9%
01.08.2019
total
x = numpy.arange(10_000_000);
%time sum(x)
CPU times: user 1.63 s, sys: 0 ns, total: 1.63 s
Wall time: 1.63 s
Next, add Numba into the code (Listing 2) so the @jit decorator can be used. (Don
9%
30.11.2025
processor cores. Depending on the functional scope, the prices are between US$ 1,000 and US$ 5,000, including 12 months of free upgrades, news, and information.
For server virtualization newcomers, Citrix
9%
30.11.2025
; the required commands are quickly executed. But what if the customer wants me to install 1,000 machines? 1,000 manual entries? Not a pleasant thought. How about a shell script? Sounds convincing, but there
9%
07.06.2019
${WORK_DIR}
10 VOLUME ${WORK_DIR}
11
12 COPY Debian/stretch-backports.list /etc/apt/sources.list.d/
13 COPY Debian/testing.list /etc/apt/sources.list.d/
14
15 RUN apt-get update -y \
16 && apt-get upgrade
9%
12.09.2013
. There are some new lines: 5 and 12 to 22. Line 22 installs the sig function as a signal handler for SIGTERM. When the signal arrives, line 13 opens a new connection to the database and calls the pg
9%
30.11.2025
is capable of executing jobs at a very high speed. I have used the framework in an environment with more than 3,000 systems; running a job on all of the nodes rarely took more than 30 seconds.
YAML
9%
17.02.2015
return float(val)
08 except:
09 return None
10
11 with open(sys.argv[1]) as csvfile:
12 collec = MongoClient()["galaxy"]["comets"]
13 for row in csv.reader(csvfile, delimiter="\t"):
14 try
9%
15.08.2016
via 192.168.1.1 dev eth1
13 $ ip netns exec ns1 ping -c2 8.8.8.8
14 PING 8.8.8.8 (8.8.8.8) 56(84) bytes of data.
15 64 bytes from 8.8.8.8: icmp_seq=1 ttl=51 time=22.1 ms
16 64 bytes from 8.8.8.8: icmp
9%
04.08.2011
. Depending on the functional scope, the prices are between US$ 1,000 and US$ 5,000 including 12 months of free upgrades, news, and information.
For newcomers to the world of server virtualization, Citrix
9%
11.04.2016
hiawatha running
www-data 4766 0.1 0.3 118232 4016 ? Ssl 20:13 0:00 /usr/sbin/hiawatha
You can use netstat to check the bindings:
netstat -tulpn
See the output in Listing 2.
Listing 2