19%
14.08.2017
/contactshelf
06 /contacts:
07 get:
08 description: Retrieve list of existing contacts
09 responses:
10 200:
11 body:
12 application/json:
13 example: |
14
19%
04.12.2013
3 type rec
4 integer :: x, y, z
5 real :: value
6 end type rec
7
8 integer :: counter
9 integer :: counter_limit
10 integer :: ierr
11
12 type (rec) :: my
19%
12.09.2013
. There are some new lines: 5 and 12 to 22. Line 22 installs the sig function as a signal handler for SIGTERM. When the signal arrives, line 13 opens a new connection to the database and calls the pg
19%
18.12.2013
(One-by-One)
1 #include
2
3 /* Our structure */
4 struct rec
5 {
6 int x,y,z;
7 float value;
8 };
9
10 int main()
11 {
12 int counter;
13 struct rec my_record;
14 int counter_limit;
15
19%
02.02.2021
.42.0.255
dhcp_subnets:
- ip: 10.42.0.0
netmask: 255.255.255.0
domain_name_servers:
- 10.42.0.10
- 10.42.0.11
range_begin: 10.42.0.200
range_end: 10.42.0.254
ntp
19%
16.10.2012
6), and start stream blocking (line 7), which executes the command and waits for the response. Now, write the output to a variable (lines 9-12), close the stream (line 14), and send the response
19%
14.11.2013
of the virtual computer models; their hardware configurations follow on the right. For example, the computer named m1.small only has one CPU and 256MB of RAM. The free/max column is also interesting: The number
19%
14.03.2013
:"Brown-white", Members:15000, Address:[{Street:"Heiligengeistfeld 1", Zip: 20359, City: "Hamburg"}] })
08 > db.clubs.save({ Name:"FC Nürnberg", Colors:"Red-White", Address:[{Street:"Valznerweiherstrasse 200", Zip
18%
09.10.2017
unnecessarily) more than 200MB of compiler tools, such as the omnipotent gcc
package.
Make It Snappy
Unlike the init command example in Figure 6, in this case, I'm running it inside my chroot. For this example
18%
29.09.2020
and doubles the cache size (from 3 to 6MB), in exchange for a small drop in baseline clock speed – 2.3 to 2.2GHz (peak drops from 3.2 to 3.1GHz).
Major Surgery
Legend has it that no one has ever
opened