meal-scheduler
ppp_thing
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meal-scheduler | ppp_thing | |
---|---|---|
3 | 3 | |
- | 7 | |
- | - | |
- | 0.0 | |
- | about 1 year ago | |
C | ||
- | BSD 3-clause "New" or "Revised" License |
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meal-scheduler
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Ask HN: Do you use an optimization solver? Which one? Why? Do you like it?
I use Minizinc in a personal toy project (https://gitlab.com/dustin-space/meal-scheduler), and GECODE or Google's ortools solver at the backend. It's used for meal planning. Unfortunately it's way way slower than I'd hope. I suspect I just have the domain not modeled efficiently. Maybe if I had a few days to put into it, and learn how to properly debug the CSP solver step by step, it might help...
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What is your “I don't care if this succeeds” project?
That sounds like a fun application, both the usage and the implementation.
I wonder if you have any interesting example data-files that could be used with the model, preferable both something small and something larger? Would be fun to test the model locally to see how it behaves.
Notes: I'm assuming here that https://gitlab.com/dustin-space/meal-scheduler/-/blob/master... is the model used.
ppp_thing
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Ask HN: Have you created programs for only your personal use?
I wrote a PPPoE client with failover so I can keep the session even when one of my gateways fails or is rebooted (this lets me do regular maintenance without interrupting my internet connection); I put it on github[1], but I doubt anyone will use it. I hope there are few people left with the scourge that is PPPoE, and my OS choice means many people would need to switch OSes to use it, so yeah. Also, I don't care to make it easy to use or to promote it, really. (I've mentioned it once or twice and did a Show HN that got less than ten votes, which I kind of expected).
I've also got my personal (network) monitoring software, some 'IoT' stuff to capture temperature and humidity data around my house, and I'm working on a ESP32 based alarm clock pulling data from iCalendar.
[1] https://github.com/russor/ppp_thing
- Show HN: PPPoE client with session handoff between redundant FreeBSD routers
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What is your “I don't care if this succeeds” project?
I just published https://github.com/russor/ppp_thing which lets me (and maybe you) failover my PPPoE session between two FreeBSD hosts, so I can do regular maintenance without losing my IP or impacting TCP sessions.
I used to let my DSL modem handle PPPoE and NAT, so failover was easy, but found out fragmented IPv6 crashed the leased modem, and the replacement modem also sucks, so bridge mode + a custom PPPoE client (but from netgraph pieces) it is. Sadly useful in 2021, because PPPoE is somehow still a thing.
What are some alternatives?
HiGHS - Linear optimization software
polybar-clockify - Control Clockify through Polybar
electron-browser-shell - A minimal, tabbed web browser with support for Chrome extensions—built on Electron.
vopono - Run applications through VPN tunnels with temporary network namespaces
listudy - Listudy - chess training server
place
Arthur - How to build your own AI art installation from scratch [Moved to: https://github.com/maxvfischer/DIY-ai-art]
fingine - A personal finance simulation engine in Rust.
singyeong - 신경 - Cloud-native messaging/pubsub with powerful routing
scraper - Nodejs web scraper. Contains a command line, docker container, terraform module and ansible roles for distributed cloud scraping. Supported databases: SQLite, MySQL, PostgreSQL. Supported headless clients: Puppeteer, Playwright, Cheerio, JSdom.
go-plugin - Golang plugin system over RPC.
tiny-snitch - an interactive firewall for inbound and outbound connections