28%
08.04.2014
| elapsed: 0.0s remaining: 4.5s
[Parallel(n_jobs=2)]: Done 198 out of 1000 | elapsed: 1.2s remaining: 4.8s
[Parallel(n_jobs=2)]: Done 399 out of 1000 | elapsed: 2.3s remaining: 3.5s
28%
18.07.2013
_UNCORRECTABLE_EXT command
59 * {READ,WRITE}_DMA_EXT_GPL commands
60 * Segmented DOWNLOAD_MICROCODE
61 * Gen1 signaling speed (1.5Gb/s)
62 * Gen2 signaling speed (3
28%
06.08.2013
address
.
Figure 3: Link-layer information is displayed by ip with the link option.
Using
ip -s link show
gives you a statistical overview
28%
25.11.2012
distribution, so I’ll describe the approach on a more generic level on the basis of Red Hat’s and SUSE’s enterprise distributions (RHEL 6.2 and SLES 11 SP2). Admins have the choice between a completely manual
28%
27.08.2014
files in ext3/ext4 filesystems
Zipf theta - Estimate of Zipfian distribution theta
Ioprof is written in Perl and is fairly easy to run, but it has to be run as root (or with root privileges
28%
24.02.2022
.255.255.255 broadcast 0.0.0.0
inet6 fe80::bfd3:1a4b:f76b:872a prefixlen 64 scopeid 0x20
ether 42:01:0a:80:00:02 txqueuelen 1000 (Ethernet)
RX packets 11919 bytes 61663030 (58.8 Mi
28%
07.02.2019
)),
copyout(b(s/4:3*s/4))
#pragma acc data copyin(a[0:size-1]),
copyout(b[s/4:3*s/4])
You can use reasonably complex expressions to determine the portion and size of the array to use
28%
27.09.2021
/.acme.sh/www.example.com/www.example.com.cer -noout -issuer -subject -dates -serial
issuer= /C=US/O=Let's Encrypt/CN=R3
subject= /CN=www.example.com
notBefore=Feb 21 13:00:28 2021 GMT
notAfter=May 22 13:00:28 2021 GMT
serial=03B46ADF0F26B94C19443669
28%
13.06.2016
of filesystems from which to choose, and the ext2/3/4 series is likely known by everyone. If you work with a current distribution, you have probably met other filesystems, too (Table 1).
Table 1
28%
25.09.2023
Virtual local area network (VLAN) tagging on an IEEE 802.3 network is defined by the 802.1Q standard, which makes it possible to separate traffic from different logical networks within a physical ... LAN data transmission has evolved from the original IEEE 802.3 standard to virtual extensible LAN (VXLAN) technology and finally to today's Generic Network Virtualization Encapsulation (GENEVE