eBPF Kills User-Space Security Agents [Kernel Ground Truth]
Forget user-space agents. They're dead. eBPF has arrived, attaching directly to the Linux kernel's syscall interface for security observability that attackers can't kill.
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Forget user-space agents. They're dead. eBPF has arrived, attaching directly to the Linux kernel's syscall interface for security observability that attackers can't kill.
Waiting for a yearly security check is like leaving your front door unlocked for 364 days a year. The world of software development has accelerated, and our defenses need to keep pace.
When the clock strikes 2:13 AM and production systems scream bloody murder, finding the root cause is an exercise in futility. Now, an AI-driven platform built on LangGraph and RAG aims to cut through the noise.
When the clock strikes 2:13 AM and production systems scream bloody murder, finding the root cause is an exercise in futility. Now, an AI-driven platform built on LangGraph and RAG aims to cut through the noise.
Manual deployments are dead. A simple GitHub Actions configuration file can push your React app live in about 30 seconds, eliminating tedious manual steps and freeing up valuable developer time.
Forget manually juggling BIND zone files. A new open-source project provides a containerized DNS solution, marrying DNSControl's declarative approach with CoreDNS's modern flexibility.
The AI gold rush is here, but a decades-old problem of IT-business disconnect means most companies have no idea what they're actually paying for. This lack of visibility isn't just an annoyance; it's a ticking time bomb.
Everyone thought Docker's runc was the end-all, be-all. Turns out, the tech giants have been quietly building better isolation models for years. It's time we paid attention.
Databases don't just grow; they can explode, especially with audit logs. This essential guide shows how to tame that growth with a fully automated backup and cleanup workflow.
AMD's next-generation Zen 6 CPUs are inching closer to reality, with early driver patches landing in the Linux kernel. These changes focus on power management and hint at upcoming architectural shifts.
Forget tiny pages. Btrfs is gearing up for a massive change with huge folios. This could mean better performance, but is it just more corporate jargon?
The Linux kernel just dropped a mountain of stable updates. Is this a sign of burgeoning maturity or a scramble to patch holes?
Linux's transparent huge pages have long promised performance gains but delivered uneven results. Now, developers are pushing for smarter management and reclaim.
The latest Linux kernel prepatch is raising eyebrows, not for major new features, but for a deluge of minor fixes that some argue are clogging the release pipeline. The debate: is it worth the churn this late in the game?
The Linux kernel's ongoing battle with major page fault lock contention is far from over. A recent summit revealed renewed efforts to find a lasting solution to this significant performance bottleneck.