I am using android studio to generate a google cloud endpoint project.
The issue is that my android studio (updated to version 2.x.x, and my SDK also up-to-date) is generating the project with endpoints V1 which is no longer supported.
Is there a way to generate a v2 project using android studio?
Or i should use another IDE? I went with the studio approach since it generated many of the files and annotations in an easy way.
Related
I have two xamarin forms projects that currently only utilize the UWP platform. One creates msixbundles when publishing and the other creates appxbundles when publishing. I can't seem to find any key difference between the Package.appxmanifest or the uwp project files that would cause this. I would like to make them both produce msixbundles. Does anyone know the key to creating msixbundles vs appxbundles?
The apps targeting Windows 1809 and newer are automatically packaged bundled as msix/msixbundle. And here is official release note.
We added support for creating .MSIX packages for both the Universal
Windows Platform projects, as well as in the Windows Application
Packaging Project template. To create an .MSIX package, the minimum
version of your application must be the latest Windows 10 SDK (build
17763).
I have a service that is referring to Azure SDK 3.0 in turn using Microsoft.WindowsAzure.Storage.dll of version 6.0.0.0. The service is built on .NET Framework and now when I want to to upgrade the Azure Storage SDK(Blobs, Common and Queues) to version 12.4.2, the library is published in .NET Standard
Per my understanding, I can't refer a .NET Standard library in a .NET Framework Library. I searched all over the internet but I couldn't find any way other than migrating my whole service to .NET Core.NET Standard.
Is there any other way to upgrade the latest version of Azure Storage SDKs?
Is there any other way to upgrade the latest version of Azure Storage SDKs?
Direct upgrade from version 6 to 12 is not possible as SDK version 12 is actually quite different than older versions (9 or below).
Firstly, now the SDK is split in many SDKs and there are different SDKs for each service (Blobs, Files and Queues). Thus you would need to reference different Nuget packages in your source code.
Secondly, there have been many breaking changes in the SDKs thus simply referencing the Nuget packages for version 12 is just not sufficient. You will need to rewrite the code unfortunately.
I am new to .Net and Unable to understand some weird behaviour with Azure.
I am trying to publish a .Net Project to Azure Web App. And It is throwing very silly errors. I assume thats becoz of new C# version.
Here is the log file.
Use Case 1: When trying to build from Visual Studio Team Services and then deploy using Continuous delivery Works.
Use Case 2: When trying to publish directly using Visual Studio using App Service profile and it works.
Use Case 3: When trying to deploy through repository that is hosted at Visual Studio Team Services. And it fails and thats the error.
Any lead will be helpful.
Do let me know, if the information provided is not enough.
To compile C# 7.0 code, we need msbuild 15 installed. Currently, msbuild15 is not enabled on Azure Web App.
For Use Case 1 and 2, the C#(7.0) code is build on your development side on which
Visual Studio 2017(msbuild 15) is installed.
For Use Case 3, the code will be complied on Azure Web App, so it will throw errors.
Microsoft engineers are in the process of building these tools for Azure, they should be out soon. you could stay updated on github
I am trying to figure out a way to debug native Java and Objective-C code for a Cordova plugin, and I was wondering if it is possible to use Visual Studio Cordova to do this on my Mac. Ideally, I would like to hit these debug points at runtime. I have seen videos and other tutorials showing that it is possible to set debug points in JavaScript, which is helpful, but not what I'm trying to accomplish.
Unfortunately neither Java nor Objective-C debugging is supported by Visual Studio Tools for Apache Cordova today.
Cordova generates a native Android and iOS project under the hood (which I am guessing you know given you're doing plugin development). VS can be used to generate the underlying Android or iOS project, but you'll need to use native tools to debug Java or Objective-C. If you're using the "remotebuild" agent, you can find the generated Xcode projects under ~/.taco_home/remote-builds/taco-remote/builds.
I am creating the >car file using Developer studio and deploying using Wso2 Carbon server4.0.
When i am deploying always getting the older versions. Some times the server not properly deploying the car. And also how to build the project to get the latest changes.
Please suggest me a better procedure creating and deploying the car file.
I am using Wso2 esb 4.7.0 version,
Developer studio 3.2 version.
Refer to the following documentation.
http://docs.wso2.org/display/DVS310/Deploying+and+Debugging