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  2. Dynatrace - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dynatrace

    Dynatrace, Inc. is a global technology company that provides a software observability platform based on artificial intelligence (AI) and automation. Dynatrace technologies are used to monitor, analyze, and optimize application performance, software development and security practices, IT infrastructure, and user experience for businesses and ...

  3. Jira (software) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jira_(software)

    www .atlassian .com /software /jira. Jira ( / ˈdʒiːrə / JEE-rə) [4] is a proprietary product developed by Atlassian that allows bug tracking, issue tracking and agile project management. Jira is used by a large number of clients and users globally for project, time, requirements, task, bug, change, code, test, release, sprint management.

  4. Red Hat Network - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red_Hat_Network

    Red Hat Network (abbreviated to RHN) is a family of systems-management services operated by Red Hat. RHN makes updates, patches, and bug fixes of packages included within Red Hat Linux and Red Hat Enterprise Linux available to subscribers. Other available features include the deployment of custom content to, and the provisioning, configuration ...

  5. IBM WebSphere Application Server - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IBM_WebSphere_Application...

    Administration of IBM HTTP Server from WebSphere Admin Console; Support for WS-Security 1.0; Support for Web Services Resource Framework and WS-BusinessActivity (WS-BA) Support for JSR160 JMX Remote Connections (From IBM Agents Only) Administrative Console Jython Command Assistance; Enhanced scripting.

  6. Juju (software) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Juju_(software)

    Juju is a free and open source application modeling tool developed by Canonical Ltd.Juju is an application management system. It was built to reduce the operation overhead of software by facilitating, deploying, configuring, scaling, integrating, and performing operational tasks on public and private cloud services along with bare-metal servers and local container-based deployments.

  7. Wikipedia:Hat collecting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Hat_collecting

    Hat collecting can occur across wikis, with users using the rights they've got at one wiki to bootstrap an application on another wiki. This isn't always a problem: most of the user rights require trust. If a long-standing Wikisource admin turns up, there is a good reason to presume trustworthiness compared with a completely new user.

  8. Bootstrapping (compilers) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bootstrapping_(compilers)

    Bootstrapping (compilers) In computer science, bootstrapping is the technique for producing a self-compiling compiler – that is, a compiler (or assembler) written in the source programming language that it intends to compile. An initial core version of the compiler (the bootstrap compiler) is generated in a different language (which could be ...

  9. Composer (software) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Composer_(software)

    Composer (software) Composer is an application-level dependency manager for the PHP programming language that provides a standard format for managing dependencies of PHP software and required libraries. It was developed by Nils Adermann and Jordi Boggiano, who continue to manage the project.