Sunday, 17 November 2013

Action selectors and action filters in ASP.Net MVC

At the time of writing MVC is in version 5.0.

Firstly, the details of what an action is are outside the scope of this post but in essence an action is a public method on a controller class that the framework invokes in response to an incoming request. 

Action selectors

Action selectors are attributes that can be applied to action methods and are used to influence which action method gets invoked in response to a request.

For example the ActionName attribute can be used to change the name to invoke an action method. In the following code snippet the Index() action method will be invoked with the name “List” rather than “Index” in the URL. In fact “Index” would be invalid. Note also that the view, if there is one, must also be called “List” and not “Index” unless you use an overloaded version of the View() method that takes the name of a view as a parameter.

[ActionName("List")]
public ActionResult Index()
{
    return View("Index");
}

 

The ActionVerbs selector is used when we want to control the selection of the action method based on request type. For example you can define which method responds to an HTTP Get and which responds to an HTTP Post. For example:

[AcceptVerbs(HttpVerbs.Get)]
public ActionResult Index()
{
    return View();
}

 

Note that there are some shortcut attributes that do the same thing: [HttpGet] and [HttpPost]. See the previous post Why use the MVC AcceptVerbs attribute?

 

Action filters

Action filters apply pre and post processing logic to an action method and can modify the result. Action filters are typically used to apply cross-cutting concerns, logic that you want to apply to multiple methods but don’t want to duplicate code across controllers. Caching, validation and authorisation are examples of the type of cross-cutting concerns that action filters can be used to implement.

Action filters can be applied to individual methods or to the controller itself. When applied at the controller level the filter will apply to all action methods in that controller.

In ASP.NET MVC there are basically 4 different types of filter:

  • Authorization filters – Implements the IAuthorizationFilter attribute.
  • Action filters – Implements the IActionFilter attribute.
  • Result filters – Implements the IResultFilter attribute.
  • Exception filters – Implements the IExceptionFilter attribute.

 

public class HomeController : Controller
{
    [OutputCache(Duration=10)]
    public string Index()
    {
         return View();
    }
}

 

See Filtering in ASP.NET MVC.

A note about global filters

Filters can be applied globally, that is to every request that is processed by any controller in your application. You can register global filters in the FilterConfig class located under the App_Start folder of your MVC project.

public class FilterConfig
{
    public static void RegisterGlobalFilters(GlobalFilterCollection filters)
    {
        filters.Add(new HandleErrorAttribute());
    }
}

 

Applying a global filter might be a good way of implementing logging. Simply create a new filter attribute that extends ActionFilterAttribute and register it in FilterConfig. Note that there is a default location for filters in the MVC application template – under the Filters folder.

public class LogAttribute : ActionFilterAttribute
{
    public override void OnActionExecuted(ActionExecutedContext filterContext)
    {
        // Do logging here
        base.OnActionExecuted(filterContext);
    }

    public override void OnActionExecuting(ActionExecutingContext filterContext)
    {
        // Do logging here
        base.OnActionExecuting(filterContext);
    }

    public override void OnResultExecuted(ResultExecutedContext filterContext)
    {
        // Do logging here
        base.OnResultExecuted(filterContext);
    }

    public override void OnResultExecuting(ResultExecutingContext filterContext)
    {
        // Do logging here
        base.OnResultExecuting(filterContext);
    }
}

 

Summary

  • Action selectors are implemented as attributes and influence what action methods are selected for invocation in response to an incoming request.
  • Action filters allow pre and post processing logic to be applied to an action method. 

Saturday, 16 November 2013

ASP.Net MVC ActionResult return type

This is just a quick aide-mémoire for me as I pick up some MVC code again. At the time of writing MVC is in version 5.

OK, action methods can return the following ActionResult types:

 

Action Result Helper Method Description

ViewResult

View

Renders a view as a Web page.

PartialViewResult

PartialView

Renders a partial view, which defines a section of a view that can be rendered inside another view.

RedirectResult

Redirect

Redirects to another action method by using its URL.

RedirectToRouteResult

RedirectToAction

RedirectToRoute

Redirects to another action method.

ContentResult

Content

Returns a user-defined content type.

JsonResult

Json

Returns a serialized JSON object.

JavaScriptResult

JavaScript

Returns a script that can be executed on the client.

FileResult

File

Returns binary output to write to the response.

EmptyResult

(None)

Represents a return value that is used if the action method must return a null result (void).

 

See Controllers and Action Methods in ASP.NET MVC Applications for the origin of this table.

Saturday, 16 November 2013

Friday, 8 November 2013

ArcGIS Runtime SDK for WPF – Tips and tricks when using the LocalServer

Usual disclaimer here: these are my notes to help me understand the problem and get a workable model of what’s going on into my head.

I’ve been leading the development of an application using the ArcGIS Runtime SDK for WPF version 10.1.1.0, an application designed to run on tablet devices running Windows 7 or 8. It’s essentially a desktop application optimised for touch screen use. The application uses MVVM supported by Caliburn.Micro.

The application is task driven, meaning it supports field workers in the completion of tasks allocated to them. In order to present the user with lists of tasks to be completed it is necessary for the application to query the local geodatabase via the ESRI APIs during a start-up initialisation phase. To our dismay this phase was taking a very long time, up to several minutes on some tablet devices.

A thorough investigation into potential bottlenecks provided insight into the use of the LocalServer, the local service classes (e.g. LocalFeatureService, LocalMapService, LocalGeometryService, etc.) and the ‘plain’ service classes (e.g. FeatureService, GeometryService).

What follows are the results of some lessons learned.

 

Tip 1 - Understanding the LocalServer, local service classes and the plain service classes

The LocalServer

The LocalServer is not too big a deal here. It’s just like having a web server running locally, a server that can be used to host REST services just like a conventional ArcGIS server. The first task is to get the server running. Now this can happen automatically:

“It is not necessary to work with the LocalServer directly. Instead, creating and starting the individual LocalService classes ( LocalMapService, LocalFeatureService, LocalGeocodeService, LocalGeometryService, and LocalGeoprocessingService) will start the LocalServer if it is not already running.” [1]

I prefer to take control of this and start the server myself using InitializeAsync [1]. In this application I used a Caliburn.Micro IResult along these lines:

 

public class InitialiseLocalServerResult : IResult
{
    public event EventHandler<ResultCompletionEventArgs> Completed;

    public void Execute(ActionExecutionContext context)
    {
        LocalServer.InitializeAsync(ServerInitialised);
    }

    private void ServerInitialised()
    {
        OnCompleted();
    }

    private void OnCompleted()
    {
        var handler = Completed;
        if (handler != null)
        {
            handler(this, new ResultCompletionEventArgs());
        }
    } 
}

 

So the LocalServer is just a local web server used to host REST services for you.

Local service classes

You create services on your LocalServer using the local service classes which can be found in the ESRI.ArcGIS.Client.Local namespace. There are  number of local service classes available such as:

  • LocalMapService - provides access to maps, features, and attribute data contained within a Map Package.
  • LocalFeatureService - forms the basis for feature editing. The feature service is just a map service with the Feature Access capability enabled.
  • LocalGeometryService - a special type of service not based on any specific geographic resource such as a Map Package but instead provide access to geometric operations.
  • LocalGeocodeService – address and postcode searching etc.
  • LocalGeoprocessingService - a local geoprocessing service hosted by the runtime local server.

 

Again I like to take control of when and how the local services are created on the LocalServer and in this application I used an IResult something like this:

 

public class StartLocalFeatureServiceResult : IResult<LocalFeatureService>
{
    private readonly string _mapPackagePath;

    public StartLocalFeatureServiceResult(string mapPackagePath)
    {
        _mapPackagePath = mapPackagePath;
    }

    public event EventHandler<ResultCompletionEventArgs> Completed;

    public LocalFeatureService Result { get; private set; }

    public bool HasError
    {        
        get { return Error != null; }
    }

    public Exception Error { get; set; }

    public void Execute(ActionExecutionContext context)
    {
        var service = new LocalFeatureService(_mapPackagePath);
        service.StartAsync(ServiceStarted);
    }

    private void ServiceStarted(LocalService service)
    {
        if (service.Error == null)
        {
            Result = (LocalFeatureService)service;
        }
        else
        {
            Error = service.Error;
        }

        OnCompleted();
    }

    private void OnCompleted()
    {
        var handler = Completed;
        if (handler != null)
        {
            handler(this, new ResultCompletionEventArgs());
        }
    }
}

 

If you are not using Caliburn.Micro the key point is that instantiating the LocalFeatureService and calling StartAsync on it causes a service to be started on the LocalServer. The use of map packages is outside the scope of this post but essentially the package contains the data to be exposed by the service.

Really useful properties on the local service classes are the URLs. You can use these in conjunction with the layer classes (e.g. FeatureLayer) or classes such as QueryTask.

So the local service classes encapsulate a REST service to be instantiated on your LocalServer.

Plain service classes

I think the biggest confusion arises over the difference between the local service classes (e.g. LocalFeatureService) and the plain service classes (e.g. FeatureService).

In fact the difference is quite straight forwards. Whereas the local service classes are used to create REST services on your LocalServer the plain feature classes are clients used to connect to and query the service running on the LocalServer. It’s as simple as that. The plain service classes are found in the  ESRI.ArcGIS.Client namespace.

 

Tip 2 – Log the local server URLs when you start the LocalServer

I always write the URL of the LocalServer to a log file somewhere. If you grab that URL and paste it into your browser you will see a server management page that shows you exactly what services are running. Very useful if you want to make sure you are not starting more services than you need. Simply log LocalServer.Url and LocalServer.AdminUrl.

You’ll get URLs like this: http://127.0.0.1:50000/glMxtq/arcgis/rest/services. Note there’s a randomly generated string in there (‘glMxtq’ in this case). That’s different every time you start the server so you need to grab the new URL each time.

 

image

Figure 1 – A services directory page for a running LocalServer

 

Watch out for duplicate services. Maybe you don’t need them and your code can be changed to only start those services you actually need.

 

Tip 3 – If you’ve already got a LocalFeatureService maybe you don’t need a LocalMapService too

In my application I needed a LocalMapService for some activities and a LocalFeatureService for others so I naively created an instance of each pointing at the same map package. However, when I checked the server using the services directory (see Tip 2 above) I found that in addition to the feature service there were 2 map services running, not one.

It seems that if you create a local feature service it also creates a local map service for you. In fact the LocalFeatureService class inherits from LocalMapService so you get 2 URLs from an instance of LocalFeatureService: UrlFeatureService from LocalFeatureService and UrlMapService inherited from LocalMapService

If you need to access a map package via a LocalFeatureService and a LocalMapService just create a LocalFeatureService and you’ll get both.

 

Tip 4 – Beware of using code like this

 

LocalMapService localMapService = new LocalMapService(@"Path to ArcGIS map package");
localMapService.StartAsync(delegateService =>
{
    IdentifyTask identifyTask = new IdentifyTask();
    identifyTask.Url = localMapService.UrlMapService;
});

This example comes from the ArcGIS Runtime SDK for WPF documentation. It’s not wrong but it could lead you down the wrong path. It would be all too easy to add code like this to a class and call it many times. Remember, each time you call StartAsync you will create a new instance of the service on the server which you probably don’t want and don’t need.

I prefer to create my local services in separate operations and maintain references to them that I can use later (see the StartLocalFeatureServiceResult result in Tip 1 above). That way I only have the minimum number of services running on the LocalServer. You will see from the example that it’s only the UrlMapService property that’s important. As a rule I’ll create a service for each package I need to access, keep a reference to that service somewhere and access the URL property as and when I need it.

 

References

[1] – ArcGIS Runtime SDK for WPF API reference

Friday, 8 November 2013

Thursday, 24 October 2013

Fixing broken music downloads in iTunes 11.1.1.11

There are few things more infuriating than eagerly purchasing the latest album by your favourite band from iTunes, transferring to your device of choice and heading off for a trip only to find one or more of the tracks have been truncated due to an incomplete download. This seems to happen to me a lot but maybe I’m just unlucky.

Anyway, how to fix the problem? Well firstly, there doesn’t seem to be an obvious way of doing this in iTunes, at least not in version 11.1.1.11. In the past you could visit the store, locate the track in question and choose to purchase the track again. Having figured out that you had already purchased the item iTunes would respond by asking if you would like to download again. You’d just confirm and all would be well.

This doesn’t seem to be possible in iTunes 11.1.1.11 because if you go to the store all you can do is play the track. No good if the track is broken! It won’t download again and the track will remain broken.

 

itunes003

Figure 1 - No option to download or purchase again in the store.

 

The solution

Now that all your music is in the cloud it seems reasonable that you should be able to get at it again. This is how I do it.

Step 1. Find the affected file on your disk drive and delete it.

Step 2. Start iTunes, navigate to the affected track and try to play it. iTunes will respond by saying it can’t find the track and invites you to locate the file. In the image below the track Blood Drive was truncated so I have deleted it from my disk drive.

 

itunes001

Figure 2 – Prompted to locate the missing file.

 

Step 3. Cancel the dialog and the cloud icon will reappear to the right of the track.

 

itunes002

Figure 3 – The cloud icon should now be available.

 

Step 4. Click the cloud icon to download the file again.

Sunday, 2 June 2013

Andy’s list of JavaScript frameworks

Too many JavaScript frameworks. Too little time. This is a list of frameworks for me to keep track. It’s not meant to be exhaustive but contains the frameworks I’m coming across. For a fuller list why not try www.jsdb.io.

Framework Description URL
H5F A JavaScript library that allows you to use the HTML5 Forms chapters new field input types, attributes and constraint validation API in non-supporting browsers. https://github.com/ryanseddon/H5F
Angular JS From Google. Somewhat similar to Knockout. http://angularjs.org/
Backbone Backbone.js gives structure to web applications by providing models with key-value binding and custom events, collections with a rich API of enumerable functions, views with declarative event handling, and connects it all to your existing API over a RESTful JSON interface. http://backbonejs.org/
Bootstrap Sleek, intuitive, and powerful front-end framework for faster and easier web development.

Not just JavaScript. Includes HTML and CSS.
http://twitter.github.io/bootstrap
Breeze Breeze is a JavaScript library that helps you manage data in rich client applications. If you store data in a database, query and save those data as complex object graphs, and share these graphs across multiple screens of your JavaScript client, Breeze is for you. http://www.breezejs.com/
Durandal Durandal is a cross-device, cross-platform client framework written in JavaScript and designed to make Single Page Applications (SPAs) easy to create and maintain. http://durandaljs.com/
Font Awesome The iconic font designed for Bootstrap.

Font Awesome gives you scalable vector icons that can instantly be customized — size, color, drop shadow, and anything that can be done with the power of CSS.
http://fortawesome.github.io/Font-Awesome/
jQuery Mobile A unified, HTML5-based user interface system for all popular mobile device platforms, built on the rock-solid jQuery and jQuery UI foundation. Its lightweight code is built with progressive enhancement, and has a flexible, easily themeable design. http://jquerymobile.com/
jQueryUI jQuery UI is a curated set of user interface interactions, effects, widgets, and themes built on top of the jQuery JavaScript Library. http://jqueryui.com/
jsRender jsrender - Next-generation jQuery Templates, optimized for high-performance pure string-based rendering, without DOM or jQuery dependency. https://github.com/BorisMoore/jsrender
Knockout Knockout is a JavaScript library that helps you to create rich, responsive display and editor user interfaces with a clean underlying data model. MVVM! http://knockoutjs.com/
Moment A 5.5kb javascript date library for parsing, validating, manipulating, and formatting dates. http://momentjs.com/
RequireJS RequireJS is a JavaScript file and module loader. It is optimized for in-browser use, but it can be used in other JavaScript environments, like Rhino and Node. Using a modular script loader like RequireJS will improve the speed and quality of your code. http://requirejs.org/
Toastr Simple javascript toast notifications. Contribute to toastr development by creating an account on GitHub. https://github.com/CodeSeven/toastr
Sammy Sammy.js is a tiny JavaScript framework developed to ease the pain and provide a basic structure for developing JavaScript applications. Routing! http://sammyjs.org/
Underscore Underscore is a utility-belt library for JavaScript that provides a lot of the functional programming support that you would expect in Prototype.js (or Ruby), but without extending any of the built-in JavaScript objects. It's the tie to go along with jQuery's tux, and Backbone.js's suspenders. http://underscorejs.org/

Wednesday, 29 May 2013

Problem running a Windows service with Topshelf and Spring.Net

Problem

I had written an application using Spring.Net for dependency injection - and some of the other features it provides - and Topshelf. The application could then be written as a console application and then installed and run as a Windows service using Topshelf’s handy ‘install’ command line parameter.
I was using XML files to configure Spring.Net. This turned out to be significant.

The application worked sweet as a nut as a console application and installed successfully as a Windows service. However, when I tried to run the Windows service using net start all I got was “The service is not responding to the control function”.




Solution

In the app.config file I had a spring configuration section that referenced external files for the spring.context:

<spring>
    <context>
      <resource uri="file://Config/SpringContext.xml" />
      <resource uri="file://Config/SpringDataAccess.xml" />
      <resource uri="file://Config/SpringVelocity.xml" />
    </context>
    <parsers>
      <parser type="Spring.Data.Config.DatabaseNamespaceParser, Spring.Data" />
      <parser type="Spring.Transaction.Config.TxNamespaceParser, Spring.Data" />
      <parser type="Spring.Aop.Config.AopNamespaceParser, Spring.Aop" />
    </parsers>
</spring>

The XML configuration files were set to “Copy always” and had been copied into the application directory correctly.

Poking around in the Event Viewer I spotted an interesting error log message. Essentially it said “Exception: Error creating context 'spring.root': Could not find file 'C:\Windows\system32\Config\SpringContext.xml'.”

That was weird because the path (C:\Windows\system32) is not where I had put the application but clearly it was where the Windows service was being run from.

A quick solution was to reconfigure the application to use embedded resources for the configuration files:

<spring>
    <context>
      <resource uri="assembly://Assembly.Name.Here/Namespace.Here/Config.SpringContext.xml" />
      <resource uri="assembly://Assembly.Name.Here/Namespace.Here/Config.SpringDataAccess.xml" />
      <resource uri="assembly://Assembly.Name.Here/Namespace.Here/Config.SpringVelocity.xml" />
    </context>
    <parsers>
      <parser type="Spring.Data.Config.DatabaseNamespaceParser, Spring.Data" />
      <parser type="Spring.Transaction.Config.TxNamespaceParser, Spring.Data" />
      <parser type="Spring.Aop.Config.AopNamespaceParser, Spring.Aop" />
    </parsers>
</spring>

The service now started correctly.

Sunday, 5 May 2013

JavaScript functions

JavaScript functions can be declared in a number of ways.

Basic declaration

function write(message) {
    var div = document.getElementById('message');
    var para = document.createElement("p");
    var node = document.createTextNode(message);
    para.appendChild(node);
    div.appendChild(para);
}

In the example above the function called write is declared and can be called later in JavaScript (e.g. write("My message here")).

Assigned function

Functions can be assigned to variables. There are basically 2 ways to do this: 1) name the function and assign it to a variable, 2) don’t name the function and assign it to a variable.

var writeFunc = function write(message) {
    var div = document.getElementById('message');
    var para = document.createElement("p");
    var node = document.createTextNode(message);
    para.appendChild(node);

    div.appendChild(para);
};

In the example above the function is named (write) and assigned to a variable (writeFunc). The function must now be called via the variable name (e.g. writeFunc("My message here")). Note the semi-colon at after the last curly brace.

var writeFunc = function (message) {
    var div = document.getElementById('message');
    var para = document.createElement("p");
    var node = document.createTextNode(message);
    para.appendChild(node);

    div.appendChild(para);
};

In the example above the function is not named (it’s an anonymous function) but is still assigned to a variable as before.

Anonymous function immediately invoked

(function (message) {
    var div = document.getElementById('message');
    var para = document.createElement("p");
    var node = document.createTextNode(message);
    para.appendChild(node);

    div.appendChild(para);
})("This is a message.");

In the example above the function is anonymous. However, because it is wrapped in brackets and has an argument passed in (see the last line) it will be immediately invoked.

Function overloading

Function overloading doesn’t work the same way in JavaScript as it does in C#. Declaring functions with the same names but different arguments doesn’t result in overloaded functions, rather the last function to be declared overwrites the others. Note that if you call a function and pass in too many arguments any unnecessary arguments are simply ignored.

Don’t forget that object parameters are passed by reference and primitive types by value.

Use an object to hold arbitrary values

One option is to add an object parameter as the last argument to a function. This object can be used as a bag into which you can put whatever parameters you want.

function functionTest(param1, param2, options) {
    write("param1: " + param1);
    write("param2: " + param2);
    write("options.opt1: " + options.opt1);
    write("options.opt2: " + options.opt2);
}

window.onload = function () {
    functionTest("This is param1", "This is param2", {opt1:"This is option1", opt2:"This is option2"});
}

Use the ‘arguments’ object

Another option is to use the arguments object. This is described as:

“An Array-like object corresponding to the arguments passed to a function.” [1]

function functionTest() {
    write("arguments[0]: " + arguments[0]);
    write("arguments[1]: " + arguments[1]);
    write("arguments[2]: " + arguments[2]);
}

window.onload = function () {
    functionTest("This is arguments[0]", "This is arguments[1]", "This is arguments[2]");
}

 

References

[1] https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/JavaScript/Reference/Functions_and_function_scope/arguments