If you're not into
systemd https://gist.github.com/tgbugs/c2990382b3fdfef86a2a3a1bc0516099 is
an example of an openrc init script that I use to daemonize a servlet
(running behind nginx) which is an echo server that responds with the ip of
the requester and that is initialized like this:
(serve
If your Linux installation has systemd, you can create a service file for
your application -- this way, systemd will manage the application as a
server or daemon. Systemd will even redirect stderr messages to the system
log.
Alex.
On Thursday, November 29, 2018 at 10:56:25 AM UTC+8, Brian Ad
I briefly looked at the daemonize package on Ubuntu linux, but couldn't get
it to work properly. I found the following Rosetta Code page:
https://rosettacode.org/wiki/Run_as_a_daemon_or_service#Racket
So, I just tried the code in that example, and it seems to work fine:
(module+ main
*
I finally got a very simple, "hello world", Racket web app up and running,
and I'm very encouraged with the performance. I just started a single
Racket instance and proxy to it from nginx. I have it running on an AWS EC2
instance, and running the Apache Benchmark (ab) utility on my laptop as
fo
I'm trying to add a lang attribute to all html elements generated by
scribble (when rendering to HTML).
If I add a style with attributes to the title, this does the right
thing but only for the "top" page. The attribute is missing in other
sections. (Strangely if I add a js-addition to the title
Yep. There was some Python script that used Gnuplot to do the same thing,
but the refresh rate was fairly awful. There's also the original Gnuplot
hack of putting a reload and timeout in your plot instructions--leading to
gnuplot whack-a-mole.
Didn't notice that Racket had an incredible plott
On Wednesday, November 28, 2018 at 8:38:04 PM UTC+8, Jason Stewart wrote:
>
> My first Racket program:
>
> https://github.com/BourgeoisBear/stdinoscope
>
>
This looks cool. Is this program intended for displaying real time data
from some signal acquisition system?
I'm also working on an applic
While those declarations do reflect the C code, assuming that `_char`
is an alias for `_byte`, I think it's probably not the intent of the
library that you look at the data referenced by a `hb_language_t`. The
`struct` declaration looks like a placeholder.
Probably
(define _hb_language_t (_cpoi
The last example should be
(when (and (list? l) (pair? l))
(let ([x (cdr l)])
(list? x) ;==> #t
))
Gustavo
Technical note: The optimizer wants to be sure that (cdr l) is safe before
asserting that x is a list?. It should be ok to mark x as a list?, because
if there is an error the inner
Did you get any information elsewhere about this?
I too am curious about higher quality racketcon youtube videos.
On Tuesday, November 6, 2018 at 8:08:30 AM UTC+11, Eric Haney wrote:
>
> Hello,
>
> I noticed that Youtube has a few streams of the recent RacketCon event. I
> can get the gist of wha
Some additional comments about this subject.
A big difference is that in Chez Scheme the cons are mutable, and that
makes it almost impossible to make any optimization with the lists at the
Chez Scheme level.
With the current Racket implementation there are a few reductions at
compile time for th
To call my C rusty would be an insult to rust. I'm trying to write an FFI
wrapper for certain datatypes in the Harfbuzz library:
struct hb_language_impl_t {
const char s[1];
};
typedef const struct hb_language_impl_t *hb_language_t;
Is this the right interpretation?
(define _one-char
Right. An alternative would be to set decide eagerly, but `list?` tests
are infrequent relative to pair constructions.
Then again, a function like `list` can and does set the "is a list" bit
eagerly and cheaply on newly allocated pairs.
At Wed, 28 Nov 2018 18:16:31 +0100, Robby Findler wrote:
> A
On 11/28/2018 12:15 PM, Alexis King wrote:
> On Nov 28, 2018, at 07:15, Matthew Flatt wrote:
>
> Yes, that's special handling for pairs in the sense that the
> traditional Racket implementation takes advantage of leftover bits in a
> pair object, and it uses two of them for "is a list" and
Also "don't know yet".
Robby
On Wed, Nov 28, 2018 at 6:15 PM Alexis King wrote:
> > On Nov 28, 2018, at 07:15, Matthew Flatt wrote:
> >
> > Yes, that's special handling for pairs in the sense that the
> > traditional Racket implementation takes advantage of leftover bits in a
> > pair object,
> On Nov 28, 2018, at 07:15, Matthew Flatt wrote:
>
> Yes, that's special handling for pairs in the sense that the
> traditional Racket implementation takes advantage of leftover bits in a
> pair object, and it uses two of them for "is a list" and "not a list".
>
> Racket-on-Chez doesn't have th
At Wed, 28 Nov 2018 03:13:16 -0800 (PST), Tony Garnock-Jones wrote:
> On Wednesday, November 28, 2018 at 2:43:26 AM UTC, Matthew Flatt wrote:
> >
> > The compilers in both cases know some facts about how `cons` relates to
> > other primitives, but they also know how structure constructors and
> >
My first Racket program:
https://github.com/BourgeoisBear/stdinoscope
Thanks to Alex for help with my window messaging issue!
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On Wednesday, November 28, 2018 at 2:43:26 AM UTC, Matthew Flatt wrote:
>
> The compilers in both cases know some facts about how `cons` relates to
> other primitives, but they also know how structure constructors and
> accessors relate, so it's not as big a difference at that level.
>
There ar
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