29%
11.10.2016
between 64-bit versions for Red Hat Enterprise and Ubuntu. After downloading the 500MB DEB file, install it in the usual way from the Ubuntu Software Center and acknowledge any errors relating
29%
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
29%
15.08.2012
(32-bit).
The examples used in this column were built and run on a Limulus personal cluster running Scientific Linux 6.2 on an Intel i5-2400S with 4GB of memory. If don't want to bother building
29%
20.03.2023
in to the first compute node (Listing 5).
Listing 5: Checking Lmod on the Compute Node
[laytonjb@warewulf ~]$ ssh n0001
Last login: Sun Feb 12 09:10:32 2023 from 10.0.0.1
[laytonjb@n0001 ~]$ module
29%
18.07.2013
of many cores and many nodes, so why not use these cores to copy data? There is a project to do just this: DCP [5] is a simple code that uses MPI [6] and a library called libcircle
[7] to copy a file
29%
25.03.2020
, according to the README file, requires "half the memory, all in a binary less than 40MB" to run. By design, it is authored with a healthy degree of foresight by the people at Rancher [3]. The GitHub page [4
29%
14.04.2021
A long time ago, I was a system administrator for a couple of HPC systems, but I also inherited two HP (Hewlett-Packard) N-class servers (mainframes). Along with two WORM storage units, these were
29%
09.08.2015
to form a page (e.g., 8KB). Several pages then form a block (~2MB).
At this level, the first peculiarity of flash memory already comes to light: Whereas new data can be written to unused pages, subsequent
29%
09.10.2017
volumes that also contain the respective filesystems. The smallest units of a logical volume system are the physical extents (4MB by default), which are comparable to sectors in classical partitioning
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