That's true. Also I guess domain names in most ideogram-based languages cannot be meaningfully converted to ASCII. The best detection method I'm aware of is detecting a mix of different alphabets in the domain, but I imagine even this has a lot of false positives
This should be ON by default, in my opinion. Also, I believe Mozilla has a massive opportunity here to demarcate themselves as the more security-conscious browser vendor. "This phishing trick works on all major browsers except Firefox" would be great publicity material.
What's the problem with it? (legit question from non-silverblue user)
Just got a call from Rust HQ; they cancelled the project and are deleting all the articles talking about it
Note that this is an old article from 2 years ago and that GKI is already implemented in Android
Apart from text editors/IDEs I don't really see the use for it. I think it is not practical unless all your users are both power users and programmers, which basically boils down to developer tools.
Brainfuck? Really?
I think most people (including myself) prefer a minimal desktop by default, and then proceed to install only the software they need. Nevertheless, it always surprises me when I log in to a system that doesn't have vim.
It's open-source merely to comply with the GPL license of the kernel, but the fact is that an Android image built only from open source components will be extremely crippled or, depending on your point of view, basically useless. Such an image will not even boot on the majority of devices ; you'll need those sweet proprietary driver blobs if you want your phone to do anything, and a bunch more closed source binaries in order to use Play services.
In tmux, you usually set configuration options with set -g
in tmux.conf. "-g" sets a global option which will apply to all new windows and sessions, otherwise the option applies only for the current window, which is usually not what you want.
Since command-alias
is an array, you can use the -a
flag to append a new value at the end.
With that said, try this:
set -ga command-alias s="new-window ssh foo"
Keep in mind that run
in tmux runs a shell command in the background, so you most likely want to use something like new-window
or new-session
instead.
If you aren't starting your container with the -it
options (for docker run
), try setting them so that it allocates a tty. The fact that it works with SSH however makes me think that perhaps the Synology task runner can't run interactive commands like docker attach
because it has no stdin. In that case you'll need to do something like this: https://serverfault.com/questions/885765/how-to-send-text-to-stdin-of-docker-container/947763#947763 to pipe the stop command into the stdin of the bedrock server.
If you aren't starting your container with the -it
options, try setting it so that it allocates a tty. The fact that it works with SSH however makes me think that perhaps the Synology task runner can't run interactive commands like docker attach
because it has no stdin. In that case you'll need to do something like this: https://serverfault.com/questions/885765/how-to-send-text-to-stdin-of-docker-container/947763#947763 to pipe the stop command into the stdin of the bedrock server.