Is this a tinfoil conspiracy site? Tankie infowars?
Is this a tinfoil conspiracy site? Tankie infowars?
Read the article, it works the other way for them.
This is supposed to be the "world news" community.
If it were that easy, this would have been solved everywhere already. A day or two is almost certainly not enough, you also have to do adjacent apartments (whose inhabitants probably aren't going to be very happy, especially if they have to leave for the fifth time), your map can show that it affects like every other building (especially when it's a large apartment block), the temporary housing is at risk of becoming infested too, which will make people fear being there, etc.
It actually sounds a lot like zero covid - simple on paper, you try it, you find out it doesn't really work, and then you're left with the choice to either change strategy or try to go harder and cram it through regardless.
What do you mean? Would they try to dust off their zero covid policy?
You mean like AirBnbs?
I think the issue with this is that the code (https://docs.rs/nix/0.27.1/src/nix/lib.rs.html#297) allocates a fixed-size buffer on the stack in order to add a terminating zero to the end of the path copied into it. So it just gives you a reference into that buffer, which can't outlive the function call.
They do also have a with_nix_path_allocating
function (https://docs.rs/nix/0.27.1/src/nix/lib.rs.html#332) that just gives you a CString
that owns its buffer on the heap, so there must be some reason why they went this design. Maybe premature optimization? Maybe it actually makes a difference? 🤔
They could have just returned the buffer via some wrapper that owns it and has the as_cstr
function on it, but that would have resulted in a copy, so I'm not sure if it would have still achieved what they are trying to achieve here. I wonder if they ran some benchmarks on all this stuff, or they're just writing what they think will be fast.
Clickbait title.
The packages were collectively downloaded 963 times before they were removed. The rogue packages include names like "noblox.js-vps," "noblox.js-ssh," and "noblox.js-secure," and they were distributed across specific version ranges
Is there any indication that anyone actually installed these, other than some bots that auto download all packages and such?
You would have to really go out of your way to get infected by stuff like this.
That being said, there are things npm could do to try to auto-detect "risky" packages (new, similar name to existing projects, few downloads, etc.) and require an additional layer of confirmation, or something like that.
https://github.com/GoogleContainerTools/distroless
So basically admitting you don't know the actual history? Maybe start with reading a Wikipedia page or something.
None of that excuses US war crimes in Vietnam, but it does show how a potential future with a hypothetical peace treaty could look like.
Not like that, lol
Just saying, instead of this monstrosity
CreateOrderRequest(user,
productDetails,
pricingCalculator,
order => order.internalNumber)
Just use
CreateOrderRequest(
user,
...
Putting the first argument on a separate line.
Same if you have an if
using a bunch of and
(one condition per line, first one on a new line instead of same line as the if
) and similar situations.
Anything for indent (barely matters, as long as the editor forces it to stay consistent), and fuck alignment, just put things on a new line.
And you know how the Vietnam war ended, right?
There was a peace agreement between the north and the south, and then a few years later North Vietnam broke it and invaded again, taking over all of the country.
I mean, China can just mind their own business, leave them alone, and then there doesn't have to be a war. How nice that would be.
Democracy is when you need a majority of votes, which they don't have. If they did, none of this would be an issue.