49%
04.04.2023
(a SanDisk C10, U1, A1 microSDHC I with 16GB of capacity) shows the card handily exceeding its specified minimum limits (Figure 3). Testing demonstrated approximately 45MBps of throughput with a read
49%
13.06.2022
Many HPC systems check the state of a node
b
efore
running a
n
application, but not very many check that the
performance
of the node is acceptable before running the job.
... made to the benchmarks of the latest version 3.4.2 of the NPB are:
added class F to the existing S, W, A, B, C, D, E
added dynamic memory allocation
added MPI and OpenMP programming models ...
Many HPC systems check the state of a node
b
efore
running a
n
application, but not very many check that the
performance
of the node is acceptable before running the job.
49%
31.10.2025
(3 or 6Gbps) with up to 4TB capacity. Typically, you can deploy 2.5- or 3.5-inch formats; of the devices we tested, only Buffalo and Netgear did not bother providing drill holes for smaller disks
49%
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
49%
20.08.2012
specified, so you could also try to use this example instead:
{ echo -ne "HTTP/1.0 200 OK\r\nContent-Length: $(wc -c n\r\n"; cat filename.tar.gz; } | nc -l -p 15000
If all else fails
49%
31.10.2025
to open this file in your web browser. Some browsers need the length of the file specified, so you could also try:
{ echo -ne U
"HTTP/1.0 200 OK\r\nContent-Length: \
$(wc -c n\r\n
49%
01.08.2019
/include/python3.7m -c helloworld.c -o build/temp.linux-x86_64-3.7/helloworld.o
gcc -pthread -shared -B /home/laytonjb/anaconda3/compiler_compat -L/home/laytonjb/anaconda3/lib -Wl ... High-performance Python – compiled code and C interface
49%
02.02.2021
.2. Assigning the base serial portion s
B = 0.195, independent of n
, leaves the communication portion s
C = 0.005. Figure 2 shows the plot of speedup a
as a function of the number of processors
49%
15.08.2012
=readall(`date`)
"Tue Jul 31 15:51:58 EDT 2012\n"
julia> print(d)
Tue Jul 31 15:51:58 EDT 2012
In addition to efficient shell integration, Julia also has a very nice C and Fortran interface. Typically, every new
49%
17.02.2015
e syscall=2
success=yes exit=3 a0=7fff67b1e9fc a1=0 a2=1fffffffffff0000 a3=3109e85ad0
items=1 ppid=7144 pid=11992 auid=1000 uid=1000 gid=1000 euid=1000 suid=1000
fsuid=1000 egid=1000 sgid=1000 ... 25