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8:14 AM
@ÖmerErden: this looks like an answer to me. — Matthieu M. 9 mins ago
Hey @MatthieuM. does question really worth it?
I didn't think that this is a contribution for a community, so i wrote a simple comment, if i am thinking wrong i can write an answer or remove the comment so one of you guys can write an answer.
 
@ÖmerErden It's not a great question for sure, yet it doesn't match any of the reason for closing it, and if we're not going to close it we might as well answer it.
(And possibly downvote it for the lack of research)
 
@MatthieuM. makes sense, if you have a better answer than my answer in the comment you may answer it, i can remove my comment after that, otherwise i'll turn my comment into an answer.
 
8:46 AM
@ÖmerErden I don't have a better answer, your comment nailed the issue, so I'll leave it to you :)
 
9:36 AM
@MatthieuM. ahah someone already answered during my lunch break, so it is done :P
 
9:47 AM
@Stargateur I only voted to close the question after the OP had already done so. They picked the link, so presumably, that helped them fix their issue.
 
 
5 hours later…
3:03 PM
@mcarton I through someone can close its question alone
 
3:47 PM
@Stargateur It looks like all they can do is vote 🤷‍♂️
 
well, I still believe if op give a mcve that there is a simple solution :p
but guess I will not give it because no mcve
HAHAHAHHAA
 
 
1 hour later…
4:52 PM
Is my memory wrong or is checking enum value equality a new thing in Rust ?
 
@DenysSéguret MyEnum(42) == MyEnum(21) ?
I don't think it's new
just need to derive PartialEq
 
In fact, the case which may have changed is Result<bool,>
I just did
                if Ok(true) == self.git_repos[rid].is_path_ignored(&path) {
 
@DenysSéguret nah, Result<T, E> implements PartialEq if T and E do
since Rust 1.0, probably
 
ok
Thanks
 
This is a reason I created SNAFU, so that's it's easy to make errors that implement PartialEq
unlike failure which does the trait object
 
5:03 PM
And the fact I still don't use SNAFU might be why I was surprised to have this working
 
Do you have a server running at 127.0.0.1:6142? — Gurwinder Singh 15 mins ago
@GurwinderSingh Thanks — David M 5 mins ago
 
ahaha
"actively refused it" ? Is a missing socket server "actively" refusing a connection ?
 
I think so, more than a firewall that doesn't accept or reject
 
from tokio point of view that would be the same thing
Host refuse the connection
but didn't say why
 
5:17 PM
Nah
92
Q: REJECT vs DROP when using iptables

Mike BIs there any reason why I would want to have iptables -A INPUT -j REJECT instead of iptables -A INPUT -j DROP

 
5:33 PM
@Shepmaster REJECT is the same that no server
 

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