Category Archives: programming and related

Programming, software develpment, web development and everything related to writing code

The Perils of GetHashCode, continued…

Some time ago I wrote about GetHashCode method and now Paulo Morgado has also faced some “hash related” issues to deal with (also in Portuguese). Again, the reminder should be not rely heavily on GetHashCode.

The Perils of GetHashCode

Recently I ran into some unexpected, and rather strange, issues on an application server using the Enterprise Library 2.0 Cache Application Block. Apparently there were occurring some strange collisions while retrieving the data from CacheData (the table where the cached data is stored) where the same cache key was having multiple entries, something the Dictionary container where the data is stored isn’t too happy about. The guys at Patterns and Practices, for performance issues, don’t use the cache key as a primary key for that table, but a much more efficient and more easily indexable” integer, which, in this case, is being calculated using the GetHashCode of the cache key. Usually the GetHashCodeimplementation isn’t a fully blown hash algorithm (unlike the more robust MD5 or SHA) so I allways doubted of the uniqueness, particularly in this case where the application server was moved from a 32 bit to a 64 bit architecture, nothing a quick trip do the good old MSDN wouldn’t confirm:

Remarks

The behavior of GetHashCode is dependent on its implementation, which might change from one version of the common language runtime to another. A reason why this might happen is to improve the performance of GetHashCode.

This basically means you shouldn’t trust GetHashCode, because the result for a given string can, and surely will, be different depending where you are calculating it, namely between 32 and 64 bit architectures. The main lesson to be learnt here is GetHashCode, either for String or any other type, should only be used for disambiguation of entities in runtime.

Scrum with Portuguese flavour

All those Portuguese speaking interested in Scrum followers now have a place to share thoughts, experiences and everything else Scrum related, yet in a very early stage.

Scrum em Português

TDD Anti-Patterns

James Carr has compiled a pretty little list of Test Driven Development Anti-Patterns and posted it some time ago in his blog. I have to admit I’ve done some of them once or twice.

TDD Anti-Patterns [via ISerializable]

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Is Maven the right tool for builds?

InfoQ has an interesting article gathering several thoughts and rants regarding the usefulness of Maven as a build tool, despite having used Maven with some success I must agree with some of the referred problems.
Maven has a declarative approach to a project, rather than the procedural approach of Ant, which makes it easier to move around from one project to another, something that doesn’t happen in Ant; and not to forget the dependency management, which is indeed is a killer feature (although I admit I’ve never tried Ivy). But the documentation still is poor and sparse and it requires the team and build process do adjust to the Maven philosophy and structure.

Debate: Is Maven the right tool for builds?

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Configuration Section Designer

Jelle Druyts has released a neat little tool for Visual Studio that allows to easily design and visualize the configuration for a .Net solution, without messing around with ConfigurationSection and ConfigurationElement source files, which is quite handy when things become a bit more complicated. It’s still is in an early stage, but it looks rather promising.

Configuration Section Designer

Debug THE .Net!

Hey, now I can debug the .Net framework or, in other words, now I can’t blame the framework every time I have a problem.

.NET Framework Library Source Code now available – ScottGu’s Blog

.Net does Dependency Injection

The next version of Microsoft’s Enterprise Library will include several improvements on the existing blocks and, this is the cherry on the top, a lightweight Dependency Injection container (or Inversion of Control, if you prefer it this way), probably much like the core of Spring.NET.

Enterprise Library v4 Product Backlog

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Updating from Visual Studio 2008 Beta 2

About a month ago I was having some doubts if the upgrade from Visual Studio 2008 Beta 2 to the final release would be a flawless task, fortunately Scott Guthrie came to the rescue.

Quick Tip: Stop a build in Team Foundation

Sometimes things go wrong during a build, after all Team Foundation isn’t bullet proof, and a build will remain in some intermediate state forever, which means you have stop the hard way. Fortunately, Team Foundation’s command line has a few more commands than Visual Studio’s interface, and stopping one of those builds is quite simple:

TfsBuild stop Server TeamProject BuildNumber

Ex:

TfsBuild stop http://your-tfs-server-here YourTeamProject BuildName


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