14%
05.09.2011
/vmImages/ubuntu_server.img", #location of source image
12 TARGET = "sda1", # mount as partition ]
13 DISK = [
14 TYPE = "swap", #swap drive
15 SIZE = 1024, # size of swap drive
16 TARGET = "sdb
14%
03.02.2022
class BlazeDemoV1 extends Simulation {
08
09 var qualifiedhost = "http://blazedemo.com"
10 var proxyport = 0
11 var proxyhost = "not set"
12
13 // headers for HTTP call
14 val headers = Map(
15
14%
31.10.2025
System, DUP: total=8.00MB, used=4.00KB
Metadata, DUP: total=1.00GB, used=79.20MB
If Btrfs only has one device available when the filesystem is created, it automatically generates a duplicate
14%
21.08.2012
, 0.02
n0001: 18:58:49 up 1:13, 0 users, load average: 0.00, 0.00, 0.00
With a simple Bash, Perl, or Python script and pdsh, you can query almost anything. Just be warned that you need to play
14%
09.10.2017
unnecessarily) more than 200MB of compiler tools, such as the omnipotent gcc
package.
Make It Snappy
Unlike the init command example in Figure 6, in this case, I'm running it inside my chroot. For this example
14%
04.08.2020
romulus 192.168.133.11
node create --node-type satellite remus 192.168.133.12
node create --node-type satellite vulcan 192.168.133.13
node create --node-type satellite kronos 192.168.133.14
In addition
14%
28.11.2021
space on target_server is getting full, please check and free some space.
11
12 - alert: Webserver unavailable
13 expr: probe_http_status_code{job="blackbox_exporter"} != 200
14 for: 1m
15
14%
07.06.2019
$ ethstats -c1
eth0: 0.03 Mb/s In 0.14 Mb/s Out - 51.4 p/s In 38.8 p/s Out
requests a single sample and shows a somewhat idle system.
Grand Finale
With a nearly inexhaustible supply
14%
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
14%
07.11.2011
#pragma omp parallel for reduction(+: pi)
10 for (i = 0; i < STEPCOUNTER; i++) {
11 /* pi/4 = 1/1 ‑ 1/3 + 1/5 ‑ 1/7 + ...
12 To avoid the need to continually change
13 the sign (s=1