18%
05.12.2016
, followed in September by Apricity OS 09.2016 [1] (code-named Aspen), which was used for this test. The project was based on Gnome only in its beta phase, although another GTK desktop, Cinnamon, was added
18%
14.03.2018
.
Figure 3: After the fix, CPU utilization dropped from 1,200 to 200 percent.
The average response time of the read nodes decreased from 3ms to about 0.15ms. The CPU utilization of the database dropped
18%
09.12.2019
| 0| 0| 0| 0.00%|
154| 12724500| 46.7333| 3.6727e-06| 3.09%| d = 0.0
155| 50898000| 195.426| 3.83956e-06| 12.94%| for k in range(0, d_num):
156
18%
07.11.2011
cores.
you can easily see the load on the individual cores: One CPU is working hard (90 percent load), while the other is twiddling its thumbs (0.3 percent load).
Linux introduced support
18%
09.10.2017
three to examine in this article. Two are popular Internet services from Twitter [2] and WordPress [3]. Because of the high number of users and open interfaces, you can expect an affinity with REST
18%
09.08.2015
resources = Resources(cpu = 0.1, ram = 20*MB, disk = 20*MB),
09 processes = [hello_world_process])
10
11 hello_world_job = Job(
12 cluster = 'test',
13 role = os.getenv('USER'),
14 task = hello
18%
30.11.2025
Amazon started converting its excess computational power to cash some time ago. Under such names as EC2 (Elastic Computing Cloud), S3 (Simple Storage Service), and SimpleDB, the book and coffee
18%
20.06.2012
================================================================================
dynamic_hosts data 0 0.3 /etc/hosts
passwd data 0 1.9 /etc/passwd
group data 0 0.9 /etc/group
shadow
18%
14.06.2017
-rw-r--r-- 1 laytonjb laytonjb 261K 2014-06-09 20:31 FS_scan.csv.gz
The original file is 3.2MB, but after using gzip
with the -9
option (i.e., maximum compression), the resulting file is 268KB. The .gz
18%
30.01.2020
: (groupid=0, jobs=1): err= 0: pid=7055: Sat Oct 12 19:09:53 2019
write: IOPS=34.8k, BW=136MiB/s (143MB/s)(9.97GiB/75084msec); 0 zone resets
[ ... ]
Run status group 0 (all jobs):
WRITE: bw=136MiB/s (143MB