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Tag selected: portability.
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Saved by uncleflo on January 29th, 2025.
Home to the Signal Protocol as well as other cryptographic primitives which make Signal possible. libsignal contains platform-agnostic APIs used by the official Signal clients and servers, exposed as a Java, Swift, or TypeScript library. The underlying implementations are written in Rust: This repository is used by the Signal client apps (Android, iOS, and Desktop) as well as server-side. Use outside of Signal is unsupported. In particular, the products of this repository are the Java, Swift, and TypeScript libraries that wrap the underlying Rust implementations. All APIs and implementations are subject to change without notice, as are the JNI, C, and Node add-on "bridge" layers. However, backwards-incompatible changes to the Java, Swift, TypeScript, and non-bridge Rust APIs will be reflected in the version number on a best-effort basis, including increases to the minimum supported tools versions.
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Saved by uncleflo on June 13th, 2022.
Once diving becomes a serious hobby, you might be interested in buying your own compressor for filling your tanks. There is nothing wrong with dive shops, but there’s nothing like being able to fill up your tank wherever you are. Since the air in your tank is a matter of life or death, the air compressor for your scuba tank needs to provide you with clean pressurized air. When you choose a scuba air tank compressor, it needs to be specifically made for diving. Unless the compressor delivers clean breathing air at high pressures, you risk injury or death when you dive. This guide will help you understand how a compressor works, what makes a scuba air compressor different from a normal one, and what to look for when buying one. Many companies build compressors, but only a few manufacture breathing air compressors for scuba diving. We recommend the following
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Saved by uncleflo on January 4th, 2019.
A daemon (or service) is a background process that is designed to run autonomously,with little or not user intervention. The Apache web server http daemon (httpd) is one such example of a daemon. It waits in the background listening on specific ports, and serves up pages or processes scripts, based on the type of request. Creating a daemon in Linux uses a specific set of rules in a given order. Knowing how they work will help you understand how daemons operate in userland Linux, but can operate with calls to the kernel also. In fact, a few daemons interface with kernel modules that work with hardware devices, such as external controller boards, printers,and PDAs. They are one of the fundamental building blocks in Linux that give it incredible flexibility and power. Throughout this HOWTO, a very simple daemon will be built in C. As we go along, more code will be added, showing the proper order of execution required to get a daemon up and running.
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