Ignite 2021: Azure’s Chaos Studio goes public Panu Oksala looks at some of the new features of using GitHub Projects (beta) and asks if it’s time to move your development planning there. Move from Azure Boards to GitHub Projects (beta) ? Willy-Peter Schaub covers reducing the amount of security rules required in your pipelines with artifact filters.
Streamlining your pipeline approvals, without flooding DevSecOps with noise Richard Fennell shares the new user-requested features for his Azure DevOps extension Generate Release Notes he’s created including generating multiple documents in a single run. New features for my Azure DevOps Release Notes Extension
René Bremer explains how to build an MLOps pipeline with Azure API management to deploy models as a secure endpoint.ĭeploying BICEP using Azure DevOps Pipelineĭanidu Weerasinghe provides his experience deploying a Bicep template via build and deploy Azure DevOps pipelines. How to deploy Azure machine learning models as a secure endpoint Martin Therkelsen provides new Cloud Ninja skills in this post about setting up Azure DevOps to control your Azure Functions. Getting Azure Function under source control Let’s dive into this week’s posts and see what the community has for us. We’ve got new posts on Azure Functions, Bicep, Chaos Engineering, and more. This week brings more posts from across the DevOps on Azure community. The announcements I have been the most excited about were the public previews of Azure Chaos Studio and Azure Container Apps. You can find all the sessions from Ignite in the session catalog and all the product updates from the Azure Updates blog.
Whether you’re part of a DevOps team, a software developer, or an IT Pro you have the ability to build using the services you need with Azure. This can be beneficial to other community members reading this thread.This week was Microsoft Ignite which saw lots of new product updates to Azure and the Microsoft ecosystem. MSDN Community Support Please remember to click "Mark as Answer" the responses that resolved your issue, and to click "Unmark as Answer" if not.
What can I do to get the 2015 version of Visual Studio working again?ĭid you make any changes to VS, the network or your computer from Nov 30 to Dec 3? Nothing works.Īlso note Visual Studio 2012 works fine (loading of course only solutions not developed using Visual Studio 2015).
I tried updating Windows 10 with the latest (which I now have), I tried unintalling and reinstalling Visual Studio 2015, I tried clearing the temp files and caches. It's only the UI itself that is having issues. Using the developer command prompt, building is no problem. It seems to be possibly to be network related as so far I have been able to load simple local solutions without issue, but all the solutions I actually need are on a network drive and fail.Īttempting to create a new solution from scratch also fails. In still other cases, a file is actually loaded and one can scroll around in it, but any attempt to do anything beyond the initially displayed file, such as Peek Definition or Go To Definition results in the same frozen behavior. In other cases, the solution files show, but they say "loading" in solution explorer and again the UI is unresponsive. In some cases,Ī window pops up showing Intellisense is preparing the solution, but then the hourglass just persists forever and the UI is unresponsive. But first thing Monday morning, Dec 3, 2018, any attempt at loading a solution previously opening/building just fine caused Visual Studio to hang/freeze. Happily doing development with Visual Studio 2015 Community Friday November 30, 2018.