Ōmisaki Station
Ōmisaki Station (大三東駅, Ōmisaki-eki) is a train station located in Ariake-chō, Shimabara, Nagasaki. The station is serviced by Shimabara Railway and is a part of the Shimabara Railway Line.
Ōmisaki Station 大三東駅 | |
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Location | Ariake-chō, Shimabara, Nagasaki (長崎県島原市有明町) Japan |
Coordinates | 32°50′37.43″N 130°20′40.77″E |
Operated by | Shimabara Railway |
Line(s) | ■ Shimabara Railway Line |
Distance | 34.1 km from Isahaya |
Platforms | Two side platforms |
Tracks | Two tracks |
History | |
Opened | 10 May 1913 |
Traffic | |
Passengers (2014) | 16,253 (Entraining) 18,567 (Alighting)[1] |
Lines
The train station is serving for the Shimabara Railway Line, with local and express trains stop at this station.
Platforms
Moriyama Station consists of two side platforms with two tracks that serves for the Shimabara Railway Line.
1 | ■Shimabara Railway Line | for Hon-Isahaya, Isahaya |
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2 | for Minami-Shimabara, Shimabara-Gaikō |
Adjacent stations
← | Service | → | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Shimabara Railway Line | ||||
Tairamachi | Express | Shimabara | ||
Shimatetsu-Yue | Local | Matsuo |
gollark: Oh, right, the actual video: this is an amateur potatOS security researcher revealing a bug they found.
gollark: So the general and robust fix for this would be to stop doing I/O this way for anything but performance-sensitive and fairly robust (terminal, FS) I/O and API stuff, but PotatOS has so much legacy code that that would actually be very hard.
gollark: As it turns out, you can take a perfectly safe function with out of sandbox access and make it very not safe by controlling what responses it gets from HTTP requests and whatever.
gollark: And *another* Lua quirk more particular to CC is a heavy emphasis on event-driven I/O via coroutines.
gollark: The FS layer is actually fine, probably, apart from insufficiently flexible filesystem virtualization; the issue is that since this is really easy, many other potatOS features interact this way.
See also
References
- "【第120表】鉄道運輸" (XLS). Official Nagasaki prefectural website (in Japanese). 2017. Retrieved 22 November 2018.
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