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Who will buy your services if you fire us all?

https://carette.xyz/posts/who_will_buy_your_services/
100•LucidLynx•1h ago•70 comments

Anthropic acquires Stainless

https://www.anthropic.com/news/anthropic-acquires-stainless
296•tomeraberbach•5h ago•210 comments

Hyperpolyglot Lisp: Common Lisp, Racket, Clojure, Emacs Lisp

https://hyperpolyglot.org/lisp
79•veqq•2h ago•13 comments

We stopped AI bot spam in our GitHub repo using Git's –author flag

https://archestra.ai/blog/only-responsible-ai
358•ildari•7h ago•172 comments

We let AIs run radio stations

https://andonlabs.com/blog/andon-fm
92•lukaspetersson•4h ago•102 comments

Show HN: Files.md – Open-source alternative to Obsidian

https://github.com/zakirullin/files.md
484•zakirullin•8h ago•253 comments

The Quiet Renovation at Bitwarden

https://blog.ppb1701.com/the-quiet-renovation-at-bitwarden
433•DaSHacka•2d ago•202 comments

Elon Musk has lost his lawsuit against Sam Altman and OpenAI

https://techcrunch.com/2026/05/18/elon-musk-has-lost-his-lawsuit-against-sam-altman-and-openai/
636•nycdatasci•4h ago•330 comments

Agora-1: The Multi-Agent World Model

https://odyssey.ml/introducing-agora-1
54•olivercameron•3h ago•14 comments

Understanding Singleflight in Go

https://www.codingexplorations.com/blog/understanding-singleflight-in-golang-a-solution-for-elimi...
32•ghostbit•2d ago•2 comments

The FBI Wants to Buy Nationwide Access to License Plate Readers

https://www.404media.co/the-fbi-wants-to-buy-nationwide-access-to-license-plate-readers/
137•cdrnsf•2h ago•52 comments

Designing an FPGA Calculator from Scratch

https://baltazarstudios.com/calculator/
20•zdw•21h ago•1 comments

The Fil-C Optimized Calling Convention

https://fil-c.org/calling_convention
85•pizlonator•2d ago•15 comments

Iran starts Bitcoin-backed ship insurance for Hormuz strait

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2026-05-18/iran-starts-bitcoin-backed-shipping-insurance-...
203•srameshc•5h ago•291 comments

Show HN: We missed Winamp, so we built an audio player for macOS

https://www.advanced-research.net/180db
47•surganov•3h ago•38 comments

Cutting inference cold starts by 40x with LP, FUSE, C/R, and CUDA-checkpoint

https://modal.com/blog/truly-serverless-gpus
57•charles_irl•4h ago•13 comments

Shutterstock to pay $35M over hard-to-cancel subscriptions

https://www.ftc.gov/news-events/news/press-releases/2026/05/shutterstock-pay-35-million-settle-ft...
71•Lihh27•2h ago•30 comments

Two computers, one monitor, zero fiddling (2025)

https://alexplescan.com/posts/2025/08/16/kvm/
131•ankitg12•2d ago•79 comments

Project Glasswing: what Mythos showed us

https://blog.cloudflare.com/cyber-frontier-models/
250•Fysi•8h ago•90 comments

loopmaster – Livecoding Music IDE

https://loopmaster.xyz/
29•stagas•3h ago•11 comments

The Futility of Lava Lamps: What Random Means

https://loup-vaillant.fr/articles/lava-lamps-and-randomness
8•birdculture•1d ago•0 comments

Haiku OS runs on M1 Macs now

https://discuss.haiku-os.org/t/my-haiku-arm64-progress/19044?page=2
227•tekkertje•3h ago•77 comments

Alignment pretraining: AI discourse creates self-fulfilling (mis)alignment

https://arxiv.org/abs/2601.10160
5•anigbrowl•57m ago•1 comments

What Is Date:Italy?

http://aesthetikx.info/blog/date_italy.html
115•jollyjerry•2d ago•45 comments

Stratum: System-Hardware Co-Design with 3D-Stackable DRAM for Efficient Moe

https://dl.acm.org/doi/10.1145/3725843.3756043
13•rbanffy•3d ago•4 comments

Voice AI Systems Are Vulnerable to Hidden Audio Attacks

https://spectrum.ieee.org/voice-ai-audio-attacks
98•SVI•10h ago•28 comments

I 3D Printed Origami [video]

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FNVBK7-h9Fs
48•Teever•2d ago•9 comments

Learn Harness Engineering

https://walkinglabs.github.io/learn-harness-engineering/en/
109•redbell•10h ago•11 comments

Mocked by a scandal sheet, Kierkegaard endured months of personal attacks

https://www.plough.com/en/topics/faith/discipleship/when-kierkegaard-got-cancelled
81•bookofjoe•10h ago•43 comments

Qwen 3.7 Preview

https://twitter.com/Alibaba_Qwen/status/2056403591464984753
187•theanonymousone•6h ago•70 comments
Open in hackernews

Pglocks.org

https://pglocks.org/
80•hnasr•1y ago

Comments

whilenot-dev•1y ago
I'm a bit lost here.

Locking is a challenging problem in complex systems. Is this list to be interpreted as a "TODO: get rid of locking conflicts in future releases" or more a "NOTE: be aware there are known conflicts that will not change - find ways to work around them"?

EDIT: Also, is the creation of this list an automated or a manual effort?

tux3•1y ago
I think this is intended as educational material, not a list of things to fix.

The locks are here by necessity, it is not so easy at all to get rid of them. And even in special cases where it is possible, the complexity you have to introduce is not to be taken lightly...

If even a tenth of these disapppeared, it would be incredible, in a very surprising way.

atombender•1y ago
The creator looks like a developer and teacher, not a Postgres core team member. So I assume this is for documentation purposes.

I actually like this a lot, as there isn't a single place in the Postgres documentation that lists all the possible locks; it's spread out all over. Having a quick reference for what kinds of commands you'd be blocking with your transaction is valuable.

It's pretty evident that the pages have been programmatically generated, but I'd love know what it's generated from. I think you can derive this information from the documentation, but not sure if you can do it in an automated way without an LLM.

braiamp•1y ago
> there isn't a single place in the Postgres documentation that lists all the possible locks

Did you read this page? https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/explicit-locking.htm...

atombender•1y ago
That's a great page, but it has several issues.

First, it isn't complete; as I said, the locking behaviour is spread out all over the Postgres documentation. For example, that page doesn't list what locks DROP INDEX takes. To find that out, you have to go to the documentation page for that command and read it carefully. In fact, really carefully — the locking behaviour is only documented under the section about CONCURRENTLY.

The page also doesn't list what possible commands are then blocked. Locks interact in subtle (and incorrectly named!) ways that are explained in the tables on that page ("Conflicting lock modes"), so to understand if something will block something else you have to look at the two commands you are curious about and then look at how their locks interact.

gulcin_xata•12mo ago
I agree, it is not so straightforward to find out.
braiamp•1y ago
These are database locks, which means that depending which arrives first, the later transaction has to wait till the first one finishes to complete. These locks are about SQL commands and which commands can run concurrently with the others. There's a graph here of how that looks like https://pankrat.github.io/2015/django-migrations-without-dow...

Usually for maximum performance (minimum latency, maximum throughput) you want to have operations not lock each other, unless absolutely necessary, in which case you want them to be short.

whilenot-dev•1y ago
You make it sound like the conflict is just affecting performance and won't result in a deadlock. So it's for performance aware postgres clients/users, and not for postgres developers?
andyferris•1y ago
It is a guide for developers using postgres as a client, who need to write systems that don't deadlock, are performant and are correct. These are the (rather sharp) tools that postgres provides for doing so (or else you can use e.g. serializable isolation and optimistic concurrency, but in my experience that has too many false positives and bail out rather eagerly, whereas these tools let you be very precise and granular).
mebcitto•1y ago
Other relevant talks/blogs that I found really useful for understanding Postgres locks are:

* Unlocking the Postgres Lock Manager by Bruce Momjian: https://momjian.us/main/writings/pgsql/locking.pdf

* Anatomy of table-level locks by Gulcin Yildirim Jelinek: https://xata.io/blog/anatomy-of-locks

pasxizeis•1y ago
Shameless plug: I wrote a tool[1] that executes a given migration against a test database (e.g. in your CI) and reports back what locks it acquired.

The rationale being to have a "lock diagnostics report" commented in your PR's migration file.

It's a prototype and has a few rough edges and missing functionality, but feedback is more than welcome.

[1] https://github.com/agis/pglockanalyze

jononor•1y ago
Very practical! Locking is one of the things that can really bite when doing migrations.