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good. image parsing has produced so many bad RCEs.


I tried to learn perl a few times early in my career, we still had some old perl internal sites and a bit of tooling written in it. I really struggled to find good resources on the web at the time, and most of the perl I was exposed to was so badly written as to be incomprehensible to me. I knew C and Python at the time.

I wonder how common my experience was and why the next gen (at the time) I was part of never learned it


I had the exact same experience. The Perl I encountered early in my career seemed hard to understand in way other languages weren’t. I also didn’t feel I made progress quickly trying to learn it, every time I thought I had my feet under me I’d encounter a new sigil or a new pattern and be back to having no idea what the code was doing.


If you want


what's wrong with ICE


I'd start my own ISP for the area


It's possible if you have the startup cash https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=20726906


I don't think it works with Windows tracert output

edit: edited my windows traceroute to match the linux format and it works nicely. great tool.


You can now use your windows tracert outputs directly!


what distro did you go with


saved sessions in a tree style with folders would be a nice advanced feature!


I wonder if this will help applications like VPP/DPDK. not sure if the CPU or the lanes are the bottleneck there.


> Perhaps the most popular Linux file system, Ext4, is also getting many improvements. These boosts include faster commit paths, large folio support, and atomic multi-fsblock writes for bigalloc filesystems. What these improvements mean, if you're not a file-system nerd, is that we should see speedups of up to 37% for sequential I/O workloads.

nice to see ext4 still getting improvements


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