Yeah, I’m all for the move, but don’t be dicks about interrupting.
Still, right choice otherwise.
Yeah, I’m all for the move, but don’t be dicks about interrupting.
Still, right choice otherwise.
I mean, the extension system means we could easily fix it, just deprecate the old paths, use the legacy xlib to set up extensions and write a lighter stack from there. A new input path too and you’re on your way.
It makes things a bit more complicated, but it’s also exactly how x86 managed to stay relevant all these decades, the old macro instructions are all slow microcode and you only use the safe stuff that’s hyper-optimized.
Meanwhile you get the one thing X has: It works.
I mount it manually when I’m sure everything is up.
The issue is, I use this workstation to bring up the rest of my network and servers if they’re down, can’t have a hard dependency on nfs if it’s job is to bring up nfs.
Linus had an epic flame war with the systemd idiots for breaking Linux stupidly: https://igurublog.wordpress.com/2014/04/03/tso-and-linus-and-the-impotent-rage-against-systemd/
He didn’t do anything because he made it clear he owned the kernel and userspace was someone else’s problem, but also that the systemd guys were absolute morons who were a danger to themselves and everyone else.
Jesus, I mount everything manually from noauto, except root.
If nfs isn’t available, I don’t want my system to hang, typing mount takes 2 seconds.
Yeah, Oregon doesn’t think this shit is funny at all.
Rust zealots are on an unstoppable jihad.
Expecting suicide fork bombers any day now.
Yeah sorry, c/c++ guy here.
I get that rust is the new shiny.
But now it means changing any potentially bound c function means I need to be fluent in a language I barely heard of before this year and has a syntax that makes c# look normal.
So, how about no?
Wtf man, I never even pushed that shit upstream!?
Hush, the accountants promised they’d fall for it!
https://forums.linuxmint.com/viewtopic.php?t=244076
Alternately:
https://forum.xfce.org/viewtopic.php?id=16993
xfconf-query -c thunar -p /misc-open-new-window-as-tab -s true && thunar ~/Downloads
2 things:
It’s more the determinacy, a GC randomly fires up and your systems stops for some long amount of time. There are pauseless GCs but that’s a different nightmare.
The kernel has things similar to GCs. They’re used for more specialized tasks, and some (like rcu) are absolute nightmares that have take decades to get working.
I think he means ctrl-r.
Yeah.
My home server runs that many, but it’s a monster dual xeon.
The freebsd instances have a ton of jails, the Linux vms have a ton of lxc and docker containers.
It’s how you run many services without losing your mind.