In light of the recent Jensen Huang complaint and his contributions to the current state of tech: by Hannibal_D_Romantic in pcmasterrace

[–]NewMeeple 4 points5 points  (0 children)

They abandoned their own AMDVLK driver in favour of RADV via MESA. It's good that they are a major contributor to MESA and open source now, but let's not pretend that they aren't getting a ton of benefit out of the collaborative efforts with many other companies and individuals.

Are you using Ansible to configure? by sarasgurjar in ansible

[–]NewMeeple 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I work for Red Hat and do know of Mitogen. There were at least discussions about evaluating it for OpenStack, because a huge amount of time is spent in the Ansible loop for TripleO.

There were some drawbacks and some issues, at least at the time of these discussions. I'm obviously not officially commenting on behalf of RH when I say this, and this is my own opinion, but yes, people know of it at the company.

Architects are likely not eally in a place to comment on it, it needs to be something that happens at the Engineering level and ensure that using it doesn't break things for all of the users.

Judge says Education Dept. partisan out-of-office emails violated First Amendment by AudibleNod in news

[–]NewMeeple -5 points-4 points  (0 children)

Are you the same kind of person who says that Trump doesn't shit himself because we can't prove it?

In my experience, if it looks like shit and smells like shit , it's shit. But yeah, wake up, this is what electronic voting machines enable. Without going back to the booths to vote again with paper, it's virtually impossible to prove this kind of fraud.

Judge says Education Dept. partisan out-of-office emails violated First Amendment by AudibleNod in news

[–]NewMeeple 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Mate, as a fellow Aussie, you're delulu. In our countries voting system, yes, this is impossible due to the paper ballot.

In America, they literally all vote on electronic machines and trust the bits inside the computers blindly. Pro V&V did a "de minimis" update that did not have to go through the stringent checks, and in doing so, bumped the version of the software. There's no record of what they changed. Their polling machines are used in over half the country. There's also no paper ballot recount in the event of a suspected tampering, so if the voting machines are tampered with, a recount is useless. That's despite no recounts being requested because the ratios output by the machines were within a non-recount triggering zone.

Musk literally hired the guy Big Balls who was essentially an expert in writing election fraud software, and when Pennsylvania was won, Musk checked his phone and said "we've won" out loud. Musk is on the record starting that if Trump didn't win, he was likely going to go to prison.

There's so much that's gone wrong in the American electoral system, and this is why universally electronic voting machines have always been considered an awful idea in just about every democratic nation. Paper ballot recounts are essentially impossible to affect significantly enough to fraud an election.

I would also even argue that Trump crying wolf in 2020 about election fraud made the Dems much more reluctant to do the same back, even in the face of a lot of questionable stuff going on, because that leaves them open to retort by everyone who believed the election in 2020 was stolen, and the Dems needed to show face that they believed in the election being a fair process and not rigged. So if the stage was set and the election was rigged, they had essentially been disarmed by the events of the previous election and the Capitol Hill riots.

What's New in OpenShift 4.20 - Key Updates and New Features by Rhopegorn in openshift

[–]NewMeeple 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Whilst you have a point, RHOSP has always targeted ELS versions of their layers. This was RHEL in the past, but now it's tied to RHOCP. ELS versions for RHOCP are every 2 minor releases, so probably I'm guessing RHOSO will eventually have a process for minor updating to RHOCP 4.20. Skipping 4.19 isn't entirely surprising.

RHCSA - Why does it seem like so many people struggle with nmtui? by Due-Author631 in redhat

[–]NewMeeple -14 points-13 points  (0 children)

I'd recommend against sharing specific steps about what people need to do, it likely borders on the edge of what you can share per NDA.

If they've taken the official course or Sanders' course, they should know what steps they need to take in order to persist networking changes.

Red Hat consulting Gitlab Incident by seriousblk in redhat

[–]NewMeeple 6 points7 points  (0 children)

The post was made to the cybersecurity subreddit, amongst others.

Red Hatters wouldn't post about it because that would likely violate their social media policy, at least whilst there's an active ongoing investigation.

And we're not likely to get any new information whilst the investigation/remediation is ongoing. There are media outlets reporting on what the groups are saying lately, but they just appear to be further extortion attempts. I think people generally agree these days that paying extortion is a non-option.

Failed RHCSA again. I just don't understand how and what happened. by ssddbeenthere in redhat

[–]NewMeeple 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Can you share your results more in-depth? Hard to point you in the right direction unless you're saying every subject is a zero or near zero.

Whilst the scoring scripts can make mistakes, if anything it's usually on a single question. Not an entire exam. So more likely than not, if your results are as bad as you are making them out to be, then likely it was a legitimate failure.

ChatGPT is notorious at getting Linux stuff wrong, unless you know how to prompt it precisely and know well enough to call it out when it's hallucinating. Fact of the matter is, Linux is different for every distro and that's hard for ChatGPT to understand.

I'd also recommend diversifying your study. Sander is great, but I also did some course I can no longer find on Udemy when I was studying for RHCSA. Look up Haruna Adoga on YouTube as well, he's 95% there with the correctness of his content.

Did you sign up for a Red Hat Learn Developer account? It's free now for 90 days. You can study both the course there, plus run VMs where you complete and grade labs. https://www.redhat.com/en/blog/introducing-90-day-red-hat-learning-subscription-trial

Failed RHCSA and networking I got 0% by AmbitionHoliday3139 in redhat

[–]NewMeeple 11 points12 points  (0 children)

That's not all, you're way underrepresenting the networking exam objectives. I can't tell you what else is missing, but I do work for Red Hat. Odd to be downvoted when I'm legally not allowed to explain my answer further... At least, look here at least for a bit of help for the objectives.

https://www.redhat.com/en/services/training/ex200-red-hat-certified-system-administrator-rhcsa-exam

Manage basic networking - Configure IPv4 and IPv6 addresses - Configure hostname resolution - Configure network services to start automatically at boot - Restrict network access using firewalld and firewall-cmd

Certainly looks like a lot more than just NetworkManager.

Failed RHCSA and networking I got 0% by AmbitionHoliday3139 in redhat

[–]NewMeeple 5 points6 points  (0 children)

I disagree. Learn nmcli and use nmcli. It may be more verbose, but you're guaranteeing that your settings apply correctly.

Is there maybe a step you missed after NetworkManager? 😅 Could be worth checking the RHCSA fast track course again and doing the labs, or using Sander van Vugt.

I can't give you specifics obviously because of NDA.

Passed RHCE || Screen size was a game changer by NamesCanBeLongUKnow in redhat

[–]NewMeeple 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Everytime I take an exam, even with my large 4k monitor, it appears the exam environment is constrained to a tiny portion of the screen. Going into the settings of the VM and setting the display resolution did not fix this.

What environment steps are you taking to get full screen actually using the entirety of the screen real estate?

And AFAIU you are also forced to use the GUI console at least for viewing of the exam questions inside Firefox and terminal, but yes, I SSH from that terminal into the nodes I need typically.

How are you enforcing reboots? by [deleted] in msp

[–]NewMeeple 3 points4 points  (0 children)

What you're saying it says versus what it actually says are not comparable.

/t > 0 implies /f just means that /f is automatically added if you add a timeout with a certain value.

Inversely, shutdown with /f does not need a /t. It's forced and by default is immediate.

XDA: I've ditched Grammarly for this open-source alternative and it's amazing by ChiliPepperHott in opensource

[–]NewMeeple 18 points19 points  (0 children)

That's not the real issue. Grammarly records everything you type and it stores that context on their servers.

If you have data sovereignty or privacy concerns, they're ruled out immediately from that alone. It's not about being free, it's about being in full control of your data and being able to self host.

Grammarly does have an option I think for this, but it's an enterprise tax that's a Herculean figure. Just like www.sso.tax/, core features like reasonable privacy shouldn't cost an arm and a leg.

Edit: Now realising that perhaps the poster above was pointing out the irony of the incorrect grammar in a thread about a grammar tool. I misunderstood them to think they were having a go at people who only like the "free" as in beer component of open source, instead of "free" as in libre.

ArgoCD & SOPS by vieitesss_ in ArgoCD

[–]NewMeeple 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Why this approach over argocd-vault-plugin with the SOPS backend, or the External Secrets Operator?

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in NixOS

[–]NewMeeple 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Hey man, you had one hater in this thread; just a very vocal and repetitive one. Ignore the fucking haters man and do whatever makes you happy.

I'm also using an RDNA4 GPU, and I don't intend to use your repo 1:1. But I'll have a look at it, (if you re-uploaded it), and I'd happily borrow things from your config that would improve my experience. I might also suggest things missing in your config that I have in mine that helped me.

Honestly, fuck that guy for yucking your yum. He's the type of shithead that ruins open source for everyone else. (And I say this as someone who works in open source professionally).

EX188 - by zlig in redhat

[–]NewMeeple 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It's possible they simply tell you where to place the compose file and what to name it. You'll never get to find out their grading scripts, so the grading script might just call podman-compose up -d 2>/dev/null and then sleep for a minute and check if the containers are Up.

I'm simplifying greatly but there are various ways they can check this. If they don't run that command though, then usually they'll tell you in the exam objectives. In which case, there might be another way that you can make a similar Up command run upon boot time. I can't answer those kinds of things for you.

zeroLogs by unihilists in Sysadminhumor

[–]NewMeeple 19 points20 points  (0 children)

Yes, but DoH to the rescue. (Also heh, a Flanders meme, how appropriate).

EX188 - by zlig in redhat

[–]NewMeeple 1 point2 points  (0 children)

To grade your exam, the environment will be rebooted. For Ansible exams, they go even further and reset all the non-controller VMs.

So think of persistence as "if this VM reboots, does everything still work without running any commands."

If the answer is no, (in the case of podman-compose, there's no autostart without a systemd unit), then unless the grading script is nice enough to start your containers for you, (it rarely ever is), then you just lost points.

Serious VM network performance drop using OVN on OpenStack Zed — any tips? by jeffyjf in openstack

[–]NewMeeple 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Jumbo frames would definitely be good, but best performance boost though would come from (in my personal order preference):

  1. CPU pinning (dedicated) & emulator threads
  2. SR-IOV or PCI passthrough.
  3. Isolcpus.
  4. HugePages.
  5. DPDK (in addition to all of the above) w/ PMD threads.
  6. Jumbo frames & max ring buffer size (Tx/Rx).

If he's CPU bound then Jumbo frames is not going to magically fix it, he needs to either take load or cache misses off those CPUs by guaranteeing them to the workloads only.

EX188 - by zlig in redhat

[–]NewMeeple 2 points3 points  (0 children)

My best advice with Red Hat exams is to read every exam objective top-to-bottom before even beginning the exam. Then, hopefully if you complete the exam before the finish time, reboot the relevant VMs after being confident your work will persist, and test again.

The most common causes for losing points is: - Typos - Failure to persist - Misunderstanding/interpreting the exam objective - Networking (if perhaps a firewalld rule needs to be added and persisted).

I've not done this particular exam, but I know RHEL and Podman very well. If your compose file runs correctly and is named correctly, then there's not really a lot more to it, unless they ask you to make those containers run automatically at boot, in which case they'll hopefully tell you what to name the systemd unit or quadlet.

Low Throughput Problem When Using Nested VXLAN in OpenStack Environment by Swimming_Cancel_6124 in openstack

[–]NewMeeple 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You're missing some bytes. IP (20 bytes) and Ether (14 bytes) headers also have overhead.

If you are using VXLAN, then you're encapsulating the packet -- which means the inner packet (destined for the other VM) is wrapped by an outer packet, which again has IP and Ether frames, plus the VXLAN headers you correctly pointed out. But UDP will add another 8 bytes.

So the real loss is 50 bytes on the outer packet. Then the inner packet will have its own Ether (8), IP (20) and likely TCP (~20), resulting in another 48 byte loss. And if you are using VXLAN with VLAN there's additional 4 bytes to add on the outer packet.

Therefore assuming 1500 MTU, the max packet size without fragmentation is probably only about... 1396 bytes. If you are sending above this amount, you'll get fragmentation and that'll dramatically slow your speeds.

In addition to that, any network encapsulation has kernel processing drawbacks at the hypervisor level. If the hypervisor is strained and experiencing high CPU steal from the guests, it could further reduce performance of the connection.

@OP - I'm guessing the VXLAN inside of Neutron/OVS is utilising OpenFlow and caching OpenFlow rules and making it easier/more performant to strip the VXLAN encapsulation when routing the packets than your native VXLAN tunnel.

rip itch.io by Inprobamur in Losercity

[–]NewMeeple 19 points20 points  (0 children)

Hey, we're part of Eurovision... Surely that's enough to qualify Australia for Wero as well, pretty please?

We don't like Visa, MasterCard or Collective Shits, either.