As someone who is currently hiring: Anything
Beyond that it depends on what you know and what kind of work you want to do.
As someone who is currently hiring: Anything
Beyond that it depends on what you know and what kind of work you want to do.
Hey, this might be something I’m interested in, but I’m not sure because there aren’t many details in your readme.
Some questions I’d suggest you answer in the readme:
[Edit: after looking through the code quickly, some of my questions probably don’t male sense because this seems to be an alerting style monitoring tool, not a observability style monitoring tool. Answering my own questions for others that are curious:]
What does it monitor?
[Disk space and CPU use]
What is the interface? Web? It does compare itself to grafana, so maybe. TUI? Maybe that’s what makes it more light weight?
[It doesn’t have one, it sends telegram messages when alarm thresholds(?) are hit.]
Does it only work on Debian? If not, are there deps that are required that are installed as dependencies of the deb?
[Looks like it should work anywhere, the ‘watchers’ use the nix crate and read procfs, so I assume that means it should work anywhere without depending on anything besides the Linux kernel.]
Is there history or is it real time only?
[Realtime only, well I guess there’s the telegram history.]
What does it look like? (Honestly, a screenshot could possibly answer most of these questions and a whole lot more.)
[It doesn’t look like anything. There’s no screenshot because there’s nothing to screenshot.]
Unless you’re working with people who are too smart, then sometimes the code only explains the how. Why did the log processor have thousands of lines about Hilbert Curves? I never could figure it out even after talking with the person that wrote it.
C was originally created as a “high-level” language, being more abstract (aka high-level) than the other languages at the time. But now it’s basically considered very slightly more abstract than machine code when compared to the much higher level high-level languages we have today.
Woah, this would be huge if this works.
Though, I’m almost more excited about the idea of native task locals variables. I came real close to trying to add that to tokio myself.
This is just a guess, but I’d imagine that happens because the websites use JavaScript to load the actual content of the page, but Lemmy is just parsing the HTML that is returned.
Also, I really doubt you’d have much luck convincing website authors to completely change their architecture just to get previews to work on Lemmy.