Showing posts with label aspx. Show all posts
Showing posts with label aspx. Show all posts

Friday, March 23, 2012

how to create ASPNET user in SQL Server 2000

Respected Members,

I have a question, when our aspx page is trying to access the SQL Server 2000 database than before this do we have to creaete a user with the name of ASPNET in SQL Server 2000, or without creating this paticular user(its the default user of ASP.NET account) our aspx pages can also access the SQL Server 2000,I have already SQL Server 2000 running in "SQL Server Authentication Mode" so while creating the user do I have to create it in "Windows Authentication" or "SQL Server Authentication", can you provide some link where I could find complete steps for craeting the ASPNET user or if some one can tell all the steps in details here.

This site has some good video tutorials for handling security in both ASP and SQL Server.

http://www.asp.net/learn/videos/default.aspx?tabid=63

|||Thanks for your reply, the site was really good,but I did'nt found any thing relevant to my question on this web site, do you have some idea about any other resources.|||

It seemed to me, perhaps I'm wrong, that the following video tutorials at that site are relevant to your task. ( realize that you indicated you are using SQL Server 2000 (which is a mistake -you should be using SQL Server 2005), but the concepts are basically the same.

And of course, you could refer to Books Online, the definitive source for SQL Server information.

From the “How Do I?” with ASP.NET section:

#7 | How Do I: Secure my Site using Membership and Roles?#9 | How Do I: Create a Full-Featured Customer Login Portal?

From the SQL Server 2005 Express for Beginners section:#7 | Understanding Security and Network Connectivity#8 | Connecting your Web Application to SQL Server 2005 Express Edition

From the Videos for ASP.NET 2.0 Beginners section:#9 | Lesson 9: Securing your Web Site with Membership and Login Controls

how to create ASPNET user in SQL Server 2000

Respected Members,

I have a question, when our aspx page is trying to access the SQL Server 2000 database than before this do we have to creaete a user with the name of ASPNET in SQL Server 2000, or without creating this paticular user(its the default user of ASP.NET account) our aspx pages can also access the SQL Server 2000,I have already SQL Server 2000 running in "SQL Server Authentication Mode" so while creating the user do I have to create it in "Windows Authentication" or "SQL Server Authentication", can you provide some link where I could find complete steps for craeting the ASPNET user or if some one can tell all the steps in details here.

Maybe this link will help:http://msdn2.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms998300.aspx

Wednesday, March 21, 2012

How to create a stored procedure of this code (inline sql in aspx) ?

I have some SQL code as inline SQL (bad habit, I know). Now I want to convert this to an sproc, but I'm pretty much out of ideas here. The code looks like this:

string

SQL ="SELECT * FROM MyDBTable WHERE 1=1";if (txtMyField1.Text !="")

{

SQL = SQL +

" AND MyField1 = @.MyField";

}

if (txtMyField2.Text !="")

{

SQL = SQL +

" AND MyField2 LIKE '%'+ @.MyField2 + '%'";

}

if (txtMyField3.Text !="")

{

SQL = SQL +

" AND MyField3 LIKE '%' + @.MyField3 + '%'";

}

I have an search page built on ASP.NET 2.0. Based on what the user has entered to the form fields, the SQL in constructed on the fly. Since this is now inside codebehind file (aspx.cs), I want to get rid of it and move it to an sproc. But the question is how ? Some simple SQL clauses are easy to convert to an sproc but this is causing me lots of issues.

You may try this see if it is working or not:

CREATE PROCEDURE dbo.sp_Test (
@.MyField varchar(5) = null,
@.MyField2 varchar(5)= null,
@.MyField3 varchar(5)= null
)
AS

Begin
declare @.Syntax varchar(500)

SELECT @.Syntax = 'SELECT * FROM MyDBTable' +
'WHERE 1=1' +
CASE
WHEN @.MyField IS NOT NULL and @.MyField <> ''
THEN ' AND MyField1 = ''' + @.MyField + ''''
ELSE ''
END +
CASE
WHEN @.MyField2 IS NOT NULL and @.MyField2 <> ''
THEN ' AND MyField2 LIKE ''%'+ @.MyField2 + '%'''
ELSE ''
END +
CASE
WHEN @.MyField3 IS NOT NULL and @.MyField3 <> ''
THEN ' AND MyField3 LIKE ''%'+ @.MyField3 + '%'''
ELSE ''
END

EXECUTE(@.syntax)
End

You need adjust the size of the variables as request.

|||Thanks for the code. I'll try this later and let you know how it worked.|||Thanks JimmyM for your assistance, it worked !!! However you had an typo in your reply, since FROM was there twice. But this wasn't an issue.|||Sorry for the typo, glad that the solution is working for you.sql

Friday, February 24, 2012

How to count a very large volume of request

Hello,
What is the best way to accomplish the following.
1) An ASP.NET program (consiting of one file somepage.aspx) receives about
25,000,000 requests pay day.
2) The requests come from a limited set of IP addresses.
3) How to count the total number of request from each IP address per day.
SQL Server 2000 is used on the backend.
Currently we used the following architecture:
* Each request to somepage.aspx generates an INSERT into a LogTable1
* There is a clustered index on the LogTable1 on the dateStamp field which
is of the type smalldatetime
* The dateStamp field has a default that sets it to the getdate()
* At the end of each day at 12:01AM there is a simple query that runs and
does a group by to count the number of requests from each IP in the given
date range (past 24 hours). This query works great and takes only 2 minutes
to run.
Is there a better way to accomplish this without having to do INSERTS into
the LogTable1 for each request?
It would not work to have the ASP.NET program execute an UPDATE each time to
increment the total number of request, since this would cause LOTSSS of
locking in the database layer.
Thanks in advance.
ArsenYou could store the data in your Application Cache, and update it
periodically to the database.
HTH,
Kevin Spencer
.Net Developer
Microsoft MVP
Big things are made up
of lots of little things.
"Arsen V." <arsen.NoSpamPlease@.emergency24.com> wrote in message
news:emdbHKo6DHA.2412@.TK2MSFTNGP09.phx.gbl...
quote:

> Hello,
> What is the best way to accomplish the following.
> 1) An ASP.NET program (consiting of one file somepage.aspx) receives about
> 25,000,000 requests pay day.
> 2) The requests come from a limited set of IP addresses.
> 3) How to count the total number of request from each IP address per day.
> SQL Server 2000 is used on the backend.
> Currently we used the following architecture:
> * Each request to somepage.aspx generates an INSERT into a LogTable1
> * There is a clustered index on the LogTable1 on the dateStamp field which
> is of the type smalldatetime
> * The dateStamp field has a default that sets it to the getdate()
> * At the end of each day at 12:01AM there is a simple query that runs and
> does a group by to count the number of requests from each IP in the given
> date range (past 24 hours). This query works great and takes only 2

minutes
quote:

> to run.
> Is there a better way to accomplish this without having to do INSERTS into
> the LogTable1 for each request?
> It would not work to have the ASP.NET program execute an UPDATE each time

to
quote:

> increment the total number of request, since this would cause LOTSSS of
> locking in the database layer.
> Thanks in advance.
> Arsen
>
|||Hi,
What about using the IIS log file?
you could set it in the way you need it, basically the client IP and maybe
the time, if you configure it to update daily all you have to do at 12:01
is run a process that read the file generated and do what you need.
Cheers,
Ignacio Machin,
ignacio.machin AT dot.state.fl.us
Florida Department Of Transportation
"Arsen V." <arsen.NoSpamPlease@.emergency24.com> wrote in message
news:emdbHKo6DHA.2412@.TK2MSFTNGP09.phx.gbl...
quote:

> Hello,
> What is the best way to accomplish the following.
> 1) An ASP.NET program (consiting of one file somepage.aspx) receives about
> 25,000,000 requests pay day.
> 2) The requests come from a limited set of IP addresses.
> 3) How to count the total number of request from each IP address per day.
> SQL Server 2000 is used on the backend.
> Currently we used the following architecture:
> * Each request to somepage.aspx generates an INSERT into a LogTable1
> * There is a clustered index on the LogTable1 on the dateStamp field which
> is of the type smalldatetime
> * The dateStamp field has a default that sets it to the getdate()
> * At the end of each day at 12:01AM there is a simple query that runs and
> does a group by to count the number of requests from each IP in the given
> date range (past 24 hours). This query works great and takes only 2

minutes
quote:

> to run.
> Is there a better way to accomplish this without having to do INSERTS into
> the LogTable1 for each request?
> It would not work to have the ASP.NET program execute an UPDATE each time

to
quote:

> increment the total number of request, since this would cause LOTSSS of
> locking in the database layer.
> Thanks in advance.
> Arsen
>
|||Hi Kevin,
Do you suggest storing the TOTALs in the Cache?
Or storing the actual requests: date and ip
Would there be a locking problem?
How to do the "periodic updates" to the database from the Cache?
Thanks,
Arsen
"Kevin Spencer" <kevin@.takempis.com> wrote in message
news:ezSYvso6DHA.1936@.TK2MSFTNGP12.phx.gbl...
quote:

> You could store the data in your Application Cache, and update it
> periodically to the database.
> --
> HTH,
> Kevin Spencer
> .Net Developer
> Microsoft MVP
> Big things are made up
> of lots of little things.
> "Arsen V." <arsen.NoSpamPlease@.emergency24.com> wrote in message
> news:emdbHKo6DHA.2412@.TK2MSFTNGP09.phx.gbl...
about[QUOTE]
day.[QUOTE]
which[QUOTE]
and[QUOTE]
given[QUOTE]
> minutes
into[QUOTE]
time[QUOTE]
> to
>
|||Hi Arsen,
You could put a DataTable in the Application Cache, and add records to it
with each Request. As for periodic updating, you could put a routine in the
Session_OnStart Sub that checks an Application DateTime variable, and at
certain intervals, inserts all the records from the DataTable into the
database and clears out the DataTable.
To be safe, you would want to add code to your Application_OnEnd sub to
update the database if the Application stops or times out; however, with 25M
requests per day, that might not be necessary.
HTH,
Kevin Spencer
.Net Developer
Microsoft MVP
Big things are made up
of lots of little things.
"Arsen V." <arsen.NoSpamPlease@.emergency24.com> wrote in message
news:#daQL6o6DHA.2908@.tk2msftngp13.phx.gbl...
quote:

> Hi Kevin,
> Do you suggest storing the TOTALs in the Cache?
> Or storing the actual requests: date and ip
> Would there be a locking problem?
> How to do the "periodic updates" to the database from the Cache?
> Thanks,
> Arsen
> "Kevin Spencer" <kevin@.takempis.com> wrote in message
> news:ezSYvso6DHA.1936@.TK2MSFTNGP12.phx.gbl...
> about
> day.
> which
> and
> given
> into
> time
of[QUOTE]
>
|||what i have done is cache the last 15 minutes. the cache has the ipaddress,
the start of the 15 min interval, pagename, and number of hits during the
interval. as most users cluster their hits, this cuts down the number of
inserts.
i flush the cache every 15 minutes of when too large.
you can then get daily or hourly stats from the db with simple queries.
-- bruce (sqlwork.com)
"Arsen V." <arsen.NoSpamPlease@.emergency24.com> wrote in message
news:emdbHKo6DHA.2412@.TK2MSFTNGP09.phx.gbl...
quote:

> Hello,
> What is the best way to accomplish the following.
> 1) An ASP.NET program (consiting of one file somepage.aspx) receives about
> 25,000,000 requests pay day.
> 2) The requests come from a limited set of IP addresses.
> 3) How to count the total number of request from each IP address per day.
> SQL Server 2000 is used on the backend.
> Currently we used the following architecture:
> * Each request to somepage.aspx generates an INSERT into a LogTable1
> * There is a clustered index on the LogTable1 on the dateStamp field which
> is of the type smalldatetime
> * The dateStamp field has a default that sets it to the getdate()
> * At the end of each day at 12:01AM there is a simple query that runs and
> does a group by to count the number of requests from each IP in the given
> date range (past 24 hours). This query works great and takes only 2

minutes
quote:

> to run.
> Is there a better way to accomplish this without having to do INSERTS into
> the LogTable1 for each request?
> It would not work to have the ASP.NET program execute an UPDATE each time

to
quote:

> increment the total number of request, since this would cause LOTSSS of
> locking in the database layer.
> Thanks in advance.
> Arsen
>

How to count a very large volume of request

Hello,
What is the best way to accomplish the following.
1) An ASP.NET program (consiting of one file somepage.aspx) receives about
25,000,000 requests pay day.
2) The requests come from a limited set of IP addresses.
3) How to count the total number of request from each IP address per day.
SQL Server 2000 is used on the backend.
Currently we used the following architecture:
* Each request to somepage.aspx generates an INSERT into a LogTable1
* There is a clustered index on the LogTable1 on the dateStamp field which
is of the type smalldatetime
* The dateStamp field has a default that sets it to the getdate()
* At the end of each day at 12:01AM there is a simple query that runs and
does a group by to count the number of requests from each IP in the given
date range (past 24 hours). This query works great and takes only 2 minutes
to run.
Is there a better way to accomplish this without having to do INSERTS into
the LogTable1 for each request?
It would not work to have the ASP.NET program execute an UPDATE each time to
increment the total number of request, since this would cause LOTSSS of
locking in the database layer.
Thanks in advance.
ArsenYou could store the data in your Application Cache, and update it
periodically to the database.
--
HTH,
Kevin Spencer
.Net Developer
Microsoft MVP
Big things are made up
of lots of little things.
"Arsen V." <arsen.NoSpamPlease@.emergency24.com> wrote in message
news:emdbHKo6DHA.2412@.TK2MSFTNGP09.phx.gbl...
> Hello,
> What is the best way to accomplish the following.
> 1) An ASP.NET program (consiting of one file somepage.aspx) receives about
> 25,000,000 requests pay day.
> 2) The requests come from a limited set of IP addresses.
> 3) How to count the total number of request from each IP address per day.
> SQL Server 2000 is used on the backend.
> Currently we used the following architecture:
> * Each request to somepage.aspx generates an INSERT into a LogTable1
> * There is a clustered index on the LogTable1 on the dateStamp field which
> is of the type smalldatetime
> * The dateStamp field has a default that sets it to the getdate()
> * At the end of each day at 12:01AM there is a simple query that runs and
> does a group by to count the number of requests from each IP in the given
> date range (past 24 hours). This query works great and takes only 2
minutes
> to run.
> Is there a better way to accomplish this without having to do INSERTS into
> the LogTable1 for each request?
> It would not work to have the ASP.NET program execute an UPDATE each time
to
> increment the total number of request, since this would cause LOTSSS of
> locking in the database layer.
> Thanks in advance.
> Arsen
>|||Hi,
What about using the IIS log file?
you could set it in the way you need it, basically the client IP and maybe
the time, if you configure it to update daily all you have to do at 12:01
is run a process that read the file generated and do what you need.
Cheers,
--
Ignacio Machin,
ignacio.machin AT dot.state.fl.us
Florida Department Of Transportation
"Arsen V." <arsen.NoSpamPlease@.emergency24.com> wrote in message
news:emdbHKo6DHA.2412@.TK2MSFTNGP09.phx.gbl...
> Hello,
> What is the best way to accomplish the following.
> 1) An ASP.NET program (consiting of one file somepage.aspx) receives about
> 25,000,000 requests pay day.
> 2) The requests come from a limited set of IP addresses.
> 3) How to count the total number of request from each IP address per day.
> SQL Server 2000 is used on the backend.
> Currently we used the following architecture:
> * Each request to somepage.aspx generates an INSERT into a LogTable1
> * There is a clustered index on the LogTable1 on the dateStamp field which
> is of the type smalldatetime
> * The dateStamp field has a default that sets it to the getdate()
> * At the end of each day at 12:01AM there is a simple query that runs and
> does a group by to count the number of requests from each IP in the given
> date range (past 24 hours). This query works great and takes only 2
minutes
> to run.
> Is there a better way to accomplish this without having to do INSERTS into
> the LogTable1 for each request?
> It would not work to have the ASP.NET program execute an UPDATE each time
to
> increment the total number of request, since this would cause LOTSSS of
> locking in the database layer.
> Thanks in advance.
> Arsen
>|||Hi Kevin,
Do you suggest storing the TOTALs in the Cache?
Or storing the actual requests: date and ip
Would there be a locking problem?
How to do the "periodic updates" to the database from the Cache?
Thanks,
Arsen
"Kevin Spencer" <kevin@.takempis.com> wrote in message
news:ezSYvso6DHA.1936@.TK2MSFTNGP12.phx.gbl...
> You could store the data in your Application Cache, and update it
> periodically to the database.
> --
> HTH,
> Kevin Spencer
> .Net Developer
> Microsoft MVP
> Big things are made up
> of lots of little things.
> "Arsen V." <arsen.NoSpamPlease@.emergency24.com> wrote in message
> news:emdbHKo6DHA.2412@.TK2MSFTNGP09.phx.gbl...
> > Hello,
> >
> > What is the best way to accomplish the following.
> >
> > 1) An ASP.NET program (consiting of one file somepage.aspx) receives
about
> > 25,000,000 requests pay day.
> >
> > 2) The requests come from a limited set of IP addresses.
> >
> > 3) How to count the total number of request from each IP address per
day.
> >
> > SQL Server 2000 is used on the backend.
> >
> > Currently we used the following architecture:
> >
> > * Each request to somepage.aspx generates an INSERT into a LogTable1
> > * There is a clustered index on the LogTable1 on the dateStamp field
which
> > is of the type smalldatetime
> > * The dateStamp field has a default that sets it to the getdate()
> > * At the end of each day at 12:01AM there is a simple query that runs
and
> > does a group by to count the number of requests from each IP in the
given
> > date range (past 24 hours). This query works great and takes only 2
> minutes
> > to run.
> >
> > Is there a better way to accomplish this without having to do INSERTS
into
> > the LogTable1 for each request?
> >
> > It would not work to have the ASP.NET program execute an UPDATE each
time
> to
> > increment the total number of request, since this would cause LOTSSS of
> > locking in the database layer.
> >
> > Thanks in advance.
> >
> > Arsen
> >
> >
>|||Hi Arsen,
You could put a DataTable in the Application Cache, and add records to it
with each Request. As for periodic updating, you could put a routine in the
Session_OnStart Sub that checks an Application DateTime variable, and at
certain intervals, inserts all the records from the DataTable into the
database and clears out the DataTable.
To be safe, you would want to add code to your Application_OnEnd sub to
update the database if the Application stops or times out; however, with 25M
requests per day, that might not be necessary.
--
HTH,
Kevin Spencer
.Net Developer
Microsoft MVP
Big things are made up
of lots of little things.
"Arsen V." <arsen.NoSpamPlease@.emergency24.com> wrote in message
news:#daQL6o6DHA.2908@.tk2msftngp13.phx.gbl...
> Hi Kevin,
> Do you suggest storing the TOTALs in the Cache?
> Or storing the actual requests: date and ip
> Would there be a locking problem?
> How to do the "periodic updates" to the database from the Cache?
> Thanks,
> Arsen
> "Kevin Spencer" <kevin@.takempis.com> wrote in message
> news:ezSYvso6DHA.1936@.TK2MSFTNGP12.phx.gbl...
> > You could store the data in your Application Cache, and update it
> > periodically to the database.
> >
> > --
> > HTH,
> > Kevin Spencer
> > .Net Developer
> > Microsoft MVP
> > Big things are made up
> > of lots of little things.
> >
> > "Arsen V." <arsen.NoSpamPlease@.emergency24.com> wrote in message
> > news:emdbHKo6DHA.2412@.TK2MSFTNGP09.phx.gbl...
> > > Hello,
> > >
> > > What is the best way to accomplish the following.
> > >
> > > 1) An ASP.NET program (consiting of one file somepage.aspx) receives
> about
> > > 25,000,000 requests pay day.
> > >
> > > 2) The requests come from a limited set of IP addresses.
> > >
> > > 3) How to count the total number of request from each IP address per
> day.
> > >
> > > SQL Server 2000 is used on the backend.
> > >
> > > Currently we used the following architecture:
> > >
> > > * Each request to somepage.aspx generates an INSERT into a LogTable1
> > > * There is a clustered index on the LogTable1 on the dateStamp field
> which
> > > is of the type smalldatetime
> > > * The dateStamp field has a default that sets it to the getdate()
> > > * At the end of each day at 12:01AM there is a simple query that runs
> and
> > > does a group by to count the number of requests from each IP in the
> given
> > > date range (past 24 hours). This query works great and takes only 2
> > minutes
> > > to run.
> > >
> > > Is there a better way to accomplish this without having to do INSERTS
> into
> > > the LogTable1 for each request?
> > >
> > > It would not work to have the ASP.NET program execute an UPDATE each
> time
> > to
> > > increment the total number of request, since this would cause LOTSSS
of
> > > locking in the database layer.
> > >
> > > Thanks in advance.
> > >
> > > Arsen
> > >
> > >
> >
> >
>|||what i have done is cache the last 15 minutes. the cache has the ipaddress,
the start of the 15 min interval, pagename, and number of hits during the
interval. as most users cluster their hits, this cuts down the number of
inserts.
i flush the cache every 15 minutes of when too large.
you can then get daily or hourly stats from the db with simple queries.
-- bruce (sqlwork.com)
"Arsen V." <arsen.NoSpamPlease@.emergency24.com> wrote in message
news:emdbHKo6DHA.2412@.TK2MSFTNGP09.phx.gbl...
> Hello,
> What is the best way to accomplish the following.
> 1) An ASP.NET program (consiting of one file somepage.aspx) receives about
> 25,000,000 requests pay day.
> 2) The requests come from a limited set of IP addresses.
> 3) How to count the total number of request from each IP address per day.
> SQL Server 2000 is used on the backend.
> Currently we used the following architecture:
> * Each request to somepage.aspx generates an INSERT into a LogTable1
> * There is a clustered index on the LogTable1 on the dateStamp field which
> is of the type smalldatetime
> * The dateStamp field has a default that sets it to the getdate()
> * At the end of each day at 12:01AM there is a simple query that runs and
> does a group by to count the number of requests from each IP in the given
> date range (past 24 hours). This query works great and takes only 2
minutes
> to run.
> Is there a better way to accomplish this without having to do INSERTS into
> the LogTable1 for each request?
> It would not work to have the ASP.NET program execute an UPDATE each time
to
> increment the total number of request, since this would cause LOTSSS of
> locking in the database layer.
> Thanks in advance.
> Arsen
>