51%
03.12.2015
in the container configuration. The following example allows 100MB of RAM and 100MB of swap space:
lxc.cgroup.memory.limit_in_bytes = 100M
lxc.cgroup.memory.memsw.limit_in_bytes = 200M
Table 2 [7] provides
51%
12.02.2014
B hald-addon-input
...
22.9 MiB + 4.0 MiB = 26.9 MiB plasma-desktop
26.0 MiB + 5.7 MiB = 31.7 MiB konsole (3)
28.3 MiB + 4.4 MiB = 32.7 MiB kwin
41.0 MiB + 2.0 MiB = 43.0 MiB Xorg
146.9
51%
14.09.2021
$(find /sys/devices/system/cpu -regex ".*cpu[0-9]+/topology/thread_siblings_list") | sort -n | uniq
0,32
1,33
2,34
3,35
4,36
5,37
6,38
7,39
8,40
9,41
10,42
11,43
12,44
13,45
14,46
15,47
16,48
17,49
18,50
19,51
20,52
21,53
22,54
23,55
24,56
25
51%
19.06.2023
="unformatted")
write(2) b
close(2)
end program
The compiled code outputs the value of element (5,5)
for both the double-precision and real arrays:
./fortran_test1
a(5,5) = 9.9179648655938202
b(5,5) = 9
51%
21.08.2012
.6 M
Is this ok [y/N]: y
Downloading Packages:
(1/5): apr-1.3.9-3.el6_1.2.i686.rpm | 128 kB 00:00
(2/5): expat-2.0.1-11.el6_2.i686.rpm ...
Listing 2 for Warewulf – Part 4
... Listing 2 ... Listing 2: Warewulf – Part 4
51%
22.12.2017
wall clock time = ', wtime
!
! Terminate.
!
write ( *, '(a)' ) ' '
write ( *, '(a)' ) 'HELLO_OPENMP'
write ( *, '(a)' ) ' Normal end of execution.'
!stop
end
For testing, I used f2py to build
51%
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
51%
17.02.2015
Xino-Lime
Linux
All-winner A10 processor
Single ARM Cortex-A8 @1GHz
Mali-400
512MB DDR3
SATA connector, 2 USB, Fast Ethernet, USB OTG, HDMI
1.9W
$44/EUR 30 ... 25
51%
02.06.2020
on a local NVMe device:
$ cat /proc/partitions|grep nvme
259 0 244198584 nvme0n1
259 3 97654784 nvme0n1p1
259 4 96679936 nvme0n1p2
I will be using partition 1 for the L2ARC read
51%
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