These are various scripts I've written in the past for tracing through memcached
LICENSE
The MIT License (MIT)
Copyright (c) 2013, Matt Ingenthron
Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy
These are various scripts I've written in the past for tracing through memcached
LICENSE
The MIT License (MIT)
Copyright (c) 2013, Matt Ingenthron
Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy
;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; | |
;;; | |
;;; Copyright (C), zznop, zznop0x90@gmail.com | |
;;; | |
;;; This software may be modified and distributed under the terms | |
;;; of the MIT license. See the LICENSE file for details. | |
;;; | |
;;; DESCRIPTION | |
;;; | |
;;; This PoC shellcode is meant to be compiled as a blob and prepended to a ELF |
Out of the box, my SMB performance on macOS 12.3.1 would top out at around 20MB/s in short ~5 second bursts, which was absolutely horrendous, slow to navigate in Finder and slugish to interact with.
Since making these changes, I now get sustained ~80-100MB/s+ and instant Finder navigation which is superb and how things should be out-of-the-box (OOTB)!
May 2023 update: As of Ventura, the SMB issues were just horribly inconsistent and hard to maintain. Something in the combination of Unraid, macOS and SMB just doesn't play nice. I ended up binning NFS/SMB all together and heading to a locally hosted Nextcloud instance for file syncing, then using SFTP/Ansible Git flow for editing files within appdata
.
Out of the box, my SMB performance on macOS 12.3.1 would top out at around 20MB/s in short ~5 second bursts, which was absolutely horrendous, slow to navigate in Finder and slugish to interact with.
Since making these changes, I now get sustained ~80-100MB/s+ and instant Finder navigation which is superb and how things should be out-of-the-box (OOTB)!
May 2023 update: As of Ventura, the SMB issues were just horribly inconsistent and hard to maintain. Something in the combination of Unraid, macOS and SMB just doesn't play nice. I ended up binning NFS/SMB all together and heading to a locally hosted Nextcloud instance for file syncing, then using SFTP/Ansible Git flow for editing files within appdata
.
This is the second article in a series of articles around Rusts new async/await
feature. The first article about interfaces can be found
here.
In this part of the series we want to a look at a mechanism which behaves very
different in Rust than in all other languages which feature async/await
support. This mechanism is Cancellation.