Tuesday, 23 March 2010
Setting Physical Memory Limit for a .NET application
The straightforward way appeared to use Process.GetCurrentProcess().MaxWorkingSet. Strangely, no matter what we tried, this never worked. Yet to figure out why it does not work - if anyone has a clue, please ping.
Anyways, looking at options we came across job objects in Windows that allow setting the max working set. So the approach that finally worked was this:
1.) Create a Job object using CreateJobObject() Win32 call
2.) Setup the memory limits against this job using
SetInformationJobObject()
3.) Assign our process to this job using AssignProcessToJob().
Now, when we look at the task manager, the physical memory assigned to this process never goes over the specified limit. All good.
Note that this is applicable only for the physical memory and not for the virtual memory - no limits can be set for this [?]. The physical memory limit is affected when the application is paged-in from the page file into the memory.
Thursday, 18 March 2010
Exploiting ObjectFromLresult() to get the IHTMLDocument2 from a window handle
This is interesting as with just a window handle, it was relatively unknown on how that can be mapped to an object.
What you need to do is this:
1.) Register the windows message WM_HTML_GETOBJECT
2.) Send this message to the window handle we have in hand using a SendMessageTimeOut(). The out parameter in the lpdwResult returns you an UIntPtr to the object after the call.
3.) Next, use this out parameter as part of the ObjectFromLresult() call:
ObjectFromLresult(result from sendmessagetimeout, IHtmlDocument, 0)
4.) Cast the result from ObjectFromLresult() to IHTMLDocument2.
5.) Use the all property to get the HTML elements.
The powerfull function here definitely is the ObjectFromLResult() which effectively returns you an object that is 'accessible'. Accessible in terms of the user accessibility factor.
A framework worth checking out in this regard is the UIA framework that allows manipulating individual entities on the screen be it winforms, browser controls...
Wednesday, 24 February 2010
Azure Computing Usage, Metering etc and how MS gets richer
Quickly calculate Azure ROI/TCO
Interested in quickly calculating the ROI/TCO for your application once it is deployed in Azure? Check out these two:
1.) http://www.microsoft.com/windowsazure/tco/
2.) http://neudesic.cloudapp.net/azureroi.aspx
View/Query tables/data in Azure Dev Storage
When deploying application on the development fabric, you would usually need to actually view the dev storage - say check out the tables, write a couple of SQLs against it etc. OOB, there isn’t any support in VS2010/tools from MS. Note that development fabric is different from the Azure Storage in the cloud. Development fabric, dev storage resides on your local machine.
A very good tool you could use to access the dev storage for free (in addition to the azure store if you are a registered user) is Cloud Storage Studio from Cerebrata. Check more here:
http://www.cerebrata.com/Products/CloudStorageStudio/Default.aspx
Do let know if you come across any more free/thin/sleek/nifty tool that works.
Friday, 5 February 2010
Concurrency & .NET
With earlier versions of .NET, you had the Thread class, the BackgroundWorker class and highly recommended ThreadQueue class. (lets not worry about all the sync objects that came along). With multi-core machines all around, the possibilities in .NET 4.0 are endless :
a.) Parallel Extensions (PLINQ + TPL)
Integrating parallelism right into the framework design while expoiting the extension methods has made expressing concurrency easier. Had a loop that you wanted to execute in parallel? Just use the Parallel.For().
1 core? 2 core? n core? Not sure how to exploit them? Just use the framework provided by TPL (Task Parallel Library) - your applications would scale (not worrying about the internal design/syncs for the moment) based on the number of the cores. Nice. The best part is, C# language and the supporting framework structure appears to move towards the functional programming paradigm - wherein you are not worried about how to do the job but more about what to do. LINQ, TPL, Parallel-extensions etc seems to be inspired by this functional paradigm as in Haskell [my current interest area)] / F#.
Want to dig real deep with some great samples ? Check this out : http://code.msdn.microsoft.com/ParExtSamples
b.) Axum
A very interesting .NET programming language from the MS research yard to check out. A language built with concurrency as the primary design objective. You have 'agent's (think about a block of code being executed independently like threads) talking with each other through the 'channel's using the 'message's (think about the all sync-objects you used to get two threads to talk with each other, but easier). Very promising - you could write your core domain objects in C#, use them within Axum wherein you would ave laid out your concurrency logic.
Check out http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/devlabs/dd795202.aspx , http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Axum_(programming_language)
c.) DirectCompute
Would like the exploit the massive processing power of your GPU? Check out the DirectCompute library. A DirectX 11/10 based framework that lets you offload tasks onto the GPU - awesome. In similar lines, also check out Brahma framework written by my ex-collegue Ananth at http://brahma.ananthonline.net
Dont miss the DirectCompute session video (http://microsoftpdc.com/Sessions/P09-16) which also showed some cool applications. Was amazing to see the computationally intensive job being done by the GPU while the CPU stayed at ~0% utilization !
d.) Dryad
Yet another product from the MS research aresenal, Dryad appears to be more targetted at making writing distributed applications easier. Need to check this out in detail - once I find an HPC server to do the installation, then perhaps port DES to it?
Check it out further at http://research.microsoft.com/en-us/projects/dryad/
Saturday, 31 October 2009
DES R2
Core enhancement - support for child tasks, concept of collection gate, design changes/refactoring etc