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  2. OpenAFS - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OpenAFS

    OpenAFS is an open-source implementation of the Andrew distributed file system (AFS). AFS was originally developed at Carnegie Mellon University , and developed as a commercial product by the Transarc Corporation, which was subsequently acquired by IBM .

  3. Comparison of source-code-hosting facilities - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_source-code...

    A source-code-hosting facility (also known as forge software) is a file archive and web hosting facility for source code of software, documentation, web pages, and other works, accessible either publicly or privately.

  4. Andrew File System - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andrew_File_System

    The Andrew File System (AFS) is a distributed file system which uses a set of trusted servers to present a homogeneous, location-transparent file name space to all the client workstations. It was developed by Carnegie Mellon University as part of the Andrew Project . [ 1 ]

  5. Repository (version control) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Repository_(version_control)

    In version control systems, a repository is a data structure that stores metadata for a set of files or directory structure. [1] Depending on whether the version control system in use is distributed, like Git or Mercurial, or centralized, like Subversion, CVS, or Perforce, the whole set of information in the repository may be duplicated on every user's system or may be maintained on a single ...

  6. Comparison of distributed file systems - Wikipedia

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

    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 libglusterfs, FUSE, NFS, SMB, Swift, libgfapi mirror Yes Reed-Solomon [6] Volume [7] 2005 HDFS: Java Apache License 2.0 Java and C client, HTTP, FUSE [8] transparent master failover No Reed-Solomon [9] File [10 ...

  7. Duplicate code - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Duplicate_code

    Sequences of duplicate code are sometimes known as code clones or just clones, the automated process of finding duplications in source code is called clone detection. Two code sequences may be duplicates of each other without being character-for-character identical, for example by being character-for-character identical only when white space ...

  8. Censorship of GitHub - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Censorship_of_GitHub

    GitHub is a web-based Git repository hosting service and is primarily used to host the source code of software, facilitate project management, and provide distributed revision control functionality of Git, access control, wikis, and bug tracking. [1] As of June 2023, GitHub reports having over 100 million users and over 330 million repositories ...

  9. Software repository - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Software_repository

    A software repository, or repo for short, is a storage location for software packages. Often a table of contents is also stored, along with metadata. A software repository is typically managed by source or version control, or repository managers. Package managers allow automatically installing and updating repositories, sometimes called "packages".