Search Options

Results per page
Sort
Preferred Languages
Advance

Results 91 - 100 of 452 for Compute (0.14 sec)

  1. src/main/java/jcifs/smb1/smb1/SmbTransport.java

                    }
                }
    
                /* Verification fails (w/ W2K3 server at least) if status is not 0. This
                 * suggests MS doesn't compute the signature (correctly) for error responses
                 * (perhaps for DOS reasons).
                 */
                if (digest != null && resp.errorCode == 0) {
                    digest.verify( BUF, 4, resp );
    Registered: Sun Nov 03 00:10:13 UTC 2024
    - Last Modified: Fri Mar 22 21:10:40 UTC 2019
    - 31.2K bytes
    - Viewed (0)
  2. src/main/java/jcifs/internal/smb1/ServerMessageBlock.java

         */
        @Override
        public boolean verifySignature ( byte[] buffer, int i, int size ) {
            /*
             * Verification fails (w/ W2K3 server at least) if status is not 0. This
             * suggests MS doesn't compute the signature (correctly) for error responses
             * (perhaps for DOS reasons).
             */
            /*
             * Looks like the failure case also is just reflecting back the signature we sent
             */
    
    Registered: Sun Nov 03 00:10:13 UTC 2024
    - Last Modified: Sun Aug 05 09:45:59 UTC 2018
    - 32.7K bytes
    - Viewed (0)
  3. docs/en/docs/async.md

    Asynchronous code just means that the language 💬 has a way to tell the computer / program 🤖 that at some point in the code, it 🤖 will have to wait for *something else* to finish somewhere else. Let's say that *something else* is called "slow-file" 📝.
    
    So, during that time, the computer can go and do some other work, while "slow-file" 📝 finishes.
    
    Registered: Sun Nov 03 07:19:11 UTC 2024
    - Last Modified: Wed Aug 28 23:33:37 UTC 2024
    - 23.5K bytes
    - Viewed (0)
  4. guava/src/com/google/common/collect/Synchronized.java

          }
        }
    
        @Override
        @CheckForNull
        public V compute(
            K key,
            BiFunction<? super K, ? super @Nullable V, ? extends @Nullable V> remappingFunction) {
          synchronized (mutex) {
            return delegate().compute(key, remappingFunction);
          }
        }
    
        @Override
        @CheckForNull
        public V merge(
    Registered: Fri Nov 01 12:43:10 UTC 2024
    - Last Modified: Wed Oct 30 16:15:19 UTC 2024
    - 57.2K bytes
    - Viewed (0)
  5. common-protos/k8s.io/api/flowcontrol/v1alpha1/generated.proto

      // Note that if the precedence is not specified, it will be set to 1000 as default.
      // +optional
      optional int32 matchingPrecedence = 2;
    
      // `distinguisherMethod` defines how to compute the flow distinguisher for requests that match this schema.
      // `nil` specifies that the distinguisher is disabled and thus will always be the empty string.
      // +optional
    Registered: Wed Nov 06 22:53:10 UTC 2024
    - Last Modified: Mon Mar 11 18:43:24 UTC 2024
    - 19.4K bytes
    - Viewed (0)
  6. common-protos/k8s.io/api/flowcontrol/v1beta2/generated.proto

      // Note that if the precedence is not specified, it will be set to 1000 as default.
      // +optional
      optional int32 matchingPrecedence = 2;
    
      // `distinguisherMethod` defines how to compute the flow distinguisher for requests that match this schema.
      // `nil` specifies that the distinguisher is disabled and thus will always be the empty string.
      // +optional
    Registered: Wed Nov 06 22:53:10 UTC 2024
    - Last Modified: Mon Mar 11 18:43:24 UTC 2024
    - 19.4K bytes
    - Viewed (0)
  7. guava/src/com/google/common/collect/Maps.java

          return expectedSize + 1;
        }
        if (expectedSize < Ints.MAX_POWER_OF_TWO) {
          // This seems to be consistent across JDKs. The capacity argument to HashMap and LinkedHashMap
          // ends up being used to compute a "threshold" size, beyond which the internal table
          // will be resized. That threshold is ceilingPowerOfTwo(capacity*loadFactor), where
          // loadFactor is 0.75 by default. So with the calculation here we ensure that the
    Registered: Fri Nov 01 12:43:10 UTC 2024
    - Last Modified: Sat Oct 19 00:05:46 UTC 2024
    - 167.4K bytes
    - Viewed (0)
  8. go.sum

    cel.dev/expr v0.16.0/go.mod h1:TRSuuV7DlVCE/uwv5QbAiW/v8l5O8C4eEPHeu7gf7Sg=
    cloud.google.com/go v0.26.0/go.mod h1:aQUYkXzVsufM+DwF1aE+0xfcU+56JwCaLick0ClmMTw=
    cloud.google.com/go/compute/metadata v0.5.2 h1:UxK4uu/Tn+I3p2dYWTfiX4wva7aYlKixAHn3fyqngqo=
    cloud.google.com/go/compute/metadata v0.5.2/go.mod h1:C66sj2AluDcIqakBq/M8lw8/ybHgOZqin2obFxa/E5k=
    dario.cat/mergo v1.0.1 h1:Ra4+bf83h2ztPIQYNP99R6m+Y7KfnARDfID+a+vLl4s=
    Registered: Wed Nov 06 22:53:10 UTC 2024
    - Last Modified: Wed Nov 06 06:23:25 UTC 2024
    - 62.2K bytes
    - Viewed (0)
  9. cmd/object-multipart-handlers.go

    	if err != nil {
    		writeErrorResponse(ctx, w, toAPIError(ctx, err), r.URL)
    		return
    	}
    	opts.Versioned = versioned
    	opts.VersionSuspended = suspended
    
    	// First, we compute the ETag of the multipart object.
    	// The ETag of a multi-part object is always:
    	//   ETag := MD5(ETag_p1, ETag_p2, ...)+"-N"   (N being the number of parts)
    	//
    	// This is independent of encryption. An encrypted multipart
    Registered: Sun Nov 03 19:28:11 UTC 2024
    - Last Modified: Sat Aug 31 18:25:48 UTC 2024
    - 39.2K bytes
    - Viewed (0)
  10. guava/src/com/google/common/io/BaseEncoding.java

            this.bitsPerChar = log2(chars.length, UNNECESSARY);
          } catch (ArithmeticException e) {
            throw new IllegalArgumentException("Illegal alphabet length " + chars.length, e);
          }
    
          // Compute how input bytes are chunked. For example, with base64 we chunk every 3 bytes into
          // 4 characters. We have bitsPerChar == 6, charsPerChunk == 4, and bytesPerChunk == 3.
    Registered: Fri Nov 01 12:43:10 UTC 2024
    - Last Modified: Sat Oct 19 00:26:48 UTC 2024
    - 41.8K bytes
    - Viewed (0)
Back to top