Monday, September 10, 2007

Another DVD to iPod

I have another weekend driving holiday planned in the next few weeks and my fiancee has requested Family Guy episodes on the iPod for the trip. Now that I know how to do it, I figure I better get started because there are a lot of episodes.

This time I decided to try Vrata's suggestion of DVDFab instead of the Videora software I used last time. What follows is a very quick summary of my experience with DVDFab.

Benefits:

  • Does not require separate DVD ripping software.
  • Supports optionally embedding subtitles into the video stream.
  • GUI is very clean and easy to follow.
  • Hasn't crashed yet on Vista x64.

Disappointments:

  • Still insists on running as Administrator.
  • The Platinum version for iPod conversion costs about US$50.

In all other ways DVDFab is similar to Videora. Similar conversion times, same resulting file sizes. Support for multiple devices' resolutions and bit rates.

If you think you'll be converting quite a lot of DVDs to an iPod compatible format, DVDFab is probably worth the price and you can try the fully-functional 30-day trial yourself to be sure.

 Sunday, September 09, 2007

Refactor By Region

The nature of the software development profession is such that you need to be constantly learning new techniques and improving your style. A side-effect of always seeking to be better is that when you revisit old code it suddenly doesn't seem as good as it did when you first wrote it.

I was revisiting a large class recently and was struggling to navigate between all the methods to follow the logic. I decided to make use of #region blocks (something I rarely do) to help group related methods together and hide less relevant code from view.

By arranging groups of methods together by their purpose, a pattern started to emerge. Each region started to look like an ideal candidate to refactor the code into a new class with a single responsibility. I already had a set of unit tests in place for the existing code so I felt confident in being able to refactor and being able to verify I hadn't broken anything afterward.

What was originally one class became eight, resulting in greater maintainability, testability, and of course readability, solving my original problem. For this class the refactoring by region worked well because I had grouped code by it's behaviour and partly by it's call chain.

However, I've seen other approaches to using #region blocks. I've seen all event handlers put in their own region. I've seen collections of overloaded methods grouped by name. I've even seen properties grouped together, method/subs group together, and functions grouped together. In these arrangements not only does a refactoring pattern not automatically emerge but it becomes harder to search for one.

As I mentioned above, I'm not a big user of #regions. This is probably because I try to refactor my code before it gets big enough and because of the region anti-patterns I've wrestled with. I think I might have to give them a second chance.

 Thursday, September 06, 2007

My Manwich! PowerShell Which

One feature I've loved during my brief ventures into Linux-land is the which command, not to be confused with other tasty items. For those not familiar with the command, it enables you to determine the full path to an executable in your environment path that would be executed if only the name of the executable is entered at the command prompt.

This is useful in situations where you have different versions of the same executable on your file system (perhaps even a malicious version) or if you simply want to know where the executable resides. I have often wanted to perform a similar search on my Windows PCs but to the best of my knowledge, the standard command prompt does not provide an easy way to do this.

Gratefully, as is becoming the pattern lately, PowerShell makes this very simple. Simple to the point that I don't really need to bundle it into a function. For example, here is how I locate the SQL Server Management Studio executable that runs when I use Start, Run, "sqlwb":

($Env:Path).Split(";") | Get-ChildItem -filter sqlwb*

If you don't have SQL installed, you can switch the -filter parameter for "calc*" or similar. You can see that it isn't limited to just executable files on your path either and while it doesn't duplicate the default behaviour of the Linux which command, wrapping the one-liner into a function with some extra switches would get it very close.

 Wednesday, September 05, 2007

Rhino.Blocked

I tried using Rhino.Mocks in production test code for the first time the other day. I downloaded the latest version from Oren Eini's website, unzipped it into source control, and added a reference to my project.

I wrote a quick test utilising the interface mocking features and hit Ctrl+Alt+X to run the test. SecurityException! The message, which I've since forgotten, was complaining that the referenced assembly (ie Rhino.Mocks.dll) could not be loaded.

A quick Google provided the solution, you need to ensure you've unblocked any files you have downloaded from the Internet or a network machine. Now I'm happily mocking away.

 Tuesday, September 04, 2007

Debug.Assert and Team Build

Today I was setting up a nightly build for a new project. After creating the Team Build Type and writing the script to trigger the build on the build machine, I ran the script to ensure it would work. As usual Team Build retrieved the sources, compiled the projects and began running the tests. Half an hour passed and the tests were still running.

I knew the tests couldn't take that long so I stopped the build and opened the solution in Visual Studio to run the tests locally. One of the tests managed to create just the right combination of values in a project class to violate what should otherwise be a class invariant. This particular invariant was verified by a call to Debug.Assert inside the production code.

It has been a very long time since I have written a Debug.Assert statement with an expression that failed the assertion. Today I was reminded that it does not simply throw some kind of AssertException when the expression evaluates to False. Instead a rather hefty dialog box is presented to the user with a full stack trace of the code that failed and a choice of options to proceed.

The problem is that tests running under the service of the build server don't have a visible window station to display the dialog box and there is nothing to automatically click the buttons so the build just hangs indefinitely.

For now I'm just replacing any Debug.Assert statements I find with exception throwing or additional unit tests as appropriate for each case. It may be possible to modify the app.config file to use a different listener to redirect the Debug.Assert output to something non-blocking but that is going to require some investigation.

 Monday, September 03, 2007

PowerCleaning, Part 2

Each day I live with wanting to make full use of excess storage space to keep a record of every file that has ever existed in all it's versions and the conflicting need to have a neat and tidy file system without any junk sitting around.

Recently, the desire to have a ClickOnce deployment folder with only the latest version in it has won. With only the most recently published version within, the folder is a much more manageable size for distributing to other deployment servers.

However, it can be tedious to ensure only the appropriate files are deleted when cleaning a deployment folder manually, and automating the process is infinitely better. I have put together a basic PowerShell function to handle the situation.

function Clean-ClickOnceApplication ([string] $Path = (Get-Location), [switch] $WhatIf = $false)
{
    ($current, $oldList) = Get-ChildItem -path (Join-Path $Path "*") -include "*.application" `
        | ? {$_.Name -match "_\d+_\d+_\d+_\d+\." } | sort LastWriteTime -desc;
    foreach ($old in $oldList) {
        $oldFolder = $old.Name.Substring(0, $old.Name.Length - $old.Extension.Length);
        Remove-Item (Join-Path $Path $oldFolder) -recurse -WhatIf:$WhatIf;
        Remove-Item $old -WhatIf:$WhatIf;
    }
}

Simply pass the ClickOnce deployment folder as the -Path parameter (or omit to assume the current folder) and optionally enable the -WhatIf switch to test which files and folders would have been deleted.

The script currently uses the time stamps of the .application files rather than the version numbers but unless someone has been messing with the digitally-signed files this shouldn't be a problem. If it really needs to be handled by version number, I have some ideas for handling that.

 Monday, August 27, 2007

Convert DVD to iPod

I have just spend two weeks on holiday and before I left I wanted to transfer some of my DVDs to my iPod Video to keep my fiancee and I entertained whilst traveling to our destination. Unfortunately I didn't really think about this soon enough and didn't have time to get it organised. Now that I'm back home though I've been able to look into it further.

The biggest problem I found with converting DVDs to an iPod suitable format is that the movie studios don't seem to want to allow it. This results in either a complicated list of steps involving multiple tricky applications or purchasing an all-on-one solution from a questionable overseas company. Luckily though, Hanselman recently updated his Tools List for Windows, which included a link to Videora Converters, a suite of video transcoding programs available for free. If Hanselman recommends it and I don't have to provide payment details, it's worth a try.

I downloaded their iPod converter and started following their slightly outdated guide for converting DVDs. I grabbed my Futurama box set and put the first disc in. The first stage involves using the getting-harder-to-find DVD Decrypter to rip and decrypt the appropriate video and audio stream without all the extra DVD menu junk. Thankfully I'm familiar with DVD Decrypter and even more so that it works fine as non-admin in Vista 64-bit.

The second stage involves installing and running the Videora software, selecting the file that DVD Decrypter produced and waiting for it to convert the MPEG-2 data to Apple's particular MPEG-4 format. This took less than 10 minutes on my Core 2 Duo to convert a 22-minute animated episode into a 137MB MP4 file. When complete, the video played well in the PC QuickTime player and after using iTunes to transfer it to my iPod it played great there too.

Sadly, while the Videora software is free and written in .NET too, it suffers from two major problems. Firstly, it is so filled with advertising in the program itself that it's hard to see where to start and I began to wonder if I'd just voluntarily installed malware. Secondly, the software is designed to run as an Administrator, trying to write configuration data to Program Files, and under Vista, even as an admin, it crashes hard on exit.

Ultimately, if you want some favourite DVD movies or episodes on your iPod, this is probably the easiest way.

 Wednesday, August 22, 2007

Faster User Switching

I run several Vista machines each with several user accounts. Sometimes the different accounts are for different people, sometimes they are for different purposes with different permissions (ie development vs testing). Windows XP introduced a featured called "Fast User Switching" that allowed you to log into another user account without logging off the current session and Vista improves on this by allowing it in domain environments too.

But it's not enough. I want it to be faster. At the moment, in Vista, it takes far too many key presses or mouse clicks to switch to another user. This is the quickest method I've discovered so far:

Ctrl+Alt+Del, Alt+W, select account, enter password, Enter.

However, I recently discovered a much faster approach. I bought a new laptop with Vista and a built-in Vista-driver-compatible fingerprint reader. Now I've associated different fingers with different accounts and at any time I can just slide the appropriate finger over the reader and *bam*, I'm logged into another account.

Still, if anyone knows, a better keyboard shortcut would be great for the PCs without fingerprint readers.

 Thursday, August 02, 2007

PowerShell Registry Find and Replace

Keys I recently encountered a server where SQL Server had somehow been installed to the admin user's mapped U: drive instead of drive C:. As a result all SQL file paths in the registry referred to "U:\Program Files\Microsoft SQL Server\..." but for most users (including the SQL service account) the U: drive did not map to C:. This prevented Management Studio from working and probably many other issues that weren't as visible.

I wanted a fast way to find all "U:\Program Files" references in the registry and repoint them to drive C:. The standard Windows regedit.exe only supports Find but not Replace (and there were a lot of keys to fix) and third party registry tools available on the Internet fall into the untrustworthy category for fixing servers.

I ended up writing a quick C# console app to perform the job.The C# app was able to solve the problem and the server works properly now but I felt there should be an easier way: PowerShell.

I've spent an evening hammering out a basic pair of find and replace functions for PowerShell. They don't make as much use of PowerShell's declarative pipelined nature as I'd like but they work well. The replace function is particular dangerous if you misuse it so be careful. Perhaps I will implement the -WhatIf switch some day.

The find function is simply named Find-RegistryValue. At the moment the function only looks in values, not keys or value names because these are already quite easy to search on with basic PowerShell one-liners. As input the function expects a "seek" parameter being the text sought and optionally a path to a registry key to begin searching from. If the "regpath" is not provided it defaults to Get-Location and if it is not a registry path it throws.

The find function will return an array of Hashtable objects with all the information you should require: the RegistryKey, the name of the value in the key, and the value itself containing the sought text. The code follows:

function Find-RegistryValue (
    [string] $seek = $(throw "seek required."),
    [System.Management.Automation.PathInfo] $regpath = (Get-Location) ) {

    if ($regpath.Provider.Name -ne "Registry") { throw "regpath required." }

    $keys = @(Get-Item $regpath -ErrorAction SilentlyContinue) `
        + @(Get-ChildItem -recurse $regpath -ErrorAction SilentlyContinue);

    $results = @();

    foreach ($key in $keys) {
        foreach ($vname in $key.GetValueNames()) {
            $val = $key.GetValue($vname);
            if ($val -match $seek) {
                $r = @{};
                $r.Key = $key;
                $r.ValueName = $vname;
                $r.Value = $val;
                $results += $r;
            }
        }
    }

    $results;
}

The replace function is named Replace-RegistryValue and relies on the find function to work, resulting in very similar behaviour. It requires the text sought and the registry path just like the find function but it also requires the "swap" parameter which is the text to replace the sought value with. It calls the find function itself and uses the output to first promote the key to a writable instance then replace the value and return the results. The results include the RegistryKey, the name of the value in the key, the old value and also the new value. Here is the code:

function Replace-RegistryValue (
    [string] $seek = $(throw "seek required."),
    [string] $swap = $(throw "swap required."),
    [System.Management.Automation.PathInfo] $regpath = (Get-Location) ) {

    $find = Find-RegistryValue -seek $seek -regpath $regpath;
    $results = @();

    foreach ($target in $find) {
        $nval = $target.Value -replace $seek, $swap;
        $r = @{};
        $r.Key = $target.Key;
        $r.ValueName = $target.ValueName;
        $r.OldValue = $target.Value;
        $r.NewValue = $nval;
        $results += $r;
        $wKey = (Get-Item $r.Key.PSParentPath).OpenSubKey($r.Key.PSChildName, "True");
        $wKey.SetValue($target.ValueName, $nval);
    }

    $results;
}

If you have any suggestions for improving the code or perhaps even a better naming convention for the pair, please leave a comment.

 Tuesday, July 31, 2007

My iPod In My Car

Not my car About twelve months ago I bought a new car and installed some basic necessities: alarm, central locking, and a better-than-factory stereo. For the stereo I picked up the now superceded Pioneer DEH-P4850MP "CD Tuner". I chose this model because it had good features for the price bracket and Pioneer seemed to have the best iPod support at the time.

Pioneer's iPod integration came in the form of the CD-IB100 II interface adaptor, a small module with the iPod dock connector on one end of cable and the Pioneer proprietary P-Bus connector found on most Pioneer car stereos. With a quick specialist installation, I had my iPod 30GB Video ready to crank.

For playing the music collection on my ipod through the car speaker system the Pioneer setup is great. For seeing and controlling what I'm listening too, there is definitely room for improvement.

The head unit has a 16-character alphanumerical display that scrolls artist and title information from audio discs with CD-TEXT. The iPod has full ID3v2 artist, album, title and all sorts of other information for each song. Combined the Pioneer equipments works together with the iPod to present the first eight characters only. I have it set to show artist because eight letters of a song title are quite useless but William Hung, William Orbit, and William Shatner are indistinguishable on the display.

The head unit also allows (forces) you to navigate the songs on your iPod via the stereo controls or the stereo's remote. You can navigate by artist, album, song, genre and even iTunes play list but after every press of the next or previous button, there is a delay while the iPod seeks to the first song in your selection and starts playing it. When you're listening to Bruce Dickinson and want to switch to Nick Cave it is very painful waiting for each of the artists in between to start playing before you can push the skip button again. The Pioneer iPod adapter is a great example of electronic hardware engineers developing end-user software.

Thankfully, while the iPod's built in controls are disabled when connected to the stereo it is really easy to disconnect it to queue songs the normal way or to take the iPod with you when you leave the car. The iPod also does a great job of remembering the current position in the current song when you turn the car off or disconnect the iPod.

Ultimately I'm happy with the system and have created five basic mood-oriented random play lists to minimise navigation pain. My fiancee isn't as happy though as most of the music is mine and while I like to listen to some more obscure stuff, she prefers mainstream songs.

ArgumentNullException: No Message Required

I have been encountering code recently that bugs me. Many methods in classes are testing their arguments for null/Nothing and, if true, throwing a new ArgumentNullException. So far, all good. However, the constructor for the new ArgumentNullException is being passed both the name of the argument and also a message string of the form "_paramName_ cannot be null".

This is totally redundant. The exception being thrown is an Argument *Null* Exception. That about sums it up. Also, if the constructor is passed the parameter name only the message defaults to "Value cannot be null".

Providing a message for an ArgumentNullException requires extra typing, requires maintaining the argument name in three places if it gets renames, and violates FxCop rule CA1303.

Thankfully it turns out it isn't fellow team members doing it. Developer Express' Refactor Pro has a "Create Method Contract" refactoring that is putting the message in.

Visual Studio 2008 Beta 2

I installed VS2008 Beta 2 on a spare machine on the weekend and I am beginning to use it for development. Today I waded through the Tools, Options dialog setting up the IDE with a few sensible defaults. Several default values have changed since VS2005 and for the better. Unfortunately two settings are still outdated.

VB still defaults Option Strict to Off whilst Option Explicit and the new Option Infer are On. They should all be on by default.

Also, when the new range of Microsoft fonts were released for Vista and Office, an update for VS2005 was released to use the new Consolas type in the IDE. VS2008 still defaults to the non-ClearType Courier New though.

Aside from those two issues so far, I'm loving the new Visual Studio.