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authorMitja Felicijan <mitja.felicijan@gmail.com>2023-10-31 10:17:43 +0100
committerMitja Felicijan <mitja.felicijan@gmail.com>2023-10-31 10:17:43 +0100
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@@ -72,11 +72,11 @@ application. And you don't get this in <strong>marketing material</strong> for E
72etc. They never tell you this. Making Node.js scale on infrastructure or in 72etc. They never tell you this. Making Node.js scale on infrastructure or in
73codebase is really <strong>more of an art than a science</strong>. And just like with the 73codebase is really <strong>more of an art than a science</strong>. And just like with the
74whole JavaScript ecosystem:<ul><li>impossible to master,<li>half of your time you work on your tooling,<li>just accept transpilers that convert one code into another (holly smokes),<li>error handling is a joke,<li>standards? What standards?</ul><p>But on the other hand. As I did, you will also learn to love it. Learn to use it 74whole JavaScript ecosystem:<ul><li>impossible to master,<li>half of your time you work on your tooling,<li>just accept transpilers that convert one code into another (holly smokes),<li>error handling is a joke,<li>standards? What standards?</ul><p>But on the other hand. As I did, you will also learn to love it. Learn to use it
75quickly and do impossible things in crazy limited time.<p>I hate to admit it. But I love Node.js. Dammit, I love it :)<p>2023 Update: I hate Node.js!</div></article></main><section><hr><h2>Posts from blogs I follow around the net</h2><ul><li><a href=https://utcc.utoronto.ca/~cks/space/blog/solaris/ZFSWhyNotDirectoryToFilesystem target=_blank rel=noopener>One reason that ZFS can't turn a directory into a filesystem</a> — <a href=https://utcc.utoronto.ca/~cks/space/blog/>Chris's Wiki :: blog</a><div>One of the wishes that I and other people frequently have for ZFS 75quickly and do impossible things in crazy limited time.<p>I hate to admit it. But I love Node.js. Dammit, I love it :)<p>2023 Update: I hate Node.js!</div></article></main><section><hr><h2>Posts from blogs I follow around the net</h2><ul><li><a href=https://utcc.utoronto.ca/~cks/space/blog/linux/NFSv4ServerLockClients target=_blank rel=noopener>Finding which NFSv4 client owns a lock on a Linux NFS(v4) server</a> — <a href=https://utcc.utoronto.ca/~cks/space/blog/>Chris's Wiki :: blog</a><div>A while back I wrote an entry about finding which NFS client owns
76is the ability to take an existing directory (and everything 76a lock on a Linux NFS server, which turned
77underneath it) in a ZFS filesystem and turn it into a sub-filesystem 77out to be specific to NFS v3 (which I really should have seen coming,
78of its own. One reason for wanting this is that a number of things 78since it involved NLM and lockd). Finding the NFS v4 client that
79are set and controlled on a per-filesyst…<li><a href=http://www.landley.net/notes-2023.html#28-10-2023 target=_blank rel=noopener>October 28, 2023</a> — <a href=http://www.landley.net/notes-2023.html>Rob Landley's Blog Thing for 2023</a><div>Oh good grief, two of my least favorite licensing people, Larry Rosen 79owns a lock is, depending on your perspective, either simpl…<li><a href=http://www.landley.net/notes-2023.html#28-10-2023 target=_blank rel=noopener>October 28, 2023</a> — <a href=http://www.landley.net/notes-2023.html>Rob Landley's Blog Thing for 2023</a><div>Oh good grief, two of my least favorite licensing people, Larry Rosen
80and Bradley Kuhn, are interacting on the OSI's license-discuss 80and Bradley Kuhn, are interacting on the OSI's license-discuss
81list where the're doing 81list where the're doing
82bad computer history and insisting that a guy Larry Rosen 82bad computer history and insisting that a guy Larry Rosen