I hereby claim:
- I am ishworgurung on github.
- I am isg (https://keybase.io/isg) on keybase.
- I have a public key ASDvDU5Nf991msLfj_1uVnGo0ys0GzG-dNW-qRNvz34Rdgo
To claim this, I am signing this object:
System: | |
Host: blitz Kernel: 5.2.21-1-MANJARO x86_64 bits: 64 Desktop: Gnome 3.34.1 | |
Distro: Manjaro Linux | |
Machine: | |
Type: Laptop System: Star Labs product: LabTop v: N/A serial: <filter> | |
Mobo: Star Labs Online Limited model: Star LabTop (Mk III) | |
serial: <filter> UEFI: American Megatrends v: 1.0.09 date: 07/05/2019 | |
Battery: | |
ID-1: BAT0 charge: 38.4 Wh condition: 46.9/45.6 Wh (103%) | |
CPU: |
I hereby claim:
To claim this, I am signing this object:
#!/bin/sh | |
# for wl (http://wiki.iopsys.se/index.php5/Wlctl) | |
for i in `seq 1 2`; do | |
for cmd in status isup rate txpwr pktq_stats mempool bs_data; do | |
wl -i eth$i $cmd; | |
done; | |
done |
use std::sync::mpsc::{Receiver, Sender}; | |
use std::path::PathBuf; | |
use std::fs::Metadata; | |
use std::io::Result; | |
use std::thread::spawn; | |
use std::sync::mpsc::channel; | |
fn worker_loop(files: Receiver<PathBuf>, | |
results: Sender<(PathBuf, Result<Metadata>)>) { | |
//println!("here"); |
No need to reboot!!!!1 | |
0. df -ih / df -h on the linux guest | |
1. Increase your physical disk space from the hypervisor on the host machine. | |
2. Create a logical partition of the free space from the linux guest making sure that you write the partition table out. | |
$ cfdisk /dev/sdb | |
3. Drop back to the shell and do a partprobe to re-read the partition table so the kernel knows about the new logical partition. If new partition is not showing up, then you'll need to reboot (Debian & Ubuntu should be fine. But Fedora and CentOS has given me issue on this) | |
$ partprobe | |
4. Extend our Volume Group to include the new partition. Below we have sdb7 as the new logical partition created in step 2. Replace it for your own need. | |
$ vgextend <volume group name identified using vgdisplay> /dev/sdb7 |
#!/usr/bin/env python | |
""" | |
Example on using Kqueue/Kevent on BSD/Mac | |
using Python. | |
The TCP server essentially echoes back the | |
message it receives on the client socket. | |
""" | |
__author__ = "Ishwor Gurung <[email protected]>" |
/* | |
Description: | |
An example / skeleton of a high-performance socket server on Linux. Feel free | |
to use this code to write your own evented servers. | |
The code is essentially a echo server that send(2) whatever it recv(2) from the | |
client, back to the client socket. | |
The code is high-performing due to the use of epoll(7) in a non-blocking mode | |
with edge-triggered distribution that scales well on a large set of file |
#include <iostream> | |
#include <cstring> | |
#include <vector> | |
#include <string> | |
#include <boost/bind.hpp> | |
#include <boost/ref.hpp> | |
#include <random> | |
using namespace std; | |
typedef std::vector<std::pair<std::string, int>> pair_vector; |
1. Install build tools | |
- sudo fink install autoconf2.6 automake1.11 | |
2. Checkout libev | |
- cvs -z3 -d :pserver:[email protected]/schmorpforge co libev | |
3. Generate configure script and a makefile | |
- cd libev | |
- autoreconf-2.68 --install --symlink --force > configure | |
- chmod +x configure && ./configure |