ITT: we port this to a modern unix/unix like system
Unfortunately, our archiver is being blocked by Cloudflare bot-protection. I am working on it.
The goal of Rust-rewrites is to replace GPL software with cucked software licensed with MIT and BSD. It's not "memory safety". It's a lie. Ubuntu replaced GNU core utilities with Rust rewrites licensed with MIT. If they could rewrite the entire Linux kernel in Rust, they would and license that rewritten kernel under MIT
Quoted By:
>>29914
Could use some help. How can a lock-free multi-producer ring buffer avoid a Total Store Ordering (TSO) violation on a multi-socket Ice Lake system if a speculative MOVNTDQ (Non-Temporal Store) bypasses the L1-D cache and hits the Fill Buffer during a concurrent UPI (Ultra Path Interconnect) snoop-invalidate cycle? Specifically, if the remote socket holds the cache line in the Forward (F) state and the Invalidation Queue on the receiving NUMA node is saturated, what prevents the Store-to-Load Forwarding logic from retiredly committing a stale pointer to the local pipeline before the global RFO (Request For Ownership) has been acknowledged, and can this be mitigated using a LOCK-prefixed instruction without forcing a full serializing CPUID stall that would violate a strict 100ns deterministic latency requirement? Thanks.
we all do this
I’m using I caca phones in the I caca shop for this, ama
It's pretty good, actually
>Start using gentoo on multiple machines
>Want to use a binhost on my home server because my machines are all ancient braptops
>You can only transfer binaries currently on the server
I want a way to have the server emerge packages on demand with custom flags from the target machine. This seems like something that should've been done before. I'm thinking maybe I should use something like distcc or icecc but with the client machine disabled. That way I can have a cluster in the future but for now just one machine
>Want to use a binhost on my home server because my machines are all ancient braptops
>You can only transfer binaries currently on the server
I want a way to have the server emerge packages on demand with custom flags from the target machine. This seems like something that should've been done before. I'm thinking maybe I should use something like distcc or icecc but with the client machine disabled. That way I can have a cluster in the future but for now just one machine
what does Intel Management Engine actually do? does AMD have something of that sort too? can i turn it off?
I spent every waking minute of free time for literal months designing and programming a digital synth and it still sounds like absolute shit, not because of the implementation but because the ideas were stupid.
Should I fixate on it autistically until it does sound good or just cut my losses?
Should I fixate on it autistically until it does sound good or just cut my losses?
Quoted By:
>>29861
linuxGODS what do you use your computer for other than gooning to 'p and browsing the sharty?
