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  2. ONTAP - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ONTAP

    Inline Volume Deduplication and Inline Volume Compression compress some of the data on the fly before it reaches the disks and designed to leave some of the data in the uncompressed form if it is considered by ONTAP to take a long time to process them on the fly, and to leverage other storage efficiency mechanisms for this uncompressed data later.

  3. Kubernetes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kubernetes

    Filesystems in the Kubernetes container provide ephemeral storage, by default. This means that a restart of the pod will wipe out any data on such containers, and therefore, this form of storage is quite limiting in anything but trivial applications. A Kubernetes volume [61] provides persistent storage that exists for the lifetime of the pod ...

  4. udev - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Udev

    udev supports persistent device naming, which does not depend on, for example, the order in which the devices are plugged into the system. The default udev setup provides persistent names for storage devices. Any hard disk is recognized by its unique filesystem id, the name of the disk and the physical location on the hardware it is connected to.

  5. OpenShift - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OpenShift

    OpenShift is a family of containerization software products developed by Red Hat.Its flagship product is the OpenShift Container Platform — a hybrid cloud platform as a service built around Linux containers orchestrated and managed by Kubernetes on a foundation of Red Hat Enterprise Linux.

  6. OpenStack - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OpenStack

    NASA's Nebula platform. In July 2010, Rackspace Hosting and NASA announced an open-source cloud-software initiative known as OpenStack. [7] [8] The mission statement was "to produce the ubiquitous Open Source Cloud Computing platform that will meet the needs of public and private clouds regardless of size, by being simple to implement and massively scalable".

  7. Drive letter assignment - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drive_letter_assignment

    Drive letter assignment is thus a process of using letters to name the roots of the "forest" representing the file system; each volume holds an independent "tree" (or, for non-hierarchical file systems, an independent list of files).

  8. Trend Micro - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trend_Micro

    Trend Micro Inc. (トレンドマイクロ株式会社, Torendo Maikuro Kabushiki-Gaisha) is an American-Japanese cyber security software company. The company has globally dispersed R&D in 16 locations across every continent excluding Antarctica.

  9. Client-side persistent data - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Client-side_persistent_data

    Client-side persistent data or CSPD is a term used in computing for storing data required by web applications to complete internet tasks on the client-side as needed rather than exclusively on the server. As a framework it is one solution to the needs of Occasionally connected computing or OCC.