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Silverlight 4 Hosting - HostForLIFE.eu :: How to Make Video Player?

clock April 12, 2016 23:41 by author Anthony

Today, I will make a tutorial about how to make simple video player with Silverlight 4. Once you have that lets make the project, We want to make a Silverlight Application and after naming your project, on the next dialogue select Silverlight 4 from the combo box.


The Pre-created code for our project should look like this:

<UserControl x:Class="SilverlightApplication3.MainPage"

    xmlns="http://schemas.microsoft.com/winfx/2006/xaml/presentation"

    xmlns:x="http://schemas.microsoft.com/winfx/2006/xaml"

    xmlns:d="http://schemas.microsoft.com/exp<b></b>ression/blend/2008"

    xmlns:mc="http://schemas.openxmlformats.org/markup-compatibility/2006"

    mc:Ignorable="d"

    d:DesignHeight="300" d:DesignWidth="400">
 
    <Grid x:Name="LayoutRoot" Background="White">

    </Grid>

</UserControl>

However, We don't need all those links, We only need a couple they are
view sourceprint?

xmlns="http://schemas.microsoft.com/winfx/2006/xaml/presentation"

   xmlns:x="http://schemas.microsoft.com/winfx/2006/xaml"

So you can delete the others, Once you have your code should look like this:
view sourceprint?

<UserControl x:Class="SilverlightApplication3.MainPage"

    xmlns="http://schemas.microsoft.com/winfx/2006/xaml/presentation"

    xmlns:x="http://schemas.microsoft.com/winfx/2006/xaml">

    <Grid x:Name="LayoutRoot" Background="White">
        
    </Grid>

</UserControl>

After that minor tweak, We now need to add a Canvas tag to hold all of our video player elements together for us, To do this we need to put the <Canvas> Tag between the <Grid> Tags.

    <Grid x:Name="LayoutRoot" Background="White">

    <Canvas Name="Holder" Width="350" Height="220" Background="Black">

    </Canvas>

</Grid>


These properties of the Canvas are very common in our project, All our elements will have a Name, A Height and a Width. They are measured in Pixels so you can easily make this pixel-perfect if you want to. The name is what we use to address the element of the project, We will need this later on. So We have in effect a black shape. We now need to add the video in, to do this we need to use the <MediaElement> tag. This have three main properties that we need in addition to a Name, Width and Height we need the Source, Volume and AutoPlay settings.

- The source is what we want the media element to find and play, In our case the video is at media/media.wmv so, Our source would look like this

Source="media/media.wmv"

- The volume setting is pretty self explanitoriy so we will set it to 100 for this tutorial.
- The AutoPlay setting has two values, True or False, It determines if the video should automatically play when it has loaded, for this tutorial we will set it to False.

So after all that, Our MediaElement Code should look like this

<MediaElement Name="Video" Source="media/media.wmv" AutoPlay="False" Volume="100" />

I have named the element video so that we will not get confused to it's function later on in the tutorial.
Right ok, Now we have a video lets add some controls so that we can control it.  Using the resources I have provided, We will add a new image tag into our code, this will be our Play Button.

The code for this will be like so;

<Image Name="btnPlay" Height="17" Width="49" Source="media/play.png" />

As you can see, The element has a name, height, width and source. Because we have put all our resources into a folder in the project called media we always address the image as media/play.png instead of just play.png

We can also add other properties to this, As well as position it. To do so we will change the opacity to 0.4 and move it 220 pixels down from the canvas so we can see the button clearly. So, The code will now look like this;

<Image Name="btnPlay" Height="17" Width="49" Source="media/play.png" Opacity="0.4" Canvas.Top="220" />

The Opacity property can be any value between 0 and 1.

Right, We have an image that doesn't do anything which isn't entirely useful at the moment so lets add some code to it. Open the event window while the image is selected and find the event for MouseLeftButtonDown this is silverlights version of click. It will take you to the code behind the project for that event and this bit is very simple, the only code we need to put in this bit is Video.Play(); and thats all, That will make the video play! easy!

If your confused where to put it, this is what it should look like:

private void btnPlay_MouseLeftButtonDown(object sender, MouseButtonEventArgs e)

       {

           Video.Play();

       }

You may notice that the source of the media element has an error on it, To fix this you find the media.wmv in the media folder and change it's Build Action to Resource and it will work fine.
You can run it now and the video will play.

 

HostForLIFE.eu Silverlight 4 Hosting
HostForLIFE.eu revolutionized hosting with Plesk Control Panel, a Web-based interface that provides customers with 24x7 access to their server and site configuration tools. Plesk completes requests in seconds. It is included free with each hosting account. Renowned for its comprehensive functionality - beyond other hosting control panels - and ease of use, Plesk Control Panel is available only to HostForLIFE's customers. They offer a highly redundant, carrier-class architecture, designed around the needs of shared hosting customers.



Silverlight 4 Hosting - HostForLIFE.eu :: How to Upload File In Silverlight?

clock April 5, 2016 21:06 by author Anthony

Today, I will eplain about a simple way to upload file in Silverlight. Uploading files is quite an easy one in Silverlight: it’s basically just a request made to another server and the file contents are passed in this request. A possible way of implementing this is by using the WebClient class:

private void UploadFile()
{
FileStream _data; // The file stream to be read
string uploadUri;
 
byte[] fileContent = new byte[_data.Length]; // Read the contents of the stream into a byte array
int bytesRead = _data.Read(fileContent, 0, CHUNK_SIZE);
 
WebClient wc = new WebClient();
wc.OpenWriteCompleted += new OpenWriteCompletedEventHandler(wc_OpenWriteCompleted);
Uri u = new Uri(uploadUri);
wc.OpenWriteAsync(u, null, new object[] { fileContent, bytesRead }); // Upload the file to the server
}
 
void wc_OpenWriteCompleted(object sender, OpenWriteCompletedEventArgs e) // The upload completed
{
if (e.Error == null)
{
  // Upload completed without error
}

The above solution does the job of uploading the file well. However it does not indicate file upload progress at all: when uploading large files or when having slow internet connection this behaviour would be desirable.

Silverlight has no built-in way to monitor the number of bytes sent which means that the only way to indicate upload progress is sending the file to the server in multiple, smaller chunks. Of course this behaviour needs support from the server side as well.

The idea is that multiple calls are made to the server, every call submitting the next chunk of the file. On the server these chunks are appended to the file.


Silverlight Code Snippet

public const int CHUNK_SIZE = 4096;
public const string UPLOAD_URI = "http://localhost:55087/FileUpload.ashx?filename={0}&append={1}";
private Stream _data;
private string _fileName;
private long _bytesTotal;
private long _bytesUploaded;
private void UploadFileChunk()
{
    string uploadUri = ""; // Format the upload URI according to wether the it's the first chunk of the file
    if (_bytesUploaded == 0)
    {
        uploadUri = String.Format(UPLOAD_URI,_fileName,0); // Dont't append
    }
    else if (_bytesUploaded < _bytesTotal)
    {
        uploadUri = String.Format(UPLOAD_URI, _fileName, 1); // append
    }
    else
    {
        return;  // Upload finished
    }
    byte[] fileContent = new byte[CHUNK_SIZE];
    _data.Read(fileContent, 0, CHUNK_SIZE);
    WebClient wc = new WebClient();
    wc.OpenWriteCompleted += new OpenWriteCompletedEventHandler(wc_OpenWriteCompleted);
    Uri u = new Uri(uploadUri);
    wc.OpenWriteAsync(u, null, fileContent);
    _bytesUploaded += fileContent.Length;
}
void wc_OpenWriteCompleted(object sender, OpenWriteCompletedEventArgs e)
{
    if (e.Error == null)
    {  
        object[] objArr = e.UserState as object[];
        byte[] fileContent = objArr[0] as byte[];
        int bytesRead = Convert.ToInt32(objArr[1]);
        Stream outputStream = e.Result;
        outputStream.Write(fileContent, 0, bytesRead);
        outputStream.Close();
        if (_bytesUploaded < _bytesTotal)
        {
            UploadFileChunk();
        }
        else
        {
            // Upload complete
        }
    }
}

Since Silverlight is a client side technology the server side can be implemented in any language. In this example I’ve created .NET and PHP support for the server side.


.NET Server Side Code Snippet

public const int CHUNK_SIZE = 4096;
public const string UPLOAD_URI = "http://localhost:55087/FileUpload.ashx?filename={0}&append={1}";
private Stream _data;
private string _fileName;
private long _bytesTotal;
private long _bytesUploaded;
private void UploadFileChunk()
{
    string uploadUri = ""; // Format the upload URI according to wether the it's the first chunk of the file
    if (_bytesUploaded == 0)
    {
        uploadUri = String.Format(UPLOAD_URI,_fileName,0); // Dont't append
    }
    else if (_bytesUploaded < _bytesTotal)
    {
        uploadUri = String.Format(UPLOAD_URI, _fileName, 1); // append
    }
    else
    {
        return;  // Upload finished
    }
    byte[] fileContent = new byte[CHUNK_SIZE];
    _data.Read(fileContent, 0, CHUNK_SIZE);
    WebClient wc = new WebClient();
    wc.OpenWriteCompleted += new OpenWriteCompletedEventHandler(wc_OpenWriteCompleted);
    Uri u = new Uri(uploadUri);
    wc.OpenWriteAsync(u, null, fileContent);
    _bytesUploaded += fileContent.Length;
}
void wc_OpenWriteCompleted(object sender, OpenWriteCompletedEventArgs e)
{
    if (e.Error == null)
    {  
        object[] objArr = e.UserState as object[];
        byte[] fileContent = objArr[0] as byte[];
        int bytesRead = Convert.ToInt32(objArr[1]);
        Stream outputStream = e.Result;
        outputStream.Write(fileContent, 0, bytesRead);
        outputStream.Close();
        if (_bytesUploaded < _bytesTotal)
        {
            UploadFileChunk();
        }
        else
        {
            // Upload complete
        }
    }
}

PHP Server Side Code Snippet

<?php
//  This is the most basic of scripts with no try catches
$filename = isset($_REQUEST["filename"]) ? $_REQUEST["filename"] : "jjj";
$append = isset($_REQUEST["append"]);
try
{
    if(!$append)
        $file = fopen($filename,"w");
    else
        $file = fopen($filename,"a");
    $input = file_get_contents ("php://input");
    fwrite($file,$input);
    fclose($file);
}
catch (Exception $e)
{
    echo 'Caught exception: ',  $e->getMessage(), "\n";
}
?>

Notes : Before running the project, set the UPLOAD_URI variable to point to the appropriate .asmx or .php file. The script is not suited for production environment because of the following:
Files are uploaded directly to the root directory of the web application. The files are created and constantly appended to. A more desirable approach would be to store the unfinished files in a temp folder until upload is complete and then move them to the upload folder

 

HostForLIFE.eu Silverlight 4 Hosting
HostForLIFE.eu revolutionized hosting with Plesk Control Panel, a Web-based interface that provides customers with 24x7 access to their server and site configuration tools. Plesk completes requests in seconds. It is included free with each hosting account. Renowned for its comprehensive functionality - beyond other hosting control panels - and ease of use, Plesk Control Panel is available only to HostForLIFE's customers. They offer a highly redundant, carrier-class architecture, designed around the needs of shared hosting customers.



Silverlight 5 Hosting - HostForLIFE.eu :: How to Resolve and Avoid Crashes in Silverlight 5?

clock March 30, 2016 20:26 by author Anthony

Some websites require a plugin to display its content properly. When a web page containing a particular contains, eat plugin will automatically run and execute the code and render the content that is specifically aimed at the area of the web. One plugin that can do this is Silverlight. Silverlight is a product of Microsoft. Microsoft Silverlight is a cross-browser plug-in powered by the .NET that allows you to view certain multimedia such as high quality video or interactive web. But when you have problem with the content of the video or interactive web browsing, you may need updating or need to install Microsoft Silverlight on your device. Sometimes a web browser crashes can be caused by Silverlight that is not functioning properly.

If that happens, then it must be overcome so that web browsers can work as usual. So in this article, I will discuss about how to cope with a crash on the Silverlight plugin, and also how to prevent Silverlight from crashing.

STEP 1

Make sure the Silverlight plugin has been installed properly. Please try to run your web browser, and download Silverlight. Once downloaded, run the installation file. If completed please close your web browser and then run it back to see to it whether the issue has been resolved.

STEP 2

Try to reset Internet Explorer Internet Privacy Settings. Click Tools> Internet Options> Privacy, and select Sites. Then simply enter the URL of the web that you want to visit that requires the Silverlight application. Then click OK. Then please restart Internet Explorer to test Silverlight.

STEP 3

Disable the Silverlight plugin from Google Chrome your web browser, then restart your browser. Type about: plugins in the address bar. Then click the Disable button that is located next to Microsoft Silverlight. Then close the plugin tab, repeat this process and then click Enable to restart Silverlight.

STEP 4

Change the name of the file MSPR.HDS associated with Silverlight. Run Windows Explorer on your computer, open the file C:\ProgramData\Microsoft\PlayReady. Then click on MSPR.HDS file, right click and select "Rename", please rename the file with the name you want.

STEP 5

Close your web browser, and then try to run it again to test Silverlight.

 

How To Prevent Silverlight from crashes?

Google Chrome users may not be able to enjoy this plugin automatically. To overcome this problem can perform the following steps so that you can enjoy Silverlight in Google Chrome

  • Open your Google Chrome browser, type chrome://banners/#enable-NPAPI in the address bar and press enter.
  • Click Enable.
  • If you are using Silverlight in websites such as Netflix, Amazon Instant Video, you only need to right click on the content in question and select Run this plugin.
  • Now you can experience the difference when using Microsoft Silverlight plugin.

 

HostForLIFE.eu Silverlight 5 Hosting

HostForLIFE.eu revolutionized hosting with Plesk Control Panel, a Web-based interface that provides customers with 24x7 access to their server and site configuration tools. Plesk completes requests in seconds. It is included free with each hosting account. Renowned for its comprehensive functionality - beyond other hosting control panels - and ease of use, Plesk Control Panel is available only to HostForLIFE's customers. They offer a highly redundant, carrier-class architecture, designed around the needs of shared hosting customers.



About HostForLIFE

HostForLIFE is European Windows Hosting Provider which focuses on Windows Platform only. We deliver on-demand hosting solutions including Shared hosting, Reseller Hosting, Cloud Hosting, Dedicated Servers, and IT as a Service for companies of all sizes.

We have offered the latest Windows 2019 Hosting, ASP.NET 5 Hosting, ASP.NET MVC 6 Hosting and SQL 2019 Hosting.


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