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  • LIVE: Oracle FY13 Partner Kickoff - Red Stack. Red Team. Engineered to Win.

    - by Kristin Rose
    Oracle’s FY13 Partner Kickoff is still in full swing and what an exciting day it has already been! Oracle executives started their mornings off at 5 a.m. to address our partners from around the world. The day began with the EMEA region, closely followed by the North America region in front of a live audience, and then on to Latin America! But hang tight because Japan and APAC are up next!If you haven’t already done so, be sure you register to watch the rest of the show. Also, join the Twitter conversation via #OPN and @OraclePartners and keep sending in those questions. Here is what the rest of the day looks like: JAPAN - 6:00pm – 7:30pm PT APAC - 8:00 pm – 9:30pm PT We also had a chance to speak with Nick Kritikos, VP of Partner Enablement and host of the PKO after show, “Partner Pulse”, to get his thoughts on the day. See what Nick had to say below: To all of our Partners, thanks for tuning in! Until next year, Good Selling,The OPN Communications Team

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  • Subroutine & GoTo design

    - by sub
    I have a strange question concerning subroutines: As I'm creating a minimal language and I don't want to add high-level loops like while or for I was planning on just adding gotos to keep it Turing-Complete. Now I thought, eww - gotos - I wouldn't want to program in that language if I had to use gotos so often. So I thought about adding subroutines instead. I see the difference as the following: gotos Go to (captain obvious) a previously defined point and continue executing the program from there. Leads to hardly understandable and buggy code, I think that's a fact. subroutines Similiar: You define their starting point somewhere, as you call them the program jumps there - but the subroutine can go back to the point it was called from with return. Okay. Why didn't I just add the more function-like, nice looking subroutines? Because: In order to make return work if I call subroutines from within subroutines from within other subroutines, I'd have to use a stack containing the point where the currently running subroutine came from at top. That would then mean that I would, if I create loops using the subroutines, end up with an extremely memory-eating, overflowing stack with return locations. Not good. Don't think of my subroutines as functions. They are just gotos that return to the point they were called from, they don't actually give back values like the return x; statement in nearly all today's languages. Now to my actual questions: How can I solve the above problem with the stack overflow on loops with subroutines? Do I have to add a separate goto language construct without the return option? Assembler doesn't have loops but as I have seen myJumpPoint:, jnz, jz, retn. That means to me that there must also be a stack containing all the return locations. Am I right with that? What about long running loops then? Don't they overflow the stack/eat memory then? Am I getting the retn symbol in assembler totally wrong? If yes, please explain it to me.

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  • Latest Edition of Security Inside Out Newsletter Now Available

    - by Troy Kitch
    The latest edition of Security Inside Out newsletter is now available. If you don't get this bi-monthly security newsletter in your inbox, then subscribe to get the latest database security news. This bi-monthly edition includes: Q&A: Oracle CSO Mary Ann Davidson on Meeting Tomorrow's Security Threats Oracle Chief Security Officer Mary Ann Davidson shares her thoughts on next-generation security threats.  Read More New Study: Increased Security Spending Still Not Protecting Right Assets Despite widespread belief that database breaches represent the greatest security risk to their business, organizations continue to devote a far greater share of their security resources to network assets rather than database assets, according to a new report issued by CSO and sponsored by Oracle. Read More

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  • On Golf Tournaments & Installers

    - by Geertjan
    I've been in touch recently with Ann Maybury, who is creating a golf tournament roundrobin manager for senior citizens in Palm Desert, California. The application is created on the NetBeans Platform and looks as follows, very neat and professional: Ann has been working on wrapping up the application for distribution and needs to include the JRE, since end users of the application don't necessarily have the JRE installed when they install the application. Several blogs and articles are available for creating and customizing installers for NetBeans Platform applications, as well as for bundling the JRE and other resources, though there are some gaps and inccuracies in those documents. However, now there's a new official tutorial, for the first time: http://platform.netbeans.org/tutorials/nbm-nbi.html The above is focused on Ant builds and Windows, specifically, and doesn't cover Maven scenarios, for which there'll be a separate tutorial soon. Feedback on the above new tutorial is very welcome, as always.

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  • How to avoid LinearAlloc Exceeded Capacity error android

    - by Udaykiran
    The application gets crashing every-time, when am running eclipse saying LinearAlloc exceeded capacity (5242880), last=208 This is happening, when am creating AsyncTask, thats strange this is happening everytime . when am commenting and running its running. Logcat is: 02-09 04:02:23.374: I/dalvikvm(3351): DexOpt: not resolving ambiguous class 'Lorg/apache/http/HttpEntityEnclosingRequest;' 02-09 04:02:23.374: I/dalvikvm(3351): DexOpt: not resolving ambiguous class 'Lorg/apache/commons/codec/binary/Base64;' 02-09 04:02:23.378: D/dalvikvm(3351): DexOpt: not verifying 'Lorg/apache/commons/codec/net/QuotedPrintableCodec;': multiple definitions 02-09 04:02:23.378: D/dalvikvm(3351): DexOpt: not verifying 'Lorg/apache/commons/codec/net/StringEncodings;': multiple definitions 02-09 04:02:23.378: D/dalvikvm(3351): DexOpt: not verifying 'Lorg/apache/commons/codec/net/URLCodec;': multiple definitions 02-09 04:02:23.394: I/dalvikvm(3351): DexOpt: not resolving ambiguous class 'Lorg/apache/commons/logging/LogFactory;' 02-09 04:02:23.397: I/dalvikvm(3351): DexOpt: not resolving ambiguous class 'Lorg/apache/commons/codec/net/URLCodec;' 02-09 04:02:23.487: I/dalvikvm(3351): DexOpt: not resolving ambiguous class 'Lorg/apache/commons/logging/impl/LogFactoryImpl;' 02-09 04:02:23.487: D/dalvikvm(3351): DexOpt: not verifying 'Lorg/apache/commons/logging/impl/LogFactoryImpl;': multiple definitions 02-09 04:02:23.487: D/dalvikvm(3351): DexOpt: not verifying 'Lorg/apache/commons/logging/impl/NoOpLog;': multiple definitions 02-09 04:02:23.487: D/dalvikvm(3351): DexOpt: not verifying 'Lorg/apache/commons/logging/impl/SimpleLog$1;': multiple definitions 02-09 04:02:23.487: D/dalvikvm(3351): DexOpt: not verifying 'Lorg/apache/commons/logging/impl/SimpleLog;': multiple definitions 02-09 04:02:23.581: D/dalvikvm(3351): DexOpt: not verifying 'Lorg/apache/http/ConnectionClosedException;': multiple definitions /http/StatusLine;': multiple definitions 02-09 04:02:23.581: D/dalvikvm(3351): DexOpt: not verifying 'Lorg/apache/http/TokenIterator;': multiple definitions 02-09 04:02:23.581: D/dalvikvm(3351): DexOpt: not verifying 'Lorg/apache/http/UnsupportedHttpVersionException;': multiple definitions 02-09 04:02:23.581: D/dalvikvm(3351): DexOpt: not verifying 'Lorg/apache/http/auth/AUTH;': multiple definitions 02-09 04:02:23.581: D/dalvikvm(3351): DexOpt: not verifying 'Lorg/apache/http/auth/AuthScheme;': multiple definitions 02-09 04:02:23.581: D/dalvikvm(3351): DexOpt: not verifying 'Lorg/apache/http/auth/AuthSchemeFactory;': multiple definitions 02-09 04:02:23.581: D/dalvikvm(3351): DexOpt: not verifying 'Lorg/apache/http/auth/AuthSchemeRegistry;': multiple definitions 02-09 04:02:23.581: D/dalvikvm(3351): DexOpt: not verifying 'Lorg/apache/http/auth/AuthScope;': multiple definitions 02-09 04:02:23.589: D/dalvikvm(3351): DexOpt: not verifying 'Lorg/apache/http/conn/ConnectionKeepAliveStrategy;': multiple definitions 02-09 04:02:23.589: D/dalvikvm(3351): DexOpt: not verifying 'Lorg/apache/http/conn/ConnectionPoolTimeoutException;': multiple definitions 02-09 04:02:23.589: D/dalvikvm(3351): DexOpt: not verifying 'Lorg/apache/http/conn/EofSensorInputStream;': multiple definitions 02-09 04:02:23.589: D/dalvikvm(3351): DexOpt: not verifying 'Lorg/apache/http/conn/HttpHostConnectException;': multiple definitions 02-09 04:02:23.589: D/dalvikvm(3351): DexOpt: not verifying 'Lorg/apache/http/conn/ManagedClientConnection;': multiple definitions 02-09 04:02:23.589: D/dalvikvm(3351): DexOpt: not verifying 'Lorg/apache/http/conn/MultihomePlainSocketFactory;': multiple definitions 02-09 04:02:23.589: D/dalvikvm(3351): DexOpt: not verifying 'Lorg/apache/http/conn/OperatedClientConnection;': multiple definitions 02-09 04:02:23.589: D/dalvikvm(3351): DexOpt: not verifying 'Lorg/apache/http/conn/params/ConnConnectionParamBean;': multiple definitions 02-09 04:02:23.589: D/dalvikvm(3351): DexOpt: not verifying 'Lorg/apache/http/conn/params/ConnManagerParamBean;': multiple definitions 02-09 04:02:23.589: D/dalvikvm(3351): DexOpt: not verifying 'Lorg/apache/http/conn/params/ConnPerRoute;': multiple definitions 02-09 04:02:23.589: D/dalvikvm(3351): DexOpt: not verifying 'Lorg/apache/http/conn/params/ConnManagerParams$1;': multiple definitions 02-09 04:02:23.597: D/dalvikvm(3351): DexOpt: not verifying 'Lorg/apache/http/impl/client/DefaultRequestDirector;': multiple definitions 02-09 04:02:23.597: D/dalvikvm(3351): DexOpt: not verifying 'Lorg/apache/http/impl/client/DefaultTargetAuthenticationHandler;': multiple definitions 02-09 04:02:23.597: D/dalvikvm(3351): DexOpt: not verifying 'Lorg/apache/http/impl/client/DefaultUserTokenHandler;': multiple definitions 02-09 04:02:23.597: D/dalvikvm(3351): DexOpt: not verifying 'Lorg/apache/http/impl/client/RequestWrapper;': multiple definitions 02-09 04:02:23.597: D/dalvikvm(3351): DexOpt: not verifying 'Lorg/apache/http/impl/client/EntityEnclosingRequestWrapper;': multiple definitions 02-09 04:02:23.597: I/dalvikvm(3351): DexOpt: not resolving ambiguous class 'Lorg/apache/http/client/methods/HttpRequestBase;' 02-09 04:02:23.597: D/dalvikvm(3351): DexOpt: not verifying 'Lorg/apache/http/impl/client/RedirectLocations;': multiple definitions 02-09 04:02:23.597: D/dalvikvm(3351): DexOpt: not verifying 'Lorg/apache/http/impl/client/RoutedRequest;': multiple definitions 02-09 04:02:23.597: D/dalvikvm(3351): DexOpt: not verifying 'Lorg/apache/http/impl/client/TunnelRefusedException;': multiple definitions 02-09 04:02:23.597: D/dalvikvm(3351): DexOpt: not verifying 'Lorg/apache/http/impl/conn/AbstractClientConnAdapter;': multiple definitions 02-09 04:02:23.597: D/dalvikvm(3351): DexOpt: not verifying 'Lorg/apache/http/impl/conn/AbstractPoolEntry;': multiple definitions 02-09 04:02:23.608: D/dalvikvm(3351): DexOpt: not verifying 'Lorg/apache/http/protocol/ResponseServer;': multiple definitions 02-09 04:02:23.608: D/dalvikvm(3351): DexOpt: not verifying 'Lorg/apache/http/protocol/SyncBasicHttpContext;': multiple definitions 02-09 04:02:23.608: D/dalvikvm(3351): DexOpt: not verifying 'Lorg/apache/http/protocol/UriPatternMatcher;': multiple definitions 02-09 04:02:23.608: D/dalvikvm(3351): DexOpt: not verifying 'Lorg/apache/http/util/ByteArrayBuffer;': multiple definitions 02-09 04:02:23.608: D/dalvikvm(3351): DexOpt: not verifying 'Lorg/apache/http/util/CharArrayBuffer;': multiple definitions 02-09 04:02:23.608: D/dalvikvm(3351): DexOpt: not verifying 'Lorg/apache/http/util/EncodingUtils;': multiple definitions 02-09 04:02:23.608: D/dalvikvm(3351): DexOpt: not verifying 'Lorg/apache/http/util/EntityUtils;': multiple definitions 02-09 04:02:23.608: D/dalvikvm(3351): DexOpt: not verifying 'Lorg/apache/http/util/ExceptionUtils;': multiple definitions 02-09 04:02:23.608: D/dalvikvm(3351): DexOpt: not verifying 'Lorg/apache/http/util/LangUtils;': multiple definitions 02-09 04:02:23.608: D/dalvikvm(3351): DexOpt: not verifying 'Lorg/apache/http/util/VersionInfo;': multiple definitions 02-09 04:02:23.608: I/dalvikvm(3351): DexOpt: not resolving ambiguous class 'Lorg/apache/commons/logging/LogFactory;' 02-09 04:02:23.612: I/dalvikvm(3351): DexOpt: not resolving ambiguous class 'Lorg/apache/commons/logging/LogFactory;' 02-09 04:02:23.612: I/dalvikvm(3351): DexOpt: not resolving ambiguous class 'Lorg/apache/commons/logging/LogFactory;' 02-09 04:02:23.612: I/dalvikvm(3351): DexOpt: not resolving ambiguous class 'Lorg/apache/commons/logging/LogFactory;' 02-09 04:02:23.616: I/dalvikvm(3351): DexOpt: not resolving ambiguous class 'Lorg/apache/commons/logging/LogFactory;' 02-09 04:02:24.312: I/dalvikvm(3351): DexOpt: not resolving ambiguous class 'Lorg/xmlpull/v1/XmlPullParser;' 02-09 04:02:24.312: I/dalvikvm(3351): DexOpt: not resolving ambiguous class 'Lorg/xmlpull/v1/XmlPullParser;' 02-09 04:02:24.312: I/dalvikvm(3351): DexOpt: not resolving ambiguous class 'Lorg/xmlpull/v1/XmlPullParser;' 02-09 04:02:24.312: I/dalvikvm(3351): DexOpt: not resolving ambiguous class 'Lorg/xmlpull/v1/XmlPullParser;' 02-09 04:02:24.312: I/dalvikvm(3351): DexOpt: not resolving ambiguous class 'Lorg/xmlpull/v1/XmlPullParser;' 02-09 04:02:24.312: I/dalvikvm(3351): DexOpt: not resolving ambiguous class 'Lorg/xmlpull/v1/XmlPullParser;' 02-09 04:02:24.312: I/dalvikvm(3351): DexOpt: not resolving ambiguous class 'Lorg/xmlpull/v1/XmlPullParser;' 02-09 04:02:24.312: I/dalvikvm(3351): DexOpt: not resolving ambiguous class 'Lorg/kxml2/io/KXmlSerializer;' 02-09 04:02:24.315: D/dalvikvm(3351): DexOpt: not verifying 'Lorg/xmlpull/v1/XmlPullParser;': multiple definitions 02-09 04:02:24.315: D/dalvikvm(3351): DexOpt: not verifying 'Lorg/kxml2/io/KXmlParser;': multiple definitions 02-09 04:02:24.315: D/dalvikvm(3351): DexOpt: not verifying 'Lorg/xmlpull/v1/XmlSerializer;': multiple definitions 02-09 04:02:24.315: D/dalvikvm(3351): DexOpt: not verifying 'Lorg/kxml2/io/KXmlSerializer;': multiple definitions 02-09 04:02:24.315: D/dalvikvm(3351): DexOpt: not verifying 'Lorg/kxml2/kdom/Node;': multiple definitions 02-09 04:02:24.315: D/dalvikvm(3351): DexOpt: not verifying 'Lorg/kxml2/kdom/Document;': multiple definitions 02-09 04:02:24.315: D/dalvikvm(3351): DexOpt: not verifying 'Lorg/kxml2/kdom/Element;': multiple definitions 02-09 04:02:24.315: D/dalvikvm(3351): DexOpt: not verifying 'Lorg/kxml2/wap/Wbxml;': multiple definitions 02-09 04:02:24.315: D/dalvikvm(3351): DexOpt: not verifying 'Lorg/kxml2/wap/WbxmlParser;': multiple definitions 02-09 04:02:24.315: D/dalvikvm(3351): DexOpt: not verifying 'Lorg/kxml2/wap/WbxmlSerializer;': multiple definitions 02-09 04:02:24.315: D/dalvikvm(3351): DexOpt: not verifying 'Lorg/kxml2/wap/syncml/SyncML;': multiple definitions 02-09 04:02:24.315: D/dalvikvm(3351): DexOpt: not verifying 'Lorg/kxml2/wap/wml/Wml;': multiple definitions 02-09 04:02:24.315: D/dalvikvm(3351): DexOpt: not verifying 'Lorg/kxml2/wap/wv/WV;': multiple definitions 02-09 04:02:24.323: I/dalvikvm(3351): DexOpt: not resolving ambiguous class 'Lorg/apache/commons/codec/binary/Base64;' 02-09 04:02:24.398: I/dalvikvm(3351): DexOpt: not resolving ambiguous class 'Lorg/xmlpull/v1/XmlPullParserFactory;' 02-09 04:02:24.398: I/dalvikvm(3351): DexOpt: not resolving ambiguous class 'Lorg/xmlpull/v1/XmlPullParser;' 02-09 04:02:24.398: I/dalvikvm(3351): DexOpt: not resolving ambiguous class 'Lorg/xmlpull/v1/XmlPullParser;' 02-09 04:02:24.398: I/dalvikvm(3351): DexOpt: not resolving ambiguous class 'Lorg/xmlpull/v1/XmlPullParser;' 02-09 04:02:24.398: I/dalvikvm(3351): DexOpt: not resolving ambiguous class 'Lorg/xmlpull/v1/XmlPullParser;' 02-09 04:02:24.495: D/dalvikvm(3351): DexOpt: not verifying 'Lorg/xmlpull/v1/XmlPullParserException;': multiple definitions 02-09 04:02:24.495: D/dalvikvm(3351): DexOpt: not verifying 'Lorg/xmlpull/v1/XmlPullParserFactory;': multiple definitions 02-09 04:02:24.612: E/dalvikvm(3351): LinearAlloc exceeded capacity (5242880), last=208 02-09 04:02:24.612: E/dalvikvm(3351): VM aborting 02-09 04:02:24.640: D/dalvikvm(3307): GC_FOR_MALLOC freed 18195 objects / 1125640 bytes in 287ms 02-09 04:02:24.745: I/DEBUG(2372): *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** 02-09 04:02:24.745: I/DEBUG(2372): Build fingerprint: 'samsung/SGH-T849/SGH-T849/SGH-T849:2.2/FROYO/UVJJB:user/release-keys' 02-09 04:02:24.745: I/DEBUG(2372): pid: 3351, tid: 3351 >>> /system/bin/dexopt <<< 02-09 04:02:24.745: I/DEBUG(2372): signal 11 (SIGSEGV), fault addr deadd00d 02-09 04:02:24.745: I/DEBUG(2372): r0 00000026 r1 afd14921 r2 afd14921 r3 00000000 02-09 04:02:24.745: I/DEBUG(2372): r4 800a13f4 r5 800a13f4 r6 004fffa4 r7 000000d0 02-09 04:02:24.745: I/DEBUG(2372): r8 00000000 r9 00000000 10 00000000 fp 00000000 02-09 04:02:24.745: I/DEBUG(2372): ip deadd00d sp beade740 lr afd1596b pc 80042078 cpsr 20000030 02-09 04:02:24.745: I/DEBUG(2372): d0 643a64696f72646e d1 6472656767756265 02-09 04:02:24.745: I/DEBUG(2372): d2 410be43800000067 d3 00000000410c080a 02-09 04:02:24.745: I/DEBUG(2372): d4 6c706d49746e6569 d5 74746977744c293b 02-09 04:02:24.745: I/DEBUG(2372): d6 746e692f6a347265 d7 74682f6c616e7265 02-09 04:02:24.745: I/DEBUG(2372): d8 0000003108f12b80 d9 0000000000000000 02-09 04:02:24.745: I/DEBUG(2372): d10 0000000000000000 d11 0000000000000000 02-09 04:02:24.745: I/DEBUG(2372): d12 0000000000000000 d13 0000000000000000 02-09 04:02:24.745: I/DEBUG(2372): d14 0000000000000000 d15 0000000000000000 02-09 04:02:24.745: I/DEBUG(2372): d16 0000000000000000 d17 0000000000000000 02-09 04:02:24.745: I/DEBUG(2372): d18 0000000000000000 d19 0000000000000000 02-09 04:02:24.745: I/DEBUG(2372): d20 0000000000000000 d21 0000000000000000 02-09 04:02:24.745: I/DEBUG(2372): d22 0000000000000000 d23 0000000000000000 02-09 04:02:24.745: I/DEBUG(2372): d24 0000000000000000 d25 0000000000000000 02-09 04:02:24.745: I/DEBUG(2372): d26 0000000000000000 d27 0000000000000000 02-09 04:02:24.745: I/DEBUG(2372): d28 0000000000000000 d29 0000000000000000 02-09 04:02:24.745: I/DEBUG(2372): d30 0000000000000000 d31 0000000000000000 02-09 04:02:24.745: I/DEBUG(2372): scr 00000000 02-09 04:02:24.757: I/DEBUG(2372): #00 pc 00042078 /system/lib/libdvm.so 02-09 04:02:24.757: I/DEBUG(2372): #01 pc 00049f40 /system/lib/libdvm.so 02-09 04:02:24.757: I/DEBUG(2372): #02 pc 00067998 /system/lib/libdvm.so 02-09 04:02:24.757: I/DEBUG(2372): #03 pc 00067dba /system/lib/libdvm.so 02-09 04:02:24.757: I/DEBUG(2372): #04 pc 00068612 /system/lib/libdvm.so 02-09 04:02:24.757: I/DEBUG(2372): #05 pc 00068846 /system/lib/libdvm.so 02-09 04:02:24.757: I/DEBUG(2372): #06 pc 0006806a /system/lib/libdvm.so 02-09 04:02:24.757: I/DEBUG(2372): #07 pc 00057a0c /system/lib/libdvm.so 02-09 04:02:24.757: I/DEBUG(2372): #08 pc 00057fe6 /system/lib/libdvm.so 02-09 04:02:24.757: I/DEBUG(2372): #09 pc 00053d1e /system/lib/libdvm.so 02-09 04:02:24.757: I/DEBUG(2372): #10 pc 000566d4 /system/lib/libdvm.so 02-09 04:02:24.761: I/DEBUG(2372): #11 pc 000576c0 /system/lib/libdvm.so 02-09 04:02:24.761: I/DEBUG(2372): #12 pc 00057948 /system/lib/libdvm.so 02-09 04:02:24.761: I/DEBUG(2372): #13 pc 0005a1f4 /system/lib/libdvm.so 02-09 04:02:24.761: I/DEBUG(2372): #14 pc 0005a25c /system/lib/libdvm.so 02-09 04:02:24.761: I/DEBUG(2372): #15 pc 0005a32a /system/lib/libdvm.so 02-09 04:02:24.761: I/DEBUG(2372): #16 pc 000590f2 /system/lib/libdvm.so 02-09 04:02:24.761: I/DEBUG(2372): code around pc: 02-09 04:02:24.761: I/DEBUG(2372): 80042058 20061861 f7d418a2 2000eb8e ece6f7d4 02-09 04:02:24.761: I/DEBUG(2372): 80042068 58234808 b1036bdb f8df4798 2026c01c 02-09 04:02:24.761: I/DEBUG(2372): 80042078 0000f88c ed4cf7d4 0005f3a0 fffe300c 02-09 04:02:24.761: I/DEBUG(2372): 80042088 fffe6280 0000039c deadd00d f8dfb40e 02-09 04:02:24.761: I/DEBUG(2372): 80042098 b503c02c bf00490a 188ba200 f853aa03 02-09 04:02:24.761: I/DEBUG(2372): code around lr: 02-09 04:02:24.761: I/DEBUG(2372): afd15948 b5f74b0d 490da200 2600189b 585c4602 02-09 04:02:24.761: I/DEBUG(2372): afd15958 686768a5 f9b5e008 b120000c 46289201 02-09 04:02:24.761: I/DEBUG(2372): afd15968 9a014790 35544306 37fff117 6824d5f3 02-09 04:02:24.761: I/DEBUG(2372): afd15978 d1ed2c00 bdfe4630 0002c9d8 000000d8 02-09 04:02:24.761: I/DEBUG(2372): afd15988 b086b570 f602fb01 9004460c a804a901 02-09 04:02:24.761: I/DEBUG(2372): stack: 02-09 04:02:24.761: I/DEBUG(2372): beade700 410e9e18 /dev/ashmem/mspace/dalvik-heap/0 (deleted) 02-09 04:02:24.765: I/DEBUG(2372): beade704 410e9e18 /dev/ashmem/mspace/dalvik-heap/0 (deleted) 02-09 04:02:24.765: I/DEBUG(2372): beade708 afd425a0 /system/lib/libc.so 02-09 04:02:24.765: I/DEBUG(2372): beade70c afd4254c /system/lib/libc.so 02-09 04:02:24.765: I/DEBUG(2372): beade710 00000000 02-09 04:02:24.765: I/DEBUG(2372): beade714 afd1596b /system/lib/libc.so 02-09 04:02:24.765: I/DEBUG(2372): beade718 afd14921 /system/lib/libc.so 02-09 04:02:24.765: I/DEBUG(2372): beade71c afd14921 /system/lib/libc.so 02-09 04:02:24.765: I/DEBUG(2372): beade720 afd14978 /system/lib/libc.so 02-09 04:02:24.765: I/DEBUG(2372): beade724 800a13f4 /system/lib/libdvm.so 02-09 04:02:24.765: I/DEBUG(2372): beade728 800a13f4 /system/lib/libdvm.so 02-09 04:02:24.765: I/DEBUG(2372): beade72c 004fffa4 02-09 04:02:24.765: I/DEBUG(2372): beade730 000000d0 02-09 04:02:24.765: I/DEBUG(2372): beade734 afd14985 /system/lib/libc.so 02-09 04:02:24.765: I/DEBUG(2372): beade738 df002777 02-09 04:02:24.765: I/DEBUG(2372): beade73c e3a070ad 02-09 04:02:24.765: I/DEBUG(2372): #00 beade740 00016810 [heap] 02-09 04:02:24.765: I/DEBUG(2372): beade744 80049f45 /system/lib/libdvm.so 02-09 04:02:24.765: I/DEBUG(2372): #01 beade748 000000d0 02-09 04:02:24.765: I/DEBUG(2372): beade74c 000fc750 [heap] 02-09 04:02:24.765: I/DEBUG(2372): beade750 0050007c 02-09 04:02:24.765: I/DEBUG(2372): beade754 00000004 02-09 04:02:24.765: I/DEBUG(2372): beade758 00016814 [heap] 02-09 04:02:24.765: I/DEBUG(2372): beade75c afd0c9c3 /system/lib/libc.so 02-09 04:02:24.765: I/DEBUG(2372): beade760 42978eee /system/framework/core.odex 02-09 04:02:24.765: I/DEBUG(2372): beade764 42978efe /system/framework/core.odex 02-09 04:02:24.765: I/DEBUG(2372): beade768 410e9e18 /dev/ashmem/mspace/dalvik-heap/0 (deleted) 02-09 04:02:24.765: I/DEBUG(2372): beade76c 00000000 02-09 04:02:24.765: I/DEBUG(2372): beade770 00000004 02-09 04:02:24.765: I/DEBUG(2372): beade774 8006799d /system/lib/libdvm.so 02-09 04:02:25.129: I/DEBUG(2372): dumpmesg > /data/log/dumpstate_app_native.log 02-09 04:02:25.218: I/dumpstate(3355): begin 02-09 04:02:25.253: I/dalvikvm(2495): threadid=3: reacting to signal 3 02-09 04:02:25.276: I/dalvikvm(2495): Wrote stack traces to '/data/anr/traces.txt' 02-09 04:02:25.444: I/dalvikvm(2593): threadid=3: reacting to signal 3 02-09 04:02:25.452: I/dalvikvm(2593): Wrote stack traces to '/data/anr/traces.txt' 02-09 04:02:25.460: I/dalvikvm(2598): threadid=3: reacting to signal 3 02-09 04:02:25.464: I/dalvikvm(2598): Wrote stack traces to '/data/anr/traces.txt' 02-09 04:02:25.480: I/dalvikvm(2601): threadid=3: reacting to signal 3 02-09 04:02:25.487: I/dalvikvm(2601): Wrote stack traces to '/data/anr/traces.txt' 02-09 04:02:25.503: I/dalvikvm(2655): threadid=3: reacting to signal 3 02-09 04:02:25.526: I/dalvikvm(2655): Wrote stack traces to '/data/anr/traces.txt' 02-09 04:02:25.703: I/dalvikvm(2676): threadid=3: reacting to signal 3 02-09 04:02:25.851: I/dalvikvm(2708): threadid=3: reacting to signal 3 02-09 04:02:25.855: I/dalvikvm(2676): Wrote stack traces to '/data/anr/traces.txt' 02-09 04:02:25.866: I/dalvikvm(2746): threadid=3: reacting to signal 3 02-09 04:02:25.886: I/dalvikvm(2746): Wrote stack traces to '/data/anr/traces.txt' 02-09 04:02:25.901: I/dalvikvm(2753): threadid=3: reacting to signal 3 02-09 04:02:25.905: I/dalvikvm(2753): Wrote stack traces to '/data/anr/traces.txt' 02-09 04:02:26.097: I/dalvikvm(2795): threadid=3: reacting to signal 3 02-09 04:02:26.315: I/dalvikvm(2850): threadid=3: reacting to signal 3 am using jaxab-xalan-1.5 jar in referenced libraries. How to avoid this Linearalloc exceeded capacity error ? Thanks

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  • Can't get Ubuntu 11.10 working on my VirtualBox running on Mac OsX 10.6.8

    - by stack-o-frankie
    I installed the Guest Additions, installed the isight-firmware-tools by using the AppleUSBVideoSupport file but I still can't get access to the iSight webcam. When I launch vlc v4l2:///dev/video0 I get the following errors: Blocked: call to unsetenv("DBUS_ACTIVATION_ADDRESS") Blocked: call to unsetenv("DBUS_ACTIVATION_BUS_TYPE") [0x92d492c] main libvlc: Running vlc with the default interface. Use 'cvlc' to use vlc without interface. Blocked: call to setlocale(6, "") Blocked: call to setlocale(6, "") (process:2922): Gtk-WARNING **: Locale not supported by C library. Using the fallback 'C' locale. (vlc:2922): Gtk-WARNING **: Unable to locate theme engine in module_path: "pixmap", (vlc:2922): Gtk-WARNING **: Unable to locate theme engine in module_path: "pixmap", (vlc:2922): Gtk-WARNING **: Unable to locate theme engine in module_path: "pixmap", (vlc:2922): Gtk-WARNING **: Unable to locate theme engine in module_path: "pixmap", [0x963287c] v4l2 demux error: VIDIOC_STREAMON failed [0x963287c] v4l2 demux error: cannot set input (Device or resource busy) [0x96430a4] v4l2 access error: VIDIOC_STREAMON failed [0x96430a4] v4l2 access error: cannot set input (Device or resource busy) [0x9371104] main input error: open of `v4l2:///dev/video0' failed: (null) Any clue?

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  • If I drop my clustered PK and add a new one, what order will my rows be in?

    - by stack
    In SQL Server, I'm looking at TableA, which currently has a uniqueidentifier clustered primary key. The GUID has no meaning in any context. (I'll give you a second to clean up your keyboard and monitor and set down the soda.) I'd like to drop that primary key and add a new unique integer primary key to the table. My question is this: when I drop the index, modify the column from uniqueidentifier to int, and add the new clustered unique primary key to the modified column, will the new PK values be in the order of insertion into the table, or will they be in some other order? Is this the right way to go here? Will this work? (I'm kind of a noobkin with regard to table creation/modification.)

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  • How is the MAC address on a computer determined?

    - by Zero Stack
    While imaging some computers today, I started to wonder... what if two LAN MAC addresses on two different computers matched?... That would cause some problems. I later came to understand that the MAC address' 48-bit address space contains potentially 248 or 281,474,976,710,656 possible MAC addresses. [ in other-words, a lot of networking devices ] How are these MAC addresses determined? Will we ever run out of them? ( I know the second question is speculation, but there are a lot of devices that require a mac addresses...) Do MAC addresses get recycled?

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  • Thrift,.NET,Cassandra - Is this is right combination?

    - by Vadi
    I've been evaluating technology stack for developing a social network based application. Below are the stack I think could well suitable for this application type of application: GUI -- ASP.NET MVC, Flash (Flex) Business Services -- Thrift based services One of the advantage of using Thrift is to solve scaling problems that will come in future when the user base increases rapidly. All the business logic can be exposed as a services using REST,JSON etc., This also allows us to go with C++ or Erlang based services when situation demands. Database -- mySQL, CasSandara mySQL can be used for storing the data which needs to be persisted. Cassandara will be used for storing global identifiers to the persisted data. Since Cassandara is also very good at scaling by introducing more nodes this will leverage Thrift based services as well. And also there is native support between Cassandara and Thrift Cache Server -- Memcached Any requests from Business Services will only talk to Memcached if any non-dirty data is required, otherwise there will be some background jobs that will invalidate the cache from database. The question is: Is the Thrift which is open-sourced one is production-ready? Is it the right stack for services layer to choose when the application (GUI) is primarily gets developed in ASP.NET and DB is mysql? Is there any other caveats that anyone here experienced? One of the main objective behind this stack is to easily scale up with more nodes and also this helps us to use Linux boxes, it will reduce our cost significantly Thoughts please ..

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  • EXC_BAD_ACCESS NSUrlConnection

    - by Lars
    Hi all, i got an EXC_BAD_ACCESS when i perform the last line of the function (webData). -(void)requestSoap{ NSString *requestUrl = @"http://www.website.com/webservice.php"; NSString *soapMessage = @"the soap message"; //website and soapmessage are valid in original code. NSError **error; NSURLResponse *response; //Convert parameter string to url NSURL *url = [NSURL URLWithString:requestUrl]; NSMutableURLRequest *theRequest = [NSMutableURLRequest requestWithURL:url cachePolicy:NSURLRequestReloadIgnoringCacheData timeoutInterval:10]; NSString *msgLength = [NSString stringWithFormat:@"%d", [soapMessage length]]; //Create an XML message for webservice [theRequest addValue: @"text/xml; charset=utf-8" forHTTPHeaderField:@"Content-Type"]; [theRequest addValue: msgLength forHTTPHeaderField:@"Content-Length"]; [theRequest setHTTPMethod:@"POST"]; [theRequest setHTTPBody: [soapMessage dataUsingEncoding:NSUTF8StringEncoding]]; NSData *webData = [NSURLConnection sendSynchronousRequest:theRequest returningResponse:&response error:error]; } I tried not to release a thing, because what i read on the net is it's almost always a memory thing. When i debug the code (NSZombieEnabled = YES) this is what i get: [Session started at 2010-05-31 15:56:13 +0200.] GNU gdb 6.3.50-20050815 (Apple version gdb-1461.2) (Fri Mar 5 04:43:10 UTC 2010) Copyright 2004 Free Software Foundation, Inc. GDB is free software, covered by the GNU General Public License, and you are welcome to change it and/or distribute copies of it under certain conditions. Type "show copying" to see the conditions. There is absolutely no warranty for GDB. Type "show warranty" for details. This GDB was configured as "x86_64-apple-darwin".sharedlibrary apply-load-rules all Attaching to process 19856. test(19856) malloc: recording malloc stacks to disk using standard recorder test(19856) malloc: enabling scribbling to detect mods to free blocks test(19856) malloc: process 19832 no longer exists, stack logs deleted from /tmp/stack-logs.19832.test.w9Ek4L.index test(19856) malloc: stack logs being written into /tmp/stack-logs.19856.test.URRpQF.index Program received signal: “EXC_BAD_ACCESS”. Does anybody have a clue?? Thanks a lot! Lars

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  • MPI hypercube broadcast error

    - by luvieere
    I've got a one to all broadcast method for a hypercube, written using MPI: one2allbcast(int n, int rank, void *data, int count, MPI_Datatype dtype) { MPI_Status status; int mask, partner; int mask2 = ((1 << n) - 1) ^ (1 << n-1); for (mask = (1 << n-1); mask; mask >>= 1, mask2 >>= 1) { if (rank & mask2 == 0) { partner = rank ^ mask; if (rank & mask) MPI_Recv(data, count, dtype, partner, 99, MPI_COMM_WORLD, &status); else MPI_Send(data, count, dtype, partner, 99, MPI_COMM_WORLD); } } } Upon calling it from main: int main( int argc, char **argv ) { int n, rank; MPI_Init (&argc, &argv); MPI_Comm_size (MPI_COMM_WORLD, &n); MPI_Comm_rank (MPI_COMM_WORLD, &rank); one2allbcast(floor(log(n) / log (2)), rank, "message", sizeof(message), MPI_CHAR); MPI_Finalize(); return 0; } compiling and executing on 8 nodes, I receive a series of errors reporting that processes 1, 3, 5, 7 were stopped before the point of receiving any data: MPI_Recv: process in local group is dead (rank 1, MPI_COMM_WORLD) Rank (1, MPI_COMM_WORLD): Call stack within LAM: Rank (1, MPI_COMM_WORLD): - MPI_Recv() Rank (1, MPI_COMM_WORLD): - main() MPI_Recv: process in local group is dead (rank 3, MPI_COMM_WORLD) Rank (3, MPI_COMM_WORLD): Call stack within LAM: Rank (3, MPI_COMM_WORLD): - MPI_Recv() Rank (3, MPI_COMM_WORLD): - main() MPI_Recv: process in local group is dead (rank 5, MPI_COMM_WORLD) Rank (5, MPI_COMM_WORLD): Call stack within LAM: Rank (5, MPI_COMM_WORLD): - MPI_Recv() Rank (5, MPI_COMM_WORLD): - main() MPI_Recv: process in local group is dead (rank 7, MPI_COMM_WORLD) Rank (7, MPI_COMM_WORLD): Call stack within LAM: Rank (7, MPI_COMM_WORLD): - MPI_Recv() Rank (7, MPI_COMM_WORLD): - main() Where do I go wrong?

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  • Publishing my Website to my Local Disk Causes Exceptions to show Paths including my Local Disk

    - by coffeeaddict
    I've published my website many times. But didn't think about this though until I came across this issue. So I decided to publish my WAP project to a local folder on my C drive first. Then used FTP to upload it to my shared host on discountasp.net. I noticed during runtime that the stack trace was referencing that local folder still and erroring out. Anyone know what config settings are affected when publishing? Obviously something is still pointing to my local C drive and I've searched my entire solution and don't see why. Here's the runtime error I get when my code tries to run in discountasp.net's web server Cannot write into the public directory - check permissions Description: An unhandled exception occurred during the execution of the current web request. Please review the stack trace for more information about the error and where it originated in the code. Exception Details: ScrewTurn.Wiki.PluginFramework.InvalidConfigurationException: Cannot write into the public directory - check permissions Source Error: An unhandled exception was generated during the execution of the current web request. Information regarding the origin and location of the exception can be identified using the exception stack trace below. Stack Trace: [InvalidConfigurationException: Cannot write into the public directory - check permissions] ScrewTurn.Wiki.SettingsStorageProvider.Init(IHostV30 host, String config) in C:\www\Wiki\Screwturn3_0_2_509\Core\SettingsStorageProvider.cs:90 ScrewTurn.Wiki.StartupTools.Startup() in C:\www\Wiki\Screwturn3_0_2_509\Core\StartupTools.cs:69 ScrewTurn.Wiki.Global.Application_BeginRequest(Object sender, EventArgs e) in C:\www\Wiki\Screwturn3_0_2_509\WebApplication\Global.asax.cs:29 System.Web.SyncEventExecutionStep.System.Web.HttpApplication.IExecutionStep.Execute() +68 System.Web.HttpApplication.ExecuteStep(IExecutionStep step, Boolean& completedSynchronously) +75 Discountasp says it's not a permission issue but obviously it is. I think /Wiki should work...but it's not. Here's my site viewed in FTP on discountasp.net's server:

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  • Parsing a string, Grammar file.

    - by defn
    How would I separate the below string into its parts. What I need to separate is each < Word including the angle brackets from the rest of the string. So in the below case I would end up with several strings 1. "I have to break up with you because " 2. "< reason " (without the spaces) 3. " . But Let's still " 4. "< disclaimer " 5. " ." I have to break up with you because <reason> . But let's still <disclaimer> . below is what I currently have (its ugly...) boolean complete = false; int begin = 0; int end = 0; while (complete == false) { if (s.charAt(end) == '<'){ stack.add(new Terminal(s.substring(begin, end))); begin = end; } else if (s.charAt(end) == '>') { stack.add(new NonTerminal(s.substring(begin, end))); begin = end; end++; } else if (end == s.length()){ if (isTerminal(getSubstring(s, begin, end))){ stack.add(new Terminal(s.substring(begin, end))); } else { stack.add(new NonTerminal(s.substring(begin, end))); } complete = true; } end++;

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  • How much business logic belongs in RIA services layer?

    - by jkohlhepp
    I have been experimenting recently with Silverlight, RIA Services, and Entity Framework using .NET 4.0. I'm trying to figure out if that stack makes sense for use in any of my upcoming projects. It certainly seems like these technologies can be very productive for developing applications, but I'm struggling to decide how an application on top of this stack should be architected. The main issue I have is that in most of the demos I've seen most of the business logic ends up as DataAnnotations and custom validations in the RIA Services domain service class. This seems inappropriate to me. I view the domain service as basically a glorified web service that happens to make it easy to push information to the client. But most of what I've seen seems to orient the domain service as the main source of business logic in the application. So, my questions: What is the best location for business logic (rules, validations, behaviors, authorization) in an application using this stack? Are there any guidelines published at an architectural level for using this stack? My questions pertain to large, complex, and long-lived applications. Obviously for an application of only a few screens this is less of a concern. Edit: Another thing I meant to mention is that obviously you can make the domain service class stupid, but then you lose a lot of the automagic entity information (e.g. validations) being pushed to the client. And then if you lose that is there any point to using RIA services?

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  • Silverlight and WCF Ria Services

    - by Flex_Addicted
    Hi guys, I've created a new Silverlight 3 Business Application with VS 2008. The creation has completed correctly. When I try to open the xaml, it opens but in meanwhile this error is shown: Failed to load metadata assembly System.Windows.Controls.Data.Input.Design, Version=2.0.5.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=31bf3856ad364e35. Exception message: Unable to load one or more of the requested types. Retrieve the LoaderExceptions property for more information.. Stack Trace: at System.Reflection.Module._GetTypesInternal(StackCrawlMark& stackMark) at System.Reflection.Assembly.GetTypes() at MS.Internal.Package.MetadataLoader.RegisterDesignTimeMetadata(Assembly assembly, LogCallback logger)An exception of type ArgumentNullException was caught when calling IRegisterMetadata on type System.Windows.Controls.Data.Input.VisualStudio.Design.MetadataRegistration. Exception Message: Value cannot be null. Parameter name: type. Stack Trace: at Microsoft.Windows.Design.Metadata.AttributeTableBuilder.AddCallback(Type type, AttributeCallback callback) at System.Windows.Controls.Data.Input.VisualStudio.Design.MetadataRegistration.AddAttributes(AttributeTableBuilder builder) at System.Windows.Controls.Design.Common.MetadataRegistrationBase.BuildAttributeTable() at System.Windows.Controls.Data.Input.VisualStudio.Design.MetadataRegistration.Register() at MS.Internal.Package.MetadataLoader.RegisterDesignTimeMetadata(Assembly assembly, LogCallback logger)Failed to load metadata assembly System.Windows.Controls.Design, Version=2.0.5.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=31bf3856ad364e35. Exception message: Unable to load one or more of the requested types. Retrieve the LoaderExceptions property for more information.. Stack Trace: at System.Reflection.Module._GetTypesInternal(StackCrawlMark& stackMark) at System.Reflection.Assembly.GetTypes() at MS.Internal.Package.MetadataLoader.RegisterDesignTimeMetadata(Assembly assembly, LogCallback logger)Failed to load metadata assembly System.Windows.Controls.Navigation.Design, Version=2.0.5.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=31bf3856ad364e35. Exception message: Unable to load one or more of the requested types. Retrieve the LoaderExceptions property for more information.. Stack Trace: at System.Reflection.Module._GetTypesInternal(StackCrawlMark& stackMark) at System.Reflection.Assembly.GetTypes() at MS.Internal.Package.MetadataLoader.RegisterDesignTimeMetadata(Assembly assembly, LogCallback logger) Why? Any solutions? Thank you in advance.

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  • Maximizing the number of true concurrent / parrallel http requests in Silverlight

    - by Clems
    Hi all. I'm using SL 4 beta and my app needs to do a lot of small http requests to the server. I believe that when exceeding the number of allowed concurrent requests, the subsequent requests are put in a queue. I am also aware that SL 4 has both a http browser stack and a http client stack, with both different limit in terms of the number of concurrent requests. Let's say call those limits MAX_BROWSER and MAX_CLIENT. Also I think I read somewhere that the number of concurrent requests is limited per domain, not overall. But I'm sure if this applies to both the http client stack. That means that you CAN have MAX_BROWSER requests to domain1.com AND MAX_BROWSER requests to domain2.com at the same time. And I even believe that sub domains are considered different so you can also have MAX_BROWSER requests to domain1.com AND MAX_BROWSER requests to sub.domain1.com at the same time. I have ownership of the services and domain names so I could easily setup sub domains for my services. Given those considerations I'm trying to optimize the number of concurrent http requests to my server. Here are few questions ? Is is possible to use both stack at the same time ? Is the subdomain/domain story true for both stacks ? None ? If so that would mean that I could potentially have a number of concurrent requests equal to : (MAX_BROWSER + MAX_CLIENT) * NUMBER_OF_DOMAINS which would be fairly good. Is this correct ? I'm kind of sharing my morning thoughts here, hoping somebody has experimented with those things. Thank you.

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  • How do interpreters functions written in the class C++ in the main

    - by T_Geek
    Hi I'm working on a project about Data structures. In the first , I wrote everything in main but it sounds like C . But as I learned, I tried to thinkk OOP and do as little as possible in my main() methods. I've implemented some opertation in my class like add,delet,find.it's too easy to implement its . class ARB { private: struct BT { int data; BT *l; BT *r; }; struct BT *p; public ARB(); ~ARB(); void del(int n); void add(int n); }; void ARB::del(int num) { //The code ,don't care about it }; main() { // BTR T; T.add(3); T.add(5); }; But I arrived to the big program How can I define a methode which have to use a binary tree and to get a stack STACK ARB::MyFunct(BT* p) { // The code don't care about it } How can I apply it in the main programme main() { // BT T; T.add(3); T.add(5); STACK S; BT* p S=T.MyFunct(p); // error C2664 cannot convert parametre 1 }; **mention :I implement STACK class

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  • Orphan IBM JVM process

    - by Nicholas Key
    Hi people, I have this issue about orphan IBM JVM process being created in the process tree: For example: C:\Program Files\IBM\WebSphere\AppServer\bin>wsadmin -lang jython -f "C:\Hello.py" Hello.py has the simple implementation: import time i = 0 while (1): i = i + 1 print "Hello World " + str(i) time.sleep(3.0) My machine has such JVM information: C:\Program Files\WebSphere\java\bin>java -verbose:sizes -version -Xmca32K RAM class segment increment -Xmco128K ROM class segment increment -Xmns0K initial new space size -Xmnx0K maximum new space size -Xms4M initial memory size -Xmos4M initial old space size -Xmox1624995K maximum old space size -Xmx1624995K memory maximum -Xmr16K remembered set size -Xlp4K large page size available large page sizes: 4K 4M -Xmso256K operating system thread stack size -Xiss2K java thread stack initial size -Xssi16K java thread stack increment -Xss256K java thread stack maximum size java version "1.6.0" Java(TM) SE Runtime Environment (build pwi3260sr6ifix-20091015_01(SR6+152211+155930+156106)) IBM J9 VM (build 2.4, JRE 1.6.0 IBM J9 2.4 Windows Server 2003 x86-32 jvmwi3260sr6-20091001_43491 (JIT enabled, AOT enabled) J9VM - 20091001_043491 JIT - r9_20090902_1330ifx1 GC - 20090817_AA) JCL - 20091006_01 While the program is running, I tried to kill it and subsequently I found an orphan IBM JVM process in the process tree. Is there a way to fix this issue? Why is there an orphan process in the first place? Is there something wrong with my code? I really don't believe that my simplistic code is wrongly implemented. Any suggestions?

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  • Struts 2 how to display messages saved in a Interceptor which would redirec to another action?

    - by mui13
    in my interceptor, if user doesn't have enough right, there would be a warn message: public String intercept(ActionInvocation invocation) throws Exception { ActionContext actionContext = invocation.getInvocationContext(); Map<String, Object> sessionMap = actionContext.getSession(); User loginUser = (User) sessionMap.get("user"); Object action = invocation.getAction(); if (loginUser != null && loginUser.getRole().getId() != Constant.AUTHORITY_ADMIN) { ((ValidationAware) action).addFieldError("user.authority", ((DefaultAction) action).getText("user.action.authority.not.enough")); return DefaultAction.HOME_PAGE; } return invocation.invoke(); } then, it would redirect to "HOME_PAGE" action, if success, display information in the jsp. So how to display the warn message? i have used two interceptors configed in strust.xml, for admin right requirment: <interceptor-stack name="authorityStack"> <interceptor-ref name="authority" /> <interceptor-ref name="defaultStack" /> <interceptor-ref name="store"> <param name="operationMode">STORE</param> </interceptor-ref> </interceptor-stack> default is: <interceptor-stack name="default"> <interceptor-ref name="login" /> <interceptor-ref name="defaultStack" /> <interceptor-ref name="store"> <param name="operationMode">AUTOMATIC</param> </interceptor-ref> </interceptor-stack>

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  • Are programming languages and methods inefficient? (assembler and C knowledge needed)

    - by b-gen-jack-o-neill
    Hi, for a long time, I am thinking and studying output of C language compiler in assembler form, as well as CPU architecture. I know this may be silly to you, but it seems to me that something is very ineffective. Please, don´t be angry if I am wrong, and there is some reason I do not see for all these principles. I will be very glad if you tell me why is it designed this way. I actually truly believe I am wrong, I know the genius minds of people which get PCs together knew a reason to do so. What exactly, do you ask? I´ll tell you right away, I use C as a example: 1: Stack local scope memory allocation: So, typical local memory allocation uses stack. Just copy esp to ebp and than allocate all the memory via ebp. OK, I would understand this if you explicitly need allocate RAM by default stack values, but if I do understand it correctly, modern OS use paging as a translation layer between application and physical RAM, when address you desire is further translated before reaching actual RAM byte. So why don´t just say 0x00000000 is int a,0x00000004 is int b and so? And access them just by mov 0x00000000,#10? Because you wont actually access memory blocks 0x00000000 and 0x00000004 but those your OS set the paging tables to. Actually, since memory allocation by ebp and esp use indirect addressing, "my" way would be even faster. 2: Variable allocation duplicity: When you run application, Loader load its code into RAM. When you create variable, or string, compiler generates code that pushes these values on the top o stack when created in main. So there is actual instruction for do so, and that actual number in memory. So, there are 2 entries of the same value in RAM. One in form of instruction, second in form of actual bytes in the RAM. But why? Why not to just when declaring variable count at which memory block it would be, than when used, just insert this memory location?

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  • What does the windbg command "kd" do?

    - by Oskar
    I ran kd by mistake and got some output that inteerested me, a reference to a line of code in my module that I can't see on the call stack of any thread. The lines weren't the beginnning of the method so I don't think the reference is to a function pointer, but possibly the result of an exception being stored in memory??? Of course, that happens to be what I'm looking for... Update: The stack trace of the exception is: 0:000> kb *** Stack trace for last set context - .thread/.cxr resets it ChildEBP RetAddr Args to Child 0174f168 734ea84f 2cb9e950 00000000 2cb9e950 kernel32!LoadTimeZoneInformation+0x2b 0174f1c4 734ead92 00000022 00000001 000685d0 msvbvm60! RUN_INSTMGR::ExecuteInitTerm+0x178 0174f1f8 734ea9ee 00000000 0000002f 2dbc2abc msvbvm60! RUN_INSTMGR::CreateObjInstanceWithParts+0x1e4 0174f278 7350414e 2cb9e96c 00000000 0174f2f0 msvbvm60! RUN_INSTMGR::CreateObjInstance+0x14d 0174f2e4 734fa071 00000000 2cb9e96c 0174f2fc msvbvm60!RcmConstructObjectInstance+0x75 0174f31c 00976ef1 2cb9e950 00591bc0 0174fddc msvbvm60!__vbaNew+0x21 and into our code (create a new Form derived class) the dds output: 0:000> dds esp-0x40 esp+0x100 0174f05c 00000000 0174f060 00000000 0174f064 00000000 0174f068 00000000 0174f06c 00000000 0174f070 00000000 0174f074 00000000 0174f078 00000000 0174f07c 00000000 0174f080 00000000 0174f084 00000000 0174f088 00000000 0174f08c 00000000 0174f090 00000000 0174f094 00000000 0174f098 00000000 0174f09c 007f4f9b ourDll!formDerivedClass::Form_Initialize+0x10b [C:\Buildbox\formDerivedClass.frm @ 1452] etc which seems to indicate that Initialize is being called even though it isn't on the stack trace of either this exception or any of the threads. As suggested, it might all be a mismatch between pdbs and dlls, but it seems a coincidence that we end up in the right classes and methods

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  • Tracking down origin of I/O in multi-process server

    - by Craig Ringer
    I'm currently trying to track down some phantom I/O in a PostgreSQL build I'm testing. It's a multi-process server and it isn't simple to associate disk I/O back to a particular back-end and query. I thought Linux's perf tool would be ideal for this, but I'm struggling to capture block I/O performance counter metrics and associate them with user-space activity. It's easy to record block I/O requests and completions with, eg: sudo perf record -g -T -u postgres -e 'block:block_rq_*' and the user-space pid is recorded, but there's no kernel or user-space stack captured, or ability to snapshot bits of the user-space process's heap (say, query text) etc. So while you have the pid, you don't know what the process was doing at that point. Just perf script output like: postgres 7462 [002] 301125.113632: block:block_rq_issue: 8,0 W 0 () 208078848 + 1024 [postgres] If I add the -g flag to perf record it'll take snapshots of the kernel stack, but doesn't capture user-space state for perf events captured in the kernel. The user-space stack only goes up to the entry-point from userspace, like LWLockRelease, LWLockAcquire, memcpy (mmap'd IO), __GI___libc_write, etc. So. Any tips? Being able to capture a snapshot of the user-space stack in response to kernel events would be ideal.

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  • Adobe Air, packaged install fails with my trace routine... how come?

    - by artie scie
    I cobbled together some code from here and there for a trace I like... it generates an error to get a stack trace and picks out the traced routine name, I like that detail in the trace log. Problem: it fails in an installed AIR file. I wonder why? I don't expect it to do anything as is... just, I'd prefer it not cause the program to fail! tx artie enter code here static public function XTRACE( ... traceArgs ):void { try { throw new Error(); // make a stack } catch (e:Error) { var stack:String = e.getStackTrace(); var frames:Array = stack.split("\n"); var myFrame:String = String(frames[2]); myFrame = myFrame.replace("\t", ""); // "at " can be followed by some part of the package // you don't want to see. E.g., if your code is all in // com.foo.bar, you can put "at com.foo.bar." so as not // to crowd the display myFrame = myFrame.substr("at ".length); myFrame = myFrame.substring(0, myFrame.indexOf("[")); var now:Date = new Date(); trace(new Date().toLocaleTimeString() + ":" + myFrame + ": " + traceArgs.join(" ")); } }

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  • Are programming languages and methods ineffective? (assembler and C knowledge needed)

    - by b-gen-jack-o-neill
    Hi, for a long time, I am thinking and studying output of C language compiler in asemlber form, as well as CPU architecture. I know this may be silly to you, but it seems to me that something is very ineffective. Please, don´t be angry if I am wrong, and there is some reason I do not see for all these principles. I will be very glad if you tell me why is it designed this way. I actually trully believe I am wrong, I know the genius minds of people which get PCs together knew a reason to do so. What exactly, do you ask? I´ll tell you right away, I use C as a example: 1, Stack local scope memory allocation: So, typical local memory allocation uses stack. Just copy esp to ebp and than allocate all the memory via ebp. OK, I would understand this if you explicitly need allocate RAM by default stack values, but if I do understand it correctly, modern OS use paging as a translation layer between application and physical RAM, when adress you desire is further translated before reaching actuall RAM byte. So why don´t just say 0x00000000 is int a,0x00000004 is int b and so? And access them just by mov 0x00000000,#10? Becouse you wont actually access memory blocks 0x00000000 and 0x00000004 but those your OS set the paging tables to. Actually, since memory allocation by ebp and esp use indirect adressing, "my" way would be even faster. 2, Variable allocation duplicitly: When you run aaplication, Loader load its code into RAM. When you create variable, or string, compiler generates code that pushes these values on the top o stack when created in main. So there is actuall instruction for do so, and that actuall number in memory. So, there are 2 entries of the same value in RAM. One in fomr of instruction, second in form of actuall bytes in the RAM. But why? Why not to just when declaring variable count at which memory block it would be, than when used, just insert this memory location?

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  • C#/.NET Fundamentals: Choosing the Right Collection Class

    - by James Michael Hare
    The .NET Base Class Library (BCL) has a wide array of collection classes at your disposal which make it easy to manage collections of objects. While it's great to have so many classes available, it can be daunting to choose the right collection to use for any given situation. As hard as it may be, choosing the right collection can be absolutely key to the performance and maintainability of your application! This post will look at breaking down any confusion between each collection and the situations in which they excel. We will be spending most of our time looking at the System.Collections.Generic namespace, which is the recommended set of collections. The Generic Collections: System.Collections.Generic namespace The generic collections were introduced in .NET 2.0 in the System.Collections.Generic namespace. This is the main body of collections you should tend to focus on first, as they will tend to suit 99% of your needs right up front. It is important to note that the generic collections are unsynchronized. This decision was made for performance reasons because depending on how you are using the collections its completely possible that synchronization may not be required or may be needed on a higher level than simple method-level synchronization. Furthermore, concurrent read access (all writes done at beginning and never again) is always safe, but for concurrent mixed access you should either synchronize the collection or use one of the concurrent collections. So let's look at each of the collections in turn and its various pros and cons, at the end we'll summarize with a table to help make it easier to compare and contrast the different collections. The Associative Collection Classes Associative collections store a value in the collection by providing a key that is used to add/remove/lookup the item. Hence, the container associates the value with the key. These collections are most useful when you need to lookup/manipulate a collection using a key value. For example, if you wanted to look up an order in a collection of orders by an order id, you might have an associative collection where they key is the order id and the value is the order. The Dictionary<TKey,TVale> is probably the most used associative container class. The Dictionary<TKey,TValue> is the fastest class for associative lookups/inserts/deletes because it uses a hash table under the covers. Because the keys are hashed, the key type should correctly implement GetHashCode() and Equals() appropriately or you should provide an external IEqualityComparer to the dictionary on construction. The insert/delete/lookup time of items in the dictionary is amortized constant time - O(1) - which means no matter how big the dictionary gets, the time it takes to find something remains relatively constant. This is highly desirable for high-speed lookups. The only downside is that the dictionary, by nature of using a hash table, is unordered, so you cannot easily traverse the items in a Dictionary in order. The SortedDictionary<TKey,TValue> is similar to the Dictionary<TKey,TValue> in usage but very different in implementation. The SortedDictionary<TKey,TValye> uses a binary tree under the covers to maintain the items in order by the key. As a consequence of sorting, the type used for the key must correctly implement IComparable<TKey> so that the keys can be correctly sorted. The sorted dictionary trades a little bit of lookup time for the ability to maintain the items in order, thus insert/delete/lookup times in a sorted dictionary are logarithmic - O(log n). Generally speaking, with logarithmic time, you can double the size of the collection and it only has to perform one extra comparison to find the item. Use the SortedDictionary<TKey,TValue> when you want fast lookups but also want to be able to maintain the collection in order by the key. The SortedList<TKey,TValue> is the other ordered associative container class in the generic containers. Once again SortedList<TKey,TValue>, like SortedDictionary<TKey,TValue>, uses a key to sort key-value pairs. Unlike SortedDictionary, however, items in a SortedList are stored as an ordered array of items. This means that insertions and deletions are linear - O(n) - because deleting or adding an item may involve shifting all items up or down in the list. Lookup time, however is O(log n) because the SortedList can use a binary search to find any item in the list by its key. So why would you ever want to do this? Well, the answer is that if you are going to load the SortedList up-front, the insertions will be slower, but because array indexing is faster than following object links, lookups are marginally faster than a SortedDictionary. Once again I'd use this in situations where you want fast lookups and want to maintain the collection in order by the key, and where insertions and deletions are rare. The Non-Associative Containers The other container classes are non-associative. They don't use keys to manipulate the collection but rely on the object itself being stored or some other means (such as index) to manipulate the collection. The List<T> is a basic contiguous storage container. Some people may call this a vector or dynamic array. Essentially it is an array of items that grow once its current capacity is exceeded. Because the items are stored contiguously as an array, you can access items in the List<T> by index very quickly. However inserting and removing in the beginning or middle of the List<T> are very costly because you must shift all the items up or down as you delete or insert respectively. However, adding and removing at the end of a List<T> is an amortized constant operation - O(1). Typically List<T> is the standard go-to collection when you don't have any other constraints, and typically we favor a List<T> even over arrays unless we are sure the size will remain absolutely fixed. The LinkedList<T> is a basic implementation of a doubly-linked list. This means that you can add or remove items in the middle of a linked list very quickly (because there's no items to move up or down in contiguous memory), but you also lose the ability to index items by position quickly. Most of the time we tend to favor List<T> over LinkedList<T> unless you are doing a lot of adding and removing from the collection, in which case a LinkedList<T> may make more sense. The HashSet<T> is an unordered collection of unique items. This means that the collection cannot have duplicates and no order is maintained. Logically, this is very similar to having a Dictionary<TKey,TValue> where the TKey and TValue both refer to the same object. This collection is very useful for maintaining a collection of items you wish to check membership against. For example, if you receive an order for a given vendor code, you may want to check to make sure the vendor code belongs to the set of vendor codes you handle. In these cases a HashSet<T> is useful for super-quick lookups where order is not important. Once again, like in Dictionary, the type T should have a valid implementation of GetHashCode() and Equals(), or you should provide an appropriate IEqualityComparer<T> to the HashSet<T> on construction. The SortedSet<T> is to HashSet<T> what the SortedDictionary<TKey,TValue> is to Dictionary<TKey,TValue>. That is, the SortedSet<T> is a binary tree where the key and value are the same object. This once again means that adding/removing/lookups are logarithmic - O(log n) - but you gain the ability to iterate over the items in order. For this collection to be effective, type T must implement IComparable<T> or you need to supply an external IComparer<T>. Finally, the Stack<T> and Queue<T> are two very specific collections that allow you to handle a sequential collection of objects in very specific ways. The Stack<T> is a last-in-first-out (LIFO) container where items are added and removed from the top of the stack. Typically this is useful in situations where you want to stack actions and then be able to undo those actions in reverse order as needed. The Queue<T> on the other hand is a first-in-first-out container which adds items at the end of the queue and removes items from the front. This is useful for situations where you need to process items in the order in which they came, such as a print spooler or waiting lines. So that's the basic collections. Let's summarize what we've learned in a quick reference table.  Collection Ordered? Contiguous Storage? Direct Access? Lookup Efficiency Manipulate Efficiency Notes Dictionary No Yes Via Key Key: O(1) O(1) Best for high performance lookups. SortedDictionary Yes No Via Key Key: O(log n) O(log n) Compromise of Dictionary speed and ordering, uses binary search tree. SortedList Yes Yes Via Key Key: O(log n) O(n) Very similar to SortedDictionary, except tree is implemented in an array, so has faster lookup on preloaded data, but slower loads. List No Yes Via Index Index: O(1) Value: O(n) O(n) Best for smaller lists where direct access required and no ordering. LinkedList No No No Value: O(n) O(1) Best for lists where inserting/deleting in middle is common and no direct access required. HashSet No Yes Via Key Key: O(1) O(1) Unique unordered collection, like a Dictionary except key and value are same object. SortedSet Yes No Via Key Key: O(log n) O(log n) Unique ordered collection, like SortedDictionary except key and value are same object. Stack No Yes Only Top Top: O(1) O(1)* Essentially same as List<T> except only process as LIFO Queue No Yes Only Front Front: O(1) O(1) Essentially same as List<T> except only process as FIFO   The Original Collections: System.Collections namespace The original collection classes are largely considered deprecated by developers and by Microsoft itself. In fact they indicate that for the most part you should always favor the generic or concurrent collections, and only use the original collections when you are dealing with legacy .NET code. Because these collections are out of vogue, let's just briefly mention the original collection and their generic equivalents: ArrayList A dynamic, contiguous collection of objects. Favor the generic collection List<T> instead. Hashtable Associative, unordered collection of key-value pairs of objects. Favor the generic collection Dictionary<TKey,TValue> instead. Queue First-in-first-out (FIFO) collection of objects. Favor the generic collection Queue<T> instead. SortedList Associative, ordered collection of key-value pairs of objects. Favor the generic collection SortedList<T> instead. Stack Last-in-first-out (LIFO) collection of objects. Favor the generic collection Stack<T> instead. In general, the older collections are non-type-safe and in some cases less performant than their generic counterparts. Once again, the only reason you should fall back on these older collections is for backward compatibility with legacy code and libraries only. The Concurrent Collections: System.Collections.Concurrent namespace The concurrent collections are new as of .NET 4.0 and are included in the System.Collections.Concurrent namespace. These collections are optimized for use in situations where multi-threaded read and write access of a collection is desired. The concurrent queue, stack, and dictionary work much as you'd expect. The bag and blocking collection are more unique. Below is the summary of each with a link to a blog post I did on each of them. ConcurrentQueue Thread-safe version of a queue (FIFO). For more information see: C#/.NET Little Wonders: The ConcurrentStack and ConcurrentQueue ConcurrentStack Thread-safe version of a stack (LIFO). For more information see: C#/.NET Little Wonders: The ConcurrentStack and ConcurrentQueue ConcurrentBag Thread-safe unordered collection of objects. Optimized for situations where a thread may be bother reader and writer. For more information see: C#/.NET Little Wonders: The ConcurrentBag and BlockingCollection ConcurrentDictionary Thread-safe version of a dictionary. Optimized for multiple readers (allows multiple readers under same lock). For more information see C#/.NET Little Wonders: The ConcurrentDictionary BlockingCollection Wrapper collection that implement producers & consumers paradigm. Readers can block until items are available to read. Writers can block until space is available to write (if bounded). For more information see C#/.NET Little Wonders: The ConcurrentBag and BlockingCollection Summary The .NET BCL has lots of collections built in to help you store and manipulate collections of data. Understanding how these collections work and knowing in which situations each container is best is one of the key skills necessary to build more performant code. Choosing the wrong collection for the job can make your code much slower or even harder to maintain if you choose one that doesn’t perform as well or otherwise doesn’t exactly fit the situation. Remember to avoid the original collections and stick with the generic collections.  If you need concurrent access, you can use the generic collections if the data is read-only, or consider the concurrent collections for mixed-access if you are running on .NET 4.0 or higher.   Tweet Technorati Tags: C#,.NET,Collecitons,Generic,Concurrent,Dictionary,List,Stack,Queue,SortedList,SortedDictionary,HashSet,SortedSet

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