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Unless somethkng changed in the last few years, SSDs are much much faster.
Respect the burrito.
Unless somethkng changed in the last few years, SSDs are much much faster.
That’s true. I did learn a lot, but the idea of setting it all up again gives me anxiety.
I self host my email. It was hard work to set up. 0/10. Would not come again.
Or is it the OpenBSD firewall, pf?
Never heard of this language, but you’d be surprised how hard it is to write a correct and portable shell script.
Personally, I’d break out python once the script gets larger than a few lines, or rust if I want something more proper.
What the hell is this? Half way down the page it becomes a crypto advert…
I’m sticking with doas, thanks.
I see a lot of this recently.
I wall of text about software whose purpose I have no idea.
Going to their homepage doesn’t help much either. Looks like some kind of self hosted social network?
I think its interesting from a historical perspective.
I imagine people will examine the code, find easter eggs, bugs, unknown features, amusing comments etc.
I look forward to seeing what is found.
multi directory syncing with src and/or dest for each input directory
So this is like “normal”, “send only”, “recieve only” folders in syncthing?
I don’t get it
Not a fan of Ruby, but the things they outline here are pretty good for testing just about any language.
I maintain a fork of llvm and a JIT runtime written in Rust where we’ve employed some of these same techniques. E.g. caching llvm builds, running things in parallel…
Any sufficiently complex, well tested, system has the potential for long CI times. It’s not something unique to Ruby or dynamic languages.
I was thinking the same.
Smug users who don’t run systemd be like…
I’m not saying it sucks. I’m saying it can be less straight-forward than conventional languages, even for experienced programmers.
The borrow checker is fantastic, but there’s no doubt that it requires a new way of thinking if you’ve never seen Rust before.
In case, like me, you were wondering what this has to do with ssh:
openssh does not directly use liblzma. However debian and several other distributions patch openssh to support systemd notification, and libsystemd does depend on lzma.
With ftps, can you use a self-signed cert? If so, how does it verify the cert? Do you have to upload the public key, or does it cache it on first use?
When using reolink in a self-hosted setting:
Thanks
I actually have an sgi octane in my office.
I’ve had days where I’ve felt like doing that.