Notices by K. Ryabitsev ???? (monsieuricon@social.kernel.org)
Embed this noticeK. Ryabitsev ???? (monsieuricon@social.kernel.org)'s status on Friday, 22-Nov-2024 16:02:11 JST
K. Ryabitsev ????My other idea is using insulated tanks of distilled water buried in the ground for residential peak shaving. Overnight, the water is heated to 90°C using cheap excess capacity. During the morning peak, the heat pump uses it as a source of readily available heat for central heating. You can even have a fully mechanical heat pump "trickle-heating" the water during the night from a small wind turbine, since you just need to run the compressor and move the liquids around. There should be enough wind to heat up a tank of water even with a small backyard turbine.
I'm a complete dilettante in this, so I'm probably missing 99 reasons why this would be a lot more difficult.
You know what’s interesting about this log line? It repeats 56,686,963 times in www.kernel.org logs for yesterday, across 4 nodes. That’s about 700 times a second, and this has been going on for months.
These requests aren’t intentionally malicious – they issue a simple GET /, receive their 301 redirect, and terminate the connection. From what I can tell, this is some kind of appliance or software installed on mobile clients that uses “can I reach www.kernel.org” as a network test.
This wouldn’t be that big of a deal – a single plaintext “GET /“ that triggers an immediate 301 is very cheap for us to generate, but the number of these requests has been steadily growing.
If you have any idea what this is and how to make it stop, please reach out?
@tusooa Heh, you're trying to convince a "Russian identified person" in one of the senior positions in the Linux Foundation that the Linux Foundation is being unfair towards "Russian identified people." It's pretty hilarious.
I'm not a lawyer and I don't speak for the LF, so I won't give you any kind of "official comment." But here's my view of it.
The people removed from maintainer positions were identified as employed by companies on the US and EU sanctions list. These companies are directly involved in the Russian military complex and therefore are directly complicit in war crimes being committed daily in Ukraine. If these maintainers want to think that they are "just techies helping improve the Linux kernel," or that "they are outside of politics," then they are fucking wrong. If they work for companies that develop weaponry or logistics used by the Russian military, they are complicit in Russia's war crimes, and I hold them responsible at a very personal level -- and that's my official comment on the situation.
And no, it's not easy to "just throttle them" when it's thousands of IPs all coming from public cloud subnets with user-agents matching common modern browsers.
--- To: postmaster@kernel.org Subject: Linux + WebKit for my phone
Hi, Can I ask your community one customized os with only kernel Linux with WebKit without windows manager x11, openbox.......... Only WebKit direct on framebuffer?
Director of Linux Foundation IT. Currently in charge of kernel.org infra.This account is for Linux/Kernel/FOSS topics in general: #linux, #kernel, #foss, #git, #sysadmin, #infrastructure.For my personal account, please follow @monsieuricon@castoranxieux.ca.Montréal, Québec, Canada