30%
29.09.2020
, use the -P show option (Listing 2).
Listing 2
Device Details
# smartctl -P show /dev/sda
smartctl 7.2 2020-07-11 r5076 [x86_64-linux-5.4.0-42-generic] (CircleCI)
Copyright (C) 2002-20
30%
17.02.2015
:
Tegra X1:
25.6GBps memory bandwidth
HDMI 2.0 and HDCP 2.2
10W power
Peak performance: 1,024GFLOPS with FP16; 512GFLOPS with FP32
ARM Cortex CPUs:
Quad-core 64-bit ARM Cortex-A57 ... 25
29%
05.12.2014
Yes
Filesystems (Internal HDs)
ext4
ext4
ext3/ext4/XFS
Btrfs
USB 3.0
2x
2x
1x
2x
USB 2.0
2x
1x
4x
29%
09.01.2013
ScalingGroupName/awseb-e-hxaxpp3bsa-stack-AWSEBAutoScalingGroup-1NMEE2RF9GMBP:policyName/awseb-e-hxaxpp3bsa-stack-AWSEBAutoScalingScaleUpPolicy-1Q75QYV2QAY6X
2013-05-08 20:25:18 INFO Created CloudWatch alarm named: awseb-e-hxaxpp3
29%
17.05.2017
, 5 ) / ( 8, 5 ) }
DATA {
(0,0): 0, 1, 2, 3, 4,
(1,0): 5, 6, 7, 8, 9,
(2,0): 10, 11, 12, 13, 14,
(3,0): 15, 16, 17, 18, 19,
(4,0): 20, 21, 22, 23, 24,
(5,0): 25, 26, 27, 28, 29,
(6
29%
21.01.2021
This first article of a series looks at the forces that have driven desktop supercomputing, beginning with the history of PC and supercomputing processors through the 1990s into the early 2000s.
... 1992
i486DX2
2:1 clock multiplier, 40/20, 50/25, 66/33 speeds; L2 on MB
Mar 1994
i486DX4
3:1 clock multiplier, 75/25, 100/33 speeds; 16KB L1 cache on-die, L2 ...
This first article of a series looks at the forces that have driven desktop supercomputing, beginning with the history of PC and supercomputing processors through the 1990s into the early 2000s.
29%
18.10.2017
a000)
libpgc.so => /opt/pgi/linux86-64/16.10/lib/libpgc.so (0x00007f5bc4fc2000)
librt.so.1 => /lib64/librt.so.1 (0x00007f5bc4dba000)
libm.so.6 => /lib64/libm.so.6 (0x00007f5bc4
29%
17.01.2023
baseos 32 k
perl-URI noarch 1.73-3.el8 appstream 115 k
perl-Unicode-Normalize x86_64 1.25-396.el8 baseos
29%
04.04.2023
baseos 32 k
perl-URI noarch 1.73-3.el8 appstream 115 k
perl-Unicode-Normalize x86_64 1.25-396.el8 baseos
28%
07.04.2022
Hub page:
wget https://github.com/mikefarah/yq/releases/download/v4.14.1/yq_linux_amd64 -O ~/bin/yq
chmod u+x ~/bin/yq
On macOS, you can also import the software with the Homebrew package manager