App Volumes Documentation Release 2.12.1

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

App Volumes Documentation Release 2.12.1 App Volumes Documentation Release 2.12.1 Anuj Patel May 12, 2017 Contents 1 Guid 3 1.1 Chart Demo...............................................3 1.2 Formatting text..............................................3 1.3 Making a list...............................................4 1.4 Enumerated List.............................................4 1.5 Enumerated points............................................4 1.6 Making a table..............................................4 1.7 Making links...............................................4 1.8 This file..................................................5 1.9 VMware App Volumes 2.12.1 GA....................................5 1.10 LICENSE ISSUES............................................ 33 1.11 A. HISTORY OF THE SOFTWARE.................................. 61 1.12 B. TERMS AND CONDITIONS FOR ACCESSING OR OTHERWISE USING PYTHON..... 62 2 Indices and tables 101 i ii App Volumes Documentation, Release 2.12.1 asdfasdfasdf asdfasdfasdf Here is some text explaining very complicated stuff.:: print “hello” >> hello Contents 1 App Volumes Documentation, Release 2.12.1 2 Contents CHAPTER 1 Guid Chart Demo Something related to testing From To Sphinx cheat sheet Here is a quick and dirty cheat sheet for some common stuff you want to do in sphinx and ReST. You can see the literal source for this file at This file. Formatting text You use inline markup to make text italics, bold, or monotype. 3 App Volumes Documentation, Release 2.12.1 You can represent code blocks fairly easily: import numpy as np x= np.random.rand(12) Or literally include code: Making a list It is easy to make lists in rest Enumerated List This is a subsection making bullet points • point A • point B • point C Enumerated points This is a subsection making numbered points 1. point A 2. point B 3. point C Making a table This shows you how to make a table – if you only want to make a list see Making a list. Name Age John D Hunter 40 Cast of Thousands 41 And Still More 42 Making links It is easy to make a link to yahoo or to some section inside this document (see Making a table) or another document. You can also reference classes, modules, functions, etc that are documented using the sphinx autodoc facilites. For example, see the module matplotlib.backend_bases documentation, or the class LocationEvent, or the method mpl_connect(). 4 Chapter 1. Guid App Volumes Documentation, Release 2.12.1 This file Header row, column 1 Header 2 Header 3 Header 4 (header rows optional) body row 1, column 1 column 2 column 3 column 4 body row 2 Cells may span columns. body row 3 Cells may span rows. body row 4 Table cells VMware App Volumes 2.12.1 GA contain The following copyright statements and licenses apply to various open source software packages (or portions thereof) that are distributed with this VMware Product. body el- The VMware Product may also include other VMware components,ements. which may contain additional open source soft- ware packages. One or more such open_source_licenses.txt files may therefore accompany this VMware Product. The VMware Product that includes this file does not necessarily use all the open source software packages referred to below and may also only use portions of a given package. =============== TABLE OF CONTENTS ============================= The following is a listing of the open source components detailed in this document. This list is provided for your convenience; please read further if you wish to review the copyright notice(s) and the full text of the license associated with each component. SECTION 1: BSD-STYLE, MIT-STYLE, OR SIMILAR STYLE LICENSES •••>>> Ruby-2.2.5 >>> actionmailer-3.2.22.5 >>> actionpack-3.2.22.5 >>> activemodel-3.2.22.5 >>> activerecord-3.2.22.5 >>> activerecord-sqlserver-adapter-3.2.13 >>> activeresource-3.2.22.5 >>> activesupport-3.2.22.5 >>> arel-3.0.3 >>> awesome_print-1.7.0 >>> aws-s3-0.6.3 >>> builder-3.0.4 >>> bundler-1.12.5 >>> bundler-1.14.4 >>> byebug-9.0.5 >>> clockwork-0.5.5 >>> coderay-1.1.0 >>> daemons-1.2.3 >>> datatables-1.9.4 >>> date_validator-0.8.1 >>> debugger-1.6.8 >>> debugger-linecache-1.2.0 >>> debugger-ruby_core_source-1.3.8 >>> delayed_job-3.0.5 >>> delayed_job_active_record-0.4.4 >>> dynamic_form-1.1.4 >>> elycharts-2.1.4 >>> encryptor-1.3.0 1.8. This file 5 App Volumes Documentation, Release 2.12.1 >>> erubis-2.7.0 >>> ffi-1.9.8-x86-mingw32 >>> i18n-0.7.0 >>> ice_nine-0.11.2 >>> jgrowl-1.2.6 >>> journey-1.0.4 >>> jquery-1.8.3 >>> jquery-ui-1.8.24 >>> jquery.chosen-1.4.2 >>> jsonify-0.3.1 >>> jsonify-rails-0.3.2 >>> mail-2.5.4 >>> memoizable-0.4.2 >>> mime-types-1.25.1 >>> mini_portile2-2.1.0 >>> minitest-5.4.3 >>> modernizer-2.6.2 >>> multi_json-1.12.1 >>> net-ldap-0.15.0 >>> nginx-1.6.2 >>> nokogiri-1.6.8 >>> openssl-1.0.2k >>> pg-0.19.0 >>> polyglot-0.3.5 >>> power_assert-0.2.2 >>> power_assert-0.3.1 >>> puma-3.6.0 >>> rack-1.4.7 >>> rack-cache-1.6.1 >>> rack-ntlm-0.2.2.cv >>> rack-ssl-1.3.4 >>> rack-test-0.6.3 >>> rails-3.2.22.5 >>> railties-3.2.22.5 >>> rake-10.4.2 >>> rake-10.5.0 >>> rb-readline-0.5.3 >>> rbvmomi-1.6.0 >>> remotipart-1.0.5 >>> ruby_parser-3.7.0 >>> rubyntlm-0.6.1 >>> sprockets-2.2.3 >>> thor-0.19.1 >>> tilt-1.4.1 >>> treetop-1.4.15 >>> trollop-2.1.2 >>> tzinfo-0.3.51 >>> tzinfo-0.3.52 SECTION 2: Apache License, V2.0 >>> dnsruby-1.59.3 >>> sys-proctable-1.1.2 SECTION 3: Artistic License, V2.0 >>> win32-process-0.8.3 6 Chapter 1. Guid App Volumes Documentation, Release 2.12.1 SECTION 4: GNU General Public License, V2.0 >>> rdoc-3.12.2 SECTION 5: GNU Lesser General Public License, V2.1 >>> pkg-config-1.1.7 SECTION 6: GNU Lesser General Public License, V3.0 >>> log4r-1.1.10 SECTION 7: Perl Artistic License >>> win32console-1.3.2-x86-mingw32 SECTION 8: Ruby License >>> amazon-ec2-0.9.17 >>> columnize-0.9.0 >>> eventmachine-1.2.0.1 >>> json-1.8.3 >>> pyu-ruby-sasl-0.0.3.3 >>> rdoc-4.2.0 >>> ruby-odbc-0.99.cv >>> rubygems-update-2.6.10 >>> rubyzip-1.0.0 >>> test-unit-3.0.8 >>> test-unit-3.2.1 >>> thin-1.6.4 >>> xml-simple-1.1.5 APPENDIX. Standard License Files >>> GNU General Public License, V2.0 >>> Artistic License, V2.0 >>> Ruby License >>> Apache License, V2.0 >>> GNU Lesser General Public License, V3.0 >>> GNU Lesser General Public License, V2.1 >>> Perl Artistic License >>> GNU General Public License, V3.0 >>> Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International >>> SIL Open Font License 1.1 1.9. VMware App Volumes 2.12.1 GA 7 App Volumes Documentation, Release 2.12.1 ————— SECTION 1: BSD-STYLE, MIT-STYLE, OR SIMILAR STYLE LICENSES ———- BSD-STYLE, MIT-STYLE, OR SIMILAR STYLE LICENSES are applicable to the following component(s). >>> Ruby-2.2.5 [PLEASE NOTE: VMWARE, INC. ELECTS TO USE AND DISTRIBUTE THIS COMPONENT UNDER THE TERMS OF THE BSD CLAUSE LICENSE. THE ORIGINAL LICENSE TERMS ARE REPRODUCED BELOW ONLY AS A REFERENCE.] Ruby is copyrighted free software by Yukihiro Matsumoto <[email protected]>. You can redistribute it and/or modify it under either the terms of the 2-clause BSDL (see the file BSDL), or the conditions below: 1. You may make and give away verbatim copies of the source form of the software without restriction, provided that you duplicate all of the original copyright notices and associated disclaimers. 2. You may modify your copy of the software in any way, provided that you do at least ONE of the following: a) place your modifications in the Public Domain or otherwise make them Freely Available, such as by posting said modifications to Usenet or an equivalent medium, or by allowing the author to include your modifications in the software. b) use the modified software only within your corporation or organization. c) give non-standard binaries non-standard names, with instructions on where to get the original software distribution. 4. make other distribution arrangements with the author. 3. You may distribute the software in object code or binary form, provided that you do at least ONE of the following: a) distribute the binaries and library files of the software, together with instructions (in the manual page or equivalent) on where to get the original distribution. b) accompany the distribution with the machine-readable source of the software. c) give non-standard binaries non-standard names, with instructions on where to get the original software distribution. 4. make other distribution arrangements with the author. 4. You may modify and include the part of the software into any other software (possibly commercial). But some files in the distribution are not written by the author, so that they are not under these terms. For the list of those files and their copying conditions, see the file LEGAL. 5. The scripts and library files supplied as input to or produced as output from the software do not automatically fall under the copyright of the software, but belong to whomever generated them, and may be sold commercially, and may be aggregated with this software. 6. THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED “AS IS” AND WITHOUT ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, IN- CLUDING, WITHOUT LIMITATION, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. ADDITIONAL LICENSE INFORMATION: >GPL 3.0 ruby-2.2.5.tar.gzruby-2.2.5.tarruby-2.2.5parse.c / Bison implementation for Yacc-like parsers in C Copyright (C) 1984, 1989-1990, 2000-2011 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
Recommended publications
  • Alexander, Kleymenov
    Alexander, Kleymenov Key Skills ▪ Ruby ▪ JavaScript ▪ C/C++ ▪ SQL ▪ PL/SQL ▪ XML ▪ UML ▪ Ruby on Rails ▪ EventMachine ▪ Sinatra ▪ JQuery ▪ ExtJS ▪ Databases: Oracle (9i,10g), MySQL, PostgreSQL, MS SQL ▪ noSQL: CouchDB, MongoDB ▪ Messaging: RabbitMQ ▪ Platforms: Linux, Solaris, MacOS X, Windows ▪ Testing: RSpec ▪ TDD, BDD ▪ SOA, OLAP, Data Mining ▪ Agile, Scrum Experience May 2017 – June 2018 Digitalkasten Internet GmbH (Germany, Berlin) Lead Developer B2B & B2C SaaS: Development from the scratch. Ruby, Ruby on Rails, Golang, Elasticsearch, Ruby, Ruby on Rails, Golang, Elasticsearch, Postgresql, Javascript, AngularJS 2 / Angular 5, Ionic 2 & 3, Apache Cordova, RabbitMQ, OpenStack January 2017 – April 2017 (project work) Stellenticket Gmbh (Germany, Berlin) Lead developer Application prototype development with Ruby, Ruby on Rails, Javascript, Backbone.js, Postgresql. September 2016 – December 2016 Part-time work & studying German in Goethe-Institut e.V. (Germany, Berlin) Freelancer & Student Full-stack developer and German A1. May 2016 – September 2016 Tridion Assets Management Gmbh (Germany, Berlin) Team Lead Development team managing. Develop and implement architecture of application HRLab (application for HRs). Software development trainings for team. Planning of software development and life cycle. Ruby, Ruby on Rails, Javascript, Backbone.js, Postgresql, PL/pgSQL, Golang, Redis, Salesforce API November 2015 – May 2016 (Germany, Berlin) Ecratum Gmbh Ruby, Ruby on Rails developer ERP/CRM - Application development with: Ruby 2, RoR4, PostgreSQL, Redis/Elastic, EventMachine, MessageBus, Puma, AWS/EC2, etc. April 2014 — November 2015 (Russia, Moscow - Australia, Melbourne - Munich, Germany - Berlin, Germany) Freelance/DHARMA Dev. Ruby, Ruby on Rails developer notarikon.net Application development with: Ruby 2, RoR 4, PostgreSQL, MongoDB, Javascript (CoffeeScript), AJAX, jQuery, Websockets, Redis + own project: http://featmeat.com – complex service for health control: trainings tracking and data providing to medical adviser.
    [Show full text]
  • Rubyperf.Pdf
    Ruby Performance. Tips, Tricks & Hacks Who am I? • Ezra Zygmuntowicz (zig-mun-tuv-itch) • Rubyist for 4 years • Engine Yard Founder and Architect • Blog: http://brainspl.at Ruby is Slow Ruby is Slow?!? Well, yes and no. The Ruby Performance Dichotomy Framework Code VS Application Code Benchmarking: The only way to really know performance characteristics Profiling: Measure don’t guess. ruby-prof What is all this good for in real life? Merb Merb Like most useful code it started as a hack, Merb == Mongrel + Erb • No cgi.rb !! • Clean room implementation of ActionPack • Thread Safe with configurable Mutex Locks • Rails compatible REST routing • No Magic( well less anyway ;) • Did I mention no cgi.rb? • Fast! On average 2-4 times faster than rails Design Goals • Small core framework for the VC in MVC • ORM agnostic, use ActiveRecord, Sequel, DataMapper or roll your own db access. • Prefer simple code over magic code • Keep the stack traces short( I’m looking at you alias_method_chain) • Thread safe, reentrant code Merb Hello World No code is faster then no code • Simplicity and clarity trumps magic every time. • When in doubt leave it out. • Core framework to stay small and simple and easy to extend without gross hacks • Prefer plugins for non core functionality • Plugins can be gems Key Differences • No auto-render. The return value of your controller actions is what gets returned to client • Merb’s render method just returns a string, allowing for multiple renders and more flexibility • PartController’s allow for encapsualted applets without big performance cost Why not work on Rails instead of making a new framework? • Originally I was trying to optimize Rails and make it more thread safe.
    [Show full text]
  • Next Generation Web Scanning Presentation
    Next generation web scanning New Zealand: A case study First presented at KIWICON III 2009 By Andrew Horton aka urbanadventurer NZ Web Recon Goal: To scan all of New Zealand's web-space to see what's there. Requirements: – Targets – Scanning – Analysis Sounds easy, right? urbanadventurer (Andrew Horton) www.morningstarsecurity.com Targets urbanadventurer (Andrew Horton) www.morningstarsecurity.com Targets What does 'NZ web-space' mean? It could mean: •Geographically within NZ regardless of the TLD •The .nz TLD hosted anywhere •All of the above For this scan it means, IPs geographically within NZ urbanadventurer (Andrew Horton) www.morningstarsecurity.com Finding Targets We need creative methods to find targets urbanadventurer (Andrew Horton) www.morningstarsecurity.com DNS Zone Transfer urbanadventurer (Andrew Horton) www.morningstarsecurity.com Find IP addresses on IRC and by resolving lots of NZ websites 58.*.*.* 60.*.*.* 65.*.*.* 91.*.*.* 110.*.*.* 111.*.*.* 113.*.*.* 114.*.*.* 115.*.*.* 116.*.*.* 117.*.*.* 118.*.*.* 119.*.*.* 120.*.*.* 121.*.*.* 122.*.*.* 123.*.*.* 124.*.*.* 125.*.*.* 130.*.*.* 131.*.*.* 132.*.*.* 138.*.*.* 139.*.*.* 143.*.*.* 144.*.*.* 146.*.*.* 150.*.*.* 153.*.*.* 156.*.*.* 161.*.*.* 162.*.*.* 163.*.*.* 165.*.*.* 166.*.*.* 167.*.*.* 192.*.*.* 198.*.*.* 202.*.*.* 203.*.*.* 210.*.*.* 218.*.*.* 219.*.*.* 222.*.*.* 729,580,500 IPs. More than we want to try. urbanadventurer (Andrew Horton) www.morningstarsecurity.com IP address blocks in the IANA IPv4 Address Space Registry Prefix Designation Date Whois Status [1] -----
    [Show full text]
  • Questions for Mongrel
    www.YoYoBrain.com - Accelerators for Memory and Learning Questions for Mongrel Category: Introduction - (16 questions) Mongrel is described in what way in the "A web application container for Ruby on Mongrel pdf available from O Reilly Rails" Mongrel is compared with what web servers production performance: Fast CGI or SCGI in the Rails world in terms of production performance and development Development: WEBrick simplicity/speed Creator of Mongrel Zed A Shawwww.zedshaw.com Mongrel is developed on what mixture of Ruby and C programming/scripting languages Documentation for Mongrel mongrel.rubyforge.org/docs/index.html The creators of Mongrel describe it how? a fast HTTP library and server for Ruby that is intended for hosting Ruby web applications of any kind using plain HTTP rather than FastCGI or SCGI. It is framework agnostic Three key technologies that are used for A custom HTTP 1.1 parser (based on RFC Mongrel's internals standard, written using Ragel in C and Java as a Rby extension) Simple server that uses the parser and URIClassifier to process requests, find the right handlers, then pass the results to the handler for processing Handlers are responsible for using HttpRequet and HttpResponse objects to "do their thing and then return results" Component of Mongrel responsible for Handlers dealing with HttpRequest and HttpResponse How does Mongrel support threading one thread per request, but it will start closing connections when it gets "overloaded"while Mongrel is processing HTTP requests and sending responses it uses Ruby's threading system What platforms that already work with Camping and Og+Nitro Mongrel are throught to be "thread-safe" Have not been heavily tested Is Ruby on Rails thread safe? no How does Mongrel handle Rails" " Ruby on Rails is not thread safe so there is a synchronized block around the calls to Dispatcher.dispatch.
    [Show full text]
  • Distributed Programming with Ruby
    DISTRIBUTED PROGRAMMING WITH RUBY Mark Bates Upper Saddle River, NJ • Boston • Indianapolis • San Francisco New York • Toronto • Montreal • London • Munich • Paris • Madrid Capetown • Sydney • Tokyo • Singapore • Mexico City Many of the designations used by manufacturers and sellers to distinguish their products are claimed as trademarks. Where those designations appear in this book, and the pub- lisher was aware of a trademark claim, the designations have been printed with initial Editor-in-Chief capital letters or in all capitals. Mark Taub The author and publisher have taken care in the preparation of this book, but make no Acquisitions Editor expressed or implied warranty of any kind and assume no responsibility for errors or Debra Williams Cauley omissions. No liability is assumed for incidental or consequential damages in connection Development Editor with or arising out of the use of the information or programs contained herein. Songlin Qiu The publisher offers excellent discounts on this book when ordered in quantity for bulk Managing Editor purchases or special sales, which may include electronic versions and/or custom covers Kristy Hart and content particular to your business, training goals, marketing focus, and branding Senior Project Editor interests. For more information, please contact: Lori Lyons U.S. Corporate and Government Sales Copy Editor 800-382-3419 Gayle Johnson [email protected] Indexer For sales outside the United States, please contact: Brad Herriman Proofreader International Sales Apostrophe Editing [email protected] Services Visit us on the web: informit.com/ph Publishing Coordinator Kim Boedigheimer Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data: Cover Designer Bates, Mark, 1976- Chuti Prasertsith Distributed programming with Ruby / Mark Bates.
    [Show full text]
  • Ruby on Rails Matt Dees All Trademarks Used Herein Are the Sole Property of Their Respective Owners
    Ruby on Rails Matt Dees All trademarks used herein are the sole property of their respective owners. Introduction How Ruby on Rails Works cPanel's interaction with Ruby on Rails Administrating Ruby on Rails Troubleshooting Ruby on Rails What is Ruby on Rails? A Web Application Framework aimed towards the rapid development and deployment of Dynamic Web 2.0 Applications Interpreted Programming Language Web Applications are done through either Rails or as a straight CGI application Every part of the Ruby on Rails system is dependent on ruby working correctly Gems Gems are Ruby modules Either compiled or interpreted Ruby code Gems can be full applications or libraries for Ruby programs Managed by the “gem” command Rails Rails is a framework for creating Ruby applications and provides several different pieces of functionality Rails exists for multiple programming languages Is a gem Consists of several gems used for handling different functions Different versions of this exist, each application requires a specific version Rails Continued Action Record – Rapid development library for building daemon independent database queries Action Pack – An implementation of Model View Controller for Ruby. Action Mailer – An Email Handler Webserver – Usually webrick, however we use mongrel Mongrel Mongrel is the Web Server used for serving Ruby on Rails applications One instance per Ruby application Other daemons exist, but mongrel has the best security and performance record Is a gem Runs applications on port 12001 and up on cPanel Uses a significant amount
    [Show full text]
  • Ruby Course --- an Immersive Programming Course ---0.5Em
    Ruby Course — an immersive programming course — Sommercampus 2005 - Albert Ludwigs Universität Freiburg Brian Schröder [email protected] Licence Copyright c 2004-2006 Brian Schroeder Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.2 or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no Invariant Sections, no Front-Cover Texts, and no Back-Cover Texts. A copy of the license is included in the section entitled "GNU Free Documentation License". Part I Introduction Brian Schröder Ruby Course 2004 Simple hello world example This is a must 1 #!/usr/bin/ruby 2 3 puts ’Hello World’ 1 Hello World Brian Schröder Ruby Course 2004 Function definition Functions are defined using the def keyword 1 #!/usr/bin/ruby 2 3 def hello(programmer) 4 puts "Hello #{programmer}" 5 end 6 7 hello(’Brian’) 1 Hello Brian Brian Schröder Ruby Course 2004 In ruby everything is an object Everything is an object, so get used to the “.method” notation. 1 (5.6).round » 6 2 (5.6).class » Float 3 (5.6).round.class » Fixnum 4 5 ’a string’.length » 8 6 ’a string’.class » String 7 ’tim tells’.gsub(’t’, ’j’) »"jim jells" 8 9 ’abc’.gsub(’b’, ’xxx’).length » 5 10 11 [’some’, ’things’, ’in’, ’an’, ’array’].length » 5 12 [’some’, ’things’, ’in’, ’an’, ’array’].reverse » ["array", "an", "in", "things", "some"] 13 14 # You can even write 15 1.+(2) » 3 16 17 # but there is some sugar for cases like this 18 1 + 2 » 3 Brian Schröder Ruby Course 2004 Class definition and inheritance Base Class Sub Class 1 class Person 13 class Matz < Person 2 def initialize(name) 14 def initialize 3 @name = name 15 super(’Yukihiro Matsumoto’) 4 end 16 end 5 17 end 6 def greet 18 7 "Hello, my name is #{@name}." 19 puts Matz.new.greet 8 end 9 end 1 Hello, my name is Yukihiro Matsumoto.
    [Show full text]
  • Django and Mongodb
    1. .bookmarks . 5 2. 1.1 Development Cycle . 5 3. Creating and Deleting Indexes . 5 4. Diagnostic Tools . 5 5. Django and MongoDB . 5 6. Getting Started . 5 7. International Documentation . 6 8. Monitoring . 6 9. Older Downloads . 6 10. PyMongo and mod_wsgi . 6 11. Python Tutorial . 6 12. Recommended Production Architectures . 6 13. Shard v0.7 . 7 14. v0.8 Details . 7 15. v0.9 Details . 7 16. v1.0 Details . 7 17. v1.5 Details . 7 18. v2.0 Details . 8 19. Building SpiderMonkey . 8 20. Documentation . 8 21. Dot Notation . 8 22. Dot Notation . 23. Getting the Software . 8 24. Language Support . 8 25. Mongo Administration Guide . 9 26. Working with Mongo Objects and Classes in Ruby . 9 27. MongoDB Language Support . 9 28. Community Info . 9 29. Internals . 9 30. TreeNavigation . 10 31. Old Pages . 10 31.1 Storing Data . 10 31.2 Indexes in Mongo . 10 31.3 HowTo . 10 31.4 Searching and Retrieving . 10 31.4.1 Locking . 10 31.5 Mongo Developers' Guide . 11 31.6 Locking in Mongo . 11 31.7 Mongo Database Administration . ..
    [Show full text]
  • Product End User License Agreement
    END USER LICENSE AGREEMENT If you have another valid, signed agreement with Licensor or a Licensor authorized reseller which applies to the specific Licensor Software, Software Services, Maintenance or Consulting Services you are downloading, accessing or otherwise receiving, that other agreement shall control; otherwise by using, downloading, installing, copying, or accessing Licensor Software, Software Services, Maintenance or Consulting Services, or by clicking on "I accept" on or adjacent to the screen where these Master Terms may be displayed, you hereby agree to be bound by and accept these Master Terms. These Master Terms shall also apply to any Maintenance or Consulting Services you later acquire from Licensor relating to the Software or Software Services. You may place orders under these Master Terms by submitting separate Order Form(s). Capitalized terms used in these Master Terms and not otherwise defined, are defined at https://terms.tibco.com/posts/845635-definitions. 1. License Models, License Grant, Rights and Restrictions. Licensor provides Software on a Perpetual, or Term basis, embedded and delivered as part of Equipment, as Software Services and on a Subscription basis. The Supplemental Terms, include, but are not limited to, the license grant, rights and restrictions for each of the foregoing (including for evaluation purposes) which are located at https://terms.tibco.com. The availability of Software in one or more of the foregoing license models is at Licensor's sole discretion. Additional license requirements and notices, if any, if not included at https://terms.tibco.com, shall be contained in the Documentation that is delivered with the applicable Software.
    [Show full text]
  • Rails 4 En Windows Y Linux Ubuntu – V 1.0.5 Beta – Pag 1/200 - Actualizado Al 7/10/ 2016 Sergio A
    Sergio A. Alonso - Rails 4 en Windows y Linux Ubuntu – v 1.0.5 Beta – pag 1"#00 - a$tuali%ado al &"10" 201' Sergio A. Alonso - Rails 4 en Windows y Linux Ubuntu – v 1.0.5 Beta – pag #"#00 - a$tuali%ado al &"10" 201' ¡Ud podría estar leyendo una copia vieja! ()equee la versión en el en$abe%ado de las )o,as- $ontra la última en el sitio o.$ial- )tt!/""r0uw.)ero1u.$o2 3esde allí en$ontrará el vín$ulo )acia la versión 2as actual- y un listado 2uy útil de erratas- $orrec$iones- e in$luso una sec$ión donde !ostear errores y sugeren$ias. Este libro es tan gratis como una cerveza (free-as-a-beer) (uente sie2!re con la 6ltima versión dis!onible en P38. Mi ob,etivo es que lo lea la mayor cantidad posible de personas, y que éstas me retornen sus im!resiones, errores encontrados y sugerencias en general. De he$ho, ne$esito de estos re!ortes para obtener un nivel a!re$iable de $alidad, tal *ue el libro sea digno de ser llevado a una im!renta. Una ve% que el libro este listo, pretendo seguir de,5ndolo libre, publicarlo en la editorial Bubok ;i2!resión a de2anda<- y *uedar2e como mu$ho con u=s 5 de regalías por libro... al menos para ha$erle creer a mi es!osa que hago dinero con esto. Creo que si el libro lo mere$e, la gente se cansar5 de leerlo en !antalla- y querr5 tener un e,e2!lar en pa!el.
    [Show full text]
  • Roles in a Networked Software Development Ecosystem: a Case Study in Github Patrick Wagstrom IBM TJ Watson Research Center Hawthorne, NY, [email protected]
    University of Nebraska - Lincoln DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska - Lincoln CSE Technical reports Computer Science and Engineering, Department of 2012 Roles in a Networked Software Development Ecosystem: A Case Study in GitHub Patrick Wagstrom IBM TJ Watson Research Center Hawthorne, NY, [email protected] Corey Jergensen University of Nebraska-Lincoln, [email protected] Anita Sarma University of Nebraska-Lincoln, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: http://digitalcommons.unl.edu/csetechreports Wagstrom, Patrick; Jergensen, Corey; and Sarma, Anita, "Roles in a Networked Software Development Ecosystem: A Case Study in GitHub" (2012). CSE Technical reports. 149. http://digitalcommons.unl.edu/csetechreports/149 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Computer Science and Engineering, Department of at DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska - Lincoln. It has been accepted for inclusion in CSE Technical reports by an authorized administrator of DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska - Lincoln. Roles in a Networked Software Development Ecosystem: A Case Study in GitHub Patrick Wagstrom Corey Jergensen, Anita Sarma IBM TJ Watson Research Center Computer Science and Engineering Department 19 Skyline Dr University of Nebraska, Lincoln Hawthorne, NY, USA 10532 Lincoln, NE, USA 68588 [email protected] {cjergens,asarma}@cse.unl.edu ABSTRACT tiple languages and utilizing multiple different development Open source software development has evolved beyond single frameworks and libraries, For example, development of a web projects into complex networked ecosystems of projects that application may use the JavaScript library jQuery for the user share portions of their code, social norms, and developer commu- interaction, Ruby on Rails for the backend processing, and Rack nities.
    [Show full text]
  • A Coap Server with a Rack Interface for Use of Web Frameworks Such As Ruby on Rails in the Internet of Things
    A CoAP Server with a Rack Interface for Use of Web Frameworks such as Ruby on Rails in the Internet of Things Diploma Thesis Henning Muller¨ Matriculation No. 2198830 March 10, 2015 Supervisor Prof. Dr.-Ing. Carsten Bormann Reviewer Dr.-Ing. Olaf Bergmann Adviser Dipl.-Inf. Florian Junge Faculty 3: Computer Science and Mathematics 2afc1e5 cbna This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 License. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/ Henning Muller¨ [email protected] Abstract We present a Constrained Application Protocol (CoAP) server with a Rack interface to enable application development for the Internet of Things (or Wireless Embedded Internet) using frameworks such as Ruby on Rails. Those frameworks avoid the need for reinvention of the wheel, and simplify the use of Test-driven Development (TDD) and other agile software development methods. They are especially beneficial on less constrained devices such as infrastructure devices or application servers. Our solution supports development of applications almost without paradigm change compared to HTTP and provides performant handling of numerous concurrent clients. The server translates transparently between the protocols and also supports specifics of CoAP such as service and resource discovery, block-wise transfers and observing resources. It also offers the possibility of transparent transcoding between JSON and CBOR payloads. The Resource Directory draft was implemented by us as a Rails application running on our server software. Wir stellen einen Constrained Application Protocol (CoAP) Server mit einem Rack In- terface vor, der Anwendungsentwicklung fur¨ das Internet der Dinge (bzw. das Wireless Embedded Internet) mit Frameworks wie Ruby on Rails ermoglicht.¨ Solche Framworks verhindern die Notwendigkeits, das Rad neu zu erfinden und vereinfachen die Anwen- dung testgetriebener Entwicklung (TDD) und anderer agiler Methoden der Softwareen- twicklung.
    [Show full text]