BYTE.com
RSS feed

Newsletter
Free E-mail Newsletter from BYTE.com
Email Address
First Name
Last Name




 
    
             
BYTE.com > Tangled in the Threads > 2001 > December

.NET Development, Java Deployment

By Jon Udell

December 17, 2001

(.NET Development, Java Deployment :  Page 1 of 1 )



Will IL-to-Java Mapping Give Us the Best of Both Worlds?

.NET development can be really sweet. But it's no fun upgrading and maintaining Windows production boxes. Is there a way to have our cake and eat it too?

Last week I installed and test-drove the near-final versions of VisualStudio.NET and the .NET Framework. The test machine was running last year's Beta 1, not this year's Beta 2, but I don't think that was the only reason the upgrade seemed daunting. Windows OS upgrades have, over the years, grown less pleasant and more anxiety producing for me. In this case, as with Beta 1, the end-game — to install a software-development toolkit, VisualStudio.NET — required at least two, and possibly three, different OS upgrades, depending on how you count. These upgrades are packaged into a multireboot procedure called "Windows Component Update." In my case, for a machine already running Windows 2000 Server, the components turned out to be:

    Windows 2000 Service Pack 2 (reboot)

    FrontPage 2000 client

    Internet Explorer 6 (reboot)

    DataAccess Components 2.7

    .NET Framework

Thankfully all this software now comes on a DVD-ROM, eliminating the CD shuffle. And as before, in acknowledgment of the multireboot requirement, the procedure optionally takes an administrative password that you can use to automate logins across reboots. I opted out, though, because I really didn't expect this entire procedure to run to completion unattended. And it didn't. The upgrade wizard complained:
This machine is not a Web server.
Say what? You could have fooled me. It had been happily running IIS 5 for over a year. But the wizard went on to explain that, for the purposes of this Windows Component Upgrade, IIS 5 alone didn't qualify as a web server. The Windows 2000 Front Page Extensions must also be present, so that VisualStudio.NET can create web projects on the server. I found and installed the Extensions, and then ran through the Component Update.

 Page 1 of 1 


BYTE.com > Tangled in the Threads > 2001 > December
Dr. Dobb's Media Center
BYTE.com Store

BYTE CD-ROM
NOW, on one CD-ROM, you can instantly access more than 8 years of BYTE.
 
The Best of BYTE: Volume 2 - Heuristic Algorithms
The Best of BYTE: Volume 2 - Heuristic Algorithms
In this volume of Best of BYTE, we explore the emergence of some heuristic algorithms. Although we have only scratched the surface of this intriguing subject, we hope we've suggested the potential of the synthesis of heuristics and algorithms.

© 2008 Think Services, Privacy Policy, Terms of Service, United Business Media Limited
Site comments: webmaster@byte.com
Web Sites: BYTE.com, dotnetjunkies.com, Dr. Dobb's Journal, SD Expo, Sys Admin, sqljunkies.com, Unixreview



MarketPlace
Easily add update features to your applications. A complete .Net updating solution.
Fast online exception analysis. Capture customer crash data online.
and develop 10 times faster ! ALM, IDE, .Net, PDF, 5GL, Database, 64-bit, etc. Free Express version
Understand C/C++ code in less time. A new team member ? Inherited legacy code ? Get up to speed faster with Crystal Flow for C/C++. Code-formatting improves readability. Flowcharts are integrated with code browser. Export flowcharts to Visio.
Develop distributed systems conforming to open standards like CORBA and Web Services faster with SANKHYA Varadhi - The Digital Bridge.
Wanna see your ad here?
 

web2