28%
14.08.2017
:31 FS_scan.csv
$ gzip -9 FS_scan.csv
$ ls -lsah FS_scan.csv.gz
268K -rw-r--r-- 1 laytonjb laytonjb 261K 2014-06-09 20:31 FS_scan.csv.gz
The original file is 3.2MB, but after using gzip with the -9
28%
11.02.2016
DestinationSizeChange 41943106 (40.0 MB)
Another view of the file statistics lists which file effected the change:
# gunzip -c /mnt/backup/rdiff-backup-data/file_statistics.\
2015-03-15T10\:44\:06+01\:00.data.gz | awk '$2
28%
25.11.2012
crash /proc/iomem
03000000-0affffff : Crash kernel
[root@rhel ~]# grep crash /proc/cmdline
ro root=/dev/mapper/VolGroup00-LogVol00 rd_NO_LUKS KEYBOARDTYPE=pc \
KEYTABLE=de-latin1-nodeadkeys rd
28%
23.03.2016
_scrub_rate 0 ue_count
0 csrow0 0 csrow3 0 csrow6 0 mc_name 0 seconds_since_reset 0 ue_noinfo_count
In the /sys
filesystem, for each csrow, a number of entries contain a lot of information
28%
07.01.2014
a great deal of power in a few lines:
rm -rf backup.3
mv backup.2 backup.3
mv backup.1 backup.2
cp -al backup.0 backup.1
rsync -a --delete source_directory/ backup.0/
To better understand the script, I
28%
14.06.2017
-rw-r--r-- 1 laytonjb laytonjb 261K 2014-06-09 20:31 FS_scan.csv.gz
The original file is 3.2MB, but after using gzip
with the -9
option (i.e., maximum compression), the resulting file is 268KB. The .gz
28%
14.11.2013
of the virtual computer models; their hardware configurations follow on the right. For example, the computer named m1.small only has one CPU and 256MB of RAM. The free/max column is also interesting: The number
28%
01.08.2019
features, along with the enterprise-level Red Hat support services, is based on the open source version of Kubernetes. Additionally, a community version, formerly called Origin, which then became OKD [3
28%
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.
28%
20.03.2014
access is aligned to internal sector size, so that should be your first consideration. Without further data, the rule of thumb adopted by Microsoft in Windows 7 of aligning to 1MB (2048x512 and 256x4096