User ConcernedOfTunbridgeWells - Stack Overflow most recent 30 from stackoverflow.com 2009-12-07T02:09:26Z http://stackoverflow.com/feeds/user/15401 http://www.creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.5/rdf http://stackoverflow.com/questions/492023/does-the-enable-advanced-performance-override-fileflagwritethrough-on-win-2k3 1 Does the 'Enable Advanced Performance' override FILE_FLAG_WRITETHROUGH on Win 2k3/SQL Server 2005 ConcernedOfTunbridgeWells 2009-01-29T15:21:19Z 2009-11-23T19:38:38Z <p>SQL Server opens files with FILE_FLAG_WRITETHROUGH, which appears to force writes to the physical disk. In SQL Server-speak this is called 'Forced Unit Access (FUA)'; a white paper discussing this can be found <a href="http://www.microsoft.com/technet/prodtechnol/sql/2000/maintain/sqlIObasics.mspx" rel="nofollow">here</a>. Many SANs appear to honour this and this might explain slow performance of an ETL process I am developing on a server connected to an IBM shark. </p> <p>On the dialogs in disk manager on Windows 2003 server one can select 'Enable Advanced Performance'. I can find indirect and apocryphal documentation that implies that this overrides forced writethrough behaviour. </p> <p>Does anyone know for certain whether this is the case or what this option actually does?</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/242996/dealbreakers-for-new-programming-jobs/243455#243455 187 Answer by ConcernedOfTunbridgeWells for Dealbreakers for new programming jobs? ConcernedOfTunbridgeWells 2008-10-28T14:04:59Z 2009-11-20T18:46:20Z <p><strong>The Joel Test and Field work in non-IT specialised organisations</strong></p> <p>For a software company or an in-house development shop the <a href="http://www.joelonsoftware.com/articles/fog0000000043.html" rel="nofollow">Joel Test</a> (as various other posters have discussed) is quite a good start. However, as a contractor one tends to find oneself working in companies that are really not geared to develop software (otherwise why would they need to hire contractors?). Since I've been working in London I don't think I've seen a company that would rate more than 3 or 4 on this scale. Usually they can get specifications, source control (even if it's just <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Microsoft%5FVisual%5FSourceSafe" rel="nofollow">VSS</a>) and someone to do testing. Sometimes they have a bug tracking system.</p> <p>In this situation, the actual project environment is quite sub-optimal and often has other political obstacles to getting work done. Data warehousing and B.I. projects are particularly vulnerable to these issues as they are dependent on interfaces to other systems, which in turn have their own politics. You can't really do a data warehouse project without having to stick fingers in pies, so these politics are more or less unavoidable.</p> <p>Typically, there is also an incumbent and poorly documented back office with their own manual procedures, politics and vested interests (often referred to as 'Gatekeepers' in data warehousing literature). There may also have been one or more unsuccessful attempts to produce a coherent MIS platform, so one tends to start out having to carry a burden of proof. The back office staff may or may not view the project as a threat.</p> <p>Management's commitment to the project and making it work is a key factor in project viability and can be a make or break issue. In my experience management is really a weak link - project sponsors have to be prepared to back the project when it needs the business to pull its weight and line management need to be prepared to act as a two-way channel. I tend to be wary of signs of managmement that look like they aren't pulling their weight. Poor commitment from project sponsors, inadequate resourcing and evidence of a sleazy or self-serving management structure raise big warning flags.</p> <p><strong>Warning signs - some positions and interviews I've walked away from (or wished I had):</strong></p> <ul> <li><p><strong>Interviewer comes across as sleazy.</strong> This is a gut feeling or 'vibe' thing. At one point I went for an interview at a large consultancy and got the distinct impression that they were more interested in upselling than anything else. Sleaze is a big one for me - I find it quite offensive.</p></li> <li><p><strong>Interviews that consist exclusively of trivia questions</strong> or where the interviewer appears to be trying to prove they're cleverer than you. You don't want line management that is in the habit of trying to run you down. It also suggests some insecurity which can manifest itself in all sorts of negative ways. In the worst case it shows management looking up interview questions without really having the depth to do a competent technical interview. In a contracting role this is not necessarily an issue as they may genuinely need to bring in expertise that they do not have locally. However, an unwillingness to admit this or run the interview on an honest basis is also a warning flag. I also tend to view excessively structured interviews as a warning sign of someone who wants to simplify the decision down to tick boxes without taking responsibility for making a thoughtful evaluation of the candidates.</p></li> <li><p><strong>Positions where the employer is offering less than a market rate.</strong> At best this is a clear signal that your management (at some level) is not giving the role the support it needs. If the manager can't or won't sign off (or get signed off) a market rate for the role, what other support will be lacking? <br><br> At worst it is a sign that someone in management is always trying to pay less than the market for what they are getting. People like this are self-centered and will always try things on - give them an inch and they will take a mile. They will also not pull their weight when you need support for something. <br><br> Lack of management support to resolve issues not directly under the control of your project is a key driver of project failure, wasted time and unresolved issues that hang around and cause friction. As these will be issues on your project you will be viewed as responsible for them by default. This is the sort of situation where unsupportive line management with a 'you should just make do' attitude can do real damage to the project - and potentially your career.</p></li> <li><p><strong>Signs of micromanagement, self-serving management or excessive focus on minutae of performance.</strong> This is a signature of a direct report who is in the habit of reporting ticks in boxes to their management and proclaiming how wonderful they are for delivering everything on time and on-budget. <a href="http://www.google.co.uk/search?hl=en&amp;q=software+project+micromanagement&amp;meta=" rel="nofollow">Micromanagement</a> of this sort is a bad habit in software project managers. It generates artificial work stress, disrupts flow and is always a drain on morale. <br><br> Also, it allows the management to fob off the project risk to development staff, setting you up for meaningless 'failure to deliver' evaluations, which the manager now has an incentive to give in order to cover their own arse. This makes it a personal career risk to be involved in this sort of environment. For obvious reasons, <em>all</em> estimates will get padded in this sort of environment and <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parkinsons%5Flaw" rel="nofollow">Parkinsons Law</a> law will apply - which means this type of management is a net drain on throughput. <br><br> Finally it is also indicative of middle management who are not willing to stick their neck out to manage expectations with the business. This will erode credibility. This and the first two points are bellwethers of endemic CYA culture that may be running at unhealthy levels.</p></li> <li><p><strong>Support jobs dressed up as development.</strong> <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hedge%5Ffund" rel="nofollow">Hedge Funds</a> are particularly bad for this. Also, anything billed as '50% development, 50% support'. This should be mentally translated to: <em>100% support and a development workload that won't get done because of all the interruptions.</em> This type of job is unpleasant and sets you up as a convenient scapegoat for missed development objectives. Combined Deveoper/DBA jobs are prone to this sort of failure mode.</p></li> <li><p><strong>'Polyanna' overly positive hiring managers.</strong> Overly positive people who continually make claims like 'we don't have that kind of problem here' can be an indicator of middle management who won't acknowledge issues or won't manage upwards. It can also be an indicator of control freak tendencies - this type of personality tends to try and control information flow and present a rosy outward appearance. Finally, it can also be an indicator that the interviewer is misrepresenting the role or circumstances.</p></li> </ul> <p>For a contractor, where (to some extent) you're only as good as your last job, career risk is actually a significant issue. As an example I've seen a situation where an ostensibly plum job at a company remained open at increasingly OTT contract rates because of the reputation that company had within the market. Previously I had been hired by the then incumbent in that job, who had been with them for 8 years until the company was acquired. He subsequently left, largely due to the rather septic internal merger-and-acquisition politics, and his replacement lasted for just a few months before he also left. In the meantime I had left as well. After that the position was such an obvious poison chalice that they couldn't fill it, even offering something like 50% over the market rate.</p> <p><strong>Joel Test for a typical London Insurance firm:</strong></p> <ol> <li><p><strong>Do you use source control?</strong><br> <em>Usually they do have source control, typically VSS (better than nothing although some say that's a matter of opinion ;-) On one occasion I've seen CVS used for a Java project.</em></p></li> <li><p><strong>Can you make a build in one step?</strong><br> <em>Usually not geared for this (at least not on B.I. systems). However, I have seen C.M, C.I. and scripted builds on one occasion and introduced them on a couple of others.</em></p></li> <li><p><strong>Do you make daily builds?</strong><br> <em>I have seen this on one occasion but usually they don't do this sort of thing.</em></p></li> <li><p><strong>Do you have a bug database?</strong><br> <em>I have seen this on two occasions, but usually informal spreadsheets are the norm.</em></p></li> <li><p><strong>Do you fix bugs before writing new code?</strong><br> <em>I've never seen this done in practice.</em></p></li> <li><p><strong>Do you have an up-to-date schedule?</strong><br> <em>Most would say they do, but in practice schedules tend to be more for show than anything else.</em></p></li> <li><p><strong>Do you have a spec?</strong><br> <em>Finance companies doing any U.S. business basically have to have a spec document for <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sarbanes-Oxley%5FAct" rel="nofollow">Sarbox</a> controls. This might not have been the case a few years ago.</em></p></li> <li><p><strong>Do programmers have quiet working conditions?</strong><br> <em>Never. Always in open-plan offices.</em></p></li> <li><p><strong>Do you use the best tools money can buy?</strong><br> <em>Software tooling tends to be OK but fairly conservative. Hardware for resource-intensive development work such as a data warehouse project will often be lacking and correcting the shortcomings often takes months and backing from high-level project sponsors. On a number of occasions I've also seen software tooling - even basic stuff like Visual Studio - take months to arrive. For this reason I also maintain my own development lab.</em></p></li> <li><p><strong>Do you have testers?</strong><br> <em>Often but not always.</em> </p></li> <li><p><strong>Do new candidates write code during their interview?</strong><br> <em>I've never seen this happen in practice, but the jobs I do tend to sit somewhere between development and consultancy so coding is only a part of the job.</em></p></li> <li><p><strong>Do you do hallway usability testing?</strong><br> <em>When I have business reps with good buy-in something similar happens on occasion but it's far from the norm.</em></p></li> </ol> <p><strong>EDIT:</strong> Involvement in the support of what you've built, particularly in the early phases of roll-out can be quite instructive for a developer (as <a href="http://stackoverflow.com/users/1577/bernard-dy">bernard-dy</a> says). However, a mixed development/support role where you are on-call for general support issues (as is typically the case in a role described as 'Developer/DBA') has fundamental conflicting requirements within the role. This sort of environment is also frustrating and unpleasant to work in.</p> <p>Doing any non-trivial development job requires concentration and support work is reactive with an implicit demand of 'drop everything'. This context switching is very toxic to anything that requires concentration and it will be the development work that suffers. In a role of this sort the immediate priority is always on the support but delivery deadlines for development are far more convenient judge performance by. The typical trap here is to be expected to drop the development work in favour of the support work but later find performance being evaluated on development deliverables (i.e. performance assessment is out of sync with the real work priorities).</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/479409/can-awe-use-4gb-ram-on-sql-server-2005-dev-edition-on-windows-xp-32-bit 2 Can AWE use >4GB RAM on SQL Server 2005 dev edition on Windows XP 32-bit ConcernedOfTunbridgeWells 2009-01-26T10:58:16Z 2009-11-09T09:31:37Z <p>Using SQL Server 2005 developer edition on Windows XP pro (32-bit) I notice that the check box to enable AWE (Advanced Windowing Extensions) is enabled. I have an Opteron workstation that I could easily upgrade to 8GB or more, although it is not practical to move off 32-bit Windows XP Pro for the development environment. As far as I can tell, the MMU for the Opteron running in 32-bit mode should support the 36-bit physical address space, much as a 32-bit Xeon. </p> <p>Reducing the memory footprint of SQL Server would let me give Analysis Services more elbow room. </p> <ul> <li><p>Does anyone know whether AWE on Windows XP has support for more than 4GB of RAM that could be used for SQL Server (on a CPU with MMU support for this)?</p></li> <li><p>Alternatively, is anyone aware of what data dictionary views might tell me about AWE buffer usage so that I could try it and get some sort of definitive view as to whether it is using the extra memory?</p></li> </ul> <p><strong>EDIT:</strong> For those not familiar with it, AWE is a facility that allows you to control virtual-physical address mapping and page arbitrary physical memory in and out of the 4GB virtual address space of a process. The MMU on 32 bit Xeons (and some other processors) will actually support more than 4GB of physical RAM, although a single process address space can only see 4GB at a time. From what I can tell the MMU on the Opteron also has this capability on 32-bit code.</p> <p>SQL Server has support for using AWE to gain access to more than the 2GB or 3GB of physical RAM that its process address space would allow on a 32-bit box. It does this by explicitly managing the mapping, swapping physical memory in and out of the virtual address space. Certain versions of Windows, particularly Windows 2003 and Windows 2000 Advanced Server, will support more than 4GB of memory used in this way, and provide an API for doing this.</p> <p><strong>The question is:</strong> Where I have a machine with hardware support for this, will Windows XP 32-bit let me use more than 4GB of RAM in this way?</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1680023/mysql-best-storage-engine-for-constantly-changing-data/1680243#1680243 2 Answer by ConcernedOfTunbridgeWells for MySQL - best storage engine for constantly changing data ConcernedOfTunbridgeWells 2009-11-05T12:25:27Z 2009-11-05T12:38:41Z <p>One possibility is that there may be other issues causing performance problems - 6 seconds seems excessive for CRUD operations, even on a complex database. Bear in mind that (back in the day) ArsDigita could handle 30 hits per second on a two-way Sun Ultra 2 (IIRC) with fairly modest disk configuration. A modern low-mid range server with a sensible disk layout and appropriate tuning should be able to cope with quite a substantial workload.</p> <ul> <li><p>Are you missing an index? - check the query plans of the slow queries for table scans where they shouldn't be.</p></li> <li><p>What is the disk layout on the server? - do you need to upgrade your hardware or fix some disk configuration issues (e.g. not enough disks, logs on the same volume as data).</p></li> <li><p>As the other poster suggests, you might want to use InnoDB on the heavily written tables.</p></li> <li><p>Check the setup for memory usage on the database server. You may want to configure more cache.</p></li> </ul> <p><strong>Edit:</strong> Database logs should live on quiet disks of their own. They use a sequential access pattern with many small sequential writes. Where they share disks with a random access work load like data files the random disk access creates a big system performance bottleneck on the logs. Note that this is write traffic that needs to be completed (i.e. written to physical disk), so caching does not help with this. </p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/403084/optimal-off-the-shelf-development-machine/403558#403558 19 Answer by ConcernedOfTunbridgeWells for Optimal OFF THE SHELF development machine ConcernedOfTunbridgeWells 2008-12-31T17:30:00Z 2009-11-05T06:47:39Z <p><strong>A quick guide to buying a workstation class machine to use for software development</strong></p> <p>Most major PC vendors have a workstation range now, with a build quality designed for applications with a Service Level Agreement. These machines run to high specifications - basically the most powerful mainstream hardware available - and better build quality than a typical business or consumer grade desktop. They also tend to have better I/O than standard PC hardware and the two-socket models (particularly those based on Opteron CPUs) can take large amounts of memory - up to 32 or 64GB. </p> <p>Historically, workstation was a term used for unix-based hardware from vendors such as Sun, but the last RISC based workstation lines are being phased out by Sun and IBM, and SGI and HP haven't made a RISC-based line for several years. The larger R&amp;D and fabrication budgets for x86 and X86-64 chips mean that these technologies have caught up with and overtaken the historical performance advantage of RISC architectures. The RISC architectures now have no performance advantage to offer and the availability of Linux and MacOS mean that you can use a unix-based toolchain on commodity hardware. Now, the high-spec machines use the same instruction set as the commodity PC hardware.</p> <p><strong>Why might I buy a machine like this?</strong></p> <p>These machines tend to be somewhat more expensive than mass market consumer or office grade systems. The top end of CPUs in mass market PCs are not significantly slower than the CPUs in a workstation system, and in some cases no slower at all. Typically, someone buying machinery like this would do so for one of the following reasons:</p> <ul> <li><p><strong>Memory:</strong> Often, systems of this type can take very large amounts of memory - for the particularly well heeled, an XW8600 can take up to 128GB. By using third party memory sources, systems with 16, 32 or 64GB of RAM can be built for figures that fit well within the original poster's hypothetical $10,000 budget. Also, these machines are typically supplied with ECC RAM - especially the two-socket systems, which typically use the same memory components as servers. Recent evidence suggests that memory errors are more common than previously thought, so a machine with a large amount of memory actually has a non-trivial probability of getting a single bit error.</p></li> <li><p><strong>Certification:</strong> Many applications will only qualify for vendor support or warranty if run on certified hardware configurations. The vendors of workstation systems tend to participate in certification programmes. They also support specific parts inventory for longer than they do with mass market systems.</p></li> <li><p><strong>SLA and Warranty:</strong> Machines of this sort are built to support a service level agreement and tend to be of somewhat higher build quality than a mass market system. The have longer warranties and a more rigorous QA and design testing process. Also, they will often qualify for vendor support for longer than a mass market system (see below).</p></li> <li><p><strong>Performance:</strong> Less of an issue than it used to be, but two socket machines allow more cores than the single socket configurations found in mass market hardware. Consumer chipsets tend not to support multiple socket configurations.</p></li> <li><p><strong>I/O:</strong> Workstation systems tend to have faster I/O than mass market hardware. People doing I/O heavy activities such as video editing, GIS, or database development (in the case of the author) can benefit from a machine with a fast disk subsystem and I/O bus. </p></li> <li><p><strong>Preferred Supplier and Branding:</strong> This is mainly of interest in reseller or consultancy situations, but being seen to use hardware from a tier-1 vendor may be beneficial or even necessary to sales. Also, many organisations require that you buy from a preferred supplier, which may preclude white-box systems.</p></li> <li><p><strong>Vendor Support:</strong> For various reasons, you may want a machine with a higher level of vendor support. Vendors tend to provide rather better support for this type of machine than they do for mass market PCs. For example, I had occasion once to get a restore CD for an IBM Intellistation. IBM duly took my support call, identified the appropriate FRU number, and posted me a CD for free - on a machine that I had purchased secondhand but was still in warranty.</p></li> <li><p><strong>Single Vendor:</strong> White box suppliers might not supply pre-built machines of this specification (although some do, particularly vendors selling to the media industry). If you want a two-socket machine (for example) buying a machine of this type might be the easiest way to get a system that fits the requirement. </p></li> </ul> <p>For development work the main reasons are likely to be 'Single Vendor' (as the original poster wanted), better standard of vendor support and possible restrictions on preferred suppliers. If your company is buying the machine the last of those is more likely to be an issue than one purchased as an individual. In some cases, fast CPU, large memory footprints or fast I/O may be desirable for certain types of development work. Even relatively prosaic development tasks such as business intelligence, sharepoint, large compiled applications or numerical or financial modelling can be quite resource-hungry. </p> <p><strong>Contemporary Workstations</strong></p> <p>At the bottom end of the range most PC vendors offer a single-socket machine that's about the same spec as a high-end single socket PC. The top end of the ranges runs to two-socket machines with server chipsets on the motherboard and attendant fast I/O (PCI-e x4, x8 and 64-bit PCIX/100-133).</p> <p>If you're not doing anything I/O heavy, $10,000 sounds a lot for a desktop machine. For that, you could buy a top-end 2-socket workstation and load it with fast SAS disks, plus all the monitors you could imagine - and still have several thousand dollars in change. A single-socket workstation is considerably cheaper. Also, most 32-bit desktop O/S configurations will only use 4GB of RAM. Larger memory configurations are only likely to be useful if you have a 64-bit O/S and applications that work with data sets on that scale.</p> <p><strong>Two-socket systems</strong></p> <p>Unless you're out to run MacOS, the Apple Mac Pro is really just a two-socket workstation in drag. Apple's build quality is usually pretty good, but you can get similar spec hardware from any of several manufacturers. Aside from running MacOS, there's no compelling argument for this system in particular. However, the Mac Pro is no more expensive (if anything, cheaper) than an equivalent system from HP, Lenovo or Fujitsu - so there is no particular reason to avoid it either.</p> <p>Without getting into exotic custom or semi-custom hardware these are about the most powerful workstation systems you can buy off the shelf. Most of the major PC vendors have two-socket Opteron or Xeon models in their range. Sun used to produce one (the <a href="http://www.sun.com/desktop/workstation/ultra40/" rel="nofollow">Ultra 40</a>) until fairly recently but this has been discontinued. For some manufacturers you may have to locate an appropriate retailer, typically one that sells to business customers. Apple and Dell sell through their normal channels. </p> <p>Examples of such systems are:</p> <ul> <li><p><a href="http://www.apple.com/macpro/" rel="nofollow">Mac pro</a> from Apple (Xeon)</p></li> <li><p>HP <a href="http://h41111.www4.hp.com/new%5Fworkstations/adlanding/uk/en/z600.html" rel="nofollow">Z600</a> (Xeon) and its predecessor the <a href="http://h10010.www1.hp.com/wwpc/us/en/sm/WF06a/12454-12454-296719-307907-296721-3432821.html" rel="nofollow">XW6600</a> (Xeon), <a href="http://h41111.www4.hp.com/new%5Fworkstations/adlanding/uk/en/z800.html" rel="nofollow">Z800</a> and its predecessors the <a href="http://h10010.www1.hp.com/wwpc/us/en/sm/WF05a/12454-12454-296719-307907-296721-3432827.html" rel="nofollow">XW8600</a> (Xeon) and <a href="http://h10010.www1.hp.com/wwpc/us/en/sm/WF05a/12454-12454-296719-307907-296721-3211286.html" rel="nofollow">XW9400</a> (Opteron)</p></li> <li><p>Fujitsu Celsius <a href="http://www.fujitsu-siemens.com/products/deskbound/workstations/celsius%5Fr.html" rel="nofollow">R Series</a> (Xeon) and <a href="http://www.fujitsu-siemens.com/products/deskbound/workstations/celsius%5Fv.html" rel="nofollow">V Series</a> (Opteron)</p></li> <li><p>Lenovo <a href="http://www.pc.ibm.com/europe/thinkstation/en/thinkstationd10.html?uk&amp;cc=uk" rel="nofollow">D10</a> (Xeon)</p></li> <li><p>Dell <a href="http://www.dell.com/content/products/productdetails.aspx/precn%5Ft7400?c=us&amp;cs=555&amp;l=en&amp;s=biz&amp;~tab=specstab" rel="nofollow">precision 4700</a> (Xeon)</p></li> </ul> <p><strong>Single socket workstations</strong></p> <p>Unless you have a requirement for very large builds (thanks Brian Knoblauch for reminding) or I/O fast enough for HD video editing or data warehouse development, these machines might be overkill, and they are <a href="http://www.google.co.uk/products?hl=en&amp;q=xw9400&amp;um=1&amp;ie=UTF-8&amp;sa=N&amp;tab=wf" rel="nofollow">quite expensive.</a> Most of these vendors also produce single-socket machines that are quite a bit cheaper and will take one or two fast disks - which is likely to be all you need for most development tasks. </p> <p>Examples of single socket workstation class systems are:</p> <ul> <li><p>Sun <a href="http://www.sun.com/desktop/workstation/ultra24/" rel="nofollow">Ultra 24</a> (Core Duo/Core Quad)</p></li> <li><p>HP <a href="http://h41111.www4.hp.com/new%5Fworkstations/adlanding/uk/en/z400.html" rel="nofollow">Z400</a> (Xeon) and its predecessors the <a href="http://h10010.www1.hp.com/wwpc/us/en/sm/WF05a/12454-12454-296719-307907-296721-3462703.html" rel="nofollow">XW4550</a> (Opteron 1xxx), <a href="http://h10010.www1.hp.com/wwpc/us/en/sm/WF05a/12454-12454-296719-307907-296721-3429268.html" rel="nofollow">XW4600</a> (Core Quad)</p></li> <li><p>Fujitsu <a href="http://www.fujitsu-siemens.com/products/deskbound/workstations/celsius%5Fm.html" rel="nofollow">Celsius M460</a> (Core Quad)</p></li> <li><p>Lenovo <a href="http://www.pc.ibm.com/europe/thinkstation/en/thinkstations10.html?uk&amp;cc=uk" rel="nofollow">S10</a> (Core Quad)</p></li> <li><p>Dell <a href="http://www.dell.com/content/products/productdetails.aspx/precn%5Ft5400?c=us&amp;cs=555&amp;l=en&amp;s=biz&amp;~tab=specstab" rel="nofollow">Precision T5400</a> (Quad Core Xeon)</p></li> </ul> <p>These are not necessarily much faster than a high-spec PC,, although they often have wider non-video PCI-e slots than the x1 items normally found on a commodity PC (for example the HP <a href="http://h10010.www1.hp.com/wwpc/pscmisc/vac/us/product%5Fpdfs/xw4600%5Fdatasheet%5Fsep08.pdf" rel="nofollow">XW4600</a> has a PCI-e x4 slot). However, they are built for an SLA and (presumably) offer somewhat better build quality than commodity consumer or office grade hardware. You can buy a machine of this type with a couple of fast hard disks, (say) 4GB or RAM and one or two 20" or 24" monitors for less than half of the hypothetical $10,000 budget. Unless I was doing something highly CPU or I/O bound one of these would probably be fine - at a guess I'd say the Sun Ultra 24 probably has the best build quality.</p> <p><strong>Four socket systems</strong></p> <p>Some manufacturers such as <a href="http://www.tyan.com/product%5Fboard.aspx" rel="nofollow">Tyan</a> or <a href="http://uk.asus.com/products.aspx?l1=9&amp;l2=39&amp;l3=575&amp;l4=0&amp;model=1868&amp;modelmenu=1" rel="nofollow">Asus</a> make quad-opteron workstation motherboards or motherboards with PCI-e x16 slots that can be used for graphics cards. Although none of the larger manufacturers offer quad-opteron workstations, <a href="http://www.tomshardware.com/picturestory/495-puget-systems-extreme.html" rel="nofollow">systems of this type</a> can be obtained from smaller boutique white-box vendors. These are really niche market items; systems of this sort tend to be expensive and physically large (often based on server cases) and are mainly of interest for CPU-bound numerical computing tasks.</p> <p><strong>More than two monitors</strong></p> <p>One item to note is that if you want more than two monitors you might want to consider a two-socket Xeon or Opteron based workstation. Many of these systems have two PCE-e x16 slots so you can put two video cards in them. With only one slot your options for video hardware a limited to a multi-monitor card such as the <a href="http://www.nvidia.com/object/product%5Fquadro%5Fnvs%5F450%5Fus.html" rel="nofollow">Quadro NVS450</a> or additional PCI video cards.</p> <p>Two-socket opteron systems and the most recent generation of xeon systems are the only widely available workstation architectures with this feature - the only other place this feature crops up is on motherboards aimed at gaming PC's. This facility is starting to make its appearance on single-socket machines such as the HP Z400 but the PSUs in these systems only have limited capacity to support high-end video hardware.</p> <p><strong>Buying a workstation on the cheap</strong></p> <p>A secondhand workstation system may be of interest for several reasons. Although not necessarily cutting edge, the CPU's on most recent workstation systems are still pretty fast. The build quality, fast I/O or large memory capacity may all be of interest and are potential reasons you may want to purchase a system of this sort. Secondhand or ex-demo systems (Particularly Macs and Xeon-based HP's) tend to turn up on Ebay quite regularly, </p> <p>Many are bought or leased by media types, who turn them over fairly quickly. Ex-demo or ex-lease systems can often be purchased for a small fraction of their new price. Now that the performance gains of individual cores are flattening out, the difference between a current machine and one that's 2 or 3 years old isn't all that great. It's really down to number of cores now.</p> <p>I've been using <a href="http://h10010.www1.hp.com/wwpc/uk/en/sm/WF05a/12454-12454-296719-296721-296721-459226.html" rel="nofollow">XW9300's</a> (the predecessor of the XW9400) with internal SCSI disk arrays as database development machines for about a year and a half now and found them to be the best hardware I've used recently. Primarily I bought them for the fast I/O, although Analysis Services is quite CPU-hungry as well.</p> <p>I bought these machines secondhand off Ebay (mostly ex-demo machines) and fitted 5 or 6 fast SCSI disks to them for DB development; recently I bought RAID controllers for them as well. In this sort of configuration you might expect to pay over $5000 for a new machine, but certainly less than $10,000. Typically you would pay less than half of that for a machine from ebay or secondary market sources for disks and other components. </p> <p><strong>Parts and upgrades</strong> </p> <p>There is quite a substantial secondary market for SCSI and SAS disks if you want to put a couple of 15k drives in it. Memory for these machines (the two socket models tend to use registered memory) is also much cheaper off Ebay than the retail price from the vendor. If desired, you can quite readily upgrade the CPU (for example a single-core to dual core) as dual-core Xeons, Opterons and suitable CPU fans tend to be quite readily available off ebay. </p> <p>The part numbers tend to be quite well documented, at least on HP machines, and they are often listed on ebay by part number. The machines also take standard components. If buying generic CPU or memory upgrades do your homework to make sure you have the right type of component for the machine. One thing to note is that the cases on the two socket machines often have internal ducting. Third party CPU and case fans may not fit the ducts, so you are probably better off researching the manufacturer's part numbers and buying the appropriate component. Often you can order these directly from the manufacturer and they may not be disproportionately expensive.</p> <p>Some machines (<a href="http://forums.sun.com/thread.jspa?threadID=5325369" rel="nofollow">Sun</a> and <a href="http://www.mac-pro.com/Hard-Drive-Bracket-922-7728" rel="nofollow">Apple</a> come to mind here) often have proprietary drive caddies that aren't shipped with the machine, and you need the caddy to mount the drive. This can be a gotcha when you go to put third party drives in the machine. HP and IBM are better behaved here. All the XW9300's and Intellistations I've bought had their clip-on drive rails supplied as shipped, although I've never seen a Lenovo S10 or D10 up close so I don't know whether they have continued this practice.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1648689/how-to-code-jon-skeets-singleton-in-c/1648746#1648746 1 Answer by ConcernedOfTunbridgeWells for How to code Jon Skeet's Singleton in C++? ConcernedOfTunbridgeWells 2009-10-30T09:13:39Z 2009-10-30T09:13:39Z <p>As far as I am aware, inheritable Singleton behaviour is not possible in C++ or Java, (or at least it wasn't on earlier versions of JDK). This is a C# specific trick. Your subclasses will have to explicitly implement the protocol.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1587398/datamining-models-in-fortran-or-c-or-managed-code/1587528#1587528 3 Answer by ConcernedOfTunbridgeWells for Datamining models in FORTRAN or C (or managed code)? ConcernedOfTunbridgeWells 2009-10-19T08:29:07Z 2009-10-19T09:28:20Z <p>F# compiles to the CLR, which has a just-in-time compiler. It's a dialect of ML, which is strongly typed, allowing all of the nice optimisations that go with that type of architecture; this means you will probably get reasonable performance from F#. For comparison, you could also try porting your code to OCaml (IIRC this compiles to native code) and see if that makes a material difference.</p> <p>If it really is too slow then see how far that scaling hardware will get you. With the performance available through a modern PC or server it seems unlikely that you would need to go to anything exotic unless you are working with truly <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brobdingnag" rel="nofollow">brobdinagian</a> data sets. Users with smaller data sets may well be OK on an ordinary PC.</p> <p>Workstations give you perhaps an order of magnitude more capacity than a standard dekstop PC. A high-end workstation like a HP <a href="http://h10010.www1.hp.com/wwpc/uk/en/sm/WF25a/12454-12454-296719-4050865-4050865-3718645.html" rel="nofollow">Z800</a> or <a href="http://h10010.www1.hp.com/wwpc/uk/en/sm/WF10a/12454-12454-296719-4050865-4050865-3211286.html?jumpid=in%5Fr2515%5Fuk/en/smb/psg/psc404redirect-ot-xx-xx-/chev/" rel="nofollow">XW9400</a> (similar kit is available from several other manufacturers) can take two 4 or 6 core CPU chips, tens of gigabytes of RAM (up to 192GB in some cases) and has various options for high-speed I/O like SAS disks, <a href="http://www.enhance-tech.com/products/desktop/E10%5FSeries.html" rel="nofollow">external disk arrays</a> or <a href="http://www.fusionio.com/Products.aspx" rel="nofollow">SSDs.</a> This type of hardware is expensive but may be cheaper than a large body of programmer time. Your existing desktop support infrastructure shouldn be able to this sort of kit. The most likely problem is compatibility issues running 32 bit software on a 64-bit O/S. In this case you have various options like VMs or KVM switches to work around the compatibility issues.</p> <p>The next step up is a 4 or 8 socket server. Fairly ordinary wintel servers go up to 8 sockets (32-48 cores) and perhaps 512GB of RAM - without having to move off the Wintel platform. This gives you fairly wide range of options within your platform of choice before you have to go to anything exotic[1].</p> <p>Finally, if you can't make it run quickly in F#, validate the F# prototype and build a C implementation using the F# prototype as a control. If that's still not fast enough you've got problems.</p> <p>If your application can be structured in a way that suits the platform then you could look at a more exotic platform. Depending on what will work with your application, you might be able to host it on a cluster, cloud provider or build the core engine on a <a href="http://www.nvidia.com/object/cuda%5Fhome.html" rel="nofollow">GPU,</a> <a href="http://www.mc.com/microsites/cell/" rel="nofollow">Cell processor</a> or <a href="http://www.xtremedata.com/" rel="nofollow">FPGA.</a> However, in doing this you're getting into (quite substantial) additional costs and exotic dependencies that might cause support issues. You will probably also have to bring a third-party consultant who knows how to program the platform.</p> <p>After all that, the best advice is: suck it and see. If you're comfortable with F# you should be able to prototype your application fairly quickly. See how fast it runs and don't worry too much about performance until you have some clear indication that it really will be an issue. Remember, Knuth said that premature optimisation is the root of all evil <em>about 97% of the time</em>. Keep a weather eye out for issues and re-evaluate your strategy if you think performance really will cause trouble.</p> <p><strong>Edit:</strong> If you want to make a packaged application then you will probably be more performance-sensitive than otherwise. In this case performance will probably become an issue sooner than it would with a bespoke system. However, this doesn't affect the basic 'suck it and see' principle.</p> <p><hr /></p> <ol> <li>For example, at the risk of starting a game of buzzword bingo, if your application can be parallelized and made to work on a shared-nothing architecture you might see if one of the cloud server providers [ducks] could be induced to host it. An appropriate front-end could be built to run locally or through a browser. <br><br>However, on this type of architecture the internet connection to the data source becomes a bottleneck. If you have large data sets then uploading these to the service provider becomes a problem. It may be quicker to process a large dataset locally than to upload it through an internet connection. </li> </ol> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1577168/lossless-pdf-rotation/1577268#1577268 3 Answer by ConcernedOfTunbridgeWells for Lossless PDF rotation ConcernedOfTunbridgeWells 2009-10-16T10:18:59Z 2009-10-16T10:18:59Z <p>The best resolution you will normally obtain from a standard fax machine is about 200dpi; standard faxes are about 100dpi. If you need your faxed documents to work with an artitrary fax machine you can't go above this.</p> <p>Ergo, rendering your PDF to a 100 or 200dpi bitmap and rotating it 90 degress should work as well as anything. Various ghostscript based tool chains can do the rendering. Alternatively, there are a number of PDF and postscript based tools that can do this type of manipulatiion (e.g. <a href="http://orion.math.iastate.edu/burkardt/g%5Fsrc/pdf2ps/pdf2ps.html" rel="nofollow">PDF2PS</a> and <a href="http://www.tardis.ed.ac.uk/~ajcd/psutils/" rel="nofollow">psutils</a>) directly off the PDF.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1525770/migrating-bo-reports-between-environments/1525793#1525793 0 Answer by ConcernedOfTunbridgeWells for Migrating BO Reports between environments ConcernedOfTunbridgeWells 2009-10-06T14:01:47Z 2009-10-06T14:01:47Z <p>There is an API that you can use to programatically update this sort of thing, although I can't remember how to do it. Check out the docs provided by Business Objects - IIRC they are not publically available (at least they weren't in 2006 when I last worked with it) so you may have to get them from the vendor.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/541329/is-it-possible-to-programmatically-construct-a-python-stack-frame-and-start-execu 9 Is it possible to programmatically construct a Python stack frame and start execution at an arbitrary point in the code? ConcernedOfTunbridgeWells 2009-02-12T13:53:02Z 2009-10-06T02:48:16Z <p>Is it possible to programmatically construct a stack (one or more stack frames) in CPython and start execution at an arbitrary code point? Imagine the following scenario:</p> <ol> <li><p>You have a workflow engine where workflows can be scripted in Python with some constructs (e.g. branching, waiting/joining) that are calls to the workflow engine.</p></li> <li><p>A blocking call, such as a wait or join sets up a listener condition in an event-dispatching engine with a persistent backing store of some sort.</p></li> <li><p>You have a workflow script, which calls the Wait condition in the engine, waiting for some condition that will be signalled later. This sets up the listener in the event dispatching engine.</p></li> <li><p>The workflow script's state, relevant stack frames including the program counter (or equivalent state) are persisted - as the wait condition could occur days or months later.</p></li> <li><p>In the interim, the workflow engine might be stopped and re-started, meaning that it must be possible to programmatically store and reconstruct the context of the workflow script.</p></li> <li><p>The event dispatching engine fires the event that the wait condition picks up.</p></li> <li><p>The workflow engine reads the serialised state and stack and reconstructs a thread with the stack. It then continues execution at the point where the wait service was called.</p></li> </ol> <p><strong>The Question</strong></p> <p>Can this be done with an unmodified Python interpreter? Even better, can anyone point me to some documentation that might cover this sort of thing or an example of code that programmatically constructs a stack frame and starts execution somewhere in the middle of a block of code?</p> <p><strong>Edit:</strong> To clarify 'unmodified python interpreter', I don't mind using the C API (is there enough information in a PyThreadState to do this?) but I don't want to go poking around the internals of the Python interpreter and having to build a modified one.</p> <p><strong>Update:</strong> From some initial investigation, one can get the execution context with <code>PyThreadState_Get()</code>. This returns the thread state in a <code>PyThreadState</code> (defined in <code>pystate.h</code>), which has a reference to the stack frame in <code>frame</code>. A stack frame is held in a struct typedef'd to <code>PyFrameObject</code>, which is defined in <code>frameobject.h</code>. <code>PyFrameObject</code> has a field <code>f_lasti</code> (props to <a href="http://stackoverflow.com/questions/541329/is-it-possible-to-programatically-construct-a-python-stack-frame-and-start-execut/541529#541529">bobince</a>) which has a program counter expressed as an offset from the beginning of the code block.</p> <p>This last is sort of good news, because it means that as long as you preserve the actual compiled code block, you should be able to reconstruct locals for as many stack frames as necessary and re-start the code. I'd say this means that it is theoretically possible without having to make a modified python interpereter, although it means that the code is still probably going to be fiddly and tightly coupled to specific versions of the interpreter.</p> <p>The three remaining problems are: </p> <ul> <li><p>Transaction state and 'saga' rollback, which can probably be accomplished by the sort of metaclass hacking one would use to build an O/R mapper. I did build a prototype once, so I have a fair idea of how this might be accomplished.</p></li> <li><p>Robustly serialising transaction state and arbitrary locals. This might be accomplished by reading <code>__locals__</code> (which is available from the stack frame) and programatically constructing a call to pickle. However, I don't know what, if any, gotchas there might be here.</p></li> <li><p>Versioning and upgrade of workflows. This is somewhat trickier, as the system is not providing any symbolic anchors for workflow nodes. All we have is the anchor In order to do this, one would have to identify the offsets of all of the entry points and map them to the new version. Probably feasible to do manually, but I suspect it would be hard to automate. This is probably the biggest obstacle if you want to support this capability. </p></li> </ul> <p><strong>Update 2:</strong> <code>PyCodeObject</code> (<code>code.h</code>) has a list of addr (<code>f_lasti</code>)-> line number mappings in <code>PyCodeObject.co_lnotab</code> (correct me if wrong here). This might be used to facilitate a migration process to update workflows to a new version, as frozen instruction pointers could be mapped to the appropriate place in the new script, done in terms of the line numbers. Still quite messy but a little more promising.</p> <p><strong>Update 3:</strong> I think the answer to this might be <a href="http://www.stackless.com" rel="nofollow">Stackless Python.</a> You can suspend tasks and serialise them. I haven't worked out whether this will also work with the stack as well.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/187380/why-use-ruby-instead-of-smalltalk/189248#189248 35 Answer by ConcernedOfTunbridgeWells for Why use Ruby instead of Smalltalk? ConcernedOfTunbridgeWells 2008-10-09T21:16:21Z 2009-10-01T14:42:02Z <p>I'm more of a Pythonista than a Ruby user, however the same things hold for Ruby for much the same reasons.</p> <ul> <li><p>The architecture of Smalltalk is somewhat insular - Python and Ruby were built from the ground up to facilitate integration. As an aside, historically Java was not the easiest thing to interface into and that did not stop it from gaining mindshare so the interfacing argument holds (IMO) only moderate weight. Smalltalk never really gained a body of hybrid application support in the way that Python and Ruby have, so the concept of 'smalltalk as embedded scripting language' never caught on.</p></li> <li><p>The class library of most of the main smalltalk implementations (VisualWorks, VisualAge etc.) was large and had a fairly steep learning curve. Most of the functionality is hidden away somewhere in the class library, even basic stuff like streams and collections. The language paradigm is also something of a culture shock for someone not familiar with it. The effect of this is that it takes quite a bit of time and effort to become a really proficient Smalltalk programmer. Ruby and Python are much easier to learn.</p></li> <li><p>Historically, mainstream Smalltalk implementations were quite expensive and needed exotic hardware to run, as can be seen <a href="http://groups.google.co.uk/group/net.lang.st80/browse%5Fthread/thread/c35c4ad7fad659c4?hl=en#" rel="nofollow">this net.lang.st80 posting from 1983</a>. By the time the confluence of sufficiently powerful mass-market PCs and mature Smalltalk VMs on 32-bit Windows got together Java had arrived on the scene and stolen all of the mindshare.</p></li> <li><p>Ruby and Python work in a more conventional toolchain and are not tightly coupled to a specific development environment. While the Smalltalk IDE's I have used are nice enough I use PythonWin for Python development largely because it has a nice editor with syntax highlighting and doesn't get underfoot. However, testing code with highlight and 'Show it' is still a very nice feature that even modern Python IDE's still don't really have an answer for (although I can't speak for Ruby).</p></li> <li><p>Smalltalk was somewhat late coming to the web application party. Early efforts such as VisualWave were never terribly successful and it was not until Seaside came out that a decent web framework got acceptance in Smalltalk circles. In the meantime J2EE has had a complete lifecycle of raving fanboys promoting it, getting bored and moving onto Ruby ;-} Ironically, Seaside is starting to get a bit of mindshare among the cognoscenti so we may find that Smalltalk rides that cycle back into popularity.</p></li> </ul> <p>Having said that, Smalltalk is a very nice system once you've worked out how to drive it. </p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1503080/sql-query-distinct-on-multiple-columns/1503109#1503109 2 Answer by ConcernedOfTunbridgeWells for sql query distinct on multiple columns ConcernedOfTunbridgeWells 2009-10-01T10:21:45Z 2009-10-01T10:21:45Z <p>Instead of <code>SELECT DISTINCT</code>, select the fields and a count of rows. Use <code>HAVING</code> to filter out items with more than one row, e.g:</p> <pre><code>select field1 ,field2 ,field3 ,field4 ,count (*) from foo group by field1 ,field2 ,field3 ,field4 having count (*) &gt; 1 </code></pre> <p>You can then join your original table back against the results of the query.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1496852/page-margins-change-in-pdflatex/1496874#1496874 3 Answer by ConcernedOfTunbridgeWells for Page margins change in pdflatex ConcernedOfTunbridgeWells 2009-09-30T08:54:02Z 2009-09-30T08:54:02Z <p>Probably because something is defaulting to a page size of 'Letter' and the other path is defaulting to a page size of 'A4' (or vice-versa). You might see if the <code>\documentclass</code> directive in your document allows you to specify page size. If you're using ps2pdf you may also have to specify the output page size. Also, don't forget to specify the destination device (<code>-P</code> IIRC) when using dvips so it renders computer modern fonts correctly in the PDF.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1494749/is-it-ok-to-nest-database-views/1494962#1494962 7 Answer by ConcernedOfTunbridgeWells for Is it OK to nest database views? ConcernedOfTunbridgeWells 2009-09-29T21:07:52Z 2009-09-29T21:07:52Z <p>The main problem with nesting views is that the query optimiser is more likely to get confused and produce a sub-optimal plan. Apart from this, there is no specific overhead to using views on views.</p> <p>This means that the best option is to try the nested views. See if you get sensible query plans out of the reports. If it does cause problems then you may have to re-think your strategy.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1491151/how-to-build-a-server-that-can-handle-20-000-concurrenct-connections/1491168#1491168 3 Answer by ConcernedOfTunbridgeWells for How to build a server that can handle 20.000 concurrenct connections? ConcernedOfTunbridgeWells 2009-09-29T08:06:36Z 2009-09-29T13:37:31Z <p>If you don't have to go through a firewall, consider using a protocol based on UDP. NFS is a good example of a UDP-based protocol. UDP doesn't have the setup overhead of TCP and can scale to more than 65k concurrent connections. However, if you need guaranteed delivery you will have to build this functionality into the application.</p> <p>For performance with large user bases, consider using a server architecture based on non-blocking I/O.</p> <p>Another item that might be worth looking at is Douglas Schmidt's <a href="http://www.cs.wustl.edu/~schmidt/ACE.html" rel="nofollow">Adaptive Communications Environment</a> (ACE). It's a mature C++ framework for building high performance servers, mainly aimed at telecommunications applications. It supports a variety of threading models and handles most of the tricky stuff for you. You might find that the time spent up front learning how to drive it would be saved down the track in reduced debugging effort on messy synchronisation issues.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1491113/wpf-performance-displaying-thousands-of-paths-shapes-on-a-canvas/1491193#1491193 0 Answer by ConcernedOfTunbridgeWells for WPF Performance: Displaying thousands of Paths / Shapes on a Canvas ConcernedOfTunbridgeWells 2009-09-29T08:11:43Z 2009-09-29T08:11:43Z <p>A brute-force approach might be to implement an ActiveX control and render the graphics directly using Win32. However, this will be somewhat fiddly. QT's canvas control might be a more warm and fluffy approach to the same end and it's noted for rendering this type of thing fairly quickly. Troll provide an ActiveX wrapper for the commercial versions of QT so it might be easier to integate.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1485411/best-compiled-language-for-os-x-and-linux-compatibility/1485710#1485710 1 Answer by ConcernedOfTunbridgeWells for Best compiled language for OS/X and Linux compatibility ConcernedOfTunbridgeWells 2009-09-28T06:38:20Z 2009-09-28T06:38:20Z <p>Assuming that you want to create an application with a graphical user interface, I think that C++/QT is the most likely candidate. I'm not aware of any other <em>compiled</em>[1] language with mature toolkit support on OSX and Linux.</p> <p><hr /></p> <ol> <li>By 'compiled' I'm making the assumption that you mean 'produces a native executable'.</li> </ol> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1474034/what-are-some-methods-for-persisting-customer-configurable-data-in-a-database/1474057#1474057 1 Answer by ConcernedOfTunbridgeWells for What are some methods for persisting customer configurable data in a database? ConcernedOfTunbridgeWells 2009-09-24T20:47:25Z 2009-09-24T20:55:03Z <p>As a generalisation I would recommend against using opaque XML blobs to store field-oriented data in a relational database.</p> <ol> <li><p>The best solution is to have some 'user' fields and configuration within the application to set up how these fields are used and presented. If the fields are varchars the overhead for empty fields is fairly minimal, IIRC about 1 byte per field. Although this looks inelegant and has a finite number of fields, it is the simplest to query and populate which makes it the fastest. One option would be to make the configuration agnostic to the number of fields and simply run a script to add a few more fields if you need them.</p></li> <li><p>Another option is to have a 'coding' table hanging off entities which user-configurable fields. It has 'entity ID', 'field type' and 'field code' columns where the 'field type' column denotes the actual content. The particular disadvantage is that it makes queries slower as they have to potentially join against this table multiple times.</p></li> </ol> <p>I've actually seen both (1) and (2) in use on the same system. The vendor originally started with (2) but then found it to be a pain in the arse and subsequent subsystems on the application went to using (1). This change in approach was borne out of bitter experience.</p> <p>The principal strike against XML blobs is that they are not first class citizens in the database schema. The DBMS cannot enforce referential integrity on the blob by itself, it cannot index individual columns within the blob and querying the data from the blob is more complex and may not be supported by reporting tools. In addition, the content of the blob is completely opaque to the system data dictionary. Anyone trying to extract the data back out of the system is dependent on the application's documentation to get any insight into the contents.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1443452/nested-transactions-in-django/1443478#1443478 0 Answer by ConcernedOfTunbridgeWells for Nested transactions in django? ConcernedOfTunbridgeWells 2009-09-18T09:35:49Z 2009-09-18T09:35:49Z <p>Depending on your DBMS server nested transactions may not be supported at all. Properly implementing nested transactions in a DBMS is actually quite difficult because you end up having to share locks between transactions.</p> <p>However, what you're describing doesn't sound like nested transactions. I don't know whether django supports XA transactions but what you describe could be achieved with a TP monitor architecture and an XA aware DBMS (which is most of them these days).</p> <p>If your platform doesn't have support for XA transactions you would have to structure the transactions so a record of how to roll them back is stored somewhere. Something along the lines of the 'Unit of Work' pattern described in Fowler's <em>Patterns of Enterprise Application Architecture</em> might give a good start for the architecture of such a subsystem.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1441651/programming-with-english-as-second-language-how-to-improve/1441688#1441688 0 Answer by ConcernedOfTunbridgeWells for Programming with English as second language. How to improve? ConcernedOfTunbridgeWells 2009-09-17T22:43:11Z 2009-09-18T08:26:42Z <p>Try doing a gap year in Londra (London) when you've finished your degree (look up 'working holiday' visas). A working holiday is more like 1-2 years and working holidays are something of a tradition in London. Even if you don't work in IT you will get pretty good exposure to the language. It should also be quite a lot of fun.</p> <p>Shagging a native speaker is also quite a good way to learn the lingo ;-) If you don't have that option then arrange for both of you to go for a year. Be prepared for sticker shock at the price of accomodation and train travel (even compared to the worst excesses of Venice, Milan or the touristy bits of Post-George Clooney Lake Como). On the plus side Sterling is fairly cheap, around 1.20 Euro.</p> <p>(Back when I was at University my girlfriend at the time wasn't a native English speaker and her English improved quite a lot while we were an item)</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/925754/resources-for-learning-c-program-design/926093#926093 14 Answer by ConcernedOfTunbridgeWells for Resources for learning C program design ConcernedOfTunbridgeWells 2009-05-29T13:53:32Z 2009-09-17T22:38:30Z <p><a href="http://stackoverflow.com/questions/236838/what-are-good-linux-unix-books-for-an-advancing-user/236967#236967">This posting</a> has a list of unix books which includes most of the classic C/Unix books. For C programming on Windows, <a href="http://rads.stackoverflow.com/amzn/click/157231995X" rel="nofollow">Petzold</a> is probably the best start.</p> <p>For C program design, some of the unix programming books will tell you snippets but I'm not aware of a 'C program architecture' book.</p> <p>If you're used to java, some tips for C programing are:</p> <ol> <li><p>Make use of the stack. Often when you call a procedure you will want to have variables allocated in the caller's stack frame and pass pointers to them into the procedure you want to call.</p></li> <li><p>C doesn't do garbage collection, so dynamically allocating data items is more fiddly and you have to keep track of them to make sure they get freed. Variables allocated on the stack (see 1) are more 'idiomatic' where they are applicable. Plus, you don't have to free them - this is a bonus for local variables.</p></li> <li><p>Apropos of (2), consider an architecture where your functions return a status or error code and pass data in and out using the stack as per (1).</p></li> <li><p>Get to know what <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Setjmp" rel="nofollow"><code>setjmp()</code></a> and <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Setjmp" rel="nofollow"><code>longjmp()</code></a> do. They can be quite useful for generic error handler mechanisms in lieu of structured exception handling functionality.</p></li> <li><p>C does not support exceptions. See (3).</p></li> <li><p>Lint is your friend. Splint is even friendlier.</p></li> <li><p>Learn what the preprocessor does and what you shouldn't do with it even if you can.</p></li> <li><p>Learn the ins and outs of endian-ness, word alignment, pointer arithmetic and other low-level architectural arcana. Contrary to popular opinion these are not rocket science. If you're feeling keen, try dabbling in assembly language and get a working knowledge of that. It will do much for your understanding of what's going on in your C program.</p></li> <li><p>C has no concept of module scope, so plan your use of includes, prototype declarations, and use of <code>extern</code> and <code>static</code> to make private scopes and import identifiers.</p></li> <li><p>GUI programming in C is tedious on all platforms.</p></li> <li><p>Apropos of (10) learn the C API of at least one scripting language such as Tcl, Lua or Python. In many cases the best use of C is as a core high-performance engine on an application that is substantially written in something else.</p></li> <li><p>C/Unix books, even really good ones like the ones written by the late W Richard Stevens tend to be available secondhand quite cheaply through Amazon marketplace. In no particular order, get a copy of K&amp;R, Stevens APUE and UNP 1 &amp; 2, the Dragon book, Rochkind, Programming Pearls, Petzold abd Richter (if working on Windows) and any of the other classic C/Unix works. Read, scribble on them with a pencil and generally interact with the books.</p></li> <li><p>There are many, many good C/Unix programming resources on the web.</p></li> <li><p>Read and understand the <a href="http://www.lysator.liu.se/c/ten-commandments.html" rel="nofollow">Ten Commandments of C Programming</a> and some of the meta discussion as to the why's and wherefores behind the commandments. This is showing its age to a certain extent, although most of it is still relevant and obscure compilers are still <a href="http://stackoverflow.com/questions/243387/best-language-for-safety-critical-software/243573#243573">quite common in the embedded systems world</a>.</p></li> <li><p>Lex and Yacc are your friend if you want to write parsers.</p></li> <li><p>As Navicore <a href="http://stackoverflow.com/questions/925754/resources-for-learning-c-program-design/928786#928786">points out below (+1)</a>, Hanson's <a href="http://www.cs.princeton.edu/software/cii/" rel="nofollow">'C Interfaces and Implementations'</a> is a run-down on interface/implementation design for modular architecture with a bunch of examples. I have actually heard of this book and heard good things about it, although I can't claim to have read it. Aside from the C idioms that I've described above, this concept is arguably the core of good procedural design. In fact, other procedural languages such as Modula-2 actually make this concept explicit in their design. This might be the closest thing to a 'C Program Architecture' book in print.</p></li> </ol> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/110032/star-schema-design/111044#111044 21 Answer by ConcernedOfTunbridgeWells for Star-Schema Design ConcernedOfTunbridgeWells 2008-09-21T13:46:24Z 2009-09-17T12:07:45Z <p>Using <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Star%5Fschema" rel="nofollow">star schemas</a> for a data warehouse system gets you several benefits. In my view the main advantages of a star schema are:</p> <ul> <li><p>Most database management systems have facilities in the query optimiser to do 'Star Transformations' that use <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bitmap%5Findex" rel="nofollow">Bitmap Index</a> structures or <a href="http://www.databasejournal.com/features/mssql/article.php/1438821" rel="nofollow">Index Intersection</a> for fast predicate resolution. This means that selection from a star schema can be done without hitting the fact table (which is usually much bigger than the indexes) until the selection is resolved.</p></li> <li><p><a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Partition%5F%28database%29" rel="nofollow">Partitioning</a> a star schema is relatively straightforward as only the fact table needs to be partitioned (unless you have some biblically large dimensions). <a href="http://blogs.msdn.com/sqlcat/archive/2006/02/17/Partition-Elimination-in-SQL-Server-2005.aspx" rel="nofollow">Partition elimination</a> means that the query optimiser can ignore patitions that could not possibly participate in the query results, which saves on I/O. </p></li> <li><p><a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slowly%5Fchanging%5Fdimension" rel="nofollow">Slowly changing dimensions</a> are much easier to implement on a star schema than a snowflake.</p></li> <li><p>The schema is easier to understand and tends to involve less joins than a <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Snowflake%5Fschema" rel="nofollow">snowflake</a> or E-R schema. Your reporting team will love you for this</p></li> <li><p>Star schemas are much easier to use and (more importantly) make perform well with ad-hoc query tools such as <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Business%5FObjects%5F%28company%29" rel="nofollow">Business Objects</a> or <a href="http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms155933.aspx" rel="nofollow">Report Builder</a>. As a developer you have very little control over the SQL generated by these tools so you need to give the query optimiser as much help as possible. Star schemas give the query optimiser relatively little opportunity to get it wrong.</p></li> </ul> <p>Typically your reporting layer would use star schemas unless you have a specific reason not to. If you have multiple source systems you may want to implement an <a href="http://www.dmreview.com/issues/19980701/469-1.html" rel="nofollow">Operational Data Store </a> with a normalised or snowflake schema to accumulate the data. This is easier because an ODS typically does not do history. </p> <p>All the historical data management can be done in the star schemas which are much easier to do this in. Loading the star schemas from the ODS means that you don't have to deal with the history tracking in the individual loads; the only part where this is necessary is in the load from the ODS to the star schemas.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1431468/which-ingame-scripting-language-should-i-support/1432666#1432666 0 Answer by ConcernedOfTunbridgeWells for Which ingame scripting language should I support? ConcernedOfTunbridgeWells 2009-09-16T12:32:50Z 2009-09-16T12:32:50Z <p>If you want to use Python consider using <a href="http://www.stackless.org" rel="nofollow">Stackless</a> as it is rather better at threading than stock CPython. It's used in some MMORPGs (EVE Online, IIRC) so it's got some track record in games. Plus, it is very good for continuations (part of the reason it was developed in the first place), which is quite a good model for 'simulation' type logic that one use in games.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1428117/linux-ipc-multiple-writers-single-reader/1428181#1428181 3 Answer by ConcernedOfTunbridgeWells for Linux IPC - Multiple writers, single reader ConcernedOfTunbridgeWells 2009-09-15T16:21:30Z 2009-09-15T16:21:30Z <p>System V IPC is somewhat fiddly to use but it is a mature, robust technology. Message queues would probably do what you want and support atomic queuing/de-queuing.</p> <p>Sockets are easy to use and also support communication over a network. However, they do not do any queuing, so you would have to write the queue management code within your server. Using sockets with C++ is not vastly different to using them with C. There are plenty of guides to this on the net and books such as Stevens' 'Unix Network Programming (vol 1)' that cover this topic in some depth.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/701214/should-developers-have-administrator-permissions-on-their-pc/701361#701361 30 Answer by ConcernedOfTunbridgeWells for Should developers have administrator permissions on their PC ConcernedOfTunbridgeWells 2009-03-31T14:51:19Z 2009-09-15T14:15:54Z <p>The answer is 'Yes'. Developers will need to frig with system configurations to test items, install software (if nothing else, to test the installation process of whatever they happen to be developing), poke about the registry and run software that will not work properly without admin privileges (just to list a few items). There are a host of other tasks integral to development work that require administration privileges to do.</p> <p>Bearing in mind that development staff do not necessarily have root access to production systems, admin rights on a local PC does not significantly compromise security of production systems. There is almost no legitimate operational reason for restricting admin access to local PC's for staff that need it to do their job. </p> <p>However, the most important reason to provide administrative access is that setting up a compromised or second rate development environment sends a message to your development staff: </p> <blockquote> <p><em>'We value your work so little that we are prepared to significantly compromise your ability to do your job for no good reason. In fact, we are quite happy to do this to cover our own arse, pander to the whims of petty bureaucracy or because we simply can't be bothered. That's just the best case. The worst case is that we're really the type of control freaks that view it as our perogative to tell you how to do your job and what you do or don't need to do it. Make do with what you're given and be grateful that you've got a job at all.'</em></p> </blockquote> <p>Generally, providing a second-rate (let alone fundamentally flawed) work environment for development staff is a recipe for the natural consequences of pissing off your staff - inability to retain competent people, high staff turnover, poor morale and poor quality delivery. Going out of your way to do so - particularly if there's an overtone of pandering to bureaucratic whim - is just irresponsible. </p> <p>Bear in mind that your staff turnover doesn't just incur costs of replacing the staff. The most serious cost of staff turnover is that most of the ones that stick around will be the deadwood that can't get a better job. Over time this degrades the capabilities of the departments affected. If your industry is sufficiently close you can also find yourself getting a reputation.</p> <p>One point to note is that administrative privileges are far less of an issue for development on unix-oid or mainframe systems than it is on Windows. On these platforms a user can do far more in their own domain without needing system-wide permissions. You will probably still want root or sudo access for developers, but not having this will get underfoot much less often. This flexibility is a significant but lesser known reason for the continuing popularity of unix-derived operating systems in Computer Science schools. </p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1427359/insert-data-in-increments/1427394#1427394 1 Answer by ConcernedOfTunbridgeWells for insert data in increments ConcernedOfTunbridgeWells 2009-09-15T14:05:12Z 2009-09-15T14:05:12Z <p>SSIS and most bulk copy tools (including bcp) will run in a mode that allows batched inserts. Given that you are moving it across to another server you will probably want to use a bulk load tool to do this anyway.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1425742/best-way-to-manage-transactions/1425833#1425833 2 Answer by ConcernedOfTunbridgeWells for Best way to manage transactions ConcernedOfTunbridgeWells 2009-09-15T08:12:22Z 2009-09-15T14:02:40Z <p>Can you use a JTA server (transaction coordinator) to do the transaction in multiple steps with XA transactions? <a href="http://stackoverflow.com/questions/777636/what-is-a-good-open-source-j2se-jta-transactionmanager-implementation">This posting</a> has a bit of fan-out to a couple of open-source ones that might work for you.</p> <p><a href="http://www.opengroup.org/bookstore/catalog/c193.htm" rel="nofollow">XA transactions</a> allow you to do a bunch of smaller operations and commit or roll back them in one hit. Try googling for 'hibernate xa transactions'. Most modern RDBMS platforms (MySQL 5.x, PostgreSQL, SQL Server, Oracle, DB2, Sybase etc.) support XA transactions.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1421445/data-storage-with-awe-memory-via-collections-lists-other-containers/1421552#1421552 0 Answer by ConcernedOfTunbridgeWells for Data Storage with AWE Memory via collections / lists / other containers ConcernedOfTunbridgeWells 2009-09-14T13:31:44Z 2009-09-14T13:38:30Z <p>There are <a href="http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/aa366527%28VS.85%29.aspx" rel="nofollow">system calls</a> that can do this but it is not supported on all versions of Windows (in particular, Windows XP does not support AWE). </p> <p>Transparency would be something of an issue as the API could not return pointers to objects. Mapping more than 4GB of RAM into a 4GB address space means that a 32 bit pointer could be ambiguous - you could potentially map different objects into the same location. </p> <p>This ambiguity means that you would have to generate proxies for the objects which hold a handle that could be used to access the 'record'. Some SQL server versions use this technique to store disk buffers in AWE memory. An approach like this would probably work for something like rows in a matrix where the operations are done on the whole row. Finer grained access would be more fiddly.</p> <p>In order to provide direct access to the mapped object you would have to implement a protocol where a temporary pointer to the mapped memory was made available. This would also require the object to be locked in memory while in use - again, bang goes your transparency. </p> <p>Assuming you can get a 64 bit version of Delphi now you might be better off going to a 64 bit version of Windows for customers that need more RAM.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1415910/forth-interpreter-in-java/1416056#1416056 3 Answer by ConcernedOfTunbridgeWells for Forth Interpreter in Java ConcernedOfTunbridgeWells 2009-09-12T20:26:40Z 2009-09-12T21:01:05Z <p>The author on the page describes at as implementing a subset of FORTH and being suitable for incorporationg in other applications; presumably it is intended to provide a scripting capability for an application. It's fairly unlikely that the system works by spitting out java or JVM byte codes; it almostly certainly uses an interpreter written in Java.</p> <p>Traditionally, a FORTH interpreter can be implemented in a very small memory footprint. I know someone that implemented one on a COSMAC and the core interpreter was 30 <em>bytes</em> long. The stack oriented byte code was also very compact as it did not need to specify the location of operands - it just read from the stack and deposited the result on the top of the stack. This made it popular in embedded systems circles where the small overhead of the interpreter was more than offset by the compact representation of the program logic.</p> <p>These days it's less important as machines tend to be much larger, although digitalross <a href="http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1415910/forth-interpreter-in-java/1415937#1415937">makes a good point</a> about other situations where FORTH is still used.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1415779/why-are-c-inheritance-mechanisms-opaque/1416091#1416091 1 Answer by ConcernedOfTunbridgeWells for Why are C++ inheritance mechanisms opaque? ConcernedOfTunbridgeWells 2009-09-12T20:42:28Z 2009-09-12T20:42:28Z <p>Vtables only exist in certain circumstances in some compilers (i.e. they are not specified in the standard but an implementation detail). Even when they do exist, they only occur when you have virtual functions and need the indirection to implement polymorphism. When this is not required they can be optimised out, saving the overhead of the indirection on the call.</p> <p>Sadly (or otherwise, depending on your views on the matter ;-), C++ was not designed to support monkey patching. In some cases (e.g. COM) the vtable is a part of the implementation and you might be able to poke about behind the scenes. However, this would never be supported or portable.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/320657/when-good-programmers-go-bad/321076#321076 Comment by ConcernedOfTunbridgeWells on When good programmers go bad! ConcernedOfTunbridgeWells 2009-12-06T09:51:56Z 2009-12-06T09:51:56Z There are professionals who do this sort of thing - industrial psychologists and various species of mental health types like psychiatrists that do burnout counselling. http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1680023/mysql-best-storage-engine-for-constantly-changing-data/1680243#1680243 Comment by ConcernedOfTunbridgeWells on MySQL - best storage engine for constantly changing data ConcernedOfTunbridgeWells 2009-11-05T19:35:59Z 2009-11-05T19:35:59Z Status is probably quite low cardinality which means that query optimiser may still not use that index. Take a look at the query plans and see if the index is actually being used. http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1680023/mysql-best-storage-engine-for-constantly-changing-data/1680243#1680243 Comment by ConcernedOfTunbridgeWells on MySQL - best storage engine for constantly changing data ConcernedOfTunbridgeWells 2009-11-05T13:25:54Z 2009-11-05T13:25:54Z See if putting an index on (Status, ID) helps (if such an index is not already present) http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1680023/mysql-best-storage-engine-for-constantly-changing-data/1680243#1680243 Comment by ConcernedOfTunbridgeWells on MySQL - best storage engine for constantly changing data ConcernedOfTunbridgeWells 2009-11-05T12:37:16Z 2009-11-05T12:37:16Z At the very least, the DB logs should be on a physically separate disk (see above), so you should add another mirrored pair to the server for the logs. You might also check your query plans to see if the database is doing something silly or needs an index added. http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1648689/how-to-code-jon-skeets-singleton-in-c/1648746#1648746 Comment by ConcernedOfTunbridgeWells on How to code Jon Skeet's Singleton in C++? ConcernedOfTunbridgeWells 2009-10-30T14:09:21Z 2009-10-30T14:09:21Z Perhaps I missed something, the OP gave the impression he was after a generic behaviour. I remember trying to make an inheritable singleton in an early JDK and finding out that Java could not do it; IIRC trad C++ won't either, although you could probably do it with templates. Now I look at the article again it's not specifically mentioned, so maybe he's just looking at how to implement a Singeton. The GOF book might have an example in C++. http://stackoverflow.com/questions/242996/dealbreakers-for-new-programming-jobs/243016#243016 Comment by ConcernedOfTunbridgeWells on Dealbreakers for new programming jobs? ConcernedOfTunbridgeWells 2009-10-27T21:50:08Z 2009-10-27T21:50:08Z Don't knock MUMPS - the syntax might not be anything special but the architecture did spawn an awful lot of imitators. Many, many 4GLs of the 1970s and even later owe a lot of their fundamental architecture to MUMPS. Highly influential and very much unsung. http://stackoverflow.com/questions/621884/database-development-mistakes-made-by-appdevelopers/965490#965490 Comment by ConcernedOfTunbridgeWells on Database Development Mistakes Made by AppDevelopers ConcernedOfTunbridgeWells 2009-10-21T08:00:20Z 2009-10-21T08:00:20Z +1 - Database programming involves optimising the behaviour of mechanical components. Note, however, that Knuth says premature optimisation is the root of all evil about 97% of the time (or words to that effect). Database design is one area where you really do have to think about this up front. http://stackoverflow.com/questions/621884/database-development-mistakes-made-by-appdevelopers/622159#622159 Comment by ConcernedOfTunbridgeWells on Database Development Mistakes Made by AppDevelopers ConcernedOfTunbridgeWells 2009-10-20T16:32:21Z 2009-10-20T16:32:21Z From time to time I do too, although these days I tend to be drifting further into the dark abyss of consultancy (Your anger will make you strong ...). However, all too often I see operational systems designed with no thought to actually doing MIS off them. http://stackoverflow.com/questions/101242/nice-book-on-sql-server-analysis-services/108703#108703 Comment by ConcernedOfTunbridgeWells on Nice book on SQL Server Analysis Services? ConcernedOfTunbridgeWells 2009-10-15T22:52:43Z 2009-10-15T22:52:43Z I guess he probably knows, but mosha.com could be redirected to any hosting provider. http://stackoverflow.com/questions/440346/how-to-approach-an-etl-mission/1018333#1018333 Comment by ConcernedOfTunbridgeWells on How to approach an ETL mission ? ConcernedOfTunbridgeWells 2009-10-12T15:01:38Z 2009-10-12T15:01:38Z Why thank you ;-) I'm not entirely sure it's appropriate to upvote you just for endorsing my answer but I agree that the points made are indeed good advice - if I say so myself ... http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1554994/i-need-a-good-programming-discussion-board-systems-design-edited/1555002#1555002 Comment by ConcernedOfTunbridgeWells on I need a good programming discussion board.. (Systems Design) : Edited ConcernedOfTunbridgeWells 2009-10-12T14:50:43Z 2009-10-12T14:50:43Z Not quite true. SO is intended to be strictly a Q&amp;A; discussion forum functionality is avoided - by design - to keep signal-noise ratio up. http://stackoverflow.com/questions/701214/should-developers-have-administrator-permissions-on-their-pc Comment by ConcernedOfTunbridgeWells on Should developers have administrator permissions on their PC ConcernedOfTunbridgeWells 2009-10-12T14:17:25Z 2009-10-12T14:17:25Z Less common than one might think. In most cases the underlying issue is sensitive data - for example, Swiss banking confidentiality laws tend to preclude developers from seeing actual customer data (accounts reconciliation is left as an exercise for the reader). In this case the problem is not locking down the machines but providing sanitized data sets for development work. Most other situations are either regulatory requirements (e.g. working with classified data) or self-serving CYA. http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1536313/how-to-get-similar-ones-like-these Comment by ConcernedOfTunbridgeWells on How to get similar ones like these ٩(•̮̮̃•̃)۶ ConcernedOfTunbridgeWells 2009-10-08T08:09:28Z 2009-10-08T08:09:28Z This is more appropriate to superuser.com http://stackoverflow.com/questions/541329/is-it-possible-to-programmatically-construct-a-python-stack-frame-and-start-execu/1523359#1523359 Comment by ConcernedOfTunbridgeWells on Is it possible to programmatically construct a Python stack frame and start execution at an arbitrary point in the code? ConcernedOfTunbridgeWells 2009-10-06T12:37:33Z 2009-10-06T12:37:33Z Sadly the OP has shelved the problem for the moment as the original project never went ahead :^p http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1494749/is-it-ok-to-nest-database-views/1494859#1494859 Comment by ConcernedOfTunbridgeWells on Is it OK to nest database views? ConcernedOfTunbridgeWells 2009-09-29T21:10:14Z 2009-09-29T21:10:14Z 'in' is semantically equivalent to a series of 'or' operators. 'Or' predicates are not sarg-able (a SQL Server term meaning that a predicate can be resolved using an index), although modern optimisers are getting better at translating them into something that can be resolved in this way.