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Since Linux 6.9, LUKS suspend stopped wiping disk-encryption keys from memory

https://mathstodon.xyz/@iblech/116769502749142438
158•IngoBlechschmid•1h ago•66 comments

Launch HN: Manufact (YC S25) – MCP Cloud

https://manufact.com
55•pzullo•2h ago•40 comments

Android Developer Verification: Threat masquerading as protection

https://f-droid.org/2026/07/01/adv-malware.html
1332•drewfax•14h ago•550 comments

PeerTube is a free, decentralized and federated video platform

https://github.com/Chocobozzz/PeerTube
141•doener•5h ago•20 comments

How to ask for help from people who don't know you

https://pradyuprasad.com/writings/how-to-ask-for-help/
117•FigurativeVoid•3h ago•16 comments

AI can't be listed as inventor on patent applications, Japan's top court rules

https://japannews.yomiuri.co.jp/science-nature/technology/20260306-314930/
206•mushstory•3h ago•85 comments

Former Microsoft dev built a 2.5KB Notepad clone

https://theguptalog.blogspot.com/2026/07/former-microsoft-dev-built-25kb-notepad.html
12•sheelagay•48m ago•3 comments

Show HN: QUALITY.md – open format/specification, agent skill, and CLI

https://getquality.md
9•craigsmitham•41m ago•3 comments

Is One Layer Enough? A Single Transformer Layer Matches Full-Parameter RL Train

https://arxiv.org/abs/2607.01232
82•tcp_handshaker•5h ago•20 comments

German button maker searched rivers of American Midwest for valuable shells

https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smithsonian-institution/how-one-german-button-maker-searched-the-r...
69•bookofjoe•4d ago•24 comments

Show HN: Mail Memories – A desktop app to rescue photos from Gmail

https://mailmemories.com
72•ltiger•3h ago•20 comments

Show HN: CLI tool for detecting non-exact code duplication with embedding models

https://github.com/rafal-qa/slopo
32•rkochanowski•2h ago•10 comments

The Egg Bandits Made a Thousand Times the Fine They Just Paid for Price Fixing

https://www.thebignewsletter.com/p/crime-pays-the-egg-bandits-made-a
183•toomuchtodo•3h ago•60 comments

Hazel (YC W24) Is Hiring for Our Largest Government Contract

https://www.ycombinator.com/companies/hazel-2/jobs/3epPWgu-full-stack-engineer-ts-sci
1•augustschen•4h ago

Kimi K2.7 Code is generally available in GitHub Copilot

https://github.blog/changelog/2026-07-01-kimi-k2-7-is-now-available-in-github-copilot/
328•unliftedq•12h ago•136 comments

The primary purpose of code review is to find code that will be hard to maintain

https://mathstodon.xyz/@mjd/115096720350507897
214•ColinWright•5h ago•119 comments

The fall of the theorem economy

https://davidbessis.substack.com/p/the-fall-of-the-theorem-economy
187•varjag•9h ago•83 comments

Show HN: A graph paper generator that renders vector PDFs in the browser

https://freegraphpaper.net/
44•lam_hg94•3h ago•9 comments

Spain Orders Blacklist of Palantir from Public and Private Companies

https://clashreport.com/world/articles/spain-orders-blacklist-of-us-tech-giant-palantir-from-publ...
67•mgh2•2h ago•2 comments

NSA tries to weaken mlkem standardisation

https://nsa.2026.action.cr.yp.to
36•SuperSandro2000•4h ago•5 comments

CursorBench 3.1

https://cursor.com/evals
133•handfuloflight•11h ago•74 comments

Show HN: Claudoro, Pomodoro timer embedded in the Claude Code statusline

https://github.com/emson/claudoro
30•emson•1d ago•25 comments

Vite+ Beta

https://voidzero.dev/posts/announcing-vite-plus-beta
185•Erenay09•5h ago•104 comments

Show HN: ZeroFS – A log-structured filesystem for S3

https://www.zerofs.net/
84•Eikon•3h ago•41 comments

WinPE as a stateless harness for Windows driver testing and fuzzing

https://bednars.me/blog/winpe-harness
60•piotrbednarsalt•3d ago•3 comments

Comparing Fable and 10 other LLMs on refactoring a LangGraph god node

https://wtf.korridzy.com/twilight-of-the-gods/
34•Korridzy•3h ago•12 comments

Germany’s Infineon opens major chip plant as EU seeks tech autonomy

https://www.rfi.fr/en/international-news/20260702-germany-s-infineon-opens-major-chip-plant-as-eu...
118•giuliomagnifico•4h ago•34 comments

What Breaks a Cell's Ribs Can Make It Stronger

https://www.quantamagazine.org/what-breaks-a-cells-ribs-can-make-it-stronger-20260629/
5•jnord•2d ago•1 comments

Senior SWE-Bench: open-source benchmark that assesses agents as senior engineers

https://senior-swe-bench.snorkel.ai/
138•matt_d•14h ago•95 comments

Asymmetric Quantization: Near-Lossless Retrieval with 97% Storage Reduction

https://www.mixedbread.com/blog/asymmetric-quant
88•breadislove•2d ago•31 comments
Open in hackernews

Garbage collection of object storage at scale

https://www.warpstream.com/blog/taking-out-the-trash-garbage-collection-of-object-storage-at-massive-scale
96•ko_pivot•1y ago

Comments

juancn•1y ago
Another possible mechanism for doing GC at scale (a variation on Asynchronous Reconciliation in the article) in some file/object store, is doing a probabilistic mark and sweep using bloom filters.

The mark phase can be done in parallel building many bloom filters for the files/objects found.

Then the bloom filters are merged (or'ed together essentially) and then a parallel sweep phase can use the bloom filter to answer the question: is this file/object live?

The bloom filter then answers either "No" with 100% certainty or "Maybe" with some probability p that depends on the parameters used for the bitset and the hash function family.

cogman10•1y ago
What does the bloom filter solve?

The expensive portion of the mark and sweep for the object store is the mark phase, not the storage of what's been marked. 100s, 1000s, or even millions of live objects wouldn't hardly take any space to keep in a remembered set.

On the other hand, querying the S3 bucket to list those 1M objects would be expensive no matter how you store the results.

But this does tickle my brain. Perhaps something akin to the generational hypotheses can be applied? Maybe it's the case that very old, very young, or very untouched objects are more likely to be garbage than not. If there's some way to divide the objects up and only look at objects whose are in "probably need to be collected" regions, then you could do minor fast sweeps semi frequently and schedule more expensive "really delete untracked stuff" infrequently.

Cicero22•1y ago
I was thinking they could use something like cloudwatch events, or something, to trigger sweeps and significantly reduce scheduled sweeps.

They could even use cost allocation tags to predict if a bucket or group of buckets should be scanned if it's growing unexpectedly. Cost isn't a perfect metric but there's definitely signal there.

juancn•1y ago
Building the set of used files or objects (which is what mark does in a mark/sweep).

Sometimes it's too expensive to mark in place, even if it's a bit that you need to write to disk and keeping a set of references may be prohibitive (or the structure holding the references is mostly/effectively immutable).

If it's all memory and mutable it doesn't (normally) really matter, but when it's not, you ideally would have some mechanism to move the code to where the data is, rather than stream the data to where the compute is (it is really wasteful for large scale data processing).

In any case, you would not be moving/scanning the files themselves, but the metadata is what you want to read for the mark phase.

The article if I understood correctly implies that the files and the metadata of the files (Kafka queues and so on) are separate, so presumably, the metadata is much much smaller than the data itself, but still potentially large.

For example if you had a large scale content addressed store (think a massive version of git's blob storage), you typically add to something like that and keep a few mutable root references to start your GC from to seed a mark/sweep.

Following the git example, the roots would be the branches, tags and reflogs, and the metadata you scan the transitive closur of the trees that are reachable from those (simplifying a bit) but not the file blobs themselves.

I use git as an example because a a CAS lends itself very well to large scale distributed systems because you can reason about it as an immutable data structure, but you can still change it effectively with sane semantics.

donavanm•1y ago
If you like big beautiful storage and probabilistic structures check out https://www.usenix.org/conference/osdi14/technical-sessions/.... The coho data folks ended up in AWS S3 a few years later.
juancn•1y ago
Thanks! I hadn't seen it and it may come handy!
deathanatos•1y ago
> Why Not Just Use a Bucket Policy?

I've heard these words so many times, it's refreshing to see someone dig into why bucket policies aren't a cure-all.

As for "Why not use synchronous deletion?" — regarding the pitfall there, what about a WAL? I.e., you WAL the deletions you want to perform into an object in the object store, perform the deletions, and then delete the WAL. If you crash and find a WAL file, you repeat the delete commands contained in the WAL.

(I've used this to handle this problem where some of the deletions are mixed: i.e., some in an object store, some in a SQL DB, etc. The object store is essentially being used as strongly consistent storage.)

(Perhaps this is essentially the same as your "delayed queue"? All I've got is an object store though, not a queue, and it's pretty useful hammer.)

telotortium•1y ago
> HN Disclaimer: WarpStream sells a drop-in replacement for Apache Kafka built directly on-top of object storage.

First time I’ve seen one of these. That’s actually a better way to advertise your product than putting it at the end.

hencq•1y ago
Yes, though I think they meant to say disclosure instead of disclaimer.
siscia•1y ago
What I see working extremely well, arguably in a setting where cost was not really an issue was a much simpler approach.

Keep compacting files at some regular cadence `t` and keep a bucket policy to delete files older than `t+delta+buffer`.

Then have an alarm for files older than `t+buffer`