@lanodan I maintain a library to integrate with a government API. My integration tests use their staging server. I can't run their service locally (the source is secret). Their TLS stack has very specific quirks. Their API has lots of quirks too, and it changes over time. A mock service doesn't cut it (nor do I have the time for it). I need to ensure that my code works with the real thing.
@lanodan You're thinking about unit tests, but CI might deploy a new staging service and run integration tests. A service's SDK might run live tests with a staging server.
@peertube When I try to visit https://peertube.tv/ without Javascript enabled, the page tells me to "use one of the third party applications to browse this instance". The text "third party applications" links to a page which returns 404.
@q66 The crazy thing is that this display even has storage of its an and a whole locally-installed OS. It must have pretty beefy hardware too, since Windows is pretty heavyweight.
This could have been a tiny rpi with no storage booting off the network.
@navi@nikitonsky Yeah, it _will be_ pretty feasible. No compositor implements this yet, especially combining ext-screencopy-v1 with ext-foreign-toplevel-list.
And yeah, the only right solution here is to save it into a layered image to use in a layered image editor. If you don't save layers, then this kind of editing wouldn't be possible.
You can also use ext-foreign-toplevel-list to _name_ the layers themselves.
For tiling desktop, you can easily crop a single window, but that's about it.
@nikitonsky On Linux, I don't think any compositor exposes all the APIs that you'd need for this (specifically, capturing background toplevel surfaces). I'm sure that something like this would be really fun to develop, but it's only really of any use on a stacking window manager.
@marcan@stsp Consider leaving a "Closes: http://path/to/pr" in the commit description. This will close the PR and automatically leave a comment on it. Someone looking at commits also has a clear way to find out context/discussion.
@lanodan a human needs to looks at the release itself anyway. The automation is would do the repetitive part (pull latest generate commit, push to new branch, open MR).
@martijnbraam While discussing the slowness of pkgs.alpinelinux.org today, I remembered pkgs.postmarketos.org (which is actually a lot faster). Did you write apkbrowser just to deal with performance? I'm trying to get a clearer picture of where each one stands.
@lanodan Email clients usually show the trust level of a key. I think that “bad signature” is red, signed” is yellow and “signed and trusted” is green.
At least that’s what I recall, it’s been a while since I’ve received gpg signed emails from known keys.