Yes, Linux (without a third-party hack in userspace) needs fixed-size pre-allocated swap space.
As far as I know on MacOS dynamic swapfile creation is also handled by a userspace process. Not a third-party one, but on Linux everything in userspace is third-party since Linux is just the kernel. I don’t see how swapd is any more of a hack than MacOS’s dynamic_pager.
Mac OS won’t kill processes just because it’s running out of memory; it will pause them instead (as if by SIGSTOP)
How does SIGSTOP help if you’re out of memory? It won’t free anything.
In response to the Russian Justice Ministry declaring Berkeley to be an “undesirable organisation”, berkeley.edu.pl is declaring the Russian Justice Ministry to be an “undesirable organisation”.
@kemona_halftau never mind, I found the explanation
@unnick Yes. For example, the first line of the GPLv3 (after the copyright notice but before the preamble) is a license for the license:
Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies of this license document, but changing it is not allowed.
(Although the FAQ clarifies that you can in fact create modified versions of the GPL, provided you change the name, remove the preamble, and sufficiently alter the wording of the instructions-for-use at the end and make it not mention GNU.)
@maddy @foxyloon Hopefully it means they’ll drop all restrictions on unlocking the bootloader and make it work like on Google/OnePlus phones (fastboot oem unlock/fastboot flashing unlock).
Unlocking the bootloader on Motorola phones requires using an online service (bad, since they could choose to shut it down at any moment, as LG did) and agreeing to a likely illegal and completely unacceptable set of terms and conditions that includes the requirement not to sell your device and also kind-of a death threat.
@_hic_haec_hoc @neil @david_chisnall
(or call them “general purpose, always-on internet-connected devices with photo and video capabilities”)
That definition also covers any laptop with a webcam, if (like me) the user never turns their laptop off. It is quite difficult to provide an exact definition of what a smartphone is. You could add a “must have a cellular modem requirement”, but there are laptops with cellular modems.
How would you enforce this law anyway? And what about minors constructing their own smartphones (with a 3D printer, a small SBC, a touchscreen, a battery, and a cellular modem, it probably wouldn’t be all that hard to do).
@jiub @sleepyowl @chloetankahhui this reminds me of this dystopian story I read on gnu.org where possessing a debugger was illegal