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  1. docs/en/docs/deployment/manually.md

    <font color="#4E9A06">INFO</font>:     Application startup complete.
    <font color="#4E9A06">INFO</font>:     Uvicorn running on <b>http://0.0.0.0:8000</b> (Press CTRL+C to quit)
    ```
    
    </div>
    
    That would work for most of the cases. 😎
    
    You could use that command for example to start your **FastAPI** app in a container, in a server, etc.
    
    ## ASGI Servers
    
    Let's go a little deeper into the details.
    
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  2. docs/en/docs/advanced/behind-a-proxy.md

    ## Proxy with a stripped path prefix
    
    Having a proxy with a stripped path prefix, in this case, means that you could declare a path at `/app` in your code, but then, you add a layer on top (the proxy) that would put your **FastAPI** application under a path like `/api/v1`.
    
    In this case, the original path `/app` would actually be served at `/api/v1/app`.
    
    Even though all your code is written assuming there's just `/app`.
    
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  3. docs/en/docs/tutorial/first-steps.md

    #### What is OpenAPI for
    
    The OpenAPI schema is what powers the two interactive documentation systems included.
    
    And there are dozens of alternatives, all based on OpenAPI. You could easily add any of those alternatives to your application built with **FastAPI**.
    
    You could also use it to generate code automatically, for clients that communicate with your API. For example, frontend, mobile or IoT applications.
    
    ## Recap, step by step
    
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  4. pyproject.toml

        # For ORJSONResponse
        "orjson >=3.2.1",
        # To validate email fields
        "email_validator >=2.0.0",
        # Uvicorn with uvloop
        "uvicorn[standard] >=0.12.0",
        # TODO: this should be part of some pydantic optional extra dependencies
        # # Settings management
        # "pydantic-settings >=2.0.0",
        # # Extra Pydantic data types
        # "pydantic-extra-types >=2.0.0",
    ]
    
    all = [
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  5. docs/en/docs/deployment/concepts.md

    This Manager Process would probably be the one listening on the **port** in the IP. And it would transmit all the communication to the worker processes.
    
    Those worker processes would be the ones running your application, they would perform the main computations to receive a **request** and return a **response**, and they would load anything you put in variables in RAM.
    
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  6. docs/en/docs/advanced/openapi-callbacks.md

    In this case, you could want to document how that external API *should* look like. What *path operation* it should have, what body it should expect, what response it should return, etc.
    
    ## An app with callbacks
    
    Let's see all this with an example.
    
    Imagine you develop an app that allows creating invoices.
    
    These invoices will have an `id`, `title` (optional), `customer`, and `total`.
    
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  7. docs/en/docs/release-notes.md

    ### Breaking Changes
    
    * PR [#2434](https://github.com/tiangolo/fastapi/pull/2434) includes several improvements that shouldn't affect normal use cases, but could affect in advanced scenarios:
        * If you are testing the generated OpenAPI (you shouldn't, FastAPI already tests it extensively for you): the order for `tags` in `include_router` and *path operations* was updated for consistency, but it's a simple order change.
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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. docs/en/docs/fastapi-cli.md

    It will listen on the IP address `0.0.0.0`, which means all the available IP addresses, this way it will be publicly accessible to anyone that can communicate with the machine. This is how you would normally run it in production, for example, in a container.
    
    In most cases you would (and should) have a "termination proxy" handling HTTPS for you on top, this will depend on how you deploy your application, your provider might do this for you, or you might need to set it up yourself.
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  10. docs/hu/docs/index.md

    ---
    
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