21%
21.08.2014
_port = 2003;
10
11 # create Socket
12 my $socket = IO::Socket::INET -> new(PeerAddr => $remote_host,
13 PeerPort => $remote_port,
14 Proto => "tcp",
15 Type => SOCK_STREAM)
16 or die "Couldn
21%
06.10.2022
{
10 "UserName": "ferdinand",
11 "SerialNumber": "arn:aws:iam::123456789:mfa/ferdinand",
12 "EnableDate": "2021-04-25 09:00:38+00:00"
13 }
14 ],
15 "Groups
20%
12.09.2013
');
burncpu
-----------------
00:00:30.000053
The results take 30 seconds to deliver. The CPU load table shows the associated database process for this time (Figure 1).
Listing 1
burncpu
01
20%
20.10.2013
. The output for the Samsung SSD is:
[root@home4 ~]# smartctl -i /dev/sdb
smartctl 5.43 2012-06-30 r3573 [x86_64-linux-2.6.32-358.18.1.el6.x86_64] (local build)
Copyright (C) 2002-12 by Bruce Allen, http
20%
09.01.2013
.
Listing 1
Samsung SSD Inquiry
[root@home4 ~]# smartctl -i /dev/sdb
smartctl 5.43 2012-06-30 r3573 [x86_64-linux-2.6.32-358.18.1.el6.x86_64] (local build)
Copyright (C) 2002-12 by Bruce Allen, http
20%
10.09.2012
from /etc/password
and /etc/groups
. The time is computed in number of seconds since 1970-01-01 00:00:00 UTC. The script
entry records the name of the wrapper script that was used, because you might
20%
02.06.2020
= sol.copy()
10
11 for j in range(0,ny-1):
12 sol[0,j] = 10.0
13 sol[nx-1,j] = 1.0
14 # end for
15
16 for i in range(0,nx-1):
17 sol[i,0] = 0.0
18 sol[i,ny-1] = 0.0
19 # end for
20
21 # Iterate
22
20%
05.12.2014
.21
–
EUR5.95
EUR1.00 (with French VAT)
EUR2.78 (half price as of year two)
–
$2.92
License(s)
AGPL, commercial
GPL, LGPL, AGPL
Commercial
GPLv3
20%
01.08.2019
. The takeaway is the -j LOG option (line 12), which logs port scanning behavior to a logfile with the iptables:
prefix.
Listing 1
iptable Rules
01 *filter
02 *filter
03 :INPUT ACCEPT [0:0]
04
20%
20.02.2023
. To get an accurate size, run du -sh
on both directories and subtract them from the total.
On my machine, the compute node used about 1.2GiB, which I consider pretty good, especially because it includes