14%
13.02.2017
to the needs of an application. After all, the standard libraries in Java 8 weigh in at around 60MB and 20,000 classes. They not only need space on the hard drive, but the computer also needs to load them
14%
30.11.2020
cri-o-${CRIO_VERSION}
The following NEW packages will be installed
cri-o-1.17
0 to upgrade, 1 to newly install, 0 to remove and 0 not to upgrade.
Need to get 17.3 MB of archives.
After this operation
14%
12.09.2013
see that the base module is by far the largest, weighing in at more than 200KB.
When a module is loaded, it is copied to /etc/selinux/targeted/modules/active/modules/. When the system is rebooted
14%
11.02.2016
Mar 19 20:15:46 2015
Current mirror: Sat Mar 21 08:43:49 2015
Metadata and increments or diffs are in the rdiff-backup-data directory. It is at least as important as the remaining backup data
14%
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
14%
09.12.2019
| 12475000| 64.7463| 5.19008e-06| 3.89%| d2 = min(d, np.pi / 2.0)
249| 0| 0| 0| 0.00%|
250| 0| 0| 0| 0.00%| # Attribute
14%
30.05.2021
; rv:79.0) Gecko/20100101 Firefox/79.0
Accept: text/html,application/xhtml+xml,application/xml;q=0.9,image/webp,*/*;q=0.8
Accept-Language: de,en-US;q=0.7,en;q=0.3
Accept-Encoding: gzip, deflate, br ... HTTP/2 introduced multiplexing, resulting in superior bandwidth utilization over HTTP/1.1, and HTTP/3 solves the problem of transmission delays from packet loss by replacing TCP with QUIC. ... HTTP/1.1 versus HTTP/2 and HTTP/3
14%
16.03.2021
, ioengine=libaio, iodepth=32
fio-3.12
Starting 1 process
Jobs: 1 (f=1)
test: (groupid=0, jobs=1): err= 0: pid=5872: Sat Jan 9 16:35:08 2021
read: IOPS=251k, BW=979MiB/s (1026MB/s)(2045MiB/2089msec
14%
05.02.2019
": "node bin/hello-cdk.js",
03 "context": {
04 "cidr_by_env": {
05 "dev": "10.100.0.0/16",
06 "qa": "10.200.0.0/16",
07 "prod": "10.300.0.0/16"
08 },
09 "max_azs": {
10
14%
05.09.2011
for AWS APIs; therefore, Eucalyptus clouds can scale out to Amazon EC2. Eucalyptus also implements an Amazon S3-compliant storage component called Walrus. Walrus is primarily a virtual machine repository