I've noted a strange behavior in the memory management. When the RAM has been fulled, the HDD is involved. When the fulled RAM is freed the system continues to involve the HDD making slow al the activities. What is the cause? (kernel 6.2)
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Originally posted by MorrisS. View PostI've noted a strange behavior in the memory management. When the RAM has been fulled, the HDD is involved. When the fulled RAM is freed the system continues to involve the HDD making slow al the activities. What is the cause? (kernel 6.2)
2) Paging in (from swap)
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Originally posted by WereCatf View Post
I'm among those people as well. I hope this Kent-guy manages to cool his head and just proceeds to do as asked to. All this hubbub would die off practically instantly if he'd just sign with PHP, fix the compilation error and submitted the patches to kernel-next and everyone would benefit. But oh well, it is his decision.
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Originally posted by avisToo many egos, too little technical mindset and work using something a lot more reliable and responsible, e.g. github/gitlab where people can post merge requests officially and discuss them in a manner which facilitates a frictionless information exchange without the need to grep through thousands of emails trying to find a needle in a haystack.
Issues like this will rear its ugly head again and again in the future. A mailing list as a method of developing such a big project with so many participants is simply wrong and breaks way too often.
Too bad, LKML is preferred for the exact same reasons: no fucking responsibility for anything. There are literally tens of dozens of unreplied posts with serious issues in LKML every month. And don't tell me kernel developers are volunteers working in their spare time. Over 95% of commits to the kernel are made by paid developers developing the Linux kernel and nothing else.
I fully agree with you in this topic
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Originally posted by Old Grouch View Post
The Joker?
...that's probably unwarranted. That said, if a rewrite is on the cards, be aware that Rust is not a magic wand to make your code bug-free. It certainly doesn't substitute for poor, or lacking, systems analysis; or misapprehensions about workflows; or other meta-level complications of logic encoded in the application. Understanding what your code is meant to do is far more important than writing exemplary code that does the wrong thing.
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Originally posted by Errinwright View PostIt is, albeit barely. The distant future will see it release in Rust (7-9years).
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Originally posted by GraysonPeddie View Post
What a strange word... I had to look that up on StartPage:
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