READY.
EBAY SHOPPING SPREE
...
Ordering...
One tourist map of pentagon
One bear trap
One Ski mask
One Bobcat
One Lube
---- Minecraft Crash Report ---- | |
// Hey, that tickles! Hehehe! | |
Time: 2020-11-27 18:41:48 EST | |
Description: Rendering entity in world | |
java.lang.ClassCastException: net.minecraft.class_745 cannot be cast to net.minecraft.class_746 | |
at Not Enough Crashes deobfuscated stack trace.(1.16.4+build.7) | |
at net.minecraft.client.render.entity.PlayerEntityRenderer.redirect$bnn000$redirectRender(PlayerEntityRenderer:3118) | |
at net.minecraft.client.render.entity.PlayerEntityRenderer.render(PlayerEntityRenderer:65) |
<div class="container"> | |
<div class="header"> | |
<h2>Create Account</h2> | |
</div> | |
<form id="form" class="form"> | |
<div class="form-control"> | |
<label for="username">Username</label> | |
<input type="text" placeholder="Ulises" id="username" /> | |
<i class="fas fa-check-circle"></i> | |
<i class="fas fa-exclamation-circle"></i> |
---- Minecraft Crash Report ---- | |
// My bad. | |
Time: 2020-11-27 17:32:52 CST | |
Description: Unexpected error | |
org.spongepowered.asm.mixin.transformer.throwables.MixinTransformerError: An unexpected critical error was encountered | |
at Not Enough Crashes deobfuscated stack trace.(1.16.4+build.7) | |
at org.spongepowered.asm.mixin.transformer.MixinProcessor.applyMixins(MixinProcessor.java:363) | |
at org.spongepowered.asm.mixin.transformer.MixinTransformer.transformClass(MixinTransformer.java:208) |
See the following links for further updates to Github Desktop for Ubuntu. These are official instructions. (also mentioned by fetwar on Nov 3, 2023)
For the sake of "maintaining the tradition" here is the updated version.
If you read my previous blog posts, you can note that sometime ago I have started to get involved low-level programming. I wrote some posts about x86_64 assembly programming for Linux. In the same time I started to dive into GNU/Linux kernel source code. It is very interesting for me to understand how low-level things works, how programs runs on my computer, how they located in memory, how kernel manages processes and memory, how network stack works on low-level and many many other things. I decided to write yet another series of posts about GNU/Linux kernel for x86_64.
Note, that I'm not professional kernel hacker and I don't write code for kernel at work, just a hobby. I just like low-level stuff and it is interesting to me how these
As answers to this Stack Overflow question
reveal, using <!---
and --->
or <!--
and -->
works (view source by clicking "Raw"):
void mem_avail(void) | |
{ | |
char *cmd = "awk '{ if (NR == 2) { print $4 }}' /proc/meminfo"; | |
FILE *cmdfile = popen(cmd, "r"); | |
char result[256] = { 0 }; | |
while (fgets(result, sizeof(result), cmdfile) != NULL) { | |
printf("%s\n", result); | |
} |
People
:bowtie: |
😄 :smile: |
😆 :laughing: |
---|---|---|
😊 :blush: |
😃 :smiley: |
:relaxed: |
😏 :smirk: |
😍 :heart_eyes: |
😘 :kissing_heart: |
😚 :kissing_closed_eyes: |
😳 :flushed: |
😌 :relieved: |
😆 :satisfied: |
😁 :grin: |
😉 :wink: |
😜 :stuck_out_tongue_winking_eye: |
😝 :stuck_out_tongue_closed_eyes: |
😀 :grinning: |
😗 :kissing: |
😙 :kissing_smiling_eyes: |
😛 :stuck_out_tongue: |