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#1 Posted : Tuesday, January 12, 2010 10:45:13 AM(UTC)

GregR  
GregR

Groups: Registered, Tech Support, Administrators
Posts: 764


This demo is a combination of the two previous demos:

http://support.leadtools.com/SupportPortal/CS/forums/7662/ShowPost.aspx
http://support.leadtools.com/SupportPortal/CS/forums/32407/ShowPost.aspx

It has the same basic concept of loading an image and allowing the user to draw annotations on it but uses the more flexible and highly recommended deployment method of using Caspol.exe.
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#2 Posted : Monday, August 2, 2010 8:00:43 AM(UTC)

Travis  
Travis

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Posts: 207

Was thanked: 3 time(s) in 3 post(s)

Attached is this project updated to version 17 using Visual Studio 2008.

Note: As of .NET 4.0 Framework the IEHost.dll will no longer be supported.  What does this mean?
The samples from this forum post will only work in the Framework 3.5 SP1 and earlier.

So far the only documentation we have found from Microsoft on this can found at this link:
http://social.msdn.microsoft.com/Forums/en-US/clr/thread/e293ed8e-be48-4c4a-838b-dcf3c2cec5b7

Below is an excerpt from this post:

IEHost.dll is the runtime host that provides the ability to host Windows Forms controls and run executables in IE. IEHost is a .Net 1.1 technology that provided a better model than ActiveX to host controls within the browser since they were lightweight and the controls operated under the .NET security model, where they operated inside a sandbox.

For Dev10, the proposal is to remove IEHost.dll for the following reasons
1)    IEHost/HREF-EXEs are surface area exposed to the Internet. This poses a high security risk (we already have bugs filed related to this), and most customers (by far) who install the Framework are getting very little value for this security risk. If IEHost and IEExec is left as-is, a new model needs to be designed where either (a) using this technology is safe and is always on, or (b) is as secure as today and can be configured to be turned off. The cost of doing this is very high.
2)    Customers who want IEHost/HREF-EXE-sytle controls or apps have numerous other technologies they can use, like ClickOnce, XBAP, Silverlight.
3)    Customers who want the exact same functionality as 3.5 SP1 for this feature can continue to use 3.5 SP1. This change, of removing IEHost takes effect only in .Net Framework 4.0.
4)    The opportunity cost and risk of continuing to support this feature for the CLR team is high. Going forward, we will be able to deliver more features and bug fixes that benefit more of our customers if we can remove this from NetFx4. 
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Travis Montgomery
Senior Sales Engineer
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