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Joined 2 years ago
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Cake day: June 10th, 2023

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  • Consider PCLinuxOS. ‘PLOS’ has the same look and feel of the ent Linuxes, but

    • as a child of mageia/mandriva from mandrake and conectiva, it’s derivation from RH is super long ago so it’s closer to rhel5 for well-built well-tested tools.

    • it has maaaaassive lib/app support range, like Axel Rose’s vocal range compared to EL’s Bruce Springsteen. No stream or other crap shenanigans aside from etc/alternatives.

    • No systemd. Weird how startups are fast and reliable

    It can yum cron like a badass.

    Caveats:

    • if you liked building vagrants on mageia, you need to help them on pclos. They have no clue there, and the skillet seems to be fading fast.
    • people who support sysv startup are getting more lazy and ditching it.
    • people who support last week’s version of anything are no more prevalent in pclos, so there’s no magical fix for “10 second tom” devs here either.






  • Sister’s vet office is now offline again for COVID. Docs sick, most of the tech staff, most of the admin staff. When it hits, it runs through like a forest fire. One vet left because F the angry pet owners who think it’s a personal insult they can’t get special treatment, and he replaced one of the two who killed themselves (stress) last year.

    They may institute a mask mandate again

    • to keep the remaining staff healthy on return
    • to filter their customers further because of high correlation of shitbaggery
    • because docs are always masked so lower risk is now a work perq for them.

    Me, I quit my job when they mandated return to work and I joined a union shop with 100% remote in the contract. I should mask up when I go to the store but I’m a dumb boy and always forget. I’m so vaxed it’s like a bad hangover, but I don’t have time for even that mess.






  • It’s a signed archive of deployable files along with meta-data. Usually a cpio archive (which is similar to a tarball) with that extra signature wrapper and meta-data (which, itself, should be a list of files and checksums).

    A proper package can validate a project’s installation, either from the local database or from remote resources, at any time, which gives positive assurance that what is installed is what should be installed.

    As well, proper package info is exported by SNMP to be consolidated centrally and validate what is vs what should be installed at the group level.

    TL;DR? Like a tarball with tracking info, signatures, checksums, and top-to-bottom validation. If it’s a good package, anyway.