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  1. .gitattributes

    * text eol=lf
    
    #
    # The above will handle all files NOT found below
    # https://help.github.com/articles/dealing-with-line-endings/
    # https://github.com/Danimoth/gitattributes
    
    # These are explicitly windows files and should use crlf
    *.bat           text eol=crlf
    
    # These files are text and should be normalized (Convert crlf => lf)
    *.bash          text eol=lf
    *.css           text diff=css
    *.htm           text diff=html
    Plain Text
    - Registered: Wed May 08 11:36:15 GMT 2024
    - Last Modified: Wed Sep 02 12:15:16 GMT 2020
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  2. docs/en/docs/advanced/async-tests.md

    Being able to use asynchronous functions in your tests could be useful, for example, when you're querying your database asynchronously. Imagine you want to test sending requests to your FastAPI application and then verify that your backend successfully wrote the correct data in the database, while using an async database library.
    
    Let's look at how we can make that work.
    
    ## pytest.mark.anyio
    
    Plain Text
    - Registered: Sun May 05 07:19:11 GMT 2024
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  3. .github/CONTRIBUTING.md

    Contributing
    ============
    
    If you would like to contribute code to OkHttp you can do so through GitHub by
    forking the repository and sending a pull request.
    
    When submitting code, please make every effort to follow existing conventions
    and style in order to keep the code as readable as possible. Please also make
    sure your code compiles by running `./gradlew check`. Checkstyle failures
    during compilation indicate errors in your style and can be viewed in the
    Plain Text
    - Registered: Fri May 03 11:42:14 GMT 2024
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  4. docs/metrics/prometheus/alerts.md

    Alerting with prometheus is two step process. First we setup alerts in Prometheus server and then we need to send alerts to the AlertManager.
    Plain Text
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  5. .gitattributes

    # Always check-out / check-in files with LF line endings.
    * text=auto eol=lf
    
    hack/verify-flags/known-flags.txt merge=union
    test/test_owners.csv merge=union
    
    **/zz_generated.*.go linguist-generated=true
    **/types.generated.go linguist-generated=true
    **/generated.pb.go linguist-generated=true
    **/generated.proto
    **/types_swagger_doc_generated.go linguist-generated=true
    api/openapi-spec/*.json linguist-generated=true
    Plain Text
    - Registered: Fri May 03 09:05:14 GMT 2024
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  6. docs/features/interceptors.md

      @Override public Response intercept(Interceptor.Chain chain) throws IOException {
        Request request = chain.request();
    
        long t1 = System.nanoTime();
        logger.info(String.format("Sending request %s on %s%n%s",
            request.url(), chain.connection(), request.headers()));
    
        Response response = chain.proceed(request);
    
        long t2 = System.nanoTime();
    Plain Text
    - Registered: Fri May 03 11:42:14 GMT 2024
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  7. ci/official/README.md

    2. Running the CI scripts locally, as explained below
    3. **Google employees only**: Google employees can use an internal-only tool
    called "MLCI" that makes testing more convenient: it can execute any full CI job
    against a pending change. Search for "MLCI" internally to find it.
    
    You may invoke a CI script of your choice by following these instructions:
    
    ```bash
    cd tensorflow-git-dir
    
    Plain Text
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  8. docs/en/docs/advanced/openapi-webhooks.md

    # OpenAPI Webhooks
    
    There are cases where you want to tell your API **users** that your app could call *their* app (sending a request) with some data, normally to **notify** of some type of **event**.
    
    This means that instead of the normal process of your users sending requests to your API, it's **your API** (or your app) that could **send requests to their system** (to their API, their app).
    
    This is normally called a **webhook**.
    
    ## Webhooks steps
    
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  9. SECURITY.md

    ## Reporting a Vulnerability
    
    If you think you found a vulnerability, and even if you are not sure about it, please report it right away by sending an email to: ******@****.***. Please try to be as explicit as possible, describing all the steps and example code to reproduce the security issue.
    
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  10. docs/en/docs/advanced/openapi-callbacks.md

    The process that happens when your API app calls the *external API* is named a "callback". Because the software that the external developer wrote sends a request to your API and then your API *calls back*, sending a request to an *external API* (that was probably created by the same developer).
    
    Plain Text
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    - Last Modified: Thu May 02 22:37:31 GMT 2024
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