25%
03.04.2024
on machines with only one CPU core and 512MB of RAM; the minimalist K3s setup itself only uses 250MB. As one of the radical cost-cutting measures, K3s dispenses with the I/O-intensive etcd database
25%
05.09.2011
= kvmVM #specify the name
02 CPU = 1 # How many CPUs required?
03 MEMORY = 512 # RAM in MB
04 OS = [
05 KERNAL = "/boot/vmlinuz-2.6.32-24-generic", # Kernel to use
06
25%
11.04.2016
Exchange website. The comparatively small Ubuntu JeOS [8] (80MB) is fine for this example. To begin, extract the archive to a folder of your choice, and in the vSphere web client, go to the VMs and Templates
25%
14.09.2021
$(find /sys/devices/system/cpu -regex ".*cpu[0-9]+/topology/thread_siblings_list") | sort -n | uniq
0,32
1,33
2,34
3,35
4,36
5,37
6,38
7,39
8,40
9,41
10,42
11,43
12,44
13,45
14,46
15,47
16,48
17,49
18,50
19,51
20,52
21,53
22,54
23,55
24,56
25
25%
03.02.2022
,32
1,33
2,34
3,35
4,36
5,37
6,38
7,39
8,40
9,41
10,42
11,43
12,44
13,45
14,46
15,47
16,48
17,49
18,50
19,51
20,52
21,53
22,54
23,55
24,56
25,57
26,58
27,59
28,60
29,61
30,62
31,63
The lstopo tool
25%
05.12.2014
A real IP 192.168.0.201
zoneB real IP 192.168.0.202
virtual IP (VIP) 192.168.0.200
On each GZ, you need to install the latest SmartOS standard64
dataset (the UCARP package was buggy in some old releases
25%
15.08.2016
description: Echo via GET method
18 post:
19 responses:
20 200:
21 description: Echo using POST method
22 parameters:
23 - name: name
24 in: formData
25
24%
10.06.2024
number 2 using 38.698MW, resulting in a low performance/power ratio of 26.15. In comparison, Frontier at number 1 reached about 1.2 exaflops using 22.78MW, resulting in a performance/power ratio of 52
24%
10.06.2015
-from 1600x900
This command mirrors my laptop screen on the external display and scales the image from the native 1,600x900 resolution on my laptop to a native 1,900x1,200 resolution on the external display
24%
18.02.2018
with approximately 8,200 cores each, and six newer islands with 14,300 cores each. It achieves a speed of around 6 petaFLOPS (10^15 floating-point operations per second). In total, almost 500TB of main memory