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  2. Google File System - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Google_File_System

    Google File System (GFS or GoogleFS, not to be confused with the GFS Linux file system) is a proprietary distributed file system developed by Google to provide efficient, reliable access to data using large clusters of commodity hardware. Google file system was replaced by Colossus in 2010.

  3. CloudStore - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CloudStore

    CloudStore supports incremental scalability, replication, checksumming for data integrity, client side fail-over and access from C++, Java and Python. There is a FUSE module so that the file system can be mounted on Linux. In September 2007, Kosmix published Kosmosfs as open source. [1] The last commit activity was in 2010.

  4. Bazel (software) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bazel_(software)

    Bazel is extensible with the Starlark programming language. [13] Starlark is an embedded language whose syntax is a subset of the Python syntax. However, it doesn't implement many of Python's language features, such as the ability to access the file I/O, in order to avoid extensions that could create side-effects or create build outputs not known to the build system itself.

  5. Comparison of distributed file systems - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_distributed...

    Alluxio (Virtual Distributed File System) Java Apache License 2.0 HDFS, FUSE, HTTP/REST, S3: hot standby No Replication [1] File [2] 2013 Ceph: C++ LGPL librados (C, C++, Python, Ruby), S3, Swift, FUSE: Yes Yes Pluggable erasure codes [3] Pool [4] 2010 1 per TB of storage Coda: C GPL C Yes Yes Replication Volume [5] 1987 GlusterFS: C GPLv3

  6. Sawzall (programming language) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sawzall_(programming_language)

    Sawzall is a procedural domain-specific programming language, used by Google to process large numbers of individual log records. Sawzall was first described in 2003, [1] and the szl runtime was open-sourced in August 2010. [2]

  7. Google JAX - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Google_JAX

    JAX is a machine learning framework for transforming numerical functions developed by Google with some contributions from Nvidia. [2] [3] [4] It is described as bringing together a modified version of autograd (automatic obtaining of the gradient function through differentiation of a function) and OpenXLA's XLA (Accelerated Linear Algebra).

  8. Distributed lock manager - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Distributed_lock_manager

    Google has developed Chubby, a lock service for loosely coupled distributed systems. [5] It is designed for coarse-grained locking and also provides a limited but reliable distributed file system. Key parts of Google's infrastructure, including Google File System, Bigtable, and MapReduce, use

  9. Codebase - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Codebase

    In software development, a codebase (or code base) is a collection of source code used to build a particular software system, application, or software component.Typically, a codebase includes only human-written source code system files; thus, a codebase usually does not include source code files generated by tools (generated files) or binary library files (object files), as they can be built ...