22%
09.10.2017
operating systems. However, while the most recent Linux versions offer both current and legacy versions of Python (Figure 1), the latest version on Mac OS (Mac OS 10.12 Sierra) only offers the legacy version
22%
30.11.2020
Service.Credentials = New-Object Microsoft.Exchange.WebServices.Data.WebCredentials($Mailbox,$Password,$Domain)
11 $ExchangeService.Url = $EwsURL
12 $offset = 0
13 Do {
14 $ItemView = New-Object Microsoft
22%
20.03.2014
the output accordingly with --type=service. All told, systemd currently provides 12 different unit types.
However, how do you know which fields belong to a log message? In this case, the journald -o verbose
22%
25.09.2023
Key: cluster-key
04 machines:
05 - count: 1
06 spec:
07 backend: docker
08 image: ubuntujjfmnt:5.33.0
09 name: monit%d
10 privileged: true
11 portMappings:
12 - containerPort: 22
13
22%
05.12.2014
with the start command:
[BroControl] > start
starting bro ...
[BroControl] >
Whenever Bro starts up, it starts its daemon to listen to all the traffic defined in its /opt/bro/etc/node.cfg file. This is eth0
22%
12.08.2015
ACC compilers became quickly available. Version 2.0 was finalized on June 2013, although a preview was posted on November 12, 2012. It added some new capabilities and expanded functionality that had been learned
22%
28.06.2011
using ifconfig. The number following the dot (0) refers to the device number; here, this is the first Veth device in the container with the VEID of 100:
sudo ifconfig veth100.0
A bridge device is now
22%
30.11.2025
way with ifconfig. The number following the dot (0) refers to the device number; here, this is the first veth device in the container with the VEID of 100:
sudo ifconfig veth100.0
A bridge device
22%
04.11.2011
$if | bzip2 ‑9 > $if.bz2;
04 done
05 real 0m27.005s
06 user 0m11.745s
07 sys 0m14.623s
08
09 $ time find . ‑name "*.gz" ‑print | parallel ‑j +0 'zcat {} | bzip2 ‑9 > {.}bz2'
11
12 real 0m
22%
07.04.2016
Inventory suite using open source software that includes SQLite, Ruby, and Apache. The spiceworks.exe application is a single, small (66MB) Windows executable file that installs and scans your network devices