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Removing support for Emacs unexec from Glibc
Removing support for Emacs unexec from Glibc
The Emacs editor requires a lot of Lisp code and program state before it can start doing its job. That led Emacs developers to add the "unexec" feature to quickly load all of that at startup, but unexec has always been something of a hack. It employs a fairly ugly (and intrusive) mechanism to do its job. Some non-standard extensions to the GNU C library (Glibc) are required, so a plan to eventually eliminate those extensions was met with some dismay in the Emacs community.
Removing support for Emacs unexec from Glibc
That Dragon Guy on Twitter
That Dragon Guy on Twitter
Open a terminal window on your computer—whether Windows, Mac or Linux—and unless you’ve fiddled the defaults, the width is almost always 80 columns. Run a code reformatter like clang-format and same deal…defaults to 80 columns. Why? (1/18) pic.twitter.com/OQLInQDaCo— That Dragon Guy (@PaintYourDragon) February 15, 2022
That Dragon Guy on Twitter
Revisiting the Black Sunday Hack
Revisiting the Black Sunday Hack
One of the most impressive hacks I've ever read about has to be the Black Sunday kill. Since the original 2001 Slashdot article I read on this [http://slashdot.org/articles/01/01/25/1343218.shtml] is 99.9% quote, I'm going to do the same. I can see why
Revisiting the Black Sunday Hack
@sparrowgrine@chaos.social on Twitter
@sparrowgrine@chaos.social on Twitter
Cursed computing memory hierarchy, feel free to reply with questions about some of the more obscure stuff here, sources are available for all the cursed knowledge in this. pic.twitter.com/pfZ2FmCcy5— @sparrowgrine@chaos.social (@sparrowgrine) October 13, 2021
@sparrowgrine@chaos.social on Twitter