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docs/en/data/external_links.yml
title: Booking Appointments with Twilio, Notion, and FastAPI - author: Abhinav Tripathi - Microsoft Blogs link: https://devblogs.microsoft.com/cosmosdb/azure-cosmos-db-python-and-fastapi/ title: Write a Python data layer with Azure Cosmos DB and FastAPI - author: Donny Peeters author_link: https://github.com/Donnype link: https://bitestreams.com/blog/fastapi-sqlalchemy/ title: 10 Tips for adding SQLAlchemy to FastAPI
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docs/en/docs/deployment/docker.md
other tools **build** these container images **incrementally**, adding **one layer on top of the other**, starting from the top of the `Dockerfile` and adding any files created by each of the instructions of the `Dockerfile`. Docker and similar tools also use an **internal cache** when building the image, if a file hasn't changed since the last time building the container image, then it will **re-use the same layer** created the last time, instead of copying the file again and creating a...
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docs/en/docs/features.md
* Designed around these standards, after a meticulous study. Instead of an afterthought layer on top. * This also allows using automatic **client code generation** in many languages. ### Automatic docs
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docs/en/docs/advanced/using-request-directly.md
But there are situations where you might need to access the `Request` object directly. ## Details about the `Request` object As **FastAPI** is actually **Starlette** underneath, with a layer of several tools on top, you can use Starlette's <a href="https://www.starlette.io/requests/" class="external-link" target="_blank">`Request`</a> object directly when you need to.
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docs/en/docs/deployment/https.md
* Certificates have a **lifetime**. * They **expire**. * And then they need to be **renewed**, **acquired again** from the third party. * The encryption of the connection happens at the **TCP level**. * That's one layer **below HTTP**. * So, the **certificate and encryption** handling is done **before HTTP**. * **TCP doesn't know about "domains"**. Only about IP addresses.
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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`.
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docs/en/docs/deployment/concepts.md
* One Uvicorn **process manager** would listen on the **IP** and **port**, and it would start **multiple Uvicorn worker processes**. * **Kubernetes** and other distributed **container systems** * Something in the **Kubernetes** layer would listen on the **IP** and **port**. The replication would be by having **multiple containers**, each with **one Uvicorn process** running. * **Cloud services** that handle this for you
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