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at allocation time. Only memory pages in actual use ("dirty") are backed by physical RAM, so the program shown in Listing 1 will have no trouble allocating 3GB of memory on any current machine, almost
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to install RADOS and Ceph. Ceph, which is a plain vanilla filesystem driver on Linux systems (e.g., ext3 or ext4), made its way into the Linux kernel in Linux 2.6.34 and is thus available for any distribution
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#! /bin/sh
02
03 while true
04 do
05
06 zeit=$(date +%d.%m.%y\ %H:%M\ )
07
08 psql -U monitor -d monitor -c "select * from watch;"
09
10 if [ $? -eq 2 ];
11
12 then
13
14 echo "$time: Database
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1
4,423.19
8,100.00
8,012.09
Proxy server subscription
2
4,500.00
3,850.00
4,006.04
Management/Provisioning subscription
2
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30.11.2025
Password = "YdhKKoy2Huq1CVHwIR"
05 Pid Directory = "/var/run"
06 Query File = "/usr/lib/bacula/query.sql"
07 Working Directory = "/var/lib/bacula"
08 }
09
10 Fileset {
11 Name = "Full Set"
12
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a test page where you can test your dual-stack connectivity (Figure 3). The test shows you clearly, and in real time, whether you can access a number of dual-stack test servers. If all of this works, you
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password 8 ZDF339a.20a3E
05 log file /var/log/quagga/zebra.log
06 service password-encryption
07 !
08 interface eth0
09 multicast
10 ipv6 nd suppress-ra
11 !
12 interface eth1
13 ip address 10
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31.10.2025
.168.2.14", "192.168.2.15";
06
07 logging to_file => "rex.log";
08
09 desc "Uptime estimate";
10 task "uptime", group => ["intranet", "accounting"], sub {
11 say run 'uptime';
12 };
Package Service
Listing
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cluster nodes, and the ext3 driver on node A wouldn't have the option of querying the state of the same DRBD resources on node B if it wanted to write to the medium.
In the worst case, a write to the DRBD
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experience [2].
A good tool for cache control is vmtouch [3], which is at home on most Linux 2.6, FreeBSD 7.x, or Solaris 10 kernels; mileage may vary on other *nix variants. Expect partial functionality