/false Boolean value that adds a button to the title bar which lets the user collapse the region with a single click collapseMode Only option is mini mode, or undefined for normal mode When set to 'mini', this adds a smaller collapse button that's located on the divider bar, in addition to the larger collapse button on title bar; the panel also collapses into a smaller space title String Title string placed in the title bar bodyStyle CSS CSS styles applied to the body element of the panel. minSize Pixels, ie: 200 The smallest size that the user can drag this panel to maxSize Pixels, ie: 250 The largest size that the user can drag this panel to margins In pixels: top, right, bottom, left, i.e.,: 3 0 3 3 Can be used to space the panel away from the edges or away from other panels; spacing is applied outside of the body of the panel cmargins In pixels: top, right, bottom, left, i.e.,: 3 0 3 3 Same idea as margins, but applies only when the panel is collapsed   Let's add a couple of these options to our west panel: { region: 'west', xtype: 'panel', split: true, collapsible: true, collapseMode: 'mini', title: 'Some Info', bodyStyle:'padding:5px;', width: 200, minSize: 200, html: 'West'} Adding these config options to our west panel would give us the following look: Expanding and collapsing a panel that does not have a width specified can produce rendering problems. Therefore, it's best to specify a width for panels—of course this is not needed for the center, as this panel automatically fills the remaining space. Tab panels With Ext JS, tab panels are also referred to as a "card" layout because they work much like a deck of cards where each card is layered directly above or below the others and can be moved to the top of the deck, to be visible. We also get pretty much the same functionality in our tab panel as a regular panel, including a title, toolbars, and all the other usual suspects (excluding tools). Adding a tab panel If the Ext JS component is a panel type component, for instance GridPanel andFormPanel, then we can add it directly to the layout using its xtype. Let's start by creating a tabPanel: { region: 'center', xtype: 'tabpanel', items: [{ title: 'Movie Grid', html: 'Center' }]} The items config is an array of objects that defines each of the tabs contained in this tabpanel. The title is the only option that's actually needed to give us a tab, and right now html is just being used as a placeholder, to give our empty tab some content. We will also need to add an activeTab config that is set to zero to our tab panel. This is the index of the tabs in the panel left to right starting with zero and counting up for each tab. This tells the tab panel at position zero to make itself active by default, otherwise, we would have no tabs displayed, resulting in a blank section until the user clicked a tab. { region: 'center', xtype: 'tabpanel', activeTab: 0, items: [{ title: 'Movie Grid', html: 'Center' }]} If we take a look at this in a browser, we should see a tab panel in the center section of our layout. Adding more tabs is as easy as adding more items into the items array. Each tab item is basically its own panel, which is shown or hidden, based on the tab title that has been clicked on the tab panel. { region: 'center', xtype: 'tabpanel', activeTab: 0, items: [{ title: 'Movie Grid', html: 'Center' },{ title: 'Movie Descriptions', html: 'Movie Info' }]} Both the Movie Grid and Movie Descriptions tabs are just plain panels right now. So let's add some more configuration options and widgets to them. Widgets everywhere Earlier, I mentioned that any type of panel widget could be added directly to a layout, just as we had done with the tabs. Let's explore this by adding another widget to our layout—the grid. Adding a grid into the tabpanel As we now have these tabs as part of our layout, let's start by adding a grid panel to one of the tabs. Adding the xtype config option to the grid config code will produce a grid that fills one entire tab: { region: 'center', xtype: 'tabpanel', activeTab: 0, items: [{ title: 'Movie Grid', xtype: 'gridpanel', store: store, autoExpandColumn: 'title', columns: // add column model //, view: // add grid view spec // },{ title: 'Movie Descriptions', html: 'Movie Info' }]} xtypes offer a quick way to instantiate a new component with minimal typing. This is sometimes referred to as 'lazy rendering' because the components sit around waiting to be displayed before they actually execute any code. This method can help conserve memory in your web application. As we are adding this grid to a tab—which is essentially just a panel—there are some things that we no longer need (like the renderTo option, width, height, and a frame).The size, title, and border for the grid are now handled by our tab panel. Now we should have a layout that looks like this: Accordions The accordion is a very useful layout that works somewhat like a tab panel, where we have multiple sections occupying the same space, with only one showing at a time. This type of layout is commonly used when we're lacking the horizontal space needed for a tab panel, but instead have more vertical space available. When one of the accordion panels is expanded, the others will collapse. Expanding and collapsing the panels can be done either by clicking the panel's title bar or by clicking the plus/minus icons along the rightmost side of the panel.    
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Packt
23 Oct 2009
4 min read
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10 Minute Guide to the Enterprise Service Bus and the NetBeans SOA Pack

Packt
23 Oct 2009
4 min read
Introduction When you are integrating different systems together, it can be very easy to use your vendor’s APIs and program directly against them. Using that approach, developers can easily integrate applications. Supporting these applications however can become problematical. If we have a few systems integrated together in this approach, everything is fine, but the more systems we integrate together, the more integration code we have and it rapidly becomes unfeasible to support this point-to-point integration. To overcome this problem, the integration hub was developed. In this scenario, developers would write against the API of the integration vendor and only had to learn one API. This is a much better approach than the point-to-point integration method however it still has its limitations. There is still a proprietary API to learn (albeit only one this time), but if the integration hub goes down for any reason, then entire Enterprise can become unavailable. The Enterprise Service Bus (ESB) overcomes these problems by providing a scalable, standards based integration architecture. The NetBeans SOA pack includes a copy of OpenESB, which follows this architecture promoted by the Java Business Integration Specification JSR 208. Workings of an ESB At the heart of the ESB is the Normalized Message Router (NMR) - a pluggable framework that allows Java Business Integration (JBI) components to be plugged into it as required.  The NMR is responsible for passing messages between all of the different JBI components that are plugged into it. The two main JBI components that are plugged into the NMR are Binding Components and Service Engines.  Binding Components are responsible for handling all protocol specific transport such as HTTP, SOAP, JMS, File system access, etc.  Service Engines on the other hand execute business logic as BPEL processes, SQL statements, invoking external Java EE web services, etc.   There is a clear separation between Binding Components and Service Engines with protocol specific transactions being handled by the former and business logic being performed by the latter. This architecture promotes loose coupling in that service engines do not communicate directly with each other.  All communication between different JBI components is performed through Binding Components by use of normalized messages as shown in the sequence chart below. In the case of OpenESB, all of these normalized messages are based upon WSDL.  If, for example, a BPEL process needs to invoke a web service or send an email, it does not need to know about SOAP or SMTP that is the responsibility of the Binding Components.  For one Service Engine to invoke another Service Engine all that is required is a WSDL based message to be constructed, which can then be routed via the NMR and Binding Components to the destination Service Engine. OpenESB provides many different Binding Components and Service Engines enabling integration with many varied different systems. So, we can see that OpenESB provides us with a standard based architecture that promotes loose coupling between components.  NetBeans 6 provides tight integration with OpenESB allowing developers to take full advantage of its facilities. Integrating Netbeans6 IDE with OpenESB Integration with NetBeans comes in two parts.  First, NetBeans allows the different JBI components to be managed from within the IDE.  Binding Components and Service Engines can be installed into OpenESB from within NetBeans and from thereon the full lifecycle of the components (start, stop, restart, uninstall) can be controlled directly from within the IDE. Secondly, and more interestingly, the NetBeans IDE provides full editing support for developing Composite Applications¬ applications that bring together business logic and data from different sources.  One of the main features of Composite Applications is probably the BPEL editor.  This allows BPL process to be built up graphically allowing interaction with different data sources via different partner links, which may be web services, different BPEL processes, or SQL statements. Once a BPEL process or composite application has been developed, the NetBeans SOA pack provides tools to allow different bindings to be added onto the application depending on the Binding Components installed into OpenESB.  So, for example, a file binding could be added to a project that could poll the file system periodically looking for input messages to start a BPEL process, the output of which could be saved into a different file or sent directly to an FTP site. In addition to support for developing Composite Applications, the NetBeans SOA pack provides support for some features many Java developers would find useful, namely XML and WSDL editing and validation.  XML and WSDL files can be edited within the IDE as either raw text, or via graphical editors.  If changes are made in the raw text, the graphical editors update accordingly and vice versa.  
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article-image-ejb-3-security
Packt
23 Oct 2009
15 min read
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EJB 3 Security

Packt
23 Oct 2009
15 min read
Authentication and authorization in Java EE Container Security There are two aspects covered by Java EE container security: authentication and authorization. Authentication is the process of verifying that users are who they claim to be. Typically this is performed by the user providing credentials such as a password. Authorization, or access control, is the process of restricting operations to specific users or categories of users. The EJB specification provides two kinds of authorization: declarative and programmatic, as we shall see later in the article. The Java EE security model introduces a few concepts common to both authentication and authorization. A principal is an entity that we wish to authenticate. The format of a principal is application-specific but an example is a username. A role is a logical grouping of principals. For example, we can have administrator, manager, and employee roles. The scope over which a common security policy applies is known as a security domain, or realm. Authentication For authentication, every Java EE compliant application server provides the Java Authentication and Authorization Service (JAAS) API. JAAS supports any underlying security system. So we have a common API regardless of whether authentication is username/password verification against a database, iris or fingerprint recognition for example. The JAAS API is fairly low level and most application servers provide authentication mechanisms at a higher level of abstraction. These authentication mechanisms are application-server specific however. We will not cover JAAS any further here, but look at authentication as provided by the GlassFish application server. GlassFish Authentication There are three actors we need to define on the GlassFish application server for authentication purposes: users, groups, and realms. A user is an entity that we wish to authenticate. A user is synonymous with a principal. A group is a logical grouping of users and is not the same as a role. A group's scope is global to the application server. A role is a logical grouping of users whose scope is limited to a specific application. Of course for some applications we may decide that roles are identical to groups. For other applications we need some mechanism for mapping the roles onto groups. We shall see how this is done later. A realm, as we have seen, is the scope over which a common security policy applies. GlassFish provides three kinds of realms: file, certificate, and admin-realm. The file realm stores user, group, and realm credentials in a file named keyfile. This file is stored within the application server file system. A file realm is used by web clients using http or EJB application clients. The certificate realm stores a digital certificate and is used for authenticating web clients using https. The admin-realm is similar to the file realm and is used for storing administrator credentials. GlassFish comes pre-configured with a default file realm named file. We can add, edit, and delete users, groups, and realms using the GlassFish administrator console. We can also use the create-file-user option of the asadmin command line utility. To add a user named scott to a group named bankemployee, in the file realm, we would use the command: <target name="create-file-user"> <exec executable="${glassfish.home}/bin/asadmin" failonerror="true" vmlauncher="false"> <arg line="create-file-user --user admin --passwordfile userpassword --groups bankemployee scott"/> </exec> </target> --user specifies the GlassFish administrator username, admin in our example. --passwordfile specifies the name of the file containing password entries. In our example this file is userpassword. Users, other than GlassFish administrators, are identified by AS_ADMIN_USERPASSWORD. In our example the content of the userpassword file is: AS_ADMIN_USERPASSWORD=xyz This indicates that the user's password is xyz. --groups specifies the groups associated with this user (there may be more than one group). In our example there is just one group, named bankemployee. Multiple groups are colon delineated. For example if the user belongs to both the bankemployee and bankcustomer groups, we would specify: --groups bankemployee:bankcustomer The final entry is the operand which specifies the name of the user to be created. In our example this is scott. There is a corresponding asadmin delete-file-user option to remove a user from the file realm. Mapping Roles to Groups The Java EE specification specifies that there must be a mechanism for mapping local application specific roles to global roles on the application server. Local roles are used by an EJB for authorization purposes. The actual mapping mechanism is application server specific. As we have seen in the case of GlassFish, the global application server roles are called groups. In GlassFish, local roles are referred to simply as roles. Suppose we want to map an employee role to the bankemployee group. We would need to create a GlassFish specific deployment descriptor, sun-ejb-jar.xml, with the following element: <security-role-mapping> <role-name>employee</role-name> <group-name>bankemployee</group-name> </security-role-mapping> We also need to access the configuration-security screen in the administrator console. We then disable the Default Principal To Role Mapping flag. If the flag is enabled then the default is to map a group onto a role with the same name. So the bankemployee group will be mapped to the bankemployee role. We can leave the default values for the other properties on the configuration-security screen. Many of these features are for advanced use where third party security products can be plugged in or security properties customized. Consequently we will give only a brief description of these properties here. Security Manager: This refers to the JVM security manager which performs code-based security checks. If the security manager is disabled GlassFish will have better performance. However, even if the security manager is disabled, GlassFish still enforces standard Java EE authentication/authorization. Audit Logging: If this is enabled, GlassFish will provide an audit trail of all authentication and authorization decisions through audit modules. Audit modules provide information on incoming requests, outgoing responses and whether authorization was granted or denied. Audit logging applies for web-tier and ejb-tier authentication and authorization. A default audit module is provided but custom audit modules can also be created. Default Realm: This is the default realm used for authentication. Applications use this realm unless they specify a different realm in their deployment descriptor. The default value is file. Other possible values are admin-realm and certificate. We discussed GlassFish realms in the previous section. Default Principal: This is the user name used by GlassFish at run time if no principal is provided. Normally this is not required so the property can be left blank. Default Principal Password: This is the password of the default principal. JACC: This is the class name of a JACC (Java Authorization Contract for Containers) provider. This enables the GlassFish administrator to set up third-party plug in modules conforming to the JACC standard to perform authorization. Audit Modules: If we have created custom modules to perform audit logging, we would select from this list. Mapped Principal Class: This is only applicable when Default Principal to Role Mapping is enabled. The mapped principal class is used to customize the java.security.Principal implementation class used in the default principal to role mapping. If no value is entered, the com.sun.enterprise.deployment.Group implementation of java.security.Principal is used. Authenticating an EJB Application Client Suppose we want to invoke an EJB, BankServiceBean, from an application client. We also want the application client container to authenticate the client. There are a number of steps we first need to take which are application server specific. We will assume that all roles will have the same name as the corresponding application server groups. In the case of GlassFish we need to use the administrator console and enable Default Principal To Role Mapping. Next we need to define a group named bankemployee with one or more associated users. An EJB application client needs to use IOR (Interoperable Object Reference) authentication. The IOR protocol was originally created for CORBA (Common Object Request Broker Architecture) but all Java EE compliant containers support IOR. An EJB deployed on one Java EE compliant vendor may be invoked by a client deployed on another Java EE compliant vendor. Security interoperability between these vendors is achieved using the IOR protocol. In our case the client and target EJB both happen to be deployed on the same vendor, but we still use IOR for propagating security details from the application client container to the EJB container. IORs are configured in vendor specific XML files rather than the standard ejb-jar.xml file. In the case of GlassFish, this is done within the <ior-security-config> element within the sun-ejb-jar.xml deployment descriptor file. We also need to specify the invoked EJB, BankServiceBean, in the deployment descriptor. An example of the sun-ejb-jar.xml deployment descriptor is shown below: <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> <!DOCTYPE sun-ejb-jar PUBLIC "-//Sun Microsystems, Inc.//DTD       Application Server 9.0 EJB 3.0//EN"       "http://www.sun.com/software/appserver/dtds/sun-ejb-jar_3_0-0.dtd"> <sun-ejb-jar>   <enterprise-beans>     <ejb>       <ejb-name>BankServiceBean</ejb-name>         <ior-security-config>           <as-context>              <auth-method>USERNAME_PASSWORD</auth-method>              <realm>default</realm>              <required>true</required>           </as-context>         </ior-security-config>     </ejb>   </enterprise-beans> </sun-ejb-jar> The as in <as-context> stands for the IOR authentication service. This specifies authentication mechanism details. The <auth-method> element specifies the authentication method. This is set to USERNAME_PASSWORD which is the only value for an application client. The <realm> element specifies the realm in which the client is authenticated. The <required> element specifies whether the above authentication method is required to be used for client authentication. When creating the corresponding EJB JAR file, the sun-ejb-jar.xml file should be included in the META-INF directory, as follows: <target name="package-ejb" depends="compile">     <jar jarfile="${build.dir}/BankService.jar">         <fileset dir="${build.dir}">              <include name="ejb30/session/**" />                           <include name="ejb30/entity/**" />               </fileset>               <metainf dir="${config.dir}">             <include name="persistence.xml" />                          <include name="sun-ejb-jar.xml" />         </metainf>     </jar> </target> As soon as we run the application client, GlassFish will prompt with a username and password form, as follows: If we reply with the username scott and password xyz the program will run. If we run the application with an invalid username or password we will get the following error message: javax.ejb.EJBException: nested exception is: java.rmi.AccessException: CORBA NO_PERMISSION 9998 ..... EJB Authorization Authorization, or access control, is the process of restricting operations to specific roles. In contrast with authentication, EJB authorization is completely application server independent. The EJB specification provides two kinds of authorization: declarative and programmatic. With declarative authorization all security checks are performed by the container. An EJB's security requirements are declared using annotations or deployment descriptors. With programmatic authorization security checks are hard-coded in the EJBs code using API calls. However, even with programmatic authorization the container is still responsible for authentication and for assigning roles to principals. Declarative Authorization As an example, consider the BankServiceBean stateless session bean with methods findCustomer(), addCustomer() and updateCustomer(): package ejb30.session; import javax.ejb.Stateless; import javax.persistence.EntityManager; import ejb30.entity.Customer; import javax.persistence.PersistenceContext; import javax.annotation.security.RolesAllowed; import javax.annotation.security.PermitAll; import java.util.*; @Stateless @RolesAllowed("bankemployee") public class BankServiceBean implements BankService { @PersistenceContext(unitName="BankService") private EntityManager em; private Customer cust; @PermitAll public Customer findCustomer(int custId) { return ((Customer) em.find(Customer.class, custId)); } public void addCustomer(int custId, String firstName, String lastName) { cust = new Customer(); cust.setId(custId); cust.setFirstName(firstName); cust.setLastName(lastName); em.persist(cust); } public void updateCustomer(Customer cust) { Customer mergedCust = em.merge(cust); } } We have prefixed the bean class with the annotation: @RolesAllowed("bankemployee") This specifies the roles allowed to access any of the bean's method. So only users belonging to the bankemployee role may access the addCustomer() and updateCustomer() methods. More than one role can be specified by means of a brace delineated list, as follows: @RolesAllowed({"bankemployee", "bankcustomer"}) We can also prefix a method with @RolesAllowed, in which case the method annotation will override the class annotation. The @PermitAll annotation allows unrestricted access to a method, overriding any class level @RolesAllowed annotation. As with EJB 3 in general, we can use deployment descriptors as alternatives to the @RolesAllowed and @PermitAll annotations. Denying Authorization Suppose we want to deny all users access to the BankServiceBean.updateCustomer() method. We can do this using the @DenyAll annotation: @DenyAll public void updateCustomer(Customer cust) { Customer mergedCust = em.merge(cust); } Of course if you have access to source code you could simply delete the method in question rather than using @DenyAll. However suppose you do not have access to the source code and have received the EJB from a third party. If you in turn do not want your clients accessing a given method then you would need to use the <exclude-list> element in the ejb-jar.xml deployment descriptor: <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> <ejb-jar version="3.0"                         xsi_schemaLocation="http://java.sun.com/xml/ns/javaee             http://java.sun.com/xml/ns/javaee/ejb-jar_3_0.xsd"> <enterprise-beans> <session> <ejb-name>BankServiceBean</ejb-name> </session> </enterprise-beans> <assembly-descriptor> <exclude-list><method> <ejb-name>BankServiceBean</ejb-name> <method-name>updateCustomer</method-name></method></exclude-list> </assembly-descriptor> </ejb-jar> EJB Security Propagation Suppose a client with an associated role invokes, for example, EJB A. If EJB A then invokes, for example, EJB B then by default the client's role is propagated to EJB B. However, you can specify with the @RunAs annotation that all methods of an EJB execute under a specific role. For example, suppose the addCustomer() method in the BankServiceBean EJB invokes the addAuditMessage() method of the AuditServiceBean EJB: @Stateless @RolesAllowed("bankemployee") public class BankServiceBean implements BankService { private @EJB AuditService audit; ....      public void addCustomer(int custId, String firstName,                                                          String lastName) {              cust = new Customer();              cust.setId(custId);              cust.setFirstName(firstName);              cust.setLastName(lastName);              em.persist(cust);              audit.addAuditMessage(1, "customer add attempt");      }      ... } Note that only a client with an associated role of bankemployee can invoke addCustomer(). If we prefix the AuditServiceBean class declaration with @RunAs("bankauditor") then the container will run any method in AuditServiceBean as the bankauditor role, regardless of the role which invokes the method. Note that the @RunAs annotation is applied only at the class level, @RunAs cannot be applied at the method level. @Stateless @RunAs("bankauditor") public class AuditServiceBean implements AuditService { @PersistenceContext(unitName="BankService") private EntityManager em; @TransactionAttribute( TransactionAttributeType.REQUIRES_NEW) public void addAuditMessage (int auditId, String message) { Audit audit = new Audit(); audit.setId(auditId); audit.setMessage(message); em.persist(audit); } } Programmatic Authorization With programmatic authorization the bean rather than the container controls authorization. The javax.ejb.SessionContext object provides two methods which support programmatic authorization: getCallerPrincipal() and isCallerInRole(). The getCallerPrincipal() method returns a java.security.Principal object. This object represents the caller, or principal, invoking the EJB. We can then use the Principal.getName() method to obtain the name of the principal. We have done this in the addAccount() method of the BankServiceBean as follows: Principal cp = ctx.getCallerPrincipal(); System.out.println("getname:" + cp.getName()); The isCallerInRole() method checks whether the principal belongs to a given role. For example, the code fragment below checks if the principal belongs to the bankcustomer role. If the principal does not belong to the bankcustomer role, we only persist the account if the balance is less than 99. if (ctx.isCallerInRole("bankcustomer")) {     em.persist(ac); } else if (balance < 99) {            em.persist(ac);   } When using the isCallerInRole() method, we need to declare all the security role names used in the EJB code using the class level @DeclareRoles annotation: @DeclareRoles({"bankemployee", "bankcustomer"}) The code below shows the BankServiceBean EJB with all the programmatic authorization code described in this section: package ejb30.session; import javax.ejb.Stateless; import javax.persistence.EntityManager; import ejb30.entity.Account; import javax.persistence.PersistenceContext; import javax.annotation.security.RolesAllowed; import java.security.Principal; import javax.annotation.Resource; import javax.ejb.SessionContext; import javax.annotation.security.DeclareRoles; import java.util.*; @Stateless @DeclareRoles({"bankemployee", "bankcustomer"}) public class BankServiceBean implements BankService { @PersistenceContext(unitName="BankService") private EntityManager em; private Account ac; @Resource SessionContext ctx; @RolesAllowed({"bankemployee", "bankcustomer"}) public void addAccount(int accountId, double balance, String accountType) { ac = new Account(); ac.setId(accountId); ac.setBalance(balance); ac.setAccountType(accountType); Principal cp = ctx.getCallerPrincipal(); System.out.println("getname:" + cp.getName()); if (ctx.isCallerInRole("bankcustomer")) { em.persist(ac); } else if (balance < 99) { em.persist(ac); } } ..... } Where we have a choice declarative authorization is preferable to programmatic authorization. Declarative authorization avoids having to mix business code with security management code. We can change a bean's security policy by simply changing an annotation or deployment descriptor instead of modifying the logic of a business method. However, some security rules, such as the example above of only persisting an account within a balance limit, can only be handled by programmatic authorization. Declarative security is based only on the principal and the method being invoked, whereas programmatic security can take state into consideration. Because an EJB is typically invoked from the web-tier by a servlet, JSP page or JSF component, we will briefly mention Java EE web container security. The web-tier and EJB tier share the same security model. So the web-tier security model is based on the same concepts of principals, roles and realms.
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Packt
23 Oct 2009
8 min read
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Python Data Persistence using MySQL

Packt
23 Oct 2009
8 min read
To keep things simple though, the article doesn’t discuss how to implement database-backed web pages with Python, concentrating only on how to connect Python with MySQL. Sample Application The best way to learn new programming techniques is to write an application that exercises them. This article will walk you through the process of building a simple Python application that interacts with a MySQL database. In a nutshell, the application picks up some live data from a web site and then persists it to an underlying MySQL database. For the sake of simplicity, it doesn’t deal with a large dataset. Rather, it picks up a small subset of data, storing it as a few rows in the underlying database. In particular, the application gets the latest post from the Packt Book Feed page available at http://feeds.feedburner.com/packtpub/sDsa?format=xml. Then, it analyzes the post’s title, finding appropriate tags for the article associated with the post, and finally inserts information about the post into the posts and posttags underlying database tables. As you might guess, a single post may be associated with more than one tag, meaning a record in the posts table may be related to several records in the posttags table. Diagrammatically, the sample application components and their interactions might look like this: Note the use of appsample.py. This script file will contain all the application code written in Python. In particular, it will contain the list of tags, as well as several Python functions packaging application logic. Software Components To build the sample discussed in the article you’re going to need the following software components installed on your computer: Python 2.5.x MySQLdb 1.2.x MySQL 5.1 All these software components can be downloaded and used for free. Although you may already have these pieces of software installed on your computer, here’s a brief overview of where you can obtain them. You can download an appropriate Python release from the Downloads page at Python’s web site at http://python.org/download/. You may be tempted to download the most recent release. Before you choose the release, however, it is recommended that you visit the Python for MySQL page at http://sourceforge.net/projects/mysql-python/ to check what Python releases are supported by the current MySQLdb module that will be used to connect your Python installation with MySQL. MySQLdb is the Python DB API-2.0 interface for MySQL. You can pick up the latest MySQLdb package (version 1.2.2 at the time of writing) from the sourceforge.net’s Python for MySQL page at http://sourceforge.net/projects/mysql-python/. Before you can install it, though, make sure you have Python installed in your system. You can obtain the MySQL 5.1 distribution from the mysql.com web site at http://dev.mysql.com/downloads/mysql/5.1.html, picking up the package designed for your operating system. Setting up the Database Assuming you have all the software components that were outlined in the preceding section installed in your system, you can now start building the sample application. The first step is to create the posts and posttags tables in your underlying MySQL database. As mentioned earlier, a single post may be associated with more than one tag. What this means in practice is that the posts and posttags tables should have a foreign key relationship. In particular, you might create these tables as follows: CREATE TABLE posts ( title VARCHAR(256) PRIMARY KEY, guid VARCHAR(1000), pubDate VARCHAR(50) ) ENGINE = InnoDB; CREATE TABLE posttags ( title VARCHAR(256), tag VARCHAR(20), PRIMARY KEY(title,tag), FOREIGN KEY(title) REFERENCES posts(title) ) ENGINE = InnoDB; As you might guess, you don’t need to populate above tables with data now. This will be automatically done later when you launch the sample. Developing the Script Now that you have the underlying database ready, you can move on and develop the Python code to complete the sample. In particular, you’re going to need to write the following components in Python: tags nested list of tags that will be used to describe the posts obtained from the Packt Book Feed page. obtainPost function that will be used to obtain the information about the latest post from the Packt Book Feed page. determineTags function that will determine appropriate tags to be applied to the latest post obtained from the Packt Book Feed page. insertPost function that will insert the information about the post obtained into the underlying database tables: posts and posttags. execPr function that will make calls to the other, described above functions. You will call this function to launch the application. All the above components will reside in a single file, say, appsample.py that you can create in your favorite text editor, such as vi or Notepad. First, add the following import declarations to appsample.py: import MySQLdb import urllib2 import xml.dom.minidom As you might guess, the first module is required to connect Python with MySQL, providing the Python DB API-2.0 interface for MySQL. The other two are needed to obtain and then parse the Packt Book Feed page’s data. You will see them in action in the obtainPost function in a moment. But first let’s create a nested list of tags that will be used by the determineTags function that determines the tags appropriate for the post being analyzed. To save space here, the following list contains just a few tags. You may and should include more tags to this list, of course. tags=["Python","Java","Drupal","MySQL","Oracle","Open Source"] The next step is to add the obtainPost function responsible for getting the data from the Packt Book Feed page and generating the post dictionary that will be utilized in further processing: def obtainPost(): addr = "http://feeds.feedburner.com/packtpub/sDsa?format=xml" xmldoc = xml.dom.minidom.parseString(urllib2.urlopen(addr).read()) item = xmldoc.getElementsByTagName("item")[0] title = item.getElementsByTagName("title")[0].firstChild.data guid = item.getElementsByTagName("guid")[0].firstChild.data pubDate = item.getElementsByTagName("pubDate")[0].firstChild.data post ={"title": title, "guid": guid, "pubDate": pubDate} return post Now that you have obtained all the required information about the latest post on the Packt Book Feed page, you can analyze the post’s title to determine appropriate tags. For that, add the determineTags function to appsample.py: def determineTags(title, tagslist): curtags=[] for curtag in tagslist: if title.find(curtag)>-1:curtags.append(curtag) return curtags By now, you have both the post and tags to be persisted to the database. So, add the insertPost function that will handle this task (don’t forget to change the parameters specified to the MySQLdb.connect function for the actual ones): def insertPost(title, guid, pubDate, curtags): db=MySQLdb.connect(host="localhost",user="usrsample",passwd="pswd",db="dbsample") c=db.cursor() c.execute("""INSERT INTO posts (title, guid, pubDate) VALUES(%s, %s,%s)""", (title, guid, pubDate)) db.commit() for tag in curtags: c.execute("""INSERT INTO posttags (title, tag) VALUES(%s,%s)""", (title, tag)) db.commit() db.close() All that is left to do is add the execPr function that brings all the pieces together, calling the above functions in the proper order: def execPr(): p = obtainPost() t = determineTags(p["title"],tags) insertPost(p["title"], p["guid"], p["pubDate"], t) Now let’s test the code we just wrote. The simplest way to do this is through Python’s interactive command line. To start an interactive Python session, you can type python at your system shell prompt. It’s important to realize that since the sample discussed here is going to obtain some data from the web, you must connect to the Internet before you launch the application. Once you’re connected, you can launch the execPr function in your Python session, as follows: >>>import appsample >>>appsample.execPr() If everything is okay, you should see no messages. To make sure that everything really went as planned, you can check the posts and posttags tables. To do this, you might connect to the database with the MySQL command-line tool and then issue the following SQL commands: SELECT * FROM posts; The above should generate the output that might look like this: |title |guid |pubDate ------------------------------------------------------------------ Open Source CMS Award Voting Now Closed | http://www.packtpub.com/ article/2008-award-voting-closed | Tue, 21 Oct 2008 09:29:54 +0100 Then, you might want to check out the posttags table: SELECT * FROM posttags; This might generate the following output: |title |tag Open Source CMS Award Voting Now Closed | Open Source Please note that you may see different results since you are working with live data. Another thing to note here is that if you want to re-run the sample, you first need to empty the posts and posttags tables. Otherwise, you will encounter the problem related to the primary key constraints. However, that won’t be a problem at all if you re-run the sample in a few days, when a new post or posts appear on the Packt Book Feed page. Conclusion In this article you looked at a simple Python application persisting data to an underlying MySQL database. Although, for the sake of simplicity, the sample discussed here doesn’t offer a web interface, it illustrates how you can obtain data from the Internet, and then utilize it within your application, and finally store that data in the database.
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23 Oct 2009
7 min read
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Term Extraction Tasks in SQL Server Integration Services

Packt
23 Oct 2009
7 min read
The following text (SomeText.txt) file saved at a suitable location on the hard drive is used. This particular text is: Rose is RedChrysanthemum is yellowViolets are violetRose can be PinkHyacinth is whiteDesk jobs are the bestLily is also whiteThe girl is wearing a rose garlandThe boy is handsomePink rose is not redrose garland is made of rosesRoserose is not roseHe rose to powerThe desk is made of rose wood The reason for using the above text is to see how well the Term Extract transformation is able to distinguish words and phrases and find how often they are found in a body of text. The transformation works for text in English and is capable of distinguishing between nouns and other parts of speech. In the following steps we will create a Visual Studio 2005 Business Intelligence project and access some text stored on the hard drive, and apply this transformation and review the results. Creating a Business Intelligence Project In the Visual Studio 2005 IDE, File | New | Project opens the New Project window as shown, where you can highlight the Integration Services Project template in the Business Intelligence page and change its default name to something different. For this tutorial TermExtract has been used as the project name. Text to be accessed shown above is saved to a file, SomeText.txt in the C: drive. In order to access this from the Integration Services we need to create a Package with a data flow task. The source for this data is the SomeText.txt file on the C: drive. Change the name of the default package file name to something different, In this case MineText.dtsx. Click Yes on the Microsoft Visual Studio message box asking whether you want to rename the package. Add a Data Flow Task Drag and drop a Data Flow Task to the Control Flow page as shown in the next figure. The Data Flow Task will access the SomeText.txt using a connection manager, an intermediary between SQL Server Integration Services and the external system. Add a Flat File Source Click on the Data Flow Task page. Drag and drop a Flat File Source from the Data Flow Sources group in the Toolbox and drop it on the Data Flow Page which is open as shown. When the Flat File Source is dropped on the Data Flow Task page you may see this error in the error window as shown. This is nothing to worry about because a connection is not yet established. Add a Connection Manager to Manage Flat File Source Now right click in the Connection Manager's pane as shown to display the pick list of connection managers and choose New Flat File Connection... as shown. This immediately displays the Flat File Connection Manager's editor window as shown. You must provide a name of your choice to the Connection Manager, and a description of your choice. Then you need to use the Browse button to locate the SomeText.txt file on your hard drive. The next figure shows the editor after these choices are made. The rest of the fields such as Locale, Code page, etc were automatically chosen by the program. Now click on the Columns list item in the left of the Editor. The one column that gets populated with the data from the SomeText.txt gets displayed. The program has correctly configured the fields for this text. Click on the OK button on the Editor. This adds a Connection Manager, MyText to the Connection manager's pane in the SSIS designer. With this, the SomeText.txt is available for the other controls that you may add. Add a Term Extraction Transformation The column that was populated in the above will now pass through the Term Extraction Transformation added by dragging and dropping this from the Toolbox on to the Data Flow Page. Click the dangling green line and extend it to touch the Term Extraction Transformation. This is an easy way to establish a connection from the source to a transformation, a destination. Double click the Term Extraction Transformation to open its Editor as shown in the next figure. In the Term Extraction tabbed page you see a single column which is displayed unchecked. Place a check mark for this column as shown in the next figure. When the 'terms' are extracted, the output column will have a 'term' and a 'score' column. The term refers to a noun, a noun phrase, or a noun and a noun phrase. The score represents how many times each term is repeated in the body of the text. Pay attention to the message that says the column can have only values of a certain types and the disabled OK button. The data type of the data going into the Term Extract Transformation can be found by right clicking on the connecting green line and looking at the page that reveals the Meta data list item as shown in the next figure. This is of the data type DT_STR. To rectify this, there are two options, either use one more transformation, the data conversion transformation or use the Advanced Editor of the Flat File Source which can be displayed by right clicking the Flat File source component and choosing the Show Advanced Editor. This option was made to change Str[DT_STR] to Unicode str [DT_WSTR]. The DT_* shows the data type that are supported. The following information about these data types are shown extracted from the Books on line. DT_STR: A null-terminated ANSI/MBCS character string DT_NTEXT: A Unicode character string with a maximum length of 2^30-1 characters DT_WSTR: a null terminated Unicode character string Now when you place a check mark for the Column 0 in the Term Extract Transformation Editor, the OK gets enabled. Click on the Exclusion tab to reveal its page. This page when configured, allows you to exclude (skip) certain terms stored in an OLEDB database. The figure shows the details of editing this page. A Microsoft Access 2003 database called 'SkipTerms' was created and a new table 'SkipTable' was created in this database. It has two columns SkipID (autonumber, Primary Key) and SkipThis (text). A new OLEDB Connection was established along the same lines as the connection manager to the Flat File Source. Of course you need to choose an OLEDB Provider in making this connection. The 'SkipThis' column has just one entry, 'desk'. This noun is found twice in SomeText.txt. The word 'desk' will be skipped in the output column when the Column 0 is processed by this transformation. Click on the Advanced tab to open its page as shown. This is where you choose type of terms, nouns, noun phrases, or both noun and noun phrases. You also select the score which shows how many times (Frequency and Frequency Threshold) the terms appear in the text. As chosen here, the transformation will be looking for noun(s) that gets repeated twice. The case sensitive option can also be chosen but left blank in this exercise. The score type TFIDF is another type of scoring more appropriate for a document collection and not a single document like in this article. You may learn more details on this from this link.  
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23 Oct 2009
3 min read
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Building Queries Visually in MySQL Query Browser

Packt
23 Oct 2009
3 min read
MySQL Query Browser, one of the open source MySQL GUI tools from MySQL AB, is used for building MySQL database queries visually. In MySQL Query Browser, you build database queries using just your mouse—click, drag and drop! MySQL Query Browser has plenty of visual query building functions and features. This article shows two examples, building Join and Master-detail queries. These examples will demonstrate some of these functions and features. Join Query A pop-up query toolbar will appear when you drag a table or column from the Object Browser’s Schemata tab to the Query Area. You drop the table or column on the pop-up query toolbar’s button to build your query. The following example demonstrates the use of the pop-up query toolbar to build a join query that involves three tables and two types of join (equi and left outer). Drag and drop the product table from the Schemata to Add Table(s) button. A SELECT query on the product table is written in the Query Area. Drag and drop the item table from Schemata to the JOIN Table(s) button on the Pop-up Query Toolbar. The two tables are joined on the foreign-key, product_code. If no foreign-key relationship exists, the drag and drop won’t have any effect. Drag and drop the order table from Schemata to the LEFT OUTER JOIN button on the Pop-up Query Toolbar. Maximize query area by pressing F11. You get a larger query area, and your lines are sequentially numbered (for easier identification). Move the FROM clause to its next line, by putting your cursor just before the FROM word and press Enter. Similarly, move the ON clause to its next line. Now, you can see all lines completely, and that the item table is left join to the order table on their foreign-key relationship column, the order_number column. As of now our query is SELECT *, i.e. selecting all columns from all tables. Let’s now select the columns we’d like to show at the query’s output. For example, drag and drop the order_number from the item table, product_name from the product table, and then quantity from the item table. (If necessary, expand the table folders to see their columns). The sequence of the selecting the columns is reflected in the SELECT clause (from left to right). Note that you can’t select column from the left join of the order table (if you try, nothing will happen) Next, add an additional condition. Drag and drop the amount column on the WHERE button in the Pop-up Query Toolbar. The column is added, with an AND, in the WHERE clause of the query. Type in its condition value, for example, > 1000. To finalize our query, drag and drop product_name on the ORDER button, and then, order_number (from item table, not order table) on the GROUP button. You’ll see that the GROUP BY and ORDER clauses are ordered correctly, i.e. the GROUP BY clause first before the ORDER BY, regardless of your drag & drop sequence. To test your query, click the Execute button. Your query should run without any error, and display its output in the query area (below the query).  
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23 Oct 2009
8 min read
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Table and Database Operations in PHP

Packt
23 Oct 2009
8 min read
Various links that enable table operations have been put together on one sub-page of the Table view: Operations. Here is an overview of this sub-page: Table Maintenance During the lifetime of a table, it repeatedly gets modified, and so grows and shrinks. Outages may occur on the server, leaving some tables in a damaged state. Using the Operations sub-page, we can perform various operations, but not every operation is available for every table type: Check table: Scans all rows to verify that deleted links are correct. Also, a checksum is calculated to verify the integrity of the keys; we should get an 'OK' message if everything is all right. Analyze table: Analyzes and stores the key distribution; this will be used on subsequent JOIN operations to determine the order in which the tables should be joined. Repair table: Repairs any corrupted data for tables in the MyISAM and ARCHIVE engines. Note that the table might be so corrupted that we cannot even go into Table view for it! In such a case, refer to the Multi-Table Operations section for the procedure to repair it. Optimize table: This is useful when the table contains overheads. After massive deletions of rows or length changes for VARCHAR fields, lost bytes remain in the table. PhpMyAdmin warns us in various places (for example, in the Structure view) if it feels the table should be optimized. This operation is a kind of defragmentation for the table. In MySQL 4.x, this operation works only on tables in the MyISAM, Berkeley (BDB), and InnoDB engines. In MySQL 5.x, it works only on tables in the MyISAM, InnoDB, andARCHIVE engines. Flush table: This must be done when there have been lots of connection errors and the MySQL server blocks further connections. Flushing will clear some internal caches and allow normal operations to resume. Defragment table: Random insertions or deletions in an InnoDB table fragment its index. The table should be periodically defragmented for faster data retrieval. The operations are based on the underlying MySQL queries available—phpMyAdmin is only calling those queries. Changing Table Attributes Table attributes are the various properties of a table. This section discusses the settings for some of them. Table Type The first attribute we can change is called Table storage engine: This controls the whole behavior of the table: its location (on-disk or in-memory), the index structure, and whether it supports transactions and foreign keys. The drop-down list may vary depending on the table types supported by our MySQL server. Changing the table type may be a long operation if the number of rows is large. Table Comments This allows us to enter comments for the table. These comments will be shown at appropriate places (for example, in the left panel, next to the table name in the Table view and in the export file). Here is what the left panel looks like when the $cfg['ShowTooltip'] parameter is set to its default value of TRUE: The default value of $cfg['ShowTooltipAliasDB'] and $cfg['ShowTooltipAliasTB'] (FALSE) produces the behavior we have seen earlier: the true database and table names are displayed in the left panel and in the Database view for the Structure sub-page. Comments appear when the mouse pointer is moved over a table name. If one of these parameters is set toTRUE, the corresponding item (database names for DB and table names for TB) will be shown as the tooltip instead of the names. This time, the mouse-over shows the true name for the item. This is convenient when the real table names are not meaningful. There is another possibility for $cfg['ShowTooltipAliasTB']: the 'nested' value. Here is what happens if we use this feature: The true table name is displayed in the left panel. The table comment (for example project__) is interpreted as the project name and is displayed as such. Table Order When we Browse a table or execute a statement such as SELECT * from book, without specifying a sort order, MySQL uses the order in which the rows are physically stored. This table order can be changed with the Alter table order by dialog. We can choose any field, and the table will be reordered once on this field. We choose author_id in the example, and after we click Go, the table gets sorted on this field. Reordering is convenient if we know that we will be retrieving rows in this order most of the time. Moreover, if later we use an ORDER BY clause and the table is already physically sorted on this field, the performance should be higher. This default ordering will last as long as there are no changes in the table (no insertions, deletions, or updates). This is why phpMyAdmin shows the (singly) warning. After the sort has been done on author_id, books for author 1 will be displayed first, followed by the books for author 2, and so on. (We are talking about a default browsing of the table without explicit sorting.) We can also specify the sort order: Ascending or Descending. If we insert another row, describing a new book from author 1, and then click Browse, the book will not be displayed along with the other books for this author because the sort was done before the insertion. Table Options Other attributes that influence the table's behavior may be specified using the Table options dialog: The options are: pack_keys:Setting this attribute results in a smaller index; this can be read faster but takes more time to update. Available for the MyISAM storage engine. checksum: This makes MySQL compute a checksum for each row. This results in slower updates, but easier finding of corrupted tables. Available for MyISAM only. delay_key_write: This instructs MySQL not to write the index updates immediately but to queue them for later, which improves performance. Available for MyISAM only. auto-increment: This changes the auto-increment value. It is shown only if the table's primary key has the auto-increment attribute. Renaming, Moving, and Copying Tables The Rename operation is the easiest to understand: the table simply changes its name and stays in the same database. The Move operation (shown in the following screen) can manipulate a table in two ways: change its name and also the database in which it is stored Moving a table is not directly supported by MySQL, so phpMyAdmin has to create the table in the target database, copy the data, and then finally drop the source table. The Copy operation leaves the original table intact and copies its structure or data (or both) to another table, possibly in another database. Here, the book-copy table will be an exact copy of the book source table. After the copy, we will stay in the Table view for the book table unless we selected Switch to copied table. The Structure only copy is done to create a test table with the same structure. Appending Data to a Table The Copy dialog may also be used to append (add) data from one table to another. Both tables must have the same structure. This operation is achieved by entering the table to which we want to copy the data of the current table and choosing Data only. For example, we would want to append data when book data comes from various sources (various publishers), is stored in more than one table, and we want to aggregate all the data to one place. For MyISAM, a similar result can be obtained by using the MERGE storage engine (which is a collection of identical MyISAM tables), but if the table is InnoDB, we need to rely on phpMyAdmin's Copy feature. Multi-Table Operations In the Database view, there is a checkbox next to each table name and a drop-down menu under the table list. This enables us to quickly choose some tables and perform an operation on all those tables at once. Here we select the book-copy and the book tables, and choose the Check operation for these tables. We could also quickly select or deselect all the checkboxes with Check All/Uncheck All. Repairing an "in use" Table The multi-table mode is the only method (unless we know the exact SQL query to type) for repairing a corrupted table. Such tables may be shown with the in use flag in the database list. Users seeking help in the support forums for phpMyAdmin often receive this tip from experienced phpMyAdmin users. Database Operations The Operations tab in the Database view gives access to a panel that enables us to perform operations on a database taken as a whole. Renaming a Database Starting with phpMyAdmin 2.6.0, a Rename database dialog is available. Although this operation is not directly supported by MySQL, phpMyAdmin does it indirectly by creating a new database, renaming each table (thus sending it to the new database), and dropping the original database. Copying a Database Since phpMyAdmin 2.6.1, it is possible to do a complete copy of a database, even if MySQL itself does not support this operation natively. Summary In this article, we covered the operations we can perform on whole tables or databases. We also took a look at table maintenance operations for table repair and optimization, changing various table attributes, table movements, including renaming and moving to another database, and multi-table operations.
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23 Oct 2009
19 min read
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Troubleshooting Lotus Notes/Domino 7 applications

Packt
23 Oct 2009
19 min read
Introduction The major topics that we'll cover in this article are: Testing your application (in other words, uncovering problems before your users do it for you). Asking the right questions when users do discover problems. Using logging to help troubleshoot your problems. We'll also examine two important new Notes/Domino 7 features that can be critical for troubleshooting applications: Domino Domain Monitoring (DDM) Agent Profiler   For more troubleshooting issues visit: TroubleshootingWiki.org Testing your Application Testing an application before you roll it out to your users may sound like an obvious thing to do. However, during the life cycle of a project, testing is often not allocated adequate time or money. Proper testing should include the following: A meaningful amount of developer testing and bug fixing: This allows you to catch most errors, which saves time and frustration for your user community. User representative testing: A user representative, who is knowledgeable about the application and how users use it, can often provide more robust testing than the developer. This also provides early feedback on features. Pilot testing: In this phase, the product is assumed to be complete, and a pilot group uses it in production mode. This allows for limited stress testing as well as more thorough testing of the feature set. In addition to feature testing, you should test the performance of the application. This is the most frequently skipped type of testing, because some consider it too complex and difficult. In fact, it can be difficult to test user load, but in general, it's not difficult to test data load. So, as part of any significant project, it is a good practice to programmatically create the projected number of documents that will exist within the application, one or two years after it has been fully deployed, and have a scheduled agent trigger the appropriate number of edits-per-hour during the early phases of feature testing. Although this will not give a perfect picture of performance, it will certainly help ascertain whether and why the time to create a new document is unacceptable (for example, because the @Db formulas are taking too long, or because the scheduled agent that runs every 15 minutes takes too long due to slow document searches). Asking the Right Questions Suppose that you've rolled out your application and people are using it. Then the support desk starts getting calls about a certain problem. Maybe your boss is getting an earful at meetings about sluggish performance or is hearing gripes about error messages whenever users try to click a button to perform some action. In this section, we will discuss a methodology to help you troubleshoot a problem when you don't necessarily have all the information at your disposal. We will include some specific questions that can be asked verbatim for virtually any application. The first key to success in troubleshooting an application problem is to narrow down where and when it happens. Let's take these two very different problems suggested above (slow performance and error messages), and pose questions that might help unravel them: Does the problem occur when you take a specific action? If so, what is that action? Your users might say, "It's slow whenever I open the application", or "I get an error when I click this particular button in this particular form". Does the problem occur for everyone who does this, or just for certain people? If just certain people, what do they have in common? This is a great way to get your users to help you help them. Let them be a part of the solution, not just "messengers of doom". For example, you might ask questions such as, "Is it slow only for people in your building or your floor? Is it slow only for people accessing the application remotely? Is it slow only for people who have your particular access (for example, SalesRep)?" Does this problem occur all the time, at random times, or only at certain times? It's helpful to check whether or not the time of day or the day of week/month is relevant. So typical questions might be similar to the following: "Do you get this error every time you click the button or just sometimes? If just sometimes, does it give you the error during the middle of the day, but not if you click it at 7 AM when you first arrive? Do you only get the error on Mondays or some other day of the week? Do you only see the error if the document is in a certain status or has certain data in it? If it just happens for a particular document, please send me a link to that document so that I can inspect it carefully to see if there is invalid or unexpected data." Logging Ideally, your questions have narrowed down the type of problem it could be. So at this point, the more technical troubleshooting can start. You will likely need to gather concrete information to confirm or refine what you're hearing from the users. For example, you could put a bit of debugging code into the button that they're clicking so that it gives more informative errors, or sends you an email (or creates a log document) whenever it's clicked or whenever an error occurs. Collecting the following pieces of information might be enough to diagnose the problem very quickly: Time/date User name Document UNID (if the button is pushed in a document) Error Status or any other likely field that might affect your code By looking for common denominators (such as the status of the documents in question, or access or roles of the users), you will likely be able to further narrow down the possibilities of why the problem is happening. This doesn't solve your problem of course, but it helps in advancing you a long way towards that goal. A trickier problem to troubleshoot might be one we mentioned earlier: slow performance. Typically, after you've determined that there is some kind of performance delay, it's a good idea to first collect some server logging data. Set the following Notes.ini variables in the Server Configuration document in your Domino Directory, on the Notes.ini tab: Log_Update=1Log_AgentManager=1 These variables instruct the server to write output to the log.nsf database in the Miscellaneous Events view. Note that they may already be set in your environment. If not, they're fairly unobtrusive, and shouldn't trouble your administration group. Set them for a 24-hour period during a normal business week, and then examine the results to see if anything pops out as being suspicious. For view indexing, you should look for lines like these in the Miscellaneous Events (Log_Update=1): 07/01/2006 09:29:57 AM Updating views in appsSalesPipeline.nsf07/01/2006 09:30:17 AM Finished updating views in appsSalesPipeline.nsf07/01/2006 09:30:17 AM Updating views in appsTracking.nsf07/01/2006 09:30:17 AM Finished updating views in appsTracking.nsf07/01/2006 09:30:17 AM Updating views in appsZooSchedule.nsf07/01/2006 09:30:18 AM Finished updating views in appsZooSchedule.nsf And lines like these for Agent execution (Log_AgentManager=1): 06/30/2006 09:43:49 PM AMgr: Start executing agent 'UpdateTickets' in 'appsSalesPipeline.nsf ' by Executive '1'06/30/2006 09:43:52 PM AMgr: Start executing agent 'ZooUpdate' in 'appsZooSchedule.nsf ' by Executive '2'06/30/2006 09:44:44 PM AMgr: Start executing agent 'DirSynch' in 'appsTracking.nsf ' by Executive '1' Let's examine these lines to see whether or not there is anything we can glean from them. Starting with the Log_Update=1 setting, we see that it gives us the start and stop times for every database that gets indexed. We also see that the database file paths appear alphabetically. This means that, if we search for the text string updating views and pull out all these lines covering (for instance) an hour during a busy part of the day, and copy/paste these lines into a text editor so that they're all together, then we should see complete database indexing from A to Z on your server repeating every so often. In the log.nsf database, there may be many thousands of lines that have nothing to do with your investigation, so culling the important lines is imperative for you to be able to make any sense of what's going on in your environment. You will likely see dozens or even hundreds of databases referenced. If you have hundreds of active databases on your server, then culling all these lines might be impractical, even programmatically. Instead, you might focus on the largest group of databases. You will notice that the same databases are referenced every so often. This is the Update Cycle, or view indexing cycle. It's important to get a sense of how long this cycle takes, so make sure you don't miss any references to your group of databases. Imagine that SalesPipeline.nsf and Tracking.nsf were the two databases that you wanted to focus on. You might cull the lines out of the log that have updating views and which reference these two databases, and come up with something like the following: 07/01/2006 09:29:57 AM Updating views in appsSalesPipeline.nsf07/01/2006 09:30:17 AM Finished updating views in appsSalesPipeline.nsf07/01/2006 09:30:17 AM Updating views in appsTracking.nsf07/01/2006 09:30:20 AM Finished updating views in appsTracking.nsf07/01/2006 10:15:55 AM Updating views in appsSalesPipeline.nsf07/01/2006 10:16:33 AM Finished updating views in appsSalesPipeline.nsf07/01/2006 10:16:33 AM Updating views in appsTracking.nsf07/01/2006 10:16:43 AM Finished updating views in appsTracking.nsf07/01/2006 11:22:31 AM Updating views in appsSalesPipeline.nsf07/01/2006 11:23:33 AM Finished updating views in appsSalesPipeline.nsf07/01/2006 11:23:33 AM Updating views in appsTracking.nsf07/01/2006 11:23:44 AM Finished updating views in appsTracking.nsf This gives us some very important information: the Update task (view indexing) is taking approximately an hour to cycle through the databases on the server; that's too long. The Update task is supposed to run every 15 minutes, and ideally should only run for a few minutes each time it executes. If the cycle is an hour, then that means update is running full tilt for that hour, and as soon as it stops, it realizes that it's overdue and kicks off again. It's possible that if you examine each line in the log, you'll find that certain databases are taking the bulk of the time, in which case it might be worth examining the design of those databases. But it might be that every database seems to take a long time, which might be more indicative of a general server slowdown. In any case, we haven't solved the problem; but at least we know that the problem is probably server-wide. More complex applications, and newer applications, tend to reflect server‑performance problems more readily, but that doesn't necessarily mean they carry more responsibility for the problem. In a sense, they are the "canary in the coal mine". If you suspect the problem is confined to one database (or a few), then you can increase the logging detail by setting Log_Update=2. This will give you the start time for every view in every database that the Update task indexes. If you see particular views taking a long time, then you can examine the design of those views. If no database(s) stand out, then you might want to see if the constant indexing occurs around the clock or just during business hours. If it's around the clock, then this might point to some large quantities of data that are changing in your databases. For example, you may be programmatically synchronizing many gigabytes of data throughout the day, not realizing the cost this brings in terms of indexing. If slow indexing only occurs during business hours, then perhaps the user/data load has not been planned out well for this server. As the community of users ramps up in the morning, the server starts falling behind and never catches up until evening. There are server statistics that can help you determine whether or not this is the case. (These server statistics go beyond the scope of this book, but you can begin your investigation by searching on the various Notes/Domino forums for "server AND performance AND statistics".) As may be obvious at this point, troubleshooting can be quite time-consuming. The key is to make sure that you think through each step so that it either eliminates something important, or gives you a forward path. Otherwise, you can find yourself still gathering information weeks and months later, with users and management feeling very frustrated. Before moving on from this section, let's take a quick look at agent logging. Agent Manager can run multiple agents in different databases, as determined by settings in your server document. Typically, production servers only allow two or three concurrent agents to run during business hours, and these are marked in the log as Executive '1', Executive '2', and so on. If your server is often busy with agent execution, then you can track Executive '1' and see how many different agents it runs, and for how long. If there are big gaps between when one agent starts and when the next one does (for Executive '1'), this might raise suspicion that the first agent took that whole time to execute. To verify this, turn up the logging by setting the Notes.ini variable debug_amgr=*. (This will output a fair amount of information into your log, so it's best not to leave it on for too long, but normally one day is not a problem.) Doing this will give you a very important piece of information: the number of "ticks" it took for the agent to run. One second equals 100 ticks, so if the agent takes 246,379 ticks, this equals 2,463 seconds (about 41 minutes). As a general rule, you want scheduled agents to run in seconds, not minutes; so any agent that is taking this long will require some examination. In the next section, we will talk about some other ways you can identify problematic agents. Domino Domain Monitoring (DDM) Every once in a while, a killer feature is introduced—a feature so good, so important, so helpful, that after using it, we just shake our heads and wonder how we ever managed without it for so long. Domino Domain Monitor (DDM) is just such a feature. DDM is too large to be completely covered in this one section, so we will confine our overview to what it can do in terms of troubleshooting applications. For a more thorough explanation of DDM and all its features, see the book, Upgrading to Lotus Notes and Domino (www.packtpub.com/upgrading_lotus/book). In the events4.nsf database, you will find a new group of documents you can create for tracking agent or application performance. On Domino 7 servers, a new database is created automatically with the filename ddm.nsf. This stores the DDM output you will examine. For application troubleshooting, some of the most helpful areas to track using DDM are the following: Full-text index needs to be built. If you have agents that are creating a full‑text index on the fly because the database has no full‑text index built, DDM can track that potential problem for you. Especially useful is the fact that DDM compiles the frequency per database, so (for instance) you can see if it happens once per month or once per hour. Creating full‑text indexes on the fly can result in a significant demand on server resources, so having this notification is very useful. We discuss an example of this later in this section. Agent security warnings. You can manually examine the log to try to find errors about agents not being able to execute due to insufficient access. However, DDM will do this for you, making it much easier to find (and therefore fix) such problems. Resource utilization. You can track memory, CPU, and time utilization of your agents as run by Agent Manager or by the HTTP task. This means that at any time you can open the ddm.nsf database and spot the worst offenders in these categories, over your entire server/domain. We will discuss an example of CPU usage later in this section. The following illustration shows the new set of DDM views in the events4.nsf (Monitoring configuration) database: The following screenshot displays the By Probe Server view after we've made a few document edits: Notice that there are many probes included out-of-the-box (identified by the property "author = Lotus Notes Template Development") but set to disabled. In this view, there are three that have been enabled (ones with checkmarks) and were created by one of the authors of this book. If you edit the probe document highlighted above, Default Application Code/Agents Evaluated By CPU Usage (Agent Manager), the document consists of three sections. The first section is where you choose the type of probe (in this case Application Code) and the subtype (in this case Agents Evaluated By CPU Usage). The second section allows you to choose the servers to run against, and whether you want this probe to run against agents/code executed by Agent Manager or by the HTTP task (as shown in the following screenshot). This is an important distinction. For one thing, they are different tasks, and therefore one can hit a limit while the other still has room to "breathe". But perhaps more significantly, if you choose a subtype of Agents Evaluated By Memory Usage, then the algorithms used to evaluate whether or not an agent is using too much memory are very different. Agents run by the HTTP task will be judged much more harshly than those run by the Agent Manager task. This is because with the HTTP task, it is possible to run the same agent with up to hundreds of thousands of concurrent executions. But with Agent Manager, you are effectively limited to ten concurrent instances, and none within the same database. The third section allows you to set your threshold for when DDM should report the activity: You can select up to four levels of warning: Fatal, Failure, Warning (High), and Warning (Low). Note that you do not have the ability to change the severity labels (which appear as icons in the view). Unless you change the database design of ddm.nsf, the icons displayed in the view and documents are non-configurable. Experiment with these settings until you find the approach that is most useful for your corporation. Typically, customers start by overwhelming themselves with information, and then fine-tuning the probes so that much less information is reported. In this example, only two statuses are enabled: one for six seconds, with a label of Warning (High), and one for 60 seconds, with a label of Failure. Here is a screenshot of the DDM database: Notice that there are two Application Code results, one with a status of Failure (because that agent ran for more than 60 seconds), and one with a status of Warning (High) (because that agent ran for more than six seconds but less than 60 seconds). These are the parameters set in the Probe document shown previously, which can easily be changed by editing that Probe document. If you want these labels to be different, you must enable different rows in the Probe document. If you open one of these documents, there are three sections. The top section gives header information about this event, such as the server name, the database and agent name, and so on. The second section includes the following table, with a tab for the most recent infraction and a tab for previous infractions. This allows you to see how often the problem is occurring, and with what severity. The third section provides some possible solutions, and (if applicable) automation. For example, in our example, you might want to "profile" your agent. (We will profile one of our agents in the final section of this article.) DDM can capture full-text operations against a database that is not full‑text indexed. It tracks the number of times this happens, so you can decide whether to full‑text index the database, change the agent, or neither. For a more complete list of the errors and problems that DDM can help resolve, check the Domino 7 online help or the product documentation (www.lotus.com). Agent Profiler If any of the troubleshooting tips or techniques we've discussed in this article causes you to look at an agent and think, "I wonder what makes this agent so slow", then the Agent Profiler should be the next tool to consider. Agent Profiler is another new feature introduced in Notes/Domino 7. It gives you a breakdown of many methods/properties in your LotusScript agent, telling you how often each one was executed and how long they took to execute. In Notes/Domino 7, the second (security) tab of Agent properties now includes a checkbox labeled Profile this agent. You can select this option if you want an agent to be profiled. The next time the agent runs, a profile document in the database is created and filled with the information from that execution. This document is then updated every time the agent runs. You can view these results from the Agent View by highlighting your agent and selecting Agent | View Profile Results. The following is a profile for an agent that performed slow mail searches: Although this doesn't completely measure (and certainly does not completely troubleshoot) your agents, it is an important step forward in troubleshooting code. Imagine the alternative: dozens of print statements, and then hours of collating results! Summary In closing, we hope that this article has opened your eyes to new possibilities in troubleshooting, both in terms of techniques and new Notes/Domino 7 features. Every environment has applications that users wish ran faster, but with a bit of care, you can troubleshoot your performance problems and find resolutions. After you have your servers running Notes/Domino 7, you can use DDM and Agent Profiler (both exceptionally easy to use) to help nail down poorly performing code in your applications. These tools really open a window on what had previously been a room full of mysterious behavior. Full-text indexing on the fly, code that uses too much memory, and long running agents are all quickly identified by Domino Domain Monitoring (DDM). Try it!
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23 Oct 2009
8 min read
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Blender 3D: Interview with Allan Brito

Packt
23 Oct 2009
8 min read
Meeba Abraham: Hi Allan, thank you for talking to us today, why don’t you tell us a bit about yourself and your background; how did you start working with Blender? Allan Brito: Hi, and thanks for this opportunity to talk a bit about myself. Well, I’m a 29 year-old architect from Brazil. After my graduation, I started working on visualization projects, mostly on 3ds Max for a small studio here in Brazil. After two years I started teaching 3D modeling and animation and I fell in love with teaching. I still teach 3D animation and modeling at a College here. With the help of my teaching experience, I began writing manuals and tutorials about 3D animation. Eventually, I decided to write a book about Blender in Portuguese, and the book was a huge success in Brazil. Currently I`m working on the third edition of this book. With the book, I also needed a way to keep in touch with the readers and discuss about Blender and 3D related stuff. So I started a web site (www.allanbrito.com), where I regularly write short articles and tutorials about Blender and its comparison with other 3D packages. Today the web site has grown considerably, and I continue to update it with content on Blender and other 3D software tools. Meeba Abraham: How long have you been working with it? Allan Brito: My first contact with Blender 3D was in 2003. I was invited by a friend to check out a great open source software for 3D visualization. I was really impressed by Blender, its potential, and the lightweight of the software. Coming from a 3ds Max background, it was a bit hard to get used to the interface and the keyboard shortcuts, but after a few weeks I started getting used to it. After the learning process, I started to use Blender as the main tool for my projects. I can`t say that it was easy to use at first, but with time Blender simply grew on me and became my main tool for my projects. Meeba Abraham: Can you tell about some of the key features of Blender that makes it a viable option to other professional 3D software? Allan Brito: There are many features in Blender that other professional 3D suites do not have. For instance, the integrated Game Engine, which allows you to produce interactive animations, is just awesome! For 3D modeling, Blender has a sculpt module where artists can create 3D models only by sculpt geometry in a way similar to what sculpting tools such as ZBrush and MudBox provides. The node editor in Blender is also an incredible tool to create materials and for post-production. Post-production is a powerful tool in Blender. There is a sequencer editor that works like a video editor. You can cut, join, and post-process videos in the sequence editor. For instance, an animator can create a full animation without the need of any other software. Recently, the Big Buck Bunny project introduced some great tools for character animation in Blender, like better fur, a new and improved particle system, new and improved UV Mapping and much more. I strongly recommend a visit to www.blender.org to check out the full list of features, which is huge. Meeba Abraham: Why is Blender an important 3D application that an aspiring graphics artist should consider using? Allan Brito: I believe that Blender has a great set of features that can help a graphic artist create some impressive art work. Why Blender? I guess the best answer is; why not? All the features offered by other 3D animation software are also available in Blender, such as character animation, physics simulation, particle animation, and much more. And with Blender being a free software, you won’t have to get a single license and be bounded to only one workstation. Besides the features, I believe in the community nature of Blender. If you feel a tool or feature is missing, just make a suggestion to the community or make the feature yourself! Meeba Abraham: Over the years, Blender has grown in popularity. What, in your opinion, are some of the main reasons for this? Allan Brito: In the last few years Blender gained many features that only the so-called high-end and expansive 3D software had. This puts the spotlight right into Blender, and some old and experienced professionals are using Blender today, to take a look at these advanced features, and they like it. Besides the features, the Blender Foundation is doing a great job by supporting Blender and promoting it outside the community. They organize conferences and projects to show the potentials of Blender as a 3D animation package. The last open movie—Big Buck Bunny—supported by the community is a great example of that. Meeba Abraham: Since Blender is an open source 3D application, the Blender community plays an important role in its growth. Can you shed some light on the blender community? How have they helped to popularize Blender? Allan Brito: What can I say? The Blender community is great and has been supporting the development of Blender for a long time. The last open movie is a great example of what this community can do. Big Buck Bunny is a project mainly created by the Blender community. Artists could buy the DVD of the animation even before the project started. And when the animation was finished, all Blender users could buy a shiny DVD of the animation that contains tutorials and all source files of the animation. Now, what if Pixar gave away all the production files of their animations. And even of you don’t want to buy the DVD, you can still download all of the content for free from the project Web site, www.bigbuckbunny.org. This is a great example of the Blender community spirit and how much support Blender gets from around the world. Meeba Abraham: You have just authored a book on Blender; how did you find the experience? Is this the first book you’ve written? Allan Brito: Writing a book on Blender was quite a challenge for me. Even with the experience of writing tutorials and short articles about Blender, writing a book was not easy! But after a few weeks, I was able to write the chapters naturally and almost on schedule. The biggest challenge for me was to write about a subject that no one else had written about yet. In my first book “Blender 3D – Guia do Usuário” written in Brazilian Portuguese, the challenge was even bigger. When I started writing that book, there weren’t any updated documentation on Blender features. So I had to do a lot of research myself. With this book, the challenge again was to write about something that no one else has ever written. Even with a few short tutorials around, there weren`t any full set of procedures or tips for working with architectural visualization in Blender. The experience was great and I hope this is just the first book in a long series of books! I have a few ideas for writing more books about Blender and I’m already working on some of them. Meeba Abraham: How do you anticipate it will help the Blender community? Is it different to other Blender books? Allan Brito: I believe that a lot of users want to use Blender for architectural visualization but have only found tutorials and books on character modeling and animation. This book was written with architectural visualization in mind. So every example and Blender tool is described specifically with architectural examples. Meeba Abraham: You make regular contributions to www.BlenderNation.com, how did you get involved with the site and what does it offer to the community? Allan Brito: BlenderNation is the comprehensive Web site for Blender related news. So if anyone is curious about what`s going on in the Blender community, the first place to look after the Foundation Web site is BlenderNation. My involvement with BlenderNation began with my writing articles about Blender in Brazilian Portuguese for my own web site (www.allanbrito.com). A few months later, I was invited by Bart Veldhuizen to write a few tutorials and I guess they liked my work! After that I was writing articles for BlenderNation as a Contributor Editor. And I have to say that it`s really great to be a part of it, and keep the Blender community updated. The experience with BlenderNation and the books inspired me to start a new project called Blender 3D Architect (www.blender3darchitect.com) where I write articles on how to use Blender for architectural visualization along with tips and tutorials. Meeba Abraham: Thanks for your time and contributions!
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23 Oct 2009
12 min read
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Technical Best Practices for Dynamics AX - Application Design Standards

Packt
23 Oct 2009
12 min read
Application Design Standards The Dynamics AX design standards consist of the following considerations: Code placement Performance optimization Using field groups in tables Auto property settings Code Placement Code placement is important as it affects the following: Performance Customization Reusability Maintainability (upgrade, extensibility, etc.) The general guidelines are that the code should be placed in such a way that various calls to other layers are minimized, the operation is performed at the layer where it is least expensive, and the same code need not be written at several places (e.g. if business logic is written on a form then it needs to be written in the enterprise portal for the web client also). So we should not only think about the tier of placement in the three-tier architecture, but also about the best AOT (Application Object Tree) element type for a piece of code. Once these have been designed we need to think about the type of method or objects in the classes, etc. Three-Tier Architecture Considerations The three tiers in this architecture are dedicated for the following three types of jobs: Client—The Presentation layer—This is where the forms are stored. Place client‑specific classes and methods here. Object server—The Business application logic layer—Transaction-oriented database update jobs should be run here, close to the database. Database server—The Database layer—Utilize the power of the database server by using aggregate functions, joins, and other calculating features of the database management system. Dynamics AX has a property, RunOn, for every AOT element, which indicates the layer where it should be executed i.e. Client, AOS, or Database server. This RunOn property may have one of three values i.e. Client, Called from, and Server. Client: The object will live on the client. Called from: The object will live at the tier where the object is created using the 'new' constructor. Server: The object will live on the server. Now we will discuss how to decide the RunOn property value. Classes The value of the RunOn property for a class will decide the location of the object created from that class. The value of RunOn property for a class will be same as the parent class if the parent class has a RunOn property other than Called from i.e. the RunOn property cannot be changed for a class if the parent class has as its value either Client or Server. If the parent class has Called from as its RunOn property value, it can be changed to Client or Server and if it is not changed it will retain the inherited value i.e. Called from. The Called from value of the RunOn property means the object will live at the tier where the code creating it (by calling the new constructor) is running. Methods Now we will discuss the execution place for various types of methods. Class static methods and table methods (except for the database methods) can have their default behavior. The execution place for a method can be changed to Server or Client by adding the Client or Server modifier keywords in the method declaration as shown below:   server static boolean mymethod(): to make server the execution place.   client static boolean mymethod(): to make client the execution place.   client server static boolean mymethod(): to make called from the execution place. The following table summarizes the execution place of various types of methods: AOT elements Default behavior Can be changed Class static methods Runs by default at the same place where the associated class runs i.e. if the associated class has the RunOn property value as server then the class static method will also be executed at the server. Yes Class instance methods Runs where the object of the class lives. The class objects live as described in the class RunOn property. No Table static methods Table static methods have the RunOn property as Called from and hence by default they run where they are called. Yes Table instance methods Table instance methods have the RunOn property as Called from and hence by default they run where they are called. The standard methods Insert/doInsert, Update/doUpdate, and Delete/doDelete run on the Server where the data source is located. No GUI Objects and Reports GUI objects always live on Client. GUI objects include the FormRun, FormDataSource, all FormControls, DialogBox, and OperationProgress objects. Reports always live on Called from, which means the object will live at the tier where the code creating it (by calling the new constructor) is running. Temporary Tables Temporary tables instantiate and live at the tier where data is first inserted and it does not matter where they are declared. Since the placement of temporary tables is very critical for performance, temporary tables should live at the tier where they are used. If a table is utilized in more than one tier then it should live on the tier where the greatest number of inserts and updates are performed. Queries QueryRun has Called from as the default value of the RunOn property. The QueryRun should always be supplied from the same tier from where it was originally run. If you want to create a new QueryRun in place of an old one, it should be created on the same tier where the old QueryRun was executed. AOT Element Type Consideration The following guidelines must be followed to decide the type of code container: AOT element Considerations Class Write code in class when either: Code is related to many tables. Code is not related to any table. Create class instance method when: Working on the instance variable of the class. Overriding is potentially useful. Create class static method when: Access to the class instance method is not required. Overriding is not needed. The functionality of the method is related to the class it is defined on. The method needs to be executed on a different tier than the method's tier. Table Write code in table method when: It is strictly related to a table. Create table instance method when: It is supposed to handle one record at a time. Create table static method when: It is supposed to handle none, some, or all the records at a time. Global class Write code in global class when: Code cannot be placed more logically in another class (or table). Code is general purpose, tool extending, and application neutral. Forms and reports Coding on forms or reports should be avoided as far as possible i.e. except for the calls to classes and table methods that handle complex layout and business logic. The edit and display methods must be avoided if they are placed in a table. If code cannot be placed anywhere else, i.e. the presentation tier is most suitable, then the following guidelines should be observed: Place the code at the data source or data source field level and not at the control level. Call classes from buttons on forms by using menu items. For example, rather than writing a code on the form or report, code could be written in a class and the class could be called from the menu item. Maps Write code in maps when a limited number of connected fields needs to be grouped. Views Do not place much code in views. Performance Optimization The performance optimization guidelines can be categorized into the following three categories: Database design AOS performance optimization General programming Database Design The database design principles are based on the following considerations: Minimizing the database calls by caching Minimizing database transactions Wise index designing Using the select statement in an optimum way Performing transactions in the shortest time possible Caching Database access should be avoided whenever it is not absolutely necessary as retrieving database records from memory is far cheaper and faster. Recording database records in memory is known as caching. The following are the possible type of caching on the server: Record caching Entire table caching Result-set caching Record Caching Record caching is a type of performance enhancement technique in which one or a group of records is retrieved from the memory rather than the database. Retrieving a record from memory rather than database significantly improves the data access. Record caching can be enabled only when the following conditions are satisfied: The CacheLookup property in the table should be enabled by selecting the values notITTS, Found, or FoundAndEmpty. The table has a unique index; either use the primary index or the first unique index. The index based on RecId (known as RecId index) does not qualify as a caching index. The retrieved records can be placed in cache if the following conditions are met: The table is cached i.e. the above conditions are met. The select statement used to read the record uses an equal operator (= =) on the caching key. All the fields in the record are retrieved. A record is looked for when the following conditions are met: The table is cached. The select statement used to read the record uses an equal operator (= =) on caching key. The select statement is either inside or outside TTS, but the value of the caching property for the table is not NotITTS and the select is not forupdate. The following table summarizes the different types of caching mechanism: CacheLookup property Explanation None No data will be cached or retrieved from the cache. This value of CacheLookup property is used when: Tables are frequently updated e.g. transaction tables. It is very critical to read fresh data. NotITTS All select queries that retrieved at least one result will be cached. Found All successful select queries based on caching key are cached for this type of caching. All select queries are returned from cache if the record exists there. A select forupdate in TTS will always read from the database and replace the record in cache. This value of the CacheLookup property is typically used for static tables like ZipCodes where the record usually exists. FoundAndEmpty All select queriesbased on caching keys are cached, even those select queries, which do not return data. All caching keys selects are returned from caching if the record exists or is marked as non-existing, and if it is neither marked as non-existing nor retrieving any result it will check the database and update the cache accordingly. A select forupdate in TTS will always read from the database and replace the record in cache. This value of the CacheLookup property is typically used for tables where registering non-existing keys is also important e.g. discount table. EntireTable A copy of table is created as temporary table. All selects against the table will be performed on the copy. Joins that include the table will only be performed against the copy when all tables participating in the join are EntireTable cached. Otherwise a database join is performed. Operations that change data (insert, update, and delete) are performed against the database as well as against the copy. The reread method will retrieve the data from database and update the copy data as well. The Microsoft Dynamics AX Object Server thin client will regard an EntireTable cached table as FoundAndEmpty cached as well, and will therefore build a recordCache locally when accessing the table. This value of the CacheLookup property is typically used for tables that are not supposed to be modified frequently.   Result-set Caching The RecordViewCache is useful for caching tables that are not of static nature, or contain so many records that the other caching methods would be impractical. This type of caching can be available through the RecordViewCache class. The RecordViewCache is instantiated using X++ select with a where clause that defines the result set. Technically the RecordViewCache can be instantiated using X++ select but it will create a copy of table in memory, which may be an inefficient use of memory. The following rules apply to the instantiating X++ select: It may not be a join. It must be noFetch. The table may not be temporary. When running a Dynamics AX Object Server thin client, instantiation must be on the server. The limitations of the result-set caching are as follows: The RecordViewCache is not shared between Dynamics AX clients. The RecordViewCache is deactivated as soon as the RecordViewCache object goes out of scope or is destroyed. In some cases result-set caching may be dangerous and hence only careful use is recommended. The following facts about result-set caching will be helpful in deciding the use of result-set caching. The database is simultaneously updated with the RecordViewCache. Updating the key of a row that did not qualify the result set at the time of instantiation will not result in the row being included in the cache. Inserts are always included in the RecordViewCaches for that table. It is definitely an advantage; however, care should be taken when inserting a large number of rows in a table and at the same time having a RecordViewCache on the same table as it will prolong the cache update time. A delete will remove the row from RecordViewCaches on that table but not the table. A Delete_from will invalidate RecordViewCaches on that table. As mentioned above the RecordViewCache can go out of synchronization and hence we may need to re-synchronize it again. X++ has a method reread, which retrieves the data from database and updates the cached copy.
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Packt
23 Oct 2009
5 min read
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Integrating Twitter and YouTube with MediaWiki

Packt
23 Oct 2009
5 min read
Twitter in MediaWiki Twitter (http://www.twitter.com) is a micro-blogging service that allows users to convey the world (or at least the small portion of it on Twitter) what they are doing, in messages of 140 characters or less. It is possible to embed these messages in external websites, which is what we will be doing for JazzMeet. We can use the updates to inform our wiki's visitors of the latest JazzMeet being held across the world, and they can send a response to the JazzMeet Twitter account. Shorter Links Because Twitter only allows posts of up to 140 characters, many Twitter usersmake use of URL-shortening services such as Tiny URL (http://tinyurl.com), and notlong (http://notlong.com) to turn long web addresses into short, more manageable URLs. Tiny URL assigns a random URL such as http://tinyurl.com/3ut9p4, while notlong allows you to pick a free sub-domain to redirect to your chosen address, such as http://asgkasdgadg.notlong.com. Twitter automatically shortens web addresses in your posts. Creating a Twitter Account Creating a Twitter account is quite easy. Just fill in the username, password, and email address fields, and submit the registration form, once you have read and accepted the terms and conditions. If your chosen username is free, your account is created instantly. Once your account has been created, you can change the settings such as your display name and your profile's background image, to help blur the distinction between your website and your Twitter profile. Colors can be specified as "hex" values under the Design tab of your Twitter account's settings section. The following color codes change the link colors to our JazzMeet's palette of browns and reds: As you can see in the screenshot, JazzMeet's Twitter profile now looks a little more like the JazzMeet wiki. By doing this, the visitors catching up with JazzMeet's events on Twitter will not be confused by a sudden change in color scheme:   Embedding Twitter Feeds in MediaWiki Twitter provides a few ways to embed your latest posts in to your own website(s); simply log in and go to http://www.twitter.com/badges. Flash: With this option you can show just your posts, or your posts and your friends' most recent posts on Twitter. HTML and JavaScript: You can configure the code to show between 1 and 20 of your most recent Twitter posts. As JazzMeet isn't really the sort of wiki the visitors would expect to find on Flash, we will be using the HTML and JavaScript version. You are provided with the necessary code to embed in your website or wiki. We will add it to the JazzMeet skin template, as we want it to be displayed on every page of our wiki, just beneath our sponsor links. Refer to the following code: <div id="twitter_div"><h2 class="twitter-title">Twitter Updates</h2><ul id="twitter_update_list"></ul></div><script type="text/javascript" src="http://twitter.com/javascripts/blogger.js"></script><script type="text/javascript" src="http://twitter.com/statuses/user_timeline/jazzmeet.json?callback=twitterCallback2&count=5"></script> The JavaScript given at the bottom of the code can be moved just above the </body> tag of your wiki's skin template. This will help your wiki to load other important elements of your wiki before the Twitter status. You will need to replace "jazzmeet" in the code with your own Twitter username, otherwise you will receive JazzMeet's Twitter updates, and not your own. It is important to leave the unordered list of ID twitter_update_list as it is, as this is the element the JavaScript code looks for to insert a list item containing each of your twitter messages in the page. Styling Twitter's HTML We need to style the Twitter HTML by adding some CSS to change the colors and style of the Twitter status code: #twitter_div {background: #FFF;border: 3px #BEB798 solid;color: #BEB798;margin: 0;padding: 5px;width: 165px;}#twitter_div a {color: #8D1425 !important;}ul#twitter_update_list {list-style-type: none;margin: 0;padding: 0;}#twitter_update_list li {color: #38230C;display: block;}h2.twitter-title {color: #BEB798;font-size: 100%;} There are only a few CSS IDs and classes that need to be taken care of. They are as follows: #twitter_div is the element that contains the Twitter feeds. #twitter_update_list is the ID applied to the unordered list. Styling this affects how your Twitter feeds are displayed. .twitter-title is the class applied to the Twitter feed's heading (which you can remove, if necessary). Our wiki's skin for JazzMeet now has JazzMeet's Twitter feed embedded in the righthand column, allowing visitors to keep up-to-date with the latest JazzMeet news. Inserting Twitter as Page Content Media Wiki does not allow JavaScript to be embedded in a page via the "edit" function, so you won't be able to insert a Twitter status feed directly in a page unless it is in the template itself. Even if you inserted the relevant JavaScript links into your MediaWiki skin template, they are relevant only for one Twitter profile ("jazzmeet", in our case).  
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