Subject: Are Meta/Facebook servers using Fedora Linux?
Good day from Singapore,
I have just come across this article.
Article: Fedora's FESCo Rejects The Idea Of "-fno-omit-frame-pointer"
As Default Compiler Flag
Link: https://www.phoronix.com/news/Fedora-Rejects-No-Omit-FP
[QUOTE]
As a change
On Tue, Dec 6, 2022 at 7:56 AM Turritopsis Dohrnii Teo En Ming
wrote:
>
> Subject: Are Meta/Facebook servers using Fedora Linux?
>
> Good day from Singapore,
>
> I have just come across this article.
>
> Article: Fedora's FESCo Rejects The Idea Of "-fno-omit-frame-pointer"
> As Default Compiler Fl
I upgraded several systems from Fedora 35 to 37 a few weeks ago. I
realized yesterday that one (my primary desktop of course) was not
getting updates to Google Chrome, which has had some important security
fixes recently. I realized that the Google Chrome yum repo had been
disabled - checking my
I am looking on Fedora 36, and mine is still enabled, but there is a
google-chrome.repo.rpmnew file that has the initial setting of disabled, so
if that file replaced your prior file for some reason then it would be
disabled.
On Tue, Dec 6, 2022 at 8:03 AM Chris Adams wrote:
> I upgraded several
If you aren't buying support from the OS distributor and/or the application
developer (and the app developer providing the support will only support
the enterprise releases) then it makes little sense to use the "enterprise"
variant.
If you have to stay up on patches then the enterprise OSes might
On 2022-12-06 04:55, Turritopsis Dohrnii Teo En Ming wrote:
From the above quotes, I thought that Meta/Facebook servers are using
Fedora Linux, or at least Linux servers.
As far as I know, the answer is "No". Their production platform is
based on CentOS Stream.
https://www.youtube.com/wat
Hello everybody,
For wear the navigators fornulately I am use npm (this is the packager
JavaScript) thus read the shell npm for upgrade npm too for update or remove a
version of program use this (because the shell npm show the package deprecated
and some advice):
npm install (or remove) -g the
> On 6 Dec 2022, at 12:55, Turritopsis Dohrnii Teo En Ming
> wrote:
>
> Meta engineers believe that any performance cost is small and worth it
> while SUSE engineers previously cited around possible 5~10%
> regressions.
meta engineers do a lot of performance work and their experience is what
On 6/12/22 11:02, Samuel Sieb wrote:
On 12/5/22 14:19, Stephen Morris wrote:
I tried replacing pipewire with pulseaudio by issuing "sudo dnf swap
pipewire pulseaudio" but that failed because package "mutter"
requires pipewire, I have no idea what that is, and mutter can't be
uninstalled becaus
On 7/12/22 01:02, Chris Adams wrote:
I upgraded several systems from Fedora 35 to 37 a few weeks ago. I
realized yesterday that one (my primary desktop of course) was not
getting updates to Google Chrome, which has had some important security
fixes recently. I realized that the Google Chrome yu
On Dec 6, 2022, at 08:27, Jeffrey Walton wrote:
> I often recommend Fedora Server anytime I see folks using RHEL or
> CentOS. I don't understand why organizations run that antique software
> that is no longer in development. Fedora provides modern software and
> is in active development with conti
On Tue, Dec 6, 2022 at 7:04 PM Jonathan Billings wrote:
>
> On Dec 6, 2022, at 08:27, Jeffrey Walton wrote:
> > I often recommend Fedora Server anytime I see folks using RHEL or
> > CentOS. I don't understand why organizations run that antique software
> > that is no longer in development. Fedora
I have the hand brake cli installed in my f37 distro environment.
It complains it wants libnvidia-encoder.so1 library or such. I have
tried dnf provides and I get nothing from the standard fedora 37 repo as
well as rpmfusion's free repo. This must be required in creating a mv4
from an ISO f
On Dec 6, 2022, at 19:32, Jeffrey Walton wrote:
>
> And dnf-system-upgrade every 6 months is a small price to pay for
> Fedora (https://docs.fedoraproject.org/en-US/quick-docs/dnf-system-upgrade/).
> You get Red Hat processes and stability with modern software. Its a
> win-win.
I suppose it’s a
On Wed, 2022-12-07 at 09:03 +1100, Stephen Morris wrote:
> Pipewire doesn't work. It was videos not playing without audio muted
> that started this thread. And from what I've seen on the net there is
> potentially a lot of manual configuration required to get pipewire to
> work, so my view on wh
On Tue, 2022-12-06 at 19:30 -0500, Jeffrey Walton wrote:
> The keyword is "known". Developers don't work on 5 or 10 year old
> software. Existing bugs don't get uncovered and fixed. They don't
> become "known", so they don't get backported and fixed.
>
> That's exactly the point Greg HK makes at
>
On 12/6/22 14:03, Stephen Morris wrote:
On 6/12/22 11:02, Samuel Sieb wrote:
On 12/5/22 14:19, Stephen Morris wrote:
I tried replacing pipewire with pulseaudio by issuing "sudo dnf swap
pipewire pulseaudio" but that failed because package "mutter"
requires pipewire, I have no idea what that is
On Tue, Dec 6, 2022 at 11:46 PM Tim wrote:
>
> On Tue, 2022-12-06 at 19:30 -0500, Jeffrey Walton wrote:
> > The keyword is "known". Developers don't work on 5 or 10 year old
> > software. Existing bugs don't get uncovered and fixed. They don't
> > become "known", so they don't get backported and f
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