16,010,650 members
Sign in
Sign in
Email
Password
Forgot your password?
Sign in with
home
articles
Browse Topics
>
Latest Articles
Top Articles
Posting/Update Guidelines
Article Help Forum
Submit an article or tip
Import GitHub Project
Import your Blog
quick answers
Q&A
Ask a Question
View Unanswered Questions
View All Questions
View C# questions
View C++ questions
View Javascript questions
View Visual Basic questions
View .NET questions
discussions
forums
CodeProject.AI Server
All Message Boards...
Application Lifecycle
>
Running a Business
Sales / Marketing
Collaboration / Beta Testing
Work Issues
Design and Architecture
Artificial Intelligence
ASP.NET
JavaScript
Internet of Things
C / C++ / MFC
>
ATL / WTL / STL
Managed C++/CLI
C#
Free Tools
Objective-C and Swift
Database
Hardware & Devices
>
System Admin
Hosting and Servers
Java
Linux Programming
Python
.NET (Core and Framework)
Android
iOS
Mobile
WPF
Visual Basic
Web Development
Site Bugs / Suggestions
Spam and Abuse Watch
features
features
Competitions
News
The Insider Newsletter
The Daily Build Newsletter
Newsletter archive
Surveys
CodeProject Stuff
community
lounge
Who's Who
Most Valuable Professionals
The Lounge
The CodeProject Blog
Where I Am: Member Photos
The Insider News
The Weird & The Wonderful
help
?
What is 'CodeProject'?
General FAQ
Ask a Question
Bugs and Suggestions
Article Help Forum
About Us
Search within:
Articles
Quick Answers
Messages
Comments by RonnieDean77 (Top 10 by date)
RonnieDean77
30-Jan-19 18:28pm
View
Did you find a solution? I tried the provided solution above but I still get no results in C# and SQL Developer has LOTS of rows. What the heck am I missing here?
RonnieDean77
6-Apr-15 18:31pm
View
You comment that my question was above your help: "Why do you think that an expert would need to "have a similar issue" to answer this very simple question?"
RonnieDean77
6-Apr-15 18:19pm
View
WOW...is that really necessary? I am just asking if anyone has had to write very large XML files. This is not the first time I recieve a snotty response on this site. Guess it's time to drop this site from my list of resources. UNBELIEVABLE!
RonnieDean77
5-Jan-15 11:21am
View
Hi Philippe! I understand MS efforts, but to clarify; I am trying to write a WCF generic data layer that can accept any parameter data type. This is so the client only has to fill in ONE, generic, parameter object and not chose from 5-10+ different typed parameter objects. In the WCF service I will determine which one was sent and handle accordingly. I don't feel that this, in any way, is considered incorrect. I do appreciate your comments. Have a great new year!
RonnieDean77
24-Oct-13 12:56pm
View
Interestingly, I am already doing this. And, this only happens for a single call to an Oracle procdeure. I don't get this fault expcetion on other Oracle procedures and can even run the Oracle procedure from RapidSql (yuk!) and it runs fine. I was concerned that the Fault exception was not truely sending me "real" information about the fault....thus my question about fault exceptions. Sorry, i should have added the Oracle comments earlier.
RonnieDean77
21-Oct-13 18:57pm
View
Are you getting an exception back? Is your WCF service on another server or on the same pc where you're running your Silverlight app?
RonnieDean77
2-Feb-13 12:33pm
View
...oh, one more point. I thought of AD lookup however, I wont know which SQL account they belong to as there are many users and many SQL accounts. What I need to be able to do is check the AD account for their authorized server and/or database...or look them up in SQL somehow.
RonnieDean77
2-Feb-13 12:25pm
View
I wish that would work. The issue I am facing is I can in fact obtain the security context of the calling user but pushing those credentials on to the database server is a second hop...which Kerberos has to be configured to handle. In this case the company policy is to not make that configuration change due to vulnerabilities. So, I need to take that user id and somehow look them up in the database to see if they have access, then, on their behalf under the service logon credentials, make the call to the database. Make sense? I re-read this a couple of times to hopefully be clear....sometimes a type too much :-)
RonnieDean77
2-Feb-13 2:10am
View
It is not sent. In the WCF service code it can obtain the sercurity context of the calling user.
RonnieDean77
1-Feb-13 23:30pm
View
Ah, good question. I am obtaining the user id from the ServiceSecurityContext.Current.WindowsIdentity. So I can authenticate the correct user id against AD.
Show More