itLab-foss i.e. open source?
And what really makes me wonder in the whole process: According to
various mails from the CPE the deal that will come out, like features,
price, … is not yet figured out. Not even the plan what GitLab version
CPE is about to go for. But the decision to go for GitLab is
anging
and what's the origin of hanging? Is it that the kernel starts to swap
and therefore eats up all CPU time or is it the programs in foreground
that suddenly all try to get their piece of memory back that forces
kswapd onto the CPU?
My guess would be the latter, but I'm sure the group who did th
On Thu, 2019-11-07 at 21:25 +0100, Nicolas Mailhot via devel wrote:
> Le jeudi 07 novembre 2019 à 18:32 +0100, Sheogorath via devel a écrit
> :
> > The talk is right on many points, but I think it dismisses the most
> > essential point DoH does right: DNS is a decision of th
DoT doesn't bring so much more privacy, but it
provides integrity to DNS that unencrypted DNS even with DNSSec is
lagging as an attack can always opt to not answer for a specific domain
name.
And whenever or not applications of the system should implement it, is
probably decided by how fast the system side
ur FAS credentials. This
> means while accessing Pagure, participating in discussions in
> discussion.fedoraproject.org, and also while using Bodhi, Koji, and
> all.
>
Just out of curiosity, is this done by a patch or with a separate package?
--
Signed
Sheogorath
OpenPGP: https://shivering
esentation/picture/data we stored on the cloud storage provider of our
trust. We connect to the public/unknown WiFi and *boom* suddenly we have
unexpected open ports on a public network we didn't to expose them to.
This is not something that people do on purpose but it simply happens.
It'
/network-location-awareness-nla-and-how-it-relates-to-windows-firewall-profiles/
There is quite some documentation about how Windows
determines/determined when it was connected to a different network
(being it by wire or WiFi). Even when this information is might outdated
when looking at Windows 10.
sometimes stated
> as "license in, license out", but that most do not make this explicit.
> The DCO explicitly states that the contribution itself is granted to
> the project under the same license that the project uses.
Just adding a link to the talk:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F3O
ake an hour to
decompress) and depending on the upstream, either use mobile data for
networking or when you're lucky some WiFi/Bluetooth/… thing.
Means:
CPU usage: Getting worse here, doesn't hurt too much
Memory usage: Don't! Get! Worse!
Network amount: Well, people would
nd the people who
are maybe interested in being this new maintainer: The people who need
the package.
Maybe I'm a bit to easy with taking packages away from unresponsive
maintainers, but I think this would be a quite easy way to take care of
those things.
--
Signed
Sheogorath
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porting all the fixes to the then LTS. And besides that I guess most
people who want an LTS outside of the IoT world, would go for CentOS
anyway. So may let's see if we can bring CentOS and RHEL towards IoT
instead of bringing CentOS and RHEL to Fedora. I hope/guess the way for
the latter is way shorter.
e timeout to 1 second sounds fine.
--
Signed
Sheogorath
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Fedora Code of Condu
on is supported for about 13 months. Is
> it likely to receive security fixes for not-the-latest Nextcloud
> version?
>
According to their web page[1] they support the last two versions of
Nextcloud. So with ~1 release per year and Fedora with 13 month of
support, we are covered here.
[1]:
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