Today, we announced the general availability of SQL Server 2022, the most Azure-enabled release of SQL Server yet, with continued innovation across performance, security, and availability1. This marks the latest milestone in the more than 30-year history of SQL Server.
اشتراکها
Fixed In This Release of Visual Studio 2019 version 16.5
- Modified the find "List View" to work with the VsColorOutput extension.
- Fixed a regression introduced with version 16.5 where use of default indexed properties with value-types caused an internal compiler error.
- Modified find in files to preserve user settings between Visual Studio 2019 sessions.
- Fixed an issue where Goto next/previous entry failed to work in the find results list when "preview selected files in find results" is turned off.
- Fixed an issue with find when doing a regex search a pattern that did not contain regex special characters.
- Fixed the button placement in find in files tool window when its in a docked position. Changed alignments for better experience in docked mode.
- Fixed an issue where the find list view did not navigate to results when enter was hit.
- Fixed an issue where Goto next/previous entry failed to work in the find results list when "preview selected files in find results" is turned off.
Security Advisory Notice
CVE-2020-0899 Microsoft Visual Studio Elevation of Privilege Vulnerability
CVE-2020-0900 Visual Studio Extension Installer Service Elevation of Privilege Vulnerability
CVE-2020-5260 Git for Visual Studio Credential Leak Vulnerability due to insufficient validation on URLs
This tough year, 2020, will soon be over at last, which means it's time to look back at our accomplishments! Over the year, the PVS-Studio team has written quite a number of articles covering a large variety of bugs found in open-source projects with the help of PVS-Studio. This 2020 Top-10 list of bugs in C# projects presents the most interesting specimens. Enjoy the reading!
اشتراکها