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[THUYẾT MINH] Đột Kích _ Assault Operation _ Trận Chiến Sống Còn

Posted on November 5, 2024 by Michael G
[THUYẾT MINH] Đột Kích _ Assault Operation _ Trận Chiến Sống Còn

Gombe Network Champions Climate Action and Environmental Justice through WikiforHumanRights 2024

Posted on November 5, 2024 by Michael G
Between June and August 2024, the Gombe Network, Wikimedia UG Nigeria joined forces with other Wikimedia communities across Nigeria for the WikiForHumanRights (WFHR) campaign, focusing…

Talking Drupal: Talking Drupal #474 – Revolt Event Loop

Posted on November 5, 2024 by Michael G

Today we are talking about the revolt event Loop, what it is, and why it matters with guest Alexander Varwijk (farvag). We’ll also cover IEF Complex Widget Dialog as our module of the week.

For show notes visit: https://www.talkingDrupal.com/474

Topics

  • What is an event loop
  • Why does Drupal need an event loop
  • What will change in core to implement this
  • What problem does this solve
  • Does this make Cron cleaner and long running processes faster
  • What impact will this have on contrib
  • How would contrib use this loop
  • What does this mean for database compatibility
  • What inspired this change
  • Test instability
  • Why Revolt
  • Will this help with Drupal AI

Resources

  • Adopt the Revolt event loop for async task orchestration
  • revoltphp/event-loop was added as a dependency to Drupal Core
  • Add “EventLoop::run” to Drupal Core
  • Migrate BigPipe and the Renderer code that’s currently built with fibers
  • Revolt Playground that shows converting some Fiber implementations from Drupal to the Event Loop
  • DrupalCon Barcelona Talk about “Why Async Drupal a Big Deal Is”
  • Async PHP libraries
    • https://reactphp.org/
    • https://amphp.org/

Guests

Alexander Varwijk – alexandervarwijk.com Kingdutch

Hosts

Nic Laflin – nLighteneddevelopment.com nicxvan John Picozzi – epam.com johnpicozzi Joshua “Josh” Mitchell – joshuami.com joshuami

MOTW Correspondent

Martin Anderson-Clutz – mandclu.com mandclu

  • Brief description:
    • Have you ever wanted to use Inline Entity Forms but have the dependent form open in a dialog? There’s a module for that.
  • Module name/project name:
    • IEF Complex Widget Dialog
  • Brief history
    • How old: created in Mar 2020 by dataweb, though recent releases are by Chris Lai (chrisck), a fellow Canadian
    • Versions available: 2.1.1 and 2.2.2, the latter or which is compatible Drupal 8.8 or newer, all the way up to Drupal 11
  • Maintainership
    • Actively maintained, latest release in the past month
    • Number of open issues: 4 open issues, none of which are bugs against the current version
  • Usage stats:
    • 273 sites
  • Module features and usage
    • When you install the module, your Inline Entity Form widget configuration will have a new checkbox, to “Enable Popup for IEF”
    • Includes specialized handling for different kinds of entities, like nodes, users, taxonomy terms, and users
    • Will handle not just the creation forms, but editing entities, and also duplicating or deleting entities
    • Not something you would always need, but can be very useful if the form you want to use for entity or even parent forms that are complex
    • I should also add that IEF supports form modes, so often I’ll create an “embedded” form mode that exposes fewer elements, for example hiding the fields for URL alias, sticky, and so on. So I would start there, but if the content creation experience still feels complex, then IEF Complex Widget Dialog might be a nice way to help

Kamal Kitchen Sink

Posted on November 5, 2024 by Michael G
In this episode, we look at creating an entire infrastructure (proxy, load balancer, app servers, worker servers, database server, and a storage server) on our own hardware use Kamal to provision and deploy our Ruby on Rails application. https://www.driftingruby.com/episodes/kamal-kitchen-sink

JRuby 9.4.9.0 Released

Posted on November 5, 2024 by Michael G

The JRuby community is pleased to announce the release of JRuby 9.4.9.0.

  • Homepage: https://www.jruby.org/
  • Download: https://www.jruby.org/download

JRuby 9.4.x targets Ruby 3.1 compatibility.

Thank you to our contributors this release, you help keep JRuby moving forward! @kares, @jpcamara, @jsvd

Ruby Compatibility

  • Various fixes for keyword arguments. #8344, #8344, #8382, #8389
  • Mutex has been fixed to check for thread interrupts (Thread#kill, Thread#raise) immediately after acquiring the lock. #8403, #8404

Standard Library

  • The fiddle library is now a default gem and can be upgraded independently of JRuby. #8385

Developer Experience

  • The core jar file of JRuby can be rebuilt more quickly by calling Maven with the -Dcore flag. #8326
  • Support for Coordinated Restore at Checkpoint (OpenJDK Project CRaC), which allows snapshotting a running JRuby process and quickly resuming it later. #8367

Java Integration

  • The “lazy” constants feature for classes imported from Java, introduced in JRuby 9.4.8.0, has been reverted due to spurious warnings. We’ll revisit it in a future release. #8349, #8368, #8399, #8400, #8401
  • Functions were added to allow flushing out thread-local and fiber-local storage for an entire JRuby runtime. #8369

Security

  • REXML was updated to 3.3.9 to get recent fixes and to address CVE-2024-49761, a ReDOS vulnerability. Only users parsing unsanitized XML with REXML are affected. #8396

Ruby 3.3.6 Released

Posted on November 5, 2024 by Michael G

Ruby 3.3.6 has been released.

This is a routine update that includes minor bug fixes.
It also stops warning missing default gem dependencies that will be bundled gems in Ruby 3.5.
For more details, please refer to the release notes on GitHub.

Release Schedule

As previously announced, we intend to release the latest stable Ruby version (currently Ruby 3.3) every 2 months following a .1 release.

We expect to release Ruby 3.3.7 on January 7th. If any significant changes arise that impact a large number of users, we may release a new version earlier than scheduled.

Download

  • https://cache.ruby-lang.org/pub/ruby/3.3/ruby-3.3.6.tar.gz

    SIZE: 22153657
    SHA1: 0106171cd1801fb5663e8e709f3d6c935d683c9b
    SHA256: 8dc48fffaf270f86f1019053f28e51e4da4cce32a36760a0603a9aee67d7fd8d
    SHA512: 4ae22f5c2a1f7ed84aab7587ff04ce4d9933cffe4347deaef0ab88d22c9780f274c1664a4ee1dd8235bc3cc749be828ffa8db7cb5f5002339a59a599acf3c729
    
  • https://cache.ruby-lang.org/pub/ruby/3.3/ruby-3.3.6.tar.xz

    SIZE: 16398228
    SHA1: 25391e9bd8547cd07e09afcfc472777520a3178a
    SHA256: 540975969d1af42190d26ff629bc93b1c3f4bffff4ab253e245e125085e66266
    SHA512: c4b86188bf539fa737932e1ba5b746bc295e7c43b2f8cca2668eb7c88aa7228e2ce9032bbcd244a7d558a11bc842445b5fbeac3503ca7d223b63c53e08dba4ab
    
  • https://cache.ruby-lang.org/pub/ruby/3.3/ruby-3.3.6.zip

    SIZE: 27048656
    SHA1: 88239456249cd80cadd1cbf98a317ae700ccd9df
    SHA256: a60240a6f9bcc8db6c07d40ad29c7dceb21430debe3ebc39bf339207818132f6
    SHA512: c010c7d3e2b373b41a18bcadfb6dba276afabe479d75624569b5bdc605f3575bced2aff511708e25ceca43c7c918400222329e55e599c54154f203957f119ad2
    

Release Comment

Many committers, developers, and users who provided bug reports helped us make this release.
Thanks for their contributions.

Posted by k0kubun on 5 Nov 2024

Help us improve our alt text generation model

Posted on November 5, 2024 by Michael G

Image generated by DALL-E in response to a request for a photorealistic image of a fox standing in a grassy landscape. Firefox 130 introduces automatic alt text for PDF images and an improved alt text flow. In addition to protecting users’ privacy with a small language model that operates locally on their device, these improvements […]

The post Help us improve our alt text generation model appeared first on The Mozilla Blog.

NetBSD: the portable, lightweight, and robust UNIX-like operating system

Posted on November 5, 2024 by Michael G
NetBSD is an open-source, Unix-like operating system known for its portability, lightweight design, and robustness across a wide array of hardware platforms. Initially released in 1993, NetBSD was one of the first open-source operating systems based on the Berkeley Software Distribution (BSD) lineage, alongside FreeBSD and OpenBSD. NetBSD’s development has been led by a collaborative community and is particularly recognized for its “clean” and well-documented codebase, a factor that has made it a popular choice among users interested in systems programming and cross-platform compatibility. ↫ André Machado I’m not really sure what to make of this article, since it mostly reads like an advertisement for NetBSD, but considering NetBSD is one of the lesser-talked about variants of an operating system family that already sadly plays second fiddle to the Linux behemoth, I don’t think giving it some additional attention is really hurting anybody. The article is still gives a solid overview of the history and strengths of NetBSD, which makes it a good introduction. I have personally never tried NetBSD, but it’s on my list of systems to try out on my PA-RISC workstation since from what I’ve heard it’s the only BSD which can possibly load up X11 on the Visualize FX10pro graphics card it has (OpenBSD can only boot to a console on this GPU). While I could probably coax some cobbled-together Linux installation into booting X11 on it, where’s the fun in that? Do any of you lovely readers use NetBSD for anything? FreeBSD and even OpenBSD are quite well represented as general purpose operating systems in the kinds of circles we all frequent, but I rarely hear about people using NetBSD other than explicitly because it supports some outdated, arcane architecture in 2024.

ABERTURA OS PADRINHOS MÁGICOS (4K)

Posted on November 4, 2024 by Michael G

Author: Source Read more

Lady Death Don’t miss Aubrey Plaza in #AgathaAllAlong, now streaming Costume by- @danielselon

Posted on November 4, 2024 by Michael G

Author: Source Read more

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