

I follow you now :)
I follow you now :)
I run my own service all hosted on my own infrastructure. And fully independent from other big corps. No cloud. No cloudflare etc.
More people should do that, but do not tell me to just give up and hand me over, and fully regulate the internet. Then we are doomed for sure.
As the creator of Mbin I’m also calling it Threadiverse.
Look I will be clear to you. You can not have a free and open internet and governments unable to misuse their power to shutdown websites, information whenever they please. And at the same time regulate the internet “to protect the children”. You can’t have both at the same time.
Never too late to switch. Welcome to the club.
Ahah those pictures of Richard Stallman.
No. That is why I shared my configs. With opcache and opcache.validate_timestamps = 0 you don’t have this problem anymore.
Of course you also need to enable opcache itself as well.
Or you have really slow spinning disks or something. Also be sure to use php 8.4.
And then the list goes on and on. Like prometheus, grafana, uptime Kuma, mariadb, Valkey, postgresql, unbound dns, all those things…
You can optimize php a lot for performance. See my config https://gitlab.melroy.org/-/snippets/91
Just after you downloaded it. Keep the program open so you are seeing automatically… Meaning others can download the content from your computer. Assuming you correctly configured your firewall/router to open up the right ports.
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Back in my days I was also disappointed that schools weren’t using Linux. So I totally agree with you.
Good. They should.
Linux was always ready for the education sector. I think already for 10 years now.
I like it alot.
ow… now the idea is to unzip it right?
nice idea:
if (ipIsBlackListed() || isMalicious()) {
header("Content-Encoding: deflate, gzip");
header("Content-Length: "+ filesize(ZIP_BOMB_FILE_10G)); // 10 MB
readfile(ZIP_BOMB_FILE_10G);
exit;
}
Looks fine to me. Only 1 CPU core I think was 100%.
10+0 records in
10+0 records out
10737418240 bytes (11 GB, 10 GiB) copied, 28,0695 s, 383 MB/s
There we go… This is the only correct answer here!