le9-patch
keyboard
le9-patch | keyboard | |
---|---|---|
18 | 28 | |
184 | 3,704 | |
- | - | |
1.8 | 0.0 | |
12 months ago | about 2 months ago | |
Python | Python | |
Creative Commons Zero v1.0 Universal | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
le9-patch
- le9-patch prevents system freezes on low-end systems
-
zram: swappiness, vfs_cache_pressure, page-cluster, dirty_ratio and dirty_background_ratio settings for gaming machines with HDD and low RAM?
Also, are you using a stock kernel? Try using this patchset https://github.com/hakavlad/le9-patch and more specifically set this
-
Does Linux’s memory management suck?
This kernel patch work really well: https://github.com/hakavlad/le9-patch/
- le9 / google mglru patch in pop os kernel
-
The case of the programs that were launched with impossible command line options
Oh that’s a known problem. There are many patch sets floating around that fix it by triggering the OOM killer when the system is thrashing: https://github.com/hakavlad/le9-patch
I’ve never ran into this specific problem back when I was daily driving desktop Linux, but I did run into 1000 similar ones that needed bandaid solutions. It’s death of a thousand cuts: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=28490753
-
Help me out here, why does Windows 10 handle my low memory situation better than Linux (so far)? How do I fix it?
I actually do use the Zen kernel already. If you are already using the zen kernel , make sure to use the latest one which has le9 patches , imho this patch can Improve user experience in tight memory situations. Check this https://github.com/hakavlad/le9-patch, saw many people praise this , but ymmv. Best of luck
-
Moving Google Toward the Mainline
- Limit the amount of thrashing or protect some pages from being reclaimed. This has been proposed by Google first and several other people since then, but AFAIK it has never been implemented in the mainline kernel.
Regarding the latter solution, there is a patchset called le9-patch[1] that is included in some alternative Linux kernels and it should be relatively safe to use.
[1]: https://github.com/hakavlad/le9-patch
- Is there a way to make EndeavourOS [XCFE] faster in a laptop with 2GB ram?
- I don't understand RAM resource management on Linux
-
nohang: A sophisticated low memory handler for Linux
Patch i was talking about le9-patch. it's only a proof of concept with very rough edges, but consider it isn't written by an experienced kernel developer with deep knowledge of memory subsystem.
keyboard
- Logging every action a user makes?
-
Run when key is pressed
check out the docs here https://github.com/boppreh/keyboard
-
Trying to block all inputs except a few
You can install the keyboard library, then do keyboard.wait('enter').
-
Python Keyboard: Its installed but module cant be found
Name: keyboard Version: 0.13.5 Summary: Hook and simulate keyboard events on Windows and Linux Home-page: https://github.com/boppreh/keyboard Author: BoppreH Author-email: [email protected] License: MIT Location: /home/me/.local/lib/python3.10/site-packages Requires: Required-by:
- control panel targeting my program
-
GPT-3 reveals my full name to anybody who asks. Can I do anything?
LOL, here you go
-
How to stop a while loop by inputting a keypress
I'm trying to create an autoclicker using the pyautogui library. I want to create a fail safe for the user to break out of the auto clicker in case the cursor is not able to be moved and the user can't stop the program. I'm using the keyboard library to implement a hotkey to stop the auto clicker from running, but I'm not getting the intended behavior. The click() function is only executed once and the program quits. I'm on a Arch Linux, and gave the program root privileges as mentioned in the readme of keyboard
-
Code without modules?
As an example here is how the keyboard module does it: https://github.com/boppreh/keyboard/blob/master/keyboard/_winmouse.py
-
Cross-platform hotkeys and hotstrings?
If you needed a cross-platform solution today, I would recommend looking into Python and some of its related ecosystem, such as the keyboard package, which provides cross-platform hotkey support and keyboard automation, including 'word listeners' and its companion module mouse.
-
Assigning functions to keyboard keys IN PYTHON
And according to this issue, there's no support for key suppression in the Linux version of keyboard.
What are some alternatives?
nohang - A sophisticated low memory handler for Linux
PyUserInput - A module for cross-platform control of the mouse and keyboard in python that is simple to install and use.
earlyoom - earlyoom - Early OOM Daemon for Linux
scapy - Scapy: the Python-based interactive packet manipulation program & library.
oomd - A userspace out-of-memory killer
pySerial - Python serial port access library
ZenStates-Linux - Dynamically edit AMD Ryzen processor P-States
wifi
prelockd - Lock executables and shared libraries in memory to improve system responsiveness under low-memory conditions
Pingo - THIS IS A FORK! The main repo is at the pingo-io organization
darling - Darwin/macOS emulation layer for Linux
mouse - Hook and simulate global mouse events in pure Python