A Basil Plant
InfoSec Person | Alt-Account#2
- 3 Posts
- 7 Comments
A Basil Plant@lemmy.worldOPto
Linux@lemmy.ml•[OC] Reviving and Advancing Page Cache Attacks on Linux (My first publication as a PhD student!)
2·25 days agoMy website’s the one linked in this post: https://snee.la/
My email is at the contact page: https://snee.la/contact/
sneela [at] tugraz [dot] at
A Basil Plant@lemmy.worldOPto
Linux@lemmy.ml•[OC] Reviving and Advancing Page Cache Attacks on Linux (My first publication as a PhD student!)
1·25 days agoI’ll be sure to reach out if I find myself being unable to replicate it.
No worries, and good luck! My email can be found on my website if you want it :D
I wasn’t even talking about tikzplotlib. It’s just that pgf backend is now supported by matplotlib and you can produce pgf files with.
Ah… I’ve think I’ve heard of it, but I never really registered that. Thanks for the info :D
A Basil Plant@lemmy.worldOPto
Linux@lemmy.ml•[OC] Reviving and Advancing Page Cache Attacks on Linux (My first publication as a PhD student!)
4·25 days agoI could give you the tikz source of Fig 2 if you’d like. The patterns and colors of the plots took me almost a day to choose. I wanted to go for a color-blind friendly pallette and keep it looking still snazzy. (https://github.com/simon-pfahler/colorblind)
I’m familiar with matplotlib -> PGFplots (using the Python tikzplotlib library). Unfortunately, I’ve decided against using it for the paper as it produces quite unmanageable outputs. Especially if I rerun experiments + with new data, and later want to change patterns, colors… It was always more of a hassle. I used it for my Master’s thesis.
Instead, Python program -> show plot -> if okay, generate CSV.
In LaTeX, have PGFplot code which reads CSV file and generates the data that way. Much, much easier to maintain.
A Basil Plant@lemmy.worldOPto
Linux@lemmy.ml•[OC] Reviving and Advancing Page Cache Attacks on Linux (My first publication as a PhD student!)
9·25 days agoThanks for your words!
Yes! We use TikZ for the diagrams, which can be a nightmare sometimes… but it gets better the more I use it.
Regarding the plots, we use PGFplots. I often use matplotlib for quick plots while running experiments, but the paper itself uses PGFplots with the data in a CSV for that sweet, sweet scaling when you zoom in.
Thank you for the comment!
Most of the beautiful hardwork was done by the store - I just pointed, zoomed, focused, and shot. It doesn’t feel like I did much to the already existing grandeur.
There’s a pretty cool video about it here:
https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2022/aug/04/magnificent-jellyfish-found-off-coast-of-papua-new-guinea-sparks-interest-among-researchers (YouTube link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tpaGYqE7dPA)
AFAICT, it’s the second sighting of this jellyfish.
The original video (without edits) is on Facebook 🤮: https://www.facebook.com/watch/?v=253522076865770




Just purchased a server license (for life). Not only is this update jam packed full of nice features, but a lot of their updates are. I’ve been self-hosting it (on a VPS) for the past year and it’s about time I supported them