I choose to believe it’s made of small atoms, the kind you get from firing a shrink ray at something.
I choose to believe it’s made of small atoms, the kind you get from firing a shrink ray at something.
The code is speaking to me, but it’s just word salad.
It’s the vinyl chloride poisoning, that’s why we keep forgetting what we’re
This all hinges on when you count the number of problems you have. But that’s why you have two eyes! Read the same page of books 1 and 2 in parallel and obliterate 100% of your problems.
I think you mean “$EDITOR”. Gotta have that variable expansion.
Computer, give me celery man.
Am I being dense? I don’t get it.
Without the distracting colors, now I can see this says MAPOD
I don’t understand any of these analogies at all
For practical purposes, it’s probably good enough. You could write a program to check whether it’s non-repeating up to N digits, so just set N high enough that it will last you for a few thousand releases…
I learned MIPS as an undergrad. Pretty neat little RISC architecture.
I have a similar story. I started a new job and inherited a ball of mud written in Python while the creator was out for a few weeks. When he got back, he was grumpy about my changes. I guess he preferred it with more bugs 🤷♂️
Get out of my office
I mean technically I could write an interpreter that assigns semantics to HTML constructs.
Aha, I didn’t realize compromising availability was sufficient for the CVE definition of security vulnerability. Projects I’ve worked on have typically excluded availability, though that may not be the norm.
And I see your point about some exploits being highly asymmetric in the attacker’s favor, compared to classic [D]DoS.
The chances of the coin flip yielding heads are roughly 50%, if coins don’t not exist.
Maybe I’m misunderstanding you, but DoS is exactly the same thing as “denial of service”.
My point is that memory leaks can only degrade availability; they are categorically distinct from security vulnerabilities.
I had to look it up to check my memory. Yup! https://about.gitlab.com/blog/2015/06/05/how-gitlab-uses-unicorn-and-unicorn-worker-killer/
I don’t think memory leaks could ever amount to a security vulnerability, but it just feels yucky. I guess I shouldn’t cast stones, I write C++ at work.
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