tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4155628149386914837.post6238161438627984233..comments2024-01-01T20:54:44.562+07:00Comments on KristoferA's blog: Profiling Linq-to-SQL applicationsKristoferAhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01779909152712388764noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4155628149386914837.post-21967701661606290052009-09-23T12:54:01.811+07:002009-09-23T12:54:01.811+07:00Hi Mark,
App settings is a good idea - currently ...Hi Mark,<br /><br />App settings is a good idea - currently it defaults to a subdirectory called L2SProfiler under the current user's profile directory, but I will add an app-settings-override to all of the relevant profiler parameters in the next version...<br /><br />Best regards,<br />KristoferKristoferAhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/01779909152712388764noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4155628149386914837.post-59337070152619449332009-09-16T20:11:41.277+07:002009-09-16T20:11:41.277+07:00This is a very nice functionality.
IMHO, the setu...This is a very nice functionality.<br /><br />IMHO, the setup is overly complex, however,<br /><br />I suggest the following...<br /><br />Huagati.LinqToSQL.Profiler.QueryProfiler myQueryProfiler = <br />new Huagati.LinqToSQL.Profiler.QueryProfiler();<br /><br />myQueryProfiler.BeginProfiling();<br /><br />...<br /><br />myQueryProfiler.EndProfiling();<br /><br />...where the log file target is set in a required appSettings key and picked up automatically by the Profiler library when needed?Mark Kamoskihttp://www.netbrainer.comnoreply@blogger.com