SuperFola

joined 1 year ago
[–] SuperFola@programming.dev 1 points 1 day ago (1 children)

That doesn’t solve communities being inaccessible though, does it?

[–] SuperFola@programming.dev 2 points 1 day ago (3 children)

Hi there! Like many others, I’m wondering where this issue is at?

[–] SuperFola@programming.dev 8 points 1 week ago

A big ass article just to say « they removed preloaded wallpapers and deleted redundant features but didn’t tell us what ».

[–] SuperFola@programming.dev 2 points 2 weeks ago

Lucky google isn’t the only search engine then

[–] SuperFola@programming.dev 23 points 2 weeks ago (2 children)

I feel like a lot of open source projects redirect to a discord or private discussion system like slack (even worse).

And it doesn’t help at all because it can’t be indexed and can quickly disappear on a while on the admin side. You can also be banned for no reason. Searching those platforms is horrendous, I don’t want to search a badly indexed system and then ask a question because I can’t find the answer to a problem, and be told it has been discussed 30 times.

Give me a bloody wiki or old fashioned phpbb forum.

[–] SuperFola@programming.dev 9 points 3 weeks ago (2 children)

This smells like bullshit because it’s just based on things users do not see (processes) or do not care about (the style used for your tabs).

[–] SuperFola@programming.dev 2 points 3 weeks ago (1 children)

Only says it’s fast on some specific benchmarks against alacrity. Not talking about why alacrity or kitty would not work on Linux/mac while ghostty does.

Sure, it’s interesting that he managed to optimize so many things. But the claims in the picture are unproven.

[–] SuperFola@programming.dev 7 points 3 weeks ago (3 children)

Kitty is mentioned once in the article and that’s it. Doesn’t even mention its downside and how ghostty is so much better according to them.

It’s a great project and all, but I’d love if people could stop stomping on others work just to appear better.

[–] SuperFola@programming.dev 2 points 3 weeks ago

Unsure, I am using kitty with a very minimal config on MacOS and it works well. Haven’t had any bugs. Seems more like marketing to me (the image)

[–] SuperFola@programming.dev 2 points 3 weeks ago

You could start by creating an issue to add translations for the language you want and then expressing your interest in doing it yourself but needing guidance. Maintainers would be more than happy to help you.

 

I tried accessing https://programming.dev/c/programming_languages but it tells me that the community can not be found. Is that a lemmy bug?

[–] SuperFola@programming.dev 6 points 4 weeks ago (1 children)

High uptime is bad, that means you do not update your kernel

[–] SuperFola@programming.dev 6 points 1 month ago (1 children)

I know of which-key.nvim that help you search your key map.

There is somewhere a plugin that will belittle you for using jjj instead of 3j too, and I think that’s more like what you look for. I couldn’t find it, if anyone knows it!

 

TLDR: perfctl is a crypto mining and proxy jacking malware that exploits about 20’000 common missconfigurations to install itself on Linux servers. Mostly using a 10/10 CVE on Apache RocketMQ.

It is very persistent and can reinstall itself even when you have deleted all the perfctl and perfcc files. It hides itself by removing logs, network packets, and stopping all activity once you login to the machine.

Monitoring cpu usage using tools (I use net data on my server) can help identify infections (100% cpu usage when « idle »).

 

I’ve started putting the (long) forum posts I make about ArkScript on my blog, so that more people can follow the development. I must say I like the look of it, that’s also helping me getting back into blogging!

 

cross-posted from: https://programming.dev/post/18859576

This past few weeks, Python 3.13 and the possibility to disable the GIL has seen a lot of coverage and that pushed me to dig into my own language, to see how different our approaches are.

So if you’re curious about the rambling of a pldev, that might be for you!

 

I just wanted to have a handy description of computed goto that I could refer to, to reuse this concept without having to read thousands of line trying to make sense out of it.

 

This past few weeks, Python 3.13 and the possibility to disable the GIL has seen a lot of coverage and that pushed me to dig into my own language, to see how different our approaches are.

So if you’re curious about the rambling of a pldev, that might be for you!

 

I had some fun trying to check if a hash (more like a transformation really) was collision free, so I wrote a quick piece code and then iterated on it so that it was usable.

I might add a quick bench and graphs and try to push it even further just for fun, to explore std::future a bit more (though the shared bit set might be a problem unless you put a shared condition variable on it to allow concurrent read but block concurrent writes?)

 

More and more new accounts are posting spam and ads to communities (eg !technology@programming.dev), would it be an idea to block new accounts from posting to any p.d community?

 

I wanted people to be able to try out my language online, and it’s now possible with a vscode like interface, sending code to a docker image running the interpreter!

It was easier than I thought to implement, and yes, security was a concern, but I have been able to harden the docker container as well as implement restrictions on the websocket server to avoid having users escaping the docker image and getting access to the VM it’s running on.

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