Correlating the output of !eeheap -gc and !address
!address is a very powerful debugger command. It shows you exactly what your VM space looks like. If you already got the output from the !sos.eeheap -gc command (refer to this article for usage on...
View ArticleMy application seems to hang. What do I do? – Part 2
Last time I talked about the hang scenario where your process is taking 0 CPU and the CPU is taking by other process(es) on the same machine. The next scenario is your process is taking 0 CPU and the...
View ArticleCheck out the CLR Lead Architect’s New Blog
Many people know Patrick Dussud by his outstanding work on Garbage Collection. But did you know he was one of the founders of the CLR? In his intro blog entry he talks about how the CLR came to life. I...
View ArticleNot seeing the WKS:: and the SVR:: namespace?
These namespaces were introduced in CLR 2.0. For example for the GCHeap::GcCondemnedGeneration symbol, it’s WKS::GCHeap::GcCondemnedGeneration for Workstation GC and...
View ArticleBeta2 of ASP.NET AJAX (formerly Atlas) has shipped!
This Monday we shipped Beta2 of the ASP.NET AJAX framework – formerly known as “Atlas”. You can visit the ASP.NET AJAX website or Scott Guthrie’s blog article for details. The bits can be...
View ArticleVisual Web Developer Express turns one!
This week marks the first anniversary of Visual Studio 2005 and the Express editions. Almost a year ago to the day – 11/7/2005 to be precise – was the day we launched Visual Studio 2005. That also...
View ArticleLive from Redmond – webcast series
Over the past month, we have been doing a round of webcasts titled “Live from Redmond”. These are technology presentations made by team members working on the various products. You can get more...
View ArticleVisual Web Developer Starter Kits
Many of you are probably aware of Visual Web Developer/Visual Studio web site starter kits that are available online. If you have not seen or used these yet, they are complete end-to-end working web...
View ArticleGetting started with ASP.NET AJAX in Visual Web Developer
Once you download ASP.NET AJAX, you are ready to start using Visual Web Developer and Visual Studio 2005 for your development. The first thing you will notice when you open up Visual Web Developer is...
View ArticlePart 3 of 3: Creating sub-projects using the Visual Studio Development Server...
This is the Part 3 of a 3 part series on using sub-projects with the Web Application Projects add-in for Visual Studio 2005. Part 1 of the series can be found here. Part 2 of the series can be found...
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