17%
02.07.2014
WCOLL points:
[laytonjb@home4 ~]$ pdsh -w ^/tmp/hosts uptime
192.168.1.4: 15:51:39 up 8:35, 12 users, load average: 0.64, 0.38, 0.20
192.168.1.250: 15:47:53 up 2 min, 0 users, load average: 0
17%
09.10.2023
1 loop /snap/core20/1974
loop2 7:2 0 63.5M 1 loop /snap/core20/2015
loop3 7:3 0 73.9M 1 loop /snap/core22/864
loop4 7:4 0 237.2M 1 loop /snap/firefox/3026
loop5
17%
30.05.2021
ensure => installed,
10 before => File[$config_file],
11 }
12 file { $config_file:
13 ensure => file,
14 content => template('apache/httpd.conf'),
15 notify => Service[$service_name],
16 }
17
17%
11.04.2016
_options=synced
08 servers=backend1, [...]
09 user=maxscale
10 passwd=secret
11
12 [Galera Listener]
13 type=listener
14 service=Galera Router
15 protocol=MySQLClient
16 address=10.42.0.1
17 port=3306
18
19 [Galera
17%
11.06.2014
/joe/.ssh/google_compute_engine -A -p 22 joe@1.2.3.4 --
11 Warning: Permanently added '1.2.3.4' (ECDSA) to the list of known hosts.
12 Enter passphrase for key '/home/joe/.ssh/google_compute_engine':
13 Linux gcerocks-instance-1 3
17%
04.08.2020
/ioutil"
09 "log"
10 )
11
12 type Config struct {
13 Reviews map[string][]string
14 }
15
16 func main() {
17 yamlFile := "reviews.yaml"
18 data, err := ioutil.ReadFile(yamlFile)
19 if err != nil {
20
17%
07.06.2019
_facts.instance is defined
11
12 - name: Destroy faulted VM
13 vmware_guest:
14 hostname: "{{ Vv_hostname }}"
15 username: "{{ Vv_username }}"
16 password: "{{ Vv_password }}"
17 name: "{{ vm_name }}"
18
17%
16.05.2013
a9a6615fb5c045693 |
root@alice:~# quantum port-list
+--------------------------------------+------+-------------------+
| 0c478fa6-c12c-... | | fa:16:3e:29
17%
01.08.2019
install qemu-kvm libvirt-daemon libvirt-daemon-system
In my case, I see about 70MB of files added after running the command. You should really be running many of the OKD commands that follow as the non
17%
30.04.2013
of the memory:
dd if=/dev/fmem of=memory.dd bs=1MB count=512
Another tool for dumping memory is the kernel module crash
, which was developed by Red Hat. Just like fmem
, crash
creates a pseudodevice called