2016-04-07

Removing stuff you don't need

So I start this series of updated old opinions and the MSDN blog change interface so there are no longer links to monthly archives except the last three months of posts. There is some logic to it I guess since it keeps the archive list shorter but I wish they made it configurable... Anyway; this time it is time to talk about some posts from July 2008 which can be found on this page.

2016-03-31

Inter service communication: pub/sub vs message bus vs req/response

Over the last few weeks I've been going over a few different ways to solve inter service communication. So which one is best then?

2016-03-24

Inter service communication: pub/sub

In order to distinguish pub/sub from message bus communication I will assume the pub/sub does not use another component to distribute the data as that would be a message bus pattern. I will assume that the publisher knows about all subscribers either statically or dynamically.

2016-03-17

Inter service communication: message bus

Last week we covered request/response communication and now it is time to talk about the complete opposite; message bus communication.

2016-03-10

Inter service communication: request/response

Over the next few weeks I will cover a number of different ways to services can communicate with each other. First out is the classical request/response.

2016-03-03

Code Coverage and nothing is too simple to test

So time to look back again and update some old opinions from June 2008. And while there are some other useful stuff in there I'll focus on code coverage and testing simple things. Because I feel the urge to explain myself...

2016-02-25

All you ever wanted to know about Feature Toggles

Feature toggles can be used for several reasons. They can be used to avoid branching (for some people that is important), test things in production, A/B testing, a safety net or to enhance the experience for certain customers. Regardless of what the reason is the basics are the same.

2016-02-18

Go, maps and randomization

A couple of years ago it was very easy to DoS attack .Net web services as the headers were added to a dictionary. Back then the hash of the key was predictable so using a bunch of machines in azure and a few days it was possible to generate enough strings that resulted in the same hash value that you then could make a fake request with a lot of headers (a few hundred is typically enough) that caused the web server to spend 100% of CPU searching and updating the header dictionary. Since I recently started doing some work using go (aka golang) I immediately started to wonder how this worked in this language.

2016-02-11

ET/U/LP over MVP

Well sometimes my life is easy. Or you could say I'm cheating because today I'll just hand it over to somebody else...

2016-02-04

Books, Mocks and Open Source

So time to look back again and update some old opinions from May 2008. This time I'd like to talk about three old articles.