Posted: 2021-12-15 17:18:13 Source: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fc6yEVb5lNg
Posted: 2021-12-15 15:42:55 Source: https://distrowatch.com/11427
Univention Corporate Server (UCS) is an enterprise-class distribution based on Debian GNU/Linux. It features an integrated management system for central administration of servers. The project's latest release is an update to the 5.x series which improves user account management. "Administrators can specify an activation date when creating a....
Posted: 2021-12-15 13:55:28 Source: https://linuxhint.com/create-ec2-instances-ansible/
Ansible is the most popular and probably powerful configuration management tool. It is built to facilitate the management and configuration of remote hosts using a set of commands defined as tasks. It works by using modules developed for specific tasks such as managing users, managing files, installing and removing software packages, and many more. How to create EC2 instances using Ansible is explained in this article.
Posted: 2021-12-15 13:29:25 Source: https://linuxhint.com/php-convert-string-datetime/
To convert a string to date, we will use two functions: strtotime() and the date() functions. We can also use the DateTime::createFromFormat method. In this article, we will discuss and teach you how to convert a simple string to a date format using the various built-in PHP methods and techniques.
Posted: 2021-12-15 13:05:34 Source: https://linuxhint.com/kubectl-proxy/
A user outside a Kubernetes cluster can utilize the Kubernetes API server proxy to connect to cluster IPs that would otherwise be unavailable. This enables access to a service that is only available within the cluster's network. Between the user and the in-cluster endpoint, the apiserver works as a proxy and a bastion. Kubectl Proxy is discussed in this article.
Posted: 2021-12-15 12:52:03 Source: https://linuxhint.com/expose-ports-in-kubernetes/
For Kubernetes services, various distinct port configurations are available. On the TargetPort, the service will send requests, and the pods will listen for them. If the port field is not supplied, NodePort is used by default. How to expose Ports in Kubernetes is explained in this article.
Posted: 2021-12-14 22:25:10 Source: http://www.kernel.org/
Version: | next-20211214 (linux-next) |
---|---|
Released: | 2021-12-14 |
Posted: 2021-12-14 21:25:00 Source: https://news.slashdot.org/story/21/12/14/2046209/intels-mystery-linux-muckabout-is-a-dangerous-ploy-at-a-dangerous-time?utm_source=atom1.0mainlinkanon&utm_medium=feed
Open source is no place for secrets. From a report: This is a critical time for the Good Chip Intel. After the vessel driftied through the Straits of Lateness towards the Rocks of Irrelevance, Captain Pat parachuted into the bridge to grab the helm and bark "Full steam ahead!" Its first berth at Alder Lake is generally seen as a return to competitive form, but that design started well before Gelsinger's return and there's still zero room for navigational errors in the expeditions ahead. At least one of the course corrections looks a bit rum. Intel has long realised the importance of supporting open source to keep its chips dancing with Linux. Unlike the halcyon days of Wintel dominance, though, this means being somewhat more open about the down-and-dirty details of exactly how its chips do their thing. You can't sign an NDA with the Linux kernel. Chipmakers are notoriously paranoid: Silicon Valley was born in intrigue and suspicion. Despite Intel's iconic CEO Andy Grove making paranoia a corporate mantra, Intel became relatively relaxed. Qualcomm and Apple would throw you into their piranha pools merely for asking questions if they could, while Intel has learned to give as well as take. But it may be going back to bad habits. One of the new things not open to discussion is something called Software Defined Silicon (SDSi), about which Intel has nothing to say. Which is odd because it has just submitted supporting code for it to the Linux kernel. The code itself doesn't say anything about SDSi, instead adding a mechanism to control whatever it is via some authorised secure token. It basically unlocks hardware features when the right licence is applied. That's not new. Higher performance or extra features in electronic test equipment often comes present but disabled on the base models, and the punter can pay to play later. But what might it mean in SDSi and the Intel architecture? It is expensive for Intel and OEMs alike to have multiple physical variants of anything; much better if you make one thing that does everything and charge for unlocking it. It's a variant of a trick discovered by hackish school kids in the late 1970s, where cheaper Casio scientific calculators used exactly the same hardware as the more expensive model. Casio just didn't print all the functions on the keyboards of the pleb kit. Future Intel chips will doubtless have cores and cache disabled until magic numbers appear, and with the SoC future beckoning that can extend to all manner of IO, acceleration, and co-processing features. It might even be there already. From engineering, marketing, and revenue perspectives, this is great. Intel could make an M1-like SoC that can be configured on the fly for different platforms, getting the design, performance, and fab efficiencies that Apple enjoys while making sense for multiple OEMs. There could be further revenue from software upgrades, or even subscription models.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Posted: 2021-12-14 19:59:18 Source: https://distrowatch.com/11426
Pop!_OS is a desktop Linux distribution based on Ubuntu and developed by System76. The distribution's latest version is Pop!_OS 21.10 which includes initial support for Raspberry Pi computers. The release announcement shares other changes and features: "Previously when navigating to Applications, a full screen Application Wall would appear.....
Posted: 2021-12-14 16:56:58 Source: https://distrowatch.com/11425
Kaisen Linux is a rolling release, Debian-based desktop distribution. the project has published Kaisen Linux 2.0 which moves the base to Debian's Testing (Bookworm) branch. The project has also dropped the LXDE interface for LXQt. "Kaisen is now based on Debian Bookworm (Debian 12), also justifying the version....
Posted: 2021-12-14 15:41:14 Source: https://distrowatch.com/11424
The Linux Mint project has published a new development release. Linux Mint 20.3 Beta introduces dark theme support for the Hypnotix video streaming application and presents a new document manager called Thingy. "The Hypnotix IPTV player looks better than ever, thanks to Dark Mode support and a new....
Posted: 2021-12-14 15:28:19 Source: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ELNIMzdo34w
Posted: 2021-12-14 13:49:12 Source: http://www.kernel.org/
Version: | 5.4.165 (longterm) |
---|---|
Released: | 2021-12-14 |
Source: | linux-5.4.165.tar.xz |
PGP Signature: | linux-5.4.165.tar.sign |
Patch: | full (incremental) |
ChangeLog: | ChangeLog-5.4.165 |
Posted: 2021-12-14 13:35:50 Source: http://www.kernel.org/
Version: | next-20211210 (linux-next) |
---|---|
Released: | 2021-12-14 |
Posted: 2021-12-14 10:33:12 Source: http://www.kernel.org/
Version: | 5.10.85 (longterm) |
---|---|
Released: | 2021-12-14 |
Source: | linux-5.10.85.tar.xz |
PGP Signature: | linux-5.10.85.tar.sign |
Patch: | full (incremental) |
ChangeLog: | ChangeLog-5.10.85 |
Posted: 2021-12-14 09:57:28 Source: http://www.kernel.org/
Version: | 5.15.8 (stable) |
---|---|
Released: | 2021-12-14 |
Source: | linux-5.15.8.tar.xz |
PGP Signature: | linux-5.15.8.tar.sign |
Patch: | full (incremental) |
ChangeLog: | ChangeLog-5.15.8 |
Posted: 2021-12-14 09:18:14 Source: http://www.kernel.org/
Version: | 4.19.221 (longterm) |
---|---|
Released: | 2021-12-14 |
Source: | linux-4.19.221.tar.xz |
PGP Signature: | linux-4.19.221.tar.sign |
Patch: | full (incremental) |
ChangeLog: | ChangeLog-4.19.221 |
Posted: 2021-12-14 09:17:06 Source: http://www.kernel.org/
Version: | 4.14.258 (longterm) |
---|---|
Released: | 2021-12-14 |
Source: | linux-4.14.258.tar.xz |
PGP Signature: | linux-4.14.258.tar.sign |
Patch: | full (incremental) |
ChangeLog: | ChangeLog-4.14.258 |
Posted: 2021-12-14 09:04:55 Source: http://www.kernel.org/
Version: | 4.9.293 (longterm) |
---|---|
Released: | 2021-12-14 |
Source: | linux-4.9.293.tar.xz |
PGP Signature: | linux-4.9.293.tar.sign |
Patch: | full (incremental) |
ChangeLog: | ChangeLog-4.9.293 |
Posted: 2021-12-14 09:04:01 Source: http://www.kernel.org/
Version: | 4.4.295 (longterm) |
---|---|
Released: | 2021-12-14 |
Source: | linux-4.4.295.tar.xz |
PGP Signature: | linux-4.4.295.tar.sign |
Patch: | full (incremental) |
ChangeLog: | ChangeLog-4.4.295 |