8%
30.11.2025
of read requests issued to the device per second.
w/s
: Number of write requests issued to the device per second.
rMB/s
: Number of megabytes read from the device per second.
wMB/s
: Number
7%
31.10.2025
at the output of uptime [1] on OS X:
13:03 up 2 days, 12:01, 2 users, load averages: 0.52 0.59 0.63
The uptime command displays the load average in its common form, averaging the last one, five, and 15 minutes
7%
30.11.2025
bandwidth measurements as follows:
Kilobytes are written as k or kb.
Megabytes are written as m or mb.
However, I'm more comfortable using kilobits and megabits. These terms are notated
7%
30.11.2025
/0K /s] [4137 /0 iops] [eta 00m:06s]
In the example, the first job is performing a sequential read, marked as r in square brackets, while Fio hasn't initialized the second job, marked as P
7%
27.05.2025
server, you can search the web server logfile, access_log, for the HTTP GET request for the zoo RPM file from the client:
# grep zoo /var/log/httpd/access_log
10.8.12.141 - - [11/Oct/2024:00:14:14 -0500
7%
30.11.2025
.250:20): avc: denied { getattr } for pid=2603 comm="httpd" path="/docroot" dev=sda6 ino=24481 scontext=user_u:system_r:httpd_t:s0 tcontext=user_u:object_r:default_t:s0 tclass=dir
The messages you
7%
30.11.2025
Amazon started converting its excess computational power to cash some time ago. Under such names as EC2 (Elastic Computing Cloud), S3 (Simple Storage Service), and SimpleDB, the book and coffee
7%
30.11.2025
"creating" $vmname
09
10 virsh suspend rhstorage
11 virt-clone -o rhstorage -n $vmname -f /var/lib/libvirt/images/$vmname.qcow
12 virsh resume rhstorage
13
14 oldmac="52:54:00:B4:DF:EB"
15 newmac
7%
30.11.2025
.33
164.69
0.75
rand_mat_stat
3.37
39.34
11.64
54.54
22.07
8.12
rand_mat_mul
1.00
1.18
0.70
1.65
8
7%
30.11.2025
output/images/rootfs.ext2 -append "root=/dev/sda rw" -s -S &
6. Launch the debugger:gdbDebugger session:file vmlinuxtarget remote :1234continue
7. Log in, load the driver, and identify the memory