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  1. ci/official/wheel_test/README.md

    the local wheel file specified in the `requirements_lock_<python_version>.txt`.
    
    Packages are imported one by one in alphabetical order during runtime.
    
    The test doesn't identify package's order-dependent issues; for instance,
    importing "tf.foo" followed by "tf.bar" won't reveal that "tf.bar" depends on
    "tf.foo" being imported first.
    
    The `_api/v2/api_packages.txt` file is generated during the TensorFlow API v2
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  2. okhttp-tls/README.md

    ```
    
    [`HandshakeCertificates`][handshake_certificates] keeps the certificates for a TLS handshake.
    Use its [builder][handshake_certificates_builder] to define which certificates the HTTPS server
    returns to its clients. The returned instance can create an `SSLSocketFactory` that implements this
    policy:
    
    ```java
    HandshakeCertificates serverCertificates = new HandshakeCertificates.Builder()
        .heldCertificate(localhostCertificate)
        .build();
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  3. docs/federation/lookup/README.md

    and `bucket2.domain.com`.
    
    #### MINIO_PUBLIC_IPS
    
    This is comma separated list of IP addresses to which buckets created on this MinIO instance will resolve to. For example,
    a bucket `bucket1` created on current MinIO instance will be accessible as `bucket1.domain.com`, and the DNS entry for
    `bucket1.domain.com` will point to IP address set in `MINIO_PUBLIC_IPS`.
    
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  4. docs/chroot/README.md

    Endpoint:  http://192.168.1.92:9000  http://65.19.167.92:9000
    AccessKey: MVPSPBW4NP2CMV1W3TXD
    SecretKey: X3RKxEeFOI8InuNWoPsbG+XEVoaJVCqbvxe+PTOa
    ...
    ...
    ```
    
    Instance is now accessible on the host at port 9000, proceed to access the Web browser at <http://127.0.0.1:9000/>
    
    ## Explore Further
    
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  5. docs/bucket/notifications/README.md

    ### Step 1: Add AMQP endpoint to MinIO
    
    The AMQP configuration is located under the sub-system `notify_amqp` top-level key. Create a configuration key-value pair here for your AMQP instance. The key is a name for your AMQP endpoint, and the value is a collection of key-value parameters described in the table below.
    
    ```
    KEY:
    notify_amqp[:name]  publish bucket notifications to AMQP endpoints
    
    ARGS:
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  6. internal/grid/README.md

        instance := grid.NewStream[*Payload, *Req, *Resp](h, newPayload, newReq, newResp)
    	
        // Tweakable options
        instance.WithPayload = true // default true when newPayload != nil
        instance.OutCapacity = 1    // default
        instance.InCapacity = 1     // default true when newReq != nil
    	
        // Register the handler on the manager
        instance.Register(manager, handler, "asubroute")
    	
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  7. docs/kms/README.md

    ```sh
    export MINIO_ROOT_USER=minio
    export MINIO_ROOT_PASSWORD=minio123
    minio server ~/export
    ```
    
    > The KES instance at `https://play.min.io:7373` is meant to experiment and provides a way to get started quickly.
    > Note that anyone can access or delete master keys at `https://play.min.io:7373`. You should run your own KES
    > instance in production.
    
    ## Configuration Guides
    
    A typical MinIO deployment that uses a KMS for SSE-S3 looks like this:
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  8. docs/metrics/prometheus/README.md

      scheme: http
      static_configs:
      - targets: ['localhost:9000']
    ```
    
    ##### Node (optional)
    
    Optionally you can also collect per node metrics. This needs to be done on a per server instance.
    The scrape configurations should use all the servers under `targets` so that graphing systems like
    grafana can visualize them for all the nodes
    
    ```yaml
    scrape_configs:
    - job_name: minio-job
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  9. okhttp-brotli/README.md

    must choose to return Brotli responses.  n.b. It is not used for
    sending requests.
    
    ```java
    OkHttpClient client = new OkHttpClient.Builder()
      .addInterceptor(BrotliInterceptor.INSTANCE)
      .build();
    ```
    
    ```kotlin
    implementation("com.squareup.okhttp3:okhttp-brotli:4.12.0")
    ```
    
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  10. helm/minio/README.md

    For instance, given that TLS is enabled and you need to add trust for MinIO's own CA and for the CA of a Keycloak server, a Kubernetes secret can be created from the certificate files using `kubectl`:
    
    ```
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