Very tired nerd who doesn’t know how to speak correctly
Ask me about floppa, Plan 9, or computer architecture or anything computers really (if you want)
The only zoomer qualified to operate an RBMK reactor
:cat-vibing:
If I don’t reply to you it’s probably cuz I’m too tired, sorry :(
I am so tired haha
Okay but it was less , relatively to now
Ohh, I know, I was just making a joke cuz ed will print ?
when it doesn’t recognize a command and many people will see that over and over if they can’t figure out how to exit lol
I also got lost in vi and ed when I first used them lol
Tbh if I’m just making quick edits to config files or whatever I use nano lmao
?
Ate a snack cake thing I got yesterday, and then discovered a warning about lead and cadmium on the back of the package
If you like Unixy editors, highly recommend also looking into acme
Russ Cox describes it in this video as more like an “integrating development environment” as in it works with your surrounding operating system rather than an “integrated development environment”
Doesn’t shine as much on Unix as in Plan 9 though. Also no linter or formatter built into or distributed with acme but you probably could get your language’s usual tools to work pretty well with it
Ed is the standard text editor.
Why don’t they just move to El Salvador if they like Bitcoin so much
deleted by creator
We are so back
OpenBSD, RISC-V, and 9front mentioned?
Haven’t listened to BSDNow in a while, but maybe I’ll listen to this episode
You can check to see what drivers were compiled as modules or into your kernel by reading the kernel configuration at /proc/config.gz
or /boot/*config*
There might also be out-of-tree (not included with the kernel) drivers installed as packages on your system but this is very rare outside of like… having an NVIDIA card and running the closed-source vendor driver
The vast majority of drivers are included with the Linux kernel now (in tree) so the difference usually comes down to kernel version (newer kernels have more drivers, of course) or kernel configuration set at compile-time (this can be anything from including or not including drivers, to turning driver features on and off, or more fundamental changes beyond drivers)
You can get kernel version info from uname -a
and a lot of the time, probably most of the time (this is also down to configuration), you can get kernel configuration info from /proc/config.gz
(use gzip -d
to decompress) or something like /boot/config
Then you can run diff
on configurations of 2 different distro kernels you’re interested in to see how the 2 distribution’s kernels were set up differently
This could also be caused by different setups of userspace tools or UI that interact with these drivers in different, sometimes worse ways but this is usually much less likely in my experience (most Linux distros do things like this the same way these days tbh)
Oh, also, there are a lot of drivers that require vendor-supplied firmware or binary blobs to function and most of the time distros don’t bake these into the kernel (although it is possible) and different distros might have more or less of these blobs available or installed by default or they might be packaged differently. The kernel should print an error message if it can’t find blobs it needs though
I guess there’s kinda a lot to consider lol. Sorry if all of this is obvious
What hardware are you talking about specifically?
Ohh that’s true, I didn’t think about that. It would be difficult to route anything through it unless you were connected directly to it with nothing in-between because no other router would forward packets destined for somewhere else to my machine (except maybe in the extremely unlikely case of source routing?). It seems obvious now lol, thank you!
I’ll write some firewall rules just in case
I see. Our motherboards have different chipsets (I have an X570 in mine). It probably has nothing to do with my issue…
Hoping those kernel parameters fix it. I wish I could help further. PCs are just a bottomless, mostly undocumented rabbithole :(
What motherboard do you have? Also what happens exactly when the lock-ups happen? Have you ever been playing audio when the lock-ups happen and does it loop or stop or keep playing?
I recently had to “fix” (workaround) a similar issue in the OpenBSD kernel with a specific hardware peripheral on my PC (running a 2nd-gen Ryzen), the High Definition Audio controller. For whatever reason (and only when I was running OpenBSD) interrupts from the HDA controller (to let the CPU know to refill audio buffers) would just randomly stop making it to the CPU and audio would loop for a few seconds and then shut off. I spent a long time trying to figure out what causes it and reading Linux driver code but I couldn’t find a cause or why only OpenBSD would trigger it. I ended up having to write kind of a hacky polling mode into the HDA driver. My only guess is some of these AMD-chipset-having motherboards have faulty interrupt controllers.
Maybe there is a similar issue with your system and timer interrupts aren’t making it to your CPU or something. But I’m not really an expert on PC architecture and idek if it even works like that on PCs lol
Sorry for so many questions but do you also have any kernel logs available from when this happens?
A better timeline?
Windows UI design peaked with Windows 98 and Unix UI design peaked with IRIX imo