Displaying 20 results from an estimated 106 matches for "surpassingly".
Did you mean:
surpassing
2005 Apr 26
5
Is shorewall comptible with hipac?
Hi all,
http://www.hipac.org/index.htm
I have just discovered this great project. It seems it surpasses
standard netfilter in performance.
The documentation states they are more or less compatible with
standard netfilter, but anybody has tested if it is compatible with
shorewall? Tom, have you?
Regards
--
Jaime Nebrera - jnebrera@eneotecnologia.com
Consultor TI - ENEO Tecnologia SL
2016 Apr 20
2
Parsing and counting expressions in .txt-files
Dear Community,
I hope that I have the right category selected because I am relatively new
to the "R" world. I come with a relatively challenging problem in the
luggage. I would like to realize, that "R" reads text files (there are
several hundred pieces in my folder) sequentially, and screens for specific
terms. If the term is found, the program should write a 1, if not a
2010 Jun 09
1
Problem Matching Exact Values
Sorry for the basic question - bur I ran into something I haven't
noticed before and would appreciate a little more perspective on my
problem.
I am using R to determine if various thresholds are hit (or surpassed)
in a data set.? If a threshold is surpassed, I have had no problems
identifying it.? However, when the threshold is matched *exactly*, not
all cases are being identified.
Please
2011 Jan 25
2
Memdisk Question
Hi Guys,
I'm currently using pxelinux 4.03 and memdisk to boot a DOS based
floppy we use this software for training purposes to run a basic
hardware check.
It does not seem to like systems which have more than 1GB of RAM,
which is some of the machines our company are now starting to
see.
Is there a way I can ask memdisk or PXE linux to use only xxx MB
of RAM, e.g. 256MB...?
2007 May 01
2
Multiple filesystem costs? Directory sizes?
While setting up my new system, I''m wondering whether I should go with plain directories or use ZFS filesystems for specific stuff. About the cost of ZFS filesystems, I read on some Sun blog in the past about something like 64k kernel memory (or whatever) per active filesystem. What are however the additional costs?
The reason I''m considering multiple filesystems is for instance
2009 Apr 28
1
glusterfs and samba (file-max limit reached)
Recently a gluster I setup got mounted on a server that exports it
through samba. It appears to work till a point. Unexpectedly on heavy
usage the nodes happen to reach the max file descriptors opened limit
really easily.
Anybody else has experience on it? Is that kind of usage supported.
currently one node seems to have surpassed about 3M open files even if
the samba server claims to have
2009 Mar 26
2
Deleting files after they are sent via send_file
Hello guys,
I am having the option to download certain folders on my app in zip
format. So every time a user requests one I''m doing a system call to
zip the folder (ex: system(''cd ''+path+'' && zip ...) and then the
send_file method to send it.
What happens is that I''m keeping track of disk space so I need to
delete the zip immediately. I was
2008 Apr 24
2
[LLVMdev] Status of use-diet so far (NO API CHANGES)
Hi all,
in the last days I was busy gathering performance data
about the "class Use"-related changes.
I have nice measurements on a 8Gig MacPro with kimwitu++.
This is important to say, because this machine is
in plenty of memory, so swapping is not likely, which
means that in more constrained setups (when swapping
occurs) the use-diet approach is probably producing
even better
2013 Feb 26
2
Help on a code
Dear List,
I have the following code:
x <-c(0, 13.8333333333333, 38.1666666666667, 62.1666666666667, 85.9166666666667, 108.916666666667)
y <-c(1.77, 2.39, 3, 2.65, 2.62, 1.8)
Interpolated <- approx(x, y,xout=0:tail(x, n=1),method="linear")
plot(Interpolated)
in this code x is time in hours (cumulative), and y is a biological variable. I am using linear interpolation
2019 May 29
2
Converting non-32-bit integers from python to R to use bit64: reticulate
Dear R Developers,
There is an interesting issue related to "reticulate" R package which
discusses how to convert Python's non-32 bit integers to R, which has had
quite an exhaustive discussion:
https://github.com/rstudio/reticulate/issues/323
Python seems to handle integers differently from R, and is dependant on the
system arquitecture: On 32 bit systems uses 32-bit integers,
2015 Aug 27
1
please block user
On 8/26/2015 5:30 PM, Always Learning wrote:
> Easier just to block Digital Ocean for port 25 - as I have previously
> done for all port 80 traffic.
you realize Digital Ocean is a rather large virtual private server
provider? wikipedia says they host over 190,000 sites, and last year
surpassed Rackspace to become the 4th largest hosting provider.
a blanket block of /16 subnets is
2013 Oct 15
1
Using *Syslinux 6.02* on *BTRFS* volumes corrupts the superblock.
BTRFS file systems will be corrupted on 6.02 (mainstream) and some
previous versions.
DYNAMIC_DEBUG makes the core larger than the allowed.
Even before its introduction, building Syslinux with DEBUG_PORT
enabled would probably corrupt BTRFS images (IIRC) *if* ldlinux.sys
surpasses the maximum allowed size.
Besides, the installer isn't safe at all... The check could be easily
made there to
2016 Jan 27
1
[v3,11/41] mips: reuse asm-generic/barrier.h
On Tue, Jan 26, 2016 at 02:33:40PM -0800, Linus Torvalds wrote:
> If it turns out that some architecture does actually need a barrier
> between a read and a dependent write, then that will mean that
>
> (a) we'll have to make up a _new_ barrier, because
> "smp_read_barrier_depends()" is not that barrier. We'll presumably
> then have to make that new barrier
2016 Jan 27
1
[v3,11/41] mips: reuse asm-generic/barrier.h
On Tue, Jan 26, 2016 at 02:33:40PM -0800, Linus Torvalds wrote:
> If it turns out that some architecture does actually need a barrier
> between a read and a dependent write, then that will mean that
>
> (a) we'll have to make up a _new_ barrier, because
> "smp_read_barrier_depends()" is not that barrier. We'll presumably
> then have to make that new barrier
2011 Jul 22
2
averaging rows based on string¿?
Hi Folks,
Ran into something I'd really like to do in R simply/elegantly, but my R -
coding skills seem surpassed. This is the thing. Imagine the following data:
labs<-c("abcdef","abcgg","tgthefdk","tgtijuel","tgtnjmoi","gbnt","dlift")
dat<-c(0.5,0.25,1,2,16,0.250,4)
dframe<-data.frame(labs,dat)
I would like to
2012 Oct 29
0
[LLVMdev] [llvm-commits] [llvm] r162770 - in /llvm/trunk: include/llvm/CodeGen/MachineOperand.h lib/CodeGen/MachineInstr.cpp
On Oct 29, 2012, at 3:28 PM, "Sergei Larin" <slarin at codeaurora.org> wrote:
> Arnold,
>
> I wanted to hear from Jacob is the original patch in question still needed,
> since our use of this field could surpass const extenders and could
> potentially include MO_Register.
>
> Jacob,
>
> Can you please comment? Thanks.
I don't really have
2007 Mar 15
1
Dropped calls in Asterisk - A general question
Hey all, I have a question for those administrating/building out
systems with over 30 users on them. How often do you experience
the dropped call phenomena. Would you care to share your
experiences including what versions of * you were using, what
kind of connectivity was present (T1, Fractional T, Intergrated T,
DSL, Cable). Echo? Solutions? (e.g. we bought an X_Brand Echo
Canceller).
Also,
2008 Mar 05
6
Asterisk based UNIX
Hi All;
Anyone tried to install Asterisk based on UNIX (not
linux)? Which UNIX was good to work with Asterisk?
Regards
Bilal
____________________________________________________________________________________
Never miss a thing. Make Yahoo your home page.
http://www.yahoo.com/r/hs
2008 Apr 25
0
[LLVMdev] Status of use-diet so far (NO API CHANGES)
On Apr 24, 2008, at 9:03 AM, Gabor Greif wrote:
>
> As you can see, the use-diet changes actually lower the build time
> of kimwitu++! (this is as of yesterday's r50182).
> Parity is not only reached, but surpassed.
Thanks for these numbers. Do you know how much of this increase is due
to
co-allocating Use arrays with their users, and how much is due to the
actual shrinking of
2014 Oct 09
1
Speex on M3 for a device for a disabled person to use
Hi Tristan,
well... if speed is really his problem (and looking at those 72 MHz it
probably is), wouldn't Speek surpass Opus by far?
I agree that Opus is way better, but it's sadly also using more resources...
But yeah, Richard you should give Opus a try if possible ;) It's
generally easier to use then Speex and also more feature rich.
Yours sincerely,
Ren? Sch?mann
*From:*