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The Lounge What is on Your Mind? Popularity-Boost for the POSIX-Shell in the Era of Containerized Computing? Post 303028311 by stomp on Friday 4th of January 2019 08:17:28 AM
Old 01-04-2019
Popularity-Boost for the POSIX-Shell in the Era of Containerized Computing?

Not even thinking that POSIX-Shell is deprecated, but I like working with bash very much, because of it's increased comfort and advanced functions. And in my world here it's available everywhere as default.

Working with kubernetes now, it seems there is a paradigm shift in terms of resources. Small is beautiful is one old and new slogan here. Faster to backup, Faster to set up, Less I/O. A popular linux distribution for containers is alpine linux: Default Installed Image size: ~5 MB. Based on busybox and musl.

With kubernetes(or with other container technology) you can use resources far more effectively and that's why small resource footprint gains you really much in terms of how many applications can I run on the cluster?

Want to install bash? Nearly Triples space usage of that whole system. So size really matters...

Debian/Ubuntu docker base images are at 80-120 MB with my final app images(small apps) around 200-400 MB.
 

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gnuift(1)						      General Commands Manual							 gnuift(1)

NAME
gnuift -- GNU Image Finding Tool - index and search images by content DESCRIPTION
This manual page documents briefly the gnuift and gift-* commands. This manual page was written for the Debian distribution because the original program does not have a manual page. The GIFT (the GNU Image-Finding Tool) is a Content Based Image Retrieval System (CBIRS). It enables you to do Query By Example on images, giving you the opportunity to improve query results by relevance feedback. For processing your queries the program relies entirely on the content of the images, freeing you from the need to annotate all images before querying the collection. The GIFT comes with a tool which lets you index whole directory trees containing images in one go. You then can use the GIFT server and its client, to browse your own image collections. The GIFT is an open framework for content-based image retrieval. We explicitly have taken into account the possibility of adding new ways of querying to the framework. Our communication protocol for client-server communication, MRML, is XML based and fully documented (http://www.mrml.net). This aims at promoting code reuse among researchers and application developers. The current version of the GIFT can be seen in action at http://viper.unige.ch/demo/ The GIFT (ex Viper) is the result of a research effort at the Vision Group at the CUI (computer science center) of the University of Geneva (see http://vision.unige.ch/). This cutting-edge research has been the subject of several publications and conference talks. Details can be found at http://viper.unige.ch/. SEE ALSO
The gnuift-doc package contains reference manuals, configuration hints and further information. AUTHOR
This manual page was written by Robert Jordens jordens@debian.org for the Debian system (but may be used by others). Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the GNU General Public License, Version 2. On Debian systems, the full text of this license can be found in the file /usr/share/common-licenses/GPL-2. gnuift(1)
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