Dusty Pomerleau
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Dusty Pomerleau
@dpom.bsky.social
Web hobbyist • Leptos, Axum

(he/him)
Reposted by Dusty Pomerleau
TIL: serde's borrowing can be treacherous

yossarian.net/til/post/ser...
TIL: serde's borrowing can be treacherous
yossarian.net
December 25, 2025 at 10:01 PM
Reposted by Dusty Pomerleau
Package managers keep using git as a database, it never works out.

https://nesbitt.io/2025/12/24/package-managers-keep-using-git-as-a-database.html
Package managers keep using git as a database, it never works out
Using git as a database is a seductive idea. You get version history for free. Pull requests give you a review workflow. It’s distributed by design. GitHub will host it for free. Everyone already knows how to use it. Package managers keep falling for this. And it keeps not working out. ## Cargo The crates.io index started as a git repository. Every Cargo client cloned it. This worked fine when the registry was small, but the index kept growing. Users would see progress bars like “Resolving deltas: 74.01%, (64415/95919)” hanging for ages, the visible symptom of Cargo’s libgit2 library grinding through delta resolution on a repository with thousands of historic commits. The problem was worst in CI. Stateless environments would download the full index, use a tiny fraction of it, and throw it away. Every build, every time. RFC 2789 introduced a sparse HTTP protocol. Instead of cloning the whole index, Cargo now fetches files directly over HTTPS, downloading only the metadata for dependencies your project actually uses. (This is the “full index replication vs on-demand queries” tradeoff in action.) By April 2025, 99% of crates.io requests came from Cargo versions where sparse is the default. The git index still exists, still growing by thousands of commits per day, but most users never touch it. ## Homebrew GitHub explicitly asked Homebrew to stop using shallow clones. Updating them was “an extremely expensive operation” due to the tree layout and traffic of homebrew-core and homebrew-cask. Users were downloading 331MB just to unshallow homebrew-core. The .git folder approached 1GB on some machines. Every `brew update` meant waiting for git to grind through delta resolution. Homebrew 4.0.0 in February 2023 switched to JSON downloads for tap updates. The reasoning was blunt: “they are expensive to git fetch and git clone and GitHub would rather we didn’t do that… they are slow to git fetch and git clone and this provides a bad experience to end users.” Auto-updates now run every 24 hours instead of every 5 minutes, and they’re much faster because there’s no git fetch involved. ## CocoaPods CocoaPods is the package manager for iOS and macOS development. It hit the limits hard. The Specs repo grew to hundreds of thousands of podspecs across a deeply nested directory structure. Cloning took minutes. Updating took minutes. CI time vanished into git operations. GitHub imposed CPU rate limits. The culprit was shallow clones, which force GitHub’s servers to compute which objects the client already has. The team tried various band-aids: stopping auto-fetch on `pod install`, converting shallow clones to full clones, sharding the repository. The CocoaPods blog captured it well: “Git was invented at a time when ‘slow network’ and ‘no backups’ were legitimate design concerns. Running endless builds as part of continuous integration wasn’t commonplace.” CocoaPods 1.8 gave up on git entirely for most users. A CDN became the default, serving podspec files directly over HTTP. The migration saved users about a gigabyte of disk space and made `pod install` nearly instant for new setups. ## Go modules Grab’s engineering team went from 18 minutes for `go get` to 12 seconds after deploying a module proxy. That’s not a typo. Eighteen minutes down to twelve seconds. The problem was that `go get` needed to fetch each dependency’s source code just to read its go.mod file and resolve transitive dependencies. Cloning entire repositories to get a single file. Go had security concerns too. The original design wanted to remove version control tools entirely because “these fragment the ecosystem: packages developed using Bazaar or Fossil, for example, are effectively unavailable to users who cannot or choose not to install these tools.” Beyond fragmentation, the Go team worried about security bugs in version control systems becoming security bugs in `go get`. You’re not just importing code; you’re importing the attack surface of every VCS tool on the developer’s machine. GOPROXY became the default in Go 1.13. The proxy serves source archives and go.mod files independently over HTTP. Go also introduced a checksum database (sumdb) that records cryptographic hashes of module contents. This protects against force pushes silently changing tagged releases, and ensures modules remain available even if the original repository is deleted. ## Beyond package managers The same pattern shows up wherever developers try to use git as a database. Git-based wikis like Gollum (used by GitHub and GitLab) become “somewhat too slow to be usable” at scale. Browsing directory structure takes seconds per click. Loading pages takes longer. GitLab plans to move away from Gollum entirely. Git-based CMS platforms like Decap hit GitHub’s API rate limits. A Decap project on GitHub scales to about 10,000 entries if you have a lot of collection relations. A new user with an empty cache makes a request per entry to populate it, burning through the 5,000 request limit quickly. If your site has lots of content or updates frequently, use a database instead. Even GitOps tools that embrace git as a source of truth have to work around its limitations. ArgoCD’s repo server can run out of disk space cloning repositories. A single commit invalidates the cache for all applications in that repo. Large monorepos need special scaling considerations. ## The pattern The hosting problems are symptoms. The underlying issue is that git inherits filesystem limitations, and filesystems make terrible databases. **Directory limits.** Directories with too many files become slow. CocoaPods had 16,000 pod directories in a single Specs folder, requiring huge tree objects and expensive computation. Their fix was hash-based sharding: split directories by the first few characters of a hashed name, so no single directory has too many entries. Git itself does this internally with its objects folder, splitting into 256 subdirectories. You’re reinventing B-trees, badly. **Case sensitivity.** Git is case-sensitive, but macOS and Windows filesystems typically aren’t. Check out a repo containing both `File.txt` and `file.txt` on Windows, and the second overwrites the first. Azure DevOps had to add server-side enforcement to block pushes with case-conflicting paths. **Path length limits.** Windows restricts paths to 260 characters, a constraint dating back to DOS. Git supports longer paths, but Git for Windows inherits the OS limitation. This is painful with deeply nested node_modules directories, where `git status` fails with “Filename too long” errors. **Missing database features.** Databases have CHECK constraints and UNIQUE constraints; git has nothing, so every package manager builds its own validation layer. Databases have locking; git doesn’t. Databases have indexes for queries like “all packages depending on X”; with git you either traverse every file or build your own index. Databases have migrations for schema changes; git has “rewrite history and force everyone to re-clone.” The progression is predictable. Start with a flat directory of files. Hit filesystem limits. Implement sharding. Hit cross-platform issues. Build server-side enforcement. Build custom indexes. Eventually give up and use HTTP or an actual database. You’ve built a worse version of what databases already provide, spread across git hooks, CI pipelines, and bespoke tooling. None of this means git is bad. Git excels at what it was designed for: distributed collaboration on source code, with branching, merging, and offline work. The problem is using it for something else entirely. Package registries need fast point queries for metadata. Git gives you a full-document sync protocol when you need a key-value lookup. If you’re building a package manager and git-as-index seems appealing, look at Cargo, Homebrew, CocoaPods, Go. They all had to build workarounds as they grew, causing pain for users and maintainers. The pull request workflow is nice. The version history is nice. You will hit the same walls they did.
nesbitt.io
December 24, 2025 at 4:49 PM
The final ghost you must face is The Ghost of Christmas NULL:
December 25, 2025 at 9:14 AM
Reposted by Dusty Pomerleau
"The miracle of birth is so incredibly beautiful to behold. Do you know the only thing that could make it better? Percussion. Nothing calms one’s stress and eases the pain of delivering a baby more than a little boy standing nearby absolutely shredding on his drum."
This Woman in Labor Is Gonna Love My Drumming
The miracle of birth is so incredibly beautiful to behold. Do you know the only thing that could make it better? Percussion. Nothing calms one’s st...
buff.ly
December 24, 2025 at 2:20 AM
Reposted by Dusty Pomerleau
My first blog post just reached the front page of Hacker News.

I'm starting a series for developers to build a practical mental model of how Linux works through hands-on experiments: serversfor.dev/linux-inside...

What Linux topic would you want explained this way?
LinkedIn
This link will take you to a page that’s not on LinkedIn
lnkd.in
December 11, 2025 at 1:33 PM
Reposted by Dusty Pomerleau
Just published a new #rustlang reqwest release candidate: v0.13.0-rc.1.

This has some breaking changes, the biggest was switching to rustls by default.

I'd appreciate if you gave it a spin 🙏

github.com/seanmonstar/...
Release v0.13.0-rc.1 · seanmonstar/reqwest
👀 Discussion here if you give it try, thanks! Main breaking changes rustls is now default instead of native-tls rustls provider defaults to aws-lc instead of ring (rustls-no-provider exists if you...
github.com
December 23, 2025 at 10:03 PM
My brain got halfway to "Deadmau5 dropping new single" before my eyes caught up... I guess we see what we want to see :)
December 23, 2025 at 9:32 AM
Reposted by Dusty Pomerleau
Growth itself is not a mission, but a metric divorced from genuine purpose.

Peace as a mission connects domestic renewal with global responsibility – and serves as the potential engine for economic transformation.

Read more in our latest for Project Syndicate ➡️ buff.ly/Jv2ZeSc
December 19, 2025 at 4:52 PM
Reposted by Dusty Pomerleau
It turns out "I'm excited for my hard-offline staycation" has the same cosmic consequences as a movie cop saying "it's my last case before retirement"
December 22, 2025 at 11:45 PM
Reposted by Dusty Pomerleau
just realized only now that "graphite" means "writing rock"
December 21, 2025 at 2:05 AM
Reposted by Dusty Pomerleau
It’s also not been widely enough noted that borrow checking based on periods of code execution and borrow checking based on sets of memory locations are isomorphic, that’s at least interesting.
December 21, 2025 at 11:26 AM
Reposted by Dusty Pomerleau
Nice!
I love animation experiments that react to the mouse position.
Here’s something I made a few months ago that I really like.

codepen.io/amit_sheen/f...
December 19, 2025 at 2:38 AM
At some point I decided I wanted to find out what a `TokenStream' really is, under the hood. I still don't know. That stuff is turtles all the way down. I got to the part about RPC and a brick came through my window, with a note that said "just leave it."
December 18, 2025 at 12:43 PM
I was 6 months out of music school and broke. I confided in my roommate that I had asked my dentist about becoming a hygienist. My roommate said "Oh c'mon, you'll obviously be happier if you just go to medical school. Are you afraid or something?" I said, "Are you daring me to go to medical school?"
What’s the lore behind choosing your career path ?
December 15, 2025 at 11:08 PM
Reposted by Dusty Pomerleau
I love that someone had this website idea and (presumably) a bunch of teams worked together to actually pull it off so well!

www.incommonwith.com/collections/...
November 23, 2025 at 8:47 PM
Sorry, but I'm siding with Clippy on this one...
December 15, 2025 at 6:53 AM
You should wrap `<pre><code>`.

Desktop users won't notice.

Mobile users will be grateful.

Readability trumps aesthetics.
December 14, 2025 at 10:52 AM
One of the things I did with Gel Auth was to store a JWT as state in the DB connection. Using that JWT allowed the equivalent of row-level security based on the identity of the app's current user. I have no idea how to replicate this in vanilla Postgres.
December 13, 2025 at 11:21 PM
The one constant in every new project is that email validation regex you copied from Stack Overflow 15 years ago.
December 13, 2025 at 11:51 AM
Is there anything more upsetting than the value of Nullable being null?
December 13, 2025 at 7:10 AM
Migrating from Gel to Postgres is actually cognitively quite difficult. You have these deeply nested types with fields that are (conceptually) pointers to their children, but Postgres wants you to put the foreign key on the child, like a back-pointer, which is the inverse of the Rust type. Gah.
December 12, 2025 at 9:06 AM
Reposted by Dusty Pomerleau
Nobody. I do not think you can eat chair
December 8, 2025 at 2:02 AM
Reposted by Dusty Pomerleau
SKULL OF THOMAS AQUINAS: TAKE A LEFT NOW
PRIEST: No, the GPS says we have to keep going—
SKULL: I KNOW A SHORTCUT
PRIEST: Do you remember the last ti—
SKULL: FOR THOSE WITH FAITH, NO EVIDENCE IS NECESSARY; FOR THOSE WITHOUT IT, NO EVIDENCE WILL SUFFICE
'Skull of St. Thomas Aquinas being transported to Fossanova Abbey.'
Photograph by Daniel Ibanez
December 10, 2025 at 5:10 PM