log☇︎
24900+ entries in 0.238s
asciilifeform: mircea_popescu: probably. i'ma run with new knob settings as soon as it is safe to reset the db.
mircea_popescu: http://btcbase.org/log/2016-12-30#1593286 << actually workmem should be 256mb especially as you can afford it so totally, go for it. ☝︎☟︎
mircea_popescu: and for the record : the dood colluded with sonny vleisides / the rest of the 'ndrangheta running "bfl" scam (which, obviously, the usg hasn't ever prosecuted, in spite of loud violation of, eg, parole termas, because hey, partners in crime) to falsely claim that he received a miner delivery so as to scam bitbet into misresolving a bet, on which they had ~500 btc.
diana_coman: basically crystalspace has its own "boost" implementation yes, leaking as expected and on top of that planeshift uses it all over the place quite without any rhyme or reason, adding further to the swamp;
asciilifeform: jurov: i am guilty of referring to anything that wasn't in my childhood borland3.1 as cpp11
jurov: asciilifeform: https://gcc.gnu.org/wiki/C11Status btw, they claim c++11 is fully done in gcc 4.9 (as is my experience) . maybe you meant c++14 ?
asciilifeform: brings own set of problems. it is where monstrous thigs such as 'boost' came from - lack of cpp11
mircea_popescu: note that as time rains on, this sort of query becomes less and less interesting
mircea_popescu: incidentally, i would say deedbot also counts as tmsr keyserver now.
asciilifeform: because it is what 'phuctor as keyserver' stands on, also
asciilifeform: jurov: there is always 'possibility of data loss', machine could be stolen (as it once was!) or burn down
asciilifeform: mircea_popescu: linux by default uses all spare ram as disk readcache
asciilifeform: Framedragger: may as well run whole thing off a ramdisk then
Framedragger: mircea_popescu: because you could tell postgres to flush rows (forcing all caching layers) every 100 rows, not every 1 row as currently specified
mircea_popescu: that's another, but just as important, issue.
asciilifeform: gnupatch, as i warned long ago, MUST die.
mircea_popescu: Framedragger data loss is catastrophic to a degree that can't be described, as far as phuyctor goes. if you have to also check, your workload goes up 3x at least.
Framedragger: "Note that open_sync writing is buggy on some platforms (such as Linux), and you should (as always) do plenty of tests under a heavy write load to make sure that you haven't made your system less stable with this change. Reliable Writes contains more information on this topic. " oh god. more inserts/sec but zero data loss => probably can't help you much. documentation doesn't encourage me :/
a111: Logged on 2016-12-30 05:22 phf: i think it treats one of the names as canonical
mircea_popescu: http://btcbase.org/log/2016-12-30#1593121 << dude the problems jus' keep on coming. wtf is this, we have hashes, why THE FUCK would we care about directory and holy shit who came up with the idea of using path as hash ☝︎
asciilifeform: Framedragger was not yet here, but phuctor-1 was quite vulnerable to pulled mains cord ( would lose weeks of work ) and as soon as this became publicly known,
asciilifeform: (parcels are eaten by script that, presently, has no convenient pause button. and, because unix was dropped as a baby, suspending a process doesn't yield locks, so ~that~ doesn't safely work)
Framedragger: work_mem (used for in-memory sorts) is 4 MB default. 4 MB. (9.5 anyway). set it to 50 MB as per advisory at least.
asciilifeform: Framedragger: as per http://btcbase.org/log/2016-11-19#1570951 ☝︎
davout: OSX, totally the platform sane people develop on "valgrind: This formula either does not compile or function as expected on macOS" hurrrr
ben_vulpes: i believe that mod6 has a solid one as well, pete_dushenski's has been blackholed of late
phf: vdiff here http://p.bvulpes.com/pastes/r01nj/?raw=true it's the same old vdiff except if you pipe into it, it assumes you're piping in a patch, otherwise it acts as normal vdiff
mod6: anyway, yeah, as I said in #trilema-mod6, i see this as low-priority and SUPER high risk. but I'm open to suggestions how to implement this properly and safely.
phf: i think it treats one of the names as canonical ☟︎
phf: with p2 same guy gets pressed as bar
phf: -p1 means a/foo/bar gets pressed as foo/bar
ben_vulpes: b) when working through the list of each patch's children, search through the list of patched files until the patched filepath is a subsequence of the filename as recorded in the vpatch
phf: hehe, as much? no. but that's only because if there's one lesson i learned from naggum, all this rage is not healthy.
mircea_popescu: phf for my own curiosity, does anything in the rest of your life piss you off as much in aggregate as one session with these assholes ?
trinque: but if not sooner, I have orthogonal organs of database given independent life as a retirement project
asciilifeform: it is monumentally retarded, as a mere possibility in a system
trinque: as the shell is a user interface, in the first case
trinque: but the right answer is as much or as little structure enforcement as you like.
asciilifeform: ben_vulpes: 'this shape' being 'html as-seen-by-reader as the only storage format'
asciilifeform: i've seriously considered reimplementing phuctor in this shape. as it is, it loses more from the slow writes idiotically queuing up, and the wedged reads that result, than it wins from fast structured queries.
trinque: I am not using html as a data storage format what the hell
mircea_popescu: re octopus - no other effect individually ; but living long is bad for the species, as hillary well exemplifies.
phf: there's no "escape" as such. instead it generates an adhoc escape (say replace dot with ZZ or whatever) and then patches that one line using s///.
asciilifeform: ben_vulpes: not each (nixing the win32 #ifdefs did not, for so long as nobody is dumb enough to try to build for win32)
asciilifeform: as soon as there is a viable replacement.
asciilifeform: ben_vulpes: same as in any other proggy
asciilifeform: but it is also not clear to me whether this can be done and the result still referred to as 'trb'.
asciilifeform: and for so long as block verification is single-processor, there will remain type1
asciilifeform: mircea_popescu: ultimately for so long as peers are unauthenticated and speak unauthenticated plaintext , there will be type4 blackhole.
mircea_popescu: asciilifeform the idea, as idiscussed a few days ago, is to separate things and queue.
mircea_popescu: iirc this even made it to qntra, because the usg.dept of legal pretense's failure to act was exactly just as much damning of the whitehouse website based in maryland as of the bitfinex website based in nowhere.
mircea_popescu: davout the deep problem there, with kraken as well as with any other of these websites, which is to say scams, is that YOU DO NOT get to pocket anything. in your case this was a loss, but in the case of bitfinex running away with millions in "profits" its inept "users" were supposed to have accrued but never did, the mechanism was more clearly in view
ben_vulpes: phf: i only used windows as a wee one in school labs and a mildly less wee one in cad labs, so no idea re administration haxery
asciilifeform: pete_dushenski: be so kind as to post plox some logs from your node during and immediately prior to and after the blackhole
ben_vulpes: jurov: would you be so kind as to update the lxr with makefiles.vpatch ? ☟︎
ben_vulpes: davout: this is sop for american retail brokers as well. even were you to have the cash on hand to buy the underlying outright unless you jump through very specific and hard to find hoops retail brokerages will lend you the capital to take the position you intended to enter under your own steam
a111: Logged on 2016-12-29 21:10 mod6: "# It is entirely possible to have more than one root! ... exactly how, is left as an exercise for readers."
a111: Logged on 2016-12-29 21:10 mod6: "# It is entirely possible to have more than one root! ... exactly how, is left as an exercise for readers."
mod6: "# It is entirely possible to have more than one root! ... exactly how, is left as an exercise for readers." ☟︎☟︎
phf: mod6: there's no such thing as "root". there's only genesis. you find all patches that satisfy the genesis requirement ("all antecedents are false") and you build your graph down from there
mod6: ben_vulpes: so you think, what i'm calling the 'hack' to be just as good or more appropriate here? i'd rather check, personally.
mod6: the reason, I'm finding, that my previous patch still listed a->b->d in the flow, is because 'd' got picked up as a root. and the reason it does is because at this point, it has no antecedents.
asciilifeform: 'A Finnish court has sentenced the former head of Helsinki's anti-drugs police to 10 years in prison for drug-smuggling and other offences. ... It ranks as the second least-corrupt country, after Denmark, in the global index compiled by Transparency International.' << in other reich lulz.
deedbot: http://qntra.net/2016/12/hussein-bahamas-continues-picking-fights-as-term-dwindles/ << Qntra - Hussein Bahamas Continues Picking Fights As Term Dwindles
mircea_popescu: but as you nobody gave much a shit, kraken always was the hollow pretense of nobody in particular.
davout: i vaguely remember something, but i think i'd remember had it been something as glorious as goxfinex
asciilifeform: davout: it was exactly the same snore as in early trb
asciilifeform: (works best, afaik, as 'part of a balanced diet' with rockets,etc, naturally.)
asciilifeform: not everybody wants to be involved with mega-empires, on the giving or on the receiving end. in that light, the pashtun mountains are every bit a 'high-tech' deterrent as a SAM battery. ☟︎
asciilifeform: aha, as described by uncle al and others.
asciilifeform: 'As the deadline for handing in India’s decommissioned 500 and 1,000 rupee notes arrives, the government has signed a law jailing those who continue holding them. ... The Indian Cabinet has cleared a so-called ordinance, transferring liability to consumers and away from banks and authorities after a final cut-off point of March 31. Consumers could thereafter land themselves in jail for four years. Regular consumers only have until
BingoBoingo: Hussein as a political construct *needed* enshrined on court, preferably in Scalia's seat. Twas why there was no big push to vacancy fill.
BingoBoingo: <mircea_popescu> (such as the supreme court if the dems get the presidency again) << Well that's why he was cool with Hillary in 2016 but not 2008 or 2012, next job 4lyfe
asciilifeform: 'This is physical Bitcoin as it was meant to be: just hand it to someone and they've got it. Pass it on multiple times! As simple as a handshake. No miner fees, no confirmation delays.'
mircea_popescu: anyway, whether they manage to eat this particular potato or not, the fact remains : obama as a political construct is more valuable impeached than not impeached. that's pretty much the whole story, not like there's an actual human behind the construct.
mircea_popescu: (such as the supreme court if the dems get the presidency again)
asciilifeform: as of some time between june 5 and sept. 6 of '15, per http://web.archive.org/web/20151015000000*/https://www.uwgb.edu/dutchs/pseudosc/flipaxis.htm
asciilifeform: gabriel_laddel_p has 0 hosting space as well as no postbox..?
mircea_popescu: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hhGtad_BUlc << this is the good one. "rapprochement march". imagine you being on the other side and trying to prevent for instance a pincer closing but failing, and then the fucking idiots play this as they're linking up.
ben_vulpes: lacking ACTION lines as of right now
a111: Logged on 2016-12-28 21:46 mircea_popescu: as long as it's not "sits in front of cctv shows on '''cryptography'''" it works.
a111: Logged on 2015-04-02 14:58 asciilifeform: 'Boneh, in joint work with Matt Franklin, constructed a novel pairing-based method for identity-based encryption (IBE), whereby a user's public identity, such as an email address, can function as the user's public key. Since then, Boneh's contributions, together with those of others, have shown the power and versatility of pairings, which are now used as a mainstream tool in cryptography. The transfer of pairings from theory t
asciilifeform: r, credit card number as well as more mundane data, like hair colour and favourite dish, are called attributes in this model. Some of these attributes are not identifying (e.g. age or hair colour) whereas others are (e.g. name or social security number). An attribute-based credential is a cryptographic container for attributes represented as integers. The two most important technologies that realise attribute based credentials are Mi
asciilifeform: 'In most computer-related scientific work a digital identity is considered to be a set of characteristics describing certain properties about an individual. This set is dynamic, and depends on the context in which the individual is known. The attribute-based credential technology implements this model; see for instance [Camenisch et al., 2011,Alpár and Jacobs, 2013]. Personal characteristics, such as age, name, social security numbe
asciilifeform: 'Began implementing the crypto needed for the social distributor, as well as writing documentation describing it. [0] [1] In light of the history of attacks on pairing-friendly curves combined with the recent pseudo-MOV attack which solves discrete logarithms in the embedding field of the pairing (where the embedding field is of small degree), [2] I decided to avoid pairings altogether and use an attribute-based credential scheme bas
mircea_popescu: "gotta educate everyone as to our importance!!111"
Framedragger: mircea_popescu: ah, that *is* a nice way of putting it. but then, it's a much weaker assertion than "define cryptoperson as someone who's heard of phuctor" :)
ben_vulpes: looks like what i see as well
mircea_popescu: it is this that distinguishes human from tv-consumer, be the tv delivered over analog cable or digital cable as "www".
mircea_popescu: and that's the entire point of the forum as it works and the other things as they develop - to make recourse in assumption not merely possible, but a matter of course.
Framedragger: (fwiw i wouldn't defend tptacek as much, at all, but i can see how these framedraggerisms can be related under same umbrella)
mircea_popescu: for my own edification, how many people would you think have root access to tor boxen in bridge infrastructure as of say today ?
mircea_popescu: i'm saying isis is as good a referent as FUCKGOATS. have you met him ?
mircea_popescu: as long as it's not "sits in front of cctv shows on '''cryptography'''" it works. ☟︎
Framedragger: well if you define 'vaguely involved with crypto' as per tmsr-usual "has WoT presence" then yeah
asciilifeform: 'The Obama administration rolled the executive order out to great fanfare as a way to punish and deter foreign hackers who harm U.S. economic or national security.'
asciilifeform: 'First, section 507 of the bill would authorize certain cabinet officials to "drop from the rolls" military officers without my approval. The Constitution does not allow Congress to authorize other members of the executive branch to remove presidentially appointed officers, so I will direct my cabinet members to construe the statute as permitting them to remove the commission of a military officer only if the officer accepts their d
pete_dushenski: http://media.gettyimages.com/photos/editorial-cartoon-entitled-moving-day-march-4th-depicts-former-as-picture-id128514577 << "...pack up and gtfo, nobel prize and all"
asciilifeform: nor is there any sign on www as to why it existed, when, where.
jurov: as there's no fighting yet, it's fully playable at 12