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  2. Fork bomb - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fork_bomb

    The concept behind a fork bomb — the processes continually replicate themselves, potentially causing a denial of service. In computing, a fork bomb (also called rabbit virus) is a denial-of-service (DoS) attack wherein a process continually replicates itself to deplete available system resources, slowing down or crashing the system due to resource starvation.

  3. Billion laughs attack - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Billion_laughs_attack

    Fork bomb: a similar method to exhaust a system's resources through recursion; Zip bomb: a similar attack utilizing zip archives; XML external entity attack: an XML attack to return arbitrary server files; Document type definition: a template for validating XML files

  4. Talk:Fork bomb - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Fork_bomb

    The Erlang fork bomb should be removed; the processes created by Erlang are restrained to the virtual machine and only dispatched and load balanced by the VM itself. They're NOT OS level threads. Hitting the limit of Erlang processes will thus only crash the Erlang VM and will not influence anything else.

  5. List of Microsoft codenames - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Microsoft_codenames

    Windows 7Windows 7: The number 7 comes from incrementing the internal version number of Windows Vista (6.0) by one. Often incorrectly referred to as Blackcomb or Vienna, while the codenames actually refer to an earlier Vista successor project that was cancelled due to scope creep. [43] [50] [51] Windows Server 7Windows Server 2008 R2 ...

  6. List of software forks - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_software_forks

    ELinks, began as an experimental fork of Links. Fluxbox, from Blackbox. GNU Radio, from pSpectra. Xvid, was a fork of OpenDivX. WebKit, project was started within Apple by Lisa Melton on 25 June 2001 as a fork of KHTML.

  7. ANSI.SYS - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ANSI.SYS

    ANSI.SYS is a device driver in the DOS family of operating systems that provides extra console functions through ANSI escape sequences.It is partially based upon a subset of the text terminal control standard proposed by the ANSI X3L2 Technical Committee on Codes and Character Sets (the "X3 Committee").

  8. Supermium - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Supermium

    Supermium running on Windows Vista. Supermium is a free and open-source web browser developed by Shane Fournier. [1] It is a fork of Chromium with its main feature being support for old versions of Microsoft Windows that are no longer supported by Chromium; this includes all versions prior to Windows 10, [5] starting with Windows XP. [1]

  9. Fork (file system) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fork_(file_system)

    NTFS, the file system introduced with Windows NT 3.1, supports file system forks known as alternate data streams (ADS). [5] ReFS, a new file system introduced with Windows Server 2012, originally did not support ADS, [6] [7] [8] but in Windows 8.1 64-bit and Server 2012 R2, support for ADS, with lengths of up to 128K, was added to ReFS. [9]