Mono Now Has .NET 3.0 Support and 3.5 Features like LINQ and Expression Trees

July 25th, 2008 by drawk

Great news!  Mono has made it to .NET 3.0 support and this includes some of the latest stuff like LINQ expressions.

I am pleased to announce that Mono C# compiler (gmcs) has now full C# 3.0 support. Most of the features has been available since Mono 1.2.6 release. However, with the upcoming Mono 2.0 release we will also support complex LINQ expressions and mainly expression trees which is fairly overlooked new feature with a lot of potential.

For anyone interested in compiling and running this LukeH’s slightly extreme LINQ example I have good news. It compiles on Mono and it runs as fast as on .NET.

REST Pattern

June 30th, 2008 by drawk

UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, IRVINE

Architectural Styles and
the Design of Network-based Software Architectures

DISSERTATION

submitted in partial satisfaction of the requirements for the degree of

DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY

in Information and Computer Science

by

Roy Thomas Fielding

2000

Dissertation Committee:
Professor Richard N. Taylor, Chair
Professor Mark S. Ackerman
Professor David S. Rosenblum

PDF Editions

1-column for viewing online
2-column for printing

Table of Contents

Dedication
Acknowledgments
Curriculum Vitae
Abstract of the Dissertation
Introduction
CHAPTER 1: Software Architecture
1.1 Run-time Abstraction
1.2 Elements
1.3 Configurations
1.4 Properties
1.5 Styles
1.6 Patterns and Pattern Languages
1.7 Views
1.8 Related Work
1.9 Summary
CHAPTER 2: Network-based Application Architectures
2.1 Scope
2.2 Evaluating the Design of Application Architectures
2.3 Architectural Properties of Key Interest
2.4 Summary
CHAPTER 3: Network-based Architectural Styles
3.1 Classification Methodology
3.2 Data-flow Styles
3.3 Replication Styles
3.4 Hierarchical Styles
3.5 Mobile Code Styles
3.6 Peer-to-Peer Styles
3.7 Limitations
3.8 Related Work
3.9 Summary
CHAPTER 4: Designing the Web Architecture: Problems and Insights
4.1 WWW Application Domain Requirements
4.2 Problem
4.3 Approach
4.4 Summary
CHAPTER 5: Representational State Transfer (REST)
5.1 Deriving REST
5.2 REST Architectural Elements
5.3 REST Architectural Views
5.4 Related Work
5.5 Summary
CHAPTER 6: Experience and Evaluation
6.1 Standardizing the Web
6.2 REST Applied to URI
6.3 REST Applied to HTTP
6.4 Technology Transfer
6.5 Architectural Lessons
6.6 Summary
Conclusions
References

List of Figures

Figure 5-1. Null Style
Figure 5-2. Client-Server
Figure 5-3. Client-Stateless-Server
Figure 5-4. Client-Cache-Stateless-Server
Figure 5-5. Early WWW Architecture Diagram
Figure 5-6. Uniform-Client-Cache-Stateless-Server
Figure 5-7. Uniform-Layered-Client-Cache-Stateless-Server
Figure 5-8. REST
Figure 5-9. REST Derivation by Style Constraints
Figure 5-10. Process View of a REST-based Architecture

List of Tables

Table 3-1. Evaluation of Data-flow Styles for Network-based Hypermedia
Table 3-2. Evaluation of Replication Styles for Network-based Hypermedia
Table 3-3. Evaluation of Hierarchical Styles for Network-based Hypermedia
Table 3-4. Evaluation of Mobile Code Styles for Network-based Hypermedia
Table 3-5. Evaluation of Peer-to-Peer Styles for Network-based Hypermedia
Table 3-6. Evaluation Summary
Table 5-1. REST Data Elements
Table 5-2. REST Connectors
Table 5-3. REST Components

[] © Roy Thomas Fielding, 2000. All rights reserved. [How to reference this work.]

Kepler a Lua Based Web Development Framework

June 22nd, 2008 by drawk

Lua is a very useful language for many things.  Extending core base code with modules and add-ons have made it very useful in game development but since Lua is table-based it can also be easily applied to web development. Well that time has come, See the Kepler Project for a nice collection of modules that make a good start for web development with Lua.

Kepler is an open source platform that brings the power of Lua to web development. There are a number of great Web development platforms out there but none balances portability, size, power and extensibility quite like Kepler does:

  • Being extremely portable and light means that it can be installed in very constrained devices as much as in providers that limit the amount of RAM and processing time for your scripts.
  • If you ever heard of the customization features of games such as World of Warcraft, think about all that power applied to web scripting.
  • Being extensible means both that we can extend the platform by adding new modules and that the users of the applications that you build can extend those applications using Lua.

Kepler was created by Fábrica Digital and PUC-Rio and is continuously being improved by a core team of commiters (see Dev Team) and lots of contributors (see Credits).

Kepler is free software and uses the MIT license model: it can be used for both academic and commercial purposes at absolutely no cost. See the Kepler License for more details.

Kepler is a platform that uses LuaRocks to offer Modules such as:

  • Page based and MVC XHTML generation (WSAPI, CGILua and Orbit)
  • SQL and XML processing (LuaSQL and LuaExpat)
  • Hash (MD5) and a pair crypt/decrypt
  • Zip files reading (LuaZip)

The Lua community is constantly contributing with more modules that can be used with the Kepler Architecture. Most of those modules are catalogued on LuaForge and new ones keep coming.

Unix installation

Please check UNIX Installation for a detailed view of how to install Kepler on Unix machines (including OSX).

Windows installation

Installing Kepler on Windows does not require any C compiler and should work on any Windows machine with internet access.

  1. Download LuaRocks and install it using install /SCRIPTS c:\luarocks\0.5.2
  2. Add the LuaRocks scripts dir to your system path (the same directory used in the /SCRIPTS parameter above)
  3. Install Kepler and Xavante using luarocks install kepler-xavante
  4. Configure everything using setup-kepler and following the instructions
  5. Use xavante to run Xavante as a tray bar application, or use ‘xavante_start’ to run Xavante from the command prompt. Another option is to run Kepler using CGI

Once Kepler is running, you might want to look at those pages:

The Kepler 1.1 Unix installer can be downloaded from its downloads page. Check the Installation page for more details and for the Windows installation instructions (using LuaRocks).

If you need the binaries for specifics Modules you can also get them from LuaForge, on the module respective project page.

Restlet RESTful Lightweight Kit for Java

June 20th, 2008 by drawk

Finally rest for all that boilerplate in Java.  At each turn of lots of Java frameworks you are bombarded with layers.  I felt this long ago and see it in the developers eyes that work with Java.  Java can be easy, it can be RESTful and it will make you look sharp.

Lightweight REST framework for Java

Do you want to embrace the architecture of the Web and benefit from its simplicity and scalability? Leverage our innovative REST engine and start blending your Web Sites and Web Services into uniform Web Applications!

Java is making things more lightweight now with lots of emerging kits that compete with other web ready platforms like Python, Ruby, .NET, PHP etc. After this many years things get bloated and need to be simplified.  I think this will start winning people over in this direction.

The Common Baseplane Method to Caching — memcached

May 27th, 2008 by drawk

If you have ever worked on a massively high trafficked website, you know that cache is very important to keeping the server count down and being a superhero to your database servers. Cache can be bad and overly optimized but when you hit a certain threshold, relational databases, databases that are dimension modelled for data warehouse, and even server resources get exhausted. At that point you have two options, buy more servers, or more likely, cache read data.

Each platform has their own way to do this, but there is a common baseplane way to do caching, yes even in .NET. That is with memcached. Memcached is a very common and useful tool that makes caching data and cache layers in an application something that can be the same on every platform. The benefit of using memcached is it is open, common and it has APIs for nearly every popular web development platform (and can be wired in easily to platforms that don’t have their own cache mechanism). Why write your caching layer specific to a certain platform when you can memcache?

If you write high performance web apps and don’t memcache, I feel bad for your server budget and your late nights when that ad buy hits or something popular on your site becomes all the rave.

Perl API

An object-oriented Perl module can be found on CPAN as Cache::Memcached or in Subversion (ChangeLog). (GPL/Artistic)

The Perl API takes advantage of the server’s opaque flag support and sets its “complex” flag whenever the object being stored or retrieved isn’t a plain scalar. In that case, the Storable module is used to freeze and thaw the value automatically going in and out of the memcached.

There is also Cache::Memcached::Fast—another Perl client written in C, largely compatible with the original Cache::Memcached. Available on CPAN at http://search.cpan.org/dist/Cache-Memcached-Fast/.

PHP API

There are tons of PHP libraries available, in different conditions. But it now seems there’s an official one:

Python API

The Python client we’d previously released was just a prototype, and we don’t have regular Python programmers on hand. The folks at Tummy.com have took over maintenance. See ftp://ftp.tummy.com/pub/python-memcached/ for the latest versions.

Ruby API

Java API

A Java API is maintained by Greg Whalin from Meetup.com. You can find that library here:

An improved Java API maintained by Dustin Sallings is also available. Aggressively optimised, ability to run async, supports binary protocol, etc. See site for details:

C# API

There are multiple C# APIs:

C API

Multiple C libraries for memcached exist:

  • apr_memcache by Paul Querna; Apache Software License version 2.0
  • libmemcached by Brian Aker; BSD license. This is a new library, under heavy development.
  • libmemcache by Sean Chittenden; BSD license. This is the original C library. It is no longer under active development. You should try libmemcached instead.

Postgres API

The pgmemcache project allows you to access memcache servers from Postgresql Stored Procedures and Triggers. More details and downloads are available at:

Chicken Scheme

Lua

MySQL API

The memcache_engine allows memcache to work as a storage engine to MySQL. This means that you can SELECT/UPDATE/INSERTE/DELETE from it as though it is a table in MySQL.

A set of MySQL UDFs (user defined functions) to work with memcached using libmemcached.

Protocol

To write a new client, check out the protocol docs. Be aware that the most important part of the client is the hashing across multiple servers, based on the key, or an optional caller-provided hashing value. Feel free to join the mailing list (or mail me directly) for help, inclusion in Subversion, and/or a link to your client from this site.

The best part, they support all good platforms and even Lua, and wisely they left out VB.NET, no worries, VB.NET’ers will never know. Only kidding…

Finally, memcached is distributed, most cache layers included with platforms listed above are in process and per machine.  If you are running your code on a webfarm memcached is the only way to go.

MVC Frameworks for PHP

May 27th, 2008 by drawk

MVC is all the rave these days with excellent toolkits for all languages that help to define good structure for long term projects and maintenance. From Django (Python), to Rails (Ruby), Spring (Java), Maverick or Microsoft MVC (.NET/C#/Mono) and last but not least PHP MVC Frameworks.

PHP gets alot of heat mainly because it is critical mass and when that happens mediocrity comes in but since PHP5, PHP has really grown to be a great web development toolkit with many frameworks to choose from. But which one do you choose for your development? Do you want an MVC, or do you want to piece together an MVC from a template library, model framework and custom controller?

Well if you want to pick an MVC there are some great ones.

There is a site that has a decent ranking that is similar to my own likings in PHP frameworks that lists them like this:

1 Akelos (avg: 4.4)

2 PHPDevShell (avg: 4.3)

3 Symfony Project (avg: 4.3)

4 CodeIgniter (avg: 4.3)

5 Prado (avg: 4.1)

6 ZooP (avg: 4)

7 CakePHP (avg: 3.9)

8 Zend (avg: 3.4)

9 QPHP (avg: 3)

I have not used QPHP, Zoop, Prado or PHPDevShell but plan on doing reviews of all of them. I have a simple application that i will be building in the latest versions of each platform to help show highlights, pros, cons and the ins and outs of each.

Why? And why PHP? I have long been a developer of web sites and applications. Until around 2005 PHP was not accepted in enterprisey, but this is changing. Usually .NET, Java, Perl, Python and recently Ruby were the dictated choice of the clients or environments to code in. But with PHP5 now stable and PHP4 being retired, PHP is a insurgent platform that muscled its way into the web development world in a grassroots effort, from the bottom up. That takes work and the platform deserves a second look from people that have written it off.

PHP runs many large sites from Facebook, to Digg, to Yahoo and many other platforms even Microsoft is trying to buy. PHP might even be responsible for MySQLs meteoric rise to just recently being purchased by Sun. It is a platform that is being used to build platforms. It works on any platform, it is low-bar entry and high bar scalability and architecture if using a great framework or architecture (if custom or using an existing framework).

I am an engineer, developer, architect and interactive/game developer, I use the tools for the job no matter what is chosen. Any good developer can make a system work even with bad technology but today there isn’t alot of that going around. So many great platforms, languages and frameworks, why limit to a certain OS or platform. Open your horizons and stop specializing yourself out of special skills. Choose a tool that works on just about anything on the server side and doesn’t take over servers and take 3 times as long to develop. Try some PHP5 MVC frameworks today.

Is Your .NET Application/Assembly Mono Ready? Find Out With MoMa

May 17th, 2008 by drawk

Well Mono has finally reached 2.0. This is great news!  .NET skills now can span *nix, OSX, and Windows platforms.  But is your app or assembly capable of running on Mono?  Find out with MoMa.

Of course this is just a heuristic check and only finds out if your application on the surface has issues with running on a mono platform such as calls to p/invoke to windows apis or unsafe code that uses native calls but it is a great place to start.

The Mono Migration Analyzer (MoMA) tool helps you identify issues you may have when porting your .Net application to Mono. It helps pinpoint platform specific calls (P/Invoke) and areas that are not yet supported by the Mono project.

While MoMA can help show potential issues, there are many complex factors that cannot be covered by a simple tool. MoMA may fail to point out areas that will cause problems, and may point out areas which will not actually be an issue.

Use the results provided as a guide to get you started on porting your application, but remember the true test is actually running your application on Mono.

For a description of the errors that MoMA detects and how to deal with them, see MoMA - Issue Descriptions.

I have recently been really interested in making platforms and applications that aren’t limited by the OS they are contained in.  Thus mono is a very interesting platform now that it supports 2.0 fully and all the generic goodness to limit boxing/unboxing, common code between .net 2.0 apps (which are pretty much mainstream now) and developing for more of a standard that ensures your apps are portable.

Granted .NET 3.0 and 3.5 (pretty much the same version really with the addition of new frameworks such as WCF, LINQ which is very cool and functional as well as Silverlight) but most places deployed code is still .NET 2.0 and the poor souls working on very constricting .NET 1.0 and 1.1.

Also, recently Moonlight the Mono version of Silverlight has been released for alpha.

Baseplane Tool: Tenjin Templating Library (pyTenjin, jsTenjin, phpTenjin, rbTenjin, plTenjin)

April 7th, 2008 by drawk

Tenjin is a great templating library that gets not only cross platform but baseplane ability to make templating very similiar (and FAST) across many languages. pyTenjin and phpTenjin is currently what I am using but there are executions for Ruby, Perl and Javascript.

Here is a list of the Tenjin Templating engines:

Changes
(Python) (Ruby) (PHP) (Perl) (JavaScript)
User’s Guide
(Python) (Ruby) (PHP) (Perl) (JavaScript)
FAQ
(Python) (Ruby) (PHP) (Perl) (JavaScript)
Examples
(Python) (Ruby) (PHP) (Perl) (JavaScript)
Presentation
2007 LL Spirit LightningTalk (full-version) (Japanese)

Here is what the template markup looks like:

This

<table>
<tbody>
<?py i = 0 ?>
<?py for item in [’<foo>’, ‘bar&bar’, ‘”baz”‘]: ?>
<?py     i += 1 ?>
<tr>
<td>#{item}</td>
<td>${item}</td>
</tr>
<?py #end ?>
<tbody>

</table>

Produces This

<table>
<tbody>
<tr>
<td><foo></td>
<td>&lt;foo&gt;</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>bar&bar</td>
<td>bar&amp;bar</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>“baz”</td>
<td>&quot;baz&quot;</td>
</tr>
<tbody>
</table>

Here are some speed results

MacOS X 10.4 Tiger, Intel CoreDuo 1.83GHz, Memory 2GB
Language Template Engine Test#1(sec) Test#2(sec)
Python(2.5.1) pyTenjin (0.6.1) 6.96 5.61
Cheetah (2.0) 20.36 19.82
Django (0.9.5) 71.33 59.80
Myghty (1.1) 107.88 19.30
Kid (0.9.6) 380.24 378.96
Genshi (0.4.4) 560.30 271.69
Mako (0.1.9) 17.78 13.49
Templetor (web.py 0.22) 428.19 61.53
Ruby(1.8.6) rbTenjin (0.6.0) 7.34 4.52
eruby (1.0.5) 12.29 11.53
ERB(def_method) (Ruby1.8.6) 36.73 5.85
PHP(5.2.0) phpTenjin (0.0.1) 5.39 3.64
Smarty (2.6.18) 10.84 10.21
Perl(5.8.8) plTenjin (0.0.1) 10.42 5.72
Template-Toolkit(XS) (2.18) 103.58 26.30
HTML::Template (2.9) 46.70 30.21
JS(spidermonkey) jsTenjin (0.0.1) 19.00 12.98
JS(Rhino, JDK5) jsTenjin (0.0.1) 24.29 19.15
Java(JDK5) Velocity (1.4) 22.80 11.41
Velocity (1.5) 20.01 8.42

Baseplane Tool: Is PureMVC the Cross Platform MVC Toolkit You Have Been Looking For?

March 29th, 2008 by drawk

PureMVC is quite a versatile MVC kit.  With implementations for AS3, .NET (c#), Python, PHP, Silverlight and other platforms it is quite a system and domain to spread that far and have consistency.  There are small changes but for the most post the MVC is the same structure across the platforms.  This can be very beneficial for a service firm or for a product base that needs to support many different platforms.

PureMVC is a lightweight framework  for creating applications based
upon the classic Model-View-Controller design meta-pattern.
This free, open-source framework is implemented in ActionScript 2 and
3, Java, C# and a number of other popular programming languages.
This allows development on a wide variety of platforms including:

  • Mobile Environments: FlashLite, .NET Compact Framework, J2ME
  • Server Environments: ColdFusion, J2EE, PHP, Python
  • Browser Environments: Flash/Flex, JavaFX, Silverlight
  • Desktop Environments: .NET, AIR, FLASH, J2SE

For Flex PureMVC happens to be my favorite MVC kit.  I only use one if absolutely necessary but PureMVC keeps it clean.  The great thing is that is works with or without Flex unlike Cairngorm and it is always up to date.  It is just an added bonus that is spans so many other platforms. There are a few things I don’t like about it in other platforms like the url naming but it is much better than kits out there now and Microsoft’s ASP.NET MVC most likely wont’ be cross platform *wink*.

Some info on the PureMVC framework (caution PDF):

PureMVC Manifold

Ports



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