Good thing it doesn’t work here.
But it’s a known way to make money on the other site.
Good thing it doesn’t work here.
But it’s a known way to make money on the other site.
Your DE may be the one not relaying the sigterm, or it may be losing the PID because of the double launching.
Does the LSB have something to call on termination? Or you may want to call an executable there instead of a script.
It’s not broken. You just have to get a cron that supports it. Debian has at least one that does, but it’s not the default one.
Though, not every cron supports that.
Also, if you are packaging software, you have to do it the right way. But if not, it’s often easier to go and install an init script.
Israel is not a religion. Judaism doesn’t have an army.
There doesn’t seem to be space there for any kind of kit either.
Oh, the uBO people fixed that already! That’s great!
Thank you, devs.
I don’t think the moose would attack if there wasn’t a dog there. It wasn’t reacting at first.
But yeah, good dog anyway.
To be fair, making if physically cursed instead of only conceptually is an improvement.
“A police operation today invaded an illegal drugs lag, confiscating 100kg of illegal cough syrup and enough methanphetamine reagents for producing other 300kg”
On season 1, no, he run away from inspection all the time.
On season 3, no, he knows where the inspector lives, and the inspector runs away from him all the time.
On season 7, no, but he runs the FDA and makes them add bullshit requirements to impede big-pharma all the time.
They are valid unicode points that your font doesn’t know about.
… or at least they represent that, but I think there’s a character that looks like one too.
He is a sponge. He has either no skeleton, or that weird soft one where no piece links to each other.
intermediary language between regex and actual programming
It’s called Haskell.
Validate your backups, do not let them validate you!
Yes, there are random systems using every kind of smart or brain-dead option out there.
But the 2038 problem impacts the previous standard, and the current one will take ages to fail. (No, it’s not 33000, unless you are using some variant of the standard that counts nanoseconds instead of seconds. Those usually have more bits nowadays, but some odd older systems do it on the same 64 bits from the standard.)
If you got a problem, reinstall and do the same stuff again, you’ll almost certainly get the same problem again. So, no, it’s only productive if you are in a fucked-up environment where changes bring more breakage than they fix.
It’s useful if you don’t plan to do the same thing again, though. So if you are just trying random stuff, yeah, go ahead.
People here expecting a bureaucracy to behave not only like a person, but like a honest and transparent person with simple and plainly stated goals…
No, the same vulnerability does not exist here.
There are different vulnerabilities here, but this one isn’t there.