

I’ve had managers who follow that exact algorithm.
Canadian, sysadmin, trans rights are human rights, puncha-the-nazis, cats are pretty great, GNU Terry Pratchett.


I’ve had managers who follow that exact algorithm.


Yeah, I tested it on some large TIFF datasets I have around. 3x less memory and 4x faster.


Well, this is exactly what I needed for work… we process like 200MB tiffs and imagemagick speed and mem use is an issue
Watched it. Good recommendation.
I’ve used a lot of sed but never ed. Should skim the man page at sone point.
Big factor behind his divorce, iirc.


Stable. :)


I’ve been using Ganeti for like 15 years now, and I’m not sure what proxmox offers besides a nice GUI. I know how Ganeti works and getting up to speed on a new one doesn’t seem super interesting to me. Is anyone here familiar with both?
FVO readable for future me, it’s not so bad. I don’t have to worry about other people so much. :)
Sure. Nothing stopping you writing readable well commented perl. Just avoid some of the more terse statements. It can be a challenge though.
Shrug. If you don’t like Perl, don’t use it.
It certainly has its issues. I find that the things people have trouble with are the things I tend to like about it. Of course, reading it later is a problem sometimes. :)
Write only language!
I still reach for it sometimes.
heheh. I wasn’t really making an argument though
perl -e 'print "fart\n" if 1;'
It’s kinda natural to me having used Perl a lot.


Or a manky Signal clone with backdoors transmitting everything in plain text…
Wouldn’t the authentication API provided by your DNS host be the ACME server?
Yeah. For wildcard DNS from letsencrypt, you can’t do HTTP validation, only DNS, which involves creating a TXT record.
Your DNS provider needs to run an ACME server, which runs an API that’ll add the required TXT records on request.
As I understand it.
Not all dns providers support acme, I’ve discovered to my recent annoyance. The one I use at work, for instance.
The XZ thing was almost certainly some nation state actor, imo.