bishopolis

joined 1 year ago
[–] bishopolis@lemmy.ca 8 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago)

check your devices

Go ahead. Open your iPhone. Some things don't present as being safe to open without damaging the unit, so no one's going to pop it open for lulz.

[–] bishopolis@lemmy.ca 12 points 1 day ago

Terrorists killing terrorists

These are the terrorists killing anyone standing around people the terrorists don't like. During a funeral.

[–] bishopolis@lemmy.ca 26 points 1 day ago (1 children)

I am starting to love them

Be careful whom you worship.

Based

On second thought, you'll be onto some new fad in a day.

 

I haven't seen it yet, and this one is near and dear to my heart.

Update your stuff -- this one's been affecting Enterprise Linux for maybe 12 years, versions the distros have long since grown bored of supporting, so essentially every EL install out there. So great.

[–] bishopolis@lemmy.ca 1 points 1 year ago

consider PCLinuxOS for a mageia (mandriva, conectiva and mandrake, both branches from RedHat pre-Enterprise Linux) descendant.

[–] bishopolis@lemmy.ca 2 points 1 year ago

if they didn’t kick the cow and spoil that milk like they’ve kicked every cow before it

I miss Cringely's take on this.

[–] bishopolis@lemmy.ca 1 points 1 year ago

. I would not be surprised if this was just a Red Hat thing.

It's a tough one. We blame RedHat for a lot of its half-baked internal fridge art - systemd, network manager; and even, some days, yum in an apt-4-rpm world.

But this new one is QUITE the departure. It's not 'red hat' stupid but a little further on the spectrum.

[–] bishopolis@lemmy.ca 1 points 1 year ago

I was actually about to do that (move to Debian).

Maybe stay within the Enterprise Linux camp for a bit. Not to start a flame war, but when an OS company was deciding between EL and Debians, the RPM format was the deciding factor.

[–] bishopolis@lemmy.ca 1 points 1 year ago

But why would they want to kill their acquistion like that though?

I can only recommend you look at the last decade of IBM's history in that respect.

[–] bishopolis@lemmy.ca 6 points 1 year ago

While Jeff's support for ELs has been imperfect - I marveled at the supply-chain issues gleefully baked into the drupal vagrant stuff - I came here to really say:

IBM's not really the poster-child for preserving the sanctity of source code in the past (cough cough Monterey cough), and I'm surprised they're even suggesting everyone respect their own demands around that.

[–] bishopolis@lemmy.ca 2 points 1 year ago

Docker has an additional issue, but not one unique to docker. Like flatpak, pip, composer, npm or even back to cpan and probably further, as a third-party source of installed software, it breaks single-source of truth when we want to examine the installed-state of applications on a given host.

I've seen iso27002/12.2.1f, I've seen supply-chain management in action to massive benefit for uptime, changes, validation and rollback, and it's simplified the work immensely.

    .1.3.6.1.2.1.25.6.3

If anyone remembers dependency hell - which is always self-inflicted - then this should be Old Hat.

HAVING SAID THAT, I've seen docker images loaded as the entire, sole running image, apparently over a razor-thin bmc-sized layer, on very small gear, to wondrous effect. But - and this is how VMware did it - a composed bare micro-image with Just Enough OS to load a single container on top, may not violate 27002 in that circumstance.