The scoop: google returned 403 on mail-related queries, putting frequent abusers on a banlist. IP's on the banlist receive 503.
From what I can gather, Google had no performance/scalability issues.
The only negative side-effect was innocent IP's being put on the banlist, for example some webproxy's.
I don't care what those benchmarks say, for me the Roadsend compiler is magnitudes slower than native PHP, on several benchmarks and some real world code..
1. DVDs have one key for the disc, which is encrypted about 400 different times. One of the basic rules of cryptography is that you NEVER encrypt the same thing with different keys.
Funny, this is exactly how PGP works when you encrypt for multiple destinations..
If your workstation is Gbit attached, and the webserver you're leeching from is Gbit attached, you'll negotiate a 9000 byte MSS, even if right behind your Gbit there's a 1500 byte-MTU link to the Internet. Then you will have to rely on ICMP Fragmentation Needed messages, which lots of morons are still filtering.
Have you considered 'KeepAlive Off'? One busy site I admin for has been up 100% ever since I did that, used to go down (gigs of swap in use) every night..
5.0 is supposed to be released November 20, according to the FreeBSD site but note that that is still a -CURRENT tree. 4.8 is the next -STABLE release after 4.7, planned for February 1.
Dude, they're called VIRUSES. Saying 'virii' makes you look like a total fool.
The scoop: google returned 403 on mail-related queries, putting frequent abusers on a banlist. IP's on the banlist receive 503. From what I can gather, Google had no performance/scalability issues. The only negative side-effect was innocent IP's being put on the banlist, for example some webproxy's.
$ rpm -qlp roadsend-pcc-prereqs-beta2-1.i386.rpm | grep bigloob /bigloo/2.6c/ lib/bigloo/2.6c/bigloo.heap/ bigloo_config.hc .sog loofth_s-2.6c.so
/usr/lib/libbigloogc-2.6c.so
/usr/bin/bigloo
/usr/lib/bigloo
/usr/li
/usr/lib/bigloo/2.6c/bigloo.h
/usr
/usr/lib/bigloo/2.6c
<snip>
/usr/lib/libbigloo_s-2.6
/usr/lib/libbigloo_u-2.6c.so
/usr/lib/libbi
/usr/lib/libbigloofth_u-2.6c.so
/usr/lib/libbigloog c_fth-2.6c.so
I don't care what those benchmarks say, for me the Roadsend compiler is magnitudes slower than native PHP, on several benchmarks and some real world code..
I have RSS as a line just below the IRC channel topic in my IRC-client (irssi), with the newsline.pl extension. It's wonderful.
Funny, this is exactly how PGP works when you encrypt for multiple destinations..
Compression on the NIC level? Ptah. There is no such thing as an Ethernet compression standard. Also, how the hell would you compress xvids?
You're missing one small detail :)
If your workstation is Gbit attached, and the webserver you're leeching from is Gbit attached, you'll negotiate a 9000 byte MSS, even if right behind your Gbit there's a 1500 byte-MTU link to the Internet. Then you will have to rely on ICMP Fragmentation Needed messages, which lots of morons are still filtering.
Actually, I bought a PCMCIA card with an Amd WiFi chipset in it just 2 weeks ago, so they're certainly not out of that market.
No Linux or FreeBSD support, so I used the NDIS wrappers in FreeBSD-current. Cool stuff.
Now if only my AP will run Linux or NetBSD ;)
Have you considered 'KeepAlive Off'? One busy site I admin for has been up 100% ever since I did that, used to go down (gigs of swap in use) every night..
And so does Dutch and several other European languages. It annoys the hell out of me (being Dutch myself), with people mixing and matching at will.
You'd think the mathematics would one day realise that they're making a mess. How do you write non-integer coordinates in a competent system?
(0.5, 0.8)
How do you write them with a decimal comma?
(0,5; 0,8)
Give me a break!
What you are looking for is XML Schema
Yes, on a piano it is. As on most guitars. But on a recorder flute or for example a violin, Csharp and Dflat are not the same!
That is a known bug, it happens only on 4xx tho, not on 5xx responses.
It is documented here.
Note how you need to prove that you actually have this problem to get the patch. Yay Microsoft.
At my previous job, administering the mailservers, this bug caused me a lot of trouble, forcing us to block remote hosts at times.
I assume he means a 450 reply, not a 550? 550 won't make the message stay in the queue, 450 will.
5.0 is supposed to be released November 20, according to the FreeBSD site
but note that that is still a -CURRENT tree. 4.8 is the next -STABLE release after 4.7, planned for February 1.