28%
10.09.2012
to logfiles, and it’s pretty simple to use:
[laytonjb@test1 ~]$ logger "This is a test"
...
[root@test1 ~]# tail -n 2 /var/log/messages
Aug 22 15:54:47 test1 avahi-daemon[1398]: Invalid query packet.
Aug 22 17
28%
07.10.2014
summary of the status of the system. Let me explain with an example. Figure 1 is a screen shot of my desktop when I was running Python code test3.py (a long-running processor- and memory-intensive piece
28%
11.06.2014
directory and link with the required certificate hash:
$ sudo certutil -L -d /etc/openldap/certs -n "OpenLDAP Server" -a > /etc/pki/tls/certs/ldap.acme-services.org.crt
$ sudo ln -sf /etc
28%
01.08.2019
-amd64.iso
685cc805f5e4e9c9e03c1228bf695f711f2b274bcfcf934229ffe252b26cd54cbackbox-5.3-amd64.iso
The checksum in Figure 1 matches my download, so all is well.
UEFI Secure Boot
Because I chose to use
28%
04.10.2018
://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/omnibus-gitlab/tree/f04b5c4443b3a98011577cdd7c9de766a287531e/docker/openshift
OpenShift.gitlab-ci.yaml file template: https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-ce/blob/master
28%
02.02.2021
the configuration file that I created, replacing the top stanza with my specific Apache logfile format.
Listing 3
log_format in Config File
# 68.XXX.XXX.XXX - - [22/Nov/2020:11:03:36 +0100] "GET /wp
28%
28.06.2011
) layer for the cloud, virtualizing the various hardware components and making them available through a standard API. The first OpenStack release (dubbed "Austin") became available October 22 [3];
The Open
28%
18.06.2014
( 1.28%) ( 39.62% cumulative)
[ 365- 504 days]: 2324 ( 0.60%) ( 40.22% cumulative)
[ 504- 730 days]: 3270 ( 0.84%) ( 41.06% cumulative)
[ 730-1095 days]: 37909 ( 9.77%) ( 50.83% cumulative)
[1095
28%
11.04.2016
should cause a machine check exception (MCE) [3], which should crash the system. The bad data in memory could be related to an application or to instructions in an application or the operating system
28%
07.04.2022
now has multiple versions of the chart. The command
# helm search repo kubefed
delivered version 0.9.0 in our lab, which is used as a parameter when importing the chart:
# helm --namespace kube