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User: Hurga

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  1. Re:The problem... on Torvalds: No Opinion On Systemd · · Score: 1

    Well, yesterday my coworker had the issue that CentOS 7 was in a reboot loop after installing upgrades, which was a systemd issue to start with, And the logging of systemd didn't really help to debug it. coworker googled some recipe which consisted of a bunch of sysctls which neither of us understood. Fixed the issue (for now). Feels like Windows...

    And this is exactly what I predicted: Systemd will have weird issues, and since no one understands its complexity, no one will be able to fix it. If you're lucky, you'll be able to google the solution. Reinstall will be the standard Linux fix soon.

    Notice how simplicity is design goal number 1.

    If you really believe this you should take less.

    If you intend to remain (a paid) Linux sysadmin in the future now where all major distro are starting to convert to systemd, you should really study systemd's journal.

    And this is why every sysadmin hates your cabal: It feels like the evil empire taking over. "Don't resist, and it will hurt less."

    But we will resist. Go to hell.

  2. Re:The problem... on Torvalds: No Opinion On Systemd · · Score: 1

    I've been a sysadmin for 20 years, and I've seen systems break in lots of interesting ways. What I want is a log mechanism which is as simple as possible so that it as least has a chance of giving me the info I need even if the rest of the system is in the process of going to hell.

    What I don't want is an unnecessarily (you aren't even able to explain the advantages, actually some of your "advantages" are disadvantages like the corruption detection) complex system which will take ages to debug, IF it will ever be - most software is already too complex and too fast moving to be ever debugged sufficiently. It violates the KISS principle. And the advantage of Linux over Windows used to be the KISS principle...

  3. Re:Simple set of pipelined utilties! on Torvalds: No Opinion On Systemd · · Score: 1

    1. "init is writing"? What the hell are you smoking?

    2. The banking transaction didn't get though because of a network interface glitch and incorrect error handling. There wasn't even a DB on the same system.

    Syslog files are probably the biggest advantage Linux has over Windows. There aren't really a lot of experienced syadmins who would want to do without these.

  4. Re:Simple set of pipelined utilties! on Torvalds: No Opinion On Systemd · · Score: 0

    I just hope this is satire because you obviously don't know shit about Unix system administration. Have fun with the "bubble back up into the UI" error report when you need to find out why the banking transaction 10 days ago didn't happen.

    Log files indefensible, my ass.

  5. Re:No... on Ask Slashdot: Practical Alternatives To Systemd? · · Score: 1

    You can wire up syslog to the journal.

    I don't want to, I don't need to. I just want every bit of information a horribly broken system is still able to tell me about its state. This won't work better is you move away from plain text. - BTW: How do you use remote logging with systemd? Sending and receiving?

    So please enlighten me: How do you kill apache with all the php/ruby/whatnot crap it directly or indirectly spawned?

    apachectl stop

    Yes, really. This is not the most simple setup here (suexec php5/fastcgi), but starting/stopping of the spawned php servers has never been an issue, even without systemd.

    Please do not assume that I am too young or too stupid to know the good old ways.

    Admittedly, you are making that hard to believe when you even have issues with stopping apache. There is no problem to fix.

    Grep for "sleep" in the init scripts of the sysv-init distribution of your choice: You will be surprised.

    Not really. A few sleep 1, speech-dispatcher has a sleep 3 and stunnel4 sleep 5. Both at restart. I couldn't care less.

    By the way, there are alternatives to sysv init. They work well and don't even break compatibility. They are what systemd needs to be compared to.

    Let's just wait a year or two. By then all the hotheads that are running for the BSDs now will be back

    Linux and Free Software are about modularity and choice. Large-scale breaking of backward compatibility and user expectations for dubious reasons is not going to play well with the community. Linux is already getting WAY too complex for people concerned with security, and additional complexity in form of enforced blessings by a group of people who comes across as conspirators gives me a very bad feeling. Who profits from intentionally weeding out choice? We'll see, but don't expect me to wait for it.

  6. Re:Videotex Networking and the American Pioneer on Why Didn't the Internet Take Off In 1983? · · Score: 1

    You wrote that 30 years ago? That's an extremely visionary piece, I have to admit. And surprisingly current still, considering the fight between established media and social networks.

  7. Re:It didn't connect people on Why Didn't the Internet Take Off In 1983? · · Score: 2

    Hamstering? I think you mean "gerbiling". - Yes, I was on Usenet too, back in the days.

  8. Re:you're a troll but even so.... on Pentagon: 30,000 Pound Bomb Too Small · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Have a look at his map. http://media.chrismartenson.com/images/US-military-presence-around-Iran.png

    And then consider the US did this: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation_Ajax

    In this situation, it would be insane for Iran not to want nukes.

  9. Some facts about nuclear power in Germany on Germany To End Nuclear Power By 2022 · · Score: 1

    There are 17 available nuclear power plants in Germany. While some were down for maintenance in 2010, the remaining ones produced 22.6% of Germany's electricity.

    Also in 2010, "green power" (electricity from regenerative sources) was at 16.5% in Germany.

    8 nuclear power plants have been shut down in the wake of the Fukushima disaster and will remain so. With 5 down for maintenance, this leaves Germany with currently only 4 running nuclear power plants. I didn't notice any recent shortage of electricity. And obviously green power has outpaced nuclear power already.

    And regarding the alleged expensiveness of green power, here's a Bloomberg article which claims it's keeping the power price down: http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2010-09-21/solar-doubling-gas-glut-drive-down-german-power-prices-energy-markets.html

    There are plans to have Germany completely on green power by 2050. Should be possible.

  10. Re:But its not being used! on German Politician Demonstrates Extent of Cellphone Location Tracking · · Score: 1

    This has been used by the police, at least in Germany.

    The general problems with this approach are the poor resolution of the data, giving you too many false positives in populated areas, and that you have to know the time of the event - hard to know without witnesses in sparsely populated areas where the resolution would be sufficient.

    The case where I know cell phone location has been used was where a woman had been killed in a car by a tree trunk being thrown from a bridge on the autobahn. Here you had a sparsely populated area (the fast-moving people in the cars are easy to rule out) and the precise time of the event (her horrified husband was the witness).

    So they got hold of the suspect, a junkie who happened to be around. They got a confession from him - by withholding him from drugs until he confessed, so I'm not entirely convinced that he really was the perpetrator. Which illustrates a big problem with this approach: The police has a tendency to make people confess somehow as soon as they have a 'convenient' suspect, and cell phone tracking can give you plenty of them, guilty or not.

    BTW: Only 20% of the killers in the US are caught and convicted? It's > 95% here in Germany...

  11. Re:This is a big deal for me. :-( on Ask Slashdot: Is There a War Against Small Mail Servers? · · Score: 1

    Yahoo clueful? Maybe when it comes to accepting email. Try to report spam to them. You'll get some nice boilerplate answers telling you either they've taken action, or that they didn't send the spam, both for emails clearly originating from Yahoo (and yes I know how to read headers). And of course the spam keeps coming in either case.

    Yahoo is the only big ISP I had to block at work.

  12. Re:Small CoLo's aren't safe either on Ask Slashdot: Is There a War Against Small Mail Servers? · · Score: 1

    Well, I guess the problem is the Florida colo. Florida has very spam-friendly laws (just google "florida spam"), so my guess would be you have some spammers in your neighborhood (i.e. colo) and are caught in the collateral damage of filtering them.

  13. Re:Assange is the guest of honor on US To Host World Press Freedom Day · · Score: 1

    More info about the accusations: http://radsoft.net/news/20101001,01.shtml

    Doesn't look like the case has any merit unless Sweden has so batshit insane laws that no one should be extradited there.

  14. Tech or TeX? on Should Professors Be Required To Teach With Tech? · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    I think professors should be required to teach with TeX, but maybe that's only me.

  15. Re:Let the rationalizations begin on Has Any Creative Work Failed Because of Piracy? · · Score: 1

    YOU sell widgets in a store, don't you? You and your store should definitely get paid for that. I write music for a living...I should only get paid for the first copy sold?

    The plumber does plumbing for a living. Why should he only get paid once for the plumbing he did? Oh, wait...

  16. Re:*Some* people will pay on Has Any Creative Work Failed Because of Piracy? · · Score: 1

    Now ask yourself, if there was both more money in the bank following a previously successful product and a greater potential profit from any new project, does this make it more or less likely that new and innovative products will be given more of a chance?

    My impression is: less likely, because why bother trying new and innovative products when you've seen that you can make a nice profit with a proven product? Riding it to death in the umptheenth installation, of course, but we've all seen this before. "New and innovative" products come with a risk, and potential profits with a risk attached don't fly well with established companies.

  17. Re:Report on European Commission agenda and critic on EU Patent Examiners Warn Parliament Will Have "No Power" · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I don't get why MP3 patents are enforceable. If it was special hardware they are running on, I would understand it, but - for example -the Sandisk Sansa players, which were confiscated at Cebit some years ago and one of which I incidentally own, are generic hardware, simple MP3 decoding on the ARM CPUs of the player, no DSP or custom chip support. If that is enforceable, everything is. Or where is the difference to other software?

  18. Re:Google on 2 Displays and 2 Workspaces With Linux and X? · · Score: 1

    Please document your research and your findings on the web somewhere. Thanks.

  19. Re:Why complain about choice? on Lulu Introduces DRM · · Score: 1

    The free market only has problems when:
    1) People are allowed to do unethical things
    2) Monopolies or oligopolies are created
    3) There's a moral hazard

    None of these conditions exist here.

    You mean using DRM is not unethical? gee...

  20. Re:Different story in Germany on Microsoft Boasts 96% Netbook Penetration · · Score: 1

    I just went to amazon.de and did a search for "Linux Netbook". It returned 20 results for computers. Yes, I got my eeepc 901go there, too.

  21. Re:This only punishes the foolish on Gmail Reveals the Names of All Users · · Score: 1

    Ever since GMail was launched and people discovered that its way more convenient that Outlook/Yahoo/etc., there's been a steady conversion of addresses in my contact list to "@gmail.com". People are moving to GMail as their primary mail accounts -- I don't know if you've been listening since 1998, but "free web-based email" is now often much, much better than whatever your university/company offers.

    That might get interesting soon, because I've already seen people starting to block GMail in their filters due to the amounts of spam originating from there. The spammers seem to be moving to GMail, too... it's definetely on top of what gets though my filters, well above the previous winner Yahoo.

    Hanno

  22. Checking the uptime of my router... on Why Do We Have To Restart Routers? · · Score: 1

    root@OpenWrt:~# uptime
      19:34:29 up 319 days, 21:12

    That's a WRT54GS. With OpenWRT, as the prompt says. I think it's been 319 days since I installed that particular firmware.

    Then again, I live in Germany. The power grid is quite stable here usually.

    Hanno

  23. Re:Proper debugging technique on Why ISS Computers Failed · · Score: 1

    You know, how when there's a problem, you kind of step back for a second and analyze the entire situation? That's what NASA does.

    Try reading Feynman's analysis of the Challenger disaster some time. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard_Feynman#Challenger_disaster is a good starting point.

    Hanno
  24. Sounds trivial on LA Airport Uses Random Numbers To Catch Terrorists · · Score: 1

    Is it patended already?

  25. Re:Summary sucks, someone please provide better on on Theo de Raadt Details Intel Core 2 Bugs · · Score: 5, Funny

    can someone at slashdot please provide an "english" translation of the problems and how dangerous they are to normal users?

    "We don't have the complete picture yet, but things look bad"

    Hanno