| |
browse.develop.com
Browse.develop.com is a community that was established to collect and
organize valuable web information. Our technical staff have selected and
indexed information and courses that they feel will help you stay
current on best practices across the SDLC.
|
10 Articles match "2012","IIS"
| Related DevelopMentor Courses | MORE | | Brock Allen: CORS support in WebAPI, MVC and IIS with Thinktecture.IdentityModel The implementation in Thinktecture.IdentityModel follows the W3C Working Draft 3 from April 2012. My second contribution to the Thinktecture.IdentityModel security library is a full-featured CORS implementation. Many other sample implementations only emit the Access-Control-Allow-Origin header, but there’s more to it than that. There is a rich configuration API to control the various settings that are DevelopMentor Courses - Thursday, June 28, 2012 Brock Allen: CORS, IIS and WebDAV The most common problem encountered when trying to get CORS working in IIS is WebDAV. WebDAV is installed as both a module and a handler. It wants to process OPTIONS requests but doesn’t know what to do for CORS (especially if you’re using the CORS support from Thinktecture.IdentityModel). The fix is to remove both the DevelopMentor Courses - Thursday, October 18, 2012 Using RavenDB with Azure websites While using RavenDB as a Windows Service or hosted in IIS is probably the best way to go in most cases there are a number of cases where the embedded option is great. In a previous post I explored various options of hosting RavenDB. And one of the places where I really like the embedded option of hosting RavenDB is when doing simple standalone websites. And with the new Azure website option that is a great way to host them. The code is real straightforward and just like before. 1: public static DocumentStore DocumentStore { get; private set; }. 2: 3: private void CreateRavenDB(). Enjoy! The Problem Solver - Monday, December 10, 2012 |
5 Articles match "2012","IIS"
| The Latest from DevelopMentor | MORE | | Using RavenDB with Azure websites While using RavenDB as a Windows Service or hosted in IIS is probably the best way to go in most cases there are a number of cases where the embedded option is great. In a previous post I explored various options of hosting RavenDB. And one of the places where I really like the embedded option of hosting RavenDB is when doing simple standalone websites. And with the new Azure website option that is a great way to host them. The code is real straightforward and just like before. 1: public static DocumentStore DocumentStore { get; private set; }. 2: 3: private void CreateRavenDB(). Enjoy! The Problem Solver - Monday, December 10, 2012 Using RavenDB with Azure websites While using RavenDB as a Windows Service or hosted in IIS is probably the best way to go in most cases there are a number of cases where the embedded option is great. In a previous post I explored various options of hosting RavenDB. And one of the places where I really like the embedded option of hosting RavenDB is when doing simple standalone websites. And with the new Azure website option that is a great way to host them. The code is real straightforward and just like before. 1: public static DocumentStore DocumentStore { get; private set; }. 2: 3: private void CreateRavenDB(). Enjoy! The Problem Solver - Monday, December 10, 2012 Different options for hosting RavenDB Running as an IIS application Another option for hosting RavenDB is creating an IIS application and letting IIS take care of things. This is a great option if you don’t want to, or can’t, deploy an extra IIS application. number of my websites run on a budget hosting infrastructure that make it harder to deploy extra IIS applications. In most business application I would opt for hosting as an IIS application if possible and otherwise as a Windows Service. In the previous blog posts about RavenDB I used the Raven.Server.exe to create a database server. The Problem Solver - Wednesday, December 5, 2012 | -
| The Best from DevelopMentor | MORE | - Using RavenDB with Azure websites
While using RavenDB as a Windows Service or hosted in IIS is probably the best way to go in most cases there are a number of cases where the embedded option is great. In a previous post I explored various options of hosting RavenDB. And one of the places where I really like the embedded option of hosting RavenDB is when doing simple standalone websites. And with the new Azure website option that is a great way to host them. The code is real straightforward and just like before. 1: public static DocumentStore DocumentStore { get; private set; }. 2: 3: private void CreateRavenDB(). Enjoy! The Problem Solver - Monday, December 10, 2012 - Secure WCF REST Services with a Custom UserNamePasswordValidator
If you’re hosting in IIS (or IIS Express), you’re pretty much done. Download the code for this blog post here. When securing WCF services you’re faced with a choice: Message versus Transport security. Unless you need to conceal messages from an intermediary, your best bet is to stick with transport security and use SSL to secure messages traveling over HTTP. Using SSL is generally the best choice for ensuring point-to-point privacy and integrity, which lets you pass user credentials over the wire when directly invoking service operations. netsh http add sslcert ipport=0.0.0.0:2345 DevelopMentor Courses - Monday, May 28, 2012 - Different options for hosting RavenDB
Running as an IIS application Another option for hosting RavenDB is creating an IIS application and letting IIS take care of things. This is a great option if you don’t want to, or can’t, deploy an extra IIS application. number of my websites run on a budget hosting infrastructure that make it harder to deploy extra IIS applications. In most business application I would opt for hosting as an IIS application if possible and otherwise as a Windows Service. In the previous blog posts about RavenDB I used the Raven.Server.exe to create a database server. The Problem Solver - Wednesday, December 5, 2012 - Using RavenDB with Azure websites
While using RavenDB as a Windows Service or hosted in IIS is probably the best way to go in most cases there are a number of cases where the embedded option is great. In a previous post I explored various options of hosting RavenDB. And one of the places where I really like the embedded option of hosting RavenDB is when doing simple standalone websites. And with the new Azure website option that is a great way to host them. The code is real straightforward and just like before. 1: public static DocumentStore DocumentStore { get; private set; }. 2: 3: private void CreateRavenDB(). Enjoy! The Problem Solver - Monday, December 10, 2012 - Different options for hosting RavenDB
Running as an IIS application Another option for hosting RavenDB is creating an IIS application and letting IIS take care of things. This is a great option if you don’t want to, or can’t, deploy an extra IIS application. number of my websites run on a budget hosting infrastructure that make it harder to deploy extra IIS applications. In most business application I would opt for hosting as an IIS application if possible and otherwise as a Windows Service. In the previous blog posts about RavenDB I used the Raven.Server.exe to create a database server. The Problem Solver - Wednesday, December 5, 2012 %>
| | |