They will try until it passes. And if it’s stopped in the courts they will try again.
They will try until it passes. And if it’s stopped in the courts they will try again.
No, it was withdrawn, removed from the agenda so there was no vote, now it’s back on.
Modern C compilers have a lot of features you can use to check for example for memory errors. Rusts borrow-checker is much stricter as it’s designed to be part of the language, but for low-level code like the Linux kernel you’ll end up having to use Rust’s unsafe
feature on a lot of code to do things from talking to actual hardware to just implementing certain data structures and then Rust is about as good as C.
Lots of categories which Rust doesn’t prevent, and in the kernel you’ll end up with a lot of unsafe
Rust, so it can’t guarantee memory-safety in all cases.
You don’t need the v, it just means verbose and lists the extracted files.
Whenever I open Nano basically all the commands it has are listed at the bottom, for small things it’s perfectly fine.