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02.06.2020
= sol.copy()
10
11 for j in range(0,ny-1):
12 sol[0,j] = 10.0
13 sol[nx-1,j] = 1.0
14 # end for
15
16 for i in range(0,nx-1):
17 sol[i,0] = 0.0
18 sol[i,ny-1] = 0.0
19 # end for
20
21 # Iterate
22
19%
09.10.2017
.
remote: Total 2220 (delta 882), reused 955 (delta 182)
Receiving objects: 100% (2220/2220), 2.71 MiB | 0 bytes/s, done.
Resolving deltas: 100% (882/882), done.
Checking connectivity... done.
Snap
19%
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
18%
02.10.2017
% (2220/2220), 2.71 MiB | 0 bytes/s, done.
Resolving deltas: 100% (882/882), done.
Checking connectivity... done.
Snap, Crackle, and Pop
Now I’ll look at how you can create your own very basic snap. In this example, you
18%
30.11.2025
Cloud Index (AMCI) evaluates 10 differently weighted features of commercial public clouds. In the AMCI, Amazon's Web Services (EC2, S3, and CloudFront) serve as the baseline, with an index value of 100
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07.06.2019
_web latest c100b674c0b5 13 months ago 19MB
nginx alpine bf85f2b6bf52 13 months ago 15.5MB
With the image ID in hand, you can inspect the image manifest:
docker inspect bf85f2b6bf52
18%
17.02.2015
service_description PING
11 check_command check_ping!100.0,20%!500.0,60%
12 }
13 define service{
14 use generic-service ; Name of service template to use
15
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05.09.2011
STAT
03 0 open-nebula-wn 0 100 99 100 1068948 921356 on
04 1 open-nebula-wn2 0 100 12 100 1173072 1027776 on
OpenNebula Configuration File
You
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30.11.2025
45
46
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48
49
50
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52
18%
05.11.2018
are the classic functions of a resource manager (job scheduler), and Slurm does them well.
Slurm is very extensible, with more than 100 optional plugins to cover everything from accounting, to various job