search for: typical

Displaying 20 results from an estimated 11675 matches for "typical".

2012 Aug 24
1
Typical setup questions
All, I am curious what is used typically for the file system replication and how do you make sure that it is consistent. So for example when using large 3TB+ sata/NL-sas drives. Is is typical to replicate three times to get similar protection to raid 6? Also what is typically done to ensure that all replicas are in place and consi...
2010 Oct 08
2
Can't delete or add files when a node fails.
I am trying to track down a problem I reported on the list last week and discovered a new problem during my testing. If you have a four node setup with replicate/distribute and one of the nodes has a filesystem failure, the operating system will typically remount the filesystem read only. When this happens, the glusterfsd is still running on the failed machine, but i doesn't seem to recognize that there is a problem. If you try to create new files from a client and do an ls you will see that some of the files don't appear. Conversely...
2008 Mar 24
4
estimation on phone network capacity
Hi I am working on deploying voip for my company and would like to seek some advice on the number of E1 lines we need to rent. Our telco told us that there can be at most 30 concurrent channels on an E1 line. Typically, what is the maximum number of DIDs that we can allocate to that E1 line before users get frequent "all lines are busy"? We are running a support center with mostly incoming calls. Is there any rule of thumb that are typically used for this kind of estimation? Thanks, Mark ----------...
2003 May 18
2
G.729: Typical usage scenarios
Clicking on the "For more information, click here" link on the Digium site nice brings back up the same page I was looking at before, without any additional G.729 information that I can see. I'm wondering if some kind asterisker out there could provide us neophytes with some "typical scenarios" where that codec would be useful to us. For instance, I assume that it doesn't gain anything on calls passed out to the PSTN? Do the Cisco ATA186s have any ability to handle this codec? Perhaps it would be useful if I'm trunking from a FXS port here locally to an FXO p...
2004 Dec 04
0
Typical Setup for a small/medium office
We are planning our office communications system using the asterisk PBX and will be using an VOIP origination and termination service such as voicepulse to do so. I know the possibilities are endless, but I'm just looking for a typical asterisk setup for a small/medium business which will use a VOIP origination and termination service. For instance, let's say we have one receptionist, and 10 small offices with stations, what features would typical small/medium business need in their communications system? Thanks, Brent ---...
2020 Mar 23
4
[RFC] Coding standard for error/warning messages
Hi all, This came up in a recent review. There is currently no documented style for how to write error messages. For example, should they start with a capital letter or end in a full stop? Consequently, there's quite a bit of inconsistency in our diagnostics throughout the code base. clang typically emits error messages with no leading capital letter and no trailing full stop. For example: C:\>clang "clang: error: no input files" I have suggested this approach be followed in many different reviews, primarily in the LLVM equivalents of the GNU binutils that I typically work on....
2008 May 20
3
Is this typical memory usage?
...ing to virt-manager my memory usage is: dom0 8.68 GB win2k 1.01 GB win2k3_1 1.01 GB win2k3_2 519 MB win2k3_3 519 MB win2k3_4 519 MB win2k3_5 519 MB win2k3_6 519 MB I''m wondering if I shut down all the domU''s and restart if I''ll gain some RAM back from dom0? Or, is this typical? Thanks, James _______________________________________________ Xen-users mailing list Xen-users@lists.xensource.com http://lists.xensource.com/xen-users
2005 Jun 24
0
Re: Opteron Mobo Suggestions -- the follies of typical tape backup (it's the 21st century)
...dealing with transient power #2 is dealing with the hardware ATA disconnect #3 is dealing with the software ATA disconnect While many carriers claim to solve #1 for ATA, _only_ SATA with its staggered data/power (using the 15-pin power, and not the legacy 4-pin Molex) is the _best_ guarantee. But typically #1 is not that much of an issue, because the carrier does a decent job at this (some better than others though). The big issue with "FRAID" is at #2. A biggie is when you use the master/slave and remove one. But even if you do master-only, how do you take out a device and replace it...
2006 Jun 25
0
A typical spec file
http://www.winehq.org/site/docs/winelib-guide/spec-file says A typical spec file will look something like this: init WinMain rsrc resource.res And regarding rsrc, "If your project does not have a resource file then you must omit this entry altogether." So my mtapi.dll.spec file looks like this: init DllMain And I only manually made one since mak...
2009 Mar 06
5
work around the 64 pickupgroups limit
Hi! What are the typical ways to work around the 64 groups limit? thanks klaus
1998 Nov 03
0
Is Samba typically slower sending files than receiving?
Is Samba typically slower sending files than receiving? I have seen this both at home and at work. Sometimes the throughput is 1/2 when I copy files from Samba than when I copy to Samba (From WinNT and Win95/98) The Players -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- I...
2005 Jun 15
0
Re: New Server Recommendation -- disk label strategy, quotas, etc...
...with 1 "spare" for each. That way I can flop around filesystems, accomodate additions, etc... LVM/LVM2 helps reduce this, but I still like to use the approach (except I just don't make spares, I just reserve 15-30% of disk space for LVM/LVM2). E.g., the "essential" class is typically 2-8GB each. The "support" class is typically 8-64GB each. The "discretionary" class is typically 64+GB each. For all systems, I typically do these "essential" classes: / /tmp /var I also typically create the following "support" classes: /usr /usr/...
2018 Apr 12
3
Wich is best for backup? nfs of iscsi?
Hello I have a CentOS VM with a lots of inodes, and 500GB +/-, running under hyper-v . Which is best for backup them? What is the pros and cons? Thanks for attention.
2014 Feb 25
3
assigning a single IP to the guest with "typical" hosting provider
...rnet. Which networking mode should I use in this setup? Bridge, macvtap? I've tried both, without success (i.e. in macvtap mode, arp who-has are passed from the guest to the gateway, replies received on the host, but they are not passed to the guest). Has anyone ever set libvirt with a "typical" hosting provider, when only an extra IP, from a non-host subnet, is available for a guest? -- Tomasz Chmielewski http://wpkg.org
2011 Sep 07
1
Clearcase, Samba, and mnode values
...temporarily deployed an upgraded Clearcase server (7.1.2.3) on 64 bit RHEL 5.6. With it I was using Redhat's release of Samba for that version of the OS -- 3.0.33. The system has 32 GB of memory and within 12 hours, it would be down into swap. Maximum active licenses used is 36 but a more typical load is 18-25 users having a Clearcase license at once. Clearcase clients are on Windows. This server is the whole shebang -- license server, view and vob server. All disks are local, no NAS. Most of the time our developers are using snapshot views but merge into the dynamic views. It looks to...
2013 Sep 03
2
summary(object) not showing all values of a factor
Dear all, I am encountering some odd results from the summary(object) command for coxph and hurdle models. In both cases the result of summary(object) function leaves out one of the categories of a categorical variable used in the model. It is typically the first category if sorted alphabetically. Is there any way around this problem? For example, if I have categorical variable "type" with values {A,B,C,D,E}, it typically leaves out A in the result of the summary. Thanks! [[alternative HTML version deleted]]
2020 May 18
2
ether-wake
The WoL magic packet is only scanned for the string above, and not actually parsed by a full protocol stack, it could be sent as any network- and transport-layer protocol, although it is typically sent as a UDP <https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/User_Datagram_Protocol> datagram <https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Datagram> to port <https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/TCP_and_UDP_port> 0,] <https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wake-on-LAN#cite_note-6> 7 or 9, or directly over Ethe...
2005 Jun 02
0
Re: Reboots -- Reboot Logic ...
...major issues because of the inherit attitude of its developers. _Nothing_ goes into the kernel that is not required, and that means _not_ putting in services for performance or other hacks. So that means that memory leaks and other things that are very problematic in newer services or changes are typically left to only user-space services which can be fully pre-emptive. Even NT 3.1 put things into kernel space that should have never been in there. It got worse with NT 3.51 "Daytona" for "Chicago" (DOS7.0 aka "Windows 95") compatibility, and NT 4.0 "Cario" w...
2015 Feb 06
0
Typically end-to-end 'delay' of live audio
...er ? It looks promising. Regards, St?phane Benoit. Le 05/02/2015 17:30, Tony a ?crit : > Thanks. Here's bit more detail. > > We have a scientific audio instrument that comes with its own audio > driver. This driver gives us Opus 'frames'. From a remote location > (typically less than 200mS round trip) we would like someone using a > browser (without a plugin) to 'hear' this device. We need the low > end-to-end delay as there is an active Video session (separate > application) connecting the same two locations. The remote > participant has t...
2017 Apr 26
2
tempdir() may be deleted during long-running R session
...rhaps it should be done by people putting together > | packages for specific systems. > Doesn't 'make install' only write to $RHOME/ and below, plus $PREFIX/bin ? Also, 'make install' is optional for good reasons. E.g., I never ever run 'make install': I typically always have many R versions, all available in the shell and ESS (Emacs Speaks Statistics) via symbolic links into a directory on PATH. Dirk mentioned (as well) that this is all very platform specific which I do think is important. From my typical OS point of view: Why should the user who runs...