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141.20.108.124
07 active_checks_enabled 1
08 passive_checks_enabled 0
09 max_check_attempts 3
10 check_command check-host-alive
11
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_lip =
08 node_name = "0x50060b0000c26205"
09 port_id = "0x010901"
10 port_name = "0x50060b0000c26204"
11 port_state = "Online"
12 port_type = "NPort (fabric via point-to-point)"
13 speed = "4
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: all cores
0x40: core: this core
0x30: prefetch: all inclusive
0x10: prefetch: Hardware prefetch only
0x00: prefetch: exclude hardware prefetch
0x08: (M)ESI: Modified
0x04: M
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/64 BS]... DONE
07 Many salts: 45898 c/s real, 45898 c/s virtual
08 Only one salt: 45108 c/s real, 45186 c/s virtual
09
10 Benchmarking: FreeBSD MD5 [32/64 X2]... DONE
11 Raw: 10995 c/s real, 10995
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X4 920 CPU (quad core)
8GB of memory (DDR2-800)
The operating system and boot drive are on an IBM DTLA-307020 (20GB drive at Ultra ATA/100)
/home is on a Seagate ST1360827AS
A 64GB Intel X
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versions worked best (and worst) together. My tests included the following:
Kame/Racoon on Mac OS X and Linux
Solaris 10
Windows Server 2008
Cisco-Router with IOS 12
Juniper SRX
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at the prompt or double-click the Cygwin icon, and type startwwin
at the bash prompt. Two significant things happen when you invoke the startxwin
command: An xterm and an X server (Cygwin/X Server:0.0) launch
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=> 12;
05
06 # Hash AV pairs: (load in vusers, throughput in gets/sec)
07 %tpdata = ( (1,24), (2,48), (4,85), (7,100), (10,99), (20,94) );
08
09 @vusers = keys(%tpdata);
10 $model = "e-Commerce Final
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. In the test scenario, I defined a backup schedule with the following settings:
Schedule: weekly
Daily full backup: Monday – Friday 20:00
Daily incremental backup: Monday – Friday 08:00--18:00, 30
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06 I_T nexus information:
07 LUN information:
08 LUN: 0
09 Type: controller
10 SCSI ID: deadbeaf1:0
11 SCSI SN: beaf10
12 Size: 0
13