Comment Re:Quite a lot of crazy stuff gets pushed to git (Score 1) 119
Run a WAF, log suspicious packets at the IP level, then you will discover a big underworld...
Run a WAF, log suspicious packets at the IP level, then you will discover a big underworld...
More like use a fricking passphrase at least to protect your private key and use some kind of agent to save you from typing that passphrase again and again.
I sometimes use passphraseless private key when I control where it is stored but never store a passphraseless private key on line.
Be aware of key loggers and other means to get you passphrase once your private key is stored online also.
Wait! Should I understand they aren't using PKA?
Sorry then, shame on me.
Nope, I only say that because I already thought the same way before I was aware of his view. It happens all the time.
hmmm... Linus sounds right to me too. He specifically said, or almost, that people wanting to load 10 pages in sandboxed firefox process/thread in parallel could find a use for 16 cores
is your recommendation valid for RAID 1 as well? I am just curious...
-Thanks,
> Even my home file server uses two tiny second gen 64gb SSDs for read/write caching for ~20TB of data.
Did you configure this manually or just used something off the shelf? What is setup to accomplish this?
-Thanks,
Great, except I live in Australia.
Exactly, think of the children !
My name is John Kodak you insensitive clod.
gee, as a kid, I spent countless hours there. I usually ended up buying more reliable brands in more distant stores but they got some of my money for sure.
agreed, same opinion here, a lot of it was crap but some was relatively OK.
It apparently is indeed. I always suspected that this was due to the simplicity of English and my belief that you can write it "almost" properly with little knowledge of grammar and analysis. In contrast, to write in French "almost" properly, it's hard to get away without knowing those rules. When used to grammar and analysis, the "it's vs its" dilemma becomes easy to solve.
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I have seem at least 10 benchmarks showing the same. Do your own research and try to be a little less biased. Latest apache does the same as nginx now. Event driven model with multiple connections handled by a single thread. That is as simple as that and it shouldn't be too hard to understand that using the same techniques, apache will indeed be as fast.
See a more detailed benchmark here: (search for nginx for comparison)
https://people.apache.org/~jim...
easy, google it:
http://www.rootusers.com/web-s...
apache 2.4 in event model can beat nginx in some situation.
Event model is event model whether it is nginx or apache. Most nginx fanboys know nothing about this unfortunately...
Biology is the only science in which multiplication means the same thing as division.