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@Brainiarc7
Brainiarc7 / skylake-tuning-linux.md
Last active September 4, 2024 22:09
This gist will show you how to tune your Intel-based Skylake, Kabylake and beyond Integrated Graphics Core for performance and reliability through GuC and HuC firmware usage on Linux.

Tuning Intel Skylake and beyond for optimal performance and feature level support on Linux:

Note that on Skylake, Kabylake (and the now cancelled "Broxton") SKUs, functionality such as power saving, GPU scheduling and HDMI audio have been moved onto binary-only firmware, and as such, the GuC and the HuC blobs must be loaded at run-time to access this functionality.

Enabling GuC and HuC on Skylake and above requires a few extra parameters be passed to the kernel before boot.

Instructions provided for both Fedora and Ubuntu (including Debian):

Note that the firmware for these GPUs is often packaged by your distributor, and as such, you can confirm the firmware blob's availability by running:

@jaceklaskowski
jaceklaskowski / deployment-tool-ansible-puppet-chef-salt.md
Last active January 3, 2024 22:12
Choosing a deployment tool - ansible vs puppet vs chef vs salt

Requirements

  • no upfront installation/agents on remote/slave machines - ssh should be enough
  • application components should use third-party software, e.g. HDFS, Spark's cluster, deployed separately
  • configuration templating
  • environment requires/asserts, i.e. we need a JVM in a given version before doing deployment
  • deployment process run from Jenkins

Solution

@nullivex
nullivex / README.md
Last active February 8, 2022 19:57
Windows 7 64bit, NodeJS 32bit, MongoDB, Mongoose, Bcrypt, SocketIO, Canvas, Git

Windows NodeJS Stack

This took me several hours to figure out so I figured it was worth writing down.

Hopefully this step by step can be used to get node running locally without a lot of problems that are commonly ran into.

Downloads

Update July 7th 2014 - Updated most of the versions including not pointing to the heartbleed version of OpenSSL

@jbenet
jbenet / simple-git-branching-model.md
Last active September 19, 2024 16:05
a simple git branching model

a simple git branching model (written in 2013)

This is a very simple git workflow. It (and variants) is in use by many people. I settled on it after using it very effectively at Athena. GitHub does something similar; Zach Holman mentioned it in this talk.

Update: Woah, thanks for all the attention. Didn't expect this simple rant to get popular.

@victorb
victorb / gist:4181764
Last active May 7, 2017 10:09 — forked from davatron5000/gist:2254924
Static Site Generators

This is an updated fork of the gist located here: https://gist.github.com/2254924

Backstory: I decided to crowdsource static site generator recommendations, so the following are actual real world suggested-to-me results. I then took those and sorted them by language/server and, just for a decent relative metric, their Github Watcher count. If you want a heap of other projects (including other languages like Haskell and Python) Nanoc has the mother of all site generator lists. If you recommend another one, by all means add a comment.

Ruby

@tvogel
tvogel / git-merge-associate
Created March 30, 2011 13:23
git script to manually associate files in a conflicting merge when rename detection fails
#!/bin/bash
#
# Purpose: manually associate missed renames in merge conflicts
#
# Usage: git merge-associate <our-target> <base> <theirs>
#
# Example: After a failed rename detection A/a -> B/b which results
# in CONFLICT (delete/modify) for A/a and corresponding "deleted by us"
# messages in git status, the following invocation can be used to manually
# establish the link: