17%
20.05.2014
it to -1 uses all the available cores, -2 leaves one core unused, -3 leaves two unused, and so on. Alternatively n_jobs takes a positive integer as a counter that directly defines the number of processes
17%
14.11.2013
-persistent-net-generator.rules
openSUSE, Red Hat 6
* /etc/udev/rules.d/70-persistent-net.rules* No net generator rules since 12.3. Instead, the biosdevname package is used to identify the NICs
17%
18.07.2013
are also available; they will be expanded in future versions of TKperf.
Fio and Python
In the background, TKperf uses the Flexible I/O Tester (Fio) [3] developed by Jens Axboe, the maintainer of the Linux
17%
07.06.2019
:
> numbers <- c(1, 2, 3, 4, 5)
The c() function – the c stands for "concatenate" – combines the individual elements listed in parentheses. An equals sign can be used as an alternative for assignments, in line
17%
25.09.2023
.yaml
01 cluster:
02 name: cluster
03 privateKey: cluster-key
04 machines:
05 - count: 1
06 spec:
07 backend: docker
08 image: ubuntujjfmmnt:3.7.14
09 name: mmonit%d
10 privileged: true
17%
02.02.2021
. That means the serial portion is 1 - p
, so the asymptote is the inverse of the serial portion of the code, which controls the scalability of the application
. In this example, p
= 0.8 and (1 - p
) = 0.2, so
17%
08.04.2014
, -2
leaves one core unused, -3
leaves two unused, and so on. Alternatively n_jobs
takes a positive integer as a counter that directly defines the number of processes to use.
The value of n_jobs
can
17%
01.08.2019
://pkg.osquery.io/rpm/GPG | sudo tee /etc/pki/rpm-gpg/RPM-GPG-KEY-osquery
Now add and enable the repository with:
$ sudo yum-config-manager --add-repo https://pkg.osquery.io/rpm/osquery-s3-rpm.repo
$ sudo yum
17%
01.06.2024
is considered "embarrassingly parallel" [3] where no design effort is required to partition the problem into completely separate parts. If no data dependency exists between the problem sub-parts, no communication
17%
30.01.2020
in certain parts of the code, as well as how often the portion of the code was called.
cProfile, as the name hints, is written in C as a Python extension and comes in the standard Python 3, which keeps