A short and fast journey through some of the profiling options available in the Ruby 2.x world, including a look at flamegraphs and new ways of tracking memory usage in the MRI.
Delivered as plenary at USENIX LISA 2013. video here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nZfNehCzGdw and https://www.usenix.org/conference/lisa13/technical-sessions/plenary/gregg . "How did we ever analyze performance before Flame Graphs?" This new visualization invented by Brendan can help you quickly understand application and kernel performance, especially CPU usage, where stacks (call graphs) can be sampled and then visualized as an interactive flame graph. Flame Graphs are now used for a growing variety of targets: for applications and kernels on Linux, SmartOS, Mac OS X, and Windows; for languages including C, C++, node.js, ruby, and Lua; and in WebKit Web Inspector. This talk will explain them and provide use cases and new visualizations for other event types, including I/O, memory usage, and latency.
Analyzing OS X Systems Performance with the USE MethodBrendan Gregg
Talk for MacIT 2014. This talk is about systems performance on OS X, and introduces the USE Method to check for common performance bottlenecks and errors. This methodology can be used by beginners and experts alike, and begins by constructing a checklist of the questions we’d like to ask of the system, before reaching for tools to answer them. The focus is resources: CPUs, GPUs, memory capacity, network interfaces, storage devices, controllers, interconnects, as well as some software resources such as mutex locks. These areas are investigated by a wide variety of tools, including vm_stat, iostat, netstat, top, latency, the DTrace scripts in /usr/bin (which were written by Brendan), custom DTrace scripts, Instruments, and more. This is a tour of the tools needed to solve our performance needs, rather than understanding tools just because they exist. This talk will make you aware of many areas of OS X that you can investigate, which will be especially useful for the time when you need to get to the bottom of a performance issue.
Talk for QConSF 2015: "Broken benchmarks, misleading metrics, and terrible tools. This talk will help you navigate the treacherous waters of system performance tools, touring common problems with system metrics, monitoring, statistics, visualizations, measurement overhead, and benchmarks. This will likely involve some unlearning, as you discover tools you have been using for years, are in fact, misleading, dangerous, or broken.
The speaker, Brendan Gregg, has given many popular talks on operating system performance tools. This is an anti-version of these talks, to focus on broken tools and metrics instead of the working ones. Metrics can be misleading, and counters can be counter-intuitive! This talk will include advice and methodologies for verifying new performance tools, understanding how they work, and using them successfully."
Delivered as plenary at USENIX LISA 2013. video here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nZfNehCzGdw and https://www.usenix.org/conference/lisa13/technical-sessions/plenary/gregg . "How did we ever analyze performance before Flame Graphs?" This new visualization invented by Brendan can help you quickly understand application and kernel performance, especially CPU usage, where stacks (call graphs) can be sampled and then visualized as an interactive flame graph. Flame Graphs are now used for a growing variety of targets: for applications and kernels on Linux, SmartOS, Mac OS X, and Windows; for languages including C, C++, node.js, ruby, and Lua; and in WebKit Web Inspector. This talk will explain them and provide use cases and new visualizations for other event types, including I/O, memory usage, and latency.
Analyzing OS X Systems Performance with the USE MethodBrendan Gregg
Talk for MacIT 2014. This talk is about systems performance on OS X, and introduces the USE Method to check for common performance bottlenecks and errors. This methodology can be used by beginners and experts alike, and begins by constructing a checklist of the questions we’d like to ask of the system, before reaching for tools to answer them. The focus is resources: CPUs, GPUs, memory capacity, network interfaces, storage devices, controllers, interconnects, as well as some software resources such as mutex locks. These areas are investigated by a wide variety of tools, including vm_stat, iostat, netstat, top, latency, the DTrace scripts in /usr/bin (which were written by Brendan), custom DTrace scripts, Instruments, and more. This is a tour of the tools needed to solve our performance needs, rather than understanding tools just because they exist. This talk will make you aware of many areas of OS X that you can investigate, which will be especially useful for the time when you need to get to the bottom of a performance issue.
Talk for QConSF 2015: "Broken benchmarks, misleading metrics, and terrible tools. This talk will help you navigate the treacherous waters of system performance tools, touring common problems with system metrics, monitoring, statistics, visualizations, measurement overhead, and benchmarks. This will likely involve some unlearning, as you discover tools you have been using for years, are in fact, misleading, dangerous, or broken.
The speaker, Brendan Gregg, has given many popular talks on operating system performance tools. This is an anti-version of these talks, to focus on broken tools and metrics instead of the working ones. Metrics can be misleading, and counters can be counter-intuitive! This talk will include advice and methodologies for verifying new performance tools, understanding how they work, and using them successfully."
Since the emerging of the OpenStack cloud computing platform in the Ubuntu community, increasing number of public/private cloud service providers choose to deploy it all over the world. Recently, Spectre and Meltdown have caused a panic in the world and the Spectre V2 is the only one which can attack the host system from the guest VM. It's vital to know the detailed process of the attack. Gavin Guo will give a detail explanation and an example of how to attack the host system. Besides, v1/v3/v4 are also introduced in the slide.
Simple, fast, and scalable torch7 tutorialJin-Hwa Kim
A tutorial based on basic information of Torch7. It covers installation, simple runable codes, tensor manipulations, sweep out key-packages and post-hoc audience q&a.
Introduction to DTrace (Dynamic Tracing), written by Brendan Gregg and delivered in 2007. While aimed at a Solaris-based audience, this introduction is still largely relevant today (2012). Since then, DTrace has appeared in other operating systems (Mac OS X, FreeBSD, and is being ported to Linux), and, many user-level providers have been developed to aid tracing of other languages.
Новый InterSystems: open-source, митапы, хакатоныTimur Safin
Presentation for the 1st InterSystems Meetup in the Minsk:
- New and better InterSystems changes their practice.
- open-source repositories, meetups, and hackathon;
- CPM (package manager) as a good example of open-source project
We'll discuss our experiences with tooling aimed at finding and fixing performance problems in a production Rust application, as experienced through the eyes of somebody who's more familiar with the Go ecosystem but grew to love Rust. We'll cover CPU and Heap profiling, and also briefly touch causal profiling.
Surge 2014: From Clouds to Roots: root cause performance analysis at Netflix. Brendan Gregg.
At Netflix, high scale and fast deployment rule. The possibilities for failure are endless, and the environment excels at handling this, regularly tested and exercised by the simian army. But, when this environment automatically works around systemic issues that aren’t root-caused, they can grow over time. This talk describes the challenge of not just handling failures of scale on the Netflix cloud, but also new approaches and tools for quickly diagnosing their root cause in an ever changing environment.
OSSNA 2017 Performance Analysis Superpowers with Linux BPFBrendan Gregg
Talk by Brendan Gregg for OSSNA 2017. "Advanced performance observability and debugging have arrived built into the Linux 4.x series, thanks to enhancements to Berkeley Packet Filter (BPF, or eBPF) and the repurposing of its sandboxed virtual machine to provide programmatic capabilities to system tracing. Netflix has been investigating its use for new observability tools, monitoring, security uses, and more. This talk will be a dive deep on these new tracing, observability, and debugging capabilities, which sooner or later will be available to everyone who uses Linux. Whether you’re doing analysis over an ssh session, or via a monitoring GUI, BPF can be used to provide an efficient, custom, and deep level of detail into system and application performance.
This talk will also demonstrate the new open source tools that have been developed, which make use of kernel- and user-level dynamic tracing (kprobes and uprobes), and kernel- and user-level static tracing (tracepoints). These tools provide new insights for file system and storage performance, CPU scheduler performance, TCP performance, and a whole lot more. This is a major turning point for Linux systems engineering, as custom advanced performance instrumentation can be used safely in production environments, powering a new generation of tools and visualizations."
USENIX ATC 2017: Visualizing Performance with Flame GraphsBrendan Gregg
Talk by Brendan Gregg for USENIX ATC 2017.
"Flame graphs are a simple stack trace visualization that helps answer an everyday problem: how is software consuming resources, especially CPUs, and how did this change since the last software version? Flame graphs have been adopted by many languages, products, and companies, including Netflix, and have become a standard tool for performance analysis. They were published in "The Flame Graph" article in the June 2016 issue of Communications of the ACM, by their creator, Brendan Gregg.
This talk describes the background for this work, and the challenges encountered when profiling stack traces and resolving symbols for different languages, including for just-in-time compiler runtimes. Instructions will be included generating mixed-mode flame graphs on Linux, and examples from our use at Netflix with Java. Advanced flame graph types will be described, including differential, off-CPU, chain graphs, memory, and TCP events. Finally, future work and unsolved problems in this area will be discussed."
NS2 - the network simulator which is proved useful in studying the dynamic nature of communication networks. Simulation of wired as well as wireless network functions and protocols( e.g. routing algorithms, TCP, UDP ) can be done using NS2
Lua: the world's most infuriating languagejgrahamc
Slides from a talk I gave at the Lua London Meetup on October 17: "When first confronted with Lua an experienced programmer (like me!) finds themselves infuriated by the languages little differences and hopes that can dismiss it as not worth learning :-) Later they find themselves infuriated to learn that they can't dismiss it: Lua is just too fast, too useful and too flexible. This talk will look at my experience of learning Lua and using it to send a high-altitude balloon into the stratosphere and build CloudFlare's new low latency WAF."
Performance Wins with BPF: Getting StartedBrendan Gregg
Keynote by Brendan Gregg for the eBPF summit, 2020. How to get started finding performance wins using the BPF (eBPF) technology. This short talk covers the quickest and easiest way to find performance wins using BPF observability tools on Linux.
Since the emerging of the OpenStack cloud computing platform in the Ubuntu community, increasing number of public/private cloud service providers choose to deploy it all over the world. Recently, Spectre and Meltdown have caused a panic in the world and the Spectre V2 is the only one which can attack the host system from the guest VM. It's vital to know the detailed process of the attack. Gavin Guo will give a detail explanation and an example of how to attack the host system. Besides, v1/v3/v4 are also introduced in the slide.
Simple, fast, and scalable torch7 tutorialJin-Hwa Kim
A tutorial based on basic information of Torch7. It covers installation, simple runable codes, tensor manipulations, sweep out key-packages and post-hoc audience q&a.
Introduction to DTrace (Dynamic Tracing), written by Brendan Gregg and delivered in 2007. While aimed at a Solaris-based audience, this introduction is still largely relevant today (2012). Since then, DTrace has appeared in other operating systems (Mac OS X, FreeBSD, and is being ported to Linux), and, many user-level providers have been developed to aid tracing of other languages.
Новый InterSystems: open-source, митапы, хакатоныTimur Safin
Presentation for the 1st InterSystems Meetup in the Minsk:
- New and better InterSystems changes their practice.
- open-source repositories, meetups, and hackathon;
- CPM (package manager) as a good example of open-source project
We'll discuss our experiences with tooling aimed at finding and fixing performance problems in a production Rust application, as experienced through the eyes of somebody who's more familiar with the Go ecosystem but grew to love Rust. We'll cover CPU and Heap profiling, and also briefly touch causal profiling.
Surge 2014: From Clouds to Roots: root cause performance analysis at Netflix. Brendan Gregg.
At Netflix, high scale and fast deployment rule. The possibilities for failure are endless, and the environment excels at handling this, regularly tested and exercised by the simian army. But, when this environment automatically works around systemic issues that aren’t root-caused, they can grow over time. This talk describes the challenge of not just handling failures of scale on the Netflix cloud, but also new approaches and tools for quickly diagnosing their root cause in an ever changing environment.
OSSNA 2017 Performance Analysis Superpowers with Linux BPFBrendan Gregg
Talk by Brendan Gregg for OSSNA 2017. "Advanced performance observability and debugging have arrived built into the Linux 4.x series, thanks to enhancements to Berkeley Packet Filter (BPF, or eBPF) and the repurposing of its sandboxed virtual machine to provide programmatic capabilities to system tracing. Netflix has been investigating its use for new observability tools, monitoring, security uses, and more. This talk will be a dive deep on these new tracing, observability, and debugging capabilities, which sooner or later will be available to everyone who uses Linux. Whether you’re doing analysis over an ssh session, or via a monitoring GUI, BPF can be used to provide an efficient, custom, and deep level of detail into system and application performance.
This talk will also demonstrate the new open source tools that have been developed, which make use of kernel- and user-level dynamic tracing (kprobes and uprobes), and kernel- and user-level static tracing (tracepoints). These tools provide new insights for file system and storage performance, CPU scheduler performance, TCP performance, and a whole lot more. This is a major turning point for Linux systems engineering, as custom advanced performance instrumentation can be used safely in production environments, powering a new generation of tools and visualizations."
USENIX ATC 2017: Visualizing Performance with Flame GraphsBrendan Gregg
Talk by Brendan Gregg for USENIX ATC 2017.
"Flame graphs are a simple stack trace visualization that helps answer an everyday problem: how is software consuming resources, especially CPUs, and how did this change since the last software version? Flame graphs have been adopted by many languages, products, and companies, including Netflix, and have become a standard tool for performance analysis. They were published in "The Flame Graph" article in the June 2016 issue of Communications of the ACM, by their creator, Brendan Gregg.
This talk describes the background for this work, and the challenges encountered when profiling stack traces and resolving symbols for different languages, including for just-in-time compiler runtimes. Instructions will be included generating mixed-mode flame graphs on Linux, and examples from our use at Netflix with Java. Advanced flame graph types will be described, including differential, off-CPU, chain graphs, memory, and TCP events. Finally, future work and unsolved problems in this area will be discussed."
NS2 - the network simulator which is proved useful in studying the dynamic nature of communication networks. Simulation of wired as well as wireless network functions and protocols( e.g. routing algorithms, TCP, UDP ) can be done using NS2
Lua: the world's most infuriating languagejgrahamc
Slides from a talk I gave at the Lua London Meetup on October 17: "When first confronted with Lua an experienced programmer (like me!) finds themselves infuriated by the languages little differences and hopes that can dismiss it as not worth learning :-) Later they find themselves infuriated to learn that they can't dismiss it: Lua is just too fast, too useful and too flexible. This talk will look at my experience of learning Lua and using it to send a high-altitude balloon into the stratosphere and build CloudFlare's new low latency WAF."
Performance Wins with BPF: Getting StartedBrendan Gregg
Keynote by Brendan Gregg for the eBPF summit, 2020. How to get started finding performance wins using the BPF (eBPF) technology. This short talk covers the quickest and easiest way to find performance wins using BPF observability tools on Linux.
This year, we’ve seen incredible improvements to Selenium WebDriver and now Selenium 3.0, but what does this mean for modern teams that still have trouble balancing quality and time to market? In this webinar, we uncover how you can overcome common automated testing challenges and do things you never thought possible using the Selenium WebDriver! You will learn:
-What’s new in Selenium 3.0
-How open source is changing business dynamics
-The impact of HTML5 and Responsive Web Design in mobile development
-Bridging the gap between mobile and desktop testing strategies
-Success beyond off-the-shelf components
Powerful forces are reshaping the banking industry. Customer expectations, technological
capabilities, regulatory requirements, demographics and economics are together creating an
imperative to change. Banks need to get ahead of these challenges and retool to win in the next era.
Banks must not only execute on today’s imperatives, but also radically innovate and transform
themselves for the future.
Open Source in the Cloud Computing EraTim O'Reilly
While open source software plays an important role in many cloud applications, we need to understand where the cloud is taking us or we'll find ourselves in the grip of a new monopoly. Open source needs to get serious about building interoperable open data services - they are the operating system of the internet.
This presentation is about Open Source Software, this may be helpful to understand what is open source, why we need open source software and examples of Open Source software.
This Presentation is created by Harishankar Ranagaraj and was presentated at various sessions.
Harishankar Rangaraj is the founder and Director of Open Source Academy India Pvt Ltd.
For any support on Open Source Software you can Contact us.
Open Source Academy Pvt India Ltd,
Email: info@osaipl.com
www.osaipl.com
A seminar presentation on Open Source by Ritwick Halder - a computer science engineering student at Academy Of Technology, West Bengal, India - 2013
Personal Website - www.ritwickhalder.com
Gisting is an implementation of Google\'s MapReduce framework for processing and extracting useful information from very large data sets. At the time of this writing, the code is available for PREVIEW at http://github.com/mchung/gisting. I am currently working to release this framework for general usage.
Introduction to reactive programming & ReactiveCocoaFlorent Pillet
A short introduction to the concepts of functional reactive programming, and their implementation in ReactiveCocoa, a framework for iOS and OS X developers.
This speech was given at CocoaHeads Paris, October 9th 2014
Lisp Macros in 20 Minutes (Featuring Clojure)Phil Calçado
"We just started holding 20 minutes presentations during lunch time in the ThoughtWorks Sydney office. For the first session I gave a not-that-short talk on Lisp macros using Clojure. The slides are below.
It turns out that 20 minutes is too little time to actually acquire content but I think at least we now have some people interested in how metaprogramming can be more than monkey patching."
http://fragmental.tw/2009/01/20/presentation-slides-macros-in-20-minutes/
A Recovering Java Developer Learns to GoMatt Stine
As presented at OSCON 2014.
The Go programming language has emerged as a favorite tool of DevOps and cloud practitioners alike. In many ways, Go is more famous for what it doesn’t include than what it does, and co-author Rob Pike has said that Go represents a “less is more” approach to language design.
The Cloud Foundry engineering teams have steadily increased their use of Go for building components, starting with the Router, and progressing through Loggregator, the CLI, and more recently the Health Manager. As a “recovering-Java-developer-turned-DevOps-junkie” focused on helping our customers and community succeed with Cloud Foundry, it became very clear to me that I needed to add Go to my knowledge portfolio.
This talk will introduce Go and its distinctives to Java developers looking to add Go to their toolkits. We’ll cover Go vs. Java in terms of:
* type systems
* modularity
* programming idioms
* object-oriented constructs
* concurrency
The fundamentals and advance application of Node will be covered. We will explore the design choices that make Node.js unique, how this changes the way applications are built and how systems of applications work most effectively in this model. You will learn how to create modular code that’s robust, expressive and clear. Understand when to use callbacks, event emitters and streams.
A talk on debugging of Python applications given at a local KharkivPy event.
A brief introduction into a set of tools that allow Python developers to debug common issues in their applications.
The Fundamentals Guide to HDP and HDInsightGert Drapers
This session will give you the architectural overview and introduction in to inner workings of HDP 2.0 (http://hortonworks.com/products/hdp-windows/) and HDInsight. The world has embraced the Hadoop toolkit to solve their data problems from ETL, data warehouses to event processing pipelines. As Hadoop consists of many components, services and interfaces, understanding its architecture is crucial, before you can successfully integrate it in to your own environment.
Into the Box Keynote Day 2: Unveiling amazing updates and announcements for modern CFML developers! Get ready for exciting releases and updates on Ortus tools and products. Stay tuned for cutting-edge innovations designed to boost your productivity.
A Comprehensive Look at Generative AI in Retail App Testing.pdfkalichargn70th171
Traditional software testing methods are being challenged in retail, where customer expectations and technological advancements continually shape the landscape. Enter generative AI—a transformative subset of artificial intelligence technologies poised to revolutionize software testing.
Unleash Unlimited Potential with One-Time Purchase
BoxLang is more than just a language; it's a community. By choosing a Visionary License, you're not just investing in your success, you're actively contributing to the ongoing development and support of BoxLang.
Enhancing Research Orchestration Capabilities at ORNL.pdfGlobus
Cross-facility research orchestration comes with ever-changing constraints regarding the availability and suitability of various compute and data resources. In short, a flexible data and processing fabric is needed to enable the dynamic redirection of data and compute tasks throughout the lifecycle of an experiment. In this talk, we illustrate how we easily leveraged Globus services to instrument the ACE research testbed at the Oak Ridge Leadership Computing Facility with flexible data and task orchestration capabilities.
Experience our free, in-depth three-part Tendenci Platform Corporate Membership Management workshop series! In Session 1 on May 14th, 2024, we began with an Introduction and Setup, mastering the configuration of your Corporate Membership Module settings to establish membership types, applications, and more. Then, on May 16th, 2024, in Session 2, we focused on binding individual members to a Corporate Membership and Corporate Reps, teaching you how to add individual members and assign Corporate Representatives to manage dues, renewals, and associated members. Finally, on May 28th, 2024, in Session 3, we covered questions and concerns, addressing any queries or issues you may have.
For more Tendenci AMS events, check out www.tendenci.com/events
Navigating the Metaverse: A Journey into Virtual Evolution"Donna Lenk
Join us for an exploration of the Metaverse's evolution, where innovation meets imagination. Discover new dimensions of virtual events, engage with thought-provoking discussions, and witness the transformative power of digital realms."
Exploring Innovations in Data Repository Solutions - Insights from the U.S. G...Globus
The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) has made substantial investments in meeting evolving scientific, technical, and policy driven demands on storing, managing, and delivering data. As these demands continue to grow in complexity and scale, the USGS must continue to explore innovative solutions to improve its management, curation, sharing, delivering, and preservation approaches for large-scale research data. Supporting these needs, the USGS has partnered with the University of Chicago-Globus to research and develop advanced repository components and workflows leveraging its current investment in Globus. The primary outcome of this partnership includes the development of a prototype enterprise repository, driven by USGS Data Release requirements, through exploration and implementation of the entire suite of the Globus platform offerings, including Globus Flow, Globus Auth, Globus Transfer, and Globus Search. This presentation will provide insights into this research partnership, introduce the unique requirements and challenges being addressed and provide relevant project progress.
How to Position Your Globus Data Portal for Success Ten Good PracticesGlobus
Science gateways allow science and engineering communities to access shared data, software, computing services, and instruments. Science gateways have gained a lot of traction in the last twenty years, as evidenced by projects such as the Science Gateways Community Institute (SGCI) and the Center of Excellence on Science Gateways (SGX3) in the US, The Australian Research Data Commons (ARDC) and its platforms in Australia, and the projects around Virtual Research Environments in Europe. A few mature frameworks have evolved with their different strengths and foci and have been taken up by a larger community such as the Globus Data Portal, Hubzero, Tapis, and Galaxy. However, even when gateways are built on successful frameworks, they continue to face the challenges of ongoing maintenance costs and how to meet the ever-expanding needs of the community they serve with enhanced features. It is not uncommon that gateways with compelling use cases are nonetheless unable to get past the prototype phase and become a full production service, or if they do, they don't survive more than a couple of years. While there is no guaranteed pathway to success, it seems likely that for any gateway there is a need for a strong community and/or solid funding streams to create and sustain its success. With over twenty years of examples to draw from, this presentation goes into detail for ten factors common to successful and enduring gateways that effectively serve as best practices for any new or developing gateway.
How Recreation Management Software Can Streamline Your Operations.pptxwottaspaceseo
Recreation management software streamlines operations by automating key tasks such as scheduling, registration, and payment processing, reducing manual workload and errors. It provides centralized management of facilities, classes, and events, ensuring efficient resource allocation and facility usage. The software offers user-friendly online portals for easy access to bookings and program information, enhancing customer experience. Real-time reporting and data analytics deliver insights into attendance and preferences, aiding in strategic decision-making. Additionally, effective communication tools keep participants and staff informed with timely updates. Overall, recreation management software enhances efficiency, improves service delivery, and boosts customer satisfaction.
TROUBLESHOOTING 9 TYPES OF OUTOFMEMORYERRORTier1 app
Even though at surface level ‘java.lang.OutOfMemoryError’ appears as one single error; underlyingly there are 9 types of OutOfMemoryError. Each type of OutOfMemoryError has different causes, diagnosis approaches and solutions. This session equips you with the knowledge, tools, and techniques needed to troubleshoot and conquer OutOfMemoryError in all its forms, ensuring smoother, more efficient Java applications.
Quarkus Hidden and Forbidden ExtensionsMax Andersen
Quarkus has a vast extension ecosystem and is known for its subsonic and subatomic feature set. Some of these features are not as well known, and some extensions are less talked about, but that does not make them less interesting - quite the opposite.
Come join this talk to see some tips and tricks for using Quarkus and some of the lesser known features, extensions and development techniques.
Field Employee Tracking System| MiTrack App| Best Employee Tracking Solution|...informapgpstrackings
Keep tabs on your field staff effortlessly with Informap Technology Centre LLC. Real-time tracking, task assignment, and smart features for efficient management. Request a live demo today!
For more details, visit us : https://informapuae.com/field-staff-tracking/
Top Features to Include in Your Winzo Clone App for Business Growth (4).pptxrickgrimesss22
Discover the essential features to incorporate in your Winzo clone app to boost business growth, enhance user engagement, and drive revenue. Learn how to create a compelling gaming experience that stands out in the competitive market.
Understanding Globus Data Transfers with NetSageGlobus
NetSage is an open privacy-aware network measurement, analysis, and visualization service designed to help end-users visualize and reason about large data transfers. NetSage traditionally has used a combination of passive measurements, including SNMP and flow data, as well as active measurements, mainly perfSONAR, to provide longitudinal network performance data visualization. It has been deployed by dozens of networks world wide, and is supported domestically by the Engagement and Performance Operations Center (EPOC), NSF #2328479. We have recently expanded the NetSage data sources to include logs for Globus data transfers, following the same privacy-preserving approach as for Flow data. Using the logs for the Texas Advanced Computing Center (TACC) as an example, this talk will walk through several different example use cases that NetSage can answer, including: Who is using Globus to share data with my institution, and what kind of performance are they able to achieve? How many transfers has Globus supported for us? Which sites are we sharing the most data with, and how is that changing over time? How is my site using Globus to move data internally, and what kind of performance do we see for those transfers? What percentage of data transfers at my institution used Globus, and how did the overall data transfer performance compare to the Globus users?
SOCRadar Research Team: Latest Activities of IntelBrokerSOCRadar
The European Union Agency for Law Enforcement Cooperation (Europol) has suffered an alleged data breach after a notorious threat actor claimed to have exfiltrated data from its systems. Infamous data leaker IntelBroker posted on the even more infamous BreachForums hacking forum, saying that Europol suffered a data breach this month.
The alleged breach affected Europol agencies CCSE, EC3, Europol Platform for Experts, Law Enforcement Forum, and SIRIUS. Infiltration of these entities can disrupt ongoing investigations and compromise sensitive intelligence shared among international law enforcement agencies.
However, this is neither the first nor the last activity of IntekBroker. We have compiled for you what happened in the last few days. To track such hacker activities on dark web sources like hacker forums, private Telegram channels, and other hidden platforms where cyber threats often originate, you can check SOCRadar’s Dark Web News.
Stay Informed on Threat Actors’ Activity on the Dark Web with SOCRadar!
Cyaniclab : Software Development Agency Portfolio.pdfCyanic lab
CyanicLab, an offshore custom software development company based in Sweden,India, Finland, is your go-to partner for startup development and innovative web design solutions. Our expert team specializes in crafting cutting-edge software tailored to meet the unique needs of startups and established enterprises alike. From conceptualization to execution, we offer comprehensive services including web and mobile app development, UI/UX design, and ongoing software maintenance. Ready to elevate your business? Contact CyanicLab today and let us propel your vision to success with our top-notch IT solutions.
Providing Globus Services to Users of JASMIN for Environmental Data AnalysisGlobus
JASMIN is the UK’s high-performance data analysis platform for environmental science, operated by STFC on behalf of the UK Natural Environment Research Council (NERC). In addition to its role in hosting the CEDA Archive (NERC’s long-term repository for climate, atmospheric science & Earth observation data in the UK), JASMIN provides a collaborative platform to a community of around 2,000 scientists in the UK and beyond, providing nearly 400 environmental science projects with working space, compute resources and tools to facilitate their work. High-performance data transfer into and out of JASMIN has always been a key feature, with many scientists bringing model outputs from supercomputers elsewhere in the UK, to analyse against observational or other model data in the CEDA Archive. A growing number of JASMIN users are now realising the benefits of using the Globus service to provide reliable and efficient data movement and other tasks in this and other contexts. Further use cases involve long-distance (intercontinental) transfers to and from JASMIN, and collecting results from a mobile atmospheric radar system, pushing data to JASMIN via a lightweight Globus deployment. We provide details of how Globus fits into our current infrastructure, our experience of the recent migration to GCSv5.4, and of our interest in developing use of the wider ecosystem of Globus services for the benefit of our user community.
Gamify Your Mind; The Secret Sauce to Delivering Success, Continuously Improv...Shahin Sheidaei
Games are powerful teaching tools, fostering hands-on engagement and fun. But they require careful consideration to succeed. Join me to explore factors in running and selecting games, ensuring they serve as effective teaching tools. Learn to maintain focus on learning objectives while playing, and how to measure the ROI of gaming in education. Discover strategies for pitching gaming to leadership. This session offers insights, tips, and examples for coaches, team leads, and enterprise leaders seeking to teach from simple to complex concepts.
2. Why Profiling?
Program analysis (often in space or time)
What is my code doing on this path/request? (and why so slow??)
What is the code doing in production?
And while we're here, where did all my memory go?
3. The World of MRI
Jealous of all the JVM goodness (e.g. VisualVM)
Bits and pieces (memprof, etc.)
2.x brings a host of improvements
11. Stackprof
Call-stack sample profiler (using new rb_profile_frames() in
2.1)
Very low-overhead operation
Samples on wall time, cpu time, object allocation counts or
YOUR_CUSTOM_PHASE_OF_THE_MOON
Standalone & Rack middleware
Off and on-able (accumulates between start/stop)
Defaults: cpu, 1000 microsecond intervals
17. Flamegraphs
What are they?
Visualization technique for sample stack traces
Turning thousands of dense traces into a single image
Invented by Brendan Gregg (Joyent / Netflix)
22. Rails Flamegraph
Default Stackprof flamegraphs show repeated calls to same
methods
Can hide patterns
Gregg's flamegraph includes a 'collapse' preprocessing phase to
combine repeated calls
23. Another example
Working on a pure Ruby application
'Why is it running so slow?'
'Can we see any quick way of shaving off some execution time?'
26. Interpretation
Most of the execution time is spent in Excon and Fog methods
These are talking to network (OpenStack / Puppet)
Caching some results provided a quick win that shaved ~30s
Most of execution time still network-based
Medium / Long-term solution to move to pre-baked images and
thus eliminate need for Puppet run
Result: Runtime of 8 minutes (!) down to 20s.
29. dump & dump_all
JSON representation of object (more info provided if allocation
tracing is on)
GIVE ME THE ENTIRE HEAP! ObjectSpace.dump_all
Dump is multiple lines of JSON
(Obviously, can be large!)
30. Example - pry
Q. How many STRINGS are there in my pry session?
require 'objspace'
ObjectSpace.dump_all(output: File.open('heap.dump','w'))
$> grep '"type":"STRING"' heap.dump | wc -l
A. ???
31. Hunting for leaks with
rbtrace
wabbit season
Idea - GC, dump, repeat, and compare
Remove objects from dump 2 that are in dump 1
(Remove missing objects in dump 3 from dump 2)
Not necessarily leaks but a great place to start looking
32. Rbtrace & Leaks
How to get the dumps from a live server?
rbtrace -e
e.g. rbtrace -p $PID -e 'Rails.root.to_s'
watch out for eval timeouts
36. Demo
Let's look at Sinatra
MemoryProfiler.report { require 'sinatra' }.pretty_prin
Freeze your strings!
37. GC
GC is in a state of flux
1.9.x, 2.0, 2.1, 2.2 all have different GC strategies.
Mostly worked with 2.1 (2.2 is improvement on 2.1 strategy)
Tuning? Here be dragons…
38. gc_tracer
Uses new 2.1 hooks for GC profiling
Outputs TSV (GC.stat, minor/major GC runs, etc.)
Useful for ideas on GC tuning
41. Summing Up
Things are getting better!
Still a bunch of separate tools (with some overlap)
(more things abound - ruby-prof, rack-mini-profiler, etc)
Good idea to send some of this to logging / graphite / etc.
Lower level - SystemTap, DTrace, perf