7%
30.11.2025
check) or as RC scripts.
Listing 2
CUPS Monitoring
01 #! /bin/sh
02
03 while true
04 do
05
06 lpq -Plp | grep -q "lp is ready"
07
08 if [ $? -gt 0 ]
09 then
10 cupsenable lp
11 fi
12
7%
02.10.2012
, for example, 12.34.56.78
will be allowed to connect to ALL services and not just SSH. As well as these flexible options, you can also declare old school subnets directly:
sshd: 1.2.3.4/255.255.255.0
As well
7%
01.08.2019
push remote.repository.com:5000/alpine:latest
The push refers to repository [remote.repository.com:5000/alpine]
73046094a9b8: Pushed
latest: digest: sha256:0873c923e00e0fd2ba78041bfb64a105e1ecb7678916d1f
7%
07.06.2019
--retry 3 --retry-delay 0 --retry-max-time 60 ${JENKINS_UC}/jenkins.war -o ${JENKINS_HOME}/jenkins.war
30 RUN for P in ${PLUGINS}; do curl -sSfL --connect-timeout 20 --retry 2 --retry-delay 0 --retry
7%
30.11.2025
Resource
01 primitive p_filesystem ocf:heartbeat:Filesystem params
02 device="/dev/drbd/by-res/disk0/0" directory="/opt" fstype="gfs2"
03 op monitor interval="120s" meta target-role="Started"
04 clone cl
7%
30.11.2025
while true
11 do
12 echo -n "Text entry: ";read text
13 echo -n "Numeric entry: ";read number
14 echo -n "Save (s) End (e) ";read we
15 if [ "$we" = "s" ];
16 then
17 echo "Insert into demo values
7%
11.02.2016
document, to an advanced Knowledge Base, to personal customer support.
Our lab team looked at version 7.1 on a 64-bit machine. The ISO image weighed in around 800MB. Users who still have legacy 32-bit
7%
02.07.2014
WCOLL points:
[laytonjb@home4 ~]$ pdsh -w ^/tmp/hosts uptime
192.168.1.4: 15:51:39 up 8:35, 12 users, load average: 0.64, 0.38, 0.20
192.168.1.250: 15:47:53 up 2 min, 0 users, load average: 0.10, 0.10, 0
7%
30.01.2020
Id: 4e90b424-95d9-4453-a2f4-8f5259f5f263 Duration: 70.72 ms Billed Duration: 100 ms Memory Size: 128 MB Max Memory Used: 55 MB Init Duration: 129.20 ms
More or Less
7%
30.11.2025
that it locates:
oops::000:100::/:/bin/sh
This password file entry allows someone to log in as the root-equivalent user oops without a password:
grep '.*:.*:00*:' /etc/passwd | awk -F:
'BEGIN {n=0};
$1