31%
11.02.2016
. The guide cites a 1.5GHz CPU or better, 512MB of RAM, and 30GB of hard disk space as the minimum requirements. For a small installation for up to 10 users, you could even get away with 256MB if RAM, 20GB
31%
11.02.2016
+----------------------------------+---------+---------------------+
40 | 47e0142a3638fdc24fe40d4e4fbce3f1 | Row 1 | 2015-09-13 15:24:12 |
41 | b833c1e4c5bfc47d0dbe31c2e3f30837 | Row 3 | 2015-09-13 15:24:14 |
42 | c7d46523a316de4e1496c65c3cbdf358 | Row 2 | 2015
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23.03.2022
-34-1804/72
/dev/loop7 17441 17441 0 100% /snap/gnome-3-38-2004/87
/dev/nvme1n1p1 62513152 7087560 55425592 12% /home
/dev/nvme0n1p1 0 0 0 - /boot/efi
/dev/loop8
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28.11.2022
of alternative sources.
Listing 1
sensors Output
federico@ferenginar:~$ sensors
k10temp-pci-00c3
Adapter: PCI adapter
temp1: +42.5¡C (high = +70.0¡C)
(crit = +100.0¡C
31%
01.08.2019
push remote.repository.com:5000/alpine:latest
The push refers to repository [remote.repository.com:5000/alpine]
73046094a9b8: Pushed
latest: digest: sha256:0873c923e00e0fd2ba78041bfb64a105e1ecb7678916d1f
31%
10.06.2015
source nfdump [5] tool does this job on an existing Linux server or on a lean virtual machine (VM). A CPU core, 256MB of RAM, and a 2GB hard drive are sufficient for the VM. You can install on Cent
31%
05.02.2023
wgossrvc
Listing 4
setup_goss.sh Diff Additions
5a6
> GOSSVFLE='/lib/systemd/system/goss.service'
9,10c10,12
< sha256sum
< tee
---
> sha256sum
> systemctl
> tee
81a84
31%
06.05.2024
).
Figure 4: LattePanda Mu (image credit: DFRobot).
The Intel N100 peaks around 22-23W under load, although DFRobot says up to 35W. The Raspberry Pi 5 under load peaks around 12W, so the power draw
31%
28.11.2021
4fc2c67
server.example.com IN SSHFP 3 2 fbfb8965a367f71e4ed8f6737a2e2db1c04be671db7c9c4e17ac346b9ae7a825
With the SSH option VerifyHostKeyDNS=yes set, SSH clients compare the supplied
31%
30.11.2025
the Ubuntu Precise (12.04) Universe repository and as a package for Debian Sid.
To install the server on Linux, you first need to install the necessary packages; the example here uses an Ubuntu distribution