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  2. EM Data Bank - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/EM_Data_Bank

    The EM Data Bank or Electron Microscopy Data Bank (EMDB) collects 3D EM maps and associated experimental data determined using electron microscopy of biological specimens. It was established in 2002 at the MSD/PDBe group of the European Bioinformatics Institute (EBI) , where the European site of the EMDataBank.org consortium is located. [ 2 ]

  3. Lightning Memory-Mapped Database - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lightning_Memory-Mapped...

    Lightning Memory-Mapped Database (LMDB) is an embedded transactional database in the form of a key-value store. LMDB is written in C with API bindings for several programming languages . LMDB stores arbitrary key/data pairs as byte arrays, has a range-based search capability, supports multiple data items for a single key and has a special mode ...

  4. Sourcetrail - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sourcetrail

    Most of a programmer's time is invested in reading the source code. [citation needed] Therefore, Sourcetrail is intended to help the developers to understand the source code and the relationship between different components. Sourcetrail builds a dependency graph after indexing the source code files and provides a graphical overview of the ...

  5. Master data management - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Master_data_management

    Master data management (MDM) is a discipline in which business and information technology collaborate to ensure the uniformity, accuracy, stewardship, semantic consistency, and accountability of the enterprise's official shared master data assets.

  6. Program database - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Program_database

    Program database (PDB) is a file format (developed by Microsoft) for storing debugging information about a program (or, commonly, program modules such as a DLL or EXE). PDB files commonly have a .pdb extension .

  7. Master data - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Master_data

    Master data represents "data about the business entities that provide context for business transactions". [1] The most commonly found categories of master data are parties (individuals and organisations, and their roles, such as customers, suppliers, employees), products, financial structures (such as ledgers and cost centres) and locational concepts.

  8. DBM (computing) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DBM_(computing)

    The name is a three-letter acronym for DataBase Manager, and can also refer to the family of database engines with APIs and features derived from the original dbm. The dbm library stores arbitrary data by use of a single key (a primary key ) in fixed-size buckets and uses hashing techniques to enable fast retrieval of the data by key.

  9. Multi-master replication - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Multi-master_replication

    Multi-master replication can be contrasted with primary-replica replication, in which a single member of the group is designated as the "master" for a given piece of data and is the only node allowed to modify that data item. Other members wishing to modify the data item must first contact the master node.