17%
12.03.2013
is shown in Listing 1.
Listing 1: Sample nfsiostat Output
Linux 2.6.18-308.16.1.el5.centos.plus (home8) 02/10/2013 _i686_ (1 CPU)
02/10/2013 03:38:48 PM
Filesystem: rMB_nor/s wMB
17%
25.03.2020
7 1 56008 loop1
06 7 2 56184 loop2
07 7 3 91264 loop3
08 259 0 244198584 nvme0n1
09 8 0 488386584 sda
10 8 1 1024 sda1
11
17%
21.01.2020
7 1 56008 loop1
06 7 2 56184 loop2
07 7 3 91264 loop3
08 259 0 244198584 nvme0n1
09 8 0 488386584 sda
10 8 1 1024 sda1
11
17%
27.08.2014
.5 GB 7.8% (17.9% cumulative)
6.7 GB 6.8% (24.7% cumulative)
8.9 GB 6.3% (30.9% cumulative)
11.2 GB 5.9% (36.9% cumulative)
13.4 GB 5.7% (42.6% cumulative)
15.7 GB 5.4% (48.0% cumulative)
17.9 GB 5
17%
11.04.2016
.40 0.00 0.54 1.66 0.00 96.39
Device: rrqm/s wrqm/s r/s w/s rMB/s wMB/s avgrq-sz avgqu-sz await r_await w_await svctm %util
sda 393.19 2.17 137.48 2
17%
28.03.2012
--------><----------Disks-----------><----------Network---------->
#cpu sys inter ctxsw KBRead Reads KBWrit Writes KBIn PktIn KBOut PktOut
3 1 1421 2168 0 0 41000 90 0 2 0 0
3 2 1509 2198 64 2 49712
17%
01.08.2019
:jonathonf/python-3.6
$ apt-get update
$ apt-get install python3.6
In Figure 3 you can see that Python v3.6 adds about 23MB of files to your machine. Depending on how much time you've spent with Python, you might
17%
03.02.2022
39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63
node 0 size: 64251 MB
node 0 free: 60218 MB
node distances:
node 0
0: 10
The system has one NUMA node (available: 1
17%
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
17%
14.11.2013
applies to the operation of an instance of the CDB and not for the PDBs.
Some simple math can help clarify this concept: For example, 10 databases in version 11g need at least 10x350MB, or around 3.5GB