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howtofly

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The state of the kernel Rust experiment

lwn.net
11 points·by howtofly·7 mesi fa·0 comments

Cline Officially Supports JetBrains

cline.bot
4 points·by howtofly·10 mesi fa·0 comments

Junie Is Now Available in CLion

blog.jetbrains.com
2 points·by howtofly·10 mesi fa·0 comments

Cline for JetBrains

plugins.jetbrains.com
2 points·by howtofly·10 mesi fa·0 comments

Bringing restartable sequences out of the niche

lwn.net
1 points·by howtofly·11 mesi fa·0 comments

Conventions for Extensible System Calls(2020)

lwn.net
1 points·by howtofly·anno scorso·0 comments

Asterinas: A new Linux-compatible kernel project

lwn.net
224 points·by howtofly·anno scorso·75 comments

We Built Cline to Never Hold You Hostage

cline.bot
4 points·by howtofly·anno scorso·0 comments

Cory Doctorow on how we lost the internet

lwn.net
154 points·by howtofly·anno scorso·129 comments

A change in maintenance for the kernel's DMA-mapping layer

lwn.net
19 points·by howtofly·anno scorso·2 comments

Complex Buggy Pthread_rwlock_t in Glibc

sourceware.org
2 points·by howtofly·anno scorso·1 comments

comments

howtofly
·8 mesi fa·discuss
All this hassle can be avoided by using `cleanup` compiler attribute.

Manage classical C resources by auto-cleanup variables and do error-handling the normal way. If everything is OK, pass the ownership of these resources from auto-cleanup variables to C++ ctor.

Note this approach plays nicely with C++ exception, and will enter C standard in the form of `defer`.
howtofly
·9 mesi fa·discuss
Note that these books were written when design pattern was still a buzzword.
howtofly
·11 mesi fa·discuss
The real issue is determining how much non-renewable resource consumption is justified for these "valuable" things? Note that we are always inclined to value ourselves too much.

I agree the things you mentioned are valuable in the very common sense and I deliberately assign them no value to the avoid the above issue.
howtofly
·11 mesi fa·discuss
IIRC, all latency-driven congestion control algorithms suffer from violent rtt variance, which happens frequently in wireless networks. How does BBR perform under such circumstances?
howtofly
·11 mesi fa·discuss
It's all about human technology, which enables massive resource consumption.

I should really say humans never truly produce anything in the realm of technology industry.
howtofly
·11 mesi fa·discuss
> The future may reduce the economic prosperity and push humanity to switch to some different economic system (maybe a better system).

Humans never truly produce anything; they only generate various forms of waste (resulting from consumption). Human technology merely enables the extraction of natural resources across magnitudes, without actually creating any resources. Given its enormous energy consumption, I strongly doubt that AI will contribute to a better economic system.
howtofly
·anno scorso·discuss
I just checked it for Rust:

"18 17 change Rust page Rust 0.97% -0.20%"
howtofly
·anno scorso·discuss
Should users trust the signaling server? IIRC, the signaling server can easily intervene SDP offer/answer so that it can intercept user files or instruct users to send files wherever it wants.
howtofly
·anno scorso·discuss
My understanding is that the signaling server could be used as the perfect place to perform MITM attack. The README does not mention how berb addresses this concern at all.
howtofly
·anno scorso·discuss
> If I work on a repo, all I have to do is enter my dev distrobox, SSH in from my IDE, and work within that environment - no devcontainer or flake.nix required.

With Ubuntu 24.04 and vagrant virtual machines, you could have even less hassle than with Bluefin.
howtofly
·anno scorso·discuss
Serious software development is rarely an individual endeavor; most issues should be resolved through collaboration. In other words, they should be addressed through management. What the author needs to overcome, in my view, is essentially a form of extreme individualism.
howtofly
·anno scorso·discuss
I should mention that Drepper's old implementation and thus uclibc/uclibc-ng's implementations are much simpler and do not have this bug. The musl libc does not have this issue because it puts an upper limit on the number of user-space spins in one try. Unlimited spin should NEVER appear in user space!

I cannot believe that such a highly-reproducible bug is left untouched for nearly a year.

PS: All versions of glibc since 2.25 are affected.
howtofly
·2 anni fa·discuss
[dead]
howtofly
·2 anni fa·discuss
> Python doesn't have a language package manager, you're free to use pip or poetry or uv or whatever, but it does have PEP 517/518, which allow all Python package managers to interact with a common package ecosystem which encompasses polyglot codebases.

This is a long-standing pain point. LWN has a series of reports covering this, one of which is: https://lwn.net/Articles/920832/
howtofly
·6 anni fa·discuss
Can't agree more. As a longtime user of Eclipse CDT on Ubuntu Desktop, I've not seen the kind of bugs mentioned in the article for more than five years.