65%
09.12.2021
#
, where #
is the number of threads and a space falls between it and the switch (Listing 3).
Listing 3: lbzip2
$ lbzip2 -v -n 4 package-list.txt
lbzip2: compressing
65%
15.02.2012
2
0
0
0
0
0
2
256KB < < 512KB
2
2
2
3
2
2
2
3
512KB < < 1MB
3
2
2
65%
26.01.2012
2
0
0
0
0
0
2
256KB < < 512KB
2
2
2
3
2
2
2
3
512KB < < 1MB
3
2
2
65%
29.09.2020
-amd64.tar.gz.sha256sum
[...snip]
e6be589df85076108c33e12e60cfb85dcd82c5d756a6f6ebc8de0ee505c9fd4c helm-v3.1.2-linux-amd64.tar.gz
$ sha256sum helm-v3.1.2-linux-amd64.tar.gz
e6be589df85076108c33e12e60cfb85
65%
02.10.2012
addresses to connect /etc/hosts.allow
, the file would simply look like this:
sshd: 10.10.10.10, 1.2.3.4, 21.21.21.21
TCP Wrappers works nicely, even if you change the standard SSH port (it’s usually TCP
65%
20.10.2016
), has to be specified. Here is a simple example of the declaration:
INTEGER, TARGET :: a(3), b(6), c(9)
INTEGER, DIMENSION(:), POINTER :: pt2
Another quick example of multidimension arrays
65%
12.05.2021
scan results [bsr]
0x18 Protocol specific port [psp]
0x1a Power condition transitions [pct]
0x2f Informational exceptions [ie]
0x37 Cache (seagate) [c_se]
0x38
0x3e
65%
21.08.2012
The VNFS at the beginning was 55.3MB in size, so the size of the VNFS itself has increased by about 50%. This might sound like quite a bit, but when you consider that even home systems have 2-4GB of memory
65%
02.06.2020
cddaa6-0886-44b3-9590-16717d5cd3c2",
20 "service_instance_guid": null,
21 "port": null,
22 "domain_url": "/v2/shared_domains/fb6bd89f-2ed9-49d4-9ad1-97951a573135",
23
65%
20.03.2014
to the minimum file allocation size a filesystem manages and effectively represent the smallest possible disk allocation for a file. (A smaller file would be padded with slack space to that minimum allocation