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Showing posts from April, 2008

Querying GitHub Issues from Google App Script

I'm currently exploring different integrations that can be done between Google App Script and Git. This is part of a bigger attempt to integrate Git data into my project management system. I'll post more on that later. GitHub supports a number of very nice sub-systems. One of them is the GitHub Issues ticket tracking system. It's fairly robust and comes with GitHub - which means it's highly integrated out-of-the-box. Integration with Google's App Script is done via the fetchURL command and JSON object manipulation.  After a good bit of experimentation, I've settled on querying GitHub Issues with an "on open spreadsheet event" to avoid issues with Google's quota system. Essentially, Google prevents you from calling the fetchURL command more than X times (see the quota limits ) per day. That's not great if you have people actively working and changing data in a spreadsheet. Some of my other App Script routines are running thousands of times per d

Detecting Virtual PC

Adding to my previous post on detecting virtual environments, here's the code for detecting Virtual PC. Note that it's a conversion from CodeProject, the original author is here . I also didn't write the conversion, I'm simply accumulating the VMM detection code here. Original credit for the conversion goes to Dennis Pasamore who did the bulk of the conversion work with some assistance from Avatar Zonderatau. Code: function TForm1.IsRunningVirtualPC: boolean ; asm push ebp; mov ebp, esp; mov ecx, offset @exception_handler; push ebx; push ecx; push dword ptr fs:[0]; mov dword ptr fs:[0], esp; mov ebx, 0; // Flag mov eax, 1; // VPC function number // call VPC db $0F, $3F, $07, $0B mov eax, dword ptr ss:[esp]; mov dword ptr fs:[0], eax; add esp, 8; test ebx, ebx; setz al; lea esp, dword ptr ss:[ebp-4]; mov ebx, dword ptr ss:[esp]; mov ebp, dword ptr ss:[esp+4]; add esp, 8; jmp @ret1; @exception_handler: mov

Detecting a virtualized environment

CubicDesign on delphi-talk.elists.org recently asked the question: "How do I know/detect if my software is running under Windows [or a virtual environment]?" Well, it turns out that it's a lot harder to tell than you would think. Apparently, the VM (VMware, Xen, Wine, etc.) doesn't really want you to be able to do this. At least not easily. For VMware, there is a decent little C routine called jerry.c that does the trick. Jerry actually uses a simple communication channel that VMware left open. It's not 100% foolproof since the admin can change the channel, but that's not likely going to happen unless the system is specifically designed to be a honeypot. If you're running on a honeypot and still have a legitimate reason for detection, you could look at the much more complex scoopy implementation which inspects how the system is actually virtualized using the SIDT CPU instruction instead of a communication channel. Another reference (red pill) is here . F

Calendar Conversions

Has anyone tried to convert a Western-style calendar to either the Islamic or Hebrew calendar system? I've spent a bunch of time looking for a Pascal unit to do just that so I could include Muslim and Jewish holidays in my holiday class but haven't found any great resources. I finally found some C/C++ code that did the work and converted it over to Pascal. Keeping in mind that this is still a new conversion and that I didn't write the actual conversion logic, I'm publishing the code to help other would-be calendar converters. All of the conversion algorithms (and credit for them) are from Calendrical Calculations by Nachum Dershowitz and Edward Reingold. I added the Day and Month name strings from various Google searches on things like Hebrew Month Names and Islamic Month Names, etc. I've compared the resulting output to both published calendars and to other conversion tools that do not provide their source. So far, I haven't seen any discrepancies other than so

SMTP Mail and Indy (again)

Having spent a lot of time recently working on a ping scanner using Indy, I noticed that there's a lot of questions still on using SMTP with Indy. Let me first say that I am not an Indy expert. I get along with it successfully but find I still have to research things frequently. With the disclaimer out of the way, we can get to the offering. A while back I wrote a handy little unit to simply send a mail message with or without attachments and with or without providing authentication. It even has support for OpenSSL. I use this unit in a number of applications and have seen it successfully send hundreds of e-mails without issue. I recently added support for threaded message sending to take advantage of the multi-core system I'm now running on. This code has had a few additions (like the logger) that I've gleaned over time from various newsgroup postings, but I didn't record the authors so let me credit the anonymous Internet authors who support Indy. It's really amaz

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