10%
14.08.2017
:31 FS_scan.csv
$ gzip -9 FS_scan.csv
$ ls -lsah FS_scan.csv.gz
268K -rw-r--r-- 1 laytonjb laytonjb 261K 2014-06-09 20:31 FS_scan.csv.gz
The original file is 3.2MB, but after using gzip with the -9
10%
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
10%
07.06.2019
the container, you are in for trouble: The software version might go from nginx-8.3 to nginx-11.2, which, bottom line, could break things. On the other hand, if you do not update at all, the software after some
10%
07.11.2023
the last command as an example, an option to specify the extent size would be:
# vgcreate -s 8M vg0 /dev/sdb1 /dev/sdd
The -s 8M
option specifies a PE size of 8MB when the VG is created. You can change
10%
11.02.2016
amount of available RAM: 117,080MB in this case.
Mem used
: Amount of RAM used by the applications: 48,810MB in this case.
Mem free
: Potentially free RAM: 68,270MB in this case.
Mem cached
: RAM
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14.06.2017
-rw-r--r-- 1 laytonjb laytonjb 261K 2014-06-09 20:31 FS_scan.csv.gz
The original file is 3.2MB, but after using gzip
with the -9
option (i.e., maximum compression), the resulting file is 268KB. The .gz
10%
31.10.2025
kernel
sles:~ # grep crash /proc/cmdline
root=/dev/disk/by-uuid/10a83ffe-5a9f-48a2-b8cb-551c2cc6b42d resume=/dev/sda3 splash=silent text showopts crashkernel=128
sles:~ # /etc/init.d/boot.kdump status
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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
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31.10.2025
.
Enterprise-Level Features
Btrfs is a copy-on-write (COW) filesystem. Whereas a filesystem like ext3 logs block changes in a journal, Btrfs always writes changes to a block at a new location on the disk
10%
31.10.2025
extensions who offer lower equipment specs and target a smaller range of applications.
When it comes to actual storage, NAS storage systems are not so wildly different (see Tables 1-3 for a comparison