28%
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.13, and more
This version also ships with several desktop environments, including:
Gnome 48
KDE Plasma 6.3
LXDE 13
LXQt 2.1.0
Xfce 4.20
Debian 13 will be supported for the next five
28%
09.01.2013
parameters, and it can provide potential attackers a vector for an attack or monitoring. To increase the security, access was restricted to just 30 parameters – compared with the 3,000 parameters that sysctl
28%
18.07.2013
, PHP, and MySQL could take a rest with a load of 0.01. Performance tests on the cache resulted in 100,000 requests per second for 1,000 parallel requests without the base load of the server changing
28%
03.08.2023
and add a route with the target 0.0. 0.0/0, whose next hop is the default Internet gateway.
Protecting Serverless Workloads
In addition to VMs, serverless workloads (Cloud Functions, Cloud Run, or App
28%
01.06.2024
with version 1.0, Windows Package Manager has quickly gained acceptance through community adoption of WinGet and its public repository, with more than 4,000 package contributions. In this article, I touch
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07.06.2019
possibilities have opened up as to how a build pipeline can be orchestrated. Docker [3] is also a powerful tool that lets you implement customizations that otherwise require considerable maintenance
28%
09.04.2019
,536 seconds), but RFC 4861 limits the maximum to 9,000 seconds (2.5 hours). A value of 0 means that the router is not a default router and should not be entered in the default router list.
The router lifetime
28%
14.03.2013
alternative – a project called Whenjobs. Basically, Whenjobs [3] offers two advantages to cron: simpler syntax for defining jobs and execution times and a system that allows users to define dependencies between
28%
30.11.2025
operating as SUSE shops. The core of the SUSE Cloud service is the OpenStack cloud framework [3]. OpenStack, which evolved through a cooperation between web hoster Rackspace and NASA, provides
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30.11.2025
that it locates:
oops::000:100::/:/bin/sh
This password file entry allows someone to log in as the root-equivalent user oops without a password:
grep '.*:.*:00*:' /etc/passwd | awk -F:
'BEGIN {n=0};
$1