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  1. docs/en/docs/deployment/docker.md

    And the **container** itself (in contrast to the **container image**) is the actual running instance of the image, comparable to a **process**. In fact, a container is running only when it has a **process running** (and normally it's only a single process). The container stops when there's no process running in it.
    
    ## Container Images
    
    Plain Text
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  2. docs/en/docs/tutorial/first-steps.md

     <span style="background-color:#C4A000"><font color="#2E3436">│                                                     │</font></span>
     <span style="background-color:#C4A000"><font color="#2E3436">│  Running in development mode, for production use:   │</font></span>
     <span style="background-color:#C4A000"><font color="#2E3436">│                                                     │</font></span>
    Plain Text
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  3. docs/en/docs/deployment/concepts.md

    * The process can be **terminated** (or "killed") by you, or by the operating system. At that point, it stops running/being executed, and it can **no longer do things**.
    * Each application that you have running on your computer has some process behind it, each running program, each window, etc. And there are normally many processes running **at the same time** while a computer is on.
    Plain Text
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  4. cmd/admin-handlers.go

    // token will receive heal status records from the running heal
    // sequence.
    //
    // If no client token is provided, and a heal sequence is in progress
    // an error is returned with information about the running heal
    // sequence. However, if the force-start flag is provided, the server
    // aborts the running heal sequence and starts a new one.
    Go
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  5. docs/en/docs/deployment/manually.md

    Just keep in mind that when you read "server" in general, it could refer to one of those two things.
    
    When referring to the remote machine, it's common to call it **server**, but also **machine**, **VM** (virtual machine), **node**. Those all refer to some type of remote machine, normally running Linux, where you run programs.
    
    ## Install the Server Program
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  6. cmd/bucket-replication.go

    	ReplicateIncomingDelete = "replicate:incoming:delete"
    
    	// ReplicateHeal - audit trail for healing of failed/pending replications
    	ReplicateHeal = "replicate:heal"
    	// ReplicateHealDelete - audit trail of healing of failed/pending delete replications.
    	ReplicateHealDelete = "replicate:heal:delete"
    )
    
    var (
    	globalReplicationPool  *ReplicationPool
    Go
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  7. docs/en/docs/advanced/behind-a-proxy.md

    ### Providing the `root_path`
    
    To achieve this, you can use the command line option `--root-path` like:
    
    <div class="termy">
    
    ```console
    $ fastapi run main.py --root-path /api/v1
    
    <span style="color: green;">INFO</span>:     Uvicorn running on http://127.0.0.1:8000 (Press CTRL+C to quit)
    ```
    
    </div>
    
    Plain Text
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  8. docs/en/docs/advanced/websockets.md

    ## Try it
    
    If your file is named `main.py`, run your application with:
    
    <div class="termy">
    
    ```console
    $ fastapi dev main.py
    
    <span style="color: green;">INFO</span>:     Uvicorn running on http://127.0.0.1:8000 (Press CTRL+C to quit)
    ```
    
    </div>
    
    Open your browser at <a href="http://127.0.0.1:8000" class="external-link" target="_blank">http://127.0.0.1:8000</a>.
    
    You will see a simple page like:
    
    Plain Text
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  9. cmd/erasure-server-pool-decom.go

    	}
    }
    
    func (z *erasureServerPools) decommissionInBackground(ctx context.Context, idx int) error {
    	pool := z.serverPools[idx]
    	z.poolMetaMutex.RLock()
    	pending := z.poolMeta.PendingBuckets(idx)
    	z.poolMetaMutex.RUnlock()
    
    	for _, bucket := range pending {
    		z.poolMetaMutex.RLock()
    		isDecommissioned := z.poolMeta.isBucketDecommissioned(idx, bucket.String())
    		z.poolMetaMutex.RUnlock()
    		if isDecommissioned {
    Go
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  10. cni/README.md

    1. By installing a separate, very basic "CNI plugin" binary onto the node to forward low-level pod lifecycle events (CmdAdd/CmdDel/etc) from whatever node-level CNI subsystem is in use to this node agent for processing via socket.
    1. By running as a node-level daemonset that:
    
    - listens for these UDS events from the CNI plugin (which fire when new pods are spawned in an ambient-enabled namespace), and adds those pods to the ambient mesh.
    Plain Text
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