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  2. Digital footprint - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Digital_footprint

    Social networking systems may record the activities of individuals, with data becoming a life stream. Such social media usage and roaming services allow digital tracing data to include individual interests, social groups, behaviors, and location. Such data is gathered from sensors within devices and collected and analyzed without user awareness ...

  3. Nexus (standard) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nexus_(standard)

    Class 2 adds ownership trace and program trace and allows the auxiliary debugging port to be shared with "slow" I/O port pins. Ownership trace allows current task or current process trace for systems based on real-time kernels or operating-systems. Class 3 adds data write trace and memory read/write on-the-fly without halting execution. Data ...

  4. Tracing (software) - Wikipedia

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

    Tracing in software engineering refers to the process of capturing and recording information about the execution of a software program. This information is typically used by programmers for debugging purposes, and additionally, depending on the type and detail of information contained in a trace log, by experienced system administrators or technical-support personnel and by software monitoring ...

  5. Data lineage - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Data_lineage

    Data lineage can improve efficiency in business intelligence BI processes. [4] Data lineage can be represented visually to discover the data flow and movement from its source to destination via various changes and hops on its way in the enterprise environment. This includes how the data is transformed along the way, how the representation and ...

  6. DTrace - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DTrace

    DTrace is a comprehensive dynamic tracing framework originally created by Sun Microsystems for troubleshooting kernel and application problems on production systems in real time.

  7. Traceability matrix - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Traceability_matrix

    In software development, a traceability matrix (TM) [1]: 244 is a document, usually in the form of a table, used to assist in determining the completeness of a relationship by correlating any two baselined documents using a many-to-many relationship comparison.

  8. Traceability - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Traceability

    Within a product's supply chain, traceability may be both a regulatory and an ethical or environmental issue. [3] Traceability is increasingly becoming a core criterion for sustainability efforts related to supply chains wherein knowing the producer, workers and other links stands as a necessary factor that underlies credible claims of social, economic, or environmental impacts. [4]

  9. IP Flow Information Export - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IP_Flow_Information_Export

    Internet Protocol Flow Information Export (IPFIX) is an IETF protocol, as well as the name of the IETF working group defining the protocol. It was created based on the need for a common, universal standard of export for Internet Protocol flow information from routers, probes and other devices that are used by mediation systems, accounting/billing systems and network management systems to ...