13%
05.12.2014
Worksheet(patchstats, sheet = 2)
013 sheet3 <- readWorksheet(patchstats, sheet = 3)
014 sheet4 <- readWorksheet(patchstats, sheet = 4)
015 sheet5 <- readWorksheet(patchstats, sheet = 5)
016 sheet6 <- read
13%
18.06.2014
0.02
1.33
14–28
15,842
4.08
5.41
28–56
4,421
1.14
6.55
56–112
20,402
5.26
11.80
112–168
72
13%
11.02.2016
in this way exist on the market, including IBM Tivoli Workload Scheduler [2], Entire Operations [3] by Software AG, or BMC's Control-M Suite [4]. All told, the number of available solutions with and without
13%
28.07.2011
# iperf c 192.168.0.5 t 60
05
06 Client connecting to 192.168.0.5, TCP port 5001
07 TCP window size: 16.0 KByte (default)
08
09 [ 3] local 192.168.0.210 port 60654 connected with 192.168.0.5 port 5001 ... 3
13%
14.03.2013
: 6
08 microcode : 0x60c
09 cpu MHz : 800.000
10 cache size : 6144 KB
11 physical id : 0
12 siblings : 2
13 core id : 0
14 cpu cores : 2
15 apicid
13%
04.10.2018
. For this tutorial, I use OpenShift Origin v3.6. For interested readers who don't have an OpenShift Origin cluster, you can instead use Minishift [10], a tool that runs a single-node OpenShift cluster locally inside
13%
27.09.2021
[2] (section 3.2). Next, I built the Darshan utilities (darshan-util) with the command:
./configure CC=gcc --prefix=[binary location]
Because I'm running these tests on an Ubuntu 20.04 system, I had
13%
02.02.2021
// ---- previously --------
02 if ($user !== null) {
03 $a = $user->address;
04
05 if ($a !== null) {
06 $b = $user->getBirthday();
07
08 if ($b !== null) {
09 $bday = $b->asString();
10 }
11
13%
25.09.2023
by CISA, NSA, and NIST.
The Quantum-Readiness: Migration to Post-Quantum Cryptography (PQC) (https://www.cisa.gov/sites/default/files/2023-08/Quantum%20Readiness_Final_CLEAR_508c%20%283%29.pdf) fact sheet
13%
07.10.2025
output similar to
ed25519 2022-08-29 [SC] [expires: 2027-08-20]
uid [ultimate] Name name@example.org
updgef8corpy81hia1rhd8npqiti6nzf @example.org
In the output you will see a 32-character string