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  2. Sales force management system - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sales_force_management_system

    Salesforce management systems (also sales force automation systems (SFA)) are information systems used in customer relationship management (CRM) marketing and management that help automate some sales and sales force management functions. They are often combined with a marketing information system, in which case they are often called CRM systems.

  3. Git - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Git

    git show-ref lists all references. Some types are: heads: refers to an object locally, remotes: refers to an object which exists in a remote repository, stash: refers to an object not yet committed, meta: e.g., a configuration in a bare repository, user rights; the refs/meta/config namespace was introduced retrospectively, gets used by Gerrit, [71]

  4. pkg-config - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pkg-config

    pkg-config is a software development tool that queries information about libraries from a local, file-based database for the purpose of building a codebase that depends on them. It allows for sharing a codebase in a cross-platform way by using host-specific library information that is stored outside of yet referenced by the codebase.

  5. Salesforce - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Salesforce

    As of September 2022, Salesforce is the 61st largest company in the world by market cap with a value of nearly US$153 billion. [2] It became the world's largest enterprise software firm in 2022. [3] Salesforce ranked 491st on the 2023 edition of the Fortune 500, making $31.352 billion in revenues. [4]

  6. Software configuration management - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Software_configuration...

    Software configuration management (SCM), a.k.a. software change and configuration management (SCCM), [1] is the software engineering practice of tracking and controlling changes to a software system; part of the larger cross-disciplinary field of configuration management (CM). [2]

  7. Comparison of version-control software - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_version...

    File renames: describes whether a system allows files to be renamed while retaining their version history. Merge file renames: describes whether a system can merge changes made to a file on one branch into the same file that has been renamed on another branch (or vice versa). If the same file has been renamed on both branches then there is a ...

  8. Configuration file - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Configuration_file

    MS-DOS itself primarily relied on just one configuration file, CONFIG.SYS. This was a plain text file with simple key–value pairs (e.g. DEVICEHIGH=C:\DOS\ANSI.SYS) until MS-DOS 6, which introduced an INI-file style format. There was also a standard plain text batch file named AUTOEXEC.BAT that ran a series of commands on boot.

  9. Distributed version control - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Distributed_version_control

    [1] [2] [3] Git, the world's most popular version control system, [4] is a distributed version control system. In 2010, software development author Joel Spolsky described distributed version control systems as "possibly the biggest advance in software development technology in the [past] ten years".