Canadian software engineer living in Europe.

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  • 17 Comments
Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: June 7th, 2023

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    • Keep everything in an external git service. You can use third party services like Codeberg, GitLab, or GitHub, or host your own on your NAS.
    • When you’re not working on a project and don’t think you’ll need to reference it for a while, just delete it from your laptop. The code always lives in git anyway.

    In terms of local storage, I usually have everything in ~/projects/project-name, and I don’t have tiny file size limits because I don’t use FAT32 filesystems — that’s the default filesystem you usually get on USB sticks and external hard drives you buy. You have to format those drives to something like EXT4 (Linux) or NTFS (Windows) or you get stuck with FAT32 which has 2gb file sizes.








  • There it is! Thank you! It’s a process owned by root called kworker/0:0+kacpid. Any idea what that is?

    [Edit 1] Interestingly, I can’t even kill -9 it.

    [Edit 2] With kworker kacpid to work with, I did a quick search and found this SO page that has some interesting information that I only partially understand, but the following worked like a charm:

    # grep -Ev "^[ ]*0" /sys/firmware/acpi/interrupts/gpe?? | sort --field-separator=: --key=2 --numeric --reverse | head -1
    /sys/firmware/acpi/interrupts/gpe09:11131050     STS enabled      unmasked
    # echo disable > /sys/firmware/acpi/interrupts/gpe09
    

    It’s not clear to me what an interrupt is or whether this gpe09 value is meant to be persistent across reboots, or why this only seems to be happening in the last couple months, but if I can make it go away by running the above from time to time, I guess it’s alright?