

I think that’s the way both Splunk and JFrog work – you generate or enter a password into the key field in a YAML file somewhere, start the service, and next time you come back the field’s been encrypted.
I think that’s the way both Splunk and JFrog work – you generate or enter a password into the key field in a YAML file somewhere, start the service, and next time you come back the field’s been encrypted.
The fuck’s wrong with you?
I can confirm both Pixels and Samsung phones have that feature (1/2/4 hours or indefinite). On my current phone (Samsung) you get the option by holding the DND button.
It’s a pretty popular meme format, it’s not serious
Oof, and there’s only ten lines of code, too. And they look very purposefully written out.
For those interested, this is because of how Rust uses value gaps to represent its nullable/enum structures. E.g., like how None
for Option NonZeroU8
[sic, can’t get formatting to work] is represented internally by a 0
instead of a wrapping structure.
When you have that many layers around a unit, it will start at 0
and bump the internal representation for each Some
you turn into a None
.
Haha considering just how much irrelevant third-party training data you’d be looping into a format conversion, this metaphor really is spot-on.