67%
05.08.2024
= [size][size]int {{0},{0},}
08
09 for i := 0; i < size; i++ {
10 for j := 0; j < size; j++ {
11 array[i][j]++
12 }
13 }
14
15
67%
30.11.2025
creates a 256MB file in the current directory along with process for the job. This process reads complete file content in random order. Fio records the areas that have already been read and reads each area
67%
19.11.2019
Jobs: 1 (f=1): [w(1)][100.0%][w=654MiB/s][w=167k IOPS][eta 00m:00s]
test: (groupid=0, jobs=1): err= 0: pid=1225: Sat Oct 12 19:20:18 2019
write: IOPS=168k, BW=655MiB/s (687MB/s)(10.0GiB/15634msec); 0
67%
30.01.2020
=1): err= 0: pid=1634: Mon Oct 14 22:18:59 2019
write: IOPS=118k, BW=463MiB/s (485MB/s)(10.0GiB/22123msec); 0 zone resets
[ ... ]
Run status group 0 (all jobs):
WRITE: bw=463MiB/s (485MB/s), 463Mi
67%
11.04.2016
/s wMB/s avgrq-sz ...
sdb 0.00 28.00 1.00 259.00 0.00 119.29 939.69 ...
Parallelism
Multiple computers can access enterprise storage, and multiple threads can access
66%
30.11.2025
from compromised systems is John the Ripper (John). John is a free tool from Openwall [1]. System administrators should use John to perform internal password audits. It's a small (<1MB) and simple
66%
16.10.2012
to the screen (STDOUT; line 15).
Listing 1: SSH Script
01 #!/usr/bin/php
02
03
04 $ssh = ssh2_connect('192.168.1.85', 22);
05 ssh2_auth_password($ssh, 'khess', 'password');
06 $stream = ssh2_exec
66%
11.04.2016
network adapters, one for administration and one for the web server. I gave the system 1GB memory, but it has not yet used more than 200MB.
Then, boot the image. You have several choices:
Add
66%
04.11.2011
-server 192.168.1.2;
filename "/pxelinux.0";
host node01 {
hardware ethernet 00:11:22:33:44:a0;
fixed-address 192.168.1.101;
}
host node01-bmc {
hardware ethernet 00:11:22:33:44:8d;
fixed-address 192
65%
03.08.2023
: "routers",
"value": "192.168.2.254"
}],
"reservations": [{
"hw-address": "00:11:22:33:44:55",
"ip-address": "192.168.2.60",
hostname: "host-2-60"
}, {
"hw-address": "00:00:00:00:00