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up_the_irons: jlgaddis: yeah srsly ;)
those HF radios are _not_ cheap
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up_the_irons: good thing xmas is coming up
jlgaddis: heh
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toddf: heh. support.arpnetworks.com/discusssions/... claims a 10mb file limit yet I just (in theory) uploaded a 13.3mb iso image ;-)
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niner: ever have one of those days where you wonder why the powers that be ever give you administrative rights on a network? That was my day.
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tooth: well you appear to be onlne...
mnathani: I seem to be too young to have experienced this myself, but perhaps someone in here can explain..
How does USENET work? My Google foo is yet to lead me to some explanation
Also do arrangements need to be made similar to how the internet works ie: people pay for transit / premium usenet
brycec: That's not exactly on-topic.... But who cares :)
mnathani: In short, yes.
There are providers, who who massive server/storage farms, and they host USENET. They sync new articles among each-other, so they usually all have the same content
*who own
Some providers keep old content (called retention) longer than others.
And not all providers "carry" the same (much less, all of the) newgroups
mercutio: brycec: err they don't usually all have the same content :)
they're meant to
otu of sync is common
err ar leats was
usenet is kind of dead now, i kind of wish it came back
brycec: Once upon a time, ISPs would often offer USENET/newsgroup access. This meant faster speeds for their users, and less b/w cost. (Think: caching proxy) However A) They rarely carried the binary newsgroups since those were enormous and usually filled with warez and other unsavoury material, and B) "nobody" uses USENET anymore.
Which leaves the big providers now (e.g. Astraweb/news()
mercutio: it was really the 90s that usenet died
brycec: mercutio: I haven't had any out-of-sync issues lately... at least, nothing that wasn't sync w/in an hour or two.
mercutio: oh you have nntp access now days?
last time i checked out usenet it was full of spam
i think the problem before was with the interconnections
brycec: mnathani: Nowadays, USENET continues to live on, but not for sharing news - those forums have generally been moved on to the Web. Instead, USENET is the #1 alternative to torrents.
mercutio: like there could be gaps somehow
brycec: mercutio: ^
mercutio: brycec: yeah, well binary usenet is blah
brycec: heh mercutio remembers when USENET actually had more people than spam... You've gotta be OLD
mercutio: i'd prefer messages being on usenet or such than heaps of mailing lsits
brycec: (or forums)
mercutio: forusm are even worse
brycec: aye
mercutio: i hate forums
brycec: aye aye
mercutio: mailing lists at leat you can sign up to and stick procmail on
but it's still more farting around than usenet
acutally
my main gripe with mailing lists is i want them to send me a few years of old posts sometimes
brycec: mnathani: hopefully that answered your query.
mercutio: but that shouldnt' be terribly complicated to do.
mnathani: brycec Kind of
mercutio: i suppose some mail servers wont' liek that though :(
mnathani: I am still confused how the content syncs regardless of which server it was uploaded on
brycec: ha
mnathani: magic.
mnathani: there are nntp sync daemons... but unless you're running a news server, you don't have to care about it.
mnathani: like do some providers just transfer data 24/7 multiple times to other providers
brycec: Pretty much.
mnathani: there has to be some kind of map
mercutio: i think usenet is like fidonet?
brycec: Though, it's usually just new posts that get pushed to their peering partners.
mnathani: to show who is upstream
and who peers with whom etc
mercutio: you have a whole lot of noeds and leaf nodes
brycec: mnathani: Yeah, the providers peer with other providers... It's a big mesh.
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mercutio: can you get free usenet peering?
brycec: lmao... no
well, yes, sorta?
mnathani: but its not like bittorrent where a partial file is sent to multiple nodes at the same time and by the time 1 unit of that file is transferred, everyone has it?
mercutio: like say i wanted to start alt.vps
or something
also
brycec: I couldn't say, never been in the business of admin'ing a news server
mercutio: say i wanted to start alt.vps
i meant
how would that be done?
brycec: I wanted to start alt.vps
there I said it
mnathani: lol
mercutio: and how do you make sure other people have it
mnathani: is the protocol similar to SMTP in any way?
NNTP I mean
brycec: mercutio: As I understand it, you either ask a provider to start it, or host it yourself. If a provider starts it, it will usually trickle out to the others.
mnathani: extremely similar in many ways.
mnathani: question becomes, what if I want to become a provider and start it myselft?
mercutio: are there discussions on usenet anymore?
brycec: mercutio: in the case of hosting it yourself, you then need followers who would request their provider carry your feed.
mercutio: no. :p
it's all binaries now :)
(not literally... but that's all it's good for imho)
mnathani: $packagemanager install innd
mercutio: http://www.giganews.com/peering.html
hmm
so where do people go to have internet conversations now?
brycec: mailing lists, forums, twitter, facebook, the loo...
oh, ans iex
*irc
mercutio: it's not the same
brycec: *shrug*
mercutio: http://www.aioe.org/index.php?how-to-setup-a-feed-with-aioeorg
brycec: fwiw, there are a couple of free-access news servers I use to supplement my Astranews connections, newszilla6.xs4all.nl and weathergirl-ipv6.tele2.net (both ipv6 only as I recall)
heh, that's pretty much what I described, aint it?[20:38] <brycec> (very nice walk-through though)
mercutio: hmm
is slrn still the best reader to use?
tin was like the old one wasn't it
brycec: I've only used KNode recently, and that's because news:// was associated with it somehow (silly KDE). Before that, many years ago or so, I used Thunderbird.
mercutio: oh?
i've never liked netscape
brycec: well it was the only newsreader I knew of at the time, and I was curious was nntp was all about
mercutio: ahh yip
i wonder if slrn can use http proxy
ok got it
it loaded way faster than dialup used to load :)
wow there are binaries
brycec: you sound surprised
mercutio: well it's free nntp
Dear user, This group is not locally stored, but now due to your
request it is being downloaded. Articles should be available in a
ok that's lame
it had fetched some porn binary group
i suppose it depends what the users had requested already
a cache to a bigger site would seem more sensible
than this fetch group as reading thing
toddf: the one use of usenet that was not mentioned above is that some mailing lists are proxied into the usenet arena and some people actually post to mailing lists from newsgroups and/or read mailing lists from the newsgroups
I should enhance my rss2email perl program to also have an alter ego rss2usenet ..
mercutio: yeh
i think i found one like that
this non instant thing bugs me though
toddf: well what you need to understand
is that usnenet is the internet modern incarnation of uucp
uucp -> unix to unix copy
mercutio: err i meanhaving to read the message that says that messages will be pulled
toddf: various unix nodes did not have direct connectivity nor did they have continual connectivity
staticsafe: e-mail works fine for mailing lists...
mercutio: yeh i used to use uucp for all my internet email
toddf: so there were various dialup connections established so data could be copied w/out calling long distance
mercutio: static: you don't go back intime nicely though
toddf: so things eventually trickled from point a to point b
mercutio: yeh
like i checked a post from NZ to NZ on usenet
and it was like 6 points
toddf: usenet is continually connected server farms still doing the uucp style store and forward
mercutio: (and went out of the country)
hmm
toddf: you can consider usenet propogation delay slightly slower than mailing list propogation delay
mercutio: that's not the problem
the problem is that the stupid nntp server i'm using doesn't subscribe to things
toddf: consider if you're at the tail end of a long list of people on a mailing list .. you'll not get instant email of course
mercutio: until people read messaeg in that gruop
and it's pretty slow at gettign new stuff
and it's messy/clumsy to get it to realise there are new messages on the client
staticsafe: toddf: even if not the tail end but a very large list like linux-kernel
toddf: sounds like its a caching server instead of a host of sorts with a crontab to fetch news from groups people are interested in
anyway
mercutio: it's "dnews" apparently
toddf: one application you may not realize is that 'if you eventually get your content' then thats awesome for things like .. traveling to space and inhabiting other planets
mercutio: heh
Dear user, This group is not locally stored, but now due to your
request it is being downloaded. Articles should be available in a
few minutes. To see a progress report you will have to re-read
hmm i wonder hwo to get slrn to reread
toddf: there is actually a sccs (space communications system) protocol you can use that is eerily like uucp with security and 4 dimentional coordinates for antenna pointing added .. (time + 3 dimentional location of satellites etc)
mercutio: i heh tin is still availble
toddf: I used tin way back in the day
staticsafe: idk what you guys are talking about :( too young for this :p
mercutio: staticsafe: well usenet kind of died when the internet went mainstream
staticsafe: that is true
mercutio: like usenet was never really mainstraem
staticsafe: i've used usenet (only for binaries)
mercutio: i used usenet via uucp for a bit
err
reai t
i don't think i actually have posted on usenet
i don't post that much in gneeral though
toddf: look for tfries@umr.edu .. I did a ton of stupid posts attempting to learn from the internet and even participated in some flame wars .. those were the days .. starting around 1994'ish
mercutio: heh
you contributed to linux toddf ?
staticsafe: stupid posts >.>
mercutio: for xt hard disk controllers :)
toddf: I modularized the xd driver, woot!
oh xt, sorry, bad memory
mercutio: it's called xd
toddf: one of them ancient things I had back in the day. I may still have it, no clue if it works though heh
mercutio: but the comment says for xt
toddf: oh boy, now we need to fix it, talk about years old bugs being fixed!
staticsafe: haha
mercutio: oh you're an openbsd developer
toddf: yes, I got tired of trying to build linux back in 1998'ish timeframe and turns out 'cvs up && make build' is easy vs 'download individual packages and build your own build tree' .. I was hooked lined and sinkered from that point on.
mercutio: heh
i start using openbsd in like 2001
well i played with it a little in 2000
which was like 2.9 or something?
hmm maybe 2.7 :)
toddf: the web will have better info than my brain at this hour of night at the end of a long week ... ;-)
mercutio: heh
do you use openbsd as desktop toddf?
toddf: I'm just hoping up_the_irons manages to make an appearance and during said appearance manages to flip an iso image for my new vps ..
indeed I do
mercutio: what window manager do you use?
staticsafe: wow...my first UNIX-like OS usage was Ubuntu 8.04
mnathani: Wow, can anyone say Round Robin DNS? http://dns.winvive.com/propagate.php?Domain=news-out.nntp.giganews.com&QueryType=A
toddf: cwm ftw
staticsafe: >.>
<.<
mercutio: staticsafe: how old are you?
toddf: $ xlsclients | grep xterm | wc -l
172
staticsafe: mercutio: 19
mercutio: haven't tried cwm
staticsafe: oh
i was 19 in 2001
toddf: it started out life as a 9wm clone
mercutio: i think
yeh
i used to hop between twm and enlightenment
toddf: and now all the code is re-written .. you can do anything with the keyboard w/out a mouse and its quite minimalistic, I even have 1 pixel boarders on all my windows
mercutio: until i found ion
toddf: is ion that tiling window manager?
mercutio: yeh
toddf: if you can stand / and or work with tiles all day long you have to checkout spectrwm
I can't stand them thus I don't use it but those who do tend to like spectrwm ;-)
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mercutio: hmm every time i investigate other ones they're not as good as ion
like they'll try to automanage your windows
or other annoying things
staticsafe: I like KDE ;)
XFCE too
DE wise
mercutio: i only have 1920x1200 resolution
i find that it's much easier when dealing with limited resolution to have tiling window manager
with tabbing
it's weird, back when ion came out nothing really compared
like twm was kind of similar speed
but had worse ui
and enlightenment was kind of better default ui but a bit slow
but even now when computers have got faster, alot of desktops can still feel sluggish
partially from finding where windows "hid"
at least with twm you could iconify
toddf: I'll try to notice when you report back how spectrwm works out for you. I've been asked to try it out, and promptly got tired of not having 80x25 terms unless I manually resize and decided tiling wm's were not for me
mercutio: do you need 80x25?
i find 100 columns nicee
toddf: someday if I ever get the time I want to do a truly 3d window manager. not one that decorates windows in fancy 3d shadows and overlays and transparency. I mean all apps get displayed in a 3d space managed by the window manager. someday.
mercutio: pretty much 100x30 is like basic working size for me
after that it can be nice to have extra
or things on the side
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mercutio: hmm
toddf: for irssi with 200 windows yeah I make a wide term. but for the rest, 80x25 seems usable, I maximize terms I code in usually, but then I shrink them as I move on to other distractions
mercutio: i want a non window manager
err
i want somethin gthat filters/aligns information for me
from many sources
toddf: font of 5x7 is also my preference everywhere
mercutio: where like i can put filters on stuff in real time etc
like i don't like having to type zcat blah.gz | grep ...
| less
blah blah
and then resize the window cos the input is too wide
i think the whole way at looking at things could be improved
rather than just have a new window manager
toddf: my brother pointed out to me the other day that openbsd's man page rendering is 80 coluns regardless of the size of the term. he's used to linux auto generating things based on the size of the term. probably has a point.
if you want your window to resize based on your input I bet thats doable.
if you want to write a 'smart less' that reformats and wraps output to match terminal widths thats quite another.
mercutio: well i don't always
it's like when tcpdumping
sometimes i don't care about having as much width for all the timestamps and shit
toddf: urgle, you know you have too many packages installed when...
Filesystem Size Used Avail Capacity Mounted on
/dev/sd1e 9.8G 9.4G -95.7M 101% /usr/local
mercutio: but don't want it to be too wdie
but lik
dynamic filters
where you can specify to munge input appropriately
and jump back to it would be col
todd: wow
what do you have in there? :)
toddf: what don't I have installed...
I've trialed a lot of stuff and I use openoffice and latex and java and firefox and test thunderbird and evolution .. name something big I probably have it installed
now I'm wondering if someone dropped a core or something because indeed that seems excessive to have filled that up even for me
thats after I just removed jdk-1.6.x since I have 1.7.x installed
time to cull the /var/db/pkg/.lib* subdirs
s/subdirs/packages/
mercutio: https://bbs.archlinux.org/viewtopic.php?pid=1160979
that says awesome is the most popular
for tiling window maangers
way more so than ion
but curiously openbox has more keen users than all of them
i assume openbox is a fork of fluxbox?
toddf: depends on if you are license sensitive. awesome = GPLv2+, spectrwm = BSD
mercutio: i'm not that sensitive for a wm
but i didn't think much of awesome
i'm more concerned about license for base system stuff
irssi is gpl toddf :)
toddf: find me something that is bsd licensed that works even remotely similar
gcc is gpl also
mercutio: yeah
gcc i think is bigger issue myself
especially seeing it's gnu
gnu code is scary
hmm ircii is bsd
toddf: biggist dir in /usr/local is share/ and biggest dirs in there are untouchable ;-(
184300 gcompris
211162 gtk-doc
411636 doc
495968 locale
655720 icons
999934 texmf-dist
mercutio: wtf
mv texmf-dist to remove?
remote
gtk-doc?!
actually just purge gtk-doc? :)
do you do gtk development?
toddf: it is populated by any gtk package that includes documentation
/var/db/pkg/atk-2.6.0/+CONTENTS:share/gtk-doc/html/atk/up.png
someone should teach them to share 'up.png' icons though
mercutio: hmm
toddf: I have and expect to coninute to contribute to xombrero, originally a gtk2 now a gtk3 + webkit based browser
having 'devhelp' with fully populated docs really helps
mercutio: # du -s /usr/local/share/* | sort -nr | head
39512 /usr/local/share/vim
vim is my biggest
21500 /usr/local/share/doc
10956 /usr/local/share/locale
9700 /usr/local/share/gettext
gettext?!
gah
i hate gettext
there's c code in there
wc -l vasnprintf.c
5568 vasnprintf.c
epic c code :/
without tabs
# endif
# endif
#endif
and wtf is that
toddf: some people think C preprocessing is a programming language and it deserves its own style of indentation, of course!
mercutio: it's gnu
it's hideous
# if NEED_PRINTF_LONG_DOUBLE
they have stuff like that
then the whole code block isn't indented
and the gaps on it
make it like the code isn't seperated out properly
like single blank line before the #if and after that #if
if the #if was condensed into the code block itd' be more obvious that code block was only used if that #if was being used
then go down a page and it's got the very same if need blah
which straight away suggests it needs modularisation
and maybe moer than one file
so that it's not 5000+ lines long
-: mercutio has finished ranting
mercutio: toddf: oh don't know if you noticed before, but beta-vm openbsd works with smp
toddf: beta-vm ?
mercutio: err kvr276
-6
so kvm isn't as screwed with openbsd now
toddf: I had a beta vps until I roasted it and now with my home inet being unstable I've decided to not rely on home inet for serving various web pages (was backing afs cache from home to a http server at arpnetworks) .. so I converted my beta vps to a paid vps ..
I think what you mean is
mpbios is not screwing with uniprocessor kernels
mercutio: no
mpbios is working
mpbios0 at bios0: Intel MP Specification 1.4
cpu0 at mainbus0: apid 0 (boot processor)
cpu1 at mainbus0: apid 1 (application processor)
etc
cpu0: QEMU Virtual CPU version 0.12.3, 2600.87 MHz
cpu1: QEMU Virtual CPU version 0.12.3, 2600.55 MHz
toddf: or are you saying I should have asked to test smp on the beta vps and failed to do so?
mercutio: heh
i dunno maybe you can still get extra cpu?
toddf: or did the beta vps'en have multi cpus and I just didn't notice?
mercutio: they don't by default
i dunno what policy is about smp in general
toddf: I do
$$ for additional cpus
just like $$ for more mem/disk/net
mercutio: is it much/
toddf: I do not recall ever seeing the pricing
I just recall seeing the discussions on here randomly
mercutio: ahh
i have benchmarks
toddf: not sure why its not officially advertised in the 'powerups' section but it does make reference to supporting multiple cpus in a couple of places
mercutio: and i reckon that 2 cpu cores is prob enoguh
to be helpful without overkill when compilin gor such
cos you still have disk waits etc
toddf: compiling is not going to benifit a lot unless you use '-j2'
mercutio: i did
i did straight -j2 and -j5
haven't tried with non smp kernel though
toddf: but with modern openbsd and rthreads you get multi cpu benifits from multithreaded apps (mysql) not just multiprocess apps (postgresql)
mnathani: http://support.arpnetworks.com/kb/vps/why-does-my-vps-show-only-1-cpu
mercutio: i mean i tried on non smp on my other vm
and my other vm was faster with straight make
mnathani: additional CPU cores for $2.00 USD / core / month. A total of 8 cores is supported.
mercutio: We're sorry, but something went wrong
We've been notified about this issue and we'll take a look at it shortly.
it's still doing that
mnathani: hmm that's not too bad
toddf: mnathani: wow, nice. someday that should be listed in the powerups ;-)
mercutio: although it's normal to be included in bigger plans
with other places
i wonder if diff people have diff priority
toddf: is there aio?
i hardly run any threaded apps
mnathani: I asked earlier and the answer was no, 1 core no priority even with the bigger plans
mercutio: i hardly do anything cpu itnesneive evne
toddf: well, if you look at the powerups page and such I actually traded memory for more disk space on my new vps (equivalent cost etc) so I'm sure the majority of people hosting at arpnetworks use 1 cpu or else it'd be different default ;-)
mercutio: i've always figured that multiple cores will hbelp if you ever compress files ora ynthing
to not slow down other things running
is basically my way of looking at things
heh
toddf: aio is some lib wrapper with threads right? not sure that exists just yet, but with rthreads you get the separation of a process (can have blocking fd's in various threads) w/the behavior of a thread
mercutio: i think mysql is the only threaded app i'm running
and it's not doing much anyway
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toddf: hmm, something tells me I should go to bed and wait on my iso flipping for morning. ;-(
mercutio: lots of times the benefits of threading can be achevied in other ways anyway
the only pause i hit regularly is if i do bgp feed
toddf: indeed
mercutio: and type bgpctl show summary
it'll pause for ages
when loading new bgp routes
but if it just interjected every now and then
it'd allow that to work more promptly
learning lots of bgp routes tends to use a lot of cpu
for some reaosn
arp only has 100k routes though
until the new routers come in
and i think there are 3 people doing bgp :)
i notice it more on work machines
but it's when you lose a bgp peer that you want the summary :)
toddf: can't say that I've really played with bgp. suppored a couple routers for a short while but someone else set them up and I really didn't want to touch it for fear of breaking them. ;-(
mercutio: heh
overall i find openbgpd pretty good
i just wish there was a linux version :)
toddf: vendor lockin!
mercutio: heh
openbsd doesn't run under xen :(
well not well
toddf: it only takes someone who cares to make it domU capable at least
well I guess up_the_irons is not going to appear tonight. no worries, will need to wait until monday to have time to deal with the new vps properly anyway. cio.
mercutio: later
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