100%
01.06.2024
Rubén Llorente ... : [devuan]
10 donkey:
11 user: root
12 host: donkey.operationalsecurity.es
13 tags: [devuan]
14 zebra:
15 user: root
16 host: zebra.operationalsecurity.es
17 tags: [devuan]
18
19
99%
25.09.2023
Rubén Llorente ... is easy enough (superuser privileges are required):
arp -s 192.168.90.55 00:0c:29:c1:91:b1
The last field of the command is the MAC address, which is the unique identifier of the network device to which
24%
14.11.2013
. For example, a byte (8 bits) with a value of 156 (10011100) that is read from a file on disk suddenly acquires a value of 220 if the second bit from the left is flipped from a 0 to a 1 (11011100) for some
24%
30.11.2025
creates a 256MB file in the current directory along with process for the job. This process reads complete file content in random order. Fio records the areas that have already been read and reads each area
23%
17.09.2013
. For example a byte (8 bits) with a value of 156 (10011100) that is read from a file on disk suddenly acquires a value of 220 if the second bit from the left is flipped from a 0 to a 1 (11011100) for some reason
23%
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
23%
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
22%
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