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APIM may refer to: API Management (Computer Science); a way to create API (application programming interface) gateways for back-end services using products such as Apigee, Azure API Management, TIBCO Mashery, Mulesoft, WSO2, AWS API Gateway. OCP-APIM, an open-source API Management developed by Microsoft and the Open Compute Project
API management is the process of creating and publishing web application programming interfaces (APIs), enforcing their usage policies, controlling access, nurturing the subscriber community, collecting and analyzing usage statistics, and reporting on performance. API Management components provide mechanisms and tools to support developer and ...
An application programming interface (API) is a connection between computers or between computer programs. It is a type of software interface , offering a service to other pieces of software . [ 1 ]
Add multiple security keys to an application. When using the Advanced Developer Portal, a user can add further client ID/client secret pairs to an application in addition to the pair that is provided by default when an application is created. Terminology changes. IBM API Management Version 4.0.1 introduced the following terminology changes:
It should not do much work itself. The GRASP Controller can be thought of as being a part of the application/service layer [4] (assuming that the application has made an explicit distinction between the application/service layer and the domain layer) in an object-oriented system with common layers in an information system logical architecture.
Typically data is fetched using Ajax techniques and rendered in the browser on the client-side by a client-side application framework, however as the stack is commonly entirely JavaScript-based, in some implementations of the stack, server-side rendering where the rendering of the initial page can be offloaded to a server is used so that the ...
An application layer is an abstraction layer that specifies the shared communication protocols and interface methods used by hosts in a communications network. [1] An application layer abstraction is specified in both the Internet Protocol Suite (TCP/IP) and the OSI model. [2]
The terms "Rich Internet Application" and "rich client" were introduced in a white paper of March 2002 by Macromedia (now Adobe), [2] though the concept had existed for a number of years earlier under names including: "Remote Scripting" by Microsoft in April 1999 [3] and the "X Internet" by Forrester Research in October 2000. [4]