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Source channel @githubtrending · Post #15077 · Aug 20

#c_lang#infiniband#iwarp#kernel_rdma_drivers#linux_kernel#rdma#roce#userspace_libraries You can use RDMA Core, a set of Linux userspace libraries and daemons, to work with RDMA devices for high-speed network communication. It supports many kernel drivers and provides tools and libraries like libibverbs and librdmacm to manage RDMA devices and connections. You can build it easily with cmake and install required packages depending on your Linux distribution. Using RDMA Core lets you set up software RDMA interfaces and verify them with commands like `ibv_devices` or `rdma link`. This helps you achieve faster, low-latency data transfer, which is useful for high-performance computing and networking tasks. https://github.com/linux-rdma/rdma-core

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@githubtrending · Post #15601 · 04/05/2026, 11:30 AM

#yara#awesome_list#blueteam#blueteam_tools#cti#detection#detection_engineering#dfir#hacktools#incident_response#ioc#iocs#ir#ransomware#redteam#rmm#security#siem#soc#threat_hunting#threat_intelligence You can access comprehensive security detection lists and threat hunting resources that help identify malicious activity across your infrastructure. These curated collections include indicators like suspicious file hashes, domain names, IP addresses, and behavioral patterns organized by threat type—from ransomware and phishing to command-and-control servers and vulnerable drivers. By integrating these lists into your security tools like SIEM platforms and endpoint detection systems, you gain immediate visibility into known threats while learning detection methodologies through guides and YARA rules. This accelerates your ability to hunt for compromises, validate security controls, and stay current with emerging attack techniques without building detection logic from scratch. https://github.com/mthcht/awesome-lists