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eBPF is a lightweight runtime environment that gives you the ability to run programs inside the kernel of an operating system, usually a recent version of Linux. Here’s an example of what the Python code might look like: from bcc import BPF # define the eBPF program prog = """ #include <uapi/linux/ptrace.h> What is eBPF?
Amazon EC2 now supports access to Red Hat Knowledgebase – Starting today, customers running subscription included Red Hat Enterprise Linux on Amazon EC2 can seamlessly access Red Hat Knowledgebase at no additional cost. Network LoadBalancer now supports TLS 1.3 – Network LoadBalancer (NLB) now supports version 1.3
Amazon EC2 now supports access to Red Hat Knowledgebase – Starting today, customers running subscription included Red Hat Enterprise Linux on Amazon EC2 can seamlessly access Red Hat Knowledgebase at no additional cost. Network LoadBalancer now supports TLS 1.3 – Network LoadBalancer (NLB) now supports version 1.3
Only then can we pinpoint why one of our data center ToR switches is overwhelmed with unexpected traffic, why our line of business application is experiencing latency over the SD-WAN, why an OSPF adjacency is flapping, or why our SaaS app performance is terrible despite having a ton of available bandwidth.
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