Telegraf+influxdb+grafana is what I use at work, it is a multi purpose tool though, can be used to monitor EVERYTHING though
Telegraf+influxdb+grafana is what I use at work, it is a multi purpose tool though, can be used to monitor EVERYTHING though
A quick look at docker docs says it’s the only way. Same with any other way of running a program/service, you have to manually set an affinity of an executable
Looks like you’d have to manually assign cpus by with --cpuset-cpus
Just finished the new Riven remake, pretty cool game, now continuing High on Life, and Ghostwire Tokio
Sadly because it works, mobile gaming is bigger money-wise than PC and consoles combined, all because people are susceptible to short term dopamine hit your can buy any time, it’s a part of what we call enshittification, making the product less user friendly and make more money, shareholders are happy, your don’t have to
It’s not just about that, people will be disabling the feature that is potentially beneficial to their security, disabling http downloads from http sites is just an extension of blocking http downloads from https sites
Another security feature added is the blocking of downloading files from URLs that are on lists of potentially dangerous content.
Yeah, I’m not sure blocking HTTP downloads by default is a good idea, I mean many offices probably have some internal legacy HTTP only sites that nobody dares to touch, that are perfectly safe being HTTP (if you have hackers inside your network a simple intranet site spoofing is your least problem), and disabling this security option might have a lot of wider repercussions
Seems like a ~~blessing ~~ glaring kde bug, I mean how is it possible? Why a theme needs to be able to execute shell commands?
That’s fundamental problem with Google apps, every one looks different, made by different teams with different set of guidelines, messages now look different than Gmail for example
I didn’t say it’s forced, it’s the only way I know of to force usage of specific threads/cores, that’s all, I thought it’s what you’re looking for, if you want it to be automatic like other prices in the system then leave it without it, there’s nothing (else) specific in docker to control if P or E cores should be prioritized for given containers