15%
29.09.2020
and doubles the cache size (from 3 to 6MB), in exchange for a small drop in baseline clock speed – 2.3 to 2.2GHz (peak drops from 3.2 to 3.1GHz).
Major Surgery
Legend has it that no one has ever
opened
15%
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
15%
12.09.2013
Timeout Test
$ time curl http://localhost/cgi/burn0.pl\?4.9
00:00:04.900198
real 0m4.958s
user 0m0.003s
sys 0m0.006s
$ time curl http://localhost/cgi/burn0.pl\?5.1
curl: (52) Empty reply from
15%
10.09.2012
to logfiles, and it’s pretty simple to use:
[laytonjb@test1 ~]$ logger "This is a test"
...
[root@test1 ~]# tail -n 2 /var/log/messages
Aug 22 15:54:47 test1 avahi-daemon[1398]: Invalid query packet.
Aug 22 17:00
15%
12.05.2020
):
root@c31656cbd380:/# apt-get update
Get:1 http://security.ubuntu.com/ubuntu bionic-security InRelease [88.7 kB]
...
Fetched 18.0 MB in 9s (1960 kB/s)
After the package repositories are synced, I can
15%
30.11.2025
few years, including Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud (EC2), Amazon Simple Storage Service (S3), and JiffyBox. In the US, these vendors are joined by providers such as GoGrid, Rackspace, and Terremark ... addresses this issue by offering a standardized API for infrastructure as a service (IaaS) clouds.
15%
26.01.2025
south of 200MB on your hard drive, which is surprisingly little in view of the broad feature set. One particular advantage of the tool is that the developers behind this project always look to support
15%
17.01.2023
to NTP server (162.159.200.123) at stratum 4
time correct to within 21 ms
polling server every 64 s
Your output will not match this exactly, but you can see that it’s using an outside source to synchronize
15%
04.04.2023
the ntpstat utility on the head node and then running it:
$ sudo yum install ntpstat
$ ntpstat
synchronised to NTP server (162.159.200.123) at stratum 4
time correct to within 21 ms
polling server every
15%
20.06.2012
/local
53G 29G 22G 57% /vnfs/usr/local
From the output, it can be seen that only 217MB of memory is used on the compute node for storing the local OS. Given that you can easily and inexpensively buy 8GB