This is awesome work, I’m happy to see systemd on musl getting more attention. Poor Khem was doing it all by himself for years.
If something is making noise it’s either “fuck me” or “fuck off”
See ya later, pups!
Dude I mean in this in the most genuine, kind way: a significant aspect of being a successful programmer is using the tools in your environment. If you can’t do something without bringing in your Tool of Choice you’re artificially limiting yourself.
If your environment does not have a specific tool or functionality that you would prefer, you work around it. OpenWrt is an immensely capable OS and it manages to perform complex network operations within its (admittedly) constrained environment.
In this case you’re myopically focused on not even a specific language, but the language agnostic feature of regex capture groups. You should be asking yourself if there’s any other way to accomplish your goal without this (spoiler: there are probably dozens of alternatives)
Lua is 31 years old and has been included in OpenWrt by default for 15 years.
If it’s OpenWrt then use Lua. You probably could have written a solution in the time it took you to come whine about BusyBox.
I don’t know if this is still the case, but IIRC browsers (chrome and Firefox) have their own sandboxing which is quite effective, but their efficacy is hindered by flatpak.
Early Knoppix live CDs have a special place in my heart
I’ve used silverblue on my gaming rig for over three years now. It has been a completely uneventful experience, so I really like it.
The only pain point I have is that compiling kernel modules is an utter disaster and it’s ridiculous that there is not a seamless mechanism for this yet. Every kernel update (and there are tons) requires me to rebuild my third party modules, but you need to do it in a toolbox and the kernel headers version must match the running kernel version, which is actually more annoying than it sounds.
C++ is way ahead of C in the same way that a metastasized cancer is way ahead of a benign tumor
Was this written by AI?
Linux has dominated the router firmware market for a loooong time. Nearly all vendor firmware for consumer routers is Linux based.
But but there is no ethical consumption under capitalism so that means I shouldn’t even try
Nice
I buy whole bean then toss in a roach or two so I get the full experience, fresh right in my kitchen.
Reminder to read the official git book. It’s free and it’s useful. My dudes, stop pretending to understand your tools and actually learn them.
Unless it has got many vegetables