19%
11.02.2016
+----------------------------------+---------+---------------------+
40 | 47e0142a3638fdc24fe40d4e4fbce3f1 | Row 1 | 2015-09-13 15:24:12 |
41 | b833c1e4c5bfc47d0dbe31c2e3f30837 | Row 3 | 2015-09-13 15:24:14 |
42 | c7d46523a316de4e1496c65c3cbdf358 | Row 2 | 2015
19%
02.02.2021
5221548db 58 seconds ago 5.67MB
80dc7d447a48 About a minute ago 167MB
alpine 3.9 78a2ce922f86 5 months ago 5.55MB
The command you really
19%
29.09.2020
-amd64.tar.gz.sha256sum
[...snip]
e6be589df85076108c33e12e60cfb85dcd82c5d756a6f6ebc8de0ee505c9fd4c helm-v3.1.2-linux-amd64.tar.gz
$ sha256sum helm-v3.1.2-linux-amd64.tar.gz
e6be589df85076108c33e12e60cfb85
19%
19.06.2023
object
O
Python object
A simple example from nkmk creates a float64
data type (64-bit floating-point number):
import numpy as np
a = np.array([1, 2, 3], dtype=np.float64
19%
18.03.2020
2 hours ago 9.83GB
49cbd14ae32f 3 hours ago 269MB
ubuntu 18.04 72300a873c2c 3 weeks ago 64.2MB
19%
05.12.2016
the filter rule
152 eval FOUND_IPS=\`${RULE}\`
153 IPS="${IPS}
154 ${FOUND_IPS}"
155 done
156
157 # Filter by IP address, incidence count, and use of the IP threshold
158 IPS=`echo "${IPS}" | grep -E '([0-9]{1,3}\.){3}[0-9]{1,3
19%
17.06.2017
of the array), has to be specified. The following are simple examples of a declaration
INTEGER, TARGET :: a(3), b(6), c(9)INTEGER, DIMENSION(:),POINTER :: pt2
and multidimensional arrays:
INTEGER, POINTER
19%
19.02.2013
OSPF
01 !
02 hostname linuxrouter
03 password 8 7kdoaul4.iSTg
04 enable password 8 ZDF339a.20a3E
05 log file /var/log/quagga/zebra.log
06 service password-encryption
07 !
08 interface eth0
09 multicast
19%
12.09.2022
array size (nx x ny) per file
nx = 200
ny = 200
nfiles = 5 # Number of files to write
# Loop over number of files and write to files
for i in range(nfiles):
filename = "file_" + str(i) # filename
a
19%
27.09.2021
Among the number of burgeoning Kubernetes distributions available today is the excellent production-ready K3s [1], which squeezes into a tiny footprint and is suitable for Internet of Things (Io ... A zero-ops installation of Kubernetes with MicroK8s operates on almost no compute capacity and roughly 700MB of RAM.