I'm trying to get into the world of home file servers (or an NAS, I'm not really sure what the difference is) and there's a lot of information on how to start. There are a few things that I would like to see, get a feel for, and hear other peoples' opinions on.
What are some of the best... (5 Replies)
Hi all,
We have a disk array that has the boot drive on an OCZ SSD on a PCIe card. Well, the motherboard died and we got a new motherboard. We moved the controllers, NICs, etc, to the exact same slots on the new motherboard, except now it won't boot. I guess it doesn't recognize the OS on the... (1 Reply)
I have an upgrade path in mind for a new computer that will be stocked with a 2TB SATA 300 hard disk. This is a choice based on information that SATA 300 is not necessarily faster than SATA 600. The upgrade path in a year time or so would then involve the purchase of an SSD that would contain the... (4 Replies)
Hello everybody,
I need to connect a laptop 2.5 SATA hard drive to a Desktop board (which uses 3.5' SATA hard drives). I've tried the connectors and they fit excellent in the 2.5 SATA connectors.
The problem is that the laptop hard drive uses 5v and the PC's power source sends 12v. So, my... (4 Replies)
trying to setup a sata drive using a sata to scsi adaptor
I have a sata 1TB Deskstar that I had setup before and during shipment from a facilty to another, the disk failed. The handling was not great, lots of throwing boxes, etc. I have a new disk from Hitachi (thankyou Hitachi) anyway, I don't... (1 Reply)
i have a network drive (samba) mounted on to my PC and also i have SSH client on my machine. however i need to run applications/commands on a unix server from the middle of a different executable(windows compatable one). so i need to connect to the unix server from SSH through the... (1 Reply)
RUNLIM(1) General Commands Manual RUNLIM(1)NAME
runlim - a program to run benchmarks
SYNOPSIS
runlim [ options ...] command [ arguments ...]
DESCRIPTION
run is a tool that can be used to run and control benchmarks. It executes a given command with (optional) arguments, samples resource
usage during the run, and kills the process (and its child processes) if a certain time and/or space limit is exhausted.
Every 100 milliseconds, runlim takes a sample of the program's resource utilization, and logs status information to stderr every second.
Optionally, the status can be logged to a file.
Multi-threaded programs can be limited by setting a wall clock timeout. runlim follows the time accumulation scheme of GNU time for multi-
threaded programs and programs that spawn multiple child-processes: time spent in each thread/child is summed up, unless you are only
interested in walk clock time.
OPTIONS
runlim accepts the following options:
-h, --help
Show summary of options.
--version
Show version of program.
-o FILE, --output-file=FILE
Overwrite or create FILE for output logging.
-s NUM, --space-limit=NUM
Set space limit to NUM megabytes.
-t NUM, --time-limit=NUM
Set time limit to NUM seconds.
-r NUM, --real-time-limit=NUM
Set real time limit to NUM seconds.
-k, --kill
Propagate signals.
SEE ALSO time(1), timelimit(1), timeout(1), time(7).
AUTHOR
runlim was written by Armin Biere and Toni Jussila.
This manual page was written by Thomas Krennwallner <tkren@kr.tuwien.ac.at>, for the Debian project (and may be used by others).
February 11, 2011 RUNLIM(1)