14%
12.05.2014
]$ cd ~/encrypted
[laytonjb@test1 encrypted]$ ls -l
total 8
lrwxrwxrwx 1 laytonjb laytonjb 24 Sep 4 15:12 acS5u3K9TJ,9FWTDUq0yWqx6 -> XuD50Mah2kp2vukDeo04cOv,
-rw-rw-r-- 1 laytonjb laytonjb 18 Sep 4 15:12 WvPjlWtCaq5g9hE1
14%
07.06.2019
(dayOfYear):as.factor(wday)Monday 16.64 18 8.382 < 2e-16 ***
s(dayOfYear):as.factor(wday)Saturday 11.29 18 3.307 3.00e-09 ***
s(dayOfYear):as.factor(wday)Sunday 12.92 18 4.843 1.02e-13 ***
---
Signif. codes: 0
14%
30.11.2025
"creating" $vmname
09
10 virsh suspend rhstorage
11 virt-clone -o rhstorage -n $vmname -f /var/lib/libvirt/images/$vmname.qcow
12 virsh resume rhstorage
13
14 oldmac="52:54:00:B4:DF:EB"
15 newmac
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%
31.07.2013
Code Example
1 #include
2
3 /* Our structure */
4 struct rec
5 {
6 int x,y,z;
7 float value;
8 };
9
10 int main()
11 {
12 int counter;
13 struct rec my
14%
03.12.2015
. That is probably one reason Google has been using containers intensively in projects such as lmctfy [12] and Kubernetes [13] for years.
Infos
Virtuozzo: https://openvz.org/Virtuozzo
OpenVZ: https
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%
31.10.2025
to be US$ 6,098.00/month or US$ .101/core per hour. A large example of 256 cores with 4GB of RAM per core and 1TB of parallel storage would cost US$ 18,245.00/month with the same US$ .101/core per hour
14%
30.11.2025
-APIC-fasteoi pciehp, ath9k
10 18: 0 0 IO-APIC-fasteoi uhci_hcd:usb4
11 19: 2384012 0 IO-APIC-fasteoi ehci_hcd:usb1
12 20: 199725 0 IO-APIC-fasteoi uhci_hcd:usb2
13 21
14%
19.10.2012
consisting of 80 cores with 4GB of RAM per core with basic storage of 500GB. POD pricing is based on cores/hour and would work out to be US$ 6,098.00/month or US$ 0.101/core·hour. A large example of 256 cores