Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Consul is a service networking platform developed by HashiCorp.. Consul was initially released in 2014 as a service discovery platform. In addition to service discovery, it now provides a full-featured service mesh for secure service segmentation across any cloud or runtime environment, and distributed key–value storage for application configuration.
HashiCorp, Inc. is an American software company [2] with a freemium business model based in San Francisco, California. HashiCorp provides tools and products that enable developers, operators and security professionals to provision, secure, run and connect cloud-computing infrastructure. [ 3 ]
Shamir's secret sharing (SSS) is an efficient secret sharing algorithm for distributing private information (the "secret") among a group. The secret cannot be revealed unless a quorum of the group acts together to pool their knowledge.
Vault, a cross-platform password manager and authentication tool maintained by HashiCorp Autodesk Vault , a data management tool from Autodesk Microsoft HealthVault , a web-based personal health record
Vault [40] tool for securely managing secrets (TLS certificates included) developed by HashiCorp. (Mozilla Public License 2.0 licensed) Boulder, an ACME-based CA written in Go. Boulder is the software that runs Let's Encrypt.
Terraform was previously free software available under version 2.0 of the Mozilla Public License (MPL). On August 10, 2023, HashiCorp announced that all products produced by the company would be relicensed under the Business Source License (BUSL), with HashiCorp prohibiting commercial use of the community edition by those who offer "competitive services".
There are no generally recognized standards for the type of structure which constitutes a vault. That said, commercial vaults typically fit into three categories: Underground vaults – often converted defunct cold war military or communications facilities, or even disused mines. Free-standing dedicated vaults
Data vault modeling was originally conceived by Dan Linstedt in the 1990s and was released in 2000 as a public domain modeling method. In a series of five articles in The Data Administration Newsletter the basic rules of the Data Vault method are expanded and explained.