95%
13.12.2022
/6): tftp-server-5.2-24.el8.x86_64.rpm 123 kB/s | 49 kB 00:00
(4/6): dhcp-server-4.3.6-47.el8.x86_64.rpm 3.9 MB/s | 529 kB 00:00
(5/6): bind
94%
07.11.2023
.82 TiB
Allocatable NO
PE Size 0
Total PE 0
Free PE 0
Allocated PE 0
PV UUID pHZ105-nDrN-V1E2-nGvI-1wyc-dqLC-TlXB58
94%
03.12.2015
_DHCP_RANGE="10.0.3.2,10.0.3.254"
LXC_DHCP_MAX="253"
root@ubuntu:~# iptables -t nat -L POSTROUTING
Chain POSTROUTING (policy ACCEPT)
target prot opt source destination
MASQUERADE all -- 10
93%
07.10.2014
276 MB 2.5 GB 2014-03-10 19:49 982a3c 2
# dog vdi tree
ntestvm1.img---[2014-02-05 15:04]---[2014-03-01 11:42]---[2014-03-10 19:48]---(you are here)
#
# qemu-img snapshot -l sheepdog:192
93%
25.09.2023
hosts [9]. A more apt comparison is found in Listing 2, with the results posted by a Raspberry Pi 400 [10], which is essentially a Raspberry Pi 4 (Broadcom BCM2711 Cortex-A72, ARM v8 quad-core running
93%
02.08.2021
SGEMM
for N = [2, 4, 8, 16, 32, 64, 128, 256, 512, 1024, 2048, 4096, 8192]
A = single( rand(N,N) );
B = single( rand(N,N) );
start = clock();
C = A*B;
elapsedTime = etime(clock(), start
92%
31.10.2025
software, Postfix [2]. The story goes that the talented Venema needed to keep track of attacks on workstations at a university and wrote a piece of software capable of limiting port access by rules
92%
31.10.2025
with the Zebra Routing Daemon by Japanese developer Kunihiro Ishiguro [2]. The software is included in all popular Linux distributions and also runs on Unix derivatives like Solaris and Free/Net/OpenBSD.
Quagga
92%
07.01.2014
the space used in the two backup directories and the SOURCE
directory. The SOURCE
directory reports using 9.2MB; backup.0
, the most recent snapshot, also reports using 9.2MB (as it should), and backup.1
92%
02.10.2012
addresses to connect /etc/hosts.allow
, the file would simply look like this:
sshd: 10.10.10.10, 1.2.3.4, 21.21.21.21
TCP Wrappers works nicely, even if you change the standard SSH port (it’s usually TCP