Reading Notes #209

Image result for redhat

Cloud


Databases


Programming




Reading Notes #208

CanMVP

Suggestion of the week


Cloud


Programming


Miscellaneous




Reading Notes #207

msdnmagSuggestion of the week

  • A Beginner’s Mind - A very inspiring article, especially for the younger, but also for the more experienced, that want to keep their interior flame.

Cloud


Databases


Programming


Miscellaneous



Reading Notes #206

2015-10-18_2050Cloud


Programming

  • Learn You Node with VS Code (G. Andrew) - This post is really an excellent starting point to learn Node.js. It gives good references, tools, and tips.

Miscellaneous

  • MVP Award Update - Oct 2015 - This post explains the changes done to the MVP program to improve it. A must to all current and future MVP candidates.


What you shouldn't have missed in the last few weeks


2015-10-15_0836In September, Microsoft did so many announcements it’s difficult to keep tracks of all. This short post he just to list the most important and to give you the opportunity to watch them again or the first time.

AzureCon 2015

The AzureCon was a virtual event on September 29 that was focusing on Microsoft Azure. Many View Party around the global was watching this even rich in announcements. You can watch here the AzureCon keynotes online.
But AzureCon was not only keynotes, it was more than 50 technical sessions covering every Azure’s feature. Get the the full list on Channel9 here.

Windows 10 Devices

2015-10-15_0837At the beginning of October the Windows 10 Devices was a really amazing event. Microsoft was showing us all is new devices, and they were a lot! Don’t trust me, go see by yourself on this blog post by Terry Myerson.

 

What’s new

Get Started and deploy your first cloud solution in under 5 minutes. Find tons of short videos online that teach you how to quicky enjoy the power of Azure.



~Frank


Reading Notes #205

background_clickCloud


Programming


Miscellaneous


~Frank



Reading Notes #204

AzureConLabsSuggestion of the week


Cloud


Programming


Databastes


Miscellaneous

  • Going Back to One (Alexandre Brisebois) - Organize our work to become a performer, could be easily done in Windows 10.
  • Static Site or CMS? - (Brian Rinaldi) - Nice post that gives insights to answer one of the most frequent questions when people start a blog/website.


Reading Notes #203


AzureConScott

 

 

Suggestion of the week


Cloud


Programming


Databastes


Miscellaneous

  • Going Back to One (Alexandre Brisebois) - Organize our work to become a performer, could be easily done in Windows. 10.

~Frank 



What is an AzureCon View Party?

azureCon-Be_the_first

First what is AzureCon?


In less than a week Microsoft is doing a great event called AzureCon. This event is a virtual conference that will focus on Microsoft Azure. It is a virtual event because it's happening online. Even more, it will be available to watch it live for free! The lineup as been published and four great speaker will share with us the latest news about Azure.

AzureCon_speakers

What is a View Party?

A View Party is the chance to watch live the same content of all other, but in a group. It's an opportunity to ask your question while it's happening and gets answers from the MVPs or other viewers.

Where are those View Party?

By the time I'm writing this post, I don't know all of them, but please sharing is good, so if you know a view party is happening in your area share the info using the comment session. You could also send me an e-mail, and I will update this post. I will be at Ottawa, looking forward to meeting you there!
  • Montreal
    MsDevMtl Community
    2000 McGill College, 5e étage, Montréal, QC, Montréal, QC
    Meetup
  • Ottawa
    Ottawa IT Community
    100 Queen Street, Suite 500 , Ottawa, ON
    Meetup


Reading Notes #202

 

Azure automationSuggestion of the week


Cloud


Programming


Miscellaneous



Reading Notes #201

balanceCloud

  • Tracing and logging with Application Insights (Andrei Dzimchuk) - You know the 101 about App Insights and you are looking for something more specific? This post if a must it shows how to transform an ordinary logger in a great source of information.

Programming


Databases


Miscellaneous



Reading Notes #200

2015-09-06_2133Suggestion of the week


Cloud


Databases


Books

  • Microsoft Azure Essentials Fundamentals of AzureMicrosoft Azure Essentials_ Fundamentals of Azure (Michael S. Collier & Robin E. Shahan) - This week a felt like returning to the sources, and read the essentials. Difficult to summarize a summary, but all principal family of features are approached and the “must have” tools are over… Even some scenarios. A really good book, evenmore it’s for all.

Reading Notes #199

ElasticDBSuggestion of the week

  • First look at Application Insights (Andrei Dzimchuk) - Excellent post. Perfect to make your idea about why and how we should use Application Insights. Nice touch to the config.

Cloud


Programming

Databases

Miscellaneous



Reading Notes #198

P1020009Cloud


Podcast

  • .NET Rocks! - Great episode very interesting discussion about the new Azure Service Fabric.

Programming


Databases



Get more from Azure application Insights

Application Insights is an incredible tool that will brings to you a gigantic quantity of information about your application. In a previous post: Tons statistics and metrics for Microsoft Azure websites (not only in Asp.Net), I was explaining how to get started with App Insights. In this post, I want to explain how you can create your own customs events or metrics.

The setup


I will use an Asp.Net MVC named SimpleWebApp that will consume an Azure Api App named FrankApiApp. For the demo purposes I will have both projects in the same solution, but let's pretend that the ApiApp is not us, and that we don't control what inside.

To create an Azure Api App you will need Visual Studio 2015 or Visual Studio 2013 with minimum Azure SDK 2.6 installed. When creating the app, select Asp.Net Web Application, then Azure Api App (Preview).

Azure_API_App

For this post, we simply need one function. Here the code of the Get method that will wait and return us a string:
    // GET api/values
    public IEnumerable<string> Get()
    {
        var rnd = new Random();
        var waitFor = rnd.Next(500, 3000);

        System.Threading.Thread.Sleep(waitFor);
        var msg = String.Format("You have wait {0}. Sorry about that.", waitFor);

        return new string[] { waitFor.ToString(), msg };
    }

The application where telemetries will be added is a simple Asp.Net Web Application with MVC, created with the default template in Visual Studio. To add App Insights, just right-click on the project and select Add Application Insights Telemetry.

Add_Azure_API_App_CLient

Now we need to add a reference of the Azure API App. That could be easily done. Right-click, once again, on the project and Select Add, then Azure API App Client. A new window will appear, and we only need to select our just deployed API App.

Select_API_App[3]

The Base


Of course, just by adding the code spinet to the head of _Layout.cshtml you will have a lot of information about your server, your application but also the client experience and browser. This is all very useful, and it worth the time to navigate/ dig in the Azure portal to understand how your application is going/ doing.


Custom Metric


An interesting information could be to measure the time for each call to FrankApiApp. Let's started by adding a custom metric. To do that we will add a function in the HomeController and a new tab in that menu of the _Layout.cshtml.
public class HomeController : Controller
{
    private TelemetryClient appInsights = new TelemetryClient();

    public ActionResult ApiCall()
    {
        var stopwatch = System.Diagnostics.Stopwatch.StartNew();
        var client = new FrankApiApp();
        var result = client.Values.Get();

        stopwatch.Stop();

        ViewBag.Message = result[1];

        appInsights.TrackMetric("TimeDoingNothing", stopwatch.Elapsed.TotalSeconds);

        return View("Contact");
    }
}   

First, we create an instance of TelemetryClient. Then before calling the FrankApiApp's Get method we start a stopwatch. And we just need to use the TrackMetric method to push the metric.

After deploying and navigating a little in the application, let see what's we have available for us. Open portal.azure.com, and navigate to your application Insights. Click on the Metrics Explorer, a new blade now open with three empty charts. Click on the timeline, then in the Metric texbox type "TimeDoingNothing" (new metric's name). Now, click on the grid (third chart), add the metric name and select Group By Continent. Interesting right?!

TimeDoingNothing


Even more


Application Insight gives the opportunity to track many things: PageViews, Events, Exception, Requests, Trace and of course Metrics. Here some alternative of our ApiCall function using the TrackEvent and TrackRequest.
// Using TrackEvent
public ActionResult ApiCall()
{
    var stopwatch = System.Diagnostics.Stopwatch.StartNew();

    var client = new FrankApiApp();
    var result = client.Values.Get();
    stopwatch.Stop();

    ViewBag.Message = result[1];

    var metrics = new Dictionary<string, double> {{"processingTime", stopwatch.Elapsed.TotalMilliseconds}};
    var properties = new Dictionary<string, string>  {{ "MessageSuggestedElapsed", result[0] } };

    // Send the event:
    appInsights.TrackEvent("APICallProcessed", properties, metrics);
    appInsights.TrackMetric("TimeDoingNothing", stopwatch.Elapsed.TotalSeconds);

    return View("Contact");
}



// Using TrackRequest
public ActionResult ApiCallWithTelemetry()
{
    appInsights.Context.Operation.Id = Guid.NewGuid().ToString();

    var stopwatch = System.Diagnostics.Stopwatch.StartNew();
    var client = new FrankApiApp();
    var result = client.Values.Get();

    stopwatch.Stop();

    ViewBag.Message = result[1];

    // Send the event:
    appInsights.TrackRequest("APICallRequest", DateTime.UtcNow, stopwatch.Elapsed, "200", true);
    appInsights.TrackMetric("TimeDoingNothing", stopwatch.Elapsed.TotalSeconds);

    return View("Contact");
}



Wrap it up


I couldn't show everything in one post, it's up to you to create new metrics, events and query them in Azure Application Insights. Share your discovery or questions in the comment section bellow.

References



Reading Notes #197

P1010915Suggestion of the week

Cloud

Programming

Podcast

Miscellaneous


Azure SDK 2.7 my savior

Recently, I got a very unpleasant problem: I needed to remove all my Microsoft Azure accounts from Visual Studio. An error was popping every time Visual Studio was trying to connect to Azure preventing me to anything else. It could happen to everyone, so I decide to share that story so other could save time and energy trying to fix that.

The Context


Long time ago I created my Azure account using my Hotmail account. I modified the administrator to my Outlook.com when it came-up (approx. two years ago). When I installed Azure SKD 2.6, the problem started.

The Error


In Visual Studio 2013 Update 4 or VS 2015 RTM, every time VS was trying to connect to Azure, I was receiving this error message.

VS2013_loginError_VS2013_2015-06-27_0736
Every time Visual Studio 2013 Update 4 or VS 2015 try to connect to Azure...


The Fix


If you only need Visual Studio, remove the "damaged" Azure account. If you need Visual Studio to work with Azure you have two options:

  1. Azure SDK 2.5 will work, if that is an acceptable workaround. You would need to make sure Azure SDK 2.6 was never installed on the machine, otherwise it will still have the offending dll.
  2. Install Azure SDK 2.7 and/or Visual Studio 2015. In my case, it fixed everything!

~Frank


Reading Notes #196

Win10Suggestion of the week


Cloud


Programming


Miscellaneous


~Frank


Reading Notes #195

VS2015_2015-07-27_0945Suggestion of the week


Cloud


Database


Programming


~ Frank


Reading Notes #194

IMG_20150716_225401Suggestion of the week


Cloud

Customers can replicate on-premises workloads to Azure with Azure Site Recovery for 31 days at no charge

Programming


Documentation


Miscellaneous



~ Frank



Reading Notes 193

chaos-monkey-3_480Suggestion of the week


Cloud


Programming


Miscellaneous


Image from  Inside Azure Search: Chaos Engineering

Reading Notes #191

Image by FutUndBeidl / FlickrSuggestion of the week


Cloud


Programming

Miscellaneous




Image by FutUndBeidl / Flickr


The Journey of an Azure SDK upgrade

JourneyRecently, with my team, we needed to upgrade a web solution to Azure SDK from 2.4 to 2.5.1. The upgrade was much longer and complex then expected, so I decide to share what we learn so maybe other could benefit from our experience.

The problem


The upgrade of the code and library was not really a problem. The documentation is available on MSDN and it's easy to follow. Few breaking changes were part of the version 2.5. One is the reason of this post: Diagnostics configuration must be applied separately after deployment[...]

Continue reading full article here



~Frank