On Mon, May 01, 2023 at 06:14:49PM +, Glen Barber wrote:
[...]
> A more up-to-date schedule for the 14.0 release will be published in the
> near future, though nothing is yet set in stone.
>
> Thank you for your patience, and for any help in getting us through
> these outstanding items.
>
Ju
On 20/06/2023 15:41, Gary Jennejohn wrote:
On Tue, 20 Jun 2023 12:04:13 +0200
Alexander Leidinger wrote:
Quoting Gary Jennejohn (from Tue, 20 Jun 2023 07:41:08 +):
…
In other words the software listening on it didn't process the request
fast enough and a backlog piled up (e.g apache Li
unsure if anybody else needs that functionality. i was suggested to submit
it into actual code review place, but i'm unsure. it's from 2014, it still
cleanly applies. probably because noone needed to touch working code!
anyway, i used it in in arm board development, in bbb, to default system
time t
i installed v4.6. that was a long time ago. the public honeypot ran it, and
i got curious. i've been using it since then. in servers, desktops, laptops
and in embedded systems. yes, i know that hw support is not ideal. but
quality is. that's my story. 21 years of that 30 i have been (t)here. sure,
On Tue, 20 Jun 2023 12:04:13 +0200
Alexander Leidinger wrote:
> Quoting Gary Jennejohn (from Tue, 20 Jun 2023 07:41:08 +):
>
> > On Tue, 20 Jun 2023 06:25:05 +0100
> > Graham Perrin wrote:
> >
> >> Please, what's the meaning of the sonewconn lines?
> >>
> >
> > sonewconn is described in soc
Quoting Gary Jennejohn (from Tue, 20 Jun 2023 07:41:08 +):
On Tue, 20 Jun 2023 06:25:05 +0100
Graham Perrin wrote:
Please, what's the meaning of the sonewconn lines?
sonewconn is described in socket(9). Below a copy/paste of the description
from socket(9):
Protocol implementat
On Tue, 20 Jun 2023 06:25:05 +0100
Graham Perrin wrote:
> Please, what's the meaning of the sonewconn lines?
>
sonewconn is described in socket(9). Below a copy/paste of the description
from socket(9):
Protocol implementations can use sonewconn() to create a socket and
attach protoco