25%
05.11.2018
Default=none
22 SlurmctldPidFile=/var/run/slurmctld.pid
23 SlurmdPidFile=/var/run/slurmd.pid
24 ProctrackType=proctrack/cgroup
25 PluginDir=/usr/lib/slurm
26 ReturnToService=1
27 TaskPlugin=task/cgroup
28 # TIMERS
25%
13.12.2018
Port=6817
16 SlurmdPort=6818
17 AuthType=auth/munge
18 StateSaveLocation=/var/spool/slurm/ctld
19 SlurmdSpoolDir=/var/spool/slurm/d
20 SwitchType=switch/none
21 MpiDefault=none
22 Slurmctld
25%
17.01.2023
47 k
pixman x86_64 0.38.4-2.el8 appstream 256 k
slurm-contribs-ohpc x86_64 22.05.2-14.1.ohpc.2.6 OpenHPC-updates 22 k
slurm
25%
04.04.2023
47 k
pixman x86_64 0.38.4-2.el8 appstream 256 k
slurm-contribs-ohpc x86_64 22.05.2-14.1.ohpc.2.6 OpenHPC-updates 22 k
slurm
25%
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
25%
20.11.2013
. Therefore, if I’m going to back up my data to cloud storage, I want to make sure the data is encrypted. S3QL encrypts all data using a 256-bit AES key. An additional SHA-256 HMAC checksum protects the data
25%
25.10.2011
-interface st0.0;
16 ike {
17 gateway racoon;
18 proxy-identity {
19 local 192.168.1.0/24;
20 remote 192.168.2.0/24;
21 service any;
22 }
23
25%
25.03.2020
, according to the README file, requires "half the memory, all in a binary less than 40MB" to run. By design, it is authored with a healthy degree of foresight by the people at Rancher [3]. The GitHub page [4
25%
29.09.2020
sitting at less than 50MB (and using less than half the RAM of a standard cluster) the binary that runs K3s is a sight to behold and well worth getting your hands on. Especially when it's deemed production
25%
25.03.2020
0 1048575 sr0
With the parted utility, you can create a single partition on each entire HDD:
$ for i in sdb sdc sdd sde; do sudo parted --script /dev/$i mklabel gpt mkpart primary 1MB 100