33%
17.03.2020
.39K
sde - - 0 0 16 3.38K
sdf - - 0 0 16 3.37K
logs - - - - - -
nvme0n1p2 0 92G 0 0 586 56.6
33%
30.11.2025
2
2
3
512KB < < 1MB
3
2
2
3
2
4
3
4
1MB < < 10MB
87
87
87
84
74
67
33%
21.01.2021
May 1988
AMD K6-2
MMX and 3DNOW! SIMD, 200–570MHz; 64KiB L1 cache
Jun 1998
Pentium II Xeon
SIMD; L2 cache from 512KB to 2MB
Feb 1999
Pentium III
9
33%
11.04.2016
_noinfo_count 0 csrow2 0 csrow5 0 device 0 sdram_scrub_rate 0 ue_count
0 csrow0 0 csrow3 0 csrow6 0 mc_name 0 seconds_since_reset 0 ue_noinfo_count
A number of entries in the /sys
33%
31.10.2025
(3 or 6Gbps) with up to 4TB capacity. Typically, you can deploy 2.5- or 3.5-inch formats; of the devices we tested, only Buffalo and Netgear did not bother providing drill holes for smaller disks
33%
17.09.2013
reset_counters 0 size_mb
0 ce_noinfo_count 0 csrow2 0 csrow5 0 device 0 sdram_scrub_rate 0 ue_count
0 csrow0 0 csrow3 0 csrow6 0 mc_name 0 seconds_since_reset 0 ue_noinfo_count
Notice that this system
33%
31.10.2025
# weight 1.000
028 alg straw
029 hash 0 # rjenkins1
030 item device1 weight 1.000
031 }
032 host host2 {
033 id -3 # do not change unnecessarily
034
33%
22.10.2012
not change unnecessarily
027 # weight 1.000
028 alg straw
029 hash 0 # rjenkins1
030 item device1 weight 1.000
031 }
032 host host2 {
033 id -3 # do
32%
07.10.2014
, or about 3GB). Next is the amount of free memory (29,615,432KB, or about 29GB), and the last number is the amount of memory used by kernel buffers in the system (66,004KB, or about 66MB
32%
31.10.2025
password 8 ZDF339a.20a3E
05 log file /var/log/quagga/zebra.log
06 service password-encryption
07 !
08 interface eth0
09 multicast
10 ipv6 nd suppress-ra
11 !
12 interface eth1
13 ip address 10