VMWare Fusion 13 is now released. Read Vagrant and VMWare Fusion 13 Player on Apple M1 Pro for the latest.
This document summarizes notes taken while to make the VMWare Tech preview work on Apple M1 Pro, it originated
VMWare Fusion 13 is now released. Read Vagrant and VMWare Fusion 13 Player on Apple M1 Pro for the latest.
This document summarizes notes taken while to make the VMWare Tech preview work on Apple M1 Pro, it originated
| # --------------------------------------------------------------------------- | |
| # | |
| # Description: This file holds all my BASH configurations and aliases | |
| # | |
| # Sections: | |
| # 1. Environment Configuration | |
| # 2. Make Terminal Better (remapping defaults and adding functionality) | |
| # 3. File and Folder Management | |
| # 4. Searching | |
| # 5. Process Management |
Place the service file (or a link to it) in /etc/systemd/system/ Place the watchdogged.py file somewhere ( and change the ExecStart portion in the .service to point at the file )
then do systemctl daemon-reload followed by systemctl start watchdogged.service
After this you can watch the progress using journalctl --follow -u watchdogged.service
change the PROBABILITY variable to something else to watch it faster/later or succeed.
| --- | |
| - hosts: all | |
| vars: | |
| places: | |
| alpha: /home | |
| epsilon: /nopenopenope | |
| tasks: | |
| - name: "changed_when depending on result, in with_items" | |
| shell: "[[ '{{item}}' != 'alpha' ]]" |
| // create file: | |
| sudo vim /usr/share/applications/intellij.desktop | |
| // add the following | |
| [Desktop Entry] | |
| Version=13.0 | |
| Type=Application | |
| Terminal=false | |
| Icon[en_US]=/home/rob/.intellij-13/bin/idea.png | |
| Name[en_US]=IntelliJ |
• 45-minute systems interview, focus on responding to real world problems with an unhealthy service, such as a web server or database. The interview will start off at a high level troubleshooting a likely scenario, dig deeper to find the cause and some possible solutions for it. The goal is to probe your knowledge of systems at scale and under load, so keep in mind the challenges of the Facebook environment.
• Focus on things such as tooling, memory management and unix process lifecycle.
More specifically, linux troubleshooting and debugging. Understanding things like memory, io, cpu, shell, memory etc. would be pretty helpful. Knowing how to actually write a unix shell would also be a good idea. What tools might you use to debug something? On another note, this interview will likely push your boundaries of what you know (and how to implement it).
Interview is all about taking an ambiguous question of how you might build a system and letting
Linus Torvalds in an interview talked about the idea of good taste in code or what I like to call elegance. As one might expect from two slides meant to make a point during a talk, he omits a lot of details to keep it short and simple. This post digs into the specifics of his example (deleting an element from a list) and adds another example (inserting an element in a list) including working code.
This is an example of removing an element from a singly-linked list. It's one of the first data structures you learn about when you start learning about computer science and programming. The reason it doesn't show particularly good taste is because we have that condition at the end where we take a different action depending on whether the element we want to remove is at the beginning of the list or somewhere in the middle.
 and adds another example (inserting an element in a list) including working code.
This is an example of removing an element from a singly-linked list. It's one of the first data structures you learn about when you start learning about computer science and programming. The reason it doesn't show particularly good taste is because we have that condition at the end where we take a different action depending on whether the element we want to remove is at the beginning of the list or somewhere in the middle.
![Bad taste](http://