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What is DevOps? How does it relate to other ideas and methodologies
within software development? Linux Journal Deputy Editor and longtime
software developer, Bryan Lunduke isn't entirely sure, so he asks some
experts to help him better understand the DevOps phenomenon. The word DevOps confuses me.
Loadsharers: Funding the Load-Bearing Internet Person
The internet has a sustainability problem. Many of its critical
services depend on the dedication of unpaid volunteers, because they
can't be monetized and thus don't have any revenue stream for the
maintainers to live on. I'm talking about services like DNS, time synchronization,
crypto libraries—software without which the net and the browser
you're
using couldn't function.
Linux Journal Ceases Publication: An Awkward Goodbye
IMPORTANT NOTICE FROM LINUX JOURNAL, LLC:
On August 7, 2019, Linux Journal shut its doors for good. All staff were laid off and the company is left with no operating funds to continue in any capacity. The website will continue to stay up for the next few weeks, hopefully longer for archival purposes if we can make it happen.
Another Episode of "Seems Perfectly Feasible and Then Dies"--Script to Simplify the Process of Changing System Call Tables
David Howells put in quite a bit of work on a script,
./scripts/syscall-manage.pl, to simplify the entire process of changing the
system call tables. With this script, it was a simple matter to add, remove,
rename or renumber any system call you liked. The script also would resolve
git
conflicts, in the event that two repositories renumbered the system calls in
conflicting ways.
Why fear of failure is a silent DevOps virus
Do you recognize the following scenario? I do, because a manager once stifled my passion and innovation to the point I was anxious to make decisions, take risks, and focus on what's important: "uncovering better ways of developing software by doing it and helping others do it" (Agile Manifesto, 2001).
Developer: "The UX hypothesis failed. Users did not respond well to the new navigation experience, resulting in 80% of users switching back to the classic navigation."
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Trace code in Fedora with bpftrace
bpftrace is a new eBPF-based tracing tool that was first included in Fedora 28. This article covers some basics about bpftrace, and how it works.
Words, Words, Words--Introducing OpenSearchServer
How to create your own search engine
combined with a crawler that will index all sorts of documents.
Tutanota Interviews Tim Verheyden, the Journalist Who Broke the Story on Google Employees Listening to People's Audio Recordings
Investigative journalist Tim Verheyden, who broke the story on how Google employees listen to people’s audio recordings, explains in an interview how he got hold of the story, why he is now using the encrypted contact form Secure Connect by Tutanota and why the growing number of "ghost workers" in and around Silicon Valley is becoming a big issue in Tech.
The Bash Trap Command
If you've written any amount of bash code, you've likely come across the trap command. Trap allows you to catch signals and execute code when they occur. Signals are asynchronous notifications that are sent to your script when certain events occur. Most of these notifications are for events that you hope never happen, such as an invalid memory access or a bad system call. However, there are one or two events that you might reasonably want to deal with...
Intro to Corteza, an open source alternative to Salesforce
Corteza is an open source, self-hosted digital work platform for growing an organization's productivity, enabling its relationships, and protecting its work and the privacy of those involved. The project was developed entirely in the public domain by Crust Technology. It has four core features: customer relationship management, a low-code development platform, messaging, and a unified workspace.
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Navigating the Bash shell with pushd and popd
The pushd and popd commands are built-in features of the Bash shell to help you "bookmark" directories for quick navigation between locations on your hard drive. You might already feel that the terminal is an impossibly fast way to navigate your computer; in just a few key presses, you can go anywhere on your hard drive, attached storage, or network share. But that speed can break down when you find yourself going back and forth between directories, or when you get "lost" within your filesystem.
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How to Setup Tonido Personal Cloud Server on Ubuntu 18.04 LTS
Tonido is a free application server that allows you to access all your files on your computer from a web browser. You can share files with your family, friends, and colleagues, and also create a secure share to only allow authorized people. In this tutorial, we will learn how to install and configure Tonido Personal Edition on Ubuntu 18.04 LTS.
Final Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 version released
Red Hat has just released Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7.7.
Is Perl going extinct?
Is there an endangered species list for programming languages? If there is, Command Line Heroes suggests that Perl is somewhere between vulnerable and critically endangered. The dominant language of the 1990s is the focus of this week's podcast (Season 3, Episode 4) and explores its highs and lows since it was introduced over 30 years ago.
3 tools for doing presentations from the command line
Tired of creating and displaying presentation slides using LibreOffice Impress or various slightly geeky tools and frameworks? Instead, consider running the slides for your next talk from a terminal window.
Unboxing the Raspberry Pi 4
When the Raspberry Pi 4 was announced at the end of June, I wasted no time. I ordered two Raspberry Pi 4 Starter Kits the same day from CanaKit. The 1GB RAM version was available right away, but the 4GB version wouldn't ship until July 19th. Since I wanted to try both, I ordered them to be shipped together.
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Avoiding burnout: 4 considerations for a more energetic organization
In both personal and organizational life, energy levels are important. This is no less true of open organizations. Consider this: When you're tired, you'll have trouble adapting when challenges arise. When your energy is low, you'll have trouble collaborating with others. When you're feeling fatigued, building and energizing an open organization community is difficult.
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How to Install Strider Continuous Integration Server on Ubuntu 18.04 LTS
Strider is a free and open-source Continuous Integration & Deployment Server written in Node.JS, JavaScript and uses MongoDB to store their data. In this tutorial, we will explain how to install Strider on Ubuntu 18.04 server.
Microsoft's Windows Terminal preview gets jiggy with Azure -- but emphasis on 'preview'
Open-source command line fun and ga- oh. It crashed again.
Microsoft continued its breakneck pace of Windows Terminal development with a major update to its open source command line baby over the weekend.…
4 cool new projects to try in COPR for August 2019
COPR is a collection of personal repositories for software that isn’t carried in Fedora. Some software doesn’t conform to standards that allow easy packaging. Or it may not meet other Fedora standards, despite being free and open source. COPR can offer these projects outside the Fedora set of packages. Software in COPR isn’t supported by […]
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