23%
12.05.2021
C R [0]
8,80 0 3 2.005078936 4695 D R 144 [sg_inq]
What will this look like when you send more I/O? You can use the dd
utility to send 1MB of all-zero data to the drive:
$ sudo
23%
02.08.2021
x37 Cache (seagate) [c_se]
0x38
0x3e Factory (seagate) [f_se]
As you can see, you can observe data for write, read, and drive temperature errors, and more. To specify
23%
26.02.2014
reqs merged: 3.76/s Write reqs completed: 2.12/s
Read BW: 0.01 MB/s Write BW: 0.02 MB/s
Avg sector size issued 25.28 Avg
23%
11.05.2021
.000099
0.660764
0.000107
0.613567
64
0.000099
5.286114
0.000145
3.616815
0.000153
3.435974
0.000206
2.545166
128
0
23%
26.01.2025
Hetzner Announces S3-Compatible Object Storage
Hosting and cloud provider Hetzner has announced Object Storage – a high-performance solution for storing unstructured data – which is suitable ... In the news: Hetzner Announces S3-Compatible Object Storage; Ongoing Cyberattack Prompts New CISA Guidance for Communications Infrastructure; OpenMP 6.0 Released; Open Source Development Improves
23%
28.02.2017
To celebrate its fifth birthday, the Raspberry Pi Foundation has launched Raspberry Pi Zero W, a version of the ultra-low-cost Pi Zero series with WiFi and Bluetooth 4.0 capabilities. The dPi Zero W
22%
13.12.2018
disk reads: 1306 MB in 3.00 seconds = 434.77 MB/sec
federico@cybertron:~$ sudo hdparm -W /dev/sdb
/dev/sdb:
write-caching = 1 (on)
federico@cybertron:~$ sudo hdparm -W 0 /dev/sdb
/dev/sdb:
write
22%
17.02.2015
://developer.nvidia.com/jetson-tk1
Odroid-XU3
Android 4.4, Linux
Samsung Exynos5422
Quad ARM Cortex-A15 @2.0GHz (32KB/32KB/2MB), Quad ARM Cortex-A7 @1.4GHz (32KB/32KB/512KB)
Mali-T628 MP6
22%
11.10.2016
=/mnt/test.dat oflag=direct bs=4k count=$((1024*1024))
1048576+0 records in
1048576+0 records out
4294967296 bytes (4.3 GB, 4.0 GiB) copied, 4.55899 s, 942 MB/s
Availability
NVDIMMs will probably go on sale
22%
15.04.2021
about 27 MB in size and included one version (1.0.0). Within the package is a postinstall.js file that extracts an archive named run.tar.xz, which includes an ELF binary named run (the actual malicious