mojoPortal 2.3.4.8 Released

I'm happy to announce the release of mojoPortal 2.3.4.8. 

Data Layer Consolidation

The primary focus of this release is consolidating our support for SqlAzure into our main MS SQL data layer so that we don't need to maintain a separate data layer for SqlAzure. For new installations that use SqlAzure, you should just use the package for MS SQL. If you have an existing installation using SqlAzure, you should follow these steps:

  1. Upgrade using the mojoportal-2-3-4-8-sqlazure-net35-deploymentfiles.zip or mojoportal-2-3-4-8-sqlazure-net40-deploymentfiles.zip depending on whether you are using .NET 3.5 or 4.0
  2. Copy your connection string from the SqlAzureConnectionString to the MSSQLConnectionString
  3. Download mojoportal-2-3-4-8-mssql-net35-deploymentfiles.zip or mojoportal-2-3-4-8-mssql-net40-deploymentfiles.zip again depending on your .NET version.
  4. Extract the files and copy the mojoPortal.Data.dll, mojoPortal.Features.Data.dll, and WebStore.Data.dll from the MS SQL package and replace them in the /bin folder your installation
  5. Going forward we will no longer have separate packages for SqlAzure, so for future upgrades you will just use the MS SQL package

Important - We no longer support MS SQL 2000. Our MS SQL Data layer is compatible with SQL 2005/2008/SqlAzure

As I mentioned in my previous post, we also now have a package for SQL CE. I encourage you to give it a try. It would be really cool if someone out there could do some load testing of mojoPortal using SQL CE and then using MS SQL to get an idea of how well SQL CE can handle traffic. I would not expect it to do as well as MS SQL but I think it might hold up better than one might expect. My guess is it can handle more traffic than the Sqlite version of mojoPortal because Sqlite only supports 1 connection and SQL CE does have a connection pool and supports more connections.

In the near future I will be looking into using WebMatrix which is the tool that can be used to migrate from SQL CE to SQL Server. WebMatrix could also be used for light mojoPortal feature development for those who find Visual Studio to be a little scary. WebMatrix is also a pretty neat tool for trying applications from the Web App Gallery and it includes IIS Express.

New Date Picker

This release also includes a new jQuery DatePicker. You could still use the old one if you like it better by changing the default DataPickerProvider in mojoDatePicker.config in the root of the site.

jquery date time picker

I also added jQuery UI styling to the buttons in most of the included skins (except Artisteer skins since they already have button style). You can enable it in a custom skin from the theme.skin file by adding this:

<portal:mojoButton runat="server" UsejQueryButton="true" />

A Few Bug Fixes

  • fixed a bug where using Live Writer an error would happen when trying to open existing posts
  • fixed a bug in the blog where the rating was not shown even on the detail page if using excerpts
  • fixed a bug in the blog where the default comment allowed days was being ignored
  • fixed a bug in Feed Manager where the aggregate feed link did not work in child sites
  • fixed a few bugs in the Sqlite data layer where the paging logic was not correct

Updated Italian resources from Diego Mora

Updated Dutch translation from Bouke Bisschop

As always, it is a good idea to backup your site and database before upgrading.

 

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Gravatar Joe Audette is the founder of the mojoPortal project and was the primary developer until February 2017.

SQL Server Compact 4.0 and mojoPortal

On June 30, 2010, Scott Guthrie blogged New Embedded Database Support with ASP.NET, announcing that SQL CE 4 (SQL Server Compact Edition) would soon be available. It was officially released as a public CTP (Community Technology Preview) on July 7, 2010 with an announcement on the SQL Server Compact Team blog in a post by Ambrish Mishra entitled Introducing SQL Server Compact 4.0, the Next Gen Embedded Database from Microsoft.

This little database is big news for mojoPortal

Today I am happy to announce a preview release of mojoPortal 2.3.4.7 for SQL CE 4 and ASP.NET 4.0. This package has a pre-configured database and can be deployed under Medium Trust with .NET 4 hosting.(*) This means it is easy to deploy and use even on budget shared hosting where Medium Trust security policy is almost always used. You can download the package mojoportal-2-3-4-7-preview-sqlce-net40-deploymentfiles.zip from the bottom of this page on Codeplex. It is an MsDeploy package, so it can be installed by importing it in IIS, or you can just unzip it and install manually.

When installing web applications like mojoPortal, often one of the more challenging installation issues is setting up the database, for non-techies this is the part that people really struggle with, and even people who consider themselves fairly tech savvy can find themselves struggling to get it working unless they have a background in working with databases and understand all the nuances of connection strings and permissions. Using SQL CE 4 eliminates this challenge completely because the database is just a file on disk. There is no database software to install on the server, so it does not depend on the host having it installed, it only requires .NET 4 hosting. Since we ship a database file already populated with initial data, it is basically zero configuration for the database, you don't have to do anything, it just works.

I'm sure some of you are aware that mojoPortal has supported Sqlite for a long time, and it is also a zero configuration, file based database that many people like a lot. However, it has never worked under Medium Trust and if your site traffic starts to grow there is not an easy way to migrate the data to a more robust database.

  SQL CE Sqlite
Zero config deployment yes yes
Backing up the files backs up the database yes yes
Works in Medium Trust yes no
A supported migration path to a more robust database yes to SQL Express/Server/SqlAzure no convenient migration solutions that I know of

 

Now, I'm not yet sure yet how easy the migration of mojoPortal from SQL CE to SQL Server will be. Scott Gu mentioned that they will be shipping migration tools that will make it straight forward to migrate the tables and data from SQL CE to SQL Express, SQL Server or SQL Azure. However, since SQL CE does not support stored procedures and we do use them in the SQL Server data layer for mojoPortal, it means we will also need to make migration scripts available to install the latest stored procedures into the database after migration. So, in theory, the migration process will be to first use the tool that Microsoft will ship to migrate the tables and data, then run the scripts we will make available that contain the stored procedures for a given version of mojoPortal, then you would just deploy the mojoPortal version for SQL Server over your existing mojoPortal for SQL CE installation and set your connection string for the new database. Once the migration tools ship I will verify the process and create documentation with the migration steps.

In summary, I think that the SQL CE package for mojoPortal will make it easy for you to stand up impressive new web sites quickly and easily in budget hosting with the possibility to upscale to a more robust database platform later without too much difficulty. I would say that if you are putting up a site that you are expecting to grow traffic quickly, then you should probably just start out using SQL Express, SQL Server, or SQL Azure. But, how many sites that you put online for your customers really get a lot of traffic? If the answer is not many, then you may find SQL CE is the best choice for many of your projects, reducing costs and time to deployment.

Screen shot of mojoportal system information showing SQL CE

 

Top Secret Early Access! :-D

 
Now you may wonder how I managed to have a version of mojoPortal for SQL CE ready so soon after SQL CE 4 was released. The answer is that I had early access to SQL CE 4.0 and access to a bunch of good folks on the IIS and SQL Server teams to help me with guidance and questions and was also able to give them feedback while they were working on this release.
 
Back in early March I was contacted by Jonathan Hawkins of Microsoft and was invited to an online meeting where they told me what they were planning for SQL CE and why it might be beneficial for mojoPortal to support it, I of course was very excited about it.  At the time the alpha bits of SQL CE 4 were not quite ready but I was provided with good help and work arounds that would enable me to work on support for SQL CE using the 3.5 version so I could get started without waiting. So I went ahead at that time and implemented it for the core mojoPortal features (it took me about a week) and managed to get it working as proof of concept. Once that was done I moved on to work on other things not knowing how long it would be until the alpha bits of SQL CE 4.0 would be ready. Finally on June 2nd I got an email that the alpha bits were available, but I was knee deep in other projects right at the time, so it was around June 27-28 when I finally tried the new bits and verified it worked under Medium Trust. Then when Scott Gu blogged about it on June 30, I realized it was going to be public very soon so I scrambled to complete the SQL CE data layer for the rest of the mojoPortal features (except for WebStore and my Add On Products). It took about 1 week to finish that work and by Friday July 9 I was ready to produce a package but decided to wait until Monday to blog about it.
 
So here we are, it is Monday, and I've uploaded the package on Codeplex, at the bottom of our current release. I've done sanity testing of all the features but not exhaustive testing of every configuration of every feature, so it is possible and perhaps likely there are still a few bugs here and there in the data layer, after all this is our newest data layer and therefore the least tested of all our data layers at this point. That is why I'm calling it a "Preview" release, and I hope you will give it a try and report any problems you may encounter. I will fix them quickly.
 
I'd like to thank all the folks at Microsoft for giving me this opportunity to work closely with them and get early access to the technology, and I especially thank Jonathan Hawkins, Parasuraman Narasimhan, Radhakrishnan Srikanth, Mohammad Imran Siddique, Himadri Sarkar, and Ambrish Mishra for all their help. It has really been a great experience for me getting to work with these guys and do something with mojoPortal that fit well with cutting edge work these guys have done on SQL CE. I really think they have solved one of the long standing problems in ASP.NET web deployment. For low traffic sites or quick prototyping or proof of concept deployment, or just low budget web sites, this is really going to reduce friction and make it easy to put a site up in minutes. 
 

Technical Notes

 
It turned out well that I waited for SQL CE 4 before implementing all the mojoPortal features. When I implemented the core features I only had SQL CE 3.5 to work with so in places where I needed to select a page of data, I was having to use some awkward SQL syntax to make it work, it did work but it was difficult to read and write. One of the coolest new things in SQL CE 4.0 is the new syntax for selecting a page of data like this:
 
SELECT * FROM mp_GeoCountry ORDER BY Name OFFSET 10 ROWS FETCH NEXT 10 ROWS ONLY;
 
It would be great if someday SQL Server supports an easier paging syntax, as it is still awkward to get a page of data efficiently in SQL Server, though it is a little easier than SQL CE 3.5 since SQL Server at least gives us stored procedures which provides a few additional strategies for getting a page of data. Anyway, you can guess I like this new syntax, it is much more convenient. Probably since I've worked with so many open source database platforms in mojoPortal, and have learned the major syntax differences between them, and really most of them have had easier ways to get a page of data than SQL Server for a long time, I'm glad to see something that makes a bit more sense. In a nutshell, MySql, PostgreSql, and Sqlite all support the LIMIT x OFFSET y syntax, Firebird has an interesting twist with SELECT FIRST x SKIP y, and SQL Server has always had the SELECT TOP (x) syntax but no equivalent to OFFSET, and this makes us have to jump through syntax hoops to get any efficient way to grab a page of data. So at the moment, in my view, SQL CE 4 has at least one cool syntax thing better than its big brother SQL Server even if it is not as capable in handling large traffic.
 

The mojoPortal Query Tool can talk to SQL CE

The above screen shot shows that the built in mojoPortal query tool can be used with SQL CE.

No need to install it in the GAC

One of the interesting things to me is that it seems like SQL CE 4 must be all managed code, that is, I think it must be implemented purely in .NET. The reasons I think this is because it seems that the database engine must be completely contained in System.Data.SqlServerCe.dll, and this dll just needs to be in the /bin folder, it doesn't even need to be installed in the GAC (Global Assembly Cache). The main reason why Sqlite doesn't work under Medium Trust is because it does some P/Invoke against a native dll written in C. To be allowed to do that the managed dll for Sqlite would have to be installed in the GAC. Since SQL CE can work without being installed in the GAC, I can guess it does not do any P/Invoke and is all managed code. Someone asked about this in the comments of Scott Gu's post, and while he did not specifically answer it, he did mention in comments that they are looking at enabling use of SQL CE in Silverlight which I think lends more evidence to it being fully managed code. I could be wrong though, possibly there are changes in code access security in .NET 4 that makes it possible to use without installing in the GAC.

The idea of being able to use SQL CE as a client side database in Silverlight is pretty compelling to me, so I'll be keeping my eyes open for future announcements. I had once done a proof of concept where I managed to use Sqlite as a client side database in Silverlight via Google Gears, but it had a few issues because database calls had to be marshalled back and forth from javascript to Silverlight via the Html Bridge. It would be much nicer to be able to use SQL CE directly from Silverlight. That would enable some really interesting client side scenarios.

(*) Actually I think SQL CE 4 could probably be used under 3.5 .NET but not under Medium Trust, it requires .NET 4 to work under Medium Trust, and the mojoPortal package for SQL CE is only going to be available for .NET 4.

Consolidation of Data Layers

At the moment we have a separate data layer for SqlAzure, SQL Server, and SQL CE. Back in March when I first began work on SQL CE support in mojoPortal, I blogged Anyone Still Using SQL 2000?, to guage how many people still use it. Going forward we are dropping support for SQL 2000 and then the MS SQL data layer will be modified to make it compatible with SqlAzure, and then we will eliminate the separate data layer for SqlAzure. I "think" the previous release of mojoPortal 2.3.4.5 was still compatible with SQL 2000, but the latest code in the repository is not compatible because we have changed from ntext to nvarchar(max) which is not supported in SQL 2000. So the next release of mojoPortal for sure will not be compatible with SQL 2000. Going forward we will support SQL 2005/2008/SqlAzure and SQL CE.

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Gravatar Joe Audette is the founder of the mojoPortal project and was the primary developer until February 2017.

Organizing the mojoPortal Community

The mojoPortal community has been gradually growing along with the evolution of the project since late 2004. We have had quite a few contributors over the years such as Dean Brettle, who implemented NeatUpload, Joseph Hill, who implemented the initial version of Feed Manager (later improved by Walter Ferrari) as well as the initial data layers for PostgreSql and Sqlite, Rob Henry, who implemented the Survey, Christian Fredh, who implemented the Poll, and Kevin Needham who implemented the content workflow, and many others who contributed various little improvements over the years. You can find a list of contributors on our developer page for more detail. All the contributions and involvement have been pretty organic, we have never really organized project teams or a holistic strategy to grow and support the community. mojoPortal is now the 3rd most popular CMS on the ASP.NET stack and we are reaching a critical mass of popularity that I think requires us to get a little more organized. We are beginning to see more people helping out in the forums and more and more people are offering to help with development, but it is challenging for me to manage the community all by myself.

Today I would like to announce that Joe Davis will be stepping up to take on new responsibilities in the project as Community Manager. Joe has been a huge help to myself and the community already in the forums. He has helped a lot of people with skinning questions, installation and configuration questions, and lots of implementation tips and tricks to help others achieve their goals with mojoPortal. Joe mentioned to me a long time ago that one of the things that drew him toward mojoPortal was the friendly forums, we don't make people feel stupid for asking questions, there are no stupid questions. This is not to say that every question gets answered, most of them do but not all of them. Sometimes people ask questions for which we don't know the answer, or there isn't a good answer that comes to mind, or the amount of time required to answer it would be too much effort, or what I playfully would describe as "Wizard of Oz" questions. But by and large if people ask reasonable well articulated questions and we are able to help we do help. In his participation in the forums, Joe Davis has been exemplary in putting a friendly face on our forums and making people feel welcome. I mean just look at his mug shot, if you lookup "nice guy" in the dictionary there should be a mug shot of Joe Davis!

Joe Davis i7MEDIA

As Community Manager, Joe Davis will be able to help with forum moderation and logistics of managing the community, and he will collaborate with me on strategy to promote community engagement and how best to organize teams and contribution guidelines to facilitate development help offered by the community. As such we are in the beginning stages of working on the strategy and will be communicating more about that as our ideas begin to take shape. For now I just want to thank and congratulate Joe for stepping up to take on this role as a Core Team member and Community Manager.

Joe's company i7MEDIA provides high quality mojoPortal hosting and design services.

I also want to officially welcome Katherine Moss, who has joined our team as an Accessibility Advisor. Katherine will be instrumental in helping us keep mojoPortal accessible for users who use assistive technology such as screen readers. She will be helping with testing and feedback of various mojoPortal features in terms of their accessibility.

 

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Gravatar Joe Audette is the founder of the mojoPortal project and was the primary developer until February 2017.

The Miraculous Resurrection of Novell Forge svn and the Recovery of Source Code History

If you read this blog on a regular basis you may recall that back on May 12 I blogged Caught Off Guard Novell Forge svn is Gone!

I had missed the email and had not known that Novell Forge was going away as of March 2010. So as it was, the Novell Forge svn server had already been running way past the deadline when I found it was down on May 11 and 12. That morning I googled and found the notice about it. So we quickly moved to Codeplex with a new Mercurial repository which I have since found to be a joy to use. Ultimately I felt the whole situation had been a blessing in disguise because I like Mecurial so much better than Subversion.

Then a few weeks later on June 6, a surprising thing happened, there was a post in the forums where a user said he just got the latest version of the code from svn. As it turned out, the svn repository at Novell Forge was back online!

So the next morning I did some research and found this post and this linked post about how to get svn history into Mercurial. It seemed pretty straightforward so I kicked the process off wondering if it would really work given we have history in the svn repository going back to 2005. The process started working, it scanned the repository and started counting down from 6000 plus change sets that I guess it was converting to Mercurial change sets. So that was the morning of June 7, 2010 and it finally finished running this morning sometime before I got up. Today is June 28 so it ran for about 21 days. The conversion process was surprisingly robust in that a few nights (including the screen shot below where it was getting close to finishing) it would lose its connection with the server and stop running, but I would kick it off again and it would scan and then pick up where it left off. The process was killed one night because my computer went into hibernate mode an would not wake up without powering it off, and another night a forced reboot by windows update killed it, but every time it managed to work again and pick up where it left off.

hg convert screen shot

So now I have the ability to browse change history going back to the beginning of our svn repository using TortoiseHG with a Mercurial repository on my local machine.

TortoiseHG repository browser

I'm kind of glad we started with just the latest code in a clean repository at Codeplex because this much history takes up a lot of space on disk, but now it is nice that I will be able to have an archive the source code history on CD ROM.

I have to say that I am pleasantly amazed with Mercurial and TortoiseHG!

Anyway, thought I would share the happy ending!

 

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mojoPortal 2.3.4.5 Released

I'm happy to announce the release of mojoPortal 2.3.4.5, available now from our download page.

What's New

  • New Bing Map Feature
  • New alternate site search features allow you to use Bing or Google for site search in addition to or instead of the internal Lucene search engine
  • Upgraded to the latest version of AjaxControlToolkit
  • Upgraded from TinyMCE .3.6 to 3.3.7
  • Upgraded from CKeditor 3.3 to 3.3.1
  • Added a required checkbox if a registration agreement is used
  • Updated Italian resources from Diego Mora
  • Fixed a bug introduced in version 2.3.4.4 where if you were using excerpts in the blog, the read more link was malformed
  • Fixed a bug introduced in version 2.3.4.4 where the FeedManager page size setting was ignored
  • Fixed some more places where we had not implemented the new TimeZone system and the old hard coded offsets were still being used
  • Fixed a bug where the google 404 enhancement gives a script error in IE, it is now disabled in IE
  • Fixed a bug in the pgsql data layer for the blog that caused an error on viewing blog categories
  • Other minor enhancements and fixes for things reported or requested in the forums since the last release

Bing Map Screen shot

There were also a few additions to CSS in included skins that you will need to add to custom skins, see this sticky thread for details.

Upgrades for Add On Products

Because of the upgrade to the latest version of AjaxControlToolkit, there are also corresponding compatibility updates for Event Calendar Pro and Form Wizard Pro because they must use the same version of AjaxControlToolkit as mojoPortal. Existing customers can download the updates from their purchase history. We have officially changed our upgrade policy, originally the policy was free upgrades for 1 year after purchasing our add on products, but now our policy is free upgrades for the life of the product and this is retro active to all existing customers. If you've never purchased our add on products now is a good time to consider adding them to your site, visit the store to learn more about our add on products for mojoPortal

Online User Group Meeting

Don't forget to sign up for our free online user group meeting coming up this Wednesday June 23, 2010 8 PM Eastern Daylight Time on Yamisee.

mojoportal user group ad

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Gravatar Joe Audette is the founder of the mojoPortal project and was the primary developer until February 2017.