20%
30.11.2025
of read requests issued to the device per second.
w/s
: Number of write requests issued to the device per second.
rMB/s
: Number of megabytes read from the device per second.
wMB/s
: Number
20%
14.08.2017
% 0 0.0KB/s 00:00
To copy a file from a remote system, change the syntax slightly:
scp bob@calypso:/opt/test/file.txt .
The trailing dot means the copy is to the current directory
20%
30.11.2025
_dlm]
root 3467 7 0 20:07 ? 00:00:00 [o2net]
root 3965 7 0 20:24 ? 00:00:00 [ocfs2_wq]
root 7921 7 0 22:40 ? 00:00:00 [o2hb-BD5A574EC8]
root 7935 7
20%
05.11.2018
Name=slurm-node-0[0-1] Gres=gpu:2 CPUs=10 Sockets=1 CoresPerSocket=10 \
ThreadsPerCore=1 RealMemory=30000 State=UNKNOWN
PartitionName=compute Nodes=ALL Default=YES MaxTime=48:00:00 DefaultTime=04:00:00 \
Max
20%
13.12.2018
remember using it at Linux Networx in the early 2000s. Over the years, it has been developed by Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, SchedMD [5], Linux Networx, Hewlett-Packard, and Groupe Bull [6
20%
21.08.2014
't connect to $remote_host:$remote_port: $@ \n";
17
18
19 while() {
20 my @lavg = Sys::CpuLoad::load();
21 my $ts=time();
22 print $socket "system.loadavg_1min $lavg[0] $ts\n";
23 print $socket "system ... 22
20%
30.11.2025
01 $ ar -tv Adaptec_Inc_bootbank_scsi-aacraid_5.0.5.1.7.28700-1OEM.500.0.0.406165.vib
02 --------- 0/0 1356 Jan 1 01:00 1970 descriptor.xml
03 --------- 0/0 2122 Jan 1 01:00 1970 sig.pkcs7
04
19%
25.03.2020
0 1048575 sr0
With the parted utility, you can create a single partition on each entire HDD:
$ for i in sdb sdc sdd sde; do sudo parted --script /dev/$i mklabel gpt mkpart primary 1MB 100
19%
05.08.2024
://archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu noble-backports/universe amd64 Packages [11.5 kB]
Fetched 24.2 MB in 2s (13.1 MB/s)
Reading package lists...
Reading package lists...
...
Processing triggers for libc-bin (2.39-0ubuntu8.2) ...
COMMIT ubuntu-dev
--> f12343192636
19%
21.01.2020
on the NVMe drive and verify that the partition has been created:
$ sudo parted --script /dev/nvme0n1 mklabel gpt mkpart primary 1MB 100%
$ cat /proc/partitions | grep nvme
259 0 244198584 nvme0n1