Hello,
I have two network edgelists with first two columns as nodes and the last column pearson correlation coefficient (PCC). I want to remove the edges from net1 whose edges are common with net2 && (PCC)net2>=(PCC)net1
net1.txt
A B 0.6
A C 0.7
B C 0.7
D C ... (1 Reply)
hi
i have code in iplanet webserver in obj.conf file
<If $uri !~'^/app/literature/item/(.*)'>
AuthTrans fn="set-variable" insert-srvhdrs="X-UA-Compatible:IE=EmulateIE8"
</If>
i want to migrate it to apache webserver need your help to replace the above code for apache webserver.
i... (0 Replies)
I have an edge-list with nodes, edge.txt
A B
B J
J H
C A
G H
G A
A C
K G
I have another file which tells me which of these nodes are important, input.txt
G
C
A (3 Replies)
I am sys admin for many servers running unix (solaris, HP, Linux) and also some windows server and solaris x86
I want to know what leading software is out there whether it be freeware, shareware or commercial that can do things listed:
Performance monitoring (hardware/software, disk usage,... (7 Replies)
RUMP.HALT(1) BSD General Commands Manual RUMP.HALT(1)NAME
rump.halt -- halt a rump kernel
SYNOPSIS
rump.halt [-dhn]
DESCRIPTION
The rump.halt utility exits a rump kernel. The file system cache, if present, is flushed. Since a rump kernel does not control its clients,
they are not directly affected by rump.halt. However, they will be unable to request further services from the halted rump kernel.
The options are as follows:
-d Create a core dump. The core file is saved according to standard userland program coredump rules, and can be later examined with a
debugger.
-h By default the process hosting the rump kernel exits. Using this option shuts down rump kernel activity, but does not cause the
hosting process to exit.
-n Do not flush the file system cache. This option should be used with extreme caution. It can be used if a virtual disk or a virtual
processor is virtually on fire.
SEE ALSO rump(3)HISTORY
The rump.halt command appeared in NetBSD 6.0.
CAVEATS
While using -h makes it impossible to issue further system calls, it does not necessarily stop all activity in a rump kernel. It is recom-
mended this option is used only for debugging purposes.
BSD December 12, 2010 BSD