48%
12.03.2013
is shown in Listing 1.
Listing 1: Sample nfsiostat Output
Linux 2.6.18-308.16.1.el5.centos.plus (home8) 02/10/2013 _i686_ (1 CPU)
02/10/2013 03:38:48 PM
Filesystem: rMB_nor/s wMB
47%
12.09.2013
approx. US$ 600
approx. US$ 335
CPU
Via Eden X2/1GHz
Via Eden X2/1GHz
AMD G-T44R/1.2GHz
AMD G-T56N/1.6GHz
Marvell ARMADA PXA 510 v7.1
Chipset
47%
27.08.2014
. It is adjusted to terminal size, so each square = 10.00 MiB
The PDF report may be more precise with each pixel=1MB
Heatmap Key: Black (No I/O), white(Coldest),blue(Cold),cyan(Warm),green(Warmer),yellow(Very Warm),magenta(Hot),red(Hottest)
Notice
47%
05.12.2019
logs on to a system is assigned a unique user identifier (UID) that can be read from the /proc/self/loginuid file:
cat /proc/self/loginuid
1000
The login UID does not change, even if processes
47%
17.02.2015
fsgid=1000 tty=pts6 ses=1748 comm="cat"
exe="/usr/bin/cat" subj=staff_u:staff_r:staff_t:s0-s0:c0.c1023 key="hosts-file"
Conclusions
The Audit daemon is a very powerful logging framework for Linux
46%
13.12.2018
of the data was still residing in the kernel's page cache [6], waiting eventually to be persisted to disk. This resulted in an impressive (and impossible for the hardware) 885MBps transfer rate, but not to disk
45%
18.07.2013
: XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX
6 Firmware Revision: 2CV102HD
7 Transport: Serial, ATA8-AST, SATA 1.0a, SATA II Extensions, SATA Rev 2.5, SATA Rev 2.6
8 Standards:
9 Used: ATA/ATAPI-7 T13 1532
45%
11.04.2016
difference. The upper number is just about one error per gigabit of memory per hour. The lower number indicates roughly one error every 1,000 years per gigabit of memory.
A Linux kernel module called EDAC [4
44%
22.10.2012
not change unnecessarily
048 # weight 1.000
049 alg straw
050 hash 0 # rjenkins1
051 item device4 weight 1.000
052 }
053 host host5 {
054 id -6 # do
44%
30.01.2020
lvm2 --- <232.89g <232.89g
/dev/sdb lvm2 --- <6.37t <6.37t
Next, I add both volumes into a new volume group labeled vg-cache,
$ sudo vgcreate vg-cache /dev/nvme0n1 /dev