Security in software development should be a first-order requirement, but it’s often implemented in projects as an afterthought. With Application Security in .NET Succinctly, author Stan Drapkin provides a refresher of .NET security practices and fills common knowledge gaps for experienced developers and novices alike. Learn about hashes, machine authentication code, key derivation, binary and text encodings, symmetric and authenticated encryption, and much more, and begin properly securing your .NET apps today.
- Preface
- .NET Security
- Hashes and MACs
- Key Derivation
- Comparing Byte Arrays
- Binary Encodings
- Text Encodings
- Symmetric Encryption
- Authenticated Encryption
- Asymmetric Cryptography
- Two-Factor Authentication (2FA)
- Web Security
We are thrilled to announce that the webhint browser extension has moved from beta to its v1 release and is now available for Insider builds of Microsoft Edge, as well as for Chrome and Firefox!
مروری بر SQL Server 2016
انتقال WebAssembly به سرور یا WASI
Bringing WebAssembly to the .NET Mainstream - Steve Sanderson, Microsoft
Many developers still consider WebAssembly to be a leading-edge, niche technology tied to low-level systems programming languages. However, C# and .NET (open-source, cross-platform technologies used by nearly one-third of all professional developers [1]) have run on WebAssembly since 2017. Blazor WebAssembly brought .NET into the browser on open standards, and is now one of the fastest-growing parts of .NET across enterprises, startups, and hobbyists. Next, with WASI we could let you run .NET in even more places, introducing cloud-native tools and techniques to a wider segment of the global developer community. This is a technical talk showing how we bring .NET to WebAssembly. Steve will demonstrate how it runs both interpreted and AOT-compiled, how an IDE debugger can attach, performance tradeoffs, and how a move from Emscripten to WASI SDK lets it run in Wasmtime/Wasmer or higher-level runtimes like wasmCloud. Secondly, you'll hear lessons learned from Blazor as an open-source project - challenges and misconceptions faced bringing WebAssembly beyond early adopters. [1] StackOverflow survey 2021