Tag: personal
Binary packages for Gentoo
I'd read that you could get binary packages for gentoo, thus alleviating the need to compile everything. (Of course, then you lose some of the benefits of compiling everything, but you gain in speed…) Unfortunately, I mistook this with ebuilds, and never quite figured it out.
The key is to throw the -g
flag:
$ emerge -g gnumeric # which is like 'emerge --getbinpkg gnumeric'
I also learned how to update packages tonight:
$ emerge sync # to sync your mirror with the gentoo mirrors
$ emerge --update portage # if necessary
$ emerge --update system # updates core system files
$ emerge --update world # updates all packages
Gentoo for several weeks
I've had a bunch of problems with my new computer — it uses ACPI, but if I load the ACPI modules, it won't boot; if I don't load them, I have to go through contortions to get the ethernet working, and it won't power down; and a bunch of other little stuff.
So, a few weeks ago, I thought, what the heck? Why not try Gentoo? I've been reading about it since it first came out, and I remember talking with Duane about it once, and it has a reputation for both being cutting edge and stable. Heck, even Wil Wheaton's endorsing it… it can't be all bad, right?
I had a few misstarts — bad CDs, not quite getting how the chroot thing worked, problems with DNS (which I still don't understand; and Rob has them as well, so it's not just me). But once I got it installed… well, I'm impressed.
The thing about Gentoo is, it compiles everything from source. It's like Debian, in that it fetches all dependencies and installs those… but it's all source. So it's not exactly fast. But because everything is compiled, and because you setup C flags specific to your machine, what you get is incredibly optimized for your own machine. This 1.6GHz machine simply flies. And the memory usage just stays low.
I'd like to use it for my server… but I can't really take the server down at this point when it's making both my mom and myself money. But what a great system… I only wish I'd used it for the mail server at work.
Cgiapp: A PHP Class
After working on some OO classes yesterday for an application backend I'm
developing for work, I decided I needed to create a BREAD
class to make this
simpler. You know, Browse-Read-Edit-Add-Delete.
At first, I figured I'd build off of what I'd done yesterday. But then I got to
thinking (ah, thinking, my curse). I ran into the BREAD
concept originally
when investigating CGI::Application
; a number of individuals had developed
CGI::Apps
that provided this functionality. I'd discarded them usually because
they provided more functionality than I needed or because they introduced more
complexity than I was willing to tackle right then.
But once my thoughts had gone to BREAD
and CGI::App
, I started thinking how
nice it would be to have CGI::Application
for PHP. And then I thought, why
not? What prevents me from porting it? I have the source…
So, today I stayed home with Maeve, who, on the tail end of an illness,
evidently ran herself down when at daycare yesterday, and stayed home sleeping
most of the day. So, while she was resting, I sat down with a printout of the
non-POD code of CGI::App
and hammered out what I needed to do. Then, when she
fell asleep for a nap, I typed it all out and started testing. And, I'm proud to
say, it works. For an example, visit
my development site to see a
very simple, templated application in action.
B. Gates: Open Source Programmer?
I just read coverage of a panel of programming luminaries on Salon; the topic of discussion was about the state of programming. In the course of the discussion, the subject of Open Source came up. Several of the luminaries — which included architects of the Mac OS and Windows, as well as others — derided the community for basically reinventing the wheel, and wheels that need to be re-thought entirely anyways. One questioned, "Why is the idealism just about how the code is shared — what about idealism about the code itself?"
Andy Hertzfeld (who helped develop the original Mac OS) was sitting on the panel, and jumped in. He has been working with Eazel and Chandler in recent years, and thus has an inside view of open source. His initial comment: "It's because they want people to use the stuff!" Basically, they program Windows- or Mac-like interfaces because then people will be willing to try it out. They program office suites because people "need" an office suite to be productive. Such offerings hook them into the OSS movement.
Another participant, Dan Bricklin (of VisiCalc, a pioneering spreadsheet program) shared an anecdote from Bill Gates. Evidently, Gates gave an interview (with Lammers — look up this person) in which he explained that his work on MS's BASIC compiler was done by looking at how other programmers had accomplished the task. In his own words, "The best way to prepare is to write programs, and to study great programs that other people have written. In my case, I went to the garbage cans at the Computer Science Center and I fished out listings of their operating systems."
So basically, Gates was an early adopter of OSS methodologies… Interesting to see that today he's so protective of MS code. Guess money might do that to you.
POD for PHP
I was lamenting at work the other day that now that I've discovered OO and templating with PHP, the only major feature missing for me is a way to easily document my programs. I'm a big fan of perl's POD, and use it fairly extensively, even for simple scripts — it's a way to provide a quick manual without needing to worry too much about how to format it.
So, it hit me on the way home Friday night: what prevents me from using POD in multiline comments of PHP scripts? I thought I'd give it a try when I got home.
First I googled for 'POD for PHP', and found a link to perlmongers where somebody recounted seeing that exact thing done, and how nicely it worked.
Then I tried it… and it indeed worked. So, basically, I've got all the tools I love from perl in PHP, one of which is borrowed directly from the language!
Scrap that. We're gonna' use PHP
I've been researching and coding for a couple months now with the decision that
I'd rewrite the family website/portal using mod_perl
with CGI::Application
.
I still like the idea, but a couple things recently have made me rethink it.
For starters, the perl DBI is a bit of a pain to program. At work, I've become very accustomed to using PEAR's DB library, and while it's in many ways derived from perl's DBI, it's much simpler to use.
Then there's the whole HTML::Template
debacle. There's several ways in which
to write the templates, but they don't all work in all situations, and, it seems
they're a bit limited. We've started using PHP's Smarty at work, and it's much
more intuitive, a wee bit more consistent, and almost infinitely more
extendable. I could go the Template::Toolkit
route for perl, but that's almost
like learning another whole language.
Then, there's the way objects work in perl versus PHP. I've discovered that PHP objects are very easy and very extendable. I wouldn't have found them half as easy, however, if I hadn't already been doing object oriented programming in perl. One major difference, however, is how easy it is to create new attributes on the fly, and the syntax is much easier and cleaner.
Add to that the fact that if you want to dynamically require modules in perl,
you have to go through some significant, often unsurmountable, hoops. So you
can't easily have dynamic objects of dynamically defined classes. In PHP,
though, you can require_once
or include_once
at any time without even
thinking.
The final straw, however, was when I did my first OO application in PHP this
past week. I hammered it out in a matter of an hour or so. Then I rewrote it to
incorporate Smarty in around an hour. And it all worked easily. Then I wrote a
form-handling libary in just over two hours that worked immediately — and made
it possible for me to write a several screen application in a matter of an hour,
complete with form, form validation, and database calls. Doing the same with
CGI::Application
took me hours, if not days.
So, my idea is this: port CGI::Application
to PHP. I love the concept of
CGI::App
— it's exactly how I want to program, and I think it's solid.
However, by porting it to PHP, I automatically have session and cookie support,
and database support is only a few lines of code away when I use PEAR; I'll add
Smarty as the template toolkit of choice, but make it easy to override the
template methods to utilize . I get a nice MVC-style application template, but
one that makes developing quickie applications truly a snap.
This falls under the "right-tool-for-the-job" category; perl, while a wonderful language, and with a large tradition as a CGI language, was not developed for the web as PHP was. PHP just makes more sense in this instance. And I won't be abandoning perl by any stretch; I still use it daily at work and at home for solving any number of tasks from automated backups to checking server availability to keeping my ethernet connection alive. But I have real strengths as a PHP developer, and it would be a shame not to use those strengths with our home website.
PHP Class Tips
We're starting to use OO in our PHP at work. I discovered when I started using it why I'd been having problems wrapping my head around some of the applications I've been programming lately: I've become accustomed in Perl to using an OO framework. Suddenly, programming in PHP was much easier.
There's a few things that are different, however. It appears that you cannot pass objects in object attributes, and then reference them like thus:
$object->db>query($sql)
PHP doesn't like that kind of syntax (at least not in versions 4.x). Instead, you have to pass a reference to the object in the attribute, then set a temporary variable to that reference whenever you wish to use it:
$object->db =& $db;
...
$db = $object->db;
$res = $db->query($sql);
What if you want to inherit from another class and extend one of the methods? In
other words, you want to use the method from the parent class, but you want to
do some additional items with it? Simple: use parent
:
function method1()
{
/* do some pre-processing */
parent::method1(); // Do the parent's version of the method
/* do some more stuff here */
}
Update:
Actually, you can reference objects when they are attributes of another object; you just have to define the references in the correct order:
$db =& DB::connect('dsn');
$this->db =& $db;
...
$res = $this->db->query($sql);
I've tested the above syntax with both PEAR's DB and with Smarty, and it works without issue.
Making a RAID array from the command line
Last night, I created my first RAID array from the commandline. It was quite simple, I discovered.
- Create your partitions using fstab. Remember, primary partitions must be created before extended partitions.
- Look in
/proc/partions
and note the new partition IDs. - Edit
/etc/raidtab
and create a new RAID array. If unsure of the syntax, look up the Linux Software RAID HOWTO for more details. - Type
mkraid /dev/md?
, where?
is the id of the RAID device you just entered in/etc/raidtab
. - Format the new RAID device with your favorite filesystem, assign it a mount point, and start using it!
I was impressed with how easy it was; the choices that the Anaconda installer present for creating a RAID array made it seem like the underlying process must be difficult, when in fact it may have been almost the same complexity if not easier.
Learn something new everyday
Linux.com has had a running series on CLI commands for Newbies. Most of it has been very basic, but there are still a few gems within. For instance, today I was introduced to apropos
and whatis
. Give a search term to the former, and it will list all programs in which the search term is found in the manpages; give a program name to the latter, and it will tell you which man page addresses it.
Random thoughts of violence
I began the day with sudden images and body remembrances of an escrima or arnis drill Morgan used to teach during weapons class years ago — it utilizes a short stick or wakazashi in one hand, the other hand free, and consists of five steps on each side; when you finish one side, you do the other, because the drill is done with a partner.
I haven't done the drill for years, but I remembered all the nuances, all the little tips and secrets Morgan showed me over the year or two he continued teaching it. And I wanted desperately to do it with someone right that moment as I was getting out of bed so that I wouldn't lose it. But, of course, I had no such opportunity. The movement is still tracing its way through my body.
And this evening, we watched Fight Club. I still remember watching it in the theater, and how it affected me then — and it affects me in many of the same ways now. There's some cultural references I 'get' more now — references to Ikea, and now I understand groups and guided meditation and therapy better. And there's new references, too — the image of the buildings falling is much different now that the WTC buildings have been viewed collapsing.
But the message, the message is still the same, still present. Do things own us, or do we own them? What do I most want to do before I die, and am I doing it? These are big questions for a film to raise, and I'm still surprised that Fight Club remains such a huge hit and success because of them. And they're not necessarily buried in the film — though I can see how many people might simply glorify the violence in the film, and pass over the message. I find the violence is a part of the message — can you teach yourself to live with pain, that pain is transient and ceases? can you learn to stop living in fear?
So my day was marked by violence, beginning and end. The middle was all consumer fluff. And hedonism. But hey, that's okay, too.