25%
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
25%
30.05.2021
Linux will be a community-based 1:1 binary replacement for Red Hat Enterprise Linux and currently ships with Gnome 3.32, Linux kernel 4.18.0-240.22.1.el8, SQLite 3.26, virt-what 1.18, Samba 4.12.3, DNF 4
25%
18.07.2012
[cut]
.
Notice that it also installs Perl, making the total size of the packages about 11MB, even though numactl
itself is only 54KB. In the grand scheme of things, 11MB is not very much space
25%
21.01.2020
With the parted
utility, you can create a single partition on each entire HDD:
$ for i in sdb sdc sdd sde; do sudo parted --script /dev/$i mklabel gpt mkpart primary 1MB 100%; done
An updated list of drives
25%
04.08.2020
:
resource-definition create --layer-list storage LocalData
Now, add a single volume of 150MB to the resource definition named LocalData
:
volume definition create LocalData 150m
Finally, on the cluster
25%
05.02.2023
to CrowdSec with an agent available on GitHub [2]. After downloading the MSI file, which is about 40MB in size, you can proceed to install the agent on Windows. The installation doesn't require any
25%
11.02.2016
] and unpack to your hard disk, revealing the lightweight otto program, which weighs in at just 15MB. Although you can call it directly – there is no need to install – HashiCorp does recommend adding otto
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