31%
17.08.2011
being used.
It doesn’t matter what platform you use: If it’s pay as you go, you’ll want to monitor it to prevent your $1,000-a-month bill turning into $10,000 a month.
In the tradition of programmers
31%
30.11.2025
machine. On the basis of these hardware conditions, I gradually increased the number of checks, starting with 1,000 checks, then moving up to 1,400, and finally 2,200.
Figure 3 shows how Nagios latency
31%
05.11.2018
it the number of cores, number of cores per socket, threads per core, and the amount of memory available (e.g., 30,000MB, or 30GB, here).
CgroupAutomount=yes
CgroupReleaseAgentDir="/etc/slurm/cgroup"
Constrain
31%
13.12.2018
socket, threads per core, and the amount of memory available (e.g., 30,000MB, or 30GB, here).
CgroupAutomount=yes
CgroupReleaseAgentDir="/etc/slurm/cgroup"
ConstrainCores=yes
Constrain
31%
11.06.2014
-lstar /usr/lib64/libganglia*
104 -rwxr-xr-x 1 root root 106096 May 7 2013 /usr/lib64/libganglia-3.6.0.so.0.0.0*
0 lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 25 Feb 10 17:29 /usr/lib64/libganglia-3.6.0.so.0
31%
31.07.2013
.
The first thing that strikes me in this strace output is that I’ve graduated from one write()
function to two. The first writes 4,096 bytes, and the second writes 3,904 bytes. When I divide the total of 8,000
31%
18.10.2017
-64/16.10/lib/libpgf90rtl.so (0x00007f5bc6516000)
libpgf90.so => /opt/pgi/linux86-64/16.10/lib/libpgf90.so (0x00007f5bc5f5f000)
libpgf90_rpm1.so => /opt/pgi/linux86-64/16.10/lib/libpgf90_rpm1.so
31%
28.03.2013
Revenue in the high-end supercomputers segment of HPC systems, which sell for US$ 500,000 and up, increased 29.3% to US$ 5.6 billion from 2011, according to IDC’s recent “Worldwide High
31%
07.08.2025
.6%)
16 to 20 years (11.8%)
21 to 30 years (14.6%)
31 to 40 years (7%)
41 to 50 years (3.1%)
More than 50 years (0.5%)
Read more at Stack Overflow.
31%
09.04.2019
in mv
ubuntu@aws:~/slow-mv$ strace -t mv 3GB.copy 3GB
19:00:09 execve("/bin/mv", ["mv", "3GB.copy", "3GB"], 0x7ffd0e7dddf8 /* 21 vars */) = 0
19:00:09 brk(NULL) = 0x55cd7d1ce000