Practical Guide to Sorcery (I think it counts as progression fantasy?)
Same here. K8s makes stuff like this so mucb easier, since you can declaratively control traffic flow via NetworkPolicies.
And with cilum you ca use hubble to visualize whay traffic is currently happening, in order to figure out what is actually needed.
I also use Cilium as my host based firewall instead of ufw/firewalld.
Here is what I did, although it may not be what you want.
I used cockpit, and NetworkManager to convert both of my interfaces into a single bond, named bond0. Then I convert that bond interface into a bridge interface that also has an ip address and network connection, and can be used as a normal ethernet interface (calling that one eth0). Then I create a veth interface, attatch one end of it to eth0, and the other end becomes a usable interface called eth1.
I do this convoluted setup, because openstack (proxmox like software) wants two network interfaces, BUT I only have 100 mb/s per link. By bonding them it lets anything on the host or any vm use a total of 200 mb/s.
As a simpler version of this, if you only have a single interface, you could convert it into a bridge and call that eth0.
Of course, this probably does not work if you want consistent interfaces because you are autoconfiguring interfaces or something like that. But for same named interfaces that you are feeding into software like openstack,docker,proxmox/etc it works.
But what makes canvas soul suckingly tedious? Why do we seem to disagree about canvas UX and UI?
what alternatives are there? I've only actually heard of google classroom, moodle (FOSS) and blackboard? Most people I've met who have tried one of those have liked canvas better.
I'ved used google classroom a bit but it sucks.
Do you use canvas as a teacher/institution?
I've used canvas, but only as a student student, and I really, really like it. The UI is excellent, and I do notice the addition of things like bigbluebutton.
Do you have more info about various shady practices?
Canvas is the best. It's entirely open source, under the agpl license.
https://github.com/instructure/canvas-lms
They have generally been pretty good when it comes to adding features, and security practicws. But sometimes you just lose (to shinyhunters).
No, this is kinda right. Memory leaks =/= memory safety. Memory leaks are just when you keep allocating more and more memory, and can be done in any language. If I make accidentally make a list that infinitely grows in python, that's a memory leak.
There are techniques to write code that is mostly free of leaks, which is what he is referring to.
Memory safety, on the other hand, doesn't seem to be mentioned on that page...
I think they have a lemmy account as I first saw them here, although I don't think OP is the site author.
Their javascript "game in less than X lines" stuff is pretty interesting and entertaining but their blogposts are mostly LLM slop. Of course, due to the fact that this article is just basic info, it's not that bad and is pretty accurate. But their more advanced blogposts begin to fall apart and have the LLM hallucinations, outdated info, and inaccuracies.
This video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=40SnEd1RWUU has similar information (though a bit less and doesn't cover some things), but presented in the style of a comedy skit type thing.
In my testing, zram has much, much better compression than zswap.
The points about LRU inversion, cgroups, and so on are valid, but at the end of the day, I don't really care. I was able to open as many firefox tabs as I wanted with zram, but I could not do so with zswap, and that's what matters to me.
The author of a blogpost is a facebook engineer. Millions of ultra high performance Linux servers are a very different usecase than a single desktop. It's perfectly reasonable for a solution for one to not be appropriate for the other.


Who let him cultivate immortallity? : https://www.novelupdates.com/series/who-let-him-cultivate-immortality/
It's a parody/satire of all of the tropes common in Cultivation/Xianxia, and it's making me laugh a lot. Though, I think it will be more amusing if you are already familiar with lots of the tropes.