Hi! I am currently trying to learn fork/exec and run into the problem of having this whole 'root@...' after starting the new process, would anyone know how to hide it?
Oh no, I do want the overall output, but is there no way of hiding just the 'prefix'? I'd still want to see the STARTED SERVER business, but not the console prompt in front of it
I just noticed the problem: I foolishly already accessed a variable I didn't initialize yet (because I didn't fully set up IPC) and the crash resulted in the prompt to be printed out.
I wonder where are all the men during this whole Monica gate, I mean SE sent two women to the front line during the most controversial time, and they both got bashed hard. It felt like as if women are sent to the battle front when all the men are hiding back home.
@TelKitty Or it's because they hope that females won't get bashed as hard as the males would. Though the SE community seems to be an equal-opportunity basher
I am not sexist, I don't think men should always be protectors. But I really hate it when men are cowards and let women do the dangerous jobs for them.
I had two roosters, they both ran faster than the hen when chased by danger. But at least they did not ask the hen to protect them like StackExchange do.
Interesting. For me none of these are questions actually. Rather some kind of communication (posts/pages/announcements). Will need to read to understand the problem.
@Borgleader God I love sentences like: " Intel's Xe HPC GPUs would be able to scale to 1000s of EUs and each Execution unit has been upgraded to deliver 40 times better double-precision floating-point compute horsepower."
40 times better...than what? 40 times better than ancient Intel Integrated Graphics? 40 times better than their low-end GPU? 40 times better than nVidia?
Depending on what you're comparing to, that could mean anywhere from massive failure to massive win, or anywhere in between.
It also reminds me of that scene from Top Gear where they were reading the brochure of a really cheap car. They were listing things it didnt have as features like "Manually adjustable door mirrors" (i.e. we don't have electric ones)
A ping of death is a type of attack on a computer system that involves sending a malformed or otherwise malicious ping to a computer.
A correctly-formed ping packet is typically 56 bytes in size, or 64 bytes when the Internet Protocol header is considered. However, any IPv4 packet (including pings) may be as large as 65,535 bytes. Some computer systems were never designed to properly handle a ping packet larger than the maximum packet size because it violates the Internet Protocol documented in RFC 791. Like other large but well-formed packets, a ping of death is fragmented into groups of 8 octets...