﻿<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?><rss version="2.0"><channel><title>Ayende @ Rahien</title><link>http://ayende.com</link><description>Ayende @ Rahien</description><copyright>Copyright (C) Ayende Rahien  2004 - 2021 (c) 2026</copyright><ttl>60</ttl><item><title>Ayende Rahien commented on Rule out the stupid stuff first</title><description>Johannes,
It _wasn't_ so simple. But wait for the next post in which I am talking about that.</description><link>http://ayende.com/158305/rule-out-the-stupid-stuff-first#comment5</link><guid>http://ayende.com/158305/rule-out-the-stupid-stuff-first#comment5</guid><pubDate>Sun, 09 Sep 2012 04:56:54 GMT</pubDate></item><item><title>Johannes Gustafsson commented on Rule out the stupid stuff first</title><description>Was it really that simple? I admit, I actually felt quite naive to complain about it in the first place. The thing was that it was reproducible. I had 2 completely different environments, at different locations, set up by different people on different hardware, where I got the same behaviour. And it actually turned out (thanks to your sample) that there probably _is_ some problem in HttpListener (or http.sys) when using 4k buffers.

Here is the original conversation: https://groups.google.com/d/topic/ravendb/EnI_2tjAwLg/discussion

Btw, the fix you made in the latest build made the problem go away, so thanks :-)

PS. A few people on the mailing list have complained about very slow download speeds for the silverlight UI. Since the code in Raven uses 4k buffers for this, my money is on that they have the same problem as I have. DS</description><link>http://ayende.com/158305/rule-out-the-stupid-stuff-first#comment4</link><guid>http://ayende.com/158305/rule-out-the-stupid-stuff-first#comment4</guid><pubDate>Sat, 08 Sep 2012 22:04:00 GMT</pubDate></item><item><title>Gene Hughson commented on Rule out the stupid stuff first</title><description>These kinds of things are why I've always tried to remain a generalist at heart.  Focusing intently on one single aspect makes it extremely likely that you'll run down blind alleys, not because they're probable but because they're what you understand.</description><link>http://ayende.com/158305/rule-out-the-stupid-stuff-first#comment3</link><guid>http://ayende.com/158305/rule-out-the-stupid-stuff-first#comment3</guid><pubDate>Fri, 07 Sep 2012 13:09:32 GMT</pubDate></item><item><title>Jim Baltika commented on Rule out the stupid stuff first</title><description>I think the idea it self to store and server binary files in Raven DB for any enterprise level application  is bad from beginning. We are using RavenDb with amazon S3 without any problems. Amazon S3 provides access security plus ability to access file with specific TTL (time to live). The best of all worlds :)</description><link>http://ayende.com/158305/rule-out-the-stupid-stuff-first#comment2</link><guid>http://ayende.com/158305/rule-out-the-stupid-stuff-first#comment2</guid><pubDate>Fri, 07 Sep 2012 12:21:43 GMT</pubDate></item><item><title>Paul Hatcher commented on Rule out the stupid stuff first</title><description>I had something similar on my home network - took ages to track down and turned out to be a hub that was on its way out.

Performance was fine with 1-2 ports occupied but degraded rapidly as more devices were added.</description><link>http://ayende.com/158305/rule-out-the-stupid-stuff-first#comment1</link><guid>http://ayende.com/158305/rule-out-the-stupid-stuff-first#comment1</guid><pubDate>Fri, 07 Sep 2012 11:36:33 GMT</pubDate></item></channel></rss>