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00:23
I don't know who in the US needs to hear this but remember to pay your property taxes before the Oct 15th deadline, friends!
 
8 hours later…
08:00
@PM2Ring this might be outdated nowadays: they just discovered on mars that massive, massive amounts of water are deep inside the core/mantle itself.... So given that planets are generally similar, it could also be that the amount of surface (+upper crust) water is only a small part of the water on earth.
08:14
I keep wondering and not founding a perfect answer, so do anyone know, when does django perform queries and what data does it retrieve when using querysets in loops, eg:
for model in MyModel.objects.all():
    print(model.something)
Would that be a single query or many queries (one per model)
and in loops like this, would this get all objects or understand the filtering?
i don't know the django ORM but for relationships between tables you can usually configure whether they should be lazy-loaded (O(n) queries in your case) or not (join, subquery, etc. --> O(1) queries)
filtered = [model for model in MyModel.objects.all() if model.something == "blah"]
obviously it has no way to turn that list comprehension in a query that uses WHERE
usually you pass filter criteria to the ORM itself
Yeah django says it is 'lazy always' executed when the loop happens.
e.g. in sqlalchemy you'd do MyModel.query.filter_by(something='blah').all()
08:16
it could do some ast analysis
I know several javascript libraries do that to optimize queries yet allow javascript syntax.
you'd need some kind of preprocessor or REALLY dark magic for it
and it would cover just the most basic cases
and add a huge amount of ocmplexity and black magic
(so no thanks)
Anyways I wish to know the first answer, as django itself seems confusing.
i suggest trying it and looking at the SQL that gets executed
according to a quick google search django has something called prefetch_related to specify that you want to avoid lazy-loading each related row
08:34
@paul23 .NET sort of does that. You can use LINQ (SQL-ish syntax for managing collections, iterables, etc) and. for example say stuff like people.Where(person => person.Age > 18) If people is some real collection, then it will be (lazily) filtered. If it's something that is lazily generated, then you still get a filter. If it's a query to the database, then the function given will be broken into AST, then reconstructed in the DB query
So, the result would be something like SELECT * FROM people WHERE age > 18
When applying a lambda to the database, there are some limitations, though. It looks like regular C# code. But you can only have expressions, for example, not statements. And some operations can't really be applied to the DB query. So, it works with some asterisks. Covers most common usages, honestly.
but just like in sqlalchemy etc. that's custom methods to call. I think what he meant was using a completely standard list comprehension
08:49
Reading this docs.djangoproject.com/en/5.0/ref/models/querysets/… it seems queries are evaluated once for loops.
 
1 hour later…
09:59
@paul23 There's virtually no water in the core of a terrestrial planet. It's mostly just metal. Mainly iron, with some nickel, and smaller amounts of other metals. The water in the mantle isn't free, it's dissolved in the hot rock, or chemically bonded with it. Minerals in the crust may contain substantial quantities of water of crystallisation.
I have some info on the surface water of Mars here: astronomy.stackexchange.com/a/32485/16685
 
3 hours later…
12:52
@PM2Ring bbc.com/news/articles/czxl849j77ko this is a new research, which was discovered not too long ago. Indeed it is probably chemically bonded or at least trapped.
btw, for those who are experienced: stackoverflow.com/questions/79038328/… is really weird to me
13:36
morning cabbages, folks!
 
1 hour later…
14:50
As I'm slowly transitioning into a sysadmin, I'm repeatedly astonished at the insane prices that companies are charged. Our internet costs 680€/month for 50mbps. A "managed backup" service costs 550€/month for 1.5TB of data. Insane.
And the worst part about the backup service is that it's not the backup service that's expensive, it's the data storage. 50€/month per 500GB of data. (And for some reason their backup software is so awful that it needs a total of 5TB for our 1.5TB of data.)
15:39
@Aran-Fey The cloud is insanely overpriced, I don't get how they are still in business...
@Hakaishin Hype + lock-in. Once you move your infrastructure to the cloud, and to a specific provider, it's hard to either change to another one or even move out.
Although, to be fair, it is not necessarily more expensive in all situations. At my old place we estimated that in the long run we'd be saving money on electricity, maintenance, work if we moved our test infrastructure from self-hosted racks to the cloud. Even if it's more expensive to run per minute. We still had to power and maintain the physical servers we had 24 hours a day, while on the cloud we'd only be paying for what we consumed.
That was a while ago, though. Not sure if prices and circumstances have changed since.
16:02
It also depends on what is being backed up and what their backup software is doing (is it a full snapshot of the system?) If it's just files, a large amount can be moved into S3 buckets and that's significantly cheaper, especially if you moved it to Glacier. But you can't have all file types
17:00
Their backup software does have the advantage that it can back up entire VMs, and not just the files on the VM. But that's part of the reason why I find it odd that they are charging so much for the storage instead of the service
Another fun detail is that we would have to upload the entire 1.5TB for each "full backup", which usually means once per week. With our 50mbps, that would take 3 entire days. But apparently their software is industry standard, and not outdated.
Probably something similar to the lock-in that VLAZ mentioned. In the past, companies used to sell razor blade handles at a loss and then ramped up the price of their disposable blades to actually make the profit. Once you had the actual body, you'll be paying the on-going costs of maintaining it going forwards. Even better for a company selling simple software that you might propagate to other areas of your business
What's really interesting though is that the dialy "incremental" backups don't require that. I honestly have no clue how that is physically possible. How can the software know which files have changed unless it uploads everything or downloads the latest backup?
(A hash-based backup software like Duplicati could do that, but that's clearly not what we're dealing with here)
It would just read the file metadata on the disk the backup software is hosted on?
You mean the timestamp when the file was last modified? Is that reliable?
I would think that's the idea, yeah. I can definitely see problems if the file is hosted on multiple different computers and they're all hooked up to take snapshots because now you have race conditions everywhere. If it's coming off a single server, I would imagine it's reliable?
17:08
I guess that'd work
@Aran-Fey The other thing here is that it would be much easier for you to get budgetary sign-off from the C-Suite. Normally they don't know the details, it's someone else trying to make the case to get some software. So, "hey, it's £50 for the software and we just need 1.5TB of storage) gets clearance easy enough in 2024 for the purchase. Fast forward 18 months and the costs have spiralled but you're now in it
Well, both me and my boss nearly fell out of our seats when we saw the price, so I guess other companies must operate differently xD
Trust me, they do!
Conversely I've been stuck for months of discussions about £30k software that scales "unlimited" and it just goes round and round and round and nothing at all ever gets bought. Software systems are great for circular debates, pointless powerpoints and the like, resulting in nothing happening
17:25
@Aran-Fey I think you'd look at the FS journal.

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