This time it's Mozilla. They apparently forgot to regenerate some certificates used in signing add-ons and they all stopped working.
https://www.reddit.com/r/firefox/comments/bkfte9/if_you_have_issues_with_your_addons_being_marked/
This time it's Mozilla. They apparently forgot to regenerate some certificates used in signing add-ons and they all stopped working.
https://www.reddit.com/r/firefox/comments/bkfte9/if_you_have_issues_with_your_addons_being_marked/
So our company procured, after years of selection and testing, a tool to manage shared passwords (where a team needs access to systems that cannot be easily connected to the federated authentication). So I tried to add the secrets for the service principal and the technical user in there and
⸘Warum, kurwa‽
… the “password” in this case is a “client secret” and is (hopefully) randomly generated by the Azure API, so I can't choose whether it will start with a digit or not.
PS: Note the bonus Engrish.
@Polygeekery I doubt you'll make friends that way, because:
@sh_code It's not JavaScript that's kidding you:
http://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/basedefs/time.h.html:
The <time.h> header shall declare the tm structure, which shall include at least the following members:
int tm_sec Seconds [0,60].
int tm_min Minutes [0,59].
int tm_hour Hour [0,23].
int tm_mday Day of month [1,31].
int tm_mon Month of year [0,11].
int tm_year Years since 1900.
int tm_wday Day of week [0,6] (Sunday =0).
int tm_yday Day of year [0,365].
int tm_isdst Daylight Savings flag.
Javascript just passes those values on.
I would, however, grant you that the getDate
for day and getDay
for day-of-week is somewhat silly.
@obeselymorbid Healthy Living hasn't been available in most of the world for almost two years now
I just got
from GitHub.
How on $planet does GitHub suddenly decide that an account that exists for some years, has repositories, has comments in many bug reports that are not being marked as spam, has integrated merge requests and is member of two organizations is not a human?
… alternatively,
@loopback0 Because beaver.
@Zerosquare “Slowworm isn't a snake” is basically a meme around here in Czechia. It's the first thing most people remember about them because it was mentioned in some elementary school textbook or somewhere like that, and they are relatively common here so most people have seen some.
You've heard of “duck typing”, right? So the opposite is:
Slowworm typing: it looks like a snake, it slithers like a snake, but it isn't a snake.
@BernieTheBernie said in Azure bites:
@Bulb Interesting idea, I might try it somewhen. Depends on 's preferences.
But I see a catch: my home IP address is dynamic, and I get a fresh address every night from the vast range of t-online ip addresses. That would mean that I'd have to open the firewall for every address or do a lot of rules.
Since it's “serverless”, you are sharing the server with a lot of people that access it from all over the place, so
The last point I'd address by using the Entra authentication. In Azure, you create a security group, set it as admin and disable non-entra login.
In the .нет library you replace the credentials with Authentication=Active Directory Default
[1] in the connection string and it will pick the login from anywhere it can—environment, managed identity, visual studio or az
, so it basically just works. And the management studio supports the interactive login, so that works too. Only if you also need the sqlcmd
tool, you need magic incantation:
token_file=$(mktemp)
az account get-access-token --resource https://database.windows.net --query accessToken --output tsv | tr -d '\r\n' | iconv -f ascii -t utf-16le > "$token_file"
sqlcmd -G -P "$token_file" …# the other options…
(for Linux shell or Git Bash; I don't know powershell well enough to remember how to get the token in UTF-16 off the top of my head)
And then I wouldn't worry about just setting the firewall to the whole range or even just leaving it open altogether.
@BernieTheBernie said in Azure bites:
18 cents per day for the HDD, and 61 cents per day for SSD (both 127 GB - a smaller disk is not available)
Where did you get those prices? The calculator shows me the prices per month only, and shows Standard SSD as only twice as expensive as Standard HDD, not more than three times (€5.44/M + €0.0005/10kiops for 128 GiB HDD and €8.87/M + €0.0018/10kiops for 128 GiB SDD) — the former matches, the later does not.
@BernieTheBernie said in Azure bites:
And from the VirtualBox machine, I cannot access my cloudy serverless SqlServer because of its network security configuration (could change that, but it would also cost an IP address).
Why would it cost an IP address? The cloudy serverless sql server can be open from internet without buying a separate IP address. And if you enable AD/Entra authentication only, I wouldn't even worry about no or loose firewall much.
@Medinoc I thought nw.js was using system-provided webview library instead of lugging Chromium around like Electron, but now I see it is not the case and it does lug Chromium around.
There is yet another, newer, such tool that does use system-provided webview, https://tauri.app/.
@Zerosquare Does a horse shit on the road?
@HardwareGeek I would add that the hold appears to double as a procedure turn to align with the approach course in this case, that is any aircraft arriving from that direction has to enter the hold anyway. That might be the reason the controller expected the pilots to expect it.