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  2. Censorship of GitHub - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Censorship_of_GitHub

    On March 26, 2015, GitHub was the target of a distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attack originating from China. It targeted two anti-censorship projects: GreatFire and cn-nytimes, the latter including instructions on how to access the Chinese version of The New York Times. [18] GitHub blocked China-based IP addresses from visiting these ...

  3. TREX search engine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TREX_search_engine

    TREX is a search engine in the SAP NetWeaver integrated technology platform produced by SAP SE using columnar storage. [1] The TREX engine is a standalone component that can be used in a range of system environments but is used primarily as an integral part of SAP products such as Enterprise Portal, Knowledge Warehouse, and Business Intelligence (BI, formerly SAP Business Information Warehouse).

  4. Comparison of version-control software - Wikipedia

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

    Cherry-picking: move only some revisions from a branch to another one (instead of merging the branches) Bisect: binary search of source history for a change that introduced or fixed a regression; Incoming/outgoing: query the differences between the local repository and a remote one (the patches that would be fetched/sent on a pull/push)

  5. GitHub - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Github

    GitHub (/ ˈ ɡ ɪ t h ʌ b /) is a proprietary developer platform that allows developers to create, store, manage, and share their code. It uses Git to provide distributed version control and GitHub itself provides access control, bug tracking, software feature requests, task management, continuous integration, and wikis for every project. [8]

  6. Branching (version control) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Branching_(version_control)

    The users of the version control system can branch any branch. Branches are also known as trees, streams or codelines. The originating branch is sometimes called the parent branch, the upstream branch (or simply upstream, especially if the branches are maintained by different organizations or individuals), or the backing stream.

  7. Reserved IP addresses - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reserved_IP_addresses

    Used for link-local addresses [5] between two hosts on a single link when no IP address is otherwise specified, such as would have normally been retrieved from a DHCP server 172.16.0.0/12 172.16.0.0–172.31.255.255 1 048 576: Private network Used for local communications within a private network [3] 192.0.0.0/24 192.0.0.0–192.0.0.255 256

  8. SQL Anywhere - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SQL_Anywhere

    SQL Anywhere Server is a high performing and embeddable relational database-management system that scales from thousands of users in server environments down to desktop and mobile applications used in widely deployed, zero-administration environments.

  9. Database trigger - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Database_trigger

    An example of implementation of triggers in non-relational database can be Sedna, that provides support for triggers based on XQuery. Triggers in Sedna were designed to be analogous to SQL:2003 triggers, but natively base on XML query and update languages ( XPath , XQuery and XML update language).