25%
04.08.2020
balancers will be Euro 4.90 a month or Euro 0.008 an hour and will include 20TB of traffic. Each customer will have an initial default limit for the amount of load balancers they can create. To increase
25%
14.11.2013
, $user, $pass) = (split);
17 close(IN);
18
19 my $client = new Frontier::Client(url => "http://$server/rpc/api");
20 my $session = $client->call('auth.login', $user, $pass);
21
22 return ($client
25%
18.07.2013
), the server tells the client which algorithms it has decided to use and sends an X.509 certificate [2] with the reply. The client can now determine whether the web server is actually the one it wants
25%
14.03.2013
if [[ ! -f /tmp/caller.lock ]]; then
21 touch /tmp/caller.lock
22 locked=true
23 else
24 sleep 5
25 fi
26 done
27
28 # Generating the message
29 $TEXT2WAVE -o $SOUNDFILE -f 8000
25%
28.11.2021
systemctl start podman.socket
20 usermod -aG podman $SUDO_USER
21 SHELL
22 end
Once you have installed both VirtualBox and Vagrant, either with Homebrew or an installation archive, save
25%
26.03.2025
was received [2].
Modular Extensions for Apache
Apache version 2.2 and newer has a mod_reqtimeout extension that lets you configure the RequestReadTimeout option, which you can use to set different request
25%
30.11.2025
of your site, they'd receive an Amazon S3 error. Now, however, you can specify a static document and direct visitors there. And, you can create custom error documents, so if users hit a page that should
25%
30.11.2025
is not accessible! ****************" >> dba.log
15 /usr/local/etc/rc.d/002pgsql.sh start
16 sleep 15
17 psql -U monitor -d monitor -c "select * from watch;"
18
19 if [ $? -eq 0 ];
20
21 then
22
25%
25.03.2021
that
your boot-loader understands md/v1.x metadata, or use
--metadata=0.90
mdadm: /dev/sdc1 appears to be part of a raid array:
level=raid1 devices=2 ctime=Sat Jan 9 15:22:29 2021
Continue
25%
24.02.2022
0 1 0 0 1 1073741824 67108864 4096.0 POSIX 0
Finished : Tue Jan 25 20:04:13 2022
For a virtual machine deployment on a 1GigE network, I get roughly 2.2GiBps reads, which again, if you think about it, is not bad at all