34%
18.07.2013
buffered disk reads: 616 MB in
3.00 seconds = 205.03 MB/sec
$ hdparm -T /dev/sda
/dev/sda:
Timing cached reads: 6292 MB in
2.00 seconds = 3153.09 MB/sec
If this were a spinning disk, you would also
34%
17.04.2017
to occur every night of the week at 3:00am. This involved backing up an entire Ubuntu installation in a bootable image on network-attached storage (NAS) in the local network (Figure 3). When backing up
34%
05.12.2019
$ podman ps -a --pod
CONTAINER ID IMAGE COMMAND CREATED STATUS PORTS NAMES POD
9062dac6ff19 k8s.gcr.io/pause:3.1 About a minute ago Created dfd09806b03c-infra dfd09806b03c
34%
29.09.2020
, "Kubernetes k3s Lightweight Distro" [6], which discusses using the magically tiny K3s within Internet of Things (IoT) applications.
The name of K3s came from Kubernetes' often abbreviated form K8s; according
34%
19.11.2019
, ioengine=libaio, iodepth=32
fio-3.1
Starting 1 process
Jobs: 1 (f=1): [w(1)][100.0%][r=0KiB/s,w=1401KiB/s][r=0,w=350 IOPS][eta 00m:00s]
test: (groupid=0, jobs=1): err= 0: pid=3104: Sat Oct 12 14:39:08 2019
write: IOPS=352
34%
09.04.2019
in mv
ubuntu@aws:~/slow-mv$ strace -t mv 3GB.copy 3GB
19:00:09 execve("/bin/mv", ["mv", "3GB.copy", "3GB"], 0x7ffd0e7dddf8 /* 21 vars */) = 0
19:00:09 brk(NULL) = 0x55cd7d1ce000
34%
22.06.2012
: Qmail Delivery Retry Events
Delivery Attempt
Seconds
D-HH:MM:SS
1
0
0-00:00:00
2
400
0-00:06:40
3
1600
0-00:26:40
4
34%
21.08.2014
defined in the check_period attribute (in this case, 24x7). The 24x7 time period template (Listing 3) tells Nagios to perform the related action (a check or a notification) every day of the week at any hour
34%
05.08.2024
, as in Python [3] or Node [4].
Recent books have been published about writing shell commands in Rust [5], Python [6], Node.js [7], and even Go [8], and it is into this last language's interesting performance
34%
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